SPORTS: Three Kansas baseball players turn down pro contracts and return to school. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103, NO.19
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1993
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS650-640)
Police warn campus of escapee
NEWS: 864-4810
Ex-Kansas player Drayton breaks out of Arizona jail
By Scott J. Anderson Kansan staff writer
He escaped from an Arizona prison Sunday evening with three other convicts.
KU police are asking students to be on the lookout for former Kansas football player Kenny Dravton.
KU police have posted fliers in residence and scholarship halls and other buildings on campus to warn students that Drayton may be on his way to Lawrence. Sgt. Mark Warren of
Lawrence Police said Drayton still may have friends in town.
Drayton was in the Cochise County Jail in Bisbee, Ariz., awaiting transportation to the Arizona State Penitentiary. He had been sentenced to 305 years in prison after being convicted Friday of 14 felony charges. Those charges included armed robbery, kidnapping and rape, stemming from the abduction of three Bisbee women in June.
Kenny Drayton
PETER JOHNSON
"We put the fliers out because officials in Arizona said he may be on his
way here," said Officer Burdel Welsh of KU police. "We also put them out because of the inherent danger and the nature of the crimes involved."
All four convicts were in maximum security cells, said Carol Capas, public information officer for the Cochise County Sheriff's Department. Capas said one of the inmates overpowered a guard and took his keys and radio. The inmate then released the other three men.
The fliers describe Drayton as 23 years old, six feet tall and 175 pounds with short black hair and brown eyes. They also say he should be considered armed and dangerous.
Drayton was a wide receiver on the Jayhawk football team from 1988 through 1991. In 1991, he was named an honorable mention to the All-Big Eight offensive team.
The four went to the jail's garage, pried open one of the doors and escaped on foot, Capas said. The inmates took $2,500 from the jail's booking room before leaving.
Arizona authorities said the jail was unsafe because of a shortage of officers and structural and design flaws in the building.
One of the men, Floyd Thornton,
was caught Tuesday. Capas said a
fugitive task force is searching for
the three other men in Tucson and in
the area around Bisbee, which is five
miles from the Mexican border.
Anyone with information about Drayton should call 911, KU police at 864-5572 or KU Crimestoppers at 864-8888.
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
Fifteen years ago, a certain disappearance caused quite a stir on campus.
...
JaYNAPPED!
By Shan Schwartz
Kansan staff writer
This week marks the 15th anniversary of one of the most notorious kidnappings in KU history.
The victim was missing for more than six weeks. Although KU police closed the case soon after she was recovered, the kidnappers never were caught, and their identities remain a mystery.
The victim was 3 feet 6 inches tall with a furry blue body and a yellow beak, and her name was Baby Jay.
On Sept. 9, 1978, Baby Jay was being cleaned with the BigJay mascot at the former Burk Awning and Canvas Goods, 706 Massachusetts St.
Robert Burk, son of the store owner,
said that he, his wife and his son had been working on the mascot costumes late that evening when two men entered the store.
"They were walking by and saw the birds in the window, and they came in and started asking a lot of questions," Burk said. "They were kind of suspicious-acting, and we thought something might be up."
Burk said the men had continued looking at the birds while he worked on the Big Jay.
Then, when Burk was not looking,
one of the men grabbed Baby Jay. The
two men took off running.
"By the time I got to the front door, they were gone," Burk said.
He saw a car zoom off, and he reported the incident to the Lawrence police, Burk said. The police caught up with the car, but the kidnappers and the mascot were not in it.
For six weeks, no news came as to the whereabouts of the mascot. Baby Jay missed the beginning of the football season for the first time in her seven-year life. The Athletic Department flashed messages on the scoreboard, and the University of Kansas Alumni Association made posters and T-shirts that asked, "Where are you, Baby Jay?"
Then, on Oct. 20, a campus mail package arrived in the Kansan newsroom. It contained a note and two photographs that showed a blindfolded Baby Jay with a bound beak. One
photo showed two people disguised in sheets and paper bags. One capter held a knife, and the other pointed a gun to the bird's head.
The unsigned note demanded no ransom. It confirmed that Baby Jay had been kidnapped but offered no clues about where the mascot was or who had taken it.
Steve Frazier, the Kansan editor at the time, said this week that no one had much of an idea who had kidnapped Baby Jay.
"Students assumed it was a prankster or the usual suspect, K-State," he said.
But both the KU and Lawrence police, Frazier said, were suspicious of the Kansan.
"The cops got all over us because they thought we cooked this up as a public stunt," he said.
Frazier said their suspicions could have been related to the Kansan's role in the recovery of Baby Jay.
On the night of Oct. 26, two days before homecoming, the phone rang in the newsroom. An anonymous caller said Baby Jay was at Wells Overlook, about five miles south of town.
Frazier sent a reporter and photographer to Wells Overlook to verify the call before notifying police.
"They were suspicious of us, and we figured if we just called it to in them, they'd beat us there and take it away before we could see it," Frazier said. "So after the reporter and photographer told us it was there, then we called the police."
"To them, I guess it looked like a setup," Frazier said. "The police came back to the newsroom and questioned me for a while. It was 2 or 3 in the morning.
Frazier said the reporter and photographer had waited with the bird until the police showed up.
"At one point, one of them said,
'You're lucky we didn't take you downtown,' and then I realized they were serious about it.
And to this date, no one knows who did.
"But we didn't do it."
Penguin Mask
Except the kidnappers.
Kansan file photo
BABY JAY
"Here's the word, about The bird, that dePARTED. JUST TO say, THAT it's SAFE!y PUT away, SO don't BE, broken HEARTED. The J was nabbed! and ALMOST stabBeD, you all seemed to BURN, But your bird, WE will RETURN. WE'RE REGULAR FOLK, WITH A flare FOR A JOKE, and WE'd like to SAY AIDOS MOTHERf—."
Whoever took off with Baby Jay left this note to the University Daily Kansan:
The Note
Renovation spending breakdown
The Board of Regents has appropriated $47 million to KU for remodeling and other expenses around campus. The figures are in millions of dollars.
Renovation of campus buildings $16
Maintenance $13.7
New construction $10
Fire code compliance $4.2
American Disabilities Act compliance $2
Improving classrooms $1.1
Source: Kansas Board of Regents
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
KU could receive renovation funds
Top needs include larger classrooms
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas could receive a $47 million face-lift as part of a $292.5 million plan for renovations all the Regents schools.
Warren Corman, interim executive director for the Regents, presented the plan to the Legislature's Joint Building Construction Committee on Tuesday.
KU would receive its $47 million portion if the plan passed the Legislature intact.
Corman said the plan would probably be phased-in over five years.
The proposed plan would allow KU to improve its campus, although the Kansas Union was recently renovated, the Lied Center completed and construction begun on Hoch Auditorium.
Ed Meyen, executive vice chancelor, said KU needed more work done.
We have many renovation needs because of the American Disabilities Act.
Meyen said KU needed to renovate some classrooms to increase space.
Corman said Murphy Hall would be expanded and Joseph R. Pearson and Spooner hall would be renovated.
"Those are the highest points on
KU's request list." he said.
The Regents now must decide how much money it will ask the Legislature for and how much it can obtain through other means, such as private donations.
"$292.5 million is a lot more than we have funds for." Corman said.
He said all of the money would not come from the Legislature when it convenes in January 1994.
"Our hope would be that they would fund this, but that's not realistic," he said.
Although the Legislature probably would not finance the entire plan, Corman said, the plan probably would pass.
"The legislators were very receptive toward the request," he said. "There won't be any resistance, but there will be a struggle on how to fund it."
State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-
Lawrence, a member of the appropriations committee, said the Legislature could finance the plan by a one-half increase in the mill property tax levy. A mill is $1 in tax for every $1,000 of assessed property value.
"I realize the maintenance on campuses is badly underfunded," she said.
Charlton said raising the mill level would be the best way to pay for the Regents $292.5 million plan.
By David Stewar Kansan staff writer
Education school again searching for new dean
Entering its second fall semester without a permanent dean, the School of Education is once again attempting to find a replacement, said Carole Ross, acting associate vice chancellor for academic affairs and dean search committee member.
The search committee narrowed its search to three candidates last year, but did not hire any of them.
"They just didn't meet the qualifications that we needed for the school," Ross said. "A match was not made."
Ross said the current 12-member committee probably would have a list of three to five new finalists by the end of October or early November.
Richard Whelan, professor of special education, has served as interim dean of the School of Education since Summer 1992 when Ed Meyen, former dean of the school, replaced Judith Ramaley as executive vice chancellor.
The committee plans to name the new dean from the final list of candidates by the first of the year, with a projected starting date of July 1, 1994.
Ross said the new dean should have a vision of where the school is headed academically, locate financial resources for the school, and have strong evidence of leadership and administrative expertise.
Ross said the committee would get input from students.
Student representatives say priorities for the new dean should include finding someone who will stay in touch with students and improve academic advising and scheduling.
Caroline Elton, Overland Park senior and the student member of the current search committee, said the new dean should be accessible.
"I'd like to see someone who will listen to the student voice." Ellen said.
ten to the student voice," Eton said. In meeting she attended yesterday, Kristina Abel, Englewood, Colo. senior, and School of Education representative for Student Senate, said along with academic advising and scheduling, the education school needed a dean who could explain school policy to the education students.
"If he or she shows an effort to show interest in the students, both parties will benefit," Abel said.
INSIDE
This man is wearing tights. He also wears diapers. Why? He performs with the New Renaissance Festival Acting Company every weekend in Kansas City.
Page 7.
Renaissance Festival
[Image of a person holding a weapon].
Fire awareness program working
Bv Brian James
Kansan staff writer
The Lawrence fire department has begun its annual campus fire awareness programs, hoping to keep any would-be pranksters from pulling fire alarms.
Barr said that since the department began making presentations 10 years ago, the number of maliciously pulled false alarms — alarms pulled as a joke or a prank — has decreased dramatically in KU housing.
Rich Barr, Lawrence fire marshal, and other Lawrence firefighters are presenting the programs at all KU residence and scholarship halls this month. The first one was held Tuesday at Pearson Scholarship Hall.
"All of the halls have really promoted this program well and that has helped," he said.
Barr said there were two purposes
for making the presentations. One is to teach residents about the proper procedures for exiting a burning building, he said.
The other purpose is to tell students the cost of pulling a fire alarm.
"When we roll out of the station to answer a call at a hall, we're taking those trucks away from other parts of the city," he said. "If it's a false alarm, that is a wasted resource for other citizens."
idents to learn about fire safety.
Barr said sending the trucks across town to answer an alarm posed a risk for other drivers as well.
Fire department records show there have been no fire alarms maliciously pulled in KU halls this semester. But compared to the 21 maliciously pulled alarms answered by the Lawrence fire department last school year, he said there was a need for res-
"We just want them to know that there is a social cost as well as a monetary cost for us to answer false alarms," he said.
"They need to realize what the results of crying wolf are," he said. "It's a pretty deadly game."
McElheneil said students who are caught pulling an alarm could face expulsion from the residence halls or even the University.
Fred McElhene, associate director of student housing, said sometimes students did not realize the danger in pulling alarms as a joke.
Michele Kessler, staff attorney for Legal Services for Students, said the penalties for maliciously pulling a fire alarm were up to 180 days in jail and a $100-$500 fine.
Oops, false alarm!
The Lawrence fire department responded to 74 fire alarms in KU residence and scholarship halls in the 1992-93 school year.
Top causes of false alarms:
1. Maliciously pulled false alarms: 21
2. Fire alarm system malfunction; 17
3. Unintentional alarm (cigarettes, etc.): 16
4. Alarm sensed smoke or odor, no real fire: 6
5. Fire in the building: 4
5. Fire in the building: 1
6. Other reasons: 10
6. Other reasons: 10
ections of alarms pulled maliciously:
1. Oliver Hall: 12
2. Hashinger Hall: 4
3. Simplin Hall: 3
JSP: 1
Corbin: 1
Source: Lawrence fire department
FIRE
FULL DOWN
Dave Campbell / KANBAN
2
Thursday, September 16, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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TODAY
ON THE RECORD
A student's clothing valued at $175 was taken from a residence in the 2500 block of West Sixth Street Sunday or Monday, Lawrence police reported.
A student's bicycle tire and rim, valued together at $50, were taken from Stouffer Place Apartments between Thursday and Monday, KU police reported.
2400 block of Louisiana Street Tuesday, Lawrence police reported. Damage was estimated at $100.
A student's sliding glass door was broken at a residence in the
A student's car was damaged in parking lot No. 102 Tuesday, KU police reported. Damage was estimated at $300.
A student's wallet and its contents, valued together at $63, were taken from Robinson Center Tuesday, KU police reported.
CORRECTION
The Kansan corrects all significant errors.
The Hispanic Heritage Month activities calendar on Page 1 of yesterday's Kansan contained incorrect information. Gov. Joan Finney will give her proclamation at 10:30 a.m. on Sept. 29 at the Capitol Rotunda in Topeka.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
HOW TO REACH US
Call 864-4830 for the newsroom:
■ News tips — Campus Desk
■ Comments/Complaints/
Corrections
— KC Trauner, Editor or
Joe Harder, Managing Editor for
News
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Come see a performance of Mozart's classic, "The Magic Flute," at The Lyric Opera and you'll travel with a young prince and his magic flute on an emotional journey inspired by love.
Performances will be staged September 17, 18, 20
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The performance on Saturday,
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图 4
WEATHER
Omaha: 74°/51°
LAWRENCE: 76°/52°
Kansas City: 75°/53°
St. Louis: 73°/54°
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 84°/68°
Chicago: 64°/50°
Houston: 90°/62°
Miami: 89°/78°
Minneapolis: 68°/48°
Phoenix: 90°/71°
Salt Lake City: 74°/53°
Seattle: 76°/50°
TULSA: 74°/58°
TODAY
Sunny and warmer, southeast winds
5-10 mph
High: 76°
Low: 52°
Tomorrow
Partly sunny, chance of late showers
High: 79°
Low: 49°
Saturday
Partly cloudy, 60% chance of rain
High: 74°
Low: 44°
Source: Gregg Potter, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
Dave Campbell / KANSAS
Tomorrow Saturday
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The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer -Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 16, 1993
3
Festival splashed with color, music
[ ]
Mexican independence celebrated by gathering
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Whatever the attraction, all the colors were bright.
Whether it was the dresses of the Mexican dancers or the stage lights showcasing the live band, last night's celebration of Mexican independence in the Ballroom at the Kansas Union was filled with greens, reds and blues.
"All the Latin countries have something to offer," said Octavio Hinojosa, president of the Hispanic American Leadership Organization, addressing about 60 people. "All the colors we see, and all the colors out there, are the colors of the Hispanic people."
Hinolosa said the event, called "El Grito de Dolores," or "the cry to Dolores," celebrated the equivalent of the Fourth of July for Mexico and Central America. One hundred eighty-three years ago yesterday, a Catholic priest named Miguel Hidalgo de Costilla rang the church bell in the small town of Dolores to summon the townspeople. Once there, Hinolosa said, Hidalgo called for Mexican independence from Spain.
Mexico finally won its independence with the Treaty of Cordoba in 1821, Hinojosa said. During the war, Hidalgo was captured by the Spanish and beheaded.
Hinojosa said the event was the official beginning of Hispanic Heritage Month, which ends Oct. 15.
Melissa Lacey / KANSAN
The event emphasized the culture of Mexico, Hinojosa said.
Ispanic Heritage Month
"The green symbolizes the land, and white the religion, because Mexico was Catholic then, and red became the blood of the fight for independence," Hinojosa said.
1986
The Mexican flag picturing an eagle biting a serpent above a red, white and green background was hung above the stage.
Calendar
Activities next week
for Hispanic Heritage Month:
He also said the serpent eating the eagle
- Flamenco performance by Zambra Gitana.
Noon, Sept. 20, Kansas Union. Gitana will play traditional Spanish music.
Stacey Alvarez twirls her skirt to the music of a Mexican folk song during the "El Grito de Dolores" celebration of Mexico's Independence Day.
**Lecture. An Overview of the Religion of Mezo-America. 7 p.m., Sept. 21, Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. John Hoopes, professor of anthropology, presents an overview of the American Indian religion.**
Lecture: Early History of Hispanics in Kansas. 2:30-4:30 p.m., Sept. 22, Pine Room in the Kansas Union. Eva Perlera, director of Kansas Advisory Commission for Hispanic Affairs, will retrace the Coronado expedition in Kansas.
Latin Music Explosion. 9-midnight, Sept
24, McCollum Hall. The dance will feature
Latin American music.
KAN8AN
Source: HALO
symbolized the founding of Tenochitlan, the capital city of the Aztec empire. A prophecy of the Aztec Indians said that they would find their city on the spot where an eagle was eating a serpent. They found such a spot and founded their city where Mexico City is today.
The music and dancing were also from Mexico. The event began with the dancing of El Grupo Atotonilco, a Mexican folk-dancing company from Kansas City, Mo. Its dances included traditional dances from different regions throughout Mexico.
The women wore brightly-colored dresses and tapped their shoes on the wooden floor of the ballroom. The men wore straw hats and occasionally banged
machetes together to the beat of the music.
Maria Chauard, director of the company, said the dancers' ages ranged from 4 to 25. She said the company served an important function for Mexican culture.
"We need to have our kids know where their roots are, that they're both American and Mexican-American," Chauard said. "That's what makes the world great, the diversity of culture."
El Grupo Tempestad, a Mexican folk band from Kansas City, Kan., supplied
the music for the dance at the end of El Grito.
Carlos Loparena, Mexico City, Mexico, senior, said he had found the event by mistake. He was attending another function with his girlfriend when he heard the music. He said El Grito had been a special day for him and his family when he was a child.
"It was always very important, because the next day we didn't have school," Loparena said. "It was something very important in my life."
CAMPUS BRIEFS
District Attorney wants gun control legislation for kids
Douglas County District Attorney Jerry Wells announced yesterday that he had asked Rep. Sandy Praeger, R-Lawrence, to support stiffer gun control legislation.
Wells said he asked Praeger to introduce in the 1994 legislative session a bill that would make it unlawful for persons under 18 to possess weapons unless they are under direct adult supervision.
"We have seen almost an epidemic of juveniles committing crimes with weapons," Wells said. "Enough is enough."
Juveniles caught with weapons would be dealt with under the juvenile code, he said. The weapons also would be confiscated.
Anyone storing a weapon accessible to juveniles would have to keep the weapon locked, Wells said, or that person would be charged with a misdemeanor crime.
The state ordinance would be based on similar ordinances already enforced in Wichita and Denver, Wells said.
Regents to discuss Tonkovich
The Board of Regents will discuss whether it will hear a reinstatement appeal from Emil Tonkovich, former KU professor of law, today during an executive session in Topeka.
The Regents received a request from Tonkovich to hear his appeal after he was dismissed from the University in July, said Judith Siminoe, associate general counsel to the Regents.
"The Regents will discuss whether they should allow the appeal and will decide if this appeal will be heard." Siminoe said.
A University committee agreed with Chancellor Gene Budig's decision to dismiss Tonkovich after Tonkovich was accused of sexual harassment. Tonkovich was dismissed after the committee decided he had violated professional ethics and committed moral turpitude.
"I feel I have excellent grounds for appeal," Tonkovich said. "I was treated fundamentally unfair, and the evidence does not support the committee's finding."
Compiled from Kansan staff reports
ON CAMPUS
Holy Eucharist, sponsored by Canterbury House, will be at noon today in Danforth Chapel.
A Volunteer Fair will be from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. today in front of Staufer-Flint Hall. For more information, call Shanda Vangas or Julie Harris at 864-3710.
The University Council will meet at 3:30 p.m. today at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. The open meeting will focus on the consensual relationships policy.
dent Union office at 864-7337.
KUN O.W. will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, contact the Women's Stu-
The Undergraduate Anthropology Club will have an informal discussion and slide show at 5 p.m. today in 633 Fraser Hall. For more information, call Destiny Crider at 832-1469.
KU Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at Parlors A, B and C in the Kansas Union. For more information, contact Erik Lindsley at 841-4585.
InterVarsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call David Zimmerman at 864-7117.
University Chess Society will meet from 7 to 11 tonight at the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Nathan at 842-0049.
LesBIGaysOK will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Scott Manning at 841-8887.
Jayhawk Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more
information, call John Dale at 864 1115.
KU Libertarians will meet at 8 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Allen Tiffany at 842-2411.
Amnesty International will hold a letter writing session at 8:30 tonight at the Glass Onion, 624 W. 12th.
Ithus Christian Outreach will meet at 8:30 tonight at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mark Winton at 843-2260 or Noel Storey at 749-5848.
KU Fencing Club will meet from 8:30 to 10:30 tonight in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445.
Bicycle patrol upgrades equipment
By Scott J. Anderson Kansan staff writer
The KU police bicycle patrol hit the streets this week on new bicycles.
The two new Bridgestone MB-4s were purchased Thursday through a sealed bid from Rick's Bike Shop, 916 Massachusetts St. The old Trek 930s, purchased two years ago from Sunflower, 804 Massachusetts St., were traded in for the new ones.
Sgt. Mark Witt, who coordinates the bicycle patrol, said the primary difference between the two models was upgraded bike equipment, such as the gears. He said comfort and quality also were considered.
"If the bike doesn't fit, you lose a lot of energy as you ride," Witt said. "And if you don't have the quality they just
don't last as long."
He said also that the cost of maintaining the old bikes would have been comparable to buying the new ones, and that he thought bikes would continue to be replaced every two years.
Officer Mike Hough, who has been with the bicycle patrol since it began, said his new bike was an improvement over the old one.
"The last two were both the same size, but this time they ordered different sizes," Hough said. "I love the new one. It's a lot more comfortable to ride."
Officer James Muhholland said the new bikes were more enjoyable.
"The new bikes are a lot lighter and a much better ride," he said. "But then we put a lot of rough miles on the old ones."
Hough put 5,604 miles on his old bicycle, according to police logs and Mulholland put 2,431 miles on the other bike. Witt said Hough logged more mileage because he had ridden four months longer than Mulholland.
Witt said that the most important advantage of a bike patrol was personal contact with students and greater mobility than a foot patrol.
"People are much more willing to talk to someone on a bike than someone in a patrol car," Witt said.
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Witt said the bicycle patrol's importance had grown as more students rode bikes on campus.
"Bicycles now are just like cars were in the early 1900s," Witt said. "They're not so much toys anymore but a true means of transportation."
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Thursday, September 16, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE ISSUE
VIEWPOINT
Sunflower Cablevision will change its service to Lawrence residents Oct. 6.
THE BACKGROUND
Because of contractual disagreements with network stations and new legislation regulating cable charges, Sunflower subscribers no longer will receive KSHB or KMBC, the FOX and ABC affiliates in Kansas City, Mo.
THE OPINION
Sunflower Cablevision should maintain service
Lawrence residents are paying for specific services from Sunflower Cablevision, 644 New Hampshire St., and we deserve to have those services remain intact. Whether paid directly to Sunflower or to a dorm or apartment complex, the money should be a guarantee of continued service.
Some of the shows viewers will miss with the loss of the FOX affiliate will include Star Trek: The Next Generation, Roc, The Simpsons and The Arsenio Hall Show.
The dispute arose when network stations requested compensation from cable companies for money they collected for broadcasting network-affiliated stations. Sunflower claims it cannot absorb these new costs without raising its subscription rates, which cannot be raised under the new national legislation.
Sunflower has completed negotiations with the other Kansas City affiliates but insists that the other two fail to comply. This is not satisfactory treatment of the customer and it will not be tolerated.
Sunflower subscribers have several options. The most drastic action is to request that, as of Oct. 6, your cable be disconnected until the regular programming is resumed.
Other options available are filing petitions, writing group letters (perhaps from an entire residence hall floor) and calling the company.
If enough Sunflower subscribers pursue any of the above options, no doubt a way will be found to complete negotiations with the stations. It is a simple matter of insisting that customers receive the service for which they are paying.
DAVID BURGETT FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
United Way operation takes more than money
Students, you should seize the opportunity to give to the Lawrence community while at the University of Kansas. If you don't have extra money, your time will do. The annual United Way drive going on through September is an excellent chance to volunteer time for one of the many services that it supports.
The United Way of Douglas County is a nonprofit organization that gives 99 percent of the donations back to the county. Many of the organizations the United Way supports provide services to students. Headquarters Inc., a 24-hour counseling service for students, receives two-thirds of its support through the United Way. Other services that benefit students include the Rape Victim Support Service, Women's Transitional Care Services and Consumer Credit Counseling Services.
Even if you would not use any of these services, there are other benefits from donating your time to the United Way. Looking outside academe at the world around you can be a valuable learning experience that you won't get with a degree.
TERRILYN McCORMICK FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
KC TRAUER, Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE Managing editors
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
Editors
Assistant to the editor .. J.R. Clairborne
News .. Stacy Friedman
Editorial .. Terrilyn McCormick
Campus .. Ben Grove
Sports .. Kristi Fogler
Photo .. Klip Chin, Renee Knoeber
Features .. Ezra Wolfe
Graphics .. John Paul Fogel
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Business Start
Campus sales mgr ... Ed Schager
Regional Sales mgr ... Jennifer Perrier
National sales mgr ... Jennifer Evanson
Co-op sales mgr ... Blythe Focht
Production mgr ... Jennifer Blowey
Kate Burgess
Marketing director .. Shelly McConnell
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 fibromet, or faculty or staff position. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be paired with the student. The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Slaffer-Flint Hall.
Reinventing the Alligator.
Gov't.
Ruling on homosexual parents based on history not morals
Is homosexuality an acceptable behavior for a parent to practice while raising children? Judge Buford Parsons, in a Virginia custody battle, ruled that it isn't. Parsons removed the custodyrights of Sharon Bottoms, the homosexual mother of a two-year-old son. This decision was based solely on whether or not the practice of homosexuality is an acceptable or "protected" practice under the U.S. legal system. Parsons' decision is a valid representation of the law that is based primarily on the Virginia Supreme Court precedent set in 1985. This ruling is not an "anti-gay" decision, but it is a decision that is firmly rooted in centuries of Western and Judeo-Christian philosophy and several legal precedents. These same philosophies and legal precedents represent what has made the United States an ideal model of democracy.
The fundamental rights that any U.S. citizen possesses originate from the Constitution. The intended purpose of the judicial branch is to oversee these guaranteed rights and to protect individuals from an abusive executive branch and an overly aggressive Congress. However, the U.S. court system has repeatedly
STAFF COLUMNIST
LANCE HAMBY
refused to recognize the practice of homosexuality as a protected "right." Bottoms' pursuit of a homosexual lifestyle is not protected by the Constitution. In addition, due to a Virginia Supreme Court decision, the practices of homosexuality by a parent in Virginia is sufficient grounds for that parent to lose custody of his or her child. Parsons' ruling that Bottoms must relinquish custody of her son, Tyler, because she has admitted to homosexual practices is valid in every sense of the law.
In Bowers v. Hardwick, the Supreme Court upholds the statute that made the practice of sodomy between homosexuals illegal. In Bowers, the Court states that a democracy cannot exist if fundamental individual rights are not protected. But the justices emphasize, "it is obvious to us that neither of these formulations would extend a fundamental right to homosexuals to engage in acts of criminal sodomy." With this precedent now being a foundation from which other courts must rule, it is clear that homosexual practices in Virginia, as well as other states with sodomy laws, have no legal basis as a protected "right."
Homosexual "rights" are not protected in the U.S. legal system largely because of the overwhelming influence of Judeo-Christian and Western thought on the U.S. Constitution and the laws that are drawn from it. It was stated in Bowers v. Hardwick that, "When colonists arrived in the United States from England, they brought with them Judeo-Christian thought, moral beliefs and the common law, which strongly influenced American laws." In reflecting upon history, the backbone of the U.S. legal system is clearly anchored in religion and Western philosophy. In both Judeo-Christian and Western thought, the practice of homosexuality is considered to be a deviant practice. To reject this principle, one also must reject the
philosophical pillars on which this country stands. Parsons chose not to do this by adhering to the Supreme Court's precedent and by refusing to justify Bottoms' illegal and "immoral" homosexual acts as protected "rights."
It is impossible to debate the history from which the United States was created. It is equally impossible to deny the fundamental role Judeo-Christian beliefs played in the thoughts and actions of the founding fathers' philosophy, which still governs this nation. Philosopher Alexis de Toqueville illuminated this point by saying, "I do not know whether all Americans have a sincere faith in their religion, for who can know the human heart? But I am certain that they hold it to be indispensable for the maintenance of republican institutions." Toqueville theorized that both the strength and success of the United States' democratic system rested in its firm adherence to its moral beliefs based upon religion. This thought is still alive today. Parsons' court decision proves it.
Lance Hamby is a Wichita junior majoring in journalism and political science.
Hispanic heritage important for all
Today marks the 183rd anniversary of Independence Day for Mexico. Each year communities across the United States and Mexico re-enact the famous "El Grito De Dolores." On Sept. 15th, 1810, Father Miguel Hidalgo Gostilla rang the local church bell in the small provincial town of Dolores, in the state of Hidalgo Guanajuato. Moments later, Father Hidalgo announced to the townspeople that New Spain must declare itself independent of the motherland. Thus, the quest for independence began.
With this in mind, the Hispanic-American Leadership Organization began its annual participation of Hispanic Heritage Month by re-enacting "El Grito de Dolores" as the first of many events. The celebration is held nationally from Sept. 15th through Oct. 15th. However, this year will be memorable for Kansas residents because Gov. Joan Finney will officially recognize Hispanic Heritage Month by signing a proclamation at noon this Friday in the state capitol.
GUEST COLUMNIST
SANDRA
OLIVAS
This year's theme is "Unidos Por Una Cultura" — "United By A Culture." The common culture that unites Hispanics throughout the world is the Spanish element that we have inherited.
As citizens and above all as students, we have the responsibility of learning and appreciating cultures other than our own. Hispanics, Native Americans, Asians and African Americans, whether straight or homosexual, are the future work force of this nation. We must be prepared to
By celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month, we acknowledge the various contributions that Hispanics have made in the shaping of this country. For instance, the concept of zero was developed by our forefathers, the Mayan Indians. Recent history shows that Hispanics have received the most medals of honor for their courage in
Heroes are numerous but some need special recognition, honor and tribute, such as the late Cesar Chavez. Chavez was president of the United Farmworkers of America. He fought to control the numerous chemical substances found in our food. Furthermore, he not only fought to protect the rights of Hispanic farmworkers but he also ultimately strived to ensure justice for everyone. Chavez was a leader and a role model. More importantly, he was a man who taught us to be proud of who we are and to love ourselves. Chavez was neither a tall man, nor did he speak loudly, but he simply spoke from the heart.
fighting for the democracy of this great country.
accept the similarities and differences that exist among these various groups. All of these groups are unique, all of these groups are beautiful. To deny them respect, to deny their equality is simply un-American.
Within the next twenty years in the United States, Hispanics will become the largest minority. Our Hispanic influence is already shaping America by the food we enjoy, the music we dance to, the language we speak, the politics we debate and the prayers we pray. Acknowledging and understanding Hispanics is an investment in our country's future. The celebration of Hispanic Heritage Month provides all students an opportunity to become familiar with our culture. The members of HALO invite you to participate in the activities we have planned in recognition of Hispanic Heritage Month, dedicated to the memory of the late Cesar Chavez.
For the Birds
Sandra Olivas is a Kansas City, Kan., junior majoring in broadcast news.
I HEAR YOU HAVE TO WATCH OUT FOR THE FOOD IN THIS PLACE
I HEAR YOU HAVE TO WATCH OUT FOR THE FOOD IN THIS PLACE
HEY, IS THAT FRESH?
ANYTHING ELSE??
NO CHECKS
Fitz Univ. Daily '03
HEY, IS THAT FRESH?
by Jeff Fitzpatrick
!
ANYTHING ELSE?!
NO CHECKS
Fitz Omin Daily '03
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 16, 1993
8
1993 Packers Insurance and Availability Association College Retirement Equity Fund
© 1995 Trucker Insurance and Annuity Association/Cellar Retirement Equities Fund
Kansan too dramatic about Dean retiring
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
I am writing this note in protest to the way The University Daily Kansan has chosen to sensualize the announcement of the retirement of the Dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design. "Students saw dean as an obstacle." Wow, what a headline! What follows, however, is an article that presents a few informal and mixed opinions that include the following not terribly conclusive observation, "the fact that he's not an architect bothered me." It doesn't bother me, but that's besides the point. I feel that the Dean's 13 years of struggling to balance conflicting priorities of students and faculty within the school, the professions we represent, the University and State—especially in the past few difficult years—deserves something better than pale-yellow journalism.
Harris Stone Professor of Architecture
Access to computers increased by phones
in a front-page article in Friday's paper, Jerry Niebaum, the director of Academic Computing Services, indicated that the logjam at the Computer Center could be alleviated by the use of various satellite computer labs on campus. Undoubtedly these labs would help, but I would like to suggest a lower-cost solution: increase the number of high-speed dial-in phone lines. More and more students and staff members have personal computers these days, either at home or in their dorm rooms, and they could easily accomplish much work by simply dialing up the Computer Center with a modem. The advantage to the University by providing these phone lines is that for every student and staff person who uses a home computer instead of one on campus, a machine at the Computer Center is freed up for someone else to use! This must also be a great saving to the University since dial-in phone lines are surely less expensive than computers to purchase and maintain. In addition, the university-wide and even global communication opportunities that are provided by these phone connections have
tremendous educational and research value and should be encouraged in their own right. So doesn't increasing the number of dial-in phone lines seem like a good thing? One might think so, but, unfortunately, the folds at Academic Computing Services appear to believe the opposite. Recently, they have actually decreased the number of dial-in phone lines and have made the high-speed lines accessible only to those willing to pay an extra fee. Does this policy provide any incentive to purchase one's own computer? Does it help to break up the computer logjam? Does it better equip us to participate in the rapidly approaching Information Age? I don't think so.
Gordon C. Ward Lawrence Graduate Student
KU connection gone with parking stickers
Having relatives in Des Moines and Omaha, I do a fair amount of travel during the holidays. I inevitably, whenever I am in one of those cities, the Jayhawks are playing either in a football or a basketball game. I prefer to watch the Jayhawks play when I'm at games with other Jayhawks. Realizing that this is not always possible, I always have enjoyed seeing other cars with KU parking stickers (white, yellow, red and blue) in those distant cities. When I would see a car that had a KU sticker, I felt like I wasn't the only person rooting for the Jayhawks. It was a warm feeling to see those little stickers — something in common with a stranger miles from the icon that provides the bond.
It just dawned on me that because the new hang-tags offered by parking services must be removed when not in use, I will not be able to spot other Jayhawks when I'm away from Lawrence. Somehow, something so basic, yet so influential (to me) is no longer going to be a part of my affiliation with KU. I guess this is a sign that I should join the Alumni Association so as to guarantee that, no matter where I'm at (within reason), I know that I can see another Jayhawk.
Lee Alderman
Des Moines graduate student
Professor suggests formation of union
If the rationale outlined by our Executive Vice Chancellor for KU's new romantic or sexual relations policy is a good one, then here is a good rationale for having a faculty union: as long as there is no union, KU's top administrators can arbitrarily impose whatever they wish as conditions for employment.
Artural Skintore
Associate professor of philoso-
Campus is obstacle for disabled students
This summer I was in an accident and now have a rod inside my leg. I am temporarily using a cane, which I've found is difficult on this campus. The holes, loose gravel and cracks in the sidewalks are constant obstacles for my cane. Stairs are a challenge as well. Many sets of stairs have no handrails or handrails on only one side.
I try to walk without my cane to avoid these problems but it is painful. I limp badly and am self-conscious when others stare at me. So I use the cane and wonder of other disabled students, whether they be temporarily or permanently disabled, are frustrated as well.
Jennifer Douglas Favetteville. Ark.. senio
Fayetteville, ARL, senior Skateboarders need safe places to ride
Skateboarding and in-line skating are continuing problems on the University campus and in Lawrence. The University or city should provide a public recreational facility for those who wish to participate in these sports. A public facility would give riders an alternative to campus, city streets and parking lots. It would separate them from pedestrians, automobiles and other dancers.
Damage from skateboarding and in-line skating is created when large groups ride at locations throughout the campus and city, not at one time by juveniles. As long as there is no place for skateboarders and in-line skaters to ride safely, these problems will continue to exist.
Matthew Brown Lawrence junior
Monthly Expense Income
Rent 725 1915
Telephone 6032 889
Gas 60
Electricity 4568
Car Loan 240
Student Loans 175
Insurance 125
Credit Cards 165
Overdrafts (CNY) 189
Discounto 300
Entertainment 100
Lothes 50
Industrial 140 275
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6
Thursday, September 16, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
GOOD FOR A FREE EXTRA LARGE CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIE limit one cookie per coupon (with sub or pasta purchase) expires 10/15/93 MR. GOODCENTS 15th & Kasold Orchard Corners Shopping Center Lawrence, KS 841-8444 WE DELIVER! OPEN DAILY 10:30 a.m.-11:00 p.m.
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Hilackers brandishing grenades and explosives forced a Russian jetliner with 52 people aboard to land in Norway yesterday. Police said the air pirates, believed to be Iranians, then asked for political asylum.
After the plane landed at the sealed-off and darkened Gardermoen charter airport, one man left the jet, and was driven to the control tower in a Civil Aviation Board car, the national news agency, NTB reported. He was driven back in five minutes and reboarded.
Air pirates hijack Russian jet, force landing in Norway
The Tupolev-134 jet was en route from Azerbaijan when it was seized over southern Russia. It was forced to land near Kiev to take on fuel and an English-speaking Ukrainian navigator, before flying to Norway.
The pilot, Capt. Mikhail Osavin, reported that the hijackers threatened the crew with hand grenades and explosives, said a Russian security representative, Alexei Zakharov.
It was Norway's first hijacking since 1985, when a drunken, 24-year-old Norwegian commanded a domestic flight with an air pistol. He surrendered after arriving in Oslo.
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An anti-war radical who spent 23 years as a fugitive from a fatal bank robbery surrendered yesterday, after throwing a going-away party at which she revealed her identity to her friends.
Somali gunmen wounded 11 United Nations peacekeepers yesterday in an unusually bold daylight mortar attack on their capital compound, a U.N. representative said.
She pleaded guilty before Suffolk Superior Judge Robert Banks to reduced charges of manslaughter and two counts of armed robbery.
But Maj. David Stockwell, a U.N. representative, said the daylight mortar attacks could signal a new phase of the assault on U.N. peacekeepers. He noted that mortars have often been fired at the U.N. headquarters, but only at night.
Two Italian peacekeepers, meanwhile, were shot dead while jogging in Mogadishu's sport area, Italy's Defense Ministry said from Rome.
Mortar attacks by Somalia also killed a Somali child and wounded 17 other Somalis, U.N. peacekeepers said. And in a separate encounter, helicopter-borne American forces killed two Somali militiamen.
THE NEWS in brief
The State Department warned Americans not to travel in the country after receiving reports that Somali warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid has ordered his militia to take U.S. citizens hostage if
The 11 wounded peacekeepers suffered only minor injuries.
MOGADISHU, Somalia U.N. peacekeepers wounded
Stockwell said the attackers who fired on the U.N. compound yesterday were believed to be followers of Aldid.
Katherine Ann Power, 44, who has lived quietly with her husband and son in Oregon while working as a cook and restaurant owner, surrendered yesterday morning.
he is captured.
Power was wanted in connection with the Sept.
23, 1970, killing of Boston police Officer Walter
Schroeder Sr., 42, during a bank holdup. She was a senior at Brandeis University at the time
BOSTON
Bankfugitive comes forward
928 Massachusetts-Downtown
Compiled from the Associated Press
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Receipts from cash or check purchases are eligible for a 6% rebate at the Customer Service counters of the KU Bookstores.
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KU student I.D. required for rebate.
Spring semester rebates (period 93) are available until Dec. 30, 1993. Computer hardware purchases are not eligible.
Other restrictions may apply.
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students
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V
cartoon crazy
C
some adults find their interest in 'toons increases as they get older
t
ricycles, stuffed animals,
Silly Putty and
cartoons. Kid stuff,
left behind upon
entering the adult
world. Well, almost.
Cartoons continue to
hold the attention of
both young and old.
They have mathtub
"I've been watching
cartoons as long as I can remember," said Steven Kirk, Lebo freshman. "My first favorites were 'The Flintstones' and 'The Jetsons."
Now Kirk watches both new and old animated characters. "I really liked Liquid TV on MTV but it hasn't been on for awhile," Kirk said. "I watch 'Ren and Stimpy' sometimes, but the all-time classics have to be Looney Tunes and the Charlie Brown specials."
Kirk said he has continued to watch the animated shows which hold his attention. "It has to be original and off the wall," he said. "The Simpsons' were pretty good for a while, when they were new, but they came and went."
No one knows the exact trends that animated characters will follow, how long they will be popular in the marketplace, or why they are so appealing to college students.
"Right now sales of T-shirts and other merchandise run pretty much across the board," said Greg Guenther, owner of The Palace, Eighth and Massachusetts streets. "We've gotten a lot of requests for 'Beavis and Butthead' from college students."
Guenther said most college students like cartoon characters because they are different. "They're obnoxious, too," he said, laughing.
"Anything new piques the curiosity of the public," Guenther said. "Trends come and go because of the market. When something new comes out it's popular. When everybody's got it the market gets saturated and the edge wears off."
Guenther said that Simpsons products were popular for about a year before popularity dwindled. Sales of Ren and Stimpy stuffed animals have remained steady. Despite a fickle public, Guenther said some products remain reliable sellers.
"Among college students Looney Tunes, Bugs Bunny, that sort of thing, has stayed popular." Guenther said.
Mickey Mouse also continues to be an old favorite. "Our most popular Mickey item is a line of gift wrap," Guenther said.
Robin Schillaci, Chicago senior, first became interested in animation when she saw "Alice in Wonderland" as a child.
"I like Disney movies because of the realism that Disney tries to achieve," she said. "The movies are a work of art; the drawings are so well done and the characters are amazing."
Like Kirk, Schollci includes newer cartoons in her viewing library. "Like 'Ren and Stimpy' because they have stills," Schollci said. "They focus on something gross for a period of time, like there might be a still of throw up, but it's done in watercolor."
- Schillact is not as impressed with the quality of animation on "Beavish and Butthead," but has watched the show anyway. "It's humor people can relate to," she said. "They're gross and they say whatever they want."
Schillaci said the monotony of a
show quickly makes it wear thin. "Beavis and Butthead" first came out on 'Liquid TV' and I thought it was hysterical," she said. "When it became something regular on MTV there were only about three shows and they played it everyday. Now there are more so I guess they're trying to keep up with the demand."
Copyrighted characters are not the only popular cartoons among diehard animation fans. Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., sometimes showcases animation festivals. The purpose is to feature several animated short films, put together to make one movie.
"Most of the films are
Most of the times,long,"said Liberty Hall employee Tim Griffith. "One of the more popular trends is computer animation,probably because it's easier to make.Drawing something frame by frame takes a lot of time."
Griffith said a film must be funny in order to hold the audience's attention. "Once it's out on video it's not as popular." he said.
The last full-length animated feature shown at Liberty Hall was "Fantasia." It received only a fair response, Griffith said, mainly because it had already hit the video market.
For fans like Schillaci, interest in cartoon characters never goes away. "I'm more into it now than I was as a child," she said. "I've bought two stills from Disney films and two of "The Simpsons."
Schillack said she plans to continue adding to her animation library.
of
Characters copyright Warner Bros. Inc.
story bY jL watson
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Renaissance Festival lends thespian stage for his art.
By Sara Bennett
Kansanstaff writer
James Hilburn spends his weekends these days wandering about in tights and wearing a diaper in a human chess match. Hilburn might be arrested for such behavior on the streets of Lawrence. But at the Renaissance Festival, he fits right in.
Hilburn, an Overland Park junior, is a member of the New Renaissance Festival Acting Company, a troupe of 16 performers who travel throughout the festival doing scenes by Shakespeare. The company also presents a murder mystery, a human chess match in which Hilburn plays the Greek wrestler Hepatitis, and a mechanical show where he plays a lion.
Founded in 1977 as a benefit for the Kansas City Art Institute, the Renaissance Festival, 628 N. 128th St. in Bonner Springs, uses over 450 performers and artisans to recreate a 17th century English village complete with jousters, wandering troubadours and a king and queen. The festival runs every weekend through Oct. 17. Admission is $10.75 for adults and $9.75 for students.
"it's kind of like a big dead-head festival," he said, referring to a underground culture inspired by the rock group The Grateful Dead. "It's cammy and you get to dress up."
Hilburn said he enjoys the festival's atmosphere.
"We wanted to create a historically accurate traveling theater group," she said. "At that time, actors went from village to village."
Holly McQueen / KANSAN
Robin Mesh, assistant entertainment director for the festival said the New Renaissance Festival Acting Company was created this year to steal patrons a taste of Renaissance theater.
James Hilburn, Overland ParkJunior, portrays a lion in the Royal Court Feast at the Renaissance Festival in Bonner Springs.
Hilburn, who had a small role in lastyear'sfestival, auditioned for the new acting troupe because he is an avid Shakespeare fan. He recently transferred to KU from the University of Missouri at Kansas City where he studied Shakespearean drama.
"I love Shakespeare," he said. "I used to sit around with my friends, grab a play and go through it to have a little fun on a Friday night because we were broke."
ence. He spent three years with the now defunct Laughing Stock improvisational comedy group in Kansas City, and is part of the fledgling Super Chums comedy troupe, which will have its first performance at the Renegade Theater, 518 East Eighth St., in November.
Hilburn also has extensive theater experi-
Mesh said Hilburn's physical and vocal energy helped to cast him in the acting company.
"He's very dynamic," she said. "His vocal quality draws attention. He's a very good comedic actor as well."
while not performing in the murder mystery or chess match, Hilburn and the his fellow thespians performed throughout the festival, relating with each other and with the patrons. So they had to invent impromptu acts, or "shticks" as Hilburn calls them. He said a slap fight he does with former KU student Eric Davis is a favorite with children.
Once cast in the company, Hilburn went to English dialect class, bought a pair of tights and puffy pants and dove into his roles.
"We'd just finished the chess match and I was pushing the prop cart," he explained. "These kids saw some swords and wanted us to have a sword fight with them. They had these little wooden swords, so we did the slap fight for them. They were like, 'That is so cool' and they went away practicing it."
Although he is majoring in communications rather than theater, Hilburn said performing at the Renaissance Festival has him thinking of continuing acting.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
"I'm tossing around the idea of doing it for a career," he said. "I love acting. I keep coming back to it."
But would he consent to wearing tights again? "The tights aren't that bad once you get used to them," he said.
KULIFE
People and places at the University of Kansas..
calendar
NIGHTLIFE
Benchwarmers Sports Bar & Grill 1601 W. 23rd St.
2004 W. 23rd St.
Bang Prophets, formerly Lost Bets, 9 p.m.
Thursday
Baghdad Jones, 9 p.m. Friday
Mango Jam, 9 p.m. Saturday
The Crossing
12th and Oread
Which Doctors, 9 p.m. Friday
Deb Girnius, 9 p.m. Saturday
Dos Hombres
Dos Hommes
815 New Hampshire St.
Eight Men Out, 9 p.m. Friday
The Jazzhaus
926 1/2 Massachusetts St.
Sun Sawed In Half, 9:30 p.m. Thursday
Ida McBeth, 9:30 p.m. Friday, Saturday
Rick's Neighborhood Bar & Grill 623 Vermont St. Lonesome Hobos, 9:30 p.m. Saturday
Free State Brewing Co.
Free State Brewing Co.
636 Massachusetts St.
Free State Jazz Quartet, 7 to 9 p.m. Friday
The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire
Crap Supper with Truck Stop Love, 10 p.m.
Thursday
Iain Matthews, 7 p.m. Friday, Killer Bees, 10
p.m.
Soul Hat with L.A. Ramblers, 10 p.m. Saturday
Hockenbury's Tavern
1016 Massachusetts St.
New Riddim, 10 p.m. Thursday, $3
Bo Diddley, 7, 10 p.m. Friday, $14
Lonesome Hound Dogs, 10 p.m. Saturday, $4
Acoustic open mic, 10 p.m. Sunday, no cover
MOVIES
Cinema Twin
31st and low streets
31st and lowe streets
Made In America (PG-13), 7:20, 9:30 p.m.
Thursday
Dennis The Menace (PG), 5, 7:30, 9:30 p.m.
Thursday
What's Love Got To Do With It (R), 5, 7:20,
9:40 p.m. Thursday
Hilicrost Theater
Ninth and Iowa streets Heart and Souls (PG-13), 5:15, 7:15, 9:30 p.m. Thursday In the Line of Fire (R), 5, 7:20 and 9:40 p.m. Thursday
See CALENDAR. Page 8.
8
Thursday, September 16, 1993
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Sat., Sept. 18, midnight
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Line of Fire R 7.29, 9.40
The Real McCoy PG-13 7.15, 9.40
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Made in America PG-13 7.80/8.80
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By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
Decentralization of the research fund will allow each professional school and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences to disburse money directly from the fund to the school's faculty members, said Morris Faiman, professor of pharmacology and toxicology and co-chairman of the General Research Fund Committee
The Faculty Executive Committee approved the final part of the five-year decentralization plan of the general research fund yesterday.
Faiman, who presented the plan said the entire allocation system of the research fund had been changed.
---
Each professional school will be called a unit, and the college will be divided into five units: physical sciences, biological sciences, behavioral sciences, social sciences and humanities.
$25
Each unit will have five faculty members to review the unit's research grant proposals. The unit will use the proposals as a base and
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FacEx completes 5-year research fund planning
30 minute sessions Wolff beds
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In other actions taken, SenEx. requested the Calendar Committee to limit the number of night exams on the Fall 1994 schedule and also allow students to have a day off from their next class period if they had a night test.
Andrew Debicki, distinguished professor of Spanish and Portuguese and Faiman will present the revised plan to FacEx during its Nov. 4 meeting. FacEx will review the plan and send it to University Council.
FacEx approved of the decentralization of the research fund for this year only. The research committee will fine tune the plan and send it back to FacEx.
exp.9/29
Srinivasan said it was not written in University Senate Rules and Regulations that students had to have a day off after a night exam.
BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility
SenEx sent its recommendations back to the Calendar Committee and requested the committee send its changes back to SenEx in final form by Nov. 1. The deadline was set so the changes could be published on the Fall 1994 schedule.
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request the needed amount of money from the fund.
This year, the units will receive the same amount of money as last year.
The allocation of money will also be increased or decreased by 10 percent depending on the success level of the unit. The new amount will be the base for next year's success rate check.
During the next two years, a unit's success rate will determine how much money it gets. Success will be measured by criteria defined by each unit, such as how many private funds are raised.
Faiman said the decentralization would not please everyone.
T. P. Srinivasan, head of the University Senate Executive Committee, said the new review process had more integrity because each unit reviewed its own plans.
"Obviously nothing is going to be perfect," he said. "There are advantages and disadvantages to the current plan."
He said a disadvantage of the plan was a lack of insulation between conflicting faculty interests.
Continued from Page 7
CALENDAR: What's going on this weekend
Sleepless in Seattle (PG), 5, 7:15,
9:30 p.m. Thursday
Fortress (R), 5:15, 7:30, 9:30
p.m. Thursday
The Real McCoy (PG-13), 5, 7:15,
9:45 p.m. Thursday
Varsity Theatre
1015 Massachusetts St.
Needful Things (R), 5, 7:20, 9:45
p.r.n. Thursday
Dickinson Theaters
2339 Iowa
The Fugitive (PG-13), 4:10, 7:05
and 9:55 p.m., with a 1:15, 4:10.
Calendar Girl (PG-13), 4:35, 7:10 and 9:40 p.m. Friday, with a 2:10, 4:35, 7:10 and 9:40 p.m. Saturday, Sunday
7:05 and 9:55 p.m. on Saturday,
Sunday
The Secret Garden (G), 4:30, 7, 9:25 p.m., with a 2:05 ,4:30, 7 and 9:25 p.m.on Saturday, Sunday
Man Without a Face (PG-13),
4:15,7 and 9:30 p.m., with a 2,
4:15,7 and 9:30 p.m. on Saturday, Sunday
True Romance (R), 4:20, 7:15 and
9:50 p.m., with a 1:20, 4:20,
7:15 and 9:50 p.m. Saturday,
Sunday
Jayhawk
Bookstore
Undercover Blues (PG-13), 4:25,
7:25, 9:35 p.m., with a 2:10,
4:25, 7:25 and 9:35 p.m. Saturday.
Sunday
Manhattan Murder Mystery (PG),
4:30, 7:10 and 9:40 p.m., with a
2, 4:30, 7:10 and 9:40 p.m. Saturday,
Sunday
Liberty Hall Cinema 642 Massachusetts
The Firm (R), 5, 8:30 p.m.
Much Ado About Nothing (PG-13),
4:45, 7:15, 9:30 p.m.
Orlando (PG-13), 5:15, 7:15, 9:15
p.m., with an additional 3:15 on
Saturday, Sunday
SUA MOVIES
"Your Book Professionals"
"At the top of Naismith Hill"
Hrs: 8-5:30 M-Th., 8-5 Fri, 9-Sat. 12-4 Sun. 843-3826
A Few Good Men (R), 7, 9:30 p.m. Friday, Saturday, with a 2 p.m. Sunday
Monty Python's The Meaning Of Life (R), midnight Friday, Saturday All movies are screened at Woodruff Auditorium, level 5 in the Kansas Union.
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 16, 1993
9
Seniors choose brains over bucks
UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS
Tom Leininger/ KANSAN
Players decline money to remain at KU for degrees
Kansas pitcher David Meyer, left, center fielder Darryl Monroe and pitcher Chris Corn all decided to return for their senior years at Kansas instead of signing major league contracts.
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Education vs. professional baseball.
For a 21-year-old college baseball player, it is a tough decision to make. He could take the money and pursue a lifetime dream or stay in school and earn his degree.
Kansas baseball players Darryl Monroe, Chris Corn and David Meyer all were offered contracts from professional baseball teams, but they chose to stay at Kansas for their senior seasons.
"Those three really exemplify the type of athletes we try to produce in our program," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "To turn down that kind of money for a 21-year-old is amazing. If we've educated them to make strong decisions about their future, we've done our job."
All three were offered signing bonuses beyond the base salary for minor league players. All three said finishing their education was more important.
The Montreal Expos drafted Monroe in the 21st round and offered him $20,000 to sign a contract. He said no.
"I was disappointed that they didn't want to negotiate," Monroe said. "I thought since I had wanted to sign, they would have tried to."
Bingham said the three players were career-oriented, whether it be behind a desk or playing baseball.
"What has happened so many times in the past is the infatuation with getting to the major leagues is overwhelming." Bingham said.
Monroe's dream of improving and playing at a higher level of competition became a reality when he came to Kansas and played with Big Eight talent every day.
"You can improve every year you play, whether you play in college or in the pros," Monroe said. "I still have goals for things I haven't done yet at Kansas. I want to hit a few more doubles."
Confidence in the outfield also is something Monroe wants to work on this year, he said.
"Ever since I can remember, I've always seen it as a goal," Monroe said. "When you get the confidence that you can play with the best players in the country, that's 90 percent of the battle."
Monroe is not the only player with goals to reach before trying the major leagues.
Corn said he wanted to continue to work on his confidence on the mound. He was drafted by the San Diego Padres in the 80th round and was offered a $25,000 signing bonus. He said no.
"I pretty much wanted $75,000," Corn said. "Then it would have been a tougher decision.
Van Smith, San Diego's scout for this
region, said he and other scouts had all three players on their draft lists. The Padres' philosophy for juniors interested in a professional career is to sign a contract as soon as possible, he said. But at Kansas, academics are another factor to consider.
"Everybody that I've talked to from Kansas is proud of their institution," Smith said. "But people should understand that if a kid signs after his junior year, he's not a communist."
Meyer was picked in the 44th round by the Toronto Blue Jays. Toronto offered a $67,000 signing bonus and to pay his tuition until he graduated. He said no.
"It was in my best interests to come back," Meyer said. "I needed to develop a consistent breaking ball. Kansas is much
more conducive to learning that pitch than the minor leagues."
Meyer said he went to many people for advice. Unlikely sources wanted him to take the money and play - his parents.
"My parents were pro-getting into the major leagues," Meyer said. "I had to convince them that I wasn't turning down an opportunity."
Bingham said he told all of them it was not enough money to give up school.
Meyer also went to Bingham for advice.
"It's going to be harder and harder for us to convince them to stay as the money gets larger," Bingham said. "I just tell them to make sure there is a career waiting for them, whether it be academics or athletics."
Chicago rally puts Royals 7 games out
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Lance Johnson met a hitter's delight in the 11th inning last night—the bases were loaded and the infield drawn in.
The loss crippled the Royals' pennant hopes while Chicago maintained a 3/12 game lead in the AL West.
He nailed a two-run single, and the Chicago White Sox batted around, picking up four runs to beat Kansas City 10-6.
"We dug down and won two of three in the series and that's what we wanted to do and what we needed to do."
"It was a typical bases-loaded situation," Johnson said. "It's real easy to hit in that situation.
The White Sox now will fly to Oakland for three games and then play four against California before returning home to face second-place Texas.
"We left Chicago 3 1/2 games ahead, and we leave here 3 1/2 ahead," White Sox manager Gene Lamont said. "Kevin Appier beat us that first game, and we were looking at guys like Mike Magnante and David Cone. Magnante's record might not be that good, but he's been tough on us. Day-by-day, game-by-game, it gets tougher to catch us."
Kansas City fell to seven games behind with 17 left to play in the season. The Royals also will head to the West Coast to play Seattle and Oakland.
Tim Raines doubled, sending two more runs home in the 11th against Mark Gubicza (4-7).
Chicago reliever Roberto Hernandez (2-4) earned the victory, giving up two hits in 2-2-3 innings — his longest outing of the year.
Gubicza walked Frank Thomas who led off the 11th inning spree. Robin Ventura then singled and Steve Sax bunted the runners to second and third. Ellis Burks was intentionally walked, loading the bases, and Johnson followed with a single that bounced just past the glove of diving shortstop Greg Gagne. Raines doubled for his fourth hit of the game one out later.
Kansas City had tied the game in the bottom of the ninth on Hubie Brooks' one-out sacrifice fly off of Hernandez. The White Sox had taken the lead in the top of the ninth on Burks' RBI single against AL saves' leader Jeff Montgomery.
Kids' game places 'red light'on player
Chicago jumped ahead 5-3 in the fifth when Thomas doubled home Joey Cora for his 75th base hit of the year, breaking the club record of 74 set by Shoeless Joe Jackson in 1920.
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
This is no laughing matter.
The Kansas football team has been hit with a rash of injuries on the field this season, and now the injury bug is stinging them in the classroom, too.
Jones' status for Saturday's game at Memorial Stadium against Utah is unknown. He has not practiced the last two days.
Starting left tackle Rod Jones hurt his shoulder in Theater and Film 105, Improvisation, Tuesday while playing the children's game "red light, green light."
"In my job you've got to keep asking questions," Kansas coach Glen Mason said. "When it was first told to me, I said 'He did what?' I thought it was some type of theatrical act, but as I kept asking questions, it came down to 'He was playing red light, green light.'"
The Jayhawks' coach has had bad experiences with the "red light, green light" game before.
Mason, who has a master's degree in education from Ball State, taught a physical education class to play "red light, green light" while he was completing a student teaching requirement for a bachelor's degree at Ohio State. It was an experience he has not forgotten.
"I thought I did a heck of a job, but my observer at Ohio State University ripped me about what I did and being so aggressive yelling 'red light' and scarring that kid," Mason said. "Since that day, I hate that game 'red light, green light.' Thate it even worse now because I might lose a player for a week because of it."
Mason yelled out "red light" so loud that one child in the class started to cry.
Injuries limit effectiveness of linebackers
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas linebacker corps earned recognition in the preseason by The Sporting News as the sixth-best group in the country.
The ranking was based on the hard-working and overachieving ability the group displayed last season when it led the Big Eight Conference in rushing defense.
However, two of the players the publication noted in giving the Jayhawk linebackers a high ranking missed the first two games of the season because of injuries.
Juniors Don Davis and Steve Harvey returned from their injuries last week at Michigan State, and they hope to help the Jayhawk linebackers live up to their advance billing.
Davis was out four weeks after he sprained his right knee during two a-day workouts in August. Harvey ruptured his right Achilles tendon in April while jogging across the field during a spring practice workout.
15
Holly McQueen / KANSAN
Both players originally were expected to be out for a longer period of time. For Davis it was supposed to be six to eight weeks.
"I never accepted that I would miss six to eight weeks like the doctors told the coaches," Davis said. "It wasn't too much of a surprise because I saw myself playing against Michigan State."
Team doctors told Kansas coach Glen Mason after the injury occurred that Harvey would miss at least six to 12 months. Mason said he was surprised when Harvey returned to action five months after the injury.
"I counted him out. I mean it, he would not play this year," Mason said. "The medical staff said they wouldn't know anything on him until game six, which in my mind was too late."
Harvey was not cleared to practice at the beginning of fall practice, but healed quickly, and the medical staff gave him the clearance to play last week against the Snartans.
"I was surprised that I healed fast, but I expected I'd be out six months," Harvey said.
Junior linebacker Don Davis catches a pass during a team practice at Memorial Stadium.
Mason said both players looked "awfully rusty" in their season debates against the Spartans.
"Steve looked like he's been out of action for nine months," he said. "There were a couple of plays where he missed tackles near the line of scrimmage that he'd usually make."
Davis played fairly well for his ability. Mason said, but was sloppy because of the preseason practice he missed.
Both players said they were not limited by their injuries in their return to action last week.
"I don't even feel the brace," Davis said. "It's a small, mobile brace that really doesn't limit me at all as long as I don't allow it to limit me."
Harvey said he felt rusty but was getting more work in practices this week.
"I'm getting more practice repetitions and contact work now," Harvey said. "I really didn't feel or seemed bothered by the injury out there on the field."
6
Junior linebacker Steve Haney works on his quickness in a practice drill at Memorial Stadium. The Jayhawks practiced yesterday in preparation for Saturday's game.
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Golfers set to tee off season in style
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas golf team will start its season this weekend on a course designed by professional golfer Jack Nicklaus when it competes in the annual Jack Nicklaus Invitational in Columbus, Ohio.
Kansas coach Ross Randall called Nicklaus' Murfield Golf Course one of the best in the nation, and senior Matt Gogel said it was one of the best courses he had ever played.
Gogel and senior John Hess both know the course well. Gogel played there when Kansas participated in the tournament two years ago. Hess played on the course during the 1992 U.S. Amateur Tournament. He said the course was both challenging and scenic.
The format of the Nicklaus Invitational will be different from most college tournaments. Individual golfers' scores will be used to determine individual winners, but team standings will be determined by matches. Teams will be paired on the course to play against one another. The lower scoring team will advance to the winners' bracket for the next round.
"If you don't win in the first match, the best you can do is seventh place."
Losing teams will be paired in the losers' bracket.
Kansas is seeded fourth in the tournament and will face Georgia Southern on Sunday in the first round.
"It's important we do well in the first match," Randall said. "If you don't win in the first match, the best you can do is seventh place."
Gogel said the team was ready for its first tournament of the season, although he and many of his teammates already had competed in off-season tournaments.
Unique tournament structure The Kansas golf team will be participating in an unconventional tournament this weekend.
Hess said he did not like the period
Round 1
Duke - Hawaii
Ohio St. - Alabama Birmingham
Texas A&M - Furman
Kansas - Georgia Southern
Auburn - Northwestern
UCLA - Southern Methodist
Winning teams
Play a round - losing teams take places 3 - 6, winning teams go on
18
Winning teams
Play for top three spots
Losing teams
Play a round to determine places 7 - 12
Source: Kansan Staff Reports
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
of inactivity from the summer to the first tournament of the season.
"You get into the mode of competition every week," Hess said. "When school hits, things slow down."
Randall said the tournament's 12 team field would provide a challenging start for his team.
The format, he said, could give small teams a chance to compete against
the strongest teams in the tournament.
"If a team gets hot and plays well for a day, they can knock someone off and end up playing in the higher bracket," Randall said.
Gogel said the only problem with the format was that the players were not used to it. But he said it would not alter the way the team prepared for the tournament.
Optical Dispensary VISIONS 841-7421
ATHLETIC
Grouptown
CLUB.INC
Special Student
Memberships!
Lawrence's Only Total Athletic Club
✓
US OUT!
Graystone Athletic Club
2500 W 6th 841-7230
Tonight at 7:00 pm Special after-hours in-store! Scotti Bros. recording artists,
Truck Stop Love
free free free Love Garden Sounds 936 1/2 Mass. St. (upstairs) 843 1557
843-1551 "in the heart of downtown"
*free UPSTANDS
We sell Frisbees • We sell Darts
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
1029 Massachusetts 841-PLAY(7529)
Put some performance into your drive.
Microsoft WORD
Microsoft WORD
25% OFF
Microsoft EXCEL
for the business
Microsoft Works
Microsoft Word $99^{00}
Microsoft
Excel
$165^{00}
Microsoft Works $115^{00}
union technology center KU VISA MasterCard DISCOVER
KU
APPLE
Academic Computer Supplies & Equipment
Burge Union • Level 3 • 913/864-5690
IT WON THE AWARDS. IT WILL WIN YOUR HEART.
THE SECRET GARDEN
IT WON THE AWARDS.
IT WILL WIN YOUR HEART.
THE SECRET GARDEN
At the Lied Center
University of Kansas
THE SUNGARDEN
At the Lied Center
University of Kansas
THE LIFE GAME
THE LION CENTER OF STUDIO
September 29 (KU Student Night) - October 3
Wednesday-Saturday performances at 8:00 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday matinees at 2:00 p.m.
Sunday evening at 7:00 p.m.
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office; all seats reserved;
tickets $35 and $30;
special discounts available.
To charge tickets by phone using MasterCard or Visa call 864-ARTS; or call any Ticketmaster outlet (816) 931-3330 or (913)234-4545.
TICKETS AT:
TICKETMASTER
KU STUDENT TICKETS HALF PRICE FOR SEPTEMBER 29 PERFORMANCE ONLY! Student tickets also available at the SUA office, Kansas Union.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 16, 1993
11
BLUEBIRD ADVENTURES
LSAT
GRE
GMAT
MCAT
814 Massachusetts
Dine in or Carry-Out
843-BIRD
The most complete arsenal of test prep tools in the world. Classes forming now. 842-5442 KAPLAN RULES
Classified Directory
100s Announcements
200s Employment
Help Wanted
Professional Services
Typesing Service
108 Personal
119 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against persons of color, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 (FHA) and the Federal Emergency Management limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available.
I
100s Announcements
110 Bus. Personals
REMEMBER!
Costumes on 2nd floor for theme parties
and of course. Halloween. Come on up!
The Ec. Shop
928 KU-Downsownt
KU Women! Mary Kay Cosmetics free facial and
makeover. All new fall colors, personalized
selection. No obligation to purchase. 643-4280.
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
Hoops, Pendants & More!
For Guys and Gals
The Ec. Shop
928 KU-Downsownt
300s
Merchandise
Ruth & Kids Floral
832-0704, 935 E 23rd
M-F 9 to 7, Sat 9 to 5, Sun 1 to 3
WE ACCEPT VISA & MC
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8:40am-4:30pm
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
ATTENTION ROLE -PLAYING GAMES. Graduate student seeks other graduate students or professors to form role-playing gaming group. Please call 865-4361.
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Tuesday 8am-9pm
Wednesday 8am-12pm
Saturday 8am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
120 Announcements
COMMUTERS: Self serve Car Pool Exchange.
Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
Dog training classes with Lawrence Jawkewn Hyakwent Club. $25 for 10 weeks. Wednesday nights at National Guard Armory. Registration: 7:30pm 15pt (No Dog). Info call 842-6848.
400s Real Estate
408 Real Estate
430 Roommate
Wanted
FRATRS SORORITES! STUDENT GROUPS!
Raise as much as You want In one Week!
*
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358-
Market Applications for VISA, MASTERCARD,
MCI, AMOCO, etc. call for your FREE T-SHIRT
and to qualify for a FREE TRIP to MTV SPRING
BREAK 94.
Call 1-800-950-1039, ext.75.
K-unity is going to Winfield! Call Scott for more info: 843-8247
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
380 Want to Buy
CHRISTMAS SKI BREAKS
LODGING • LEFTS • PARTIES • PICNICS • TAXES
JANUARY 2-16, 1994 • 5, 6 or 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT* $199
from
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK*
TELLURIDE
FREE 1/2 DAY
LIFT TICKET!
MUST BOOK BY 10/15
Suncheese
BREWERY
FREE 1/2 DAY
LIFT TICKET!
MUST BOOK BY 10/15
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
1-800-SUNCHASE
NEED A RIDE/RIDER? Use the Self Serve Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
Students who wish to student teach the spring semester (GCP included) must attend the student teaching course. Please visit p.m. in 303 Bailey. This meeting is mandatory. Preliminary information is available in 117 Bailey. TUTORS: List your name with us. We refer students to you. Students Assistance Center 133 Stroud.
VOLUNTEER IN THE FIGHT AGAINST AIDS
IN DAY SESSION September 8th, cell Bath at
DACP: 832-0000
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assessment Center, 133 Strong
130 Entertainment
ATTENTION WEEK OF ROCK FANS-The show is on! Jimmy Witherspoon is coming to town but his two shows on Sept. 27th have been moved up 1 hour to 7:30 pm and 10 pm. Get your Week of Rock passivity here! Listen to KLZR FM 105.9 for ticket giveaways. Remember all shows are 18 and over.
LOST BET
TONIGHT!
BENCHWARMERS
25¢ DRAWS!
BAGHDAD JONES
Friday Sept.17 BENCHWARMERS 2 For 1 Wells!
Bucky's drive in now taking applications for part-time employment. Flexible hourly. Apply in person btw. 10a.m. and 5PM. Bucky's drive in 9th and Iowa.
140 Lost & Found
Found - 1 WIB videotape on the sidewalk between Military Science and Malott. Call 864-1444 for aid or information.
Found, single key on the corner of Emery and
Sigma Nu Place. Call ask for Dave.
Lost stray white cat at 190h and Haskell Sunday morning Sept. 12 at laudromat. To the girl who took it home please respond back to UDK, box #15. The owners inquired about the cat.
Cater Caters, Kansas and Burge Union' Catering Department, September 28, 1993, 1:15pm; Cater Caters, Kansas and Burge Union' the opening of the Lafid Center. Apply at the Kansas and Burge Union' Personnel Office, Level 5, Kansas Union Building. Other dates available on catering listings available in Personnel Office.
Lost: Prescription glasses in gray case. Cash reward. Call 749-5041.
Found: Gold watch outside Robinson w/ inscription on back. call 841-739. ask for Rex.
200s Employment
Child care provider needed in person, First United
Mothcraft Church, 94 Vermont, 841-7500
205 Help Wanted
Red and blue jacket found in Smith Hall. Call 865-2611 to identify.
Counter help needed Sat 9-11. Answering phone and
languages. Apply in person at office
alarm? Attention 1003 Mae
Brandon Woods Retirement Community is curta-
tioned 4:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. shift. Above minimum wage pay. Must be hard working and willing to work weekdays and some holidays. Apply at 1891 Abbey Dr.
PRN, as needed, position now available in our DP area. Must have good knowledge of computer systems. Must be available for all shifts. Salary range is $8.44-$9.74 per hour.
Cottonwood Inc., a service providing for adults with developmental disabilities, is currently accepting applications for full and part-time employment in their residential division. All positions are evening and weekend hours, some may be on weekends or holidays. Applicants must exp. helpful, but may not be required. A good driving record is a must. Please apply at Cottonwood Inc., 2801 W.1st. EOE
If interested in the above positions, please apply to the Human Resources Department, Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma.
WALK-INS WELCOME!
CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING - Earn up to $5000 + / mo. + world travel Summer & career employment available. No experience necessary. For employment only. DEVELOPMENT/CONSTRUCTION CO. has part-time opening with flexible day hours for an office assistant. Chance for full-time summer employment and after graduation. Experience on job and training programs is needed, keeping experience starting. Start at $6.00 and up depending on experience and hours. Send resume to P. O. Box 3008, Lawrence, KS 66046. Attn:
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
Greenpeace is seeking dedicated, energetic individuals to work with our grasslands and wetlands. We are seeking volunteers + behaving full or part time. Call (816) 531-3884. Everyone is welcome regardless of gender, race, or sexual orientation.
Grace Church is looking for experienced childcare workers. Sunday morning hours are 8:15 to noon. References required. Call Kathy at 843-2005 for an interview time.
Kansas and Burge Unions hiring part-time, hourly for Fall Semester. Many jobs in Food Service, catering, food preparation, schedules Come to Personnel Office, Level 5, Kansas Union Building for job specifics. EOE
Help wanted. Adams 3 alums Center needs morning dishwasher 2 days a week, minimum wage, position available immediately, apply in person. 1766.Oread Avy
Work experience and a pay check too
The earnings potential in Lawrence is explosive
opportunity from your residence. Please call
us for more information.
Do you need work experience?
Did you have trouble making the income you needed this summer?
Vector Marketing can help you
842-8531
TUTORS
VECTOR $9.30 starting
Internships & Scholarships
now available.
Keyboard players wanted for variety dance band.
They have equipment and exp. MB
Entertainment Group
Miracle Video in accepting applications for a part-
ment call. Interval between 10: 30 and 3: 30. No phone calls please.
Need dependable care given for my 8 yr. old daughter, approx. 1 hr., early eve. 3' x w/bl, and possibly more. Must have own transportation. Call 841-7088 after 6 p.m.
Needed for Property Management Co. full time, experience preferred.
NANNIES. . spend a year near NYC with a NYC friend you call '1-800-858-170, anyone. "No feet."
Fast Cash $
$
send resume to P.O. Box 1832
Lawrence, KS 66044
The University of Kansas Athletic Department Student Support Services unit is currently accepting applications for part-time tutors during the summer. Applicants must have a GPA of 3.0 or better. Tutors must have Math, and other areas. Interested applicants must have at least twenty-one hours of course work in the subject area with a GPA of 3.0 or better. Tutors must have a course content and teaching the strategies expert learners use to acquire knowledge, experience academic success, and graduate. A complete application form is available on request. Salary: $6/hour with the potential for regular merit raises. Application procedures Complete the tutor application form, available online. Students located in Jayhawt Tower B at Room 227, Allen Fieldhouse. Hours of application are 9:00 a.m. to day through Thursday. The University of Kansas Equal Opportunity / Affirmative Action employer.
NABI Biomedical Center Introduces its Fall Special
By donating your life saving Plasma
• Walk in Today •
9-6 M-F 10-38at.
816 W 24th
749-5750
Part-time day and evening help wanted. Must be
on a Border Bandage 1528 W 323rd
at Border Bandage 1528 W 323rd
Earn $15 today
Earn $30 this week
University Information Center seeks student hourly who is motivated, familiar with KU and community resources, organized, computer-literate, good communicator, interested in helping other students with academic or humor. Pick up application at KU info. 420 Kansas Union. Applications due by 5 p.m. Sept. 10.
Position Available: A local business needs a person to do maintenance work including, lawn work, washing cars, cleaning, painting etc. Flexible schedule, but need 2-3 hours per day with possibly some weekend hours. Must have valid driver's license and be very responsible. Within walking distance of the internal office in an interview, please call 843-1120 and ask for Larry or Phil.
Earn $30 this week
Program Aide for the Lawrence Arts Center,
progressive education program and work
shops. Part time jobs. Afternoons and
weekends. Start immediately. Must be Kc
Career Work. Study qualified. Study at The
School of Arts.
Mass St. Deli or Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Previous food service and supervisory experience mandatory. Start at $2.55 per hour. Future pay raises based on performance. Up to $2.55 per hour. 20-3 hrs. a week. Mostly evenings and weekends. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. or 4:45-9:45 m.p., upstairs at Smokehouse.)
Part-time telephone marketer needed. No experi-
ience. Invo. no. 2000 E. 32rd, or
电话 no. 895-3114 Ask for Brands.
Wanted a very responsible person to babysit a baby old 23 days a week. Will work with your schedule. Please call: 749-3655. References required.
Work/Study positions open in Speech/Language/Hearing Clinic and Departments. Apply in 210 Haworth or 303 Dolle
225 Professional Services
PART TIME SUPERVISOR WANTED.
Mast St. Fluff to Ruffalo Bills Smokebone 1
For a confidential, caring friend. call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Birlight 813-4821. Free pregnancy testing.
Rainforest Montessori School is interviewing for a Late afternoon instructor-Experience in non-competitive games with elementary-aged children required. Fires: 11:55:30 M-W-Call: 844-8800.
LSAT EXPERTS KAPLAN
1-800-KAP-TEST
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
TRAPFIC-BOYS
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
THE LAW OF DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G Strole Sally Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Macintosh repairs and upgrades
Friendly, Affordable, In-Home Service
The Mac Doctors 842-0848
Prompt abortion and contraceptive services. Dale L. Clinton M.D. 841-5716.
GRE EXPERTS
KAPLAN
1-800-KAP-TEST
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
NAILTIQUE
Grand Opening! (Next to Ultimate Tan)
*Pedicures •BackScratchers
*Manicures •Linen Wraps
*Sculptured Nails •Overlays
$5.00 offfirst visit!
Call Heidi at 832-2900
235 Typing Services
CDE Desktop Publishing: Resumes, Cover Letters,
Brchicles, Flyers, Term Papers, Newsletters.
*l-der Women Word Processing. Former editor*
*l-der women in order to intoicate pages, letter*
*utility type.* 844-2083.
*word processing.* 844-2083.
ABSOLUTELY EXCELLENT EDITING! Dissertation and thesis experience. No paper too large or small.
X
powerbook 184/1/20
new in box $249.99
$32-137
Wedding ring set, ¼ karat round diamond sur-
rounded by marquia & baguettes. Retail value
$200, nailing for $3000 lisa. Lissa $325-234
WORD PROCESSING & USER PRINTING
For all your typing needs
you can print directly from
the PC.
Word processing, applications, term papers, dis-
tributes, job interviews. Master's degrees. 841-6254
r jobs available. Masters Degree. 841-6254
300s Merchandise
87 Caravaler, Auto, cruise, AC, PS sunroof, Kenwood Stereo, $3000, 945-288-37eve.
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
writers.
1995 Calton miles. Excellent condition. New
three hats cell phone
cellphone.
Wood Stereo, $3000, 842-288-Streve.
The Celica 760 miles. Excellent condition. New
1985 KAWA 600k Ninja "Frick paint, plenty of
penis" 600k-601v
1987 Honda Hurda 600cc red on white: Runs and looks great $2000.00; Calls 82-1400
1987 Gibson Les Paul Studio, wine color with gold hWAware, 6 months old, beautiful cost. $495.00
1986 Ford Tempo 4 d AT, AT, AC extra, $7500
or Call Bruce after 8:42 840-942-4973
360 Miscellaneous
Cheetah tickets: 4 Broncos, 2 Raiders, 4 Bengals, 1 Packers, 4 Bears, 6 Bills, and 4 Seahawks. Best offer. All are single seats but most are in same section. Call 843-3856.
370 Want to Buy
Quantrill's Flea Market open every Fri., Sat. & Sun 10AM-5PM 811 New Hampshire 842-6616 Downtown
LEVITS $501's will pay up to $13.00 and $10.00 for Levi's Jeans jeans $40.00
Wanted: used Trek 350/90 min. bike. Will pay
$120-$250 cash. Call 843-1683.
26" Women's Schwinn Word Sport bicycle excellent cond. Ridden 3 times $150,
BAW 3 way spikes DM5, Replaced woofers and
Motorcycle Cables CD 894-1281
Beds, desks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
934 Mass.
400s Real Estate
Full Fall Clearance: All adult tapes on sale $12.26 and
$15.99; All adult tapes on sale -8003, or Miracle
Video Too, 1910 Kandak, 941-7849.
GARAGE SALE 17-18 Sept.
Neons, Beer & Liquor Signs
I-70 East to I-43, South to
Johnson Drive, Ease and Quiver
Lane
For Sale: Dorn carpets $25-$39 each. Alpine carcins car stereo headphones for Canon Fone
Camera Calibre Kelab Reqb 750
Sublessing - Naisinith Room, I need paid for, call 849-1797. Leave message or ask for Kerry.
For Sale: Microwave $45, Brass Full-sized headbearer and Bothe Wordprocessor $300, Converter $199
For Sale: Student Football tickets
Must Sell-Best offer. 841-4370
One pair, Intuit Studio Monitor 132 Home Speakers.
Very nice speakers, well taken care of. Come with 5 yr. warranty. $650/pr. or o.b.o. $82-299 or
8-42-0606.
2 rooms for rent for non-fram. female(s) available
1. $200 + lift. Live 10 min. south of lawrence.
Private country home-kids and pets O.K. K 760818-
leave message.
$3 hrs 2 hrs apt for rent at Campus Place. Very close to campus. Resembles room #1. One female room. Includes laundry, kitchen, restroom, and parking.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS 2040 Heatherwood
*2 Bedroom, 1 1/2 Bath $425
*3 Bedroom, 2 Bath $550
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
Call Now!843-4754
- Byphone: 834-4358
How to schedule an ad:
3 bedroom, 3 bath available october 1 for sublease. $85 a month. Call 841-7484, leave message.
Available Immediately at West Hills Apts. 1012 Emery Rd, Spacious, one room, unfurnished room, pool, laundry, great location near campus. $39 per month, water paid. No Pets. 841-3804 or 842-3884.
430 Roommate Wanted
By Mail: 119 Starfur Flint, Lawrence, KS. 68045
Adobe phone in may be held by your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
phone number 411 589 0211
Stop by the Kansas office between 8 a. m. and 5 p. m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa.
Female. Grad. student roommate wanted to share a 2 bed petel. Great location. $215 + utilities. Call 763-894-0311.
Male roommate needed at Sundance $19/month. Water paid, furnished. Call after 7 p.m. 749-138-182. Responsible, non-smoking female roommate to a share f. 2 BIR apt. $185 + /util. Call 843-709-609. Cable + water Mandy furniture $3 bdr. sapi. Cable + water Mandy furniture on KU route. $165 + /util. 749-019-6
Female roommate to share beautiful new condo on bus ttl. No smoking/Nets. Oct 1-31; $825 + $250 off room.
You may print your classify order on the form below and nail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have billed to your MasterCard or VISA account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Classified information and order form
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of apile lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
When canceling a classified card that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled cards that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00.
Name. of insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
Please print your ad one word per box
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.
Cost per line per day
1X 1.25 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30+X
2.05 1.55 1.05 .85 .75 .50
1.90 1.13 0.90 .70 .65 .45
1.85 1.05 .75 .65 .60 .40
1.75 .90 .65 .60 .60 .35
Classifications
105 personal
110 business personalis
120 announcements
120 entertainment
385 for sale
340 auto sales
360 miscellaneous
140 lost & found
225 help wanted
225 professional services
225 training services
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | | |
3 | | | | | |
4 | | | | | |
5 | | | | | |
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSNAM POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
370 want to buy
495 for rent
438 roommate wanted
Name:
Address:
Total days in paper.
Regis: Total days in paper
Total ad cost: Classification:
Name: Phone:
VISA
Method of Payment (Check one) ☐ Check enclosed ☐ MasterCard ☐ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Dalkansan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Account number:
Expiration Date:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
MasterCard
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1983 Farnworks Inc./Dit by Universal Press Syndicate
BOARD ROO
0
Once again, Vernon has a good shirt ruined by a cheap pocket octopus.
1
12
Thursday, September 16, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Art of Manuscript Typography
Jayhawk Bookstore
"Your Book Professionals"
"At the top of Naismith HILL"
Hrs: 8-5:30 M-Th., 8-5 Fri.
9-5 Sat., 12-4 Sun.
843-3826
NATURAL WAY
Natural Fiber Clothing
CITY OF BELGIUM
820-822 Mass.
841-0100
State Radiator
Student Friendly
We recycle
anti-freeze, freon,
and metals.
842-3333
radiators-heaters
a/c-water pumps
VISA
Not Clear
NEW!
SUCLASSIC BY BAUM & LONDY
---
3 different lens colors available
928 Mess
843-0611 The
Etc.
Shop
2
Hair Experts Design Team
Attention Water Skiers
$5 Off
Hair Design
Not valid with any other offer
EXPIRES 10/15/93
KU Waterski Team & Club Meeting
Discover Our Difference
Holiday Plaza • 25th & Iowa
841-6886
for beginners to competitive skiers Wednesday, September 16 6:00 pm
COLLEGE OF SPORTSWALES
We've made Thursday night shopping an art!
Daisy Hill Room, Burge Union
Any Questions? Call:
President Tim Shellenberger 749-0659
The Spencer Museum of Art at the University of Kansas is now open Thursdays until 9:00 p.m.
And the Museum Book Shop—offering handmade jewelry, art books,and gifts—is open 'til 8:30.
CZECH FILM SERIES
The Apple Game
Spencer Museum Auditorium
Thursday, September 16, 7:00 p.m.
SPECIAL EXHIBITIONS
Contemporary Czech and Slovakian Photography August 22-October 3
American Indian Baskets from the University of Kansas Museum of Anthropology August 29-October 10
SPENCER MUSEUM HOURS
SPENCER
Tuesday & Wednesday ... 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
MUSEUM
Thursday ... 8:30 a.m.-9:00 p.m.
OF ART
Friday & Saturday ... 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Sunday ... Noon-5:00 p.m.
The University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas 66045 Telephone 913-864-4710 The galleries are closed on Mondays As always—admission is free!
WATKINS
1907
"We Care For KU"
A
Health Fair'93
Health Fair'93
hu., Sept. 16 & Frl., Sept. 17
9 a.m.- 3 p.m.
Watkins West Entrance
Cholesterol Screening/Percent Body Fat Caloric Needs Assessment/S Stress Assessment Diabetes and Cancer Information/Health Literature Free Nutritional Snacks/Prize Drawing/And More!
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES 864-9500
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
Don't Get Lost In The Crowd!
Get Noticed!
Get Noticed!
Have your Yearbook Portrait taken now at Strong Hall. It's FREE!
now at Strong Hall. It's FREE!
September 7-29.
Monday, Wednesday, Thursday & Friday: 9a.m.-12p.m. & 1-5 p.m
Tuesday: 1-5p.m. & 6-9 p.m.
Call 864-5499 for an appointment... Walk-ins accepted.
Nature is class's laboratory Environmental studies course teaches scientific methods
By Liz Kiinger
Kansan staff writer
Collecting water samples from Clinton Lake and surveying insects in a sewage-impacted stream are all in a day's work for Field Methods In Environmental Studies students.
The senior-level class give $ 120 students practical, hands-on experience in collecting and analyzing scientific data.
"They get a chance to pretend they're a real scientist collecting real scientific data," said Diane Debinski, assistant professor of environmental studies who is also one of the course instructors. "Instead of just talking about it, they can actually do it."
Yesterday's EVRN 460 class collected water samples near Clinton Lake Marina. The samples were tested for phosphates, dissolved oxygen, alkalinity and turbidity—the amount of suspended particles.
Becky Hughes, St. Louis senior, tested a water sample for dissolved oxygen.
"You get to see where stuff comes from," said Hughes, who would like to work on environmental issues in city planning. "It's not just in a bottle in a lab. You're doing it for a reason and you actually see what the purpose and experiments are."
The class meets once a week for four hours. Debinki said that about 90 percent of class time was spent outdoors. The class is divided into four ecology sections: lake, terrestrial, stream and small mammal.
Debinski said the lake ecology section of the class compared the water chemistry in Clinton and Lone Star lakes. She said the section on small-mammal ecology was probably the most popular. In that section, students capture live, small animals at the Kansas Ecological Reserve 10 miles north of Lawrence for three weeks. They estimate the mammals' population sizes and habit preferences in different grasslands.
"There's an element of adventure because you never know what's going to happen sometimes with respect to weather or the different species you might see," Debinski said.
SARA BROWN
"It's so wonderful to actually get out in nature," said Anna Seay, Topeka senior. "It kind of reminds us what our goals are."
Karin McCoy, Omaha, Neb., senior, measures the alkalinity of the water in Clinton Lake. McCoy went on a field trip yesterday with her environmental studies 460 class in order to measure the oxygen and phosphate levels of the lake.
William Alix / KANSAN
Slattery enters governor's race
By Tracl Carl
Kansan staff writer
But working for a Kansas gubernatorial candidate will be a different story, he said.
Working as an intern at U.S. Rep. Jim Slattery's Topeka office has been the usual office work, Paul Davis, Lawrence senior, said.
Yesterday at press conferences in Overland Park, Wichita, Kansas City, Kan. and Topeka, Slattery confirmed speculation that he was running for governor when he announced his candidacy for the Democratic nomination.
"I believe I have the experience to lead Kansas into the 1990s and beyond," Slattery told a packed crowd at the Florentine Room at the Javawk Tower in Topeka.
Slattery said at the Topeka conference the reception he had received at all four stops had been good. But the last one in Topeka was the best turnout, he said.
He also stressed the need for safer cities.
Some issues Slattery said he would focus on were jobs that would encourage today's youths to stay in Kansas, health care insurance that every Kansan could afford and quality education.
"This is the special one," he said. "This is home."
"We must make our community
safe," he said. "We must stand up together against this insane violence that threatens us all."
Jim Slattery
Slattery said he supported the existing Kansas abortion law, which guarantees a
woman's right to an abortion as long as the fetus can not survive outside of the womb. But he said he did not support state-funded abortion except in cases of rape, incest or life-threatening conditions.
Davis said he thought Slattery represented the majority view on abortion.
"Often times you see the extreme views on abortion," Davis said. "His view is a moderate one."
Davis also said he thought Slattery would be a strong supporter of higher education.
Since 1983, Slattery has served as U.S. Representative of the 2nd District, which includes the northeast corner of Douglas County.
"He understands the importance of colleges and universities in Kansas," Davis said. "He knows its vital to the economic future of Kansas to give our students the best education they can have."
"The last four years that Slattery has been in Washington, Barkis has been dealing with Kansas issues on a day to day basis," Cole said.
for former Kansas Speaker of the House and democratic candidate Marvin Barkis, said Slattery had been in Washington too long to be an effective leader in Kansas.
But Kay Cole, campaign manager
Utley Bush, Miami senior, said he thought Slattery's experience in Washington would help Kansas.
"I think today when you need federal aid, like with the flood, you need someone who knows the ins and out," Bush said.
The third democratic runner, Joan Wagnon, could not be reached for comment.
Russell Getter, associate professor of political science and government, said Slattery's entry into the race made it more competitive.
"He has demonstrated repeatedly that he knows how to win elections," Getters said.
But Wagnon's strong pro-choice stance and her sharp, quick style made her a strong candidate, Getter said.
"People who back Wagon are absolutely devoted to her," he said. "She's conversant on a wide range of issues in Kansas and I think she attracts the intellectual sect because of that."
IMAGES OF JESUS IN FILM
Excerpts from the following films:
Arcand's Jesus of Montreal
Jewison's Jesus Christ Superstar
Madonna's Like a Prayer
Pasolini's Gospel According to St. Matthew
Scorsese's Last Temptation of Christ
Zefrelli's Jesus of Nazareth
Friday, Sept. 17, ECM, 1204 Oread
Friday, Sept. 17, ECIM, 1204 Oread
Friday, Sept. 24, Canterbury House, 1116 Louisiana
Light meal at 6:00 pm with film excerpts and discussion from
For more information, call the ECM at 843-4933 or, Canterbury House at 843-8202.
1344 Tennessee 843-9726
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Thursday- $1.00 Big Beers ($3.00 cover)
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Sunday- $1.75 Imports
*Stop by the Bullafter the KU vs. Utah game this Saturday.*
1
1
SPORTS: The Kansas football team attempts to even its record tomorrow against Utah. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103.NO.20
ADVERTISING:864-4358
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS;864-4810
Relationship policy review to continue
Panel picked to study issue
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
The current consensual relationship policy escaped an hour-long debate unscathed when the University Council decided to wait until November before they take up the issue again.
Council members voted to send the policy to a newly formed committee,
which will study the issue and report back to Council in six to eight weeks
University Council is a governance body composed of faculty and students who make recommendations on proposals before they reach Chancellor Gene Budig. They also examine policies and procedures.
lor, and the other vice chancellors developed the consensual relationship policy this summer. Meven said.
According to the consensual relationship policy, in effect since Aug. 20, faculty members are prohibited from having a romantic relationship with one of their students. Faculty includes anyone in a teaching role at the University, including graduate teaching assistants.
Some of the council members said they felt the Council should have had more say before the University took action on the issue of student-faculty relationships.
"We're being asked to judge on apolicy we didn't actually initiate or approve," said Lynn Nelson, professor of history.
Because the Council had no discussion on the policy before it went into effect, said Wil Linkugel, professor of communication studies, the University would have been better off by making the policy temporary, so Council could study the issue.
"Otherwise, it wouldn't have as many problems as it does now," Linkugel said.
Council members who spoke against the policy said they were concerned with the lack of freedom students and faculty would have to lead their own lives.
"The real heart of Chancellor Budig's policy and the comments by Dr. Meyen concern the abuse of power," said John Altevogt, Eudora graduate student. "This policy will do little to curb abuses of power."
phy, said the University should not make decisions like the consensual relationship policy without hearing from faculty and students first.
"What was not done in this case was the free and open discussion of this policy," Marquis said. "The impetuous issue of this policy is quite wrong. It should be withdrawn."
Other council members argued for the policy, stating that it would protect students from unequal romantic relationships with an instructor.
"Students do not feel they have freedom when they approach a faculty member for a relationship," said Ellen
Sward, professor of law. "Psychologists or doctors are not to have relationships with their clients. This policy should also apply to faculty and students."
Some members wanted to make sure the University implemented the policy correctly.
"Ihave no problems with this policy. This is long-awaited," said Jill Bechtel, Hutchinson junior. "What is needed is a fair and effective measure to enforce this policy."
The committee that Council selected to study the policy will consist of 16 members, including five students.
THE WORKSHOP
John Gamble / KANSAN
Blood test
Charlie Sun, Springfield, Mo., senior, winces as Diane Stroble, a medical technician from Lawrence, draws blood for a cholesterol test. Stroble performed tests yesterday during the Health Fair at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
Fraternities work to resolve dispute
By Scott J. Anderson
Kansan staff writer
The presidents of two fraternities involved in a brawl Sunday are taking steps to prevent a similar altercation.
Dan Hubbard, president of Phi Kappa Theta, and Mark Galus, president of Pi Kappa Alpha, are meeting with one another to soothe the bad relations between their houses after a fight between the two broke out Sunday morning.
According to police reports, between 40 and 50 people were involved in the brawl. The fight reportedly started when members of Phil Khaa Theta were jumping on a
truck that belong to a member of Pi Kappa Alpha. One member of Pi Kappa Alpha was injured in the fight and was treated at Lawrence Memorial Hospital for cuts and bruises to his face.
"We feel that this was the result of some miscommunication between the two houses," Hubbard said. "We're looking into endeavors to improve communication so that there will not be another situation like this."
One thing that has eased negotiations is that Hubbard and Galus are good friends, Hubbard said.
Hubbard said the alteration never should have happened, and he hoped it
could be laid to rest quickly. He said one option being considered is a meeting of the two houses' executive boards to discuss ways to improve communication.
Hubbard said another option under consideration was filing a complaint with the Interfraternity Council. He said this would be a last-resort attempt to receive damages for his house.
"I would definitely want to speak with Mark before doing that," he said. "Right now I'm trying to work with him to develop a joint measure to improve the situation."
Galus said if a complaint was filed, it would not be until after the police finish investigating.
"We've basically turned it over to the police at this point," Galus said. "We're going to wait until the police finish investigating, then talk to Bill Nelson and IFC and see how they feel about filing a complaint."
section of our educational institution. Hubbard and Galus have met several times with Nelson, who is the coordinator for greek programs for the Organizations and Activities Center. Nelson said his role was to provide guidance during the negotiations.
"I believe tremendous progress has been made," Nelson said. "The chapter presidents have been very responsible and cooperative with the University and city officials."
Hispanic Heritage Month
Hispanic Heritage Month
--it looks like," he said. "Then I have to work to get the image out of my mind, then onto paper."
Hispanic cultures have similarities and differences
By Donella Hearne
Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
"I know people who think that since I'm Hispanic that I eat burritos and all kinds of Mexican food," she said.
Uarmen Urdaneta, Topeka senior, said she thought people tended to think that all Hispanic people came from identical cultures.
Urdaneta's family comes from Venezuela, where meals consist of more bread and meat than the tortillas and beans found in Central American countries.
Cuisine was only one of the differences between the various Hispanic countries cited by Octavio Hinojosa, president of the KU Hispanic-American Leadership Organization. Differences in clothing and language were also notable, he said.
At KU there are more than 300 students from 19 different Hispanic countries. Many more students like Urdaneta live in the United States but are of Hispanic origin. Many times these students identify with the country from which their families came.
Urdaneta said she would identify herself as Hispanic to non-Hispanics, but as Venezuelan to other Hispanics. But she said she also considered herself American.
"My parents never wanted us to lose our roots, so we grew up knowing both cultures," Urdaneta said. "I always say I'm bi-cultural, from Venezuela and the United States."
Hinojosa said Hispanic Heritage Month was important because it allowed Hispanic students who lived here to celebrate their heritage with other Hispanics.
"Without a doubt it's good for Hispanics to bond together," Hinojosa said, "In the Hispanic community there are so many more people you can relate to. I am always learning something new."
The similarities which bond Hispanics together are stronger than any differences, Hinojosa said. He said he thought the cultural influences of Spain, especially the Spanish language, created a bond between Hispanics.
Although a different dialect is used in almost every Spanish speaking country, said Robert Granberg, assistant professor of Spanish and Portuguese, the principles of the language were the same all over.
"It's like comparing our English with the English spoken in England or Australia, where some of the words and pronunciations are different but we can still understand the context," he said.
Hinojosa said that a strong sense of family and religion was common among Hispanics.
The Spanish were influential in converting the indigenous people of Latin America to Catholicism during the colonization of the New World. Today, more than 85 percent of Latin Americans are Roman Catholic.
INSIDE
VOLUNTEER PATT
Community volunteer groups gathered on campus yesterday to encourage enthusiastic students to help those who are less fortunate.
Volunteer fair
Page 3
A changing world
The heads of Israel and the PLO shaking hands? A Black president for South Africa? Some of the world's most bitter conflicts are finding resolutions.
Exhibit set to show off professor's 'Secret Garden'
Page 6
By Kathleen Stolle
An awed Mary Lennox falls exhausted against the wooden gate, her jump rope dangling, forgotten at her side. Inside the four stone walls of the secret garden, brambles of brown poke from the ground. An orange-chested robin seems the only sign of life.
Tom Allen created this scene not with words but with pastels and textured paper. Of the 18 illustrations he drew for author James Howe's 1887 adaptation of the classic children's story, "The Secret Garden," it is the artist's favorite.
Kansan staff writer
"I felt like I created not just the image but the feeling of the image exactly like I wanted." said the KU professor of design.
A collection of the illustrations, along with some sketches, go on display Sunday at the Spencer Museum of Art. Located in the Study Gallery, the exhibit runs through Oct. 17.
In order to convey the English story accurately, Allen said he had to research characteristics of Yorkshire manor houses and late Victorian clothing.
He said the story told him which scenes called for illustration.
"I get a mental image in my mind of what
"My aim is to create an illusion of realism that allows the viewer to get into the experience without having to look at every detail." he said.
He said that he tried to create an ambiance, a sense of place and time, that conveyed a particular feeling.
The exhibit of Allen's work coincides with the Lied Center's season premiere of a musical based on original author Frances Hodgson Burnett's "The Secret Garden."
Marilyn Stokstad, professor of art history, is curator of the exhibit.
Performances of the musical run Sept. 29 through Oct.3.
"When they announced what they were doing for the opening of the Lied I thought this would be a natural." Stokstad said.
Allen will be autographing copies of "The Secret Garden" at the Friends of the Art Museum's high tea from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Sept. 25, in the Central Court of the museum. Reservations are required.
Allen said his next project would be his most challenging yet. He has been asked to create 65 pencil drawings for a new edition of Emily Dickinson's 1918 "Poems for Youth."
THE AUTOGRAPH
William Alix / KANSAN
Tom Allen, professor of design, has a collection of his drawings illustrating the book "The Secret Garden" on display in the Spencer Museum of Art. The exhibit opens Sunday and will run through Oct. 17.
2
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 17, 1993
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ON CAMPUS
Women's Student Union will meet at 5 p.m. today at Alcove A in the Kansas Union.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries and Canterbury House will present a movie, "Images of Jesus on Film," from 6 to 8 tonight at the Ecumenical Christian Center, 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933.
African Affairs Student Association will have its first general meeting at 7 tonight at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Sewite Negash at 749-0299.
St. Lawrence Catholic Center will sponsor a bowling and pizza party at 6 p.m. today at the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more
Le Cercle francais will have a brown bag lunch at noon Saturday in front of Fraser Hall. For more information, call Angie Hubbard at 832-9057 or Erik Roberts at 832-9027.
information, call Meg at 843-0357 or 842-6005.
Omega Psi Phi Fraternity will have a formal information presentation at 6 p.m. Saturday at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Brian Jones at 841-0944.
St. Lawrence Catholic Center will sponsor a trip to the Renaissance Festival in Bonner Springs at 12:30 p.m. Sunday at the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call Meg at 843-0357 or 842-6005.
WEATHER
TODAY
Mostly cloudy.
Drizzle or thunderstorms,
east winds 10-15 mph
High: 75°
Low: 53°
Mostly cloudy, 30%
chance of T-storms
High: 73'
Low: 52'
Sunny
Cloudy
Sources: John Pleifer, KU Weather Service; 864-3300
ilight chance of hunderstorms
High: 74'
Low: 53'
AFRICAN ADORNED
For Unusual Jewelry & Imported Gift Items 5 East $^{7\text{TH}}$ •842-1376•10-5:30 MON-SAT
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
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Thursday- $1.00 Big Beers ($3.00 cover)
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 17, 1993
3
Building projects open for bids
Regents approve $27 million plans
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
The Board of Regents opened the door yesterday for the University of Kansas to begin accepting bids for two projects that have an estimated total cost of $27.2 million.
The Regents approved final plans for the $18.2 million renovation of Hoch Auditorium and the $9 million construction of the new Dolph Simons Sr. Biosciences Center.
The biosciences center, set for completion in 1996, will be built on West Campus.
Allen Wiechert, University architect, said KU would have construction bids for Hoch by mid-November and for the biosciences center by early December.
Construction companies generally do not bid simultaneously for contracts,he said.
Wiechert said the bids would be awarded one or two weeks after they were collected.
He said that Warren Corman, Regents interim executive director, already had reviewed the plans. The
"Once we recommend the plans, they're usually accepted by the Regents," he said.
approval is just a formality, Wiechert said.
In other action, the Regents:
- approved KU's request to convert Joseph R. Pearson Hall for use by the School of Education. The $204,493 renovation will be included in KU's 1995 budget.
"It will be a beautiful renovation," he said.
Corman said he was looking forward to Hoch's completion in Fall 1995.
During the renovation period, the
basement and the first two floors of JRP will be used for the Clinical Child Psychology program, graduate teaching assistant offices, research suites, administrative conference and training rooms, and storage areas.
approved KU's request to add five projects to the list of repair and rehabilitation projects.
For one project, four concrete beams and loose handrails on overhead walkways will be repaired in Memorial Stadium. The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation will pay the $30,000 cost.
The Student Housing Department will finance these four renovations
- $460,000 for new roofs and stair repairs in buildings No. 8, 10, 12 and 22 of Stouffer Place Apartments.
from its repairs, equipment and improvements fund;
-$370,000 for renovation of building No. 12 of Stouffer Place Apartments in compliance with the American Disabilities Act.
— $500,000 for reconstruction of the first two floors of Sellards Scholarship Hall in compliance with the American Disabilities Act.
— Renovation of apartments No. 1 and 2, building A, of Jayhawker Towers in compliance with the American Disabilities Act.
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Car fire near Oliver does little damage
Lawrence firefighters put out a fire in a student's car in parking lot No.127, northwest of Oliver Hall, on Wednesday afternoon.
Two fire trucks were sent to the lot at 4:06 p.m. Wednesday. Capt. Don Knight said the report was a car on fire. When firefighters arrived they found only a little bit of smoke showing. The fire was extinguished.
Knight said a mechanical failure started the fire, which burned the car's carpet. The damage was estimated at $50.
KU graduates in Miss America
Two familiar KU faces will compete in this year's Miss America pageant.
Saturday night in Atlantic City, KU graduate Lori Minnix will represent Kansas in the pageant, and graduate Angela Casey will represent South Dakota. NBC will televise the pageant at 9 p.m.
Minnix, Lawrence resident, won the Miss KU pageant last fall, and this summer she won the Miss Kansas title in Pratt.
In December, Minnix completed her master's degree in Spanish literature at KU.
During her reign as Miss Kansas, Minnix traveled the country and spoke about education.
Business conference planned
Casey, who lives in Rapid City, S.D., works as a pharmaceutical representative for the Upjohn Company.
Looking for a way to become involved in her state, Casey entered the Miss South Dakota pageant. After singing a solo from the musical "Yenil" in the talent competition, she won the pageant in Hot Springs, S.D.
Casey graduated in the spring
The forum is from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Marriott Downtown Allis Plaza Hotel, 200 West 12th St. The cost is $5.
KU students interested in master's of business administration programs may attend the Graduate Management Admission Council's MBA Forum tomorrow in Kansas City.
Representatives from more than 70 MBA programs will be available. Schools include Boston University, Carnegie Mellon University and Northwestern University-Kellogg School, as well as KU. Workshops on topics such as MBA careers will be presented by employees of area businesses, such as Sprint and Hallmark Cards, Inc.
Haskell receives more funding
The U.S. Senate on Wednesday approved $1.3 million to build a new residence hall at Haskell Indian Nations University.
The money was part of the interior appropriations bill for fiscal year 1994, said Mike Horak, press secretary for Sen. Nancy Kassebaum. The bill also included $7.2 million for total campus operations, the same amount it approved for fiscal year 1993.
The appropriations bill now must go through a joint House-Senate committee. It will appear again on the Senate floor in a revised version on Oct 1.
An amendment, sponsored by Kassebaum and Sen. Bob Dole, also shifts $200,000 of the bill to assist an education program for Haskell.
The money for the new residence hall could ease Haskell's housing shortage, said Hannes Combest, educational assistant to Haskell president Bob Martin
The program is Haskell's first four-year baccalaureate program.
VOLUNTEER FAT!
Compiled from Kansan staff reports.
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
Brian Karney, left, Town and Country, Mo., freshman, talks about volunteering at a hospice with Mike Cattaneo, center, Lawrence hospice volunteer, and Harry Hunn, Lawrence volunteer. The volunteer fair was yesterday in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall and represented many possible volunteer opportunities in Lawrence.
Students enthusiastic about volunteer fair
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
Communication between potential student volunteers and Douglas county agencies, such as Special Olympics, was the purpose of the volunteer fair, said Julie Harris, co-director of the Center for Community Outreach. The community center, a student organization funded by Student Senate, coordinated the fair, which ended yesterday.
For the past two years, Matt Nielsen,
Lawrence freshman, has coached swimmers who were in the Kansas Special
Olympics.
"The fair generates interest in volunteer ing and exposes students to agencies who are looking for volunteers." Harris said. "Some students may not know where they want to volunteer, and this makes them aware of the opportunities."
Harris said 15 agencies attended the fair, which has been held at the University for the past three years.
Nielsen told Special Olympics representatives yesterday that he wanted to coach the swimmers again this year when he attended the Center for Community Outreach Volunteer Fair on the lawn in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall.
She said student response to the fair was very good.
Kerry Morgan, Denver graduate student and a representative at the fair for Habitat for Humanity, said that more than 40 students had signed up to help with future projects.
"We've run out of fliers for our group," she said. "The response has been wonderful."
She said students liked to volunteer because they had extra time and energy.
"There is a lot of enthusiasm for volun
Colin McDonald, Kansas City, Kan., junior and a representative of the KU Homeless Coalition, said the group always needed more volunteers.
teering here at KU and we're finding more and more people through things like this." Morgan said. "You see all types of students who come to volunteer."
Nielsen said he volunteers because he liked doing positive things for himself and Lawrence community.
"We're trying to get more people involved so we can have a larger effort for projects that we do with other groups, like the Salvation Army, Habitat for Humanity and battered women's shelters," he said.
"I get a lot out of it by helping the kids," he said. "It makes me feel good."
Students who wish to volunteer but did not sign up can call the community outreach center at 864-3710.
Speak-Out to bring out accounts of harassment
By Carlos Tejada
Kansas staff writer
The anonymous accounts are due Monday at the Women's Studies program office in 2120 Wescoe Hall.
On Oct. 5, the KU Women's Studies Program will try to change that. On that date, volunteers will read KU students' anonymous accounts of sexual harassment in the Sexual Harassment Speak-Out. The accounts will be read at noon in front of the Kansas Union.
Victims of sexual harassment often keep silent, said Betty Campbell, assistant professor of English.
Although accounts of sexual harassment are not often heard, they do exist, Campbell said.
Campbell, coordinator of the event, said the first Speak-Out last fall created a larger awareness of sexual harassment. She said 200 people attended the Speak-Out last year, and as a result of the event, she was invited to speak at the Kiwanis Club and KJHK, the University's student radio station, on the subject.
"A number of people, including students, staff and faculty told me they had stories and didn't want them in," she said.
Sexist comments, constant solicitations for sex and touching when inappropriate for a business relationship are considered sexual harassment by the program. Rape and attempted rape also are included in the definition.
Campbell said the Speak-Out gave victims of harassment, most of them women, the courage to confront their fears.
"It makes people more aware of what exactly sexual harassment is," she said. "It gives people who have been harassed the courage to speak out."
Shirley Harkess, associate professor of sociology, said events such as the Speak-Out helped people who would not otherwise identify themselves as victims come forward.
Harkess said that victims often blamed themselves for sexual harassment the way rape victims sometimes blamed themselves.
"There are a lot of similarities to rape in that it makes the victim feel worthless," she said.
But Maurice Bryan, director of KU's office of affirmative action, said that not every victim would benefit from the Speak-Out. Some might need therapy first, he said.
"People have different ways of addressing those kinds of issues," Bryan said. "It's an option that could be healthy for some people."
Bryan said that addressing the issue was the most important aspect of the Speak-Out. He said KU — and other academic institutions — were not ready to deal with issues of sexual harassment.
"It's important to address the aftermath, the healing process," he said. "Institutions aren't good at that. We're not good at that."
KU faculty, staff and students can report to the affirmative action office if they think they have been sexually harassed at the University.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
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Call 864-4810 for the newsroom:
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placing announcements of meetings or events of campus groups for the "On Campus" calendar. Announcements must be submitted on form provided by 5 p.m. two days prior to desired day of publication. No submissions will be taken by telephone.
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Friday, September 17. 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
Last week the U.S. Education Department released a literacy study showing that nearly half of all adult Americans possess only the most rudimentary skills in English and mathematics.
THE BACKGROUND
Causing the most public alarm were conclusions stating that more than 40 million of America's 191 million adults scored at the lowest level, meaning they could not find a certain intersection on a street map or calculate the difference in the price of two items. Adults at the second lowest level, about 40 million, could not answer specific questions about facts in a newspaper article.
THE OPINION
Students should join fight against illiteracy
The illiteracy problem in America is in great need of attention. Poor reading and writing skills have been linked to low voting rates, low salaries and billions of dollars in losses for businesses in the United States annually. Solutions to this enormous and complex problem will require the collaborative efforts of governments, businesses and local communities. So now is the time that KU students can address illiteracy in the Lawrence community by getting involved in a campus literacy organization.
There is the Dr. Seuss Club, which promotes literacy by reading books to area schoolchildren.
Partners in Learning, which operates through the English 590 class, "Tutoring for Literacy," is offered each semester.
Students Tutoring for Literacy is a group that sends KU student volunteers to various tutoring sites around town, one being the Adult Learning Center. Through STL, volunteers can work with college, high school and elementary students, as well as with adults working towards their GED. STL representatives will hold a training workshop Oct. 3. For more information call 864-3660.
All they ask is that volunteers agree to tutor two hours a week for a semester. This is a small commitment that can have big effects.
Tutoring for literacy at the local level is a chance for KU students to make a significant difference in the lives of a few people and is an important beginning to solving a nationwide problem.
CHRISTINA CORNISH FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Game-by-game lottery solves ticket dilemma
When are we going to get our basketball tickets? This question buzzing around campus is still unanswered.
According to the University Athletic Ticket Office, nothing yet has been decided. Approximately 7,000 seats, roughly 45 percent of Allen Fieldhouse, are reserved for students. Administrators in the ticket office have said that they are waiting for situations to clear up before making any decisions. A prudent course, but as students eager to plan accordingly, we have come up with a possible solution to the problem.
If too many ticket packages were sold, this solution would be a game-by-game lottery and not a lottery for the entire season. That way every student would have a chance to see some games instead of not being able to see any games. Of course, the best-case scenario would be that enough people would either forfeit or drop out of the running for tickets and a lottery would not be necessary. Hopefully, we will get an answer soon.
MANNY LOPEZ FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
DON'T WORRY,
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HEALTH
CARE
REFORM
Dr. Bill
SMALL
BUSINESS
HOOD
UDK 93
Abuse doesn't justify violence in any case
I heard some of Russ Johnson's "Talk Radio" on KJHK last Friday. During the few moments I was able to listen, the discussion was about the former KU student who shot her overprotective father. The question seemed to be whether she was justified in attempting to kill her father.
As it turned out, one caller phoned in and changed the subject to abused women. Actually, she called to defend women who kill their abusive husbands. Women, she claimed, can only handle so much abuse before having to do something about it. The caller said this was enough to justify the murder of an abusive husband.
It seems that in recent court cases, "Battered Woman Syndrome" has become an increasingly successful defense when a woman stands trial for murdering her husband. The basis of the argument is that a woman has been abused to a point that she will take no more. Therefore, killing her husband as a way to escape the abuse is deemed an acceptable option.
In murder trials involving gang members, their criminal behaviors often are attributed to their surroundings, which can include poverty, racism, broken families and failing school systems. Often, gang members who kill do so out of some sort of revenge. In court trials, however, if
For one of the first times, my eyes were opened, and I thought I slightly understood what minorities are concerned about when they claim that they are treated unfairly by the judicial system. After listening to the caller's viewpoints, I found some similarities between inner-city gang situations and domestic abuse.
SCOTT GILLASPIE
issues such as economic and familial conditions are considered, they usually aren't enough to earn gang members verdicts of not guilty.
Such observations can lead one to question the difference between their situations. Is it merely a coincidence that women are allowed to kill those who wrong them whereas gang members, who usually are racial minorities, are not? There shouldn't be a double standard. If women are allowed to justify murder with the claim of fear, other minority groups should be allowed the same option.
Furthermore, it isn't enough for each group simply to realize that it is not permissible to commit a crime in order to avenge a crime. Lawmakers and the legal system must realize this, as well. Victims of violence must look for other ways out of their situations before taking them into their own hands.
However, in the interest of justice, society must agree with the way gang members and many others are treated by the judicial system and disagree with the legal advantages granted to abused women.
For example, abused women must make other attempts to bring an end to their situations. Attempts can be
made to leave abusive husbands or boyfriends, and in the case that this doesn't work, other actions within legal limits must be tried until a solution is found. Living with an abusive person until the point of murder is not only stupid but also shouldn't provide the basis for murdering them.
The only acceptable justification for murder in any case is self-defense. Yet killing someone who has beaten you repeatedly, simply because you didn't want to be beaten any longer, does not excuse murder. This does not constitute self-defense and only makes people wonder why a person would stay with an abusive person.
The same rules should apply to those involved in inner-city gang wars. Violent crimes should not be forgiven because of living conditions. Living in poverty or in a broken home should not guarantee the right to commit a violent crime and to not face the responsibilities of such an action. Also, criminals falling into such a category should not be granted special considerations.
Lawmakers should re-examine laws that allow killings to be justified by reasons other than self-defense. They also should reconsider the fairness of laws and make them uniform and fair for every population group. Until those laws are changed, we can blame only ourselves for setting bad examples that increase the crime rate. As long as any person, man or woman, white or African-American, is given certain advantages in the legal system, the war on crime will continue to lose ground.
Scott Gillespie is a Topeka junior majoring in English.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Parents responsible for instilling morality
Once again, a cry is heard from the Kansan. It seemed to tell parents to stop taking responsibility for their children, to stop placing their beliefs on them. However, my cry is this: When do we stop pointing a finger and start taking responsibility?
or even bigoted. The crux of the argument was based on the idea that we should not try to "strive and protect [children] and to nurture them."
Some of the attitudes in the Sept. 8 issue [Patrick Dilley's column, "Kids should be allowed to form their own opinions"] seem to portray the role of parents as obsolete
Is not the parent responsible to nurture a child? As parents, we naturally place our beliefs on our children. If not, movies, TV, or the school playground would be the foundation of children's morals. Where else but from a parent can a child have morals, convictions and the knowledge of right and wrong taught? Certainly society does not
offer it. Society is not the nurturer, the parents are.
I agree, childhood is a "grove of innocence and joy." But let us keep it that way, without placing reasoning, adult problems and claims of self-righteousness on children.
When we, as brothers or sisters or parents, do not take an active and decisive role rearing children, it is not 'society' which corrupts our children. Unfortunately, it is ourselves.
Reagan Thompson
London sophomore
ANNE BAILEY
STAFF COLUMNIST
Large cities cannot allow small towns to disappear
Last year I lived in a hell hole that I reluctantly remember as Hashinger Hall. One night I made a desperate attempt to escape the insanity of the dorm by taking a drive. After trekking the half mile to my car — since everyone in Ellsworth parked in the Hashenger parking lot — I finally began my soothing journey out of town, leaving my troubles behind.
Y
But without these crippled towns, the cities would never have been born. Like a child who never learns to respect his elders, the city and its product blindly continue.
I found something deep in the heart of Kansas for which I hadn't been looking. I found America. Late in January, on that cold winter night, my city-girl's point of view was changed forever. This is what I found:
We must not play corporate games and leave the dying towns to fend for themselves. Even though they can no longer compete with the monstrous cities, their worth should not be based on this. So much more can be learned from a town straining to stay alive than can be learned in the false glamour of the city.
America has been lost in a selfish struggle to erase some blemish of the past. As a nation we must move ahead, but this nation cannot evolve until it comes to grips with its past. This country was built on the broken backs of men and women who understood the beauty and life force of the land.
I saw America. A sad and beautiful sight. The Glory of the Midwest, the Heartland of America. A forgotten town aged before its time and devastated by the economy.
I refuse to see this nation fall. But if the grunts fail, the entire operation dies. If the town goes under, the city will soon follow. I have seen the thousand points of light and the ramshackle buildings. And I know that one cannot live without the other.
We must not forget the importance of the city and the small town it evolved from. The two must learn to coexist. There is no reason one should be destroyed because of the other.
This country is entering a dangerous stage in its life, and the town and city cannot ignore each other if the nation is to stay alive. We must respect this land and never take it for granted.
The small town and the city must once again strive together if this nation is going to continue to succeed. The struggle of the small town is a reflection of America's fight to survive, and the whole of the country needs to learn from this forgotten piece.
Anne Ballie is a Denver sophomore major ing in psychology.
Where has the respect for the farmer and the small-town way gone? It is lost in the cities that reflect an idea of imperialism and whose inhabitants hide behind skyscrapers, lose themselves in traffic, and have forgotten what this nation is built on; the desire for a family to make a better life for their children and grandchildren.
KANSANSTAFF
KC TRAUER
Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
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BILL SKEET
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Marcus Johnson
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0
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 17, 1993
5
Vista serves Rush on radio with its burgers and fries
By Traci Carl
Kansan staff writer
With his pressed white shirt, tie, wire-rimmed glasses and neatly combed hair, Shawn Stewart, 27, sat down during his lunch hour yesterday to listen to Rush Limbaugh's radio show.
Vista's conference room became Lawrence's first Rush Room yesterday. Like many other restaurants around the country, the fast-food restaurant broadcasts the show from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. for their lunch hour customers.
Stewart said he came for the atmosphere more than the food.
"I listen to National Public Radio, which is ungodly liberal, and then I listen to this to get the other side," he said.
Stewart, who works at Holz Office Systems in Lawrence, was not always a conservative, he said.
"When I was in college I got some crazy ideas in my head," Stewart said. "At first I was somewhat liberal."
But when he heard Limbaugh, Stewart said, he realized he agreed with more conservative views.
"i sort of rediscovered myself," Stewart said. "It brought Rush to say 'Yea, that's what I think.'
Until two months ago, Stewart was
"I was preaching conservative messages from the microphone for the last year and a half," Stewart said. "If people had realized it they would have probably had a connition."
Brad Street, owner of Vista restaurants, wore a five-dollar bill folded and pinned to his shirt to celebrate the first broadcast. He said it was his "budget deficit reduction ribbon." The ribbon idea started as a joke on Limbaugh's show.
Street started the room after a few customers asked for it and was pleased with the number of people who showed up, he said.
But Joleen Robison, Lawrence resident, said she did not like Rush or his room in Vista.
"I have eaten onion rings and pineapple shakes there for 20 years, and I'll never go back again," she said.
Allan Cigler, professor of government, said he thought Limbaugh's humorous style and clever terminology, like his famous feminazi references, attracted his audience. Limbaugh appeals to people who feel alienated by politics, Cigler said.
"Ilisten to National Public Radio,which is ungodly liberal and then I listen to this to get the other
side."
Shawn Stewart Vista customer
"There's a widespread feeling that both parties are serving themselves and Washington is out of touch with the people," he said. "I think he probably picks up on that."
Elaine Labach, Overland Parkfreshman, said Limbaugh was too critical for her taste.
"I've listened to him for a minute or two and he insulted women, animals rights and liberals all in the same sentence," she said.
Labach's reaction is common, Stewart said. Listeners needed to understand Limbaugh's sarcastic style.
"He's bombastic and he does overstate things, but you just have to take him for what he is," he said.
Bandwagon growing for Band Day
Kansan staff writer
Lori Miller, Great Bend senior, remembers the first time she stepped into Memorial Stadium as an Ellinwood High School freshman playing alto saxophone during Band Day 1986.
"It was really exciting seeing the campus, the football team and all the people," she said. "I grew up in a KState community and I had never been to KU before."
By Shan Schwartz
Ninety bands consisting of more than 6,000 musicians are expected to parade down Massachusetts Street in the morning and then come together
ranged in size from 20 to more than 200 members. The bands are from as far away as Quinter, Kan., and Tarkio, Mo.
Thousands of high school and junior high band members will experience the same thing tomorrow as the University hosts the 46th annual Band Day.
at Memorial Stadium for a mammoth halftime performance tomorrow afternoon.
Stidham said the visiting bands
The biggest thrill of band day, Stidham said, probably was for band members from the smaller schools.
Tom Stidham, assistant director of bands, said this year's band day would be bigger than it has been in 17 years.
The size of this year's event, Stidham said, was attributable to several things, including the recent success of the KU football team and a later date, which gave the smaller bands more time to rehearse and didn't conflict with Kansas State's band day. K-State hosted its band day last weekend.
The parade will begin at 8:30 a.m. one-half hour earlier than originally planned, so the parade will finish in time to get everyone to the stadium for a pre-game rehearsal.
"I suspect it's pretty awesome to come from a place where there's only 20 in your band and then step on the field with 6,000 others," Stidham said.
This will be Miller's sixth Band Day and some of the excitement of Band Day for her has faded. She said this Band Day would not be as thrilling as her first.
"It's still exciting, but nowadays, for me, it's just another performance," she said. "But it's fun to see the excitement of all the younger kids. You can see it in their faces when they march onto the field."
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The Fugitive PG-13 (*4:10), 7:05, 9:55
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Sat., Sept. 18, 7 & 9:30 PM
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• MONTY PYTHON
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Sat., Sept. 18, midnight
All shows in Woodruff Auditorium
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$3.50 Pitchers 75¢ Kamis
Upcoming Bands:
• 5 Nimble Pilots Sept. 24, 25
• The Hollow Men Oct. 1.2
Quincy Magoos
1517 Lane
232-9800
"A GRAND-NEW MOVIE.
This ravishing and witty spectacle invades the mind through eyes that are dazzled"
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based on the book by Virginia Woolf
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Fri(5:00),8:30
Sat, Sun No SHOWING
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SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
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5.15,
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WILLCREST
925 IOWA
841-5191
Jurassic Park PG-13
5.00,
7.20, 8.40
Sleepless in Seattle PG
5.00,
7.30, 8.30
The Real McCoy PG-13
5.00,
7.15, 9.45
In the Line of Fire R
5.00,
7.20, 8.40
Into the West PG
5.15,
7.30, 9.30
University Book Shop
PRESENTS:
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6
Friday, September 17, 1993
IBM Tool to IBM Tapes
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The University of Kansas Theatre for Young People Presents
Step on A Crack by Suzan Zeder
Step on A Crack
by Suzan Zeder
7:00 p.m.
Saturday,
September 25,
1993
Crafton-Preyer
Theatre/Murphy Hall
Recommended for children
age eight and older.
Reserved seat tickets are available for $3 (regardless of age) through the KU box offices (Murphy: 864-3982, Lied: 864-ARTS); VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone reservations.
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By Charles J. Gans The Associated Press
Events offer hope for global harmony
Yasser Arafat shakes hands with Yitzhak Rabin. Nelson Mandela may become South Africa's first black president. U.S. and Russian troops are planning maneuvers — together.
Miracles are far from guaranteed. Armed conflicts, large and small, are tormenting more than 20 countries. Other nations are grappling with domestic tension. Even the latest accomplishments in the Middle East and South Africa could be undermined by extremists or internal politics.
What breakthrough comes next?
Around the world, bitter conflicts suddenly appear solvable. Imaginable by the end of the decade: a unified Korea. China and Taiwan making money together. U.S. fast-food restaurants in Hanoi. Cuban exiles returning to Havana.
Communist North and capitalist South Korea, which signed historic pacts in 1991 aimed at reconciliation and eventual unification. Implementation has stalled over disputes on nuclear inspections.
Irish Prime Minister Albert Reynolds said there were indications that peace talks on Northern Ireland might resume. The Israeli-PLO accord "has to give you hope" that Catholics and Protestants in
ANALYSIS
restore exiled President Jean-Bertrand Aristide to power and help put the troubled country back on the democratic path.
Yet the world is in a mood to resolve long-standing disruptions.
Nagorno-Karabagh, a predominantly Armenian enclave within Azerbaijan, where fighting between Armenia and Azerbalajan has claimed at least 15,000 lives in five years. Russia and other outside mediators continue efforts to halt the bloodshed.
Northern Ireland can resolve their differences, he said in a newspaper interview.
The Israeli-PLO agreement offers hope to others about resolving conflicts diplomatically, said Joyce Neu, acting director of the Conflict Resolution Program at the Carter Center in Atlanta. The center was set up by the former U.S. president to help mediate civil wars.
"There is a political will of the international community to resolve conflicts," she said. "The superpowers are not aggravating internal disputes in other countries by taking sides."
China and Taiwan continue to trade ideological barbs, but China has turned some military positions along the Taiwan Strait into economic development zones and tourist attractions. Taiwan now allows private travel and some business investment on the mainland.
In former Yugoslavia, the bloodiest war in Europe since World War II is raging among Serbs, Muslims and Croats in Bosnia-Herzegovina. Despite repeated setbacks, international mediators hope the warring parties will soon sign a peace plan partitioning Bosnia that might end the carnage.
GENEVA — Mediators asked Bosnia's three warring sides to meet in Sarajevo next week to sign a peace settlement, after the country's warring Muslims and Serbs signed a cease-fire accord yesterday.
Other areas where major developments are possible:
Haiti, where a U.N. force is planned to help
The Associated Press
In signing the accord, Bosnia's Muslim President Alija Izetbegovic agreed in the clearest terms yet to possible secession by Bosnian Serbs and Croats to join their neighboring motherlands.
Cease-fire signed in Bosnia could lead to peace
Vietnam, where just this week, President Clinton relaxed the U.S. trade embargo allowing U.S. companies to compete for internationally funded development projects. U.S. businesses are clamoring for Washington to establish normal relations, but the POW-MIA issue stands in the way.
"We have made progress," European Community mediator Lord Owen said after Izetbegovic and the
speaker of the self-styled Bosnian Serb parliament, Momcilo Kraijnik, signed a preliminary agreement in Geneva.
The agreement followed a similar accord signed Tuesday between Izetbegovic and Croatian President Franjo Tudjman, also aimed at speeding the peace process.
Both agreements provide for ceasefires by tomorrow at the latest, an exchange of prisoners and a pledge not to hinder humanitarian aid convoy.
Tuesday's deal failed to stop Muslim-Croat fighting in central and
southwest Bosnia. Clashes intensified yesterday after the brutal slaying of Croat villagers. Serb-Muslim fighting has been only sporadic for about a month.
UNITED NATIONS — Faced with increasing violence in Mogadishu, the U.N. special envoy for Somalia said yesterday that he had asked for 4,000 more peacekeepers to patrol the country's volatile capital.
The Associated Press
Izetbegovic said yesterday he doubted differences among the three factions could be resolved by Tuesday, the date set for a signing a peace accord in Sarajevo.
Both the Muslim-Serb and Muslim-Croat accords, however, refer territorial disputes to working groups, allowing for the signing of a final peace package without those issues resolved.
An important point of the Serb-Muslim deal allows for a referendum on whether any of the three ethnic ministates wants "to leave the union" to be created under the main peace package the three sides have negotiated.
If they secede, Bosnian Croats and Serbs likely would merge with neighboring Croatia and Serb-dominated Yugoslavia.
It wasn't clear what effect the Serb-Muslim deal has on the main accord, which allows one group to secede only with approval of the other two or the U.N. Security Council.
Despite progress, more troops may be sent to Somalia
"Iwish I had them last week," retired U.S. Adm. Jonathan Howe said at a news conference, where he announced a two-year timetable for restoring democracy to the East
African nation.
Howe ruled out negotiating with fugitive warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid or his followers.
Howe has been criticized for focusing more on capturing Aidid than the United Nations' humanitarian mission. U.N. forces have failed to arrest Aidid or to stop attacks on peacekeeper despite near-daily clashes with Somali militia and dozens of raids on their suspected compounds.
A June ambush killed 24 Pakistani peacekeepers.
About 12,000 U.N. forces now are in Mogadishu, most of them support troops.
Howe came to U.N. headquarters to brief Secretary-General Boutros-Boutros Ghali. Howe said yesterday that he had the U.N. chief's full support, despite rumors that he would be replaced.
"I have my return ticket," he said. He
plans to speak to the U.S. Congress next week.
Howe said the United Nations was working on possible elections in Somalia in January 1995. He said 36 of the country's 76 district councils would be established by the end of this week.
Enormous progress has been made "when we think back to where we were a year ago," he said.
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Mon-Thurs Fri-Sat Sunday
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UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Fridav. September 17. 1993
7
THE NEWS in brief
Europa
WASHINGTON
Kansas City, Wichita honored with national All-America City award
Kansas City, Kan., and Wichita were among 20 cities nationwide honored as recipients of the All-America City award presented by President Clinton yesterday at the White House.
The award, which is given each year by the National Civic League, recognizes cities whose residents have worked with businesses and the government to tackle social problems.
Wayne E. Hedien, chairman and chief executive officer of Allstate Insurance Co., whose Allstate Foundation sponsors the All-America City Award program, said the award recognizes "community success stories."
Kansas City, Kan. Mayor Joseph E. Steineger, attended the 15-minute ceremony.
"The award ... holds special meaning for the residents of Wyandotte County because it represents the 'can-do' spirit that is becoming more contagious among our residents," Steinere said.
Kansas City, Kan.-Wyandotte County was named an All America City in 1992. The city and county were included in yesterday's ceremony because there was no ceremony last year, said Robert Ross, public information officer for Kansas City, Kan.
("The award) is a public acknowledgement that the government with the support of its citizens can accomplish anything when we all work together." he said.
Wichita Mayor Elma Broadfoot also was on hand for the ceremony honoring the city's selection as a 1993 All-America City.
OSLO, Norway
Hijackers seek asylum in Norway
Authorities charged three hijackers yesterday who forced a Russian plane to fly from Azerbaijan to Norway but surrendered to seek political asylum.
All 58 passengers and crew on board the Aeroflot Tu-134 were released unharmed when the suspects — who claimed to be Iranian — surrendered early yesterday.
A fourth man, a Russian detained as a possible accomplice because he helped the three suspects communicate with the other passengers, was later released.
If convicted in Norway of hijacking, the three suspects could face up to 21 years in prison, the Norwegian news agency NTB reported.
The three men said they were Iranians and "started this to protest conditions in Iran," regional police chief Knut Austad said. "Why they picked Norway for asylum, we don't know vet."
Justice Minister Grete Faremo said there was no sign the hijacking was related to Middle East issues or to Norway's role in arranging an historic agreement between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization.
LOS ANGELES
Justice may work slowly sometimes, but then Wally Tope isn't govy anywhere..
LOS ANGELES
Man beaten in riot awaits trial
The street evangelist was beaten into a coma during the Los Angeles riots 16 months ago. A pie chart over his bed in a San Fernando Valley convalescent home divides up his day; right side, left side; back two hours for each position.
Tope, 54, who tried to stop people looting a Hollywood strip mall, is the last of about 1,800 riot injured still hospitalized. He also will be one of the last to have his story heard in court.
Deputy District Attorney David Augh is prosecuting charges of attempted murder and aggravated mayhem against Fidel Ortiz, 21, and Leonard Sosa, 24.
They have pleaded not guilty, but scheduling conflicts have stalled the trial and they remain in jail. Attorneys expect a scheduled opening Wednesday to be pushed back to a date between Thanksgiving and Christmas.
CALCUTTA, India
Mother Teresa hospitalized again
Mother Teresa was in stable condition yesterday after doctors cleared a blocked blood vessel in her heart.
The procedure was successful and the 83-year-old Roman Catholic nun was back in her room under close observation, the B.M. Birla Heart Research Institute said in a statement.
Dr. Patricia Aubanel of the United States, Mother Teresa's cardiologist for the past two years, inserted a tiny balloon into the blood vessel and inflated it to expand the clogged vessel and ensure free flow of blood.
This is the fourth time Mother Teresa has been in a hospital this year.
She entered the hospital Monday but the operation was delayed when she developed a fever.
Mother Teresa won the 1979 Nobel Peace Prize for dedicating her life to the world's poorest and most destitute people.
WASHINGTON
Tuition, fees increasing at colleges
The American Association of State Colleges says tuition and fees at state colleges and universities is up 7.6 percent — from $2,263 last year to $2,434 this year.
But Wednesday's report said the pace of the rising prices has slowed. Costs in 1992 were 10.4 percent higher than the previous year and those 1991 costs, in turn, had been 13.6 percent higher than in 1990.
"The fiscal crisis in the states is not over, but it's certainly easing up a bit," said association president James B. Appleberry.
Room and board charges increased from an average of $3,374 in the fall of 1992 to $3,520 this fall.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
when Tom met the babe of his dreams during his summer vacation in Texas. The trouble started when they got their first phone bill.
Tom and his roommate had a little altercation
Now Tom's roomie wants to cut off the phone. Uncool.
Lucky for Tom, he can go to The Time Machine and buy a "cash" calling card for $4.50 for 10 minutes of interstate long-distance. Or a 30-minute card for $9.90. Or he can skip cable for a month and get a 75-minute card for $24.75. After all
a 75-minute card for $24.75. After all, it's more than
50% cheaper than using a payphone. And it's cool.
It's Time to TALK!* "cash" calling cards. It's about time.
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842-TIME (8463)
(In the Trailridge Apartments)
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8
Friday, September 17, 1993
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NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Letters tell health-care horrors
WASHINGTON — Brigitte Burdine was talking to the president of the United States, but her niece wasn't impressed. Two-year-old Chase was more interested in the swing flung over a huge tree near the Oval Office.
Therefore, Chase played quietly while her aunt told President Clinton and a Rose Garden audience of the girl's health-care horror story.
The Associated Press
Burdine said Chase had the AIDS virus, and her mother, Heather, had AIDS. The mother's insurance company has refused to pay claims until it can determine whether she contracted the virus before getting insurance.
Meanwhile, the bills are piling up. Heather's parents are adopting Chase in case the mother loses her insurance.
The family is worried that Heather's employer, threatened with high premiums, will fire her. The illness will soon make it impossible for her to work in any case.
"Myparents love Heather and Chase...and they would do anything to keep them alive, including being forced into poverty. This is not fair," Burdine wrote in a letter to Clinton. "No one should be refused topnotch health care in this country for financial reasons, and when someone becomes chronically ill, it should not be allowed to wipe out their entire family financially."
Burdine was one of 21 people the White House invited to help open Clinton's push for health care reform. Some read their letters out loud.
Some examples:
Cancer victim Suzy Somers of Menlo Park, Calif., wrote about how she lost her health insurance after her ex-husband went bankrupt. After reading the letter to the Clinton's, she shocked the audience by adding, "Last week, I found another lump on my breast."
■ Mable Piley of Iola also was invited to the ceremony. Her letter to Hillary Rodham Clinton's health care reform task force talked about how her and her husband's monthly insurance premiums more than tripped between 1989 and 1992, from $243 a month to $900 a month.
Piley, 59, said she was impressed by the attitude of the Clinton administration and the members of the task force.
Panel suggests lifting Vietnam ban
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Clinton should lift the 18-year trade embargo with Vietnam, six House members of a key trade panel said after returning from a visit to Hanoi.
"Lifting the trade embargo with Vietnam will enhance prospects for a final resolution of the POW-MIA issue by
Rep. Sam Gibbons, D-Fla., chair of the Ways and Means subcommittee on trade, joined five other members of the panel in telling Clinton that enduring trade sanctions will help resolve the issue of Americans missing from the Vietnam War.
actively involving more people, both Vietnamese and American, in the process,"the lawmakers said in a letter to Clinton dated Wednesday.
Bank and other international projects in Vietnam but were still barred from other commercial transactions.
Gibbons, in a speech to a business group Wednesday, said that Clinton was finding it difficult to move decisively on ending sanctions on Vietnam because of the political fallout from his efforts to avoid the draft during the Vietnam War.
The lawmakers, who visited Vietnam and other Asian countries in August, said the American public had not been fully informed about joint U.S.-Vietnam efforts on POW-MIA matters and "such lack of information has inhibited our ability to restore public confidence in both the U.S. and Vietnamese governments on this issue."
The White House announced Monday that American businesses would be allowed to participate in World
The administration said it would not normalize trade and diplomatic relations until it confirmed that Hanoi is fully cooperating in the accounting of more than 2,200 Americans still missing from the war.
The Associated Press
China expands military; neighbors nervous
BELIING — While China's resurgent economy is grabbing headlines worldwide, nervous neighbors are paying even closer attention to its accelerating program to build a modern fighting machine.
Although the magazine failed to reveal any military secrets, it was an unusually frank account of Chinese
military goals.
China insists it has no expansionist ambitions. But an official magazine recently acknowledged that China has taken advantage of the end of the Cold War to expand its "military influence to the entire Asian region."
"We shouldn't think that because we're at peace now, we can let the horses out to pasture, put our knives and guns in storage," said Gin. Liu Huqing, vice chairman of the Central Military Commission.
China has increased its official military budget an average 14 percent each of the past four years, more than the increase in overall government spending. It has come up with even more funds by aggressively selling weapons and civilian products made in military factories.
Gary Klintworth, an Asia specialist at Australia National University, said
economic development is driving the buildup with offshore interests such as oil, fisheries and shipping.
Gerald Segal, a senior fellow at the London-based International Institute of Strategic Studies said Beijing seemed most interested in negotiating long-term co-production agreements that would give it access to Russian technology.
Some experts say China's military buildup still amounts to catching up with its neighbors.
Lee Ngok, a strategic affairs expert at Hong Kong University, said other Asian countries also have increased arms purchases recently.
IT WON THE AWARDS. IT WILL WIN YOUR HEART.
THE LION CENTER
THE SECRET GARDEN
At the Lied Center
THE LION CENTER FOR SCIENCE
At the Lied Center University of Kansas
September 29 (KU Student Night) - October 3
Wednesday-Saturday performances at 8:00 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday matinees at 2:00 p.m.
Sunday evening at 7:00 p.m.
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office; all seats reserved;
tickets $35 and $30;
special discounts available.
To charge tickets by phone using MasterCard or Visa call 864-ARTS; or call any Ticketmaster outlet (816) 931-3330 or (913) 234-4545.
TICKETS AT:
TICKETMASTER
KU STUDENT TICKETS HALF PRICE FOR SEPTEMBER 29 PERFORMANCE ONLY! Student tickets also available at the SUA office, Kansas Union.
Student tickets also available at the SUA office, Kansas Union.
-2 0 0 0 0 .
1
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 17, 1993
9
Kansas to face Utah
Jayhawks ready for victory after early season struggle
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas senior center Dan Schmidt said there is a sense of urgency on the Jayhawk team for a victory.
"The urgency is definitely there when your goal is bowl games, ultimately the Orange Bowl, but if that doesn't happen then other bowl games," he said. "You have to win as many games as possible. There is a sense of urgency because we have to get on a roll now, especially by winning our games at home."
The Jayhawks, 1-2, hope to start a winning streak with a victory against Utah, 1-1, at 1 p.m. tomorrow at Memorial Stadium.
Kansas has struggled on offense in its two losses this season. The total offensive output in the losses to Florida State and Michigan State was a combined 505 yards. Against Western Carolina, Kansas' Ione
victory, the Jayhawks had 525 yards of total offense.
kansas coach Glen Mason said he has not been pleased by the effort of his offense in the two losses. "We've shot ourselves in the foot on offense more than anything, but we're not that far off from being okay," Mason said. "We've got to get going in the right direction. I think that's imperative because we are playing a good team, but not one with superior talent."
Utah has allowed its first two opponents to gain 456 yards of total offense a game, but the Utes have only given up an average of 126 yards rushing in those first two games.
Utah coach Ron McBride said that he was concerned with Kansas' size and ability to run the football.
"They really like to stretch you with the running game," McBride said. "Our defense has given up some big plays, which you just can't do."
Uah had to break in a new starting quarterback this season in junior Mike McCoy to replace Frank Dolce, who helped lead
Utah to a berth in the Copper Bowl last season.
McCoy got off to a rough start in a season opening 38-0 loss at Arizona State, where he completed only 12 of 33 passes for 129 yards and threw three interceptions. He rebounded last week to complete 20 of 38 passes for 261 yards and three touchdowns in Utah's 31-29 victory against Utah State.
Kansas senior defensive tackle Mike Steele said he was impressed by the Utes after watching them on film.
"Lots of times I get a false impression of a team on film, but Utah has a very good offense," Steele said. "They're very aggressive and tough on their offensive line, and they like to throw the ball a lot." Schmidt said he knew what a victory against Utah could mean for his team.
"We're only as good as our last game, and right now we're not too good after Michigan State," he said. "You get better or you get worse, and winning this week would definitely change our perspective and help us improve."
1 p.m., Saturday Memorial Stadium
Kansas Jayhawks KU
(1-2-0)
Head Coach: Glen Mason
Utah Utes (1-1-0)
Head Coach: Ron McBride
Offense:
WR 84 Rodney Harris 6-6 210 Jr.
TE 1 Dwayne Chandler 6-2 238 Sr.
LT 62 Chris Banks 6-2 270 So.
LG 66 Hessley Hempstead 6-1 295 Jr.
C 75 Dan Schmidt 6-2 265 Sr.
RG 69 John Jones 6-1 285 Jr.
RT 78 Mark Allison 6-3 285 So.
WR 8 Ashaudal Smith 6-1 285 So.
QB 12 Fred Thomas 6-0 490 Jr.
TB 22 L.T. Levine 5-10 210 So.
RB 33 Costello Good 6-1 212 Jr.
Defense:
OLB 39 Don Davis 6-1 212 Jr.
LE 95 Kevin Polian 6-3 238 So.
LT 72 Chris Meumalanga 6-3 286 Sr.
RT 61 Mike Steelis 6-3 276 Sr.
RE 90 Guy Howard 6-4 245 Sr.
OLB 46 Ronnie Ward 6-0 212 So.
MLB 35 Larry Thiel 6-3 223 Sr.
CB 28 Tony Blewls 6-0 170 Pr.
FS 47 Clint Bowen 5-11 190 Sr.
SS 38 Robert Vaughn 5-11 188 Sr.
CB 3 Gerald McBurrows 5-11 188 Jr.
Defense:
LE 83 Luther Elliss 6-5 257 Jr.
LE 94 Adam Swaney 6-7 263 Jr.
RT 93 Blaine Berger 6-4 274 Jr.
RE 36 Bronzell Miller 6-4 235 Jr.
OLB 53 Chris Newman 6-5 222 Jr.
OLB 48 Ronnie Ward 6-0 212 So.
MLB 35 Larry Thiel 6-3 223 Sr.
CB 48 Karsem Leary 5-11 166 Sr.
FS 12 Marcus Woods 5-11 209 Jr.
SS 37 Ed Miller 5-11 222 Sr.
CB 5 Mark Swanson 5-11 185 Sr.
NB 15 Cedric Crawford 5-10 194 Sr.
KU
Utah Utes (1-1-0)
Head Coach: Ron McBrid
Source: KANSAN Staff Reports
Micah Laaker/KANSAN
Twins' Winfield gets 3000th hit makes history
The Associated Press
MINNEAPOLIS — Dave Winfield singled in the ninth inning last night off Oakland's Dennis Eckersley to become the 19th player in major league history to get 3,000 career hits.
The ground single to left, in his fourth at-bat, drove in a run that helped send the Minnesota Twins into extra innings with a 2-2 score. Winfield was presented with the ball at first base while many in the Metrodome crowd of just 14,654 tossed paper on the field.
For two decades, Winfield's combination of size, speed, power and grace has sent scouts scurrying in search of the next prototype ballplayer.
His chopper off the plate in the seventh inning put him within one of the milestone, and he got No. 3,000 two innings later off Eckersley.
Winfield turns 42 on Oct. 3. Only Cap Anson, 46 when he got his 3,000th, reached the milestone at an older age.
Winfield fouled off a 1-2 pitch and then grounded a hard single past diving third baseman Craig Paquette. He pumped his right hand in the air, shook hands with first-base coach Wayne Terwilliger and raised both arms amid a standing ovation.
Last September, Robin Yount of Milwaukee and George Brett of Kansas City also reached 3,000 career hits.
It was Winfield's 10th career hit off Eckersley. Kelly Downs, who gave up the infield hit, was the 681st pitcher to serve up a hit to Winfield.
Winfield has played in 12 All-Star games. Now primarily a designated hitter, he also has won seven Gold Gloves as an outfielder.
Winfield also ranks high in several other categories: ninth in at-bats with 10,558 and games with 2,840, 11th in total bases with 5,044, 13th in RBIs with 1,780, 15th in extra-base hits with 1,053, 18th in homers with 453, 25th in doubles with 51 and 29th in runs with 1,616.
That capped an outstanding season in which Winfield became the first 40-year-old to drive in 100 runs.
But his biggest triumph came last season when he helped Toronto win the World Series, proving he could perform in the clutch, too. His two-run double in the 11th inning of Game 6 gave him his first championship.
"I never thought about numbers when I was drafted," Winfield said. "I was drafted as a pitcher."
In December, the native Minnesota signed with the team he rooted for as a youngster, but he has had one of his worst offensive seasons — batting 2.62 with 21 homers and 70 RBIs. The team has been out of the AL West race for months, making Winfield's chase for 3,000 hits the main focus.
He has fought through several long slumps this year and entered last night's game with 18 hits in his previous 110 at-bats.
Despite this season's struggles, Winfield has put up remarkable numbers since his 40th birthday. In 292 games, he has batted .278 with 47 homers and 180 RBIs.
Winfield went right from the University of Minnesota to the San Diego Padres, never playing in the minors. He got his first hit off Jerry Reuss in his debut, June 19, 1973.
Aside from Brett, Yount and Pete Rose, every player who has 3,000 hits has been enshrined in the Hall of Fame.
Brett and Yount, who last season became the 17th and 18th players to reach the milestone, are still playing. Rose, the all-time leader with 4,256 hits, was banned by former commissioner Fay Vincent for gambling.
But Winfield doesn't think too much about the Hall of Fame because he wants to play at least two more years. His guaranteed, no-trade contract with the Twins runs through next season.
4
William Alix / KANBAN
Track team member Billy Davis, Topeka sophomore, runs during an informal workout at Memorial Stadium. NCAA regulations prohibit the team from officially practicing with coaches present until Oct. 11.
In training
Running back signs contract with Dallas
The Associated Press
IRVING, Texas — Emmitt Smith and Jerry Jones ended their contract feud yesterday. The cost: millions of dollars out of Jones' pocket and two lost football games.
Smith, who had watched on television while the defending Super Bowl champion Dallas Cowboys lost both games they played without him, reached an agreement with Jones that could make him the highest-paid running back in the game.
Cowboys public relations director Rich Dalrymple confirmed "there has been an agreement in principle but the contract has not been signed."
No contract terms were immediately divulged, but Smith had said that he wouldn't sign unless Jones paid him "Thurman Thomas money."
The contract was expected to be a four-year deal for approximately $13.6 million, which would be more than Buffalo pays Thomas.
Smith had said he wanted a fouryear contract worth $15 million.
Thomas is the NFL's highest-paid running back at $13.5 million over four years.
"I was underpaid the first three years," Smith said in a recent telephone interview. "Now it's time for
me to be paid what I'm worth."
Jones fought to the very end against paying Smith what he wanted, saying he needed to pay Smith as little as possible to position the Cowboys under the salary cap that will take effect in 1994.
"I have all the confidence in the world that what I'm doing for the future is the right thing to do," Jones said before the agreement. "I'm not trying to win a popularity contest. But I feel now by putting the Thurman Thomas dollars out there I've met responsibilities to the fans and the plavers in the lockerroom."
Smith had the option to sit out the season and become a restricted free agent next year.
Jones has admitted the loss to Buffalo last Sunday complicated matters.
Jones has tried to sell his side of the bargaining to the media while Smith has remained relatively quiet.
However, it hasn't worked in the Cowboys lockerroom, where players have openly sided with Smith.
Fans also have turned on Jones, who hid in the Texas Stadium tunnel during Sunday's 13-10 loss, shunning his usual fourth-quarter jaunt along the sidelines He then hurried out of the interview room area before the doors were opened.
The Associated Press
Mariner pitcher hands KC defeat after losing no-hitter
SEATLE — Randy Johnson came within five outs of his second career no-hitter last night before Brian McRae doubled in the eighth inning in the Seattle Mariners 14-1 victory against the Kansas City Royals.
Chris Bosio pitched a no-hitter for the Mariners on April 22 against Boston in a 7-0 victory in Seattle.
The 30-year-old left-hander struck out 15, extending his major league-leading strikeout total to 277. He walked six and hit a batter in his bid to duplicate his only career no-hitter, a 2-0 victory June 2, 1990, against Detroit in the Kingdome. The 15 strikeouts matched his season high set against Kansas City on June 14.
Johnson,17-8,a two-time All-Star for the Mariners,won his sixth straight game as Seattle tied the Roy-
as or third place in the AL West, 7% games behind Chicago. It was Seattle's fifth win in seven games.
Johnson lost his no-hit bid in the eighth after walking leadoff batter Keith Miller. Miller went to second on catcher's interference with Greg Gagne batting. McRae hit a hard grounder down the line past diving third baseman Mike Blowers for a double, scoring Miller.
Johnson was replaced after making 140 pitches. With three more starts, Johnson has a chance to become Seattle's first 20-game winner and also has an opportunity to become the first major league pitcher to get 300 strikeouts in a season since Nolan Ryan struck out 301 in 1989.
The Royals got their second hit of the game in the ninth inning when Craig Wilson doubled with two outs off Steve Ontiveros.
Tournament welcomes Jayhawks
Volleyball coach expects challenging tournament
Kansan sportswriter
By Gerry Fey
Kansas is the only volleyball team not nationally ranked in this weekend's Arby's Big Eight-Southeast Conference Classic in Lincoln, Neb.
"We'll have to do our best to compete," she said. "It's important that we play our own game. I believe the better the team you play is, the better your team plays."
The other teams in the tournament are No. 4 Nebraska, No. 18 Georgia and No. 22 Louisiana State. Kansas plays Louisiana State at 5:30 p.m. today, and the Jayhawks will play Georgia on Saturday at 5:30 p.m. Kansas and Nebraska will not meet in the tournament.
And that makes Kansas senior middle blocker Cvndae Kanabel a little nervous.
"We don't play Nebraska, but I don't
care," Kansas coach Frankie Albitz said. "We already play each other twice in the Big Eight and maybe again in the Big Eight tournament."
Albizt said she wasn't sure how her team would react to its tournament opponents.
"They're pretty confident no matter who they play," Albizs said. "I don't know if we'll win it. If we're competitive, and they show what they can do, I'll be happy."
Kanabel said that the thought of winning the tournament excited her.
"I'm kind of glad we're playing these teams," Kanabel said. "It would be the highlight of the season if we won. I would be on cloud nine."
Nebraska coach Terry Pettit asked Albiz to enter the tournament because he wanted two Big Eight teams and two teams from another conference to participate. Colorado coach Brad Saidon had wanted Kansas to play in a tournament in Boulder, Colo.
"A couple of years ago, when this was scheduled, he and Brad called," Albitz said. "We were third in the conference at the
"At first, I wanted to go to Colorado," Albiz said. "I wasn't sure about Nebraska. But now I'm really glad we are going."
time, so they both wanted us in their tournament."
Because of good timing in the schedule, Lincoln's proximity to Lawrence and the level of competition, Albitz said she chose the tournament at Nebraska.
This tournament might be a bigger challenge to the Jayhawks compared to last weekend's Kansas Invitational. The Jayhawks defeated Southeast Missouri State in its last match, winning the tournament.
Tracie Walt, senior outside hitter, said those matches helped the team.
"I think it was good because everybody got equal time to play." Walt said. "We worked on things we had only worked on in practice..."
Walt said she was excited about playing in Lincoln, which is her hometown, against players she knew.
"Even if we don't win, it will be a learning experience," she said. "We don't have anything to lose."
1
Susan McSpadden / KANSAN
---
Senior spiker Shelby Lord walts for a return during the KU Invitational Tournament.
10
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Open-water swimming gains popularity
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
Lake temperature causes coach to cancel swim meet
For the second consecutive year the Kansas swim team has had its hopes of being the first U.S. college to host an open-water swimming event dashed because of cold water.
Western Illinois and Southern Illinois were scheduled to compete in the event, which was to have taken place Saturday at Lone Star Lake.
The temperature of Lone Star Lake, where the event was to be held, was 73 degrees Fahrenheit on Tuesday afternoon. With overnight low temperatures expected to drop into the 40's, Kansas coach Gary Kempf decided to cancel the event.
Kempf tried to organize a similar event last year but also was forced to cancel that event because of low water temperature.
athletes weren't accustomed to swimming in those temperatures.
"That last cold front killed it for us," Kempf said. The average temperature for an NCAA pool is 82 degrees. Kempf said that when water temperatures dropped into the low 70's, the chance of cramping and developing hypothermia increased because
Open-water swimming events take place in large bodies of water, usually lakes or oceans.
Kempf said Western Illinois had withdrawn from the tournament before Tuesday, when Kempf made the decision to cancel the meet.
"It's just not worth the chance of serious injury," Kempf said.
Southern Illinois coach Rick Walker agreed with the decision to cancel the event.
Walker said that the inclement weather wasn't hindering the sport's growth in popularity.
He said that he expected the popularity of open-water events to increase in the future. He said there were several factors that would help the future of the sport.
One factor is the formation of the open-water national team, which Walker coached last year, by United States Swimming, the sport's governing body in the United States.
Another factor is that FINA, the international governing agency for swimming, sanctioned openwater events and started holding world championships in 1991.
One of the biggest draws to the event may be the formation of a professional circuit in Europe. Distances on the circuit range from five-kilometers to 45-kilometers long. Winners can win up to $15,000 in such an event.
@
On the skin, water feels five degrees colder than it actually is
Take a Dip
O
The average pool water temperature at a swim meet is 82 degrees Fahrenheit. In comparison, the temperature of a lake on Tuesday afternoon was 73 degrees Fahrenheit.
In long open water events, swimmers have feeding stations. In addition, coaches usually follow their respective swimmers in boats.
A professional circuit now exists for Drop Water Splitting
JACKIE MAYER
Micah Leaker/KAMSAN
North Carolina ready for Seminoles
Walker said that some events were beginning to appear in the United States as well. He said that one such event was held in Manhattan, N.Y., in which swimmers swam around the entire island. Walker said that Las Vegas promoters wanted to hold a professional meet later in the year.
Walker said that the distances of the open-water races were demanding and that practicing in open water helped his swimmers' conditioning.
Kempf said he hoped that the weather would cooperate when the event was scheduled next year.
The Associated Press
CHAPELHILL, N.C. — There is a big ACC game this weekend on Tobacco Road. Two undefeated teams will play before a sellout crowd on national television. The hype is enormous, the No.1 ranking is on the line, and the winner could capture the national championship.
So what do you think, Dean Smith?
So what do you think, Dean Smith:
"It should be a great game," he said.
"I can't wait to watch it on television."
That's right, Smith will be a fan tomorrow night when top-ranked Florida State visits No. 13 North Carolina in what might be the most important football game at Kenan Stadium in a dozen years.
Big games are nothing new in Chapel Hill, but they usually involve Smith's basketball teams. There hasn't been this much excitement over football since 1981, when No. 8 North Carolina lost to No. 2 Clemson 10-8.
"People are comparing it to the Final Four," said Corey Holliday, the school's all-time leading receiver.
North Carolina and Florida State are both high-scoring teams with 3-0 records, but that's where the comparison ends. Florida State is an established power that is favored to win its first national championship. North Carolina's arising challenger that has made steady strides under coach Mack Brown since posting 1-10 records in 1988 and 1989.
"We want respect," said senior defensive back Bracey Walker. "If we beat Florida State, we'll get all the respect we deserve."
The Tar Heels already have the respect of Florida State coach Bobby Bowden, who was impressed by their 31-9 rout of Southern California in the
Just how far the Tar Heels have come will be determined against the Seminoles, who have outscored Kansas, Duke and Clemson by a combined 144-7.
Pigskin Classic.
"They looked as good as anybody I've seen this year," Bowden said. "They've got some speed, especially in their defensive front, and they're scoring a lot of points."
North Carolina has met many challenges since going 2-20 in Brown's first two seasons.
"It was a very, very difficult time," said Brooks. "We were playing a lot of young people, and we didn't have much success, but it forced us to come together as a team."
Brooks is from Raleigh, one of 68 North Carolina natives on the 106player roster. Recruiting more instate players has been one of the keys to Brown's success.
"There are a lot of really good football players in North Carolina, and we want to get as many of them as we can," Brown said. "We want to be the popular place to play big-time college football in this state."
Club Groups
Men's soccer
Men's soccer at University of Nebraska at Omaha for Mavrick tournament this Saturday and Sunday. Play against Wichita State, UNO, and Mankato State, Minnesota.
Collegiate Side—at Missouri University, Saturday.
Reserve Side—at Missouri University, Saturday.
Club Side—at Aspen Rugby Festival in Aspen, Colorado, Saturday and Sunday, play against teams from Aspen, California, and Kansas City.
Women's rugby at Wichita State, Saturday.
The Associated Press
Virginia tops Tech, continues winning streak
ATLANTA — Larry Holmes caught a 30-yard touchdown pass and set up a score with a 65-yard kickoff return as No. 25 Virginia defeated Georgia Tech 35-14 last night.
Holmes caught the touchdown pass from Symmion Willis, giving the unbeaten Cavaliers a 9-0 lead in the Atlantic Coast Conference game.
Tech's Mike Williams prevented a 100-yard kickoff return when he bumped Holmes out of bounds on the
Tech 35 yard line, but four plays later Kevin Brooks scored from the 7 yard line, giving Virginia a 15-7 lead.
The Cavaliers, 3-0 overall and 2-0 in the ACC, beat Georgia Tech, 1-1 and 0-1, for the fifth time in the last seven meetings.
Virginia's biggest problem in the first half was converting extra points. Alhigh snap prevented a kick after the first touchdown and Willis was stopped on an attempted run after the second.
Virginia scored twice in the final
Kyle Kirkseid added field goals of 28, 39 and 20 yards for the Cavaliers.
quarter following pass interceptions, the first on Charles Way's 33-yard run and the other a 6-yard run by Brooks with 34 seconds left in the game.
Tech cut the lead to 9-7 on a 20-yard pass from Donnie Davis to Keenan Walker with 7:19 left in the second quarter, just before Holmes' long kickoff return.
After Way gave the Cavaliers a 28-7 lead, freshman Derrick Steagall returned the ensuing kickoff 50 yards.
setting up a six-play, 42-yard drive that ended on a 9-yard touchdown run by Davis with 8:39 left in the game.
Virginia wasted a 26-yard interception return by P.J. Killian to the Tech 29 yard line in the final minute of the first half when an errant snap over Willis' head cost the Cavaliers 22 yards. Willis then was sacked for losses of 8 and 16 vards as the half ended.
Willis, a redshirt sophomore who played high school ball in Atlanta, completed 16 of 21 passes for 185 yards.
R ANGER FRUSTRATION AGONY WEAKN STRESS FAINT THUNDER LIGHTNING JOY IEF SADNESS PRIDE COMPANIONSHIP ST ENCE ANGUISH JOY EXCITEMENT HAPPI STACY TORMENT LOVE FEAR ANGER FRUS
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The Magic Flute
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Come see a performance of Mozart's classic, "The Magic Flute," at The Lyric Opera and you'll travel with a young prince and his magic flute on an emotional journey inspired by love.
and 22. Tickets range from $8 to $37 and can be purchased at The Lyric ticket office. Seats are selling quickly, so call 471-7344 soon to order tickets
Performances will be staged September 17, 18, 20
The performance on Saturday,
September 18th is sponsored by
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Lyric Opera. Get Caught in the Act. 1029 Central, Kansas City, MO 64105
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 17, 1993
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108 Personal
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112 Personal
120 Awardsnitions
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
Classified Policy
400s Real Estate
408 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Furthr, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
380 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1988 and may not be presented under any circumstances, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discriminatory.
- Kansan Classified: 864-4358
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100s Announcements
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120 Announcements
ATTENTION ROLE - PLAYING GAMES. Graduate student seeks other graduate students or professors to form role-playing gaming group. Please call 855-4361.
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WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. HTASE Assistance Center, 133 Strong
130' Entertainment
ATTENTION WEEK OF ROCK FANS-The show is on Jimmy Witherens is coming to town but his two shows on Sept. 27th are been moved up i four hours pm on the week of July passes and Witherens tickets now on their Listen to KLZR FM 106.9 for ticket giveaways. Remember all shows are 18 and over.
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140 Lost & Found
Lost stray white cat at 18t and Haskell Sunday morning September 12 at inlandromat. To the girl who took it home please respond back to UDK, box #15. The owners injured about the cat.
Work experience and a pay check too
Found 1 VIB videotape on the sidewalk between military Science and Malott. Call 864-4144 ask for
Found, single key on the corner of Ermery and Sigma Nu Place. Call aks for Dave.
Lost: Prescription glasses in gray case. Cash reward. Call 749-5011.
205 Help Wanted
Do you need work experience? Did you have trouble making the income you needed this summer Vector Marketing can help you
BURNED OUT on your food service job! Clean buildings for BASIC Sun!-Thur. eves 13-20 hr/wk. Flexible wage. $4.80/hr. starting wage. 842-5995 Counter bail needed 5-9 Apr.
Cash Caterers, Kansas and Burge Unions' Catering Department, September 28, 1983, 8:15pm-10:00am. Opening the opening of the Leid Center, Apply at the Kansas and Burge Unions' Personnel Office, Level 5, Kansas Union Building. Other dates available for cash catering. Listings available in Personnel
200s Employment
numeral help needed SAT-B1. Answering phone and
buying skilled skill set. Apply in person at
a nursing school.
Brandon Woods Retirement Community is urging 4:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. shift. Above minimum wage. Pay must be hard working and willing to work weekends and some holiday. Apply at 185俊留館
with both.
Cottonwood Inc., a service providing for adults with developmental disabilities, is currently accepting applications for full and part-time employment in their residential division. All positions are evening and weekend hours, some may require sleepouts. College course work and relat- ing experience are required to acquire driving record is a must. Please apply at Cottonwood Inc. 2001 W. St. EOE
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Internships & Scholarships
842-8531 now available
Hardy person needed to help renovate an old house. Cell Phn at 842-8198 or 841-6307.
Male Female
DEVELOPMENT/CONSTRUCTION CO. has part-time opening with flexible day hours for an office assistant. Chance for full-time summer employment and after graduation. Experience on IBM or Apple computers. Some accounting/book-keeping experience. Starting at $6.00 and up depending on experience and hours. Send resume to P. D. Box 3008, Lawrence, KS 60504. Attn: Nila.
CRUISER SHIPS NOW HIRING - Earn up to $2000 +
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employment available. No experience necessary. For
applicants please email your resume to: crusierships@micro.com.
Personal details must be provided. Must be a job-
Child care provider needed in person, First United
Methodist Church, 486 Vermont, 841-7500
Day care needs experienced person. Must be available in the morning. $5/hr. 811-781
Greenpeace is seeking dedicated, energetic indi-
pendent staff. (Including the unrising staff. Guaranteed wage + benefits.
Full or part time. Call (618)513-1884. Everyone is
dedicated to gender, race, or sexual orientation.
Grace Church is looking for experienced childcare workers. Sunday morning hours are 15 to noon. References required. Call Kathy at 843-2005 for an interview time.
Domino's Pizza now has 5 delivery positions available. Apply after 4 p.m. any day all shifts avail. Flexible hrs. average driver earns $7-$10 an hour. 841-8002.
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
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WALK-IMS WELCOME!
Keyboard players wanted for variety dance band.
Keyboard equipment, 7 equipment, and exp. MB Entertainment Group.
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W 24th 749-5750
Help wanted.Adams Alumni Center needs morning dishwasher 3 days a week, minimum wage, position available immediately, apply in person.
1286 Oread Ave.
Kansas and Burge Union hiring part-time, hourly for Fall Semester. Many jobs in Food Service, Catering and Custodian with varying schedules. Office of the President, K. Kansas Union Building for job titles: BOE, USEC
Miracle Video is accepting applications for a park
and building a playground between 16:30 and
3:30. No phone calls please.
Needed for Property Management Co.,
full time, experience preferred,
Need dependable care give for my 8 yr. old daughter, approx. 1. hr., early eve. 3 X's w/k, and possibly more. Must have own transportation. Call 841-7088 at 6 p.m.
NANNIES... spend a year near NYC with a family
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at Deli or Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Previous food service and supervision experience mandatory. Start at $2.52 per hour. Future pay raised on performance. Up to $2.52 per hour. 20-3 hrs a week. Most evenings and weekends. Includes breakfast. M-F 8-4 p.m. (unlimited) smokehouse.
Part-time telephone marketer needed. No expi-
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For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
800-753-1922 or visit www.vivian.com.
Brightnight.com:1, free pregnancy testing.
Part-time day and evening help wanted. Must be
born in France, resident in person only at
Border Dock, 1604a W. 2329c E.
Program Aide for the Lawrence Arts Center.
Shops. Part time position. Afternoons, evenings and weekends. Start immediately. Must be KS. Study at The Lawrence Arts Center, 200 W. 9th.
RTIME SUPERVISOR WANTED.
ass St. Deli or Baldi Bob's Sucr
225 Professional Services
Rainforest Montessori School is interviewing for a
Late Afternoon Instructor-Experience in non-competitive games with elementary-aged children
required. Hrs 3:15-5:00 M-F. Call 843-6800.
Position Available: A local business needs a person to do maintenance work including, lawn work, washing cars, cleaning, painting etc. Flexible schedule, but need 2-3 hours per day with possibly some weekend hours. Must have valid driver's license and/or a job offer. Please indicate distance of K U. For additional information and an interview, please call 843-1120 and ask for Larry or Phil.
The University of Kansas Athletic Department Student Support Services unit is currently accepting applications for part-time tutors during the fall semester. Students are required to Math, and other areas. Interested applicants must have at least twenty-one hours of course work in the subject area with a GPA of 3.0 or better. Tutors must be familiar with course content and teaching the strategies expert learners use to acquire knowledge, experience academic success, and graduate. A complete transcript from the University of Kansas are available on request. Salary; $6/hour with the potential for regular merit raises. Application procedures: Complete the tutor application form, and submit the completed application located in Jayhawk Room 8 at Room 257, Allen Fieldhouse. Hours of application are 9:00 a.m. to: 4:00 p.m. Monday through Thursday. The University of Kansas is an equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action institution.
Macintosh repairs and upgrades
Friendly, Affordable, In-Home Service
The Mac Doctors 892-0648
Temporary help wanted. Interior building demolition. Bea a.s.a. n 816-787-6011
University Information Center seeks student hourly who is motivated, familiar with KU and community resources, organized, computer-literate, knowledgeable, capable of performing tasks, has wide range of interests and sense of humor. Pick up application at KU info. 420 Kansas Union. Applications by d. p. September 30.
The earnings potential in Lawrence is exploitable as opportunity from your residence. Please call
842-5442
Wanted a very responsible person to babysit a child.
Please call: 748-7655. References required.
LSAT EXPERTS KAPLAN
TUTORS
Work/Study positions open in Speech/Language
Department, Apply in Haworth or 301 Dole
KAPLAN
GRE EXPERTS
842-5442
Prompt abrupt and contraceptive services. Dale L. Clinton M.D. 841-5716.
TRAFFIC.DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
235 Typing Services
DONALDG.STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G Kesety
16 East 13th 842-1133
i-der Women Word Processing. Former editor
inherits skills into accurate pages of letter
quality type 943-20-200.
ABSOLUTELY EXCELLENT EDITING! Dissertation and thesis experience. No paper too large.
WORD PROCESSING AND MARK- PRINTING
For all your typing needs
***
ProType - fast, reliable service, professional quality
any kind of typing accepted Call today at 841-350-3272
Word processing, applications, term papers, dis-
tribitions, presentations. Master's degree: 841-628,
rush jobs available. Masters Degree: 841-628.
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
1968 Yamaha Riva, 100cc, Runs Great, $700,
make offer. 832-295-85.
1867 Honda Hurricane 620cc red on white; Runs and
lights great $260.00. Call: 82-1400
GARAGE SALE 17-18 Sept.
Neons, Beer & Liquor Signs
1-70 Eastto I 435, South to
Johnson Drive, East to Quivia
5928 Garnett, Shewwke, Ks
1912 Gibson Les Paul Studio, wine color with gold
60s, beautiful, old beauty, $455.00
call 749-2893
email info@gibsonlesspalmstudios.com
26 'Women's Schwinn Word Sport bicycle excellent cond. binder. Dibs 3 times $150.
lent cond. Ridden 3 times $150,
BAW 2 way spurs DRMs, Replaced woofers and
BEW 2 way wsprs DMS, Replaced woofers and
Mend to accommodate 1850, Call Chad M3-2741.
Beds, desks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
908 Mass.
Quantrill's Flea Market open every Fri., Sat. & Sun 10AM-5PM 811 New Hampshire 842-6616 Downtown
Dennis Miller tickets 865-3562.
For sale Yakima car top carrier with bike tray,
Call 841-9605.
For Sale: Dorm carpets $20-$30 each. Alpine carpets
for Canon FD-500; Drom carpet $40-$60 each. For Canon
FD-250; Call Rabalh 76-415.
For Sale: Microwave-$65, Brass Full-sized headboard $75 and Brother Wordprocessor $300, Contact 82-895
SUNFLOWER
104 MASACHUSETTS
BOSTON, MA
Rollerblade.
Rollerblade 303 Wheels
(reg. $17.99)$10 SALE
Rollerblade Zetra
Bearings (reg. $10.95)
$7 SALE
Bauer
Aeroblade (reg. $329)
$269 SALE
XS-5 Street Skate
(reg. $199.95)
$139.95 Sale
340 Auto Sales
Hockey Gloves
(reg. $29.95)
$10 SALE
Leg Guards (reg.
$22.95)
$10 SALE
87.Cavallet, Auto, cruise, AC, PS, sunroof, Kenwood
Stereo, $3000, 948-287-887.
In-Line
1900 Ford Tempra, 4 dr. AT, AC, extra clean, 85700
ob. Call Bruce Ree 3:50pm 832-4974
Cooper
$10 SALE
370 Want to Buy
tran, tires, batt. call 864-5728
1985 KAWA, KOINi Nujri. Trick paint, plenty of
tran, tires, batt. call 864-5728
360 Miscellaneous
Skate Speedometer (reg. $45.95)
$35 SALE
Chiefs ticket: 4 Broncos, 2 Raiders, 4 Bengals, 10 Packers, 4 Bears, 6 Billis, and 4 Seahawks. Best offer. All are single seats but most in same section. Call 843-3506.
LEVI'S 501's, will pay up to $13.00 and $10.00 for Levi's jean Jackets. 814-0546.
Wanted, used Trek 660/970 min. bike. Will pay $150-$250 cash. Call 841-1882.
One pair, Infinity Studio Monitor 182 Home Speakers. Very nice speakers, well taken care of. Come with warranty. $60/pr. or b.o.b. 832-2399 or 842-6066.
powerbook 150 4/120
new in box $249.99
852-1317
dress cabinet queen size waverless, heated good condition $100.0 b.c. call 841-7672.
Wedding ring set, ¼ karat round diamond surrounded by marquise & baguettes. Retail value $280, selling for $300.00包邮. Call Liss 862-2354
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1 BR apt. cable & water paid. Sept. 3p. On bus
Call after 7:00AM. Call after 7:25am and leave a
message 844-4177
Available Immediately at West Hill Apt. 1032,
Emery Etr. Sd. Spacious, one bedroom, unfurnished
bedroom, a pool, laundry, great location
northeast comp. $359, north-water paid. No
Peters. 841-380 or 848-384
3 bedroom, 2 bath available October for sublease. 6154 a.m. Call 841-7414, leave message.
b2 b3 bath 2 app for rent Campus Place. Very close room. Smoker please. Call 842-6095.
f. m. avail, for fem. in 2 story townhouse. Close to campus & on bus rt. $242/mo. +. used. Sept. rent already paid. Lease to May 31. 749-7243. Subleasing. Naismith Room, 1 month paid for, call
*extra noise and quiet.* 3 bedroom room. Including cen-
tral suite and balcony. No pet. Nets: 925.
Spanish Crest Appartment 814-608-5761.
Subleasing: Nismith Room. I month paid for, call 410-1499. Leave message or ask for call.
HEATHERWOOD
VALLEY
APARTMENTS
2040 Heatherwood
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
How to schedule an ad:
Call Now!843-4754
*2 Bedroom, 1 $^{1/2}$ Bath $425*
*3 Bedroom, 2 Bath $550*
AVAILABLE IN MEDIATE!
430 Roommate Wanted
- By phone: 864-4358
Female. Grad. student roommate wanted to share 1 bed, duplex. Great location. $125 + utilities. Call and leave a message 865-3511. Ask for Claudia.
Male roommate wanted at Sundance $197/month. Water paid, furnished. Call after 7 p.m. 749-1398.
Responsible, non-smoking female roommate to share a fire. 2 br. AFT $185 + 1/2 utils. Call 843-7099.
Responsible NS F roommate to share 3 bdr. apt. Cable + waterpaid. Most furnished, on KU bus route. $165 mo + 1/2 utility. 749-0198.
Ads phone in may be held to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
*n.* person: 1191 Staffer Flight
Classified Information and order form
Calculating Rates:
Stop by the Kasaa 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.
*female non-smoker to share duplex, three床,
washer/dryer, on KU bus route. 794-145.
*roommate roomate to beautiful new condo on
a balcony to pets. Oct 1 May 31 $288 +
3 utilities. 749-3886
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
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 cancelled ads that were pre-paid by or with cash are not available.
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 the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
Refinement:
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00.
Rem. of insertions:
3 lines
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5-7 lines
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Cost per line per day
1 2X 1-3X 4-7X 0-14X 15-29X 30+X
2.05 1.55 1.05 .85 .75 .50
1.90 1.15 1.00 .70 .65 .45
1.85 1.05 .75 .65 .60 .40
1.75 .90 .65 .60 .55 .35
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
165 personal 148 last 1 found 385 for sale
110 business personalis 205 help wanted 380 auto sales
122 announcements 225 professional services 360 miscellaneous
128 entertainment 235 living services
Classifications
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The University Dialysis Kalan,AN, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 60945
***
The University Dialysis Kalan,AN, 119 StauFFER FLINT HALL, LAWRENCE, KS. 60945**
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1983 ForWorks, Inc./Dist. by Universal Press Syndicate
MARRIAGE COUNSEL
9-17
Jenson
"Now, you can't hurt each other with those things, so next time you bicker, just go ahead and vent your anger—you'll both feel better."
1
12
Friday, September 17, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Book offer draws resistance
LesBiGay plans gift to junior highs
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Megan Joyce's plan to buy books for Lawrence's three junior high schools sounds simple enough.
But Joyce, Lawrence sophomore, and other members of Lesbian Bisexual Gay Services of Kansas want to raise money from KU students to buy books different from others in the libraries at South, West and Central Junior High schools — books on being homosexual.
"There's a great need for education not only for the gay and lesbian people in school but for teachers and faculty as well," Joyce said. "It would dispel a lot of myths and put a lot of reality into the schools."
Joyce said the junior high age of 12-15 years old was a sensitive time for someone discovering his or her sexual orientation.
"It's an age where they just need to explore for themselves," she said.
Keeping the books in junior high libraries would allow better access to them, Joyce said. She said because students that age had to travel with their parents they would find books in
the junior high library more convenient than books in the Lawrence Public Library.
In addition, Vespestad said that controversial books must be approved by a committee of parents before being made available. And in this case, the decision also would involve the Lawrence School Board, she said.
Joyce said she tried to donate three books to West Junior High in the fall of 1902, but Vespestad said she only could find one of the books. She said it was behind the counter and not on the library shelves.
"It's a pretty good guess that some parents would have problems with that." she said.
Vespestad said books on gay and lesbian issues would probably be met with parental opposition.
A check through the library's computer catalog system yielded only one entry under "gay," Vespestad said. It was a cross-reference to a book on AIDS.
Joyce said she planned to bring the
board to the board at some future date.
John Tacha, president of the school
board, declined to say how either he or the board would react to gay and lesbian literature in the junior highs but said the issue would be brought before the board if Joyce brought it up.
Tacha said he disagreed with Joyce on the issue of convenience for gay junior high students. He said the students would feel uncomfortable checking out books from the library where their classmates could see them.
"A junior high student who has those kinds of awakenings would not want to go to a junior high library," he said. "That argument doesn't hold much water to me."
P. K. Duncan, director of curriculum for the district, said she would oppose the idea. She said the evidence showed junior high children were too impressionable, and gay and lesbian books could confuse their orientation.
"I don't know how to tell anybody I'm not biased," Duncan said. "But I do think it's a difficult age for a child."
"It doesn't change your sexual orientation," she said. "It gives you a healthier perspective on your sexual orientation, whether gay or straight."
M
Brian Vandervliet / KANSAN
Fire at Templin
Tony Augusto, KU police officer, and Harold Mallonee and Jim Wilson, Lawrence firefighters, rush to put out a small fire in the basement of Templin Hall. Brenden Sager, Shawne freshman, waits outside after the residence hall was evacuated. A cardboard box caught on fire in a boiler room yesterday. No injuries were reported.
Magazine features KU singer
Student receives national attention
By Liz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
Kirsten Paludan, Lawrence senior, was one of four students nationwide selected to appear in the audition section of October's Downbeat, a nationally known jazz magazine.
Paludan was one of several members of the KU Jazz Singers, which won Downbeat's 1993 Outstanding Performance Award, to be asked to submit a biography and photograph for the audition profile, which features rising talents from high schools and colleges across the nation.
Students may associate Paludan with the singing of the national anthem at men's home basketball
100
games. Paludan first tasted fame while standing on the Jayhawk emblem in the middle of Allen Field House and performing for thousands of basketball fans.
Kirsten Paludan
"When you get out there and everyone is screaming and yelling, it's a major rush," Paludan said. "It's like, 'Wow! This is what it would be like if I were famous.'"
Paludan made her debut as a soloist in a first-grade recital. Phillip Paludan, professor of history, said that at the recital his daughter and a group of eight kids were lined up with their backs facing the audience. At one point each child would turn toward the audience
and sing a short solo consisting of several humorous lyrics.
Her father said Paludan's voice and singing style were mature for her age.
"When Kirsten turned around, it was like an 18-year-old was singing," her father said.
Paludan began taking weekly private voice lessons while she attended junior high school. In high school she was ranked twice as one of the top 10 soloists in a statewide competition.
Paludan maintains a 3.5 grade point average as well as rehearsing four times a week with the singers and working at Victoria's Secret 25 hours a week.
Paludan, who will graduate next year, knows what she would like to do in the future.
"What I really want to do — and its kind of scary to talk about — is be a singer," Paludan said.
Loan program helps sports clubs
By Tracl Carl
Kansan staff writer
When Free State Walkers, a local walking club, opened two trails through Lawrence on March 1, it could not afford to buy the commemorative medals that celebrated the completion of the walk.
But the Lawrence Sports Corporation's new loan program advanced the club the $400 dollars it needed to nav for the medals.
The loan program was started to help sports organizations interested in starting or sponsoring an event, said Fred DeVictor, chairperson of the corporation and director of Parks and Recreation. Loans are interest-free, but a small administration fee may be required.
"The main thing is to attract additional sporting events to the community," he said.
Loan applicants had to show that the event they wanted to sponsor brought participants from other cities, he said.
Free State Walkers fulfilled that requirement.
It maps out non-competitive, year round walking trails that anyone is invited to complete. Upon completion of a trail, the participant can buy a medal for $5.
The club is Lawrence's chapter of the national club, Volkswalkers. Volkswalkers' members try to walk in every state, said Judith Galas, secretary of Free State Walkers. About 240 people have completed the 10 kilometer Lawrence walk, including a busload of people from Maryland.
"We've had walkers from all over the country." Galas said.
Brett McCabe, convention sales manager at the Lawrence Convention and Visitors Bureau, said sports activities would bring business and tourism to Lawrence. In 1988, Lawrence was the smallest city ever to sponsor the National Amateur Athletic Union Junior Olympic Games, and that event's success inspired more interest by the corporation and visitor's bureau to seek out national and regional tournaments for the city, he said.
and families to Lawrence for a week." McCabe said.
DeVictor said that profit from the games financed the establishment of the corporation and the loan program.
With sports facilities at the University of Kansas, Haskell Indian Nations University and Lawrence High School, Lawrence is a possible location for many sporting events, he said.
"It brought about 10,000 athletes
Lawrence Officials Association also used the loan to bring a high school football training program to Lawrence in August, DeVictor said.
Mary Chappell, director of recreation services, said she thought that KU sports clubs would use the loan program.
"There is a need because there are so many things they want to do," she said.
Groups needed to be aware that they would have to generate money to pay the loan, she said.
"We certainly don't like them to get in debt and leave a legacy to other groups after them," she said.
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
PLACE AN AD FREE
♂♂
8" Soft brown sophomore transfer student "v6" a tan tenant friendly female committee member that leaves you with an opportunity to learn. I am an experienced student that can tutor Math 001 and 002 charge. Good company is all that matters.
Ezry. old Asian male seeking companionship with fun-loving Asian female who is short, likes sports and enjoys playing cards and going out for frozen yogurt. @82526
52-yr-old Hispanic $'s laind back California seeking an open-minded female who likes doing new things.
2021 old blond hair, blue-eyed male seeking inlading
music. E-mail info@hainach.org. Has to enjoy
alive music score. gs2223
29t, old black hair, brown eyes male. Looking
i laid back 29-32 yr. old female who enjoys
lining to live music and kicked back evenings.
we call me a fish if this is you. #47707
A small town boy with small town manners who has his feet planted firmly in cowboy boots, his hair tucked in and kept on the gym, and his dreams arm reach away. Seeks a girl whose mind, body, and life is able to keep up with you. If you like creative romantic nights, give this senior a call, e45458
Kind, sensitive, earth-loving, Phib-head male seeking female with similar interests for events such as concerts, movies, late-nights in front of the TV and baking cookies in the nude. You must be a real earth muffin. Peace 2 Fingers. Sorority girls need not apply. @28767
Common abbreviations
M Male A Asian
F Female J Jewish
D Divorced C Christian
S Single G Gay
W White G Gay
B Black L Lesbian
H Hispanic N/S Non-Smoker
B Hispanic N/S Non-Smoker
To check out these ads call 1-900-787-0778 You will be charged $1.95 per minute
Ambitious grad student seek attractive, mature,
N/S single female. 21-27 years old with dark hair
and a hazel eye. Work with short dark hair, hazel eyes and excellent muscle tone. I have left-of-center political beliefs, am a
impassioned classical guitar virtuoso. I am esp-
sibly charm, wit and sagacity. All intelligence.
Affective 20-year-old SWM. Brown hair, brown eyes seeking a SWM. 18-22 for an evening, long lasting relationship. I enjoy partying, cooking, music and have similar interests, please respond, #02230
Hello, I’m fairly tall. Like bluegrass and sport. If you’re in going into out, give that number a call, `call 1234`.
Athletic, communicative, in good shape, intellectual; athletic and social. New to Area 4235.
SDWM sees non-traditional single divorced white female who enjoys outdoors, concerts, dancing, quiet dinners, romance and value honesty and strong family values, kids are O.K. Box #2268.
Single white male, 23, seeks single white female, 21-42 for casual relationship. I am S'11, well built, have it brown hair, green eyes. I like to work out, mountain bike, and ski. I'm looking for someone with a smile or sometimes spend a quiet night alone. I'm serious but have a quiet sense of humor. #2688
My girlfriend has skipped town and I am seeking a female companion. Please help, 43880
Latin lover seeking a beautiful American woman to heat up the long nights. Must enjoy shaking to all directions.
I'm looking for a girl that listens to good music like REM, ELIV Costello, or PearJam. j22872
SBM seeding SN. If you're used to games for ready, a for real, romance are, fun-loving, excited with the program. The Mack Daddy's waiting-only fine ladies need apply. **23883**
Single white male looke for a lustful vienn like likes the Grateful Dead, Bar-B-Q, Blues, and David Letterman. I love to give long massages. I love the Lizard Queen of my dreams? Call box #45877
SM seeks for a N/SF@ who is tall and has long black hair. I am 6'1" I love outdoor activities and I want a partner who enjoys traveling by car. I like jax very much and I want a partner who can spend hours talking with me in the jazz pubs while having glasses of beer.
SWM seeks SWF with simple American name for
his role in a relationship, must have love for
Harry Apos. 462/803.
SWM, 20, blond hair blue eyes, I did it for the tickets.
20211
SWM, 22 w/ unstoppable smile smile confident, clever, crazy, carwage CWI 19-24 to share life's adventures with me. If you have a heart just buring with the shear of living, give me a call and I will go!
SWM - seeking good looking, great body, intelligent woman 18-24 years old, who likes to play darts, watch Ben & Stimpy and like beer. No hairy armps or mustaches. #69088
SWIM 5'10 looking for an athletic, outgoing,
confident beautiful young woman 29-24 to
need not paint her face before she goes out for the
evening or squeeze into a pair of jeans w/ a spatula
to get a few looks. I go the outdoors & playing
traveling from bed to bed, cat back on her. #2293
SWM Graduate student seeking friendship and possible serious relationship. I’m honest, kind, love, respect, and a great athlete build, brown hair, green eyes, and a clean-cut look. I’m looking for a non-smoking SWM who is moral and kind. My ideal lady enjoys athletics, has blue eyes, and a bright smile.
62231
SWM looking for tall mellow women. Recently moved to Lawrence from East Iowa. Hoping to a corried-fear, Kansas-grown beauty queen. I enjoy long walks and water sports. Must be a smoker. I enjoy cock-pop & weed rock. I love the movie and watch it on the PAW that is not wearing a watch $48937
WSM.Raw Limbamlugh an, who goes by the philosophy just Do It. My idea of a good time includes movies, sports, golf, movies, beer, and road trips. Seeking some humor, and back yet has style and a sense of humor, #4378
SWM tall enough that when I stand my feet touch the ground. N/S not firmly planted in other people's reality. If you share my belief on the non-existence of space and time, then you know we've met. I enjoy people-watching and playing in this beautiful world.
SWM wants gorgeous SWM N/S/who can pound a lot of beer and who is interested in going to parties and getting crazy. I may not and do not call if you anything is cool. The knees are waving. 463816
SWM seeks SBF. Am interested in meeting a lady who is tired of people playing games. If you like to get away for the weekends, dance, and are open-minded, give me a call 29334
SWIM 19 years-old. Brown eyes, brown hair.
Enjoins working out and playing sports. Looking
for attractive female between 18&22 who enjoys
romantic evening. #a3863
SWIM-I'm a very inveterate person. I like to get involved. My favorite hobby is hunting wild animals. I love the outdoors. Locking for a 18-29 year old gets him to get involved, like marriage adornment
Swim! I'm tail have blonde surfer hair. I look like the blueglove on the Real World. I enjoy romantic dinners and long evening dancing. Give me a call. I'd love to meet you. (N/S) #0397 . @0397
Tall, dark and handsome law student seeks kniky and buromix backdoor in Slacker and regane. #82318
Toned '9' guy, 21, seeking attractive, fun girl to share some quality time. #26866
♂
WOMEN
SEEKING
MEN
Are you tall, dark, and handsome+ a little shy? From a small town? Brown eyes and style turn me on. Whether you work at a grocery store or drive a CRX, I will mull it over but I not vain so, as long as you love to dance and women with blond hair and blue eyes, call box #23281.
You are tired of endless bush hunting for a sincere, honest, attractive woman? If so, give me a call I'm a 61 year old SWF with curly black hair, fair skin, and brown eyes. I looking for someone with creativity and spontaneity to have a good time with Boy #89194
Down to earth, fun-loving who is looking for a great time. If you're open-minded, like long walks, and ready for one hell of a time never to forgo dumbrella call! #49203
I'm seeking a man who's interested in art, reading,
writing. Must be good-looking, humorous and
honest. #29299
Intrigging female searching for a majestic male to share intimate evening together. #42002
I am 5'3, have short, sassy hair & blue eyes. I am very outgoing and make friends easily. However, I spent the summer in France and am looking for romance. I am very versatile in my interests and enjoy doing a variety of things. I like guys with hard, chiselized looks, intelligent and they must know how to dance. If you would like to try to out for us, we compliment each other, call my loos. #1555
SAF2, 51.3, *looking for* SM 21-26, *must be good*
safety, a sense of good, sensual, fun-loving
SBF-Tall, brown eyes, serious. I like movies (comedy and action adventure) and I like reggae music. I am religious and would like a gentleman who abuses role beliefs.40007
SWF, 19, 18"² with short blonde hair, sensitive, fun-
loving, into country music, seeks SWM age 18-24
or older.
SWF 19, seek male for intimate friendship only
26. seek female for possible mutual hobbies be found out, else 45
SWF, 20, $5.4" brown hair, brown eyes. I am looking for someone who brings me flowers and that I can cook cake light dinner for him. Must be a nice dresser, call me to find out #47218
SWF, 21 years old, 5'4" with caviar wishes and dreamy dreams seek SWM 21-23 years old to help me fulfill all my desires. If you prefer Fifi's to Hope, I wish you a $25 affair for this. Hope to talk to you soon. @sarahj
SWF, 23, 5'3" dark brown hair and brown eyes.
Searching for SWF, 29-23 who is mature, open and into romantic nights at home. I like going to movies, long walks and candle light dinners. No smokers, beer drinkers, or beer bellies, please.
00206
SWF 5'10 Blond attractive, athletic figure looking for male with good senses of humor to build confidence.
SWF, seeking a BM 50-40 who enjoys leapy days and wild nights. Must like disco music and dancing till dawn. I'm open-minded and fun-loving. Call box
29003
SWF Catholic, seeking 6ft. plus athletic, 30 to 35 years, old who enjoys the outdoors. Loves walks, sunsets, tunes, & stargazing. Enjoys tennis, golf, blinking, & dancing. Looking for someone who knows how to live & enjoy with a good sense of humor, also a non-smoker & no-drinker. #82482
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The image contains text in a single block with no images or other graphics. The text is:
SWF N/S/ I am looking for a very tiny, kind, and
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HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
To place an ad
10 places are all
1. Call or come into the Kansan aal 110
2. Stauffer-Flint Hole, 864-4358
2. You'll place an ad in the Jaiketa Network section of the Kansan (up to 8 lines) and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people who respond to your ad. Your voice message will remain in the system for 21 days.
3. After your ad runs in the Kansan, you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages people leave for you.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
1. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them.
2. Call 1-800-787-0778 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touch-tone phone), enter the mailbox number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category. You can interrupt to skip over messages that don't interest you. Voice prompts will lead you along the way. You'll be charged $1.95 per minute.
4
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached.
.
CAMPUS: Looking for more than just corrective lenses, people are turning to high-fashion glasses. PAGE 5
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL. 103, NO.21
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20.1993
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
A DEBATE OVER STATUS
THE MAIN ISSUE
THE MAIN ISSUE Today's hearings will determine whether graduate teaching assistants are public employees as defined by the Kansas statutes.
THE STAKES
THE GTAS' STANCE
THE GTAS' STANCE GTAs maintain that because they work for a public agency, the University, they are by definition public employees.
If the GTAs are found to be public employees, they will have the right to form a bargaining unit, which could negotiate terms and conditions of employment with the University.
THE UNIVERSITY'S STANCE
The University's STA nce The University says that the Kansas statutes do not address GTA status and that the nature of the relationship between the University and the GTAs is academic, not employer to employee.
KANSAN
Hearings hold key to union formation by University's GTAs
Issue progresses toward resolution after lengthy delays
By Kathleen Stolle Kansan staff writer
Today begins the long-awaited hearings to determine whether the University of Kansas' 1,100 graduate teaching assistants are public employees — and therefore eligible to form a union.
Expected to run through Friday, the hearings are from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. A hearing examiner from the Kansas Public Employees Relations Board will hear the case. The meetings are open to the public.
The hearings pit GTAs against University administration in a disagreement about the status of GTAs as public employees. According to the Public Employer-Employee Relations Acts, or PEERA, of the Kansas statutes, a public employee is any person — excluding supervisory, professional, elected or confidential workers — employed by any public agency, such as a state university. Public employees have the right to form employee organizations, such as bargaining units.
The GTAS, represented by Scott Stone of the Kansas Association of Public Employees, say that, by definition of PEERA, they are public employees.
“It’s kind of funny; we’re spending all this time and money to argue over about 15 words, but there’s quite a bit at stake over the interpretation of those words,” Stone said.
Stone said he planned to introduce about 80 pieces of evidence and about eight witnesses, including GTAs and faculty members.
"Their real goal is to form a bargaining unit," Stone said. "If they are found to be public employees under PEERA, then they can get together and have some kind of strength in numbers to negotiate terms and conditions of employment."
The University, represented by assistant general counsel Karen Dutcher, maintains that GTAs are outside the umbrella of PEERA.
"What we will be arguing is although they are performing a service to the University, the essential nature of the relationship is academic." Dutcher said.
She said she would call about 10 witnesses, including faculty members and Howard Mossberg, dean of the graduate school. Dutcher said she planned to present about 30 documents. Testimony about the nature of teaching assistanceships would be the key to the University's case, she said.
"I don't view this as a document case but as a case that turns more importantly on the testimony of the faculty members," she said.
The GTA issue was sparked in Fall 1991 when several of the University's GTAs began gauging interest among their peers in forming a bargaining unit. Their efforts were thwarted when the University challenged GTAs' status as public employees.
On Feb. 25, 1992, the Kansas Association of Public Employees filed a petition with the relations board on behalf of the GTAs, requesting a hearing to determine their status. Since the original hearing date Oct. 6, 1992, the hearings have been delayed three times. The delays were the result of requested continuances from both the GTA and University counsels. Reasons for the continuance requests included late submittal of documents, witness lists and discovery request responses.
Looming beyond the employee status argument is the issue of collective bargaining and what that would mean for both sides.
GTAs Christina Sharp and David Reidy said that through collective bargaining, GTAs could pursue issues such as health benefits, pay and multi-year contracts. As of now, GTAs have no forum to collectively express their grievances, they said.
"There's no procedure at all for us to represent ourselves as employees," Sharp said. "Right now there is no bargaining table."
Mossberg said the University shared many of the same concerns as the GTAs. However, he said that tradition should be maintained and that GTAs should be prepared for the similar system they will enter into when they leave the University.
"My concern is we've had 127 years of collegiality and the system they'll be going into is collegial," he said.
"You get two things when you start working centrally," he said. "You might get more power for the GTAs, but you also limit responsiveness on the part of the departments and the students."
Mossberg said collective bargaining could be disadvantageous to individual GTAs.
David Stewart contributed information to this story.
Student group to guide grievances
Panel created to advise students with complaints
By Donella Hearne Kansan staff writer
A new student advocacy group created with the intention of helping students solve grievances hopes to make the University's grievance procedures less intimidating to students.
The creation of the Student Advocacy Group was announced Thursday. It consists of three students from the Student Senate's Student Rights Committee; Benjy Schwartz, co-director of the student jobbing group; Jeff Russell, head of the Student Rights Committee; and John Altevogt, vice chairperson of the Student Senate Executive Committee.
Altevogt said the main purpose of the group would be to inform students of their options for solving problems and voicing complaints.
The July dismissal of Emil Tonkovich, former professor of law, was one of the reasons Altevort created the group, he said.
Altevogt said that the women who made
sexual harassment allegations against Tonkovich had not received the support they needed and that the new advocacy group would provide that kind of support.
"The group is there to deal with abuses of power," he said. "Students won't have to face the problems by themselves."
Altevogt said the group would handle each case on an individual basis and in accordance with students' wishes.
He said that he would review the complaints received by the group, unless the student requested it be read by a specific person. For instance, if a woman did not want her complaint read by a male, she could write "Attention: Female" on the envelope, and Altevogt would pass the letter to a woman. He said that the group planned to contact women's groups on campus this week to ask for help in handling such matters.
Barbara Ballard, associate dean of student life and director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, said the group could be of help to the student body. Although the University has several offices, such as University Ombudsman, Department of Student Life and the Office of Affirmative Action, that are specifically set up to handle student concerns, students may feel more comfortable speaking with other students. Ballard said.
"My feeling is you really can't have too many avenues or options for students," Ballard said. "There might be some students who might not feel comfortable coming forward to talk to administrators."
She said she thought it was important that the group concentrate on advising students about how they could solve their grievances by going through the proper University offices. /
John Shoemaker, student body president, said the Senate had talked about forming an advocacy group last year. He said that because most students were unfamiliar with grievance procedures and various administrative offices, the group definitely would benefit the student body.
"It's a great idea, even if it helps only one student," Shoemaker said. "It will be there to solve whatever problem a student might have."
Students with complaints, concerns or questions can write to: Student Advocacy, P.O. Box 1375, Lawrence, Kan. 66044.
Champions
Virus Laws
SAN JOAQUIN
09/18/81
William Alix / KANSAN
Marching on
Approximately 6,300 high school band members fill Memorial Stadium. Bob Foster, KU band director, said Saturday's Band Day was one of the largest in the event's 50 year history.
Watkins adds fifth female physician to staff
By Liz Kllinger
Kansan staff writer
It was Friday at Watkins and the on-call doctor, Leah Luckeroth, was definitely in. By 3 p.m. the University of Kansas Medical School graduate had treated patients for such aliments as a sore throat, finger laceration, sprained ankle, infectious diarrhea and eye trauma.
On Aug. 16, Luckerhot became the fifth female physician on a staff of 10 at Watkins Memorial Health Center. Until 1898, Watkins had never had more than two female physicians.
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins, said the increase in female physicians at Watkins was the result of selecting the most qualified candidates, rather than seeking an
equal number of male and female physicians.
Yockey said that the only time Watkins ever specifically recruited a female physician was in 1989, when the health center no longer had any female physicians. At that time, two female physicians were hired, Patricia Denning and Dee Ann Deroin. Watkins also hired Myra Strother in 1991 and Linda Lyle in 1992.
Yockey said all the female physicians practiced general medicine and basic gynecology. Denning and Luckeroth are internists and DeRoin, Strother and Lyle are family practice physicians.
All the male physicians work full time, but Luckerhorn is the only full-time female physician. Yockey said the other female physicians all had children and usually worked
afternoons. He said the arrangement worked well at Watkins.
Although those four physicians only work 20 hours a week, it's at a time when they are needed most, Yockey said.
Yockey said that 20 percent of patients made specific requests about the sex of their doctor and with more female physicians, patients would have a greater choice.
"Women (physicians) tend to see more women patients," Luckeroth said.
Yockey said that the increasing number of female physicians reflected the growing number of female medical students. In 1972, there were only five females in a class of 125 at the Med Center. About 50 percent of this year's 195 medical students are female.
INSIDE
Football woes
The Jayhawks suffered their third defeat to a Division I school this season when they lost to Utah on Saturday at Memorial Stadium 41-16.
Page 9.
Lawrence doctor begins service with Regents
3
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
John Hiebert wants to know how things work.
"The bookshelf behind me represents that interest," said the cardiologist and newest member of the Board of Regents, as he pointed over his shoulder to shelves of books on decision analysis theory in his office at Preventive Cardiology. 404 Maine St.
He was appointed to the board on July 16 by Gov. Joan Finney and will be considered for confirmation by the state Senate when it convenes in January 1994.
For most of his life, Hiebert has been involved with use University. He graduated with a bachelor of arts degree in mathematics in 1963 and graduated from the University of Kansas Medical Center in 1968.
Hiebert, of Lawrence, now will use his curiosity as the newest member of the Regents.
During his sophomore year, Hiebert met his future wife, Nancy Bramley. She works with her husband at Preventive Cardiology where she is the chief operating officer.
The Hieberts have two children, Eric, who teaches part-time in the School of Engineering, and Rebecca, who is a case manager at the Wyandotte County Mental Health Clinic in Kansas City, Kan.
Even though he has many ties to KU, Hiebert said he would not be a biased Regents member.
"My loyalty is very broad in the context of this Board appointment," he said. "It is a significant responsibility, and I take it very seriously."
Hiebert said he would use his own personal ideals to help the Regents improve the state's universities.
"I grew up in a family where education was highly valued," he said. "And I view this opportunity as a way to give back to the state by serving on this board."
Corman said the Regents were pleased when Hiebert was appointed.
"They're just really tickled to death to have him on board," he said. "He brings us an incredible amount of medical knowledge."
The Board of Regents is made up of nine members from all over the state. Board members meet in Topeka for two day meetings 10 times a year.
The Board sets academic, fiscal and legal policies and controls more than $1 billion for the six Regents universities — the University of Kansas, Kansas State University, Wichita State University, Fort Hays State University, Pittsburg State University and Emporia State University.
COLUMBIA
Susan McSpadden / KANGAN
"Most people don't even know what a board of regents is," Corman said. "The board has total control over the universities."
John Hiebert, a Lawrence cardiologist, was named to the Board of Regents in July and will be considered for confirmation in January 1994.
1
The other members are Corman, Topeka; Robert Caldwell, Salina; Rick Harman, Mission; John Montgomery, Junction City; Shirley Palmer, Fort Scott; Frank Satabin, Topeka; Donald Slawson, Wichita; and Sidney Warner, Cimarron.
H
2
Monday. September 20, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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ON CAMPUS
Narcotics Anonymous will meet from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. today at Alcove I in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Andy at 843-9461 or Laura at 887-0753.
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet from 6 to 8:30 pm. tonight in 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jacob Wright at 749-2084 or Jason Anishanslin at 843-3099.
■ KU Kenpo will meet from 6 to 7 p.m. tonight in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Ersahdi at 842-4713.
Campus Center, 1629 W. 19th St.
For more information, call Anthony
Case at 865-1682.
KU Yoga will meet at 7 tonight at Room 310 in the Burge Union. Membership dues are $9 for 13 weeks or $3 per session. Guest memberships available for walks at $4 per session. Payment plans are available. Bring a mat or blanket and wear loose clothing. For more information, call Yvonne Coldera at 841-0766.
Harambe will meet at 6:30 today in the American Baptist
FOKUS (Film Organization for KU Students) will meet at 7:45 tonight at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Jeff Maynard at 841-1875.
ON THE RECORD
A student's purse and its contents, valued at $479, were taken from the women's locker room in Robinson Center on July 28, KU police reported.
A student's car windshield was damaged in parking lot No. 105 between Sept. 13 and Wednesday, KU police reported. Damage was estimated at $250.
CORRECTION
A Page One story in Friday's Kansan contained incorrect information. The Friends of the Art Museum's high tea will be from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Sunday in the Central Court of the Spencer Museum of Art.
814 Massachusettes Dine in or Carry-Out 843-BIRD
BLUE BIRD DONE
The University Daily Kansasan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60445, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, 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
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
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Call 864-4810 for the newsroom:
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Disney Parks
DISNEY
Is there really life after Disney World?
KU chapter of the Walt Disney World College Program Alumni Association will hold its first meeting Tuesday, Sept. 21 at 7pm Alcove G in the Kansas Union For more info contact Paul at 842-0273
Since
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 20, 1993
3
Fire codes won't cut back capacity at Allen Field House
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
Allen Field House can continue to operate at full capacity this basketball season, officials said, while a newly selected Lawrence architecture firm works on the $1.9 million project to bring the building into compliance with state fire codes.
Ross Boelling, chief of fire prevention at the state fire marshal's office, said his house had no plans to require a reduction in the field house's advertised capacity of 15,800.
He cited the University's good faith effort to improve the availability of exits and to widen stairwells in response to the 1991 state fire marshal's report.
"We will be monitoring the building, but at this point, we do not plan on limiting capacity," Boelling said. "The University has given us an acceptable response. They've taken some additional steps, and they are after compliance."
Boelling said that the design and construction of the recommended improvements would take time.
Planned construction for the field house includes fire towers in three corners of the building. Boelling said.
towers in three corners of the building, Boelling said. Allen Wiechert, director of facilities planning, said the fire marshal's recommendations for the field house would ease the flow of crowds leaving the building after games
"We hope to start meetings very shortly with the architects to discuss the details," Wlechert said. "We hope to have the project ready to bld by the end of basketball season."
and during emergencies.
Gould Evans Associates, the Lawrence architecture firm selected to design the field house renovations, only recently had received the recommendations for fire code compliance. Doug Kester, associate with the firm, said no detailed plans had been made yet.
Kester said Gould Evans would work with FPC Consultants, Inc., a fire protection and code consultant in Kansas City, Mo., to devise the best method for the field house to reach compliance. He said that he expected the FPC report to be done by the end of October and that construction would begin after this basketball season.
"We've been under similar time schedules, so that's not a problem," Kester said.
Theresa Klinkenberg, associate director of business affairs, said that although the state legislature had allocated $924,000 for the project, the University would have to find other sources for the almost $1 million balance.
"I think we'll do our best to find the funding that's needed," Klinkenberg said. "By the time of taking construction bids in February, we'll have the financing in place."
Holidays' obligations create dilemmas
Jewish students may miss classes
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
For most students, classes and exams during September are merely nuisances.
But for Jewish students at the University of Kansas, September can mean missed classes, inconvenience and possibly worse — identifying one's religion to an anti-Semitic instructor.
The High Holidays can be a stressful time for Jewish students, said David Greenbaum, Overland Park law student. The High Holidays — which consist of Rosh Hashana, Yom Kippur and the days that fall in between — require certain religious observances that may interfere with classes.
"It's degrees of observation," Greenbaum said. "Some people won't write, some people don't drive, and you've got to decide for yourself within reason."
Rosh Hashana, which means "head of the year" in Hebrew, is the Jewish new year, Greenbaum said. Yom Kippur is a day of atonement for Jews. The days between require spiritual reflection, he said.
Because the holidays follow the Jewish calendar, Greenbaum said, the High Holidays fall at different times during September. This year, Rosh Hashana fell on Thursday and Yom Kippur will fall on Saturday.
Greenbaum said he missed his first class on Thursday because he had to attend a ceremony for Rosh Hashana. He said he attended his afternoon class, but he could not take notes because his own beliefs forbade him to write.
The University Code requires professors to allow students who miss class because of religious holidays to make up their work. But Greenbaum said such actions required identifying oneself as Jewish, which could make both the student and the professor feel uncomfortable.
"By going up to a professor, you're singling yourself out of a class," he
David Katzman, head of the American Studies department at the University, said responsibility for scheduling tests and events fell upon the University.
"Our goal at the University is to make it hospitable in a multicultural and multiracial society," he said. "We ought to be sensitive."
Katzman said he was familiar with the feeling. He said he was invited to Friday's presentation of KU's Higuchi Awards, which recognize excellence in research. Katzman, who has won the award in the past, could not attend because it was held on the High Holidays.
Although the majority of the student body is not Jewish, faculty and staff should be aware of the Jewish holidays. Katzman said.
"Major things at the University shouldn't be scheduled so that there is asse of exclusion," he said.
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Teenagers arrested for carjacking murder
Four Topeka teenagers have been arrested for the shooting death of a Lawrence man during an attempted carjacking Saturday, Lawrence police reported.
The attempted carjacking occurred shortly before 7 p.m. Saturday at Riverfront Park in North Lawrence, according to police reports. The driver, Edward Lees, 29, was shot in the face with a large-caliber handgun as he tried to drive away from the teenagers. He was pronounced dead at the scene. A woman and two children who were in the car were uninjured.
The four teenagers were arrested at the East Lawrence entrance of the Kansas Tumpike, the report said. The weapon was recovered near the scene of the shooting.
One of the four teens was charged with felony murder. Two were charged with first-degree murder, and one was charged with conspiracy to commit murder. Police and the Douglas County Sheriffs Department continue to investigate.
Three KU scientists were featured on CBS"Sunday Morning" this weekend for their discovery of a crater in central Nebraska that is thought to be the largest and most recent impact crater in the United States.
Wakefield Dort, Larry Martin and Edward Zeller discovered the crater earlier this year while searching for mammoth tusks near North Platte. Neb.
Martin, curator of vertebrate paleontology at the Museum of Natural History, estimated the 500-foot meteor released as much energy as a hydrogen bomb when it impacted.
The crater is one mile wide and 70 feet deep. The scientists think it fell to the earth about 1,000 years ago.
Since the discovery, the scientists have continued to study the bedrock under the crater to gain additional evidence to back their find.
Dort is a retired professor of geology and Zeller is codirector of the radiation physics lab.
Compiled by Kansan staff writers.
IN HONOR OF MRS. E
Mary
Tom Leininger / KANSAN
Carolyn Helmer congratulates Lenior Ekdahl at the dedication of the new dining commons at Lewis Hall, called Mrs. E's.
Lewis dining hall named after former director
By Brian James
Kansas staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Lenoir Ekdahl leaned back in her chair and laughed during a reception in her honor.
"This is overwhelming," she said.
"I imagine having a building named after you — it's almost embarrassing."
The new dining hall at Lewis Hall was officially dedicated and recognized as the Lenoir D. Ekdahl Dining Commons in a ceremony Saturday morning. About 150 people attended the event held at the dining hall.
The event honored Ekdahl, who retired in 1989 after serving as director of food services in KU residence halls for 35 years. Ekdahl is a graduate of Kansas State University and a member of the KU Women's Hall of Fame.
Chancellor Gene Budig, Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, and Ken Stoner, director of student housing, each spoke briefly during the ceremony
Ekdahl said after the ceremony that student workers in the dining halls made her career enjoyable.
"They were always so great to work with," she said. "They brought such a different insight into the job."
Ekdahl arrived at the University in 1955 from Purdue University, where she supervised two kitchens and four dining halls. She planned
to stay at the University for only three years.
"My husband worked in Topela and told me he would only commute there for that long," she said. "Well, he ended up commuting for 25 years.
She said she estimated that during her career at the University, she oversaw nearly 200 different dining hall supervisors.
"I guess I was just enjoying myself."
In a speech during the ceremony,
Stoner told a story he had heard
about Ekdahl's first day on the job.
Ekdahl told cooks to double the amount of rice for dinner that night, Stoner said. The cooks questioned the decision.
"To that she replied, 'On my first day of work here at KU we will not run out of food, and the students will not leave here hungry—not on my shift,'" Stoner said.
"I'm told that on the days that followed they also introduced a number of new rice recipes," he said.
Ekdahl said she learned from that incident to not second-guess her cooks.
Louisa Davis, who worked in the dining halles for 38 years and was one of Ekdahl's cooks, spoke with Ekdahl after the ceremony.
"I'm glad you didn't blame us," Davis said, grinning. "We just did what you told us."
Edkahl said she was pleased with the nickname given to the dining
"I imagine having a building named after you—it's
embarrassing.
Former KU food services director
hall.
"I'm awfully happy they are just calling it Mrs. E's," she said. "Students can do some interesting things with names of halls, but I don't think they will with this."
Stoner said that naming the dining hall after Ekdahl seemed obvious.
"I suggested it to David Amber, but everyone thought it was the logical name to use anyway," he said.
The new dining hall's food court was part of a new trend in dining services, Ekdahl said.
"I think this place is great," she said. "They've gotten away from the stereotype of the typical college dining hall experience."
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4
Monday, September 20, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
Several cases of children murdering their parents are in the courts today. These include a former KU student who was charged with attempted first-degree murder of her father. In each of these cases, the children have made allegations of child abuse.
THE BACKGROUND
In 1991, an estimated 2.7 million children were assaulted physically, mentally or sexually by their parents. One thousand three hundred and thirty-eight children, or almost four a day, died in 1991 in the United States because of parental maltreatment. Patricide accounted for about two percent of all homicides. Most of these involved teenagers who killed abusive parents.
THE OPINION
System fails children who kill their parents
Children are not driven to murder their parents because of routine groundings or a lack of allowance. They do so because the system has failed them. These teenagers pick up the family gun and murder their fathers because they are desperate, helpless and in mortal fear.
Roy Rowe, sentenced in 1991 to four to 12 years for the murder of his stepfather, had been beaten with a paddle, a belt and a two-by-four. Whenever the screaming got too loud, the neighbors called the police. Each time, family services, left Roy in his home.
Such an occurrence is typical in almost every case of patricide. Reports are made, officials visit, but no help is given. There are laws, but the safeguards are on the side of adults. Furthermore, bureaucracy often plays a part in these dismal failures. Police officers and social workers who are overworked or undertrained can miss or ignore signs of abuse.
Most parental homicides occur when the victim is in an apparently vulnerable position — watching television or sleeping. This leads many to deny the self-defense claim and to think it was cold-blooded murder. However, if children grow up in volatile and violent surroundings, they learn to read warning signs of an impending barrage, beating or rape. This vigilance implies that, when children do kill a parent, it is most likely an act of self-defense: They know something bad is going to happen, soon.
No one is saying that abused children should murder their parents or even that they should get away with it. Child abuse officials should carry out investigations of all murders, and the children should receive psychiatric help. However, across-the-board laws are fruitless. Each case must be dealt with individually. The system is failing abused children. A call, loud and clear, must be made for enforcement of existing abuse laws. This includes better training for professionals.
The next time you read about young people murdering their parents, do not be quick to judge them as aberrant or evil. Only after you have tried to imagine pain, terror and helplessness can you begin to understand the driving forces of their lives.
MICHELLE SMITH FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS:
DAVID BURGETT, JR CLAIRBORNE, CHRISTINA CORNISH, CARSON ELROD, TOM GRELINGER, MATT HOOD, MANNY LOPEZ, COLEEN McCAIN, TERRILYN McCORMICK, MUNEERA NASEE, KIRK REDMOND, CHRIS REEDY, MIKE SILVERMAN, MARK SLAMIN, MICHELLE SMITH, EISHA TIERNEY, KC TRAUER, AND DAVID WANEK
KANSAN STAFF
KC TRAUER, Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE Managing editors
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
Editors
Assistant to the editor...J.R. Clairborne
News ...Stacy Friedman
Editorial ...Terrilyn McComick
Campus ...Ben Grove
Sports ...Kristi Fageron
Photo ...Klip Chin, Renee Knoeber
Fostures ...Erzra Wolfe
Graphics ...John Paul Fogel
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ...Ed Schoger
Regional sales mgr...Jennifer Perlier
National sales mgr...Jennifer Evanson
Co-op sales mgr ...Blythe Focht
Production mgr...Jennifer Blowey
Kate Burgese
Marketing director ..Sheliy McConnell
Creative director ..Brian Fuco
Clasified mgr ..Jance 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
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
THINGS FOREIGN TOURISTS MUST HAVE WHILE IN FLORIDA:
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UDK '93
Questions about life language answered
Once again it is time for Ask Mister Language Person, the column whose motto is: "People Judge You By The Words You Use, So Use Words That Nobody Really Understands, Such As 'Parameter.'"
Today, as is our custom, we shall start with our first question;
Q. I have noted that the slang expression "cool" is being used once again by young people. Is this good?
A. Yes. Mister Language Person approves of any language trend that makes him feel like a "hep cat," so he is pleased to hear young people bringing back "lingo" from the days when he was Mister Language Teenager and the Earth's crust was still warm.
Q. What does "boss" mean?
A. it means "cool," as in these examples: "Duane got a boss carburator." "Michelangelo painted some boss frescoes."
Q. Was "Michelangelo" his first name or his last name?
A. Yes. This column contains a letter from man who is upset because he
Q. Recently I made the statement: "I'm so hungry I could literally eat a horse." My grandmother, who is a real stickler for grammar, told me that this was incorrect. So I flushed her insulin down the toilet. My question is, what is a "stickler?"
A. Neither. It was just his fresco name. His full legal name, on his driver's license, was "Vito."
A. The correct form is: "I could eat a literal horse."
Q. Can you describe the contents of a "Dear Abby" column published in the March 26, 1992, Boston Herald and sent in by alert reader Chip Moynihan?
COLUMNIST
DAVE
BARRY
has discovered that his wife has a hidden collection of pornographic books. The man states: "I came upon them accidentally."
Q. Regarding the old spiritual song: Why would a person "jump down" and then "turn around" before picking a bale of cotton?
Q. Do the instructions for the Batman costume set manufactured by Kenner Products contain important consumer safety information?
A. This involved a union contract.
A. Yes. These instructions, sent in by alert reader Maria Reed, state: "CAUTION: Cape does not enable user to fly."
Q. What DOES the cape enable the user to do?
A. It enables the user to leap from one tall building to another. A user wishing to actually FLY should purchase the Kenner Products Superman cape.
Q. Are you going to receive an irate letter written by approximately two dozen attorneys for Kenner Products?
A. They can go jump in a literal lake.
Q. Please quote from an Official Marker erected in Plum Lake, Wis., to commemorate "The First Lighted
Softball Park In The Far North."
A. According to a photograph sent in by alert readers Dick and Margie Kussman, this marker, after praising the accomplishments of Plum Lake's champion softball teams, states "WE HAIL WHAT RADIATION HAS WROUGHT WHAT WE HAVE TODAY."
Q. "Radiation?"
A. Yes. The marker also states: "TRAVEL AROUND AND SEE THE VAST LEGEND OF OUR COMMUNITY. ENJOY RELAXING IN THE FUN OF THE HOMELAND OF WHICH WE ARE PROUD."
Q. Probably it would be good idea not to get out of the car.
Q. What was the cause of a September 1992 airliner crash in Katmandu, Nepal?
A. An Associated Press report at the time stated: "Airline sources said a Pakistani jet that plowed into a hillside may have been fled too low."
Q. It certainly pays to have airline sources.
A. Yes, and that is why we journalists will go to jail to protect their secret identities.
GOT A QUESTION FOR MISTER LANGUAGE PERSON? He is not in at the moment.
TODAY'S GRAMMATICAL TIP:
Avoid unclear use of pronouns.
WRONG: "Earl and Ted were working together when suddenly he pushed him into the threshing machine."
Dave Barry is a syndicated columnist with the Miami Herald.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Guest column wrong about feminist theory
I am responding to the column by Will Lewis "Male seeks an activist mother could love."
You assumed that the female driver of this car would go on a date with you. Your first mistake. Your second mistake was the sicker stereotype that you placed on feminists. It was sadly obvious to me that your misinformation regarding feminist philosophy only propagated your stereotypes. Many feminists would also disagree with the implied
intent of the fated bumper sticker.
Just because your brain has a void of feminist's existence does not mean that this world does also. If you are disbelieving, I refer you to Carol Travis and her book, "The Mismeasure of Woman." She devotes a chapter to the reason men are not superior to women as well as another explaining why women are not superior to men.
My next comments regard your mother's presence throughout this article. You've set it up so that one woman must approve another for you. Perhaps this is because you
cannot do it yourself? In this sense, your mother is now your governing superior and not your equal. Is there a resenting complex hidden somewhere between the lines, meaning the bumper sticker hit too close to home? (No pun intended.)
I take it your column was supposed to engage laugh. I felt kind of guilty about munchckues, however. I've always believed that ignorance was not something to laugh at.
Amanda Traxler Overland Park junior
STAFF COLUMNIST
TIFFANY HURT
'Packaging all part of games that lawyers play
There it was in bold letters: "African American to defend KKK."
As I read this headline a few weeks ago, I could not believe my eyes. But it was true. The newspaper article clearly stated that an African-American lawyer had agreed to defend the Ku Klux Klan. As an African American myself, I was first awded that an African-American lawyer would willingly defend a white-supremacist group. The lawyer stated that he took the case in order to protect the KKK's right to free speech, as well as his own. I decided that the lawyer had a valid point.
But the fact that everyone has the right to free speech is the obvious. Why would the KKK allow an African American to represent them anyway?
The article stated that when the Texas Civil Liberties Union sought representation for the KKK they did not know that the lawyer who accepted the case was an African American. But when the KKK discovered the lawyer's race, they could have sought another attorney. So why didn't they? It's all a part of packaging.
It's all a part of packaging.
When the opposing lawyers enter a courtroom, they are merely trying to sell the judge and jury a package. It is pure advertisement. In some cases, all of the jurors may not have a clear concept of the law. When they enter the courtroom, they bring all of their individual biases, morals and values with them. And sometimes, their individual judgments affect their verdict more than the facts.
The fact that an African-American lawyer is representing the KKK is not ironic. The KKK is allowing the lawyer to represent them in order to play on the sympathy of the jury. If an African-American man defends a group that is against his race, it looks to the jury that the KKK is okay because an African-American lawyer is defending them. It is in the KKK's favor to have an African-American lawyer because it creates a good package for the jury.
The first Rodney King case is an excellent example of packaging. Rodney King is an African-American motorist who was brutally beaten in 1991 by four Los Angeles police officers who are white. A video tape of the beating clearly showed the officers beating King. But the jurors in the first trial did not base their verdict on the video tape. They took their own blases into the courtroom and acquitted the four officers.
It will be interesting to see how packaging affects the Reginald Denny case. The Denny case is similar to the King case, except the role roles are reversed. Reginald Denny is a white man who was pulled from his truck and brutally beaten by two African-American men during the Los Angeles riots. Denny's beating was video taped also. But packaging probably will affect this case differently. Most likely, the defendants in the Denny case will be found guilty with much harsher sentences.
Although everyone has a right to a fair trial, sometimes packaging and the individual biases of a judge and jury can affect their decision more than the facts.
Tiffany Hurt is an Overland Park senior majoring in Journalism and English.
University of Mars
M
Hey, Carbon based life forms. Ya know, every time you turn on the tv, ya get bombarded with images of sex and/or violence So, we at U or Mars are taking a 3-part look at tv violence.
Why Study TV Violence (and NOT TV SEX)? CUZ CARTON
SEX AIN'T FUNNY, it's just HARD TO DRAW. AND SO...
SEX AIN'T FUNNY, IT'S JUST HARD TO DRAW AND SO...
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FRANKLE '93
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 20, 1993
5
FASHION
GLASSES
They're catching
people's eyes
ANSAN
Luke Watkins
Olaf Westerberg
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
People looking for ways to express individuality need not look beyond their noses.
Those who are sick of the same old specs have turned to the eye wear industry, which now is cashing in on high-fashion glasses.
"I wanted to get a unique pair you don't see people wearing everyday," Westerberg said, looking over his oval Giorgio Armani designer frames. "And you don't see many people wearing these — that's for sure."
Olaf Westerberg, Lund, Sweden, freshman, said he had worn contacts but after having problems with them, he decided to invest in a pair of glasses he really liked.
Like many people across the country, Westerberg decided to make the switch to glasses — but not just any old pair would do.
Audrey Leban, owner of Fashion Eyeland, 600 Lawrence Ave., said
the eye wear industry was making frames that accommodate all tastes. Hundreds of different frames, ranging in size, shape and color, make glasses exciting fashion.
But choosing the right pair can be a trying experience, she said.
"I think it used to be true that people tended to hide behind their glasses," she said. "Nobody used to know or seem to care what they really looked like."
But people try on some really unusual styles, she said.
Teague Speckman, owner of Visions of Lawrence, 806 Massachusetts St., said conservative, round-wire frames were popular with KU students now.
"We have some styles that are really 'out there,' but people buy them," Speckman said. "We're selling wide and narrow, metal, stronger shapes, half-eye and frames with 20 different colors in them."
Before deciding on his bold, unusually shaped Armani glasses,
Westerberg said he spent two weeks shopping with friends in different shops in Europe.
Chris Rogers, manager of Lens Crafters in the Topeka West Ridge Mall, said glasses were one way to get noticed.
"Some people come in and try on the wildest pair they set their eyes on," Rogers said. "I guess they're sick of the same old thing, so they're going for the more exotic look."
Designer frames, such as Polo and Armani, sell from $200 to $300, Rogers said.
Shannon Buckley, Kansas City, Kan., graduate student, went to Austin, Texas, last spring with a group of friends to support local bands and ended up buying some new glasses.
Rogers said that even students who have perfect vision buy $1-$10
"I haven't seen any others like them," she said, looking through her black, retro-looking frames. "I think they're cool, and they were cheap."
generic glasses at boutiques to make a fashion statement.
"They'll decide they want to change their look for a day, maybe go more intellectual — so they'll buy some cheap frames to wear around," she said.
Luke Watkins, 24-year-old Lawrence resident, got a pair of octagon-shaped glasses for Christmas last year.
"My mom said, 'Luke, we're going to go to every place in the world until you get the pair of glasses you want,' he said. "I wasn't going to wear anything you see everyday."
Rogers said she thought people bought unusual frames because they wanted to make the investment count.
"If people are going to put a lot of money into a pair of glasses, I think they want to go all out," she said. "Why spend hundreds of dollars on a pair of glasses the guy next-door has on?"
Kansan staff writer
Lawrence, German town exchange pupils, culture
By Tract Carl
Corrina Guinthir, an eleventh-grade student from Eutin, Germany, went to her first American football game Friday when Lawrence High School played Shawnee Mission South.
"The people are more funny than the game was," she said. "Everyone was so enthusiastic."
Guinthir is one of six students from Eutin's gymnasium, Germany's high school equivalent, who arrived in Lawrence on Sept. 9. The six students are part of Lawrence's sister city program, which gives Lawrence and Eutin the chance to exchange students and information. Eutin is in northern Germany, about a half hour from the Baltic Sea.
The German students will be in Lawrence until Oct. 20. They are attending Lawrence High School and living with the families of six high school students who visited Germany this summer.
Cheri Crowther, an eleventh-grade student at Lawrence High School and Guinthir's host sister, visited Germany from May 25 to July 7. Like Guinthir, she attended the gymnasium and learned about German culture. But life in Eutin is not that different from life in Lawrence, she said.
Kristin Suedel, who is also an eleventh grader in Eutin, said the biggest difference between Lawrence and Eutin was the size. Eutin only has about 18,000 people, and Lawrence has about 65,000.
"The people were nicer and more relaxed," she said. "They all seemed to know each other."
And everything is farther apart in
Lawrence.
"It's so widespread," she said. "There are so many lawns and trees, and the streets are wider."
Steve Timoner, Chicago junior,
studied German at the gymnasium from May 22 to July 22 with 13 other KU students. The KU students spent the last two weeks of the program traveling from Berlin, along the Rhine river and then to Munich.
Timoner, who is Jewish, said his parents did not want him to go to Germany because of recent anti-Semitic occurrences. But he said he did not experience any prejudice.
"I was looking out for it," he said. "I know there is anti-Semitism, but I didn't personally see it."
Eutin has remained much the same despite changes in Eastern Europe and Germany, Timoner said.
"I don't think it was really affected, except by public opinion," he said.
Frank Baron, professor of Germanic languages and literature, said the Eutin program began as an exchange program for KU students in 1966. After a friend in Eutin made the suggestion, the program was expanded in 1989 to include the exchange of high school students and to become Lawrence's sister city, Baron said.
"One of the things that has happened as a result of the program is we have had exchanges on many different levels," Baron said.
In October, a bank employee from Eutin will visit Lawrence for two months for the experience of working at an American bank. In November, a librarian from Eutin will speak to Friends of the Library at the Sudler House, a German and American study center.
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Monday, September 20, 1993
Man Without a Face P*12-14* (*4*:15), 7:00, 9:30
Secret Garden G*13-14*, 7:00, 9:25
Undercover Blues P0*16-18* (*4*:25), 7:25, 9:35
Manhattan Murder Mystery G*14-30*, 7:10, 9:40
The Fugitive P0*14-10*, 7:05, 9:55
True Romance P*14-10*, 7:15, 9:50
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50TH ANNIVERSARY
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Israel, Syria may sign pact
"Every country in the area wants peace," said Mubarak. "Enough hatred and bloodshed and killing, and using our revenues for war. I can tell you most, maybe all the Arab world supports the step forward for peace."
Arab nations may be ready for negotiations
ALEXANDRIA, Egypt — Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak met yesterday with Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and said "most, may be all" Arab nations were ready to follow Israel and the PLO toward peace.
The Associated Press
Syrian president Hafez al-Assad,
meanwhile, told an Egyptian newspaper
that he was angry with Arafat's
tactics in negotiating secretly with
Israel and did not endorse the Israeli-PLO accord.
Speaking to reporters after a two-hour summit with Rabin, Mubarak said that he expected Israel and Syria to sign a declaration of peace within months. Mubarak said he would try to speed their negotiations.
"We did not endorse, and we did not support," Assad told Al-Akhbar. "We did not oppose, and we did not accent."
with the PLO in Washington a week ago. The pact calls for limited Palestinian self-rule in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank town of Jericho.
But he also confirmed that Syria will continue negotiations with Israel.
Rabin arranged yesterday's summit to win support from friendly Arabs for the peace pact the Jewish state signed
Egypt is the only Arab country that has a peace treaty with Israel and has been instrumental in mediating between Israel and other Arab states.
Mubarak did not specify what he and the Syrian president would discuss when Assad visits Egypt later this week.
"We will try and reach a solution between Israel and Syria," Mubarak said. "It is not a miracle."
"I don't think it will take more than a few months" for the neighboring enemies to reach agreement, Mubarak said.
and Japan to contribute towards implementation of the agreement and improving living conditions in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
Rabin repeated his call to Arab countries, the European Community
"I believe without improvement in conditions in Gaza, and not only Gaza, (Palestinian) hopes will not be materialized," he said.
He also urged the Arabs to end their economic boycott of Israel, which hard-liners have vowed not to do until the last Israeli soldier is out of Gaza, the West Bank and Golan Heights. All three areas were captured in the 1967 Middle East War.
At the Arab League's regular meeting of its foreign ministers in Cairo yesterday, most of the 21 member countries expressed support for the Israeli-PLO accord.
Cities quieter; Bosnia considers peace
The Associated Press
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — A U.N. official said yesterday that a cease-fire between Bosnian government officials and Croat forces appeared to be taking hold in central Bosnia, but fighting was reported in southwestern Mostar.
Fighting continued Saturday past the noon ceasefire deadline.
But early yesterday, flashpoints such as Jablanica in central Bosnia quieted, said Lt. Col. Bill Aikam, who spoke for U.N. peacekeepers in Sarajevo. He said vehicles and convos now could move without difficulty around Gornii Vakuf.
"B basically, the operation is holding, and I'm hoping it stays that way," he said.
"It appears the cease-fire is taking hold," he said. Military action across Bosnia "has declined dramatically."
But divided Mostar, where about 50,000 Muslims are under Croat siege, was the scene of intense fighting Saturday, when 15 people were reported killed and 27 injured.
Reports said the fighting continued yesterday. Croatian radio said four government soldiers were killed and more than 20 wounded during the night. U.N. officials could not confirm the report.
Bosnia's war, now in its 18th month, has been littered with broken truce.
The most recent cease-fire was part of concerted diplomatic efforts during the past week to remove remaining obstacles to a peace agreement.
Slav, said Saturday that he doubted there was enough time to settle disputes with rival Serbs and Croats before leaders of the three warring factions meet tomorrow in Sarajevo.
But Bosnian President Aliia Izetbegovic, a Muslim
Talks on a peace plan that would divide Bosnia into three, mostly ethnically defined, mini-states stalled Sept. 1 when Serbs and Croats rejected Izbekegovic's demands for more territory, including access to the Adriatic Sea.
The Serbs hold 70 percent of Bosnia, and Croats control most of the rest. Under the proposed peace agreement, worked out in Geneva, Muslims would get about 31 percent of the land.
A meeting between the three sides is scheduled for tomorrow at the Sarajevo airport, but Izetbegovic said he would stand by his demands.
White House plans examination of foreign aid
The Associated Press
humanitarian assistance."
WASHINGTON — The White House plans serious reforms of the U.S. foreign aid program and will discuss its ideas with congressional leaders this week, a senior White House official said yesterday.
"The foreign assistance program is important to us, but the program is in some sense of disrepair," said the official, who spoke on condition he not be identified by name. "It is in need of serious reforms, and that's why we've undergone one of the most far-reaching reviews ever completed."
"We are changing the nature of how we do business, development agency director J. Brian Atwood said in yesterday's Washington Post." "We're going to be a lot more tough in making decisions about whether a country is a good development partner for the United States."
The Agency for International Development said in statement that the new aid plan would be based on "a new approach that addresses five specific concerns: the global environment, population growth, economic development, democracy building and
The White House official said the proposal would not reduce aid to Israel and Egypt, the largest recipients of U.S. aid.
"The president is firmly behind assistance to those two countries." the official said.
The United States spends more than $27 billion a year on foreign aid through several U.S. agencies and multinational institutions such as the World Bank. Much of the aid is given on instruction from members of Congress.
An internal report leaked to news agencies in July said the development agency is overextended and lacking a clear mandate and should shut down programs in many countries. Vice President Al Gore's plan to "reinvent government" embraced the report, saying the agency could cut the number of overseas missions from 105 to 50.
"Cuts will be made in the number of missions in developed countries so that the agency's efforts can focus on those nations that can't absorb or manage assistance or (are) truly underdeveloped countries," said the Gore report.
The White House official said President Clinton has not made final decisions on how to proceed with the restructuring. The decisions may not come before this week's consultations with Congress, he said.
Sr. Shilpi Verma
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 20, 1993
7
THE NEWS in brief
---
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
Discovery captures telescope used to view stellar birth and death
Discovery's astronauts captured an ultraviolet telescope yesterday that spent nearly a week orbiting free of the shuttle and gazing at stars.
Commander Frank Culbertson Jr. eased Discovery to within 35 feet of the telescope and its reusable platform. Crewman Daniel Bursch grabbed the 3 1/2-ton satellite with the shuttle's robot arm as the craft soared over the South Pacific.
"Nice job," said Mission Control's Jay Apt.
"Oh baby, oh baby, oh baby," one of the crewmen replied. The five astronauts will bring the telescope home with them this week.
The $80 million telescope project, paid for largely by Germany's space agency, was designed to focus on stars in their genesis and others that are dying out.
Astronomers were delighted with the amount of stellar data collected by the telescope, which Discovery dropped off last Monday, even though a newly discovered nova was barely perceptible.
Scientists focused the telescope Friday night on the nova—a binary star explosion—even though they knew they might not see anything in the ultraviolet wavelength.
ATLANTIC CITY. N.J.
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J.
South Carolina wins Miss America
Miss South Carolina Kimberly Clarice Aiken was crowned Miss America 1984 on Saturday night after telling judges she would spend the next year working to help the homeless.
Aiken, 18, of Columbia, S.C., wept, laughed and jumped up and down after baiting out hopefuls from the 49 other states. She hugged outgoing lean Leanza Comette before walking down the runway to the song "There She Is."
Aiken, who sang a spine-tingling rendition of George Gershwin's "Summertime" during the talent competition, said she will use her year as queen to promote long-term solutions to homelessness. She said she has an uncle who lives in a shelter for the homeless in New York City.
"We sometimes donate food and clothing to homeless
shelters, but we never see what happens to them," said the University of South Carolina student, who wore a black fitted Spandex gown with a sheer bodice and sleeves.
"I've seen a lot of homeless people. I've worked in homeless shelters. It's something we all need to get involved in," she said.
A music and accounting student, Alken said she wants to work for the Internal Revenue Service.
The field of 50 contestants was narrowed to 10 then to five semifinalists late Saturday after two weeks of competition in swimsuit, talent, interview and evening gown competitions.
In addition to the title, the 1994 Miss America receives a $35,000 scholarship, a car and an estimated $200,000 in speaking fees.
CALCUTTA, India
Mother Teresa leaves hospital
Mother Teresa left a hospital yesterday after surgery to clear a blocked blood vessel, but her doctor said she had better wait two weeks before making her first visit to China.
After her release, the 83-year-old Nobel laureate demonstrated her recovery from the operation by climbing 50 steps to her quarters at Missionaries of Charity, a worldwide order she has set up for the poor.
But her personal cardiologist, Patricia Aubanel, ordered a two-week rest before the Roman Catholic nun goes ahead with her trip to China, where she plans to open a home for the handicapped.
"We have allowed Mother to go home as her condition is stable," Aubanel said. "She will be needing two weeks of rest at home. Only (then) can she go out."
Mother Teresa underwent a two-hour procedure Thursday to unclob a blood vessel in her heart. She has no chest pain and has recovered from malaria, for which she was treated last month in New Delhi. Aubanel said.
She was admitted to the B.M. Birla Heart Center a week ago.
Mother Teresa asked to leave the hospital so she could prepare for the China visit. She was invited by China's Social Welfare Department.
It was not immediately clear whether she will stick to her original schedule to travel there Oct. 7.
Mother Teresa won the 1979 Nobel Peace Prize for dedicating her life to the world's poorest and the most destitute people.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 20, 1993
9
Utah Utes offense cinches victory
95
Holly McQueen/ KANSAN
Kansas linebackers Terence Sullivan and Larry Thiel tackle Utah quarterback Mike McCoy. In its third loss of the season, Kansas was frustrated by the Utes strong first-half performance Saturday.
Kansas unable to overcome first-half deficit
Paul Kotz/KANSAN
Junior fullback Costello Good attempts to break through defensive backs Ernest Boyd, left, and Sam Rhodes of Utah. The Jayhawks were defeated Saturday 41-16.
3 7
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
Three games against Division I teams and three defeats. That is how the line reads for the Kansas football team after Saturday's 41-16 defeat to Utah before a Band Day crowd estimated at 34,000 in Memorial Stadium.
Kansas' only victory of the season was against Division I-AA Western Carolina Sept. 4 at home.
The defeat to the Utes was probably worse than defeats to No. 1 Florida State and Michigan State. Kansas had opportunities to score in those defeats but was never in position to score in the contest against Utah.
The Utah offense executed to near perfection in the first quarter, building a 21-10 lead. Junior quarterback Mike McCoy connected on nine of 13 passes for 128 yards and two touchdown passes to junior Henry Lusk.
Utah also was able to run the ball effectively in the first 15 minutes. Senior running backs Jamal Anderson, Keith Williams and Pierre Jones shared the responsibilities and 85 of the 90 rushing yards in the first quarter. Anderson had 30 yards, including a2-yard touchdown run. Williams had 28 yards, and Jones had 27.
Utah coach Ron McBride said the performance against Kansas had been far different from the performance at Arizona State two weeks ago, when Utah lost 38-0.
"The game of football is all about execution of both offense and defense," McBride said. "When you can do that, things will happen. Our offensive coordinator, Rick Rasnick, did a great job of mixing up plays so Kansas couldn't get into the flow."
Whereas Utah was executing its offense nearly perfectly in the first quarter, the Jayhawks struggled during the first half.
Kansas had 28 plays in the first half, could gain only 76 yards and trailed 31-3 at halftime.
The first-half performance left Kansas coach Glen Mason frustrated after the game.
"Frustrated? Yeah, we're frustrated. We're not executing on offense and defense," Mason said. "Utah is a pretty good team that gave a very good effort."
The Jayhawks did not record a first down until freshman June Henley's 11-yard run with 14:20 remaining in the first half. Kansas trailed 21-0 when junior Tyler Quast recovered a fumbled punt at the Utah 20-yard line. Only senior Dan Eichloff's 24-yard field goal put the Jayhawks on the scoreboard with 10:22 left in the second quarter.
Utah junior defensive back Ernest Boyd gave Mason trouble in more ways than one late in the first half. When Kansas trailed 24-3 with a second down and 10 from the 50-yard line, Boyd intercepted junior quarterback Fred Thomas' screen pass intended for senior Dwayne Chandler. He returned it 42 yards for a touchdown, gaining a 31-3 lead at halftime.
Mason replaced Thomas who was five of 17 passing for 46 yards, with
junior Asheiki Preston at quarterback in hopes of igniting the offense at the start of the second half.
Preston directed the Jayhawks to two touchdowns and 199 yards of offense in the second half, but the first-half deficit was too huge to overcome. Preston completed seven of 15 passes for 79 yards and ran for 53 yards, including one touchdown.
Mason denied that there was a quarterback controversy as a result of the game and the performance of the two quarterbacks.
"That word is not in my vocabulary," Mason said. "When I evaluate, the guy who played the best is the one I'm going to play. One guy didn't play well, and the other guy thinks he deserves a shot. I'll play that guy. So there's no controversy in my mind."
Mason did not divulge who would start at quarterback against Colorado State in two weeks.
Preston said that he thought he had deserved an opportunity to play against Michigan State last week and that he was glad for the opportunity this week.
"I did get an opportunity to play today," Preston said. "When you go into a game, you are expected to perform."
Thomas said that he would leave the choice for quarterback to the coaching staff but added that he would like a chance to redeem himself.
"I need to work harder and try to show myself and my teammates that I can do a better job," he said. "But it's definitely a good situation to have two quarterbacks that know the offense well."
Utah: Victory not a surprise
"I'm not going to share them with you," he said. "But we will have a new look in some regards when we play Colorado State."
The quarterbacks and their teammates have two weeks to regroup from a 1-3 start before facing Colorado State on Oct. 2 at home. Mason said that he would try to improve his team and that he already had a few ideas for the offense.
Rv Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
Most of the fans Saturday at Memorial Stadium were shocked by the ease with which Utah rolled to a 41-16 victory over Kansas.
The Utah players were not.
"I wasn't surprised by the win," Utah junior quarterback Mike McCoy said. "I have all the confidence in the world in our offensive line."
That offensive line gave McCoy enough time to pass for 322 yards, completing 22 of 30 attempts. He directed three touchdown drives in the team's first four possessions, giving Utah a 21-0 lead by the end of the first quarter.
The Utah players said they were surprised by the ease with which they drove the ball.
"I thought it would be much harder than this," said Utah junior wide receiver Henry Lusk. "It just goes to show you the Western Athletic Conference is no joke."
Lusk accounted for 109 of the team's receiving yards including two touchdowns. He credited much of the success of the passing game to Utah's early ability to run the ball. The team ran the ball for 154 yards.
"It was really important for us to instill our ground game in order to get our air game going," he said.
Much of the ground game came from senior running back Jamal Anderson, who ran for a total of 99 yards. He said the team came in expecting to have a lot of success on the ground against the Kansas defense.
"We definitely knew we could do things on the ground against them," Anderson said.
Utah Coach Ron McBride said that establishing the ground game was a major goal before the game.
"We felt we had a chance to run the ball against KU coming in," McBride said. "Our offensive line played really well today."
McBride said he also was pleased with a defensive effort that limited the Jayhawks to three first-half points.
Utah senior defensive tackle Adam Swaney said Kansas' offensive performance was what Utah expected.
Swanee was responsible for two of the four passes that were batted
Swaney said that he thought Kansas took Utah lightly coming into the game.
down by Utah defenders in the first half.
But Kansas senior defensive back Chris Maumalanga said that Kansas came out ready to play.
"We prepared hard, we were mentally ready," Maumalanga said. "Things just didn't click for us."
McBride said he thought the victory would help the perception of his team.
"It was big for us to come in, face a Big Eight team and win," McBride said.
Volleyball victory lifts Jayhawks
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
LINCOLN, Neb. — Entering the FirsTier Bank Invitational at Nebraska, Kansas volleyball coach Frankie Albiz said she wanted her team to be competitive.
Kansas, 6-5, was competitive Friday night, upsetting No. 22 Louisiana State, 10-15, 15-4, 18-16, 15-5.
"It'll help the confidence of our team to beat a nationally ranked team," Albitz said. "It won't get us a national rank, but we should be regionally ranked."
The celebration was cut short when No.18 Georgia defeated Kansas 15-7, 15-12, 15-13 Saturday at the tournament that also featured Big Eight foe No.4 Nebraska.
Against Louisiana State, senior Cynde Kanabel led Kansas with 16 kills, and junior Jenny Larson added 10.
In game three, the Jayhawks were down 3-7. Two kills by Kaynabs, two Louisiana State errors and a Lesli Steinert-Cyndee Kanabel block tied the score 7-7. Kansas used that momentum to win the game 18-16.
The play in the middle gave Kansas most of its points, but in the first game, Louisiana State attacker Venessa Hackett was in control. She ended with 17 kills on 62 attempts.
Albitz said that her scouting report listed Hackett as Louisiana State's best hitter.
"We had our best blockers on her the whole match," she said. "We started serving tough, which limited their choices of what they could do."
Good blocking contributed to Friday's victory, but Kansas' lack of blocking led to its defeat by Georgia on Saturday. The Jayhawks ended the Georgia match with six team blocks compared to 15 against Louisiana State.
Kansas played against Georgia without junior outside hitter Janet Uher because she injured her ankle in warm-up.
"We could have really used Janet today," Kanabel said. "Our blocking was inconsistent the whole game."
Albiz said Georgia exposed Kansas' weaknesses.
"We broke down at times," Albizt said. "They were the things we preach, the little things that don't hurt until you play a really good team like Georgia, things like controlling the ball on digs and keeping our heads up on blocks."
Georgia coach Jim Ims said his team did not play great in its victory.
"I'm happy with the fact that we won," Iams said. "Since we've been on the road a long time, it's good to have a win."
Kansas did not go down without a fight, though. The Jayhawks were down 7-12 in game three when Steinert set senior Barb Bella at middle blocker for three kills. Sophomore Tracie Walt added two kills at outside hitter. tiving Georgia 12-12.
Georgia improved its digging from then on, winning the game and match.
"I watched Kansas against LSU, lams said. "They're a good team. They play a style that is streaky. We stopped the last streak in the third game in time."
Albita said she was happy with the team's play overall.
"Our defense looked good," Albitz said. "Our offense could have been better."
Top 25 teams
The Associated Press 1993 college football poll: first-place votes in parentheses, records through Sept. 18, total points based on 25 points for a first place vote through one point for a 25th place vote, and ranking in last week's poll.
| | Record | Points | Previous |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1. Florida St. (5) | 4-0-0 | 1,544 | 1 |
| 2. Alabama (5) | 3-0-0 | 1,483 | 2 |
| 3. Miami | 2-0-0 | 1,396 | 3 |
| 4. Notre Dame | 3-0-0 | 1,374 | 4 |
| 5. Florida | 3-0-0 | 1,299 | 9 |
| **6. Nebraska** | **3-0-0** | **1,170** | **8** |
| 7. Ohio St. | 3-0-0 | 1,137 | 11 |
| 8. Michigan | 1-1-0 | 1,067 | 10 |
| 9. Penn St. | 3-0-0 | 986 | 14 |
| **10. Oklahoma** | **2-0-0** | **974** | **12** |
| 11. Tennessee | 2-1-0 | 912 | 5 |
| 12. Syracuse | 2-0-1 | 904 | 6 |
| **13. Colorado** | **2-1-0** | **732** | **7** |
| 14. Texas A&M | 2-1-0 | 688 | 16 |
| 15. Arizona | 3-0-0 | 680 | 15 |
| 16. Washington | 1-1-0 | 586 | 18 |
| 17. Stanford | 2-1-0 | 563 | 20 |
| 18. North Carolina | 3-1-0 | 480 | 13 |
| 19. N. Carolina St. | 2-0-0 | 463 | 17 |
| 20. California | 3-0-0 | 375 | 21 |
| 21. Brigham Young | 3-0-0 | 360 | 19 |
| 22. Virginia | 3-0-0 | 279 | 25 |
| 23. Wisconsin | 3-0-0 | 238 | 24 |
| 24. Louisville | 3-0-0 | 235 | — |
| 25. Auburn | 3-0-0 | 63 | — |
Others receiving votes: South Carolina 25, Indiana 24, West Virginia 20, Kansas State 17, Virginia Tech 12, Texas 10, Michigan State 9, Fresno State 6, San Diego State 6, Washington State 6.
Source: The Associated Press
SPORTS in brief
The Kansas men's golf team was defeated by Georgia Southern in the opening round of the Jack Nicklaus Invitational and was defeated by Texas Tech in the second round this weekend.
Men's golf team tied with Georgia for ninth in Nicklaus Invitational
Kansas is now tied with Georgia Southern for ninth out of 13 teams with a two-round total of 653 strokes.
Senior Jay Hepler leads the Jayhawks with rounds of 81 and 80 on the par-82 Murfield Village Golf Course in Dublin, Ohio, near Columbus. Behind him are seniors Matt Gogel, who shot two rounds of 83, and John Hess, with rounds of 84 and 82. Junior Tom Sims, who shot rounds of 87 and 80, and senior Casey Brozek, with rounds of 80 and 87, round out the Jayhawks score.
Ohio State leads the tournament with a two-round total of 604 strokes. Duke trails by five strokes, and Furman is in third with 613 strokes.
The third and final round of the tournament will be held today. The Jayhawks will then return home to begin preparations for this weekend's Topy Cup International Tournament in Japan.
WOMAN'S RUGBY Jayhawks top Oklahoma in Wichita
Immediately following the first game, Arkansas shut out Kansas 10-0.
Kansas slid past Oklahoma 6-5 in its first game. Oklahoma, which calls itself the Roses, made a five-point try, but missed the two-point conversion. Graduate student Chris Minske made both three-point penalty kicks for Kansas.
Kansas does not play again for three weeks, but the team's players chosen for the Heart of America Select Side Tournament on Oct. 2 in Norman, Oka., will have an open practice at 10 a.m. Sunday at Shenk Complex, the practice fields at 23rd and Iowa streets.
Women's rugby traveled back from Wichita with one win and one loss Saturday.
Senior Scott Collin made two trys and senior Blake
MEN'S RUGBY
The Tigers came out strong, scoring three times before sophomore Erik Sutton made two tries with senior Matt Delargy booting in the conversions near the end of the first half.
The men's rugby team defeated the Missouri Tigers 35-28 Saturday in front of Missouri's home crowd.
Kansas overcomes Missouri lead
KU
Reeves contributed one try in the second half for Kansas win. Delargy made all three conversion attempts.
Kansas has compiled a 3-1 record this season. Sutton is the leading scorer this season with three trys. Reeves has two. Delargy has a perfect kicking average, making all nine of the possible conversion attempts. The games for next weekend have not been confirmed yet.
。
MEN'S SOCCER Shoot out means defeat for Kansas
It took a shoot-out to decide the winner of the championship match Sunday at the Maverick Tournament in Omaha. Neh.
The Kansas men's soccer team and the Nebraska Cornhuskers were tied 1-1 after regulation play. Nebraska won the goal-kicking shoot out 3-2 for the tournament title.
Kansas played three matches Saturday, defeating Wichita State 8-2, losing to Nebraska 1-0 and defeating Mankato State 1-0 in the semi-finals.
Kansas coach Mark Salisbury said that Nebraska's goals in both games came from a direct free kick and a corner kick. He said the team would work on how to defend those types of kicks this week in practice.
Kansas plays Central Missouri State on Saturday, and Missouri on Sunday. Both games begin at 1 p.m. at the Shenk Complex, the practice fields at 23rd and Iowa streets.
Kansas staff writers Anne Felstet and Kent Hohlfeld contributed to this report.
10
September, 20, 1993
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
AFC
West
W L T DIV.
Denver
L.A. Raiders 2 1 0
San Diego
3 1 0 1.80
San City
2 1 0 1.80
Seattle
1 1 0 1.80
Central
Cleveland 3 0 0 1.0-0
Houston 1 2 0 1.0-0
Pittsburgh 1 2 0 1.0-0
Cincinnati 0 3 0 0.2-0
East
Buffalo 2 0 1 0-0
Indianapolis 2 0 1 0-0
Washington 2 0 1 0-0
N.J. Jets 1 0 1 0-0
New England 1 0 3 0-0
NFL
Pittsburgh 34, Cincinnati 17
New Orleans 14, Detroit 3
N.Y. Giants 20, L.A. Rams 10
Seattle 17, New England 14
San Francisco 16, Dallas 30
San Francisco 37, Atlanta 30
Cleveland 19, LA. Raiders 10
San Diego 18, Houston 17
Dallas 17, Phoenix 10
NFC
West
Source;Associated Press
8 P.M. ABC
Tonight's Game
W L T DIVE
New Orleans 3 0 0 1.00
San Francisco 0 3 0 0.00
L.A. Rams 1 2 0 0.00
Atlanta 0 3 0 0.00
Injury prone KC to meet Denver
Denver at Kansas City
Central
Detroit 2 1 1 0 0-0
Green Bay 1 1 1 0 0-0
Missouri 1 1 0 0-0
Chicago 0 2 0 1-0
Tampa Bay 0 2 0 1-0
Denver at Kansas City
8 P M. ARC
East
N.Y. Giants 3 0 0 0-00
Philadelphia 3 0 0 2-00
Phoenix 1 2 0 11-00
Washington 1 2 0 12-00
Dallas 1 2 0 11-00
James Frederick/KANSAR
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — When the Kansas City Chiefs promised Joe Montana a revamped offensive line, rookies and castoffs were not what they meant.
Montana's chances took an upsurge at mid-week when Alt, the former All-
Associated Press Writer
By Doug Tucker
Yet, with injuries sidelineing John Alt and Dave Sottt, that is mostly all they got. The line that let Dave Krieg get sacked 48 times last season carried better credentials than the ragtag unit that might have to protect Montana tomorrow night during his faceoff against John Elway and Denver's swarming defense.
KC CHIEFS
Pro left tackle, was pronounced recovered from the back injury that kept him out of last week's 30-0 loss at Houston. But right guard Scott was expected to miss his second straight week, meaning rookie Will Shields would probably alternate with free agent Danny Villa while Ricky Siglar, who barely played for Phoenix the past two seasons, starts at the other tackle.
With Alt out last week, center Tim Grunhard was the only proven performer in a line that took much of the blame for five turnovers, Krieg's constant pressure and a running game netting 46 yards.
The Chiefs wisely held out Montana, who injured his right wrist while throwing three touchdown passes in the opener at Tampa Bay. But Montana threw freely without pain in practice this week and was proclaimed ready for what promised to be the most-watched game in Arrowhead Stadium history.
Montana and Elway, two of the all-time greats at bringing their teams from behind, have not faced off since the 1989 postseason.
Montana threw for 207 yards and five touchdowns that night while winning his fourth Super Bowl and EIway threw for 108 yards and two interceptions while losing his third Super Bowl.
Despite their line problems, the Chiefs, 1-1, are six-point favorites over the Broncos, unbeaten in Wade Phillips' first two games as head coach. In injuries in the defensive line could dull whatever advantage the Broncos have over the Chiefs' blockers.
"You play strengths and weaknesses," Phillips said. "That's the pro game. If they have a weakness, and I'm not saying their offensive line is a weakness, you try to take advantage."
Weekend's results mixed bag for Big 8
Successes and failures hit conference in football play
Bv Doug Tucker
Associated Press Sportswriter
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — On one of those half-full,
half-empty sort of days, the Big Eight's pride and
.800 winning percentage both took horrific hits.
On the empty side were shattering losses dealt to Missouri and Kansas and a bitter, controversial, last-second setback for Colorado. The half-full glass contained narrow escapes by Nebraska and Oklahoma State and Kansas State's shutting down of a 14-year losing streak.
Losses by Iowa State, Colorado, Missouri and Kansas and wins by Oklahoma State, Kansas State and Nebraska reduced the Big Eight's 1993 log from a gaudy 12-3 to a respectable 15-7.
The Tigers, 1-1, one week after defeating Illinois 31-3 in coach Bob Stull's fifth season opener, absorbed the second-worst defeat in school history as No. 14 Texas A&M took out all its Big Eight and NCAA frustrations in an unbelievable 73-0 debacle.
At least Missouri got embassed on the road by agridiron toughe. Kansas, 1-3, lost 41-16 at home to the preseason favorite for sixth in the Western Athletic Conference.
Iowa State, 1-2, possibly drained of emotion after last week's close lose to Iowa, dropped a 28-7 verdict at No. 23 Wisconsin.
But the most nettlesome loss was no doubt No. 13 Colorado's 41-37 setback at No. 17 Stanford. The Buffaloes, 2-1, lost a 10-point fourth quarter lead and lost the game when officials ruled that Tony Cline did get his feet down before losing the ball
with eight seconds left on a 5-yard touchdown reception from Steve Stenstrom.
No. 6 Nebraska, 3-0, after falling behind 10-0,
needed a 137-yard rushing effort from an 18-year-old freshman to squeak past UCLA 14-13.
At Tulsa, Oklahoma State, 2-0, got a big game from defensive end Jason Gildon, including a sack-and-strip with 25 left, to beat Tulsa 16-10.
And at Minnesota, K-State beat a nonconference team on the road for the first time since 1979. The Wildcats, 3-0, took a 17-0 lead and withstood four thrusts from inside their 5-yard-line in the final minute for a 30-25 victory.
Andre Coleman's 72-yard kickoff return, immediately after Minnesota had taken its only lead, set up J.J. Smith's 7-yard touchdown run with 3:11 to one.
"It was a ball game of character," said coach Bill Snyer.
The Wildcats came into the game 2-13 on the road and 17-2 at home since 1990. They had not beaten a non-Big Eight team away from K-State Stadium since 1979.
Minnesota quarterback Tim Schade was held to 183 total yards, less than half his nation-leading 441.5 average. K-State's Chad May, although slowed by an ankle injury, hit 16 of 30 passes for 247 yards.
Guion became Oklahoma State's all-time leader with 34 career saves with three against Tulsa. In the second quarter, he took down quarterback Gus Frerotte and knocked the ball loose for a safety. Then with 25 seconds remaining, he got Frerotte again but recovered the fumble himself.
"When it got right down to the clutch, he makes the play out here that ultimately decided things," coach Pat Jones said. "But that's what great players do."
Is Nebraska's supply of running backs simply
inexhaustible? Two weeks ago Calvin Jones, the preseason choice for Big Eight offensive player of the year, went down with an injury and in stepped backup redshirt freshman Damon Benning. Then Benning fumbles twice against UCLA and in comes Lawrence Phillips, rushing for 137 yards and a touchdown.
I saw a couple or nubbles right before it got in, and I was really nervous about fumbling," Phillips said. "So when I got in, all I wanted to do was hold on to the ball. I was more into holding onto the ball than trying to break it."
"I think we escaped today," said quarterback Tommie Frazier, who hit 13 of 19 passes for 145 yards. "Everyone thought that."
Colorado had beaten its first two opponents by an average of more than 21 points but saw Stenstrom hit five touchdown passes.
"We had the game in our hip pocket, and we let it get away," Colorado coach Bill McCartney said. "We had control of the game, and we were doing everything we wanted on offense."
Rest assured the midnight oil will burn in the offices of Missouri's Stull and Kansas coach Glen Mason. Missouri is 2-19 under Stull away from home. Only a 77-0 clobbering by Oklahoma in 1986 was worse.
"I don't know who was playing out there just a minute ago," said Missouri tailback Joe Freeman. "At 12 o'clock, I don't know what team stepped on that field. That wasn't the Missouri Tigers."
Kansas' hopes for a second straight bowl bid now seem almost hopeless. The Jayhawks would have to go 6-2 the rest of the season, just to have the necessary six Division I-A victories.
"Turnovers weren't the deal," Mason said. "Missed opportunities weren't the deal. We just got our tails kicked."
Seattle pitcher throws Kansas City a curveball
The Associated Press
SEATTLE — Erik Hanson expects to win every time he steps on the mound. The problem is he finds a way to lose far too many games than the Mariners think he should.
Making what he said were two mechanical adjustments in his delivery, Hanson had five hits over 8 % innings to break his four-game losing streak, leading Seattle over Kansas City 4-1 Sunday.
The 6-foot-6 right-hander compared pitching a baseball to hitting a golf ball.
"You look at the game of golf," he said. "You can make one little adjustment and go from shooting a 90 to under par. It's such a long season. You go through a lot of mechanical adjustments."
Hanson, 11-12, who had an 8.46 ERA since Aug. 13 as he lost four consecutive decisions, struck out nine batters and walked one. Ted Power finished for his 11th save, allowing an RBI single to Kevin McReynolds.
Hanson, 5-0 in his first eight starts this year, is 6-6 in his last 14 games.
"Today he was getting his curveball over," Mariners manager Lou Piniella said. "That's the big difference. Just an outstanding game."
"I can't recall seeing Hanson with that type stuff," Kansas City manager Hal McRae said.
Hanson was an 18-game winner in 1990 who lost 17 games last season. His inconsistency has led to speculation that the Mariners will trade him this winter.
His performance against the Royals may give Piniella second thoughts.
"This is the type of game that he was pitching early in the season," Piniella said. "Aggressive. Going after the hitters. Making the pitch away on them. Getting his curveball over. Mixing in a fastball with a change-up. That's what he's got to do. He's got all the equipment."
Hanson has one of the top curveballs in baseball, but his inability to win consistently has the Mariners puzzled. Hanson insisted his problems were mechanical.
Bill Haselman's double-play groundout gave the Mariners a 1-0 lead in the third. Seattle added three runs in the fourth on Ken Griffey's RBI double, Mike Blowers' run-scoring triple and Bret Boone's sacrifice飞
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aurtace, "1938" aurtace, "1940" aurtace, "1942" aurtace, "1944" aurtace, "1946" aurtace, "1948" aurtace, "1950" aurtace, "1952" aurtace, "1954" aurtace, "1956" aurtace, "1958" aurtace, "1960" aurtace, "1962" aurtace, "1964" aurtace, "1966" aurtace, "1968" aurtace, "1970" aurtace, "1972" aurtace, "1974" aurtace, "1976" aurtace, "1978" aurtace, "1980" aurtace, "1982" aurtace, "1984" aurtace, "1986" aurtace, "1988" aurtace, "1990" aurtace, "1992" aurtace, "1994" aurtace, "1996" aurtace, "1998" aurtace, "2000" aurtace, "2002" aurtace, "2004" aurtace, "2006" aurtace, "2008" aurtace, "2010" aurtace, "2012" aurtace, "2014" aurtace, "2016" aurtace, "2018" aurtace, "2020" aurtace, "2022" aurtace, "2024" aurtace, "2026" aurtace, "2028" aurtace, "2030" aurtace, "2032" aurtace, "2034" aurtace, "2036" aurtace, "2038" aurtace, "2040" aurtace, "2042" aurtace, "2044" aurtace, "2046" aurtace, "2048" aurtace, "2050" aurtace, "2052" aurtace, "2054" aurtace, "2056" aurtace, "2058" aurtace, "2060" aurtace, 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aertace, "2188" aertace, "2190" aertace, "2192" aertace, "2194" aertace, "2196" aertace, "2198" aertace, "2200" aertace, "2202" aertace, "2204" aertace, "2206" aertace, "2208" aertace, "2210" aertace, "2212" aertace, "2214" aertace, "2216" aertace, "2218" aertace, "2220" aertace, "2222" aertace, "2224" aertace, "2226" aertace, "2228" aertace, "2230" aertace, "2232" aertace, "2234" aertace, "2236" aertace, "2238" aertace, "2240" aertace, "2242" aertace, "2244" aertace, "2246" aertace, "2248" aertace, "2250" aertace, "2252" aertace, "2254" aertace, "2256" aertace, "2258" aertace, "2260" aertace, "2262" aertace, "2264" aertace, "2266" aertace, "2268" aertace, "2270" aertace, "2272" aertace, "2274" aertace, "2276" aertace, "2278" aertace, "2280" aertace, "2282" aertace, "2284" aertace, "2286" aertace, "2288" aertace, "2290" aertace, "2292" aertace, "2294" aertace, "2296" aertace, "2298" aertace, "2300" aertace, "2302" aertace, "2304" aertace, "2306" aertace, "2308" aertace, "2310" aertace, "2312" aertace, "2314" aertace, "2316" aertace, "2318" aertace, "2320" aertace, "2322" aertace, "2324" aertace, "2326" aertace, "2328" aertace, "2330" aertace, "2332" aertace, "2334" aertace, "2336" aertace, "2338" aertace, "2340" aertace, "2342" aertace, "2344" aertace, "2346" aertace, "2348" aertace, "2350" aertace, "2352" aertace, "2354" aertace, "2356" aertace, "2358" aertace, "2360" aertace, "2362" aertace, "2364" aertace, "2366" aertace, "2368" aertace, "2370" aertace, "2372" aertace, "2374" aertace, "2376" aertace, "2378" aertace, "2380" aertace, "2382" aertace, "2384" aertace, "2386" aertace, "2388" aertace, "2390" aertace, "2392" aertace, "2394" aertace, "2396" aertace, "2398" aertace, "2400" aertace, "2402" aertace, "2404" aertace, "2406" aertace, "2408" aertace, "2410" aertace, "2412" aertace, "2414" aertace, "2416" aertace, "2418" aertace, "2420" aertace, "2422" aertace, "2424" aertace, "2426" aertace, "2428" aertace, "2430" aertace, "2432" aertace, "2434" aertace, "2436" aertace, "2438" aertace, "2440" aertace, "2442" aertace, "2444" aertace, "2446" aertace, "2448" aertace, "2450" aertace, "2452" aertace, "2454" aertace, "2456" aertace, "2458" aertace, "2460" aertace, "2462" aertace, "2464" aertace, "2466" aertace, "2468" aertace, "2470" aertace, "2472" aertace, "2474" aertace, "2476" aertace, "2478" aertace, "2480" aertace, "2482" aertace, "2484" aertace, "2486" aertace, "2488" aertace, "2490" aertace, "2492" aertace, "2494" aertace, "2496" aertace, "2498" aertace, "2500" aertace, "2502" aertace, "2504" aertace, "2506" aertace, "2508" aertace, "2510" aertace, "2512" aertace, "2514" aertace, "2516" aertace, "2518" aertace, "2520" aertace, "2522" aertace, "2524" aertace, "2526" aertace, "2528" aertace, "2530" aertace, "2532" aertace, "2534" aertace, "2536" aertace, "2538" aertace, "2540" aertace, "2542" aertace, "2544" aertace, "2546" aertace, "2548" aertace, "2550" aertace, "2552" aertace, "2554" aertace, "
SWF seeking a good-looking atlantic male. Must be fun & out-going. Like beer and blue eyes. Prefer someone 21 or older. Want to meet ya! #2367 SWF seeking a SM 20-40 who enjoy lays day and wild nights. Must like disco music and dance till dawn. I'm open-minded and fun-loving. Call box
SWF N/S! I am looking for a very little, kind, and
brightly to brighten my life. #20233
SWF seeking an attractive SWM to go to a party and have a good time. 68422
the outdoors and am seeking someone to just hang out with and get to know. I like seeing bands and enjoy going to coffee shops. I'm 22 yrs. old, 5'4 and attractive. Please call if interest. #22051
SWJF, 19, $^4$F, 115 lbs. Enjoys working out, dancing,
playing volleyball, and occasional partying.
Enjoys singing, dancing, and blossoming.
Seeking SWJM with similar interests.
Smokers and drug users need not apply. #82504
SWF seeking SWM. I like alternative music, but you don't have to. I like guys around 5'10 with long brown hair and blue eyes. I also like drink beer. We also love playing the board of fun and like to hang out. give me a call .#22800
SWJW looking for that special guy to sweep me off my feet and can enjoy high times chilling out at home or around town. 1 drink, dance, and smoke. Call me for fun. I like to party! #21059
WANTED: 59M. Prefer tail and dress. It wouldn't hurt if you were handsome and rich either. Nicely defined peds and little, preferably no chest hair or back hair. Be of choice: Bud Light #40077
WF looking for a fairly plastic relationship with a normal WM. I enjoy light drinking, an ice cream, and socializing. People with annoying personalities need not respond. Friendly outgoing man only, please, who are just good friends.
Woman seeking Scandinavian man. More or less blonde and blue-eyed. European ideas and attitudes. Politicalally. Hard worker affectionate. I'm looking for my equal. #82988
MEN SEEKING MEN
8
Dark long hair, athletic looking for male with similar lifestyle #82339
Hay If I put the following, to meet the same:
Great Body, Great Looks, Tamed, Closeted Stuff.
GWM I'm looking to find a lot of new friends where we can share a lot of ideas and wants. We enjoy others company. Let's if we've got anything in common.
FRIENDS SEEKING FRIENDS
Very good looking, BLIWM 11%, % quality, fit &
comfort. Super cool looking, super co-
llection, 18 in to mid size, exceeds
18 in to mid size
.
Very good looking, bbm, 6 feet 1½ lesk workout,
8-10 hours. Bamboo/glass desk. High gloss,
sophisticated 8-9mm only镜, private. $6000.
Bamboo workstation. Free wifi.
19 yr. old Chicago boy looking for 19 yr. old Jewish girl.
40038
Any non-traditional students hoping to get into
groups call me on phone for studying groups and
information.
Blucit macker seeks friend who likes to fix stuff c2005
Eleven-Eleven. Is this meaningful to you? If so, let's get together. #23868
K
SEEKING SPORTS INTEREST
SWM seeking Female partner to play tennis and golf with me. Also looking for any person that is interested in going to the woodlands race track. # 61039
MUTUAL HOBBIES
Grad student looking for riding companion to
shape with. Road and off-road, all abilities will.
1 ride 6X's a week with varying intensities.
229645
Graduate student looking for riding companion to
and off road. Abilities are welcome! Road
and off road.
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
To place an ad
10 place an air
1. Call or come into the Kansan at 119
Staffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
2. You'll place an ad in the Jaytait Network section of the Kansan (up to 11 lines) and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people who respond to your ad. Your voice message will remain in the system for 21 days.
3. After your ad runs in the Kansan, you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages people leave for you.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
To check out an ad
1. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them.
2. Call 1-900-787-0778 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touch-tone phone), enter the mailbox number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category. You can interrupt to skip over messages that don't interest you. Voice prompts will be displayed. Way. You'll be charged $1.95 per minute.
1
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached.
---
4
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 20.1993
11
Paradise
Breakfast•Lunch•Dinner
728 Massachusetts 842-5199
The Athlete's Foot.
914 Massachusetts 841-6966
Crisis Ppregnancy
Crisis Pregnancy Outreach Center
- FREE Pregnancy Testing
* Totally Confidential Services
* Same Day Results
* Call for Appointment
* Walk-ins Welcome
2032 SW Wayne • Topoka, Ks 66040
(813)235-5379
AMERICAN BISTRO
701 MASS.
In the Eldridge Hotel
841-8349
Breakfast*Lunch*Dinner
We do Banquets tool
Beauty
WAREHOUSE
Salon & Supplies
520 W. 23rd + 841-588
REDKEN
IMAGE
Laser Logic Sales·Supplies·Rentals
29131
H
Broadfax
NEXUS
VISIONS
frames PAUL MITCHELL
One Stop Source for All Laser Printer Needs
865-0505
Featuring i.a.
Eeyeworks!
806 Massachusetts
841-7421
Introducing
Full Service
Engraving
Name Tags, Name Plates,
Plaques and More!
Jaybowl
KANSAS UNION
Not just for
bowling
any more!
864-3545
100s
Announcements
108 Personal
109 Business
110 General
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
130 Front Office
Jaybowl
SUNDAY UNION
Classified Directory
200s Empleo
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
200s Employment
208 Help Wanted
202 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and is therefore not protected by the ordinance, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
100s Announcements
I
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
300s
Merchandise
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available.
REMEMBER!
110 Bus. Personals
308 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buv
REMEMBER!
Costumes on 2nd floor for party parties
and of course Halloween. Come on up!
928 Mass. Downtown
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358-
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Tuesday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 11am-9pm
Sunday 11am-9pm
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday: 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday: 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday: 8:40am-4:30pm
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am:4:30pm
Saturday 8am:1:30am
120 Announcements
KU Women! Mary Kay Cosmetics free facial and makeover. All new fall colors, personalized selection. No obligation to purchase. 943-4230.
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
Hoops, Pendants & More!
For Guys and Gals
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass-Down town
CHRISTMAS SKI BREAKS
JANUARY 2-16, 1994 + 5,6 or 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT* $199
from
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK*
TELLURIDE
JANUARY 2-16, 1994 • 5, 6 or 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT* $199
from BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK*
TELLURIDE
"FREE 1/2 DAY
LIFT TICKET!"
MUST BOOK BY 10/15
SUNCHASE
FOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
1.800.SUNCHASE
'FREE 1/2 DAY
LIFT TICKET!
MUST BOOK BY 10/15
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
1·800·SUNCHASE
USE DAILY KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS
ATTENTION ROLE - PLAYING GAMES. Graduate student seeks other graduate students or professors to form role-playing gaming group. Please call 865-4361.
School of Education Students
Students who wish to student teach the spring semester (GCS included) must attend the student teacher meeting on Tuesday, September 21, at 13:30 PM. The meeting is held at the University of Georgia. Preliminary information is available in 117 Bailen.
130 Entertainment
ATTENTION WEEK OF ROCK FANS-The show is on! Jimmy Witherens is coming to town but his two shows on Saturday at 10 p.m. Get your Week of Rock tickets and Witherons tickets now at Liberty Hall. Listen to KLZR FM 105.9 for ticket giveaways. Remember all shows are 18 and over.
MONO DIECO Industrial, Alternative, Techno,
$20 per hour. MONO DIECO Industrial, $85 per
per hour. HIDEPASS 10 N. Floor 3B, 865-1100
476.
140 Lost & Found
Found, single key on the corner of Emery and Sigma Nu Place. Call ask for Dave.
Lost stray white cat at 18t and Haskell Sunday morning Sept. 12 at laundromat. To the girl who took it home please respond back to UDK, box # 15. The owners inquired about the cat.
Male and Female
205 Help Wanted
Cash Caterers, Kansas and Burge Unions' Catering Department, September 25, 1993, 8:15pm; the opening of the Leid Center, Apply at the Kansas and Burge Unions' Personnel Office Level 5, Kansas Union Building. Other dates available for cash catering. Listings available in Personnel
ALASKA EMPLOYMENT- Fisheries. Earn up to $4000 + $400 / mo. on fishing vessels or canneries. Many companies provide transportation and room & board. For more info; call 1-205-545-4185. ext.
A great opportunity for education majors! Stepping Stone is hiring a lead teacher to work with kinder gardeners from 12:00 to 6:00 p.m. m. 3, or 5 days a week. Anxely at ten:100 Wakarana.
200s Employment
We are currently accepting applications for teaching counselor (TC) positions to work with and enhance the vocational and daily living skills of our men and women with developmental disabilities. We offer full part-time positions, along with flexible substitute positions. CLO needs quality-minded, professional people with a 4 yr. degree, prefer related to Behavioral Sciences. Students are required to have a Master's degree preferred. Apply in person at 2125 Delaware, Lawrence, KS 60846. EOE
BURNED OUT in your food service job? Clean
burned up for BASIC! Sun-Thur eaves. 12 wk./hr.
flexible hours. $40./hr. startage. wage. 842-5965
Costly. burden needted to Satur- 9. Answering phone and
basic sewing skills needed. In apply in person at Aneta's Alterations 1901 Mass.
Child care provided needed in person. First United Methodist Church, 489 Vermont, 841-7500.
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
Cottonwood Inc., a service providing for adults with developmental disabilities, is currently accepting applications for full and part-time employment in their residential division. All positions are evening and weekend hours, some may require additional training or exp. helpful, but may not be required. A good driving record is a must. Please apply at Cottonwood Inc., 2901 W. 31st, EOE
CLO
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING- Earn up to $2000
+/mo. + world travel. Summer & career employment available. No experience necessary. For more information call 1-206-634-6088 ext. fc7585.
Day care needs experienced person. Must be available in the morning. $/hr. 841-7831.
DEVELOPMENT/CONSTRUCTION CO. has part-time opening with flexible day hours for an office assistant. Chance for full-time summer employment and after graduation. Experience on IBM or Apple computers. Some accounting/bookkeeping experience. Starting at $8.00 and up depending on experience and education to P.O. Box 3053, Lawrence, KS 60046. Attn. Nita
Domino's Pizza now has 5 delivery positions available.
Apply after 4p.m. any day all shifts avail.
Flexible hrs. average driver earns $7-$10 an hour:
841-802-6911
Graduate level student with proven technical writing and revision skills, three quarter to full-time. Technical services or science background helpful. Good typing skills essential. Some short term travel required. Applications close 10/04/83. Send resume and letter of interest to TECHGROUP Director, p.o. bw 798, Lawrence, KS 65044. EOE. Students seeking dedicated, energetic individual to work with our grassroots lobbying and fundraising staff. Guaranteed wage + benefits. Full or part time. Call (811) 351-8348. Everyone is welcome regardless of gender, race, or sexual orientation.
Do you need work experience?
Did you have trouble making the income you needed this summer?
Vector Marketing can help you
Work experience and a pay check too
Handy person needed to help renovate an
housed, flexible office. Call Phl 842-1838 or 841-
2507.
with both.
VECTOR
$9.30 starting
842-8531
Internships & Scholarships
new available
Help wanted. Adams Alumni Center needs morning dishwasher 3 days a week, minimum wage, position available immediately, apply in person.
Kansas and Burge Unions hiring part-time, hourly for Fall Semester. Many jobs in Food Service; Catering and Custodial with varying schedules. 5. Kansas Union Building for job specialties. IQE,劳
Keyboard players wanted for variety dance band.
Keyboard group wanted for exp. MB
Entertainment Group, 749-6404
Miracle Oracle is accepting applications for a part-time clerk. Apply itk 10.14 Haskell between 10:30 and 10:50.
NANNIES. spend a year near NYC with a family
NANNIES. call C1-180-750-1701, one-way.
"No fees!" "free."
Need dependable care give for my 8 yr. old daughter, approx. 1 hr., early eve. 3 E'S/wk, and possibly more. Must have own transportation. Call 841-7082 after n.m
Fart-time counter helper, Mon, Wed, Fr., apply in
person at the Mail Box, 3115 W 8th suite C.
Part-time day and evening help wanted. Must be able to work weekdays apply in person only at 8:30am. Applicants must have a Master's degree or equiv.
PARK TIME SUPERVISOR WANTED
Previous food service and supervisory experience mandatory. Start at $2.50 per hour. Future pay raises based on performance. Up to $6.50 per hour. 20-3 hrs. a week. Mostly evenings and weekends. Entrance fee $100. M-F, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. in mountains above Smokebone.
PART-TIME SUPERVISOR WANTED.
Position Available: A local business needs a person to do maintenance work including, lawn work, washing cars, cleaning, painting etc. Flexible schedule, but need 2-3 hours per day with possibly some weekend hours. Must have valid driver's license and be very responsible. Within walking distance of K.U. For additional information and an interview, call 845-1130 and ask for Larry or Phil.
Part-time telephone marketer needed. No expi-
rience. Call us at 212-630-3198, inc. 2200 E. 32rd,
or call 855-3319. Ask for Brenda.
Position Available: A local business needs a person to do maintenance work including, lawn work, washing cars, cleaning, painting etc. Flexible schedule, but need 2-3 hours per day with possibly some weekend hours. Must have valid driver's license and be very responsible. Within walking distance of K.U. For additional information and an interview, please call 845-1120 and ask for Larry or Phil.
Program Alde for the Lawrence Arts Center.
Visit the shop. Part time position. Afternoons, evenings and weekends. Start immediately. Must be KE Career work study qualified. Study at The
Sport Officials: Lawrence Parks and Recreational Department is hiring individuals who want to be coaching coaches or assisting league teams. Must be able to attend training sessions to qualify. Contact Bob Stanclist ASPA. 843-712-721
Wanted a very responsible person to babysit a child by 10am on Wednesday. Please call: 749-365. References required.
842-5442
Social Worker, full-time position to provide case management services to adult SPMI population, screening and crisis stabilization and manage clinical needs in community agencies 10 years experience with this population, requires an LMSW, licensed psychiatric nurse or licensed psychologist. Please submit resume with cover letter in care of State Creamer, Bert Nash, CMHC, 384 North 202, Lawrence KS 68044, until filled off. EOE
LSAT EXPERTS KAPLAN
842-5442
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
BirtightBirth #242. Free pregnancy testing
225 Professional Services
GRE EXPERTS KAPLAN
235 Typing Services
Macintosh repairs and upgrades
Friendly, Affordable, In-Home Service
The Mac Doctors 842-0848
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The lawsuits of
Donald G. Strohe Sally G. Ketsey
16 East 13th 842-1-133
-der Women Word Processing. Former editor transforms scrambles into accurate pages of letters.
-Computer programs to do
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman, Attorney
843 Missouri
843-4023
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
THE law offices OF
DONALD G. STROLE
ABSOLUTELY EXCELLENT EDITING DISSER-
tion and thesis paper. No paper too large,
small
Are you Makin' the Grade
WORD PROCESSING& LASER PRINTING
For all your typing needs
call Makin' the Grade at 853-2955
*Book Publishing: Resumes, Cover Letters,
Brochure & Flyer, Timer Papers, Newsletter*
Call 642-0699
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
Protype - fast, reliable service, professional qual-
ity any kind of typing accepted. Call today at 843-755-1234.
JUSTICE
Prompt assault and contraceptive services. Dale L. Clinton M.D. 841-5716.
Word processing, applications, term papers, dis-
tribution, training jobs. Rush jobs availa- tion. Masters Degree, 81-9234
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
1928 Yamaha 560 Seca, 20% miles, new battery, exc-
cond. service records, many extra's, $1,300 - 700
Austro Bauer **TEAM** *Racing Blade*. 56 cm Reynolds SI frame, European components, 2 sets of weights.
1984 Yamaha Riva, 180s, Runn Great, $700, make offer, 832-295-305.
Beds, desks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
938 Glass
Quantrill's Flea Market open every Fri. Sat. & Sun 10AM-5PM811 New Hampshire 842-6616 Downtown
Dennis Miller tickets 865-3562.
Full Fall Clearance: All adult tapes on sale $12.95 and
Video Too, 1910 Hakstel, 841-704a, or Mircae
Video Too, 1910 Hakstel, 841-704a
For sale Vakima car top carrier with bike tray.
Call 841-9005.
*or sale:* Dorm carpets: $20-$30 each. Alpine Carpet
*series:* D-500. Call Ralph 794-4155
*d-series:* D-800. Call Ralph 794-4155
SUNFLOWER
ROI MASSACHUSETTS
845-3000
Rollerblade
Aeroblade (reg. $329)
$269 SALE
Rollerblade 303 Wheels
(reg. $17.99) $10 SALE
Rollerblade Zetra
Bearings (reg. $10.95)
$7 SALE
Bauer
XS-5 Street Skate
(reg. $199.95)
$139.95 Sale
Cooper
Hockey Gloves
(reg. $29.95)
$10 SALE
Leg Guards (reg.
$22.95)
$10 SALE
In-Line
Skate Speedometer (reg. $45.95) $35 SALE
powerbook 180/4120
new in box $499.99
823-1317
Suzuki G5500 great low price. Call Mark 842-9383.
waterbed, queen size baffled, waveless, heated good condition $100 a.b. call 841-6762.
Wedding ring set, ¼* karat round diamond sur-
face, & baguette. Retail value $230,
selling for $119. Call Lisa 682-8947.
340 Auto Sales
8$ Suzuki GSXK-750. Yoshi Pipe and much more.
$2500 OBO. Call John at 832-0299.
1990 Ford Tempo, d 4 AT, AC, extra clean, $7000 obo. Call Bruce after 5:39m 842-4974.
360 Miscellaneous
Fitness room
Over the Edge
Front door bus service
24 hr. computer center
Naismith Halls' services give students the competitive edge.
Bookcases, desks, chairs, IBM typewriters, copier,
printer, fax machines. To view call 852-7393 during business hours.
To call 852-7393 during business hours.
Dine anytime meals
370 Want to Buy
Weekly maid service
NAISMITH Hall
LEVIS $60's, will pay up to $13.00 and $10.00 for Lee
Levine Jenn Jackets. $84-0546.
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
3 bed house, 6 bath, a late October 1 for sublease
8415 mths. Call 8414-8414, leave message.
1800 Naismith Drive (913)843-8559
1 BRT abc. cable & water paid. Sept. 4. On bus
and car. 9 BRT abc. water paired. Call after 7 am and leave a
phone. 641-437-103
3 rooms for rent for non-traid. female(s) available
o. 1200 $ - one day, 10 min. south of Lawrence.
Private country home-kids and pets O. K. 760316
leave message.
3 bdr 2 bath apt for rent Campus Place. Very close to campus. Reasonable rent. One female roommate. Smoker please. Call 924-6509.
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS 2040 Heatherwood
- 2 Bedroom, 1 $1/2 Bath $425
•3 Bedroom, 2 Bath $550
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
Call Now!843-4754
430 Roommate Wanted
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Rm. avail, for 1em, in 2 story townhouse. Close to stairway. Lease to Marek, rent already paid. Leave to May 31, 749-724. Subleasing. Naismith Room, 1 month paid for, call 842-1979. Leave message or ask for Kerry.
Available Immediately at West Hills Apt. 1012 Emery Rm. Spacious, one bedroom, unfurnished apt. w/balcony, ac, dw, pool, laundry, great location near campus apx. 30% per month-waited. No phone.
- Byphone: 864-4358
Extra rice and quiet. 1 bedroom room, including cen-
tury suite. 2 bedrooms. No pets. Needs
Saint Francis Church Apartments 841-600-6900.
How to schedule an ad:
Female non-smoker to share duplex, three bedroom, washer/dryer, on KU bus route. 749-4145.
Responsible, non-smoking female roommate to a share f. 2 BR mat. $118. +1/âutils. Call 834-7099.
Ads phone number in may be filled to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* in aircaran 110 Starflare Flint
- By Mail: 119 Staufer Flint, Lawrence. KS. 60445
Stop by the Kansas 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.
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305 for sale
340 auto sales
360 miscellaneous
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128 announcements
128 entertainment
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Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
379 want to buy
405 for rent
438 roommate wanted
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The University Daily Kansas, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 68045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1983 FarWorks, Inc./Dust by Universal Press Syndicate
10
Vacationing from their jobs of terrorizing young teen-agers, zombies will often relax at a Western dead ranch.
2)
12
Monday, September 20, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Would Jesus Flunk Western Civ?
The greatest opposition during Jesus' life came from religious and academic leaders of His day. Careful examination of Patterns In Western Civilization, the Western Civ textbook, reveals another academic approach to understanding the Bible: 1) It teaches that Adam & Eve, Noah & the Flood, and other Bible stories were merely myths. 2) It distorts the impact Israel had on western civilization. 3) It implies that Jesus was just a good man. Are you upset over the subtle attack on Christianity? Have you been told all the truth? And they shall turn away their ears from the truth, and shall be turned unto fables. (II Timothy 4:4) Ever learning, and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth. (II Timothy 3:7)
Campus Presentation 7:00 PM Wednesday, September 22nd Kansas Room, Kansas Union
MARINA DEL CALLE
KCBT Student Ministries
SPORTS: Club sport members can be injured like varsity athletes, but don't have athletic trainers. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103.NO.22
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:8644810
GTAs contend that they are employees
By Kathleen Stolle Kansan staff writer
Two graduate teaching assistants testified yesterday, the first day of hearings on the status of GTAs, that they considered themselves employees of the University of Kansas, independent of their roles as graduate students.
Under questioning by GTA representative Scott Stone of the Kansas Association of Public Employees, Dan Murtaugh and
David Reidy both said they decided to be GTAs for financial, not academic, reasons.
"Nobody would deny that you do receive some academic benefits," Reidy said. "But the motivation for the job is primarily economic."
The hearings focus on the issue of whether GTAs qualify as public employees, as defined by Kansas statutes. Public employees have the right to vote on unionizing. The GTAs, who are interested in forming a bargaining unit, say they are public employees. The University says that GTAs are students who benefit academically from the teaching experience.
Anthony Genova, head of the philosophy
department, testified that GTAs in his department had many of the responsibilities as faculty members. Preparing syllabuses and lectures, grading papers, and holding office hours were some of the responsibilities he cited. He also testified that GTAs were subject to the same standards of ethical conduct as faculty. Genova said he considered the GTAs junior colleagues.
Under questioning by hearing examiner Monty Bertelli of the Kansas Public Employees Relations Board, Genova said most graduate students became GTAs for the financial rather than the academic benefits. However, he said an assistantship could enhance a graduate's prospects
when looking for a job.
"It's not necessary, but I would say it's helpful for someone going into teaching to say, I've had some experience teaching," he said.
Stone introduced photocopies of GTA paychecks, applications and a GTA manual, tailored after the faculty handbook, as evidence of the University and GTAs employer-employee relationship.
"We have all the responsibility of employees, all the responsibilities of faculty, but none of the benefits," Murtaugh said.
Under questioning, all three witnesses cited compensation and health care as known concerns of GTAs.
KU scientists find mammoth crater
Nebraska crater may be largest in U.S.
By Shan Schwartz
Kansan staff writer
A team of three KU scientists received local and worldwide attention for their discovery of an impact crater in Nebraska, believed to be the largest in the United States and one of the most recent anywhere on Earth.
Wakefield Dort and Ed Zeller, professors emeritus of Geology, and Larry Martin, curator of vertebrate paleontology at the Museum of Natural History, stumbled onto the crater three years ago while looking for fossils in central Nebraska.
Martin said the scientists were originally investigating the area near North Platte, Neb., looking for mammoth tusks.
"We started looking for elephants, then lagoons, and then we found a crater," he said.
To help them find remnants from the mammoths, Martin said, the scientists studied geological formations in the area to look for prehistoric lagoon formed at the end of the last ice age. The lagons, Martin said, were likely areas to find the mammoth fossils.
While searching for lagoons, Martin said, Dort pieced together several maps of the area. Dort discovered what appeared to be a crater from the altitude lines on a topographical map.
Zeller said he was surprised no one else had discovered the crater by looking at topographical maps.
The scientists studied the area to confirm the finding. After digging up glass and magnetic particles in the area around the crater, Martin said, they were convinced that it was formed by a large meteor that crashed
into the earth about 1,000 years ago.
The meteor's impact caused an explosion equivalent to the force of a hydrogen bomb, Zeller said, and probably displaced at least 50 or 100 million tons of material from the impact site. Particles blown from the explosion flew as far as five miles from the crater.
The original crater was probably several hundred feet deep, Zellers said, but over time it was filled in by erosion and ground settling.
"If you're there looking at it, it doesn't appear to be a crater unless you know it's there," he said.
Zeller said that animals and humans within 10 miles of the impact were probably killed. Within 20 miles of the impact, he said, "they probably experienced a major shake-up."
"This was probably the most spectacular astrophysical event ever witnessed by humans on earth," he said.
Zeller said that Pawnee Indians probably were living in the area at the time of the meteor's impact.
A large crater in Arizona, formed about 22,000 years ago, was previously believed to be the largest crater in the United States, but Zeller said it wasn't as big as the one discovered in Nebraska.
The Arizona crater, however, is more spectacular to view because it was formed in solid rock and retained its shape and size much more than the Nebraska crater, which formed in softer soil, Zeller said.
The discovery in Nebraska, Dort said, proved that the earth is not safe from another devastating meteor crash.
"As far as the general public is concerned, it demonstrates that a large impact occurred very recently," Dort said. "And another one could occur anywhere at any time."
South Dakota
Minn.
Iowa
crater location
Merna
Lincoln
Colorado
Nebraska
Kansas
The Custer County crater
Three KU scientists have discovered the most recent impact crater in the world and the largest in the United States. The depression is 70 feet deep.
1 mile
TOTAL INATURE VAN
Doug Hesse/ KANSAN
Cedric Deniau, Coutevroult, France, graduate student, left, and Grace Yee, Hong Kong graduate student, meditate at the Campanile as part of a class taught by Woun Ur Young Ur, graduate teaching assistant and master of Tae Kwon Do. The class of about 40 exercised and mediated for an hour yesterday morning.
Sunrise meditation
KANSAN
Haskell students boycott
By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer
Students allege that businesses are racist
Students at Haskell Indian Nations University have boycotted two Lawrence businesses that they accuse of racism.
Regina Grass, Haskell sophomore and president of the Campus Activities Association, or CAA, said most of the student body had refused to do business with Gumby's Pizza, 1445 W. 23rd St., and Checkers Foods, 2300 Louisiana St., because of alleged discrimination against American Indians.
Owners of both businesses have denied the charges.
Grass said the boycott began Wednesday when Shirlene Willie, a former assistant manager at Gumby's and an American Indian, told Haskell students that employees of Gumby's performed mock war chants when they received a call from Haskell.
Kansan staff report
The charges were brought before a campus activities association meeting, Grass said. She said the students present discussed the matter before deciding on a boycott.
Willie could not be reached for comment.
The boycott was fueled by the belief that Gumby's deliberately delivered pizzas late to Haskell, Grass said.
Grass said the boycott had been successful.
"Usually the trash cans outside are full of Gumby's boxes," she said. "I've only seen one or two of their drivers this weekend."
Grass also said Checkers was added to the boycott because American Indian students who entered the store were followed and watched by Checkers employees, and automatically were suspected of being shoplifters at Checkers.
"The darker color you are, the worse treatment you get." Grass said.
Brian Sipp, part owner of Gumby's, said the charges of deliberate tardiness and racism were false.
"We do a lot of business down at Haskell, and there's no way we want to make anybody angry," he said.
Sipp said an employee once made a war cry after a call from Haskell in front of Willie. However, he said the employee was performing the Tomahawk Chop, which is used by fans of the Kansas City Chiefs football team, and did not mean to insult Haskell students.
Sipp said that he spoke to the employee about the matter and that the employee apologized. He declined to name the employee.
Sipp said he had hired American Indian drivers and would do so again in the future.
Jim Lewis, owner of Checkers, said the charges were "ridiculous" because of the work he had done for Haskell in the past. He said he had helped organize rallies for new Haskell students at the beginning of each year.
Lewis said that because he hired American Indians and that he himself was part American Indian, the allegations made no sense.
"If that was true, why would I hire Haskell students?" he said. "That's all wrong."
Grass said the students were justified in their actions.
Hannes Combesb, educational assistant to Haskell president Bob Martin, said Martin would refrain from commenting until he knew more about the matter.
A meeting between Haskell students and the management of Gumby's will be at 7 tonight at the Student Senate building at Haskell.
INSIDE
Tagged
Orlev Tavlor. professor of entomology.
Orley taylor, pr coordinated a butterfly tracking project in which monarchs were tagged as they came through Kansas on their way south. Page 3
[Image of a man holding a butterfly.]
Page 3.
Brand-name recognition increases Union yogurt sales
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
Tapping into a national trend of bringing brand-name fast foods to the convenience of college students on campus, the Kansas Union third-floor cafeteria in August added TCBY yogurt to its menu, said Jay Glatz, manager of food services.
It's a case of "All the pleasure, none of the hassle."
"I'm always trying to see a way to sell more," Glatz said. "Under this license agreement, we're giving students the so-called branded items."
Glatz said he would not characterize bringing TCBY to the Union as privatizing food service.
Instead of bringing in a TCBY outlet, KU food service signed a license agreement with the yogurt company that allowed the Union cafeteria to use the company name and product, a method Glatz called "branding."
By branding, KU food service conveniently provided students with a nationally recognized product rather than a generic brand, he said.
"We had yogurt and ice milk before, but with TCBY, we went from 15 servings a day to 80," Glatz said. "On average, we've experienced a six-fold increase in sales."
In addition to adding TCBY, Glatz said he has discussed with a Pizza Hut representative the possibility of providing pizza at the Union cafeteria by January of next year.
Mary Beth Whitted, national account manager for TCBY, Inc., in Dallas, explained the year-old trend of national chains like TCBY, Taco Bell and Pizza Hut operating on college campuses around the country.
"People don't want to eat mystery food from college cafeterias anymore," Whitted said. "They want to eat brands they know and trust."
Knowing the name TCBY was one reason Dan McNair, Deerfield, Ill., freshman,
decided to buy a cup of the non-fat Dutch chocolate yogurt.
"You know it's better quality food than the standard cafeteria," Keenan said.
Along with the quality, students said they did not want to travel away from campus just to eat at a fast food restaurant.
Students also said they appreciated the added variety that brand foods such as TCBY yogurt offered.
"If students just had a Union name, they'd take it as a generic brand and not buy it as much," McNair said. "With places like TCBY and Pizza Hut, they'd have more of an opportunity to get a little variety in the food."
After having worked at a TCBY store, Amy Keenan, Overland Park sophomore, said she was glad to see the addition at the Union cafeteria.
"If the University had more fast food outlets on campus, then maybe more people would stay here for lunch," McNair said.
---
COBRA
Valerie Bontrager / KANSA
Deborah Knudtson, assistant director of food services, serves TCBY frozen yogurt at the cafeteria in the Kansas Union.
2
Tuesday, September 21, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
CAUTION:
DANGEROUSLY
LOW PRICES!
COUPON
STRIP
--reported.
ACME
DRY CLEANERS & LAUNDERERS
LAWRENCE'S
VALUE CLEANERS
- Hillcrest/ 9th & Iowa
* Plaza Park/ 2/7th & Iowa
* Dillons/ 2/3rd & Nalmith
* Biths/ 8th & J lewrence
Laundered SHIRTS On Hangers
99¢
Not valid with any other offer.
Coupon must be presented with incoming order
Emails 18/7/83
SAVERSPECIAL
Sno Palace
"Hawaiian Shoes Ice"
Owns all refreshing shoes!
Valuable Coupon
Buy One
Get One
same size or smaller
FREE
Thru Sept 30th 1993
One coupon per visit
Open hour : Noon to 10:30 p.m.
2108 W. 25th Lawrence
--reported.
GOOD FOR A
FREE
EXTRALARGE
CHOCOLATE
CHIP
COOKIE
limit one cookie per coupon
(with sub or pasta purchase)
expires 10/15/93
SUB-BANPRESTIGES
BAYVILLE
MR. GOODCENTS
15th & Kasold
Orchard Corners
Shopping Center
Lawrence, KS
841-8444
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2340 S. Iowa • 842-8565
ONLY DRIVE-THRU IN LAWRENCE!
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Film Developing
(c-41 process only)
35mm-110-126 sizes. First set of prints only. Not valid
with any other.
Expires 12:31-93
Valentino's
Pizzeria
Student Special
Large Single Topping Pizza
$7.99
Expires 9-21-93
50c OFF a medium or large cup or cone! Not valid with other offers-Expires 9-21-93
Louisiana Purchase
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843-5500
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749-0440
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BORDER BANDIDO
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ON CAMPUS
NATURALWAY Natural Fiber Clothing
NATURALWAY
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15% Off Jewelry
(Excludes items already on sale.)
Expires September 31
820-822 Mass. Downtown Lawrence
Applications for Diamond Crew, an organization that supports the KU Baseball team, are now being taken. Interviews will be held until Friday. For more information, call Becky Grother at 749-9395.
KU Pre-Law and CLAS Advising Support Center will sponsor its 3rd Annual Pre-Law Forum from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. today at the Kansas Union. Panel discussions will begin at 9 a.m. and the fair will begin at noon. For more information, call Marion Dyer at 864-4371.
International Students Association will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
■ 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 864-731-631.
Amnesty International will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Danelle Myron at 842-5407.
Hispanic-American Leadership Organization (HALO) will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Octavio Hinojosa at 864-4256.
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will practice at 7:30 tonight in Robinson Center. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
KU Libertarians will sponsor a lecture on the U.S. government's drug war at 7 tonight at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Allen Tiffany at 842-2411.
CORRECTION
KU Pro-Choice Coalition will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center, 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Stephanie Gabriel at 842-6894.
Hall/House will have a contact meeting at 6:30 p.m. today at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call Wendy at 843-0357.
A student's name was misspelled Olof Westerberg is a Lund, Sweden on Page 5 in yesterday's Kansan. freshman
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.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-FintHall, Lawrence, K6045.
WEATHER
Omaha: 79°/49°
LAWRENCE: 82°/50°
Kansas City: 84°/81°
St. Louis: 80°/52°
Wichita: 85°/51°
Minneapolis: 60°/40°
Phoenix: 102°/80°
Salt Lake City: 82°/60°
Seattle: 48°/30°
TODAY
Tomorrow Thursday
Sunny and warm
High: 82°
Low: 50°
Sunny and clear
High: 85°
Low: 51°
Becoming cloudy
High: 82°
Low: 50°
Source: Gregg Potter, KU Weather Service: 864-3300 KANSAN
ON THE RECORD
A student's bicycle and lock, valued together at $245, were taken from Hashinger Hall between Wednesday and Friday, KU police reported.
A student's bicycle and lock, valued together at $145, were taken from McColm Hall on Thursday or Friday, KU police
Two mountain bicycles, a telephone, an answering machine, a stereo, compact discs and a leather coat, valued together at $3,205, were taken from a students' residence in the 1200 block of Ohio Street on Saturday, Lawrence police reported.
LASTING IMPRESSIONS
Consignment Boutique
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The clothes that you unwear in your closet will make a profit for
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FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: (913)-832-8444
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---
CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 21, 1993
3
MIGRATING MONARCHS
Doug Hesse/ KANSAN
Students trace butterfly travels
TWICE
By Chesley Dohl
By Chesley Doh
Kansan staff writer
Doug Hesse/KANSAN
Fluttering about the Baker Wetlands, many Monarch butterflies innocently tease and elude their pursuers. But hundreds of these butterflies, known for their distinct black and orange wings, will not leave Lawrence without a red tag affixed to their brilliant wings.
On Friday, Lawrence grade-school and high-school students celebrated the annual fall migration of the monarch butterfly through Kansas by catching and tagging the delicate insects south of Lawrence.
Kristine Eck and Tama Suderman, 15-year-old Lawrence high-school sophomores, walked through the wetlands Friday evening, armed with nets, insect repellent and a supply of clear wax envelopes.
"If I were a monarch I'd land right in my net," Eck said, swinging at a hovering butterfly.
"Hey, you got him," Suderman said, gently taking the butterfly out of the net and placing it inside an envelope for safe keeping.
After catching as many as 50 butterflies, students returned to the classroom where they tagged the butterflies, identified their sex and entered the information into a computer.
Above: Lori Custer, West Junior High School student, prepares a monarch butterfly for identification at the Baker Wettands by placing a red tag on the underside of its right wing with one-third of a drop of high sealant glue. Above left: a tagged monarch gets nectar from a sunflower. Above right: Brooke Wilson, Lawrence High School junior, left, and Sudhir Allada, Lawrence High School senior, look for butterflies before sunrise when the insects are cold and move slowly.
The red tags are affixed underneath the butterflies' right wings with high-sealant glue. The butterfly tags identify Orley Taylor, professor of entomology, who hopes that people who find the butterflies will contact him.
A computer modem has linked schools across the Midwest to advance communications, the key to the monarch-tracking process, said Ken Highfill, Lawrence High School biology teacher.
Highfill said the butterfly tracking project was unique because it brought together all age groups, from kindergartners to college professors.
Taylor recruited people in Lawrence to help catch and tag hundreds of butterflies last year.
"We've already learned a lot about the arrival dates for major flights of monarchs in each region of the country," Taylor said. "Now we're beginning to learn about their travel patterns and roosting areas because of the observations of Kansans last year."
I'M GONNA TAKE IT OUT!
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
Duck race to aid foundation
By Tracl Carl
Kansan staff writer
Ernie would be proud.
An expected 10,000 yellow rubber duckies will be set afoot shortly after noon Saturday at the Clinton Reservoir Spillway, east of Clinton Dam. People who adopted the first ten ducks that make it across the river will win prizes. The first-place prize is a 1993 Toyota Tercel.
The Great American Duck Race is a fund raiser for the Cottonwood Foundation, a non-profit organization that coordinates residential employment, work support and life enrichment for people with mental retardation or other developmental disabilities, said Carolyn Church, director of community relations for the foundation.
It provides support for people such as Arie Tillman, who has earned his living as a dishwasher for almost three years at the Deli Shop in the Burge Union.
When asked how to spell his name, Tillman, who has Down syndrome, crinkled his forehead and bit his lip in concentration.
Then he reached into his fanny pack and pulled out his driver's license, which had his name spelled correctly.
Tillman said he liked the work at the deli. But there was something he liked even more.
He usually spends his money on trips that Cottonwood organizes, he said, and pointed to his shirt from Branson. Mo.
Jason Olds, manager of the deli, said Tillman was a hard worker.
"He's clever," Ohlids said. "He's a fast learner and he'll work as hard as you want him to."
Tim Burton, Annandale, Va., senior, is campus coordinator for Natural Ties, a non-profit organization that pairs students with developmentally disabled individuals, most of whom are from Cottonwood. Burdon said.
"I was kind of surprised at how much these people have going on in their lives," Burton said.
and of surprise at how much these people have going on in their lives," Burton said. Students from 24 sororities and fraternities visit their friends about once a week to play sports or bring them to their parties, he said.
The duck race is a neat way to get the community involved in Cottonwood, Church said.
Adoption costs are a minimum $5 donation,
but the ducks in the race cannot be kept.
Last year was the first year for the race, and 7,338 ducks were adopted, raising $16,000, Church said. So far this year 2,000 ducks have been adopted, she said, and more ducks are expected to be adopted than last year.
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Ducks can be adopted today at Kief's Audio and Video, 2429 Iowa; tomorrow at Dillons, 3000 W. Sixth St.; Thursday at Dillons, 1740 Massachusetts Street and in front of Mercantile Bank, 900 Massachusetts; and Friday at Dillons, 1015 W. 23rd St. They also can be adopted until the race at the spillway or by calling 842-DUCK.
Teen to be tried as adult in killing
One of four teenagers arrested Saturday in the death of a Lawrence man will be tried as an adult.
Abraham Orr, 17, has been charged with murder and attempted carjacking. Police said they had confessions from the four teenagers that identified Orr as the one who shot Edward Lees, 29, in Riverfront Park on Saturday.
Orr made his first appearance in district court yesterday. Judge Jean Sheppard set his bond at $500,000 based on two prior felony convictions — one for robbery and one for attempted robbery.
Lees was shot in the face through the driver's side window of his car, according to police reports. He was pronounced dead at the scene. A woman and two children who were in the car were uninjured.
Orr's next appearance is scheduled for Monday.
The other three teens were charged Saturday with murder and conspiracy to commit murder. They are being held in Wyandotte County Juvenile Detention Center.
Drayton is 'Most Wanted'
Law enforcement officials are seeking the nation's help to find three escaped convicts, including former KU football player, Kenny Dravton.
The television program "America's Most Wanted" will open tonight with a 5-minute segment on the escapees.
"This falls under the breaking news category of our program," Anthony Batson said. "We have three dangerous men who have been at large for 10 days. We're hoping viewers' tips can help lead to their capture."
He said the program's operators would relay calls on the Drayton case to U.S. Marshals. The marshals then would note trends in tips to determine which ones were worth pursuing, Batson said.
Drayton and three other convicts escaped from an Arizona prison on Sept. 12. One of the men was recaptured Sept. 14 in Arizona, but the other three are still at large, according to authorities.
Drayton was sentenced to 305 years in the Arizona State Penitentiary after being convicted on 14 felony charges, including rape, sodomy, kidnapping and armed robbery. Lawrence and KU police officials think Drayton may return to Lawrence.
"America's Most Wanted" is at 8 tonight on channel 41.
Compiled from Kansan staff reports
Uniting to be Heard
Palestinian students seek unity Group offers social political platforms
By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer
Officially, no Palestinian students attend the University of Kansas.
So KU considers Saeh a citizen of Israel.
Jamal Saah, president of the General Union, of Palestinian Students (GUPS) at KU, said he told the University his home was Bethlehem in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. But he said KU considered the occupied territories part of Israel.
"I could be happy just putting 'West Bank, Jordan.' he said.
Events after World War II left Israel in control of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, where large numbers of Palestinians live. Saah said groups such as GUPS helped keep the Palestinian people together.
But the group is more than political, he said. Begun in the late '60s as an international organization, the group formed its KU contingent in the mid-70s, Saeh said. The goal was to unite the Palestinian students and help them share their culture with other nations.
Currently, the group is studying the recent peace accord between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization, Saeh said. He said the group could not reach a consensus on the accord because the terms were vague.
"There is very little indication of what the exact details of the accords are," Saeh said.
The group traditionally has been small, Saeh said. Ironically, it was uprisings in the occupied territories against Israeli forces that caused KU's Palestinian population to rise, he said. Israel closed the schools in the occupied territories in response, which sent more Palestinians overseas for college.
"There are so many oppressive factors in the universities that it's very difficult to live in the universities at home," Saah said.
Saeh said the group tried to hold events and bring speakers to KU who would interest a wide variety of people. Though the speakers may not be Palestinians, he said, they speak on issues that affect Palestinian affairs.
"Most of them are peace activists and human rights activists, so all those people do have something to do with Palestine," Saeh said.
But not everybody agrees. The group's request for funding to bring author Noam Chomsky to speak passed Student Senate two weeks ago with protests. Some senators cited a book that claimed Chomsky denied that the Holocaust ever happened.
Bassam Elkhatib, a junior from occupied east Jerusalem, said many Americans confuse Palestinians with Arabs.
"Americans over here don't know the Palestinians," he said. "They think the whole area is Arab. But we have different cultures."
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Tuesday, September 21, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
In-line skating is prohibited on campus and in the city of Lawrence.
THE BACKGROUND
The ordinance banning skateboarding was adopted in 1990 because injuries and damage to buildings. The ban includes in-line skating.
THE OPINION
Banning in-line skates on campus ill-conceived
Because of the potential for injury and property damage, skateboarding and in-line skating are prohibited on the KU campus by a Lawrence city law. While there are good reasons for the ban on skateboards,the prohibition of in-line skating is ridiculous. The law should be amended allowing in-line skating on campus.
Those who think that in-line skates are in the same category as skateboards probably consider baseball and football to be the same since they both use a ball.
Skateboards have caused property damage and personal injury on the KU campus in the past few years. In-line skates, however, pose no risk to bystanders in that the skates are securely attached to the skater's feet. In-line skating is closer to bicycling than skateboarding.
Changing the city law to allow in-line skating on campus is overdue. However, the law won't be changed unless more students make their voices heard.
MIKE SILVERMAN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Search for new dean must include students
In the wake of Max Lucas' announced resignation, the University administration must consider student concerns as they select a new dean for the School of Architecture and Urban Design.
Lucas' planned resignation provides an excellent opportunity for the students' concerns to be heard and taken seriously. Students have cited problems with the upgrading of facilities, communication with the dean's office and the dean's qualifications. All of these issues need to be addressed in the selection of a new dean.
Architecture students and faculty also must share the responsibility. Take this opportunity to let your concerns be heard before a new dean is selected.Informing the administration of current problems will be the only way it can help make a change.
Administrators listen up.Hear the students' concerns and select a dean who will make the needed changes in the architecture school. Use Lucas' resignation as a catalyst for improvement that will keep the school's reputation strong.
TERRILYN McCORMICK FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVES
Texas case proves racism alive and well in U.S.
Vidor, Texas, is being publicly castigated as the equivalent of a multiculturalist disciple's Hell on Earth. If its press clippings are to be believed, it is a town where ignorance, morally repugnant racism and depraved threats of hostility against numerically weaker members of its community are the principal stocks in trade.
Vidor had been all white for 70 years prior to court order in a class-action lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. The judge in the case ordered 170 public housing projects in 36 east Texas counties desegregated after three African Americans who were refused housing because of their race filed suit.
African-American families began moving into Vidor in February. The last two African-American residents fled, a few steps ahead of bombing and hanging threats, demeaning racial slurs and catcalls, and a constant,gressive fear.
What occurred in Vidor was vicious and deserving of condemnation. That sort of racial intolerance is contrary to the precepts of our free society.
WILLIAMSPORT, PA.
SUN-GAZETTE
CHECK THE MAP AGAIN. SOMEWHERE BACK THERE WE TOOK A WRONG TURN. Somalia
Judeo-Christian principles lack reason with which to lead nation
The recent column by Lance Hamby stating that Judeo-Christian philosophy is the historical foundation of the U.S. Constitution and is a reasonable basis upon which to deny parental custody rights to gay parents was both historically inaccurate and logically flawed.
Generally, Hamby's column had the tone of a Pat Robertson commercial where nice upper-middle class white folk lament how our government has strayed from its Christian roots and how we need to base our laws on biblical truths. Intellectually, Hamby's column was an exercise in scholasticism, where some authority is cited, and logical deductions are made from ridiculous premises.
First, there is no such thing as Judeo-Christian philosophy except in the minds of right-wingers who need some indisputable source of moral authority from which to argue. There is no authority to determine exactly
GUEST COLUMNIST
RAYMOND BIRT
what Judaism or Christianity are or what a Jew or a Christian must believe. Basing laws on platiudinous principles that can never be defined beyond the mere incantation of their names is not a good idea.
Western philosophy has had a less than inspiring history when dealing with non-male, non-conforming or non-Western people. So gays are now feeling the heavy hand of the West's past. Based on Aristotle's authority, women have been denied equal rights on the ground that they have defective reason. According to Aristotle, people could also be made slaves if they lacked reason. Is this the Western tradition that we want to live by today?
A history of the U.S. Constitution should be repugnant to any political science major interested in reality. For the most part, our Constitution was written not with appeals to the past in mind but with the Enlightenment faith in the use of human reason to overcome all social and political problems. It was also written mostly by Freemasons and Deists — those who believed in a universal creator, but they did not believe in the God of the Bible.
The Constitution maintained the institution of slavery and did not extend rights to women, Indians, Blacks, non-whites or anyone else a local majority of "citizens" did notlike or consider fully human.
decision in Bowers v. Hardwick is not likely to stand much longer. Would that mean that the Supreme Court suddenly has abolished the entire heritage of the United States and its common law tradition? Plessy v. Ferguson (the case that established the separate but equal doctrine) was also a judicial precedent. Did segregation make the U.S. an "ideal model of democracy?" Should Plessy be reaffirmed? Of course not, since one of the functions of common law has always been to correct errors from the past or by elected majorities, not to enshrine bigotry, ignorance and anything old.
As for the judicial precedent, the 5-4
The case of parental custody for Sharon Bottoms is not really a question of gay rights, it is a question of human rights for a group still not considered fully human.
Raymond Birt is a Lawrence graduate student in political science.
Roofing job makes student wish to be back in school and studying
Each year, my "friends" tell me about the "awful" summers they've experienced. "Oh gosh, I worked at the pool this summer, and it was so terrible because it was sooo hot, and I had to sit up in that chair all day long!" OH WAAAAA. Would you please do me the honor of shutting your trap?
Every summer since my freshman year in high school, I've spent my days toiling with the gang at my father's roofing company. To put it mildly, it's the worst (bleeping) job you'll ever have in your entire (bleeping) life. In a survey I saw a few years ago, this job was ranked second to last out of like 250 jobs. It made you appreciate school. Did I say that? Good God!
STAFF COLUMNIST
I once worked with a guy named, and I swear they called him this, "Ramrod." Rammer spent an entire
STAFF COLUMNIST
CHRIS
RONAN
Over the course of my career at this institution, I lost three toenails, bruised my back and stepped on no less than seven nails. And there's been much rejoicing.
summer attempting to severely main (that's to administer a whole lot of pair) me.
One time, while he had me suspended about ten feet in the air on a forklift, he started shaking it in an obvious attempt to paralyze me. Of course, I fell off back first into a curb, and much to his dismay, was still able to walk. Oh, it was big fun.
The neat thing about roofers is that although they may be fairly nice people, they feel it necessary to uphold their world renowned reputation for being rude, vile, sexist, violent, one
shower a week orangutans (that's "an arboreal anthropoid ape having a shaggy coat and very long arms.")
More than once, I've heard myself murmur what I thought I could only hear on the Sci-Fi channel: "What is that thing? Where did it come from?"
I think the obvious perks of roofing speak for themselves, so I'm sure you'll be lining up soon at your local roofing outlet. To prepare yourself for this first job, follow my suggestions:
1) Get a tattoo. With some roofing companies, this is actually a requirement. The more you get, with the more depressing and violent theme, the better. I suggest a heart with MOM and ROOFERS ROCK on it.
2) Showering, haircuts and shaving are major no-no's. To be a "cool" roofer, you must reek of cedar and cigarette smoke. Your hair must be as long as Yanni's. In fact, this famous pianist works as a forklift operator at
a roaming supply company in Kansas City. I sweat to God.
3) Take up smoking and most importantly, buy a beat up, rust-colored Chevy pickup truck. This highlight of automobile excellence must have no air-conditioning, an AM-only radio and the famous bumper sticker — I'm sure everyone already owns one — "ROOFS DO IT ON TOP."
So get ready to rock and roll! With these tips, before you know it, you'll be working 50 hours a week in 100-degree temperatures making a baking, and no my friends, this is no misprint, $6 an hour. With the high job stress, heat and potential for injury, you might just want to work for free YEE-HA!
So get to filling that application out. For best results, misspell your first name and tell em' Chris sent ya.
Chris Ronan is a Ovarian Park sophomore major in radio and T.V. broadcast,
KC TRAUER
Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
KANSAN STAFF
Assistant to the editor ... J.R. Clairborne
News ... Stacy Friedman
Editorial ... Terilyn McCormick
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Kristi Togger
Photo ... Kip Chin, Renna Knobler
Features ... Erza Wolfe
Graphics ... John Paul Fogel
Web ... Vicki ↵
Reporters
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Associate editorial ... Cecile McCain
Associate campus ... Dan England
Associate campus/planning ... James DeLaurentia
Associate sports ... Todd Selert
Assistance manager ... Almee Entrada
Assistant Editors
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Scott Anderson ... Sara Bennett
Mark Button ... Traci Carl
Matt Doyle ... Anne Felstet
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Kathieen Stolle ... Carlos Tejada
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Jess DeHaven ... Dan England
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Campus sales manager...Ed Schager
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Production managers...Jennifer Blowey
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Mindy Blum ...Chris Bulgren
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Laura Guth ...Jill Hogan
Allison Kaplan ...Jason Kort
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Chris Morrissey ...Frank Muller
Paula Ostrowski ..Heather Richetto
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Campus Account Executives
Kerli Kimmal ..Beth Pols
Shannon Reilly ..Troy Tarwater
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Regional Account Executive
Alex Kolb ..Frederick Jewsome
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Interns
Shelley Falevits ..Bradley Felinberg
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Dean Houlnd ...Lynn Hul
Matt Spett
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 21, 1993
5
Kansan must advocate prevention of violence
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
This letter is in response to Scott Gillaspie's column in the Sept. 17 Kansan.
Obviously doing background research for a column is foreign to you. You just hear something on the radio and think you mastered the topic. I would lecture you about professionalism, but more importantly, you aren't writing just a class paper here.
You gave credibility to a system that allows the abuse of women. One in three women will be sexually assaulted in her lifetime. Odds are that it will be by the hands of someone she knows. Fifty percent of all women are or will be abused in their own homes. Obviously not all of them are killing their husbands, so we can assume there is a pretty severe situation in cases where the women kill. If they do kill their husbands during abuse, women are twice as likely to be convicted and serve a life sentence than their husbands are.
Instead of blaming the victim, you should be using the power of the
press to advocate better funding of abuse shelters, stronger domestic abuse laws, and better public awareness. Meanwhile, keep in mind that the main reason women go to hospital emergency rooms in this country is domestic abuse. Michele Kumm Leawed junior
Sixteen lines added to computer access
In the "Letters to the Editor" column on Sept. 16, titled "Access to Computers Increased by Phones," there were two errors of fact which should be corrected. The number of dial lines for computer access has been increased this fall from 32 to 48, an increase of 50 percent. User authorization is required for accessing the 16 new lines, but there is no charge for the service for faculty, staff or students. Users may sign up for the service at the system access office in the southwest corner of the main floor of the computer center, Monday-Friday.
Jerry Niebaum Director of Academic Computing Services
Stations to blame for lapse in service
I must disagree with the Kansan editorial board's opinion (Sept. 16) that subscribers are guaranteed that Sunflower Cablevision will carry the Kansas City ABC and Fox affiliates and that if they stop doing it everyone should rise up and protest against the cable company.
Because of the money demanded by two of the many stations Sunflower carries, the company is faced with the possibility of having to eliminate two stations. Other stations have agreed not to charge Sunflower Cablevision for their feed. These two Kansas City stations have not yet seen the wisdom of that. Considering that those stations are dependent upon advertising revenue, one would think their advertisers would begin to demand that their rates on these two stations drop with the loss their viewing audience.
Rather than encouraging people to protest Sunflower Cable's proposed action by way of letters or petitions, the Kansan editorial board should be suggesting that people contact KSHB and KMBC protesting their
decision. Let the stations be the ones cutting off their noses to spite their faces, don't suggest that subscribers do so by disconnecting their cable.
Kendall Simmons
Watson Library staff member
Kansan hypocritical on recycling issue
An article on the back page of the Sept. 14 Kansan suggests the terrible wastes developed by "junk" mail. The article makes a tip of getting students' names off these "junk" mailing lists to avoid environmental destruction.
I find it interesting that the same issue of the *Kansan* included an elaborate advertisement for Ralph Lauren. I saw piles of them in the trash.
Perhaps the Kansan staff should get together and determine what "junk" really is.
What right do we have to tell the corporate world to cut waste when we waste so much ourselves? I guess it's hard to set an example when the checks are so big, eh?
**Roy Schmidt**
**Tulsa senior**
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Israeli parliament to debate peace pact amid protests
Right-wing protesters hoisted Israel flags above the ramparts of Jerusalem's old city yesterday while parliament prepared for what promises to be one of the most heated debates in its history.
Israel's 120-seat parliament takes up Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin's peace initiative with Yasser Arafat tomorrow. Most predictions give the accord a bare majority of support.
Shas, the government's ultra-orthodox coalition partner, has yet to decide whether to back the agreement and proposed a nationwide referendum on the plan which provides for Palestinian autonomy in the occupied Gaza Strip and the West Bank town of Jericho.
The protesters planned to march to parliament and camp there until the vote, expected Wednesday or Thursday night.
"The government says there is to be no dividing of Jerusalem," said seminary student Ronen Dar. "But when you start cutting the cake there is no end to it."
A nearby Arab vendor grumbled, "They are against the peace. They want more bloodshed on both sides."
Also yesterday, the leadership of the Palestinian uprising against Israel's occupation of the West Bank and Gaza issued a leaflet criticizing the Palestine Liberation Organization for signing the peace agreement with Israel.
"The agreement reached between a branch of the PLO and the Zionist enemy does not meet the minimum demands that were raised by our masses when the uprising started," according to the leaflet. "No Israeli withdrawal has been achieved, no recognition of the Palestinian national rights, no establishment of a Palestinian state and no freeze and removal of the settlements."
Europa
Salon
THE NEWS in brief
TBILISI, Georgia Shevardnadze appeals for aid
Separatist fighters broke through the outer defenses of the Abkhazian capital of Sukhumi yesterday while government officials desperately appealed for outside help.
Georgian leader Eduard Shevardnadze vowed to remain in the city and called the situation extremely critical, aides said.
Shevardnadze has opposed joining the CIS, saying it would infringe on the Caucasus Mountain nation's independence.
Shevardnadze appealed over the weekend to Russian President Boris Yeltsin and the world for help.
Georgia's military, political and economic crises prompted parliament speaker Vakhtang Goguadze to urge Monday that the country join Russia and other former Soviet republics in the Commonwealth of Independent States.
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Russian Defense Minister Pavel Grachev said yesterday that Shevardnadze had agreed to a Russian offer to send peacekeepers into Abkhazia.
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NORFOLK, Virginia Navy clears Tailhook officer
NORFOLK. Virginia
Lt. Cole V. Cowden was to face court-martial Wednesday at the Norfolk Naval Base on a charge of conduct unbecoming an officer. The charge was based on a photograph taken at the Tailhook Association convention in Las Vegas that showed Cowden's face pressed against a woman's breast.
The Navy dropped its criminal case yesterday against an aviator who was the first officer scheduled to face court-martial for the 1991 Tailhook sex scandal.
Dozens of women have said that they were assaulted by aviators during the convention, with
Police responding to an alarm discovered the fire at the local office of Family Planning Associates shortly before 4 a.m., said arson investigator Bill Goatcher. When firefighters arrived, flames were shooting through the roof of the one-story building that housed the clinic.
some saying they were fondled and stripped of clothing.
Vice Adm. J. Paul Reason, who is the Navy's top Tailhook authority, cleared Cowden "of all criminal misconduct" after a second review of his case, Cowden's attorney said.
The woman in the photograph said she didn't want Cowden prosecuted, and an investigating officer recommended dismissal of the charge.
BAKERSFIELD, Calif.
Arson suspected in clinic fire
A. S. Mistry
Investigators had not determined the cause, Pacheco said.
A neighboring building housing several offices also was gutted and two other buildings were damaged, firefighters said. Assistant Fire Chief Henry Pacheco estimated damage to be at least $500,000.
A fire destroyed an abortion clinic before dawn yesterday and arson is suspected, authorities said. There were no reports of injuries.
Family Planning Associates operates a chain of abortion clinics.
Reporters said they could see flames a mile away in the darkness as they drove to the scene in southwestern Bakersfield, a city of 200,000 residents 100 miles north of Los Angeles.
Nationwide, there has been a rash of vandalism and violence against abortion clinics.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
11a.m.-Career choices & special considerations: Public Interest Law
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Students are tuning in to David Letterman instead of Jay Leno and Chevy Chase in the late-night talk shows
Jason Cupp, Stillwell junior, left, and Eric Tow, Olathe junior, watch "The Late Show" last week in the lobby of Olin Templin Hall
No.1 reason for KU students sleeping in class: Letterman
By Sara Bennett Kansan staff writer
Dave, Jay and Arsenio are the battle-proven veterans. Conan and Chevy are the new recruits, fresh out of boot camp. Lines have been drawn in the airwaves as TV's colonels of comedy battle for the right to rule the war-torn late-night zone.
The late-night television wars have been raging for three weeks, and KU students agree that
Letterman threw down the gauntlet in the late-night battle and has conquered the nation's top ratings.
Dave Letterman is the victor so far. In a informal poll, students said Dave is having a red-letters season, and most agreed that he would chase Chevy off
the battlefield.
"Dave has that dry, witty, sarcastic, on-the-edge type of humor that's lacking in Leno and Chevy Chase," said Robert Zielinski, Omaha, Neb., junior.
"Chevy is kind of a rip-off of Dave," Zielinski continued. "He's funny in a movie falling down, or drinking a glass of water the wrong way, but not on TV doing that spontaneous, off-the-top-of-your-head humor."
Letterman, the gap-toothed everyman whose recent switch to CBS from NBC threw down the gaudlet in the late-night battle, has conquered the nation's top ratings as well. After
competing for three weeks in the same time slot as "The Tonight Show" with Jay Leno. Letterman tops the late-night ratings roster. Letterman had a 5.6 rating, which means that 5.6 percent of all televisions in the country were tuned in to his show. The show earned a 19 percent share, which means that of all televisions that were turned on during his time slot watched Letterman, according to the most recent figures from A.C. Nielson Media Research in New York City.
Students cited Letterman's Top 10 list and guests such as Vice President Al Gore and Robin Williams as selling points for the show.
Chris Wareham, Overland Park senior, said Letterman seemed comfortable in front of the camera.
"I like the casual spontaneity of his humor," he said. "He's just a funny guy and he doesn't have to try."
The same wasn't said about Chevy Chase, the slap-stick "Saturday Night Live" veteran who is trying his hand on Fox. Critics have panned Chase's show as boring and stiff, though it scored better in its premiere week than "The Tonight Show" with Jay Leno. Chevy Chase had a 4.3 rating and 10 percent share.
Most KU students interviewed agreed Chase seems uncomfortable in a talk-show setting and should stick with films.
"He doesn't seem to move very smoothly," said Erick Bryant, St. Louis senior. "He's better as an actor."
Doug Dorothy, Lenexa sophomore, said, "Chevy seems nervous, and he makes every
one else nervous too."
Students also expressed indifference or dislike for Jay Leno. Johnny Carson's replacement placed last for the week of Sept. 6-10 with a 3.3 rating and 10 percent share. The show scored a full point below "Nightline," which came in second place all around.
"I hate Jay Leno," said Stacy Stull, Overland Park senior. "He annoys me and he has bad jokes."
Shannon Norman, Fowler freshman, said,
"Leno has to live up to Carson and he's not
doing it very well. Nobody can top Carson."
Some students said they prefer to watch Arsenio Hall who has, so far, kept conspicuously out of the late-night wars. Ratings were not available for Hall's show because it is syndicated.
Ratings are also not yet available on Conan O'Brien, Dave Letterman's replacement on NBC's "Late Night" show. But those who have seen the show say the Howdy-Doody look alike doesn't quite live up to his predecessor. Critics have called O'Brien likable, but not very funny.
O'Brien doesn't seem to have the name recognition needed to lure viewers to his show because few students interviewed had seen it. Those who had said O'Brien, who had no previous television experience, was doing the best he could.
"He's filling in pretty good," said Tim McMullen, Liberty, Mo., senior. "It seems like he's making the best out of a bad situation, considering Dave was such a legend."
'Joy Luck Club' captures dynamic family relationships
Wang film reveals daily struggles and emotional experiences of modern-day Chinese mothers and their American daughters
By Sara Bennett
Kansan staff writer
The relationship between mother and daughter is mysterious and elusive, reaching into the crevices of the deepest and most painful emotions.
Tan's novel captured these dynamics with subtle words and characterizations. Wang brings them to life, painting a powerful and moving family portrait with gorgeous cinematography and flashbacks which expose each woman's experiences and motivations.
"The Joy Luck Club" tells four interwoven stories of mothers who try desperately to give their American daughters a better life than they had in China and daughters who try to earn the approval of mothers they barely know.
"The Joy Luck Club," Wayne Wang's adaptation of Amy Tan's novel of the same name, addresses that relationship as few films have before. Rarely does a film accurately capture the confusing and subtle power plays between a mother and daughter.
The film alternates between the daughters' modern-day struggles and
the mothers' experiences as young girls in China. Each sequence is artfully crafted. The daughters' stories are presented with confused poignancy as the women tiptoe around failed relationships and strained encounters with their mothers. The flashbacks to pre-war China are infused with brilliant color and tragic urgency as the mothers' often devastating pasts are revealed.
When the mother's past and daughter's present collide, the effect is electric. Four emotional moments-of-frith occur as each is forced to acknowledge her dependence on the other.
Although "The Joy Luck Club" is about Chinese immigrants, its themes are universal. The daughters grow up far from their mothers' homeland, yet they cannot escape their legacies. The more the daughters try to separate themselves from their mothers, the more they become like them. The conflicts in the daughters lives are only resolved when they allow themselves to learn from their mothers' examples.
See JOY,Page 8.
Film shows struggles of 8 women
By JL Watson Kansan staff writer
Wayne Wang was born in Hong Kong to a father who was so enraptured with western movies he named his son after John Wayne. It seems natural that Wang ended up directing Hollywood movies.
However, it may seem unnatural that Wang's latest film, "The Joy Luck Club," centers around the lives of eight women.
"Some of my best friends are female, and I grew up with a lot of women," said Wang, who is in Kansas City this week attending one of the film's debut showings. "I try to be as sensitive as possible. My wife says I must've been a
---
Valerie Bontrager/ KANSAN
Wayne Wang, the director of the "Joy Luck Club," tells the story behind his new movie on Monday in Kansas City.
See WANB, page 8.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SEPTEMBER 21, 1993 PAGE 7 KULIFE
People and places at the University of Kansas.
WEIRD
Perverts, weirdos wackos and losers: It's all here to read
At an August meeting in a Tampa, Fla., church, representatives of the Union of Independent (Ku Klux) Klansmen and the all-Black Pan-African Inter-National Movement vowed to work together to create an independent African nation for African-Americans. The groups agreed that integration in the United States is impractical and that relocation payments should be made to African-Americans as restitution for historical oppression.
Executive-style cowboy
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Mark Wiegel, 33, was arrested in Salem, N.H., in May after mull security guards confiscated a video camera hidden in a shoe box in his bag. Wiegel allegedly would set the bag down at a woman's feet with the lens pointed upward so that he could videotape up the woman's dress.
Doctor, I need a second opinion
A well-dressed man in his 40s fled after an incident in February at a western wear store in Omaha, Neb. According to a clerk, the man asked for a horse harness for a costume party and went into a dressing room to put it on. He emerged a short time later, flung the door open and ran around the store wearing only his undershorts and the harness. After a few minutes, he quietly changed back into his business suit and told the clerk he would be back with his wife to buy the harness.
Marketing executive Leonard Schwartz, 34, was arrested in New York City in July and charged with impersonating a medical doctor in his swanky Manhattan apartment building. Allegedly, Schwartz took a female neighbor's temperature rectally, tried to administer an enema to her and offered to examine the 11-year-old daughter of another resident.
Mistress Ayesha
In May, Minneapolis Judge Richard Solum dropped prostitution charges against Jacqueline Reina, aka "Mistress Ayesha." She was discovered by police during a raid on her chambers standing beside a naked client who was strapped to a sawhorse and on whose genitals she had placed 16 clothespins. Reasoned Judge Solum, Reina herself was not responding to a sexual impulse from the act and could not be guilty of prostitution. (She was found guilty of running a disorderly house.)
See WEIRD, Page 8
8
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"The Joy Luck Club" is best when it remains true to the subtlety of Tan's novel. But it comes dangerously close at times to ruining that fragile effect. Like many directors who adapt novels, Wang doesn't seem to trust the audience to grasp the themes and messages of the film. He ties up the stories and relationships too neatly and adds a morality speech in the end, just in case the audience didn't get it the first time.
JOY: Not just about women
Continued from Page 7.
Another weak spot is the casting of Andrew McCarthy in a short role as the husband of one of the daughters. Ming-Na Wen as the lovely and captivating June leads a cast of refreshingly unknown actors and actresses. McCarthy sticks out like a sore thumb among such an unassuming cast.
But a few weaknesses could never spoil the richness and purity of emotion Wang has achieved with "The Joy Luck Club." This is a moving portrait of relationships that anyone with a family can relate to.
WANG: Created interest in film
Continued from Page 7.
"The Joy Luck Club" isn't just a story about women, Wang said. "It also brings out the relationships between family members who are struggling with ideas of separate and merging cultures."
"It's a true immigrant story," Wang said. "We're all immigrants in one way or another, and it tells how the next generation deals with that."
Wang said the biggest obstacles he faced in making the movie were trying to make a complicated story fit into a movie genre, and finding a movie company that would provide financial backing.
"When we first approached people about the story they said it was too complicated, or that it wouldn't work because it was about a group of Chinese women," Wang said. "I got together with Amy Tan and another writer, and we wrote the script based on speculation. Once producers could see how emotional it was and how it could all come together, there was more interest. That's when Disney got involved."
daughter relationships. Wang does not have sisters, but said he had a similar relationship with his father that some of the characters in the movie had with their mothers.
"It's a good idea for mothers and daughters to see it together," Wang said. "I've been with a lot of people who've seen it that way and one of them will say, 'See, you're just like that!' and a lot of communication comes out of it."
In making the movie Wang took his crew to parts of San Francisco and China.
The film deals mainly with mother-
"Going to China was, in a way, sort of like going home," he said. "China is changing so much so part of it was scary and frustrating."
Wang took special care not to stereotype the Chinese-American characters.
"It's important for us to understand that these young women are very American," Wang said. "Unlike their mothers, they don't speak Chinese, or if they do, they're not fluent. They think and act like Americans because that's what they are."
"The Joy Luck Club" has opened in larger cities and debuts in Kansas City Friday.
Weird: Fake police officer sought for Illinois toe-sucking incidents
Continued from Page 7.
Three weeks apart in March, a High Point, N.C., couple and a Clyde, Ohio, couple reported that someone had stolen approximately 50 recently used cloth diapers from their front porch and garage, respectively, before the diaper service showed up. No other items were taken.
Weirdo-American community
Two California physicians, co-authoring a piece in the March 1993 issue of the Journal of Forensic Sciences, reported on the deaths of two men who suffered mishaps while suspended naked on construction vehicles' hydraulic shovels. The doctors reported both men were attempting to heighten sexual gratification but that one went little too
Toefetish
State police in East St. Louis, Ill., arrested Eddie Glens, 36, during a routine traffic stop and charged him with impersonating a police officer after he tried to avoid charges by presenting a badge. They also announced that Glens was a suspect in several area incidents in which a man claiming to be a police officer stopped female motorists and asked to suck their toes.
Diaper bandits
far and asphyxiated, and the other was accidentally fatally pinned to the ground by the shovel while dressed in women's clothes.
Robert Lord, 42, was rescued after eight hours afloat without a life jacket in the chilly and turbulent Strait of Georgia, between Vancouver Island and the Canada mainland in July. He had fallen off a ferry boat when he leaned too far out a window while vomiting.
Federico Fernandez, 35, was charged in Plainfield, N.J., in April as the man who had fondled at least 10 women in supermarket incidents. Allegedly, he would "accidentally" squirt them with liquid detergent and then apologetically wipe their clothes off while fondling them in the process.
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SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 21, 1993
Chiefs buck Broncos 15-7
Running back, kicker overshadow Montana
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Joe Montana's home debut as a Kansas City Chief was upstaged last night by a couple of other golden oldies — Nick Lowery and Marcus Allen.
And something else golden — yellow penalty flags. Lots of them.
Lowery, a 37-year-old, kicked five field goals, and the Kansas City defense led by Derrick Thomas and Darren Mickell shut down John Elway and Denver as the Chiefs beat the Broncos 15-7.
That was enough to avoid the last-minute heroics Elway has pulled off four years in a row against the Chiefs. He managed a 2-yard touchdown pass to Vance Johnson with 1:24 remaining for the only touchdown of the game.
Meanwhile, the old guys were performing for the Chiefs and penalty flags were flying — 24 in all for the two teams.
Allen, 33, gained 91 yards on 17 carries, his best regular-season game since 1988.
Montana avoided enough mistakes to win his second game without a loss as a Chief. He sat out last week's 30-0 loss in Houston with a sore wrist. He missed open receivers several times, but finished 21 of 36 for 273 yards. Receiver Willie Davis caught six of those passes for 139 yards.
But Lowery got the points — field goals of 34, 41, 52 and 44 yards in the first half and 20 yards in the fourth quarter. A Denver penalty for having too many men on the field helped the Chiefs get three points. The five-yard penalty on a Chiefs punt moved Lowery into position for the 52-yard field goal.
It was the first loss for the Broncos after two stiffs.
The first AFC West meeting of Elway and
Montana was marred by 24 penalties for 180 yards between the two teams. Gary Zimmerman, the Broncos' new left tackle, was penalized for three false starts, and the Chiefs were called three times for roughing Elway.
Elway, who was under pressure all night,
was 28 of 45 for 300 vards.
The game marked the first regular-season victory for Montana over Elway, against whom he had been 0-3. Montana did lead San Francisco to a 55-10 triumph over Denver and Elway in the 1990 Super Bowl.
It was only the third victory in 12 games against Denver for Kansas City coach Marty Schottenheimer, who had been bedeviled over the years with the Chiefs and Brownys by Elway's last-minute comebacks.
Montana didn't start brilliantly, but with the help of Ron Dickerson's 44-yard return of the opening kickoff, the Chiefs moved to
a3-0lead.
Dickerson's return put the Chiefs at the Denver 48-yard line, and after a holding penalty on Denver's Ricky Siglar, Montana threw a 35-yard pass to Willie Davis at the Broncos 23-yard line. But he threw wide to Tim Barnett, who was open on the goal line, and the Chiefs settled for Lowery's 34-yard field goal.
Lowery hit a 41-yarder with 2:37 remaining in the quarter to make it 6-0 after a 74-yard drive that started from the Chiefs' 2yard line. Montana was 5 of 7 for 59 yards on the drive.
Lowery's 52-yarder made it 9-0 with 8:56 to play in the half and was a gift from the Broncos. The Chiefs already had punted from the 39 yard line, but Denver was called for having 12 men on the field, and the ball was moved into Lowery's field-goal range.
Just under five minutes later, Lowyh hit from 44, increasing the lead to 12-0.
Baseball tryout reset for today
Kansanstaffreport
Sunday's heavy rains postponed yesterday's walk-on tryouts for the Kansas baseball team. The first tryout has been rescheduled for 2:30 p.m. today at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
Kansas baseball coach Dave Bingham said he never considered having practice inside, which would have been held in Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
"It wouldn't be fair," Bingham said. "You just can't give them inside. You have to hit in the cages and take ground balls off the turf instead of grass."
"We look at speed and defensive ability." Bingham said. "Then we look at hitting."
Pitchers will throw a set amount of pitches in the bullpen. Bingham said.
"If they show us enough there, we'll put them in a game situation," Bingham said. "If we have enough walk-ons that we want to look at, we may have a scrimmage."
"We'll keep players around if we want to look at them closer," Bingham said. "It would be a day-by-day deal."
If a player is selected during the tryout, he is evaluated throughout the fall baseball season. Players who perform well in the fall might be asked to return for the spring season.
The baseball team roster is already set, Bingham said, but there might be an exception.
"We look for good students," he said. "We're looking for an outstanding young guy who is willing to make a commitment to baseball for four years."
1
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Tim Rodagna, New Port Beach, Calif., freshman, practices on the Kansas tennis courts behind Allen Field House. Rodagna and the rest of the men's tennis team worked out yesterday afternoon.
Taking aim
Colorado coach says luck was not on Buffaloes' side
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
Colorado coach Bill McCartney said his team was not paid back by referees for the "fifth down" flashe three years ago at Missouri late in the Buffaloou 41-37 lost Saturday at Stanford.
Colorado thought it was a fumble, but the officials ruled the play a catch.
Stanford tight end Tony Cline caught a 5-yard touchdown pass from Steve Stenstrom with eight seconds remaining to give the Cardinals the victory. However, television replays showed that the ball squirted out of Cline's grasp after being hit hard by Colorado free safety Dwayne Davis just as Cline planted his feet in the end zone.
"Things out over the course of time," said McCartney, whose team is now 2-1 and ranked No. 13 in the Associated Press poll. "In our first two games, we got all the bounces to go our way. In our game with Baylor, we scored two touchdowns by recovering a fumble in the end zone and catching a tipped ball in the end zone at the end of the half."
The Buffalooes record could even up at 2-2 after this Saturday. Colorado hosts No. 3 Miami at Folsom Field in Boulder.
Kings of the Road?
"I'm really not aware of those type of things," said K-State coach Bill Snyder. "We don't research those negative things, we research out positive things."
The same luck was not afforded to Missouri, however.
The Tigers 73-0 loss at No. 14 Texas A&M extended their road losing streak to 11 games overall, and 14 games in non-conference action.
Missouri's last victory on the road was a 31-21 decision at Kansas in 1990. The last time the Tigers won a non-conference road game was in 1981 at Mississippi State.
Student participants must sign injury waiver
"It's obvious we haven't done very well with road games," said Missouri coach Bob Stull.
Keeping up with Jones
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
Oklahoma State coach Pat Jones tied former Cowboys coach Jim Lookabaugh for most career victories at Oklahoma State with 58. Jones tied the mark with Saturday's 16-10 victory at Tulsa.
It would be ironic if Jones sets the mark this week at Arizona State. His first win as the Cowboys coach was a 45-3 decision in 1984 at Arizona State.
As senior Fetsi Ngoepe lay on the soccer field, all he could think about was the waiver he had signed.
Nebraska coach Tom Osborne said junior running back Calvin Jones is listed as doubtful for the Cornhuskers game at home against Colorado State this week.
"Whatever happens, no one is responsible for the injuries," he remembered it said. "But what if this one is serious?"
During Sunday's championship
Jones sprained his right knee in the third quarter of Nebraska's season opening 76-14 victory against North Texas on Sept. 4. Osborne said he hoped to have Jones back at full speed for Nebraska's Big Eight opener on Oct. 7 at Oklahoma State.
game against Nebraska, Ngopee conluded in mid-air with another player. He said that he couldn't get back up. Once he did, he was sidelined for the remainder of the game.
Injuries cause concern for club-sports program
"Maybe if someone were there to instantly assess what it was and could have given me proper care, I could have made it back into the game," Ngopee said.
Every club sport participant must sign a waiver, which exempts the University from injury liability.
Like other club sports, soccer does not have a trainer to handle injuries.
Unlike soccer or women's rugby, men's rugby has the benefit of having an emergency medical technician on the team. Joel Foster, a collegiate side player, said he worked for the Shawnee fire department's type II ambulance service as an EMT.
Varsity sport teams, like the Kansas football and basketball teams, do have physical trainers and sometimes even doctors on the sidelines during games.
He said he did not join the team to care for players, but he would take care of an injury if he had to.
Senior rugby player Scott Collin, said the only thing the team really worried about was head and neck injuries. He said injuries such as broken fingers or hurt muscles could be treated by the players themselves.
Freshman soccer player Kyle Ratzlaff, already has gone to Watkins Memorial Health Center this fall for an injury he sustained during a game against Wichita two weeks ago. He said that the doctor told him he had sprained or stressed ligaments in his right foot.
He said that having a trainer at the games was not a necessity but that it
would be reassuring to know that someone was able to handle serious injuries if the need arose.
Some club sports do not have to worry about the presence of a trainer. Mike Amick, crew president, said that rowing was a low-impact sport and that most of the injuries came from something outside of the sport itself.
Soccer coach Mike Salisbury said that competing without trainers present was a part of participating in club sports. He said it would be nice to have a trainer present, but that too many would have to be hired to tend to all the Kansas club teams.
LAKEWOOD
Bryan Schultz, Topeka freshman, has been the leading runner for the Kansas cross country team the last two meets.
Paul Kotz/ KANSAI
Freshman leads Kansas cross country
Schultz is top runner at first two meets of season
Leading isn't what freshmen are supposed to do in college athletics.
Schultz, Topeka freshman, has surprised himself and the coaches by being the top Kansas runner in the team's first two meets. The engineering major took third place overall at the Southern Illinois Invitational Sept. 4 and seventh overall at the Jayhawk Invitational Sept. 11.
By Kent Hohifeld
Kansan sportswriter
Schultz started running his freshman year in high school at the encouragement of his brother, who is now a senior at the University.
No one told Bryan Schultz.
"He told me how much fun it was," Schultz said. "I thought I'd give it a try and really liked it."
His high school freshman year was not an indication of his potential. He was 17th out of 28 runners on his Topeka West cross country team. The following summer he started an off-season training program
Schultz's work in the off season was the biggest factor in his improvement, Schrag said. He went from 17th on the team his freshman year to the No. 1 runner his senior year.
Schrag said that many schools decided not to recruit Schultz his senior year because of his interest in attending Kansas.
"The coach started these small competitions during the summer," Schultz said. "He had games which made running fun."
supervised by his coach, Joe Schrag.
"He got a lot of attention from Division II schools and was recruited by Wichita State," Schrag said. "He decided to go to KU pretty early."
Two of the factors that led to his decision were the strength of both the track and the engineering programs at Kansas.
Schrag said that he thought Schultz would make the varsity squad, but that he had not expected the immediate impac Schultz had made.
Schultz said that last summer he worried about whether he would make the travel squad this year. He said that teammates, freshman Josh Stewart and senior Jon Hays, had helped him keep his confidence during the summer.
Not only did Schultz make the squad, but his performance went beyond Kansas coach Gary Schwartz's expectations.
"We are very pleased with his transition to the college level," Schwartz said. "We thought he had the potential, but we didn't expect an immediate impact."
An immediate impact is exactly what Kansas got with Schultz.
"Before the Southern Illinois meet I was pretty nervous," Schultz said. "I didn't know what to expect."
Schultz said he did not go into the first two meets with any preconceived goals.
He said the fact that the team had run in a pack during meets had helped him and the other freshmen in competition. Schwartz used the tactic to help the freshmen on the team run closer together and improve their confidence.
He said that he hoped to continue to help the team as it headed into competition against Boston College Saturday and Michigan on Oct. 17. He said that he hoped those meets would help the team prepare for Big Eight Championships in October.
"I just wanted to keep up and run my race," Schultz said. "I wanted to feel good about the way I run, which I do."
The Associated Press
U.S. has new dream team
NEW YORK — The U.S. basketball team at next summer's world championships in Toronto will not include a single player from the squad that rolled to a gold medal in the 1992 Olympics.
Magic Johnson, who came out of retirement to start at point guard in most of the Olympic team's games, was in New York yesterday as part of a group trying to win an NBA franchise for Toronto.
And that's just fine with Magic Johnson.
Two more players will be selected, possibly from college. The 1992 team had only one college player, Christian Laettner.
The U.S. team will be coached by Don Nelson of Golden State, with one pro and two college assistants: Don Chaney of the Detroit Pistons, Xavier Pete Gillen and Utah's Rick Malerus.
"All these guys deserve it," he said. "It will be super team, but not good enough to beat our Barcelona team."
A selection committee chose 10 NBA players for the competition next Aug. 4-14: Larry Johnson and Alonzo Mourning of Charlotte, Orlando's Shaquille O'Neal, Derrick Coleman of New Jersey, Dominique Wilkins of Atlanta, Joe Dummes of Detroit, Mark Price of Cleveland, Miami's Steve Smith, Dan Majerle of Phoenix and Tim Hardaway of Golden State.
"This new team is similar to our team," he said. "It has great big men and great shooters."
The NBA has not said that any members of next summer's team would also play in the 1996 team in Atlanta and has not ruled out 1992 team members from the next Olympics. But Johnson said the 1994 team also could do the job in 1996.
"Shaq and Alonzo could play on the next three Olympics," he said. "They're so good and so young."
1
10
Tuesday, September 21, 1993
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THE MEETING WILL BE HELD SEPTEMBER 22AT7:00PM IN THE ADAMSALUMNICENTER. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL:864-4760
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Disney Parks
© DISNEY
KU chapter of the Walt Disney World College Program Alumni Association will hold its first meeting Tuesday, Sept. 21 at 7pm Alcove G in the Kansas Union
For more info contact Paul at 842-0273
Teams close on pennants
Maybe there won't be any pennant races after all. Toronto, Atlanta, Philadelphia and the Chicago White Sox all appear to be in good shape with two weeks to go.
The Associated Press
"We're in a comfortable position," Phillies catcher Darren Dauillon said. "But I wouldn't say it's comfortable."
Following Sunday's 3-1 victory against Oakland, the White Sox had the largest lead in the majors, $4\%$ games over the Texas Rangers in the AL West.
"If you can't get emotionally high for every game, you're in trouble," White Sox manager Gene Lamont said. "Our guys know what these games mean. They know what they have to do."
Toronto, on a season-high, eight-game winning streak, has a four-game lead over the New York Yankees in the AL East.
"Ive always felt great about this team, but we never really got things together until lately," Toronto manager Cito Gaston said. "Right now, we're getting good pitching and we're hitting the ball. It looks good for us."
Atlanta maintained its $2\frac{1}{2}$ game lead over San Francisco in the NL West with Sunday night's 11-2 rout of the New York Mets. The Braves begin a three-game series at Montreal tonight and the Giants start a three-game series at Houston last night with a 7-2 victory.
“It's no secret that we haven't played well in Montreal,” Braves shortstop Jeff Blauer said. “But we will be emotionally up for it. We know they are right in the race.”
Montreal trails the Phillies by 4% games in the NL East, but the Expos do have momentum. They trailed Philadelphia by 14½ games on Aug. 21.
"We go from facing a very good team to one that's even better," Expos right fielder Larry Walker said. "But we always played well against the Braves."
Philadelphia, constantly reminded of 1964,
when the Phillies blew a 8-game lead with 12
games to play, tried to remain upbeat after
Sunday's loss.
"If there's any positive from this," Dautton said, "it's that these games showed everyone in here what the atmosphere is going to be like."
A's outpitch Royals sealing 2-1 victory
The Associated Press
RBI singles by Troy Neel and Mike Aldrete in the first inning turned out to be all Van Popeli needed.
Van Poppel (6-6) won his second straight start. He walked one batter and struck out six. He left the game after George Brett led off the ninth with an infield single.
OAKLAND, Calif. — Rookie Todd Van Popel pitched a seven-hitter in eight innings as the Oakland Athletics heat the Kansas City Royals 2-1 last night.
Mike Bordick led off Oakland first with a double. Two groundouts later he stood at third, and he scored on Neel's single for a 1-0 A's lead. After Brent Gates kept the inning alive with a single, Aldrete singled, putting Oakland ahead 2-0.
The Royals managed to place just three runners in scoring position off Van Poppel. Bob Hamelin walked with one out in the second and went to third on Gary Gaetti's two-out single. But Van Poppel struck out Greg Gagne on a 3-2 pitch to end the threat.
Roger Smithberg got the final three outs after giving up an RBI groundout to Kevin McReynolds.
SPORTS in brief
Crudup pleads not guilty in DUI case
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Missouri basketball player Jevon Crudup not guilty yesterday to charges of driving while intoxicated and failure to drive on the right side of the road.
KU
Crudup, a 6-foot-9 inch forward from Kansas City, Mo., was arrested Sept. 7. His attorney mailed the not guilty plea to Boone County Circuit Court.
star Donnie Boyce yesterday, saying there was no evidence he was involved in drug activities as previously suspected.
A Boulder policeman arrested Boyce after seeing him hand a "white object" to another man outside a fast food restaurant. The officer had asked Boyce to hand over the object, and when he reportedly turned away, Boyce was handcuffed and arrested. No white object was recovered.
It was Crudup's second arrest in two weeks. He and teammate Melvin Booker were given municipal summonses Aug. 29 for disturbing the peace after a fight at the university's Memorial Union.
After Crudup's second arrest, Missouri coach Norm Stewart suspended him from the team for the semester. Stewart said he might alter the suspension pending the outcome of court proceedings.
Boyce, 20, Colorado's all-Big Eight guard last season and the team's leading scorer during the past two seasons, was arrested Sept. 5 on suspicion of obstructing a governmental operation.
COLLEGE BASKETBALL Buffs basketball player cleared
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
BOULDER, Colo. — Boulder police dropped obstruction charges against Colorado basketball
Police "determined that there is no evidence that Mr. Boyce was involved in any drug activity. Mr. Boyce was not arrested on any drug-related charges relating to the incident. The matter is considered closed," the statement said. "It is regretable that the matter generated such publicity and speculation."
A witness said after the incident that the white object was dice and that Bovce was playing cramps.
"A lot of people knew they play dice," said Nataline Cruz, a Colorado junior from Walsenburg and witness to the incident. "Maybe they thought they weren't supposed to be gambling either."
Boulder police said in a statement yesterday that after consulting with the district attorney's office, police had requested that the office discontinue prosecution of the obstruction charges.
KANSAS GOLF
Men's golf ends in 12th place
The Kansas men's golf team finished 12th yesterday in the 13-team Jack Nicklaus Invitational at Murfiel golf course in Dublin, Ohio.
The Jayhawks finished with a total of 978 strokes in the three-round tournament. Ohio State won the tournament with a total of 910 strokes.
In individual play, senior John Hess shot rounds of 84, 82 and 76, followed by senior Jay Hepler, who shot rounds of 81, 80 and 84. Senior Matt Gogel shot three rounds of 83 and senior Casey Brozek shot rounds of 80, 87 and 82. Junior Tom Sims rounded out the team's scoring with rounds of 87, 80 and 85.
Murfield is a par-82 golf course. No individual championships were awarded.
The Jayhawks now have a short week to prepare for the Topy Cup Intercollegiate in Fukushima Prefecture, Japan on Sept. 28-30.
Compiled from The Associated Press and Kansan staff reports
STUDENT
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SENATE
Is now accepting applications for the four
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Applications are available at the
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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.
To check out an ad:
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 21, 1993
11
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120 Announcements
140 Entertainment
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Classified Policv
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are subject to change.
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and requires a license or accreditation, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, oi an intention, such preference, limitation or discrimination.
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1
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120 Announcements
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School of Education Students
Students who wish to student teach the spring semester (GCPS included) must attend the student teacher meeting on Tuesday, September 21, at 3:30 PM. Information is available in I178. Preliminary information is available in I178.
S
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Cash Caterers, Kansas and Burge Urns' Catering Department, September 28, 1983; 8:15pm-1:00pm; $45 per hour. Come join the festivities of Burge Urns and Burge Urns' Personal Office, Level 5, Kansas Union Building. Other dates available for cash catering. Listings available at Personnel Group.
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Lost stray white cat at 19th and Haskell Sunday morning Sept. 14 at laundromat. To the girl who took it home please respond back to UDK, box #15. The owners insured about the cat.
140 Lost & Found
男士厕所
女士厕所
205 Help Wanted
200s Employment
BURNEO DU on your food service job? Clean
up! Hire a full-time 8-hr. prep., starting wages =
10% per hour, @$45/hr.
DEVELOPMENT/CONSTRUCTION CO. has part-time opening with flexible day hours for an office assistant. Chance for full-time summer employment and after graduation. Experience on IBM or Apple computers. All accounting/bookkeeping experience. Starting at $8.00 per hour with experience and hours. Send resume to P.O. Box 5003, Lawrence, KS 65004. Attn. Nita.
Day care needs experienced person. Must be available in the morning. $/hr. 841-7981
A great opportunity for education majors! Stepping Stones is hiring a lead teacher to work with kindergarteners from 12 to 16 on 6:00 p.m. 3, or 2, or 5 a.daay a week. Apply today at t104 Wakanda.
Child care provider needed in person, First United Methodist Church, 949 Vermont, 814-7500.
we are currently accepting applications for teaching counselor (TC) positions to work with and enhance the vocational and daily living skills of our men and women with developmental disabilities. We have two full and part-time positions, along with flexible substitute positions. COE needs quality-minded, professional people with a 4 yr. degree, prefer related to Behavioral Sciences. Students must be enrolled in a TC DP preferred. Apply in person at 2125 Delaware, Lawrence, KS 60449. EOE
nwood Inc., a service providing for adults with developmental disabilities, is currently accepting applications for full and part-time employment in their residential division. All positions are evening and weekend hours, some may require a valid driver's license exp. helpful, but may not be required. A good driving record is a must. Please apply at Cottonwood Inc., 2801 W. Stolm BOE
Dominio's Pizza now has 5 delivery positions available.
Apply after p.4 m. any day all shifts avail.
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Graduate level student with proven technical writing and revision skills, three quarter to full-time. Technical services or science background helpful. Req's MS in Technology or related field required. Applications close 10/04/93. Send resume and letter of interest to Technical Services at Greenville College. Greenville is seeking dedicated, energetic individuals to work with our grassroots lobbying and fundraising staff. Guaranteed wage + benefits. Full or part time. Call (818)51-3844. Everyone is required of gender, race, or sexual orientation.
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
Home-based Therapist, Part-time. Fee-for-service. To provide clinical services to severely emotionally disturbed children, adolescents, and families with special needs, minimum 2 years experience providing mental health services to SED children and families. Attn: Patricia Roach. Please submit resume with cover letter in care of Sherry Engel-Gardner, 341 South Broadway, 802 Lawrence, KS 65040. Open until filled.
Handy person needed to help renovate an
five-hour flexible. Call Phi 842-8198 or 841-
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Work experience
Help wanted Adams Alumni Center needs morn-
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Internships & Scholarships
Kansas and Burge Union hiring part-time, hourly for Fall Semester. Many jobs in Food Service, Catering and Custodial with varying schedules. Burge University, Kansas, University Building for job specifics. EOE
Miracle Video is accepting applications for a part-
tition and will talk between 10:30 and
3:30. No phone calls please
Macintosh repairs and upgrades
Friendly, Affordable, In-Home Service
The Mac Doctors 842-0948
OPPORTUNITY TO BE PART OF THE SOLUTION
Innovative grant funded program designed to provide alternatives to psychiatric hospitalization of children, Leavenworth, and Atchison counties needs persons to be on-call for short-term, crisis intervention care to emotionally disturbed children. Communication skills, ability to be firm and consistent; experience and/or ability to learn to work with children and youth with special needs; part of treatment team including parents, health professionals, SRS workers, school personnel, court services, and others as needed. Nature of employment means work may be sporadic. The following parameters are required:
TRAFFIC.DUI'S
Make inquiries to: Cheri Schwin, Bert Nash,
Merkel, 203rd, Lawrence, RK 66044
Open until filled. EOE
now available.
ON-CALL ATTENDANTS to provide one-on-one supervision in home or foster care.
FOSTER PARENTS to provide short-term out of home care, must be able to be licensed through
Mass St. Deli or Buffalo Bob's Smokhouse. Previous food service and supervisory experience mandatory. Start at $2.50 per hour. Future pay raises based on performance. Up to $2.50 per hour. Most evenly days and weekends. Apply at Schumann. Mid-week M-F-8a.m.-4p. (upstairs above Smokhouse.)
Part-time counter help, Mon, Wed, Fri, apply in person at The Mail Box 315, Wied 9th suite C.
Part-time day and evening help wanted. Must be able to work weekends. Apply in person only at The Mail Box 315, Wied 9th suite C.
Social Worker, full-time position to provide case management services to adult SPMI population, screening and crisis stabilization and manage clinical skills for this population. Requires 9 years experience with this population, requires an LMSW, licensed psychiatric nurse or licensed psychologist. Please submit resume with cover letter in care of Dale Creamer, Bert Nash, CMHC, 338 University of Wisconsin, 202, Lawrence, KS 66044, still enrolled, EOE
Program Aide for the Lawrence Arts Center.
Assist with education program classes and workshops. Part time position. Afternoons, evenings and weekends. Start immediately. Must be Ks Career work study qualified. Apply at The Lawrence Arts Center, 200 W 9th.
Part-time telephone marketer needed. No exp. Must be 25+ years old, inc. $2000 E.3rd; or call 86-351-Ask For Brenda.
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally K. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
** Sport Officials:** Lawrence Parks and Recreational Department is hiring individuals who want to be sports officials for adult volleyball and basketball teams. Contact Bob Stancist ASAP: 846-7232. Connect
842-5442
PART-TIME SUPERVISOR WANTED.
GRE EXPERTS KAPLAN
Fake id'S and alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
225 Professional Services
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Children daycare. Full-time openings and drop-in inshe. Hrs. 7a-8m:30am, M-F
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300s
305 For Sale
19' color T.V. Queen waveless water bed. Queen water bed frame. Kitchen table. Barbecue grill, filing cabinets, posters, kitchen items & telephone. Call 842-5891
1982 Yamaha 650SE, 288 miles, new batteries,
cond. service records, many extras, $1,300-
$700
Austro Daimler "TEAM" Racing Blake. 56 cm
wheels. 2 sets of wheels. 6 sets of wheels.
overly rated, 850. 798-936.
Quantrill's Flea Market open every Fri. Sat. & Sun 10AM-5PM 811 New Hampshire 842-6616 Downtown
Beds, desks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
BMW
Dennis Miller tickets 865-3562.
Dennis Miller tickets 865-3562
For sale Yakima car top carrier with bike tray.
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powerbook 180 4/120
new in box $2499.99
Smith-Coronaella, 3 yrs. old, Elexcel.课
worked 707 after 4:30 pm. Ask for Skeh, will
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Susuki G5550 great low price Call Mark 842-9393 waterbed, queen size baffled, waveless, heated good condition 810 b. o b. call 841-6762
Wedding ring set. 1/4 karat round fundation by marquis & baguettes. Retail value $200, selling for $200 obo. call Lisa 665-2344. Yamaha Synthesizer for sale. Please call 842-5891.
340 Auto Sales
79 SAAB, good shape AT PS sunroof $1400 obo
84-0729 Alison
86 Sukiu GSXR-750. Yoshi Pipe and much more.
8390.0B0 Call. John at 839-499.
Ford Tempo T4, dr AT, AC, extra clean, $7500
obc Call Bruce after 5:38 940-487-474
1982 Audi 4000 S F"=table, good condition HIMI.
$1,000.o.b. o. b.
Over the Edge
*Sale-`78 W Rabbit, body damaged but runs-$400*
*Cn-`749 - 02055*
Bookcases, desks, chaira, IBM typewriter, copier,
phone system, and miscellaneous items. To
obtain the price of each item, see the
bookcase page.
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Naismith Halls' services give students the competitive edge.
LEVIT'S 501's, will pay up to $13.00 and $10.00 for Levi's Jean Jackets. B41-0546.
400s Real Estate
- Front door bus service
Fitness room
24hr.computer center
405 For Rent
Dine anytime meals
1 BR gt. capable & water paid . Sept. pt. On bus
phone 841-4177 Call after 3p and leave a
message 841-4177
Weekly maid service
HEATHERWOOD
VALLEY
APARTMENTS
2040 Heatherwood
NAISMITH hall
Call Now!843-4754
*2 Bedroom, 1½ Bath $425
*3 Bedroom, 2 Bath $550
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
1800 Naismith Drive (913)843-8559
Rm. avail, for lem, in 2 story townhouse. Close to
Ashland. Call (855) 634-7244. Receipt already paid. Lease to May 31, 7946-T234.
Choice room in large quiet residence. Uplifts paid
private bath; on bus route, near Dell-
on Linda Drive.
Extra nice and quiet. dabber bap. including cathode lamp, daubber and low utilities. no pest. $325
2 rooms for rent for non-trad. female(s) available
at $1. 200+/day. Live 10 min. on Lawrence.
Private country home-kids and pets O.K. K. 765818-
leave message.
3 Bdr 1 bath apt for rent Campus Place. Very close to campus. Reasonable rent. One female room. No pets allowed. No smoking.
Renta
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For Only $40 a Month
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Delta Corporation 842-8428
3301 Clinton Parkway Ct., Suite #5 Lawrence, KS 66047
430 Roommate Wanted
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Available Oct. 1, one bdm, newly renovated basement apartment. pp. no. $849.00, street parking pkw. pp. no. $849.00, bdm # 844-101.
- By phone: 864-4358
Available Immediately at West Hills Apts. 1013 Emery Rd, Spacious, one bedroom, unfurnished room, pool, laundry, great location near campus. $39 per month-water paid. No pets. 841-380-945 or 842-384-94
- By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS, 66045
Female non-smoker to share duplex, three bedroom, washer/dryer, on KU bus route 789-4145.
Responsible, non-smoking female roommate to a share f. 2 BIR 4183 + / 3/utils. Call 843-7099.
Ad phone may be billed by your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
In summary 11985 Blessed Fleet
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385 for sale
340 auto sales
360 miscellaneous
Cost per line per day
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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
105 personal
110 business persons
120 announcements
130 entertainment
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Autograph Party!
MEET THE AUTHOR
It WAS VERY COLD AND I
IT WAS VERY COLD AND I
COULDN'T MOVE
It WAS VERY COLD AND I
It WAS VERY COLD AND I
MOVING
9-21
After being frozen in ice for 10,000 years, Thag promotes his autobiography.
12
Tuesday, September 21, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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SEPTEMBER 28-24
KANSAS UNION
THIRD FLOOR
Greek houses give presentation Program helps define greek life
September is not the only culturally diverse month — every month is, said Victor Dawson, the president of the Black PanHellenic Council.
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
To remind students of that, eight fraternities and sororities from the council gave an hour-long presentation last night at Templin Hall as part of Lewis and Templin halls' Cultural Diversity Month. Representatives of the organizations told approximately 75 students about the history and uniqueness of their individual houses.
Dayna Holford, Topeka junior and an organizer of the event, said students learned a lot about the groups—even though they might have come just to see the routines.
Several freshmen said the program helped them in their decision to join a Greek organization.
"I think a lot of them, especially the younger students, got a lot of information about us and about the different organizations," she said. "That will help them if they are trying to decide which organization to join."
Beverly Williams, Daytona Beach, Fla., freshman, said she got a better idea of what each group was about.
"I got a chance to recognize a few faces and put some names to those faces, and that helped me narrow it down a little." she said.
Dawson said he thought the program helped inform residents about the PanHellenic Council.
Dawson said the residence halls offered a diverse and convenient means to get information to younger students.
"These types of events offer us a chance to get the word out that we are a campus organization — and a large one," he said. "Too many people do not have a concept as to who we are and what we are about."
"Tonight was really a chance for all residents to learn about the Black greek system in a relaxing atmosphere," he said.
Other events planned for Cultural Diversity Month include an informal discussion titled, "Is KU Really a Diverse Campus?" at Lewis and a panel discussion at Templin concerning male/female relationships. Each is at 7 p.m. on Thursday.
DENIS SILVA
;Ole!
Tamara "la Garbanicota" McIntosh clicks her finger castanets to the rhythm of a guitar during her flamenco dance in front of the Kansas Union. McIntosh, from the Ole Dance Company in Kansas City, Mo., performed yesterday as part of Hispanic Heritage Month.
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MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
PLACE AN AD FREE
♀
MEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
1st year grad student from New England is looking for running partner who enjoys cold weather, eating vegetables, reading philosophy, and owns at least one Bickie Lee Jones Album!
least one heckle like those Audrey.
old, blond hair, blue-eyed male seeking laid-
back female to study with and go out. Has to enjoy
the music live scene. #1223
22yr. old Asian male seeking companionhip with fun-loving Asian female who is short, likes sports and enjoys playing cards and going for frozen yogurt, 892526
21 yr. old, black hair, brown eyed male. Looking for a laid back 20-23 yr. old female who enjoys listening to live music and kicked back eonings. Give me a call if I call #74707
8$ Soft brown sophomore transfer student with a tan seeking college membership. Have房友 Travel. Not a college student. I am an experienced student that can tutor Math 602 and 101 free charge. Good company in all that.
25-yr-old Hispanic 9'1'2" laid back Californian seek-
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ture and having a good life.
A small town boy with small town manners who has his feet planted firmly in cowboy boots, his hair pulled back tightly, his hard work and time in the gym, and his dream arm reach away. Seeks a girl whose mind, body, and life is able to keep up with me. If you like her style, she will be perfect for romantic nights, give this senior a call @62456
Ambitious grad student seek attractive, mature, N/S single female. 21-27 years old with dark hair and a long hairstyle. Reasonable for dark hair, basaleye and excellent muscle tone. Have left-of-center political beliefs, am impassioned classical guitar virtuoso. I am especially attracted to women with intelligent intelligence.
Athletic, communicative, in good shape, intelligence, adaptability, engagement of activities and social. New to Area; Arena.
To check out these ads call 1-900-285-4560
Common abbreviations
M Male A Asian
F Female J Jewish
D Divorced C Christian
S Single G Gay
W White Gay
B Black L Lesbian
H Hispanic N/S Non-Smoker
Attractive 20-year old SWM. brown hair, brown eyes seeking a SWM. 18-22 for a romantic, long-lasting relationship. I enjoy partying, cooking music, dancing and having you similar interests, please respond. #20220
Hello, I'm fairly tall. I like bluegrass and sports. If you're interested in going out, give that number a call.
SM seeks for a N/SF who is tall and has long black hair. I am 6'1". I love outdoor activities and I want a partner who enjoys traveling by car. I like jay very much and I want a partner who can spend hours talking with me in the jazz pubs while having glasses of beer.
Kind, sensitive, earth-loving. Phish-head male
tourist. You're in a place like this for
sconcerts, concertes, movies, late-night in front of
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are not. Apply #6708.
m looking for a girl that listens to good music like REM, Elixis Costello, or PearJam. #22672
Latin lover seeking beautiful American woman to
become a wife. Must enjoy shaking all of music as
gift. #29377
Single white male, 23, seeks single white female, 12-14 for casual relationship. I work 5'11, well built, have it. brown hair, green eyes. I like to work out, mountain bike, and ski. I'm looking for someone to go on the town or sometimes spend a day at a hotel but have a quiet sense of humor. #28044
SWM, 20, blond hair blue eyes, I did it for the tickets,
49281
My girlfriend has skipped town, and I am seeking a female companion. Please help. #43860
SDWM seeks non-traditional single divorced white female who enjoys outdoors, concerts, dancing, theatre, theater and the beauty and respect. Also enjoys country life style. Strong family values, kids are O.K.
SBM seeking SF. If you're tired of games and ready for a 'real' romance, are fun-loving, exciting, and love to dance, look ye no further and need a couple. Have you already a dawning-only fine ladies need apply. #22693
SWM, 26, *2^th*, brown blr, eyes. Ambulatory corpse seeks nephrolithic embalmer. My parents locked me in the closet when I was young but it didn't have affect on my development. (I have a strong affinity for cashmere sweaters.) I like to feed peanut butter to dogs. # 81015
SWM, 22 w/ unstopable smile make confident,
clever, crazy caring SWM 19-24 to share life's
adventures with you. if you have a heart just burst-
ing, you'll give it a living, give it a call and
we'll have a ball. #e2588
Single white male #6, brown hair, blue eyes. I am looking for a down to earth, mature woman to drink some beer with. Must have a good sense of humor and be able to speak English. Box 4719. Fax give me a call, mailbox #43108.
SWM, 22, 51"! Dark So. German, brown eyes.
Agile but not lanky. In alt music but not all foods.
Enjoys dancing in KC, live music and films. I often forget my phone #, you do? You seek mutual back rubs and conversation under the steam of the cappuccino machine. Box #22704
Single white male look for a lustful vienna who likes the Grateful Dead, Bar-B-Q, Blues, and Letterman. I love to give long massage. Are you the Lizard Queen of my dreams? Call box #8377
SWM - seeking good looking, great body, intelligent woman 18-24 yrs old, who likes to play darts, watch Rin & Stimpy and like beer. No hairy armpits or mustaches. #80988
SWM Graduate student seeking friendship and possible serious relationship. I'm honest, kind, humorous, generous, and intellective. I am curious, green eyes, and a clean-cut look. I'm looking for a non-smoking SWM who is moral and kind. My ideal lady enjoys athletic activities, has blue eyes, and a bright smile.
You will be charged $1.95 per minute
SWM 5'10 looking for an athletic, outgoing, confident beautiful young woman 20-24 who doesn't need to paint her face before she goes out for the evening or squeeze into a pair of jeans w/ spatula at the bottom of the shirt. Bring your guitar. If you put on one night stands & traveling from bed to bed, call another box. #22693
SWM 24 seeks SWF. Enjoys conversing, romance,
marriage and family. Participates in co-ed
pools and high in life. 23-20. Box 22978
Box #22658.
SWM looking for tall mellow women. Recently moved to Lawrence from Eastern Iowa. Hoping to a corn-fed, Kansas-grown beauty queen. I enjoy long walks and water sports. Must be a smoker. I enjoy crap-pop and wavelock. I love the movie "The Paw" to the PAW while not wearing it. watch #4.8587
SWM tall enough that when I stand my feet touch the ground. N/S not firmly planted in other people's reality. If you share my belief on the non-existence of space and time, then you know we've met. I enjoy people-watching and playing in this beautiful world. #21829
SWM seeks SBF. Am interested in meeting a lady who is tired of people playing games. If you like to get away for the weekends, dance, and are open-minded, give me a call 29483
SWM wants gorgeous SWF N/ N who can pound a lot of beer and who's interested in going to parties and getting crazy. I'm not a bird and don't call if you are anything cool. The kegs are a new thing. #458816
SWM.Rush Limbaugh fan, who goes by the philo-
sophist of surfing, but rather than ride on the beach. I enjoy golf, movies, beer, and road trips. Seeking someone who is laid-back yet has a style and a sense of humor.
SWM seeks SWF with simple American noun for疼early relationship, must have low to harry Average salary.
SWM looking for Vampires willing to embrace if you love the night call box #8899.
SWM-19 years old. Brown eyes, brown hair.
Enjoys working out and playing sports. Looking
for attractive female between 18&22 who enjoys
romantic evenings. #43863
SWIM-W! my actively motivated person. I like to get involved. My very favorite hobby is hunting wild animals. I love the outdoors. Looking for a 19-29 yr. old teenager to get involved, give it a go! #38598
Swim`I’m tall have blonde surfer hair. I look like the blonde guy on the Real World. I enjoy romantic dinners and long evenings dancing. **@give397**
I’d love to meet you. (N/S please.) **@#3097**
Tall, dark and handsome law student sees kinky and buxon blond in Slacker and regge. **@#3138**
Toned 5’ guy, 21, seeking attractive, fun girl to share some quality time. **@#2666**
♂
WOMEN SEEKING MEN
Are you tall, dark, and handsome--but a little shy? You are nice and stylish and face you turn me on. Whether you work at a job as a CRK, I will milt it but it not I’m vain so, as long as yellow to dance and women with blond hair
Are you tired of endless bar hunting for a sincere, honest, attractive woman? If so, give me a call. I'm a 21 year SWF with curly black hair, fair skin, and brown eyes. I'm looking for someone with creativity and spontaneity to have a good time with. Box #82194
I am 5'3, have short, sexy hair & hair eyes. I am very outgoing and make friends easily. However, I spend the summer in France and am looking for romance. I am very versatile in my interests and enjoy doing a variety of things. I like guys with hard, chiseled looks, intelligent and they must know how to dance. If you would like to try to see how we compliment each other, call my look.
Down to earth, fun-loving female who is looking for a great time. If you're open-minded, like long walks, and ready for one hell of a time never to forget-stimme a call! #43203
Intriguing female searching for a majestic male to share intimate moments together. #89020
I'm seeking a man who's interested in art, reading,
and writing must be good-looking humorous and
fair (24292)
SBF-Tall, brown eyes, serious. I like movies (comedies and action adventure) and I like reggae music. I am religious and would like a gentleman who shares my beliefs. #40037
SAF, 22. $2, looking for SM 31-28, must be good
singer of great sense of human fun-loving
and romantic, a love of music.
SWP, 18, 5.2" with short blonde hair, sensitive, frowning, age 18-24 and fill my eyes and my fill my tears.
SWF19, 19, seeking male for intimate friendship only and to share possible mutual hobbies to be found
SWF, 30, 5'4", brown hair; brown eyes. I am looking for someone who brings me flowers and that I can candle light dinner for him. Must be a nice dresser, call me to find out more. #47719
SWF, 21 years old, *5'4" with curvier wishes and champagne dreams sees SWM at 21-23 years old to help me fulfill all my desires. If you prefer Filt's to McDonald meal meals, you can afford this call.
SWF. 211r., engaged and seeking one last fling.
@6190
SWF. 22, '9', dark brown hair and brown eyes.
Searching for SWF. 20-22 who is mature.
Looking for a long walk or going to moving row, walkers and candle light dinners. No smokers, beer drinkers, or beer bellys, please.
SWF 516 Blond attractive, athletic figure looking for single male with good looks to build a woman's look more even. more recent
SWP Catholic, seeking 6f plus athletic, 30 to 35 yrs, old who enjoys the outdoors. Loves walking and biking. Enjoys baking, & dancing. Looked for someone who knows how to live & enjoy life with a good sense of humor.
SWF looking for my soul mate! If you love to read, and walk, and enjoy '70 music like ABBA, then let the party go. We'll have a fun evening, live, and lots of fun. Let's go to *prima inzaff* for oozeff! (Women need not apply!) 22051
SWF N/S. I am looking for a very tall, kind, and compassionate man. Someone with a sweet smile to brighten my lonely life. @20253
SWF seeking a good-looking athletic male. Must be fun & out-going. Like beer and blue eyes. Prefer someone 21 or older. Want to wait at meet ya! #23287
SWF, seeking a SM 20-40 who enjoy lazy days and wild nights. Must like disco music and dancing till dawn. I'm open-minded and fun-loving. Call box
SWF looking for SWM I enjoy mountain biking and the outdoors and am seeking someone to just hang out with and get to know. I like seeing bands and bands in music, especially 5,4 and 5,4 and attractive. Please call if interested. #22051
SWF seeking an attractive SWM to go to a party
and have a good time. #82422
SWJF, 19, $ 5^*$, 115 lbs. Enjoys working out, dancing,
playing volleyball, and occasional partying.
Likes Van Halen, Stowe Temple *6* lots, and the Gin
Smokers and drug users need not apply. #2504
SWF seeking SWM. I like alternative music, but you don't have to. I like guys around 5'10 with long brown hair and blue eyes. I also like to drink beer. I enjoy the sunshine. It's fun of fun and like to hang out, give me a call .#2380
SWJF looking for that special guy to sweep me off my feet and can enjoy high times chilling out at home or around town. I drink, dance, and smoke. Call me for fun. I like to party! #21059
WANTED: SNM. Prefer tall and dark. It wouldn't hurt if you were handsome and rich either. Nicely defined pees and little, preferably no chest hair or back hair. Bee of choice. Bud Light. #40077
WF looking for a strictly plastic relationship with a normal WM. I enjoy light drinking, moving, and shopping. People with annoying personalities need not respond. Friendly outgoing men only, please, who are just going to the store.
Woman seeking Scandinavian man. More or less blonde and blue-eyed. Eyes ideas and attitudes. Neutral personality. Hard worker affective. I'm looking for my equail. #8268
88
MEN
SEEKING
MEN
Dark long hair, athletic looking for male with similar lifestyle. #82539
GWM, 18,49, $11.11, blue dene, very cute sharp looking and masculine. Seeking good lookin,
sharp dressing guy 18-36 for possible friendship and discuss four issues.
GWM I'm looking to find a lot of new friends where we can share a lot of ideas and wants. Who enjoys others company. Let's if we've got anything in common. 492886
Hey If you fit the following, to meet the same:
Grace Body, Great Locks, Tanned, Closeted Studs.
[ ]
Very good looking, BIMW, 117', 6' quality, fit & tannin
loaded, good supersoft/super looking, co-
ing, fit to 28 cm² on EACH hand.
Very good looking, bwm. 6 foot 17 lb work out
habit, 120 lbs weight, shoes, sharp,
significant 12-8 only gm, private
website: www.worstbuy.com
Non-any traditional students hoping to go into interschool cell call my for studying groups and classes.
FRIENDS
SEEKING
FRIENDS
19 yr. old Chicago boy looking for 19 yr. old Jewish girl
80283
shaking hands
**biscuit maker seeks friend who likes to fix**
**stuff #20655**
Eleven-Eleven. Is this meaningful to you? If so, let
it's get together. @82968
SEEKING SPORTS INTEREST
SWM seeking Female partner to play tennis and golf with me. Also looking for any person that is interested in going to the woodlands race track. # emma
A
TOOL BOX
MUTUAL HOBBIES
Grad student looking for riding companion to get in shape with. Road and off-road, all abilities well ensured. 1 ride 6X's a week with varying intensities. @26454
Graduate student looking for riding companion to
all abilities are welcome Road
and off road. #00223
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
To place an ad
1. Call or come into the Kansan at
119
Stauffer-Fint Hall, 864-4358.
2. You'll place an ad in the Jaytak Network section of the Kansan (up to 8 lines) and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people who respond to your ad. Your voice message will remain in the system for 21 days.
3. After your ad runs in the Kansan, you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages people leave for you.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
and note the voice mail number in them.
2. Call 1-900-485-4560 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touch-tone phone) from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category. You can interrupt to skip over messages that don't interest you. Voice prompts will lead you along the way. You'll be charged $1.95 per minute.
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached.
6
---
+
SPORTS: With diminishing bowl-game hopes, the Kansas football team is left wondering what's wrong. Page 11.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103, NO.23
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
Storm blitz
NEWS:864-4810
I
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
Matt Brookshier, Newton junior, carried his bike onto the north terrace of Wescoe Hall, seeking shelter as he tried to get home. He said he was stuck on campus when the storm hit yesterday but decided to head home through the rain anyway.
Last day of summer makes exit with torrential rain, violent winds
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
Doug Hesse / KAN$AN
The last day of summer closed with a bang yesterday when a late afternoon thunderstorm brought heavy rains, lightning strikes and tree-stripping winds throughout the University and Lawrence.
Along with the strong gusts and the 2 inches of total rainfall, the storm generated two tornadoes that touched down in Douglas County.
some KU scholarship halls and parts of Lawrence lost power for several hours. Damage reports to the campus and the city were not available at press time.
Officials did not sound the tornado sirens to alert residents of the potential sever weather until tornadoes were actually detected, said Paula Phillips, Douglas County emergency preparedness coordinator.
About 3:20 p.m., almost an hour before the storm hit campus, the National Weather Service issued a tornado warning for areas including northern Douglas County and Lawrence.
The National Weather Bureau in Kansas City reported gusts of 100 mph winds at Lawrence Municipal Airport at 4:33 p.m.
It seems many students remained unaware of the impending danger.
Upon hearing the tornado-warning sirens, which are on top of Watson Library, sound, most students walking around campus scattered to nearby buildings. Others already in buildings stayed there, like Jocelyn Gaitan, Kansas City. Kan., graduate student.
"At first the whistle scared me," Gitan said as she waited out the storm, inside
Wesco Hall. "I thought it was a locomotive."
Some students wanted an outdoor vantage point to watch the storm.
Even though her house was hit by a tornado three years ago, Debbie Doleck, Omaha freshman, stood underneath the overhanging eaves on Wescoe's east side to watch.
"Here I can experience the full capacity," Dolleck said. "I can see what's going on."
From the sixth floor of Malott Hall, members of the KU severe-storm intercept team watched the storm with special interest.
Meteorology students gather in the KU weather office to watch as severe weather forms over the Lawrence area. Two tornadoes were confirmed to have touched down in North Lawrence yesterday afternoon.
"Look at the green in the sky over there," said John Henderson, Ottawa junior, as said he pointed to the western horizon. "It's like a scene in a Disney production."
While the intermittent phone calls came into the office from weather watchers confirming the presence of marble-sized hall, tornadoes and sheets of rain, the room kept a festive atmosphere throughout the storm's hour-long life.
"No," said companion Bruce Reeves, Lawrence resident, "we're just where we want to be."
"We're right where we shouldn't be," said Rob Brooks, Wichita junior, said as the hail and strong winds pounded against the window.
Comments like "Good strike" after a lightening flash or "It's about time" after the tornado sirens went off filled the room throughout the storm.
Kansan reporters Carlos Tejada, Christoph Fuhrmans, Shan Schwartz and Scott J. Anderson contributed to this report.
JEEP
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
Four vehicles were damaged at the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, 1433 Tennessee St., during yesterday's storm. Strong winds and rain downed trees and power lines throughout Lawrence.
Yeltsin leads coup against hard-liners
Congress nullifies actions; president calls for elections
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — President Boris Yeltsin seized control of the Russian state in a coup against enemies of his reforms yesterday, ousting the hard-line congress and calling December elections for a new parliament.
In his first "decree," Rutskoi nullified Yeltsin's action and ordered all government leaders to obey him and the parliament.
Lawmakers meeting in emergency session voted to impeach Yeltsin and name one of Yeltsin's main rivals, Vice President Alexander Rutskiol, acting president.
Yeltsin, appearing hours earlier in a national TV address, claimed he was amending the constitution by decree. But his action effectively suspended the Soviet-era charter. He warned that any attempt to stand in his way would be "punished by law."
In Washington, President Clinton endorsed Yeltsin's decision to disband parliament and set new elections for December.
Clinton issued a statement of support after calling
See YELTSIN, Page 6.
KU professors support Yeltsin
By Shan Schwartz
By Shan Schwartz Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Members of the KU community say that Russian President Boris Yeltsin's moves yesterday were necessary to end his standoff with the Russian parliament. And they support Yeltsin's efforts.
Maria Carlson, associate professor of Russian and East European studies, said Yeltsin's move initiated a historically typical conflict in Russia.
"Things go on in Russia about as long as they can," Carlson said. "Then, when they can't, something else will happen."
"Russia has experienced a lot of economic hardships," she said. "People are making below U.N.-level subsistent wages, there was an unsuccessful attempt at monetary reform, and there's a parliament with no popular support." Of these things come together and endure.
All of these things come together and explode Carlson said if Yeltsin maintained control and pushed through with popular elections, a new parliament could benefit Russia.
"That would be the first parliament that would be Russian and not Soviet, and that could make a big difference for Russia." Carlson said.
Norman Saul, professor of history, said Yeltsin's move was bound to occur because of the long standoff between Yeltsin and the Russian parliament.
"The best thing would be for Yeltsin to win," Saul said.
"Even though this move was illegal under the existing constitution. I think it had to be done."
"In order to preserve the gains of democracy and a market economy, something had to be done, and Yeltsin decided to do it now."
Saul said Alexander Rutskii, the former Russian vice president who was named acting president by the parliament, could not survive as Russia's leader.
Kurskoi has little credibility," Saul said. "He's never demonstrated much leadership, and I don't see him in the power picture for long."
Saul said the next few days would be crucial for Yeltsin to maintain control of Russia and said he thought Yeltsin would prevail.
"Since he made the initiative, he must have calculated that he could do it," Saul said. "If he can't, there will be utter chaos in Russia. But I don't think that will be the case."
Carlson said yesterday's developments were just a part of another step toward ultimate stability in Russia.
"Russia has historically had to build up from chaos into order, and I don't think we've seen the end of the chaos yet," Carlson said.
INSIDE
Retro is today
They're back. The'70s that is. Bell bottoms are making a comeback and the shag look is in.
Ivan and Ida
Students say AmeriCorps would be beneficial
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
Tara Bachmann, Topека senior, could have eliminated her $5,500 student loan debt if she was graduating from high school this year instead of college.
Future college students could have an easier time of paying for college. President Clinton signed the National and Community Service Trust Act yesterday morning at a White House ceremony.
Time served is determined by how much money the student owes.
Clinton's program, called AmeriCorps, has two ways of allowing students to repay their student loans. Students can pay a percentage of their income after graduation until the loan is paid off or serve one to two years of community service before or after college.
"All around it sounds like a better idea for someone going to college." Bachmann
In ink: President Clinton made the community-service-for-college plan official yesterday when he signed it into law. Page 6.
said. "I would have done it in a minute."
Bachmann said she would have taken more classes and not worked during her first year at KU if she could have participated in AmerCorps.
"It would have been a lot easier for me my freshman year," she said.
Kelly Bales, Overland Park senior, said AmeriCorps would be beneficial for college students because the plan could keep students out of debt.
"I're really bothers me that I'm this far in the hole," she said of her $20,000 loan debt.
Bales said the positive effects of the act on students would be passed on to the general public.
"It would be a good idea because people
"It's really not a very large program initially," she said.
Even though the service act will help many students, other loan agencies will still be busy.
She said that because AmeriCorps will allow about 20,000 participants in 1994, not many students will be affected on a national scale.
would be working in an area that could help their community," she said. "I definitely would've considered it."
Diane Del Buono, director of KU's office of student financial aid, said about 8,000 KU students use federal loan money to pay for college.
"Not all students want to pay their education that way," said Elaine Nelson, assistant vice president of operations at the Student Loan Marketing Association branch in Lawrence. "It will really have minimal impact on anyone who provides higher educational funding."
Program guidelines
President Clinton's National and Community Service Trust Act:
Participants will receive $4,725 a year for up to two years to apply toward college tuition or to repay loans. Payment will be made direct lv to the school or lender.
Participants will receive living allowances during their national service of at least
$7,400 a year. The government would provide
85 percent of $7,400 and the service program
n Spending would be limited to $300 million in the first year of the program, $500 million in the second year and $700 million in the third year.
An estimated 20,000 people could participate in the first year, 33,000 in the second year.
Educational awards will have to be used within seven years after service was completed.
A.
Source: The Associated Press
2
Wednesday, September 22, 1993
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OAKS—Non-Traditional Student Organization will have a brown-bag lunch from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at Alcove G in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Gerry Vernon at 864-7317.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will hold a forum, "Christ and the Homosexual," from noon to 1 p.m. today at the ECM building, 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will hold mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Danforth Chapel. For more information, call the center at 843-0357.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a Catholic student discussion group and sack lunch at 1:10 p.m. today (directly following 12:30 mass) at Alcove B in the Kansas Union. For more information, call the center at 843-0357.
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 844-7316.
KU German Club Stammtisch will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at the
KU Student Alumni Association will meet at 7 tonight at the Adams Alumni Center. For more information, call 864-4760.
KU Wrestling Club will have an organizational/informational meeting at 7 tonight at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Isaac Christoffersen at 864-7074.
Free State Brewing Co. Inc., 636 Massachusetts St.
KU Ad Club will meet at 7 tonight in 100 Stauffer-Flint Hall. For more information, call Wade Baxter at 749-7487 or Ed Schager at 864-4358.
KU Kempo will meet from 7 to 8:30 tonight in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Ershadi at 842-4713.
ACE (Association of Collegiate Entrepreneurs) will meet from 7 to 8:30 tonight at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Chris Freemont at 864-5233.
KU Sailing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Tom Connard at 841-4597 or Valerie at 865-1699.
CORRECTION
A story on Page 3 of yesterday's Kansan identified a cafeteria in the Burge Union and misspelled two names.
The Hawk Stop is the correct name of the cafeteria; Jason Olds is the correct spelling of its manager's name; and Tim Barton is the correct spelling of the name of the
Natural Ties campus director.
A story on Page One of Monday's Kansan contained incomplete information. Warren Corman, Topeka, is the interim executive director of the Kansas Board of Regents.
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.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119
Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan6045.
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WEATHER
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WEATHER
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 90°/64°
Chicago: 67°/53°
Houston: 96°/71°
Miami: 89°/78°
Phoenix: 101°/74°
Salt Lake City: 77°/45°
Seattle: 72°/48°
Omaha: 69°/44°
LAWRENCE: 85°/65°
Kansas City: 93°/63°
St. Louis: 72°/63°
Wichita: 68°/56°
Tulsa: 76°/62°
TODAY
Tomorrow Friday
Chance of thunderstorms
High: 85°
Low: 65°
Partly cloudy, chance of rain
High: 71°
Low: 55°
Chance of rain
High: 66°
Low: 50°
Source: Associated Press
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A student's parking sticker was taken from a car in the 600 block of Gateway Court on Sunday or Monday, Lawrence police reported.
A student's calculator, KUID
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Call 864-4-810 for the newsroom:
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and bus pass, valued together at $95, were taken from the fourth floor of the Kansas Union on Monday, KU police reported.
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Board of Class Officers and Student Union Activities would like to recognize the students nominated for the 1993 EXCEL Award, for EXcellence in Community, Education and Leadership.
Kristy Abel
Brian Anderson
Steve Bedell
Brent Bowen
Tracey Brown
Peter Braithwaite
Chad Browning
Rex Chang
Helen Cheng
Tonya Cole
Londonne Corder
Jamie Cutburth
Timothy Dawson
Victor Dawson
Kelly Dunkelberger
Jeremy Haas
Kelly Harrell
Julie Harris
Travis Harrod
Todd Hatton
Tamara Huff
Todd Kindred
Kristi Klepper
Chad Moon
Nicole Millard
Antoine Montgomery
Carrie Neiner
Channing Nuss
Kathryn Price
Marcia Ramos
Kristen Rikkers
Michelle Rolfe
Carmen San Martin
Roy Schmidt
Kari Scott
John Shoemaker
Ana De S. Silva
Corey Taylor
Trevor Thompson
Shanda Vangas
George W. Wyatt
Remember to turn in your application to SUA by 5:00 pm September 28!
CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 22.1993
3
Bertolt Brecht
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
Careful craft
Harold Fakhouy, a glass blower, works with a glass tube for the chemistry department at the University. Fakhouy has been working at KU for 22 years. He produces the glassware used by chemistry labs throughout the state.
Watkins offers influenza shot
In October, the Kansas Jayhawk football team will take time out of their busy schedule to stalk a different kind of opponent - the flu.
All 100 players are required to receive a vaccine to safeguard the team from acute influenza, commonly known as the flu.
"The shot really isn't that bad," said Dan Eichloff, Ft. Lauderdale senior and kicker. "Just like drug testing, it's a pain in the neck. I guess they just want to prevent us from not being able to play."
Will not reduce chance of catching the common cold By Liz Klinger
Watkins Memorial Health Center will offer flu shots that cost $6.50 beginning Oct. 1. Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins, said the vaccine would protect students only from the flu and not the common cold.
"The flu is a very specific viral illness characterized by the sudden onset of severe headaches, severe sore throat, dry cough, severe muscle aches and fever," Yockey said. "That's what the flu shot prevents. It does not prevent the common cold, strep throat, sinus infections, pneumonia, nausea, vomiting or diarrhea."
Yockey said it was common for people to refer to a cold as the flu. But the true influenza virus is not that common.
By Liz Kinger
Kansan staff writer
Someone experiencing flu symptoms will feel them immediately, Yockey said.
Flu vaccines have been around since the 1960s. Each year a flu vaccine is prepared containing small doses of the viruses predicted to be prevalent that year, he said.
"It hits you like a train," Yockey said. While a person with the flu will know the exact time they became sick, someone with a common cold may become gradually worse during the next few days.
Watkins chief pharmacist John Baughman said the health center would offer a vaccine this year that would immunize a student against three different viruses: A/Texas, A/Being and BPana.
Last year 450 students got flu shots. Between the end of November and spring break, Watkins typically sees several hundred students with acute influenza. Yockey said.
ON CAMPUS
Yockey said the key to the vaccine's success was giving a person a large enough dose of the virus to form antibodies but not enough of it to make them sick.
Students who are typically healthy will usually recover from the flu within seven days. Yockey said health care professionals urged people over the age of 65 and those afflicted with congestive heart failure, emphysema, diabetes and cancer to get flu shots. The virus could prove fatal to a persons in these conditions.
General counsel, GTA representative to call witnesses
Testimony in the KU graduate teaching assistant status hearings continues today.
GTA representative Scott Stone is expected to call two witnesses, including administrative officer Jane Garrett of the department of English, before resting his case.
Yesterday, the University heard from its first witness. Betty Soppelsa, director of the Applied English Center.
University assistant general counsel Karen Dutcher said she anticipated presenting Howard Mossberg, dean of the graduate school, as her first witness. Two faculty members also are tentatively scheduled to testify for the University today.
Three GTA witnesses, including John Davidson, professor of physics and astronomy, and GTA Kathleen Chatman, also testified yesterday.
She testified that GTAs who taught in the English center received both practical teaching experience and income.
Hearing examiner Monty Bertelli said he expected the hearings to continue into the middle of next week.
Two teens charged in murder
Two more Topeka teenagers have been charged with murder and attempted robbery in the shooting death of a Lawrence man on Saturday.
Courtney Crockett and James Wadley, both 17, made their first appearance in court yesterday. Douglas County District Attorney Jerry Wells said the two were held on $500,000 bond at the Wyandotte County Juvenile Detention Center. A hearing will be held later to determine whether they will be tried as adults. Wells said his office had decided not to charge one of the suspects at this time.
Abraham Orr, 17, has been charged with murder and attempted robbery and is being held in the Douglas County Jail on a $500,000 bond. His next appearance in court will be Monday. Orr will be tried as an adult based on two prior offenses in Shawnee County. The four teenagers were arrested Saturday in connection with the shooting death of Edward Lees, 29, during an attempted carjacking in Riverfront Park.
Owner of Gumby's apologizes to Haskell
By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer
Brian Sipp,part owner of Gumby's Pizza faced an angry crowd at Haskell Indian Nations University last night.
Sipp sippe to about 150 people at Haskell Auditorium to answer charges that Gumby's, 1445 W. 23rd St., discriminates against American Indians. The charges led to a boycott of Gumby's last Wednesday.
"I feel rotten," Sipp said. "I feel bad for everybody. From the bottom of my heart, it's going to be corrected."
The owner of Checkers Foods, Jim Lewis, declined to appear and answer similar charges against the grocery store.
Checkers, 2300 Louisiana St., was
accused of illegally searching a Haskell student, Patrick West, Haskell sophomore and vice president of the Campus Activities Association, said some students had hired an attorney who would sue Checkers if the student was not cleared of all charges at a Sept. 30 hearing.
Although some Haskell students publicly praised Sipp for appearing, most were not satisfied with his answers.
"This is not an individual you're talking to," Regina Grass, Haskell sophomore and president of the Campus Activities Association, after Sipp said he could not please all individuals. "This is Haskell Indian Nations University you're talking to."
The adductor apppause.
The bovcott begin when Missy Willie.
former Haskell student and a former manager at Gumby's, told Haskell students last week that a cook mocked Haskell in front of her and performed the Tomahawk Chop when Haskell students ordered pizza. Willie also said certain managers sent drivers to deliver to other customers before delivering to Haskell dormitories.
Sipp said he was contemplating firing the cook.
Sipp also said he had met with the managers and they had told him they followed policy. He said Gumby's policy was to deliver pizzas in the order they were called in, regardless of location.
The crowd demanded that Sipp fire the cook, and some compared performing the Tomahawk Chop to wearing Ku Klux Klan
symbols.
Students also complained about rudeness from Gumby's managers and neglecting to put Haskell on the Gumby's T-shirt. The Gumby's shirt lists the universities that the Gumby's chain delivers to throughout the nation.
Sipp said Haskell would soon be added to the shirts. He also said he would buy ads in local publications to apologize.
Bob Martin, Haskell president, said he would support the boycott if the Haskell Student Senate or some other group made it official.
"If the Student Senate and the student body made the decision to boycott those businesses, from what I've heard tonight, I'd support you," he said.
Spanish-speaking community growing in Kansas
Hispanic Heritage Month
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Puede hablar español?
If you can speak Spanish, then you are part of a growing community, said Eva Pereira, director of the Kansas Advisory Commission for Hispanic Affairs. The number of Spanish speakers in the state has been traditionally low, she said, but recent trends have sent the numbers higher.
"The southwestern part of Kansas is 10 percent Hispanic," Pereira said. "We're taking over the southwest quadrant."
And because the job requires a low amount of training and pays relatively poorly, untrained Hispanics from Mexico, Central America and the southwestern United States have flocked to take the jobs, she said.
The reasons are economic, she said. Meat-packing plants in Garden City, in southwestern Kansas, have experienced major growth in business. Pereira said the growth had required that the plants hire more workers.
Pereira said that more than 62,000 Kansans speak Spanish. She also said almost a fifth of them speak little or no English.
The numbers have given Hispanics political power, she said. Hispanic legislators such as House minority leader Tom Sawyer, D-Wichita, have helped pass laws that require interpreters for Spanish speakers in fields such as health care and law enforcement.
"Now that we have legislation in the state, when they ask for something in Spanish they have a little bit of clout," Pereira said.
Most Spanish speakers choose to continue speaking Spanish despite the disadvantages of living in an English-speaking country, said Octavio Hinojosa, Hutchinson senior and president of the Hispanic-American Leadership Organization.
“It’s a matter of my self-esteem,” said Hinojosa, who speaks Portuguese and French in addition to English and Spanish. “To be able to speak Spanish is just something extra.”
It was not always so, he said. In kindergarten and grade school, he quickly realized speaking Spanish set him apart
"I felt like I wasn't like everybody else." Hinojosa said. "Looking back it was stupid, but I wanted to be like everybody else."
Hinojosa said that his mother soon realized what was happening and hired a Spanish tutor during their summer
Where Spanish is heard
0-250
251-
500
501-
1000
1001-
2000
Spanish speakers who speak little or no English
0-250
Garden City
251-
500
Wichita
Kansas City
501-
1000
1001-
2000
Spanish, spoken by more than 62,000 Kansans, is the state's second language. The meat-packing industry near Garden City recently has drawn Spanish speakers from the American Southwest and Latin America.
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
Dave Camobell / KANSAN
vacations in Mexico. Now, Hinojosa said, he is glad he learned to speak Spanish fluently.
Carmen Urdaneta, Topeka senior, said being bilingual helped her stay in touch with her family.
"All my relatives are in Venezuela, and I like to go back there and I like to sneak with them," she said.
The increasing Spanish-speaking population could help broaden the horizons of Americans who speak only English, Urdaneta said.
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4
Wednesday, September 22, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
U. N. and U.S. troops are attempting to rebuild Somalia but have failed to capture Mohamed Farah Aidid, the warlord responsible for much of the violence occurring daily in Mogadishu.
THE BACKGROUND
Since the successful humanitarian relief effort in Somalia, the U.S. mission has changed to involve the implementation of a democratic government in Somalia and the capture of Aidid. So far, the effort to capture Aidid has failed. Many in the United States, including a large number of senators, are urging President Clinton to withdraw troops from Somalia.
THE OPINION
U.S. troops no longer necessary in Somalia
The time has come to pull American troops out of Somalia. The current mission of "government building" is failing and is far from the original mission of feeding the hungry people of Somalia.
The mission has turned into a failure with U.S. troops getting ambushed at every turn. Instead of a government-building mission, it appears to be a "get Aidid" mission. The search for Aidid has been fruitless and appears to have made little progress.
When President Bush sent U.S. troops into Somalia there was a need to see that humanitarian relief successfully reach the starving people of Somalia. That mission has succeeded, but in the process we have acquired a new mission that is different from any we have involved our troops in before.
It is time to cut our losses and pull out of Somalia. If the situation changes in the future, it might become acceptable to send U.S. troops back to Somalia. At this time, it is dangerous and painful not to withdraw.
TOM GRELINGER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Wage increases display abuse of Senate power
Student Senate passed a bill on Sept. 8 that increased the hourly wages of five of the eight Senate executives to $4.25 an hour. The bill, effective immediately, increases the hourly pay of the administrative assistant, the Student Senate Executive Commission chair, the executive secretary, the Community Outreach chair and the Associated Students of Kansas director.
Senate members are in a unique position because they have the power to set their own executives' salaries. Discretion must accompany this power.
Senate voted to increase student fees by $3 last spring. Senators claimed the increase was imperative to finance adequately Senate projects. Now, Senate executives are utilizing additional funds to increase their own executives' salaries.
The salaries of Senate executives are stipends. The law does not require that executives be paid minimum wage. Offering some compensation to executives for their time and effort is reasonable. But paying executives, whose wage is based on a 20-hour work week over 12 months, up to $368 a month is exorbitant.
Senate executives work hard, as do executives of innumerable other campus organizations. But almost without exception, executives of other organizations are not paid for their efforts.
Senate executives are fortunate to receive monthly stipends. However, these stipends must remain at a reasonable level.
COLLEEN MCCAIN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
EMPLOYEE OR NOT EMPLOYEE,
THAT IS THE QUESTION...
DON'T YOU .
THINK THIS NEW
"SEX POLICY" IS
A LITTLE BIT
HYPOCRITICAL?
YEAH,
THE KU
ADMINISTRATION
HAS REALLY BEEN
SCREWING THE
GTA'S...
WE DONT LIKE TO
THINK OF GTAS
AS "EMPLOYEES"...
WE PREFER
"SLAVE LABORERS"
Censorship hinders constructive debate
It's nearing the end of September, which means crisp fall days, football and censorship.
I mention censorship because of Banned Books Week. The week, which lasts from Sept. 26 to Oct. 2, is a project of many organizations including the American Booksellers Association and the American Library Association. Its purpose is to increase awareness of censorship in this country. Bookstores and libraries will feature displays with books about censorship as well as examples of censorship in the past and present.
Censorship has traditionally been practiced by the religious right. The Catcher in the Rye is a frequent target of censorship because of "bad" language. (My high school English teacher gave me his personal copy of the novel but wouldn't teach it to the class because of the language issue). The first problem occurs with defining bad language. The word "screw" has many connotations, at least one of which can be considered obscene. Do we censor the word in "Penthouse" but not in "Handy Andy"? Second, we must look at the context. Though Holden Caulfield arguably swears too much, isn't that part of the point of the novel? Hateful words don't mean much without a context in which to place them.
What's more disturbing to me is the rise of censorship by liberals in the name of political correctness. These
STAFF COLUMNIST
NATHAN
OLSON
liberals advocate a form of censorship when, for example, the material in question is considered "hate speech." A case in point is Bret Easton Ellis' American Psycho. The novel is a first-person account of an investment banker whose nightly diversions include dismembering people. The murders are related in nonchantily gruesome details, and most of the victims are women. When the novel was published, women's groups were appalled; here was an openly misogynistic, hateful novel that should not have been published.
Others read the novel differently. Norman Mailer, for example, saw it as a metaphor for the 1980s: the logical conclusion of greed and manipulation is murder. While both interpretations can exist simultaneously — the novel can be a grand metaphor as well as misogynistic — what is important is that they are different interpretations. One person's interpretations of a novel aren't the same as another's.
So who will decide which interpretations are valid and which aren't? A number of years ago, when I was an undergraduate at Northwestern University, a former leader of the Nicaraguan Contras did not speak because a campus communist group threw an animal's blood on him. The blood symbolized the blood he had caused to spill. He was furious and wouldn't speak; the group went around chanting "No free speech to Contras." The hypocrisy astounded me: the right to speak extended only to them, not to those they opposed. Debate was not possible. Only one interpretation mattered to them—theirs.
I'm not condoning American Psycho or the Contras. American Psycho is a hateful and poorly written novel, and the Contras were responsible for hundreds of deaths. But the most effective way of dealing with those things isn't by censoring them but by bringing them out in the open. It's by discussing ideas which may be hateful, not by sweeping them under a carpet where they grow until they are so large we trip over them.
Ultimately, censorship is about power. It's about the ability to control what is accessible and what is not. No one — not governments, not churches, not school boards — should have that power. It should belong to the people.
Nathan Olsen is a Chicago graduate student in English.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Sexual harassment definition distorted
In response to the Sept. 15 editorial concerning the sexual harassment speak-out, I would like to make a few points. I agree that the issue of sexual harassment is a terrible and dehumanizing crime that has no place in our community. But to truly raise awareness and alleviate misconceptions about this crime, a few distinctions should be made.
Second, the Kansan believes it is difficult to detect how many times this crime occurs. Indeed it is as long as the definition of sexual harassment is as flexible and changing as the prevailing opinion of editorial staffs.
First, sexual comments alone, no matter how dehumanizing, are not covered by the legal definition of sexual harassment. I quote the 1994
edition of "Money Magazine's Best College Buys," page 34, which defines harassment as "Sexual attention that is unwanted, offensive, usually repeated, and interferes with your ability to work." The article continues by stating that an action, such as being called a '10' as you walk, probably does not constitute sexual harassment.
Third, including the horrific crime
of rape in the definition of sexual harassment is a great injustice to rape survivors. This is the equivalent of defining murder as an assault.
I am in resounding agreement with the need to end sexual harassment and all other crimes against individuals. I feel that the editorial board is doing a great disservice to the men and women of this country by bumbling the definition of sexual harassment. Few could find fault with the women's studies program for wishing to end this crime, so let's at least get its definition straight.
Randall Reitz
Salina senior
Last weekend Pat Robertson's Christian Coalition met for one of its political pep rallies. The list of speakers included the usual group of Republicans rumored to be considering a run for the presidency in 1996. Pat Buchanan renewed his call for a cultural war in America with a speech that made you wonder if he was hiding an arm band under his coat. The crowd cheered its approval at almost every line. It was enough to bring a tear to Ronald Reagan's eye.
Persecution has no place in democracy or religions
In this den of rabid Republicanism one lone Democrat had to deliver a speech. David Wilhelm, Democratic national committee chairman, had been invited by Robertson as the only democratic speaker. The majority of his address was received politely, if sedately, until he made one mistake.
Wilhelm told them that it wasn't fair to characterize someone as unChristian, simply because he did not agree with them on political issues. Disagreeing with a person but respecting his right to his opinion is the basis of democracy, isn't it? Well, apparently not. For that statement the Christian Coalition nearly booed him off the stage. Apparently God has registered as a Republican. I had the mistaken belief that God was an independent.
KANSAN STAFF
It seems that Pat Robertson has a unique gift that he shares with the Coalition. He knows what God's political wishes are. In fact he will share them with you every day on his television show, "The 700 Club." It seems that God was against the president's budget package approved by Congress last summer. No wonder it had so much trouble passing. It seemed that God was against raising taxes, especially on wealthy television evangelists.
Of course God hates gays. We don't even have to take Pat's word for that. We have a local in Topeka who is God's expert on that issue.
JIM KIMMEL
When I was a small child going to Sunday school we used to sing a song called "Jesus Loves Me." I don't remember any exceptions. I can't help wonder if someone has undated the lyrics.
God can't seem to make up his mind on the North American Free Trade Agreement. At first he was all for it, but once Pat, I mean God, discovered that it threatened U.S. sovereignty he decided it wasn't such a good idea.
God is also sure that he wants a Republican to be the next president, although he hasn't decided which one yet. The only real requirement, however, seems to be a willingness to do exactly what his messenger, Pat, wishes.
Every time Pat Robertson implies that those with different political views are unChristian, he is doing more that just political name-calling. He is really denying his opposition's right to participate in the process. He uses religious and patriotic rhetoric to invalidate his opposition's existence, not just its position.
When you deny your political opponents' right to exist, then you deny the basis of democratic government, which gives a voice to everyone, not just a chosen few.
Jim Kimnel is a McLouth junior majoring in history and sociology.
PABLO MAYORAL
KC TRAUER, Editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
Editors
Assistant to the editor ... J.R. Clairborne
News ... Stacy Friedman
Editorial ... Terrilyn McCormick
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Kristi Fogler
Photo ... Klip Chin, Renee Kneeber
Features ... Exe Worte
Graphics ... John Paul Fogel
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
STAFF COLUMNIST
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 pleased if you provide details. The Kanaan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanaan newsroom, 111 Stauffer Flint Hall.
University of Mars (unplugged)
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ... Ed Schager
Regional Sales mgr ... Jennifer Perrier
National sales mgr ... Jennifer Evenson
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Production mgrs ... Jennifer Blowey
Kate Burgess
Marketing director ... Shelly McConnell
Creative director ... Brian Fusco
Classified mgr ... Janice Davis
TYPES OF VIOLENT Shows on TV.
TODAY ON U or Mars,
we'll take a look at "American Gladiators"
"American Gladiators". The only show where someone wins by dodging big muscle heads with Nerf® weapons and darky names like LAZER, JAZZ, and FUDGE-O.
The real question is... why do we watch "American Gladiators"?
$\textcircled{1}$ TO CHECK out the buff participants.
$\textcircled{2}$ It's Funny to see these "Athletes" talk about how hard they train just to knock someone onto a wrestling mat with a giant Q-tip.
$\textcircled{3}$ Just makes us feel good to watch someone else get the Snot Knocked out of 'em!
Kill him!
TURBO!
PART
TWO
by Joel Francke
PART TWO
TYPES OF VIOLENT
Shows on TV.
TODAY ON U OF Mars,
we'll take a look at
"American Gladiators"
TYPES OF VIOLENT Shows on TV.
TODAY ON U or Mars,
We'll take a look at "American Gladiators"
★
"American Gladiators"...The only show where someone wins by dodging big muscle heads with Nerf @ weapons and dorky names like LAZER, JAZZ, and FUDGE-O.
The real question is... why do we watch "American Gladiators"?
$\textcircled{1}$ TO CHECK OUT THE buff participants.
$\textcircled{2}$ It's Funny to see these "Athletes" talk about how hard they train just to knock someone onto a wrestling mat with a giant Q-tip.
$\textcircled{3}$ Just makes us feel good to watch Someone else get the Snot Knocked out of 'em!
Kill him, TURBO!
$ \textcircled{3} $ Just makes us feel good to watch someone else get the snot knocked out of 'em!
Kill him,
TURBO!
SINCER
UNIVERSITY, DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 22, 1993
5
Cigarette butts litter grounds in front of University buildings
Smoking ban forces students, staff to go out to dump ashes
Phil Endacott, associate director of housekeeping for facilities operations, said the biggest noticeable difference from the building smoking ban was cigarette butts on the ground outside many campus buildings.
Since a smoking ban in all campus buildings took effect at KU this summer, students, faculty and staff on campus are noticing one big result — the butts underneath their feet.
The ban prohibits smoking inside any campus building, but students and faculty can smoke outside, usually between classes. University staff, who work in their offices all day, take breaks outside their building if they want to smoke.
By Shan Schwartz Kansan staff writer
Endacott said facilities operations had about $6,000 worth of aluminium ashtray urns removed from the buildings when the smoking ban took effect. The ashtrays were inside buildings, primarily near exterior doors and elevators.
"People are smoking in the building
The absence of those urns, he said, could be part of the reason why ashes and cigarette butts were being dropped on the ground in the entry-ways.
entryways, and they never used to do that before." Endacott said.
Some burn damage has occurred from when smokers put out their lit cigarettes by stomping them out on the floor or smashing them onto plastic trash cans as they enter the buildings, he said.
"That probably wasn't a prudent decision," Endacott said. "They forgot that the urs don't smoke, people do."
Endacott said his department was working to supply ashtrays back to the areas outside of all major campus buildings to avoid the problem. He said the department also was looking
into installing ashtrays on top of the stone barrel, dome-top trash cans, which are located outdoors throughout campus.
Helen Harrell, supervisor of the Kansas Union information counter, the only place on campus that sells cigarettes, said the smoking ban had not affected the number of students and University staff that smoked.
Harrell said that the Union's cigarette sales had not diminished as a result of the ban. She said the information counter sold about 450 packs a day.
"This summer, I thought everyone had quit smoking," Harrell said. "But when everyone came back in August, I decided no one quit smoking."
Customers have commented on the smoking ban, Harrell said, but their concerns were mostly about the winter months.
"Most people aren't concerned about going outside to smoke now," Harrell said. "But what about when it gets cold? That's what they are worrying about."
The quality of the clothing counts when KU students go shopping
Advertising often helps attract buyers to name-brand clothes such as Levi's, Polo and Pepe
Marci Wright, Lawrence senior, said she invested in Polo wear and other name brands because they have a tradition of quality.
"If you buy something and it works for you, you'll buy it again," she said. "I still have quality rugbys from high school in great shape."
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
When KU students walk into clothing stores, Lawrence retailers say high quality is No.1 on their priority lists.
Jack Miller, owner of King of Jeans, 740 Massachusetts St., said that as long as he had been in the clothing business, nothing compared to Levi's as far as consistent sales and a good product.
"They've been around forever," he said. "The other name brands are hot for a couple years, but they die out. Levi's never have."
Pepe, Lee, Guess and Lawman jeanswear brands still attracted the most KU students, Miller said.
Greg Easter, manager of Easton's Ltd., 839 Massachusetts St., said Polo was the biggest seller at his store among college men and women from 18 to 25 years old. He said that he thought the Polo emblem was a status symbol.
Miller said that he thought advertising had the most impact on the public's buying decisions.
Miller said Ralph Lauren was a billionaire because of the popularity of the distinguished Polo emblem found on his name brand line of clothing. But clothing manufacturers can manipulate prices and still have a solid buyers market, he said.
Even though the prices are high, Easter said that people liked Ralph Lauren's sense of style.
"Sure they're making a killing with that emblem," Miller said, "but they can get away with it because they turn out good, quality, made-to-last clothing — and it helps that we gullible enough to buy it."
"His style and quality are distinguished," Egster said. "People like something different, and he has some good stuff on the market. It might be over-priced but there's a reason for it."
"I suppose I buy it because it looks really unique in the store," she said. "Then I wear it to death."
Kansas City lawyer will help students with career choices
KU graduate to serve in law school
By Kathleen Stolle
Kansan staff writer
Fifteen years after graduating from the University of Kansas, Kansas City lawyer Georgann Eglinski is right back where she started.
Eglinski was recently appointed acting associate dean of law. She is expected to begin Oct. 4. The appointment is for the academic year.
Robert Jerry, dean of law, said Eglinski primarily would serve in the Office of Career Services, where her professional perspective could benefit students.
"She has a very good understanding of the challenges of our profession and will be of great assistance to our
students in helping them prepare for careers after Green Hall." he said.
Eglinski has worked at the Kansas City law firm of Spencer Fane Britt & Browne since 1980. As head of the firm's attorney-hiring committee, Eglinski traveled throughout the country conducting campus interviews with law students.
But Eglinski said that when it came to law firms, bigger was not always better.
"I think the tendency is for law students to see one obvious pattern for employment, and that is large, private-practice law firms," she said. "They don't employ the majority of lawyers by any means, but it seems like they do because of their presence."
She said that knowing where to look was the key to finding the right job.
"Many jobs aren't found through a notice on the bulletin board but are found through contacts," she said.
She said faculty and alumni were good contacts.
According to placement statistics, in the past five years the majority of KU law graduates joined private practices. However, recent graduates appeared to have had more difficulty landing jobs. Seventy-four percent of KU's 1992 law school graduates were employed six months after graduating, an 11 percent drop from 1991 and a 23 percent drop from 1989.
Eglinski said the market had tightened since she first headed out into the job market. And while she can help students sharpen their interviewing skills and develop job-search strategies, Eglinski said some things, like he economy were beyond her control.
But Lillian Six, director of the Office of Career Services, said the drop was not a phenomenon unique to KU.
"This is occurring in law schools across the country," Six said.
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Clinton signs community service law
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Promising it will help the nation "strengthen the cords that bind us together," President Clinton signed legislation yesterday, allowing students to trade public service work for college tuition money.
The president, who promised during last year's campaign to press for such a program, said he had "harbored this dream for years." He dubbed the first new program of his administration "AmeriCorps" and appointed Eli Segal, his chief lobbyist for the legislation, as head of the new program.
The law, a watered-down version of Clinton's initial plan, gives as many as 100,000 youth tuition money, modest stipends, health insurance and child care in exchange for community service.
Clinton used two historic pens to sign the legislation during a carefully choreographed campaign-style rally on the South Lawn of the White House. One was used by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to create the Civilian Conservation Corps and the other was used by President John F. Kennedy to set
Members of youth conservation groups from Maryland, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and Washington, D.C., stood behind the president as he signed the legislation.
More than 1,000 people involved in various community service programs crowded under a massive white tent to watch the bill signing.
un the Peace Corps.
The president received a raucous welcome when he arrived for the rally with a rock band blaring his campaign anthem, "Don't Stop (Thinking About Tomorrow)."
Clinton said he saw the "wreckage, the insanity, the lost human potential" in the nation's communities while campaigning last year and expressed hope that AmeriCorps would represent "a series of challenges, to help us rebuild our troubled but wonderful land."
The new law will allow students who complete two years of community service work to earn $4,725 a year to apply toward college tuition or student loans. Participants also would earn living allowances of at least $7,400 a year and health-care
The first programs could be in use by the middle of next year.
and child dav-care benefits.
The plan allows 20,000 participants in 1994, which is a higher total than ever achieved by the Peace Corps. In the second year, 33,000 people could be involved and by the third year 47,000 could be in the program.
Spending would be limited to $300 million in the first year of the program, $500 million in the second year and $700 million in the final year.
A public corporation with a board of directors will run the program with the help of new state commissions.
The measure also establishes a new bureaucracy, pulling together the government's efforts in existing community service programs involving children, college students and adults.
Clinton originally asked Congress to adopt a far more ambitious $9.5 billion, five-year program. That plan would have allowed 25,000 participants in the first year and 150,000 by the third year, but Republicans balked at the cost.
Yeltsin: Actions could smooth reforms
Continued from Page 1.
Yeltsin and asking for assurances he would act in a way "that ensures peace, stability and an open political process this autumn."
Rutskio and another Yeltis nival, parliament speaker Rusian Khalasulatov, were inside the Russian White House, where parliament is located.
By midnight, several hundred anti-Yeltsin protesters gathered outside the building, many waving red Soviet hammer and sickle flags and erecting makeshift barricades as police stood nearby.
Yeltsin's gamble could decide the future of Russian politics and what kind of government ultimately will emerge from the chaos of the post-
Soviet era. It was his boldest move since he faced down tanks during an abortive August 1991 coup against Mikhail Gorbachev.
If Yeltsin succeeds in dissolving the parliament and conducting December elections, the vote could give him a Congress more in tune with his reformist policies.
Yeltsin's action to break his longstanding stalemate with lawmakers will need the strong backing of the military and security services, which have supported him in the past. Yeltsin paid a highly publicized visit to a military base just last week in a possible attempt to rally support.
Thirty-five military trucks loaded with soldiers and policemen were parked near Russia's Central Bank late Tuesday.
Khsbulatov urged the police and military to ignore orders from the president and appealed for a nationwide general strike. Yeltsin made similar calls in 1991.
"Do not fulfill any illegal decrees coming from the president," Khasbulatov said. "These decrees are considered invalid."
It was unclear how the public would respond to Yeltsin's sudden assault on his opponents. Public opinion polls have repeatedly showed little support for the Communist-dominated parliament.
State television continued its normal programming, showing a classical music concert.
Russia's top jurist, Constitutional court chair Valery Zorkin, joined Khasbulatov at the White House and
offered his support. Khasbulatov said he was organizing the defense of the building.
Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin told reporters the Cabinet supports £elsin. He also said there were no unusual troop movements and that there would be no attempt to storm the White House.
"All troops remain in their garrisons," Chernomyrdin said. "Of course, they are ready for anything, but God save us from doing that."
The constitution, drafted in Soviet times, does not specifically give the president authority to dissolve parliament or call elections. But Yeltsin has often argued that as president, he has the authority to take actions not specifically barred by the constitution.
Assassination of PLO leader called 'sabotage of peace'
The Associated Press
GAZA CITY, Occupied Gaza Strip — Masked gunmen killed a PLO leader in the occupied Gaza Strip yesterday in the first such assassination since the PLO signed a peace accord with Israel last week.
Two cars filled with masked men forced Mohammed Abu Shaaban's car off the road and killed him in a
blaze of gunfire when he stepped out to see what was happening, Arab and Israeli reports said.
Israeli and officials of Yasser Arafat's Palestine Liberation Organization have warned that the treaty might lead to an upsurge in violence between its supporters and opponents in the occupied territories.
Abu Shaaban, a 38-year-old lawyer and a leader of Arafat's mainstream Fatah faction the PLO, had just left a rally of thousands of Palestinians who demonstrated in support of the agreement in Gaza City's Zeytoun quarter, according to the reports.
Palestinian reports said Abu Shaaban's 13-year-old son, his brother and two bodyguards were with him at the time of the slaying, but escaped harm.
Relatives of Abu Shaaban called it a political killing, carried out by opponents of the peace agreement.
Leaders of Palestinian groups opposing the agreement have vowed to fight against it, and some radicals have threatened the life of Arafat himself.
Some Arab reports suggested that Abu Shaaban might have been the victim of rivals within his own Fatah group, rather than Muslim fundamentalists or leftist Palestinians opposing the accord.
The peace pact, signed in Washington on Sept. 13 by Arafat and Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin of Israel, hands over the Israeli-occupied Gaza Strip and the West Bank town of Jericho to Palestinian self-rule within four months.
Abu Shaaban, a popular figure known for his charity work in the area, had led a Gaza Strip political committee advising Palestinian negotiators to the U.S.-backed Middle East peace talks. Since the PLO-Iraeli agreement was announced two weeks ago, Abu Shaaban had organized pro-agreement rallies.
His niece, Maha Abu Shaaban, said after being told of his assassination:
"This is a political assassination. This is a sabotage of peace, they wanted to sabotage peace."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 22, 1993
7
KLAMATH, Oregon
Oregon earthquake kills two, measures 5.7 on Richter scale
Crews cleared earthquake debris of bricks and broken glass from streets and sidewalks yesterday and half-eaten meals still sat on restaurant tables where diners had fled hours earlier.
Geologists warned that buildings damaged by Monday night's quake could collapse as aftershocks rumbled through the area.
More than 100 people refused to spend the night in their homes after the tremor, including one family who left California to get away from snakes.
One motorist was killed by a rock slide. An 82-year-old woman died of an apparent heart attack after she was frightened by the mawk.
The earthquake, which struck at 8:29 p.m. Monday, was upgraded yesterday from 5.4 to 5.7 on the Richter scale by the U.S. Geological Survey in Menlo Park, Calif. It was followed within three hours by aftershocks measuring 5.5 and 4.8 on the scale.
A magnitude 5.5 quake can cause considerable damage in a populated area. A quake measuring 6 on the Richter scale can cause severe damage.
Last spring, a magnitude 5.6 quake struck about 200 miles north of Monday's quake, causing $14 million in damage in Oregon's Willamette Valley.
DIYARBAKIR, Turkey Government troops kill rebels
Government troops killed 15 Kurdish rebels yesterday in southeastern Turkey, the Anatolian news agency said. Two soldiers were killed in a separate incident.
The report said the soldiers were killed when separatist rebels raked a military vehicle with automatic weapons near the town of Andirin in the southeastern province of Kahramanmaras. Five other soldiers were wounded.
No details were available on the Kurdish deaths.
Troops killed 10 rebels on Cudi Mountain in the province of Sirmak on Monday, the agency said. According to the report, troops also killed five other rebels in the same province Monday in another clash.
THE NEWS in brief
EASTERN OCEAN
More than 100 people died in intensified fighting last week in the region, where the government had launched an offensive against the Kurdistan Workers' Party.
More than 7,000 people have been killed since the party began fighting for self-rule in 1984.
CAPE TOWN, South Africa Country plans for transition
The ruling National Party attacked white lawmakers yesterday who oppose giving up some power to a multiracial council that will oversee the transition to Black majority rule.
Backed by the ruling party, a bill creating the Transitional Executive Council is expected to be passed by Parliament this week. The white Conservative Party fiercely opposes the measure.
Yesterday, the second day of debate on the transitional council measure, Constitutional Affairs Minister Roelf Meyer told Conservatives: "You will not be able to stop this process. You would be totally irresponsible if you try."
Conservative Party leader Ferdi Hartzenberg called the bill to establish the council a "declaration of war."
In November, the white-dominated Parliament is expected to hold its last session, at which the final constitutional changes are to be made, clearing the way for the country's first election to include its Black majority. That vote is scheduled for April 27.
Nelson Mandela, president of the African National Congress, and President F.W. de Klerk will visit the United States later this week to woo foreign investors. Both have warned that political violence will discourage new investment.
Until then, the transitional council would have veto power over government decisions and would have to be consulted on budget and policy matters.
NEW YORK Female smokers more at risk
Women may be more prone to lung cancer from smoking cigarettes than men are, especially among heavier smokers, a study suggests.
At the highest smoking levels studied, female smokers showed 82 times the lung cancer risk of nonsmoking women, while male smokers showed only 23 times the risk of nonsmoking men.
Risch said he had no adequate explanation for the disparity.
Overall, female smokers may run about twice the risk that male smokers do for a given number of cigarettes smoked in their lives, said Harvey Risch, physician and associate professor of epidemiology and public health at the Yale University School of Medicine.
He presents the study in the current issue of the American Journal of Epidemiology with scientists from the University of Toronto and the Ontario Cancer Treatment and Research Foundation in Toronto.
WASHINGTON
Study says more dads stay home
For more and more American preschool children, it's Dad who pours the breakfast cereal and tucks them in for their afternoon naps.
Fathers with working wives in 1991 were the primary caretakers for one-fifth the children under age 5, a Census Bureau demographer said yesterday. Just three years earlier the share was one in seven.
Changes in the way Americans work have encouraged fathers to stay home and care for the kids, said demographer Martin O'Connell, author of a study based on Census figures and released by the Population Reference Bureau, a Washington educational organization.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop
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with the purchase of any sandwich. 1618 W.23rd exp.10/6/93
Not valid with any other offer.
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Monday Sept 27 Tuesday, Sept. 28
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Wednesday, Sept. 29
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7:30-9:00 & Jazz Night Out * $7.50
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Tickets:$10 in advance
$12 at the door.
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Reggae Dance Party ...*$5.00
*Week Pass $25.00 (Good for 1 Jimmy Witherspoon show & all other nights)
Tue-Fri shows start at 9:00pm and are $5.00 per night
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b.
8
Wednesday, September 22, 1993
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Rangers capture Aidid's top aide
The Associated Press
MOGADISHU, Somalia — U.S. Army Rangers hunting for fugitive warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid scored their first major success yesterday by capturing his chief aide.
U. N. military spokesman Maj. David B. Stockwell called Osman Atto's arrest "a significant milestone in dismantling the Aidid militia." The militia is blamed for killing more than 50 U.N. peacekeepers and plaguing the effort to rescue Somalia from famine and civil war.
About 50 helicopter-borne elite Rangers took part in the operation. They slithered down ropes to seize Atto and three other Aidid supporters in a building near Digfer Hospital, an
area that officials say has been used to lob mortar rounds into U.N. headquarters in Somalia.
Militiamen opened fire on the hellcopters and troops with small arms and at least a dozen rocket-propelled grenades. No U.S. forces were wounded, Stockwell said.
Yesterday's 20-minute raid follows a series of increasingly brzen attacks on U.N. forces. Earlier in the day, Somali militiamen opened fire on an armored convoy of Pakistani peacekeepers, killing three and wounding two, two of them seriously.
Stockwell described Atto, a wealthy Somali businessman, as the principal adviser and financier to Aidid. Somali consider Atto as Aidid's No. 2 man.
After Atto's capture, Aidid's supporters threatened to attack U.N. installations in Mogadishu if he was not freed within four hours. That deadline passed without an attack, but the militia then said it would strike by noon (4 a.m. CDT) today.
Stockwell said the U.N. force was taking extra security measures.
"We understand the importance of detaining him and the potential emotional outburst that may follow this," he said.
Stockwell said some militiamen were killed in the fighting but no civilian casualties were reported. An unconfirmed Somali report said Aldid's forces suffered 13 dead and 29 wounded.
The Associated Press
BOSTON — The cost of higher education continues to outpace income, inflation and financial aid this fall, even as colleges and universities slash services, according to the College Board.
The average tuition, room and board climbed 6 percent to $6,207 at four-year public universities and 5 percent to $15,818 at four-year private colleges, the College Board reported in a survey released Sept. 15.
Tuition rates rise despite collegiate actions
The increases were about the same, or slightly less, than last year's, as competition sharpened for the dwindling number of potential students.
"Colleges have simply come to realize that the very markets they wish to serve could not afford them at the rate of increase they were following," said David L. Warren, president of the National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities.
Although inflation was down 2.8 percent from last fall
to this fall, the average tuition and fees at four-year private universities and colleges rose 6 percent to $11,025; room and board brought the total to $15,818.
Public university tuition rose 8 percent, to $2,527,
after two years of double-digit increases fueled primarily
by state budget shortfalls; room and board boosted
the price to $6,207. The average cost of community and
public junior colleges jumped 10 percent for the third
straight year, to $1,229.
"The fiscal crisis in the states is not over," said James Applebey, president of the American Association of State Colleges and Universities. "But it's certainly easing up a bit."
Still, 38 percent of public universities have put off making repairs to buildings, 30 percent have capped enrollment, 31 percent have cut the number of courses they offer and 45 percent have left full-time faculty positions unfulfilled, the association said.
LOWEST PRICES
OF THE YEAR
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Selected 10K Ladies'
$299
Selected 10K Men's
ARTCARVED
Sale prices are available on all other styles
KU Bookstores
Kansas a Pioneer Unions
September 22-24
9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
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September 22-24
9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
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September 22-24
9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
Kansas Union
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For Unusual Jewelry & Imported Gift Items
5 East 7TH • 842-1376 • 10-5:30 MON-SAT
NOW AT CHECKERS:
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CHECKERS INVOICE COST + 50¢ EVERYDAY
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PIZZA FOR $5
IMPORTED FROM FINANCE
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99¢ LB. FAMILY PACK
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FAMILY PACK $1 18 LB.
A&E YOGURT
FOR 99¢
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ENTREES 158
ASST. VARIETIES EA.
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98¢ 8 CT. ENG.
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SLICED OR SHAVED TURKEY BREAST
198 LB.
H&G WHOLE CATFISH $1 99 LB.
U.S. NO. 1 RUSSET POTATOES
189
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CARROTS, YELLOW ONIONS OR CABBAGE
19¢ LB.
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4X6 25¢ EACH
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"NEW ZEALAND"
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SEPT. '93
1
trends
They're back
The
W.
The
By JL Watson
1960s faded and the 1970s era began, there were a lot of changes. It was the decade of "The Mary Tyler Moore Show," hot pants and bean bags.
But this is the 1900s, a lot of thing,
have changed, right? Not so fast. A quick glance into any fashion magazine
proves that designers have raided the closets of the past to clothe future generations.
The '70s look is all therage.
"Since I lived it, it's not shocking to me," said Carol Holm, leavenworth senior. Holm is a non-traditional student, and has many memories of the 1970s.
"I was pretty frumpy back then," Holm said.
"There weren't as many bright colors. Everything had to coordinate."
Fashion isn't the only part of the 1970s enjoying a revival.
"I'm back to saying 'cool'," Holm said. "I don't know if that's '60s or '70s or what."
Andrea Moreau, Lawrence junior, watches "Charlie's Angels" and listens to early David Bowie and Michael Jackson.
"That was my prime!" she said. "There's also a new movie coming out called 'Dazed and Confused.' It's about people who were kids growing up in the '70s," she said laughing.
2d, laughing.
Moreau remembers the '70s and
said she gets a flashback when she
thinks of it.
"Right now my favorite recy-
cled fashion is a good pair of
flare jeans," Moreau
said. "I don't really
like skull caps
a n d
plat-
forms so
high you could
break your neck."
plat-
S
Moreau said the '70s resurgence began when people tried to find an alternative to '90s fashions.
"For someone to be original,
they can't go with the public
issue." *Maryland acid*. *Parents*
"He was said." Eventually,
everything comes back full fling. History repeats itself.
Though the 1970s looks are back in full force, Moreau thinks the look is already on the way out.
However, slaves to fashion should not be discouraged. Should those bell bottoms, clogs, shag haircuts and choker necklaces got shewed to the back of the closet, there is a solution — recycling.
"Just put it away and save it," Moreau said. "Bring it out five or ten years later and it will be in style."
For those individuals lacking closet space there is always the option of trading or selling clothing.
Arizona Trading Company, 734 Massachusetts St., buys and sells used clothing. Moreau is an employee, and says one of the greatest advantages to the store is the cost and variety.
"It's very accessible," she said. "it's possible to trade a whole wardrobe for a new one," she said.
Lawrence resident Leonardo
Santarpa wears a long, layered haircut—sometimes
called a shag—but he
does not consider
See'70s,Page 10.
MARY HARDY
Rebecca Laws, Portland, Ore., junior, poses with her boyfriend Leonardo Santapia of Florence, Italy.
Richard Devinki/ KANSAN
FASHION BASED
Seventies clothing hangs among today's fashions at Arizona Trading Co., 734 Massachusetts St.
Richard Devinki/ KANSAN
Cara Hensley, Topeka, sells today's fashions and seventies clothing at Arizona Trading Co., 734 Massachusetts St.
Tabloids cover the strange but 'true' world from coast to coast
Tabloid publishers say they try to verify stories, but readers should read them for amusement only
By JL Watson
Kansan staff writer
"Woman carries unborn baby for 41 years"
Whoa! Now, who wouldn't stop and read that?
Stories like these are printed every week in tabloid newspapers. They exist all over the world, but the most sensationalized version of any story might be found in U.S. publications like the Sun, the National Enquirer, the Weekly World News and the Globe.
The story explains that, incredibly, these men haven't aged a bit. Amazing.
Another reads, "5 Men Trapped in Pyramid for 24 Years Found Alive."
These newspapers are available in stores from coast to coast.
was the most popular. "They cover the tawdry stuff, but some of it's based in fact," he said.
Shump said tabloid magazines were popular because they picked up on news before mainstream magazines hit the market.
MICHAEL LANDON GHOST SAVED ME FROM 3
NEWS
Sun
I WANT TO HAVE A BABY
Saves 25-third we
JESUS' CROSS
Bible experts confirm little-flung dravine in West Ireland
"We sell quite a few of them. Some people might find it believable, but for the most part it's just wacky and fun to read," he said. "I've learned not to judge people on what they buy."
They supported day, and we get five to 10 of each tabloid every week," said Nick Shump, Town Crier employee and Lawrence senior.
Shump said that the National Enquirer
Where do tablolb stories come from? Why do they always seem
jungle areas that are inaccessible by normal modes of transportation?
Where do tabloid stories come
"We get our stories from freelancers and news agencies," said John McGran, senior editor for the Sun. "We try to the best of our ability to verify the stories, but
we usually take their word."
McGran said he had interviewed sources ranging from Elvis psychics to Bigfoot hunters. "Believe me, those people are out there," he said.
The disclaimer found on page 4 of the Sun explains that the magazine seeks to entertain and report on bizarre stories : 'The reader should suspend belief for the sake of enjoyment."
The Sun is distributed in the United States and Canada, and has a weekly circulation of 300.000.McGran said.
He said the paper had not won any journalism awards.
"We're gun shy about talking about the paper because of the bad light in which we're shown," McGran said. "A lot of people are out to make us look bad."
Tamara Harden, Olate junior, said she buys tablolds once in a blue moon, and reads the headlines while standing in line at the grocery store.
The headlines are bizarre, and the pictures are totally false," Harden said. "It's just for entertainment and to read the gossip going on in other people's lives because I have nothing better to do and I don't want to study."
Harden also watches tabloid television shows. Her favorite is Inside Edition. "Inside Edition did a show exposing the National Enquirer," she said. "They showed how the Enquirer cuts pictures together and how they just get stories from anyone. They're supposed to find out if the news is real, but they don't."
Despite viewing tabloid television shows, Harden doesn't believe them, either. "It's all just for fun," she said.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KU Lite
People and places at the University of Kansas.
calendar
EXHIBITIONS
"Canyon Revisited: Rephotographing the 1923 Grand Canyon Expeditions"
Exhibit runs through Sept. 26 at Museum of Natural History.
"Contemporary Czech and Slovakian Photography"
Exhibit runs through Oct. 3 at Kress and Balconies Galleries in Spencer Museum of Art.
"American Indian Baskets from the University of Kansas Museum of Anthropology" Exhibit runs through Oct. 10 at the White Gallery in Spencer Museum of Art.
On display at the Study Gallery runs through Oct. 17.
"The Secret Garden" Illustrations by Tom Allen
"Internal Divisions: Photography Today in the Czech Republic"
Lecture by Colin Westerbeck, assistant curator of photography at the Art Institute of Chicago, at 7 p.m. Sept. 23 at the auditorium in Spencer Museum of Art.
Paintings and drawings on display Sunday through Oct. 8 at the gallery of the Art and Design building.
Yueon Gayh Yehp, professor, and Jean Giguet, curator of exhibits from University of Las Vezas
Local artist Helen Lea
Exhibit runs through Saturday at the gallery on level four of the Kansas Union.
Movie poster sale
Runs Monday through Sept. 30 at the gallery on level four of the Kansas Union.
PERFORMANCES
Faculty Recital: John Boulton Flute, 7:30 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall, free.
1
KU Theatre for Young People, "Step on a Crack" by Susan Zeder
Weekday performances at 2:30 p.m., and 7 p.m. Saturday, runs through Saturday at Crafton-Prever Theatre.
"The Secret Garden" Tony-award-winning musical
See CALENDAR, Page 10.
0.
10
Wednesday, September 22.1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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RAPE
WHO IS RESPONSIBLE?
How can our society encourage women to protect themselves without sending the message that they are responsible for stopping rape? Please join us as we discuss victim-blaming attitudes and how they interfere with the safety and well-being of women.
Tuesday, September 28, 1993
7:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.
Pine Room, Kansas Union
Facilitator: Susan Hickman, Graduate Assistant
Sexual Assault Prevention & Education Program
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
Sponsored by The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 115 Strong Hall
For more information, contact Susan Hickman at 864-3552
Special Student Memberships!
Lawrence's Only Total Athletic Club
US OUT!
Graystone Athletic Club
2500 W 6th 841-7230
ATHLETIC GRAYPIONE CLUB INC Special Student Memberships! Lawrence's Only Total Athletic Club
ATHLETIC GROUPING
Hockenbury Tavern 1016 Massachusetts
Wed.- $3 Pitchers
Thurs.- Spankin Rufus
Fri.- Crap Supper
Sat.- Baghdad Jones
865-4055
ENTERTAINMENT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
'70s: Fans hot for '70s duds
about '70s music. "I like the classics of the time," he said. "I still listen to Jimi Hendrix, Jefferson Airplane, the Rolling Stones and Bob Marley."
himself a trendsetter. "I'm not doing it because I decided to," he said. "It's just the way I am."
Continued from Page 9.
Santapia is from Italy, and wasn't even born when the '70s first began.
As for making the old new, Santarpia is less than enthusiastic. He said he didn't like to see people dressing '70s as a fad. "It's silly," he said.
Santarpia is more enthusiastic
Rebecca Laws, Portland, Ore., junior, buys her clothing from thrift stores, antique malls, estate sales and garage sales. "There are great vintage sales at estate sales," Laws said.
Laws likes to use old buttons to add personality to her clothing.
"I also like clogs a lot, but they're
uncomfortable, "Laws said. "They're not practical at all."
Like Santarpia, Laws does not subscribe to any one fashion trend.
QUIPS ANDS QUOTES
"I wear what appeals to me," she said. "Maybe I just don't look '90s."
Shuttle's telescope retrieval leads to starry pillow talk
Laws said she did not know where the next fashion trend would originate but speculated it might be the 1980s, which could bring back the much-dreaded parachute pants, leg warmers and designer jeans.
"Oh baby, oh baby, oh baby." — Discovery astronaut Daniel Bursch after retrieving with the shuttle's robot arm an orbiting telescope loaded with nearly a week's worth of star observations.
Tabloid Roundup
Melon babies
Thousands of infants are being smuggled into the United States in hollowed-out watermelons and frustrated federal agents say they are powerless to do anything about it.
he was being strapped into the,
electric chair Appel quipped, "Well,
Equally hair-raising, once the infants are in the U.S., evil "baby traders" sell them to the highest bidders—usually couples who aren't physically able to have children or can't qualify to adopt them through normal channels.
"For every baby our agents find, at least 10 more are entering the country undetected," said Brent Stanton, whose book, "Melon Babies, America's Hidden Shame," is expected to reach bookshelves this winter.
1. George Appel (electocuted in 1952)
Weekly World News
folks, you'll soon see a baked Appel."
3. James Donald French (electro-cuted in 1966)
Witticisms of 7 condemned criminals
2. Guy Clark (hanged in 1832)
On the way to the gallows the sheriff told Clark to speed up the pace.
Clark replied, "Nothing will happen until I get there."
5 Guy Clark (hanged in 1832)
Turning to a newsman on his way to the chair, French helpfully suggested, "I have a terrific headline for you in the morning. 'French Fries.'" 4. William Palmer (hanged in 1856)
As he stepped into the gallows Palmer looked at the trapdoor and exclaimed, "Are you sure it's safe?" 5. Sir Walter Raleigh (beheaded in 1618)
Feeling the edge of the ax soon to be used on him, Raleigh said, "Tis a sharp remedy but a sure ine for all ills."
6. James W. Rodgers (shot in 1960)
Asked if he had a last request,
Rodgers stated, "Why yes—a bullet proof vest."
7. Frederick Charles Wood (electocutured in 1963)
Sitting down in the electric chair Wood said, "Gentlemen, you are about to see the effects of electricity upon wood."
Adapted from 'The People's Presents The Book of Lists: The '90s Edition'Copyright 1993
CALENDAR Off-campus events listed
Continued from Page 9.
Sept. 28 through Oct. 3, with student night Sept. 29 — tickets $17.50 and $15 that night only.
OFF-CAMPUS EVENTS
Second Annual Harvest of Arts Week-long celebration of performing and visual arts featuring local artists at 7:30 p.m. Saturday through Oct. 3 at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
"Looking for Orozco"
"Looking for Orozco Paintings by Duane Slick, Mesquakie/Winnebago Native American from Sante Fe, N. M., professor of painting , Institute of American Indian Arts at Raymond Eastwood Gallery/Lawrence Art Center, 200 W. Ninth St., runs though Oct. 9
“Renegade Eight-Ball”
By East Side Comedy Shop at 8 tonight runs through Saturday at Renegade Theatre, 51.8 E. Eighth.
LOOKING SO SMART
It doesn't take a lot of money to look like a million.
$595 HAIRCUT (reg. $895)
COST CUTTERS FAMILY HAIR CARE
(Next to Dickinson Theaters)
2329 Iowa (Next to Dickinson Theaters)
843-1966
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STUDENT
ART
EXHIBIT Oct.18-31 Exhibited in Kansas Union Gallery
May pick up Applications at SUA office from 9-5pm,level four of Kansas Union.
ALL STUDENTS WELCOME TO APPLY
Applications due Mon., Oct.11 by 5pm.
Awards given in three categories painting/drawing photography 3-dimensional art
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
For more information call 864-3477
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
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fourd a sound 20 K q w K v K M N P R C a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 22, 1993
11
Team tryouts kick Jayhawks into gear
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
Women's soccer coach Lori Zito did not have an easy decision. Approximately 50 women attended tryouts two weeks ago, and it was up to Zito alone to place the players on either the A or B team.
She said that the A team, which is the traveling team, was extremely tall-
She said that the A the traveling team, waented. Zito said that there was not a major skill-level difference between the two teams, which
ented. Zito said that there was not a major skill-level difference between the two teams, which
WOMEN'S SOCCER
showed the high skill level of all the players.
Last year, Zito said some women quit because they had to play with less-experienced players. This year she said she had not heard if a player was not happy with her placement on the team.
Returning sophomore player Liana Hemphill, A team member, said she did not know of any player who had quit because of her placement on a team. She said Zito was very frank with the players and told them that she could not guarantee playing time so that they could quit right then if they wanted to. Hemphill said almost all of the players stayed.
"We are a lot more serious this year compared to last," said Hemphill. "Both teams should be pretty competitive."
Freshman A team member Kris Metcalf said she thought that tryouts were organized well but that the outcome was not what she expected. She said she thought that all the best players would be on A team and that all the
She said Zito used the only option she could, which was to scrimpage a lot to see who was good.
returning players were put on the A team as well.
Freshman B team member Kristin Fulford also said that she thought Zito did a good job running tryouts but that an identification system could have made it better.
"Lori just called our name if she thought we were good. We should have worn numbers so she could have known us better." Fulford said.
Fulford said she was not worried about playing on the B team because she was not out there for status but to play the game.
A player's team status is not concrete, Zito said. She said she would promote and demote players throughout the season depending on the player's performance.
"As long as I am playing, I am happy," she said.
Zito coaches both teams, so she has direct insight into each player's performance. Fulford said both teams practice together, but she did not know how Zito would coach both teams during game situations.
The B team will compete in the Recreation Services intramural tournament this weekend as its season opener. October marks the teams' tournament month. Both teams meet Nebraska in Lincoln on Oct. 2. Tournaments at Colorado State and Missouri are also planned.
Nike camp may have ruined students' amateur status
PITTSBURGH— Dozens of the nation's top high-school basketball players may have jeopardized their eligibility when they played in a Nike-sponsored all-star tournament in Oregon earlier this month.
The Associated Press
By attending the two-day tournament, which supplemented Nike's annual summertime camp, the 36 players may have violated high school rules governing all-star game participation and amateur eligibility.
Accepting money or gifts — such as the $100 gift certificate Nike gave the players — is a violation of amateur status rules in all 50 states governed by the National Federation of State High School Associations.
Nike held the two-day, four-game tournament in Beaverton, Ore., on Sept. 11-12, after the start of the school year, to meet NCAA regulations. But Nike apparently
didn't check with the National Federation or its 50 state associations to see if the tournament violated their rules.
"All of the state high school athletic associations should have been contacted," said Brad Cassman, executive director of the Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic Association.
Players who attend schools not regulated by state high school associations may not have affected their eligibility. Each player's case will likely be dealt with on a local or regional level, not by the National Federation.
High-school seniors are permitted under NCAA rules to play in two post-season all-star games, usually held in the spring or early summer, after their scholastic seasons are over.
State high school athletic associations usually do not regulate these games because the players' eligibility has expired.
32 0 KU 99
kansas quarterback Asheli Preston carries the ball past Kansas running back L.T. Levine and Utah linebacker Derrick Stapley during the game Saturday. Kansas is 1-3 for the season and plans to use the next two weeks to regroup after its slow start.
Jayhawks look to regroup
Season's start leaves coaches players puzzled
By Matt Doyle
Kansansportswriter
Kansas coach Glen Mason wishes he could put his finger on the problem affecting his team after its 1-3 start this season. But to do that, he would need more than one finger because his team has several problems.
Big Eight team statistics
"I wish I could pinpoint reasons why we're doing so poorly, whether it was poaching or bad attitudes of the players, but I can't do that," Mason said. "My football team is asking for answers, and right now I don't know what to tell them."
Injuries. Lack of experience at some positions. Poor execution.
Mason said that he, his coaching staff and the players were frustrated by this season's start. But they cannot determine a cause for the slow start.
Those are just a few reasons for the team's poor start. Fortunately for Mason, he has two weeks to regroup his team and prepare them for the last two-thirds of the season. The Jayhawks are idle this week and return to action Oct. 2 at Memorial Stadium against Colorado State.
Kansas football statistics compared to the rest of the Big Eight Conference in total offense and defense.
Total Offense
Total Defense
| | Plays | Yards | Yds-pg |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Colorado | 245 | 1616 | 538.6 |
| Nebraska | 235 | 1462 | 487.3 |
| Oklahoma | 156 | 844 | 422.0 |
| Kansas St. | 211 | 1121 | 373.6 |
| Kansas | **293** | **1307** | **326.7** |
| Iowa St. | 173 | 979 | 326.3 |
| Missouri | 137 | 566 | 283.0 |
| Oklahoma St. | 144 | 566 | 283.0 |
| Plays | Yards | Yds-pg |
|---|
| Oklahoma St. | 129 | 455 | 227.5 |
| Oklahoma | 115 | 560 | 280.0 |
| Kansas St. | 208 | 896 | 298.7 |
| Nebraska | 188 | 943 | 314.3 |
| Iowa St. | 201 | 1072 | 357.3 |
| Missouri | 146 | 771 | 385.5 |
| Kansas | 279 | 1632 | 408.0 |
| Colorado | 229 | 1348 | 449.3 |
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
Source: Associated Press
"This is a great break for us because we need time to regroup." Mason said.
The Jayhawks have been hit hard by injuries. No fewer than 12 players have missed at least one game this season because of injuries.
Three key performers were lost for the season in the 46-3 victory against Western Carolina on Sept. 4. Senior starting tailback George White and freshman reserve cornerback Charles Davis both suffered knee injuries, and senior starting free safety Kwamie Lassiter broke his left collarbone.
Losing White and Lassiter has
affected the Jayhawks' depth and experience at those positions. Other positions also have been affected by injuries and lack of experience.
Quarterback is a position that has been affected by a lack of game experience. Juniors Fred Thomas and Asheki Preston may have more talent and provide more depth at the position than at any time in the Mason era at Kansas. But after four games, it is evident that the Jayhawks miss the experience and leadership of Chip Hilleary at quarterback. In the three losses, Thomas has produced only one touchdown drive.
"Our quarterbacks haven't played up to our expectations, but neither has the rest of the offense," Mason said.
Senior center Dan Schmidt said the lack of experience had hindered the progress of the offense.
"It slows down the process of molding together the way good teams do," Schmidt said.
Mason said both the offense and defense had lacked consistency and big plays so far this season. That is an area Mason would like to see improved.
Senior defensive tackle Chris Maumalanga said he believed this team was better than its record indicated.
"I think we be definitely a better football team, but I can't put my finger on it why we're not better," Maumalaanga said. "We have to go back to fundamentals, get our attitude straight and re-evaluate what we real-ready are."
The goal for the team was to return to a bowl game. That is still a possibility, but the team must win six of their eight remaining games to have a shot at a bowl game. Maumalanga said that was still a realistic possibility.
"If we improve and do the things we're capable of doing, there's definitely a chance," he said. "But if we keep playing the way we have been, then there's no chance."
Manning joins fellow Jayhawks in pick-up games at field house
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
As rain pelted the windows of Allen Field House yesterday afternoon, players on the Kansas basketball team were working out.
They were playing in the house that Wilt built...
They were playing in it.
And Dannvremodeled.
Former Jayhawk Danny Manning was one famous Kansas face in the Kansas pick-up game. Other notable players were Adonis Jordan and Eric Paulley from last year's team and seniors on this year's team, forward Richard Scott and guard Steve Woodberry.
Manning, a Lawrence resident during the summer, began his career at Kansas in 1985 and led the team to the 1988 NCAA National Championship his senior year. He was named college basketball player of the year in 1988 and was a three-time Big Eight Conference Player of the Year.
TAMPA
Manning was the No. 1 draft choice in the National Basketball Association when he picked by the Los Angeles Clippers in 1988. He has played for the Clippers ever since
Valerie Bontrager/KANSAN
Danny Manning, third from left, who was practicing with current and former Kansas basketball team members yesterday, sits in the hall of Allen Field House while tornado sirens sounded throughout Lawrence.
"I enjoy playing with these guys," Manningaid said. "They're a very tatalunch bunch. They're fun to play with."
Although the field house may seem like an intriguing place to play, even to practice, it's not for Manning. It has been 10 years since he first stepped onto the court at Allen. "Practicing at Allen is no big deal." Manning said.
Manning comes back to campus occasionally to play with the new members of the lahawks, he said.
The pick-up games are fun for Manning, but this is also his time to practice and get in shape. Los Angeles' training camp opens Oct. 8, and Manning is preparing now.
In this year's NBA draft, the Clippers selected Terry Dehere in the first round, and Manning said he hoped the team's draft picks worked out. He is looking forward to next year. Manning said.
Manning works hard in off-season games, which makes the other players in the pick-up games step up, sophomore guard Sean Pearson said.
Everybody steps up because they have to." Pearson said. "He's such a great player."
"He's a lot of fun," Pearson said. "Everybody listens to him. He knows what he's talking about. He's been in the position we're in so he should know."
Pearson said Manning gives advice in these games, and he tells players what they're doing wrong.
Manning led Los Angeles in scoring with 19.3 points a game last year, but the players are not aided by playing with or against this NBA player. Even three-time junior varsity player Brandon Sanders isn't surprised by being on the same court as Manning.
"He motivates you to play hard," senior Sanders said. "I've played with him before. The first time was the summer of 1990 so it's not that big a deal, I treat people like people, but I will say that he is good at his profession."
For Manning, these games with "Roy's Boys" offer a time to just play basketball, without the big crowds.
"I just kind of mind my own business when I'm here," he said. "I'm working out, but I'm trying to have some fun."
By Kent Hohifeld
Kansan sportswriter
Ma.Junen gave part of the credit for his team's world record-breaking performances, including Junen's runner Wang Jumxia who last week took 42 seconds off of the 10,000-meter record at the National Games in Beijing, China, to his home made concoction.
Caterpillar fungus, dog meat and turtles may not seem like a tasty meal to most Kansas students, but a track coach in China claims it is great for distance runners.
Kansas senior cross country runner Ladd McClain said that he doubted such a diet could be responsible for the team's success.
"I wonder whether they found a new drug rather than a new diet." McClain said.
Junren has denied the charges his team used illegal stimulants, and his team passed drug-doping tests this week, according to the official Xinhua News Agency.
Ann Chapman, dietitian for Watkins Memorial Health Center, said she doubted such a diet could increase a team's performance.
"Off the top of my head, I've never heard of that type of diet doing any good," Chapman said. "There is no magical elixir."
Chapman discusses diet with many Kansas athletes. She said she suggested diets high in carbohydrates and low in fats.
"We suggest that athletes try to get 70 percent of their calories in the from of complex carbohydrates," Chapman said. "We suggest that only about 12 percent come from fats."
Chapman's suggestions are followed by athletes like McClain, who said he ate a steady diet of tofu mixed with Mideastern dishes.
"I try to eat an ethnically diverse meal," McClain said.
McClain said his adherence to a healthy diet had helped his performance on the field.
"I've never tried anything as exotic as the Chinese diet though."
"My freshman year I was sick a lot from the pressure," McClaim said. "I don't get sick now that I watch what I eat closer."
McClain's friend and teammate, senior cross country runner Bobby Palmer, agreed that diet can be important. He said that his sophomore year he began eating a diet that contained a lot of oriental rice mixed with a combination of herbs and spices.
V
Palmer said that his diet included a ritual of sucking on a Gatorade bottle before meets and a power bar after the meet.
He said the team had a traditional meal called the carbo load. This team meal is eaten the night before a meet. They go out to a local restaurant where they load up on carbohydrates, usually pasta.
This is one of the few times that the Kansas coaches control what their athletes eat.
Assistant track coach Steve Guymon said that suggestions were made by the team's nutritionist who worked with athletes on their diet. He said that the coaches watched what the runners ate, even though they did not have daily team meals as the basketball and football teams do.
"We leave it mostly up to the athlete," Guymon said. "If we see a problem, we have the runner talk to our nutritionist for advice."
Guymon said that the coaches mainly concentrated on getting runners to limit the intake of junk food. He said that team trips helped the coaches get an idea of what the runners ate normally.
"We usually get a pretty good indication of their habits during the team trips," Guymon said.
1
12
Wednesday, September 22. 1993
- ABORTION ASSISTANCE
SPORTS
Low Cost Early Abortion Services Wichita Women's Center·BC/BS·Mastercard·Visa Toll Free Dial "1" & then ...800 467 4340
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
M
PANDA GARDEN
1500 W.6th St. 843-4312
DIMSUMFANS!
We now have over 30 different kinds of authentic Chinese Dim Sum every Sunday from 11:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Join us to experience this delicious taste of China
Auctioneer's Note: The whole auction is Excellent and near new-classy and contemporary. Be on time. Very few small items. RAIN OR SHINE.
Six piece Black Lacquered King Size Bedroom Set; Two Large overstuffed Sofa Sectional each with 2 built in Recliners-Sea Blue; and Soft Rose Brown; Glass Top Coffee & Lamp Tables-brass legs; Blue Recliner 2 Large White Upholstered Sofa's; 2 Bar Stools; Large Oak Dining Room Table with Hutch-7 chairs; Queen Size Brass Bed with Porcelain knobs; 9 drawer dreser with mirror; Lamps; Book case; Brass Triangle glass shelving unit; Table and 4 chairs; 2 10-speed bikes; Built-in Dishwasher; Microwave; Oak Island with Lighted Hood; Matching Washer and Dryer; GE Electric Stove with grill.
AUCTION SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 25,1993 10:00 A.M.
Shoemaker's Auction Center
707 East 4th Street
Tonganoxie, Kansas
Easy to Find: From Lawrence Go across 61st Street Bridge to Tee-Pe Junction East on Hwy 24-40 -10 miles. In Downtown Tonganoxie.
SHOEMAKER'S AUCTION SERVICE
John Shoemaker-Auctioneer
913 845-3600 Tonganoxie 842-7171 Lawrence
Terms: Cash or approved Check SNACK BAR
KU STUDENTS ONLY! $1 OFF COUPON
World's Greatest Haircut
Reg. $7 95
BUT WITH COUPON
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HIS OR HERS = MATINEE
PERMS $23^{95}
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(MON - THURS. Till 4 PM)
Long Hair. Extra
snip n'clip
FAMILY HAIRCUT SHOPS
Orchard Shops
842-5151
15th & Kasold
15th & Kasold
Under 12 KIDSCUTS $5
OPEN NIGHTS AND SUNDAYS JUST DROP IN!
EXPIRES: 12-31-93
KU
Valerie Bontrager/KANSAN
Knit one. purl two
Judson Bertsch, Yankton, S.D., senior, strings a racquet for the Kansas tennis team yesterday in Allen Field House. Bertsch, who is a student assistant, usually strings four racquets a day and has done as many as 15 in one day.
A's defeat of Royals douses pennant hopes
The Associated Press
OAKLAND, Calif. — Ruben Sierra had three hits and three RBIs, and Scott Hendon singled four times and scored three runs last night as the Oakland Athletics defeated the Kansas City Royals 9-6.
Kelly Downs, 5-9, pitched four innings of two-hit relief to pick up the victory.
The Royals have lost three straight and six of their last $ _{14} $ eight to drop out of contention in the AL West.
With the game tied 6-6 in the sixth hining, the Athletics mounted a go-ahead rally off Mark Gubicae, 4-8. Hemond had his third single of the game, went to second on Kurt Abbott's groundout and to third on Mike Bordick's single.
He scored on Sierra's sacrifice fly to deep center.
Hemond, whose four hits all went to the opposite field in right, singled again in the seventh to set up Kurt Abbott's infield RBI single for an Oakland insurance run and an 8-6 lead.
Sierra scored the ninth run with a homer in the ninth. It was his 20th.
Gary Gaetti, George Brett and Bob Hamelin hit home runs for Kansas City.
The Athletics rallied from a 5-2 deficit and scored four times in the fifth off Royals starter Dennis Rasmussen. Mike Bordick and Brent Gates each hit RBI doubles, and Sierra added a run-scoring single. Rasmussen's wild pitch scored Bordick from third with another run.
The Royals tied it back up with a run in their half of the sixth on Hamelin's first major league home run.
Gretzky to sign for $25.5 million
Notes: Before the game, Athletics general manager Sandy Alderson said first baseman Mark McGwire will undergo surgery next week to repair torn tissue in his left heel. **The Royals are** 33-32 since the All-Star break, and 44-42 before it. **The Royals have lost nine of their last 11 games at the Oakland Coliseum.**
'Great One' to become highest-paid player in NHL with new deal
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Wayne Gretzky has agreed to sign a three-year $25.5 million contract with the Los Angeles Kings, making him the highest-paid player in the National Hockey League, team officials said yesterday.
Team spokesman Scott Carmichael said the deal was completed yesterday afternoon. Gretzky is expected to sign in the next few days.
"With the contract, Wayne has made a commitment to dedicate the next three years toward bringing the Stanley Cup to the fans of Los Angeles," McNall said.
Gretzky, 32, the NHL's all-time leading scorer, will earn $8.5 million a season, said Kings owner Bruce McNall. That is more than double his current $3 million annual salary.
The new three-year deal supersedes the 10-year contract Gretzky signed when he joined the team in August 1988.
Carmichael said Gretzky would be paid $4 million this year, and receive another $4.5 million in a deferred payment at a later date.
Gretzky is entering his sixth season with the Kings and his 15th in the NHL. Gretzky is just 36 goals short of Gordie Howe's all-time record of 801, a level once thought untouchable.
McNall said the deal recognized Gretzky's contributions to the Kings and the sport of hockey.
The announcement ended months of speculation about Gretzkv's salary.
"Wayne has been a true ambassador for the sport of hockey, not only here in Southern California, but all across North America," McNail said. "It is only fitting that he reap the benefits for such hard work, both on and off the ice."
McNall said the new contract was not a typical player agreement.
The NHL's next highest-paid player is the Pittsburgh Penguins' Mario Lemieux, who earns about $6 million a year in a 7-year contract.
Other top earners include the Montreal's Patrick Roy, who signed a new contract last week for $4 million a year, and Philadelphia's Eric Lindros, who earns $3.5 million a year.
Sports salaries
Wayne Gretzel became the highest-paid NHL player and makes more than anyone in professional football or baseball.
Basketball
Hockey
Baseball
Wayne Gretzky, Los Angeles
Kings, $8.5 million for three years
Barry Bonds, San Francisco Giants, $7.29 million for six years
Football
Steve Young, San Francisco 49ers,
$5.25 million for five years
Source:Associated Press, Campbell/KANSAN
"It is no secret that Wayne and I have enjoyed a relationship that transcended the hockey arena since he came here five years ago," McNall said. "At the same time, I had made a promise to both Wayne and Walter (Gretzky's father) that he would always be the highest-paid player in hockey as long as he was a member of the Los Angeles Kings."
Fan-on-field protest by Red Sox denied
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — American League president Bobby Brown yesterday denied the Red Sox' protest of Saturday's loss against the New York Yankees in which a fan ran on the field in the ninth inning. Brown said Boston manager Butch Hobson did not protest in time.
Brown, citing AL regulation 3.13, said a protest must be filed with the umpire-in-chief by the manager at the time of the dispute and before the next pitched ball.
Boston appeared to have won 3-1 when Mike Stanley filed out. But third-base umpire Tim Welke had called time when he saw a young fan run on the field and said it was before the pitch was delivered.
Stanley, given a second chance, singled, as did Wade Boggs. Dion James then walked and Don Mattingly's single gave New York a 4-3 victory.
THE SAMPLES
Wed. Sept. 22
Liberty Hall * 9 PM
18 & over admitted
Tickets at all TicketMaster outlets,
The Bottleneck and Liberty Hall box office.
749-1972
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ACE KU WELCOMES
Northwestern Mutual Life to the first meeting of the year.
Membership information and Internship Program Available.
Wednesday, September 22
Kansas Union Pine Room 7pm-8:30pm
For more information call 864-5ACE
Northwestern Mutual Life
The Quiet Company
© 1988 The Northwestern Mutual Life
Insurance Co., Milwaukee, WI
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 22,1993
13
Trade agreement may force students to learn new culture
By Donella Hearne
Kansan staff writer
If President Clinton succeeds in getting the North American Free Trade Agreement passed into law, more KU students may have to take an interest in Latin American studies.
Trade between Canada, Mexico and the United States will be opened up if NAFTA is passed by all three countries.
Tariff amounts on goods exported and imported among those three countries would be lowered into nonexistence. The agreement also would up business opportunities for investors in those countries.
V. K. Narayanan, associate dean of business, said Latin American studies would be especially important for KU business students if the new agreement was passed because it would require students to learn the culture.
"It is fundamentally important to have an understanding of the culture in which you are doing business," he said.
"And it is expected by the company that hires you."
Narayanan said the school had been revising its curriculum since 1986 to accommodate changes occurring in the world economy.
$ ^{b} $NAFTA or agreements like NAFTA are part of globalization of the economy," he said. "It's just one step of the grand change we are moving into."
Narayanan said the creation of the European Economic Community was another example of steps toward creating what he called the "global village."
"The new undergraduate curriculum requires students to specialize in studies of one region of the world," Narayanan said.
He also said the school had revised its undergraduate program to prepare for the economic changes.
Alexandra Harper, professor of history in Latin American studies, said she thought more students, especially business students, would focus on the Mexican business markets because it gave students new career opportunities.
Harper also said all students would need to learn more about Mexican culture if NAFTA passed.
"One of the most important things is the culture," she said. "You can't conduct business in any country without knowing the culture."
Harper said some aspects of Mexican culture would require U.S. businesses to make some adjustments when dealing with Mexican businesses.
"If someone offers you something to drink or eat, it is really not a good idea to turn it down," she said. It is considered rude not to accept something a host offers.
She also said Mexicans were not as time conscious as Americans.
"We do try to run on time but we're more relaxed about it," Harper said. "American business meetings are very intense, but in some Latin American countries it is much more relaxed and less formal."
Ready-to-drink tea sales gaining on soft drinks in beverage market
But the teas are not as healthy as some consumers may think By Liz Kilinger
Kansan staff writer
The soda industry may have met its match.
A few years ago, as cola companies savagely battled one another for consumers, a new non-carbonated competitor found its niche in the national beverage market. Experts in the tea industry estimate that ready-to-drink feed tea sales will reach at least $600 million and may go as high as $1 billion this year.
Joseph Simray, executive director of the Tea Council of the USA, said he attributed the teas' recent success to a better-tasting product, better advertising, improved distribution and joint ventures between manufacturers and vendors such as Pepsi and
Lipton, and Coca-Cola and Nestle
Although Snapple teas have been on the market since 1987, the other industry leaders, Nestea and Lipton, began distributing their product within the past year and a half.
Ready-to-drink teas can be found in many local supermarkets and convenience stores.
"We're selling more all the time," said Bob Anderson, assistant manager of Texaco Self Serve, 1802 W. 23rd St. "The popularity of Nestea and Snapple looks like it's increasing rapidly."
Simrany said many people perceived tea as being healthy, a factor that has contributed to its growing popularity. Simrany said college students might find iced teas attractive because they were more natural than soft drinks and a renewable resource.
"I suppose it's the 'in' thing to do," Simrany said.
But sweetened teas can have as much sugar and as many calories and about as much caffeine as a soft drink.
Although the top three selling tea brands, Snapple, Nestea and Lipton, list their ingredients on their bottles and cans, none list their caloric or nutritional content. Baxter said that problem would be solved by May of 1994 when the Nutrition Labeling and Education Act of 1990 would require beverage manufacturers to include the information with their products.
"You can delude yourself into thinking something is more nutritious than it is," said Adrienne Moore Baxter, dietitian at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Whether it's healthy or not, Rachel McCallie, St. Louis senior, could not say enough about her love for Snapple's peach eded tea.
Leigh Bowersock, Albuquerque, N.M., junior, grew up drinking sunmade tea and is not impressed with the ready-to-drink version.
"I really like the flavor of it," McCalle said.
"It loses something going into the can." Bowersock said.
Annexation land rezoning asked of city
The City Commission sent two rezoning and annexation requests in the Southern Development Plan to the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission last night at their weekly meeting.
Kansan staff writer
By Tracl Carl
Payleass Cashways asked that three acres east of Sonny Hill Chevrelet-Geo be annexed and 10.68 acres be rezoned from limited commercial and agricultural development to planned commercial development. The 10 acres to be rezoned would include the three annexed acres.
Payless Cashways plans to build a store that would sell retail and wholesale lumber and home-improvement products.
The commission decided in August to put any development requests in the Southern Development Plan area that would significantly alter existing land-use patterns on hold until the plan is completed. The plan, which will lay out development along the South Lawrence Trafficway, should be completed in six months.
Wint Winter, an attorney for Payless Cashways, said the requests did not affect existing land-use patterns. The land is already zoned limited commercial, he said, but limited commercial does not allow Payless Cashways to have delivery to residential homes or outdoor storage, which is part of the store's plan.
Planned commercial development would also give the commission more control over the appearance of the site, Winter said.
"It seems to us that this is actually an enhancement to the existing area," he said.
Commissioner Jo Andersen said the planning commission wanted to develop the plan without any pending development requests.
We sell Frisbees • We sell Darts
"They don't need anything side-tracking them," she said.
Doug Brown, who spoke on behalf of Holladay, said she wanted the land annexed and rezoned from agricultural to planned commercial development only if the Target proposal is approved.
The other rezoning and annexation request was from Merle Holladay, whose home is next to the northeast corner of a proposed Target store.
The Target proposal will be brought before the commission Sept. 28.
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
We sell Frisbees • We sell Darts
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
1029 Massachusetts
841-PLAY(7529)
Come See Men in Tights!
Find out how when
The KU Wrestling Club
meets
September 22
Wednesday 7:00 pm
in the Jayhawk Room
Kansas Union
Henry T's Bar&Grill
15¢ Buffalo Wings $1.50 Longnecks
6th & Kasold 749-2999
The University of Kansas HOMECOMING 1993
KU VS. ISU
KU
ISU
Parade applications available in the SUA office.
Recycle the Cyclones!
Entry Categories:
- Marching Bands
- Float
- Banner Signs
- Float- Deadline for entry applications is Friday, Oct. 1 at 5:00pm
- Marching Bands and battalion - Deadline for entry applications is Friday, Oct. 8 at 5:00pm
- All entry applications should be submitted to the SUA Office, Level 4, Kansas Union.
- Marching Bands and Banners-Deadline for entry applications is Friday, Oct. 8 at 5:00pm.
For more information call 864-3477.
Entry Applications & Deadlines:
Required Parade Meetings
- Wednesday, Oct. 6 at 5:00pm in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union, Level 5. All FLOAT entries must have a representative present for rules and safety review by the KU Police. An absence from this meeting could result in disqualifications from the parade or loss of points.
Put some performance into your drive.
Microsoft WORD
Microsoft WORD
Microsoft EXCEL
Microsoft Works
Microsoft EXCEL
Microsoft Works
Microsoft Word $99^{00}
Microsoft Excel $165^{00}
Microsoft Works $115^{00}
union
technology
center
KU
APPLE
VISA
MasterCard
DISCOVER
Academic Computer Supplies & Equipment
Burge Union • Level 3 • 913/864-5690
MasterCard
DISCOVER
14
Wednesday, September 22,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Coast to Coast
Test Hardware
1923 MADE IN USA
Billiards $2.40 per hour until 6:00 p.m.
Jaybowl
NOT JUST FOR
bowling
any more!
864-3545
Beauty
WAREHOUSE
Salon & Supplies
520 W. 23rd • 841-5885
SORBIC
MAGE
KMS
JOICO
NEXUS
Breast
REDKEN
frames
PAUL MITCHELL
Jaybowl
Not just for bowling anymore!
POLYGONAL TRIANGLE
SEBASTIAN
COVOTE BIKE
ADULT
BIKES
ONLY
910 KENTUCKY 832:2484
Rings Fixed Fast!
Kizer Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass *Lawrence, KS
Introducing
Full Service
Engraving
Name Tags, Name Plates,
Plaques and More!
Jaybowl
OFFICIAL
Not just for
bowling
any more!
864-3545
Jaybowl
Not just for bowling any more!
864-3545
BLUE BIRD
DINER
814 Massachusetts.
7 a.m. 10 p.m. Mon, Su.
8 a.m. 2 p.m. Sun.
Dine in or Carry Out
843-BIRD
Red Lyon Tavern
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
944 Massachusetts
832-8228
"Unhurried since 1963"
HairExperts Design Team
3
$5 Off
Hair Design
Not valid with any other offer
EXPIRES 10/15/93
40
Discover Our Difference
Holiday Plaza • 25th & Iowa
841-6886
Have you dined at The Castle Tea Room
lately?
Reservations only:
843-1151
"Your Book Professionals"
"At the top of Naismith Hill"
0-5:30 M-Th. 5-Fri. 9-Sat. 12:45 Sun.
843-3826
The Athlete's Foot.
914Massachusetts 841-6966
Jayhawk Bookstore
★★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
THE ULTIMATE PIZZABOY... Wednesday Special
357
Eat at
Rudy's or
I'll be
back!
wake up to CEDARWOOD APTS Now leasing Winter & Spring Newly Redecorated Units Gas heat & Low Utilities Close to Mall 1 Block from KU Bus route Studios 1&2 Bedroom Apts. Duplexes (3 & 4 Bedroom) Call Pat today 843-1116 2411 Cedarwood Ave.
RUDY'S PIZZERIA
.357 Special (ONE IN OR CARRY OUT ONLY)
$3 Small One Topping
$5 Medium One Topping
$7 Large One Topping
Tax not included
Great Pizza, Great Price
620 W. 12TH
(behind the Crossing)
749-0055
---
CITY OF CHEVROLET
SPELL IT OUT
1-800
O-P-E-R
A-T-O-R
There's no lower price for a collect call $ ^{SM} $
For long distance calls from public phones. You don't have to be an Economics major to see that AT&T's new 1 800-OPERATOR service is lower priced than anyone else's standard operator service rates for long distance collect calls. Use it from any phone on or off campus. When you call, just spell it out. Dial 1 800-OPERATOR (1 800 673-7286).
Pending tariff effectiveness. © 1993 A2BT.
AT&T
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 22, 1993
15
Taco Bell is servin' up some serious NACHS
NEW BEEFY NACHOS (Featuring Seasoned beef)
REGULAR NACHOS
NACHOS SUPREME (Nowwith Sour Cream)
PEPSI
Dr. Pipher TACO BELL.
Make A Run For The Border.
PEPSI
Dr. Pepper TACO BELL. Make A Run For The Border. PEPSI
Classified Directory
100s Announcements
108 Personal
119 Business
Personal
22 Announcements
130 Entertainment
130 Lost and Found
Classified Policy
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against persons with disabilities, race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or in law.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and therefore, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are paid.
110 Bus. Personals
100s Announcements
Algebra get you down? As a tutor, I can help you.
I'll call you early, and I'll call you later. Call
evensials, and call You. LearnJava
REMEMBER!
Costumes on 2nd floor for theme parties
and of course. Halloween. On up!
the ETC.
928 Mass.Downstown
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hour
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday: 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8:40am-4:30pm
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
KU Women! Mary Kay Cosmetics face and facial
makeup. No obligation to purchase. 863-4290.
Unique Sterling Silver Jewel
Uno Hands, Pendants & More!
For Gums and Gals
928 Mast-Downtown
928 Mast-Downtown
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 10am-3pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
120 Announcements
ADVERTISING WORKS!
MODELS NEEDED FREE HAIRCUT! Men and women call Carmine Caroline 845-1465.
CHRISTMAS SKI BREAKS
LODGING • LIFTS • PARTIES • PICKIES • TAXES
JANUARY 2-16, 1994 * 5, 6 or 7 NIGHTS
400s
JANUARY 2-16, 1994 • 5, 6 Or 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT* $199
from
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK*
TELLURIDE
* FREE 1/2 DAY
LIFT TICKET!
MUST BOOK BY 10/15
Synchrony
TOOL-ALL FORENIORE & RESERVATIONS
1·800·SUNCHASE
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
CLO
- Kansan Classified: 864-4358
FRATS: SORORTILES! STUDENT GROUPS!
Raise as much As you Wan in One Week!
Love and respect.
Market Applications for VISA, MASTERCARD,
MCI, AMOCO, etc. call for your FREE T-SHIRT
and to qualify for a FREE TRIP or MTV SPRING
BREAK 94.
BREAK 94.
Call 1-800-950-1039, ext. 75
New & returning LesBiGay
Graduate students, faculty & staff: Welcome (back)! Gay and Lesbian Academic & Staff Advocates
(GLASA)
invites you to get acquainted at a reception on Monday 27 September, 5-7 p.m. Please call Kari at the Student Assistance Center 804-4844 for more information.
MONDO DISCO Industrial, Alternative, Techno,
cover. 10-30 months. Monday to cover, $2
cover. Hide-a-waay $65; hours 8:45-10:00
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
LOST KITTEN-blue-eyed male Siasame. 3/1 mo old.
Cash reward for return. 842:121
Recycled Sound 12th & Oread
841-9475
We've lost our innocence but found some cash to buy your connect diaries
TRADE SELLBUY
New magazines, CDs, LPs, Tapes & Posters
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
We are currently accepting applications for teaching counselor (TC) positions to work with and enhance the vocational and daily living skills of our men and women with developmental disabilities. We have full and part-time positions, along with flexible substitute positions. CLO needs quality-minded, professional people with a 4 yr. degree related to Behavioral Sciences. Students are encouraged to apply. Experience with MR/DJ related to Behavioral Sciences is required in 1232 Delaware, Lawrence, KS 60046. EOE
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
BURNED OUT on your food service job? Clean buildings for BARDIC Sun!-Thur eves. 15:20 hrs/wk. Flexible hours. 44/80 hr. starting wage. $84-995
A great opportunity for education majors! Step up to the next level in kinder gardens from 12:00 to 6:00; m, 2, or 5 days a week. Apply today at 110 Wakaraus.
ALASKA EMPLOYMENT. Fisheries. Earn up to $2000+ $0/m. on fishing vessels or canneries. Many companies provide transportation and room & board. For more info.; call 1-206-5415 ext. 115
By donating your life saving blood plasma.
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
Cash Caterers, Kansas and Burge Union's Catering Department, September 28, 1983; 8:15pm-10:45am for the opening of the Lodge Center. Apply to the Kansas and Burge Union's Personnel Office, Level 5, Kansas Union Building. Other dates available for Personnel Listings available in Personnel Office, EOE
Child care provider needed in person, First United Methodist Church, 94 Vermont, 841-700-6500
Mass St. Dell or Buffalo Bob's Smoketown. Previous food service and supervisory experience mandatory. Start at $25 per hour. Future pay based on assessment. Up to $25 per hour. Prepare meals for hangouts and weekends. Apply at Schumm Food Co. in M-F附近, above Shroomee.
Part-time telephone marketer needed. No experience necessary. Come by CLAS Inc., 220 E 32rd, or call 855-519-5191 for Brenda.
SALEZ-College Students. Here your chances
were to need extra cash. We work.
Work at SALEZ-College Students.
Social Worker, full-time position to provide case management services to adult SPMI population, and providing management clinical coordination of residential care experience with this population, requires an LMSW, licensed psychiatric nurse or licensed护理师, and provide resume with cover letter in care of Dale Careman. CSU, 320 Missouri, Ste. 202, Lawrence, KS 60044, open until filled. EOE
Retail sales position. Immediate opening full time sale. Jewelry-china crystal. No experience necessary. Can work with school schedule-event. Send resume to P. o. box 620 Lawrence KS 60542.
Cottonwood Inc., a service providing for adults with developmental disabilities, is currently accepting applications for full and part-time employment in their residential division. All positions are evening and weekend hours, some may require sleepservers. College course work and relatables must be completed. A good driving record is a must. Please apply at Cottonwood Inc., 2001 W. 1st EOE
Day care needs experienced person. Must be available in the morning. 45/hr. 941-781.
DEVELOPMENT/CONSTRUCTION CO. has part-time opening with flexible day hours for an office assistant. Chance for full-time summer employment and after graduation. Experience on IBM or Apple computers. All accounting/bookkeeping experience. Starting at $6.00 and up depending on experience and hours. Send resume to P.O. Box 3008, Lawrence, KS 65066. Attn: Nita.
Domino's Pizza now has 5 delivery positions available.
Apply after 4 p.m. any day all shifts avail.
Flexible hrs. average driver earns $7-10 an hour.
841-802-800
Evening and weekend CNA's need to work with
their patients at Douglas University
County Visiting Nurses-443-578-328
Full-time nanny needed for Lawrence family.
Competitive salary plus room and board. Ideal job for college student. Car and references required.
(816) 444-6400. No fee.
Graduate level student with proven technical writing and revision skills, three quarter to full-time. Technical services or science background helpful. Must possess a Master's degree or equivalent required. Applications close 10/04/93. Send resume and letter of interest to Technical Services Director, p.o. box 786, Lawrence, KS. 66044. EOE. Handy person needed to help renovate an home, flexible hours. Call Phl. at 842-198-084 or 841-
Help wanted. Adams Alumni Center needs morning dishwasher 3 days a week, minimum wage, position available immediately, apply in person.
1288 Oread Ayc.
Work experience and a pay check too
Do you need work experience?
Did you have trouble making the income you needed this summer?
Vector Marketing can help you
with both.
842-8531
$9.30 starting
Internships & Scholarships
now available
VECTOR.
Kansas and Burge Unions hire part-time, hourly for Fall Semester. Many jobs in Food Service, Hospitality, or Varying schedule to Personnel Office. Level 5, Kansas Union Building for job specifics, EOE
tionally disturbed children, adolescents, and fami-
ties that are vulnerable to abuse. Resu-
lated care, minimum 3 years experience providing mental health services to SED children and families in Tacoma. Trace Roach ease submit data with cover letter for position in Bertr. Bert Nash CMCH, 334 Missouri, St.te. 202,
Lawrence, KS 60644. Open until filled. EOE
Need dependable care given for 15 old boy. Refs. required call 832-1205.
NOW HIRING smiling facing in a clean, grease-free environment. Fast food exp. preferred. Apply at MR. GOODCENTS bis and Pastas. 15th and Kassd. Hold. 10:30 m.-11:09 p.m.
OPPORTUNITY TO BE PART OF THE SOLUTION
Innovative grant funded program designed to provide alternatives to psychiatric hospitalization of children. Leavenworth, Atkinson counties needs persons to be on-call for short-term, crisis intervention care to emotionally disturbed children. Quality training and communication skills, ability to be firm and consistent; experience and/or ability to learn to work with children and youth with special education needs; part of treatment team including parents, mental health professionals, SRS workers, school personnel, court services, and others as needed. Nature of job requires a Master's degree. The following part-time positions are available:
Make inquiries to Cheri Schwin, Bert Nash,
614-238-7900, Lawrence KS 66044.
Open until filled. EOE
FOSTER PARENTS to provide short-term out of home care, must be able to be licensed through
"ON-CALL TENDANTS to provide one-on-one supervision in home or foster care.
United Child Development Center, 946 Vermont, is accepting applications for a part-time computer instructor for pre-school children. For more info on the daycare line for接受应用的 applications is September 30.
Part-time counter help, Mon, Wed, Fri, apply in person at the Mail Box, 3115 W 8th suite C.
Sport Officials: Lawrence Parks and Recreational Department is hiring individuals who want to be sport officials for adult volleyball and basketball lades. Must be able to attend training sessions to meet requirements.
Part-time day and evening help wanted. Must be
in person only at Border Dodge, 1520 W. 324rd,
Border Dodge, 1520 W. 324rd.
United Child Development Center is accepting applications for the position of 2-hour rest aides. Applications can be picked up at UCDC, 946 Vermont, Lawrence.
Children home daycare. Full-time openings
and drop-in airstairs. Hrs. 7:00am-3:00pm, M-F
225 Professional Services
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Birthright 943-4821. Free pregnancy testing
Sright 843-4521 Free pregnancy testing.
Macintosh repairs and upgrades
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
TRAFFIC-BOTS
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
For free consultation call
LSAT EXPERTS KAPLAN
Prompt abortion and contraceptive services. Dale L. Clinton M.D. 841-9716.
For free consultation can Rick Frydman, Attorney
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
842-5442
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
United Child Development Center, 946 Vermont has full and part-time openings for ages 1-6; day kindergarten care available. Program is taught by teachers certified. Call 852-3922 for more info.
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor transforms words into accurate pages of letters.
Friendly, Affordable, In-Home Service
The Mac Doctors 842-0848
GRE EXPERTS KAPLAN
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
DONALDG.STROLE
ABSOLUTELY EXCELLENT EDITING! Discussion and thesis paper. No paper too large.
CC Desktop Publishing: Resumes, Cover Letters,
Brochures, Flyers, Term papers, Newsletters.
842-5442
235 Typing Services
WORD PROCESSING & LABOR PRINTING
For all your typing needs
contact the Word Lab.
www.wordlab.com
ProType - fast, reliable service, professional quality
ProType fast, reliable service, professional quality Call today 844-761-0900
X
Word processing, applications, term papers, dis-
turbations, resumes. Editing, completion, rush
work on manuscripts.
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
1982 Yamaha 650 Scae, 200 miles, new battery,
cond. service records, many extra, $130, 760
Absolutely beautiful !^k$1 karat strat en engagement
for $240 eob. Call 943-852-6700 value $800.00 selling
for $400 eb. Call 943-852-6700
Austro Daimler "TEAM" Racing Bike. 16 cm
weight, never raced, waits 750-800 hp, 720-832 eBHP,
women, never raced, waits 750-800 hp, 720-832 eBHP,
Full Clearance: All adult tapes on sale $12.36 and
900-895, or Mirror
Video Too, 1910 Haskell, 841-764.
Beds, desks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
908 Mass.
For sale Yakima car top carrier with bike tray.
Call 841-9506.
powerbook 180 4/120
new in box $2499.99
Sith-Corona typewriter, 3 yrs. old. Excel. cond.
Calif. typewriter, 4:30 pm. Aks for Sue. will take
learning class.
Quantrill's Flea Market
open every Friday, Sat. & Sun
10AM-5PM 811 New Hampshire
842-6616 Downstown
Suzuki GS559 great low price. Call Mark 842-9383.
waterbed, queen size baffled, waveless, heated good condition $100.0 e.b. call 841-6782.
**wedding ring set.** 1/4 karat round retail
surrounded by marquis & baguettes. Retail value
$200, selling for $200 obo. Call Lis 865-2344.
Yamaha Svitches for sale. Please call 842-5861.
340 Auto Sales
'79 SAAB, good shape ATPSunroof 1490 abo. 842-7922 Alison
86 Sunda GSXR-750 YoshiPipe and much more.
2500 BOB Call at John 832-0299.
1982 Audi 4000 S reliable, good condition HMI
$1,000 a.b.o.
1860 Volvo DL, great cond., new brews, new tires,
ML pass, pass; reserving 2300 h. b call 841-290-7720.
Sale- '78 W Rabbit, body damaged but runs -$400
Call 749-2025
360 Miscellaneous
Bookcases, desks, chaira, IBM typewriter, copier,
telephone system, and miscellaneous items. To
obtain a copy, call 212-850-3474.
A
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
3d卫床 2dr apt for rent Campus Place Very close female room. Smoke free. Call 842-600-9001
18 pts. abc. water & water used. Sept. pd. on leave
route. 18 pts. Call after 7 pm and leave a
route. 841-8177
Renta
WASHER & DRYER
For Only $40 a Month
Over the Edge
No Deposit
Delta Corporation
842-8428
Naismith Halls' services give students the competitive edge.
24 hr. computer center
Front door bus service
Fitness room
- Free Maintenance
* GE Two Speed, Heavy Duty,
Large Capacity
Dine anytime meals
NAISMITH Hall
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
The best place to live at KU is in KC!!!
---
764-1471
119th &l-35
1800 Naismith Drive (913)843-8559
JEFFERSON
PLACE
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS 2040 Heatherwood
*2 Bedroom, 1 l/2 Bath $425
*3 Bedroom, 2 Bath $550
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
Call Now!843-4754
Room for rent, half from campus, very
affordable. Call for details, any time. hp 832-323-7
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
- By phone: 864-4356
How to schedule an ad:
430 Roommate Wanted
Choice room in large quiet residence. Uuillides paid
private bath, private bath on bus route. near Dilons
on 2xrd.
Rim. avail. for fem. in 2 story townhouse. Close to rent relied贿款. Leave to May 31, 749-723.
Extra nice and quiet, 2 bedroom apt. including central air, dishwasher and low utilities. No pets. $325 Spanish Crest Apartment 841-6868
Ads phone number in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
119 Stuart Fluffier FT
Looking for a place to live? Try cooperative living at the Sunflower House. Low rent, utilities, pdns, washier/derm. Come check us out at 1406 Tennessee, or call 811-0484.
- Dy Mail: 119 Sturfer Flint, Lawrence. KS. 66445
Female non-smoker to share duplex, three bedroom, washer/dryer, on KU bus route. 749-415.
Female roommate(s) needed to share 2B, 2H, brass, on KU bus route. $283.68/month +/-
usils. 841-415.
Stop by the Kansan 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.
Responsible, non-smoking female roomate to
share a furl. 2 BR kitchen $118 + 1/4 utils. Call 843-7099.
Responsible roommate to share upscale child Cars
Oks $225; utils Call after 843-7099.
Cars Oks $225; utils Call after 843-7099.
Classified Information and order form
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Vise 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 agile lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
**Refine:**
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 cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
Pollutants
Number of insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Classifications
Cost per line per day
1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30+X
2.05 1.55 1.05 .65 .75 .50
1.90 1.15 1.05 .70 .65 .45
1.85 1.55 .75 .65 .60 .40
1.75 .60 .75 .60 .60 .35
305 for sales
340 auto sales
360 miscellaneous
140 lost & found
205 help wanted
235 professional services
235 proba services
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | | |
3 | | | | | |
4 | | | | | |
5 | | | | | |
379 want to buy
465 for rent
438 roommate wasted
Name: _
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper___
Total ad cost:___ Classification:___
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 charming your ad:
Expiration Date:
MasterCard
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66405
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
DOWN IN FRONT!
At the Vatican's movie theater
THE PROVEN LOW PRICE LEADER!
BY NOT-FOR-PROFIT GROUPS!
FRESH GROUND BEEF
Family Pack 98¢ lb.
HEAD LETTUCE
39¢
Regular or Light COORS
24/12-oz. Cans
$1099
BAKERY SPECIAL
Our Special Touch CREME CAKES $188
18.75 oz.
KRAFT AMERICAN SINGLES
$169
12 oz. Pkg.
KRUNCHERS POTATO CHIPS
All Varieties 6.5 oz. Bag
69¢
Banquet Frozen DINNERS
All Varieties 98¢
9 to 11-oz. Pkg.
Time and time again not-for-profit groups prove Food 4 Less to be the low price leader in Lawrence! Our everyday low prices are often lower than other stores' ad prices! And with hundreds of Green Tag Specials every time you shop-no other store can match the savings you get by shopping at Food 4 Less.
•2525 Iowa Street in Lawrence, Kansas Fresh Daily Bakery!
These and more Green Tag Specials in effect thru Sept. 28, 1993. Limit rights reserved.
★ AND SHOP FOOD 4 LESS FOR FREE!
No membership fees or limited hours!
Check out the savings in our value pack section!
★ OPEN 24 HOURS
-everyday! ★
IF YOU LIKE SAVING AT FOOD 4 LESS TELL A FRIEND!
FRESH
NO MORE SOUR Cream & Onion
Krunchers!
Potato Chips
Great Taste of Real Onion
with Rich Sour Cream Flavor
No preservatives
NO MORE SOUR Cream & Onion
Krunchers!
Potato Chips
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CAMPUS: The University begins to make its case in the employee status hearing for graduate teaching assistants. Page 5.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103, NO.24
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING; 864-4358
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
student reported missing since Saturday
Last seen by roommate before game
By Scott J. Anderson Kansan staff writer
Family and friends are seeking help to find a KU student who has not been seen since Saturday.
Rob Johnson, 22, of 1737 Ohio St.
Apt. 12, was reported missing by his
roommate and cousin, Kyle Johnson,
on Saturday, according to Lawrence
police reports.
Rob Johnson was on his way to the Kansas football game when Kyle Johnson last saw him, the report said.
Kyle Johnson said he was very worried about his cousin and that his disan-
PETER SMITH
Rob Johnson
"We played tennis a few weeks ago, and we shot the breeze for about 15 minutes every now and then," Kelly Johnson said. "But he was busy being a GTA, and I was busy trying to graduate."
Rob Johnson is a graduate teaching assistant in math. His step-father, Mike Jaworski, said Rob had not taught a class or attended his own classes since Thursday.
Jaworski said Rob Johnson was supposed to meet his parents for dinner after the game. But when they arrived at his apartment, Rob Johnson and his car were not there.
"We're looking all over for him." Jaworski said from El Dorado. "This
is very unusual for Rob. We don't know what to expect at this point."
Jawsowski said the family had no indication that Rob Johnson was depressed before his disappearance.
depressed before his disappearance. Police officials said yesterday that Rob Johnson and his car, a yellow 1978 Buick Skyhawk, had been reported to the National Crime Information Computer, a database that allows law enforcement officials to identify and recover stolen or missing property or lost people.
One student said he thought he saw Rob Johnson walking near the scholarship halls Tuesday.
"I think I saw him, but I'm doubting
myself about it now that I know he's missing," said Angel Garcia, Olathe sophomore. "If that wasn't him, I sure hope they find him."
The residents of Stephenson Scholarship Hall, where Rob Johnson used to live, also are involved in the search. They have made 200 to 300 fliers that they plan to post on campus to alert people to his disappearance.
Mark Tregellas, Pratt senior, was Rob Johnson's roommate at Stephenson for a year and a half up until this semester.
"I talked to Rob about a week before," Tregellas said. "We were going to go see a movie that Saturday. I called Saturday, and Kyle said he had
left. Kyle called again on Sunday and said he had reported him missing. The whole thing is quite surprising."
Tregellas said he had no indication that Rob Johnson was having problems.
"He was teaching that math class and kind of getting a kick out of that," he said.
Jaworski encouraged anyone who might have information about Johnson's disappearance to call Lawrence police. Meanwhile, his family and friends are anxious for his return.
"We're just waiting," Tregellas said. "That's about all we can do right now."
Storm damage leaves University with cleanup bill
Crews' efforts to clear campus debris may take $10,000, extra removal time
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
Left with a loss of nearly $10,000 worth of trees on campus and an overwhelming amount of debris, campus and city officials are still being blown away by the damage and the ensuing cleanup demands left by Tuesday's storm.
"This was a messy storm more than anything," said Mike Richardson, director of facilities operations.
Cleaning up campus after a typical storm normally takes about one day for facilities operations workers. Richardson said.
"This was unusual," he said.
"Providing there are no more storms, we should finish by the end of the week."
Crews have been hauling trees, branches and debris left in all areas of campus since the storm, Richardson said.
"That's not even including the money the street maintenance division in Public Works will spend," he said.
Tom Wilkerson, assistant director of Lawrence Parks and Recreation, said cost of the cleanup — including extra personnel, overtime pay and equipment — could top $50,000.
Street maintenance officials could not be reached for comment.
Wilkerson said the department answered damage reports from north Lawrence to 28th Street.
"The storm was so much more widespread than others," he said. "We've had 200 reports of affected areas by the storm and they haven't stopped coming in."
Wilkerson said property owners should not expect city crews to pick up downed trees in their lawns.
"They can either hire a private contractor to come take it away or bundle the branches to put in the trash." he said.
City crews will pick up trees or
"...we were fortunate—it could have been a lot worse."
Mike Richardson Director of facilities operations
branches that are lying in streets or the areas between curbs and sidewalks.
Wilkerson estimated cleanup efforts in Lawrence would take two to three weeks.
Larry Brock, division superintendent for Kansas Power and Light in Lawrence, said 40 extra trucks were brought in from surrounding communities to help service downed power lines.
Brock said the combination of trees, electrical wires, and heavy winds resulted in 8,500 Lawrence residents without power for several hours after the storm.
KPL crews had restored electricity to most residents' homes by yesterday afternoon.
"Some trees that did not fall during the storm are falling now, leaving us with more of a mess," he said. "We've been efficient, though, with jumping in and restoring power when that happens."
Crews still will be trimming trees, replacing downed poles and wires the rest of the week, Brock said.
Though the storm left its mark on campus and in Lawrence, Richardson thought Lawrence was lucky.
"We had high winds and a ton of rain, but we were fortunate — it could have been a lot worse."
J. B. C.
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
Bob Abbott, facilities operations employee, cuts off a tree limb at a University-owned house at 1043 Indiana St.. The tree was knocked over by the storm Tuesday and took down a power box disconnecting the phone, cable and electricity to the building.
KU,relax: Drayton behind bars
Former Kansas football player captured in Florida
By Scott J. Anderson Kansan staff writer
Former Kansas football player Kenny Drayton was captured yesterday in St. Petersburg, Fla., 10 days after he escaped from an Arizona prison.
A team of U.S. marshals and police officers arrested Drayton at a residence in St. Petersburg. The arrest stemmed from a tip from someone who saw Drayton featured on the television program "America's Most Wanted" on Tuesday night, said Mike Potter, spokesperson for the U.S. Marshals Service in Fla. Fla.
Potter said Drayton did not resist arrest. He is being held in the Pinellas County Jail in St. Petersburg. A hearing will be held today to confirm Drayton's identity. Authorities in Arizona said yesterday that Drayton said he would challenge being returned to Arizona by refusing to sign an extradition waiver.
Drayton was convicted in Bisbee, Ariz., on Sept. 10 on 14 felony charges, including rape, sodomy, kidnapping and armed robbery. He faces a possible sentence of 305 years in the Arizona State Penitentiary.
On Sept. 12, Drayton and three other convicts escaped from the Cochise County Jail in Bisbee. One of the men overpowered a guard and took his keys and radio. He then released the other three men. The four went to the jail's garage, pried open a door and fled on foot.
One of the men was captured in Arizona on Sept. 14. The other two are still at large, said Carol Capas of the Cochise County Sheriff Department.
The Florida marshal's office could not confirm that Drayton had family in Florida. College football media guides list Drayton's hometown as Homestead, a suburb of St. Petersburg.
At the time of the escape, Lawrence and KU police thought that Drayton might return to Lawrence. Fliers were posted in residence and scholarship halls and in campus buildings urging students to be on the lookout for Drayton.
"We're glad to hear that he's been caught, and we hope it helps put people on campus at ease again," said Sgt. Rose Rozmiarek of KU police.
Drayton was a wide receiver for the Jayhawks from 1988 to 1991. He was named an honorable mention to the 1991 All-Big Eight team. Potter said Drayton's mother told marshals that the Tampa Bay Buccaneers had invited Drayton to training camp twice.
Drayton did not graduate from the University. He was last enrolled in Spring 1992.
Drayton had been charged with two misdemeanors in Lawrence. A charge of theft was dismissed in 1991 because of a lack of evidence. In 1992, he was convicted of taking a car without permission but without the intent to steal it. He was ordered to pay restitution and served probation.
INSIDE
Bring on the night
Disc jockeys at KJHK keep company in the wee hours of the morning with caffeine, good music and a few weird listeners.
Page 3.
TOMMY WALKER
Clinton presents health care program
He discussed the proposal with Democratic and Republican leaders at the White House before outlining his goals for Congress and the country during a nationally broadcast speech.
WASHINGTON — President Clinton proposed a massive make-over of the nation's health care system yesterday and said the country must guarantee lifelong medical care for every American regardless of income or well-being.
The Associated Press
"This is a good beginning," said Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan. "I would hope in the next six to eight months we'll have a bill."
But other Republicans grumbled that government was taking on more than it could handle.
Polls show most Americans believe the system needs to be fixed but are uncertain about the best way to change it.
The administration's plan, which is the
product of eight months of work under the direction of Hillary Rodham Clinton, is based on the premise that it can extend health care coverage to the 37 million uninsured while shrinking the nation's $900 billion medical bill.
Health care costs are rising at more than twice the rate of other services and represent one-seventh of all U.S. spending.
Clinton's plan would require all employees to pay 80 percent of the average health premium for their workers. Employees would pay the rest. Small businesses and low-income workers could apply for subsidies.
Giant insurance-purchasing pools called health alliances would be created in each state to negotiate with doctors, hospitals and insurers. Consumers would buy coverage through the alliances.
Since 1912, when Theodore Roosevelt called for national health insurance, many attempts have been made to enact universal coverage. All of them have failed.
Growth in the government's two biggest health programs — Medicare and Medicaid — would be reduced by $238 billion over five years.
Questions about how Clinton would pay for the program lingered even as he announced his plan. He is certain to seek a sizable boost in cigarette taxes, but it is unclear how big. A tax on corporations that opt out of the health alliances and set up their own programs is another possibility.
"If you read the history of health care, it's like people ... passing each other in the night." Clinton said. "Now you've finally got everybody in the country focused on it. We can seize it and move forward if we can maintain this determination to stay in touch with the real problems of our people and the spirit that we have now of working together."
Bill of health
Basic elements of the Clinton health care plan:
Under federal supervision, each state would create one or more alliances, or "buying clubs," that would negotiate with doctors and hospitals to provide health care for all members of the alliance. Every family or individual would be required to join an alliance, which collects premiums and pays doctors and hospitals.
By preliminary estimates, the plan would cost about $70 to a month for a basic family policy and $30 for an individual. An employer would pay an additional $280 a month for a family plan and $120 for an individual. The basic rule is that an employer would pay 80 percent of the average monthly premium of all plans available in an area.
The government would subsidize the premiums of individuals or families whose income is not at least 11/2 times the poverty level.
(1)
Source: The Associated Press
KANSAN
2
Thursday, September 23,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Menhattan Murder Mystery G* (4*:30) ; 7:10, 9:40
The Fugitive P*10*-12 (*4*:10) ; 7:05, 9:55
True Romance P*10*-12 (*7*:15, 9:50
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- INDIAN SUMMER
Fri., Sept. 24, 7 & 9:30 PM
Sat., Sept. 25, 7 & 9:30 PM
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Student Travel Experts
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ON CAMPUS
- Railpasses Issued
Tickets $2.50, midnight $3.
Free admission with SUA Movie Card.
For information, call 864.SHOW.
- Worldwide Adventure Tours
Canterbury House will celebrate Mass at noon today in Danforth Chapel.
The Office of Study Abroad will discuss opportunities for students to study in Spanish-speaking countries at an informational meeting at 4 p.m. today in 4046 Wescoe,
KU Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at Pparls A, B and C in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Erik Lindsley at 841-4585.
Council Travel
1634 Orrington Ave
Evanston, IL 60901
InterVarsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call David Zimmerman at 846-7117.
KU Chapter of the American Chemical Society will sponsor a chemistry student-faculty mixer at 7 tonight in 3005 Malot Hall. For more information, call Erich Steinle at 865-1638.
University Chess Society will meet at 7 tonight at the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Nathan at 842-0049.
1-800-475-5070
LesBiGaysOK will meet at 7:30
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will conduct a Catholic scripture study at 7:30 tonight in the center, 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call 843-0357.
tonight at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union.
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will have swimming practice at 7:30 tonight in Robinson Center. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
Jayhawkerv Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call John Dale at 864-1115.
Amnesty International will meet for a letter writing session at 8tonight in the Glass Onion, 624 W. 12th.
Icthus Christian Outreach will meet at 8:30 tonight at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mark Winton at 843-2260 or Noel Storey at 749-5848.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 tonight in 130 Robinson. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445.
WEATHER
St. Louis: 70°/55°
Weather around the country:
Atlanta '92/66'
Chicago '65/47'
Houston '93/71'
Miami '88/77'
Minneapolis '67/46'
Phoenix '100/74'
Salt Lake City '74/46'
Seattle '73/48'
Wichita: 70'/544"
Tulsa: 78'/65'
TODAY
Tomorrow Saturday
Sun
Cloudy and cool NW winds at 10-15 mph
Sunny
High: 66*
Low: 50*
Partly cloudy and cool NE winds at 5-10 mph High: 67' Low: 49' Clearing and cool NE winds at 5-10 mph High: 70' Low: 52'
KANSAN
Source: Gregg Potter, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
Clip and Save with Daily Kansan Coupons !!!
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.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 23,1993
3
Students doctor nation's health
Class project sent to Clinton By Tracl Carl Kops on staff writer
Mark Slyter said $50 a day would keep the doctor paid.
But Slyter's idea was not adopted by President Clinton, who unveiled the new national health care plan last night.
Slyter was one of 26 KU students who put together a national health care reform package and sent it to Washington last semester. The plan required everyone to pay $50 a month for insurance guaranteeing health care.
Carol Roscoe, White House assistant to the president, sent Slyter a letter thanking him for the proposal. She said in the letter that the proposal would be sent to advisors for review.
The students put the plan together as a final project last semester for their Work Roles in Health and Medicine class.
After reviewing the plan, Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, suggested that the students send copies to Washington D.C. So they submitted their proposal to Rep. Jim Slattery, D-Kan. and Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan.
Jim McLean, Slattery's press secretary, said Slattery decided the proposal deserved to be sent to Hillary Clinton's health care task force.
"I was very impressed with the extensive research and analysis contained in the final proposal," Slattery wrote.
Yockey said he was impressed with the students' ideas on how to pay for health care.
"It was really a pretty good project for a group of students who had no experience with health care," he said.
Slattery, who is a member of a House health and environment subcommittee, has worked closely with the national health care reform plan.
Slyter, an exercise science major, said the students' reform package did not increase taxes like Clinton's plan
would. The students' plan is regulated by the private sector and paid for by individuals. Clinton's plan is regulated by government and paid for by businesses.
"We brought it down to the consumer level because we thought it was too much of a burden on businesses," Slytter said.
With the students' plan everyone would pay $50 a month but deductibles would be based on income levels. For example, a student who lives on $200 a month may have a deductible of $5. The students' plan was a base plan, Slyter said, and those who wanted more coverage could pay more than $50 a month.
The two plans are similar in that they both include universal coverage
and mandated benefits. Slyter said.
After studying health care plans from 10 countries and 11 states and 16 other proposals for national health care, the group modeled their plan after Germany's health-care system.
Slyer said the students dealt with the fact that increased technology was keeping people alive longer and creating huge health costs.
Unlike Clinton, the students could address the tough issues of rationing health care and putting a cap on spending because they did not have to worry about getting re-elected.
"Iguarantee no politician will touch on that," Slyter said. "These are going to be hard decisions to make, but they will have to be addressed."
KU enrollment falls from 1992
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
Following a trend throughout the Big Eight schools, the University's official Fall 1993 enrollment dropped by a small percentage, according to the 20th-day headcount report released yesterday.
The Department of Educational Services compiled the report on Sept. 20, the 20th day of classes. The report indicated a decrease of 274 students on the Lawrence campus, from last fall's 25,160 to Fall 1993's 24,886—a loss of about 1 percent
Decreases of more than 10 percent were noted in three professional schools: business, engineering and journalism.
For all campuses, including the University of Kansas Medical Center, this year's total enrollment of 28,862 was 299 students less than last fall's total. It was the first decrease in total enrollment in six years for all campuses, representing a 1 percent loss.
With the rest of the Big Eight schools experiencing similar decreases, Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, said the University had anticipated the decrease in total enrollment, possibly due to a sluggish national economy.
"You have to look at the size of the University as a whole when considering these numbers," Meyen said. "If you look at a variation of 299 students, that's a very small variation."
The Graduate School had an increase of 2 percent, the largest percentage among the 14 KU schools.
Falling off their Fall 1992 enrollments, the Schools of Business, Engineering and Journalism saw the most significant drops of all the schools.
Joseph Bauman, dean of business, said the nation's poor economy and the school's steps to limit enrollment during the late 1980s had contributed to the decrease.
"We set the size of the school below demand when demand was at its peak in the late '80s," Bauman said. "We've now taken some steps in improving the attractiveness of sophomore-level business classes to recruit more students."
Job cutbacks in the defense industry along with the economy had led to the recent continuing decrease in the School of Engineering's enrollment, said Carl Locke, dean of engineering.
Changing enrollment
The schools of business, engineering and Business journalism have seen some big changes Engineering in enrollment in the last few years. Journalism
'89-'90 '90-'91 '91-'92 '92-'93
Percent change
10
5.2%
1.6%
-0.1%
-3.2%
-9.5%
-14.4%
-7.4%
-7.7%
-11.4%
-11.3%
KJHK DJs turn the tunes
KJHK Radio station's announcers find fun late at night
Winnie the Pooh's voice drifted over the airwaves on KU's alternative radio station.
By Christoph Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
At 1:45 a.m. Tuesday, KJHK jockey Suzy Sturm, Evergreen, Colo., junior, leamed back in her office chair and cued a record.
Source: 20th Day Headcount
"Is anybody at home?" the honey-loving bear said.
Sturm said she sympathized with Winnie.
"Sometimes I feel like nobody is listening," she said.
Despite the hours, Sturm said she did not have a hard time staying awake.
Sturm is one of many DJs who work the late night and early morning shifts at 90.7 FM KJHK and to entertain themselves during the wee hours of the night.
"There's too much to do," she said. "I think around two in the morning it gets a little tiring but not boring."
Ian Ritter, Overland Park sophomore, said there was enough work to keep busy, but he and fellow DJ Rob Wood, Overland Park junior, still needed something to get them through their 1 to 3 a.m. Friday shift.
"It tends to stray away from mainstream, and that's were it gets all of its power and individual," she said.
"We overload ourselves with caffeine and cigarettes, which causes us to get kind of wacky," he said.
Ritter said he and Wood tried a different gourmet coffee each week with a coffee maker from Ritter's roommate.
Although the coffee and cigarettes keep them awake, Ritter said, he and Wood often have panic attacks from the nicotine and caffeine.
Disc jockey Ian Ritter, Overland Park sophomore, hosts the Free Jazz show on KJHK.
"You're trying to finish your cigarette and coffee before the song finishes, and that causes even more stress," he said.
To keep themselves entertained in the middle of the night, Ritter said, he and Wood often would sing and burp on the air, and not necessarily in that order.
"We haven't done any farting yet, but if the possibility arises, we might do it," he said.
"We didn't want anybody throwing their radios away," he said.
Wood said he and Ritter limited their singing on the air.
They also danced on the hardwood floor of the cramped control room if the song was good enough, Wood said.
Ritter said he and Wood once had an argument on whether or not they should play a song. So at 2:30 a.m. they had a call-in to decide what to play.
Only one person called and voted for the song to be played.
"We're just generally being weird to keep ourselves up." Wood said.
But the strangest thing was two drunk students who walked into the station and requested the "70s hit 'Shaft' by Isaac Hayes, Ritter said.
"We couldn't find it so we played 'Superfly' for them, and they seemed satisfied," he said.
Minorities' committee draws fire Claims of inattention by University made
By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer
Even Barbara Ballard, associate dean of student life, said she initially did not know the purpose of her committee.
"We're trying to figure out exactly what we're doing, too," said Ballard, head of the Study Group/Coordination of Programs for Minority Students Committee.
The committee was appointed last month in response to last year's African American Student Concerns Task Force, said Ballard, who was a member of the task force. She said it was appointed by Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, to fulfill the task force's request for a plan to implement its recommendations.
But Carlos Fleming, a former member of the task force, said that the committee's formation was too different from the original recommendation and that the University was stalling real action.
Ballard said the purpose of the committee was to coordinate the actions of different offices on campus that recruited minority students. She said the offices then could work together to bring minority students to the University to avoid overlapping efforts.
She also said such coordination would help with retention as well as recruitment of minority students.
"After we get them here, how do we keep them?" she said. "That's what these offices do."
But Fleming, Shaker Heights, Ohio, senior, said the committee was a tactic by the administration to delay substantive progress on other measures of the task force. He said larger issues, such as moving the Office of Minority Affairs higher in the administration, were being ignored.
"The big problem that we've had was that the administration always seems to postpone action for future generations."
the executive vice chancellor's timetable on the task force's request said the committee's job would be to "further review the organizational structure and reporting lines of the Office of Minority Affairs."
Fleming also said he protested the lack of undergraduate students on the committee. The 11-member committee is made up only of office heads and faculty.
"Certain things transcend color lines," he said. "If you want to help students, you go to the students."
Ballard disagreed about the lack of students on the committee. She said the department heads were the ones who controlled policy and that each one knew what its patrons wanted.
"We're looking at offices that provide services," she said. "Students don't head offices."
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, disagreed with Fleming about the Office of Minority Affairs. He said the committee should not review the office's position.
"The best place for it to accomplish its mission is with the dean of student life in the department of student affairs." Ambler said.
Chicago comes to Lawrence
Vienna Beef
Chicago's hot dog.
V
Come try one At the McDonald's in Wal-Mart 3300 S.Iowa
McDonald's
What you want
is what you get.
7195122
23rd & Louisiana
THE MALLS
The University of Kansas
HOMECOMING 1993
KU VS. ISU
Recycle the Cyclones!
Parade applications available in the SUA office.
KU VS. ISU
Entry Categories:
- Marching Bands
- Banner Signs
- Float Deadline for entry applications is Friday, Oct. 1 at 5:00pm.
Entry Applications & Deadlines:
- Marching Bands and Banners- Deadline for entry applications is Friday, Oct. 8 at 5:00pm.
- All entry applications should be submitted to the SUA Office, Level 4, Kansas Union. For more information call 864-3477
Required Parade Meetings
- Wednesday, Oct. 6 at 5:00pm in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union, Level 5. All FLOAT entries must have a representative present for rules and safety review by the KU Police. An absence from this meeting could result in disqualifications from the parade or loss of points.
70
5
4
Thursday, September 23,1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
A hearing to decide if graduate teaching assistants are public employees began Monday and will continue until the middle of next week.
THE BACKGROUND
GTAs' efforts to form a union are awaiting the outcome of the hearing, which has been delayed for more than a year and a half. If they are ruled to be public employees, they may form a union, something the GTAs claim will help them get better pay and health and day care benefits. The University is arguing that GTAs are students and that being a GTA is a learning experience.
THE OPINION
GTAs, University must work to prevent union
GTAs and University officials: keep picket lines, bargaining tables and strikes out of our classrooms. A GTA union would be a bigger charade than the delay of this week's hearing process to determine GTAs' status as employees.
Not that GTAs do not have legitimate concerns worthy of addressing. GTAs teach nearly half of all freshmen and sophomore-level courses. They nearly have all of the responsibilities of professors, and the University should give them comparable compensation.
But a union is not the best way to achieve this goal. It sets up a "us vs. them" mentality that will hinder relations with administrators, not help them. The high turnover in GTAs also makes organizing a union difficult. Forming a union would waste more time than the hearings already have.
The only positive aspect of this year-and-a-half hearing process is that it has raised awareness of the GTAs plight. And the raised awareness has helped. Soon after the hearing process began, a full tuition fee waiver was given to GTAs, which was one of the original reasons they had for forming a union.
GTAs: while you have the University's attention, use it. Administrators: end the stalemate that has halted progress for two years. It is time that the GTAs get the pay and benefits they deserve for their invaluable work. Both parties need to work for negotiations, not isolation.
TERRILYN McCORMICK FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Duck adoption is fun supports a good cause
It is time to adopt your ducks!
The Great American Rubber Duck Race is once again coming to Lawrence. The event sees thousands of yellow rubber ducks floating down the Kansas River racing for prizes for their adoptive parents.
Human participants adopt a duck for $5 with all proceeds going to benefit Cottonwood, a local nonprofit organization providing services to people with mental retardation or other developmental disabilities.
The event will be held Saturday, Sept. 25, at noon. Adoptive parents should gather on the promenade behind the Riverfront Plaza Factory Outlets, Sixth and New Hampshire streets, shortly before noon.
Adoption papers can be picked up at local merchants including Dillons and Mercantile Bank or at Cottonwood, 2801 W. 31st St. More information is available through the duck hotline, 843-DUCK.
Remember, you are benefiting an excellent charity, watching thousands of rubber ducks float down the river and giving yourself the chance to win prizes. Now get out there and adopt your ducks!
DAVID BURGETT FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
KC TRAUER, Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE Managing editors
TOMEBLEN
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
Assistant to the editor ... J.R. Clairborne
News ... Stacy Friedman
Editorial ... Terrilyn McComick
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Kristi Fogler
Photo ... Klip Chin, Renee Knoebe
Features ... Erra Wolfe
Graphics ... John Paul Fogel
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STUMO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ...Ed Schagar
Regional Sales mgr ..Jennifer Perrier
National sales mgr ..Jennifer Evenson
Co-op sales mgr ..Blythe Focht
Production mgrs ..Jennifer Blowey
Kcite Burgess
Marketing director ..Shelly McConnell
Creative director ..Brian Fuoco
Classified mgr ..Jance 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 homeetown, or faculty or staff position. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be
photographer. You can receive the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Stauffer Flint Hall.
MAXEELY Chicago Tribune
CHRISTOPHER
BOSNIA
"The Fall of American diplomacy."
"The full weight of American diplomacy."
Car dealers, their tricks make life difficult for human beings
Today we are going to talk about growing up. This is an interesting topic, in that we thought of it exactly two seconds ago.
First of all, we must say that we are going to talk about growing up from a human perspective. This is important because we are not going to talk about growing up from, say, a mayfly's perspective. Which is even more interesting because mayflies live by the saying "one day at a time." This is quite a literal translation because mayflies are notorious for living for exactly one day. Really. Mayflies are born, graduate from college, marry a mayflyette, get a job, have kids, retire to Florida and die - all within 24 hours. And we thought we had rough days.
STAFF COLUMNIST
So let us move on to growing up, the human way. There are a number of important stages that a human must pass through to become "grown up." One is to drink as many as 21 shots of pure-grain alcohol at a local bar and then wake up the next afternoon with a Whopper, an apple pie and a burrito
TODD
PUNTNEY
displayed artistically and digested on one's clothing.
But there are other stages that are not so pretty. One stage in particular is downright nasty. It is so terrible, in fact, that if we weren't human, we would opted to skip this stage and move right along to death. You know what stage we are talking about: buying a new car.
Nothing can strike fire into the hearts of humans like car dealers. Even hardened humans have a tough time dealing with them. And this can be directly attributed to the fact that car dealers smell like black licorice.
Last week, we had the distinct pleasure of passing through this developmental stage. Let us relate our very interesting and horrifying car-dealer anecdote:
CAR DEALER: Hi. This is a very nice car you are looking at. (PAUSE) Do you know what high balling is? Low balling? Can you pick up on the physical signs of someone lying to you?
AUTHOR: Huh?
CAR DEALER; Good. Now, see this car? I could give it to you for a couple thousand less than what the sticker says. But since you seem like a nice-kind-of-guy-going-through-a-developmental-stage-who-wants-his-mommy person, I will let you have it for exactly $2,189.61 more because, frankly, I can do that, you wouldn't know the difference, and I smell like black licorice.
AUTHOR: Huh?
CAR DEALER: Good. Now, your total bill comes to three jillion dollars, which includes a small fee for my yacht in the Ozarks and a few thousand bucks for servicing the nation's
debt. Any questions? Well, we sincerely thank you for being a sucker and letting us fulfill our motto, which is "Milk the customer for all he's worth — and then some." See you later, and remember not to report us to any federal or state regulatory agencies.
AUTHOR: Huh?
This is a very typical scene. Car dealers stun their victims through the sheer force of bad breath. This happens all over the country because normal humans cannot withstand such power. People do not know what they are doing once they are under a car dealer's spell. That is evident by the large numbers of Pintos and Pacers on our roads today.
However, do not be ashamed for fitting under the category "You Are A Sucker." It is just part of a normal developmental step that culminates with being a "Grown-Up Sucker."
Mayflies have it easy.
Todd Puntney is a Manhattan senior major ing in Journalism
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Lewis column offensive to half of readership
In regards to Will Lewis' column "Male seeks an activist a mother could love" (Sept. 15), I have only this to say to him—are you on drugs or are you just naturally deficient?
It's bad enough that the Kansan gives Fred Phelps so much coverage, but now it's actually publishing bublerings from any little hick that sends in a column full of half-wit, inconsiderate trash that offends at least half of the world's population. Why don't you set up a weekly neo-Nazi skinhead corner you you're at it? Perhaps you've forgotten that half your readers just happen to be female? Are you that desperate for articles? Have some self respect! And get real while you're at it!
Isabel Villalon New Orleans law student
Laws, rules of Kansas and KU not the same
In a Sept. 14 editorial, the University Daily Kansaw drew our attention to the sodomy laws in Kansas that prohibit certain kinds of sexual behavior. According to the Kansaan, "It is ludicrous that in the late twentieth century there are puritanical laws in Kansas still in effect, and utilized, to dictate morality between consenting adults."
The Kansan is, of course, quite correct. Laws that forbid certain kinds of sexual contact between consenting adults are ludicrous. However, you failed to point out the positive features of these Kansas laws. After all, at KU there are also rules, recently put into effect, which prohibit romantic and sexual relationships between consenting adults when those individuals are faculty and their students. These rules were simply issued from some throne in Strong Hall, with no attempt at consultation or discussion with those who
would be affected by those rules. The sodomy laws of the state of Kansas, on the contrary, were passed by a democratically elected legislature. Somehow it seems excessively harsh for the Kansan to criticize the state of Kansas for laws whose manner of promulgation is distinctly superior to the establishment of the very same kind of rules at the institution at which the Kansan is located.
Fairness of laws can't be based on precedence
Don Marquis Professor of philosophy
It is interesting to note that in Mr. Hamby's assessment of the "philosophical pillars" of our country, homosexuals have no human rights. Hamby writes, "In both Judeo-Christian and Western thought, the practice of homosexuality is considered to be a deviant practice."
First of all, "Western" thought is often believed to originate with ancient Greek men, who themselves engaged in homosexual acts. It also is important to note that 200 years ago, under a Judeo-Christian understanding of democracy, Africans were subhuman and women had no civil rights.
Both of these realities often were supported by the Bible. I wonder if Mr. Hamby would support the re-enactment of that kind of democracy since, like discrimination against homosexuals, it can be supported with a few verses from the Bible.
An existing law is not necessarily just. History has shown that precedents and traditions are not always the means by which we determine what is right and wrong. It is time for antiquated sodomy laws to be revoked. I sincerely hope that our country is far beyond the "Because the Bible Tells Me So" method of determining justice.
Sarah Deer
Wichita junior
Column misrepresent Western society originis
I would never have expected a college student to insist that, according to the history of Western thought, homosexuality is deviant. I imagine that Lance Hamby's recent editorial caused quite a few spins in the graves of the early thinkers. Plato and Socrates, the very founders of Western culture, used homosexual love as a starting point from which to develop metaphysical theory in their teachings. Other celebrated Westerners who were openly homosexual or bisexual include Alexander the Great, Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, Edward II, James I, Christopher Marlowe and at least six popes. I am not trying to deny the fact that history has been plagued with homophobia, but to say that heterosexuals have always held a monopoly on Western thought, Christianity and democracy itself is to assert a tremendous lie.
David Webb Roswell, Ga., senior
Extreme right's ideas hinder liberal education
I do not usually take the time to reproach such ignorant slander against the University as appeared on the back page of Monday's Kansan. I do not have a problem with Christians, I do not have a problem with Christian student organizations. I do not have a problem with you running the advertisement. Those are things we must allow in the name of liberty.
I do have a problem with the extreme right's attempt to establish an agenda at the University that seeks to take the liberation of our minds from a liberal arts education. In fact, it is a near faux pas in today's climate to require only Western Civilization courses, which ignore the wealth of other world cultures. The non-western culture course requirement only half-heartedly addresses this question.
Exploring Christianity outside of the Biblical literalists' perspective is not a "subtle attack on Christianity." It is a fortright attack that can create an even greater faith in the true believer or can liberate the individual to question just what exactly the truth is.
Faith, based on a set of "truths" gained by fear, indoctrination and ignorance is no faith for the truly righteous. And indeed, the subjectivity of truth as revealed through questioning and study tends to drive one mad at times. But it is in no way contradictory to the teachings of a man called Joshua ben Joseph (later given the Greek name of Christ), whose questioning of the religious elite was the center of his existence.
Please live as you will. But do not seek to make me and this University subject to your "truth."
Lane Jorgensen
Syracuse, N.Y., junior
Headquarters Center lauds student support
This is to clarify information about Headquarters Counseling Center that appeared in a fine front page article on Sept. 13 and in a very supportive editorial on Sept. 16.
HQ offers its services not only for KU students, but to the entire Douglas County community. I also think Director Marcia Epstein was misinterpreted as indicating that training required 300 hours in two months. Training requires 100 hours in two months. After six months of volunteering eight hours a week, more than 300 hours have been put in.
HQ tremendously appreciates not only the funding from the Student Activity Fee, administered by the KU Student Senate, but also the volunteers that have come from the University of Kansas over the years. Without either, it would be very difficult to continue our services, which HQ has done without missing a beat for almost 24 years.
Steve Nash, President Headquarters' Board of Directors
1
---
}
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 23, 1993
5
Hispanics have long state history
By Shan Schwartz Kansan staff writer
Hispanics are the first and most recent immigrants to Kansas, and the Hispanic history in Kansas should not be overlooked, a Kansas Hispanic official said yesterday.
Eva Pereira, executive director of the Kansas Advisory Committee on Hispanic Affairs, spoke in the Kansas Union about early Hispanic history in Kansas.
Pereira cited a Kansas history textbook published in 1931 as an example of a poor representation of the Hispanic culture in history.
Hispanic Heritage Month
The book referred to the expeditions of Francisco Vásquez de Coronado, a Spanish explorer who visited Kansas in 1541. Pereira said the book implied that Coronao's team left Kansas because it had not been
"But that's simply wrong," Pereira said. "They did make property claims and came back to the area."
strong enough to settle the land.
Juan Padilla, a priest who accompanied Coronado's expedition, was fond of the area and requested that Coronado permit him and a few others to return to Kansas. Pereira said.
Coronado granted Padilla that request, Pereira said, and Padilla returned to Kansas in 1542 to work as a missionary with American Indians.
"He was the first immigrant resident of Kansas," Pereira said.
have established large missions in Kansas had he lived. Padilla died, however, in the winter of 1542 before he could establish a mission.
Pereira said Padilla probablv would
"The great missions might have been in Kansas instead of California if he would have lived." Pereira said.
Pereira said that Kansas was now home to large Hispanic populations, predominantly in Kansas City, Wichita and Garden City.
Immigration first began with westward expansion in the 1800s when Mexican traders came to Missouri and Kansas to sell goods, she said.
Hearing elicits different views on GTAs
By Kathleen Stolie Kansas staff writer
Yesterday, University witness testimony became the focus of the graduate teaching assistant status hearings for the first time.
The University, represented by Karen Dutcher, assistant general counsel, asserted its stance that GTAs are not public employees but students who benefit from the teaching experience.
The GTAs have tried to prove they are public employees entitled to pursue collective bargaining with the University for benefits.
The Public Employer-Employee Relations Act of the Kansas statutes,
or PEERA, states that anyone employed by any public agency, such as a state university, is a public employee. Public employees are allowed to organize or unionize.
Under questioning from GTA representative Scott Stone, both university and GTA witnesses testified that the University relied heavily on the services of GTAs and could not function well without them.
"If you are going to be a gainful member of the faculty on down the road, you should have a graduate teaching assistantship," testified University witness Eric Sexton, a political science GTA.
Howard Mossberg, dean of the graduate school and wjiness for the Umi
versity, confirmed that, according to statistics, GTAs teach about one in every four credit hours.
"What would happen if all the GTAs walked out tomorrow?" Stone asked.
We are invited, Misssong and Stone's first witness, Jane Garrett, an administrative officer in the department of English, testified that 100- and 200-level English courses were taught primarily by GTAs. She said economics was a factor in the growing number of GTAs in the department.
"There's no money to hire senior staff, and GTAs are much cheaper to hire," she said.
Mossberg said that the growing number of GTAs was a concern and that as a result of program review
funds were being shifted to hire more faculty.
He said the University could hire lecturers who already are trained and could carry larger work loads than GTAs but that the University wanted to offer GTAs teaching experience.
"We bear the responsibility as a research institution to produce the faculty of the future," Mossberg said.
Hearing examiner Monty Bertelli pressed Mossberg to distinguisht between public employees and GTAs.
Mossberg responded, "I believe the University's position, and therefore my position, was that they are not so classified under the PEERA classification, but there are aspects of their positions of an employee nature."
5 Nimble Pilots Sept. 24-25 Playing at Quincy Magoos
In Topeka
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Then Step Over To
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*Live Bands ✖️ New Light Show ✕ DJ
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$2.00 32 oz. Big Cup Refill
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Upcoming Bands:
- The Hollow Men Oct. 1-2
- Submytion Oct. 7, 8 & 9
Quincy Magoo
1517 Lane
232-9800
COUNSELING &
PSYCHOLOGICAL SERVICES
GROUPS
Adult Children of Alcoholics Mondays 3:00-4:30
Anxiety & Stress Management Tuesdays 6-7:30
Bulimia Education & Therapy Tuesdays 4:30-6
Gen. Psychotherapy Wenesdays, 4:30-6
Women's Gen. Psychotherapy Tuesdays 6-7:30
Communication For Couples Wenesdays, 4:30-6
Adjustment to the U.S. for Weds. 4:30-6pm International Students
FOR MORE INFO: CONTACT CAPS 864-2277
BLOW
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14th & OHIO (UNDER THE WHEEL)
"We Care For KU"
Since WATKINS
1907
Busy schedule? Watkins Pharmacy Is Conveniently Open Til 9 p.m. Monday-Thursday.
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8 a.m.-9 p.m.
Friday 8 a.m.-6 p.m.
Saturday 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
Sunday 11 a.m.-3 p.m.
KU STUDENT TICKETS HALF PRICE FOR SEPTEMBER 29
PERFORMANCE ONLY!
Student tickets also available at the SUA office Kansas Union.
THE LION CENTER FOR REALITY
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES 864-9500
TICKETS AT:
TICKET MASTER
At the Lied Center University of Kansas
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
Student tickets also available at the SUA office; Kansas Union.
IT WON THE AWARDS. IT WILL WIN YOUR HEART.
To charge tickets by phone using MasterCard or Visa call 864-ARTS or call any Ticketmaster outlet (816) 913-3300 or (913) 234-4545.
THE SECRET GARDEN
IT WILL WIN YOUR HEART.
THE SECRET GARDEN
At the Lied Center
September 29 (KU Student Night) - October 3
Wednesday-Saturday performances at 8:00 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday matinees at 2:00 p.m.
Sunday evening at 7:00 p.m.
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office; all seats reserved;
tickets $35 and $30;
special discounts available.
IAMES
CAAN
OMAR EPPS
CRAIG
SHEFFER
Pressure surrounds them.
Competition divides them.
Glory unites them.
A story of what it takes to survive
THE PROGRAM
TOUTHERD PICTURES THE SAMUEL GOLDWIN COMPANY DAVID S. WARD JAMES OAN THE PROGRAM HALLE BERRY OMAR EFPS
CLAUD SHEEFER KRISTY SWANSOR MICHAEL COOPERER TOMOON HEADERSOR TODA RUSHMAN DAVID S. WARD AARON HATHAM
R SAMUEL GOLDWIN JR DAVID S. WARD
STARTS FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24 AT THEATRES EVERYWHERE
KRISTY SWANSON
THE
PROGRAM
6
Thursday, September 23,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Cornucopia
Restaurant
fresh fruit • salads • full bar • pasta
guacamole • drinks • buffalo wing
burgers • sea food • beer • sandwii
iches • omlets • BEF • potato ski
skies • steaks • stir fry • cheese
ake • fries • fresh fish • prime rib
oups • frozen yogurt quesadillas
fresh bread • patio baked goods
20
1801 Massachusetts
West of Dillons Plaza
842-9637
Since WATKINS
"We Care For KU"
Do You Have a Hold on Your Enrollment?
Approximately 2.650 new KU students are on hold because they have not documented their Mandatory Immunization (the MMR). The hold must be removed by Sept. 30 to enable Spring '94 enrollment. To be cleared bring your Permit to Enroll to Watkins Immunizations (Mon.-Fri., 8am-4:30pm).
Students born before 1957 are exempt but must submit a Health History form to Watkins Immunizations. There is no charge for a required immunization. 864-9533.
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES 864-9500
SARALAND, Ala
43 passengers die, 10 remain missing after train derails
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
An Amtrak train jogged the tracks on a bridge and plunged into a foggy bayou before daybreak yesterday, trapping passengers in a submerged car and killing at least 43 people, authorities said.
Ten others were missing, said Coast Guard Petty Officer David Schmidt.
All three engines and four of the eight cars or Amtrak's Sunset Limited, on its way from Los Angeles to Miami, derailed just after 3 a.m. in a remote, swampy area on the northern outskirts of Mobile, Ala., Amtrak representative Clifford Black said in Washington. Two of the derailed cars were passenger cars, including one that was entirely submerged.
It was the deadliest crash in the history of Amtrak, which was created in 1970 to run the nation's long-distance passenger trains. Sixteen people were killed Jan. 4, 1987, in an Amtrak crash in Chase, Md.
Survivors in the cars that stayed on the bridge reported that a fire that erupted from the derailed engine and the collapsed bridge had hampered their efforts to save other passengers.
"It's conceivable today's catastrophic accident could eclipse the number of fatalities for our entire 22-year history." Black said. He said 48 people had died in Amtrak crashes before yesterday.
The cause of the accident was not known, Black said, and he did not want to speculate.
THE NEWS in brief
MOSCOW Yeltsin gains army's support
Europa
Russian President Boris Yeltsin's bid to control Russia gained strength yesterday, buoyed by support from the Russian army and cheering crowds. His hard-line opposition sat barricaded in parliament, struggling on how to respond.
Bonfires burned for a second night outside the Russian parliament building yesterday, where as many as 5,000 anti-Yeltsin demonstrators ringed the building to protest his suspension of parliament Tuesday.
Yeltsin told the crowd he would avoid bloodshed. "We would not like and do not intend to use any force," he said.
Hundreds of people applauded and shouted "We support you!" when Yeltsin and his military commanders made an impromptu visit to Moscow's downtown Pushkin Square.
Defense Minister Pavel Grachev said the military "unequivocally supports the president as commander-in-chief."
JERUSALEM Army says shelling a mistake
The Israeli army dismissed reports that a Katyusha rocket was fired on northern Israel from Lebanon yesterday and raised the possibility that the rocket was mistakenly from a nearby army base.
The army statement came several hours after Israel radio and residents in the border town of Kiryat Shmona reported that a rocket had landed near
by. No damage or injuries were reported.
"No Katusha was fired into Israeli territory," the army said in a statement.
Radio reports said that mortar shells had been found in the area and that the army was determining whether they had been fired from Israel or Lebanon.
WASHINGTON Federal flood aid to increase
President Clinton set a new standard for disaster relief yesterday to ensure that the nine Midwestern states damaged by summer flooding qualify for additional federal aid.
Under the new standard, the Federal Emergency Management Agency will reimburse the states for 90 percent of eligible disaster costs rather than 75 percent.
Clinton earlier had announced that FEMA would pay 90 percent of disaster costs in states where flood damage totaled at least $64 a person. But as of last week, none of the nine Midwestern states had met that standard, and most did not expect to attain it.
The new, more generous standard applies to FEMA disaster aid for public and non-profit properties such as streets, universities, utilities and government buildings.
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KANSAS
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A smart, easy way to meet people in a sophisticated, safe and confidential manner.
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.
To check out an ad:
4. You choose the people you want to meet and set up a time and place.
1. Read the ads in the Jaytalk Meeting Network in the Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday issues of the Kansan.
2. Call 1-900-285-4560 (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.
6 LINES for 6 DAYS ABSOLUTELY FREE! CALL 864-4358 TODAY TO PLACE AN AD
Classifications available:
Classifications availabie
1-Men Seeking Women
2-Women Seeking Men
3-Men Seeking Men
4-Women Seeking Women
5-Friends Seeking Friends
6-Seeking Sports Interest
7-Mutual Hobbies
8-Shared Religion.
1
Me&
1980
Richard Devinki/KANSAN
Richard DeWink/KARNAI Jason Greenwood, Chanute sophomore, and Mike Fine, recreation coordinator, check in a tent at the Kansas Union JayBowl.
Story by Sara Bennett
"I'm the boss!" children scream at each other as they battle for the right to rule the sandbox. "Stop being so bossy," a 10-year-old shouts at her older brother. A father slumps at the dinner table after a hard day at work and mutters, "I
my boss
hate my boss."
Todd Stineman, Newton senior, left, and his boss, David Bay, prepare a box of supplies to be sent from the Union Bookstore. Stineman works for Support Services in the bookstore.
Since childhood, people have associated the boss with an insufferable and domineering dictator. After such conditioning, students may look at their first employers with awe and dread.
AUTHORITY OF BOSTON
Most find, however, that their bosses are people too, with feelings and interests just like their own. These KU students have learned to appreciate their bosses' good points as well as their differences.
When Todd Stineman, Newton senior, entered his offices in the support services section of the Kansas Bookstore in the Kansas Union last Halloween, he found a scary sight waiting for him.
A child-size Jayhawk costume stood in the corner with a knife in its stomach. The figure wore a green monster mask and a sign proclaiming, "This is
what happens when you work for support services.
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Paul Kotz/ KANSAN
Stineman said such antics are typical of his boss, David Day, assis tant supervisor of support services.
"He's easy to work with and funny," Stineman, said
motioning to Day's side of the office. Miniature moose, lion and rhinoceros heads protruded from the wall above a desk littered with plastic animals and GLJoe dolls.
"He keeps our spirits up," Stineman said. "He's just kind of a goof-off, but he also very knowledgeable."
Stineman said although Day is tremendously busy, he always finds time for his employees.
"He will drop what he's doing to help you," Stineman said. "He maintains a good frame of mind when a normal person wouldn't."
Day said he tries to keep the atmosphere pleasant for his employees.
"We just try to make things interesting," he said. "I try to treat them in a way that keeps things lively."
Day took the full-time position he holds now in 1991. Before that, he worked part time at the bookstore as a student employee. He said he can relate
to his employees better because he was once in their position.
"She's very polite when she's angry." Dunkelberger said of his boss. "We know she's angry by her disapproving smile."
Ann Eversole, director of the organizations and activities center (OAC) in the Kansas Union smiles extra big when she's angry, Kelly Dunkelberger, Woodland Park, Colo., senior said.
"They have to worry about with the pressures of school," he said. "So we don't want this job to be mundane and boring."
NY
Coby Craghage, Wichita senior, right, and his boss Mark Lorentz, assistant manager for food services, pose at the Kansas Union cafeteria.
Dunkelberger, who runs the front desk at the OAC said he appreciates Eversole, not just for her tactfulness under pressure, but also because she trusts her employee to do their jobs without keeping a close eye on them.
"She's really encouraging," he said. "I've worked for other departments and she gives us the free rein other departments may not afford a student."
Eversole said, "I do as much as I can to give them autonomy."
Eversole also said Dunkelberger's observations about her handling of anger are accurate. "It's probably one of those unconscious things," she said. "If you're really annoyed with someone, you try not to say things you might regret later."
"If I had enough time to get everything I need to do done, there would probably be less smiles." he said.
Dunkelberger said he enjoys working for Eversole, even when he becomes the object of her polite anger.
Kara Eddey, Columbus, Ohio, graduate student, finds quotes from Seinfeld hidden in the nooks and crannys behind her counter at the Union Square cafeteria in the Kansas University. Her boss, assistant food service manager Mark Lorentz, plants them there for the employees' enjoyment.
Eddey described Lorentz as a fun and laid-back boss who doesn't expect his employees to be in a good mood.
"He's a Seinfeld fanatic," Eddey said, shaking her head.
"If I want to be grouchy, he lets me be grouchy," she said. "He just smiles and nods and says, "How nice for you."
Lorentz said he tries to be more flexible with his student employees.
"I think especially in this environment you have to be understanding of the needs of students," he said. "They're here to go to school, so if they need time to study, or something comes up, I try to work around their schedules."
Coby Craghead, Wichita graduate student, agreed Lorentz is a good boss. But maybe a little too good at times.
"He's such a nice guy that you almost wish he'd start cracking heads a bit," Craghead said.
"I think that's just my personality." Lorentz said. "If you'rehard, that creates other problems. I'd rather deal with trying to be a nice guy and deal with the problems that come from that."
STUDIO CITY
Anne Eversole, director of Organizations and Activities, right, talks with Kelly Dunkelberg, Woodland Park senior.
theater
Lawrence troupe offers abstract skits untouched by mainstream theater
Chameleon theater group likens itself to a cross between Monty Python and the Blues Brothers
Chameleons are unobtrusive reptiles who protect themselves by blending in with their surroundings.
By Sara Bennett Kansan staff writer
Deborah McMullen, Lawrence, wore a sliced up trash bag white greeting people at the Lawrence Arts Center before Saturday's performance of "Bite This."
Founded in 1992 by Lawrence writer Robert Baker, the Chameleons are dedicated to producing works by local playwrights. Baker described the troupe's experimental productions as "Monty Python meets the Blues Brothers."
The actors and writers of this fledgling theater company prefer to expose the world rather than hide from it.
Chameleon Productions is a different animal.
Tom Leininger / KANSAN
"We have a dark comedic bent that's rooted in reality," he said. "We emphasize the abstract, absurdist themes in society."
The Chameleon's latest offering, "Bite This, A Theatrical Monstrosity," did just that. The show, which ran last Friday and Saturday at the Lawrence Arts Center, presented multi-media sketches on a variety of controversial subjects: A born-again Christian saw Jesus in her refrigerator, a trailer park prodigy killed his abusive uncle, and "The Toilet Trilogy" addressed America's preoccupation with the commode.
"Our goal in 'Bite This' was to
Baker said the not-for-profit company was formed in response to a lack of opportunities for local playwrights to have their work produced.
The Chameleon troupe consists of 12 amateur performers aged 15 to 52. Most of them write, direct and perform their own material. Many of the performers have previous theater experience and were recruited for the company by a core group of writers and performers.
assault the audience's senses from the beginning to the end," Baker said.
Penny Weiner, an award-winning Topeka playwright, and David Ohle, a Lawrence author who wrote the '70s expose "Cows Are Freaky When They Look at You," have both had plays produced by Chameleon Productions. Last spring, the company produced Ohle's black comedy "Crank Calls." Its next project will be Wiener's play "Dancing With the Big One."
"We want to encourage local talent and give them a venue for their writing," he said.
Ohle said Chameleon Productions is an ideal venue for his work because the company is willing to perform plays about subjects that may not be acceptable in mainstream theater.
"Community theater doesn't lend itself to the kind of material I do," he said. "We're doing the kinds of works
Baker said the Chameleons' work would appeal to anyone who is turned off by traditional theater.
"Anyone who thinks theater is boring, abstract and pretentious, we're none of the above," he said.
Baker said he hoped the Chameleons' work would challenge the audience's world views.
"If we don't get a reaction, good or bad, then we're not doing our job," he said. Chameleon productions will have its next performance Sept. 30 as part of the Lawrence Art Center's Harvest of the Arts.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SEPTEMBER 23,1993 PAGE 7
KULife
People and places at the University of Kansas.
calendar
NIGHTLIFE
Benchwarmers Sports Bar & Grill 1601 W, 23rd St.
Turquoise Soul, 9 p.m. Thursday Room Full Of Walters with That Statue Moved. 9 p.m. Friday Wake, 9 p.m. Saturday
Dos Hombres
The Crossing
12th and Oread
Ricky Dean Sinatra, 9 p.m. Friday
Danger Bob, 9 p.m. Saturday
Dos Hombres 815 New Hampshire St. Eight Men Out, 9 p.m. Friday
The Jazzhaus
926 1/2 Massachusetts St.
Acoustic Juice with Mother Well, 9:30 p.m.
Thursday
Slamjammy, 9:30 p.m. Friday
Johnny Clueless, 9:30 p.m. Saturday
Poetry Slam, 7-10 p.m. Tuesday
Rick's Neighborhood Bar & Grill 623 Vermont St. The Red Dirt Rangers with Arkansaw White Trash Express, 9:30 p.m. Saturday, $3
The Jazzhaus
Free State Brewing Co.
636 Massachusetts St.
Free State Jazz Quartet, 7-9 p.m. Friday
The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire
Tenderloin, 10 p.m. Friday
Fall Fest' '93, 1-8 p.m. Saturday, $5
1 p.m.- Mountain Clyde
2 p.m.- Love Squad
3 p.m.- L.A. Ramblers
4 p.m.- Baghdad Jones
5 p.m.- Tenderloin
6 p.m.- Salty Iguanas
7 p.m.- Billy Goat
Peter Case, 10 p.m. Saturday.
Granada Theater
1020 Massachusetts St.
The River City Six, 8-11 p.m. Thursday
The Stringers, 9 p.m. to midnight, Friday, $3
Staying Alive: '70s Flashback, Wednesday
See CALENDAR, Page 8
》
8
Thursday, September 23, 1993
Introducing
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401 N2nd 842-0377 JOHNNY'S TAVERN LAWRENCE / KANSAS CITY
$1.25 Domestic Bottles $1.25 Pichers in the Up & Under
MOEBLUESBAND
ENATION DEVOTION FAMILY LOVE GRIEF SPAIR ABANDON SACRIFICE FAITH HONG Y VOWS STRENGTH PAIN LONELINESS COMP T OBLIGATION DUTY ALLEGIANCE ABS EFERING DISTRESS ESTRANGEMENT ALIE
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Come see a performance of Puccini's classic, "Madame Butterfly," at The Lyric Opera, and you'll hear a Butterfly's voice soar with the pain of her tragic love for a United States Navy lieutenant.
NATURE BUDDY GIFT
range from $8 to $37 and can be purchased at the Lyric ticket office. Seats are selling quickly, so call 471-7344 soon to order tickets.
Performances will be staged September 25, 27 and 29, and October 1 and 3. Tickets
Performances will be sponsored by Boatman's First National Bank of Kansas City on September 25, and Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Miller on October 1.
Lyric Opera. Get Caught in the Act.
1029 Central, Kansas City, MO 64105
ENTERTAINMENT
Student rush $4.00 with ID, 30 minutes prior to curtain.
Financial assistance provided by the Missouri Arts Council and the National Endowment for the Arts. The Lyric list usars.
JON BLUMBAUGH MEMORIAL
WHEAT MEET
1993
Chi Omega Alpha Kappa Lambda
Entry:
Entry Fees~ $6 -Race
$11 -Relays
$5 -Fun Relay
$4 -Simon Says
Awards:
100% cotton t-shirts will be given to winner of each racer. Winnerrd Clinton Says receives trip to Chicago.
Ben Cits KU Cancer Research.
Schedule:
Meet begins at 9:00 a.m. on September 26,
1993.
For questions, call 841-7191
Sign up on Wescoe Beach before Friday.
UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP
TRAVEL CENTER
BUDY T'S PARKS
UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP
Shirts illustrated
Quinton's
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LAWRENCE KANSAS
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UNIVERSITY BOOKSHOP
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BULLWINKLES
RENT TO OWN CENTER
TRAVEL CENTER
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Continued from Page 7.
University Book Shop
Hockenbury's Tavern
1016 Massachusetts St.
Full Moon Cafe
CALENDAR: Lawrence nightlife
1016 Massachusetts St.
Spakin Rufus, 10 p.m. Thursday
Crap Supper, 10 p.m. Friday
Baghdad Jones, 10 p.m. Saturday
Acoustic open mic, 10 p.m. Sunday,
no cover
Acoustic Juice, 8:30 p.m. Friday Art Kershaw, guitar and related madness, 8:30 p.m. Saturday
803 Massachusetts St.
Blues with Nathan Machel on guitar and Jordan Shelton playing harp and vocal, 8:30 p.m. Thursday
Jazz Bunch with Tim Cross, noon to 3 p.m. and Open Blues Jam, 3-6 p.m. Sunday
MOVIES
Cinema Twin
31st and Iowa streets
Rooke of the Year (PG), 5, 7:30
and 9:40 p.m. Thursday
Sliver (R), 5, 7:20 and 9:40 p.m.
Thursday
and 9:25 p.m. Thursday
True Romance (R), 4:20, 7:15
and 9:50 p.m. Thursday
Hillcrest Theater
642 Massachusetts St.
Orlando (PG-13), 5:15, 7:15 and
9:15 p.m., with an additional 3:15
p.m. on Saturday, Sunday
SUA MOVIES
and 9:30 p.m. Thursday
Into The West (PG) 5:15, 7:30
and 9:30 p.m. Thursday
The Real McCoy (PG-13), 5, 7:15
and 9:45 p.m. Thursday
Ninth and Iowa streets
Jurassic Park (PG-13) 5, 7:20 and
9:40 p.m. Thursday
In the Line of Fire (R), 5, 7:20 and
9:40 p.m. Thursday
Sleepless in Seattle (PG), 5, 7:15
Liberty Hall Cinema
Varsity Theatre
1015 Massachusetts St.
Striking Distance (R), 5:15, 7:30
and 9:30 p.m. Thursday
Dickinson Theaters
All movies are screened at Woodruff auditorium, level 5 in the Kansas Union .
Indian Summer (R), 7, 9:30 p.m.
Friday, Saturday, with a 2 p.m.
Sunday
The Serpent and the Rainbow (R),
midnight Friday, Saturday
2339 Iowa St.
2359 Iowa St.
Undercover Blues (PG-13), 4:25
7:25 and 9:35 p.m. Thursday
The Fugitive (PG-13), 4:10, 7:05
and 9:55 p.m. Thursday
Man Without a Face (PG-13),
4:15, 7 and 9:30 p.m. Thursday
The Secret Garden (G), 4:30, 7
Moving?
Lawrence Paper Company
Solve your moving hassles
Sherry boxes for moving and storage. Boxes with handles for easier moving. Large quantities at discount prices. Small quantities walk-in welcome.
Call 843-8111
Ask for sales/service dept.
Learn to Fly
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CREATION STATION
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Jayhawk Bookstore
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1420 Crescent Rd. Lawrence, Ks. 66044
(913) 843-3826
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 23, 1993
9
Golfers prepare for trip to Japan
Team is one of four flying across the world to play in tournament
By Kent Hohlfeld Kansan sportswriter
Exchanging currency, applying for passports and rescheduling tournaments are just a few of the difficulties five golfers are facing as they prepare for their next tournament more than 8,000 miles away in Japan.
The men's golf team will compete against 13 teams in the Topy Cup Intercollegiate tournament Sept. 28 - 30. The players leave Saturday for Tokyo.
U. S. teams from Kansas, The University of California Los Angles, Kent State and Augusta College will meet 11 Japanese teams, including defending tournament champion Nihon University.
Kansas coach Ross Randall said college teams in Japan rarely practiced more than twice a month because golf courses are expensive and rare.
"In Japan they have no public golf courses," Randall said. "The land is so expensive that they have to go hundreds of miles from the closest city to build their courses."
Headed fore Japan
Five members of the Kansas men's golf team are flying to Japan this weekend to play in the Topy Cup Intercollegiate tournament. In preparation for the trip, they have had to learn:
Basic vocabulary
How and when to bow
formal function etiquette
exchanging gifts and business cards upon meeting
Source: Kansan staff reports
John Paul Fosel/KANSAI
He said that golf was considered a luxury in Japan and that most courses are organized similar to American vacation resorts.
Source: Kansan staff reports John Paul Fogel/KANSAY
The Kansas team will travel to one such golf resort in Tanagura, Fukushimara Prefecture, which lies in an agricultural region about 150 miles northeast of Tokyo.
"It should give the kids a chance to see a cosmopolitan area like Tokyo and a rural area." Randall said.
The trip will take 16 hours, cover eight time zones and include a four-hour bus ride from Tokyo to the resort.
Preparing for such a trek has been a major undertaking
The Jayhawk coach said he had to move the team's home tournament, which had been scheduled for this weekend, to Oct. 11-12.
for Randall and his players.
Moeller said that being fifth-year seniors helped give him and teammate Casey Brozek more flexibility in planning their schedules than most underclassmen might have had.
"When I knew about the trip, I arranged my schedule so that I wouldn't miss too much class," team member Jeff Moeller said.
Brozek said he expected the language barrier to be the biggest obstacle the team would face. To help reduce that problem, Randall passed out forms containing common Japanese words and sayings to each member of the team.
One problem the team will not have to worry about is paying the $30,000 tab for the trip. Topy Corp., the sponsor of the tournament, is paying the teams' expenses. The players will have to pay only for souvenirs and snacks while in Japan. Randall said he told them to take extra money because of higher prices in Japan, where a cup of coffee costs $7.
None of the team members have experience playing outside the United States.
Randall said he also was worried about the time difference. He said jet lag could become a serious problem.
"Going over, it isn't too bad because you gain time," Randall said. "Coming back is what really gets you."
Junior Tom Sims and seniors John Hess and Matt Gogel will join Moeller and Brozek to form the Kansas tournament team.
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.
Volleyball coach gives players space
Frankie Albitz keeps her cool during games and leaves the spotlight for team members
During practice, Kansas Volleyball coach Frankie Albitz goes over a video tape of the opposition with her team. Since Albitz's arrival at Kansas, the team has played in four Big Eight Conference tournaments, and she was named Big Eight Coach of the Year in 1991.
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Richard Devinki/ KANSAN
Although she may look laid back and relaxed, she is as nervous as any player. Maybe more.
Sitting cross-legged, wearing sandals and shorts, Kansas volleyball coach Frankie Albitz looks more like a spectator than a coach.
"I'm not laid back," Albitz confessed. "I have an air of being calm. I eat bread and crackers before the game and after to settle my stomach."
Albitz said that the 6-5 Jayhawks played better when they were relaxed and that if she didn't look calm it would hurt the team. But her temperament has posed a problem.
"I take a lot of heat for the way I act," Albitz said. "I had to convince my team this year that I am watching the game."
As for her apparel, it reinforces what kind of person she is.
Compared with some coaches from opposing teams, Albiz does not act as a cheerleader.
"It's unrealistic to think that I could wear a dress," she said. "It's too constricting, and I'm not the best dresser anyway."
"Ihave tried to be more assertive with my team before, but it doesn't work." Albiz said. "I try to be calm, relaxed and confident. People have a perception of what a coach should act like from watching football and basketball coaches. I think volleyball coaches are different."
Albitz, like other volleyball coaches, is busy thinking of strategies for the team during a match. But she doesn't make a scene on the sidelines.
"The players put in a lot of time and effort," she said. "Let them play in front of the crowd and get the attention. My philosophy may be different from other coaches. You have to do your work before you get there."
Kansas assistant coach Karen Schonewise is a former Nebraska volleyball player who played for Cornhusker coach Terry Pettit. Albitz's style is different from Petit's, and Schonewise agrees with her current mentor's philosophy.
"He is much more technical and more of a disciplinarian compared to Frankie," Schonewise said. "She likes the team to make its own decisions."
Albitz's philosophy has been effective. She posted a
136-67-1 record at Oral Roberts, where she coached from 1981 to 1984. But she inherited a Kansas program in 1985 that was 5-30 the previous season.
Since then, Kansas has played in four Big Eight Conference tournaments, and Albizt was named Big Eight Coach of the Year in 1991, when her team finished third in the Big Eight with a 25-10 record.
Despite the success, some players have to adjust to the freedom Albitz allows on the court. Schonewise said.
Frankie gives some ideas before the game that may work," Iizakita said. "But Frankie says if you see an
"Most players aren't used to the flexibility," Schonewise said. "They're used to being told what to do on the court. It forces them to be more knowledgeable."
Redshirt freshman Lara Izokatis said Albitz gave her positive reinforcement on the court.
opening. do what's best for the team."
Senior Barb Bella transferred to Kansas from Texas A&M after her freshman year. She said she had made the right choice in coming to Kansas because, unlike her former coach, Albitz allowed her players to have privacy in matters not pertaining to volleyball.
"He was the type of coach that wanted to know what I was doing all the time," Bella said of her former coach. "It's not like that here. When I do something right I feel good about it."
Albitz's philosophy might be good for the players, but she said it was hard for her as a coach to stay out of the spotlight at Kansas.
"Everyone is happy for you when you win," she said. "The wins and losses belong to the team. I didn't do any of that."
Women's tennis to begin season with tough competition
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
Women's tennis team members no longer have to compete against one another. This weekend, the Jayhawks travel to Williamsburg, Va., for their season opener in the College of William and Mary Invitational.
Women's tennis coach Chuck Merzbacher said the invitational was a flighted tournament.
Senior Kim Rogers said the first tournament of the season was always the most exciting, because the team could get back out on the court and start again.
In a flighted tournament, individuals compete against players of other teams in the tournament with the same ranking. Merzbacher said that the players would not know who their individual opponents would be until the tournament.
The Kansas team's opponents will be South Florida, Virginia Commonwealth, Notre Dame, which was ranked 19th last year by the Intercollegiate Tennis Association, and Virginia, which was ranked 22nd last year. Kansas ranked 17th last year.
Rogers said the Notre Dame players would be the toughest because they defeated Kangas last year.
Merrbacher has added three new players to the Kansas lineup.
Freshmen Chessa Beiral, Amy Trytek and Heather Heidel will compete at the No. 4, 5 and 6 spots, respectively. Rogers moved from her No. 6 position last year to No. 3. Senior Abbey Woods moved from No. 4 to No. 2, and senior Mindy Weiner rounds out the team at No. 1, up from her No. 3 position last year.
In her college tennis debut, Heidel said, she was excited and nervous because she wanted to look good for the school and she did not want to let herself down.
Weiner said she needed to show that she belonged back in the national rankings. She had been in the top 10, but fell out of the top 100 last year. She said she thought she could be in the top 20 this year.
She said she was looking forward to playing against tough collegiate competition.
"I tend to play better when the competition is better," she said.
Merzbacher said he thought the team was excited about the tournament.
"They are tired of playing each other," he said.
10th-inning homer lifts Royals past A's
The Associated Press
OAKLAND, Calif. — Kevin Koslosfki, who entered the game as a defensive replacement, homered to lead off the top of the 10th inning, giving the Kansas City Royals a 3-2 victory over the Oakland Athletics last night.
Koslofski's first home run of the season came off Roger Smithberg (1-2) and finally ended a game that featured blown saves by two of baseball's premier relievers.
Craig Paquette's solo homer off Jeff Montgomery with two outs in the ninth inning tied the game at 2 after Dennis Eckersley had blown his 10th save of the season in the top of the inning. It was Paquette's 12th home run of the season.
Montgomery (5-5), who blew a save for the sixth time this season, earned the victory.
Brian McRae began the Kansas City ninth with a one-out single. George Brett followed with a single to right field, and when Scott Brosius' throw missed the cutoff man for an error, McRae was able to score an unearned run from first base.
Brett took second on the play and was replaced by pinch runner Phil Hiatt. Hiatt scored the go-ahead run on Mike Macfarlane's single.
Eckersley's blown save wasted a fine effort from starter Ron Darling in a pitching duel with Tom Gordon.
Gordon pitched eight innings, allowing five hits and three walks and striking out 11, a season-high.
Darling had been seeking his first victory since Aug. 18. He pitched eight innings of four-hit ball, striking out a season-high seven and walking one.
Gordon walked Troy Neel to open the second inning but got two strikeouts and a ground out to end the threat. Neel's fourth-inning infield single was Gordon's only other baserunner through four innings.
IF YOU WANT TO MAKE IT IN THE REAL WORLD,
SPEND A SEMESTER IN OURS
Walt Disney World Co.
Walt Disney World Co. representatives will be on campus to present an information session for Undergraduate Students on the Walt Disney World SPRING '94 College Program.
The Walt Disney Co.
WHEN: Thursday, Sept. 30
6:30 pm
WHERE: 303 Bailey Hall
The Walt Disney Co.
Attendance at this presentation is required to interview for the Spring '94 College Program. Interviews will be held on Friday, October 1. All majors are encouraged to attend.
For more information
Contact: University Placement
Center
Phone: 864-3624
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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PAT GREEN, LCSW, NCAC II, DIRECTOR
708 West 9th Street, Suite 4, Lawrence, KS 66044
Optical Dispensary VISIONS 841-7421
Spend Thursday evenings with Tom, Elizabeth, Winslow $ ^{*} $ and the gang!
The Spencer Museum of Art at the University of Kansas is open Thursdays until 9:00 p.m.
Enjoy eleven galleries of art, including the special exhibitions: Contemporary Czech and Slovakian Photography August 22-October 3.
American Indian Baskets from the University of Kansas Museum of Anthropology August 29-October 10
"The Secret Garden": Illustrations by Tom Allen September 19-October 17
ECTURE Colin Westerbeck, assistant curator of photography at the Art Institute of Chicago. "Internal Divisions: Photography Today in the Czech Republic." Spencer Museum Auditorium, Thursday, September 23, 7:00 p.m.
SPENCER
MUSEUM
OF ART
MUSEUM HOURS
The University of Kansas
Lawrence, Kansas 66045
Telephone 913-864-4710
Monday... Galleries are closed
Tuesday & Wednesday... 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Thursday... 8:30 a.m.-9:00 p.m.
Friday & Saturday... 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Sunday... Noon-5:00 p.m.
As always—admission is free!
*Works of art by Thomas Hart Benton, Elizabeth Murray, Winslow Homer, and hundreds of other artists are included in the Spencer Museum of Art collection.
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China favored as Olympic site
Politics may decide 2000 Games' home
The Associated Press
MONTE CARLO, Monaco — As the five candidates vying to play host to the 2000 Olympics made their final pitches yesterday, the decision appeared to be between Beijing's political pull and Sydney's promise of risk-free games.
China's human rights record remained the central issue surrounding its capital's candidacy as the International Olympic Committee prepared for today's secret ballot.
Sydney is said to have the best technical bid because of its sports facilities, hotels and transportation. An official committee report said Sydney offered "conditions over and above what is required by the IOC."
Despite controversy and criticism, Beijing appears to be the slight favorite. Its main rival is Sydney, Australia. Manchester, England, could be a compromise choice, and Berlin and Istanbul, Turkey, are long shots.
Olympics 2000
But the symbolism and political impact of taking the Games to China, whose 1.2 billion people represent one-fifth of the world's population,
could sway the deciding votes. Beijing officials noted that about 300 million people would take part in the torch relay if China played host to the Games.
"It's David vs. Goliath," said Kevan Gosper, a committee vice president from Australia who serves on the Sydney bid committee. "The sheer immensity of China is the hardest element Beijing's competitors have to contend with."
Some committee members claimed that awarding the Games to Beijing could serve as a catalyst for reform.
"If you really want to influence a change in the behavior of China, this is a way to do so," said Dick Pound, an executive board member from Canada.
Beijing's opponents, including members of the U.S. Congress, argued that China did not deserve the Games because of its human rights record. Awarding the Games to China, they said, would honor the government that brutally suppressed
the Tiananmen Square pro-democracy movement in 1989.
China's Vice Premier Li Lanqang accused U.S. and British politicians of ignoring the Olympic spirit by opposing the bid on political grounds.
Li said holding the Games in Beijing would promote international friendship and greater East-West cooperation.
"A lot of those who criticize China have never been there," he said. "They should go to see for themselves. After they go, I'm sure they will come to the right conclusions."
"It will be of great importance to all mankind if Beijing wins," he said. "It will be of far-reaching historical significance."
Sydney has tried to depict itself as the most reliable host and the candidate preferred by most athletes.
It has never boycotted the Olympics and is one of only three countries to participate in all Summer Games of the modern era, he said.
John Coates, president of Australian Olympic Committee, called his country a peaceful and democratic society free of terrorism and racial conflict.
Today's decision lies in the hands of 89 committee members from 75 countries. Forty-five votes will be needed to win.
"NO COUPON SPECIALS"EVERYDAY
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
TWO-FERS
2-PIZZAS
2-TOPPINGS
2-COKES
$9.00
PRIMETIME
3-PIZZAS
1-TOPPING
4-COKES
$11.50
PARTY 10"
10-PIZZAS
1-TOPPING
CARRY-OUT
$30.00
1-PIZZA
1-TOPPING
1-COKE
$3.50
DELIVERY HOURS
842-1212
Mon-Thurs Fri-Sat Sunday
11 am-2 am
11 am-3 am
11 am-1 am
1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center
Hurry, Time Is Running Out!
12
9 3
6
You have until September 29 to get your portrait taken for the Jayhawker Yearbook.
Times:
Tuesday 1-5 p.m. & 6-9 p.m.
Monday, Wednesday,
Thursday& Friday: 9-noon & 1-5 p.m.
Place:
Strong Hall Rotunda
Purchase Yearbooks for just$30. Call864-5499-Walk-ins welcome.
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 23, 1993
11
Beauty WAREHOUSE Salon & Supplies SORBIC MAGE 520 W. 23rd - 841-5885 KMS JOICO NEXUS Breath RedkEN STRASTIEN frames PAUL MITCHELL
Rings Fixed Fast!
Kizer Cummings
Jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass·Lawrence, KS
ComputerLand
10. 3. 2. 1.
841-4611
The Lowest CD Prices In Town!
Current, Popular CDs for $5.95! Buy 5 or more CDs for $4.95!
For the Best Values in Town Visit
Also available, special selection CDs $3.95 Buy 10 or more CDs for $2.50 each!
Lawrence Pawn 843-4344 718 New Hampshire
Classified Directory
100s
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
award
120 Announcements
120 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s
200s Employment
Help Wanted
Professional Services
Services
Temporary 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 persons based on nationality, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and the Landmark Protection, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, facial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are covered.
100s Announcements
I
Wally
Te Quiero
Feliz Cumpleaños
. Christina .
Algebra you got down? As a tutor, I can help you bring your grade back up. X=865-9041 Call eveigns, ask for John. Leave message.
WHILE THERE
Costumes on floor for two floor parties and of course Hallowen. Come on up!
The Etsc. Shop
922 Mass.-Downwind
KU Women Mary Macy goes free facial and makeup. All men fall color, personalize妆。
110 Bus. Personals
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
KU Women! Mary Kay Cosmetics free facial and
hair collection. No obligation to purchase 843-4290
Ungent Care (Additional Charge)
Morgend-Friday: 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8:40am-4:30pm
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday- Saturday 12am-13pm
Saturday 11am-3pm
300s
Merchandise
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
EAGLE
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358
Hillel Upcoming Events Kol Nidre and Yom Kippur Services- see advertisement in today's Kansan Intramural Softball call Caryn at 864-3948 CHECK NEXT WEEK'S ADS FOR SUKKOT PROGRAMS AND FOR A SCHEDULE OF OCTOBER SHABBAT DINNERS!!
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelers, Hoops, Pendants & More! For Jewelry and Gals The Etc. The Etc. 292 Mass-Downfort
120 Announcements
GET AWAY TO PRAIRIEWOODS: Treat your sweetie to a day of relaxed hospitality. Massage, outdoor spa, healthy foods, trees and privacy! 863-3137 for rates/reservations.
GREEKS & CLUBS
RAISE UP to $1000 in just ONE WEEK For your fraternity, sorority & club. Plus $1000 for yourself! And a FREE T-SHIRT just for calling 1-800-932-0528, helptx . 75
MODELS NEEDED FREE HAIRCUT ! Men and women call Carmen Caroline Salon 843-1465.
New & returning LesBiGav
(GLASA)
Graduate students, faculty & staff: Welcome (back) Gay and Lesbian Academic & Staff Advocates
invites you to get acquainted at a reception on Monday 27 September, 5-7 p.m. please call Karl at the Student Assistance Center 864-4048 for more information
SKI BREAKS
LODGING • LIFTS • PARTIES • PICNICS • TAXES
LODGING • LIETS • PARTIES • PICNICS • TAXES
STEAMBOAT* $199
from
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK*
TELLURIDE
SUNDAY & BEACH BREAKFAST
- FREE 1/2 DAY
LIFT TICKET!
MUST BUCK BY 10/15
FOLL-RECORD INFORMATION KILLERUATION
1·800·SUNCHASE
LOST KITTEN-blue-eyed男 SameSis 3½ mo. old.
Cash reward for return. 842-1281
140 Lost & Found
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
BURNED OUT on your food service job? Clean up after you eat. Replace dishware. Fix flexible hours. Add 40/hr. start ware, wipe. $195.00 per hour.
ALASKA EMPLOYMENT - Fisheries. Earn up to
15K/week on m fishing or cannerys.
Many companies provide transportation and room
locations. For more info, call 1-308-455-1187.
A7876.
205 Help Wanted
Men and Women
Caterers, Kanasa and Burge Union' Catering Department, September 28, 1993, 8:19pm; the opening of the Leid Center. Apply at the Kansas and Burge Union' Personnel Office, Level 5, Kansas Union Building. Other dates available in Personnel Office, EOE
A great opportunity for education major! Stepping Stones is hiring a lead teacher to work with kinder gardeners from 12:00 to 6:00 m. 3, or 5 days a week. Apply today at 100 Wakauras.
200s Employment
Child care provider needed in person, First United Methodist Church, 94 Vermont, 841-7500.
DEVELOPMENT/CONSTRUCTION CO. has part-time opening with flexible day hours for an office assistant, Chance for full-time summer employment and after graduation. Experience on IBM or Apple computers. Some accounting/bookkeeping experience necessary. Starting at $4.00 and up depending on experience and hours. Send resume to P.O. Box 3003, Lawrence, KS 65006. Nila.
Handy person needed to help renovate an
excellent lifespan. Call Phi at 842-8198 or
841-1137.
Day care needs experienced person. Must be available in the morning. 48/hr. 841-7831
Domino's Pizza now has 5 delivery positions available. Apply after 4 p.m. any day all shifts avail Flexible hrs. average driver earns $7$10 an hour. q41.8002
Graduate level student with proven technical writing and revision skills, three quarter to full-time. Technical services or science background helpful. Good typing skills essential. Some short term travel required. Resume and letter of interest to Technical Services Director, p. o. box 788, Lawrence, KS 66044, EOAA.
Full-time nine needed for Lawrence family.
Competitive salary plus room and board. Ideal job for college student. Car and references required.
(816) 444-9400. No fee.
Evening and weekend CNA's needed to work with
Chaise Sharon at Douglas
Country Village Nursing 645-732-6100
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
By donating your life saving blood plasma.
$15 Today $30 This week
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
Hewed wapted Adams Alumni Center needs morning dialbacker 3 days a week, minimum wage, position available immediately, apply in person. 1866 Oread Ave.
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 reimbursement for training in mental health services to SED children and families. Attn: Patricia Roach. Please submit resume with cover letter in care of Sherry Engel-Lawrence, KS 65041. Open until filled, 302; Lawrence, KS 65041. Open until filled, 302.
Looking for a change second semester? Come live in our living room. Free home, board plus salary. Work 5 plus hours a day while getting your education and be a mother's helper. Job consists of babysitting 2 year old and newborn, light housekeeping, errand-running, et al. interested, please send in 100 words or less. You are the best person for this job. P.O. Box 1823, Lawrence, KS 6049
Kansas and Burge Urges hiring part-time, hourly for Fall Semester. Many jobs in Food Service, with varying schedule. Come to Parcel Office 10, Kansas Building for job specifics. EOE
Need Cash? Start immediately 3- painters for
a new job. Start at $69.00/hr. K47-01288
and ask for AKN.
Now accepting applications for quality minded, dependable individuals for part-time banquet service and dining service at the Palm Beach Morning afterparty shifts available. Apply at Admissions Center, 1286 Oreard Ave.
Need dependable care given for 15 mo. old boy.
Refs. required call 823-1205.
Work experience and a pay check too
VECTOR
$9.30 starting
Internships & Scholarships
842-8531
now available.
United Child Development Center, 946 Vermont, in accepting applications for a part-time computer instructor for preschool children. For more information, visit the daily line for accepting applications is September 30.
NOW HIREM smiling facing in a clean, grease-free environment. Fast food exp. preapply. apply at MR. GOODCES Subs and Fastes. 15th and Kasad. Hrs. 10:30 a.m - 11:00 p.m.
Innovative grant funded program designed to provide alternatives to psychiatric hospitalization of people with learning disabilities, Leavenworth, and Atchison counties needs persons to be on-call for short-term, crisis intervention care to emotionally disturbed children, providing communication skills, ability to be firm and consistent; experience and/or ability to learn to work with children and youth with special needs; participation in part of treatment team including parents, mental health professionals, SRS workers, school personnel, court services, and others as needed. Nature of the role of each person is available. The following part-time positions are available:
TITY TO BE PART OF THE SOLUTION
Make inquiries to: Cheri Schwen, Berrnash, KS 6044
Open until filled EOE
ON-CALL ATTENDANTS to provide one-on-one supervision in home or foster care.
United Child Development Center in accepting applications for the position of 2 hour rest aides. Applications can be picked up at UCDC, 948 Vermont, Lawrence.
FOSTER PARENTS to provide short-term out of school care, must be able to be licensed through SRS.
WANTED!
Mass St. Delail or Buffalo Bob's Restaurant. Previous food service and supervision experience mandatory. Start at $2.50 per hour. Future pay raises based on performance. Up to $2.50 per hour.
Apply to Schumann Corp. at 719 West Akron Ave.
M-F 8:4p - m.(upstairs above Smokhouse).
Part-time counter help. Mon, Wed, Fri, apply in
at The Mail Box, 3115 Width sute C.
SALES REPS WANTED. Wanted prefer your own marketing strategy and go sell. Prefer marketing of sales men to sell to a mail-order Kosher market season food. We will deliver at 1:30 PM or 8:36 PM. Before 10 am and after 1:30 PM.
Retail sales position. Immediate opening full time part time. Jewelry-china crystal. No experience necessary. Can work with school schedule-week. Send resume to P.O. box 268, Lawrence, KS 50415.
Part-time day and evening help wanted. Must be
in person only at Border Daiser, 1528 W. 23rd St.
225 Professional Services
PART-TIME SUPERVISOR WANTED.
clinical and crisis stabilization and manage clinical coordination of residential services. Two wives are registered population, requires an LMSW, licensed psychiatric nurse or chologist. Please submit resume with cover letter in care of Dale Creamer, Bert Nash, CMHC, 338 Bldg., 202, Lawrence, KS 66044, now filled into EOE.
SALES@ColeenStudents. Here's your chance!
SalesLee.com - Your people. Work
your own hours. Call (816) 857-3463
Social Worker, full-time position to provide case
work with a focus on screening and crisis stabilization and manage clinical
situations.
** Sport Officials:** Lawrence Parks and Recreational Department is hiring individuals who want to be sports officials for adult volleyball and basketball contact. Contact Bob Stantlin ASAP: 847-7122
Student Manager, Kansas and Burge Union's $5.00 per hour. Work schedule in varied but would be sufficient. Must have KU student. Ability to work well with people, concern for appearance. Prefer audio/visual, VCR and monitors, video projector, slide projector, computer, DVD player, corder, etc. experience. Ability to work without supervision. Apply Kansas and Burge Union's Perk Office, Level 5, Kansas Unit Building. EOE
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Birthday 843-4921. Free pregnancy test!
GRE EXPERTS KAPLAN
Macintosh repairs and upgrades Friendly, Affordable, In-Home Service The Mac Doctors 842-0494 Promote access and contrapetence services. Dale L. Clinton M.D.
OUI/Traffic
Criminal Defense For free consultation call
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
United Child Development Center, 946 Vermont,
has full and part-time openings for children ages 1-
3 under kindergarten care available. Program is
based on the teachers' all certified. Call 818-5292
for more info.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal and civil matters The law offices of
DONALDG.STROLE
Donald G Strole Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
LSAT EXPERTS
KAPLAN
842-5442
235 Typing Services
CC Desktop Publishing: Reamages, Cover Letters,
Fermin's Fires. Term Books, Newsletters.
Cell 62-83583
电话 62-83583
i-der Women Word Processing. Former editor
involved in accurate documents of letter
quality (942-823-205)
ABSOLUTELY EXCELLENT EDITING! Dissertation experience. No paper too large or small. 749-5855.
Are you Makin' the Grade
PROCESSING LAYERES
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your typing needs
in the classroom or office
ProType - fast, reliable service, professional quality. Any kind of typing accepted. Call today at 841-267-3900.
Word processing, applications, term papers, dissertations, resumes. Editing, composition, rush work.
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
1982 Yamaha 604 Seca, 20 miles, new battery, exc.
service records, many extras, $1,300, 780
1982 Honda 604 Seca, 20 miles, new battery, exc.
Absolutely beautiful 1/4 karat satelite engagement
for $340.00 value $800.00 selling for
$400.00包邮 Call 833-8543
Austro Daimler "TEAM" Racing Bike. 58 cm
Reynoldsalls frame, European components, 2 etas
38 cm, 17 cm.
Beds, deks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice. 908 Mass.
Quantrill's Flea Market open every Fri., Sat. & Sun 10AM-5PM811 New Hampshire 842-6616 Downtown
**Full Clearance:** All adult tapes on sale $12.95 and up.
Miracle Video, 910 N. 2nd, 841-8903, or Miracle
Video Too, 1910 Haskell, 841-7504.
Smith-Corona typewriter, w1 old. Excel. cond.
Wednesday, 4:30 a.m. for 3pm. Ask for Susie will take best offer of
new in box $2499.99
899.197
Suzuki GSS550 great low price. Call 842-393-3983
waterbed, queen size batted, waffle, headdress
(601) 715-5842
Wedding ring set. 7/4 karat round diamond sur-
mount ring with a 5 mm gold band, $298,
selling for $300. Call Lisa 802-354-254
340 Auto Sales
Yamaha Synthesizer for sale. Please call 842-5891.
86 Suzuki GSXR-750. Youji Pipe and much more.
$250 OB0. Call John at 832-4990.
1982 Audi 4000 S reliable, good condition HIMI.
$1,000 a.o b.
79 SAAB, good shape ATSP sunroot $149 obo 842. 879
Olson 122A
Over the Edge
Volvo DL, great cond, new breaks, new tires,
Volvo V40, great steering, $2800 b. o. call B-3550,
1500, 1750, 2000, 2250, 2500, 2750, 3000
Sale- '78 W Rabbil, body damaged but runs -$400
Call 749-6055
Naismith Halls'
services give students the competitive edge.
400s Real Estate
24 hr. computer center
Front door bus service
Fitness room
360 Miscellaneous
Dine anytime meals
Weekly maid service
Bookcases, desks, chairs, IBM typewriter, telephone system, and minicellar items. To purchase these, go to www.ibm.com.
1 bdm apartment in Meadowbrook. Free cable and swimming pool. On bus route R-482-459. Ask for
NAISMITH Hall
405 For Rent
BR apt. cabl & water paid. Sept. 30. On bus
passage. Cala after 7pm and leave
passage. ma41-4372
1800 Naismith Drive (913)843-8559
3 rooms for rent for non-trad. female(s) available oct. 1. 500 + util. Live 10 min. south of Lawrence.
Private country home-kids and pets O.K. #760816-1 message.
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS 2040 Heatherwood
- 2 Bedroom, $1^{1/2}$ Bath $425
•3 Bedroom, 2 Bath $550
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
Call Now!843-4754
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
very neat! Contact: Call 98-4465.
3 bdf 2 hrs apt for rent Campus Place. Very close room, comfortable room, smokier speaker. Call 943-408-6000.
4 bedroom apartment for rent. Fully furnished,
very nice. Interested? Contact 892-4455
very nice! Interested? Call 842-4455,
very nice! Interested? Call 842-4455,
very nice! Interested? Call 842-4455,
How to schedule an ad:
- Byphone: 864-4358
Available now, 2 bedrooms at 919 Tennessee, small pet okay, 825 plus utilities 748-768.
Available Oct. 1, one bdm; newly renovated banquet apt. 1500 to Vermont, Off street parking
Responsible roommate to share upcale 3 bbr 2
$255 / utilities Call after 49m 829-6044
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Room for rent, for a call from campus, very affordable. Call for details, any time b 823-232-723.
Choice room in large queen residence. Utilities paid
with rd. cost of $35. Call 646-291-8700, near DUI-
center or rd. cost of $25. Call 646-291-8700, near DUI-
center.
Rm. avail, for fem in 2 story townhouse. Close to,
seattle, shoppable on 31st St. Sep. already
shipped. Lease to May 31, 794-7294.
430 Roommate Wanted
- ByMail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66845
Eritrea nice and quiet. 3 bedroom apt. including cen-
tral room, bathroom, laundry. Not pets. Nibes 52.
Spainish Coast Aptures 841-844.
Female non-smoker to share duplex, three bedroom, washer/dryer, on KU route 794-415.
Female roommate® needed to share 2B, 2bath, on KU route $283.0/mo + 1/2 buildup 414-319.
Atshun phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* In american 110 Stuffer Filed
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Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
105 personal 140 lost & found 380 for sale
110 business personals 265 help wanted 340 auto sales
129 announcements 225 professional services 360 miscellaneous
130 entertainment 235 lying services
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The University Daly Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
9-23
"I wouldn't laugh, Jack. ... I know things about you."
.
12
Thursday, September 23, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Presto Wammo
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the Weekend
(Thursday) Special!
Get a Large, 2 Topping
Pizza with 2 drinks for
only $8.50 FREE Delivery
(Tax not included)
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620 w 12th (behind the Crossing)
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Presto Weekend
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10 tans $25
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23rd St. & Ousdahl
(behind Perkins)
Since 1980
841-6232
EUROPEAN
TAN, HEALTH & HAIR SALON
All-nighters need focus, good food
Amy Johnson, Salina sophomore, pulled an all-nighter and swigged Mountain Dew to stay awake Sept. 15, cramming for a psychology test
She is one of many students who will pull at least one all-nighter this semester.
By Liz Klinger Kansan staff writer
"I don't do it that often," Johnson said. "I am just way too tired the next day."
Educators and health care professionals at the University of Kansas said all-nighters should be avoided.
Marshall Jackson, associate administrator at the Student Assistance Center who conducts workshops on exam preparation, said the all-nighter should be used only as a last resort.
"Try not to get yourself in this situation," Jackson said. "One thing we really try to do is get students to manage their time."
College students often spend three to four times more time studying than they did in high school, Jackson said.
"Some students come to college with an inaccurate view of what it's going to take-to be successful," he said.
Jackson said he encouraged students to use study techniques such as "mind maps," in which students first
Norman Saul, professor of history, also recommended that students focus on a key figure, event or term when studying.
Then students should add more detailed information and should make associations about the way things relate to each other, he said.
"If you're dealing with the Russian Revolution, there's Lenin," he said.
visualize a main idea and then add any information that relates to that idea
University of Kansas Medical Center dietitian Adrienne Moore Baxter said all-nighters should be avoided from a health standpoint.
During critical periods of work or study, Baxter said, people should eat foods that contain tyrosine, an amino acid that is converted into chemicals that help people remain alert. Baxter said tuna, cottage cheese and yogurt were good sources of tyrosine.
Baxter said people should limit their intake of pure carbohydrates such as chips, bagels, breads and pastas, which have a calming effect.
Marshall Butler, Chicago senior continues to pull all-nighters, regardless of the physical and mental strain.
"Oh, I do that consecutively," Butler said. "I do that all the time."
■ Make choices — Don't try to learn everything, just key elements. Spend 25 percent of study time learning new material and 75 percent reviewing.
■ Make a plan — Choose what to study and then set a deadline.
Study tips The six-step cramming process
Condense material Use flash cards to aid review.
Studytips
KANSAN
■ Repeat information — it may be helpful to tape information. Play it before going to sleep and again in the morning.
■ Relax — Yawn, tighten and relax muscles or think about a peaceful area.
■ Don't batere yourself for procrastination. Promise yourself to be better prepared next time.
Source: "Becoming a Master Student" by Dave Ellis with explanations provided by Marshall Jackson, associate administrator.
The architecture major said adrenaline and staying focused kept him awake during the wee hours at Lindley Hall Annex.
"Make yourself a working calendar that has every single task that you're going to be involved with throughout the day," Jackson said.
Jackson suggested students take good notes and review them often.
The Student Senate last night approved a resolution that will be added to a time capsule to be sealed in a Kansas Union cornerstone later this year. Senate also passed legislation financing six student groups.
The time capsule resolution recognizes the 130 KU students and alumni who died in World War I and to whom the Kansas Union is dedicated. It also commends the service the Union has provided for 67 years.
Student Senate's words set in stone
The following groups were allocated funds by the Student Senate:
■ Middle East Club — $179
■ Cultural India Club — $1,360
The results of freshman class officer elections were also announced: Derek Ahrens, Overland Park, president; Rob Lundquist, Lenexa, vice president; Katie French, Phoenix, treasurer; and Heather Austin, Olate, secretary.
Jayhawk Association of Environmental Professionals
— $300
Pakistan Club — $3,329
Best Buddies — $329
Club Persia — $554
LSAT
GRE
GMAT
MCAT
The most complete arsenal of test prep tools in the world.
Classes forming now.
842-5442
KAPLAN RULES
Monday Sept27 Blues Night Out with
JimmvWitherspoon
Jimmy Whitspen
Two Shows
7:30-9:00 &
10:00-11:30
Tickets: $10 in advance
$12 at the door
Tuesday, Sept. 28
Rock-N-Roll ... *$17.50
Wednesday, Sept. 29
Pop-N-Roll ...*$12.50
Thursday, Sept. 30
Jazz Night Out * $7.50
Friday, Oct. 1st
Reggae Dance Party ...* $5.00
*WeekPass $25.00 (Good for 1 Jimmy Witherspoon show & all other nights)
Tue-Fri shows start at 9:00pm and are $5.00 per night
The Week Of Rock: A week dedicated to the history, progression and future of modern music. A.W.R.E.N. Production
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
PLACE AN AD FREE!
♂
MEN SEEKING WOMEN
1st year grad student from New England is looking for running partner who enjoys cold weather, eating vegetables, reading philosophy, and owns at least one dog. Participants will be blindfolded, dunked in blond hair, blown eyed male seeking laid-back female to study with and go out. Has to enjoy the local music scene. #81223
31 yr, old, black hair, brown eyes male. Look for a back lap after 29-23 yr. old female who enjoys listening to live music and kicked back evenings.
Give me a call if this is you. #4707
29 yr. old Asian male seeking companionship with
fun-loving Asian female who is short, likes sports
and enjoys playing cards and goes for frozen
vouurt. #85256
35-year-old Hispanic 6'1" backлад Californian seeking
an apartment in a bustling city doing new
work and having good time, @2022
8" Soft brown sophomore transfer student with a
music major. You will be able to wear a
car, will travel. Not a Jack but fitness conscious.
I am an experienced student that can tutor Math
90% of the grade. Good company. All that
afforded. 623125.
Athletic, communicative, in good shape, intelligent (sometimes). Enjoy a variety of activities;
A small town boy with small town manners who has his feet planted firmly in cowboy boots, his hair pulled back into a tight ponytail, his hard work and time in the gym, and his dreams arm reach away. Seeks a girl whose mind, body, spirit is full of possibilities and active dates that have a possibility of turning to romantic nights, give this senior a call. 623456
ambitious grad student seek attractive, mature, N/S female single. 21-27 years old with dark hair and brown eyes. Have a long arm with short dark hair, hazel eyes and excellent muscle tone. I have left-of-center political beliefs, am a impassioned classical guitar virtuoso. I am aspired to become an intelligent charm, wit, and agility. #81831
SM 18^31 19 looking for SM 18-32. Must be sensitive and
humor. Be outgoing with a good sense of humor.
b, #1847
m, #1847
Aultrayce 30-year-old SWM. Brown hair, brown eyes seeking a SWM. 12-28 for a romantic long-lasting relationship. I enjoy partying, cooking, music and dance. You will have similar interests, please recomment. #002200
Fate made you notice this ad. Now, my hopeful romantic muster thy courage and let this knight become your soulmate. Check the stars and let this air sigh sweep you off your feet. #43585
Common abbreviations
M Male A Asian
F Female J Jewish
D Divorced C Christian
S Single G Gay
W White G Gay
B Black L Lesbian
H Hispanic N/S Non-Smoker
Hello, I'm fairly tall. I like bluegrass and sports. You're interested in going out, give that number a call.
I'm looking for a girl that listens to good music like REM, Eva Costello, or PearJam. f2872
To check out these ads call 1-900-285-4560 You will be charged $1.95 per minute
Kind, sensitive, earth-loving, Phinch-head male seeking female with similar interests for events and parties. Use TV and baking cookies in the nude. You must be a student or graduate. Finger 2. Sorority girls need not apply. #67026
If you are seeking a plastic relationship, stop if you're seeking a 2 hour relationship, read on. Very energetic BH/BE, w/ trim build SWM is looking for an energetic BF or 2, who is looking for even more energy. You must be sexually attractive. No ugly women need apply. 4703
Latin lover seeking beautiful American woman to heat up the long nights. Must enjoy shaking all of her hands.
Single white male, 23, seeks single white female, 21-24 for casual relationship. I will '51, well built, have it. brown hair, green eyes. I like to work out, mountain bike, and ski. I'm looking for someone who is more spontaneous and quiet night alone. I'm serious but have a quiet sense of humor. #22884
Single white male 6'0, brown hair, blue eyes. I am looking for a down to earth, mature woman to drink some beer with. Must have a good sense of humor with minimal financial expectations. Box 4719.
Single white male look for a lustful vienna who likes the Grateful Dead, Bar-B-Ar, Blues, and Dream Letterman. I love to give long messages. My Lizard Queen of my dreams? Call box #3877
SDWM seeks non-traditional single divorced white female who enjoys outdoors, concerts, dancing, quiet dinners, romance and value honesty and strong family values, kids are O.K. Box #28268.
My girlfriend has skipped town, and I am seeking a female companion. Please help. #43860
Single, white male, age 21, brown hair, and blue eyes. Please come to the kitchen, tiring, hanging out, and drinking. Must be spontaneous, plus willing to sit on the couch all day. Smoky and hot, please, plus, but II teach you! Must have good attitude.
SM seeks for a N/ S/F who is tall and can swat, hawk or arm. I am 6'1". I love outdoor activities and I want a partner who enjoys traveling by car. I like jazz very much and I want a partner who can spend hours talking with me in the jazz pubs while having glasses of beer.
we are seeing SF. If you're tired of games and ready for a "real" romance, are fun-loving, exciting, and love to dance, look ya no further and get a nice date! We have a waiting only a fine lady needs at #22663
SWM, 20, blond hair blue eyes, I did it for the tickets. #20281
SWM, 22, $5'11" Dark K. So. German, brown eyes.
Jazzing in KC, live music and films. Ifen forget my phone #, do you? Seeking mutual back racks are康复 under the steam of the capstam
SWM, 22, 6" ath, brown blr. blues, Ambulator; corpse seeks necrophilic embalmer. My parents didn't have affect on my development. (I have a strong affinity for cashmere sweaters) I like to wear the sweatshirt.
SWM, 22 w/ unistoppable smile seeking confident, confident, crazy, caring SWM 19-24 to share life's experiences with a heart that just loves with the shear joy of living, give me a call and we'll have a bell #22586
SWM, 34, tall, athletic, been around the block,
seek SWF, feminine, SINCERE, in fair or better
shape, to see which doors we can open together.
We need the doors. Card-Carrying-Libermakers
apply at your own risk.
SWM - seeking good looking, great body, intelligent woman 18-24 years, old who like to play darts, watch Ren & Stimpy and likes beer. No hairy armis or muscups. #j0988
SWM 21 years olds 59 Athlete looking for SWF who likes sports, dancing and having a good time. I am a gentleman that's looking for someone to share a great friendship with and may more.
SWM 8'1" looking for an athletic, outgoing, confident beautiful young woman 20-24 who doesn't need to paint her face before she goes out for the gig. If you want to play with her or get a few looks, I love the outdoors & playing the guitar. If you are into one night stands & traveling from bed to bed, call another box. #22938
music, and new experiences. Seeking form with personal goals and high in life. 23-20. Box #22876
I am a student seeking friendship and possible romantic relationship. I am honest, kind, humorous, great artist, an athletic build, brown hair, green eyes, and a clean-cut look. I'm looking for a non-smoker SWIM who is moral and kind. My ideal lady enjoys athletic activities, has blue eyes, and a bright smile. #22231
SWM looking for tall mellow women. Recently moved to Lawrence from Eastern Iowa. Hoping for a corn-fed, Kansas-grown beauty queen. I enjoy long walks and water sports. Must be a girl with blue eyes or a movie "Slacker", and I listen to the PAW while not wearing a watch. #43857
SWM, Ruth Limbaugh man, who goes by the philosopher Surfer, rather than lounging on the beach. I enjoy gif, movies, bear, and road trip. Seeking some something back yet has style and a sense of humor. #8576
SWIM tall enough that when I stand my feet touch the ground. We not firmly planted in other places (because of space and time), then you know we've met enjoy people watching and playing in this beautiful environment.
SWM non-smoker $180 '12 lt for hair br hairs, all-inclusive. Swimwear for $350 country. Harry Connick Jr., gives great messages seek attractive, intelligent SWF (18-24) w/ a knot to knock out smite who loves a good hair and it really works.
SWM looking for Vampires willing to embrace if you love the night call box #84243
SWM seeks SBF. Am interested in meeting a lady who is tired of people playing games. If you like to get away for the weekends, dance, and are open-minded, give me a call.
SWM waw gorgeous SWF N/S who can pound a lot of beer and who's interested in going to parties and getting crazy. I may not a nerd and don't call if you are too busy. You can't be anything in cool. The knees are waiting, espe-
SWM seeks SWF with simple American name for
relationship, must have love for HARP Adele #417
SWM-19 years-old. Brown eyes, brown hair.
Enjoys working out and playing sports. Looking
for attractive females between 18 & 22 who enjoy
easy evening meetings. #43863
SWM-Handsome, with athletic build, looking for
lovers of fine art and loves have a good time. edd77
SWIM! I'm a very motivated person, I like to get involved. My favorite hobby is hunting wild animals. I love the outdoors. Look for a 10-29 yr. old man who wants to get involved, like marriage.
43859
Swim 'm I tall will have blonde surfer hair. I look like the blonde guy on the Real World. I enjoy romantic dinners and long evening dances. Give me a call. I'd love to meet you. (N/S please.) #60397
'All dark and handsome law student seeks kinky and buckton blonde into Slacker and reggae @82318
'All dark-brained Englishman, 21 yrs old, the coolest of all things American seeks like minded American female (who doesn't mind guys with a slight accent) for casual friendship. So go on and make the transatlantic connection. Prefer fun-loving, personable and unique girls. No strings attached, but hang out together and see what happens @8150
Toned 5'9 guy, 21, seeking attractive, fun girl to share some quality time. #26866
♂
Are you tall, dark, and handsome but a little shy? You will probably be at home on. Whether you work at a grocery store or drive a CRK, I will moll it over it but I’m not vain as long, an old woman and women with blind hair and blue eyes, and blues.
Are you tired of endless bar hunting for a sincere, nice, and classy man? I'm an 192年 old SWP with curly black hair, fair skin, and brown eyes. I'm looking for someone with a lot of spontaneity to have a good time with. Box #824149
I am 5'3, have short, sexy hair & blue eyes. I am very outgoing and make friends easily. I observed the summer in France and am looking for romance. I am very versatile in my interests and hard, chiseled looks, intelligent and they must know to dance. If you would like to try out to see how we compliment each other, call my calls: #21553
down to earth, fun-loving female who is looking for a great time. If you are open-minded, like long walks, and ready for one hell of a time never to forget-imeme a call! #43203
I'm seeking a man who's interested in art, reading,
writing that must be good-looking, humorous and
honest. **2022**
SAF 23, 5'3, looking for SM 21-26, must be good
knowledge of sensory of humor, fun-loving
and romantic; emotional
Intriguing female searching for a majestic male to share intimate eyes together. #82902
HF-TALL, brown eyes, serious. I like movies
and music. I am religious and would like a gentleman's
music. I am religious and would like a gentleman's
music.
SWF 18, 5'2" with short blonde hair, sensitive, fun-
bring bright my days and fill my nights.
SWF, 20, 5.4" brown hair, brown eyes. I am looking for someone who brings me flowers and that I can cook cake light dinner for him. Must be a nice dresser, call me to find out more. #47719
SWF 19, seeking male for intimate friendship only
with a possible mutual hobbies to be found out
online, #8144
SWF, 21 years old, 54" with caviar wishes and champagne dreams seeks SWM 21-23 years old to McDonald menu meals, you will prefer FIle's to McBmond menu meals, you should call this. Hoe to talk to you soon. #82230
SWF. 21 yr., engaged and seeking one last fling.
8199
SWF, 22, 5% dark brown hair and brown eyes.
She's into romantic nights at home. I like going to movies, long walks and candle light dimmer. No smokers, beer drinkers, or beer bottles, please.
SWF, Brown hair, brown eyes & "If you like pina colada's, getin' catch in the rain if you're not into yoga, if you have ½ a brain, you're the man I have looked for. Call me & esape-" #82266
SWF 510 Hond attractive, athletic figure looking for single male goal of good sense to build a team that can deliver the best possible result.
Swift Catholic, seeking 6 ft. plus athletic, to 30 to 35 yrs. old who enjoys the outdoors. Loves walks, bike riding, biking, & dancing. Looking for someone who knows how to lead a group of humorous friends on driving roads.
SWF looking for my soul mate! If you love to read, walk, and enjoy 70's music like ABAZR, then let the phone "ring," ring, ring, in rhythm, at a ragtime beat, at a disco beat, at coffee (Women need not amply!) 22001
SWF seeking an attractive SWM to go to a party and have a good time. #84232
SWF N/S / I am looking for a very kind, and kind,
brighten to bristle my life! #20233
---
SWF seeking a good-looking athletic male. Must be out & going. Like beer and blue eyes. Prefer someone 21 or older. Want to wait to meet ya! #2367 SWF, seeking a SM 20-40 who enjoys lay days and wild nights. Must like disco music and dancing till dawn. I'm open-minded and fun-loving. Call box
SWF looking for SWM. I enjoy mountain biking and the outdoors and am seeking someone to just hang out with and get to know. I like seeing bands and enjoy going to coffee shops. I'm 23 yrs old, '54 and attractive. Please call if interested. #22051
SWJF, 19, $4'', 115 lbs. Enjoys working out, dancing,
playing volleyball, and occasional partying.
Likes Van Hale, Stone Temple Pilots, and the Gin
Sensors. Seems to like DJs. Doesn't drink much.
Drug usage need not be apprised. **$200**
SWF seeking SWM. I like alternative music, but you don't have to. I like guys around 5'10 with long brown hair and blue eyes. I also like to drink beer. You can wear a tank top or a pair of fun airs like to hope give me a call #2890
SWJF looking for that special guy to sweep me off my feet and can enjoy high times chilling out at home or around town. I drink, dance, and smoke. Call me for fun. I like to party! #21059
WANTED: SWM. Prefer tall and dark. It wouldn't hurt if you were handsome and rich either. Nicely defined pets and little, preferably chin hair or back hair. Beer of choice. Bud Light. #40077
WF looking for a strictly platonic relationship with a normal MW. I enjoy light drinking, movies, eating out, and meaningful conversations. People with annoying personalities need not respond. Friendly outgoing men only, please, who are just looking for a friend to hang out with. #43204
Woman seeking Scandinavian man. More or less blonde and blue-eyed. European ideas and attitudes. Neutral politically. Hard worker affectionate. I'm looking for my equal. #8298
MEN SEEKING MEN
Are you as comfortable in a "gay" scene as a "straight one"? Are you a GWM, 21-6, confident, with a muscular build and at least somewhat intelligent. I am a GWM, 24, 6^3", 195 hrs, not so serious senior with good looks, intelligence, and neurotic personality. Call box #47588
88
Dark long hair, athletic looking for male with simi-
lar lifestyle. **82539**
GWM, 18,40, 51/11, bluebeard, very cute sharp looking and masculine. Seeking good look, dressing sharp guy 18-26 for possible friendship and discrete fun. #39904
GMW I'm looking to find a lot of new friends where we can share a lot of ideas and wants. Who enjoys others company. Let's if we've got anything in common. 89288
Very good looking, BIWM, I175, 6', quality fit & tanned, seeks only cute/super look, cleaning.
Hey I if you fit the following, to meet the same:
Body, Great Looks, Tanned, Closeted Stud.
10264
WOMEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
Very good looking, bwm, 6 foot 17lb workbook,
sophisticated, 82-92cm, private, #G90025,
sophisticated 82-92cm, private, #G90025
Humorous, cute, boyish looking AF - that's me. I would like to meet 18-29 year old pretty young ladies to spend some time together and have fun.
**@80833**
♥
SHARING HANDS
FRIENDS SEEKING FRIENDS
Biscuit maker seeks friend who likes to fix stuff **20655**
19 yr. old Chicago boy looking for 19 yr. old Jewish girl
80263
Non-national students hoping to get into
information exchange and studying group and
Information exchange
Eleven-Eleven. Is this meaningful to you? If so, let it get together. #28268
SEEKING
SPORTS
INTEREST
SWM seeking female partner to play tennis and volleyball in Goa. Interested interested in going to the woodlands race track
TREASURE BOX
MUTUAL
HOBBIES
Graduate student looking for riding companion to
and off road. abilities are welcome! Road
20222
Grad student looking for riding companion to get in shape with. Road and off-road, all abilities welcome.
1 ride 6X's a week with varying intensities
22545
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
2. You'll place an ad in the Jatykal Network section of the Kansan (up to 8 lines) and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people who respond to your ad. Your voice message will remain in the system for 21 days.
To place an ad
1. Call or come into the Kansan at 119
Stauffer Flint Hall, 864-4358.
3. After your ad runs in the Kansan, you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages people leave for you.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
1. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them.
2. Call 1-900-485-4560 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touch-tone phone) the ad, enter the mailbox number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category. You can interrupt to skip over messages that don't interest you. Voice prompts will lead you along the way. You'll be charged $1.95 per minute.
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached.
SPORTS: Sydney, Australia, will be the host of the 2000 Summer Games. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103.NO.25
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1993
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Witness says wanted status benefits none
By Kathleen Stolle Kansan staff writer
Collective bargaining could be detrimental to both graduate teaching assistants and the University of Kansas, a witness for the University testified during a hearing yesterday.
But Robert Bickel, former director of employee and labor relations at Rutgers University in New Brunswick. N.J., could not name any adverse effects collective bargaining has had on Rutgers.
GTRAUNION HEARINGS
- **AROUND THE NATION:** GTAs at other universities have faced the same complex issues that KU's GTAs are dealing with right now. Page 3.
During the fourth day of GTA status hearings, Bickal testified that bargaining collectively for wages could tie the hands of department directors.
"It seems to me it limits the flexibility a department has to assign its resources," he said.
The hearings will determine whether University GTAs qualify as public employees and therefore could vote to form a collective bargaining unit. The University, which says GTAs benefit from the experience of their assistance-hip, is challenging the GTAs' claim that they are public employees.
Bickal, now a consultant in labor relations, was expected to testify as an expert witness, by hearing officer Monty Bertelli ruled that Bickal lacked the proper scholarly background to be considered an expert. His testimony on GTA collective bargaining could reflect personal experiences only. Bertelli said
Bickal testified that contracts negotiated through collective bargaining could commit GTAs to undesirable conditions.
"What I have found is that because of the transitory nature of graduate work, very often what the present group of teaching assistants attempt to bargain is not necessarily of interest to those who succeed them," he said.
Bickal testified that uniform collective bargaining could disrupt the informal relationships between departments and their GTAs.
Under cross examination by GTA representative Scott Stone, Bickal could not cite specific problems collective bargaining had created for the administration at Rutgers. He also said the administration at Rutgers did not try to block the formation of collective bargaining units by the Rutgers GTAs.
"After he was pressed, a lot of what he said came out in favor of the GTAS." Stone said after the hearing.
Faculty members, called as witnesses by University assistant general counsel Karen Dutcher, echoed Bickal's assertion that collective bargaining could be detrimental.
Dean Stetler, director of undergraduate studies in biological sciences, said collective bargaining could upset the delicate balance of budgeting, providing experiences to GTA and serving undergraduates.
Hearing highlights
A brief overview of previous days' testimony:
Monday: The GTAs first presented their case with lead-off witness David Reidy, who summarized the GTA position: "Nobody would deny that you do receive some academic benefits. But the motivation for the job is primarily economic."
Tuesday: Applied English Center director Betty Soppela, the University's first witness, supported the University's position that assistanceships are an academic teacher training experience, not employment: "We're trying to promote opportunities for GTAs in allied disciplines to teach and receive some income so they can afford to go to school. It's commitment to teacher training on our part."
■ Wednesday — The University relies heavily upon the GTAs teaching service, witnesses from both sides testified. "What would happen if all the GTAs walked out tomorrow?" GTA general counsel Scott Stone asked. "We'd be in trouble," said University witness Howard Mossberg, dean of the graduate school. But the University maintained the position that they were not public employees.
INSIDE
Secretary speech
Former Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney told a crowd at Baker University yesterday that the end of the Cold War should not justify U.S. defense cuts.
Page 8.
Health-care plan
Who are the winners and losers under President Clinton's proposed health plan?
Page 7.
President Clinton's proposed health plan
Missing student calls family
Johnson stranded in Kentucky town with car problems
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
After having been reported missing for five days, a KU graduate student has turned up in Kentucky with a broken-down car and possible intentions to return home.
Family and friends of Rob Johnson have not seen him since Saturday.
Jaworski, on Tuesday and told him he had broken the front ball joint on his 1978 Buick Skyhawk in Eddyville, a town in the corner of southwestern Kentucky.
Johnson called his stepfather, Mike
102
"We thrashed a lot of things out on the phone," Jaworski said. "I asked him what does Kentucky
mean to you?" and he said 'Nothing.' He said he was just going to go."
While he did not know for sure, Jaworski said he expected Johnson to get his car fixed by today and return to his home in
Rob Johnson
Wichita tonight or sometime tomorrow.
"We never gave up hope on him," Jaworski said. "His mom's just ecstatic. His stepdad, too."
Jaworski did not know for sure whether Johnson intended to return to the University.
"It's still kind of up in the air," Jaworski said. "But I get the sense that he might not return."
Mark Tregallas, Pratt senior and Johnson's roommate at Stephenson Scholarship Hall last year, said that he learned of Johnson's planned return to Kansas from Johnson's family. The news came as a big relief to Tregallas.
"It doesn't matter what he's done," Tregallas said. "I'm really not sure why he
Tregallas spent Wednesday night posting notices throughout campus asking about Johnson's whereabouts.
Kyle Johnson, Rob Johnson's cousin,
said he had not yet had a chance to speak
with Rob Johnson but was relieved at his
return.
chose to leave when he did. He probably just needed some time."
In addition to his graduate studies, Rob Johnson is a graduate teaching assistant in math.
"That's a mild understatement," Kyle Johnson said. "Still, I'll be really relieved when he's in Wichita with his folks. Right now, he's still traveling, as far as I know."
Kansan reporters Scott J. Anderson and Shan Schwartz contributed to this report.
BREATHE
Your move
John Gamble / KANSAN
Nathan Welch, Lawrence sophomore, and Charlie Frey, Brockport, N.Y., senior, play a game of "speed" chess at the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union. Speed chess is a timed game lasting less than 10 minutes. The two played during the Chess Club's meeting last night. The club meets every Thursday at 7 p.m.
New food delivery business to bring Lawrence dining directly to front doors
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
After three years of delivering pizzas and learning all the tricks of the trade, three 22-year-olds will sit back in their offices on Sunday and manage a delivery business of their own.
"It's going to be really exciting for us," said Mark Lyerly, Overland Park senior. "It's going to feel great to be on the opposite end of the delivery business after sitting behind a steering wheel for so long."
Lerly and two longtime friends will open "Waiters on Wheels" this Sunday in Lawrence.
The business is designed to deliver foods from Lawrence restaurants that do not offer a delivery service. Sxr restaurants on Massachusetts Street have their menus on the delivery service brochure.
"We're working on distributing menus in Lawrence right now," Brant said. "People will only have to call our business, tell us what they want from a restaurant, and we will take care of the rest."
One of the three new managers, Andy Brant, Prairie Village senior, said the service would be convenient and easy to use.
Three delivery cars will operate at all times. Brant said their business would guarantee hot and fresh foods—or the delivery would be free.
"We've learned a lot about the business since we've all delivered pizza for years," Brant said. "We know what people like and what people don't like so we're going to use our experience to better serve the public."
Keith Rice, Tin Pan Alley manager, said he was excited about the service.
"I think it will bring more business to downtown Lawrence," Rice said. "On busy nights,
"It was one of those
"It was one of those things where I didn't know what to do with a history degree—this came up, and I decided to
jump at the chance."
Kryan Meyer
Co-founder of Waiters on Wheels
"My mom asked me what I wanted to do with my economics major when I graduated from KU," he said. "I gave it a lot of thought, and I wanted to use my experiences with delivery."
we might even be able to crank out an extra hundred bucks."
Brant said he had been at home during winter break last year when he thought of starting the business.
Brant and Lyerly said they had spent some time brainstorming the project and had called an old high school friend to ask him if he wanted to go in on the business.
.
Ryan Meyers, who graduated from Santa Clara University near San Jose, Calif., with a degree in history last spring, said that he had not enjoyed his job and that he had been ready to do something else.
"It was one of those things where I didn't know what to do with a history degree — this came up so I decided to jump at the chance," he said.
SALON DE CAFÉ
Waiters on Wheels
Two KU students and a friend started an independent delivery service, which delivers food from the following restaurants:
Cornucopia
Low Rider Mexican Cafe
Paradise Cafe
Quinton's Bar and Deli
Tin Pan Alley
Uptown Bagels
Micah Laaker/KANSAN
Heather Linhart, Emporia senior, said she thought the business would be a success.
Meyers helped his friends finance the business and added some ideas he got from delivery services in California.
"Someday, we'd like to expand and deliver movies along with the food people order." Meyers said. "Then people can eat their meals and watch a movie at the same time."
"There's a good variety of restaurants, and I think it will go over well," she said. "It'll definitely be nice for lazy or rainy days like today."
The wrong speech — Clinton's Feb. 17 economic message — flashed up on the eye-level viewing screens for the president to read instead of the address about health care.
The Associated Press
Clinton speech almost spoiled by technology
TAMPA, Fla. — Television host Ted Koppel teased President Clinton during last night's town hall meeting about the foul-up the night before with the president's TelePrompTer as he began his address to Congress.
ABC then played a videotape showing Clinton on the podium in the House chamber Wednesday night, turning to talk to Vice President Gore. Clinton narrated.
"There you were," Koppel said. "You were in front of a joint session of Congress. You had the joint chiefs of staff there. You had your Cabinet there. You were talking to tens of millions of people."
"I am telling the vice president, 'Al, they've got the wrong speech on the TelePrompTer.'
}
"He said, That's impossible."
"I said, 'You're not reading it. Read it.'
"That what I said to him," Clinton explained that the White House communications department had typed his health-care speech onto the same computer disc that also contained the earlier address.
"And I thought to myself, 'That was a pretty good speech, but not good enough to give twice,'" Clinton said.
2
Friday, September 24, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA FILMS
INDIAN SUMMER
Fri., Sept. 24, 7 & 9:30 PM
Sat., Sept. 25, 7 & 9:30 PM
Sun., Sept. 26, 2:00 PM
SERPENT & RAINBOW
Fri., Sept. 24, midnight
Sat., Sept. 25, midnight
All shows in Woodruff Auditorium.
Tickets $2.50, midnight $3.
Free admission with SUA Movie Card.
For information, call 864-SHOW.
"A GRAND,
NOW MOVIE,
For a gathering that never ends,
are the ones
involved in this story."
THE NEW YORK CITY
"IT'S PERFECT,
GO SEE IT."
THE NEW YORK CITY
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TODAY (5:15), 7:15, 9:15
Sat, Sun (3:15, 5:15), 7:15, 9:15
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SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 6 PM. ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
Rookie of the Year PG 5:00, 7:30, 9:30
Another Stakeout PG 5:00, 7:20, 9:30
841.5191
Jurassic Park PG-13 5.00
7.20 9.40
Into the West PG 5.15
Sleepless in Seattle PG 7.15 9.30
Warlock Armageddon $^R$ 8.15
7.30 9.45
In the Line of Fire $^R$ 8.30
7.30 9.40
The Good Son $^R$ 8.15
7.30 9.30
CINEMA TWIN ALL SEATS
3110 IOWA 841-5191 $1.25
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191
Dickinson
1105 MASSACHUSETTS
749-9750
LAWRENCE'S
BEST!
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KIDS
MASSACHUSETTS
TIM PAN ALLEY
FITS
MUSIC DEVELOPMENTS
1105 MASSACHUSETTS
LAWRENCE'S
BEST!
TUN VAN ALLEY
CAIS
ENATION DEVOTION FAMILY LOVE GRIEF
SPAIR ABANDON SACRIFICE FAITH HONOR
TY VOWS STRENGTH PAIN LONELINESS CONTEMPT OBLIGATION DUTY ALLEGIANCE ABSENCE SUFFERING DISTRESS ESTRANGEMENT ALIENATION
VOTION FAITH HONOR LOYALTY VOWS STRENGTH PAIN LONELINESS CONTEMPT OBLIGATION DUTY ALLEGIANCE ABSENCE SUFFERING DISTRESS ESTRANGEMENT ALIENATION
ON FAMILY LOVE GRIEF AGONY DESPAIR ON SACRIFICE FAITH HONOR LOYALTY VOWS STRENGTH PAIN LONELINESS CONTEMPT OBLIGATION DUTY ALLEGIANCE ABSENCE SUFFERING DISTRESS ESTRANGEMENT ALIENATION DEVOT
Dickinson
Dickinson
NEW YORK
212-750-WALL
Man without a Face **P*10 (4: 15); 7: 10; 9: 30
Secret Garden **I*4 (4: 30 only)
Undercrowder Blues **P*13 (7: 25; 9: 35
Mhattan Murder Mystery **P*14 (4: 30; 7: 10; 9: 40
The Fugitive **I*10 (4: 10); 7: 65; 9: 55
The Program **I* (4: 35); 7: 20; 9: 45
True Romance **I* (4: 20); 7: 15; 9: 50
53 Primer Timer Show (c). Senior Citizen Anytime
Come see a performance of Puccini's classic, "Madame Butterfly," at The Lyric Opera, and you'll hear a Butterfly's voice soar with the pain of her tragic love for a United States Navy leutenant.
Performances will be staged September 25, 27 and 29, and October 1 and 3 Tickets
range from $8 to $37 and can be purchased at The Lytic ticket office. Seats are selling quickly, so call 471-7344 to order tickets.
Performances will be sponsored by Boatman's First National Bank of Kansas City on September 25, and Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Miller on October 1.
Lyric Opera. Get Caught in the Act
1029 Central, Kansas City, MO 64105
Student rush $4.00 with ID. 30 minutes prior to curtain.
Financial assistance provided by the Missouri Arts Council
and the National Endowment for the Arts The Lyric flies U.S.Air
marks the spot
GENERATIONAL POLITICS:
marks the spot
Do you find it ironic that so few people stayed after Woodstock to pick up the trash?
Do you suspect that the American Dream is over?
Are you already bored with these subjects and wishing you had a beer?
Find out what may define a generation that hates to be called a generation, and what the future could hold for you.
Meet Neil Howe, co-author of 13thGEN
Random House Publishing
OREAD
BOOKSIGNING
Thursday, September 30
1:30 - 3:30 pm at the Mt. Oread Bookshop
In the Kansas Union
OREAD
BOOKSHOP
SUNSET & LANDSCAPE
ON CAMPUS
■ Communication Studies Graduate Student Association will sponsor a lecture, "Cultural Studies: What's in a Name?" at 3:30 p.m. today at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Tracy Russo at 864-3239.
KU Fencing Club will meet from 6:10-8:30tonight in 130 Robinson. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445.
9:30 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mehdi Khoshabeshgaeh at 841-7585.
Women's Student Union will meet at 5 p.m. today at Alcove AIn the Kansas Union.
KU Bahai'i Club will sponsor a lecture, "Marriage and Family Life," by Joyce Stohr from 7:30 to
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will hold Vespers at 7:15 tonight at St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Rd. A vocal recital by Katy Steinbacher-Strange will follow. For more information, call 843-0357.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will hold Spanish Mass at 12:30 p.m. on Sunday at St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call 843-0357.
ON THE RECORD
A student's KUID and bus pass, valued together at $60, were taken from the fourth floor of Wesco Hall on Sept. 17, KUpolice reported.
A professor's blue parking permit valued at $125 was taken from a car in parking lot No. 18 on Sept. 17, KU police reported.
The trunk lid of a student's car was scratched in parking lot No. 34 between Sept. 19 and Wednesday, KU police reported.
A student's bicycle and lock,
valued together at $420, were
taken in the 1700 block of Ohio
Street between Saturday and
Wednesday, Lawrence police reported.
A-student's bicycle and lock, valued together at $204, were taken in the 1000 block of Ohio Street on Wednesday, Lawrence police reported.
A student's wallet and its contents, valued together at $56, were taken in the 700 block of New Hampshire Street on Wednesday, Lawrence police reported.
A student's KUID, drivers license and cash, valued together at $77, were taken from the fourth floor of Wescoe Hall on Wednesday, KU police reported.
WEATHER
WEATHER
Omaha: 64'/46'
LAWRENCE: 60'/45'
Kansas City: 67'/53'
St. Locks: 69'/60'
Wichita: 56'/54'
Minneapolis: 61'/37'
Phoenix: 98'/72'
Salt Lake City: 75'/49'
Seattle: 69'/46'
TODAY
Tomorrow Sunday
Cool with 50% chance for T-storms
NW winds at 10-15 mph
High: 60°
Low: 45°
Partly cloudy and warmer
High: 70°
Low: 45°
Cool with a chance for showers
High: 63°
Low: 45°
Source: The Associated Press
---
8
CORRECTION
The Kansan corrects all significant errors. If you have a correction, call 864-4810.
The calendar on Page 9 of Wednesday's Kansan contained two incorrect listings. The correct items are listed below:
KU Theatre for Young People's
"Step on a Crack" will be performed at 1 p.m. today and 7 p.m. Saturday at Crafton-Preyer Theatre. Today's performance is for Lawrence schoolchildren only.
The faculty recital of John Boulton on flute will be 7:30 p.m. Monday at Swarthownt Recital Hall.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
HOW TO REACH US
Comments/Complaints/Corrections
Call 864-4810 for the news room:
— KC Trauer, Editor or Joe Harder, Managing Editor for News
Call 864-4358 for advertising:
Classified Department
Comments/Complaints — Janice Davis, Classified Manager
News tips — Campus Desk
Display Advertising Comments/Complaints — Amy Casey, Business Manager
Come to the Kansan newsroom,
111 Stuart-Fleint Hall for:
- placing announcements of meetings or events of campus groups for the "On Campus" calendar. Announcements must be
submitted on form provided by 5 p.m. two days prior to desired day of publication. No submissions will be taken by telephone. submitting "Letters to the Editor." See the Opinion page for details.
University Daily Kansan fax number — 913-864-5261
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.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-FlintHall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
"Universal age 1965"
Red Lyon Tavern
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
944 Mass. 832-8228
AOII
"Luernal since 1964."
ALPHA OMICRON PI
would like to wish good luck to the teams
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See you Sunday morning bright and early! Wear your best golfin' duds!
JERRY BURNS
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Free Hair Cut with Shade E.Q.
Offer Expires 9-30-93 Don't miss it!
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841-6886
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"NO COUPON SPECIALS" EVERYDAY
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
TWO-FERS
2-PIZZAS
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PRIMETIME
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Mon-Thurs Fri-Sat Sunday
DELIVERY HOURS
11 am-2 am
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1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
---
Friday, September 24. 1993
3
GTA unionization is a national concern
Process met with success elsewhere
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
This week's hearings to answer the question of the status of graduate teaching assistants as state employees has focused attention on what the power of a graduate student union could do.
At some schools around the country they have parlayed that power into action.
Graduate teachers and researchers have taken the issues of collective bargaining from hallway discussions to signed contracts and, in some cases, picket lines.
In order to get the administration to comply with graduate students' demand for collective bargaining, the GTAs at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst voted to go on strike in November 1991, said Jeff Kuenzi, coordinator for the UMass graduate employees organization.
"The strike lasted almost two weeks," Kuenzi said. "The administration was just imposing fees on us left and right. It became apparent to the students that the strike was something they had to have to negotiate properly."
With the agreement, UMass GTAs joined the world of collective bargaining along with their peers at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, University of Oregon at Eugene and the University of California at Berkeley.
Graduate student representatives from the four schools shared results from collective bargaining, including receiving greater compensation and health care packages.
"You could see the benefits as soon as you put collective bargaining into place," Kuenzi said. "It makes up for all the time you put in."
While graduate students at schools such as UMass had only recently won their campaign to organize, students at the University of Wisconsin have
had collective bargaining since 1970,
said Jon Pollack, office manager for Wisconsin's chapter of the American Federation of Teachers.
For Pollack, collective bargaining had many advantages, including establishing uniform pay scales for employees, eliminating the political atmosphere for advancement of many academic departments and achieving higher status with the school's faculty.
"They respect us as equals rather than departmental peons," Pollack said.
One of the University of Kansas' peer institutions, the University of Oregon, established collective bargaining procedures during the mid to late 1970s, said Diane Rau, union representative for the graduate teaching fellowship federation.
Though some administrators feared a loss of rapport between graduate students and faculty, Rau said the contract process had the opposite effect.
(graduate teaching fellow), there is no collegiality in the first place."
"There has been no loss of collegiality," Rau said. "In an atmosphere where a faculty member exploits a
The expectation of increased tension between faculty and teachers never came about either. Rau said.
"I think we have a very good relationship, not an adversarial one." Rau said. "There are no residual bad feelings.
Steadman Upham, dean of the University of Oregon graduate school, said he agreed that the administration and the graduate student union had established a good working relationship
"Reflecting back into the history of the University of Oregon, we were dragged kicking and screaming into the agreement," Upham said. "We have cleaned up that relationship."
Through collective bargaining, Oregon's administration had to re-examine the roles of their faculty and graduate students, Upham said.
"It cleaned up the act of the University," Upham said. "Graduate students are a potentially exploitable class of individuals."
Strikes by graduate students against a university could stem from the
administration refusing to acknowledge student demands, said Maureen Kaspan, president of the association for graduate student employees at the University of California at Berkeley.
"The only problems that we see is the university fighting our bargaining right," Kaspan said. "Our strike last fall semester came from the University refusing to agree to collective bargaining units."
Joseph Doughan, associate dean of the Berkeley graduate division, said only two people had mentioned last year's strike to him as the school prepared to enter another round of bargaining next month.
Beyond the benefit of providing the administration with information about student grievances, Douggan said collective bargaining remained a barrier between faculty and students. He used the example of a recent 49-page contract for a graduate lecturer.
"It had a lot more regulations and rules to follow," Douggan said. "Collective bargaining is ideally congenial, but it eliminates the give and take of employment."
Other collective bargaining efforts
University of Massachusetts at Amherst—UMass graduate
teaching assistants won the right to bargain with the administration in January 1991.
University of Wisconsin at Madison — Graduate students gained status as public employees in 1987.
University of Oregon at Eugene In the process of negotiating a new contract, graduate students have extended their old contract since July.
University of California at Berkeley — The California Supreme Court ruled this year that Berkeley graduate teaching and research assistants did not have right to collective bargaining.
Event set to provide fun, funds Games and races part of Wheat Meet
KANSAN
By Shan Schwartz Kansan staff writer
KU students will have the opportunity this weekend to win an all-expense paid trip to Chicago so winning by a game of "Simon Says."
The game is part of the 11th annual Wheat Meet, an philanthropy of the Chi Omega sorority and Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity. The event will take place from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday at Memorial Stadium.
Julie Wollnik, Wheat Meet co-coordinator, said the meet was named for Jon Blubaugh, an Alpha KappaLambda member who founded the event with his sister in 1983.
All Wheat Meet events are open to viewing and participation by the public, Wollnik said.
Blubaugh drowned less than one year later. Proceeds from the meet are donated to the Jon Blubaugh memorial fund, which benefits University of Kansas Medical Center cancer research.
Competitors of the events are divided into four groups: fraternity, sorority, and men and women independent. After heats are held to determine the finalists, the winner of the finals in each group wins a t-shirt, Wollnik said.
Wollnik said Sunday's competition mostly would be comprised of traditional track and field events, such as the 100 and 400-meter dashes, relays, long jump, high jump and hurdles.
This year the meet will include two nontraditional events — the "Simon Says" game and a "Fun Relay" where competitors will run around the stadium track blindfolded, backwards or holding objects making it more difficult to run, Wollnik said.
The "Fun Relay" is scheduled for 11:30 a.m. and "Simon Says" is scheduled for noon. The rest of the events will take place throughout the day.
A meet kick-off party will begin at 9 p.m. tomorrow at the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire Street, featuring three live bands, Wollniksaid. Tickets can be purchased from sponsoring chapter members in advance or at the door.
The event raised $6,500 last year.
Wendy Ryding, meet co-coordinator,
said she hoped to double that amount
this year.
Wollnik said anyone wishing to participate in Wheat Meet could register on Wesco Beach today, sign up at the stadium before the meet on Sunday or call the meet coordinators at 841-7191.
Sox
Serenade
Members of Eight Men Out, from left, Billy Davis, Topeka sophomore; Bud Anderson, Lawrence senior; Jeff Smith, Lawrence senior; Jason George, Shawnee senior; and Ben Claypool, Lawrence freshman, sing to Caroline McNaughton, Leawood freshman. The group performed at Ellsworth Hall last night before a fire prevention program by the Lawrence Fire Department.
William Alix / KANSAN
Students help minority recruits focus on their futures
By Christoph Fuhrmans
Kansan staffwriter
Sheldon White, Kansas City, Kan., junior, does not want incoming freshmen to have the same problems that typical KU freshmen do.
Freshmen at KU usually party too much and study too little, he said.
White was one of several college students who spoke to Kansas City high school seniors yesterday during the student panel of KU's Fall Focus. The orientation program, which is in its third year, attempts to prepare and recruit minority high school seniors for KU.
White said he wanted to explain the reality of college life to the students.
"Talking to a college student, you get the real perspective," he said. "When I was coming along, it seemed things were sugar-coated."
Deborah Castrop, director of admissions, said she wanted Fall Focus to succeed in its goal.
"The purpose is to bring prospective high school minority students to learn more about KU," she said. "It is to help them understand the importance of higher education."
Not only does the orientation session give students a head start on college, Castrop said, it also gives the students a chance to meet other graduating seniors.
"We feel it's not only an academic orientation, but also a student orientation," she said.
The Tuesday's orientation was for seniors from Topeka High School, Lawrence High School, Highland Park High School in Topeka, Lincoln Academy in Kansas City, Mo., and Leavenworth High School.
About 240 high school students attended the orientation sessions yesterday and Tuesday, said Dawn Kovats, associate director of admissions.
Seniors from Washington High School, Wyandotte High School, J.C. Harmon High School and F.L. Schlagle High School in Kansas City, Kan., and Westport High School in Kansas City, Mo., attended westerday.
The students took a tour of the campus,spoke to college students and went to an academic information fair staffed with representatives from each professional school.
"We're jjust squashing their feathers abutting coming"
to the University of Kansas," said Wendi Corman, academic counselor for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
LaTonya Thomas, high school senior from Westport High School, said she enjoyed her first visit to KU and was interested in majoring in social welfare.
After Thomas got academic information from officials, she received social information from college students.
Cinzia Byrd, Wichita junior, said high school students would understand practical college information from college students better than from adults.
BASINIKO FOUNDATION
"When they hear an administrator, they feel like their parents are talking to them," she said.
Kovats said Fall Focus was important for graduating seniors choosing their colleges.
John Gamble / KANSAN
"A lot of students don't get the chance to come out and see the school," she said. "We're trying to get them to start the college admission process. We're trying to get them thinking about it earlier."
Torres Dawson, Wichita junior, center, speaks high school students at a question-and-answer session at KU's Fall Focus, a presentation by the Office of Admissions. Dawson is joined by Frank Williams, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore.
Drayton makes court appearance following capture
Drayton was ordered to appear before the advisory board again within 96 hours. At his next appearance, a judge will determine whether he must return to Arizona, where he faces 305 years in prison. On Sept. 10, he was convicted in Bisbee, Ariz., on 14 felony charges, including rape, sodomy, kidnapping and armed robbery.
Former Kansas football player Kenny Drayton made his first appearance yesterday before an advisory board in the Pinellas County Vail in St. Petersburg, Fla.
Drayton and three other prisoners escaped from the Cochise County Jail in Bisbee on Sept. 12. One of the men was captured in Arizona on Sept. 14. Two of the men are still at large.
CAMPUS in brief
Drayton was captured in St. Petersburg on Wednesday. U.S. marshals and St. Petersburg police officers arrested him at a residence based on a tip from a caller who had seen Drayton featured on the television program "America's Most Wanted."
Fall Fest set for tomorrow
Five dollars and a couple ear plugs will let live music fans enjoy their fill of Lawrence bands tomorrow. The Bottleneck, 737 New
shire Street will be closed during of the event.
Hampshire St., is holding Fall Fest '93 — an all-day event featuring seven local bands.
Jacki Becker, music promoter for the Bottleneck, said the event is similar to those held in Seattle.
"They bring in national acts, though, and we thought we'll play it safe by just having local bands," she said. "A lot of college towns have this, too."
The event will be open to all ages.
Those in attendance will receive wristbands so they can leave and return, she said.
1 p.m. — Mountain Clyde
Food and merchandise vendors will be at the event, which runs from 1 to 8 p.m. New Hamp-
2 p.m. Love Squad
3 p.m.—L.A.Ramblers
4 p.m. — Baghdad Jones
5 p.m. — Tenderloin
5 p.m. — Tetuerohon
6 p.m. — Salty Iguana
6 p.m. — Satty Iguazar
7 p.m. — Billy Goat
KU ranked high as best value
Of 989 of the nation's leading universities, the University of South Florida was ranked No.1 overall.
Factors used in determining the best buys included faculty resources, library resources, student services budget, SAT results of attending freshmen, graduation rates and a
tally of schools attended by the top executives listed in Standard & Poor's Register of Corporations, Directors and Executives.
The 1984 edition of Money magazine named the University of Kansas as the 15th best value in the category of state schools ranked by instate tuition.
]
Elimination hearings set
Public hearings on the elimination of eight degrees will be held Sept. 27-30. The University Council Academic Procedures and Policies committee will hear arguments for and against eliminating the programs.
The hearings are scheduled as follows:
Atmospheric Science, B.A., B.G.S. and M.S. — Sept. 27, 7:15-9:30 p.m., English Room, Kansas Union.
Italian; B.A. — Sept 29, 7:15-9:30 p.m.
English Room; Kasan Union
Comparative Literature and Humanities, B.A.—Sept. 30, 7:00-8:30 p.m., Room 100, Smith Hall.
Computer Science, B.A. and B.G.S. Sept. 30, 8:30-10:00 p.m., Room 100, Smith Hall.
4
Friday, September 24, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
2
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
President Clinton's health care reform proposal would mandate that all small businesses provide and pay for identical health coverage for its employees.
THE BACKGROUND
Many small businesses do not provide health insurance for all their employees under the status quo. Clinton's plan would change this. A plan advanced by moderate Republicans would not mandate that employers pay premiums for all employees.
THE OPINION
Clinton health-care plan will hurt small business
President Clinton must be open to outside opinions like any good doctor.
Clinton emphasized principles rather than steadfast proposals in Wednesday's speech. This is the only approach that will make health care reform a reality But before performing major surgery on the health care system, he must work with the Republicans to keep small businesses out of critical condition.
In Clinton's own words, small businesses are the engine of the economy. Even in today's sluggish economy, it is the innovation and initiative of small businesses that create jobs and incomes for thousands of Americans.
Clinton's proposal, even with its modest subsidies would cripple small businesses that currently do not provide health insurance for some or all of their employees. While small business employees may not be covered, many are covered by their spouses' health insurance. Clinton's plan does not take these possibilities into account, and those small businesses forced to pay could go bankrupt.
This fate is already facing many small businesses in Kansas because of higher property and sales taxes. Mandated increases in health care costs could put them over the edge.
The Republican's plan, even with its flaws, would guarantee that small businesses stay afloat.
It does not mandate employers' pay for health insurance. It relies on cuts in insurance processing fees and reduced lawyer compensation from malpractice settlements to cut cost. It opens the way for employers to decrease costs without forcing higher costs on smaller businesses.
Just as Clinton's plan places emphasis on universal coverage at the expense of the nation's economy and employment rate, the Republican plan may sacrifice the health of workers for health of the economy.
Only a compromise that proposes a smaller and more flexible premium plan for small businesses can address health care reform and fill the needed prescription.
TERRILYN MCORMICK AND CHRIS REEDY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
Census bureau correcting inaccurate head-count
Saying that city and state governments have a lot riding on the question of whether to correct the next census by estimating the number of people overlooked in the count is to be labor the obvious. The current system's failure to reflect a more accurate decennial head-count has raised questions in recent years about its credibility.
Urban leaders have rightly complained that the census overlooks millions of Americans, many of them inner-city African-Americans, homeless and Hispanic people. As a result of under-counting,
which federal officials don't dispute, the local officials maintain that minorities have been victims in a number of ways—such as having their health risks underestimated or their roles in crimes exaggerated.
We believe the Census Bureau is moving in the right direction with the 1995 test. An official, single count based on scientific methods would be in the best interest of not only the under-counted minorities but the nation as a whole.
THE TIMES-PICAYUNE NEW ORLEANS
UNIONIZE! I DON'T HAVE TIME TO UNIONIZE. THIS IS A FULL-TIME JOB!
JOB!
GRADING
GTA
OFFICE
HOURS
LECTURES
Hood UDK '93
School system needs competition to thrive
Several studies issued last week suggest that a significant number of students enrolled in public schools lack an adequate understanding of basic writing, reading, and math skills. Is this surprising? It's not to most employers.
The costly task of having to retrain unprepared high school graduates is all too real for many American corporations. This lack of preparation of our students for the workplace is not the fault of parents, as suggested by U.S. Education Secretary Richard Riley, but of the noncompetitive structure of our public school system.
The nation's monopolistic public school system has been inefficient and unproductive for years. Chester E. Finn Jr., former assistant secretary for research and improvement in the U.S. Department of Education, stated, "Our school system today holds few incentives or rewards for entrepreneurship or risk-taking for initiative or heterodoxy. Success brings no prizes, failure no sanctions, mediocrity no response at all except intermittent alarms sounded by distant national commissions." Without competition, Finn's words will ring as true tomorrow as they did seven years ago when he said them.
A lack of competition has never been a problem for the excellent public and private universities in the U.S. that continue to rank as the world's elite institutions. This has resulted in part because both the public and private universities are allowed to operate in an open marketplace.
LANCE
HAMBY
STAFF COLUMNIST
If a university wants to attract students it has to first offer quality programs and intelligent professors to oversee those programs. The failure to provide a proper educational environment will result in both a loss of money and possibly the closing of that particular inefficient university.
With public schools receiving a guaranteed amount of money each fiscal year, there is no incentive to increase either the quality of education, the standards expected of the students, or the merits of the instructors.
The best policy to create competition in our nation's school system is the voucher plan. This program would provide the student with the same allotment of money it takes to educate that student in a public school. With this policy in place, the student could attend the school of his or her choice, and in the process create competition among the schools for the student's money.
Thus, students' academic skills are increasingly deficient compared to the growing demands of the high-tech job market. At best, this cycle will continue to produce mediocrity unless the element of competition is introduced into the equation.
With students being granted a choice of school, the inadequacies in today's schools could be alleviated. The schools that provide the best academic agenda and the qualified teachers to implement this agenda will profit for their efforts.
To restrict the inevitable demand to enter these profitable schools, modest admission qualifications would be set up to maintain the high degree of quality in these programs. However, students who couldn't academically qualify for the best public schools would still have a choice among the other schools in their districts.
Thus, the substandard expectations that are currently demanded from today's students would change, because certain levels of academic achievement would have to be reached if a student wanted to attend the best schools.
The biggest hurdle between mediocrity and a quality education is a noncompetitive public school system. To overcome this we must present an alternative plan to the students and teachers who are willing to work harder and achieve greater goals.
The competitive university model would provide a strong foundation from which the new voucher plan would operate. This system would create a sizable increase in the standards and expectations set for both teachers and students, but in this case I think the ends justify the means.
Lance Hamby is a Wichita junior majoring in political science and journalism.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Boardheads banned, but they'll still skate
I would just like to take this opportunity to tell the University Daily Kansan and everyone else that you can arrest me for skateboarding in the Union courtyard, you can throw me in the slammer for being a "boardhead" at Checkers Foods, you can send me up the river for skating rather then dying at the Kwik Shop on Ninth Street, and you can shoot me on sight for being a "skater geek" on the almighty Jayhawk Boulevard, but
you cannot stop me from skate-
boarding.
John Tyburski
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Kansan missed point,
physician brings quality
I am extremely disappointed in your coverage of the new female physician at Watkins Memorial Health Center in the Sept. 20 issue of the University Daily Kansan. Your story angle was to chronicle the addition of a female physician
to the staff, as if the only newsworthy item is the fact that she is a woman.
Never mind the fact that Leah Luckeroth is an incredibly well-educated, three-time KU graduate who has had an extremely impressive career thus far as an internist. Luckeroth's presence on this campus is important because her expertise will ensure top-quality care for all KU students. That is the real story, and it is one you overlooked entirely.
Kyle Davis Van Vliet Lawrence resident
SAMANTHA CHRISTIE
Unrealistic ideas about abuse victims irresponsible
I am writing in response to Scott Gillaspia's column "Abuse Doctors Justify Violence in Any Case," which appeared in the Sept. 17 issue of the University Daily Kansan. I believe his column was irresponsible for a number of reasons.
First, one cannot logically compare domestic violence that results in the death of an abuser with gang violence, no matter what the circumstances. Many abused women who kill their husbands do not kill merely out of revenge, as Gillaspie's vague comparison to gang violence would have you believe. Most are cases of self-defense.
GUEST COLUMNIST
Second, Battered Women's Syndrome is a controversial defense, not an automatically accepted one. Jim Lenore Walker's theory is that wives in abusive relationships sometimes have difficulty leaving because they fear that their abusers may stalk them and become more violent. Anyone can say that an abused woman should get out of the relationship, but it isn't always that easy. Not all women who kill abusive husbands escape punishment on grounds of Battered Women's Syndrome. Most, in fact, do not, Gillaspie stated, "Yet killing someone who has beaten you repeatedly, simply because you didn't want to be beaten any longer, does not excuse murder. This does not constitute self-defense..." Perhaps we don't all believe that the motive was merely that they "didn't want to be beaten anymore." There are valid reasons that a victim might indeed fear for her life. The legal system does not make it easy to obtain protection from abusers. Some situations are escapable and some are not.
Third, Gillaspie states, "...abused women must make other attempts to bring an end to their situations Attempts can be made to leave abusive husbands or boyfriends, and in the case that this doesn't work, other actions within legal limits must be tried until a solution is found." If it sounds too simple, it probably is. Are we to assume automatically that the victim is able to seek adequate medical attention? Are we to assume that seeking police assistance will solve the problem? Are we to assume that if the woman leaves the abuser she will always be safe? Despite orders of protection, restraining orders, divorce and police reports, abuse can, and often does, continue to occur. Gillaspie obviously does not take that into account when he refers to the "legal advantages" of abused women I fail to recognize any legal advantages. If the world were as simple as Gillaspie must believe, the system would correct the problem of wife abuse, and women would not have to fend off husbands in the first place.
Here is a final fact to consider: it was not until October 1984 that a U.S. District Court judge ruled that "a man is not allowed to physically abuse or endanger a woman merely because he is her husband. Concomitantly, a police officer may not knowingly refrain from intervening in such violence and may not decline to make an arrest simply because the assailer and the victim are married to each other."
Samanttha Christy is a Uniintonown senior majoring in environmental science.
KANSAN STAFF
KC TRAUER, Editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
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Editors
Assistant to the editor ...J.R. Clairborne
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Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kannan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be nailed or brought to the Kannan newsroom, 111 Stauffer Flint Hall.
University of Mars
PART 3: TYPES OF VIOLENT SHOWS
THE ACTION/ADVENTURE
DRAWBACKS: Recycled Scripts make for predictable movies.
PERKS: Great One liners.
KEKKS: Great one uniers.
See you in DA FUNNY PAPERS.
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012341
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Getting Busted.
POSITIVE AND NEGATIVE ASPECTS)
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EVENING NEWS
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12
More violence # TRAGEDY THAN ANY SYNDICATED SHOW.
More violence # TRAGEDY THAN ANY SYNDICATED SHOW.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 24,1993
5
SenEx defines goals for relationships policy review
By Christoph Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
The University Senate Executive Committee approved the goals of a task force that will study KU's consensual relationships policy.
Srinivasan, head of SenEx, said there was one decision for the task force.
"The main charge is the determination if we need a policy at all," he said. "And if we do, what are the provisions of the policy?"
The goals were written by Srinivasan and Steven McCabe, associate professor of civil engineering and SenEx member.
University Council formed the task force at its meeting last week. The 16-member task force will be headed by Kim Wilcox, associate professor of speech, language and hearing.
The task force is considering:
- whether the University should have a consensual relationships policy.
whether the existing policy adequate, and if not.
what can be done to change it;
■ whether the policy should be limited to a sexual or romantic relationship or should be amended to include other relationships that could harm the faculty/student or supervisor/employee relationship, such as children of faculty members;
- whether the policy should be renamed the confluent relationship policy;*
- whether the policy should clearly explain what types of relationships are allowed and prohibited;
- whether the policy should be publicized in any special forms, such as the undergraduate catalog.
- whether the task force should recommend ways to implement changes, if changes are suggested.
- whether any amendments change the sexual harassment policy. If so, identify the amendments.
Srinivasan said the task force would have to give its final recommendations to SenEx by Nov. 24. After SenEx examines and possibly changes the recommendations, the policy will be sent to Council.
Students air feelings at forum
Alpha Phi Alpha program addresses relationships and dating expectations
John Gamble / KANSAN
By Brian James
Kansan staff writer
The first in a series of monthly forums titled Point-Counterpoint" drew a crowd of about 75 people in the lobby of Templin Hall last night. "Male/female relationships" was the topic discussed.
"The focus of tonight is to discuss strength in Black relationships on KU's campus and in the community," said Jonathan Allen, Fort Lauderdale, Fla., graduate student and moderator of the forum. "We're doing this to unite us — not divide us."
Members of the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity said they had created the forums to give students of all races chances to air their feelings about particular tonics.
Steve Douglas, Kansas City, Kan., junior and head of community services for the fraternity, said, "We're not here to solve problems but to listen to people and see how they feel. We're making an attempt at healing the campus — really addressing the issues that matter."
Marek Jacobs, St. Louis senior and president of the fraternity, said the fraternity wanted to bring in a speaker for next month's forum to discuss AIDS awareness.
Last night's forum created an intense discussion about college relationships.
Allen asked the panel of 10 African-American KU students questions about themselves and about their dating experiences.
"What is the greatest satisfaction you expect to receive in a relationship? — and be truthful" Allen asked the panel.
PRESENTED BY
THE HISTORY MUSEUM OF PHILADELPHIA
Michelle Rolfe, Wichita senior, argues a point with a panel member at the Point-Counterpoint forum in Templin Hall hall Marek Jacobs, St. Louis senior, waits to speak.
Panel member Don Davis, Kansas City, Mo., junior, said, "Well, sex is one, but you have to have true happiness in a relationship to make it really last."
Panel member Tamara Huff, Wichita senior, said, "It's knowing you have someone to share your innermost secrets and problems with."
Mens' feelings about commitment in relationships were also discussed.
Derrick Wallace, St. Louis sophomore, said, "I don't think men are necessarily scared of commitment. It comes down to the fact that they may be putting a lot into the relationship but they're not getting much out of it—so they decide to leave."
Jacobs said that he thought the forum had been successful and that the fraternity was considering moving it to a larger site next month.
Harvest of Arts gives local talents chance to perform
On Oct. 3, Sean Demory, Olathe junior, will produce and direct a play that he wrote for the first time.
By Tracl Carl
Kansan staff writer
"I'll be excited in the midst of scene four," Demory said. "Until then, I'm just nervous."
Demory is one of many local artists who will be participating in Lawrence's second annual Harvest of Arts, a weeklong schedule of activities featuring local artistic talent. Performances and activities will be scattered throughout the city during the week.
The celebration began last year as an attempt to define Lawrence as a community of artists, said Wendy Jane Bantam, this year's director.
"There is a higher per capita of artists in this town than any other in the United States." Bantam said.
Last year's event drew a crowd of about 1,000, Bantam said, and this year's crowd could reach 5,000. The celebration is financed by donations from local businesses and museums.
The newest event is a street dance in the 800 block of Massachusetts Street. There will be four stages and several bands, including Salty Iguanas, Trout 66 and Professor and Mary Ann.
The north outside wall of Chet Johnson Furniture Co., 722 Massachusetts St., will be the permanent spot for a mural, Bantam said. Eleven people were chosen from the community to design and create the mural, called "Guardians of the Arts". Those chosen were not all artists, Bantam said.
The mural will be painted throughout the week and unveiled Oct. 3, the last day of the celebration.
The event will begin tomorrow with performances by Seem-To-Be-Players, Renegade Theatre, Best of the Comedy Shop and Phoenix Dance Ensemble.
Demory's play, "Ships," will be performed on the last day of the celebration. The play, a romantic comedy, started as a one-scene exercise in capturing natural conversation on stage.
"I added a bit of flash and thunder to it," Demory said.
Demory, who is also reading poetry at 1 p.m. Sunday at the gallery, asked if he also could perform his play.
Harvest of Arts gives Demory and other artists a supportive audience, he said.
"It gives them the opportunity to perform in a venue where they won't be eaten alive by critics," he said.
His only other audiences have been friends and family, he said.
"If nothing else, it'll be a slightly more critically observant audience," he said.
Shana Pralmatter, St. Louis senior, will be displaying her paintings, drawings and prints Oct. 3 in Buford M. Watson Park, Seventh and Vermont streets.
This will be her first public showing. She is using the opportunity to include other people's stories in her work.
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Friday, September 24,1993
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tolerance for Russian hard-liners weakens
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — President Boris Yeltsin called for early presidential elections next June as signs emerged yesterday of growing government impatience with hard-liners barricaded inside the parliament building.
Yeltsin ordered Interior Ministry police to "secure" public safety after accusing his political opponents of distributing dozens of automatic weapons to anti-Yeltsin demonstrators outside the Russian White House.
Late yesterday, unidentified gunmen tried to storm the Moscow headquarters of the commonwealth military command, killing one policeman and badly beating a second before being repulsed. A woman was killed by a stray bullet, Interfax news agency said.
Postfactum agency said the gunmen were hard-line army officers who support Russia's parliament. It was the first violent clash since
Yeltsin dissolved parliament on Tuesday.
Yeltsin's foes seemed increasingly desperate and isolated and were denied support by the people, the military and the international community after Yeltsin's decree Tuesday dissolving parliament. Lawmakers ordered the president to surrender to legitimate authorities or leave the country.
Deputies later convened parliament in defiance of Yeltsin and voted to confirm earlier decisions by the smaller standing legislature to impeach him and name Vice President Alexander Rutskiol acting president.
Yeltsin moved to seize sole control of the government after an 18-month struggle with lawmakers over how to reform the economy and over who should rule Russia: the president or parliament.
The political stalemate has paralyzed the government and crippled the economy. Fueled by fears of turmoil, the Russian ruler plunged 18 percent yesterday to a record low, trading for 1,299 rubles to the U.S. dollar.
More than 1,000 anti-Yeltsin demonstrators remained camped outside the parliament headquarters, known as the White House, for a third day. Small bands formed "self-defense units" and about a dozen carried assault rifles.
Russian TV described the atmosphere outside the White House late yesterday as "explosive."
Yeltsin warned lawmakers and their supporters that he would punish those ignoring his orders and those possessing weapons without permits.
"Dangerous weapons are falling into the hands of extremists, tramps, the mentally ill, criminals and mafia gangs, who have been gathering around the White House with the aim of getting uncontrolled weapons," presidential representative Anatoly Krasikov said in a statement issued on Yeltsin's behalf.
"This poses a serious danger to people's safety," he added. "The Interior Ministry has been given directions on the assumption of a need to secure the safety of citizens."
The Defense Ministry claimed the hard-liners were preparing to attack the ministry, but the improbable claim appeared to be a possible excuse to crack down on the anti-Yeltsin forces.
Yeltsin expressed hope Wednesday there would be no violence.
"We would not like and do not intend to use any force," he said. "We want everything to go peacefully, without blood."
But yesterday, Dmitry Ardamatsky, a member of Yeltsin's press service, said officials would not rule out the use of force to disarm Yeltsin's opponents.
Toreasure Russians that he is committed to democracy, Yeltsin yesterday called for presidential elections June 12, two years ahead of schedule.
U.N. officials fearful of renewed Serbian assault
The Associated Press
ZAGREB, Croatia — Croatias clinging to their last village in Serb-controlled land are in danger of being driven out or killed in retaliation for a brutal Croat attack, a U.N. official said yesterday.
U. N. civil affairs chief Cedric Thornberry made the report as tensions rose once more between Croats and Serbs — enemies in a 1991 war that left Croatia independent from former Yugoslavia but a third of its territory in Serb hands.
The Croatian government demanded Wednesday that 14,000 U.N. peacekeepers, whose mandate expires Sept. 30, pack up and leave in two months if they cannot guarantee Serb-held land will be returned.
In New York, U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali said yesterday that he had been tempted to recommend withdrawing U.N. troops from Croatia but said that would result in more conflict.
"I have been sorely tempted, in light of the criticism of (the U.N. forces) by both sides, and the dangers and abuse to which its personnel are exposed, to recommend the withdrawal of the force altogether. But I am conscious that such a step could only result in further conflict," Boutros-Ghali wrote.
The original six-month U.N. mandate has been extended three times, but a national consensus has formed among Croats that the U.N. presence has only helped the Serbs.
In a report released yesterday, Boutros-Ghali recommended that the U.N. peacekeepers remain in Croatia for another six months. He also said he would extend "air support" into Croatia to protect U.N. peacekeepers. He did not elaborate.
U. N. officials say the Croatian demand for a U.N. withdrawal appears to be a pressure tactic to wring concessions from the world body.
Fighting between Serbs and Croats largely ended in January 1992, and ethnic conflict moved to neighboring Bosnia last year. But warfare periodically erupts, and Thornberry said 117 ethnic Croats remaining in the village of Podlapaca were in danger of Serb retaliation for a Croatian attack Sept. 9.
"As we speak, Podlapaca is in danger of being ethnically cleansed," said Thornberry, civilian chief of
Republic told the villagers of Podlapaca they were no longer safe, he said.
Croatian forces withdrew from the region under international pressure, and U.N. peacekeepers moved in. They found the villages of Divoselo, Citlik and Poocitl wrecked and burned
U.S. peacekeeping force in the Kosovo war.
Officials of the self-proclaimed Serbian Krajina
The return of Serb corpses, many mutilated beyond recognition, was sending tensions spiraling. Thornberry said.
Thornberry visited Podlapaca, 24 miles northeast of Medak, Wednesday and said he found "panic has set in."
"They told me very clearly, 'We must go, it's the only thing that will give us peace of mind,'" he said. Most other Croats left the region during the war, leaving Podlapaca as the last sizable Croat settlement.
A beefed-up unit of Czech U.N. peacekeepers was patrolling Podlapaca round the clock, Thornberry said, but added that peacekeepers were faced with a dilemma that has become all too familiar.
"If you fail to support ethnic cleansing, you may sponsor murder and mayhem, you may cause the destruction you are actually trying to avoid," he said.
Runaway barge said to be cause of Amtrak disaster
The Associated Press
SARALAND, Ala. — An investigation into Amtrak's deadliest wreck focused yesterday on a tugboat operator who — 12 minutes before the crash — radioed to authorities that he was having a problem with a runaway barge.
The barge had struck a railroad trestle over the foggy backwaters of a bayon just before the train carrying more than 200 people plunged off it and exploded, killing at least 44. early Wednesday.
A giant crane stabilized the Sunset Limited coaches before divers resumed their search for bodies yesterday.
The body of a 5-year-old girl was found floating about 100 feet from the submerged car of the Los Angeles to Miami train, said one of the divers, Mark Lampkin of Orange Grove, Miss. At least two people were missing.
The tugboat pilot, Andrew Stabler, has been questioned by the FBI and his vessel impounded. The barges were moored a quarter mile from the crash site 10 miles north of Mobile.
Perkins said that Stabler radioed in at 3:06 a.m. Wednesday - 12 minutes before the train crash — that he had struck a bridge but mistakenly thought he had hit a span on the Mobile River. Instead, he was on Bayou Canot, one of several bayous, streams and creeks that feed into the river at its delta.
But U.S. Transportation Secretary Federico Pena told "CBS Morning News" that Perkins radioed only that a barge had come loose.
"Unfortunately, he did not indicate it had hit the support," Pena said.
The train's speed wasn't known, the speed limit on the bridge was 70 mph. It had just left the Mobile station.
Results of mandatory drug and alcohol tests given Stabler and three crewman were unavailable the Coast Guard said. $^{70}$
The barges — 193 feet long and 86 feet wide — were lashed two aside and filled with coal, cork and wood chips. Some apparently broke loose upon impact, and Stabler was trying to corral them in the fog.
"It is clear the barge did hit the bridge." Pena said.
Stabler, who lives 60 miles north of Mobile in Martinville, refused to answer questions without consulting his lawyer.
"I'd like to tell my side. People get things and turn them around," Stabler told The Associated Press.
At the crash site yesterday, a giant crane was used to keep the wreckage from slipping in the water, and a second was being positioned as divers groped through the clouds waters for bodies.
Lifting the wreckage out of the mud could take days, said Mobile County Sheriff Tom Purvis.
The lead locomotive, which carried the train's data recorder, was buried nose down in 15 feet of muck and 25 feet of water, investigators said.
One locomotive had exploded in a fireball, and a film of diesel fuel burned atop the water as bewildered passengers—many of whom had been sleeping in their reclining seats—scrambled to safety.
Most of the victims drowned and two died in the fire, state pathologist Gregory Wanger said.
"It was the most terrible sight I've ever seen," Gov. Jim Folsom Jr. said after touring the site.
Survivors were housed in a Mobile hotel until Amtrak could make emergency travel arrangements to send them on their journeys.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 24, 1993
7
South Africa sees changes
Blacks to be given role in government
The Associated Press
CAPE TOWN, South Africa — Parliament voted yesterday to allow Blacks a role in governing South Africa for the first time, and angry white right-wing lawmakers warned that the decision could lead to civil war.
"This makes permanent peace impossible," said Ferdi Hartzenberg, leader of the white Conservative Party, who led his followers in walking out of Parliament after the vote. "We have lost a golden opportunity for peace."
The vote creates a Transitional Executive Council, comprised of representatives from the 26 Black and white parties that have participated in the talks on ending apartheid.
The body, which one official said may function as early as next month, will be a watchdog of the government
with some veto powers. It will help oversee the holding of the country's first multiracial election April 27.
The African National Congress, the country's largest Black group, hailed the vote as "a major victory for the forces of peace and democracy."
"For the first time in the history of our country, the racist Parliament has approved a bill which is responsible to the will and aspirations of the majority," the ANC said in a statement.
By giving Blacks a role in government, the bill set the stage for ANC leader Nelson Mandela to endorse the lifting of remaining international economic sanctions against South Africa.
The move was expected today during Mandela's visit to the United Nations in New York.
In Washington, President Clinton applauded the "historic step" and promised to provide voter education and training "to create a level playing field" for all the parties in the upcoming campaign.
The dominant white chamber of
Parliament, led by President F.W. de Klerk's National Party, voted 107-36 to create a power-sharing council agreed upon this month at talks with the ANC and other groups.
But several parties, including the pro-apartheid Conservative Party and the Black Inkatha Freedom Party, the ANC's rival, said they would boycott the council. The Black militant Pan Africanist Congress also said it would boycott the council because it would not have enough power to control security forces.
The council can start functioning as soon as next month, Constitutional Development Minister Roelf Meyer said.
While it will not have absolute power, the panel will have veto power over some decisions — most importantly those involving increased use of the security forces to quell political unrest in Black townships.
It also will help oversee foreign, economic and national security policy and the April elections.
MANAGUA, Nicaragua — Ordinary citizens joined striking transport workers in throwing up street barricades yesterday as a wave of anger over tax increases and economic woes swent Nicaragua's capital.
At least two people have been killed since the indefinite strike began Monday when 30,000 bus, truck and taxi drivers went off their jobs across the country to protest a new vehicle tax.
The Associated Press
Yesterday, thousands of ordinary citizens began streaming to barricades of flagstones and flaming tires all over the city to back demands that the tax be canceled and gasoline prices cut.
Taxes cause riots in Nicaragua
"The people are joining in this protest because of the terrible shape of the economy. We don't have jobs, and we just can't stand this anymore," said Victor Lopez, 18, an unemployed construction worker.
Estimates of unemployment run as high as 60 percent, three years after the end of the eight-year war between U.S.-backed Contra rebels and the former leftist Sandinista rulers.
Some people expressed fears of a civil uprising, but there was no sign that the government of President Violeta Chamorro was in danger of falling.
Barricades blocked most major roads and highways throughout the capital and the country. Bus service,
There was no progress reported from a set of marathon negotiations at the National Assembly between strikers of the National Transport Commission and members of Chamroro's Cabinet.
Nicaragua's principal form of transportation, stopped. Schools, shops, businesses and most government offices were closed.
Hundreds stood about the barricade of flagstones on the Pan-American Highway where a policeman and a bystander were shot dead Tuesday during a clash between strikers and police.
The stench of burning tires hung in the air, and strikers brandished daggers and machetes.
At one point, barricade leaders checking cars that cross a narrow gap in the blockade pounced on a battered orange auto, smashing in the door and beating the driver until blood ran down his face.
"I'm just trying to go see my family," the motorist pleaded to the 20 men mobbing his car. Heavily armed troops of the Sandista-led army later passed through to cheers.
The strike by thousands of taxi, truck and bus drivers began as a protest against a new vehicle tax averaging about $430 a year per vehicle, which Chamorro said was necessary to finance rebuilding the country.
The government said Wednesday the tax would be suspended pending further study.
Health-care plan met with approval, questions
The Associated Press
LYNNWOOD, Wash. — Rick Perkins didn't need President Clinton to tell him America's health care system is broken. He suffered severe colitis for 10 years, unable to afford surgery because his employers offered no health benefits.
Perkins, 33, nodded enthusiastically Wednesday night as he listened to the president pitching his health-care reform.
"Clinton has a lot of chutzpah to come up with something that's so misunderstood and unpopular," Perkins said. "I have a lot of respect for him for that, I'll be watching for what the details are."
He's not alone. Interviews with a sampling of Americans who have the most to win or lose from Clinton's plan — doctors, retirees, young professionals, the long-term disabled — showed broad support but also a hunger for more information, especially about what reform will cost.
"I'm very supportive of a national health
care plan, but it also sounds like a very costly program," said Hal Pos, 34, a lawyer in Salt Lake City.
Pos is among those for whom health-insurance premiums would probably rise under Clinton's plan — healthy, young professionals who already have insurance and would be pooled with older, less healthy people.
In the Seattle suburb of Lynnwood, Perkins said he could have used Clinton's plan years ago. He was diagnosed in 1981 with colitis, a chronic intestinal disorder, but put off surgery because he had no health insurance.
"Sometimes the pain was excruciating, sometimes it was just annoying, but it was constant," he said.
He had his surgery in 1991 but today is again without health insurance, working as a self-employed computer publisher.
Perkins hopes Clinton's plan will spare others his years of pain and uncertainty. But he said: "It could take him his entire time as president to get this through, and even then he might not make it. There is
guaranteed to be something to upset everybody."
In a hotel at the edge of New Orleans' French Quarter, doctors in tuxedos watched Clinton's speech as they waited for their dinner-dance at a convention of the American Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons.
They applauded when Clinton criticized malpractice lawsuits and the high cost of paperwork. But they expect battles ahead.
"Of course, we're going to argue to have all reconstructive surgery included," said Dr. Dennis J. Lynch of Temple, Texas, the organization's assistant secretary.
"We can't continue on the way things are now," Langlitz said. "This road just leads to ruin."
In the AIDS ward of San Francisco Hospital, Dwight Langlitz, 32, watched from his bed and applauded the president, his IV line flapping with each clap. He doubts he will live to see any changes but said they are needed nonetheless.
Health-plan winners
President Clinton's proposed broad health-care changes could affect every American and many aspects of the medical system. Here are some groups who will gain under the plan.
The uninsured
All Americans would have health-care coverage, regardless of health, age or employment status. Taxpayer subsidies would assist the poor.
---
Individuals in Inner cities
and rural areas
Increased incentives would be offered to physicians who practice in inner cities and rural areas where adequate medical care is lacking.
Self-employed
Many self-employed people now go without insurance. They would be guaranteed coverage, and 100 percent of the cost would be tax deductible.
o and re
Health-plan losers
If the president is able to achieve his health-care goals, many of the proposed changes will hurt some businesses and individuals.
Small business
About 38 percent of small businesses do not offer health coverage to their employees. They would see their costs go up, or they would have to offset the losses with layoffs, pay reductions or hiring freezes.
Small and medium-sized
SOURCES: White House, Chicago Tribune
insurance companies Many small insurers may not be able to compete with large insurers that can offer HMO-style coverage.
Employees with generous
health-care benefits Employer-paid plans that exceed federal basic benefits could be taxed as income.
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti
HEALTH PLAN
Coast Guard halts Haitians fleeing military brutality
Knight-Riddor Tribune
A 65-foot, "grossly overloaded," the freighter was intercepted Tuesday 18 miles north of Capu Mole in northwest Haiti, a Coast Guard statement said. The refugees were turned over Wednesday to the Haitian chapter of the International Red Cross in Port-au-Prince.
The U.S. Coast Guard said yesterday that it intercepted 297 Haitian refugees off Haiti's coast and returned them to their country, which has been rocked this month by army-sponsored killings.
THE NEWS in brief
Since a 1991 military coup that overthrew Haiti's first freely elected government, the Coast Guard has intercepted more than 40,000 Haitians trying to reach the United States. Refugees say they are fleeing army terror. Washington claims that they are economic migrants and has shipped most of them back.
The army and police have killed hundreds of Aristide supporters since the coup.
Human rights advocate Jean-Claude Bajuex said that Haitians were becoming increasingly discouraged as they wait for the arrival of nearly 1,300 U.N. troops and the resignation of the city's repressive police chief. Those measures, along with the Oct. 30 return of exiled President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, are part of a U.N.-brokered plan for the restoration of democracy.
WASHINGTON 'Wireless' industry begins
Federal regulators opened the floodgates yesterday for a surge in wireless communications that the industry says could make cellular phones so inexpensive that half the country will carry them by the year 2000.
In a 2-1 decision, the Federal Communications Commission carved up 160 megahertz of airwaves for companies to create a new, multibillion-dollar industry based on a fresh line of wireless devices.
This includes highly sophisticated pocket phones, palm-size computers and laptops that receive video pictures.
"This will profoundly change the way people communicate," said FCC chairman James Quello.
It was the most heavily lobbied ruling in the history of the FCC, involving virtually every company with an interest in communications, including cable TV, long-distance and regional telephone companies, cellular phone services and computer companies.
As a result of the ruling, everyone may some-day carry around a small, personal phone at all times with a number that's individually assigned, just like Social Security numbers.
"We made an earnest effort to balance all the conflicting interests," said Guello.
"By the end of the decade, half the people on the streets in Washington will be carrying a phone," said John Roth, president of wireless services for Northern Telecom.
GENEVA
Saudis say no to oil reduction
Staking out its position ahead of a key OPEC meeting, Saudi Arabia said yesterday that it would not reduce its oil production in the coming months to help lift sagging prices.
Hisham Nazer, the kingdom's influential oil minister, made his remarks upon arrival in Geneva for tomorrow's meeting of the 12-nation Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.
The average price of an OPEC marker — an indicator of crude oil price trend — stood at $14.78 a barrel last week, well below the group's $21 target.
The producers, under pressure to halt the slide in oil prices, will be plotting production strategy for the final three months of the year.
Crude prices have tumbled to their lowest level in three years — since shortly before Iraq invaded Kuwait, a crisis that briefly sent prices above $30 a 42-gallon barrel.
Nazer, whose country supplies about a third of OPEC's oil, said Saudi Arabia would not cut output below its current level of 8 million barrels a day. Overall, the nations are supplying about a million barrels a day above their July-September ceiling of 23.6 million barrels a day
The price plunge has been blamed partly on excess production by Iran, Kuwait and several other OPEC members.
JERUSALEM
JERUSALEM
Parliament OKs peace treaty
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin declared he won "freedom of action" to pursue Mideast peace after parliament ratified the historic Israel-PLO accord yesterday.
Rabin said the 61-50 vote allowed the government to implement the agreement on Palestinian self-rule in the occupied lands and continue attempts to reach peace with Israel's Arab neighbors.
The margin was less substantial than Rabin had hoped for, but it put a convincing end to calls for early elections or a national referendum that would have slowed down the peace momentum.
It also diminished fears that Israel would be torn by violence and political anarchy after recognizing the PLO, its bitter enemy.
"Now we shall build a new Middle East," Foreign Minister Shimson Peres said after the vote.
eign Minister Shimon Peres said after the vote. Still, hard-line opponents to the accord said that the government's mandate was slim and that they would try to force changes in the accord.
PLO spokesman Yasser Abed-Rabbo praised the result, telling Israel army radio from Tunis that it was a "positive step" and that support for the treaty was larger in the street than in parliament.
Rabin had staked the credibility of the peace initiative as well as the future of his government on winning the vote, saying it would constitute a formal vote of confidence.
PHOENIX
Passenger lands airplane
A passenger with virtually no flying experience crash-landed a light plane at a dark airport yesterday morning after the pilot died at the controls.
"Definitely an 'E' ticket ride," said Matthew Kornblum, who walked away from the single-engine Cessna 182 after his feat in Flagstaff, Ariz. "It's just something you have to do when you're in a do-or-die situation."
The pilot, Billy D. Graham, 59, was pronounced dead at Flagstaff Medical Center. An autopsy was ordered to determine the cause of death, but Kornblum said he believed Graham had a heart attack.
The two were returning to Flagstaff in the dark from a business trip in the Navajo Reservation community of Kayenta, Ariz., about 130 miles northeast of Flagstaff, when Graham said he wasn't feeling well.
About 10 minutes later, Graham convulsed and passed out. Kornblum said.
Kornbium, from Charlotte, N.C., said he has never had a flying lesson but Graham and other pilots had allowed him to take controls of planes several times, though never at night.
"I've had maybe 10 hours at the stick," Kornbom said. "I'm really glad I paid attention."
num said. "I'm really glad I've paid attention." Kornblium, an electrical engineer, said he was too high on his first attempt at landing. The second time, he bounced the plane three times, collapsing the nose landing gear before the skid skipped to a halt.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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Friday, September 24,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
---
Cheney gives speech at Baker
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
An 8,000 mile car trip across the western United States this summer confirmed a few things for former Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney.
America is still far stronger than what most people believe, he said. And Washington, D.C., is not as important to Americans as politicians think.
BAKER
But Cheney, 52, said he was concerned that Americans have become more complacent in realizing that world events since the Cold War remained important to the United States.
"I sensed that this has been most pronounced in our turning away from events in other parts of the world in favor of domestic concerns," he said.
Dick Cheney, former Secretary of Defense, speaks to the students and faculty of Baker University the college's annual fall convocation.
Cheney, who served as Secretary of Defense under George Bush from 1989 to 1992, presented the Dietch Distinguished Lecture at Baker University's annual fall convocation yesterday. About 900 people attended the speech in Baldwin City.
In the speech, Cheney said the end of the Cold War could not have come if it had not been for unwavering U.S. defense policies and higher defense spending in the 1980's.
"There is a notion that the end of the Cold War was preordained — that it would have happened anyway without regard to the policies pursued by the United States in the last 40 years." Cheney said. "That is wrong."
Cheney said many Americans believed that the former Soviet Union's most difficult struggles were behind them. Dramatic developments in Moscow during the past three days dismiss that notion, Cheney said.
"For us to expect that the former Soviet Union can go through something this dramatic without violence, always moving forward, is not realistic," he said. "Sooner or later, conflicts will develop.
"That is a disturbing proposition, given they have 30,000 nuclear weapons."
Cheney said the United States must maintain its responsibility as a world leader.
Further cuts in the defense budget, though, would make this responsibility difficult, he said. Cutting a proposed $127 billion in the defense budget in addition to the $322 billion already cut since the Cold War is a "serious mistake."
Cheney told reporters in a press conference afterward that he would advise President Clinton to not deviate from the original U.S. plan in Somalia.
"We went there to accomplish the mission, now it is time to make the handoff to the United Nations," he said.
"You can't find a time in U.S. history when we have downsized that we haven't overdone it, going down too far, too fast," Cheney said. "It sends a signal of weakness around the world."
Cheney said that he had made no decision for his political future. He said he is currently working at the American Institute in Washington, D.C., and is a director of an investment group in New York City.
Chewing tobacco a health threat
By Liz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
"It was the cool thing to do," Lowry said. Lowry said that he chewed tobacco two to three times a week and that he used it to relax and to cure his oral fixation.
Danny Lowry, Dallas freshman, began chewing tobacco when he was 14.
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said that in 1964, the Surgeon General reported that cigarette smoking was linked to lung cancer.
"I'm not addicted to it," Lowry said.
Since then, Yockey said, there has been overwhelming evidence that confirms the Surgeon General's report. Yockey said that although smoking usually was associated with cancer, chewing tobacco was no better.
"The only difference between smokers and chewers is that chewers get their cancer where they can see it," Yockey said.
Throat and mouth cancers are associated
with chewing tobacco.
Kansas baseball coach Dave Bingham said chewing tobacco had been banned for the last three years from team members on the field, in the locker room or in their apartments.
Yockey said that in the late 1800s, people who wanted nicotine chewed tobacco. By the early 1900s, the forerunner of the American Lung Association thought tuberculosis was spread when people spit tobacco.
"It's just wise for them not to chew," Bing-
ham said. "It's a hard habit to break, obviously."
Ironically, to stop the spread of tuberculosis, the organization began a campaign that encouraged people to replace chewing tobacco with cigarettes, Yockey said. He said smoking had taken off during World War I when soldiers found it more convenient to smoke in their foxholes and to toss out butts instead of chewing and spitting.
Camden Fisher, Wichita sophomore.
"It's not that attractive, I guess," said Fisher. "It's disgusting."
Although the sale of chewing tobacco is prohibited to people under the age of 18, Fisher began chewing tobacco when he was 16. He had no trouble purchasing the tobacco, possibly because he looked older, he said.
Allen Hilburg, representative of the Smokeless Tobacco Council in Washington, said 5 million people in the United States used smokeless tobacco.
Holly McQueen / KANSAN
Hilburg said that American Indians had introduced Europeans to tobacco and that during the American Revolution, tobacco had been the product most in demand from the United States.
KANSAS
Hilburg said there were two types of chewing tobacco: Moist and dry snuff that is sold in small canisters, and loose leaf tobacco that is sold in pouches.
Ana Lochmann, left, and Melissa Bukovatz, Topeka freshmen, fill their plates with Caribbean delicacies during the "Pirates of the Seas" night at Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall cafeteria. The dinner buffet was provided by Student Housing Dining Services yesterday.
Feeding frenzy
Professors earn book awards
By Kathleen Stolle
Kansanstaffwriter
For KU professors Norman Saul and Sandra Zimdars-Swartz, the Byron Caldwell Smith Award they received earlier this month reinforced their own sense of accomplishment.
The biennial award recognizes books by Kansas authors who demonstrate originality and outstanding scholarship. Zimdars-Swartz and Saul were selected by a committee of KU faculty from 28 nominations.
Zimdars-Swartz's "Encountering Mary: From La Salette to Medjugorje" was recognized as an inspiration to scholars and students in related fields of study. Saul's "Distant Friends: The United States and Russia, 1763-1867" was commended for research and insightful scholarship.
Zimdars-Swartz, professor of religious studies, said she was first inspired by the phenomenon of Virgin Mary apparitions when she visited a Marian shrine in Lourdes, France.
She said the apparitions most commonly were
reported by women and youngsters of the Catholic faith and with a disadvantaged background. She said she felt good about the objectivity of her writing.
"Most people don't know what religion I am after reading it, and I take that as a good thing," she said.
Saul, professor of history and Russian and East European studies, said his book was the result of 20 years of research.
"It's not just diplomatic history," he said. "It's everything."
The date, 1763, refers to the first year of trade between the United States and Russia. In 1867, the United States bought Alaska from Russia. During this period Americans were recruited to help design and build Russian railroads, and the two countries took an interest in one another's cultures, Saul said.
"Distant Friends" is his best work yet, he said of his third book.
"I feel if confirms that I'm kind of maturing," he said.
EAGLE
JEWISH DAY OF ATONEMENT: YOM KIPPUR Kol Nidre Service: Friday, Sept. 24. 7:30 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom
YomKippur
Saturday, Sept. 25
9:30 a.m.: Services
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5:30 p.m.: Nilah Service
Sundown: Break-the-Fast
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JON BLU BAUGH MEMORIAL
WHEAT MEET
1993
Chi Omega Alpha Kappa Lambda
Entry:
Entry Fees - $6 - Race
$11 - Relays
$5 - Fun Relay
$4 - Simon Says
Sign up on Wescoe Beach before Friday.
Schedule:
Meet begins at 9:00 a.m. on September 26,
1993.
For questions, call 841-7191.
Awards:
100% cotton t-shirts will be given to winner of each race. Winners of Simon Says receive trip to Chicago.
Benefits KU Cancer Research.
TRAVEL CENTER
UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP
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CONGRATULATIONS
Thomas B. Allen
Hallmark Professor of Illustration on the presentation of his drawings for James Howe's adaption of
THE SECRET GARDEN
at the Spencer Museum of Art September 26
from THE MEN OF DELTACHI
The University of Kansas Theatre for Young People Presente
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by Suzan Zeder
7:00 p.m.
Saturday,
September 25,
1993
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THE UNIVERSITY
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Reserved seat tickets are available for $3 (regardless of age) through the KU box offices (Murphy: 864-3982, Lied: 864-ARTS); VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone reservations.
V
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 24, 1993
a
Sydney victorious in bid for Summer Games
Beijing edged out after close vote
The Associated Press
MONTE CARLO, Monaco — Sydney, Australia was selected yesterday to play host to the 2000 Olympics, beating out Beijing for the Summer Games in a choice of stability and modern athletic facilities over the political uncertainty of China.
After the announcement, fireworks exploded over Sydney Harbor, where an estimated 100,000 people had gathered just before dawn Friday local time to await the outcome. The white shells of the city's famous opera
Olympics 2000
house were illuminated with the five colors of the Olympic movement.
"The members preferred Sydney because it was a candidate which presented no problems," said International Olympic Committee member Primo Nebiolo of Italy. "It was easier for them to make this decision than to face the prospects of dealing with a big country like China, its population, its problems."
Australia for the first time since the 1956 Melbourne Olympics was announced live to a worldwide television audience by IOC President Juan Antonio Samaranch after secret balloting by the committee's 89 voting members.
The decision to return the Games to
Beijing led during the first three rounds of voting, when other contenders Istanbul, Berlin and Manchester were eliminated, in that order. Manchester's voters then apparently swung to Sydnev in the fourth round.
In the first round. Beijing got 32 votes, Sydney 30, Manchester 11, Berlin 9, while Istanbul was eliminated with 7. In the second round, it was Beijing 37, Sydney 30, Manchester 13 and Berlin dropping out with 9. In the
One voter did not cast a ballot in the final two rounds.
third, it was Beijing 40, Sydney 37,
Manchester 11.
Bob Scott, head of the Manchester bid committee, said there was a definite "stop-Beijing" movement among committee members uncomfortable with what they perceived as heavy-handed support of China by some top IOC officials.
After Samaranch made the announcement in Monaco's soccer stadium, members of the Sydney delegation leaped into the air in jubilation.
Chinese officials in the audience appeared stunned, staying seated and offering only polite applause.
Sydney's victory, which followed unsuccessful Australian bids for the 1992 and 1996 Games, resulted from steady insistence that the harbor city could provide state-of-the-art infrastructure and cater best to the needs and wants of the athletes.
Despite its beauty and facilities, Sydney had been considered to be at slight disadvantage because of the 16-hour time difference with the eastern United States, which could affect TV rights fees.
The competition for the Games has been dominated by Beijing's candidacy — an ambitious, controversial attempt to bring the Olympics to the Communist nation despite skepticism about its record of suppressing
political dissent.
"The closed China of the past has now opened its doors," said the chairman of Beijing's bid committee, Chen Xitong. "We fervently want to know more about the world and to have more friends in the world know about us. Hosting the 2000 Games will open our door still wider."
Human rights officials immediately praised the decision to deny the Games to China.
"This decision puts the Chinese leadership on notice that they will pay a price for the continued abuse of their own citizens," said Richard Dicker, a lawyer for Human Rights Watch in New York.
Men's tennis looks to gain experience
Team to greet season in weekend tournament
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas men's tennis team faces 22 teams in South Bend, Ind., this weekend for its fall season open.
The Tom Fallon Tournament, whose host team is Notre Dame, features teams from all collegiate divisions. The teams are Northwestern, Nebraska, Vanderbilt, Rice, Colorado, Kentucky, Furman, Clemson, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Indiana, Michigan, Miami of Ohio, Michigan State, University of Cincinnati, Illinois, Northern Illinois, Ball State and Purdue.
Kansas coach Michael Center said the Jayhawks would face fair competition this weekend.
"It's a great first tournament," he said. "It's a chance for all the players to get a lot of matches under their belts."
The tournament is flighted, which means players compete against players with the same rankings. The tournament will have four flights in singles play and two flights in doubles. Two teams will compete in each flight.
The team's top returning player, sophomore Reid Slattery, and transfer student Martin Eriksson will compete in the first singles flight. Eriksson is a two-time NAIA All-American from Belhaven College in Jackson, Miss.
Competing in the second singles flight are sophomores Michael Isroff and J.P. Visepso.
7
Freshmen Tim Radogna and Trent Tucker, in their first collegiate tournament, will compete in the third singles flight.
Rounding out the eight-man team in the fourth singles flight are sophomore transfer Victor Fimbres and junior Manny Ortiz. Fimbres attended Bethany College in Lindsborg. He played on the Mexican 1992 National Team.
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
The two groups of doubles partners in flight one are Slattery and Isroff and Fimbres and Ortiz. Radogna and Vissepo and Tucker and Eriksson are doubles partners in flight two.
Junior tennis player Martin Eriksson practices at the tennis courts behind Allen Field House. The team is traveling to South Bend, Ind., this weekend for the Tom Fallon Tournament.
Volleyball team makes difficult road trip
Bv Gerrv Fev
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas volleyball team will see more of the United States than it ever wanted to when it travels to play in the Pittsburgh Tournament this weekend.
It will be the team's worst road trip of the year, Kansas coach Frank Albizt said. Other teams participating are Virginia Tech, Pittsburgh and Svacuse.
"I told the team to try to get as much rest as we can," Albitz said. "I think all three teams are regionally ranked."
Kansas will play against 7-5 Virginia Tech today. They will play 6-3 Pittsburgh and 3-7 Syracuse tomorrow.
The tournament ends tomorrow, but the matches for Kansas do not. Kansas is scheduled to play Akron on Sunday in Akron, Ohio. That means the Jayhawks may not return to Lawrence until late Sunday or early Monday, Albiz said.
Senior Barb Bella said she was looking forward to the tournament but not the travel.
Bella said she had extra incentive because one of her former assistant coaches at Texas A&M will be there.
Bella transferred to Kansas from Texas A&M after her freshman year.
Redshirt freshman Lara Izokaitis also has a vested interest in this tournament. She chose to attend Kansas instead of Syracuse.
"It's more exciting for me," Izokaitis said. "I was recruited hard by Syracuse. A girl I played against in my high school conference will be playing, and my dad will be there too."
This tournament adds to the high level of play the Jayhawks already have experienced. In a tournament last weekend in Lincoln, Neb., Kansas played Georgia and Louisiana State, two nationally ranked teams.
"This will be good competition," Izokaitis said. "We had a good competitive spirit last weekend, and we've been playing together."
Georgia defeated Kansas on Saturday 15-7, 15-12, 15-13. Georgia used a type of defense called a rotation defense, which is different
Izokaitis said she felt good about facing this weekend's opponents.
"Rotation defense seems to be more prevalent with good teams like Georgia," Bella said. "There is a good chance that these teams do it also."
from what Kansas is used to. Izokaitis said the Jayhawks worked on playing against that kind of defense in practice this week.
The Jayhawk offense had to change its playing style, but Bella said this defense opened up more opportunities for Kansas.
Albitz said most teams use the defense, but Georgia might have been better at it than the teams the Jayhawks had played before.
"It is actually not as good a defense to use against one of our sets," Albitz said. "We use it too. There are weaknesses in it, which I don't like."
"We were hitting easy against Georgia," she said. "We started hitting in the middle of the court, which is where their defense was. We need to have confidence and hit hard in the future."
Albitz said the rotation defense was not good against one of the plays Kansas used.
Appier's scoreless streak snapped as A's sneak by struggling Royals
The Associated Press
The law of averages caught up with Kevin Appier.
After setting a club record by extending his scoreless streak to 33 innings, he gave up a couple of runs and lost his six-game winning streak as the Oakland Athletics beat the Kansas City Royals 2-1 yesterday.
Bobby Witt, 13-12, outdued Appier, allowing one run and five hits in eight-plus innings, striking out a season-high 11 and walking two. Dennis Eckersley, the A's third pitcher, got the final two outs for his 34th save in 44 chances.
"Setting the record is very pleasing. Sabe's been a pretty good pitcher in the past. He's had some incredible years." Appier said.
Appier, 17-7, pitched five scoreless innings before an RBI single by Brent Gates in the sixth broke his streak. Appier gave up two runs in seven innings, struck out five and walked four. The previous club record was a 31-inning streak by Bret Saberhagen in 1989.
George Brett's 17th home run gave Kansas City the lead in the sixth, but Oakland tied the score in the bottom half after Jerry Browne's leadoff double. Mike Aldrete walked with one out in the inning and Gates singled.
Oakland went ahead in the seventh when Scott Hemond walked with one out, and Kurt Abbott and Jerry Browne followed with singles.
Witt, who is 4-0 with a 1.12 ERA in his last five starts, said he was worried Appier would make Brett's homer stand up.
"The pitch to Brett was a slider down and in, and he really tattooed it," Witt said. "The way Appier's been pitching, I thought we might lose the game."
After Brian McRae's leadoff double in the ninth, Witt was replaced by Rick Honeycutt. Eckersley, who had a blown save in Wednesday night's 3-2, 10-inning loss' to Kansas City, then struck out pinch-hitter Mike Macfarlane. Gary Gaetti filed to left as the Royals lost for the seventh time in 10 games.
Former Jayhawk safety succeeds in arena football
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
Bowen, however, did spend the summer playing arena football for the Cincinnati Rockers.
"You never know who's watching," Bowen said of his chances of playing in the NFL. "At least this way, I'm keeping in shape, and I'm playing. If something like that comes up, fine. But if not, it's nothing to get upset about."
Former Kansas safety Charley Bowen's four years of hard-nosed football with the Jayhawks did not earn him a ticket to the NFL Yet.
Although Bowen has played football since he could walk, arena football, which is different than conventional football, brought new challenges to the Lawrence native.
Differences in arena football include the size of the field, which is 50 yards long plus eight-yard end zones, and the number of players, eight on each team. Sidelines are marked by four-foot padded walls that allow for hockey-like cross check tackles a big part of the game.
"Things happen much faster," he said.
"Running backs get to the corners faster, and receivers run their routes quicker because everything is cut down."
Although the speed of the game and size of the field made Bowen adjust, the biggest challenge was relearning how to play offense, he said. In arena football, everyone except kickers and quarterbacks plays both offense and defense.
Bowen, who returned punts for Kansas, had not played a down on offense since high school. Bowen said that he had fun playing offense but that he had difficulties learning pass routes and formations.
Bowen said sideline walls had been difficult to adjust to, as well.
"I saw guys knocked through walls and over the walls all the time," he said. "The first time it happened to me was when we
were down in Dallas,
and, well, the wall
doesn't give very
much."
PETER BURKE
Joe Haaring, coach of the 2-10 Rockers, said, "There were some veterans ahead of him. It took him some time to learn everything, but toward the end of the season he was one of
Charley Bowen
our best players. I started him for the last game of the season, and he was the player of the game."
Bowen got used to the walls, to the speed of the game and to playing on both sides of the ball. He also got used to the paychecks.
In addition to a fully furnished apartment and a food allowance, the Rockers' base salary was $500 for each game, plus bonuses. Bonuses depended upon a player's action on the field. For instance, $200 was given to players who scored a touchdown or made a big hit in the game.
Bowen said that on more than one occasion he had earned $1000 in one game.
Although his team had a rough year, Bowen said, he probably will return to Cincinnati next summer. And because the NFL may not knock on his door, Bowen is making preparations for life after arena football.
With little more than a semester of school standing between him and his degree, Bowen said he planned to return soon. Upon graduation, he said, he would apply to the Highway Patrol.
Haering said, though, that Bowen had what it took to play arena football field for sometime.
Freshmen runners to take lead in Boston meet
"He is an overachiever," Haering said.
"What he lacks in skills, he makes up for with instinct. He definitely has the skills for a career in the sport."
Cross-country teams face challenge of top programs
After a weeklong break from competition, the Kansas cross country teams will return to action this weekend in Boston.
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
Both the men's and women's teams will compete in the Boston College Cross Country Invitational Saturday at Boston's Franklin Park. The women will compete in a five-kilometer race while the men will run a five-mile race.
The 11-team meet will include Rhode Island's Providence College, the second ranked women's team. South Florida, ranked 18th, might be the strongest men's team in the tournament.
Kansas assistant coach Steve Guymon said the trip would give the runners a good look at the level of competition they will face later in the year. He said the experience of competing against high-caliber teams as the runners prepare for the Big Eight tournament Oct. 30 and the NCAA district meet Nov. 13 was as important as the meet's results.
The women will face second-ranked Providence just two weeks after they were defeated by the topranked Arkansas Razorbacks in Lawrence.
Senior runner Julia Saul said the team looked forward to seeing the quality of competition among teams in the Northeast.
"It gains us some recognition," Saul said. "Traveling also helps in recruiting."
She said she thought the caller of competition the team would face would help the younger runners improve. Four of the nine women competing this weekend are freshmen.
Many of those competing for the men's team also
are underclassmen.
Guymon said that he thought Franklin Park would be a faster course than the Jayhawks home course at Rim Rock Farm, northwest of Lawrence.
Senior runner Bobby Palmer said the team had changed its practice routine since the previous meet. "We met together this week to devise some sort of game plan." Palmer said.
The men's team is coming off a home meet in which it finished third behind the Air Force Academy and Big Eight Conference rival Missouri.
Palmer said the team would benefit later in the season from facing tough competition this early.
Guymon said sophomores Chris Ronan and Jeff Peterson would miss the Boston meet because of injuries.
He said Ronan and Peterson's absences, combined with the absence of redshirt seniors Michael Cox and David Johnson, would give the younger runners a chance to compete.
USA
William Alix / KANSAN
Members of the men's cross country team run along Massachusetts Street during an eight-mile practice.
10
Friday, September 24. 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Ryan pitches his final game, ends award-winning career
Torn ligament keeps veteran off the field
By Arnie Stapleton The Associated Press
The end didn't turn out the way Nolan Ryan wanted. Back in April, at the start of his 27th and final season, the cool spring air was filled with hope.
"I want to stay healthy, get 30 starts and 200 innings," Ryan said. "Of course, I'd like to bring a pennant to Arlington Stadium. And I'd like to look back on this season and say, 'Yeah, I could have gone one more."
AUTHORITY OF SAN ANTONIO
They seemed like modest goals for baseball's career leader in strikeouts and no-hitters. But his glorious career ended abruptly Wednesday night in Seattle when a ligament in his right elbow "popped like a rubber band."
Going out with a flourish seemed like a possibility in the spring. He had one of his best spring trainings after compiling a .99 ERA during his final four starts in 1992. At 46, he still was smoking the radar guns at 96 mph. He wanted to make at least 30 starts on his farewell tour.
But age finally caught up and his body broke down. He missed 22 days
after surgery on the left knee, 72 days because of a strained hip muscle and 21 days because of a strained ribcage muscle.
Nolan Ryan
Doctors say Ryan probably has a torn ligament in his right elbow and
would need 12 months of rehabilitation. He finished his final season with a 5-5 record in just 13 starts, a careerhigh 4.88 ERA, 46 strikeouts and 40 walks.
Perhaps the most memorable moment of his final season was punching Chicago's Robin Ventura, who made the mistake of his career by charging the mound after Ryan hit him with a fastball. Ryan grabbed Ventura in a headlock and landed six punches. Ventura landed none.
It was his last no-hitter, teammates ioked.
Ryan didn't finish his final game Wednesday night, walking off the mound with a 3-1 count on Dave Magadan. Steve Dreyer relieved and completed a walk charged to Ryan.
Ryan said his elbow had been sore
since a seven-inning no-decision Friday night at Anaheim, where California's Greg Myers whiffed for Ryan's 5.714th and final strikeout.
"Everyone has visions of things turning out different than they really do," Ryan said philosophically. "But I can't really say I ever sat around and fantasized about how I would have liked to have ended my career. But I think if I had, it certainly would have been with a strong performance in a pennant race. I guess by striking out the last hitter."
Wouldn't that have been fitting? He was the last of the power pitchers who came up throwing every fourth day and was counted on for 300 innings a year. Ryan is finished, and he takes with him the epoch from which he came.
When he came up for good with the New York Mets in 1968, his goal was to stay in the majors long enough to qualify for a pension. He wound up lasting long enough to pitch to eight fathers and sons.
"I'm not sad," Red Murff, the scout who discovered Ryan, said. "I'm glad it's over for him. He's been fighting. Nolan Ryan is as great as anyone we've ever had in this wonderful game. What a man. I am in awe him. And I am not alone."
Softball team anxious for first game
Bv Gerrv Fev
Kansan sportswriter
The threat of rain might be the Kansas softball team's biggest worry this weekend during the Jayhawk Invitational tournament.
"The girls are really excited to play." Kansas coach Kalum Haack said. "They are tired of doing the same thing everyday."
again at 4:30 p.m. against Team Salina, which is made up of players from Kansas Weslyn.
The tournament will mark the beginning of Kansas' fall season. Last weekend's game against Wichita State was rained out, leaving the Jayhawks with nothing to do but practice.
Haack said Southwest,Missouri State and Nebraska-Kearney would be the Jayhawks' toughest competition in the tournament.
Kansas is scheduled to play at 3:15 p.m. tomorrow against Nebraska-Kearney and at 5 p.m. against Johnson County Community College. Sunday, the Jayhawks will play at 2:45 p.m. against Southwest Missouri State and
"I think Southwest Missouri State will be the toughest since they're the lone Division I school besides us," Haack said.
Kansas main goal will be to get all its players some playing time, Haack said.
Senior pitcher Stephani Williams said that getting freshmen team members experience against Division I opponents was most important.
"Whether we win or lose isn't what's most important," Williams said. "But we should win."
Team Salina, 3-1; cannot be affiliated with Kansas Wesleyan according to
Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference rules. Under those rules, the team, which is allowed to compete only in spring games, cannot play a fall season game under the supervision of its head coach. But with seniors Leslie Zielinsk, Michelle Villaire and Jennifer Montio coaching, its members are free to play.
"This is our first year," Zielinski said. "We wanted to get our new people together to get experience and have fun. We don't even have the whole softball team. It's just whoever has the time to play."
Haack said that Kansas' opponents would be as anxious to play as the Jayhawks were, but he was confident his team could win.
"I'll be disappointed if we don't win them all," he said. "We're going to come at them with both barrels firing."
MEETING
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Here's how it works...
To place an ad:
To place an ad:
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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.
To check out an ad:
1. Read the ads in the Jaytalk Meeting Network in the Monday,
Tuesday, and Thursday issues of the Kansan.
2. Call 1-900-285-4560 (you need a touch-tone phone) and listen to the message. The charge is $1.95 per minute.
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.
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own so the two of you can set up a meeting.
6 LINES for 6 DAYS ABSOLUTELY FREE! CALL 864-4358 TODAY TO PLACE AN AD
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IT WON THE AWARDS. IT WILL WIN YOUR HEART.
THE SECRET GARDEN
At the Lied Center
At the Lied Center University of Kansas
September 29 (KU Student Night) - October 3 Wednesday-Saturday performances at 8:00 p.m. Saturday and Sunday matinees at 2:00 p.m. Sunday evening at 7:00 p.m. Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office; all seats reserved; tickets $35 and $30; special discounts available.
To charge tickets by phone using MasterCard or Visa call 864-ARTS; or call any Ticketmaster outlet (816) 931-3330 or (913) 234-5454.
TICKETS AT:
TICKETMASTER
KU STUDENT TICKETS HALF PRICE FOR SEPTEMBER 29 PERFORMANCE ONLY!
Student tickets also available at the SUA office, Kansas Union.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 24,1993
11
AFRICAN ADORNED
For Unusual Jewelry & Imported Gift Items
5 East 7TH • 842-1376
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108 Personal
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130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s
205 Employment
206 Help Wanted
207 Professional Candidate
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Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on nationality, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and landholdings advertised in this newspaper are open to qualified applicants.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1988 which makes it illegal to advertise any preferee's race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
I
100s Announcements
110 Bus. Personals
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
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Costumes on 2nd floor for party parties
and of course Hallowen, Come on up!
922 Mass-Downton
Regular Clinic Hours
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Aigela got you down? As a tutor, I can help you.
(603) call bencks, ask for John. Leave message.
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Intramural Softball
call Caryn at 864-3948
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FOR SUKKOT PROGRAMS
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Merchandise
MODELS NEEDED FREE HAIRCUT ! Men and women call Caroline Carroll Suite 833-1485.
New & returning LesBiGav
Graduate students, faculty & staff: Welcome (back) Gay and Lesbian Academic & Staff Advocates
(GLASA)
invites you to get acquainted at a reception on Monday 27 September, 5 p.m. please call Kart at the Student Association Center 864-4094 for more information.
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140 Lost & Found
Found: gold bracelet near design building, call 843-1638 icall.cem
LOST KITTEN-blue-eyed male Miamese. 3½ mo.
old. cash reward for return. 482-1281
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200s Employment
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$ STOP! DON'T READ THIS!
HELP WANT: Fraternities, Sororites, Clubs!
$ HELP WANT: 100% Profit! Easy! Sell 20/50% Binocular & $45 at All Sport/Group Events 800-824-9833
ALASKA EMPLOYMENT - Fisheries. Earn up to $2000 + $400 on m fishing vessels or canneries. Many companies provide transportation and room. For more information, call 1-206-485-4155 A3756.
A great opportunity for education majors! Stepping Stones is hiring a lead teacher to work with kinder gardeners from 12:00 to 6:00m, 2, 3, or 5 days a week. Apply today at 101 Wakaraus.
Cash Caterers, Kansas and Burge Union's' Catering Department, September 28, 1998, 8.15pm-10am, for the opening of the Leid Center. Apply at the Kansas and Burge Union's' Personnel Office, Level 5, Kansas Unit Building. Other dates available for meetings. Listings available in Personnel Office. EOE
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
DEVELOPMENT/CONSTRUCTION CO. has part-time opening with flexible day hours for an office assistant. Chance for full-time summer employment and after graduation. Experience on IBM or Applicators. Some accounting/bookkeeping experience required. Must be up and down depending on experience and hours. Send resume to P.O. Box 3008, Lawrence, KS 69466. Attn. Nita.
Child care provider needed in person. First United Methodist Church, 94 Vermont, 81-750.
By donating your life saving blood plasma
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
Day care needs experienced person. Must be available in the morning. 85/hr. 741-7851
Evening and weekend CNA's needed to work with clients in their homes. 40 Shares at Douglas Capital.
WALK-INS WELCOME!
Dominio $P'i a pizza now has 5 delivery positions available. Apply after 5pm, any day all shifts avail.
Flexible hrs, average driver earns $7-$10 an hour.
841-802.
Full-time nanny needed for Lawrence family.
Competitive salary plus room and board. Ideal job for college student. Car and references required.
(816) 444-9000. No fee.
Graduate level student with proven technical writing and revision skills, three quarter to full-time. Technical services or science background helpful. Good typing skills essential. Some short term travel required. Prior experience in resume and interest to Technical Services Director. p. p. box 785, Lawrence, KS 60444 EOE
Help wanted. Adams Alumun Center needs morning dishwasher 3 days a week, minimum wage, position available immediately, apply in person.
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Home-based Therapist, Part-time. Fee-for-service. To provide clinical services to severely emotionally disturbed children, adolescents, and families. Attn: Patricia Roach. Please submit credentials, minimum 2 years experience providing mental health services to SED children
Kansas and Burge Unions hiring part-time, hourly for Fall Semester. Many jobs in Food Service, Center for Personal Office with varying schedule, Center for Personal Office, 5 Kansas University Building for job applications. JOE EC
Live in nainy room 7:35:30 M-F, $42 monthly +
+ room & board, vacation & sick leave. Kids, 6 &
4. House keeping & cooking duties. P / t students
accepted, need references, #383-387.
Looking for a change second semester "Come live in our living room. Free room, board plus salary. Work 5 hours a day while getting your education and be a mother's helper. Job consists of baby-sitting 2 year old and newborn, light housekeeping, errand-running, etc. If interested, please send me, in 100 words or less, you are the best person for this job. P.O. Box 182, Lawrence, KS 63701
23rd St. & Ousdahl
(behind perkins)
841-6232
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Need Cash? Start immediately. 3-builder for
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United Child Development Center, 948 Vermont, is accepting applications for a part-time computer instructor for pre-school children. For more information, call the Daycare for accepting applications is September 10.
VECTOR.
$9.30 starting
Interschine & Scholarte
now available.
Internships & Scholarships
NOW HIRING smiling facing in a clean, grease-free environment. Fast food esp. preffered. Apply at MR. GOODCENTS Subs and Pastas. 15th and Kasold. Hrs. 10:30 m - 11:00 m.
Innovative grant funded program designed to provide alternatives to psychiatric hospitalization of children and youth in Doughan, Franklin, Jefferson counties. Specialized training persons to be on-call for short-term, crisis intervention care to emotionally disturbed children and youth with special communication skills, ability to be firm and consistent; experience and/or ability to learn to work with
OPPORTUNITY TO BE PART OF THE FUTION
FOSTER PARENTS to provide short-term out of home care, must be able to be licensed through FOSTER.
Part time student hourly receptionist/pyjwist worker in the Center center 2009 Contain Ave, west park 864-613-613
ON-CALL ATTENDANTS to provide one-on-one supervision in home or foster care
Retail sales position. Immediate opening full time part time. Jewelry-china crystal. No experience necessary. Can work with school schedule-weekends. Send resume to P. box 92 Lawrence, KS.
SALES REPS WANTED - Develop your own marketing strategy and go sell. Prefer marketing of sales majors. Product to sell is a mail-order Kosher food processor. Contact us at 507-568-8921. Before 11:00 am and after 3:00 P.M.
Make inquiries to: Cheri Schwin, Bert Nash,
Mike Schwartz, 202, Lawrence, KS 6604
Open until filled, EOJ
SALESE-College Students. You're chance
to work with us. Work with
people. Work with
our hours. Call 819-693-7457.
part-time counter work. Mon, Wed., Fri, apply in person at The Mail Box, 3115 W 9th suite C.
Part-time day and evening help wanted. Must be
in person only at Border Dandido, 1032 W. Ward 321.
Social Worker, full-time position to provide case management services to adult SPMI population, screening and crisis stabilization and manage client well-being, and provide years experience with this population, requires an LMSW, licensed psychiatric nurse or licensed psychologist. Please submit resume with cover letter in care of Dale Creamer, Bert Nash, CMHC, 31602, Lawrence KS 6004, open until filled EOE
United Child Development Center is accepting applications for the position of 2-hour rest aides. Applications can be picked up at UCDC, 946 Vermont, Lawrence.
**Sport Officials:** Lawrence Parks and Recreational Department is hiring individuals who want to be sports officials for adult volleyball and basketball联赛。Must be able to attend training sessions to
STUDENT ASSISTANT IN ENGINEERING/
MAINTENANCE. Deadline: 09/30/23. Salary:
$4.35/hour. Duties include pickup and delivery of
equipment; receiving and write up of orders;
managing a staff of six (five) technicians in light mechanical and electronic repair;
and other duties as assigned. Required qualifications currently enrolled as a student at the University of Alberta, are required for customers, good oral and written communication skills, months previous hardware experience, available to work 16 to 30 hours a week, in 3 to 4 weeks. Job application which is available in Room 202 of the Computer Center. EO/AA EMPLOYER.
225 Professional Services
Student Manager, Kansas and Burge Uniones $5.00 per hour. Work schedule is varied but would normally be 8 AM to 12 PM, KU student. Ability to work well with people, concern for appearance. Prefer audio/video, VCR and monitors, video projector, slide projector, or computer. Experience in corder, etc. experience. Ability to work without supervision. Apply Kansas and Burge Uniones' Perform Office, Level 5, Kansas University Building. EOE
LSAT EXPERTS KAPLAN
For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and talk with you. Birthday parties are welcome. Meeting. Macintosh reprints and upgrades Friendly, Affordable, In-Home Service
842-5442
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Prompt abortion and contraceptive services. Dale L.
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United Child Development Center, 946 Vermont,
has full and part-time openings for children ages 1-
6.1/2 kindergarten care available. Program
number 342-8942 for more info. Teachers certified.
Call 342-8942 for more info.
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
Donald G Strole Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
CC Deskbook Publishing: Resumes, Cover Letters,
Brocurets, Flyers, Term Paper, Newletters.
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call Makin 'the grade at 865-285.
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Any kind of typing accepted. Call today at 841-6241
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300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
Absolutely beautiful 1/4 karat solitaire engage-
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for $440.00. Call 834-583-8141.
Beds, deks, and bookcases Everything But Ice. 936 Mass.
CHEAP FURNITURE! Hide-a-bed, easy chair,
office chair, Desk Looking For Something!, 007
823-645-9138
powerbook 180 4/120
new in box $2499.99
ppowrk
Smith-Corona typewriter, 3 yrs. old, Excel. excl.
from 2013 after 4: 30 pm; Ask for Sue, will be take
on Saturday.
Quantrill's Flea Market open every Fri., Sat. & Sun 10AM-5PM 811 New Hampshire 842-6616 Downtown
340 Auto Sales
Suzuki GS550 great low price Call Mark 842-6383.
waterbed, queen size baffled, waveless, heated
good condition $100 o.b. call 841-6762.
**86 Surcal GSKR-790. Youi P1pe and much more.**
**$2500 OBO Call John at 832-0299.**
**John P1pe, 832-0299**
1982 Audi 4000 S reliable, good condition HIMI.
$1,000 b. o.b. 832-298
Audi 4000 S reliable, good condition HIMI.
$1,000 b. o.b. 832-298
1638 Volvo DLF, great cond, new breaks, new tires,
5000 Volvo DLF, great cond, $2200 o b. call 811-3500,
leave message.
360 Miscellaneous
Sale- '78 W R Rabbit, body damaged but runs -4400
Call 749 4205
Bookcases, desks, chairs. IBM typewriters, copier, towels. Receipts. To view call 842-7345 during business hours.
370 Want to Buy
Cash for Bay Scoots patches badges, uniforms. We
looking for Something? 100 Meters Looking for
Something?
400s Real Estate
Over the Edge
HOTEL
1 BR apt. cable & water paid. Sept. p. On bus
route. leave交换机 AP. Call after 7am and leave a
password.
Fitness room
Naismith Halls' services give students the competitive edge.
405 For Rent
1 bdm apartment in Meadowbrook. Free cable and swimming pool. On bus route 81-4230. Ask for
Front door bus service
2 rooms for rent for non-trad. female(s) available
i. 400. i. 890+uite. Live 10 min. south of Lawrence.
Private c:ntry home-kids and pets O.K. 766-0816
leave message.
Dine anytime meals
4 bedroom apartment for rent. Fully furnished.
very nice. Interested? Call 822-4455
NAISMITH Hall
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
very nice interior! Call 812-445-4455
Weekly maid service
Available now, 2 bedrooms at 612 Tennessee, small pet
key, $425 plus utilities 749-758.
3 Edr 8th apt for rent Campus Place. Very close
room. Smoke free. Female room.
Smoke free. Call 942-715-6058.
1800 Naismith Drive (913) 843-8559
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS 2040 Heatherwood
-2 Bedroom, 1½ Bath $425
-3 Bedroom, 2 Bath $550
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
Call Now!843-4754
Available Oct. 1, one binam, newly renovated basement parking wd. no.教务室, 8209, #174M1
parking wd. no.教务室, 8209, #174M1
- Byphone: 864-4358
Extra nice and quiet, 3 bedroom apart, including extra alp, dishwasher and low utilities. not pests. $250.
How to schedule an ad:
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Choice room in large quiet residence. Utilities paid
daily. Refundable within 24 hours. Near Dilim
on 2nd. $45/mo. Call A168-605-7333.
Newly remodeled 1B droom. $400 month. 841-797-9
student. Available now. $400 month. 841-797-
9. tkm avail for fem. in 2 story townhouse. Close to
parking. On-site laundry. Sept. 29, Sept. 30.
really already paid. Lease to May 31. 749-797-
430 Roommate Wanted
Rent for rent, hall a block from campus, very
affordable For details, call any, phone 832-283-721
- ByMail: 119 Stairfer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
Stop by the Kansas office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa.
Ada phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
19th Stuffer Flat
Looking for a place to live? Try cooperative living at the Sunflower House. Low rent, utilities pds, waher/dryer. Come check us out at 1406 Tennessee, or call 814-0484.
Responsible roommate to share upwards 3 bsplt
CALOB /2 +1/ = wait, the prompt says "CALOB"
CALOB /2 +1/ = wait, the prompt says "CALOB"
CALOB /2 +1/ = wait, the prompt says "CALOB"
Calibration Call after dm 839-004
Respondible NS F roommate to share 3 bdr.仆
on KU bus. $16 per hour + 74,900. utility
$18 per month + 94,800.
Female non-smoker to share duplex, three bedroom, washer/dryer, on KU bus route 749-4145.
Female roommate(s) needed to share 2B/2A, brunch, apl. 1150qt. on Fk U bus route $383/188 mo. +/can canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kanan offices. Or you may choose have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of apine lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00
Num. of Insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Please print your ad one word per box
105 personal
110 business personas
120 announcements
130 entertainment
305 for sale
340 auto sales
360 miscellaneous
Classifications
148 lost & found
265 help wanted
225 professional services
225 tying services
Cost per line per day
1X 23% 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30+X
2.05 1.55 1.05 .85 .75 .50
1.90 1.15 1.05 .70 .65 .45
1.65 1.05 .75 .65 .60 .40
1.75 .90 .75 .60 .55 .35
379 want to buy
485 for rent
438 roommate wanted
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | | |
3 | | | | | |
4 | | | | | |
5 | | | | | |
Address:
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
Address:
Phone:
Date ad begins: Total days in paper.
Total ad cost: Classification:
VISA Method of Payment (Check one) ☐ Check enclosed ☐ MasterCard ☐ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Expiration Date:_
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
MasterCard
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Haiti, Lawrence, KS. 60445
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Lexon
And Professor Hardwick is Out
Of the chute!...He'll have to
net and eterize that Danaus plexippus
in less than ten seconds if he hopes to win!
A man in a sun hat runs after a butterfly.
Entomological rodeos
12
Friday, September 24.1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
fifi's
fifi's 925.IOWA 841-7226 Lunch & Dinner Great Food
Have you dined at The Castle Tea Room
lately?
Reservations only:
843-1151
The Lowest CD Prices In Town!
Current, Popular CDs for $5.95! Buy 5 or more CDs for $4.95! Also available, special selection CDs $3.95! Buy 10 or more CDs for $2.50 each!
For the Best Values in Town Visit
Lawrence Pawn
843-4344 718 New Hampshire
5 Nimble Pilots Sept.24-25 Playing at Quincy Magoos
In Topeka
Dancing Kitchen
Then Step Over To The Other Side
*Live Bands* **New Light Show** **DJ**
Every night of the week.
$2.00 42 oz. Big Cup Refill
$3.50 Budwees 75c Kaguis
Upcoming Bands:
Upcoming Band:
· The Hollow Med Oct. 1-2
- The Hollow Men Oct. 1, 2
- Submtyion Oct 7 8 & 9
KANSAS WOMEN'S GOLF
Quincy Magoos
1517 Lane
232-9800
Women's golf team fights rivals at the Hawkeye Invitational
Senior golfer Holly Reynolds, who tied with Oklahoma's Marie Desbians for seventh place, had the strongest tournament for Kansas.
Big Eight rivals Iowa State and Kansas State along with Big Ten powers Wisconsin, Northwestern and Michigan State will compete in the tournament _with Kansas.
The Kansas women's golf team will travel to Iowa City this weekend to participate in the Iowa Hawkeye Invitational.
The team is coming off a disappointing finish Sept. 12 in the Roadrunner Invitational in Las Cruces, N.M. The team finished 11th of 16 teams.
Freshman Lori Laurittsen, senior Tracy Beilis,
senior Pamela Wineinger, junior Ann Holbrook and
freshman Missey Russel will join her for this week's
competition. The top four players' scores will be
counted in the 54-hole, three-round tournament.
IV baseball begins fall season
SPORTS in brief
KANSAS BASEBALL
Kansas baseball coach Dave Bingham faces a dilemma as the team begins the fall season against Coffeville Community College at 11 a.m. tomorrow at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
Bingham said it was always a problem to find a balance between winning games and giving players needed time on the field.
KU
"As junior varsity game, it is designed to give our new recruits and young players playing time," Bingham said. "But you always want to win."
"There will be a couple guys who didn't get much time last year," Bingham said.
Since this is primarily for players who are young most of the older, experienced players will not be playing. Bingham said.
He said junior catcher Wilmot, who played in only five games last year, was the most notable.
The Jayhawks have scheduled all of their fall games with community colleges because the players on both teams will be about the same age, Bingham said.
He said the games were good for young Kansas players and for the players from the community colleges because they gave the players exposure in a university setting.
Bingham said his concern was to get Kansas' young players used to the team's system.
"It's good for them," Bingham said. "We may be looking at some of their players. This way, we see them here rather than having to go down and see them somewhere else."
"It's a matter of getting these players in the game," he said. "No matter what, if you play well, you should win."
Compiled from Kansan staff reports.
Kentucky runs past South Carolina
COLUMBIA, S.C. — It took one long run and several short ones for Kentucky to finally show how its offense is supposed to work.
The Wildcats, 2-2 and 1-1 in the Southeastern Conference, had trouble running the Stack-I option attack the past two weeks, and for a time last night had the same sort of trouble against South Carolina.
However, Randy Wyatt's 64-yard touchdown run and a 13-play, 81-yard scoring drive that ended on Michael Woodford's 1-yard run lifted Kentucky to a 21-17 victory.
“It’s hard to stop an offense like that
when it gets under way," said Kentucky coach Bill Curry, whose team rolled up almost half of its 400 yards in the final quarter.
Kentucky's comeback started after the Gamecocks broke free from a 7-all halftime tie with Brandon Bennett's second 1-yard touchdown and Reed Morton's 21-yard field goal.
Wyatt, a junior who had only 22 yards rushing this season, took a pitch from O'Ferral and went 64 yards around right end to cut South Carolina's lead to 17-14.
The Wildcats run exclusively during a 6-minute drive to the winning touchdown, up O'Ferrall's 24-yard run setting up Woodford's score.
Club Sports
Men's soccer
Central Missouri State at 1 p.m. Saturday at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa University of Missouri at 1 p.m. Sunday at Shenk Complex
Women's soccer
University of Missouri at 1 p.m. Sunday at Shenk Complex
Recreation Services tournament at 1 p.m. Saturday and Sunday at Shenk Complex.
Select Side practice at 10 a.m. Sunday at Shenk Complex
Women's rugby
BIG DOG SPORTSWEAR
MOVE OVER, TOTO
...HERE COMES
THE BIG DOG!
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Lawrence Riverfront Plaza
Factory Outlets
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: (913) - 832 - 8444
MAIL ORDER: (800)-642-DOGS
BRING IN THIS COUPON FOR
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New
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From- Melvins, Seam, Didjits,
Truck Stop Love, Mekons,
Hater, Nirvana, Supersnazz & more.
DANCE
Love Garden Sounds
936 1/2 Mass. St. (upstairs)
843-1551 "in the heart of downtown"
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UPSTAIRS
Border Bandido
presents
Attack of the Texas Burrito
You can run.
but you can't hide from the TEXAS BURRITO
BORDER BANDIDO
$3.29 Daily
$2.69 Sunday
1528 W.23rd
Across from the Post Office
0
I
Computing Services University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Fall 1993
The Jayhacker
Computing?
Are you in the doghouse with your profs for the way your papers look? A trip to the Computer Center "lab" may just help. Computer Center staff won't bite—or bark at your questions—when you visit the student computer labs.
If you are new to campus—or to computing-you can take a tour, find computers to use, learn to use software in 3-hour workshops (now just $20 for KU students), or ask a question or two at the Consulting Window or from Customer Assistance. There are more than fifty computers in the Computer Center labs for students to use—and many more at other places on campus. If you use the Computer Center labs you can take your choice of Mac or PC (IBM-compatible) microcomputers and print your documents free on dot matrix printers or pay just 20¢ a page to laser print your assignments.
Com and Duo
If you've already discovered the Computer Center-you may not know about all of the services offered to students. With a student account-now available to all KU students-you can discover electronic communication and online information. With an account, or from many labs on campus, you can explore KUfacts.
Isn't it time to get ready for the next century? Start by reading this issue of the Jayhacker to find out about computing at KU. We call it jayhacking—and it's computing for everyone!
Welcome to the lab
Inside the Jayhacker
Need help with computing? A trip to the Computer Center "lab" may help. The Consulting Window is open 10 a.m.to noon, 1 to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday. The Customer Assistance Window is open from 7:30 a.m. to midnight on Friday and Saturday, 7:30 a.m. to 2 a.m. the rest of the week.
- Who, what, when, where, and software-campus resources for you to use
- Compute your way to an A:Term papers
- More about KUfacts
- How to find computers close to you-day or night
- Computing services for KU students
- Campus map
- And more!
Customer Assistance
Come on down
How can I get help? Who do I ask? Is my computer dead or just lazy? Can I type my term paper? Do you have a laser printer?
The Computer Center can be a confusing place. So if you've had any of these questions, you may be pleased to hear about Computer Center general information tours. Tours take 15 to 20 minutes and will be held October 4 to 7, Monday and Wednesday mornings, Tuesday and Thursday afternoons. For tour information call 864-0100 or stop by the Computer Center reception desk.
You'll get more than information. All tour participants will get a free laser print card and $1 worth of free printing for your first paper!
KUfacts for KU and you!
Have you heard about the campus-wide information system? It's called KUfacts and it is something new for everyone.
KUfacts is a way for you get information about all sorts of things on the KU campus. You'll find concert and event schedules, library and health center hours, enrollment information, and placement center services. And new to KUfacts is anonymous online AIDS information from Watkins Health Center.
KUfacts connects you to electronic books, lets you get local and national weather, and can connect you with libraries and other computing resources around the world. All of these thingsand moreare available at your fingertips from most computer labs on campus
Although KUfacts is lots of things, it isn't really what it could be. Why? Because you aren't using it.
Right now you won't find information about student organizations at KU. Starting this fall, if you are a member of a student organization, you can post information about your organization for the rest of campus to read. You can let people know about your organization's purpose, members, meetings, and anything of interest to KU students, faculty, and staff.
And it is easier than you might think.
If you represent a registered student organization, stop by Room 203 at the Computer Center and ask to open an organization account. Get a form signed at Student Affairs in Strong Hall, then come back to the Computer Center to get instructions on how you can include your organization's information on KUfacts. You can come to a free afternoon seminar from 2 to 3:30 p.m. at the Computer Center on September 29 or get help at the Computer Center's Consulting Window Monday through Friday, 10 a.m.to noon or 1 to 4 p.m.
Then encourage all your friends to see what you have posted. KUfacts Make it fun to use.
The Jayhacker is published once each semester by Computing Services at the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas. Volume 3, number 1, Fall 1993.
Learned
Lindley
Marvin
Snow
Green
Strong
Murphy
Wescoe
Bailey
Summerfield
Fraser
Computer Center
Twente
Where do I go? What do I do?
Finding your way around the KU campus isn't always easy. Does it sometimes seem like every one of your classes is three miles from the last? And all are up hill? Then you start looking for a computer lab to use If you're lucky, there is one nearby.
If not, grab your floppy disk and come discover the Computer Center. It is down hill from almost every place on campus except the Health Center. If you need to compute, take a leisurely walk down the hill from Jayhawk Boulevard. Or stroll across the soccer field from Robinson Gym.
Once you get to the Computer Center, it is easy to find the labs. If you've come in the front door (the one that faces the Dole Building), the labs are the open doors to your right on either side of the display case. If you've come in from the back, take the stairs or elevator to the second floor and you'll see the labs on your left from the stairs and across the hall to your right from the elevator.
In the lab you will find both Macintosh and IBM-compatible microcomputers. You are welcome to use either or both. If your assignment didn't specify which platform (Macintosh, DOS, or Windows) you
need to use, try any open machine. Computer availability seems to depend on what class has what assignment due, but toward the end of the semester there seems to be more demand for the Macintosh computers.
If you don't know which type of computer is best for you, stop by the Consulting Window. If you have questions about using the lab, stop by the Customer Assistance Window. These are the big windows in the south end of the main lab room. Computer Center staff will be glad to talk about what platform will best meet your needs.
If you are new to computing,you may want to look at the posters on the walls before you start. They can help you get started and help you send your work to either a laser printer (buy a laser printing card and prepay 20¢ per page) or dot matrix printer (free).
If you get stuck or have other questions, please ask. You can check out software manuals (with a KU ID) or get more personal assistance. Computer Center staff can't help you with an assignment, but they can help you get through the intricacies of computing.
Hope to see you soon!
The Jayhacker
Jerry Niebaum Director, Academic Computing Services Dave Gardner Director, Office of Information Systems Herb Harris Assistant Director, User Services Michael Grobe Supervisor, Distributed Computing Support Martha Bryant Editor Laura Crow Editorial Assistant
Ana Lugo Photographer
The Jayhacker is published each semester by Computing Services at the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas, for students, faculty, and staff.
Contributions to the Jayhacker were made by Jeff Bangert, Dave Barnhill, Garrett Blythe, Jerree Catlin, Laura Green, Doug Heacock, Wes Hubert, Kathryn Huxtable, Nancy Miles, Doug Miller, Pat Miller, Lou Montulli, Brian Moore, Paul Nazario, Charles Rezac, Kari Scott, Kaia Skaggs, Pat Transue, Cathleen Wang, Mickey Waxman, and Rose Winters.
The use of trade, firm, or corporation names in this publication is for the information and convenience of the reader. Such use does not constitute an official endorsement or approval by the University of Kansas of any product or service to the exclusion of others.
The University of Kansas is an Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer.
2
The Jayhacker
Fall 1993
| Where | When | Who | What | Software |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Bailey Hall Room 6 | Mon-Fri 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Mon & Wed 7-9 p.m. | Education students have priority | 5 Apple IIe, 12 Mac SE, 1 scanner, 1 laserprinter, 2 ImageWriter printers | Apple: AppleWorks, Logo, Educational software *: Word, Works, MacWrite, MacPaint, MacDraw, Excel, SuperPaint, Cricket Graph, HyperCard, Persuasion, Statview, MyStat, and educational software |
| Ellsworth Hall 2nd floor | Mon-Fri 8 a.m.-2 a.m. 24 hours | Student housing residents | 32 Mac LCII, 1 laser printer, 7 ImageWriter printers | Word, Excel, MacWrite, Telnet, DeltaGraph, Hypercard, SuperPaint, Works |
| Fraser Hall Room 121 | Mon-Wed 9 a.m.-9 p.m. Thu 11 a.m.-9 p.m., Fri 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Sat 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun noon-9 p.m. 24 hours | All students All students | 3 Zenith 158, 5 Microtech 486/66, 1 laser printer | C:> WordStar, Basic, Turbo Pascal, Corel Draw, Kermit; SPSS, SAS, Lotus, and WordPerfect for Windows |
| Room 122 | Mon-Thu 7:30 a.m.-11 p.m. Fri 7:30 a.m.-10 p.m. Sat 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Sun 10 a.m.-11 p.m. | Law students | 8 Mac Isi, 2 ImageWriters | Kermit, SuperPaint, HyperCard, Word, DeltaGraph, Excel, SPSS, Disinfectant |
| Green Hall Room 306D | Mon-Thu 7:30 a.m.-11 p.m. Fri 7:30 a.m.-10 p.m. Sat 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Sun 10 a.m.-11 p.m. | Law students | 8 Zenith 286 AT, 4 486SX, 2 inkjet printers, 2 laser printers | *C:> WordPerfect for Windows, AsEasyAs, Excel DrawPerfect, Harvard Graphics, CALI drills, Interactive video |
| Room 306C Room 306B | Same hours Same hours | Law students Law students | 7 Westlaw PCs 8 Lexis | C:> Westlaw C:> Lexis |
| GSP-Corbin | Sun-Thur 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Closed Fri & Sat | Residents only | 4 Mac Plus | Works, WordPerfect, WriteNow |
| Learned Hall Room 3001A Room 3042 | 24 hours 24 hours | Engineering students only* Engineering students only* | 20 Mac SE 16 Apollo workstations, 5 ELC, 5 Sun IPX, 10 X-terminals 30 486 machines 23 HP Vectra 286 | Excel, CricketGraph, MacWrite, MacDraw, HyperCard, WordPerfect, Eureka, Prolog, Pascal, Telnet Sun IPX: AAA, Bons, Mentor, IMSL, Eansys C:> Drafix, Paradox, QuattroPro, C, Fortran 77, Images 3D, WordPerfect, Expert System+, Polymath, FSTModula II, Telnet, Joblink, Graphica, and more Apollo: HPMDF, Fortran, Pascal, AAA, ACad, Patran, Finesse, IMSL Libraries |
| Room 1036 Room 1037 | 24 hours 24 hours | Engineering students only* Engineering students only* (*with Eng sticker on KU ID) | 23 HP Vectra 286 | Word, Works, MacWrite, WingZ, MacDraw, MacDraft, SuperPaint, MacBanner, Adobe Illustrator Watch for changes throughout the semester |
| Lewis Hall | Sun-Thu 1-11 p.m. Fri 1-6 p.m., closed Sat | Lewis & Templin residents only | 2 Mac Classic, 2 Mac Plus 1 StyleWriter, 1 ImageWriter | Word, Works, MacWrite, WingZ, MacDraw, MacDraft, SuperPaint, MacBanner, Adobe Illustrator Watch for changes throughout the semester |
| Lindley Hall Room 31 | 24 hours on combination lock | Geology students only | 2 Mac SE, 1 Mac Plus, 1 scanner, 2 Mac Isi, 1 386, plotters, 2 pg monitors | WriteNow, SuperPaint, FullImpact, MORE, Canvas, RecordHolder, SmartBundle, Excel, HyperCard C:> QuattroPro, WordPerfect, CPS, WordStar |
| McCollum Hall | Mon-Thur 2 p.m.-midnight Sun noon-midnight Closed Fri & Sat | Residents only | 1 Mac Plus, 2 IBM 286 | MacWrite, MacDraw, MacPascal C:> WordStar, WordPerfect, GeoWorks Ensemble, QuattroPro, Pascal Compiler |
| Naismith Hall | 24 hours | Residents only | 4 Mac Plus, 1 IBM PS1 | Word, SuperPaint, MacDraw, MacWrite, Cricket C:> WordPerfect |
| Oliver Hall | 2 p.m.-midnight | Residents only | 3 Mac SE, 1 Zenith 286 | Works, Word C:> WordPerfect |
| Snow Hall Room 210 | Mon-Fri 8 a.m-5 p.m. Mon-Thu 5 p.m.-midnight Fri 5-6 p.m., Sat-Sun 9 a.m-5 p.m. Mon-Thu 8 a.m.-midnight Fri 8 a.m-6 p.m., Sat-Sun 9 a.m-5 p.m. | Students in CS 128, CS 200 and restricted classes only All students All students All students | 25 Mac SE, 7 MacII, 30 PCs, 1 NeXT, 1 Sun | Pascal, Fortran, Word, MacPaint, MacDraw, Think Pascal, Think C, SmallTalk, LogiWorks, ProGraph C:> Works, Turbo Pascal, Cobol |
| Room 106 | Mon-Fri 8 a.m-5 p.m. Mon-Thu 8 a.m-midnight Fri 8 a.m-6 p.m., Sat-Sun 9 a.m-5 p.m. | All students | 12 Mac SE |
| Strong Hall Room 17 | 24 hours (Building locked at midnight) | All students | 10 386s, 1 laser printer | C:> WordPerfect, WordPerfect for Windows, Excel for Windows, Word for Windows, Telnet |
| Summerfield Room 219 Room 418 | Mon-Fri 8 a.m-5 p.m. Econ grad students only | Econ grad students only | 2 Mac SE, 2 Zenith 150, 1 Microtech 486 | Word, WordPerfect, MacDraw, MacDraft, Excel, HyperCard C:> WordStar, FairModel, FlowChart, Minitab, dBase, Enable, Fieldpak, Microstat, PC SCA, PreAudit, QSB, SCAD, Statistic, Storyboard, Pascal; Word, WordPerfect, Excel, Lotus, SPSS, and SAS for Windows |
| Templin Hall | Sun-Thu 1 p.m.-midnight Fri 1-5 p.m. | Lewis, Templin residents only | 3 Mac Plus, 2 Zeniths | Works, MacWrite, SuperPaint, Excel, Word, Think Pascal |
| Twente Hall Room 217 | Mon-Fri 8 a.m-5 p.m. Social Work students only | Social Work students only | 1 Zenith 159 XT 1 Dell 486 | WordStar, SPSS, FoxPro, WordPerfect, Word for Windows |
| Computer Center Room 202 | 24 hours Staffed 7 a.m.-midnight Fri-Sat 7 a.m.-2 a.m. Sun-Thu | All students | 14 Mac IIcx, 12 Zenith 386, 9 Mac Isi, 1 Zenith 159, 2 Mac II, 2 scanners, 1 plotter, 1 Mac Classic, laser printers | SuperPaint, CricketGraph, Excel, SPSS, WordPerfect, Word, FoxBase+, HyperCard, Telnet, QuarkXPress, MacWrite II, Fetch, VersaText, Turbo Gopher, FileMaker Pro, Wingz, DeltaGraph, PageMaker, TN3270, Disinfectant C:> WordPerfect, WordStar, FoxBase+, Kermit, Telnet, Turbo CN3270, FTP, SPSS, SAS, Lotus 1-2-3, QBasic, dBase III, Turbo Assembler, Turbo Pascal, Turbo Debugger, Harvard Graphics, PageMaker, Excel, Word, Windows, F-Prot, Fox Pro, Minitab |
* Macintosh software C:> DOS or Windows (IBM-compatible) software For access to campus mainframe computers, go to a lab with TN3270 or Telnet.
Fall 1993
The Jayhacker
3
Meet KUfacts!
KUfacts is the new campus-wide information system at the University of Kansas. A CWIS traditionally answers the questions you felt stupid asking—like when's the library open or when's graduation?
THE BOXING CENTER OF THE NEW YORK HIGH SCHOOL
University Relations
Start here!
1930
University Relations
About KU
Learn about admissions, majors, and some of the facilities available for KU students from museums to computer labs
Arrow
The image shows a person sitting at a desk with a computer in front of them. The individual appears to be smiling and looking towards the camera. They are wearing a dark shirt with a pattern that includes light and dark colors. The background is mostly empty, with no other objects or people visible.
KUFACTS: THE UNIVE
ONLINE INFORM
how to use this system
Everything you always wanted to About The University of Kansas
Information about the campus,
Events, activities and amenities
Events, activities, and announcements Happenings at and around KU am Courses
Timetable of classes and catal
Departmental information
Groups of students, faculty, a reference shelf
Info about people, classes, ev Campus organizations
Reference materials, phonebook Index
>
Worldwide resources
4
Fall 1993
The Jayhacker
The Jayhacker
Fall 1993
THE TOMORROW IS NOW
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PETER & GABRIEL MICHAELS
KU Library
Timetable
Current search: fs banana
Line™ - SUBJECT INDEX Titles
refs 1 Banality (Philosophy) ... 1
2 Bananex... -
refs -> 3 Banana. ... 16
4 Bibliography. ... 1
5 Developing countries. ... 1
6 Diseases and pests. ... 5
7 Banana fish... -
Banana
8 Guatemala—Diseases and pests. ... 1
refs 9 Banana River (Flg.) ... 8
10 Navigation. ... 1
refs 11 Banana trade. ... 1
12 Caribbean area. ... 2
13 Central America. ... 8
14 Central America—Fiction. ... 1
Type a NUMBER to select a SUBJECT, or type another command - then press ENTER
a - MORE (browse forward) r (* line*) - show REFERENCES (refs) h - HELP
b - DOCK (browse backward) o - other OPTIONS q - QUIT
as - MODIFY your SEARCH
Command=>_
Fall 1993
The Jayhacker
5
Compute your way to an A: Writing a paper
What's the first thing you do after you've been assigned a paper on a topic you know nothing about? Nothing. You don't even have to panic until it's due.
Although that's the course too many of us take, there are some other options. And one of those is using a computer (or several of them) to make your job easier.
Libraries and computers
You'll probably want to start your paper at the library. Perhaps with the library online catalog system. You can use the online catalog from terminals at any one of the libraries, from computers on the campus Ethernet backbone, or even reach the catalog by modem if you have a computer at home.
If you haven't used the system before,you may want to spend a few minutes reading the instructions. If you've used the system before you probably know to start with "fs" and the subject you're writing about.
may want to go to the reference desk. They can help you find all sorts of resources—electronic and paper—that let you look for journal articles and other sources of information for your paper.
If you need newspaper articles, you are in luck. If you've felt that your eyes wouldn't hold out long enough to go through microfilm, you should know things have changed. At least if you want recent articles. Several major daily publications are indexed on CD-ROM. You can do keyword searches through the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, and the Chicago Tribune among others. Pick the dates you want checked enter your keyword or words, and then you can read abstracts of the articles online, print them to paper, or save them to a computer file. You still need to go to the microfilm for complete articles, but your searching has been done in a format much kinder to your eyes—and faster than you could search.
Machines & Software
Printing Option
A computer Center Machines and Printers is located in each building on the campus. You need to select which printer you want to print from. How to Find a printer can be found on the back wall.
Loncarcon. = $2
Just need to print
You may want to start working on a paper at the library, but many students are choosing to do their writing and editing in the Computer Center labs. The labs are open around the clock and staffed from 7:30 a.m. to midnight (2 a.m. Sunday through Thursday).
The University of Kansas
Online Catalog and Information System
If you are an experienced searcher, you can enter your
search directly on the command line of this screen.
Or, choose one of the following options by typing its number
on the command line and pressing the SEND or ENTER key.
1 - How to search and how to ask for help
2 - Basic explanation of how the catalog works
3 - Description of what is in the catalog, and what isn't
4 - Library announcements, hours, and other information
5 - Suggest a book the library should buy
6 - Make a comment or suggestion
Please type a search or type a number and press the SEND or ENTER key.
- Enter 'logoff' on any display to exit the online catalog.
- Enter 'q' or 'quit' on any display to return to this menu.
Command==> _
If you enter:
fs banana you'll have the option of reading about bananas, banana diseases and pests, banana fish, the Banana river, banana trade (by country), and the banana workers' strike in Santa Marta, Colombia
From this list, you may want to write down the call numbers of a couple of the most recent references on your topic and any others that look interesting. If you are lucky, at least some of these will have bibliographies. The bibliographies will give you the names of journals that publish information about your topic and the names of authors working in the field. Then go back to the online catalog. See if the journals are available (enter ft journal name) and if the authors have written on related topics (enter fa lastname firstname).
It isn't staffed by a computer, but you
1. Use a word-processing program available on Computer Center machines
Make your copies, haunt the library stacks,and check out the books you need. Lugging them all home is great exercise. Once you have the facts,you can begin the next step on the computer.
There are many word processing programs you can use. At the Computer Center you can use Word, WordPerfect or MacWrite II on the Mac or Word, WordPerfect, or WordStar on the PC. Other labs around campus may have other software packages.
How do you decide what is best for you? Here at the Computer Center we make two recommendations:
One of the easiest ways to work on a paper is to use your word processor for outlines,notes,and for the paper itself.
Outlines, notes, words
so we can answer your questions if you get stuck.
2. Use the program your best friend uses so you can call your friend for help.
Look at outlining functions on the word processing software you have chosen. If you like outlines—and your program has an outlining function—it is a great place to start.
Hate outlines and just take notes? The advantage of a word processor is that you can rearrange your notes into logical sequence. And you can copy information from your notes into the paper.
Writing the paper itself is easier on a word processor. You can make changes and revisions, print different versions to polish your words on paper rather than on screen, and work through several drafts to get your paper to reflect the time and effort you have invested. When you think you are through, run spell check. This will catch your misspellings—unless your misspelling is another word in the spell checker's dictionary.
If you are interested in purchasing word processing software, many stores give educational discounts. Just show your KU ID and get a better price on many of the best packages around.
Grammar checkers
Grammar checking software used to be separate from word processing. You could choose between interactive and non-interactive programs. The packages were not expensive,but they were just one more thing you wanted to buy when you got your own computer.Now,some word processing packages,like Word and WordPerfect,have grammar- checking capabilities.
A caution about these is in order.
Any grammar checker will catch some of your mistakes but not all of them. You still need to read your work carefully.
Graphics and scanners
Laser printing
If your very best words aren't quite enough, you may want to add graphics to your paper. At the Computer Center you can use a number of drawing and graphics packages to create illustrations or you can scan images from other sources to include in your work remember though that you have to cite the source of illustrations and photographs you have scanned.
The best way to find out about these is to come to the Computer Center labs and do a little exploring. You may want to consider SuperPaint, Paint for Windows, Cricket Graph, DeltaGraph, Harvard Graphics, Digital Darkroom, Ofoto, or PhotoFinish.
Ready to hand in your paper? Laser printing is available at the Computer Center and other places on campus and around town. At the Computer Center you can laser print for 20¢ a page. You need a plastic laser printing card that costs $1—but you can use it for years. Like copy cards at the library, you prepay for services. You can get a free laser card and $1 worth of free printing if you come to a Computer Center tour offered October 4 through 7.
You can print from the Macintosh self-service printer around the clock, or pick up printing sent from any Mac or PC in the Computer Center labs from 7:30 a.m. to midnight (2 a.m. on Sunday through Thursday).
And congrats on the good grade!
6
The Jayhacker
Fall 1993
KU Computing Services for students
What does the Computer Center do for students? Well, there are labs for student use, free seminars, discounted workshops,and, new this semester, computer network services are available to all students on campus.
And just what are "network services?" The most popular and well known, of course, is electronic mail. With national and international networks, electronic mail can be sent around the world. You can correspond with those that share your personal or research interests. The costs of network access are included as benefits of your enrollment at KU. Up to this point there have been a limited number of accounts available on the Oread computer system that provides student network services. That system is overloaded and consequently slow. Now everyone can have electronic mail with a simple user interface that runs either on a PC or a Macintosh.
Networking is not limited to mail. It includes a variety of other services, such as News, Telnet, FTP, Gopher, and World Wide Web. This article provides a brief description of each of these. For additional information, including details about how to use the services, see the writeups on Internet Services for Macintoshes and PCs, available at the Computer Center, or online via KUfacts.
"News" is a worldwide colloquium. There are over 2000 interest groups. These groups cover subjects ranging from bread making to technical topics in computing. Within these groups people share information and vent their frustrations. News has been available to users on the Oread system, but it ran v-e-r-y slowly. Now everyone can participate at reasonable speeds.
Telnet and TN3270 are programs that allow you to sign on to computer systems around the world. On some of these systems you must be an authorized user and have a valid account; however, on many, a personal account is not required. For example, there are over 600 libraries worldwide whose catalogues can be searched with Telnet or TN3270, including the Library of Congress.
FTP (the File Transfer Protocol) is a program that can move files between computers. People have established compilations of programs, data, and documents on computer systems known as "FTP sites" or "anonymous FTP sites." (Anonymous refers to the fact that you do not need to be an authorized user at an anonymous FTP site to retrieve a file from that site.) There are more than 1000 of these sites worldwide, providing approximately 2.6 million files. To help you locate the information you want, there is a program to automatically search all sites for file names that contain a keyword you specify. The program goes by the unlikely name of "archie."
Computer systems providing services are known as "servers," while systems and programs making use of these services are known as "clients." More and more general information servers are coming into use across the networks. Presently the most popular of these is Gopher. A Gopher client will access and retrieve information from Gopher servers on the net. These Gopher clients are available for both Macs and PCs. They provide very easy to use interfaces for information retrieval and they have taken over part of the function that the more arcane FTP servers have performed in the past.
Another type of information server, the next stage in server technology development, is the World Wide Web (WWW) server. Before the year is out there will be WWW clients available for the Mac and PC. WWW servers can have formatted documents with different fonts and sizes. There can be integrated graphics in a document, even animated graphics. Documents can also contain
sounds that WWW clients will play back.
Computing Services intends to provide all of these facilities for all students. This generation of students is the "connected" generation. Sharing and discussion can be done literally worldwide using increasingly good interfaces.
Currently any student can get an account that provides access to Internet services by going to room 203a in the Computer Center and filling out a short application form. Students who have modems and computers of their own should also get a terminal server account at the same time. The terminal server account provides high-speed dial-up access to KU computer systems and the Internet. This connection can be used with Kermit or any of several other terminal emulation programs.
Dial-up use of client programs that provide a personal-computer-based interface to mail, news, and other network services requires Serial Line Internet Protocol (SLIP) or Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) software on the desktop
system and on the network system you're calling. This summer the Computer Center installed a terminal server that provides SLIP support for incoming dialup connections, and may support PPP at some time in the future. SLIP software for Macintosh systems is available from the Burge Union Technology Center. A basic package, VersaTilities, costs $60. A package that adds terminal emulation, VersaTerm, costs $72. Computing Services is investigating several options for PC SLIP support.
Computing Services will be providing a variety of SLIP client software for Macs and PCs. Watch for updates on KUfacts. In the meantime, get your mail and terminal server accounts, and you can begin using the network now.
You'll have something to do on those nights when you don't want to do homework,you don't have a date,and it's raining. Who said that Computing Services wouldn't help you get through the difficult times?
Tour the Computer Center
A
Get
Computing Services
VendaCard
Record No. 900154
University of Kansas
Sign Here
VendaCard is a registered Trademark of XCP INC,
Computer Center • Lawrence, Kansas 66045 • (913) 864-0100
+ $1 of free laser printing
Discover—student labs, where to get help, how to laser print, and more. Sign up today for Computer Center tours October 4 through 7. Come by the Computer Center or call 864-0100 for more information.
Fall 1993
The Jayhacker . . . . .
7
Dear l'Abby-
Questions from Computer Center Labs
Dear l'Abby,
I stopped by the Computer Center yesterday. The PC lab was closed and I really needed to finish an assignment. What was going on?
Closed Encounters
A raven sitting in front of a computer.
Dear CE,
Education was going on. Throughout the semester, different workshops and seminars are held in both the Mac and the Zenith (PC) labs at the Computer Center. Workshops are designed to help people improve their computing skills. The three-hour workshops are specially priced for KU students—only $20. Faculty and staff pay $40. The general public pays $75.
If you are interested in improving your skills on some particular software package, stop by the Business Office at the Computer Center (it is just north of the labs). They can tell you when particular workshops are being taught—and they'll even offer to take your money.
So if you need to learn more about a variety of programs—from PageMaker to WordPerfect, spreadsheets to SAS and SPSS-stop by for more information.
Dear I'Abby,
I was in the lab late the other night and couldn't find the software on one of the computers in the Mac lab. What was wrong? Miss Mac
Dear Miss,
Obviously someone had trashed the machine. Wait, that isn't what it sounds like. A user had probably put the fileserver in the trash. If you run into this, go to the Apple icon in the upper left-hand corner of the screen. Pull down the menu and select Chooser. Click on the AppleShare icon and pick the file server CC-Labs. Then click okay. As you follow the menus, you may need a user name. Enter the one taped to the front of the machine (User 01, 02, etc.) and you'll be up and running in a few seconds.
Dear l'Abby,
I'd like to see minutes from Student Senate and other student governmental meetings on KUfacts. Who should do that? Thomas Paine
Dear Tom,
Why don't you volunteer? Putting information on KUfacts is not a Paine. If there is any information you think belongs on KUfacts, why don't you contact the group that holds the information and encourage them to use KUfacts. You could tell them about the seminar Introduction to KUfacts on September 29—or Preparing Info for KUfacts on October 6. And remember-you can offer to help!
Dear l'Abby,
I came to the lab to use a scanner, but now there are two. Please help me decide which one to use. Scanman Carruthers
Dear Scanman,
Knowing how you want to use your scanned material may make a difference. Are you a determined DOS/Windows type on the PC? Or does a Mac bring a gleam to your eye?
But this isn't the only difference. If you want something that will be in color or at a very high resolution, you should chose the Mac scanner. From the PC, you can use the HP ScanJet and PhotoFinish software—with some great tools to improve your image. You can also use PhotoFinish to convert your scanned files from one format to another.
Dear l'Abby,
I haven't heard about computer dating in a long time. Is it a thing of the past? Didn't anyone want to date computers? Wanna come study at my place?
Dear Wanna,
No questions about your social life, but computer dating is not a thing of the past! At the Computer Center we think about computer dating lots of the time. And we are already a little worried about what happens on New Year's Eve 1999. Will all of the computers be able to handle the new date? Is a 2 too much?
PETS
Disks Handle with care
It doesn't matter what kind of computer you use—or what size disk you prefer all computer disks need care. For starters, they like fingerprints as well as the average burglar. So avoid touching the surface of your disk. Your fingerprints can corrupt your data and ruin your day if the disk contains your only copy of a paper due by lunch.
Disks don't like dust, moisture, extreme heat or cold, or cigarette smoke. And disks don't find magnets very attractive. Unless you want to erase your disk, you shouldn't stick it to a filing cabinet or the refrigerator door with a magnet. A ringing telephone can wipe your data from your disk and many users swear a disk sitting on their computer or desk has suddenly become blank.
One of the best things you can do to protect your disks is to carry them in a hard plastic case. You can find reasonably priced cases at the bookstore (complete with a Jayhawk on the front) or at computer stores around town.
Even with the best care, sometimes a disk will die. If you've been making backups, you just pull the file you need off the backup disk. If you haven't been making backups, don't
panic yet.
Bring your old disk and a new disk to the Customer Assistance Window at the Computer Center. Tell them you have a damaged disk. Fill out the form they give you, leave your two disks,and keep your fingers crossed. Consultants at the Computer Center will work on your disk. In many cases, all or part of the information on your disk can be recovered in a day or two.
If it can't, you'll begin to understand why many computer users recommend backups. And youll probably take their advice—at least for a while.
Library Catalogs
university organizations
National weather
Enrollment Information
Library Catalogs university organizations National weather Microcomputer workshops Student Health Information Academic Calendar KU Events Enrollment Information facts Add/Drop Schedule
KUfacts is a campus-wide information system that can be used from any machine in this lab. Free write-ups are available at the Customer Assistance window. To sign on, follow instructions below.
To use KUfacts:
Macintosh
Open Teinet folder which is avail-
able on Mac hard drives and click
twice on the KUHUB icon.
Type KUFACTS at the USERID prompt.
Zenith
At the C:\WORKAREA> prompt,
type: Teinet
Type KUFACTS at the USERID
prompt.
Microcomputer workshops Student Health Information Academic Calendar KU Events facts Add/Drop Schedule
8
The Jayhacker
Fall 1993
a promotional feature of the University Delhi Nouns
Entertainment 93
What to do so you won't climb the walls... but then again, that's always an option.
See page 15.
Page 3 -The popularity of some Lawrence bands is increasing thanks to a new CD.
Page 4 -Students can hit the waves with the KU Sailing Club.
Page 5 -Three new bars on Massachusetts Street give students a place to relax and drink.
Page 7-When you need to get away but the pocketbook won't allow it, consider a day trip to a place near Lawrence.
Page 8 -Running provides many students a chance to relax or think about their day.
Page 10 -If you love to dance, three recently opened
---
establishments in Lawrence are the places to go.
Page 11 -The KU Juggling Club tries to captivate onlookers with this age-old hobby.
Page 12 -The new in the New Standstone means a lot of big changes for this concert hotspot.
Page 13 -The Renaissance Festival in Bonner Springs has a variety of entertainment for a reasonable price.
Page 14 -Hit the trails with a guided horseback ride from Westwinds Outfitting in Lawrence.
Page 15 -Whether for the thrill or the mental stimulation, rock climbing is catching on.
Page 21 -Students often find house parties an alternative to bars, but many apartment managers see the parties as a problem.
Page 22 -Many KU students discover the fun of fishing.
---
100
Assistant to the Editor J.R. Clairborne
CREDITS
Special Sections Manager Judith Standley
Creative Director Brian Fusco
Designer
John Paul Fogel
Managing Editor for Planning & Design Christine Laue
Co-Photo Editors
Kip Chin, Renee Knoeber
Copy Chief
Allison Lippert
Technology Coordinator
Bill Skeet
Cover Photo
Andrew Arnone
Special thanks to Professor Paul Wenske and his Reporting II class
Do you ever look at people and wonder?
---
Catch a glimpse of the world around you in the in the next Lifestyles special section Friday Oct.11th..
Now! Wednesday is CD Salvage Day at Kief's.
STARTS WEDNESDAY, SEPT1.
Trade in your unwanted CDs for up to $5.00* Credit on Lawrence's best new CD selection! Unbeatable opportunity...Unbeatable value!
Trade-ins will not be resold as used CDs. Please, no promotional copies. Trade-ins will be donated to local service and charitable organizations.
*$3.00 trade value...units priced $14.96 or less.
*$4.00 trade value...units priced $18.96 or less.
*$5.00 trade value...units priced over $18.96.
Not valid with other offers, orange-tag, or "cheap" CDs.
Kief's is the home of "Loaded in Lawrence" on Mercy
Records
KIEF'S CDs/TAPES
24th & Iowa St.P.O. Box 2 Lawrence, KA 68044
GD3 & IMR5 AUDIOVIDEO CAR SHOWROU
913-842-1544 913-842-1811 913-842-1436
2
ENTERTAINMENT'03 • Kyou • September 24, 1993
CD showcases local bands
By Andrew Eliner Special to the Kansan
Only two weeks after "Loaded in Lawrence: Live at the Bottleneck" was released, Lawrence music has become one of the hottest tickets around.
Last April, some of Lawrence's finest bands took part in a four-night event to record the live compilation album. The event culminated Sept. 4 when Mercy Records of Lawrence released the album at a compact disc release party at the Bottleneck, which was sold out.
Brian Byers, owner of Mercy Records, said the release party was a promotion to give fans an early chance to buy the CD and hear some of the bands.
Initial reports have been positive, Byers said.
"The album is doing really well and we've heard from quite a few people that they like it." Byers said.
Brett Mosiman, owner of the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., said that "Loaded in Lawrence" was Lawrence music listeners' way of giving something back to the bands.
"We are doing this to celebrate Lawrence music," Mosiman said. "This album is for all the bands in Lawrence."
Mosiman said that the primary goal of the album was to give the bands more exposure.
"We hope that someone will hear the album in New Jersey and like it," Mosiman said.
That goal is already becoming a reality. Byers said that the album was getting some national attention.
"I heard that some national and other college radio stations had called KLZR to find out how to get a hold of the album," he said.
Byers said that Kief's Discount Record and Stereo Supply, 2429 Iowa St., sold 30 copies the first day.
KLZR is a Lawrence radio station.
Mercury Records produced 2,000 copies and shipped them to stores and radio stations throughout the Midwest.
"We will start out with 2,000 copies, after that we will just see how everything goes." Byers said. "We hope that everybody benefits from this, the bands, the Bottleneck and Mercy Records."
Byers said that the album should give everyone involved more exposure.
The album was recorded and produced by Byers in April. Byers said he recorded 35 minutes of each band's set. Each band chose one song to put on the album.
"Ihad each band come in and help mix the song and get it to the point where they were happy with the sound," he said.
Joe Greene, bass player for Nic Cosmos, a Lawrence band, said that the event and the album were beneficial for all the bands involved.
"The whole idea was great," Greene said. "A lot of the local bands deserve some sort of mentioning.
Mosiman said that with the album, the future could be bright for the Lawrence music scene.
"We have an unique situation here," he said. "There aren't too many places that have as much talent as we have in Lawrence."
Bands featured on the album are Nic Cosmos, Salty Iguanas, Love Squad, Stick, Kill Creek, Psychoviolets, Mahoots, Lonesome Hounddogs, Which Doctors?, Arkansas White Trash, L.A. Ramblers, Badghdad Jones, Lowlife, Motherwell, Slackjaw and Dracomagnet.
THE SANDBAR
17 E. 8TH STREET
DAILY
DRINK SPECIALS
THE LARGEST JIMMY BUFFETT
SELECTION IN LAWRENCE!!!
Your Prescription For Fall Fashion Dr AirWear Martens
Arensberg's Shoes
One step ahead since 1958
Open evenings M-F till 8:30 Open Sunday 12:00 to 5:00
825 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence
THE GRANADA
Monday: Monday Night Football $2.50 Bud & Bud Light pitchers $3.00 Boulevard Pitchers
Tuesday: Classic Movies $2.00 Movies at 8:00 pm
Wednesday: Trash Disco Night
Wednesday: Tra
GRANADA
GRANADA
Thrusday: Jazz Night
$1.00 Sex on the Beach and Kamakazi Shots
Saturday: Live & Recorded Music $1.50 Imports.
1020 Mass Downtown 842-1390
September 24,1993 Kyou • ENTERTAINMENT'93
3
Club offers chance to ride the waves
By Dave Campbell
By Dave Campbel Special to the Kansan
Sailing is a more popular sport in Kansas than many people realize. Clinton Lake is a popular place for many part-time sailors from Lawrence and the Kansas City area to race their boats and relax with family and friends.
"Our family has a boat at Clinton, and my brother and I race it a lot during the summer," said freshman Tom Conard, co-commodore of the KU Sailing Club.
Connard and his brother, Chris, won the 1989 Clinton Crew Cup for best crew on a sailboat. They have been sailing since they were in second grade in St. Louis. They rented boats at Shawnee Mission Lake when they moved to Overland Park two years later.
The Connards purchased a boat and have kept it in a slip at the Clinton Lake Marina for five years. As sailing has become more popular, more people have come to the lake's marina to moor their boats.
However, marina space is limited, even after a dock expansion. All the available slips are taken, making owning one like belonging to an exclusive club.
"Sometimes I just take a few friends down to the boat and we all relax for the afternoon on the dock," Connard said.
It is not uncommon to see many people just lounging on their boats in the slips at
the marina. The soft lapping of the water against the dock and the relaxed atmosphere make it an ideal place to lounge or study.
KU students now can get in on the fun without buying a sailboat. For $40 a semester, any KU student or faculty member can join the KU Sailing Club, regardless of sailing experience.
"Any faculty member or student can come to our meetings on Wednesdays and check it out," said co-commodore Jenny Thiessen.
The sailing club meets at 7:30 p.m. Wednesdays. Meetings are open to anyone interested in sailing. Participants learn to sail during the meetings and apply their new knowledge on the water during weekends.
The club meets at the Burge Union parking lot at 9 a.m. Saturdays. Members carpool the 25-minute drive to Shawnee Mission Lake. That drive will get shorter, Thiessen said.
"We are in the process of moving our dock and boats to Clinton Lake, about five minutes away," Thiessen said. "We hope that will be done within the next few weeks."
The sailing club is a member of the South East Intercollegiate Sailing Association and will race against other schools this fall. The club plans to sponsor a regatta at Clinton Lake once its dock is established there.
WA 026 NB
The Clinton Lake Marina harbors 160 sailboats and party boats and six rental motor boats for fishing. The marina is open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday and Tuesday through Thursday, and from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday.
William Alix / KANSAN
Red Lyon
Tavern
944 Massachusetts
832-8228
Feeling a little crazy?
Come now, don’t be lazy.
Race to the Mt. Oread Bookshop.
Get here by car, or bus, or hop.
We have books that are fun to read,
For every person, every race and creed.
So take a break from all your hard study.
Have some fun, invite a buddy.
To find fun you need not go far.
To Mt. Oread - for books as diverse as you are!
“Far away in Berlin a musical urchin named Gretchen von Schwinn has a blue-footed, true-footed, trick-fingered, slick-fingered, six-fingered, six-stringed tin Schwinn mandolin.”
-Oh Say Can You Say
by Dr. Suess
Mt. Oread Bookshop
Kansas Union
Level Two
864-4431
CAT IN THE HAT
OREAD
BOOKSHOP
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
4
Bassoon
ENTERTAINMENT $3 • K-you • September 24; 1993
New bars invade Massachusetts Street, increase business for all establishments
Downtown adds Red Lyon, Granada and Harbour Lights
By Angela Cunningham Special to the Kansan
You always knew Massachusetts Street had lots of places to go for entertainment, right? Well, now there are even more.
Three new bars have sprouted on Massachusetts Street in the last few months, giving students looking for fun in downtown Lawrence more places to go to drink, relax and have fun. Harbour Lights, the Red Lyon, and the Granada have recently opened (or reopened) to offer students three very different sources of entertainment.
Harbour Lights, 1031 Massachusetts, was actually an established bar which has recently reopened. After over 50 years of being a beer-only bar, Harbour Lights changed ownership over the summer and began serving liquor and wine.
Cliff Phillips, who owns the bar with partners David Heinz and Curt Melzer, said the decision to serve liquor was an economic one—there's more profit in it.
"Serving liquor allows us to increase the money we take in, and to stay open two hours later and on Sundays," Phillips said.
Phillips, who had been looking for a teaching job when the opportunity to buy Harbour Lights came along, said he was excited about the other new bars on Massachusetts.
"We all feed off each other's business," he said. "I wouldn't have bought a bar if I couldn't get this location. It's great."
A cozy bar, Harbour Lights resembles a scene out of "Cheers": regulars occupy many of the barstools, but lots of newcomers can be found enjoying their mason jars of beer in the big orange booths. The bar offers daily drink specials, and there are plans to install a coffee shop. Patrons can play pool, shoot darts, test their skill at a trivia machine, or just watch TV.
Another new bar, the Red Lyon, 944 Massachusetts, opened in June and has been packed ever since, according to bartender Frankie Porter. She said she had no explanation for the bar's overwhelming success, except for the excellent location.
"Our business has been better than we could have ever expected," she said. "I think Mass is just a great place to be."
Like Phillips, Porter expressed excitement over the other new bars in the vicinity. She said that having so many other bars nearby increases the chances of customers coming into the Red Lyon.
The Red Lyon has an antique feel to it, right down to the gargantuan bar that owner Jerry Neverve bought at an estate sale. This establishment also features drink specials from its full-service bar. Customers can enjoy pool, darts, television, or they can borrow a checkers set at the bar.
A different atmosphere is what Mike Elwell, owner of the Granada, 1020 Massachusetts, was trying to achieve. As a result of the Granada's unique characteristics, Elwell said he doesn't think his location gives him any special advantage.
"We don't attract the usual bar crowd," he said.
With a coffee shop, live piano music in the early evening, and a DJ spinning contemporary dance music beginning at about 10 p.m., the Granada is definitely not a typical bar. Elwell said he wanted to do something a little different with his property, which used to be a theater.
He said he wanted to offer some light entertainment that would appeal to older patrons, then bring in a DJ later in the evening to play dance music so the younger crowd could use the 1500-square foot dance floor.
In addition, Elwell said the history of the building is important to him. Preserving the bar's history is so important that he has made the Granada a non-smoking bar in order to preserve a mural that adorns the walls of the bar.
"I like the history," Elwell said. "I didn't want to chop this building up and use it for offices. Years ago, Gabby Hayes, Roy Rogers and John Wayne were here one evening."
Like the other bars mentioned, the Granada offers drink specials along with its unique atmosphere. This is the place to go whether you want to sit and relax or kick up
vour heels to the latest dance tunes.
This flurry of bar openings has caused speculation that Lawrence may be developing a bar district similar to Aggieville. This popular Manhattan area has several bars within a few blocks of each other. At very busy times, such as KU—KState football and basketball games, the streets are blocked off because of the heavy flow of people in and out of the bars.
What do the owners and employees of these bars think about Lawrence having its own bar district?
Elwell said there has been no concerted effort to make downtown Lawrence a bar district. He said the number of new bars was simply "happenstance"—the space was there and the owners just happened to be opening bars.
Porter said she didn't know if it was a true bar district or not, but that Massachusetts Street did remind her of another bar district.
"It's kind of like Boulder without all the restaurants," she said.
Phillips said there was a definite potential for downtown Lawrence to become a bar district on a par with Aggieville. He said he was excited about all the business, but he doesn't want Massachusetts Street to become a carbon-copy of Manhattan's popular bar district.
"Mass is happening right now," he said. "We're like Aggieville in that we all get business from each other, but I wouldn't want it to be exactly like Aggieville. It's too jampacked with people."
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September 24, 1993 *Kyou* • ENTERTAINMENT '93
5
BULLWINKLE'S
BULLWINKLE'S
Drink Specials
Monday- $2.75 Pitchers
Tuesday- $.25 Draws ($3.00 cover)
Wednesday- $1.50 Big Beers/ $.75 Draws
Thursday- $1.00 Big Beers ($3.00 cover)
Friday- $1.25 Cans/ Free Burgers
Sunday- $1.75 Imports
1344 Tennessee 843-9726
M-Th & Sat 3:00pm-2:00am Friday- 2:00pm -2:00am Sunday- 6:00pm 2:00am
Program demystifies Shakespeare's plays
The Associated Press
There's enough material to fill hundreds of pages not just on the play, but history, stagecraft, language, character and plot. And that's just "Hamlet." The "book" also contains "Romeo and Juliet," "Midsummer Night's Dream" and "Macbeth."
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Shakespeare's plays have endured the ages and interpretation of thousands of actors, some great and many less so.
But can the Bard's work survive the computer, as text turns from ink to images?
Bresko's company is shipping samples on 31/2-inch floppy disks to 1,000 educators around the country for field testing. The company expects to go to market in January with both floppy disks and compact discs, which will contain movie clips of Shakespearean productions.
"Most definitely," said Laura Bresko. "If anything, the computer may be the modern stage that brings Shakespeare—the ramifications, the lessons we learn, the cultural transmissions—back into the modern generations."
If so, Bresko's tiny start-up company, Communication and Information Technologies Inc. of Knoxville, Tenn., may play a part. Its BookWorm Press is coming out with a quartet of Shakespeare's plays in an "electronic book."
Not simply "to be or not to be" on a computer screen, BookWorm's "Hamlet" contains annotations, major criticism, summaries of acts and scenes, a dictionary and as many as 50 illustrations — from wood cuts to Picasso.
The electronic book industry is embryonic. Bresko said BookWorm is the next step beyond current offerings for the "technoliterate set flying around on their airplanes wanting to read their books and not really put their computer down."
BookWorm books are tools that bring together a massive amount of information from which users can draw and to which they can add at their own pace and inclination in unstructured style.
BookWorm fashioned its first offering for the literary market for a couple of business reasons — no copyrights to worry about and it's a wide-open market, Bresko said.
"Everybody has to take English literature," she said.
But inherent in the study of literature "are all the tools that anybody uses to process any information regardless of what the subject matter is—highlighter pens, reference materials, encyclopedias, dictionaries, notebooks, etc.," she said. All of those are contained in the BookWorm Press.
Bresko, 32, is uniquely suited to the task. The daughter of a teacher, she holds a master's degree in English literature from the University of Tennessee and worked for several years as a consultant in technical communications at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
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ENTERTAINMENT '93 • K-you • September 24, 1993
---
Possibilities plentiful for daytrips
By Colleen Ryckert Special to the Kansan
The urge to take a road trip can come on fast and furiously. Coming up with the cash to pay for it, however, may take slightly longer. When the balance in your checkbook won't allow for a weekend in the mountains, take your vacation closer to home.
The male lion in the Topeka Zoo's "Lion Pride" exhibit waits for the keeper to bring food for the evening meal. Area zoos offer a change of pace from classes.
Within two hours of Lawrence, you can explore a rain forest or, if your taste buds are craving refreshment, tour a distillery.
The Topeka Zoological Park has renovated its rain forest display, and it is scheduled to open Oct. 30. The display is housed in a 30-foot high geodesic dome with a diameter of 100 feet, and it is designed to imitate a lowland rain forest ecosystem.
It is home to more than 100 plants and 150 animals, including flamingos, Indian giant fruit bats, iguanas and a type of crocodile called gharial. Birds make up the majority of the display and many are on endangered lists. Most of the birds and many of the lizards roam freely among the plants, so look closely to find them.
Gorilla Encounter is another of Mike Coker's favorite displays. It is unique, said Picker, general curator for the zoo, because visitors can walk through the display in a plexiglass tunnel, getting a three-sided view of the great apes, up close and personal.
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
Coker likes to tell stories about Max, the silverback, and his "great personality." Max, said Coker, enjoys scaring people in the tunnel. He will engage you in a staring contest and then, when you least expect it, run up and pound on the glass.
There are more than 350 animals calling
the zoo their home and many other displays available. The zoo is located 1/4 mile south of Interstate 70 at the Gage Boulevard exit. Admission is $3, and visitors can enter the zoo from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The building displays, including the rain forest and Gorilla Encounter, open at 9:30 a.m. and close at 4:30 p.m. The outside areas close at 5:30 p.m.
In the opposite direction, you can take Interstate 70 East to Highway 435 North to Highway 45 West and end up in Weston, Mo. Weston, founded in 1837, was a booming river town until a flood moved the Missouri River one mile south of town.
While the people and businesses have changed with time, the frontier look of the town hasn't. Many of the original structures still stand, and the entire town was designated a Historic District in 1972. It is listed in the National Register of Historic Places.
Weston is also home to the only distillery west of the Mississippi River, the McCormick Distillery.
The company has been in operation since 1856 when Benjamin J. Holladay discovered that the limestone water on the property was perfect for distilling whiskey. Until then it had been used as a slaughtering plant.
Today, the distillery offers free tours Monday through Saturday, from April 1 to Nov. 30. The tour includes a film on the history of the company.
McKayla Heider, weekend manager, said visitors stock up on their favorite whiskeys at the gift shop located next to the distillery. The big sellers, she said, are the peach vodka and J.B. Holladay.
"Peach vodka is McCormick's answer to
peach schnapps," Heider said. "B.J. Holladay is our top-of-the-line whiskey. It is aged for eight years to give it maximum flavor and the best color."
Visitors can try a sample of their favorite spirit for 10 cents at the sample bar. "The finest little bar in the Midwest" is tended by John Dickinson, an alumnus of KU, who put it best when he said, "You can't get any cheaper than this."
A walk through the town is a haunting
stroll. The two-story buildings still have the heavy awnings and antique moldings of the late 1800s. Main Street is lined with shops including a rare and hard-to-find book store and a candy shop. Weston also has an abundance of antique shops.
A great source of ideas for more quick getaways is "Day Trips From Kansas City" by Shifra Stein. Her 1993 edition includes 43 different cities, a map and a list of festivals held throughout the year, as well as a list of businesses to contact for more information.
WEDNESDAY
Just For The Buck Of It!
5 p.m. - 9 p.m.
$1 Bar Food
Hot Wings, Mozzarella Sticks, Hamburgers, Onion Rings & Much More.
$1 WELL DRINKS ALL NIGHT LONG!
Also Wednesday.
KARAOKE MADNESS
8 p.m. - 12 a.m.
All your favorites- even Barry Manilow
THURSDAY
5 p.m. - 7 p.m.
AIN'T NO BULL-
$2 STEAK DINNERS
Includes Potato, Beans and Dinner Roll
THEN IT'S-
DISCO NIGHT
Only We've Got The Disco
Balls To Do It!
THURSDAY
Starts at 9 p.m.
The Original Polyester Bell Bottom Bash!
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"Simply a head of the times"
In the Quality Inn
6th & Iowa
842-7030
Just For The Buck Of It!
5 p.m. - 9 p.m.
$1 Bar Food
Hot Wings, Mozzarella Sticks, Hamburgers, Onion Rings & Much More.
$1 WELL DRINKS ALL NIGHT LONG!
Also Wednesday-
KARAOKE MADNESS
8 p.m. - 12 a.m.
All your favorites- even Barry Manilow
THURSDAY
5 p.m. - 7 p.m.
AIN'T NO BULL-$2 STEAK DINNERS
Includes Potato, Beans and Dinner Roll
THEN IT'S-DISCO NIGHT
Only We've Got The Disco Balls To Do It!
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Starts at 9 p.m.
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6th & Iowa
842-7030
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WEDNESDAY: The Bridge, Chips, Cooler Drink ... $4.50
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THURSDAY: All Wegmans with Drink Chosen, Cooler Drink ... $4.50
FRIDAY: Supreme Pizza Bagel, Cookie, Large Drink ... $4.50
We offer a full delicatessen course with a variety of cheeses and bagels.
Hours:
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749-EATS
(749-23297)
815 MASSACHUSETTS STREET
UPTOWN
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September 24, 1993 Kyou • ENTERTAINMENT '93
7
"Best Place to Take a First Date"
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Open Thursday, Friday, & Saturday til Midnight
Live Music Thursdays!
Serving Dinner Mon-Sat
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Mon-Sat - 6:30 am - 2:30 pm
Sun - 8 am - 2:30 pm
728 Massachusetts
Downtown • 842-5199
By James Evans Special to the Kansan
Students run for fun, health
Exercise, enjoyment, and relaxation are all reasons why Bill Clinton and many Americans go running several times a week.
Students can enjoy and reap the benefits from running in Lawrence at many different places for most of the year.
"I look forward to running now that I've been running awhile," said Beth Silvey, Lee Summit Mo., sophomore.
She said she runs four to five miles at a moderate pace, five times a week, mainly for the exercise. But she also finds it fun.
"I'm hooked on it," she said.
Silvey said running "helps me clear my head," and allows her to be more focused on school. She often plans out her schedule for the following day while she is running.
Jon Oler, Lawrence senior, agreed that running has helped him stay focused. Oler, who has been running 3 or 4 miles, several days a week, for the last three months said, "it's a good stress reliever after class."
The physical and mental benefits to running are very real, said Mary Visser, a graduate teaching assistant and doctoral candidate in exercise physiology.
Oier said that he liked the fitness benefit of running also. "I feel like I'm in shape" whenI'm running,he said. He added that he feels stronger and eats a lot better when he runs.
She said increased muscular endurance and cardiovascular efficiency can be gained by running 20 to 30 minutes several times a week. And running burns the calories.
Pathsto glory
The following is a list of places Schaffer suggested as good places to go running in Lawrence.
Riverfront Park — Located at N. Second and Elm St., the park has a biking and running trail along the river. The gravel trail is flat and marked with mileage markers every half-mile.
Massachusetts Street — Schaffer recommends this as a good place to start running because it's flat and you can tell how far you've gone.
Clinton Parkway — This is a nice place to run at night because it is well lighted. Schaffer also suggests advanced runners try the far end of Clinton Parkway, near the lake, because of the rolling terrain.
Haskell Cross Country Course — This is a flat gravel and dirt course located at Haskell Junior College.
Centennial Park — Located at Sixth and Rocklidge, it is a good advanced course because of the rolling hills in the park.
KANSAN
Visser suggested that runners trying to lose fat should try to maintain a moderate heart rate while they are running. She said the body tends to burn more fat and carbohydrates, instead of glucose, at moderate running speeds.
Lawrence has many good routes for running, according to Van Schaffer, a former Kansas track and cross country runner and manager of The Athlete's Foot sports store in Lawrence.
"Try to avoid the cement and the asphalt as much as possible," said Schaffer. The pavement takes its toll on feet.
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ENTERTAINMENT '93 *Kyou*·September 24,1993
Legal entanglements silencing Romantics
By Kira L. Billik
Associated Press Writer
PHILADELPHIA — If there's one song guaranteed to get bodies jumping on the dance floor, it's the Romantic's "That's What I Like About You." If there's one song guaranteed to keep the Romantics off the record charts, it's "That's What I Like About You."
The Romantics have been locked in a legal battle for the past several years over publishing royalties and other claims for "That's What I Like About You" and other songs.
The dispute is with their two former managers, Artie Tencer and Joel Zuckerman, whom they fired in 1987, after discovering their contract included no specific language concerning the publishing and licensing of their songs. "That's What I Like About You" has since been used extensively in commercials, notably by Anheuser Busch, but the band says it has received little compensation.
A trial has been scheduled for the beginning of next year in Oaldand County Circuit Court. Meanwhile, the band's career is in limbo — they haven't released any material in the United States since 1985's "Rhythm Romance" and a 1990 greatest hits compilation.
"The licensing of 'What I Like About You' to Budweiser, to Molson in Canada, (to)
HBO...this was all done without our knowledge," singer Wally Palmer said in a telephone interview. "We still haven't received the proper accounting of how much these deals were struck for or, for that matter, where the money went.
"You have to imagine that by this point from the songs being played as much as they have and licensed over and over to these certain companies (that) there could be a significant amount (of money) there."
Palmer thinks the band, now unsigned, is a risk for record labels while they're involved in litigation.
"It's preventing us from recording properly," he said. "Record labels will tend to lay back a little bit off you if they know that you're involved in a lawsuit."
Palmer, not surprisingly, can't wait for it to all be over.
"We've already started work—we've got a good five, six songs that are pretty much done already and we've got a lot more ideas that we're working on. Hopefully, when this lawsuit ends ... we can put out some new product domestically."
Influenced by not only Detroit's Motown sound, but by its rock and punk scene, especially bands like the MC5, Iggy and the Stooges and Bob Seger, the Romantics combine rockabilly pop with a bit of punk energy (but not its nihilism). They were much too upbeat to be true punks, but they fit right in with the "new wave" scene.
Daytime drama marriages available on video cassette
By Douglas J. Rowe
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK — ABC Video hopes to engage viewers with "Daytime's Greatest Weddings." If anyone has any objections, they should speak now or forever hold their piece.
Be prepared, however, to be shouted down by the 30 million viewers who tune in ABC-TV's "All My Children," "General Hospital" and "One Life to Live" each month.
Those avid fans have never been able to savor favorite episodes through reruns (though flashbacks in soap operas can be more rampant than at an LSD convention).
So they're likely to scarf up the three 45- to 50-minute videos that cost $14.95 ($9.95 with a $5 rebate from, fittingly enough, Lysol products).
For someone who's not a soap opera fan, these videos can be laugh-out-loud funny.
Then they can really live happily ever after.
The Tina Roberts character on "One Life to Live" comes back from the grave as her husband is walking down the aisle with his new wife. And she proclaims her love for the best man instead of the groom during a subsequent ceremony.
"I take thee, uh, ..." Don't you hate it when happens?
Maybe not as much as an exploding wedding cake, which the video also has.
These videos show how some characters get married about often as Elizabeth Taylor or Mickey Rooney in real life.
"If only we could stay married as much as we get married," daytime doyenne Susan Lucci says as hostess of the "All My Children" video.
As Erica Kane, she points out how she's the show's most frequent bride.
"Erica's full name alone tells the story, and frankly even I have trouble remembering it. Let's see: Erica Kane Martin Brent Cudahy Chandler Roy Roy Montgomery Montgomery Chandler Marick," she says, taking a deep breathe. "Now THAT'S a trip down memory lane."
Yes, sometimes like Liz and the late Richard Burton, a couple take their vows to each other more than once — "till death do they part. or unless the ratings or plot lines lag."
The "One Life to Live" collection alone has 18 weddings — five of them for patriarchal Asa Buchanan. "All My Children" features 26 (eight of Erica's), and "General Hospital," eight — though the latter highlights the most famous one, the Luke and Laura nuptials that rated a Newsweek cover story and had 30 million viewers in front of their TV sets on a single afternoon.
"Daytime loves spectacles. So the more weddings the better," Erika Slezak, who plays Viki Buchanan on "One Life to Live" and serves as the hostess of that soap's nuptial compendium, said in an interview.
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401 N. 842-0377
TAVERN
LAWRENCE / KANSAS CITY
Busy
Monday & Tuesday
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Wednesday
50¢ Draws
Thursday
$1.25 Pitchers in the Up & Under
$1.25 Domestic Bottles Everywhere
Friday & Saturday
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Sunday
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September 24, 1993 *K-you* ENTERTAINMENT '93
9
Dance popularity experiences growth with three new locations
By April Gonzales Special to the Kansan
It is Friday night in Lawrence. What do you and your friends have planned?
If you love to dance but feel Lawrence has lacked good dancing establishments in the past are you in for a surprise!
On any weekend, the Cadillac Ranch, Duffy's and the Granada are packing in the customers by the hundreds.
"Country music is really hot right now," said Mike Parsons, manager of the Cadillac Ranch, 2515 W. Sixth St. "We opened because there was really no place for college students in Lawrence to go for country music or dancing."
On a nightly basis, Cadillac Ranch, which opened last April, serves approximately 230 people. Weekends are busiest, but the club also holds Ladies Night on Wednesdays, which draws a crowd.
Don't worry if you can't dance the Achy Breaky or shuffle to the Cotton-Eyed Joe. Free dance lessons are offered every Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday at 8:30 p.m. Customers are taught to swing dance, threestep or strut to many other country line dances.
"Some customers come in full Western outfits or shorts and sandals," Parsons said. "It doesn't matter because we all learn together. Everyone wants to learn how to country dance."
Although it is primarily a country bar, requests for other types of music are also played during the evening.
"People help you get the country steps down, but the funniest thing to see are country regulars doing the 20-step to Metallica with traditional headbangers around them," Heather Moore. Wellsville junior, said.
The Cadillac Ranch is open every day from noon to 2 a.m.
If country is not your style, then consider Duffy's, 2222 W. Sixth St. in the Quality Inn hotel, for contemporary or disco music.
Duffy's began offering dancing in May to offer a wider variety of entertainment to their customers and offered disco in June because it was making a big comeback on the East and West Coasts.
"We wanted to add entertainment to our bar, so we added a dance floor," said Cory Conklin, assistant manager and bartender. "We added a disco night because no other place in town offered it at the time. It was just a crazy idea that took off."
"I went to Disco Night with my friends who dressed up '70s style. I think they should have an early '80s night instead," Lori Black, Oskaloosa junior said. "Although the '70s aren't for me, it was still a great place to go to dance."
Usually 150 patrons show up for disco night on Thursdays. Techno-Rave will be offered on Saturday nights, as well. Other nights offer rock and some alternative
music.
Spicing things up a bit, Duffy's management is also thinking about adding '70s dance contests and dance lessons to disco hits to ease people onto the floor.
Duffy's is open Monday through Saturday from 4 p.m. to 2 a.m. and on Sundays at noon.
Since its grand re-opening in August, the Grenada, 1020 Massachusetts St., has regularly reached its capacity of 405 patrons. Does the large dance floor have something to do with this success?
"It's definitely added to it," said Stacy Elwell, Granada manager. "We added the floor because we knew there was a large group that wanted to dance."
However, Elwell said that the Granada's goal was not to become a dance club but a wide-range entertainment bar.
The Granada offers mainstream and Top 40 music, and dancing usually begins after 10 p.m. In order to attract an older generation,jazz is played on Thursdays and blues is offered on special nights. A "70s flashback" theme night will be showcased every Wednesday.
Chery Thomas, Bethesda, Md., senior enjoyed another unique feature the Grenada offers.
"I think it's really good that it is non-smoking. It provides for a better atmosphere, and everyone dancing looks like they're really enjoying themselves."
Julia Clarke/KANSAN
Mark Friel, Overland Park, senior, and Meghan Dougherty, Tempe, Ariz., sophomore, catch disco fever during an Alpha Delta Pi date dash at The Granada.
The Grenada is open from 5 p.m. to 2 a.m., Sunday and Monday through Friday and from noon to 2 a.m. on Saturday.
Henry T's Bar&Grill
Mon. Monday Night Football $2.95 Beer & Brat
Tues. 2 for1 Hamburgers $2.0033 oz.Gustos
Wed. 15¢ Buffalo Wings $1.50 Longnecks
Thurs. 75¢ Draws
Sat. 8oz.Ribeye Steak $6.95 $2.0033 oz.Gustos
Fri. $1.50 Black & Tan
Sun. 50¢ Tacos $1.50 Margaritas
3520 W. 6th (6th & Kasold) 749-2999
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ENTERTAINMENT '93 *Kyou* September 24,1993
Club hopes that juggling will captivate onlookers
By Jonl Palermo Special to the Kansan
If you've been in front of Wescoe Hall on a Friday afternoon, you've seen the performers tossing tennis balls and clubs, which look like stretched-out bowling pins, through the air. They create what looks like a mini circus on the lawn of Strong Hall.
These performers, the 10 members of the Juggling Club, are making an age-old hobby into a performance art. Not only do they juggle six, seven, even eight clubs at a time, but they also entertain with jokes and stories.
"We've made juggling more public," said Brian Moore, Overland Park junior and a founder of the club.
Moore and his friend, Eric Fellows, formed the club in 1991 because juggling for them was a "compelling addiction," said Moore.
"It's what we call 'catching the juggling bug'" said Fellows, Boulder, Colo., senior. "It's like the very first time you catch the balls — it's an ecstatic feeling, and then you can't put them down."
But the tennis balls are only the beginning.
"Now I juggle everything," said Fellows. "I go into the grocery stores and juggle the fruits and vegetables."
Members of the club also have been known to juggle fire torches and a rubber chicken named Camilla.
As if that's not enough, some of their fans want to see more.
"I want to see them juggle bowling balls or toasters of something," said Scott Fryar, Wichita junior.
1930
Holly McQueen / KANSAN
Eric Fellows, Boulder, Colo., senior, practices juggling in front of Strong Hall.
As difficult or absurd as it may sound, Moore and Fellows insist that basic juggling is easy. A beginner can usually learn to juggle three or more tennis balls in just a few hours.
"It's as easy as stumbling into the bathroom at night and flipping on the switch," said Moore.
In other words, anyone can do it.
"I'm not at all graceful," Moore said. "I trip over stairs, but I can juggle."
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September 24,1993 *K-you* • ENTERTAINMENT'$&
11
Right: Joe Walsh, left,
and Glen Frey, right,
perform for fans in June at
the New Sandstone
Amphitheatre in Bonner
Springs.
Below right: Acrowd watches comedian Gallagher in June. The new amphitheater in Bonner Springs features many improvements including two 12 feet by 16 feet video screens and an upgraded sound system.
Photos courtesy of Contemporary Productions
Douglas J. Cox
--and Dunn, to Barry Manilow to the H.O.R.D.E. (Horizons of Rock Developing Everywhere) Festival.
WESTERN WESTERN WESTERN
A 'new' look
Sandstone Amphitheatre undergoes changes
By Stacy Ashley Special to the Kansan
A "new" amphitheater hit the Kansas City area this summer. And although it may have the same name as the old, the new in the New Sandstone means a lot of big changes.
Located off State Avenue on 130th street in Bonner Springs, the outdoor theater near Kansas City attracts some of the biggest entertainment acts in the region.
Greg Hagglund, senior vice president for Contemporary Productions, the owners of the New Sandstone, said that the theater had gone through a complete refurbishing.
Because of financial problems with the previous owners and management, Contemporary Productions bought Sandstone and made the renovations, Hagglund said.
"The goal for the New Sandstone is for people to have a true concert experience," he said, "This starts the minute they pull into the parking lot and ends the minute they pull out."
Hagglund said they had hosted 33 concert events this summer. The most the original Sandstone had presented in the past few years was rine, he said.
"We worked hard on bringing diverse entertainment," Hagglund said. "Something for everyone."
He said they had tried to bring a variety of events, such as the comedy of Tim Allen and a Disney show for children and families.
"We also tried to be multi-purpose with our music," he said.
Sandstone had acts ranging from Brooks
Structurally, the amphitheater expanded and remodeled their concession service and restrooms.
They added a new concession complex in
the North Plaza including such restaurants as Pizza Hut and Subway, Hagglund said.
They also removed the chain-link fences and replaced them with wood railings.
As for the changes in the shows, Hagglund said they had added 16-by-12 feet video screens and enhanced the sound system.
"It is a more natural, relaxing environment now," he said.
"We added a separate sound system for the
lawn seats," he said, "so the people in reserved seating aren't getting blasted out and those in the lawn can still hear the show."
The amphitheater also tried to be competitive and varied with ticket prices, Hagglund said.
He cited the Planet Party concert as an example of inexpensive ticket prices with $10.50 for lawn seats and $12.50 for reserved seats. Most concerts run between
$18 and $25.
"We tried to make it appealing for a wider audience," he said. "There are different prices for different shows, though."
Shelley Groom, Overland Park sophomore, worked as a waitress for the box seats at the New Sandstone this summer and said
"The goal for the New Sandstone is for people to have a true concert experience."
Grog Hagglund
Contemporary Productions
she felt that the public's reaction to the changes was generally positive.
"A lot of people commented on the sound being better," she said. "But also people talked about the video screens not working."
sonnel attitude.
Hagglund said however that the video screens had worked great and that they and the new sound system were state of the art.
Besides the physical changes there was also a change in per-
Hagglund said the company had hired all new staff, from management to ushers and maintenance.
"The new staff caters more to concertgoers,"he said.
Hagglund called Sandstone's new ways the "Disneyland attitude" and said that the goal was to keep customers happy and give them the best show possible.
Although Groom had not heard of the Dis
neyland attitude, Brian Tamasi, Overland Park junior, worked security for the amphitheater and said that he had been trained to keep a smile on his face.
"Also we were told to lift up our sunglasses if someone was talking to us so we could make eye contact," he said.
Tamasi said that customer service was frequently stressed.
Hilarie Soloff, Overland Park junior, attended the H.O.R.D.E. Festival at the New Sandstone in July and said she had gone to concerts at the old Sandstone in past years.
Jenni Jenkins, Shawnee sophomore, said she liked the new screens and noticed that the bathrooms were nicer, she said.
"I like New Sandstone better," Soloff said, "Everything seems a lot cleaner and organized."
"I did think it was stupid that they didn't have an ATM (Automated Teller Machine) with how expensive things were though," Jenkins said.
With all the changes, Hagglund said the New Sandstone had hoped to get Kansas City back on the list for big concerts.
"Names like Rod Stewart and Van Halen have been sporadic in booking in the past," he said.
The last concert for the season at the New Sandstone is country singer Vince Gill with Patty Loveless and Larry Stewart.
Hagglund said they hoped to start next year's season in mid-May and again have between 25 and 35 events.
12
ENTERTAINMENT '93 • Kyou • September 24, 1993
Right: A royal subject displays her costume to the visitors last year. Entertainment at the Renaissance Festival includes a parade of the royal court.
Below: David Volmut, Topeka senior, left, and Ian Johnson, St. Joseph, Mo., junior, battle each other in Renaissance Festival in Bonner Springs. They are participants last year in a Pennsic war between kingdoms in the United States.
TELY
KANSAN file photo
KANSAN file photo
Renaissance Festival returns to times past
By Sanaka Samarasinha Special to the Kansan
If you are feeling the pressure of classes, the strain of bills or just tired of the life's routine and want to find an alternative to bar-hopping on Saturday nights, the Kansas City Renaissance Festival in Bonner Springs may be your answer.
The festival, which runs every weekend through Oct.17 from 10 a.m.to 6.30 p.m.is a refreshing option for students looking for quality entertainment at a relatively low price. For the price of a medium pizza, you can extract a whole day's merriment out of the variety of talented entertainers at the festival.
If you are making your first visit to the 17th Annual Renaissance Festival, the chances are you have already heard much about it. However, if you have been the victim of highly-rated theme parks you may be just a little skeptical of the popular event, which is a 20-minute drive from the KU campus on I-70 east.
In Merry Ole England
However, after walking through Cotswold Commons, North Bramble and Sheffield Way, more than likely you will succumb to the joys of this unique, entertaining and educational event.
"For the money you pay you get four times as much entertainment as any other place around here," says Mike Owens, Leawood junior.
The Renaissance was the great revival of art, literature and learning which enveloped most of Europe from the 14th century through the 17th century. This period marks the transition from the medieval to the modern world. As liberated and creative thought spread, nobles and commoners alike developed a new interest in classic civilization.
The Renaissance Festival captures and preserves the spirit of this period through the replication of a typical 16th-century village. Castles, manors, pubs and boutiques, manned by more than 150 crafts people, adorn the 14-acre fair ground, as over 300 performers provide continuous entertainment on nine open-air stages, street corners or where ever they may find you.
As Bob, The Incredible Juggler, stands on a ball juggling six cigar boxes at the Mermaid Theatre, Magician Estavon Peyton is busy burning somebody's $100 bill and then making it reappear.
While the Renaissance Acting Troupe is making its comedic debut at the Three Lion's Theatre — the troupe largely performing the improvisational commedia dell'arte show — and keeping the audience in hysterics, Ian O'Donell, the Irish bard, is keeping another audience enthralled with his tunes.
As a large group gathers to watch an
Funforall
armored joust at Renaissance Downs, another group attentively listens to KUstaff member Pamela Keller strum beautiful melodies on a Celtic harp at Canterbury Court.
Meanwhile, the blacksmith is busy making custom ordered swords at The Blacksmith Shoppe, the potters are shaping intricately designed pots at Pinetree Pottery, the artists are creating interesting combinations of colored sand in glass bottles at Sand Art and several painters are attending to their customers at the numerous face-painting stalls.
Keller, a program analyst at the KU computer center, said that she was participating in the festival for the first time.
"I had been here before, and I liked it. So I auditioned for this year," she said.
"It gives you an opportunity to step back and enjoy the Renaissance without the negative aspects of the era," she said, referring to the absence of highway robbers, regional wars and the bubonic plague.
Jeremy Povenmire, marketing assistant for the Renaissance Festival, said that since all the participants are dressed in period costumes, there is a more authentic feeling of a Renaissance village.
"The fact that they also speak the language of the period, with an English accent, helps you to think you are in 16th century England and not Bonner Springs, Kan., in the 1990s," said Stephen Taylor, Wichita freshman.
KU graduate Leigh Reinhart, who is the marketing assistant and ticket sales coordinator for the Renaissance Festival, said there had been more visitors this year in comparison with the same period last year.
"We try to make it all as authentic accurate as possible," said Robin Mesh, assistant entertainment director for Renaissance Festival.
"That is partly due to the great media coverage we got this year," she said.
Mesh said 27,000 people attended the opening weekend of the festival this year. A total of more than 176,000 attended the festival through its duration last year.
Reinhart said that tickets are available at the gate and at several locations in Lawrence. She said the cheapest tickets are available to students through Student Union Activities.
SUA, which sells an average of 400 tickets each year, has tickets available to students at $8 per adult and $4 per child.
Owens said that more students should make use of the discounted prices and come to the festival.
"It is a fun place to come with your friends if you want to get away from Lawrence," he said. "And since you get all the shows, it is well worth the money."
September 24,1993 K-you • ENTERTAINMENT '93
13
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By Alicia Hein Special to the Kansan
Rides offer entertainment
It is a crisp autumn afternoon. The sun is slowly sinking and your senses are alive with sights, sounds and smells — the rushing of the nearby Kaw River, the creak of the leather saddle and the scent of the damp earth under the horses's hooves.
You are far removed from the usual Saturday night assault of loud music, stale beer and cigarette smoke.
Trail riding is a unique way to enjoy the days of autumn, and the guides at Westwinds Outfitting are ready to take individuals or groups on an excursion through trails along the Kaw River or surrounding Clinton and Perry lakes.
Westwinds Outfitting is located amile and a half northeast of Lawrence on U.S. Highway 24-40. Westwinds provides horses, tack and guides for rides ranging in length from one-hour to overnight. Owner Murl Westheffer says trail riding appealed to people of all ages and skill levels.
"We get all kinds," he said. "I'd say the majority of them are beginners who have little or no experience with horses."
Westheffer said he and his head wrangler, Butch Acox, stressed the enjoyment of the rider on each guided ride.
"We just want people to come and have a good time, ride a good horse and see some country," Acox said.
They have plenty of country to show. Westwinds' land covers about 265 acres,
Westheffer said that during the peak seasons of spring and fall, he kept about 20 horses for use on the rides. He said he took care to choose only the most gentle horses for his customers.
Westheffer said. The company also uses public lands along the Kaw River. Westheffer purchases an annual permit that allows it to use the trails around Clinton and Perry lakes.
Prices for the rides range from $20 per person for an hour ride to $75 per person for an all-day excursion. Also offered are two-hour rides for $30, four-hour rides for $55 and a one-hour ride that includes a barbecue dinner in an outdoor setting for $30.
Westheffer said he could arrange overnight rides led by Acox, an Oklahoma native and working cowboy for most of his life.
"And I'm not a half bad cook,either," Acox said, smiling beneath his thick mustache.
Westheffer and his wife, Carla, have operated Westwinds Outfitting for the past two years. He said he used to keep five or six horses around for his family's use. His wife suggested that if they were going to keep that many that they might as well buy more and put them to use.
Westheffer said during a good week, he or Acox would guide between 50 and 75 people. Westheffer said groups were welcome, but he tried to keep the maximum number of group members to about five or six.
Last year, Westheffer said he ended activities at Westwinds shortly after Labor Day. This year, however, he plans to continue with trail rides as long as the weather allows and perhaps plan activities such as sleigh riding for the winter. He said the company also planned to acquire more ponies and operate a pony "carousel" for children this fall.
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Westheffer prefers that all rides be scheduled in advance. Rides are subject to change if the weather is bad.
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14 ENTERTAINMENT '98 • Kyou • September 24; 1993
Climbers find high in reaching heights
By Jay S. Lisondra Special to the Kansan
The 30-foot wall looms above the climber like a towering black shadow. Its face is covered with small protrusions, barely enough for the climber to grip. Slowly she climbs, sweat glistening on her brow. As she reaches the top, she breathes a sigh of relief and grins in triumph.
This particular wall, in the Combative Sports Room in Robinson Center, is where beginning and experienced climbers can improve their skills, get a workout or enjoy a thrill.
1926
"A lot of people climb for the rush," said Melissa Smith, Lake Forest, III., sophomore and president of the KU Climbers Club.
Tyler Bergmeier, Lawrence senior and treasurer for the club, said he climbed not only for the rush but for what he learned.
"You learn to trust yourself and put confidence in your placements," Bergmeier said.
But to others, rock climbing is a sport, and they take pride in honing their skills and moving up to bigger and more challenging climbs.
Drew Manica, Prairie Village freshman, climbs the practice wall in Robinson Center as Tyler Bergmeier, Clay Center senior, belays his line. The club meets twice a week in Robinson.
"I don't climb for the thrill, I do it to get better and learn all the different styles," said club member Lewis Rodgers. "Your homework is putting your life in your own hands it's a constant mental high."
John Gamble/KANSAN
vertical scale," Rodgers said.
Whether because of the thrill or mental stimulation, rock climbing is catching on. The climbing club has grown to more than 40 members. Rodgers said rock climbing started as an adventure but was becoming urbanized because of the creation of indoor climbing walls such as the one in Robinson.
Rock climbing is also a physically demanding sport, according to Dan Hughes, an experienced climber and manager at Sunflower Bicycles. 804 Massachusetts St. But he said that you didn't have to be in great shape to enjoy it.
"I consider indoor climbing as golf on a
"It's good for you physically, and everyone can do it; you don't need a lot of upper body strength." Smith said.
Bergmeier agrees.
"You can be in any shape when you start out, but you get out of it what you put in," he said.
The basic equipment is a good pair of shoes,but beginners should be prepared to spend more as their skill improves. A strong rope costs about $125,and a harness costs about $30.
Rock climbing is a relatively safe sport if you use your equipment properly, said Smith.
"Unlike in the movie Cliffhanger, your equipment won't break," said Smith.
Smith and Hughes agreed that knowledge of the risks was the most important safety procedure.
"To avoid accidents, you should have prior knowledge of the route you'll climb" Hughes said. "You're better off taking a class and try not to get into situations out of your ability."
Unfortunately, there are few places in Lawrence for one to climb. Club members said bridges and buildings were illegal to climb.
"I encourage you to either climb with an experienced climber or take some schooling." Smith said.
"I once climbed Stauffer-Flint Hall and received a nasty letter from the University," Hughes said.
Some climbing areas in the region include: Cliff Drive in Kansas City, Mo.; Kapen Park in Columbia, Mo.; and Sam's Throne near Jasper, Ark.
However, sometimes the best mountain or cliff is found by accident.
"My partner, Kevin Stevens, and I found a climb along a road in New Mexico," said
Jasper Denniston, a Lenexa junior and avid climber. "We climbed about 300 feet when the rocks began to give way. We barely made it to the top, but when we did it gave me this really neat feeling right in the gut."
Anyone interested in climbing can attend a climbing club meeting from 8 to 10:30 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays at Robinson, or they can try the wall during public nights from 8 to 10:30 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays, from 8 a.m. to noon Saturdays and from 1 to 5 p.m. Sundays.
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September 24,1993 K-you ENTERTAINMENT'93
15
'60s play has musical message today
Bv Matt Wolf
Associated Press Writer
LONDON—In a darkened London auditorium where "Hair" is once again coming to life, 1968 and 1993 briefly seem to be one.
Onstage, three African-American singers bump and grind their way through "White Boys," while director Michael Bogdanov monitors every Supreme-like shimmy. On this occasion, the performers only mime the song's celebrated lyrics — "my daddy warns me stay away / I say come on out and play-ay-ay-y" — so they can save their voices for that night's preview.
Minutes later, the cast of 26 scans the empty Old Vic Theater with flashlights, as they will do to the audience during each performance.
"It's sinister, very, very sinister," Bogdanov said of the moment.
And offstage, the two men behind Broad-
way's legendary tribal rock musical — coauthor James Rado and composer Galt McDermot — look on in wonder, amazed that a '60s cultural touchstone is finding new life a quarter century later.
"It's nuts, totally nuts," said McDermot, whose silver hair and L.L. Bean jacket suggest an aging golfer, not a begetter of the best-known counterculture musical ever.
The show's third originator, co-writer Gerome Ragni, died in 1991.
Rado said, "It feels like we're in Hollywood here, like we're working on a big-time movie. There are 150 people working in this theater every day."
This new "Hair" is a $3.08 million co-production between Canada's David Mirvish, owner of the Old Vic, and real-estate tycoon Abe Hirschfeld, who made waves in New York earlier this year when he attempted to buy the bankrupt New York Post.
The show opened Sept. 14 in the 970-seat
theater. The cast includes American actor Paul Hipp, Australian heartthrob Felice Arena and pop singers Sinitta and Pepsi Lawrie Demacque. John Barrowman, born in Scotland but raised in the United States, plays the pivotal role of the doomed Claude.
If this is the biggest "Hair," it is also in some ways the riskiest.
After all, "Hair" in 1968 was as much a celebration of free love as a musical — a simultaneously festive and fearless piece whose pro-drugs, anti-war message was inseparable from the decade that gave it life.
Or was it?
"Hair' isn't just for the '60s," argues Bogdanov, 54, who was in the audience at the 1968 London opening night and witnessed the famous full frontal nudity first-act ending. "It's not just for the '90s; it's for the future. Without that, I wouldn't have been able to do it."
the question, then, is whether "Hair" is
resilient enough to withstand AIDS, the passing of the Reagan-Bush era and such renewed atrocities as the war in Bosnia.
"The fact that this is an anti-Vietnam War piece doesn't invalidate it in terms of any other war raging in the world," Bogdanov said. "In that sense, it's like any play taken out of its time and used to exemplify something happening in the world."
The director spoke of a poignance in the failure of the vision prescribed in the show to come to any kind of realization.
"The sad thing is that 25 years on, the world is in an even worse state than it was then — the pollution, the juggernauts, the wars," he said. "I feel that pathos very strongly."
Said McDermot: "There was really a very big reaction against the values of 'Hair' in the '70s as soon as Nixon came in; now people are beginning to think they can look at it again."
Cambodian a music success after struggle to survive
The Associated Press
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Ell Bunna had to hang up his guitar 18 years ago or risk execution. Now, after surviving the brutalities of government, he's back as one of Cambodia's most popular songwriters.
Ell had been a rising star when the radical Khmer Rouge took over in 1975.
Before Cambodia was plunged into almost four years of disastrous economic schemes and draconian social reforms, he seemed destined for fame. He had a few hit tunes covered by some of the country's best known singers.
But then the Khmer Rouge banned popular music, along with all musical instruments. The only tunes Cambodians could listen to were ear-piercing revolutionary songs.
Ell was forced to hide his past lest the Khmer Rouge target him for having practiced what it considered a bourgeois profession.
Simple survival remained his priority even after a 1978 Vietnamese invasion overthrew the Khmer Rouge, which left behind a shattered society and the corpses of hundreds of thousands of people it had starved, tortured
and worked to death.
But in 1800, Ell spotted a stranger with a guitar that somehow had survived the Khmer Rouge's anti-bourgeois campaign.
The instrument was battered, its wood chipped, its strings broken.
He bought it for a precious 22 pounds of rice — enough to feed him and his wife for a week — and replaced the broken strings with a bicycle's brake cable.
"A whole new world opened to me when I played the guitar again," the 46-year-old Ell said. "I had given up my music and only prayed to survive."
Two years ago, he built a studio in his apartment building, soundproofing the room with wood, layers of cloth and straw mats.
Now he and other musicians record cassettes there, mixing traditional Cambodian sounds with those of the West.
His songs once again get played on the radio, in shops, even on film soundtracks.
"During the Khmer Rouge time I never expected that I would live long enough to write songs again," Ell said. "At least before dying I can leave something for Cambodian children."
1993 SOUL ASSASSINS U.S. TOUR
CYPRESS HILL
HOUSE OF PAIN
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OCTOBER 20 • 8 PM
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A CONTEMPORARY PRESENTATION
1993 SOUL ASSASSINS U.S. TOUR
CYPRESS HILL
HOUSE OF PAIN
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Soul Assassins
GET ASSASSINATED
STEP INTO A WHOLE NEW REALM
OCTOBER 20 • 8 PM
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Tickets available at all TicketMaster locations including Hy-Vee,
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A CONTEMPORARY PRESENTATION
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Brooks true to himself, fans
Bv Jim Patterson
Associated Press Writer
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — It is hard to say when he blossomed from a mere countrymusic success story into a cultural touchstone, one of those celebrities whose first name is superfluous.
Garth.
Garth. In the John Singleton movie "Poetic Justice," the subject of country music comes up between two urban men. The name with which they associate it is Garth Brooks.
On MTV's "The Real World," aspiring country singer Jon Brannon phones home and is cut off by his father with the explanation, "Garth is singing the national anthem (on television)."
He will likely be the only country singer on the upcoming Kiss tribute album. (Brooks calls his lead vocal on "Hard Luck Woman" his "tribute to Peter Criss.")
Brooks' power is reflected in big and small ways.
What kind of singer would dare alienate consumers with an outspoken stance against used compact discs? Why would anyone who wants airplay on always-conservative country radio stations release "We Shall Be Free," with its line advocating that people "love anyone they choose?" The song was No. 7, instead of Brooks' customary No.1 on the Billboard country singles chart.
Not that Brooks thinks he's above such controversy.
"It doesn't help," he said during an interview at his record company's office.
"My job is to be the most honest Garth Brooks I can be, and I say these things because I believe them," said Brooks, 31.
"I don't think we can be free until everyone can love who they choose, and something has got to be done about used CDs.
"I've got more money than I'll ever be able
to use, but people who are like brothers and sisters (songwriters) to me are getting ripped off. Two things can happen with used CDs—either find a way to pay the people who create them or they must be wiped out."
It is hard to overestimate Brooks' popularity. He is the best-selling recording artist so far in the 1990s, with total sales hovering around 30 million.
"I thought I was finished," Brooks said, completely serious. At the time, Brooks spoke publicly of retiring and devoting himself to being a father.
"The Chase," Brooks' last album, contained "We Shall Be Free" and sold about 5 million copies, about half of what he's become accustomed to.
Instead, wife Sandy and baby girl Taylor Mayne Pearl (named after James Taylor and Minnie Pearl) are joining him on the road as he promotes his new record, "In Pieces."
"In Pieces," produced by Allen Reynolds, is a nice helping of the now-familiar Brooks style. That means intensely sung slices of life balanced with rollicking odes to the regular guy and one or two stylistic twists.
"The Night I Called the Old Man Out" is a good example as to what keeps Brooks solidly country, despite showmanship inspired by 1970s arena rock. In rock'n'roll, the story would end with youth coming out on top. In Brooks' hands, the story ends with the rebel being taught a lesson.
Reynolds has produced every Brooks album. The singer credits him with a key piece of advice given during the recording of the first album.
"He told me he couldn't work with me anymore because I wasn't being myself. I had always wanted to be George Strait, and that's what I was trying to do," Brooks said. "He said the world already had a George Strait, and all I could do was give them Garth Brooks."
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'September 24', 1993 *K-you* • ENTERTAINMENT '93
17
On tour, Dylan still rolling like a stone
By Jennifer Bowles
Associated Press Writer
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — Forget the tributes, drop the hero worship: Bob Dylan just wants to be known as a working musician.
"It's all about a livelihood. ... It's all about going out and playing," he said, his blue eyes sparkling. "That's what every musician who has ever crossed my path strives for."
Yes, but Bob Dylan isn't just the Average Joe musician.
Wearing jeans and cowboy boots topped off with a black Australian cowboy hat, he strolls into a small, stuffy room in his manager's office. He sits down in a chair, leans back and plucks the hat off his head, propping it on his knee where it rests for nearly an hour.
Dylan, who rarely gives interviews, is
clearly uncomfortable at first, not divulging much and giving terse replies. But it doesn't take long for him to shed his elusive facade, exhibiting annoyance at today's music, bashfulness about his own achievements and fervor about taking his guitar and harmonica on the road again.
"To me, it's a dream come true," he says. "What could be bad about traveling places, seeing different things, moving? It keeps you alive."
In his latest North American tour, he's paired up with old pal Carlos Santana, allowing concertgoers to hear the contrasting sounds of Dylan's folksy rock music and Santana's fusion of Latin American, African and blues rhythms.
It was Dylan who inspired Santana back in the 1960s with such classics as "Blowin' in the Wind" and "Like a Rolling Stone" —
songs that helped bring social consciousness to rock'n'roll.
Santana said, "Life to me is like light, and you're the projector, man. If you don't like what you're showing just change the light. He (Dylan) made me aware of that.
"With most bands, as soon as you unplug the amplifier it's over. Not with his music, not with my music. When people go home, men or women, they feel pregnant with his consciousness."
While Dylan hears all this coming from his friend seated on a nearby couch, he stares off into the corner as if he's not listening. When asked about the adulation, he says simply: "Well, my feelings are the same about Carlos' music. It's great to be supported by your fellow musicians."
At52, Dylan's stature as rock'n'rollsage is perhaps only rivaled by the late John
Lennon. Although he has inspired everything from a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award to an obsessed fan sifting through his garbage, he tries not to think about it.
Dylan has carried his music through three decades of constant change, but he's not real happy about how the music industry has evolved.
"Music can save people, but it can't in the commercial way it's being used. It's just too much. It's pollution," he said.
Dylan, who started his career playing in coffee houses, shared his romantic notion of music.
"Music is what saved me in this world," he said. "It gave me something to do when others around me were just doing stuff which didn't interest me. My heart wasn't into any of that other stuff.
Author's sleuthing for ideas outpaces peers
"The music grabbed me."
By Matt Wolf
Associated Press Writer
LONDON — In "Prime Suspect," her best-known TV series, Lynda La Plante created a policewoman whose sleuthing often outpaced that of the men on her beat.
So is it any surprise that La Plante herself could be said to have done the same, as a television writer?
For her new series "Framed," La Plante traveled to a secret destination on a fake passport to spend two weeks in a remote villa where she was locked in her room each night.
The goal? To witness the workings of a "supergrass," an English term for an
The four-hour movie, starring Timothy Dalton as a reclusive "supergrass" and David Morrissey as the ardent police officer who tracks him down, began yesterday at 7 p.m. CDT on the Arts & Entertainment network. It continues tonight.
informer or someone who turns state's evidence, so that "Framed" would have that ripped-from-the-headlines look.
La Plante's method of writing "Framed," as usual, was "to find the character" — to seek out an actual person, or persons, as the basis for a fictionalized program.
Such has been her approach from her first hit series "Widows" in 1983, in which she trawled the world of prostitutes and prisons
to tell of several East End women who turn to crime.
The impetus for "Framed" came from a headline in a British tabloid newspaper about a supergrass, presumed dead, who had been sighted in Spain.
La Plante's own sleuthing in the summer of 1989 led her back and forth between London and Miami until $500 brought her a forged passport for further travel, and the promise of meeting the real Eddie Myers.
"It was totally journalism and detective work," she said. "It's nice because it alleviates hours in front of a word processor to go out and be a supersleuth."
But why would an informer trust her?
"I was on an illegal passport ... (and) could have been in trouble, so I was not likely to go to the police," said La Plante, 47, an animated redhead whose north of England directness jars amusingly with a posh accent cultivated during her erstwhile career as an actress.
La Plante may choose unusual material for a female writer, but she expresses no interest in conforming to gender expectations.
"What I find quite strange is the confusion in people's minds about me," she said with a smile, between puffs on a cigarette. "They think I must be some horrific, macho, guntoting woman because of the material I write."
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18
ENTERTAINMENT '83 • K-you • September 24. 1993
Director under fire for debut film
Amputation film bombs, leaves author gloomy
By Patricia Bibby Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK — Jennifer Lynch just might be a victim of her own last name.
Raised on the set of her father David's "Eraserhead" and with those who were the vanguard of avant-garde, she was practically fated to be a filmmaker of creepy proportions.
And on that count, her debut film, "Boxing Helena," does not disappoint.
Nick is a gifted surgeon obsessed with a woman named Helena. When she caustically rebuffs him, he amputates her legs and then her arms — boxing her — in order to keep her from pushing him away. It's a film so macabre that even David Lynch declined to make it.
"He said it scared him too much," says Jennifer Lynch, drawing on a Mariboro over coffee at a posh cafe in a Manhattan hotel. "And that's not something you want David Lynch saying before you're about to make your first film!"
Maybe she should have taken a cue from dad.
Making "Boxing Helena" was fraught with hardship, headache and heartache. And protests. And nasty reviews. And dismal box-office returns — after two weeks in the theaters, it was ranked 30th.
After losing one boyfriend and three stars, Lynch — at the tender age of 25 — sounds like she doesn't ever again want to yell "Cut!"
"I'm writing a book," she says resignedly.
"It's going to take some time to get my life back together ... Everything went to pot."
If Lynch sounds weary, perhaps it's because she's been in the midst of this maelstrom for six years, culminating with an intensive week of interviews to hype her movie.
It wasn't always this bleak. In fact, in the beginning, it probably was quite heady.
Lynch was 19 years old and lounging around with Sam Rami, the actor and director, when a friend called Rami saying he was looking for a female writer to flesh out, so to speak. a film idea by
many of which complained bitterly about the violence, albeit bloodless on the screen, against Helena. One group chanted "Two, four, six, eight, it's not sexy to amputate." "Cutting off arms and legs is not love," said a representative for the Women's Action Coalition in Los Angeles.
With screenplay in hand, Lynch and Caland shipped it around but had a tough
Philippe Caland. Rami got the two together and a screenplay was born.
"It's going to take some time to get my life back together... Everything went
This so-called notion of feminism probably would baffle some women's groups,
to pot." Jennifer Lynch "Boxing Helena" director
"I had grown up with a very intense obsession with the Venus de Milo... And I felt really imperfect and broken as a kid because of my club feet," Lynch says. "(The film concept) was an interesting and very brave way to see something missing. And I love the idea that (the doctor) in his dream sees her as something he can't whittle down to nothing. She's always going to be above him. I thought, 'Yeah, damn right!'"
time finding a studio. Then Carl Mazzocone decided to make "Boxing Helena," the first movie produced by his new film company, Main Line Pictures.
Barely in her 20s, Lynch easily was seduced by the millions of dollars tossed her way for the movie, and she charmed studio executives. She is a woman with a vigorous handshake who speaks with a confident, fast,
staccato rhythm. She has an easy laugh and a look-you-hard-in-the-eye sincerity. You want to believe her, and Main Line believed she could pull it off.
The next few years could be called the Hollywood Shuffle as various stars attached to the movie dropped out. First, Madonna sent her regrets. Then, Kim Basinger reneged on the eve of production. Mazzocone sued Basinger for breach of oral contract and won; Basinger was ordered to pay $7.4 million and has since filed for bankruptcy.
Meanwhile, Ed Harris, the original doctor got tired of waiting and left to work on other
projects.
Even after the film was in the can, the movie was dogged. The Motion Picture Association of America kept giving it an NC17 rating because of the sexually explicit scenes. Lynch, contractually bound to deliver an R rating, returned twice to the editing room to cut the offending parts.
When it was all over, the pre-release buzz was a publicist's dream: The ratings controversy, along with the lawsuit, made it one of the most anticipated films this fall.
The reviews, however, were a publicist's nightmare.
"A gruesome tale of obsessive love and mutilation, it's less a work of art, however, than a luridly stylish expression of female self-loathing," wrote the Washington Post's Rita Kemplem. "What Ms. Lynch has given us is a prettied-up snuff movie."
The Associated Press' Dolores Barclay railed, "This movie lacks the sophistication or cleverness to be a satire or even high camp."
"Devoid of wit and irony, the film becomes merely a simple, blunt expression of extreme fear of women," wrote Kevin Thomas in the Los Angeles Times.
Oddly, Lynch was surprised that the movie generated any attention, much less wrath. As the young daughter of a famous filmmaker who got a studio to put up $4.5 million for a sexually charged film, the picture was bound to make headlines.
But she is stoic about the fuss the movie has provoked.
"It's all lessons learned," she says. "I was lucky enough to be able speak, in the form of the movie, and now it's my job to listen."
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19
Merge is the word at studios
High-tech innovations lure media moguls into high-finance marriages
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES—And then there was one.
With this week's announcement that Viacom Inc. was buying Paramount Communications Inc. in a deal valued at $8.2 billion, there is only one Hollywood studio — the Walt Disney Co. — that has not changed hands.
The tenacity of the bidding (MGM, Columbia Pictures, 20th Century Fox, Warner Bros. and MCA all were sold or merged in the last decade) dramatizes the impending revolution in the entertainment business. While movie and television shows will continue to be uneven and often crummy, they soon will be coming at us in new ways.
Although the promise of 500-channel cable systems, "video-on-demand" in-home movies, virtual reality simulators and interactive programming remains largely unfulfilled, these megamergers were made with the expectation that Hollywood is about to be reinvented.
The companies that flourish in this new environment will be those that marry delivery systems — cable networks, video games, CD players, TV stations — with the producers of feature films, sitcoms and music albums.
Viacom already is one the country's top cable network owners, with its MTV, VH-1
and Nickelodeon channels generating surging profits. MTV alone has a worldwide audience of 233 million, and it has crass music-video commentators Beavis and Butthead, too.
Paramount is a top supplier of movies and TV shows, with its recent hits including "The Firm," "Indecent Proposal," "Deep Space Nine" and "Entertainment Tonight."
Among the most logical outgrowths of the deal is a potential fifth television network. Furthermore, since Paramount has a new interactive technology division, it's now possible for any Paramount innovation to reach consumers through the 1.1 million subscribers to Viacom's cable-TV systems.
"You have a merger agreement that will create a company that will be superbly positioned for the future," said Gordon Crawford, whose money management firm Capital Guardian is Paramount's largest shareholder with an 8 percent stake.
Said Viacom head Sumner Redstone: "The shape of our industry will never be the same. ... I guarantee you, this will be the single most powerful entertainment and communications company in the world."
In fact, in terms of financial value, it's the fifth largest media conglomerate. But the potential is endless.
"Strategically, everything fits," said Paramount chairman Martin Davis. "We just
have unlimited possibilities looking at the future."
Just two days after the Paramount-Viacom deal was revealed, video store giant Blockbuster Entertainment Co. used its majority interest in a TV producer to buy the Republic Pictures movie studio, home to John Wayne Westerns.
The goal of the $100 million deal is to create a new, although comparatively smaller, multimedia company which could capitalize on the booming video-game business and interactive computer programs.
"We're going to look at new media and the growing potential for interactivity," said Ron Castell, Blockbuster's senior vice president of programming and communications.
The companies that are likely to dominate the future are those that have both a wealth of creative personnel and that control copyrights to entertainment programming: Hightech hardware isn't worth much without first-rate software.
That's why there's still speculation another bidder may emerge for Paramount.
"This is the last great repository of copyrights in the world that's available," said Crawford. "it's really the last chance."
Despite all the excitement generated by the Paramount-Viacom deal, the track record of Hollywood mergers is not particularly good.
Time Warner spent several years digging out from a pile of debt after Time Inc. and Warner Bros. became one entity. With hardware sales stalled, Sony Corp.'s expected
synergies with Columbia Pictures have not been fully realized. MCA has a hit with "Jurassic Park," but the movie, TV and record company makes up just 6 percent of hardware giant Matsushita Electric Industrial Co.'s revenues.
Although it already has been sold once (to convicted felon Giancarlo Parretti), the MGM studios are again on the block. It's far less attractive than Paramount, however, with a modest film library and a weak presence in both feature films and television production.
Disney, on the other hand, is robust, except for its struggling Euro Disney theme park. While the company's not for sale, the asking price if it were would be extravagant — probably well in excess of $20 billion.
"I don't think Disney could be sold," said Jessica Reif, an entertainment analyst with Oppenheimer & Co. "I don't think anything is imminent."
She did not rule out a merger, however, and said broadcaster Capital Cities-ABC would be a near perfect fit.
TRAILERS: You've seen Keanu Reeves mangle Shakespeare in "Much Ado About Nothing" and maim Bram Stoker in "Dracula." Soon you'll have a chance to watch the "Bill and Ted" veteran take a shot at playing a religious leader. Miramax announced this week that it has acquired North American rights to "Little Buddha," director Bernardo Bertolucci's high-budget biography. Expect it later this year.
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20 ENTERTAINMENT '93 • Kyou • September 24, 1993
Students bypassing bars
Special to the Kansan
By Jennifer Frost
House parties are popular among many college students, but they can be a problem for apartment managers and police officials.
Students younger than 21 often go to house parties as an alternative to going to bars. Rick Renfro, co-owner of Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. Second St., said that bars were making it harder for minors to get in and, as a result, younger students look for somewhere else to party.
Renfro said that he would like to be able to let students under 21 into his bar but that he couldn't always watch to make sure those students don't drink.
Debbie Horter, Lawrence junior, said she went to house parties because they were cheaper than going to bars.
"Most house parties charge you a few dollars to get in, and you can drink all the beer you want," Horter said. "That beats going to a bar and paying two dollars per drink."
As house parties grow in popularity, so do the complaints.
Lawrence police said they often received complaints about parties on weekends.
"Every party gets a complaint, or two, or three," Officer James Winn said. "Generally, we issue a ticket on the second complaint. Let them tell the judge why they didn't quiet down after the warning."
Some area apartment managers are taking precautions to prevent party-related problems.
Julie Smith, a leasing consultant, said that Lawrence Security Control patrolled the Colony Woods apartment complex.
"If security has a problem they call the Lawrence police," Smith said. "The fact that
the police are there usually takes care of the situation."
Kyle Trial, manager at Orchard Corners apartment complex, said he would call the police if a party got out of control.
"I've tried to handle the situation myself, but the police seem to be more effective," Trial said.
Trial said he didn't mind the parties as long as he knew about them ahead of time. He said that way he could keep an eye on things and make sure no one gets hurt.
"I don't have a problem with the parties until people do something wrong, like climb the fence or get into the pool," Trial said. "The pool scares me. I just don't want anyone to get hurt."
Horter said that she enjoyed having house parties but that she understood how parties could be a problem for apartment managers and the police.
She said once the police had come five times before breaking up one of her parties.
"The police kept giving me a warning until a keg got thrown through a screen," Horter said.
Horter said the police often were more tolerant outside the campus area than they were on campus.
"I've been to parties on campus where the first time the police get a complaint they want everyone to go home," Horter said.
Trial said students could eliminate some of the problems associated with house parties by following a few steps:
Let your manager and neighbors know ahead of time.
If you feel things are getting out of control, call the police.
Keep alcohol away from the pool area.
Clean up afterward.
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21
Jayhawks hooked on thrills of fishing
Local lakes provide opportunity for new enthusiasts
By Brian Vandervilet Special to the Kansan
Fat men sitting near water. That is what Jane Whitley thought fishing was about until something finally bit the minnow at the end of her line.
Whitley, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, will not soon forget the excitement of her first big catch at Clinton Lake a year ago.
"I was taken back by the force of it," she said. "It felt like it took forever to reel the fish in because I was so anxious."
Like Whitley, many KU students have discovered the thrill of being outdoors and catching fish. The lakes and streams in the area provide an excellent opportunity for those wanting to learn the art of angling.
"It can be really fun," Whitley said. "You really do have to think about where the fish is going to be and what kind of bait to use."
Phil Huntsinger, professor of health education, instructed about 60 students this summer in a one-credit course that taught the fundamentals of fishing.
"Fishing is good for you," Huntsinger said. "You can't fish and worry at the same time."
Huntsinger recommended Clinton Lake or Lone Star Lake as good places to find bass, bluegill and channel cat. He advised fishermen to look for rocks or log piles, where the
fish feed and spawn.
Bryan Thomas, Newfield, N.J., freshman, has fished off the coast of New Jersey every weekend since he was 4 years old. When he was only9, he caught the state's largest blue fish of the year. Despite his trophy catch, Thomas has remained humble about his fishing.
"I don't go fishing to catch fish," Thomas said. "I go to sit and think. Catching one just makes it all the more exciting."
For students who want to start fishing,the expense is reasonable.
Steve Sheldon, an employee at Lunker Bait and Tackle, 947 E. 23rd St., said the beginning fisherman can expect to spend about $40 for a rod, reel and tackle. A $14 fishing license must also be purchased, which lasts for one calendar year. Licenses can be bought from Lunker, Kmart, Wal-Mart or Dillons.
Finding the perfect bait is really a sport of its own, with a smorgasbord of options. A fisherman can choose from items such as crankbaits, stinkbaits, worms or goldfish. Despite all of the luxurious enticements available, standard minnows are often the most popular.
Mike Thomas, Kansas state park officer, said that now is an excellent time to fish because water levels are still high from the summer's rain. High water levels give fish additional vegetation to spawn in. But Thomas' enthusiasm for fishing goes well beyond high water levels.
"I've been ice fishing ... I've fished in 110 degree weather," he said. "And I just don't believe there any bad days of fishing."
[Image] A silhouette of a person standing in the water, holding a fishing rod with a small fish caught in it.
Bill Roberts fishes for white bass by the dam at Clinton Lake. People often fish to enjoy the outdoors and relax.
Brian Vandervliet / KANSAN
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Different Elvis heard in songs
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — To be an Elvis fan in the 1960s could be as awkward as defending Frankie Avalon. While the Beatles were recording "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band," Presley was filming "Clambake." The Stones sang "I Can't Get No Satisfaction"; the King offered "(There's) No Room to Rhumba in a Sports Car."
But did Elvis really go soft after getting out of the Army? Some think his downfall had as much to do with marketing as it did with music. Buried under the schlocky sound-tracks — sometimes as many as three a year — were songs as good, or even better, than his famous hits of the previous decade.
"I think the point is once you remove the movie music and you're just dealing with the music Elvis made in the studio, you actually see a much wider range than what he made in the 1950s," said critic Peter Guralnick, who wrote the liner notes for "Elvis: From Nashville to Memphis," a five-record box set that compiles the King's nonmovie '60s music.
"The '60s was when Elvis became a singer," added critic and long-time Elvis defender Dave Marsh. "He could sing a ballad as corny as 'Are You Lonesome Tonight?' or a blues like 'I Feel So Bad.' By the time you get to the end of the decade, 'Suspicious Minds,' he sang as great as he ever did."
The box set, the second volume of RCA's Elvis retrospective, covers his recording career from the first post-Army records in the early '60s through the 1969 "comeback"
sessions that produced "Suspicious Minds."
Gone are embarrassments such as "Song of the Shrimp" and "Fort Lauderdale Chamber of Commerce." Among the rescued is a slow, haunting cover of Bob Dylan's "Tomorrow Is a Long Time."
That Guralnick even agreed to write the liner notes is a sign some have changed their minds about Elvis. In "The Rolling Stone Illustrated History of Rock & Roll," Guralnick had dismissed much of his '60s music as an "eight-year slumber in Hollywood." He wrote of his "self-parodying mannerisms," his "indifference to the material he recorded; his apparent contempt for his own talent. ... The spectacle itself of the bad boy made good."
So what happened?
"I think my eyes have been opened considerably since I started working on this biography, also from listening to a great deal of material which I had never closely listened to before," he said.
Two of the records in the set largely are devoted to music no one, not even Guralnick, ever doubted: the songs Presley recorded after his 1968 television "comeback" special.
Vowing "never to sing another song that I don't believe in," Elvis finally ditched his movie career. In January 1969, he returned to Memphis for a recording session for the first time in 14 years.
Within weeks, Presley had recorded more than 30 songs. Hit singles included "Suspicious Minds," "Kentucky Rain" and "Don't Cry Daddy." There was pop, soul, even social protest.
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24
ENTERTAINMENT '93 • K-you • September 24, 1993
11
SPORTS; George Brett retires but continues to give it his all until the last at-bat. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103,NO.26
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
GTA benefits Here is how KU GTAs fare against GTAs from peer universities based on workloads of 20 hours a week.
benefits on workloads of 20
Health care provided Tuition waived Collective bargaining
Kansas no fully waived under discussion
Colorado partially in-state no, out-of-state gets in-state rate no
Iowa partially in-state no, out-of-state gets in-state rate under discussion
North Carolina at Chapel Hill no in-state no, out-of-state gets in-state rate no
Oklahoma no in-state no, out-of-state gets in-state rate no
Oregon partially fully waived yes, since 1985
Source: Kansan staff reports John Paul Foel/KANSAN
Health benefits part of drive to form union
By Kathleen Stolle Kansan staff writer
Shelley Steele is having a skin lesion biopsy today, but her health is not her only concern. Because the KU graduate teaching assistant does not have medical insurance, her financial future could be at risk as well.
"If it comes back that it's (the lesion's) something bad, I wish I had it, but I don't know so I'll deal with that later."
she said.
Health care,
salaries and
work loads
are a few
issues GTAs
may negotiate
if they are
allowed to
GTAUNION
form a collective bargaining unit, GTA David Reidy said.
form a collective bargaining unit, GTA David Reidy said. GTA status hearings continue this week and will determine if KU's 1,100 GTAs are state employees and, therefore, eligible to negotiate with the University on employment issues.
"Collective bargaining would be a chance for us as a group to discuss and prioritize our own concerns," Reidy said.
GTA Jeff Beasley said he was covered by his parents' medical insurance but would prefer to have his own.
"The main thing I'd like as a GTA is health insurance because right now it's impossible to live on the money they give us and also have health insurance," he said.
Beasley said he earns about $800 a month as a political science discussion leader.
Spanish GTA Terri Heusinger said she would like to see more uniformity in GTA pay as it related to workloads. She said GTAs in her department had more responsibility than some GTAs in other departments but were not paid accordingly. Heusinger said she received about $800 a month for teaching two three-hour classes.
"I'm responsible for 55 University students, and nobody else helps me teach my class," she said.
if GTAs do eventually bargain on medical benefits and pay increases, Reidy said it could take three to four years before GTAs see any improvements.
"Anything that involves money is going to take time to phase in," he said.
The source of additional funds for GTAs' needs is a matter of speculation.
Howard Mossberg, dean of the graduate school, said he did not expect to see significant increases in the state's higher education allocations.
"I assume we'll be working with restrictive budgets," he said.
Reidy said he hoped that the Legislature could be persuaded to provide additional GTA funds. However, if funds were not available, Reidy said that he hoped the University would consider the GTAs' role at KU and adjust its own budget.
"If it was inevitable, I do think we'd be justified in claiming a little bigger piece of the pie," he said.
INSIDE
Singing in the street
Six local bands played Saturday during the first Fall Fest, an outdoor concert in downtown Lawrence.
RM
Degrees open for debate this week
Program eliminations are focus of hearings
Page 3.
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
Starting tonight, students, faculty members and the general public will have their only chance officially to express opinions about the future of eight degree programs when the University of Kansas' program discontinuance hearings begin this week.
The hearings will be conducted by the Committee of Academic Procedures and Policies, a University Council committee made up of seven faculty members and three students.
The meetings will allow anyone to speak for or against the elimination of the degree programs, said Bob Anderson, professor of French and Italian and head of the committee.
"They literally are open hearings," he said. "As long as they address the topic up for discussion, we are ready and willing to hear them."
Anderson said speakers who had filed a written summary of their comments with University Governance prior to the hearing would be allowed to speak first.
Because each hearing will last about two hours, Anderson said, the committee will try to hear everybody's opinions, but a time limit may be set.
"We hope people would be to the point and concise," he said. "Filibustering would not help at this time."
Robyn Weeks, Overland Park senior and an atmospheric science major, said everyone should be allowed to speak no matter how many people are at the hearings.
David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said people should attend the hearings and should speak because the final decision would affect so many people.
"You will find there are a lot of emotions affiliated with this " he said
Anderson said that if someone could not attend the hearings, they could submit a written proposal stating their opinions to University Governance, 308 Strong Hall.
When the hearings finish, Anderson said, the committee will deliberate for a few weeks until it reaches a decision about each
The student members are Travis Harrod, Topekaunior; Andrew Irwin, Overland Park senior; and Balchander Jayaraman, Prairie Village senior.
degree program.
The committee's recommendations then will be sent to Council, which will make its own decision. Council will send its recommendations to Shulenburger, who will send his recommendations to Chancellor Gene Budig for a final decision.
If Budig approves the proposed degree eliminations, each program will be phased out within three years. During that time, new students will not be accepted into the programs, but enrolled students will be able to finish their degrees.
Last semester, the committee recommended the elimination of six degree programs: B.S. in toxicology; Ph.D. in visual arts education; B.A. in history and philosophy of science; B.S. in geophysics; B.S. in recreation; and B.S. in engineering physics.
Hearing schedule
The public is encouraged to speak out about the proposed program eliminations. The hearings are:
■ Wednesday, 7:15:9:30 p.m. at the English Room in the Union.
Tonight, 7:15 p.m. at the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union.
To be considered: B.A., B.G.S. and
You consulted B.K. International.
Thursday, 7-8:30 p.m. in 100 Smith
Hall
To be considered: B.A. in comparative literature and B.A. in humanities.
Thursday, 8:30-10 p.m. in 100 Smith Hall.
To be considered: B.A. and B.G.S. in computer science.
KANSAN
USA
Mattress sprint
Jodie Bellemere, Kansas City, Kan., junior, top, gets a ride during the Fun Relay at Wheat Ray 1993 with help from teammates Nick Pivonka, Alameda, Calif., sophomore, left front; Ryan Brownling, Denver sophomore, left rear; Chris Dunny, Leawood sophomore, right rear; and Max Myers, El Dorado sophomore, right front. The meet yesterday at Memorial Stadium involved 350 students who participated in track and field events. The Chi Omega sorority and Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity sponsored the 11th annual Wheat Meet to benefit KU Cancer Research and the Jon Blubaugh Memorial.
Holly McQueen / KANSAN
Overcrowded
85 percent of Haskell students live on campus. Campus housing can accommodate only 700 residents.
On campus residents
700
629
703
706
763
748
833
659
663
675
716
Spring '69
Spring '69
Fall '69
Fall '90
Spring '91
Fall '91
Spring '92
Fall '92
Fall '93
Budget shortages cramp Haskell
John Paul Fogel/KANSAN
Some By Carlos Tejada
studentslive
studentslive Kansan staff writer
room while
Haskell Indian
Source: Kansan staff reports
government.
federal
Brandon Girty is getting out.
The Haskell Indian Nations University freshman looks about his residence hall room with a weary smile. He says he is going to move to an apartment off-campus in a few days, and he says he is relieved.
awaitsfunds
"It's not going to be too bad to get out of here," Girty says. "A lot of guys have been here longer than I have, and they don't like it."
Girty is one of about 830 Haskell students who live in university housing built for 700 students. And since 85 percent of Haskell's 981 students live on-campus, overcrowdedness has become
a way of life.
The women at Wiона Hall are not much better off than the rale residents, says Elena Lopez, Haskell sophomore. She shares her room with eight other women and the floor's candy and soda machines.
"It wasn't like this when I first came," she says.
"When I was a freshman they gave me a room and there was no problem."
If Haskell were a state university such as the University of Kansas, it would raise endowment money or lobby the Kansas Legislature for funds. But Haskell is different. It is the nation's only university aimed solely at educating Amer-
See HASKELL, Page 12.
Rain-drenched '93 making history
Kansanstaffwriter
By Shan Schwartz
Those who are upset about the heavy rains in Lawrence could look at things from a different perspective.
There is no official annual precipitation record in Lawrence because the National Weather Service does not have a Lawrence office to make those observations. And the KU weather service has not compared precipitation totals for past years to determine an all-time high.
This wet weather is making history. In all probability, 1993 will go down as the wettest year ever in Lawrence.
But as of last night, the KU weather service had recorded 58.65 inches of rain and snow for this year. That is within a downpour's
reach of the all-time annual precipitation records in Topeka, 60.89 inches in 1973, and Kansas City. 60.25 inches in 1961.
And there's still three months to go
Is this rainy, snowy weather a trend or just a flake?
Paul Castleberry, graduate teaching assistant in atmospheric science, said there were several different factors that may have contributed to the wet weather this year.
Large snowfalls in January and February or last year's eruption of Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines could be attributed to the lingering effects of El Niño, Castleberry said. El Niño is a periodical weather pattern caused by warmer waters in the southern Pacific Ocean. Castleberry said more warm moisture was pushed west of the United States by El Niño and then pushed into our area by the
natural easterly flow of storm systems.
In May and June, Castleberry said, the summer weather pattern over Kansas didn't set up as usual. The jet stream, a high-altitude air current that drives storm movement, usually shifts northward to Canada during the summer. Castleberry said the jet stream didn't move that far north this year and hung just north of Kansas for much of the summer, causing above-average rainfall.
Castleberry said there was no indication that wetter-than-normal weather would continue.
About this time each year, Castleberry said, the jet stream moved back southward to set up a winter weather pattern. As the jet stream now passes southward over Kansas, the Lawrence area receives more rain, he said.
Precipitation totals
Precipitation totals
KU Weather Service.
1993 average
Jan. 1.6" 1.0"
Feb. 1.7" 1.1"
March 2.6" 2.4"
April 7.1" 3.2"
May 7.1" 4.4"
June 6.5" 5.1"
July 18.3" 4.1"
Aug. 1.7" 3.7"
Sept. 10.7" 4.3"
Total to date: 57.3"
Lawrence yearly average: 36.8"
4. 1
Source: KU Weather Service, Kansas Statistical Abstract
6
Dan Schauer/KANBAN
2
Monday, September 27, 1993
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Taxes, regulations will raise gas prices The Associated Press
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNION OF SUNDAY PARKS
LOS ANGELES — Motorists paid a half-cent per gallon less at the pump during the last two weeks, but costs will soon climb because of new federal taxes and clean-air rules, an industry analyst said yesterday.
Trilby Lundberg, publisher of the Lundberg Survey, said that prices should rise next week because of a double-whammy: a federal tax hike and the second annual implementation of the oxygenated fuel program mandated in certain cities.
The Lundberg Survey of 10,000 gasoline stations nationwide on Sept. 24 showed the average price at selfserve and full-serve pumps, including all grades and taxes, was 113.21 cents per gallon.
That's a 0.54-cent drop from the Sept.10 average.
Effective Friday, the federal tax on gasoline will increase 4.3 cents per gallon.
At self-service pumps, the latest nationwide survey shows regular unleaded gasoline selling for an average 106.07 cents per gallon, midgrade at 117.49 cents, premium at 125.46 cents and regular leaded at 109.78 cents.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Display Advertising Comments/Complaints Amy Casey,
HOW TO REACH US
Call 684-4830 for the newsroom:
News tips — Campus Desk
Comment complaints/Corrections
Editor, Editorial Manager
Joe Harder, Managing Editor for News
Cell 864-4358 for advertising:
■ Classified Department
Comments/Complaints — Janice Davis, Classified Manager
WEATHER
Come to the *Kansan newsroom*, 11.1 Stauffer-Flint Hall for:
■ placing announcements of meetings or events of campus groups for the "On Campus" calendar. Announcements must be submitted on form provided by 5 p.m. two days prior to desired day of submission will be taken by telephone.
■ submitting "Letters to the Editor." See the OnQnare nare for details.
University Daily Kansan fax number — 913-864-5624
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.
Weather around the country:
Atlanta; 77/65'
Chicago; 59/47'
Houston; 85/70'
Miami; 90/77'
Nineapolis; 57/37'
Phoenix; 73/35'
Salt Lake City; 83/45'
Seattle; 77/52'
Omaha: 75' X37'
Wichita: 79'/42' ●
Tulsa: 74°/46°
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kensan, 119
Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
St. Louis: 60°/45°
LAWRENCE: 71'/41" Kansas City: 70'/38'
TODAY
Tomorrow
Wednesday
Source: KU Weather Service: 864-3300
Mostly sunny and warm.
High: 78'
Low: 49'
Sunny
Mostly sunny and cooler.
High: 70'
Low: 50'
KANSAN
CORRECTION
The Kansan corrects all significant errors. If you have a correction, call the newsroom at 864-4810.
A story on Page One of Thursday's Kansan contained the incorrect location of Homestead, Fla. Homestead is south of Miami.
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CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 27, 1993
3
Bands, crowds jam in Lawrence streets
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
A few people sitting on a curb at Eighth and Massachusetts streets waited intently as the band Mountain Clyde did sound checks on stage at 1:30 p.m. Saturday.
Before the bands began playing, most people said they did not know what to expect of the first Fall Fest, an all-day outdoor concert featuring local bands.
"I think it's going to be cool," said Garrett Sullivan, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore. "You get to see a lot of different people when you come out to these."
About 9 p.m., Billy Goat, the last band of the evening, showered hot dogs on the crowd, which was estimated at 1,000.
"One of the vendors at the concert gave them a bunch of
hot dogs to use," said Jacki Becker, music coordinator for the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire. "It was quite a sight."
The Bottleneck sponsored the concert, held on Eighth Street between Massachusetts and New Hampshire streets. About a dozen vendors lined the curbs selling T-shirts, food, buttons and other merchandise.
One of the vendors, Jetta Hutt, Lawrence resident, was selling Frisbees for $2 to anyone who wanted to experiment with spin-art, which is applying different colors of paint to Frisbees as they spin on rotating plate.
Becker said she thought the concert was a success, considering it was the first outdoor concert sponsored by the bar. Concert-goers were charged $5.
"We'd like to turn this into an autumn version of 'Day on the Hill,'" said Becker, referring to the all-day concert held on Campanile Hill in the spring. "We'd like to have it as a free concert next year and maybe have a couple investors sponsor it."
Becker said outdoor concerts were popular in other college towns such as Seattle and Boulder, Colo.
"We think this type of event has a lot of potential here in Lawrence," she said. "There's no reason why it can't happen here."
Reaction to the idea of outdoor concerts in Lawrence was positive.
"We need more of these," said Brian Georgia, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore. "It's a blast seeing all these bands in one day because it doesn't happen much."
RM
Mountain Clyde lead singer Charlie Keel performs during Fall Fest. The downtown festival, which was held for the first time this year drew about 1,000 people to see the six bands performing.
UWT
Susan McSpadden / KANSAN
Fruit fight
Phil Larsen, Indianapolis freshman, and Ryan Wiesehan, St. Louis sophomore, both members of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity, pelt each other with watermelon during a watermelon festival at the Lambda Chi Alpha house. Nine fraternities and sororites took part in the event, which raised about $2,000 for Special Olympics.
Ancient practice alleviates maladies
Physical and mental bliss may be a sniff away
By Liz Klinger
Kansan staffwrite
If you have a nasty hangover, your room stinks, you lack self-confidence, can't sleep or are stressed-out by the demands of college life, take a whiff of this: aromatherapy.
Using natural scents to enhance mental and physical well-being is the basis of aromatherapy, a $100 million industry in the United States.
"It's basically an ancient art in science that involves the skilled use of essential oils of plants for their physical, psychological and esthetic purposes," said Gary Kobat, vice president of Aroma Vera, a company that manufactures aromatherapy products.
Aromatherapy products, including oils, bath salts and candles, can be applied to the skin, inhaled or used as room fragrances.
Kobat said Cleopatra, the seductress whose lovers included Julius Caesar and Mark Antony, used aromatherapy nearly 2,000 years ago when she dabbed jasmine oil on her body.
Michael Scholes, aromatherapy seminars president for Aroma Vera, said aromatherapy products were effective because of high concentrations of essential oils that are 75 to 100 times higher than dry herbs. A pound of jasmine essential oil contains 3,000 pounds of jasmine petals, he said.
Scholes said aromatherapy products were popular because they are ready to use. He said a lot of the remedies were based on herbalism and had the same benefits.
A drop of peppermint oil on the forehead and back of the neck reduces the headaches often associated with hangovers and helps with digestion, Scholes said. A drop of lavender oil on a pillowcase would help induce sleep, he said.
"College life is so demanding and stressful that any help you can get with relieving your stress is certainly welcome," said Katie Stolz, front-end supervisor at Wild Oats Community Market, 1040 Vermont St.
"Aromatherapy right now is an up-and-coming therapy that can be fun, and I think that most people are into smells whether they realize it or not," said Cullen, who owns an aromatherapy shop called Hummingbird Song, 10 E. Ninth St., Suite B. "I think we're in the middle of a movement involving
Certified aromatherapist Terry Cullen said that turning to nature for personal well-being was becoming increasingly popular.
nature and the elements. Aromatherapy definitely reflects Mother Nature and what she's about."
"We're dealing with the real things," she said. "These plants, these essences, come from all over the world."
Cullen said that essential oils had no chemicals or synthetics and offer pure earth energy.
Although aromatherapy products are not as popular in the Midwest as they are in other parts of the country, Cullen and others who sell aromatherapy products say the demand for the products is growing.
"adveil people realize this is not a fad," said Gretchen Gaultney, health and beauty aids purchaser for Community Mercantile Co-op, 901 Mississippi. "This has been around for centuries."
City leaders discuss issues with students
Mayor requests official stance on underage drinking
By Tracl Carl
Kansan staff writer
City officials who met Friday with representatives of the University of Kansas and Haskell Indian Nations University urged student leaders to be pro-active in discouraging underage drinking.
The meeting in the Kansas Union was the second of two held this year between city and university leaders. Each year, the Chamber of Commerce organizes the meetings so the three groups can discuss community issues.
Robert Hessle, Haskell student body vice president, said he was concerned that the city and police were not doing enough to discourage minors from drinking.
"They come to Lawrence, and they can get in almost any bar they want to," he said.
Mayor John Nalbandian, KU professor of public administration, said he thought it would help for student leaders to take an official stance on underage drinking and send that message to students.
"The police department has become very shy, I think, about dealing with minority populations in Lawrence because they've been accused of various misstreatments." Nalhandian said.
Mike Wildgen, city manager, said that the police were out every weekend trying to deal with all underage drinkers but that they could not cover every bar.
Wildgen said trash left in the streets of downtown earlier in the year had stopped, and he said he thought high school students were initially responsible for the litter.
"It was a summer activity, and you don't sit on out on the hood of your car when it's 55 degrees out." Wildgen said.
Nalbandian also asked the group for input on how the city's $100,000 transportation budget might be spent.
John Shoemaker, KU student body president, said Student Senate might be interested in using the money for Safe Ride.
Sleepy Eye LaFromboise, Haskell student body president, said Haskell needed more bus routes. Lawrence Bus Co. buses — the same buses that service KU — stop at Haskell once in the morning and once at night.
"Haskell students basically have no transportation." LaFromboe said.
Bob Martin, Haskell president, said an exchange program being considered would allow KU and Haskell students to take classes at both universities. This also would create more demand for transportation.
In other discussions:
Commissioner Jo Andersen said that she would be in charge of a task force designed to address the problem of American Indians not feeling welcome in Lawrence businesses. The group would include Andersen, Haskell representatives and a few local patrol officers.
"The way I conceive of this group that it would be pro-active and anticipate problems before they begin," she said.
LaFromboise said he also would like to ask local businesses for donations to finance a video presentation on the traditions and cultural aspects of American Indians.
Prayers remember life of former priest
By Donella Hearne
Kansan staff writer
Everard, 39,
died early Friday
morning of
pneumonia,
said the Rev.
Vince Krische,
director of the
center.
The St. Lawrence Catholic Center conducted a prayer vigil last night in memory of the Rev. Bob Everard, formerly of the center.
At last night's vigil,
Steve Nguyen, Wichita senior,
described Ever-
P
Everard
ard as a caring and funny man.
"It's sad because he had so much more to give," he said.
When Everard was new to St. Lawrence, some of the international students held a dinner party to get to know him. Everyone was supposed to bring a dish that represented their nationality, Nguyen said. Everard, a U.S. citizen, brought Lipton soup.
Nguyen said Everard was a friend and inspiration to the students he worked with.
"The most important thing is that he lived his belief the best way he could," he said. "He wasn't afraid of people laughing at him; he wasn't afraid of being looked down on."
Everard came to St. Lawrence in 1989 after working for the Church of St. Patrick in Kansas City, Kan. During his time at St. Patrick's, Everard helped out in the Kansas City and Lawrence areas, Krische said. Because he had spent time at the St. Lawrence center, he was already familiar with Lawrence, Krische said.
OBITUARY
Everard served at St. Lawrence until 1992, when he transferred to the Blessed Sacrament in Kansas City, Kan, where he led the parish.
"He left because he had the opportunity to be a pastor, "Krische said. "He wanted to do parish work, which is different from what we do here."
During his time at St. Lawrence, Everard worked closely with students, Krische said.
"He was an educator," Krische said. "He enjoyed his time at KU very much and worked well with the faculty and the students."
Everard also enjoyed KU's Fine Arts programs as well as KU basketball, Krische said.
ON THE RECORD
Everard's good attitude toward his work was one of his best qualities, Krische said. Dedication was another, he said.
"He was very much committed to the renewal of the Church," he said. Everard will be missed by the St. Lawrence Center, Krusche said.
The funeral Mass will be celebrated at 11 a.m. today at the Church of St. Patrick, 1086 N 94th. St., Kansas City, Kan. Visitation will be from 3 to 6 p.m. today at St. Patrick's, and a prayer vigil will be at 4:30 p.m.
A KU employee's radar detector, book and Bible, valued together at $110, were taken Wednesday or Thursday in the 1900 block of Heatherwood Drive, Lawrence police reported.
A KU employee's parking permit, valued at $3, was taken Thursday or Friday in the 1900 block of Kasold Drive, Lawrence police reported.
A KU employee's window was broken Friday in the 600 block of Illinois Street, Lawrence police reported. Damage was estimated at $100.
A student's car window was broken Saturday in the 400 block of North Second Street,
Lawrence police reported. Damage was estimated at $250.
A student's wallet and its contents, valued together at $18, were taken Friday in the 900 block of Arkansas Street, Lawrence police reported.
A student's car stereo, valued at $200, was taken Thursday or Friday in the 1400 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence police reported
A student's videocassette recorder, compact discs, wallet, checkbook and miscellaneous jewelry, valued together at $835, were taken Thursday or Friday in the 1200 block of Ohio Street, Lawrence police reported.
Narcotics Anonymous will meet at 11:30 a.m. today at Alcove in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Andy at 843-9461 or Laura at 887-0753.
ON CAMPUS
The Office of Study Abroad will hold a video presentation on study in Denmark from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. today in front of the Kansas Union. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742.
St. Lawrence Catholic Center will sponsor a Catholic law student discussion group at 12:30p.m. today in 109 Green Hall. For more information, call 843-0357.
KU Tae Kwon Do will meet at 6 p.m. today in 207 Robinson Center. For more information call Jacob Wright at 749-2084
or Jason Anishanslin at 843-3099.
Harambe will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in the American Baptist Center, 1629 W. 19th St. For more information, call Anthony Case at 865-1828.
Black Student Union will meet at 7 tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Terry Bell at 864-3984.
KU Yoga will meet at 7 onight at Room 310 in the Burge Union. Membership dues for the 13 weeks are $39 or $3 per session. Guest memberships are available for walks at $4 per session. Payment plans are available. Bring a mat or blanket and wear loose clothing. For more information, call
Yvonne Coldera at 841-0766.
Native American Student Association will meet at 7 tonight in 3012 Haworth Hall. For more information, call Johnnie Young in the Office of Minority Affairs at 864-4351.
St. Lawrence Catholic Center will hold a "Fundamentals of Catholicism" class at 7 tonight at Room 101 in the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
St. Lawrence Catholic Center will show a video, "Exploring the Faith," at 8 tonight at Room 101 in the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
4
Monday, September 27,1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y., has come out in favor of bullet control. He presented a bill in Congress to tax ammunition at 1,000 percent. The bill would also ban certain types of ammunition not used for hunting.
THE BACKGROUND
There are 200 million firearms owned in the United States. Even if the Brady Bill passes, it will not take the guns out the hands of those already owning them. Currently in the United States, there is a four-year supply of ammunition available.
THE OPINION
Taxes on ammunition could stop gun violence
This issue is not gun control. It is about saving lives and making the streets of the United States safer. Daniel Patrick Moynihan and his supporters do not want to prevent anyone from hunting deer or prairie chickens, just human beings. The proposal is to ban certain kinds of ammunition which are not used for hunting but for spraying crowds of people from tower tops or passing cars. Supporting this concept is one way that people in the United States could move about safely.
It has been suggested that the proposed tax on bullets could be a way to increase revenue for health care. The revenue also could be distributed to states to increase the number of police officers on the streets or to fund an all-encompassing research project to find out why violence is rampant in the United States.
In Canada and Australia, it is more difficult to have guns and ammunition than it is in the United States. In 1990, 10 murders by handguns were committed in Australia, 68 in Canada and 10,567 in the United States. It is obvious that action has to be taken, even if it is only a Band-Aid solution. With time, maybe all of these solutions will work together to lower the death toll in this country.
Everyone can have the guns they feel they need for hunting and self-protection; they can have the bullets, too. Even the most staunch advocate of the Second Amendment should admit that one only needs a few rounds to protect home and hearth.
MICHELLE SMITH FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Search for permanent deans must speed up
Help Wanted: Deans to fill positions.
The school of education and the school of pharmacy have been without a dean for more than a year, and the law school and the school of architecture will be without a dean by the end of the school year. For professional schools to operate successfully a permanent dean must be in place. A two or five-year appointment to school required of permanent dean is a stronger commitment than what is expected of an interim dean.
Both students and faculty of these schools need the security that a permanent dean can bring. The administration has been searching for replacements but claims it has not found qualified people for these positions.
Administrators should speed up the searches, place the most qualified people in these positions and realize that these schools will be in limbo as they wait for a new permanent dean.
TERRILYN McCORMICK FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
KC TRAUER, Editor
IOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
Assistant to the editor ... J.R. Clairborne
News ... Stacy Friedman
Editorial ... Terrilyn McCormick
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Krist Fogler
Photo ... Klip Chin, Renee Kneeber
Features ... Ezra Wolfe
Graphics ... John Paul Wolf
Editors
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviss
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ... Ed Schager
Regional sales mgr ... Jennifer Perrier
National sales mgr ... Jennifer Evenson
Co-op sales mgr ... Blythe Footh
Production mgr ... Jennifer Blowey
Kate Burgess
Marketing director ... Shelly Fuccio
Creative director ... Brian Fuco
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
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be nailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photorahmed.
BORIS YELTSIN'S PERSONAL HEALTH CARE PLAN
HOOD
JDK
'93
MILITARY
Driving around in Italy an adventure in itself
Recently, in an effort to gain insight into the European currency crisis, my family and I went to Italy.
Our plan was to rent a car and drive around on winding, picturesque Italian roads. Because we are international travel sophisticates, we went in the middle of August, which is when the entire population of Italy goes on vacation. It turns out that the No. 1 Italian vacation activity is to get in a car and drive around at approximately the speed of light.
I imagine that some traffic maneuvers are illegal in Italy. For example, you're probably not allowed to drive your car over a police officer without signaling. But other than that, pretty much anything goes. When we picked up our car in Rome, I asked a man for directions; he told me to start by driving the wrong way up a one-way street.
"Isn't that a one-way street?" I asked.
"Yes," he said, shrugging. "But who reads the siams?"
As far as I could tell in 10 days of driving around Italy, there is only one strict traffic regulation: You are NOT allowed to be behind another motorist. If somebody is in front of you, you MUST, by law, get past this person, even if you are on a winding road the width of a strand of No. 8 spaghetti, on a hillside next to a huge cliff. Several times I was passed by drivers who got past me by driving right off the cliffs' edge, so that their cars were briefly hanging right out in space, the way the cartoon Road Runner does.
We were on many small roads, because we stayed in some picturequeues villages built a thousand years ago by people who put massive stone walls around them to indicate that these villages were never intended for automobile traffic. But you have to try to drive in them anyway to reach your hotel. To do this, you follow a series of arrows, apparently put up by prankster villagers, which lead you through a maze of streets, sometimes passing the same point four or five times before reaching the center of the town, where the pranksters laugh as you inch your car through streets so narrow that they make the winding road look like the New Jersey turnpike, with stone walls scraping your car on both sides and even overhead. The only indication that you are on a legal automotive thoroughfare is that occasionally an Italian driver will pass you, if necessary by driving on your roof.
COLUMNIST
COLUMNIST
DAVE
BARRY
Once we reached the hotel, we did fine, thanks to my sophisticated knowledge of Italian. I had memorized the Italian expressions for "I do not speak Italian," and "Do you speak English?" As a result, on two occasions, I strode up to the hotel desk person and stated, in crude Italian, "I do not speak English."
Fortunately, the Italians are low on soot, so we were treated well despite communicating like tourist versions of Tonto ("We stay in room with toilet, yes?"). We ate many wonderful meals wherein they keep bringing you more courses. And when you finally stagger away from the table, they follow you
At one point in our vacation, we were in a very important church in Venice, and a guide was pointing toward the spot where St. Mark was entombed, and my son, looking impressed, said, "THE St. Mark?"
to your room and stuff food into your mouth while you sleep.
But of all our experiences, the one I remember most vividly was when we were in the Dolomite Alps, an area of spectacular natural beauty, and realized that our passports were missing. So I reported this loss to the local police, who typed up and handed me a detailed document that I believe said, in Italian, "The people holding this document have no idea what it says, but it will certainly get them out of our hair. Thank you."
In my sophistication, I actually believed that this document would be an adequate replacement for our passports. You can imagine how comical this seemed to the authorities when we got to the Milan airport and attempted to leave Italy. So our plane took off without us, and we got to spend a whole extra day in Italy, rearranging our travel plans and trying to prove to the American Consulate that we were Americans and should be permitted to return home. During this process, I thought a lot about Sheik Oman Abdel-Rahman, whom our government cheerfully admitted despite the fact he listed his occupation on his visa application as "Terrorist Loon."
Anyway, we eventually got home, bringing with us valuable insights into the European currency situation, the main one being that if you go over there, you should take a lot of it.
Not that I am bitter.
Dave Barry is a syndicated columnist with the Miami Herald.
INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
It is possible that (Boris) Yeltsin and his squad will emerge as victors in this battle. But the adventurous nature of this decision is evident. The necessity of this move is questionable. Why such a hurry? The impression which emerges is that
influential men of Yeltsin's presidential team have deemed it necessary to accelerate the confrontation with the opposition (the legislative power) before support behind Yeltsin plunges further.
Whatever happens, even if this new "legality" — instituted by decree — works (with or without blood), it is born stained by a "revolutionary" original sin, of which its creators will not easily cleanse
Force in implementing democracy demeaning
The dramatic turn in Moscow had been long in coming.
themselves. It will not be democratic because they will have to use force to implement it. And tomorrow, with other means of force, in other circumstances, other men, no less scrupulous than the present "winners," will assume the right to impose other "legalities" by decree, founded on other plebiscites.
LA STAMPA
TURIN, ITALY
Women and minorities still striving for equality
Janet Reno
Ruth Bader Ginsburg Joycelyn Elders.
Jaret Reno.
Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
STAFF COLUMNIST
TIFFANY
HURT
Mary Frances Berry.
It all began with Janet Reno. Clinton's appointment of Reno lead her to become the first female Attorney General.
But it didn't stop there. Joycelyn Elders, another African American, was nominated for Surgeon General. She was recently confirmed.
This year can be defined as "the year of women and minorities."
Next, Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Last month she became the second female Supreme Court Justice. Clinton nominated her to replace Justice Byron White upon his retirement.
Mary Frances Berry was recently appointed to head the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. If confirmed, Berry, an African American, will be the first female to head the commission. But Berry will not be alone. She will enter an administration with at least three other women and minorities that Clinton has appointed.
These four remarkable women will grace history books. They will serve as role models for future generations. It is refreshing to see that more women and minorities are given a chance to hold top level positions in government. For many years, women and minorities have been put on the back burner. They have been taught to sit on the sidelines instead of participate in the ball game.
It's not that women and minorities were not qualified to hold top level positions. They just were not given the chance to do so. I'm glad to see that we are making slow but sure progress.
But we still have a long way to go.
We still await the first female president. We still await the first minority president.
Having women and minorities in top level government positions not only creates equality for the people in the positions but the citizens of the United States. Government should adequately represent the people that it serves.
We still await a woman or minority vice president, chief supreme court justice, and so on.
Ournation consists of a diverse population. Thus, government should be diverse also. If it is not, everyone's needs can not be met. The concerns of women and minorities can not adequately be met if women and minorities are not adequately represented in government.
A white male can not represent a minority person as adequately as a minority can. If minorities are put in top level positions, the voice of the minority can be heard. Berry, Reno, Ginsburg and Elders are minority voices that need to be heard. As women and minorities, they can adequately represent the views of women and minorities in America.
A. W. C.
A democracy is government for the people and by the people. But this only can be true if government is diverse. Government should continue to strive for diversity. And women and minorities should continue to strive for excellence.
Tiffany Hurt is an Overland Park senior majoring in Journalism and English.
University of Mars
HAL THF
ROBOZ
HAL THE ROBOZ
explores...
Trendy "EARTHY" SANDAIS
Let's hear
from some
people around
the U+01M1
CAMPUS.
FENDY EARTHY SANDALS
HAL THE ROBOT
Impresses...
Trendy "EARTHY" SANDAIS
I had my pair before they were popular!!
Most Common lie
THEY Hurt my Feet... I'm so ashamed.
Secret Confession
I used to make fun of them before they were in! But now I have a black pair to go with my convertible rabbit.
Function before Fashion
EXCUSE
Mine stink like over-cooked peas & cheese.
Popular Complaint
First Response: They're not too wide for my feet, are they?
That black smelly imprint of your Foot wasn't there when you first bought it.
FACT
I've moved on to clogs
FUTILE ATTEMPT TO AVOID BEING TRENDY
Let hear from some people around the UOE M1 CAMPUS.
!
They hurt my Peer...
I'm so ashamed.
Popular Complaint
THEY Hurt my Feet...
I'm so ashamed.
Secret Confession
First Response: They're not too wide for my feet, are they?
Pooopeeee Thaise
they were I have a
DOOD
I used to make an of them before they were in! But now I have a black pair to go with my convertible rabbit.
That black smelly imprint of your Foot wasn't there when you first bought it.
FA2T
by Joel Francke
Function before Fashion
EXCUSE
I've moved on to clogs
FUTILE ATTEMPT TO AVOID BEING TRENDY
we moved on to clogs
OP-ED UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 27,1993
5
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Victim refutes letter defending skinheads
I feel I must respond to the letter published on Sept. 14 entitled "Skinhead Label Is Used inappropriately." I could hardly believe what I was reading about how "Racist skinheads do not exist" and "We are constantly misrepresented by the media ..." I also take severe objection to the generalizations made about London skinheads. I seriously doubt Mr. Burk has ever been to London, let alone seen London skinheads in action. I myself was the victim of an attack by skinheads when I was six years old. I was attacked in a park by two skinheads who beat me for the hell of it. On a council estate near where I used to live, skinheads used to drive around and go 'Pak'bashing,' beating up Black people or those they considered 'ueer.'
The skinheads in London today wear swastika patches on the arms of their bomber jackets for a reason. They are racists, some are fascists, and they have never pretended otherwise. I am amazed at Richard Burk's claim that skinheads are multiracial. Having lived in London for 20 years, I have never seen a skinhead who is non-white. And the reason skinheads take the blame for senseless acts of hate is because they perform senseless acts of hate.
Perhaps I am mistaken and skinheads in the United States are different from their counterparts in Britain and the rest of Europe, but from my experience of them, they have no record to defend. Skinheads originated from a doctrine of white supremacy, hate and contempt for those who didn't adhere to their idea of a norm. Does Richard Burk take a great deal of pride in this?
I must emphasize I am writing about the skinheads of Europe, London in particular, but I would hate to think that those who read Mr. Burk's letter were so misled about skinheads that they believed them to be harmless. I advise Richard Burk to go and meet some London skinheads for himself, (if they'll talk to him, as he is non-British), and then see where his "racist skinheads do not exist" claim lies. It must be realized
that hate and violence do exist. It is only in understanding where hate comes from and why that we can find ways to overcome it.
Alexis Tregenza
London junior
As the president of Kansas City Baptist Temple Student Ministries, I have the responsibility to respond to the criticism directed to the ad in Monday's paper concerning Western Civilization and also to explain the reasons for its placement in the Kansan.
Text fails to explain Bible and its origins
First, I am afraid that Lane Jorgensen in his letter misunderstood our student organization.
Concerning our presentation about "Patterns," the Western Civilization textbook, in the Kansas Union on Wednesday, we wanted to challenge the literary and historical method that the book used to interpret the Bible. We think this method of interpretation is given too much support. The numerous inconsistencies and contradictions that it creates are not addressed. Also, it seems misleading to say that "most modern biblical scholars" support this method of interpretation, since most would imply more than half. Regarding this method, the popular "New International Version Study Bible" states on the second page, "This view is not supported by conclusive evidence, and intensive archaeological and literary research has undercut many of the arguments used to challenge Mosaic authorship." From this, I do not think the claim of "most scholars" can be supported with a statistic. Even if it was, I caution anyone from jumping on the bandwagon. The purpose of our activity was to caution the student body not to put stock in the conclusions reached by the textbook. There is sufficient scientific evidence to support the claims that the Bible makes about itself.
Ward Nitz Lee Summit senior
A couple of weeks ago, at about the same time a swastika was being scrubbed from the walls of a KU Jewish student building. I noticed a collection of particularly ugly anti-gay sayings scrawled on the wall of a Kansas Union bathroom. Among other things it said "all fags must die." Within a day the wall was quietly repainted, no doubt by some embarrassed Union custodian.
New conversation on KU prejudice needed
Two incidents, one visible and the other less so, of prejudice and bigotry have occurred on campus and in Lawrence. Such things are happening more and more on college campuses, and the response has become fairly standardized. We erase the graffiti. We then either act as if nothing happened or, if this is impossible, issue yet another shrill denouncement, in the Kansan or wherever, that racism and homophobia will not be tolerated on our campus.
But do we understand exactly what is occurring here? This was not the work of regimented, dedicated fanatics. No, this is the bigotry of weaklings on a spree, tweaking the noses of authority and giggling to themselves over their little mutinies. And do we realize that our ceremonies of erasure and condemnation merely serve to increase the frequency of these acts? Bigotry and intolerance have been relegated by well-meaning people to the realm of forbidden behavior.
I am not trying to offer acceptable alternatives. I would like only to suggest that our response to intolerance has become stale and ineffective. We have created a dialogue in which prejudice and hatred are allowed to flourish underground, real concerns and fears are improperly acknowledged and freedom of expression is sometimes trampled. We need to begin a new conversation, within the pages of the Kansan and elsewhere, which re-examines the root assumptions of our current approach, for something seems terribly amiss.
Conway, Ark., graduate student
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Monday, September 27, 1993
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APPLE
THE NEWS in brief
ORACLE, Ariz
Biosphere 2's crew ends two-year stay in isolation experiment
Biosphere 2's crew emerged yesterday from a two-year experiment in self-sufficiency, filling their lungs with fresh air and waving to about 2,500 reporters and cheering well-wishers.
Operators of the experiment said that the crew set a record for living inside an essentially closed structure designed as a mini-earth with rain forest, ocean, savannah and farm.
But the dome was opened more than two dozen times, first for crew member Jane Poyner's finger surgery and later for import of thousands of small items, including seeds, sleeping pills, mousetraps and makeup. Outside air was pumped in once and pure oxygen was added twice to balance the atmosphere.
After testing and upgrading equipment, operators of the $150 million private, for-profit enterprise plan to resheal the dome with a second crew early next year for a one-year stay.
"They said it couldn't be done," crew member Mark Nelson said. "But here we are—healthy, happy."
The four-man, four-woman crew that left Biosphere yesterday ranged in age from 29 to 69, and most spoke fondly of the world they were leaving.
"I certainly had a big lump in my throat as I walked around Biosphere 2 this morning," said crew member Sally Silverstone of England. "I milked the goats for the last time, fed the chickens for the last time, I saw the sunrise on the space frame in my apartment for the last time."
Crew members lost an average of 13.65 percent of their body weight on a diet heavy on such items as sweet potatoes, rice, peanuts, bananas and wheat. They occasionally had an egg, chicken or goat meat and coffee.
The experiment also had been accused of deception and amateur science and drew more than 400,000 paying visitors in two years.
WASHINGTON Bosnian peace required before aid
If President Clinton orders U.S. soldiers into Bosnia on a NATO peacekeeping mission, thousands of troops will enter Sarajevo in an airborne show of force that could be mounted within days of his request, military planners said.
But before U.S. troops go in, the Pentagon wants to see a peace accord that holds — with the combatants separated from one another, heavy artillery withdrawn and the free flow of humanitarian supplies assured, planners said.
"Both the combatants and their political leaders must be
"Because when you commit to something like this, as we found out in Somalia, if you don't watch out, what your basic premise was ends up not being what the U.N. or the NATO premise was," he said. "Then you're in a situation where the mission gets broader and broader and it's very difficult to find an ending point."
committed to it before this will work," a planner said.
WASHINGTON
End role in Somalia, senators say
The six-month deployment plan, which could involve about 75,000 troops, is subject to change given the uncertainty of the political situation and the administration's wish for Congress' approval.
Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., and chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, said yesterday that the United States must have "a very clear exit strategy" before sending any troops.
Expanding the peacekeeping mission in Somalia was a mistake, and it is time for Congress to narrow the U.S. role there so it has a definite ending point, the chair of the Senate Armed Services Committee said yesterday.
"This mission cannot continue to be enlarged. And I would make that mission very narrow based on what I know now," Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., said on NBC's "Meet the Press."
Demands for an end to the U.S. military presence in Somalia were given new impetus Saturday when Somali militiamen shot down a U.S. helicopter with a rocket-launched grenade. Three U.S. servicemen died. Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va., called for a rapid withdrawal before more Americans are killed.
The train plunged off a wood-and-steel bridge into the dark water early Wednesday. The accident, the worst in Amtrak's history, was survived by 163 people.
"I don't think capturing one person is going to end this," Nunn said, referring to the search for warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid.
Still moored nearby were barges that investigators believe struck the railroad bridge shortly before the train careened into the water before dawn. A tugboat lost the barges in heavy fog.
SARALAND, Ala.
Amtrak engine pulled from bayou
The baggage car of the California-to-Florida passenger train was pulled from Bayou Canot earlier in the day, leaving only one of three engines to be removed by crane from the bayou near Mobile, Ala.
Crews began hauling the last engine of the wrecked Sunset Limited out of a muddy bayou yesterday while other workers repaired the bridge from which it plunged, carrying 47 people to their deaths.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 27, 1993
7
Supporters cheer Yeltsin
Protesters defy orders to leave the Parliament
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Thousands of Russians cheered Boris Yeltsin at a concert on Red Square yesterday, and at least 10,000 people marched through downtown in the biggest demonstration of support for the president since he disbanded Parliament five days ago.
Across town, the hard-liners who have defied the president by refusing to leave the parliament building dug in their heels.
"If need be, we will stay here for a year," said Parliament speaker Russian Khanbulasulov, leader of approximately 100 lawmakers who remain holed up in the building, known as the White House.
Foreign Minister Andrei Koziyev, speaking yesterday on NBC's "Meet the Press," said that if there is a "growing mood" in the country, Yeltsin might compromise on his plan.
Late yesterday, in a potentially significant development, the Interfax news agency reported that a top Yeltsin alde had agreed to simultaneous parliamentary and presidential elections. No date was mentioned, and the president has not approved the proposal.
Yeltis has set new parliamentary elections for December and said presidential elections could be held in June. Khasbulatov's parliament, elected in Soviet times, wants simultaneous elections in March.
But Kozyrev said he believes simultaneous elections are "very, very dangerous" and could destabilize the country.
Yeltsin, accompanied by Defense Minister Pavel Grachev and Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov, waded into surging crowds on Red Square for a free concert by the Washington-based National Symphony Orchestra and its conductor, former dissident Mistislav Rostropovich.
The president waved and smiled taking his place at the front of the crowd. He cracked a smile again when earblasting cannons went off during Tchaikovsky's "1812 Overture."
"Someone has to be in office," he said.
An announcer urged "faith in the president and in Russia's future," and the crowd responded "Hurrah! Hurrah!"
cert to give Russians hope and confidence during the transition to a post-Soviet democracy.
Outside the White House, Yeltsin's rebellious vice president, Alexander Rutskoi, urged 3,000 to 4,000 anti-Yeltsin demonstrators "to stand till the end." Rutskoi has condemned Yeltsin's actions as unconstitutional and declared himself president.
At a news conference, Khasbulatov said that he would not deal with Yeltsin, saying elections could be held only if the "former president leaves his Kremlin office."
The deputies have little popular support in Moscow, and Khasbulatov said Saturday that they might move to another city. Yesterday, he said five or six cities had been selected should the Parliament be evicted "or the speaker eliminated or arrested."
A longtime backer of Yeltsin, Rostropovich has said he wanted the con-
Electricity and phones have been cut off to the White House.
'Virginity' comments denounced by faculty
The Associated Press
AMHERST, Mass. — The faculty senate at the University of Massachusetts voted to "emphatically dissociate itself" from the views of an English teacher who said professors can help some female students lose their virginity.
"In the public's eye he was identified with the faculty, and a lot of people out there thought he represented our views." English professor Jeremiah Allen, who sought the vote, said Friday. "I wanted to make it clear that he did not represent our views."
More than 100 faculty representatives approved Allen's motion, which did not refer to English professor William W. Kerrigan by name. One person was opposed and one abstained.
Kerrigan did not attend the meeting Thursday, but he said Friday that he had no quarrel with the section of the motion that said professors should maintain a "strictly professional" relationship with the students they teach or supervise.
In an interview published in the September issue of Harper's magazine, Kerrigan said sex between students and professors was not necessarily a bad thing.
The professor said he was "not defending Don Juianism, you know, sex for grades and so forth. But there is a kind of student I've come across in my career who was working through something that only a professor could help her with. I'm talking about a female student, who for one reason or another had unnaturally prolonged her virginity...
"There have been times when this virginity has been presented to me as something that I, not quite another man, half an authority figure can handle—a thing whose preciousness I realize."
U.S. confronts Russia about lost Korean War prisoners
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The U.S. government has confronted Moscow for the first time with evidence that hundreds of U.S. Korean War prisoners were secretly moved to the Soviet Union, imprisoned and never returned.
The allegation, supported by new information from a variety of U.S. and Russian sources, was made in a detailed presentation by a State Department official at a meeting with Russian officials in Moscow earlier this month.
The evidence is spelled out in a government report titled "The Transfer of U.S. Korean War POWs to the Soviet Union." It was given to the Russians at the Moscow meeting, but the Clinton administration has refused to release it.
A copy of the report was obtained by The Associated Press.
"The Soviets transferred several hundred U.S. Korean War POWs to the U.S.S.R. and did not repatriate them," the report says. "This transfer was mainly politically motivated with the intent of holding them as political hostages, subjects for intelligence exploitation and skilled labor within the camp system."
It asserts that the evidence gave a "consistent and mutually reinforcing description" of Soviet intelligence services forcibly moving U.S.POWs to the Soviet Union at a time when the Soviet military, including anti-aircraft units, was active in North Korea.
It does not assess how long the U.S. servicemen — mostly Air Force aviators — may have lived or whether any might still be alive in the chaotic former Soviet Union.
Just last year, the U.S. government said it had
no evidence of such transfers. Washington has known, though, since the end of the war that some evidence existed that U.S. POWs from Korea had been taken to the Soviet Union. It asked Moscow for information on this in May 1954 and July 1956. Both times the Soviet government denied any knowledge of U.S. POWs on its soil.
Russian President Boris Yeltsin said last year that Soviet records showed that 59 captured U.S. servicemen in Korea were interrogated by Soviet officials and that 12 crew members of U.S. aircraft shot down in reconnaissance missions unrelated to the Korean War were transferred to Soviet territory. But the Yeltsin government has yet to concede that Americans were taken from Korea.
In the three years of fighting in Korea, in which the United States led a U.N. force on the side of South Korea against communist North Korea, 54,246 Americans were killed. The government lists 8,140 as unaccounted for, although the number of missing for which there is no direct evidence of death is estimated at 2,195. Many of the unaccounted for were not recovered because they were buried in battlefield graves in North Korea or died in POW camps.
The 77 page U.S. report on U.S. Korean War prisoners delivered to Russia gives no specific figure, but the analysis seems to indicate it is fewer than 600.
It identifies by name 31 missing Air Force F-66 fighter pilots who are among the most likely identifiable servicemen to have been taken by the Soviets for their knowledge of the plane's capabilities.
Was former hostage a hero or a stooge?
Publication of Waite's memoirs revives questions
The Associated Press
LONDON — Freed from the chains, the fear and the boredom
PETER DAVIDSON
Terry Waite
The publication of Waite's
memoir, "Taken on Trust," has revived charges that the Church of England envoy was naive, or an ogoniacian, or a stooge of Oliver North; that Waite took credit for hostage releases actually bought with U.S. arms shipments to Iran; and that Waite is still holding back some of the truth.
Waite insists his conscience is clear.
Whatever his motives, Waite paid a severe price: 1,763 days of captivity, most of them in solitary confinement.
The aide to Archbishop of Canterbury Robert Runcie had been involved in securing the release of British prisoners from Iran and Libya. In 1984, an American Presbyterian official, Fred Wilson, sought Waite's help on behalf of the Rev. Benjamin Weir, who had disappeared in Lebanon.
Weir's captors, Islamic Jihad,
took more hostages in 1985; Terry
Anderson, the Rev. Martin Jenco,
David Jacobsen and Thomas
Sutherland.
Weir was released in September 1985. Two months later, The Associated Press bureau in Beirut received a letter signed by Anderson, Jacobsen, Jenco and Sutherland, addressed to the Archbishop of Canterbury.
It carried a crucial message: "Our captors have indicated they are willing for you to be involved ..."
Waite went to Beirut, met a representative of the kidnappers and
returned with four Polaroid photographs of the captives, each holding a copy of the Wall Street Journal that Waite had signed.
Jenco was released in July 1986 and Jacobsen the following November.
To Walle's critics, this was taking credit where none was due.
Amid the Iran-Contra uproar, Waite returned to Beirut in January 1987 — in part, he said, to demonstrate he had nothing to hide. He said he also had been told one of the hostages — either Sutherland or Anderson — was gravely ill.
Waite went alone to the office of a Dr. Mroueh, again meeting the representative of the kidnappers to set up a meeting with the hostages.
At a news conference last week, Waite said he expressed fear that he would be taken hostage, but the representative assured him that would not happen.
"And I said, 'Give me your word as a Muslim that you will not keep me.' He stretched out his hand, he gave me his hand ..." Waite said.
But he was soon taken captive and kept alone for nearly four years. Waite did not meet Anderson, Sutherland and British hostage John McCarthy until he was put in their cell in late 1990.
Richard Secord, retired U.S. Air Force general convicted for his Iran-Contra activities, has said Waite served as "a convenient lightning rod for us to keep the prying eyes of the press diverted from our covert operations."
Waite now believes that he may have been caught between two agendas: the kidnappers seeking the release or at least better conditions for relatives imprisoned in Kuwait and the Iranians using the situation to get U.S. arms.
He concedes hostages may have been released because of arms trades and not because of his efforts.
"But how does one know that at the time, you see?" Wait asked.
As his book was released last week, a British Broadcasting Corp. documentary showed Waite putting the question to North: Had he been used?
"Oh, very much so," North said. "Our government did use you. It uses people every day."
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When the bill arrives at the table, most restaurant patrons begrudgingly find themselves fumbling for spare change or roughly calculating 15 percent.
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
Tips often pay the bills
In Lawrence, a city full of fast food restaurants and fine dining establishments, many KU students turn to food service jobs to pay their rent and tuition. In fact, many students depend on tips for a living.
So what is proper tipping etiquette?
Martellaro said that the job of food servers was strictly to serve food and to attend to the needs of the customer.
John Martellaro, restaurant critic for the Kansas City Star, said everyone should reward good service, even college students living on tight budgets.
"If the food is undercooked or overcooked, the room is too cold or the person seated at the table next to you is blowing smoke in your face — you can't take that out on the person serving your food," he said. "Their tip is based on how well they attend to your needs, and they make a living on that tip."
"Waiters and waitresses depend on tips for survival," he said. "If you can't afford to tip, then you should take your business to McDonald's."
The American Bistro, 101 W. 7th St., caters to an older age group, usually parents of KU students, said waitress Simone Wehbe, Omaha, Neb., senior.
Fifteen to 20 percent was the tipping guideline to follow no matter what restaurant, Martellaro said but it could vary with the level of service.
"College students don't come in as much, but when they do are excellent tippers," she said. "I think if a student can come in and pay for a meal, they should be able to afford a tip too."
At Carlos O'Kelly's Mexican Cafe, 707 W. 23rd St., Michelle Rotering, supervisor, said most KU students tipped better than Lawrence residents.
"A lot of college students have waited tables before to get themselves through school," Rotering said. "They know what it's like, and that's where the big difference is. I think everyone should have to wait tables once in their life."
Dana Breashears, Hot Springs, Ark., senior, said she did not think people realized how food servers were paid.
Many servers are paid less than minimum wage and depend on tips to supplement that salary, said Breahears, who is a waitress at Perkins, 1711 W. 23rd St.
"It's a job with a lot of adjustments," she said. "Some days I might walk out of here with $80, and some days I might leave with $20. It all depends on the day, the people and the mood."
PASSING ON THE WALK OF SUCCESS
Yom Kippur William Alix / KANSAN
From left, Steve Jacobson, HILLEL president, Jack Winerock, chair of the Lawrence Jewish Community Center, Fredric Scheff, Lawrence resident, and Lois Schneider, community center president, lead 400 people in the Yom Kippur ceremony Friday night at the Kansas Union.
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SPORTS
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Monday, September 27,1993
9
Retiring Brett keeps swinging away
Memories remain of World Series No.3,000,pine tar
By Craig Horst
Associated Press sportswriter
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — George Brett, his career in its final days, will not go quietly.
One day after announcing his retirement, Brett showed there is still plenty of baseball left in his 40-year body after 20 seasons with the Kansas City Royals.
Yesterday, he doubled in the first inning against the California Angels and hit a three-run homer in the fourth. That took him past two more Hall of Famers — Jimmie Foxx and Ted Williams — with 1,118 extra base hits, 10th on the all-time list.
But for all the extra-base hits, the cham-
But for all the extra-base hits, the championship in 1985, the pine tar game, Brett
ROYALS: George Brett had two homers
and five RBIs in the 9-8 victory against California. Page 10.
said he will miss other things, simpler things, that have nothing to do with a pennant run or a chase for a batting title.
"Just being around the guys," he said. "The camaraderie. The bus rides. Sometimes some of the bus rides can be pretty funny. Not really the plane travel, I'll miss some of the towns. Boston, Seattle."
Boston and Brett have a mutual admiration. Boston fans, sensing this 20th season was his last, gave him six standing ovations during the Royals' last series there.
Jamie Quirk has seen Brett through the years. He was hired as a Royals coach this season when his career at Oakland ended, and he remains one of Brett's closest friends.
"Time and time again, he would come through," Quirk said. "You would just sit there and hope that he would have a chance to come up and do it again. You'd
look at the guy batting and say 'Get a hit so George can have a chance to come up. Let him take one more shot at it.'
"You think of one highlight and then you think of another and we could sit here for hours talking about it. He's just a certain type of ballplayer that I don't think people here realized what they've had. There are a lot of cities that will never experience a player like him."
Brett, who will become vice president of baseball operations for the Royals, was criticized by some for not being a more demonstrative leader on a team for which he played his entire career. Brett simply chose to lead with his bat and glove.
"He's an amazing guy," said John Wathan, who played with and managed Brett and now is a coach with the California Angels. "I guess I'll think of how he played the game. All the big games he's had, it's hard to pick one out. He just played the game hard."
If pressed, both Wathan and Quirk would say Brett's three-run home run off Goose Gossage in Game 3 of the 1980 AL playoffs
was their most memorable moment. It sent the Royals into their first World Series.
That was the year Brett flirted with becoming the first player to hit. 400 since Williams hit. 406 in 1981. It was a sundrenched Sunday afternoon in August when Brett doubled to push his average to 401.
He finished at .300, and got one of his three batting titles. This year he joined Willie Mays, Hank Aaron and Dave Winfield as the only players with 3,000 hits, 300 homers and 200 stolen bases.
Brett, finishing his career as a designated hitter, was as elegant as anyone at the plate. But he also knew a thing or two about playing third base and has a 1985 Gold Glove to show for it.
That was also the year the Royals beat St. Louis and won the World Series. And Brett had a baseball memory like no other. Nothing else is close. Eight years later, the picture is as clear as ever.
"Hugging Bret Saberhagen after the seventh game in 1985," he said.
BRETT
5
993
Brett's best BRETT 5
Lifetime statistics through
Sept. 26, 1993
Batting average .305
Hits 3,151
RBI 1,594
Home Runs 317
Doubles 665
Triples 137
Source: Kansas City Star. Associated Press John Paul Fogel/KANSAK
Water-skiing team retains Big Eight title
By Mac Engel
Special to the Kansan
The Kansas water-ski team successfully defended its Big Eight title this weekend in the Third Annual Big Eight Waterski Championships at the Mokan Waterski Club.
Led by senior Tim Shellenberger and sophomore Tara Shelinbarger, Kansas won four of the six events and won its third consecutive title at the club, located east of Lawrence.
Kansas State finished second, Iowa State third and Oklahoma State fourth in the four-team tournament.
Shellenberger took first place in the men's jump and men's slalom. He said that despite this weekend's cool temperatures, the tournament was a success.
Shelinbarger won the women's trick, took second in both the women's slalom and the women's jump. She said that she was satisfied with her performance despite the cold weather.
"My trick was the best I have ever done," she said.
Other Kansas winners were sophmore Lisa Dolejs, who won the women's slalom, and freshman Ryan Leff, who placed third in the men's trick.
"Distances were down by 20 feet," he said. "I barely made the ramp."
Skiers were cautious of winds that reached 20 mph during the weekend, said Oklahoma State junior Jason Rozneck. He said that high winds made the jumps more difficult.
he said. Twenty made it. Sophomore Tim Dunn of Iowa State, who finished first in the men's trick and third in the men's slalom, agreed that the weather played a large role at the tournament.
"The weather threw us all off," Dunn said. "I was bounced all over in the tricks."
The winds became so high that the last round of the jump competition was canceled.
The Kansas water-ski team will finish its regular season next week in a tournament in Syracuse, Ind.
KA
Paul Kotz/KANSAN
Poised for the sack
John Jeffries, San Diego sophomore and member of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, sets up a pass that Mike Konen, Overland Park junior and member of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity, attempts to block during a scrimmage game. The game was yesterday at Shenk Complex, the playing fields at 23rd and Iowa streets.
Volleyball victories may result in ranking
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
In the course of one weekend, the Kansas volleyball team went from being merely a 6-5 team to a team vying for a regional ranking.
Thanks to a 3-0 record Friday and Saturday at the Pittsburgh Tournament in Pittsburgh and a victory at the University of Akron yesterday, the Jayhawks are now 10-5. Kansas won the tournament against teams that are ranked regionally or that were ranked last year.
"I didn't know how we would do." Coach Frankie Albitz said. "All our matches were tough. That was a high-level tournament. Maybe not a top 20, but probably a top 30 tournament."
Since Baylor defeated Kansas on Sept. 6, the Jayhawks have gone 9-1 and now expect a regional ranking.
Kansas opened the tournament Friday against Virginia Tech and defeated the Hokies 17-15, 11-15, 15-7 and 15-10. Saturday, the Jayhawks defeated the host team, the University of Pittsburgh, 15-12, 7-15, 15-12 and 17-15. The team clinched the tournament title later that day with a victory against Syracuse.
Sophomore setter Lesli Steinert orchestrated the Kansas attack against Pittsburgh with 63 assists, just six short of a Kansas single-match individual assist record.
Kansas outside hitters senior Shelby Lard and sophomore Tracie Walt capitalized on those assists. Walt had 16 kills and a .424 hitting percentage, and Lard added 15 kills with a .200 hitting percentage.
"I felt really good against Pittsburgh," Walt said. "My hitting percentage that match was a career high for me."
Walt said the team knew it had to play its best in the tournament.
"In the past, when we have been behind, we have trouble coming back," she said. "This weekend, I think we came back twice when the other team was at game point."
Steinert said team passing combined with hitting by Walt and senior Cyndee Kanabel at middle blocker had allowed her to accumulate the assists.
"Overall, since the passing was good, I had a lot more options for sets," Steinert said. "The hitters tried for every set. If it wasn't a good set, they did their best to put it away. It made me look good."
Even though the Jayhawks defeated Syracuse 11-15, 15-6, 15-7 and 15-7 in their last match on Saturday, Albiz said she was surprised by Syracuse.
"They didn't look very good in their other matches, but they played us tough." Albitz said.
Kanabel led Kansas to the victory with 25 kills and a career-high 579 hitting percentage. She was named the tournament's Most Valuable Player. Steinert and Kanabel were selected to the all-tournament team.
Walt said the tough matches had taken their toll on the team. After playing three matches in two days, the team was not sure about yesterday's match with Akron, she said.
"Our record of playing Sunday games after a tournament isn't really good," Walt said. "We were a little worried. We didn't know what to expect."
Kansas won the match 15-11, 15-8 and 17-15, but Steinert said the match should not have been that close.
"From last year, we knew that they weren't a really good team," Steinerrd said. "We should have just come out and beaten them. But we were tired, and I think they knew that."
Albitz said that time had prepared Kansas for this tournament, compared to the team's first tournament at Northern Illinois. In the Sept. 3-4 tournament, the Jayhawks lost the three matches against Colorado State, Northern Illinois and Northwestern.
"The first tournament is always tough," she said. "After that first tournament, it was like my team just woke up. They are playing well now."
Top 25 teams
The Associated Press 1993 college foot ball pit. first place votes in parentheses, records through Sept. 25, total points based on 25 points for a first place vote through one point for a 25th vote, and ranking in last week's poll.
| | Record | Pts | Pts | Pts |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1. Florida St. (58) | 4-0 | 1,154 | 1 | 1 |
| 2. Alabama (4) | 4-0 | 1,482 | 2 | 3 |
| 3. Miami | 4-0 | 1,414 | 3 | 4 |
| 4. Notre Dame | 4-0 | 1,361 | 4 | 5 |
| 5. Florida | 4-0 | 1,297 | 5 | 6 |
| 6. Nebraska | 4-0-0 | 1,180 | 6 | 7 |
| 7. Ohio St. | 3-0 | 1,157 | 7 | 8 |
| 8. Michigan | 2-10 | 1,077 | 8 | 9 |
| 9. Penn St. | 2-10 | 1,058 | 9 | 10 |
| 10. Oklahoma | 3-0-0 | 1,006 | 10 | 11 |
| 11. Tennessee | 3-10 | 903 | 11 | 12 |
| 12. Arizona | 4-0-0 | 782 | 15 | 12 |
| 13. Syracuse | 3-0-1 | 750 | 12 | 14 |
| 14. Texas A&M | 2-10 | 718 | 14 | 16 |
| 15. Washington | 2-10 | 688 | 16 | 18 |
| 16. North Carolina | 4-1-0 | 648 | 18 | 20 |
| 17. California | 4-1-0 | 614 | 18 | 20 |
| 18. Louisville | 2-2-0 | 429 | 24 | 13 |
| 19. Colorado | 2-2-0 | 428 | 24 | 13 |
| 20. Brigham Young | 4-0-0 | 415 | 21 | 22 |
| 21. Virginia | 4-0-0 | 390 | 22 | 23 |
| 22. Wisconsin | 4-0-0 | 338 | 23 | 25 |
| 23. Auburn | 4-0-0 | 188 | 25 | 26 |
| 24. N. Carolina St. | 2-1-0 | 73 | 19 | — |
| 25. St. Louis | 3-0-1 | 71 | — | — |
Others receiving votes: Stanford 39, Mississippi 34, Virginia Tech 25, Southern Cal 17, UCLA 17, Northwestern 13, Bayton 11, Georgia Tech 10, Fresno State 7, Hawaii 7, Kansas State 7, San Diego State 6, Oregon 4, Indiana 2, Clemson 1.
CROSS COUNTRY
Source: The Associated Press
Teams hold their own at Boston College's weekend invitational
The Kansas cross country team traveled across the nation this past weekend to compete in the Boston College Cross Country Invitational at Boston's Franklin Park. The men's team came home with a fifth-place finish out of the 13 teams competing. The women's team brought home a third-place finish out of 12 teams competing.
Freshmen Bryan Schultz was the Jayhawk men's top runner, finishing 16th in the competition. He was followed by senior Bobby Palmer at 17th, senior Rosekrenzkanz at 25th, freshman Criss Cord at 32nd and keven Kovan长于 34th.
Assistant coach Steve Guymon said that he believed this team could have a good year despite losing sophomore starters Chris Ronan and Jeff Peterson to knee injuries.
"Last year we had high expectations on us; this year there is no pressure on us," Guymon said.
Saul was followed by junior Kristi Kloester who placed 11th, freshman Bridget Mann at 13th, junior Melissa Swartz at 16th and senior Daniella Daggy at 24th.
SPORTS in brief
The we men's team saw senior Julia Saul return to last year's top form as she was the top Kansas runner placing fifth overall.
Guymon said that he was pleased with the women's finish and that he had expected his team to compete well against teams like Providence and Dartmouth.
The teams will compete next weekend at the Minnesota Invitational in Minneapolis.
RACQUETBALL
RACQUETBALL Club does well at round robin
The four other schools competing in the tournament were Washington University, Wichita State, Missouri and one player from Southwest Missouri State. Players competed Friday evening and all day Saturday.
Some of the Kansas racquetball players will play this weekend in Kansas City, but the team will not play again until the Missouri tournament during the first weekend in November.
The Kansas racquetball club took first place in the men's and women's combined competition during a racquetball tournament this weekend in Robinson Center. It took second place in both the men's and women's divisions.
Kansas sophomore Brannon Hertel said that most tournaments consist of eight schools, but a round-robin tournament was played since this one only had five.
MEN'S TENNIS
Team survives first round
Every Kansas men's tennis player avoided immediate elimination by winning his first singles match during the Tom Fallon Invitational this weekend in South Bend, Ind.
In the 20 team tournament at Notre Dame, a player was eliminated after his first loss. Five of the eight Jayhawks played three matches. Sophomore Victor Fimbres played six matches in his division, defeating his five opponents
in two sets. He lost his sixth match to Jeff Clark of Vanderbilt 6-1, 6-2.
Top returning player, sophomore Reid Slattery, lost his second match to Steve Flanigan of West Virginia 6-3, 6-4.
The two doubles teams in the first flight, or division, lost their matches to Northwestern and Pennsylvania. The two doubles teams in the second flight won their first match. Sophomore Martin Eriksson and freshman Trent Tucker defeated Northern Illinois 9-8. They lost their second match to Michigan State 8-6. Sophomore J.P. Vissepo and freshman Tim Radogna won four matches before a duo from Notre Dame defeated them 8-4.
WOMEN'S TENNIS Invitational kicks off season
KU
Each member played four singles matches regardless of winning or losing the first match.
All the doubles teams, except for the team of Kirchhof and freshman Amy Trytek, who had a first round bye, won their open matches Fri
The women's tennis team traveled to Williamsburg, Va., this weekend for its season opener in the William and Mary Invitational.
Senior Mindy Weiner and freshman Bianca Kirchhof were the only Jayhawks to win their opening matches. Weiner defeated Jennifer Carlino of South Florida 6-3, 6-4, and Kirchhof defeated Helena Svanstrom of South Florida 1-6, 6-4, 6-4.
The team of Woods and Rogers was the only duo to win again after Friday. It defeated Notre Dame's team of Christy Faustmann and Erin Gowan 6-4, 7-6, 6-2.
day. Seniors Aby Woods and Kim Rogers defeated the Virginia team of Alison Cohen and Ly-Lan Schofield 6-7, 6-2, 6-2. Weiner and freshman Heather Heidel defeated South Florida's team of Svanstrom and Lisa Lodgegust 6-1, 6-2.
WOMEN'S GOLF Jayhawks nabs third in Iowa
After a one-day postponement, the Kansas women's golf team resumed play yesterday in the Hawkeye Invitational at the Finkbine Golf Course in Iowa City, Iowa.
The team finished third in the 10-team tournament, 12 shots behind Illinois and three shots behind Wisconsin. Kansas was the Big Eight's top participant, defeating fourth place Iowa State and sixth place Kansas State.
Senior Holly Reynolds led the team for the second straight tournament. She tied for fourth place with Kansas State's Jacque Wright. "She was followed by junior Ann Holbrook's four-way tie for seventh place and freshman Miss Russell's six-way tie for 11th place. Freshman Lori Lauritsen and junior Tracy Bellisle rounded out the Jayhawk scoring in a five-way tie for 17th
1
Kansas sportswriters Anne Feletter and Kent Holfield contributed to this report.
10
Monday, September 27.1993
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
AFC
West
**W L T DN**
Denver 2 1 0 1-0
L.A. Raiders 2 1 0 1-0
San Diego 2 1 0 1-0
Kansas City 2 1 0 1-0
Seattle 2 2 0 0-2
Central
Cleveland 3 1 0 1-0
Pittsburgh 1 2 0 1-0
Houston 1 2 0 1-0
Cincinnati 1 4 0 0-2
East
Buffalo 2 1 0 1-0
Indianaapolis 2 1 0 1-0
Miami 2 1 0 1-0
N.Y. Jets 2 1 0 2-0
New England 0 4 0 0-2
NFL
Source:Associated Press
NFC
ndianapolis 23, Cleveland 10
Minnesota 15, Green Bay 13
Los Angeles Rams 28, Houston 13
Miami 22, Buffalo 13
Chicago 47, Tampa Bay 17
Cincinnati 46, Pittsburgh 17
New Orleans 46, San Francisco 13
Seattle 19, Cincinnati 10
New York Jets 45, New England 7
West
West
W L T Div.
New Orleans 4 0 0 2-0
San Francisco 2 2 0 1-1
L.A. Rams 2 2 0 0-0
Atlanta 2 2 0 0-2
Central
Detroit 3 1 0 0-0
Minnesota 2 1 0 2-0
Chicago 2 1 0 1-1
Green Bay 1 2 0 0-1
Tampa Bay 0 3 0 1-0
East
N.Y. Giants 3 0 0 0-0
Philadelphia 3 0 0 2-0
Dallas 1 2 0 1-2
Washington 1 2 0 1-2
Phoenix 1 3 0 1-2
Tonight's game Pittsburgh at Atlanta 8 P.M. ABC
KANSAN
Brett propels Kansas City to victory
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — George Brett still can have fun playing baseball at age 40. All it took was his biggest game in five years.
The Associated Press
One day after he announced that he would retire at the end of the season, Brett. homered twice and drove in five runs, including a 10th-inning homer that gave the Kansas City Royals a 9-8 victory over the California Angels yesterday.
"I haven't been in that situation in a long, long time," said Brett, grinning as broadly as he has in years. "I never wanted to go out and not perform well. I'm not the player I once was, and I'll be the first to admit it."
Brett, who has three home games remaining, doubled in a run in the first and hit a three-run homer in the fourth. It was the second two-homer game this season and the 16th of his career. It was his first five-RBI game since May 22, 1988.
On Saturday, he said he was retiring because baseball had become a job. For a few hours, the second home run put those thoughts out of his head.
"I stayed with it and got it up in the jet stream," he said. "There was a pretty good crosswind out there today. But you are entitled to some of those. I've hit some into the wind, and I've hit some when there was no wind."
Brett took a little hop and pumped his arms as he rounded second base
after the high homeer into the rightfield bullpen. Reliever Bruce Kison retrieved the ball for him.
"If it's the last home run I ever hit, I'll have it inscribed and have it hang in my trophy case," Brett said. "Hopefully, there will be another. It would be sweet to have this come again Wednesday."
He waved to the fans who cheered long after both teams left the field and shook his head in disbelief as he returned to the dugout.
Brett, who leads the Royals with 74 RBIs, has four home runs in his past five games and 19 this season, his most since hitting 24 in 1988.
Kansas City tied the game in the ninth, scoring three runs with the help
of three walks. Brett was the first runner on base after he was hit by Steve Frey. Frey then walked a batter and was replaced by Joe Grahe, who walked two more batters, forcing in a run, and gave up a two-run single to Mike MacFarlane.
Javier's second homer this season gave California a 3-1 lead in the fourth, but Felix Jose's sacrifice fly and Brett's first homer put the Royals ahead 5-3 in the bottom of the inning.
California tied the score off Chris Haney in the fifth on RBI singles by Perez and Chris Turner and took ar. 85 lead in the sixth on Luis Polonia's RBI double off John Habyan and RBI singles by Chili Davis and Eduardo Perez off Stan Belinda.
2
Brian Vandervliet / KANSAN
School of hard knocks
Women's rugby coach Norm Chase is tackled by members of his Heart of America Women's Rugby team during a drill. The team, made up of rugby players from Northeast Missouri State, Kansas State and Kansas, practiced yesterday at Shenk Complex, the fields at 23rd and Iowa streets. The team will play in the Heart of America tournament on Oct. 2 in Norman, Okla.
Bv Ron Sirak
Associated Press sportswriter
SUTTON COLDFIELD, England — Let Europe have the best golfer in the world. The United States has the best team — and the Ryder Cup.
Even Nick Faldo's hole-in-one was not enough to stop a stirring comeback that allowed the Americans to keep the cup with a 15-13 victory yesterday over Europe.
Fred Couples, Chip Beck and Davis Love III rallied on the back nine at the cold, wind-swept Belfry course, and the U.S. team won five of the last six matches to hang on to the cup, which nearly slipped away several times.
It was the second successive victory
for the Americans, following the 14% to 13% win at Kiawah Island, S.C., in 1991, and the 23rd time the U.S. team has won in 30 Ryder Cups.
It also evened the record at two victories for each side and a tie since 1985 when the cup became much more competitive with a European victory at The Belfry.
"I think this is perhaps the greatest feeling I've ever had in my life, being captain of the Ryder Cup, even though I didn't hit a shot all week," Tom Watson said.
"We gave our hearts," said Faldo, who played up to his No. 1 ranking in the world. "It just wasn't enough."
It did not look like that would be the case early yesterday.
Play started with Europe holding a one point lead and the first five matches passed the treacherous 10th hole — the short par four that challenges players to drive over the water for the green — with the Europeans ahead.
But that is when the American charge started. From every corner of the course the meekest European move was met by thunderous roars that had U.S. players craning nervously to see the scoreboard. But it was the American nerves that held as the pressure built.
Pavin had been beaten by Peter Baker. The Europeans could have won the cup if Rocca had defeated Love and Faldo had beat Azinger.
Lee Janzens had already lost to Colin Montgomerie, John Cook had fallen to Joakim Haeggman, and Corey
And Love was one down going to the 17th hole. But again a European player buckled under the pressure and Love won the hole when Rocca missed a 4-foot putt. Rocca boyedey again on the 18th, and the match was won when Love rolled in a 6-foot parpall, all but sealing the Ryder Cup.
As Love's putt dropped, a small knot of Americans shrunched in red, white and blue and nearly swallowed up by the foot-stomping pro-Europe crowd, burst into a chant of "USA, USA, USA."
Outright AL West title in sight for White Sox
The Associated Press
CHICAGO - Now that the Chicago White Sox have clinched a tie for their first AL West title since 1983, they have seven more chances to clinch it outright.
A 5-3 victory against Texas in the opener of yesterday's doubleheader brought Chicago to the brink of the title, but a 3-2 loss in the second game delayed the celebration for at least one day.
"I'ts not over 'til they clinch," said Julio Franco, who put the Rangers ahead in the second game with an RBI double in the eighth. "We're not going to quit."
A crowd of 42,094 roared all afternoon. The White Sox, who lead second-place Texas by seven games with seven remaining, are home against Seattle tonight, and the Rangers play tomorrow night at Oakland.
"I don't think we've ever played more exciting games than we did today," Ozzie Guillen said.
Bo Jackson's bee was the highlight of the first game. Jackson hit his 14th homer in the second after a bee buzzed by the plate and chased him back to the dugout.
"I guess I was invading his space," Jackson said. "I tried to shoo him away but he came back. I tried again, and he came back. Then I was in the dugout."
Chicago manager Gene Lamont wasn't worried about Jackson getting stung.
"I don't care about the bee — only the home run," Lamont said.
Consecutive singles by Johnson, Ron Karkovice and Craig Grebeck gave Chicago a 2-0 lead in the fifth. The White Sox added three runs in the seventh on Ellis Burks' two-run double and Joey Cora's RBI single. Chris James hit a two-run single in the eighth for Texas.
Jason Bere, 11-5, won his sixth straight start. He gave up four hits in six innings, including Dean Palmer's 32nd homer. He struck out five, walked five and hit a batter.
The 22-year-old rookie said he was pumped up by the excitement of the series between the division leaders.
"It gives you a lot of adrenaline, sometimes too much," Bere said. "With two strikes, I wanted to go for the strikeout when it wasn't always a good idea."
The Associated Press
Toronto one game shy of solo AL East title
TORONTO — The Toronto Blue Jays clinched a tie for their third straight AL East title but missed a chance to win it completely yesterday, losing to Jim Abbott and the New York Yankees 7-3.
The Blue Jays needed to win their final home game of the season and have Baltimore lose once in a doubleheader against Detroit to wrap up their fourth division championship in five years.
Instead, a crowd of 50,518 — which boosted the Blue Jays' total to an an AL record 4,057,947 — saw the Yankees postpone the party. Toronto had clinched all four of its previous division titles at home, but New York scored five runs in the first and stopped Toronto's season-high, five-game losing streak.
Tofonto takes a magic number of one into Milwaukee, where Paul Molitor could help the Blue Jays clinch
tonight against his former Milwaukee teammates. The Orioles lost to Detroit 9-4 in their series opener and would have been eliminated with a loss in their second game.
By the time Toronto took the score on fan appreciation day, the scoreboard already showed Detroit ahead of Baltimore 5-0, helped by a home run from former Blue Jays player Cecil Fielder.
Fireworks were set off and they were the indoor kind, the retractable roof having closed in the middle of the game when clouds moved in.
The Blue Jays have drawn more than 4 million fans for three straight years and were the only team to reach the mark until the National League Colorado Rockies, an expansion team, set a major league attendance record this season. Toronto set an AL record last year with 4,028.318.
Of the 81 games at the Toronto Blue Jays this season, 71 were sellouts, including the final 49.
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The University of Kansas HOMECOMING 1993 KU vs. ISU Recycle the Cyclones! Parade applications available in the SUA office.
KUVS. ISU
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- Marching Bands and Banners- Deadline for entry applications is Friday, Oct. 8 at 5:00pm.
Required Parade Meetings
- Wednesday, Oct. 6 at 5:00pm in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union, Level 5. All FLOAT entries must have a representative present for rules and safety review by the KU Police. An absence from this meeting could result in disqualifications from the parade or loss of points.
4
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 27,1993
11
Laser Logic
Sales+Supplies+Rental
One Stop Source for All Laser Printer Needs 865-0505
Have you dined at The Castle Tea Room
lately?
Reservations only:
843-1151
Introducing Full Service Engraving Name Tags, Name Plates, Flags and More!
Jaybowl
Not just for bowling
any more!
864-3545
LSAT
GRE
GMAT
MCAT
The most complete arsenal of test prep tools in the world.
Classes forming now. 842-5442
KAPLAN RULES
Classified Directory
100s
Announcements
1015 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
130
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s Employment
105 Help Wanted
125 Professional Services
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on nationality, gender, race, ethnicity, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation on discrimination.
235 Typing Services
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any "private property" in a public space, race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are free to the public.
I
100s Announcements
105 Personals
%2A Lelea. All the way from U of I 1 just wanted to
love you. Love me! Drew 1 miss you and
love you. Love me! Lin Lina
110 Bus. Personals
Algebra got you down? As a tutor, I can help you.
It's time to finish the call. Can I call evensky and/or John Leave?
Yes, I can.
REMEMBER!
Costumes on 2nd floor for theme parties and of course Hallowen. Come on up!
928 Mass.-Downtown
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-1:30am
Organ Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10p
Saturday 11:30am-4:30p
Sunday 8:40am-4:30p
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Saturday 9am-12pm
Sunday 12am-3pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
KU Women! Mary Kay Cosmetics free facial and makeover. All new fall colors, personalized selection. No obligation to purchase. 645-4230
Universal Beauty Bridal Jewelry Hoop, Pendants & Mantle For Gums & Gals The Eie Shop. 928 Music Downstairs
FUNDRAISEERS, FUNDRAISEERS
FUNDRAISEERS!
RAISE $150 - $300!
GUARRETEED in one
week PLUS BONUS
up to $500!
Manage pamphons for tacmp
paniclet on one week on your campus.
Call for FREE GIFT and to
qualify for FREE TRIE to MTV
SPRING BREAK 94.
Call 1-800-950-137, ext.25.
120 Announcements
GET AWAY TO PRAIRIEWOODS: Treat your
sweetie to a day of relaxed hospitality, Massage,
outdoor spa, healthy foods, trees and privacy! $83-
$187 for rates/reservations.
MODELS NEEDED FREE HAIRCAUT! Men and women call Carmen Carol Salon 843-1453.
'FUNDRAISERS FUNDRAISER
FUNDRAISERS!
RAISE $150-$300
GUARANTEED in one
week PLUS BONUS
Manage promotions for top companies for one week on your campus. Call for FREE GIFT and to qualify for FREE TREAT to MTV
300s
Metal
merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
SPRING break'94.
Call 1-800-950-1037, ext.25.
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358-
USE KANSAN CLASSIFIED
CHRISTMAS SKI BREAKS
LODGING •LIFTS •PARTIES •PICNICS •TAXES
JANUARY 2-16, 1994 • 5, 6 or 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT* $199
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK*
TELLURIDE
*FREE 1/2 DAY
LIFT TICKET!
MUST BOOK BY 10/15
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
1·800·SUNCHASE
NEW YORK BEACH
SUNCHA
130 Entertainment
Drummer needed for Lawrence band. Must be able to play weekend and some weekends.
**Reqs:** Bachelors degree in Music or a related field.
MINDFLUX. A Cyberdelle Dance Experience.
Sat, Oct. 2, DJ JAY Velazquez, DJ Roland All ages/alcohol free, 9pm-3; OUTHOUSE, 4 miles E. of Mass. St., on 18th
LUSASA EMPLOYMENT- Fisheries. Earn up to
8000+4000 + mo. on fishing vessels or canneries.
Many companies provide transportation and room.
For more info; call 1-400-545-4155.
19788
MONDO DISCO Techno House, Hypnotic
Washroom 10' x 9' x 3' Kitten Park 18
& cover. Hide over-106 N. Park 18
Cash Caterers, Kansas and Burge Urions' Catering Department, September 28, 1983; 8:15pm-10:30am at the opening of the Led Center. Apply at the Kanaes and Burge Urions' Personnel Office, Level 5. Kanaas Union Building. Other dates available for Personnel Listings. Listings available in Personnel Office EOE
140 Lost & Found
Found: gold bracelet near design building, call 843-1638 to claim.
200s Employment
男士厕所
女士厕所
205 Help Wanted
A great opportunity for education maps! Storm Stones is hiring a lead teacher to work with kindergarten from 12:00 to 6:00 p.m. 2, 3 or 5 days a week. Apply today at 110 Wakaraura.
$ STOP ! DONT READ THIS! $
HELP WANTED: Fraternities, Sororites, Clubs
Rake money for your Group. Make 100% Profit
Bowling glasses for bowling glasses <45 at
AllSpelling (Group Event)
Day care needs experienced person. Must be available in the morning. hs/ 84, hr/ 81.
Martinis
steak veal pasta
Our high volume restaurant specializes in quality, customer, service and, hospitality.
at Johnson County's Hottest New Restaurant at 117th & Roe! Brought to you by MICHAEL FORBES RESTAURANTS
NOW HIRING
FULL STAFF
DEVELOPMENT/CONSTRUCTION CO. has part-time opening with flexible day hours for an office assistant. Chance for full-time summer employment and after graduation. Experience on IBM or Apple computers. Some accounting/bookkeeping experience necessary. Starting at $6.00 per hour. Please call 1-800-524-3232 for resume to P.O. Box 3008, Lawrence, KS 69016. Attn. Nita.
We are now accepting applications for:
*SERVERS
*BUSSERS
*COOKS
*DISHWASHERS
*HOST/HOSTESS
*BARTENDERS
Great wages and benefits!
Jomoño $2 pizza now has 5 delivery available.
Apply after 4pm, any day all shifts avail!
flexible hrs. average driver earns $7-410 an hour.
141-802.
Evening and weekend CNA's need to work with clients in their homes. Loanna at Douglas University in Seattle.
Full-time nanny needed for Lawrence family.
Competitive salary plus room and board. Ideal job for college student. Car and references required.
(816) 444-6400. No fee.
Apply in person
9-5 p.m. Mon.-Frl. at Parkway 600
on the Country Club Plaza
600 Ward Parkway,
K.C.M.O. 64112
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
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 benefits. Provides mental health services to SED children and family. Attn: Patricia Rocca. Please submit resume with cover letter in care of Sherry Engel Lawrence KS 60044. Open until filled. EOE KS 60044. Open until filled. EOE
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
Help needed. Adams Alumni Center needs morning dishwasher 3 a day, a week, minimum wage, position available immediately, apply in person.
1266 Oread Ave.
taking for a change second semester? Come live in our loving home. Free room, board plus salary. Work 5 plus hours a day while getting your education and be a mother's helper. Job consists of babysitting 2 year old and newborn, light housekeeping, cleaning, office work. Send me, in 100 words or less, why you are the best person for this job P.O. Box 1832, Lawrence, KS 60049
Kansas and Burge Union hiring part-time, hourly positions in Catering and Guestroom with varying schedules. Come to Personnel Office, Level 5, Kansas Union Building for job specifics. EOE
Live in many winnery 7-35:30 M-F, $42 monthly +
+ room & board, vacation & sick leave. Kids 7 &
4. House keeping & cooking duties. P/1 students
accepted, need references. 843-3887.
NABI Biomedical Center Introduces its Fall Special
$ Fast Cash $
Earn $15 today
Earn $30 this week
NOW HIRING smiling facing in a clean, grease-
free environment. Fast food exp. prefer. Apply
at MR. GOODENTCS Subs and Pastas. 15th and
Kasold. Hrs. 10:30 m - 11:09 m.
By donating your life saving Plasma
• Walk in Today •
9-6 M-F 10-3 Sat.
816 W 24th
749-5750
Innovative grant funded program designed to provide alternatives to psychiatric hospitalization of children with learning disabilities, Leavenworth, and Atchison counties needs persons to be on-call for short-term, crisis intervention care to emotionally disturbed children/adolescents with special emotional/behavioral skills, ability to be firm and consistent; experience and/or ability to learn to work with children and youth with special emotional/behavioral skills; inclusion in parents, mental health professionals, SRS workers, school personnel, court services, and others as needed. Nature of crisis intervention time positions are available. The following part-time positions are available.
FOSTER PARENTS to provide short-term out of home care, must be able to be licensed through
OPPORTUNITY TO BE PART OF THE SOLUTION
ON-CALL ATTENDANTS to provide one-on-one supervision in home or foster care
Make inquiries to: Cheri Schwain, Bert Nash,
302, Lawrence, 292, Lawrence, KS 6044.
Open until filled. EOE
Retail sales position. Immediate opening full time-part time. Jewelry-china璃. No experience necessary. Can work with school schedule-week. Send resume to P. o. box 620 Lawrence KS. WR25347
Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Previous food service and supervisory experience mastery. Start at婴童, pay raises based on performance. Up to 8% of salary. Most evenings and weekends. Apply at Schumn Food Co. at 719 Mass. M-F 9am-4pm. (Upstairs above smokehouse)
Part-time time and evening help wanted. Must be a certified therapist in person only at Border Dodge, Idaho, w/2 yrs. exp.
SALES REPS WANTED - Develop your own marketing strategy and go sell. Prefer marketing of desserts as well as food. Order Koster Delicatessen work. Work on commercials 11 a.m.-5:47 568-938. Bid 11:10 a.m. after 3:00 P.M.
Part time student boury receptionist/(ypaist wanted. Apply in person Hughli Biosciences Center, Lafayette, Louisiana)
SALES-College Students. Here's your chance
You need extra cash. We need salespeople. Work
with us to get started.
skills, 6 months previous hardware experience,
available to work 16 to 20 hours a week, in 3 to
4 hour blocks. To apply, complete a job application
form and submit it to the Computer Center.
EO/AA EMPLOYER.
PART-TIME SUPERVISOR WANTED.
STUDENT ASSISTANT IN ENGINEERING/
MAINTENANCE. Deadline: 09/30/93. Salary:
$16/hour. Dudes include pickup and delivery of
equipment; receiving and writing
inventory levels; data entry; assist technicians in light mechanical and electronic repair;
and other duties as assigned. Required qualification:
degree in engineering or related field of Kansas, demonstrated ability to work with
customers, good oral and written communication
skills. 6 months previous hardware experience,
week, in 8 t
Need Cash? Start imprinting 3-4 painters for
new塘 bank. Start imprint 14@mw.Hr-C7491-0138 and
14@mw.Hr-C7491-0138.
United Child Development Center, 946 Vermont, is accepting applications for a part-time computer information childcare. For more information, call 822-5292. Deadline for accepting applications is September 30.
Need dependable care given for 15 mo. old boy.
Refs. required call 832-1005.
Now accepting applications for quality minded, dependable individuals for part-time banquet servant position at a group of Mooring and afternoon shifts available. Apply at Adams Albany Center, 1268 Orcad Ave.
United Child Development Center is accepting applications for the position of 2-hour rest aides. Applications can be picked up at UCDC, 948 Vermont, Lawrence.
225 Professional Services
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Birthright 843-8421. Free pregnancy testing.
Macintosh repairs and upgrades
Friendly, Affordable, In-Home Service
The Mac Doctors 842-0948
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
LIFE
Rick Frydman,Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
LSAT EXPERTS KAPLAN 842-5442
Prompt abandon and contraceptic services. Dale L. Clinton M.D. B41-3716.
GRE EXPERTS KAPLAN
TRAFFIC·DUI'S
842-5442
Fake ID's and alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law of offices of
DONALDG STROLE
Donald G Strole Sally G Kelsey
18 East 13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
CC Desktop Publishing: Reames, Cover Letters,
Flyers. Term Paper, Newsletters.
Call 842-8385
www.ccdeskpublishing.com
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor
quality type. 943-2053
www.womenswordprocessing.com
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your TYPING needs
enter the following information:
can meet the clients at 0800-2055
good RESUMES get job interviews!
Meadowlark desk top publishing call 832-0603
Protype fast, reliable service, professional quality. Any kind of typing accepted. Call today at 841-6242.
Word processing, applications, term papers, dissertations, resume, Editing, composition, rush writing
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
GUITAR SHOW
Kansas City fall guitar show Oct. 12 3 heart of America Center 41 W. Maple, Ind. MD. Buy, sell, trade, bring your used musical gear for sale or purchase 84, for show information phone 816-836-show
fedx, deks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
936 Mass.
CHEAP FURNITURE! Hide-a-bed, easy chair,
Look Looking For Something! 007
MSS. 632-0140
MSS. 632-0141
Fall Clearance: All adult tapes on sale $12.95 and up
mixed media N 90 x 20 in, or miracle, or
190 mm x 190 mm
www.miracle.com
Quantrill's Flea Market open every Friday, Sat. & Sun 10AM-SPM 811 New Hampshire 822-6616 Downtown
ARTKTE BASS AMPLIFIER 300 watts exc. cond.
800, 850, 890 Chiles 10A
waterbed, queen size huffed, waveless, heated good condition $100 + b. o. call 841-6792.
powerbook 180 4/120
new in box $2499.99
002 1017
340 Auto Sales
1923 Audi 4000 S reliable, good condition HIMI.
$1 090 n.o b. 823-298
1863 Volvo DL, great cond, new brakes, new tires,
1864 Volvo DL, great cond, steering 2200. b.o. Call 1441-
3550, leave message
Sale- '78 V.W.Rabbit, body damaged but runs $400
Cai ; ; 749-0205
370 Want to Buy
Cash for Boy Scouts patches badges, uniforms. We buy all scout items and military collections. Somewhat $15.00
Overthe Edge
24 hr. computer center
1 bdm apartment in Meadowbrook. Free cable and swimming pool on bus route B3-8402. Ask for
400s Real Estate
2 rooms for rent for non-trial. female(s) available
ot, 1 $20 + unit. Live 10 min. south of Lawrence.
Private country home-kids and pets O.K. K60818-
leave message.
- Front door bus service
Naismith Halls' services give students the competitive edge.
very nice. Interested? Call 842-4455
bordroom apartment for daily furnished,
snowboard, skiing, hiking, etc.
very nice! Interested? Call 824-4555.
Available now, 2 bedrooms at 912 Tennessee, small
Available Oct. 1, one birmingham, newly renovated basement parking area, two parking lots, street parking an water pl., pets. Bessy. 849-1074-076
Fitness room
Available now, 2 bedroom at 912 Tennessee, small pet okay, $45 plus utilities 740-768.
4 bedroom apartment for rent. Fully furnished,
very nice. Interested? Contact 842-4455
Dine anytime meals
Choice room in large quiet residence. Utilities paid
daily, near Dellows on 24hrs. 849-750. Cali A1 885-269-900.
Weekly maid service
NAISMITH Hall
1800 Naismith Drive (913)843-8559
*2 Bedroom, 1½ Bath $425
*3 Bedroom, 2 Bath $550
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
Call Now!843-4754
Extra nice and quiet. 1 bedroom room, including central bathroom, rainwater and out pit. Noties $225.
女性 female room(a) a needed to 2 BR, hR(
female room(a) RU bus route. $2818/month +/-%
ubls. 841-519
Room for rent, half a block from campus, very affordable. Call for details, any time, ph 832-2732.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Newly remodeled 1 Bdrm. house, ideal for graduate student. Available now $400 month. 841-793-98.
Rm await for fem. in 2 story townhouse. Close to Lakewood, parking available. Please replease. I need to May 31, 749-723.
Looking for a place to live? Try cooperative living at the Sunflower House. Low rent, utilities, pds, washer/dryer, Come check us out at 1406 Tennessee, or call 814-0484.
Female non-smoker to share duplex, three bedroom, washer/dryer, on KU bus route 749-4145
Female roommate (s) needed to share 2B, BR 2a, at 1150 sq. ft. On KU bus route 283/188 mo. +/- 1150 sq. ft.
- By phone: 864-4358
430 Roommate Wanted
How to schedule an ad:
Responsible roommate to share uncleable ibd# 2%
Cats Cake Oats Catering # 2%
8-availities Calm after cpm 12h Cats Cake Oats Catering # 2%
Calculating Rates:
Ads phoned in may be billed by your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
**Staff Clearance**
Stop on the Kansas office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa.
One N/S/Grad. Student needed for now. Nice, quiet room. Enclosed, own room, AC, cloak to room. Call 642-7923.
Responsible NS F roommate to share a bdr ap.
Route 1: 2 w/ utility on, on RU bus route 5
route 6: 3 w/ utility on, on RU bus
Classified Information and order form
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of apile lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
**Reference:**
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 cancelled ads that were pre-paid by or with cash are not available.
Num. of insertions:
3 lines
5 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Rates
at per line per day
Classifications
105 personal
110 business personals
120 announcements
130 entertainment
Cost per line per day
1X 2X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30+X
2.05 1.55 1.05 .65 .75 .50
1.90 1.15 .80 .70 .65 .45
1.85 1.05 .75 .65 .60 .40
1.75 .90 .65 .60 .60 .35
148 lost a found 365 for sale
295 helped want 404 sales a丝
225 professional services 308 miscellaneous
*92 business hours*
1
2
3
4
5
379 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
Name: _
Date ad begins: Total days in paper:
Total ad cost: Classification:
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 charming your ad:
Expiration Date:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
MasterCard
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66041
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
AUS USA OBR CAN 9.27
Tension mounts in the final heat of the paper-rock-scissors event.
Monday, September 27.1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Lowest CD Prices In Town!
Current, Popular CDs for $5.95!
Buy 5 or more CDs for $4.95!
Also available, special selection CDs $3.95!
Buy 10 or more CDs for $2.50 each!
For the Best Values in Town Visit
Lawrence Pawn
843-4344 718 New Hampshire
WATKINS
"We Care For KU"
Do You Have a Hold on Your Enrollment?
Approximately 2,650 new KU students are on hold because they have not documented their Mandatory Immunization (the MMR). The hold must be removed by Sept. 30 to enable Spring '94 enrollment. To prevent a hold on Permit to Enroll come to Watkins Immunizations (Mon.-Fri., Bam-4:30pm).
Students born before 1957 are exempt but must submit a Health History form to Watkins Immunizations. There is no charge for a required munion. Call 864-9533.
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES 864-9500
ican Indians. It is also part of the federal government. In this time of budget cuts and deficit reduction, Haskell depends solely on the U.S. Congress for its financing.
HASKELL: Waiting for government's help
Continued from Page 1.
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
Jason Spoonhunter, Haskell freshman, lays on his bed and sketches his girlfriend's portrait in an upstairs study room in Osceola Hall, where the collective mess of 12 roommates hides the floor.
Susan McSoarden/KANSAN
"It itucks," Spoonhunter says. "It's not good. They should have let us know it was like this before they accepted us, or I wouldn't have come."
--tion program, which received baccalaureate accreditation this summer.
The answer to Haskell's overcrowding is not as simple as requesting more funds, said Bob Martin, Haskell president.
Martin said the university's attempts to make itself known to American Indians had played a role in increasing enrollment. In addition, the university began its first four-year program this summer when its elementary teachers education program received baccalaureate accreditation.
Martin said Haskell needed to request more money from Congress to provide adequate housing and housing alternatives. But Haskell's budget does not increase along with inflation, so the university has to expand programs to justify a budget increase. Program expansion draws more students.
1978
"More people are seeing Haskell as a first option to higher education," he said. "We expect that trend to continue."
And the cycle goes on.
But that trend conflicts with another trend: calls from across the nation to cut the federal budget.
Since 1990, Haskell's enrollment has skyrocketed. In the fall of 1990, 831 students attended Haskell. Enrollment has increased 18 percent since then.
Jacqui Doyeto, Haskell sophomore, curls her hair in a room she shares with eight other students. Doyeto's room, called "temporary room C," was once Winona Hall's television room. Temporary rooms also exist in Keokuk and Osceola residence halls.
Solutions to the housing crunch?
According to Haskell president Bob Martin, the following are some ways the University could alleviate the problem.
- Rent hotel rooms and apartments — Colony Woods Apartments, 1301 W. 24th St., has agreed to house 40 Haskell students. A group of four Haskell students would pay $400 a month to stay in one apartment — a $125 discount. Haskell has spoken with other business about similar discounts.
■ Lease KU space — Haskell would lease KU's yacant Joseph R.
Pearson Hall for about $1 million a year. A similar plan failed last year because Haskell's money did not come through from the federal government. Haskell may lease rooms in other KU residence halls as well.
Permit financial aid off-campus - Haskell would allow students to use their financial aid to off-set costs for off-campus housing.
Cap enrollment - Haskell would not allow any more students than it could house.
Source: Haskell president Bob Martin
"That creates a lot of problems for us," Martin said. "The whole environment with the deficit has made us suffer."
Last year's budget for Haskell was $7.2 million, said Rep. Jan Meyers, R-Kansas. This year's proposed appropriations bill, which is in conference committee in Washington, allots $7.4 million for Haskell. However, the extra $200,000 is earmarked for Haskell's elementary teachers education program, which received baccalaureate accreditation this summer.
Meyers said she was aware of the problem, but Washington budget constraints had tied the hands of the Kansas delegation.
KANSAN
There is hope for Haskell in the new bill, Meyers said. One provision in the
"I know that they have real problems," she said. "We think it's a priority."
appropriation bill allocates $1.3 million for a new Haskell residence hall.
But Martin said the new residence hall plans had design problems. He said construction would not begin until next spring at the earliest and might not start for more than a year.
“It’s not as bad as I expected it to be, but it’s not as good as I’d like it to be,” he said.
The funding problems also have postponed renovations and repairs on Haskell's current housing facilities. Martin said three of the university's eight residence halls were up for renovations that have been delayed indefinitely.
Randy Evans, Haskell freshman and president of Keokuk Hall, said the residence halls are in need of significant repairs.
“Most of them come knowing that would be the situation,” said Sonja Larson, Haskell sophomore and resident assistant at Winona Hall. “But it's never been this bad before.”
Unlike KU residence halls, Haskell halls are not wired for phone service. The three pay phones in the lobby of Keokuk serve its 140 residents. The bathrooms have neither hand soap nor paper towels, and broken furniture clutters some hallways.
"A lot of them dropped," he said. "A lot of them couldn't handle the living conditions."
Even now there is little relief for the students. But Benny Smith, acting dean of students at Haskell, said the mission to educate the nation's troubled American-Indian population would continue.
"They're willing to stay," he said. "They're willing to endure any trial Haskell housing can give them. That's a tribute to them."
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
PLACE AN AD FREE!
To check out these ads call 1-900-285-4560
♂
MEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
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30yr. old blond hair, blue-eyed male needing laid out.
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5"® Soft brown sophomore transfer student with a bachelor's degree. You can drive a car, will travel. No a jack but fitness conscious. I am an experienced student that can tutor Math 602 and 101 free charge. Good company is all that you need.
22-year-old Hispanic 5'9" laid back California seeking an opening in a job based on doing new things well a good time, @2022.
Ambitious grad student seek attractive, mature, N/S single female. 21-37 years old with dark hair or a straight wavy hair. Apply with short dark hair, hazel eyes and excellent muscle tone. I have left-of-center political beliefs, am a impassioned classical guitar virtuoso. I am passionate to music and with intelligence charm, wit, and sagacity. #8181
Athletic, communicative, in good shap, intelligence;
activities; athletics and social, New to Arena, 9-12
Attractive 20-year-old SWM. Brown hair, brown eyes seeking SKIMMER. 18-22 for a romantic, long-lasting relationship. I enjoy partying, cooking, music and road trips. If you have similar interests, please contact me.
Fate made you notice this ad. Now, my hopeful romantic muster thy courage and let this knight become you soulmate. Check the stars and let this air sign sweep you off your feet. #a3388
Common abbreviations
M Male A Asian
F Female J Jewish
D Divorced C Christian
S Single C
W White G Gay
B Black L Lesbian
H Hispanic N/S Non-Smoker
Fun, worldly responsible NSG Grad Student seek questions about the study sessions for drives discussions study sessions, going out, avoiding work and doing what you want to do. Don’t be okay. Poor? okay. Bad speller? okay. Coffee? okay.
Hello, I'm fairly tall. I like bluegrass and sports. If you're in going out, give that number a call. zzzz
Grad student will love to meet women with blond hair and blue eyes and a knockout look. All replies
Single white male looking for a hustleful wife like the Grateful Dead, Bar-B-Q, Blues, and David Letterman. I love to give long massages. The Liliana祖母 of my dreams? Call box #8387
If you are seeking a plastic relationship, stop. IF you are seeking a plastic relationship, stop. IF you are seeking a plastic relationship, stop.
energetic BH/BE, w/ trim build. SM is looking for an energetic SWF or, who are looking for an energetic SWF or, who are equally attractive. No嫩 women need apply. 47983
I'm looking for a girl that listens to good music like
Euvi, Eliscopo, or PearJam. #22672
Kind, sensitive, earth-loving, Phish-head male seeking female with similar interests for events such as concerts, movies, late-nights in front of the TV and baking cookies in the nude. You must be a real earth muffin. Peace 2 Fingers. Sorority girls need not apply. #8237
SDWM seeks non-traditional single divorced white female who enjoys outdoors, concerts, dancing, quiet dimmers, romance and value honesty and strong family values. kids are O.K. Box #2684.
SBM seeking SF. If you're tired of games and ready for a "real" romance, are fun-loving, excitement, dance, look ye no further and get with the program when it's waiting a only fine ladies need apply. #26938
SDWH 21. 6lf, 6lf., muscular, handsome, conser-
sor, athletic, Mid-Eastern), female (Asian,
Hispanic, Mid-Eastern), female (18-4),
friendship. Must be pretty, soft hearted and
mature. Please, no drug users or promiscuous
My girlfriend has skipped town, and I am seeking a female companion. Please help. #43860
Single, white male, age 21, brown hair, and blue eyes. Two clad in red pants, trips, hanging out, and drinking. Must be spontaneous, plus willing to sit on the couch all day. Smoky hair, blue eyes, and, but IPT, you teach I must have a good attitude.
You will be charged $1.95 per minute
Latin lower seeking beautiful American woman to heat up the long nights. Must enjoy shaking all of them.
Single white female, 23, seeks single white female, 21-24 for casual relationship. I will 91, well built, have it. brown hair, green eyes. I like to work out, mountain bike, and ski. I'm looking for some quiet night alone. I am sensitive but a quiet night alone. I am sensitive but a quiet sense of humor. #22884
Single white male 6' brown hair, blue eyes. I am looking for a down to earth, mature woman to drink some beer with. Must have a good sense humor and be friendly. Call 4778. Please give me a mail, call 43103.
SM seeks for a N/S/SF who is tall and has long black hair. I am #1! love outdoor activities and I want to get the most out of it. I very much and I want a partner who can spend hours talking with me in the jazz pub while having fun.
SM 21.97 took place for SP 18-23. Must be sensitive and
be outgoing with a good sense of humor.
h # 1457
SWM, 20, blond hair blue eyes, I did it for the tickets. #2021
SWM, 22, 6 a,b, thorn hr, bl eyes. Ambulatory
brain injury in the closest layer when I was young but
it didn't have affect on my development. (I have a
strong affinity for cashmere sweaters). I like to
play with my hands.
SWM, 21, $5! "Dark So. German. brown eyes.
Brown hair." You don't want it in the舞厅 in DJ live music and fifteen forget my phone #, do you? Seeking mutual back rubs and conversation under the stair of the capella.
SWM, 22 w/ unistopable smile seeking confident, clever, crazy carving SWM 19-24 to share life's adventures with me. If you have a heart just bursting, crazy carving living, give me a call and we'll have a ball, #2588
SWM, 24, tall, athletic, been around the block,
seeking SWF, feminine, SINCERE, in fair or better shape, to see which doors we can open together,
apply at our own risk. Carry-Carrying-Library apply at your own risk.
SWM - seeking good looking, great body, intelligent
woman 18-12 yrs old, who likes to play darts,
watch Rin & Stimpy and like beer. No hairy
armpit or mustaches. #90988
SWM 21 years old 5'9 Athlete looking for SWF who likes sports, dancing and having a good time. I am a gentleman that's looking for someone to share a great friendship with and may be more.
SWM looking for tall mellow women. Recently moved to Lawrence from Eastown. Hoping to a corn-fed, Kansas-grown beauty queen. I enjoy long walks and water sports. Must be a smokelike and weaker rock. I love the movie "Slacker," and it likes to the PAW not while wearing a watch. #43887
SWM Graduate student seek friendship and possible serious relationship. I'm honest, kind, and patient. I've had an athletic build, brown hair, green eyes, and a clean-cut look. I'm looking for a non-smoking SWM who is moral and kind. My ideal lady enjoys athlete activities, has blue eyes, and a bright smile.
SWM 5'10 looking for an athletic, outgoing, confident beautiful young woman 20-24 who doesn't need to paint her face before she goes out for the holidays or takes a walk in the park to get a few looks. I love the outdoors & playing the guitar. If your into one night stands & traveling from bed to bed, call another box. #22693
SWM 24 seeks SWM. Enjoys conversing, romance,
practice, and fun in the gym. Has a good
personal goals and high in Me. 23-20. Box 22976
SWM. Hutch LimBimbang fan, who goes by the philosophy, *hiking or doing good time includes hunting, rather than taking golf*, movies, beer, and road trips. Seeking someone who back-back yet has style and a sense of humor.
SWM seeks SRF. Am interested in meeting a lady who is tired of people playing games. If you like to get away for the weekends, dance, and are open-minded, give me a call.
SWM non-smoker 8'10 lbf in hair br air hrs, all-American look, humorous sports fan, listens to country and Harry Cornell Jr., gives great messages seeks attractive, intelligent SWF (18-24) or beautiful eyes & knock out smile who loves a good time & is ready to be romanced. #81914
SWM looking for Vampires willing to embrace if you love the night call box #43042
SWM wants gorgeous SWF N/S who can pound a lot of beer and who is interested in going to parties and getting crazy. I may not a nerd and don't call if you are too young or is preferred but anything is in cone. The keys are in there.
SWIM 19 years-old. Brown eyes, brown hair.
Enjoys working out and playing sports. Looking for attractive female between 18&22 who enjoys 'romantic evening'. #43883
SWH-Handouts, with athletic build, looking for
themes that feature fine art and loves to
have a good time. ed777
SWM-I'm a very motivated person, I like to get involved. My favorite hobby is hunting wild animals. I love the outdoors. Looking for a 19-20 yr old would want to get involved, like marriage #43859
Swim I'm tall on have blonde surfer hair. I look like the blonde guy on the Real World. I enjoy romantic dinners and long evening dances. Give me a call, I'd love to meet you (N/S please). 4800077
Tall dark and handmade law student sees kinks and blombs on slideback into Slacker and regale. #8218 Tall, dark-haired Englishman, 21 years old, who does all things American seems like minded American female (who doesn't mind guys with a slight accent) in the transatlantic connection. Prefer fun-loving, personable and unique girls. No strings attached, just let hang out together and see what happens.
Toned $9 guy, 21, seeking attractive, fun girl to share some time quality. #2666
♂
Are you tall, dark, and handsome—but a little shy?
Do you have a boyfriend? No, maybe on. Whether you work at a grocery store or drive a CRX, I mull it over but I not vain, as long
as I can dance and dance with blind hair and blue eyes.
You are tired of endless bar hunting for a sinecre, honest, attractive woman? If so, give me a call. I'm a 21 year SWF with curly black hair, fair skin, and brown eyes. I'm looking for someone with creativity and spontaneity to have a good time with. Box #62194
I am 5'3" have short, sexy hair & blue eyes. I am very outgoing and make friends easily. However, I am not a fan of romance. I am very versatile in my interests and enjoy doing things like playing a board game, being smart and looking intelligent and they must know how to dance. If you would like to try out to see how we compliment each other, call my box.
Down to earth, fun-loving female who is looking for a great time. If you're open-minded, like long walks, and ready for one hell of a time never to forget-give-a-call a call #43203
I'm seeing a man who's interested in art, reading
him. Must be good-looking, humorous and
honest. . .2093
SFF-tall, brown eyes, serious. I like movies (comedies and action adventure) and I like reggae music. I am religious and would like a gentleman who shares my beliefs. #40037
Intriguing female searching for a majestic male to share intimate views together. #49092
SAP, 22, 5', 3' looking for SM 21-26, must be good
knowledge and sense of humor, fun-loving
personality, self-confidence.
SWF 19, seeking male for intimate friendship only
with females; possible mutual hobbies be found out
via e:l4146
SWF. 20, 5'4". brown hair, brown eyes. I am looking for someone who brings me flowers and that I can cook cake light dinner for him. Must be a nice dresser, call me to find out more. #47719
SWF, 21 years old, *P* with caval wishes and梦境 dreams seek St. John's 21-23 years old to fulfill all his dreams in you prefer this call to McDozen. You can help, you can afford this call. Hope to talk to you soon. **#262**
SWF. 28, 93, 'dark brown hair and brown eyes.
They live in romantic nights at home. I like going to movies, long walks and candle light dinners. No smokers, beer drinkers, or beer bellys, please.
SWF, 219r., engaged and seeking one last fling.
e81190
SWF, 23 pre-med, to have fun and attractive. Serious student,
but likes to have fun. Everyone here is so young! For science for grade student/pre-MED, 22-34, handsome. Let's go get a beer and talk
about her shirt number: 797258
SWF. Brown hair, brown eyes & "If you like plus
colora, get on the bus! have fun with a brain, you're the man
for Call me and goose" #28066
SWF "BIO BION" Attractive, athletic figure looking
very athletic. Great for a gym or workout room.
Dramatic friendship may even more, boost.
*
SWF Catholic, baptized 6 ft. plus athletic, 30 to 35 yrs old, who enjoys the outing on her own. Travels with his family. Tennis golf, biking and dancing. Looking for someone who knows how to live a enjoy life with a good sense of humor, love and a good sense of humor.
SWF grad. student dazed and confused seeks same SWM.
CM0, Call box #47880.
SWF graduate student seeking romance with SWM. Must have computer knowledge, interest in programming.
SWF looking for my soulmate! If you love to read, and walk, on 70's music like ABBA, then let the phone, and look at it. You will receive "4"Attracts, and lots of fun. Let me play "music" for coffee (if we want not need it!) j2261
SWF looking for SWM. I enjoy mountain biking and the outdoors and am seeking someone to just hang out with and get to know. I like seeing bands and music together. I love 5.4 and attractive. Please call if interested. #22601.
SWF N/S/ I am looking for a very tall, kind, and compassionate man. Someone with a sweet smile can match him.
SWF seeking a good-looking athletic male. Must be fun & outgoing. Like beer and blue eyes. Please someone 21 or older. Will not wait to meet ya! #22367
SWF, seeking a SM 20-40 who enjoys lazy days and wild nights. Must like disco music and a dancing tilt. We open-minded and fun-loving. Call Box #22603
SWF seeking an attractive SWM to go to a party and have a good time. #84242
SWJF, 19, 5'4", 118 las. Injures working out, dancing, volleyball, and occassionally partying. Smoker needs to be able to blossom. Seeking SWJM with similar interests. Smokers and drug users need not apply. #2604
SWF seeking SWM. I like alternative music, but you don't have to. I like guys around 5'10 with long brown hair and blue eyes. I also like to drink beer. I don't like to be on a lot of fun or like to hang out, give me a call. #23200
SWJF looking for that special guy to sweep me off my feet and can enjoy high times chilling out at home or around town. I drink, dance, and smoke. Call me for fun. I like to party! #2069
WANTED: SWM. Prefer tail and dark. It wouldn't hurt if you were handsome and rich either. Nicely defined peds and little, preferably no chest hair or back hair. Beer of choice. Bud Lid: 40007
WF looking for a strictly plastic relationship with a normal MWI. I enjoy light drinking, movies, eating out, and meaningful conversations. People with annoying personalities need not respond. Friendly outgoing men only, please, who are just looking for a friend to hang out with. #43204
Woman seeking Scandinavian man. More or less blonde and blue-eyed. European ideas and attitudes. Neutral politically. Hard worker affectionate. I'm looking for my equal. #82968
MEN SEEKING MEN
88
Are you as comfortable in a "gay" scene as an adult? Are you with a muscular build and at least somewhat intelligent. I am a GWM, 24, 196, 198, not so serious senior with good looks, intelligence, neurotic ability.
Dark long hair, athletic looking for male with similar livelihood. #28539
GWM, 18:40, 5'11" blonde, very cute sharp looking and masculine. Seeking good look, dress shaping guy 18:36 for possible friendship and discrete fun. #29204
GWM I'm looking to find a list of new friends where we can share a lot of ideas and wants. Who enjoys others common. Let's if we've got anything in common. #82388
Hey If you fit the following, to meet the same:
Grace Body, Great Looks, Tanned, Closeted Stud.
Your name:
Very good looking. BIW, I1M, 7'6, ' quality, fit & taupe clothing. BIW/Superior/superlook, clothing, size 18 to 28 cm (62")
WOMEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
Humorous, cute, boyish looking AF . . . that me. I would like to meet 18-22 year old pretty young ladies to spend some time together and have fun.
♥♥
FRIENDS SEEKING FRIENDS
TALK TO US
19 yr. old Chicago boy looking for 19 yr. old Jewish girl
girl#8003
Biscuit maker seeks friend who likes to fix stuff. ro6655
Any non-traumatic students boping to get into med school, call my office for studying groups and discuss what I can do.
Eleven-Eleven: Is this meaningful to you? If so, let's get together. @29308
SEEKING SPORTS INTEREST
MUTUAL
HOBBIES
SWM seeking Female partner to play tennis and golf with me. Also looking for any person that is interested in going to the woodlands race track # 61039
TREASURE BOX
Grad student looking for riding companion to get in shape with. Road and off-road, all abilities will be. 1 ride 6X's a week with varying intensities. #22645
to place an ad
on the Board, matemat. 119
Staffer-Fint Hall, 864-4358
Staffer-Fint Hall, 864-4358
Graduate students looking for riding companion to
pass them. All abilities are welcome! Road
and off road. #3022
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
2. You'll place an ad in the Javatik Network section of the Kansan (up to 8 lines) and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people who respond to your ad. Your voice message will remain in the system for 21 days.
3. After your ad runs in the Kansan,
you call a free 800-number to listen to
the messages people leave for you.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
To check out an ad
1. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them.
2. Call 1-900-285-4560 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touch-tone phone), enter the mailbox number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category. You can interrupt to skip over messages that don't interest you. Voice prompts will lead you along the way. You'll be charged $1.95 per minute.
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached.
1
.
CAMPUS: Yearbook photos are free this year and will be taken in Strong Hall until 5 p.m. tomorrow. Page 8.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103.NO.27
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1993
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
NEWS:864-4810
Workers assemble one of the many light banks shipped in for tonight's Lied Center opening. Six semi-trucks were used to transport the equipment used specifically for "The Secret Garden" performance.
Opening night for Lied Center
"Secret Garden is center's debut By Sara Bennett
Kansan staff writer
Less than 24 hours before opening night, "The Secret Garden" bore little resemblance to an award-winning Broadway musical.
Bird-shaped trees, perched amid black claxtes, only hinted at the elaborate production in the works. But the secret to transforming the Lied center stage into a child's garden lay hidden within those very crates.
The Tony Award-winning musical "The Secret Garden" opens with an invitation-only performance tonight at the Lied Center, ushering in the $14.6 million performing arts com-
plex's first season.
Eric Insox, stage manager for the touring company of "The Secret Garden," said he was excited to be involved with the center's first production.
"I feel kind of lucky in a way," he said, gazing into the crimson and blue auditorium. "It really is a treat. The house is stunning, and I just know it's going to sound wonderful in here."
Inso and his crew will spend 14 to 16 hours installing the six truckloads of equipment required for "The Secret Garden." Although the Lied center has new state-of-the-art sound and lighting systems, the touring company brought its own equipment, including an ornately painted proscenium, backdrops never before used on tour, lightsand a large turntable that rotates to
OPENING NIGHT: As the preparations for the first show go on, the Lied Center reveals a multiplicity of features. Page 7.4
OPENING NIGHT: Asthe
Lee Saylor, technical director for the Lied Center, said the center was providing 30 of its 44 rigging lines from which the troupe will hang scenery, more than 70 crew members and stage hands, spotlights and 100 pounds of dry ice.
change scenes.
Preparing for the center's first performance has been nerve racking, Saylor said.
"The Lied Center staff is tied up in knots," he said. "We've spent months getting ready for this and now it's here."
quality of the Lied Center was good enough to bring in other big-name shows.
Inco said opening a show in a new hall had inherent challenges, but the
"Phantom of the Opera" will be able to play here," he said. "I bet you'll see 'Les Miserables' within in the next two years."
Nevin Steinberg, sound technician for the touring group, said the Lied Center was one of the better halls "The Secret Garden" has played in.
"It's smaller than most, and the seating is intimate, which is good for this kind of show," he said. "I much prefer it to some of the caves we've played in."
As stage hands bustled about hanging lights and stacking crates, Inso shielded his eyes and peered into the Lied Center balcony.
"It is pretty wonderful, isn't it?" he said.
GTAs close argument in hearing
GTRUNION
Decision still far from made
By Kathleen Stolle
Kansan staff writer
Final testimony in the graduate teaching assistant status hearings was heard yesterday, but the issue is far from resolved.
Anthony Genova, professor of philosophy, and Diane Del Buono, director of student financial aid, were called as rebuttal witnesses by GTA general counsel Scott Stone.
The GTAs hope to establish their status as that of public employees so they can vote on whether to form collective bargaining units. The University does not consider GTAs public employees, but rather students who gain teaching experience while the University supports them financially.
Genova testified that he was not opposed to collective bargaining among GTAs. He said that among the 50 to 60 other professors with whom he had discussed the issue over the past two years, only two had expressed opposition to the idea.
Genova testified that he did not believe collective bargaining would drive a wedge between GTAs and faculty.
"If anything, it would enhance the collegial relationships at the department level," he said.
Del Buono testified that the stipends GTAs receive are not financial aid as defined by her office.
"It is not a form of federal, state or institutional aid," she said.
Stone said the highest hurdle – addressing whether GTAs are public employees or not – had been cleared.
"I feel fairly optimistic for the GTAs," he said.
What's next?
Feb. 1 - GTA and University counsels must submit briefs by this date.
June 1994 - An initial recommendation from the Kansas Public Employee Relations Board hearing officer must be made by this time; if an appeal is not filed, the ruling stands.
An appeals
Either party could appeal the officer's recommendation to the KPERB. Either party could appeal the board's decision to district court. Either party's court decision could be appealed to appellate court. Finally, an appeal of an appellate court decision could land the case in the state Supreme Court.
Source: Kansas Public Employee Relations Board KANSAN
University assistant general counsel Karen Dutcher said she had no reaction to the hearings.
The result of yesterday's testimony and that of the other 18 witnesses presented throughout the past week may not be revealed until next summer.
Stone and Dutcher agreed to submit their respective briefs to hearing officer Monty Bertelli by Feb. 1, 1994. Briefs are a written form of closing arguments and contain citations of laws that support the party's case.
Bertell said he did not anticipate making a final decision until June. At that time, either party may appeal Bertell's order to the Kansas Public Employee Relations Board. The board could review or accept Bertell's recommendation.
Bertell said the matter could go as far as the state supreme court if future decisions were appealed to the district and appellate courts.
Bertelli said a decision in favor of the GTAs would set a precedent in Kansas and possibly pave the way for GTAs at other state schools. Likewise, if the University prevailed, the decision could thwart future movements toward collective bargaining, he said.
"I think you'll find this case is a keystone for these questions," Bertelli said.
Clinton urges United Nations to limit peacekeeping missions
The Associated Press
"The United Nations must know when to say 'no,' he said.
President Clinton told the United Nations Monday that the American people will support sending U.S. troops to keep peace around the world only if new missions are sharply limited.
Clinton insisted on new rules for "new times" as he outlined his foreign-policy views with a mixture of caution and high purpose.
Clinton is prepared to send as many as 25,000 American troops to Bosnia
if peace terms can be worked out.
He proposed a network of nuclear arms restraints, including a worldwide ban on stockpiling of weapons-grade uranium. He hinted he might abandon his three-month old ban on underground weapons blasts if China resumed its testing program.
At a news conference later with Japanese Prime Minister Morihiro Hosokawa, Clinton said the United States sent peacekeepers to Somalia in December "with our eyes open" but "may have underestimated" the difficulty of restoring political stability
ing American forces to a NATO peace-keeping unit in Bosnia.
Clinton said there would have to be "a clear political strategy" for the peacekeeping mission, and the deployment would have to be endorsed by Congress.
He also listed conditions for deploy-
"We would have to know what our financial responsibilities are," the president said. "Then we would have to know that others would do their part as well."
Elaborating on his speech, Clinton said that none of the current peacekeeping missions was "ill founded"
but that "there are limits to what we can do" in the future. "I want to see us go into these things with our eyes open," he said.
Clinton, in proposing curbs on mushrooming international peacekeeping ventures appeared to be looking for a practical way out of a growing dispute with members of Congress who are questioning American intervention in foreign conflicts.
"The United Nations simply cannot become engaged in every one of the world's conflicts," Clinton said.
He offered to pay within the next
few weeks a $400 million U.S. debt for peacekeeping, but he also said the United States was paying too heavy a load. A senior U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the idea was to scale back from 30.4 percent to 25 percent and have Germany and Japan, among others, make up the difference.
Clinton said the United Nations must "weed out waste" and he suggested the appointment of an inspector general to investigate any abuses.
In Washington, Senate Republican leader Bob Dole of Kansas said Clinton's speech failed to address the
increasing gap between U.S. interests and U.N. operations. Specifically, Clinton did not spell out what U.S. interests are in the operation in Somalia, Dole said.
"We must avoid adopting the U.N. agenda whether in Somalia, in Bosnia, in Haiti, or elsewhere when it does not meet our standards and principles," Dole said in a statement. "The key to making the world safe for democracies and not for dictators, is not to 'reinvent' the United Nations but to assert U.S. leadership in support of U.S. interests."
INSIDE
A strong mental stroke
Kansas swimmer David Lewis is the team'sfirst-ever Rhodes Scholar nominee.
2016
Page 9.
Fate of atmospheric studies debated
By Christoph Fuhrmans
Kansas state writer
Kansan staff writer
About 60 people crowded into the Centennial Room of the Kansas Union yesterday evening for the discontinuance hearing on bachelor of arts, bachelor of general studies and master's degrees in atmospheric science.
Twenty-five people spoke in front of the Academic Procedures and Policies Committee during the three-hour hearing.
The department of physics and astronomy was notified in Fall 1992 that the B.A., B.G.S. and M.D. degrees in atmospheric science had been recommended for discontinuance during the University's academic program review.
More than 100 students are enrolled in those degree programs this year.
Only the department's bachelor of science degree has not been recommended for elimination.
Joe Eagleman, professor of atmospheric science, spoke for 20 minutes at the hearing.
He said program review had changed its goals.
When the review began in Fall 1991, the goals were to eliminate program duplication and cut costs.
Eagleman said eliminating the degrees did not meet either of those goals because KU has the only atmospheric science
PROGRAM review
program in Kansas. In 1991, the three tenured professors in the program each handled 600 student credit hours, compared to a normal high of 300 hours for a professor, he said.
"Are we not essential to the state?" Eagleman said. "I say we are."
Several professors and students argued the state needed KU's atmospheric science program and research because of Kansas' extreme weather.
"This is a severe-weather state, and interest in the weather is great," said Ray Ammar, head of the department of physics and astronomy.
Andrew Kula, Leawood senior, said the entire program hinged on the availability of the master's degree.
"Without graduate students, the bachelor of science program will not survive," he said.
Curtis Hall, professor of meteorology, discusses why available degrees in atmospheric studies should not be eliminated.
David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs, spoke at the end of the hearing.
He said that even though the review committee rated the atmospheric science program as "good," the Board of Regents still required six faculty members for any program with bachelor's and master's degrees, and the Regents would not approve additional faculty members for the program.
2
Tuesday, September 28, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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The Graduate Student Organizations Treasurers will meet at 5:30 p.m. at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Michelle Violanti at 864-4914.
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International Students Association will meet at 6 p.m. at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
Early Education Organization will meet at 5:45 p.m. at Dole Human Development Center, Room 1004. For more information, call Angela Luca佑玄 at 841-4264.
Amnesty International will meet at 6 p.m. at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Danelle Myron at 842-5407.
KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 5:30 p.m. on the third floor of the Burge Union. For more information, call 864-7316.
The Graduate Representative Assembly will meet at 5:30 p.m. at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Chris O'Brien at 849-4914.
- Inspirational Gospel Voices will have choir rehearsal at 6 p.m. in 328 Murphy Hall. For more
Spectrum Publishing P.O. Box 177 Lawrence, KS 66044
PRSSA will meet at 7 tonight in 100 Stauffer Flint Hall. For more information, call Kevin Grace at 865-3744.
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KU Ad Club will hold its annual Grad Board at 7 tonight in 100 Stauffer-Flint Hall. For more information, call Ed Schager at 864-4358 or 865-0720.
Minority Business Student Council will have a general meeting at 7 tonight in 426 Summerfield Hall. For more information, call Antoine Montgomery at 842-5276 or Jacinta Carter at 749-3083.
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will have swimming practice at 7:30 tonight in Robinson Center. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
Hispanic-American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. at Alderson Auditorium. For more information, call Octavio Hinojosa at 864-4256.
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Call 864-4810 for the newsroom:
Comments/Complaints/Corrections/News tips
information, call Kim at 749-3819.
KU College Republicans will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Leigh Smith at 832-8656.
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The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
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WATKINS
WEATHER
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 82'/50'
Chicago: 61'/41'
Houston: 89'/62'
Miami: 87'/76'
Minneapolis: 56'/34'
Phoenix: 102'/75'
Salt Lake City: 82'/50'
Seattle: 75'/53'
LAWRENCE: 74'/41
Kansas City: 71'/43
St. Louis: 72'/46
Wichita: 78'/50
Tulsa: 81'/55
TODAY
Sunny and dry.
High: 74'
Low: 41'
Tomorrow
Sunny and cooler.
High: 68'
Low: 40'
Thursday
Partly cloudy and cool.
High: 67'
Low: 42'
Source: Greg Potter, KU Weather Service: B64-330D
WEATHER
Do You Have a Hold on Your Enrollment?
Approximately 2,650 new KU students are on hold because they have not documented their Mandatory Immunization (the MMR). The hold must be removed by Sept. 30 to enable Spring '94 enrollment. To prevent a hold on Permit to Enroll come to Watkins Immunizations (Mon.-Fri., 8am-4:30pm).
Students born before 1957 are exempt but must submit a Health History form to Watkins Immunizations. There is no charge for a required munion. Call 864-9533.
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES 864-9500
CORRECTIONS
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
A story on Page One of yesterday's Kansan contained incorrect information. A University committee recommended last spring that the B.S. degree in engineering physics be kept.
A story on Page One of yesterday's Kansan contained incorrect information. Large snowfalls in
A graphic on Page One of yesterday's Kansan contained an incorrect date. The graduate teaching assistants of the University of Oregon have had collective bargaining since 1975.
January and February could be attributed to last year's eruption of Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines or the lingering effects of EI Nino.
A story on Page 3 of yesterday's Kansan missspelled the name of Robert Heffle, Haskell Indian Nations University student body vice president.
A photo caption on Page 3 of Friday's *Kansan* misspelled the name of Torrez Dawson, Wichita junior, and misidentified Frank Williams. Williams is a Kansas City, Kan., junior.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 28, 1993
3
Students need to tell KU of move
Lack of address could lead to University mail losses
By David Steward
Kansan staff writer
Students may have noticed they are losing touch with the University — and their new campus addresses may be the reason.
Next Monday, about 25,000 permits to enroll for Spring 1994 will be sent to students, Morrell said.
Rich Morrell, university registrar, said he expected that many new students had not realized that they had to notify the registrar's office about their new Lawrence addresses and phone numbers.
Students who submitted a change-of-address card to the post office would receive their permits a few days later than normal delivery. Morrell said.
If students have not notified the registrar's office of their new addresses, the letters may be delayed or even returned to the University.
But students who did not notify either the post office or the registrar's office will have their permits returned, Morrell said.
By allowing students to pay by mail for Fall 1993, the University eliminated having all students verify their current school addresses during the original fee payment process.
"Prior to the pay-by-mail process, students were asked to verify their address before they paid their fees," Morrell said. "Now, if they decide to send a correct address, they do. But many students don't."
By Fall 1994, students once again would need to verify their school and home addresses during the proposed computerized enrollment process. Morrell said.
The registrar's office also had used the on-file student addresses and phone numbers to produce the 1993-94 campus directory, said Tom Hutton, associate director of news and public issues.
Hutton said he was unaware of any problems with the apparent increase in the number of outdated phone numbers and addresses.
"We haven't had any problems of major note," Hutton said. "Most of the time these corrections go to the telecommunications department."
Gail Schaplowsky, office supervisor for the telecommunications department, said students who had found errors in their campus directory listing should inform the registrar's office or call the telecommunications department to make corrections.
Uniting to be Heard
Hillel promotes Jewish unity
By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer
As an undergraduate in 1989, Steve Jacobson remembers when somebody spray-painted a swastika on a Hillel booth in front of Wescoda Hall during the day.
"It's tremendously disturbing when things like this happen, but it's more disturbing when decent people who are standing around don't stop it," he said.
Now, four years later, Jacobson is the director of KU Hillel, the University's only Jewish student organization. He said Hillel was a national student organization that had chapters in universities around the country.
"We give students confidence to show their Jewishness," he said.
Jacobson said the organization existed to provide care and counseling for KT's estimated 1,500 Jewish students.
Hillel was formed by a Christian minister in the early part of this century, Jacobson said. The minister sympathized with Jewish students at the University of Illinois, who had special dietary needs and had no place to go for their holidays, and founded the first Hillel House. KU's Hillel House, 940 Mississippi St., houses some Hillel members and
serves those same needs as the first house, Jacobson said. The organization is named after the rabbi who helped form the Talmud, the Jewish law, during biblical times, he said.
Jacobson said the organization was bound by more than religious ties. Hillel members have social and political bonds that include the nation of Israel.
"My involvement in Israel actually started my involvement in Hillel," he said. "It evolved from my interest in Israel and blossomed into all aspects of Jewish life."
Jeff Katz, New Orleans junior and Hillel vice president,
agreed with Jacobson.
"I feel a very close attachment to Israel," he said. "I've been there, and everybody who goes there falls in love with the land because it's so beautiful."
Katz said that because of these bonds, the leaders of Hilli'l wanted the organization to be more than just a body to turn to for help with problems. He said they wanted it to be more inclusive and positive.
"We're trying to stop the old stereotype of Hillel being solely a religious group," Katz said. "We do appeal to Jewish students, but we're trying to reach out to other interests as well."
Caryn Silver, Memphis senior and sports chair for Hillel. said meeting Jewish students on campus would be difficult without Hillel.
"Through Hilile, it a lot easier," she said. "Not many people have signs on their backs that say, 'I'm Jewish.'"
Silver, who coordinates Hillel's intramural sports teams, said athletics was a large part of the social aspect of Hillel. She said, however, that the teams rarely won.
"We're out there for fun," she said. "We're playing volleyball next month, and we'll win that."
Problem affects many U.S. schools
KU experiences dean shortage
By Shan Schwartz
Kansan staff writer
Four of the nine schools at KU's Lawrence campus — Architecture, Education, Law and Pharmacy — are lacking a permanent dean or are anticipating their dean's departure within a year.
The Chronicle of Higher Education, a weekly nationwide newspaper that covers college news, indicates that schools
However, KU does not appear to be the only university with this problem.
throughout the country are searching for administrators to fill their upper level academic positions. The Chronicle's Sept. 24 edition contains advertisements for nearly 200 position vacancies of chancellors, presidents and deans.
Hammond-Paludan said that significant university growth in the late 1960s and early 1970s prompted a lot of faculty hiring and that those faculty members were now reaching retirement age.
Martine Hammond-Paludan, director of academic affairs for the Kansas Board of Regents, said the openings at KU were not unusual.
Job stress is another reason for the short tenures of academic deans, Hammond-Paludan said.
"We have an aging faculty and an agng administration, and a lot of the upper level administrators are just ready to step down," she said.
"These administrators' jobs are quite complicated," she said. "There are so many constituencies with a lot of voices, and they want a lot of different things. For someone in a position to serve all of these constituencies, it can be really difficult."
David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said an academic dean's tenure was usually less than ten years. Shulenburger said the 13-year tenure of Max Lucas, the dean of architecture who recently announced he would be stepping down June 30, was the longest of any KU dean.
Shulenburger said the search for an academic dean usually took at least a year.
"The main reason is because most of the people we'd want to fill the positions have obligations to other universities," he said.
Usually a committee is formed to find candidates for a dean position. The committee then reviews the applications and selects five for personal interviews. The final choice goes to Chancellor Gene Budig for approval.
Shulenburger said there was tremendous competition for high-level academic positions, and it was very important for a school to carefully select a dean.
"I am committed to make sure we hire a dean that we're entirely comfortable with," Shulenburger said. "Making a mistake in that high of a position can be disastrous to a school or the whole university."
A time of reflection
A. J.
Susan McSnadden / KANBAN
John Sabraw, Lawrence senior, works on a self portrait in the Art and Design building while using a mirror for accuracy. Sabraw, who was working on the portrait yesterday, said he had put in about 90 hours on the directed study project and expected to put in 60 more before the painting was complete.
19
Aggressive magazine sellers annoy KU community
City says salespeople may be breaking law
By Donella Hearne Kansan staff writer
Students and Lawrence residents have been opening their doors recently to find themselves unknowingly face-to-face with smooth-talking magazine salespeople.
The people ringing the doorbell may present themselves as neighbors just stopping by to chat and may try to get through the door before they ever suggest they are selling magazine subscriptions.
Dawn Ridgeway, Lenexa junior, was home alone when a salesman came to her door.
The man who approached Ridgeway started his sales pitch by telling her that he worked for a program that helped children, similar to Big Brothers and Big Sisters, but he later said he was trying to win $1,500 for himself. He also asked questions which
"I opened the door and he looked like he was just going to walk in," she said. "He kept getting too close for comfort."
Ridgeway said she thought were irrelevant to magazine sales.
"He asked me things like where was I from, what my major was, what year I was in school," she said.
What some of these salespeople are doing may not be legitimate.
The city clerk's office said that, according to city records, there should not be anyone selling magazines door-to-door in Lawrence unless they are named James Michael Holt or with a group of teenagers called United Teens.
Door-to-door salespeople are required by a city ordinance to have a license. License applicants are fingerprinted by the Lawrence police, who run a background check to determine if the individual actually is a reputable salesperson.
City Clerk Penny Porter said the clerk's office had received several calls in the past few weeks from residents complaining about extremely aggressive salespeople.
Magazine salespeople also have approached students on campus. Beth Russell, Overland Park graduate student, was walking to her car from Robinson Gymnasium when a man approached her
and asked if she was old enough to vote.
The salesman told her that she must not be from Lawrence, she said. "I asked why, and he said 'because you know how to smile, I've been here for a couple of weeks and nobody here knows how to smile,'" she said.
Russell said she was not impressed by his sales tactics.
"You should've seen this guy," Russell said. "He had a Rick Springfield haircut, very cheeseball."
The Organizations and Activities Center said soliciting on campus was illegal if the salespeople were not registered with the center or sponsored by a registered student group.
One company, Chapel Sales Inc. in Collingswood, N.J., was on a receipt given to a Lawrence resident who had purchased
Russell and Ridway both said the men who approached them said they were accumulating "points" by selling magazines. The men said that if they got enough points they would win cash prizes or trips. They also carried receipt books and unofficial-looking identification cards, Russell and Ridway said.
Knock, knock...
The Better Business Bureau and the city clerk's office suggest a few questions you should ask yourself if approached by salespeople.
Who is ringing your doorbell? Salespeople should tell you their names and the name of the company they work for. Ask for identification.
Do the salespeople have licenses? Licenses from the city of Lawrence would be on 8 1/2 X11 inch pieces of blue paper
embossed with the city seal. They should not be photocopies.
Do you know how to reach the salespeople and their company?
Is the sales contract clear and complete?
What do you do if you want to cancel your
if salespeople refuse to leave when asked, tell them you will call the police.
Source: The Associated Press KANSAN
a magazine subscription from a salesperson. A company spokesperson could not be reached for comment.
Student hurt in bridge fall near turnpike
A KU student was injured Saturday afternoon while rappelling from a bridge north of Lawrence.
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Nils Jergensen, Colorado Springs,
Colo., sophomore, was climbing and rappelling concrete posts under the Kansas river turpike bridge around 5 p.m. Saturday.
Also at the bridge were Jason Loss,
Great Bend senior, and Jergensen's brother, John Jergensen.
Nils Jergensen his rappelling cord slipped off the bridge, causing him to fall
to the ground next to the river and underneath the tumpike. He landed on his feet, but then fell on his back. He was admitted to Lawrence Memorial Hospital and treated for two compressed vertebrae.
Jergensen remained in fair condition at the hospital yesterday evening and said he expected to be released today.
Art celebration underway
Harvest of Arts, a celebration of local artists, began Saturday. Upcoming activities include:
Poetry and storytelling of the earth, animals and sky at 7:30 tonight in the KU Natural History Museum. Local poets Jim
McCray, Mary Klayer, Denise Low, Ken Irby, Caryn Goldberg, Stan Lombardo and Becky McMillan will be featured. Admission is free.
Folk, country and rockmusic at the songwriter's showcase, 8 to 11 p.m. tomorrow. Admission is free.
Renaissance Festival performers will be in Downtown Lawrence from 6 to 9 p.m. Thursday. Admission is free.
The English Alternative Theatre will present "The Abyss Gates Also" at 8 p.m. Friday in Haskingham Hall. Admission is $3.
- "Ships," a play by Sean Demory, will be performed at 2 p.m. Sunday in Locust Gallery, 500 Locust St. Admission is free.
A street dance will be held from noon to midnight in the 800 block of Massachusetts St. Admission is free.
Artists and performers will be in Bufford M. Watson Park, 7th and Vermont streets, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Admission is free.
Hearing set for woman charged in shooting
A preliminary hearing has been set for 9 a.m. Dec. 15 for Caroline Castleberry, a former KU student who allegedly shot her father.
Castleyberry was charged Sept. 6 with the attempted first-degree murder of her father. She also faces an alternative charge of aggravated battery.
Briefs compiled from Kanaan staff reports
4
Tuesday, September 28. 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
President Clinton signed into law the new AmeriCorps program providing students an opportunity to pay back loans through volunteering.
THE BACKGROUND
The AmeriCorps program will allow students to pay for college either through community service or by having a fixed percentage deducted from a student's postgraduation income until the loan amount is paid off.
Community benefits from student aid plan
President Clinton's new AmeriCorps program is a good program, because it gives students options when paying off their student loans — options that did not exist in the past.
THE OPINION
AmeriCorps gives students up to $4,725 a year for two years that they can use for college tuition. If students choose the community service option, they will receive $7,400 a year for living expenses. If students cooperate in supporting this program, more federal money can be spent on it in the future.
For many students who cannot afford college, financial aid loans can snowball into huge debts that can take up to 20 years to pay off, and the interest on student loans also can be prohibitive.
The best part of Clinton's plan is the community service. Students often overlook the underdeveloped, undernourished communities that desperately need the services of doctors, engineers, social workers, pharmacists and lawyers. Students can use their knowledge and expertise in various communities and in turn, give something to society.
Imagine how an engineering graduate can help construct a bridge in an area deprived of technological expertise; how a doctor, who may have easily collected a debt of over $100,000, can treat sick people; and how a social worker can help the abused and the neglected. Such service should be an honor, and it would be temporary. AmeriCorps is a small step, but at least, it is a step in the right direction.
MUNEERA NASEER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
PBS and government should find compromise
Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., has proposed cutting all government funding for the Public Broadcasting Service's child education programs such as "Sesame Street" and "Barney." A better option would be requiring shows to pay back a percentage of their proceeds to the government.
The basis of Sen. Dole's argument is that the revenue from the shows' merchandise would allow the programs to be self-supportive and provide their own financing for production.
The shows should continue to use government financing for production costs while contributing a percentage of their merchandise revenue back to the government.
This would allow the shows to maintain the same production quality while possibly reimbursing the government for all of its contributions.
An added bonus to continuing government support for PBS educational programming is allowing new shows an opportunity to get off the drawing board. Meanwhile, successful shows like "Barney" and "Sesame Street" could support themselves and give some back to the government.
DAVID BURGETT FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
KC TRAUER, Editor
KC TRAUER, Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
Editors
Assistant to the editor ... J.R. Clairborne
News ... Stacy Friedman
Editorial ... Terrilyn McCormick
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Kristi Fogler
Photo ... Klp Chin, Renee Kneiber
Features ... Erza Wolf
Graphics ... John Paul Fogel
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Business Star
Campus sales mgr .. Ed Schager
Regional sales mgr .. Jennifer Perrier
National sales mgr .. Jennifer Evanson
Co-op sales mgr .. Blythe Focht
Production mgrs .. Brian Blowey
Kate Burgess
Marketing director .. Shelly McConnell
Creative director .. Brian Fuco
Glassel 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 homeотten, or faculty or staff position. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan editorial on Thursday seriously misrepresented the facts concerning GTA unionization. The Kansan does not strike strikes and picket lines: It should know that GTAs are attempting to organize as public employees, and under Kansas law public employees have no right to strike. Indeed, GTAs acknowledge this as one of the benefits of organizing as public employees.
Unions could improve relations between University and GTAs
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Perot
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It is true that at a small number of state universities GTAs have gone on strike. But that has always been in response to an administrative refusal to acknowledge them as public employees. Significantly, KU GTAs did not strike when the administration refused to acknowledge them as public employees. Rather, KU GTAs resolved themselves in a professional manner to settle the disagreement before the appropriate governmental agency — the Kansas Public Employee Relations Board. As the hearing on the issue draws to a close, it appears that KU GTAs may succeed in peacefully forcing the administration to acknowledge that under Kansas law GTAs are public employees.
Worries about strikes and picket lines at KU have no basis in fact. The law precluded public employees (and GTAs if they are found to be public
important to remember what "collegiality" means. Webster's dictionary defines collegiality as sharing power equally among colleagues. Employees of course, rarely share power equally with employers. But they can and often do approach the ideal of collegiality. Perhaps the administration should recognize KU GTAs as public employees and should allow GTAs to debate the impact that collective bargaining would have on collegiality at KU.
GUEST COLUMNIST
DAVID
REIDY
employees) from striking. And KU GTAs have demonstrated that they do not prefer strikes as a means of advancing their interests.
The Kansan viewpoint states that high GTA turnover will make the formation of a GTA union difficult to administer. Of course, most GTAs serve KU for several years during their graduate studies. Further, unionized GTAs at the Universities of Oregon, Massachusetts, Wisconsin, Michigan and Florida, among others, seem able to sustain GTA unions without difficulty. Turnover is simply a red herring.
As it stands, GTAs have no institutional status as a group. There is no structure within which GTAs and administrators can share power or work together to address the concerns either economic or otherwise. I am, of course, open to persuasion provided the arguments advanced are based upon facts and reason and not knee-jerk anti-union sentiments.
What does lead to an adversarial employer/employee relationship is when an employer offers arguments that can barely be made with a straight face and attempts to prevent employees from exercising their statutory rights. Indeed, during the hearing last week, even the administration's "expert" witness acknowledged during cross examination that refusing to acknowledge GTAs as public employees in an effort to avoid collective bargaining can do more damage to the administration's relationship with the GTAs than any amount of collective bargaining. Had collegiality been a top priority for the administration, it would not have denied that KU GTAs are public employees, a position rejected by every branch of university governance that has considered the question. Also a position at odds with any reasonable interpretation of the state statute defining public employees.
The Kansan correctly states that GTAs and administrators ought to work together to improve the terms and conditions of GTA employment at KU. I believe that is what a GTA union, organized under Kansas public employees statutes, will enable GTAs to do.
and amicable employer/employee relations. And by all accounts, the statutes serve that end. Despite the decline in private sector unionization, public sector unionization has continued to rise in recent years.
The Kansan editorial board states that it believes unionization will lead to an adversarial relationship between administrators and GTAs. The laws governing public sector labor relations, however, are designed to encourage professional
Human rights violated outside China
Last week, the International Olympic Committee decided that in seven years the Olympics will be in Sydney, Australia, and not Beijing. The reason, simply put, was China's atrocious human-rights record. While I agree with the committee's decision, I think that invoking "human rights" when deciding where to hold the Olympics can become problematic.
To be sure, KU GTAs remain committed to professional and collegial relations with the administration. It is
David Reidy is a lawrence philosophy doctoral candidate.
Take the 1996 Olympics, which are going to be in Atlanta. If the committee had looked at our human rights record, they might have come across Brett Kimberlin. In 1988, Kimberlin, a convicted felon, attempted to hold a news conference to announce that he once sold marijuana to Dan Quayle. The conference was canceled at the last moment, and Kimberlin was placed in special confinement. Recently, the Justice Department concluded that though Kimberlin received "disparate treatment" further investigation wasn't warranted. I
Or there's the case of Randy Weaver, a self-proclaimed white separatist in Idaho. The FBI arrested him for selling a sawed-off shotgun. When he failed to show up for court, they went to his farm. (Weaver was given the wrong date for the trial.) A shootout ensued, during which FBI agents killed his son and wife. Because an FBI agent was also killed, when the siege ended, the FBI prosecuted him
guess this means that free speech doesn't extend to criminals.
STAFF COLUMNIST
NATHAN
OLSON
The decision to reject China for the Olympics is a step in the right direction, but we shouldn't be satisfied with this "victory." Instead, we should use it to take a look at ourselves and not just blame others.
Asset forfeiture laws are another example of this country's strange ideas on human rights. Under the laws, police can seize property and assets from people suspected of selling or possessing drugs. The seized money is given to the police and prosecutors. In California, the laws require the suspect to prove the assets were obtained legally — a far cry from "innocent until proven guilty." In 1992, for example, a woman who possessed approximately a grain of salt worth of methamphetamine had $1,013 seized from her. She failed to get her money back because the form had to be signed in two places, and she signed it only in one.
While arguing about forfeiture laws before the Supreme Court this summer, the government, according to the New York Times, "argued that forfeiture actions are not punitive but
'remedial' and that the guilt or innocence of the property owner is 'constitutionally irrelevant.'" It's frightening that the Government would ever believe that guilt or innocence is "constitutionally irrelevant." Fortunately, the Court did hold that asset forfeiture laws violate the "excessive fines" clause of the Eighth Amendment.
And of course there's the death penalty. Amnesty International continues to include the United States in its list of human rights violators because we are the only developed nation in the world that still has the death penalty.
for murder. His acquittal doesn't replace his family.
Nathan Olson is a Chicago graduate student in English.
For the Birds
by Jeff Fitzpatrick
SEYMORE!
SOMETHING MOVED!
WHAT ARE YOU,
KIDDING?
GET OUT!
BE QUICK ABOUT IT
SHUT THAT DOOR!
LEAVE US ALONE!
SLAM!
OP-ED
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 28, 1993
5
Gumby's apologizes, pledges better service
Gumby's of Lawrence deeply regrets the offense given the Haskell Indian Nations University community by certain of its employees. We want to thank all Haskell students for the opportunity to discuss your concerns and to assure you that policies have been implemented to prevent any recurrence. We hope that together Haskell and Gumby's of Lawrence can turn this unfortunate experience into a new relationship of mutual respect, cooperation and understanding. Gumby's of Lawrence is proud of the opportunity to serve Haskell, the University of Kansas and the residents of Lawrence, and pledges prompt, friendly and high-quality service in the months and years to come.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Brian Sipp co-owner of Gumby's of Lawrence
Kansanstereotyped working white males
I am constantly fascinated by the solicitous attention paid by the Kansan to the concerns of minority pressure groups. Every day, when I pick up the Kansan, I know that I will be treated to three or four articles that in some way advance the political agendas of organizations that claim to speak for women, gays, African Americans or Hispanics. The Kansan never misses a chance to denounce what somebody has perceived as racism, sexism, homophobia or stereotyping. So, of course, I was surprised when I
checked the editorial page of the Sept. 21 Kansan and found Chris Ronan's column titled "Roofing job makes student wish to be back at school and studying."
This column was one of the most blatant and unfair examples of stereotyping that I have seen printed anywhere. I am sure that there are many clean-cut, polite, nonsmoking, intelligent, sensitive and untattooed working-class males out there but they don't seem to exist in Mr. Ronan's world.
Actually I don't mean to get on Mr. Ronan's back. The people I am angry with are the Kansan editorial staff for not having enough perspective to catch this prejudice and stereotyping.
Roofers are identified in the public eye as being "rednecks" or "white trash" (two racial epithets which are socially acceptable). If Mr. Ronan had written his column making fun of people in a profession identified with some other social group, the Kansan would have never printed it.
Of course, it's wrong to stereotype and put down a migrant farm worker; in America today it is socially unacceptable to make fun of people based on their race, religion or ethnic background.
This is all to the good -but it should apply to everybody. If it's wrong to make fun of African Americans, Jewish or Polish people, than it's wrong to make fun of white working-class males. But the Kansan is too busily and hypocritically involved in promoting the agendas of minority pressure groups to recognize this basic truth.
John Chappell
Raymond Birt claimed that Lance Hamby's thesis that the Judeo-Christian world view, as incorporated in the U.S. Constitution, provides adequate grounds "to deny parental custody rights to gay parents" was both historically inaccurate and logically flawed. In fact, it was both historically accurate and logically cogent. Much more so than Birt's own conclusion that the Sharon Bottoms case is really "a question of human rights for a group still not considered fully human."
Leawood graduate student
Never mind that no sane person claims that these people are less than human, only that they exercise a deviant and potentially disastrous lifestyle. We are already paying for these deviant "lifestyles" in our fight against AIDS, the gift to our society from "gay" men.
Western society was well-shaped by Bible
The real issue here is Birt's participation in the defamation through ignorance of the "Judeo-Christian philosophy." He is typically "platitudinous" in his statement that "there is no such thing as Judeo-Christian philosophy..." and "no authority to determine exactly what Judaism or Christianity are or what a Jew or a Christian must believe."
Such abysmal ignorance of the simplest biblical texts surely should not be exposed in print. Only our current climate of cultural relativism and what in liberal circles passes for thinking can hide such stupidity.
Such resolute foolishness falls to the level of college yells if we believe that "Western philosophy has had a less than inspiring history when dealing with nonmale, nonconforming or
nonwestern people." Where in all the world, throughout history to within a few years ago, would a woman have had it so good as she did in the west after the Judeo-Christian philosophy took hold? Only after other cultures began to "westernize" were women ever treated well in other cultures. I invite you to consider the Chinese practice of hobbling women and the still-current abomination of female circumcision practiced throughout most of Africa and the Arab Middle East.
I ask you to differentiate, as the Judeo-Christian "philosophy" does, between loving people and hating, sinful behavior. Sheldon Wilson
Lawrence graduate student
Western Civ critics have no argument
With reference to the full-page advertisement captioned "Would Jesus Flunk Western Civ?" taken out Sept. 20 by KCBT Student Ministries, I would like to make a few comments. KCBT suggests that "a careful examination" of the western civilization textbook "reveals" a basic methodological approach to understanding the Bible that is at once a "subtle attack on Christianity" and a conscious withholding of "truth." KCBT would have us believe that its leaders are the legitimate arbiters of truth, and that its members should be teaching western civilization. KCBT apparently is making three demands: 1) that western civilization instructors teach biblical narrative as fact; 2) that they stop distorting the impact Israel had on the
development of civilization; and 3) that they start teaching that Jesus was not just a man but "God."
There are serious problems with this approach. First, such an approach is illegal vis-a-vis a strict adherence to the principle of separation of church and state. However, KCBT is not interested in the needs and expectations of an objectively oriented, multicultural student body, only the needs of its narrow constituency. Second, the mission of academia is the accumulation of knowledge through objective, scientific enterprise, not the application of a blind-faith approach to history. Third, KCBT's argument that western civilization misrepresents Jesus and his existing nature, implies that KCBT understands Jesus and his nature correctly. Objective readers who are interested in doing a little research of their own will find that the Jesus KCBT advocates is a Jesus the New Testament canon could make nothing of; and the KCBT's basic methodological approach to understanding the Bible is itself a "substate attack" on biblical Christianity.
Those without a philosophical or religious axe to grind would find the question "Would Jesus Flunk Western Civ?" absurd. In light of the Nazarene's championing of both the principle of justice and a correct exegesis of the religious texts, objective readers can only conclude that, not only would Jesus pass western civilization with honors, but, were he alive today, he also would be teaching western civilization with an eye for imparting the "truth" to the lost souls at KCBT.
Matthew Fewels
Instructor, western civilization
Matthew Fellows
U.S. juries capable of giving fair verdicts
I am writing in response to Tiffany Hurt's article, "Packaging all part of games that lawyers play." In her commentary, Ms. Hurt stated that, "(Lawyers) are merely trying to sell the judge and jury a package." She continued to state that the defense of alleged criminals (guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution) was "pure advertisement." After discussing this "advertisement" issue with both a KU advertising student and KU law student, I could find no logic in this statement. While both realized that lawyers are invaluable participants in the American system of justice, neither could imagine using advertising in a courtroom.
Just as invaluable is the constitutionally guaranteed trial by a jury of peers. Although this system has served us well for more than 200 years, Ms. Hurt believed that some juries, like the first Rodney King beating jury, were too biased to disseminate fact from opinion, and thus rendered the "wrong" verdict. Ms. Hurt implied that slick legal tricks by unscrupulous lawyers produced these "wrong" verdicts, but she supplied her readers with no examples. Luckily, this country has enlightened individuals such as Ms. Hurt and thousands of rioters, who came to the "right" verdict simply from watching 15 seconds of a four-minute video.
It seems to me that the only people disregarding facts are those who would convict others in the media rather than in a court of law.
Doug Roberson
Galena sophomore
VISIONS Featuring l.a. Eyeworks
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Featuringl.a.Eyeworks 841-7421
Learn to Fly 842-0000
Have youined at The Castle Tea Room lately?
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NEIL HOWE AUTHOR OF 13th GEN: ABORT, RETRY, IGNORE, FAIL?
DARYL EVANS, PHD. ASSOC. PROFESSOR OF SOCIOLOGY
MODERATOR
FORUM / TWO PANEL DISCUSSION
DATE THURSDAY
SEPTEMBER 30
PLACE KANSAS UNION
BALLROOM
TIME 7:30 P.M.
PRICE FREE
THIRD
MILLENNIUM
BOOK SIGNING
MT. OREAD BOOK SHOP IN THE KANSAS UNION NEIL HOWE AUTHOR OF
13TH GEN: ABORT, RETRY, IGNORE, FAIL? 1:30 - 3:30 THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 30TH
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Celebrate Women's Week!
October 4th-- the 8th
MAJOR EVENTS
MONDAY: Lecture by Bobbi Larson in the Kansas Union. TUESDAY: Women's Fair with information and recruitment in the Kansas Union!!
FEATURING: THE STUDENT ASSISTANCE CENTER, PLACEMENT CENTER, WATKINS HEALTH CENTER, EMILY TAYLOR WOMEN'S RESOURCE CENTER, AND OTHER STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS. A LECTURE SERIES OF EDUCATIONAL AND GROUP DISCUSSION SESSIONS ON WOMEN'S ISSUES IN THE
SION SESSIONS ON WOMEN'S ISSUES IN THE KANSAS UNION!
INCLUDING: AIDS/HIV, LEADERSHIP AND INVOLVEMENT, JOB SEARCH AND OPPORTUNITIES, NUTRITION AND EXERCISE, VOLUNTEERISM, AND MALE/FEMALE COMMUNICATIONS.
INCLUDING: AIDS/HIV, LEADERSHIP
WEDNESDAY Women's Fair / Lecture Series Continued!
KANSAS UNION!!
ALL WOMEN WELCOME!!!
AMES PUBLIC LIBRARY
ORLANDO
THE BOOKSTORE MUSEUM
MONDAY JULY 10TH 2023
NEW YORK CITY
ORLANDO
THE MUNDIAL BUILT JANE
MAYOR OF ORLANDO
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Man without a Faces $^{P13}$ *{4:15}*, 7:00, 9:30
Secret Garden $^{P13}$ *{4:30 only}$
Undercover Blues $^{P13}$ *{7:25, 9:35*
Mannenhattan Mystery $^{P13}$ *{4:30}, 7:10, 9:40*
The Fugitive $^{P13}$ *{4:10}, 7:05, 9:55*
The Program $^{R}$ *{4:35}, 7:20, 9:45*
True Romance $^{R}$ *{4:20}, 7:15, 9:50*
*PrimeTime Show (t)* Hearing Impaired Stereo
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1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191
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7:30,9:30
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SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
INDIVIDUALIZED WEIGHT CONDITIONING PROGRAMS
For Students, Faculty, & Staff
Recreation Services has a staff member on duty in the Robinson Center Weight Room to help you with such a conditioning program. During Open Recreation, this individual will be able to assist you with proper lifting techniques, machine usage, and a variety of individual work-out packages.
MONDAYS
Staff will be available at these times:
TUESDAYS
WEDNESDAYS FRIDAYS
7:00PM-10:30PM
7:00PM-10:30PM
7:30PM-10:30PM
12:30PM-2:30PM
Drop by during these times and design your own program today! For more information call 864-3546, Recreation Services, 208 Robinson.
6
Tuesday, September 28, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FREE! GET IT DONE NOW!
through September 29
Make the yearbook your book. Let your face mark your place at KU.
Call 864-5499 to schedule an appointment.
Walk-ins welcome, too.
Times available Monday, Wednesday Thursday & Friday: 9-12,1-5 p.m. and tesdays 1-5 p.m..6-9 p.m.
Tuesdays 1-5 p.m., 6-9 p.m.
Pictures taken at Strong Hall Rotunda. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to see that time is running out!
The Jayhawker your face, your place, a different perspective.
THE NEWS in brief
AUSTIN, Texas
U.S. senator is indicted on charges of misconduct during state-level tenure
Just 10 weeks after her election to the U.S. Senate, Kay Bailey Hutchison was indicted yesterday on charges of misconduct during her 2 I/2-year tenure as state treasurer.
Hutchison, a republican, was accused of using her treasurer office for personal use and destroying records as part of a cover up.
She denied the charges, calling them the product of a politically motivated investigation by Travis County District Attorney Ronnie Earle, a democrat.
Hutchison, 50, defeated appointed democrat Sen. Bob Krueger in a June 5 special election for U.S. Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentens's former seat. The victory made her Texas 'first woman senator in history.
Days later, a grand jury began looking into misconduct allegations.
The indictments accuse her of using state employees, facilities, equipment and supplies for "her personal benefit" and of destroying computer records from the treasury.
Africa
Asia
Europe
North America
South America
Antarctica
Middle East
Africa
Also indicted were Michael Barron, former deputy state treasurer, and David Criss, the agency's planning director.
Texas GOP executive director Karen Hughes called the charges politically motivated.
Barron was charged with official misconduct, tampering with governmental records and tampering with physical evidence. Criss was charred with official misconduct.
Hutchison is allowed to remain in the Senate while she fights the charges.
"Iam sickened but frankly not surprised that a grand jury made up of democrat primary voters is trying to win through the judicial process what they were unable to win in the last election," she said. "This is a new low for partisan double standards in state government."
Earle's office raided the treasury June 10 and issued more than a dozen subpoenas for current and former agency workers.
LOS ANGELES
Officers out on bail in King case
U. S. District Judge John G. Davies gave Powell and Koon about two weeks to appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, setting Oct. 12 as the new date for them to start serving their 2/12-year sentences.
Police officer Laurence Powell had already spent his first night in prison for the Rodney King beating and Sgt. Stacey Koon was just surrendering when a judge suddenly allowed them to go free yesterday.
Both men had faced a deadline of noon yesterday for checking into the Dublin Federal Prison Camp, a converted military barracks without bars or fences 40 miles east of San Francisco.
Powell, described by his lawyer as terrified, surrendered
at the prison Sunday afternoon; Koon arrived at around 11:30 a.m. yesterday, around the time Davies issued his ruling, and hadn't been processed yet.
Koon, Powell and two other white policemen were charged in the March 1991 beating of King, an African-American motorist stopped after a chase.
TBILISI, Georgia
Shevardnadze flees besieged province BELISIT, Georgia
Abkhazian separatists captured Sukhumi, the Georgian government's last stronghold in the prosperous Abkhazian province on the Black Sea, yesterday and forced Georgian leader Eduard Shevardnadze to flee the devastated city he had vowed to defend.
Shevardnadze blamed Russia for the defeat.
Abkhazian forces fought their way to the center of the city and after 12 days of bitter combat raised their flag over City Hall, Shevardnadze said in a message to his office in Tbilisi, the Georgian capital. The victory gave the separatists virtually complete control of the region.
More than 3,000 people have been killed and 100,000 made homeless during the yearlong war, one of the fiercest ethnic conflicts to rise among the ruins of the Soviet Union.
"Georgia lost an unequal battle," he said. "We could have saved Sukhumi yesterday, but only Russia could do this, and we sent an appeal to Moscow for such help."
Andrei Soloviev, a 38-year-old Russian freelance photographer on assignment for The Associated Press, was killed by a sniper during yesterday's attack, Abkhazian officials said.
MIAMI
10th tourist murdered in Florida
Just as travel agents from Germany were getting a VIP tour to persuade them to keep sending tourists to Florida, another out-of-state visitor was shot to death on a Miami highway.
The seemingly senseless killing unleashed a new flurry of negative publicity about crime against visitors in a state with a $31 billion-a-year tourist industry.
Miguel A. Sanchez, 40, of New York City, was shot Sunday night.
A motorist pulled alongside his cousin's car and fired a single shot, hitting Sanchez in the head.
No arrests were made, he said.
"At this point we really do not have a motive," said Metro-Dade police representative Ralph Fernandez.
Sanchez was the 10th tourist murdered in Florida in the past year.
The shooting couldn't have come at a worse time, said Aldo Rinaldi, president of Sun Tours Inc., which helped bring 22,000 Germans to Florida last year.
Rinaldi had 15 German travel agents in Key West on Monday as part of a campaign to calm European tourists frightened away by the violence.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
IT WON THE AWARDS. IT WILLWIN YOUR HEART.
THE SECRET GARDEN
At the Lied Center
University of Kansas
HOLLIDAY CENTER
September 29 (KU Student Night) - October 3
Wednesday-Saturday performances at 8:00 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday matinees at 2:00 p.m.
Sunday evening at 7:00 p.m.
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office; all seats reserved;
tickets $35 and $30;
special discounts available.
To charge tickets by phone using MasterCard or Visa call 864-ARTS; or call any Ticketmaster outlet (816) 931-3330 or (913) 234-5454.
TICKETS AT:
TICKET MASTER
KU STUDENT TICKETS HALF PRICE FOR SEPTEMBER 29 PERFORMANCE ONLY!
Student tickets also available at the SUA office, Kansas Union.
TOWELING ANTI-STATIC ROPE
The Lied Center OPENING NIGHT
Paul Knotz / KANSAN
Bob Wolf, Olfer resident, left, and Greg Ogan, Lawrence resident, raise the lights at the Lied Center.
Ernst Lied gave much to causes
Kansanstaffreport
Ernst Lied entered the University of Kansas in 1924 and played on the golf team, but his legacy has little to do with sport. It has more to do with a donation by The Ernest F. Lied Foundation Trust.
The Lied Center, on West Campus, opens tonight with an invitation-only reception and performance followed by a student-night tomorrow. Half-price student night tickets are still available and can be purchased at the Lied Center Box Office.
EASTERN UNIVERSITY
Susan McSpadden/ KANSAN
Lied was the secretary for The Sphinx Society, an honorary freshman class organization for men. In 1987
for the sophomore class. Two years into his studies, Lied and his family
moved to Omaha, Neb. He graduated from the University of Nebraska and later moved to Las Vegas.
Lied's father owned a car dealership in Kansas City, and Lied made his fortune as a car dealer and land developer.
During the 1940s, Lied hired Christina Hixson. When Lied died in July 1982, Hixson was named as the trustee for the Lied Foundation Trust. Hixson has given generous donations in his name to causes that were important to Lied. A Lied Center stands at the University of Nebraska, and the Omaha Zoo received a substantial donation.
Hixson gave $15 million to KU to complete the Lied Center.
Student night
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
Susan McSpadden/KANSAN
Student tickets are $17.50 and $15.
All other nights are $35 and $30.
Rates for seniors are $34 and $29.
Season subscribers receive a 25 percent discount.
Tomorrow and Sept. 30's shows will be at 8 p.m.
Shows 0ct. 2 will be at 2 and 8 p.m.
Shows 0ct. 3 will be at 2 and 7 p.m.
The Lied Center, a $14.6 million performing arts complex, has a seating capacity of 2,030.
Source: The Lied Center
KANSAN
Award-winning 'Secret Garden' opens theater
By Sara Bennett Kansan staff writer
"Come to my garden. Come, sweet child," the ghost of the beautiful Lily beckons, inviting those she left behind to discover the beauty locked within her secret garden.
Tomorrow, children and adults alike also will be invited to come into the garden when the Lied Center presents the Tony Award-winning Broadway musical "The Secret Garden."
"The Secret Garden" is an adaptation of Frances Hodgson Burnett's classic story about Mary Lennox, a love-starved young girl orphaned during a cholera epidemic in India. Transplanted to her uncle Archibald's lonely man on the moors of Yorkshire, England, Mary discovers an abandoned garden that belonged to her deceased aunt Lily. Mary restores the garden, despite the wishes of her grieving uncle, and, in doing so, restores the bloom of hope to her grieving family.
"The Secret Garden" debuted April 25, 1991, at the St. James Theater in New York City, where it continues to play to sell-out crowds. During its opening season, the musical won Tony Awards for set design, best book and best supporting actress. Daisy Eagan, the first girl to play the part of Mary, is the youngest actress ever to win a Tony Award.
"The Secret Garden" also marked the first time in Broadway history that all key creative positions in a major production were held by women. Pulitzer Prize-winner Marsha Norman wrote the script and lyrics, Grammy Award-winning Lucy Simon composed the music, and Susan Schulman directed the production. Heidi Landesman produced and designed the sets, which are based on Edwardian and Victorian collages.
Paul Kotz/KAH$
Burnett's novel "The Secret Garden" was published in 1911. Simon said in a telephone interview from her New York City apartment that her affection for the book inspired her to adapt it to a musical.
BIG BIRD
"I read it when I was a kid and had a really strong attachment to the idea of that secret place you could go to that was all yours," she said. "It's the transformation of the garden that's the healing device that brings Mary back to life."
To remain true to the story, Simon researched the folk music of Scotland and Northern England to recreate the feel of Yorkshire, England, where the story is set.
"It deals with everything from loss and sorrow, to excitement and healing, to the fulfillment of getting what you want,# she said. "It also encompasses jealousy, anger and hope."
Workers at the Lied Center unload scenery that will be used in "The Secret Garden."
Jacqueline Davis, executive director for the Lied Center, said such emotions make "The Secret Garden" an ideal show to celebrate the opening of the center.
Although "The Secret Garden" is known as a young girl's story, Simon said the show's message appeals to men and adults as well.
"It is one of the most uplifting, charming and beautiful pieces of musical theater I have ever seen," she said.
"It just tugs at everybody," she said. "One of our male producers said a fun thing to do is to go into the men's room after the show and watch them dry their eyes."
Simon said receiving letters from people for whom "The Secret Garden" has struck a personal note is one of the greatest rewards for her involvement with the show.
"It was a gift to me to get to write it," she said. "I feel like I am returning the gift, and I think people receive it as a gift."
Lied Center offers space, new features
By JL Watson Kansan staff writer
Tonight marks the debut of "The Secret Garden" at the center. Long after the performers from the theatrical production have traveled on, the center will be the home for KU's Concert, Chamber and New Direction Series.
The paint has dried, the lights are on, the actors are ready to take the stage, and there's not a bad seat in the house. The Lied Center is about to open to thunderous applause.
"We had a need for this building because we didn't have a facility that had technical capabilities to do events like 'The Secret Garden,'" said Nancy Kaiser-Caplan, public relations director for the center. "It's state-of-the-art."
It will also be the site for Vespers, Rock Chalk Revue, lectures, films, conferences, convocations and performances by the department of music and dance.
"It's the largest seating capacity of any building on campus except for the field house." she said.
The center offers a variety of amenities for performers and audience members. Performers will have the use of three group dressing rooms and four "star" dressing rooms, all equipped with bathroom facilities, makeup lights and mirrors. A sound-proof warm-up room just off-stage will allow performers to perfect their vocal and musical sounds in close proximity to the action on stage. Dancers will warm up in a specially designed dance studio that has a residential floor similar to the stage floor so that dancers do not have to make a transition in footing.
"The Secret Garden" was chosen as the premiere production because it had a wide range of appeal and offered multiple performances, Kaiser-Caplan said. "We didn't want a symphony for just one night," she said.
Audience members can meet performers backstage in the greenroom, which doubles as a waiting room for actors before they go on stage.
"This is the most elegant greenroom I've ever seen," said Jacqueline Davis, director for the center. "I look forward to having artists here. I had to apologize at Hoch for no showers, no dressing rooms and the horrible spaces."
The greenroom at the new Lied Center has a kitchen, oversuffited chairs and a view of the Wakarusa Valley.
The center was constructed after the Ernst F. Lied Foundation donated $15 million for the project.
Audience members will be seated on the main level or one of three balconies. Sound consoles throughout the hall will engulf the audience with "surround sound." The theatrical riggings 69 feet above the floor hold curtains, lighting instruments, scenery and a screen for movies.
"We received confirmation of the gift in 1888," Kaiser-Caplan said. "Construction began in early 1990, and we've been working on it ever since."
For opening night everything is in place. Everything, that is, but the landscape.
"If you had asked me earlier, I would've said it would have been done today," Davis said. "But now we're still working on it."
The fresh piles of dirt symbolize the potential the building holds; and an air of expectation wafts through the halls and onto the stage.
Students are encouraged to be part of the experience. They will be able to buy tickets at reduced rates for all of the center's productions, including "The Secret Garden."
"It took a lot to talk the show's producers into having a student night," Davis said. "I want that student night to be full. I'm even providing free beverages and cookies."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Student tickets for "The Secret Garden" are still available.
SEPTEMBER 28.1993 PAGE 7
KULife
People and places at the University of Kansas.
WEIRD
Bandit nabs baited bag of money, gets paint in his pants
A suspect, said to be in his 20s, escaped after robbing a First American Bank branch in Nashville, Tenn., in August, but not before leaving some of the money behind during the getaway. The teller had managed to give the man a bag of "bait" money containing an explodable device that would coat the money with a dye soon after he left the bank. Apparently the man wanted to free his hands during the getaway and stuffed the bag into his sweatpants. Said a Nashville detective, "We believe he may have (dropped the money when he) suffered severe burns to his groin area."
Flunkee gets an A
Good to be big
In April, police in Chandler, Ariz., arrested Arturo Ortiz, 33 and 135 pounds, after he had allegedly broken into a home and had begun fondling a woman as she slept. The woman weighs 260 pounds and easily subdued Ortiz by twisting his wrist behind his back and holding him until police arrived. Said the woman, "I'm large, and he happens to be small."
Kansas lawyers
In January near Alvin, Texas, Andrea Guerero, 18, and her brother came across a man who was slumped over the wheel of his truck and not breathing. Andrea administered CPR until an ambulance arrived to take the victim to a hospital where he recovered. Guerero was on her way home from a CPR certification exam, which she had flunked.
The New York Times reported in April that Kansas lawyers Michael Harris and Fletcher Bell were successful in filing worker compensation claims for back injuries suffered at work: Harris got almost $35,000 for the strain of reaching into the backseat of his car for his briefcase, and Bell got $95,000 for his injury lifting his briefcase from the trunk of his car.
The Weirdo-American community
During a nationally televised August preseason game, Denver Bronco defensive tackle Darren Drozdov, who was in his stance opposite the offensive center awaiting the snap, vomited on the ball. Afterward, he told reporters, "I get sick a lot. I was a quarterback in high school, and I'd start throwing up on my center's back. I don't have a lot of control out there."
Copyright 1993 Universal Press Syndicate
8
Tuesday, September 28, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Haskell, city to study relations
By Traci Cari
Kansan staff writer
Many Haskell Indian Nations University students say they do not feel welcome in Lawrence, and a new city task force is being formed as a response.
Commissioner Jo Andersen said the task force would consist of about 10 people, including herself, Haskell students, Lawrence police patrol officers and American Indians who are residents of Lawrence.
"Haskell students still have some feeling that people in Lawrence don't like Indians and there is some fear
about going downtown and into this community." Andersen said.
A recent boycott by Haskell students of two Lawrence businesses, Gumby's Pizza, 1445 W. 23rd St., and Checkers Foods, 2300 Louisiana St., are examples of what the task force hopes to prevent, Andersen said.
"It's that kind of thing that I want to get before it reaches a boycott," she said. "It's bad for the whole community, and a lot of it has to do with misunderstanding and people not talking to each other."
Mayor John Nabandian requested that patrol officers serve on the task force to increase communication
"It will give officers a chance to see that there is a variety of opinions among the students and that some are pro-law enforcement," he said.
between the police and Haskell students.
The task force is being formed with the help of the Lawrence Alliance, a community coalition whose mission has been to eliminate discrimination in Lawrence. Sleepy Eye LaFromboise, president of the Haskell student body, also will serve on the task force.
Lisa Blair, program coordinator for the coalition and administrator for the Downtown Lawrence Association, said the coalition had received letters from Haskell students that said they did not feel comfortable shopping downtown.
"They feel as if they are being scrutinized more closely," said Blair, who will serve on the task force.
But downtown merchants have promised to watch closely for discrimination, she said, and as a result, the letters have declined.
"I think that the downtown is receptive," Blair said. "Part of the issue was just bringing it to their attention and showing them ways of dealing with it."
Yearbook photos free to boost sales
Bv Denise Noll
Special to the Kansan
Jayhawker yearbooks will cost $30 this year, but students won't have to pay to get their pictures in it.
Eliminating the charge for being photographed is just one of the changes the Jayhawker staff made in this year's book, which is due out in April. Pictures are being taken in Strong Hall until 5 p.m. tomorrow.
The low number of students who had their pictures taken was a problem that plagued past staffs, said Jennifer Derryberry, Oklahoma City sophomore and Jayhawker editor.
In the past, seniors were charged $4 and underclassmen were charged $2. The staff dropped the charge, Derryberry said, to entice more students to be photographed.
"We felt that it might make it more of an option for more people if they don't have to worry about how much it costs," she said. "Maybe it will encourage more people to come out and have it done."
Last year, only about 1,800 students got their pictures taken, said Jennifer Hughes, Dodge City sophomore and associate editor.
Another reason the charge was dropped was to increase book sales, Hughes said.
"We didn't have a very high percentage of students getting their pictures taken," she said. "People don't buy books if they aren't in them, and yearbook sales have been very low."
Hughes said sales had been slightly higher this year than last year, when only about 2,800 students purchased the yearbook. She said low sales indicated that college yearbooks were dying out.
Hughes also said that the content of the book would differ from past editions. One of the changes will be the way student portraits are arranged.
In previous years, students were pictured in the yearbook by living groups. This year, the portraits will be divided into only two sections: seniors and underclassmen.
"It's really a lot easier from a production point of view," she said. "You'd always have half of a page of nothing because six people from Hashinger would get their pictures taken."
New sections covering local bands and campus events and fraternities and sororities also will be added, Derryberry said. Since members will no longer be pictured with their organizations, group pictures and stories about Greek activities will appear in their own section.
The theme of the book will be "A Different Perspective." Derryberry said the theme was chosen to reflect the student population.
"Last year's theme was 'Diversity,' she said. "That's still a prominent theme on campus. We wanted a theme that included diversity but obviously we can't do that again. 'A Different Perspective' implies that lots of people see things in different ways."
Hughes said the staff's goal was to make all types of students more aware of the presence of the Jayhawk on campus.
"We're trying to make a success out of it," she said, "but it's more of a long-term project than a one-year thing."
TEXAS
THE
KUNG FU
SCHOOL
Susan McSpadden / KANSAN
Hackey-sack ballet
Mitch LaPoint, Lawrence freshman, concentrates on keeping his hackey sack moving while Chris Hatton, Lawrence freshman, waits his turn in the background. They said they were enjoying the cool weather on Campanile Hill yesterday.
Private funds fuel skepticism about Biosphere 2
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
Professors and students at KU have joined the ranks of the nation's many skeptics questioning the scientific validity of the scientific experiment, Biosphere 2, which ended Sunday.
For two years, eight people, four men and four women, lived in a specially designed dome, created to serve as a self-producing, natural living environment.
The experiment was funded by a Texas billionaire, without any government assistance for the project. Ross McKinney, professor emeritus of environmental health engineering, said he thought the experiment was criticized largely because of the way the project was funded.
"There's still confusion whether the biosphere was constructed for its commerciality or for its validity to the scientific world," McKinney said.
Biosphere 2 was a $150 million project, and
McKinney said that when that much money was invested in something there usually was a gimmick to get people to come out and see it.
The "planet within a dome" was designed outside of Tucson, Ariz., and nested in a desert valley. The biosphere is 3.15 acres of enclosed environments that range from a desert setting to a rain forest, with farmland and living quarters.
Biosphere is second only to the Grand Canyon as Arizona's top tourist attraction.
"They made a show out of it," McKinney said. "How else are you going to justify spending that much money?"
But McKinney also said he thought the biosphere could prove to be very resourceful to the scientific world in the future. Someday, it could even be used in space, he said.
"If it's handed in the right fashion it could serve as an invaluable learning tool," he said.
In its two-year stint, the biosphere experiment had some problems. Researchers ran into shortages in supplies and resources.
Val Smith, assistant professor of environment studies, said the biosphere experiment served its purpose well, but only as a learning facility that answered scientific questions.
"How exactly does one go about creating a closed living environment to use for the future?" Smith said. "Problems that arose only underscore our limited understanding of the way our own biosphere (Earth) currently functions."
Paul Rich, assistant professor of environmental studies, said the biosphere research project could not be categorized as a scientific study because a rigorous set of controls were not used in the experiment.
"It did not fulfill the requirements for strictest scientific research," Rich said. "Experiments require a detailed process of hypothesis, treatments and controls. This experiment was lacking in many areas."
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
"There's still
confusion whether the biosphere was constructed for its commerciality or for its validity to the scientific world."
Rosa McKinney professor emeritus of environmental health engineering
Biosphere2
Researchers claim to have set a record for living in an essentially closed system, breaking a Soviet record of six months.
Crew produced 80 percent of its food. The rest consisted of seeds intended for planting and crops grown inside the dome and stored before closure Sept. 26, 1991.
Air was pumped in once to replace seepage. Oxygen was pumped in twice to counter losses that left air as "thin" as that atop a loss of 1,340-foot mountain. Carbon dioxide levels settled at five times the normal amount but were within federal standards.
Crew member Jane Poynier left the dome for five hours for surgery after losing the tip of her finger in a thresher accident, Oct. 11, 1991.
Airlock doors were opened more than two dozen times to import equipment, predatory insects to battle farm pests, and such items as vitamins and sleeping pills.
Source: The Associated Press
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The University of Kansas
HOMECOMING 1993
KU VS. ISU
Recycle the Cyclones!
Parade applications available in the SUA office.
Entry Categories:
- Marching Bands
- Marching
- Banner Signs
Entry Applications & Deadlines:
- Float. Deadline for entry applications is Friday, Oct. 1 at 5:00pm.
- Marching Bands and Banners- Deadline for entry applications is Friday, Oct. 8 at 5:00pm.
- Marching Bands and Banners- Deadline for entry applications is Friday, Oct. 8 at 5:00pm
- All entry applications should be submitted to the SUA Office, Level 4, Kansas Union.
For more information call 864-3477.
Required Parade Meetings
- Wednesday, Oct. 6 at 5:00pm in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union, Level 5. All FLOAT entries must have a representative present for rules and safety review by the KU Police. An absence from this meeting could result in disqualifications from the parade or loss of points.
---
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 28, 1993
9
Falcons handed fourth season loss
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — It was supposed to be the night the Atlanta Falcons ended their 1993 futility. It didn't happen. In fact, it wasn't even close.
Neil O'Donnell, Barry Foster and a fierce Pittsburgh defense crushed the Falcons 45-17, handing winless Atlanta its seventh loss in a row on Monday Night Football and its fourth loss of the season.
The Steelers (2-2), 2% point underdogs, converted four Bobby Hebert turnovers into three touchdowns and a field goal as Pittsburgh ended a string of eight losses by AFC opponents at Atlanta.
The Falcons finished with six turnovers to Pittsburgh's one.
Cornerback Rod Woodson was the main defensive star for Pittsburgh with two interceptions. He also had a 30-yard punt return.
The Steelers dominated the second half, outscoring Atlanta 21-0 to turn a game that was close at halftime into a rout.
Two-thirds of the crowd of 65,477 fans had left the Georgia Dome when the Steelers took a 41-17 lead two minutes into the final quarter. They even began a chant normally heard a mile away — the Indian war chant of the baseball Braves.
O'Donnell, who completed 19 of 25 passes for 259 yards, threw scoring passes of 4 yards to Dwight Stone and 7 yards to Yancey Thigpen.
Foster had the first three-touchdown game of his career, scoring on runs of 30,7 and 1 yards. He finished with 65 yards on 20 carries.
Club coach leads from experience
Student coach former player heads soccer
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
Spectators looking for the women's soccer club coach should look for nei-ther a whistle nor a person running the sidelines with a bullhorn. Lori Zito, women's soccer club coach, said she went to practice looking like everyone else on the team.
Zito, who began to play for the team, began coaching during the spring semester of her sophomore year, said she was glad to have had the opportunity to coach but that the job was stressful. She said that missed playing, but that sometimes a person had to make sacrifices.
"I am more a leader of the group," she said.
Besides the two-day a week practices, Zito, Omaha senior, establishes the team's schedule and reserves game and practice fields. She schedules the
Senior Carlos Rojas, the team's advisor, said he admired Zito for handling all her responsibilities so well.
referees, arranges the referees' salaries for home games, reserves hotel rooms, handles travel arrangements and attends the Sports Council meetings once a month. She also does all the required paperwork necessary for a functioning club at Kansas .
Rojas, who played on the same co-recreational soccer team as Zito, said she was an excellent player who had the knowledge to direct the team as a leader. She works well with the players on and off the field. Rojas said she was a driven person and was committed because she wanted to do her best.
Zito said her blunt personality showed the team members that she did not back down on her word. When she gives the team instructions, members usually followed them.
Sophomore returning player Carrie Gabbard said Zito was a lighthearted and easy-going coach because she did not yell at the team and was not overwhelming.
"Lori is an effective coach," Gabbard said. "She tells us exactly what to do, yet she's involved with what is going on. She doesn't stand back giving orders."
Zito said she tried to get involved with as many drills as she could, but that was difficult since she was the only coach of a 50-player team.
"I am not a lazy coach," Zito said. "If the team sees me being lazy, then they will be."
That was a problem that Zito saw with the coach when she played. She said the coach let the players do whatever they wanted to do. That brought about laziness and a slacking attitude.
Zito does not run an easy practice. The team practices for about two hours every Tuesday and Thursday. Zito prepares a written practice agenda.
"Disorganization is not good, especially when coaching women my own age," Zito said. She said she was not a strict coach, but she was strict about getting things done that needed to be completed. Other than that, she laughs and jokes like the rest of the team.
Gabbard said Zito made practices fun because she is energetic and lively, with a bouncy, outgoing personality.
Zito's greatest fear is that her players will not listen to her. She said she did not want the team to think she was condescending, because she saw a lot of soccer talent better than her own.
Zito may coach the team alone, but she said she always needed advice. She is not afraid of criticism. She takes all the advice she is given to make the program better.
Voit
Senior Lori Zito said she made the sacrifice not to play on the women's soccer team so she could coach.
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
THE BOY
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
Senior swimmer David Lewis participates in a team practice at Robinson Gymnasium. Lewis is the team's first-ever Rhodes Scholarship nominee.
Kansas swimmer is Rhodes nominee
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
Senior David Lewis will compete for one of the 32 scholarships given annually across the nation.
This year's Kansas swim team has one thing that past teams have never had. The team has its first Rhodes Scholar nominee in team history.
Rhodes scholarships began in 1904 when they were given exclusively to male student athletes. The scholarship program expanded over the years to include students who were not athletes. The scholarship was first presented to a woman in 1976.
Sandra Wick, assistant director of the University honors program, is one of the people in charge of sending applications to the state committee. That committee sends the nominees to the Rhodes Scholarship Trust, which awards the scholarships.
"They look for people with strong academic and leadership qualities," Wick said. "Applicants also need a legitimate reason to study in England at Oxford University for two years."
Lewis, a biology major, said that he learned about the Rhodes Scholarship his freshman year. He said he had worked since then to fulfill the requirements to apply for the scholarship.
"Attaining a Rhodes Scholarship is a dream," he said.
Among the classes Lewis has taken while attending KU are the biology classes that are required for his bachelor's degree and Japanese language classes.
Lewis said he hoped to study abroad after graduation, with or without the scholarship. He said that after graduation he wanted to attend graduate school and work toward a doctorate in ecology.
Grades have not been a problem for the Spokane, Wash., native. He was a Big Eight Conference classroom champion in Spring 1993. He is working on a senior project on how animals deal with their environments.
Kansas coach Gary Kempf said that Lewis typified what a student athlete should be. He said Lewis was the type of student he wanted to recruit from high school.
"When I recruit them, they know what I expect. Kempf said."
He said he thought the discipline that Lewis learned while swimming helped him in the classroom.
Lewis said disciplining himself was the key to his success in college.
"Basically I have an image of what I want to achieve before the semester starts and how to do it." Lewis said.
Besides carrying a 14-credit hour
course load, Lewis also is president of the Kansas chapter of Omicron Delta Kappa. The organization is a national leadership honorary society. Lewis organizes the group's civic activities.
Lewis said the group tried to help underprivileged children and gave a series of awards in various leadership categories.
Lewis said that keeping up his schedule had meant making some sacrifices.
Throughout Lewis' career, the breast stroke has been his strongest event. Kempf said Lewis also had provided leadership in the middle distance events. He said Lewis was fighting for a spot on this season's national team.
"I don't get to watch to much television," he said.
"I want to place in the top six in the 100-meter breaststroke," Lewis said. "I feel most comfortable with my breaststroke."
He said he was willing to make the sacrifices so that he could participate in his activities.
"I do these things because I enjoy them," Lewis said. "I'm not just looking to build my resume here."
Lewis said making nationals was a dream, but he tried to set his goals realistically.
Lewis' goals for his college swimming career are more modest.
Requirements for Rhodes Scholars
Senior KU swimmer David Lewis is a Rhodes Scholar candidate. To win the prestigious award, he must:
- succeed with a rigorous academic schedule.
Mason said yesterday that junior Asheikh Preston had been working with the No. 1 offense in practices the last week. But Mason also said that a decision on who would start at quarterback against Colorado State at Memorial Stadium would not be made until Saturday.
show willingness and ability to help others.
Thomas completed 5 of 17 passes for 46 yards in his one half of work against Utah.
Mason considers new quarterback
demonstrate leadership abilities.
have a legitimate reason to study two years at Oxford University.
Kansas coach Glen Mason appears to be leaning toward a change of starting quarterbacks for the Jawhaws.
Preston replaced junior starting quarterback Fred Thomas to start the second half against Utah on Sept. 18. Preston completed 7 of 15 passes for 79 yards and also ran the ball 10 times for 53 yards and a touchdown.
"It will be that way on Saturday!" I don't know," Mason said. "Whoever gives us the best chance to win is the one we will go with."
The Rhodes Scholarship began in 1904 as a scholarship for male student athletes. In the 1940s, students who did not participate in athletics began to win the awards. In 1976, a woman won the award for the first time.
Kansan staff report
Kempf said that Lewis was an important part of the team.
KANSAN
"He has the respect of everyone on the team," Kempf said. "We're very proud of David's work ethic and attitude."
Jayhawk wins Big Eight player of week
Kansan staff report
As Kansas prepares for Oklahoma in Big Eight volleyball action this weekend, a Jayhawk has earned the Big Eight player of the week.
Senior outside hitter Cindyee Kanabel was given the award after leading Kansas to the USAir Tournament title last weekend in Pittsburgh, Pa. The team won all three matches against Virginia Tech, Syracuse University and University of Pittsburgh.
The big game for Kanabel came against Syracuse, when she had 25
kills and a career-high. 579 hitting percentage.
She ended the tournament with 51 kills, a.408 hitting percentage, 16 block assists, 32 digs and four service aces. For Kanabel's effort, she was named the tournament's MVP, her second such award this season. She was also MVP of the Kansas Invitational Tournament Sept. 10-11.
This recent honor adds to the list of awards and records Kanabel already has compiled. She is first in Kansas career block assists with 272. Former Jayhawk Kim DeHoff previously held the record with 238.
Suspensions could prevent football fights
By Matt Dovle
Kansan sportswriter
Football is an aggressive, physical and at times, violent sport. Just before halftime of Saturday's Miami-Colorado game, the violence spilled over into a brawl between the two teams near the Miami sideline.
The fight between Miami and Colorado was one of three fights that occurred in college football on Saturday and raised the question of what measures should be taken to prevent such occurrences.
Twelve players — seven from Miami and five from Colorado — were ejected from the game. However, some Big Eight Conference coaches said they would be in favor of tougher punishments for players involved in such fights.
College basketball has a rule that states players ejected from a game for fighting are suspended for one game. Last spring, the NCAA Rules Committee considered such a rule for football, but did not act on it.
Miami coach Dennis Erickson told the Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel that he would not oppose such a rule
"All of us hate to see those things happen," said Kansas State coach Bill Snyder. "There's a need for better control of those things, and if you had more stringent consequences for those involved then a lot of it would be prevented."
for college football.
"A one-game suspension makes sense to me." Erickson said.
Oklahoma State coach Pat Jones said he would oppose such a rule if it was ever enacted.
Many Big Eight coaches said they believed such a rule would be beneficial if fights ever broke out, but they also said referees had a difficult time identifying which players should be ejected.
"You have the video of the game," said Kansas coach Glen Mason. "I don't know why you can't use that to find out which players should be thrown out of the game."
Mason's Kansas team was involved in a scuffle with Miami during the pregame warm-up in the 1990 contest in Miami.
Colorado coach Bill McCartney said he was so disgusted by the fight at the Miami-Colorado game that he did not even leave the Colorado sideline when the fighting was taking place.
"We offered no threat to no one at that time," Mason said. "It was total intimidation on their part."
"This was the first time we have had this kind of altercation and I hope it never happens again," McCarthy said.
Foul weather infringes on Kansas' fall softball season
Bv Gerrv Fev
Kansan sportswriter
Inexperienced Big Eight softball players use the fall season to gain experience before the spring's championship season.
But what if there is no fall season?
But what if there is no holiday season. Because of rain, Kansas has only one tournament remaining on a fall schedule that originally had two. The Big Eight Fall Classic, beginning Friday, is the last scheduled tournament for Kansas.
The team was to play over the weekend in the Jawawk Invitational. All four Kansas games were rained out, but the team was able to scrimmage Nebraska-Kearney in Anschutz Sports Pavilion. Now Kansas is forced to add a scrimmage against Johnson County Community College at 2:30 p.m. today.
Kansas junior outfielder Joy Herrera said she was bored with practices.
"It's monotonous," Herrera said. "My roommate says it's like cabin fever. There is not very much to do. You perfect what you already know."
Everybody needed the game time during the fall, Kansas coach Kalum Haack said, not just freshmen.
Iowa State coach Deb Kuhn said. "We've been juggling practices inside and out, but we don't need to be inside that much."
"The rain doesn't help any," Haack said. "We had a controlled scrimmage with Kearney. That was better than nothing, but it wasn't a real game."
"The weather's been touch and go."
Kansas is not the only Big Eight team experiencing problems with inclement weather. Although Iowa State does not schedule many fall games, its number of outside practices has been cut down considerably.
Iowa State has a nice inside practice facility, Kuhn said, and players develop bad habits playing inside too much.
"Inside is not the same, especially in the way of fundamentals," Kuhn said of her team's fielding.
Nebraska has played 10 games this fall, many on artificial turf. Nebraska coach Rhonda Revelle said the team played one of its tournaments on the school's football field.
"If we hadn't had access to turf, we would have been rained out also," Revelle said. "I can't imagine not having a fall season."
Revelle said every team needed to play a fall season because it acted as a preseason.
"It's important for everybody," Revelle said. "But it is critical for the younger players. We have some young players who need to get college experience. Without the fall, those young kids may never get a chance to play because there is too much at stake in the spring."
The Midwestern climate puts some Big Eight teams at a disadvantage against its Southern counterparts.
"We get a late start compared to teams in the South anyway." Revelle said. "You need the fall, especially if you want to compete nationally."
Haack said those teams had an advantage because they didn't have to deal with the same weather situations
"The big schools start playing in January and February," he said. "We can't even get on the field until March."
10
Tuesday, September 28, 1993
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Three-run homer gives White Sox title
Slow start ended in championship season
The Associated Press
CHICAGO AGO The Chicago White Sox, baseball's quiet achievers, used a three-run homer from Bo Jackson last night to clinch the American League West.
Chicago defeated the Seattle Mariners 4,2 giving baseball its first division winner of the season and the White Sox their first division championship since 1983.
Jackson, who made an amazing comeback from hip replacement surgery, hit a three-run home run to snap a scoreless tie in the sixth inning. The homer, his 15th and second in two days, was a towering fly to left field that barely made it into the first row of the left-field bleachers.
It sent the crowd of 42.116 white socks
waving fans into a frenzy and the White Sox to the playoffs. The White Sox open the best-of-7 series against Toronto next Tuesday at home as the Blue Jays clinched the AL Eastst at Milwaukee only a short time after the Sox clinched.
"I thought it was a pop fly and I slammed my bat down," Jackson said. "Then the ball kept drifting and drifting. When the count went 3-0, I looked at the bench and they gave me the swing sign. This is the icing on the cake. Now we have to put the candles on again at Toronto."
The White Sox charged onto the field to celebrate when the final out was made and the fans kept on waving their socks in the seats.
Winner Wilson Alvarez (15-8) and Dave Fleming (11-5) were locked in a scoreless matchup of left-handers when Ellis Burks singled to open the sixth and Craig Grebe beat out a bunt single.
After Frank Thomas and George Bell made outs, Jackson hit the 3-0 pitch high into the sky for what appeared to be a long out, but the ball kept drifting until it made it into the seats. The White Sox added an insurance run in the seventh on Burks' sacrifice fly.
"When Bo hit the homer everyone was jumping up and down," Alvarez said. "I felt like we got it. I knew we were going to win the game."
The win was the seventh straight for Alvarez, who allowed four hits, two runs, walked four, and struck out six in 7% innings.
Kirk McCaskill got out of the jam in the eighth and finished for his second save. The victory was the 10th in the last 13 games for the White Sox.
Ignored by many at the start of the season and inexplicably struggling at the All-Star break, the White Sox finally hit their stride
— winning behind a combination of strong starting pitching, sound defense, and the dangerous bat of Thomas.
Many fans outside Chicago paid little attention to the White Sox much of this season. The hot races were in the other divisions.
For that matter, the fans in Chicago weren't so sure about the White Sox, either. They wondered why the team with the best talent in the division was so inconsistent and unable to pull away. At the mid-season break, Chicago was 45-41 with a one-game lead.
By July 23, the White Sox were in first place for good. Nothing glamorous, no long string of victories. Just steady, productive baseball. Texas and Kansas City made runs here and there, with the Rangers coming as close as two games on Aug. 19. But the White Sox held their ground.
Blue Jays seize AL East title for third year
The Associated Press
MILWAUKEE — The Toronto Blue Jays, bursting with high-priced talent and closing the season as baseball's hottest team, last night won the American League East for the third straight year.
Former Milwaukee star Paul Molitor hit a home run in the second inning and Pat Hentgen (19-8) scattered seven hits in 6% innings as the Blue Jays beat the Brewers 2-0 for their 13th victory in 15 games. Toronto will play Chicago in the playoffs starting next Tuesday as the White Sox clinched the AL West title last night with a 4-2 victory against Seattle.
"I feel like I'm very much part of this team," Molitor said. "Early on I had to learn to be myself and not occupied with comparisons with last year or who's shoes I was supposed to fill. This is a first step and
we'll enjoy it, but our goal is to go a little further. We know the White Sox are looming and we know how tough the divisional playoffs will be."
Toronto took a 2-0 lead in the third as Ed Sprague, the hero of Game 2 of the World Series against Atlanta last year, singled, Pat Borders doubled and Devon White hit a sacrifice fly.
The Blue Jays were supposed to have an easy ride on their way to the division title, but ended up hitting a lot of bumps on the way. Entering September, they led the New York Yankees by 1% games, with Baltimore charging on an eight-game winning streak.
Toronto almost let things get away by losing six straight games — Sept. 3-9 — to lowly California and Oakland, but the Yankees and Orioles started bad streaks of their own and could do no better than stay
close for awhile.
Finally, the Blue Jays seized command with a nine-game winning streak. The starting pitching — inconsistent all season — got big efforts from Juan Guzman, Dave Stewart, Hentgen and Todd Stottlemyre. Mike Timlin also came along and was able to set up Duane Ward. Toronto's relief ace.
Manager Cito Gaston remained his usual cool self when many were baffled by the Blue Jays' inconsistency. His influence was most evident the last few weeks as Toronto thrived in the heat of the race while the Yankees and Orioles collapsed.
Toronto lost Dave Winfield, David Wells,
David Cone, Jimmy Key, Kelly Gruber and
Tom Henke from its world championship
team of a year ago.
But the big-spending Blue Jays, with a $46 million payroll, signed free agents Molitor and Stewart, reacquired shortstop Tony
Fernandez after Dick Schofield was injured and got Rickey Henderson from the Athletics in a July trade.
"We had a lot of transition this year," Gaston said. "But I always thought from spring training we'd be a good club."
Molitor, who spent 15 years with the Brewers and played in the 1982 World Series, drew a mixed reaction of cheers and boos from the small crowd of 14,931 in the second inning. He then hit Cal Eldred's first pitch over the left-field fence, his 22nd home run of the season.
Milwaukee had runners on second and third with two outs in the fifth, but Henggen got Robin Yount out on a fly ball. Duane Ward pitched the ninth for his 43rd save.
All four of the Blue Jays' previous AL East titles were clinched at home, the first at Exhibition Stadium, the last three at Sky-Dome.
Royals sneak past Indians in ninth
The Associated Press
Jerry DiPoto hit Gary Gaetti with a pitch on an 0-2 count with the bases loaded and two out in the ninth inning last night, giving the Kansas City Royals a 6-5 victory over the Cleveland Indians.
DiPoto (4-4) started the ninth and walked Craig Wilson. He eventually scored from second on Mike Macfarlane's two-out single after a fierce collision at the plate that knocked the ball loose from catcher Sandy Alomar.
Alomar was helped from the field and was replaced by Junior Ortiz.
Chris Gwynn was walked intentionally to load the bases, bringing Gaetti up to bat.
The Indians committed three errors in the ninth inning, allowing the Royals to score twice.
Mark Gubicza (5-8) got the victory by getting a double-play grounder in the top of the inning.
Albert Belle boosted his RBI to 125 with a two-run homer, and left Treadway drove in three runs.
Tom Gordon, trying for his fourth straight win, took a 2-1 lead into the sixth but walked Wayne Kirby with one out and then surrendered Belle's 37th home run. After Paul Sorrento walked and Sam Horn singled, Treadway doubled off the wall in right-center field to put the Indians on top 5-2.
Cleveland starter Julian Tavarez shut out the Royals on two hits through three innings before running into trouble in the fourth. Macfarlane led off with a single and advanced to second on Chris Gwynn's infield out. After Gaetti tailed, Bob Hamelin hit an RBI single into right, and Jose Lind singled into center to bring Gaetti home for a 2-0 lead.
Sorrento doubled leading off the Cleveland fifth and eventually scored on Treadwav's sacrifice flv.
The Royals added two runs in the sixth on back-to-back home runs by Gaetti and Hamelin.
Tavarez, who started the year at Class-A Kingston, went 5% innings, giving up eight hits and three runs. He struck out three and walked one.
NOTES: George Brett, playing his last series at home, went 0-for-5 and continued receiving standing ovations in each at bat. ... The Royals also had back-to-back home runs Sept. 3 at Boston when Brian McRae and Brett did it.
Jayhawk Bookstore
"Your Book Professionals"
"At the Top of Naismat Hill"
Hrs: 8-7-M-Th, 5-6-Fri, 9-5-Sat, 12-4-Sun. 843-3826
105 MASSACHUSETTS
LAWRENCE'S
BEST!
749-9750
TINY TAN ALLEY
TIN PAN ALLEY
Fats
Restaurant & Bar
Buy 1 Large
PYRAMID PIZZA
With two toppings
for only $7.99
and get
1 liter of pop for
no buck$ no buck$ no buck$
TERRIFIC
TUESDAY
PYRAMID
PIZZA
842-3232
CARRY OUT, DELIVERY OF
EAT AT THE WHEEL
ONLY GOOD WITH THIS COUPON
THE NEW YORK CITY
HISTORY MUSEUM
THE NEW YORK CITY
TERRORIC
THOUSDAY
ONLY AGOOD WEEK! 4/15-6/15 COLLEGE
MARINE OFFICER PROGRAMS
Freshmen, sophomores, juniors and seniors are eligible for Marine Officer Programs that have no on-campus requirements.
PILOT or LAWYER Commission Guaranteed
- SUMMER PAY $1,600 - $2,695
- LEADERSHIP TRAINING
- NO OBLIGATION
STARTING SALARY AFTER YOU GRADUATE
$24,100 - $28,900
FOR MORE INFORMATION SEE
Capt. Curtis Everett & GySgt. Cynthia Deans
SEPTEMBER 29 & 30
in the Student Union
from 10 am to 3 pm
1·800·531·1885
Marines
We're looking for a few good men and women.
THE STUMBLE INV Drink Specials
Mon.- $1^{50}$ Schooners $1^{50}$ Wells
Tues.- 25¢ Draws
50¢ Boulevard Draws
50¢ Miller Reserve
Draws
$3^{00} cover
Wed.- Ladies Night
$1^{75} Imports
$1^{00} Draws
$1^{00} Well Shots
No cover for Ladies
$1^{00} Cover for Men
Thur.- $2^{25} Big Beers of Bud Light Coors Light $3^{00} Big Beers of Boulevard $1^{00} Kamis Shots $1^{00} Watermelon Shots
S
THE STUMBLE WNW
Fishbowls
LAWRENCE, KS
Coming Soon...
704 New Hampshire
749-1999
Mon.-Sat. 7pm-2am
Buckets o' Beer
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 28, 1993
11
LSAT GRE GMAT MCAT
The most complete arsenal of test prep tools in the world.
Classes forming now.
842-5442
KAPLAN
RULES
Putt-Putt®
COUPLES
DATE SPECIAL
TWO DAYS TAPED
MAR 27 & 28 CENTURIES
Putt-Putt
a premium concierge ATLANTA, GA.
Putt-Putt Gold Couples
WARNING: LIMITED DATE OF PURCHASE.
- 2 games of Putt-Putt®
Golf per person
• 2 soft drinks
• 2 ice cream cones
• Group function
- Date dashes specialty
- Date dashes speciality
All For Only $9.50!
onday thru Thursday 5 p.m.-Close
31st&lowa
across from K-Mart
Classified Directory
100s Announcements
108 Personal
119 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
123 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s
Employmen
Classified Policy
1 Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Turing Service
300s
Merchandise
400s
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and therefore, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available. All advertisements on the web will be correct.
- Kansan Classified: 864-4358 -
100s Announcements
1.
110 Bus. Personals
FUNDRAISERS, FUNDRAISERS,
FUNDRAISERS!
REMEMBER!
Costumes and floor for theme parties
and of course all guests come on up!
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass-Downstown
Unique Sterling Jewelry
Hoops, Pendants & More!
For Guys and Gals
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass-Downstown
RAISE $150 - $300!
GUARENTEED in one
week PLUS BONUS
up to $500!
Manage promotions for top cam
panies for one week on your cam
pus. Call for FREE GIFT and
to quality for FREE TRIP to MTV
SPRING BREAK'94.
Call : 8-900-1503, ext. 25.
120 Announcements
GET AWAY TO RAINIERWOODS: Treat your sweaty to a day of relaxed hospitality. Massage, outdoor spa, healthy foods, trees and privacy! 863-3137 for rates/reservations.
Hillel Upcoming Events Erav Sukkot-Wednesday Come help us decorate the Sukkah at the Hillel House. Call 864-3948 for more information.
SHABBAT DINNER THIS FRIDAY
You must sign up at the Hillel office or call 864-3948 by noon on Friday
Hillel members $2 non-members $4 (or use your free tickets)
call 864-3948 for rides and info.
Intramural Softball:
Team A: Tues. 3:30
Team B: Sun. 5:30
FUNDRAISERS, FUNDRAISERS
FUNDRAISERS!
RAISE $150-$300
GUARANTEED in one
week PLUS BONUS
Manage 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.
Call 1-800-497-9977 or 85
Call 1-800-950-1037, ext.25.
GREEKS & CLUBS
RAISE UP TO $1000 IN JUST ONE WEEK! For your fraternity, sorority & club. Plus $1000 for yourself! And a FREE T-SHIRT just for calling. 1-809-932-6588, ext. 75.
MODELS NEEDED FREE HAIRCUT! Men and women call carolin Carine Caroline 831-469-146.
SKI
Adams Alumni Center needs AMP pamiya chair 84, 3days a week. Flexible schedule. Position available immediately. Apply in person 1266 Oread Avenue.
JANUARY 2-16, 1994 • 5, 6 or 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT* $199
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK*
TELLURIDE
EDUCATION LET'S ARTS PARTIES PICTURES LAWS
ANNUAL YEAR 04-12 - F & M SCHEDULES
SUNCHA BEACH BREAKS
ALASKA EMPLOYMENT! Fisheries. Earn up to $8000+$400. on m. fishing vessels or canaries. Many companies provide transportation and room facilities. For more info; call 1-308-4545-4155 A9708.
*FREE 1/2 DAY
LIFT TICKET!
MUST BOOK BY 1015
130 Entertainment
Drummer needed for Lawrence based band. Must
play weekends and some weekdays.
Play 45 play sessions.
MINDFLUK. A Cyberdelic Dance Experience.
Sat. Oct. 2, DJ JRAY Velazguez, DJ Roland. All ages/alcohol free, 5pm-, O'THOUSE, 4 miles E. of Mass. Str. on 11th.
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
1.800.SUNCHASE
140 Lost & Found
Found: gold bracelet near design building, call
145-1638 to claim.
200s Employment
男 女
205 Help Wanted
Clinical psychologist, full-time or eligible for Kansas licensure, with established experience in services to children; psychodelocalized group therapies; crisis interventions; psychological evaluations; and interdisciplinary team operations. Applicants must have a bachelor's degree in behavioral health care in a CMHC setting preferred. Applications accepted until position is filled. Resumes and letter of interest to Outpatient Disease Center, Inc., 336 Missouri, Suite 202, Lawrence, Center, Inc., 336 Missouri, Suite 202, Lawrence, Kansas 60044, OEO, Open until filled, EOE
Adams Alumni Center needs Dishawar AM & PM. Flexible hours, 3 days a week. Position available immediately. Apply in person, no phone calls 1266 Arec Road.
DEVELOPMENT/CONSTRUCTION CO. has part-time opening with flexible day hours for an office assistant. Chance for full-time summer employment and after graduation. Experience on IBM or Apple computers. Some accounting/bookkeeping experience necessary. Starting at $6.00 and up depending on experience and hours. Send resume to P. Box 3054, Lawrence KS 65046. Atn. Nita.
Day care needs experienced person. Must be available in the morning 85/hr. 841-7881
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
Dominio Pizza now has 5 delivery positions available. Apply after sp.m, any day all shifts avail. Flexible hrs, average driver earns $710 an hour. 841-8002.
Evening and weekend CNA's needed to work with
their families in the hospital at Douglass
County Visiting Nurses-643-738.
Full-time nanny needed for Lawrence family.
Competitive salary plus room and board. Ideal job for college student. Car and references required.
(816) 444-6400. No fee.
Kansas and Burge Uhures hiring part-time, hourly for Fall Semester. Many jobs in Food Service, Catering and Custodial with varying schedule. Kansas Union Building for job speciales EOE.
Help wanted Adams Alumn Center needs muni-
nation staff to provide support and pro-
vision available immediately, apply in person.
1266 Oread Ave.
Live in nanny 7:30-3:30 M-F, $42 monthly +
+ room & board, vacation & sick leave. Kids 7, & 8.
4. House keeping & cooking duties. P / t students
accepted, need references. 843-3887.
loving for a change second semester? Come live in our loving home. Free room, board plus salary. Work 5 plus hours a day while getting your education and be a mother's helper. Job consists of babyspaying 2 year old and newborn, light housekeeping if interested, please send me, in 100 words or less, to the best person for this job. P. O. Box 1832, Lawrence, KS 6049.
Need Cah? Start immediately 3-4 painters for
Need Cah? Start at start 0.9H./0r.Hz 749-1028 or
ask for Aaron
Need dependable care given for 15 mo. old boy.
Refs. required call 832-1205.
Now accepting applications for quality minded, dependable individuals for part-time banquet service. Willing to train the right people. Morning and evening hours. Apply at Admins Alumni Center, 1266 Groad Ave.
NOW HIRING smiling facing in a clean, grease-
free environment. Fast food exp. prefered. Apply at MR. GOODCENTS Subs and Pastas. 15th and Kasold. Haris. 10:30 m. 11:00 m.
Part time student hourly receptionist/Typist want in person in person position at Center 209 Campbell University sample #1454-83.
United Child Development Center, 846 Vermont,
unaccepting applications for a part-time computer
course or pre-school children. For more information,
call 817-290-2350 for accepting applications
as September 30.
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749
225 Professional Services
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Bbirthright 432-4821. Free pregnancy testing.
Macintosh repairs and upgrades
Friendly, Affordable, In-Home Service
The Mac Doctors 922-0848
Retail sales position. Immediate opening full time part time. Jewelry-chemia crystal. No experience necessary. Can work with school schedule-week end resume to P. box 625 Lawrence, KS 68044
SALES REPS WANTED-Develop your own marketing strategy and go sell. Prefer marketing of sales majors. Product to sell is mail-order Kosher food. Work on commission. Call 341-862-5007. Email: sales@kosherfood.com.
9-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri at Parkway 600
on the Country Club Plaza
600 Ward Parkway,
K.C. M.O. 64112
Buffalo Bob $5 Smokehouse. Previous food service and supervisory experience mandatory. Start at $2.50 per hour. Future pay raise based on performance. Beginning in September. Mostly evenings and weekends. Apply at Schumann Food Co. at 719 Mass. M-F 8am-5pm. (Upstairs above Smokehouse)
Part-time day and evening help wanted. Must be able to work weekdays. Apply in person only at www.apl.com.
SALES REPS WANTED: Develop your own marketing strategy and go sell. Prefer marketing or catering. Plan a mail-order cateresson food. Work on commission at 31 4696 5936 before 11:00am and after 1:30pm.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Donald G Strole Sally G Keisey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
Martini's
steak veal pasta
NOW HIRING
FULL STAFF
GRE EXPERTS KAPLAN
842-5442
Sport Officials: Lawrence Percis and Recreational Department is hiring individuals who want to be sports officials for adult volleyball and basketball teams. Must be able to attend training sessions.
Apply in person
SALES-College Students. Here's your chance!
You need extra cash to pay for College Work People.
Call (618) 698-7927 or visit www.sales-college.edu.
at Johnson County's Hottest New Restaurant at 117th & Roe!
United Child Development Center, 946 Vermont,
has full and partial time-interests for children ages
1-10. 1/2-day kindergarten care available. Program
also offers all teacher certification. Call 946-
342-9228 for more info.
842-5442
PART-TIME SUPERVISOR WANTED.
Brought to you by
MICHAEL FORBES
RESTAURANTS
LSAT EXPERTS KAPLAN
We are now accepting applications for:
*SERVERS
*BUSSSERS
*COOKS
*DISHWASHERS
*HOST/HOSTESS
*BARTENDERS
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
I
Our high volume restaurant specializes in quality, customer, service and hospitality.
Rick Frydman,Attorney 823 Missouri 843-4023
235 Typing Services
For free consultation call
Prompt abortion and contraceptive services. Dale L Clinton.M.D. 841-5716.
STUDENT ASSISTANT IN ENGINEERING/
MAINTENANCE. Deadline: 09/30/93. Salary:
$4.35/hour. Duties include pickup and delivery of
equipment; receiving and write up of orders;
installing equipment for technicians in light mechanical and electronic repair;
and other duties as assigned. Required qualifications
currently enrolled as a student at the University
of Illinois, with a minimum of 6 years of
customers, good oral and written communication
skills, 6 months previous hardware experience,
available to work 16 to 20 hours a week, in 10 or 3
weeks a week on a job application which is available in Room 202 of the Computer
Center. EO/AA ENGLOVER.
LA LA
C Desktop Publishing: Resumes, Cover Letters,
Memoirs, Flyers, Term Paper, Newletter,
Newspaper
Great wages and benefits!
Criminal Defense
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor
quality type. 943-200-8000 of pages of letter
qualty type. 943-200-8000
WORD PROGRAMMING & LASER PRINTING
For all your TVIPING needs
equip with a Laser Printer!
GO RESIMESMES get job interviews!
Meadowbank deskt best online calling 823-6907
Meadowark desk top punishing call 832-606
ProType - fast, reliable service, professional quality. Any kind of typing accepted. Call today at 841-
Word processing, applications, term papers, dissertations, resumes, editing, composition, rush projects.
X
300s Merchandise
GUITAR SHOW
305 For Sale
Kansas City fall guitar show Oct. 2 & 3 heart of America Center 41 W. Maple, MID. Buy. sell, trade bring your used musical gear for sale or purchase 85, for show information phone “436-sun”
1983 Sender Stratocaster with hard case and
accessories for $245 Call 814-7780
Beds, desks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
936 Mass.
Quarantil's Flea Market open every Friday. Sat. & Sun 10AM-5PM 811 New Hampshire 842-616 Downtown
Quantrill's Flea Market
Over the Edge
HARTK BASS AMPLIFIER 350 watt exc. cond.
and sound. $300 832-066 Chris. Leave a message.
RT airline ticket from KIT to NASHVILLE. You
choose dates: Thkingg X-mas or whenever.
Must sell soon. $150 BOO. 1-723-3798
340 Auto Sales
waterbed, queen size baffled, waveless, heated good condition $10.00 b. o call 841-6762.
1863 Volve DL, great cond, new breaks, new fires,
1865 Volve DL, great cond, $2200 to call B. 6141
2300, leave message
3300, leave message
1982 Audi 4000 S reliable, good condition HIMI.
$1.000 b.o h.0 832-2988
370 Want to Buy
Front door bus service
Naismith Halls' services give students the competitive edge.
24 hr. computer center
Fitness room
400s Real Estate
Dine anytime meals
405 For Rent
1bdm apartment in Meadowbrook. Free cable and swimming pool. On bus route 89-4300. Ask for code: **33454**.
Weekly maid service
4 bedroom apartment for rent. Fully furnished,
very nice. Interest? Call 82-4455.
FURNISHED.
2 rooms for rent for non-trad. female(s) available
ot. 1 $200 + until. Live 10 min. south of Lawrence.
Private country home-kids and pets O.K. .760816-
leave message.
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
very nice interested? Contact 89-2445.
Available now, 2 bedrooms at 91 Tennessee, small pet
okay, $425 plus utilities 749-7568.
NAISMITH Hall
Choiceroom in large quiet residence. Utilities paid
with ESI card. 801-743-6592, near Diflin,
Doral, FL. mcall 801-743-6592, near Diflin,
Doral, FL.
Available Oct. 1, one bedrm, newly renovated base-
room, parking lot, street parking and street parking
dp. no. Pets $29.80, B64-107-95
Extra size and quiet. 2 bedroom apt. including ceiling fan. No pets. $25 Spanish Crest Apt Apartments 841-6868
1800 Naismith Drive (913) 843-8559
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS 2040 Heatherwood
-2 Bedroom, 1 1/2 Bath $425
-3 Bedroom, 2 Bath $550
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
Call Now 818434754
Call Now!843-4754
430 Roommate Wanted
Newly remodeled 1 bdrm. house. Ideal for graduate student. Available now. $400 monthly. 841-799-3978. Rm. avail. for fem. in 2 story townhouse. Close to the Muni center. Sep 7, sept. rent already paid. Lease to May 31. 79-784-2597
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
How to schedule an ad:
- By phone: 864-4358
Responsible roommate to share upscale 3 dbr 2
bath townhouse FD DW/F/D CA Cable Cats OK
8225 +/- utilities Call after 4pm 832-8694
Female roommate (s) needed to share 2B ltr, 8H aft,
on KU bus route. $838.100 +/-¢
wills. 4465.
Nom N/O SGrad. Student needed for now. Nice, quiet room. Call 842-7023 or A/C, close to campus. Call 842-7023 even more.
Responsible NS F roommate to share 3 bbf april cable & water pad, most furnished, on KU bus line.
Roommate wanted: Responsible female to share nice 2 BIR, jacuzzi, bathuil DW, DWC pad, pV, very affordable $270/mo + 1/2 utils. Pets O.K. Call 841-487 leave message.
Looking for responsible roommate to share 4BR, 1/2 bath, 2 level apt. @ exp. 4/8 and Owsdahl w/ 2 males, 2 female. We washster/dryer Unit 3B, Wardrobe 5A, Washroom 6A. Route. Go to Post Office, Dollars. Please call 842-1940 or 749-5111 for more info. A non-discriminatory household.
Ads phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
119 Staunton Flair
- By Maite J. 19$ Starfler Flint, Lawrence, KS. 69045
Classified Information and order form
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it in payment to the Kanan offices. Or you may choose too have billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of apine lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
When cancelling a cancelled ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kanagan office for a fee of $4.00.
Number of insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Classifications
105 personal
118 business personals
129 announcements
138 entertainment
305 for sale
340 auto sales
360 miscellaneous
Cost per line per day
1.0x 1-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 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
379 want to buy
405 for rent
439 roommate wanted
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
1
2
3
4
5
Date on begins: Total days in paper
Total ad cost: Classification:
Name: Phone: -
Address:_
VISA
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Expiration Date:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
MasterCard
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
WITTER?
ANGRY
MOB2
LLER'S
ANGRY
OBS
"OK, Bill. Tuesday night, 8 o'clock, over at the sheriff's office where they're holdin' your brother's killer ... You want that with extra hollerin'?"
12
Tuesdav. September 28, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COOL CLOTHES FOR COOL
COOL
CLOTHES FOR
COOL
WEATHER
• Skirts & Dresses
• Pants & Tights
• Imported Clothing
• Sweaters & T-Shirts
• Incense & Exotic Oils
• Jewelry, Hats, & More!
BIG SAVINGS!
CREATION STATION
725 MASSACHUSETTS
LAWRENCE • 841-1999
AMERICAN BISTRO
701 MASS.
In the Eldridge Hotel
841-8349
Breakfast*Lunch*Dinner
we Do Banquets too!
Rings Fixed Fast!
Kier Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass*Lawrence, KS
90¢
Bowling
3:30 - 6:00 p.m.
Mon - Thur
Not just
for bowling
Jaybowl
GENERAL UNION
864-3545
Zaybowl
Mon - Thur
Jaybowl
SAN FRANCISCO UNION
Not just
for
bowling
864-3545
--with short dark hair, hazel eyes and excellent muscle tone. Have left-of-center political beliefs, arm a muscular forearm, and I am especially attracted to women with intelligence, charm, wi, and sagacity. #1881
Metropolis BBS
832-0041
Levittown's Marijuana Entertainment Bay
Piradee
Breakfast•Lunch•Dinner
728 Massachusetts 842-5199
Parkside
Breakfast*Lunch*Dinner
Laser Logic
Sales•Supplies•Rentals
One Stop Source for All
Laser Printer Needs
865-0505
REGLEWOOD
FLOORIST
123 MAIN AVE, WEST SIDE
93346 HAWKEE TOWNSHIP
LAWRENCE KANSAS
841-2998 1-800-622-2999
Laser Logic
Sales-Supplies-Rentals
One Stop Source for All
Laser Printer Needs
865-0505
P
RINGLEROO FLORIST
933 MAGNUM BUILDINGS
LAWRENCE KANSAB
841-2999 1-800-622-2999
Waiters
-on
Wheels
---
Delivering from Lawrence's favorite restaurants:
842-2662
*Cornucopia*
*Low Rider*
*Paradise Cafe*
*Quinton's Bar & Dell*
*Tin Pan Alley*
*Uptown Bagels*
INDEPENDENT RESTAURANT DELIVERY SERVICE
to check out these ads call 1-900-285-4560 You will be charged $1.95 per minute
The Lowest CD Prices In Town!
Current, Popular CDs for $5.95!
Buy 5 or more CDs for $4.95!
Also available, special selection CDs $3.95!
Buy 10 or more CDs for $2.50 each!
For the Best Values in Town Visit
Lawrence Pawn
843-4344 718 New Hampshire
RIVER CITY HAIR CO.
50% Off
full sets of "Soft Touch" gelnails
Reg. $405 Now $200
(95¢ extra for polish)
Reimburse Jan 18/93
(Offer good with coupon only)
8421 Massachusetts 842-0508
Border Bandido presents
Attack of the Texas Burrito
You can run,
but you can't hide from
the TEXAS BURRITO
BORDER
BANDIDO
$3.29 Daily
$2.69 Sunday
1528 W. 23rd
Across from the Post Office
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
BORDER BANDIDO
$3.29 Daily
$2.69 Sunday
1528 W. 23rd
Across from the Post Office
PLACE AN AD FREE! Call 864-4358
♂
MEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
M Male A Asian
F Female J Jewish
D Divorced C Christian
S Single G
W White G Gay
B Black L Lesbian
H Hispanic N/S Non-Smoker
1st year grad student from New England is looking for running partner who enjoys cold weather, eating vegetables, reading philosophy, and owns a bike. She will be studying at 20yr. old blond hair, blue eyes male seeking laidback female to study with and go out. Has to enjoy the local music scene. #81223
21 yr. old, black hair, brown eyed male. Looking for a laid back 20-23 yr. old female who enjoys listening to live music and kicked back evenings. Give me a call if this is you. #47707
21-year SWM 6'1, 185 ls, looking for SWF 19+
that enjoys the finer aspects of life, the outdoors,
m.n. biking, snowboarding, live music (Stick,
Funkadelic, & Zoom), t.v., sports and loves road
trips. If you fit at least 3 of these give me a call. P.S.
I hate the Grateful Dead #44307
22yr, old Asian male seeking companionship with fun-loving Asian female who is short, likes sports and enjoys playing cards and going out for frozen voursurt #85236
25-yr-old Hispanic 9% laid back Californian seek-
ing and having a good life. #e20242
and having a good life. #e20242
A small town boy with small town manners who has his feet planted firmly in cowboy boots, his ears tuned to rock and roll, his body defined by his athleticism. She's an arm reach away. Seeks a girl whose mind, body, and life is able to keep up with me. If you like creamy romantic nights, give this senior a call #84256
8 $' Soft brown sophomore transfer student with a tenant seeking friendly female companion. Have an interest in computer science. I am an experienced student that can tutor Math and engage charge Good company all that required. #8220
Ambitious grad student seek attractive, mature,
N/S single wear. 21-27 years old with dark hair
and slender figure. I am a SWM. 27 $11^+$. 115 lbs,
with short dark hair, hazel eyes and excellent™
Abitative 20-year old SWM. Brown hair, brown eyes seeking a SWM for a romantic, long lasting relationship. I enjoy partying, cooking, music and read trips. If you have similar interests, please contact me.
Fun, wildly responsible NS Grad Student seeks
work on a study session for Dr. Davis or
for drives discussed study sessions, going out,
avoiding work and doing what you want to do.
Light smoker? okay. Poor?吓死. Had spider?
No.
Athletic, communicative, in good shape, intellectual and social. Active in athletic activities, athletic and social. New to Area 4e.
Fate made you notice this ad. Now, my hopeful romantic master thy courage and let this knight become you soulmate. Check the stars and let this air sign sswear you off your feet. #43888
Grad student will live to meet woman with blond hair and a knockout body. All replies email. #6214, #6215
Kind, sensitive, earth-loving, Phish-head mate seeking female with similar interests for events in the beach and cookery. TV and baking cookies in the nude. You must be a real earth muffin. Peace 2 Fingers. Sorority girls
If you're seeking a palatable relationship, stop. If you're needing your relationship, stop. If you're looking for a BHE, I'm looking for an energetic SWF or 2, who are looking for even more attractive and equally attractive. No worry, we need speed 4703.
Looking for androgynous woman, pleasant, spiritual, growth oriented for experiencing life. I'm receptive, friendly, and good-looking. Age 24. Box #43677
Hello, I'm fairly tall. Like bluegrass and sports. If
really in that place in going out, give that number a
call. 204767
Common abbreviations
I'm looking for a girl that listens to good music like REM. Elix Costello, or PearJam, #2672
SDWM seeks non-traditional single divorced white quiet dinners, romance and value honesty and respect. Also enjoys country life style. Strong family values, kids are O.K.
Latin lover seeking beautiful American woman to
masturbate. Must enjoy shaking all sort of music.
code: 822371
m seeking SF. If you're tired of games and ready for a "real" romance, are fun-loving, excit-
ing, and have no further need or get with the program - The Mack Jack's waiting-a- fine lady needs apply. **22683**
my girlfriend has skipped town, and I are seeking a female companion. Please help. #43860
SDWH- 21.6T, 11.FL, muscular, handsome, conscience,
Hispanic, Mid-Eastern) female, 18-24 for intimate
friendship. Must be pretty, soft hearted and
mature. Please, dn drug users or promiscuous
Single white male, 23, seeks single white female,
21-24 for casual relationship. I '51-11, well built,
have it. brown hair, green eyes. I like to work out,
mountain bike, and skI. I will look for someone to go out to the town or sometimes spend a quiet night
in my "serious but have a quiet sense of humor"
@22684
Single white male #6, brown hair, blue eyes. I am looking for a down to earth, mature woman to drink some beer with. Must have a good sense of humor. Box 47719. Please give me a mail, mailbox #8106
Single white male look for a lustful vieno who likes the Grateful Dead, Bar-B-Q, Blues, and Letterman. I love to give long messages. Are you the Lizard Queen of my dreams? Call box #8387
Single, white male, age 21, brown hair, and blue eyes. Dress appropriately for trips, hanging out, and drinking. Must be spontaneous, plus willing to sit on the couch all day. You must have a good sense, and I will teach you! Must have a good attitude.
SM 21 57 *looking for SF 18 23*. Must be sensitive
to hurt. Must be outgoing with a good sense of
burmer. # 18547
SM seeks for a N/S SP who is tall and has long hair. You are wanted to travel with a wanter a partner who enjoys travel by car. I like jazz very much and I want a partner who can spend time with me when we the jubz pupils while having drinks.
SWM, 20, blond hair blue eyes. I did it for the tickets,
49221.
SWM, 22. $11!" Dark So. German, brown eyes.
Euphoria Enjoins in舞乐. kc live music and films. I often forget my phone *e* do you? Seeking mutual back up.
SWM, 22, 6' ath, brown blr, hl eyes. Ambulatory corpse seem necrophilia confuses you, but it didn't have affect on my development. (I have a strong affinity for cashmere sweaters. I like to wear cashmere sweaters.)
SWM, 34, tall, athletic, been around the block; seeking SWF, feminine, SINCERE, in fair or better shape, to see which doors we can open together. Card-Carrying-Laberals apply at your own risk.
SWM, 22 w/ unstoppable smile seeking confident, clever, crazy, caring SWF 19-24 to share life's adventures with me. If you have a heart just bursting with the joy of living, give live a call and talk.
SWM 510 looking for an athletic, outgoing, confident beautiful young woman 29-24 who doesn't need to paint her face before she goes out for the evening or squeeze into a pair of jeans w/ a spatula to get a few looks. I love her playing & traveling from bed to bed, call another box. #22930
SWIM-19 years-olds. Brown eyes, brown hair.
Enjoys working out and playing sports. Looking
for attractive female between 18&22 who enjoys
romantic evenings. #43863
SWM - seeking good looking, great body, intelligent woman 18-24 years old, who likes to play darts, watch Ren & Stimpy and like beer. No hairy armis or mustaches #40098
SWM Graduate student seeking friendship and possible serious relationship. I'm honest, kind, and generous. I enjoy being a team athlete build, brown hair, green eyes, and a clean-cut look. I'm looking for a non-smoking SWF who is moral and kind. My ideal lady enjoys athletic activities, has blue eyes, and a bright smile.
SWM 21 years old 5'9 Athlete looking for SWF who likes sports, dancing and having a good time. I am a gentleman that's looking for someone to share a great friendship with and may more.
SWM Irish, red headed, Catholic w/ Jeep, en ys flexes in mirrors, Jack Daniels, and pulring hurries. A swim suit is a must. SWM looking for tail mallow women. Recently moved to Lawrence from Eastern Iowa. Hoping for a corn-fed, Kansas-grown beauty queen. I enjoy long walks and water sports. Must be a smoker. I enjoy cock-pop & pussel rock. I love the water. I am not a lake or PAW while not wearing a watch. #48357
SWM looking for Vampires willing to embrace if you love the night call box #82462
SWM, Lira Limbaugh man, who goes by the philosopher Salmon, fan of surfing, rather than lounging on the beach. I enjoy golf, movies, beer, and road trips. Seeking someone with a back yet has an aura and a sense of humor. #48276
SWM non-smoker '83 180 lt Br hair bh br hairs, all-in-one, easy to wear. Swimwear for Harry Connick Jr., gives great messages seeks aktives, intelligent SWF (18-24) w/ swimwear & Harry Connick Jr., gives great messages & it is ready to be encouraged #9384
SWM wants gorgeous SWF N/S who can pound a lot of beer and who is interested in going to parties and getting crazy. I can't be a new and don't call if you want it. The kegs are waiting. anything is cool. The kegs are waiting. 43861
SWM seeks SBF. Am interested in meeting a lady who is tired of people playing games. If you like to get away for the weekends, dance, and are open-minded, give me a call. #20433
SWM-25 on 4th floor Elsworth. Looking for 25
books like *My Kind of Town* or like all types of
books and find *Monkey Python* funny.
SWM-Hardiness, with athletic build, looking for
have a good time. We finishes fine art and loves
to have a good time.
I'm a very motivated person. I like to get involved. My favorite hobby is hunting wild animals. Love the outdoors. Looking for a 19-20 year old would want to get involved, like marriages.
*43859*
Swim I'm tall have blonde surfer hair. I look like the blonde guy on the Real World. I enjoy romantic dinners and long evenings dancing. Give me a call, I love to meet you. (N/S please), 80397
Tall, dark and handsome law student seeks kinks and blomox in slacker and reggae. #62318 Tall, dark-haired Englishman, 21 yrs, old, who is a very popular socialite of all things American seeds like minded American female (who doesn't mind guys with a slight accent for casual wear). Can you imagine being preferred to connect, Prefer fun-loving, personable and unique girls. No strings attached, let's just hang out together and see what happens.
Tooned 9' guy, 21, seeking attractive, fun girl to share some quality time. j22666
♂️
WOMEN
SEEKING
MEN
you are too dark, and handsome—but a little shy? On whether you work as a grocery or drive CRX. I will moll it over but I not vain as so, as long as you love to dance and women with blond hair
Are you tired of endless bar hunting for a sincerе, manly hairstyle? I am. I'm a 28 year old SWF with curly black hair, fair skin, and brown eyes. I'm looking for someone with crest and spontaneity to have a good time. Can you please come to my studio?
Blonde hair, blue eyed SWF 9" seeking a tall laid back guy in to TMBG and partying. Drinker and drinker in to the park. Walking and in to spontaneous road trips. Call box #4746 Down to earth, fun-loving (emile who is looking for a great time. If you're open-minded, like long walks, and ready for one hell of a time never to fore. graduate student seeking romance with
historical and cultural interest, interest in
martial arts and music #2831
I am 3'8, have short, sexy hair & blue eyes. I am very outgoing and make friends easily. However, I can be more reserved in romance. I am very versatile in my interests and skills, but don't be afraid to hard, chicised looks, intelligent and they must know how to dance. If you would like to try to show me compliment each other, call my box.
I am seeking a man who's interested in art, reading and I must be good-looking, humorous and honest. #22329
Introducing female searching for a majestic male to
intimate intimate meetings. #ag8902
Outgoing, spontaneous 19 yr old SWF looking for semi-partyaming man that likes to talk. Must be concerned about school, but able to say 'to' hell with studying; lets go out 'if you like a babyperson.' Must have a bed, give him care. Under 19/oral animal need not bother #4795 SAF 22, 53, 10 facing for SM 21-26, must be good-looking, sensitive, good sense of humor, fun-loving and romantic. #20283
SBF-Tall, brown eyes, serious. I like movies/comedies and action adventure) and I like reggae music. I am religious and would like a gentleman who shares my beliefs. #40037
SWF 19, seeking male for intimate friendship only and possible mutual hobbies be fobbies to have.
SWF, 20, 5.4", brown hair, brown eyes. I am looking for someone who brings me flowers and that I can cook cake light dinner for him. Must be a nice dresser, call me to find out more. #47719
21 years old, 5'4" with caviar wishes and champagne dreams seeks SWM 21-23 years old to help me fulfill all my desires. If you prefer Pflift is Hope to talk to you now. #82320 afford this补贴.
SWF, 21yr., engaged and seeking one last fling.
82199
SWF 22, 73. dark brown hair and brown eyes.
I'm going to romantic nights at home. I like going to movies, long walks and candle light dinners. No smokers, beer drinkers, or beer belts, please.
SWF, 23 pre-med, thin and attractive. Serious student, but likes to have fun. Everyone here is so young! Looking for science grad student/pre-med student. You should talk about ward staff. Smokers are福利. #47228
SWF. Brown hair, brown eyes & "If you like pina colada's, gettin' caught in the rain, if you're not into yoga, if you have I/2 a brain, you the man I have looked for. Call me and escape." *82966*
SWP 3'8 TG affinive, atheletic figure looking for single male with good sense of humor; builds a strong character.
SWF Catholic,孝顺 fit, plus athletic, 30 to 35 yrs, old who enjoys the outdoors. Loves walk outs, biking, & dancing. Drinking for someone who bikes, & dancing. For someone who hunts, explores, humor, also a non-smoker & non-drinker. #8428
SWF looking for my soul mate! If you love to read, and walk, and enjoy 70' music like ABBA, then let the phone and/or ringing. I 'm brunette $4, attractive $10, sassy $15, cute $20 ("caesar" for coffee!) (we need not add) #1 #2051
SWF looking for SWM. I enjoy mountain biking and the outdoors and am seeking someone to just hang out with and get to know. I like seeing bands and movies, I enjoy the outdoors, $ 4 and attractive. Please call if interested. #22051.
SWF N/S: I am looking for a very kind, kind, and compassionate person with a sweet smile and great life! Life is
SWF seeking a good-looking athletic male. Must be fun and out-going. Like beer and blue eyes. Prefer someone 21 or older. I will wait to meet ya #23267
SWF seeking a SM 20-40 who enjoys lazy days and muses. Must like music disc and dancing dawn. 我 open-minded and fun-loving. Call box #22603
SWF seeking an attractive SWM to go to a party and have a good time. #8#4234
SWF seeking SWM. I like alternative music, but you don't have to. I like guys around 19 with long brown hair and blue eyes. I also like to drink beer and have a lot of fun of laughing at bumps out. Gigs on one call; £2800 to like to hang out. Gigs on one call; £2800
SWJF, 10' F. 3'4" 115 lb. Enjoy playing out, dancing,
playing volleyball, and occasional partying.
Swimming, swimming pool, bleosons, Blossoms.
Seeking SWJM with similar interests.
Smokers and drug users need not apply.
WANTED: SMM. Prefer tall and dark. It wouldn't hurt if you were handsome and rich either. Nicely defined peds and little, preferably no chest hair or back hair. Be of choice. Bud Light. #40077
SWJW looking for that special guy to sweep me on my feet and can enjoy high times chilling out at home or around town. 1 drink, dance, and smoke. Call me for fun. I like to party! #21059
WF looking for a strictly platonic relationship with someone else, because he is out, and meaningful conversations. People with annoying personalities need not respond. Friendly忽略 men only, please, who are just people like you.
Woman seeking Scandinavian man. More or less blonde and blue-eyed. European ideas and attitudes. Neutral politically. Hard worker affectionate. I'm looking for my equal. #82968
♥
MEN SEEKING MEN
Dark long hair, athletic looking for male with similar lifestyle. #82539
Are you as comfortable in a "gay" scene as a woman? Do you feel confident with a muscular build and at least somewhat intelligent. Are a GWM, 24, 8" C', 1985s, not so serious senior, with an intelligence, and neurologic competence?
Hey If you fit the following, to meet the same:
Belly, Great Looks, Tanned, Closet Stud.
GWM, 14:40, 5/11 'Blue, blonde, very cute sharp looking and masculine. Seeking good look, sharp dressing guy 18-26 for possible friendship and discrete fun. #2904
GWM I'm looking to find a lot of new friends where we can share a lot of ideas and wants. Who enjoys others company. Let's if we've got anything in common, #28258
Very good looking. BWM, 17%, 6' quality, fit &
comfort. Excellent for college. collage,
girl, 18 to 19, only #2234
WOMEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
♥
FRIENDS
SEEKING
FRIENDS
Handshake
19 yr. old Chicago boy looking for 19 yr. old Jewish girl
@g2063
Eleven-Eleven. Is this meaningful to you? If so,
let it be together. #29368
Any non-traditional students hoping to get into
study groups and information exchange. #8077
Bicusit makeker makes friend who likes to fix
stuff #20655
SEEKING
SPORTS
INTEREST
MUTUAL HOBBIES
T
TREASURE BOX
SWM seeking Female partner to play tennis and golf with me. Also looking for any person that is interested in going to the woodlands race track. # simea
MUTUAL HOBBIES
To place an ad
Grad student looking for riding companion to get in shape with. Road and off-road, all abilities welcome. 1 ride 6X's a week with varying intensities. #2645
1. Call or come into the Kansan at 119
2. Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
Graduate student looking for riding companion to
have all abilities are welcome. Road
and off road. #40222
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
2. You'll place an ad in the Jaytalk Network section of the Kansan (up to 6 lines) and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people who respond to your ad. Your voice message will remain in the system for 21 days.
3. After your ad runs in the Mon., Tues., & Thurs. editions of the Kansan, you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages people leave for you.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
To check out an ad
1. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them.
2. Call 1-900-285-4560 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touchstone phone), enter the mailbox number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category. You can interrupt to skip over messages that don't interest you. Voice prompts will lead you along the way. You'll be charged $1.95 per minute.
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached.
.
SPORTS: Kansas linebacker Larry Thiel makes a comeback after suffering from a broken leg last season. Page 11.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103.NO.28
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
Robbery suspects arrested
2 men hold The Hawk's customers at gunpoint By Traci Carl
NEWS:864-4810
Lawrence police arrested two men they believe held up Javhawk Cafe yesterday.
Robert Martin, 18, of Lawrence, was charged yesterday with aggravated robbery, and the other man, 16, has an arrangement scheduled for 1 p.m. Thursday. Martin's preliminary hearing will be Oct. 25.
Shortly after I am, yesterday, two men walked into Jayawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St., with a handgun and demanded money from the patrons and the register, Lawrence police reported.
Martin and the 16-year-old were arrested at 2 a.m. in the 500 block of West 14th Street, police said. They are being held in the Douglas County jail. Martin is being held without bond.
The two men fled on foot with a wallet, a book bag and cash, valued together at $555, police said. All of the items were recovered.
Kelli Stephani, Leawood freshman, was one of about 10 people in the bar at the time of the robbery. She said she was playing pool with her friends when the two men walked in.
"We looked up and everybody in the front by the stools was on the ground," she said.
One of the men stayed by the door and the other, wearing a hooded sweatshirt, held the gun.
"He pointed the gun at us and started walking back toward us, and we all went down on the ground," Stephani said.
"He pointed the gun at my friend's head and said, 'Empty your pockets now. I know you have money,'" she said.
The man with the gun then ordered Stephani and her friends to give him their money.
The two men did not injure anyone, she said, and after they emptied the register and the patron's pockets, they left.
Ken Wallace, owner of Jayhawk Cafe, said the incident took him by surprise.
"I've had this place almost 20 years, and something like this has never happened," he said. "It's just a sign of the times. I guess."
Wallace, who was not in the bar at the time of the robbery, said most people present were regular customers.
He said the alleged robbers did not have much to gain by holding up the bar. There was $300 in the register, the customers had $105 together, and the book bag was estimated by police to be worth $150.
Melissa Lacev / KANSAN
"They might as well have knocked over a Coke machine on campus," Wallace said.
MADONNA HAWKINS
Strike a pose
Pamela Chu, Hong Kong junior, receives yearbook posing tips from photographer Darrick Gans. All students still can have yearbook portraits taken through Friday in the Rotunda Room of Strong Hall.
KU faculty has no plans to unionize
Pittsburg State has only union in Regents system
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
In their recent attempts to move closer to collective bargaining, KU graduate teaching assistants have more in common than they might realize with the University's own faculty.
Only six years ago, in November 1987, KU professors held an election in their attempt to form a faculty union. The faculty voted down a then four-year-old effort to unionize by a margin of 4 percent.
Faculty and GTA concerns about better benefits and compensation remained alike, said Felix Moos, professor of anthropology and president of the American Association of University Professors, or AAUP.
"Back then, our issues were essentially similar to GTAs now," Moos said. "But I know of no on-going plans for a faculty union any time soon."
Moos said he had not heard of any renewed interest in a faculty union at the University, but said KU faculty probably would not make plans before consulting other Board of Regents schools.
"It seems to me if a move is ever again attempted, three of the Regents units will go it together," Moos said.
Of the six member universities in the Regents system, only Pittsburgh State University has a faculty union.
Allowed to organize by the Regents in 1983, Pittsburgh State faculty established a bargaining unit under the leadership of the Kansas National Education Association.
David Lomshek, the association's current president at Pittsburg State, said there were a lot of misconceptions involved with university-level faculty unions.
"There's a lot less antagonism between the administration and the faculty than people think," Lomshek said. "If you take two groups who have similar goals, you will reach some consensus. They will both get a part of what they want."
By having a union available, the faculty has a greater role in their own governance, Lomshek said.
Because of strong support the faculty has for the union, Lomshek said the association could achieve higher annual raises than those available at other Regents schools.
"We are able to bring both sides to the table on the important issues," he said. "I think we go in there as equals."
Lomshek said one of the most recent negotiations the Pittsburg State faculty union achieved with the administration was a guaranteed increase in summer pay.
Robert Ratzlaff, Pittsburgh State vice president for academic affairs, said he thought negotiations for the past five years between Pittsburg State faculty and administration remained amiable.
"It's been beneficial when explaining university procedure," Ratzlaff said. "The union has provided a better forum for discussion of the issues that concern faculty."
Ratzlaff said one advantage of an organized faculty union was that it helped the faculty better understand the administrative process.
Rule helps women's teams to varsity consideration
Kansan sportswriter
By Anne Felstet
Maggie Romens, a junior and captain of the women's crew team, rows ever faster, and sophomore soccer goal keeper Carrie Gabbard dives for more saves in hopes that their teams will become the next Kansas women's varsity sport.
In 1972, the U.S. Congress passed Title IX, establishing that educational programs and activities receiving federal financial assistance could not discriminate against a person on the basis of sex. After 21 years, the law is gaining recognition in sports through the gender-equity guidelines established by the National Collegiate Athletic Association in 1993. The guidelines assist universities in striving for equal treatment and opportunities for both men's and women's athletic programs.
Following those guidelines, Kansas is opting to add one or two women's sports rather than cutting existing men's programs.
Crew coach Rob Catloth said that he wanted his team to be one of the first on the list of those to be converted
Betsy Stephenson, associate athletic director/senior woman administrator, said that the Athletic Department was not at a proposal stage to add the sports but that all women's club sports would be under consideration, with soccer and crew probably leading the way.
from a club team to a varsity team.
Women's soccer is also vying for a varsity position. Lori Zito, women's soccer coach, said that she had tried to make the team more competitive in hopes of being considered.
The addition of women's athletics programs is in response to Title IX.
"It is not our goal to diminish one sport to bring up another," Stephenson said. "We want to add sports that will be as competitive as our current non-revenue sports."
Because Title IX is a law, the Office for Civil Rights — not the NCAA — monitors institutional compliance, and the courts act as the enforcer.
"The task force believes it's up to the individual institutions to do what is right." said Janet Justus, director of
engibility at the NCAA. "The NCAA is not an enforcing mechanism but rather a guide."
Before adding any sport, the Athletic Department will look at all the factors relating to adding that sport. Stephenson said that the Athletic Board, the governing committee for Kansas athletics, will look at funding, recruiting, facilities and competitiveness of sports in this area.
Crew captain Romens has strong feelings for wanting crew to become a varsity sport.
"If we're going to continue to do well regionally and nationally, we'll need some help from the Athletic Department," she said.
fied them for the Collegiate Crew Nationals.
Last year, crew won the Midwest Rowing Championships, which quali-
Soccer goalie Gabbard said that having soccer as a varsity sport would draw more women to the University who were interested in soccer. She said that she looked at schools with varsity programs but turned them down because they were all small colleges.
Stephenson said she hoped that the new sports could be added during the 1994-95 academic year and that the athletic department was moving toward compliance with Title IX. The task force guidelines do not give a clear timeline for completion but said full compliance with Title IX should come at the earliest possible date.
toward gender equality.
Schools should support equal opportunities for men and women. Thirteen program components of Title IX help clarify this test. They include equal provision of equipment and supplies, and equal recruiting and scholarships.
Schools should be making ongoing efforts to reach gender equality. One approach is to match the undergraduate male-female ratio with the number of participants in the men's and women's sports. Kansas' undergraduate male-female ratio is 49 to 51. The sports male-female ratio is 68 to 32.
Schools should address the interests of its women athletes. A sport with high participation and interest rates among women athletes would be a good sport to add.
Genderequality
Three main tests in the NCAA guidelines help schools gauge their progress toward gender equality.
INSIDE
Sources: the NCAA and Betsy Stepherson, associate athletic director of Kansas.
Page 9.
Hats off!
Headwear tops this season's fashion trends with students taking the casual look to new heights. And both women and men are in on it this time around.
THE MASTER OF LANGUAGE
A master of language is a person who can communicate effectively and fluently in various languages. This skill requires extensive training, practice, and dedication to the development of language skills.
The master of language is also known as a linguist or a scholar of language. A linguist studies the structure and function of languages, including grammar, syntax, and vocabulary. A scholar examines the history, evolution, and diversity of languages, considering their origins, development, and cultural significance.
In today's world, the master of language is an essential skill for individuals living in a globalized environment. It allows them to communicate with people from different cultures and regions, facilitating communication and collaboration across borders.
In addition to its practical importance, the master of language is also valuable for researchers and educators. It helps them understand the complexities of language and its evolution, enabling them to develop innovative teaching methods and research strategies.
Overall, the master of language is a crucial tool for language learning and communication. Its ability to convey complex ideas and emotions through language makes it an invaluable asset for anyone seeking to improve their language skills.
Panel discusses Western origins
By Kathleen Stolle Kansan staff writer
Sponsored by the Joyce and Elizabeth Hall Center, the panel discussion was moderated by James Woelfel, director of the Western Civilization program and professor of philosophy.
Drawing on their diverse cross-section of scholarly backgrounds, three KU faculty members discussed their understanding of Western civilization yesterday afternoon.
wooster said the influences for Western civilization were primarily Western European, but it also had roots from ancient Greece. He characterized the United States as a modern branch of Western civilization.
Can brinkwenda, associate professor of history, said that by the beginning of this century, Western civilization had become a primary influence in the world. He said Western civilization was characterized by capitalism, equality among individuals and the ability of many ethnic, religious and cultural groups to coexist.
Omofolabo Ajayi-Soyinka, assistant professor of women's studies and theater and film, said from a geographical standpoint, Western civilization generally included areas west of France and England. She said these
countries, along with Italy and Germany, spread the seeds of Western civilization through colonization.
But she noted the irony in how mainstays of Western civilization, such as freedom of religion and democracy, often were imposed upon colonies.
"To many colonized people, Western civilization means power," Ajavi-Sovinka said.
However, people of colonized countries have begun speaking out about who they are, she said.
"I think what other cultures are doing now is projecting their own ideas of civilization and voicing their own contribution to a world civilization," she said.
Elaine Gerbert, assistant professor of East Asian languages and culture, said that Western civilization had affected Japan beginning in the mid-1800s. New vocabulary, altered self images and a push for modernization were a few of the influences felt by the Japanese. However, as the Japanese began forming their own definition of civilization, they became more critical of Western ideals.
She said the Japanese saw civilization as a source of power or hierarchy, and that they used their civilized status to help justify a late 19th-century war with China, whose society they characterized as barbaric.
The professors also addressed the issue of Western civi-
James Woolfeil, director of Western Civilization, left, and Omofolao Alaji-Yoinka, assistant professor of women's studies and theater and film, conduct a panel discussion on the definition of Western civilization.
Mike J. Baldwin
.
ization in university curriculum.
"It's so broad and inclusive, if it's everything, can it be anything?" Gerbert asked.
She suggested that the study of Western civilization be broken down into specific components, such as American or European.
Strikwerda said he would be supportive of a course that focused on not just Western civilization but world civilization. He suggested that information about diverse civilizations be integrated into the University's curriculum.
2
Wednesday, September 29, 1993
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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ON THE RECORD
A KU student's TV, VCR, stereo, CDs and other miscellaneous items, valued together at $1,650, were taken in the 3800 block of Clinton Parkway between Saturday and Sunday, Lawrence police reported.
A KU student's mountain bike, valued at $640, was taken in the 1600 block of Tennessee Street between Sunday and Monday, Lawrence police reported.
telephone and answering machine, valued together at $220,
were taken Sept. 2 in the 100 block of Hanover Place; Lawrence
police reported.
A bathroom door in Templin Hall was damaged Sunday, KU police reported. Damage was estimated at $100.
A KU student's microwave,
A KU student's sunglasses, valued at $85, were taken in the Ekdah Dining Commons Monday, KU police reported.
CAMPUS BRIEF
Jury trial set for man charged in cariacking
A Dec. 6 jury trial was scheduled yesterday for a Topeka youth charged with murder and attempted aggravated robbery connected to a carjacking incident in North Lawrence Sept. 18.
his vehicle while parked at the Riverfront Park in North Lawrence. Lees' girlfriend and her two children were in the car at the time of the shooting but were not injured.
Abraham Orr, 17, will be tried in Douglas County District Court as an adult because of two previous violations as a juvenile that would have been considered felonies.
The court heard testimony in preliminary hearings yesterday from nine witnesses, including police detectives and officers, a paramedic, the county coroner and Lees' girlfriend.
Orr was arrested after Lawrence resident Edward Lees was shot in
Orr pleaded not guilty to both charges. He remained in custody at the Douglas County jail under a $500,000 bond.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 6044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119
Stauffer-FlintHall, Lawrence, Kan6045.
KU WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL CLUB
DIG THIS!
PRACTICE: TUESDAYS & THURSDAYS
7:00-9:00 PM
WEATHER
NORTHGYM-ROBINSON
MOREINFO?
WEATHER
Omaha: 64°/39°
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 78°/53°
Chicago: 57°/33°
Houston: 89°/58°
Miami: 88°/76°
Minneapolis: 52°/32°
Phoenix: 102°/70°
Salt Lake City: 83°/52%.
Seattle: 76°/51°
LAWRENCE: 68°/40°
Kansas City: 68°/45°
St. Louis: 65°/45°
Wichita: 67°/45°
Tulsa: 75°/53°
TODAY
Sunny
High: 68°
Low: 40°
Tomorrow Partly cloudy and cool
High: 67°
Low: 42°
Friday Sunny
High: 70°
Low: 42°
Source: Associated Press
KANSAN
Contact: Sam Ghate @
841-9860
or Karen Vest@
865-4204
X
Lion
Jayhawk Bookstore "Your Book Professionals" "At the top of Naismith Hill" Hrs: 8-7 M-Th.. 8-5 Fri. 9-5 Sat. 12-4 Sun.
Hrs: 8-7 M-Th., 8-5 Fri. 9-5 Sat. 12-4 Sun.
843-3826
Weekly Re-affirmation
All is well, regardless of outer appearances. I place my unwavering trust in Ever-loving God.
K-Unity & Unity of Lawrence 843-8832 416 Lincoln
From K-Unity & Unity of Lawrence 843-8832 416 Lincoln
SCOUTS
Wake up to
CEDARWOOD APTS
Now leasing Winter & Spring Newly Redecorated Units Gas heat & Low Utilities Close to Mall 1 Block from KU Bus route
Close to Mt
1 Block from KU Bus route
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts.
Duplexes(3 & 4 Bedroom)
Call Pat today 843-1116
2411 Cedarwood Ave.
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ART
EXHIBIT
Oct.18-31
Exhibited in Kansas Union Gallery
ALL STUDENTS WELCOME TO APPLY
---
May pick up Applications at SUA office from 9-5pm , level four of Kansas Union.
Applications due Mon., Oct.11 by 5pm.
Awards given in three categories:
painting/drawing
photography
3-dimensional art
For more information call 864-3477
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Kansas Union - Lawrence KS 60455 1963 © 1983-2003
CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 29, 1993
3
Mainframes will be replaced
New systems will run faster
By Shan Schwartz Kansan staff writer
Students and faculty using mainframe computer systems at KU may notice greater computing power and speed in the coming months.
Jerry Niebaum, director of academic computing services, said five new Digital Equipment Corporation computers had been purchased and would replace much of the existing mainframe system at KU.
The computers being replaced are a DEC Vax 9000, which users know as Kuhub, a DEC Microavox, the student-use electronic mail
vax named Oread and two IBM RS-6000 model 350s, which users know as Ukanaix and Stet1.
Niebium said the look and feel of the new systems would be identical to the old ones, but the new computers would run two times faster than the Vax 9000 and about 250 times faster than the Microvax 2.
Niebium said the transition to the new systems would begin in October and would be complete by December.
Richard Kershenbaum, manager of technical services for computing services, said there were several reasons to replace the Vax 9000. He said the system was overloaded, performance was slow, and this was a last chance to get a significant trade-in value on the Vax 9000.
But the best reason for purchases-
ing the new system, Kershenaum said, was money. He said the Vax9000 alone cost more than $55,000 a year for maintenance.
"For that much, we can buy a new computer that's more powerful, with a one year warranty," he said.
Kershenbaum said the entire new system only cost about one-third as much as the Vax 9000 cost three years ago. He said it also took up less floor space, used less electricity and required less air conditioning than the old system.
When the Vax 9000 was purchased, Kershenbaum said it was brand-new, state-of-the-art technology. Kershenbaum said the technology, however, quickly became obsolete.
Kershenbaum said the Microvax running the Oread system was about 8 years old and was purchased from the physics department a few years ago after the department acquired a new system.
“It’s kind of an antique in computer terms,” Kershenbaum said. “Many of us have computers at home that run faster than this one does.”
Kershenbaum said Oread's heavy use made the system even slower, especially when many users were logged on at the same time. He said the system was practical for only about 300 users, but more than 900 accounts had been assigned because of the large student demand.
Many students who requested e-mail accounts on Oread had to be turned away, Kershenbaum said.
Every time we purchase new hardware,we find it's quickly saturated with
users."
Richard Kershonbaum manager of technical services for computing services
The new system, he said, would allow any student to get an e-mail account.
ON CAMPUS
The Office of Student Financial Aid is moving today from 22 Strong Hall, but will remain open on a walk-in and phone-in basis. The office will reopen on Oct. 5 in 50 Strong Hall. For more information, call 864-4700.
OAKS-Non-traditional Student Organization will hold a brown-bag lunch from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at Alcove G in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Gerry Vernon at 864-7317.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will hold a forum, "On Stage and Off with Lawrence Community Theatre," at noon today at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center, 1204 Oread. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933.
Soapbox, sponsored by KJHK, will be held from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. today in front of Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Jenny Schwab at 749-7684.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel. For more information, call the center at 843-0357
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a Catholic student discussion group and sack lunch at 1:10 p.m. today (directly following 12:30 Mass) at Alcove B in the Kansas Union. For more information, call the center at 843-0357.
The Office of Study Abroad will hold an informational meeting for students interested in studying in Spanish-speaking countries at 3:30 p.m. today in 4010 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Ellen Hart Strubert at 864-3742.
The Office of Study Abroad will hold an informational meeting for students interested in studying in English-speaking countries at 4 p.m. today in 4044 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742.
The Office of Study Abroad will hold an informational meeting for students interested in studying in French-speaking countries at 4 p.m. today in 4010 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Janis Perkins at 864-3742.
KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 5:30 p.m. today on the third floor of the Burge Union. For more information, call 864-7316.
AIAA will hold a general meeting at 6 p.m. today in 2002 Learned Hall.
KU Ad Club will meet at 7 tonight in 100 Stauffer-Flint Hall. For more information, call Wade Baxter at 749-7487 or Ed Schafer at 864-4358.
KU Sailing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at Parors A, B and C in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Tom Connor at 841-4597.
Asian-American Student Union will meet at 7:30 tonight in 100 Smith Hall. For more information, call Arthur Chiu at 832-8332.
KU Kempo will meet from 7 to 8:30 tonight in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Ershadi at 842-4713.
Watkins Memorial Health Center will sponsor an eating-disorders support group meeting from 7:30 to 8:30 tonight at the second-floor conference room in Watkins. For more information, call Sarah Kirk at 864-4121.
F. A.C.T.S. will meet at 8 tonight at the first-floor conference room in Watkins Memorial Health Center.
Virginia Baldwin
Jacqueline Davis, executive director of the Lied Center, presents to Christina Hixson, trustee of the Lied Foundation Trust, the master key to the center at the official opening ceremonies.
Lied Center begins era
Building, play impress crowd
By Donella Hearne Kansan staff writer
Nancy Kaiser-Caplan, coordinator of the Lied Center, said approximately 1,100 people attended the opening, including Gov. Joan Finney and the show's composer, Lucy Simon.
Tuxedos and sparkling gowns were abundant last night at the gala opening of the Lied Center and "The Secret Garden."
Tickets to the opening were by invitation only. People who donated money to the Lied Center all were invited.
The opening ceremonies featured the presentation of the master key to the Lied Center, Jacqueline Davis, executive director of the Lied Center, presented the key to Christina Hixson, trustee of the Lied Foundation Trust, which gave $10 million for the construction of the performing arts hall.
C
THE
LIED
CENTER
Davis thanked Hixson for making the Lied Center possible.
"You made the Lied Center our secret garden," Davis said.
"There isn't a theater in New York that compares with ours," she said. "They are all so old and ours is brand new."
Hixson said she would come back to Kansas whenever she was invited, especially to the Lied Center.
"The center is an extraordinary asset to the University," Budig said. "We can attract the very best. It opens the door for an exciting
"It was all wonderful, the voices, the music, the dancing," Finney said. "It was a fabulous evening."
The audience was then introduced to the garden of an orphan girl named Mary Lennox.
Chancellor Gene Budig said the play overwhelmed him.
future."
Tonight will be student night at the Lied Center and student tickets range from $15 to $17.50, which is half price. Kaiser-Caplan said there were still good student seats available for the performance.
"We feel this is a very important part of academic life," Kaiser-Caplan said. "We wanted to involve local patrons and donors, but we really wanted to get the students in here."
Kaiser-Caplan said an invitation-only gala event like last night was not likely to take place again at the Lied Center.
"The event was special," she said. "As someone said earlier, 'Today is history in the making.' We did this in appreciation for those who have helped pay for the center."
The student population also was represented at the opening.
John Shoemaker, student body president, had only a few words to say about the performance and the entire evening.
"Stupendous, wonderful, fabulous," he said.
Counterfeit bills reported in Lawrence
Banks post signs in businesses alerting patrons to funny money
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
John Webb said that there was nothing funny about funnymoney.
Webb said that he hoped the signs would make customers think twice about spending or accepting counterfeit money.
Webb, owner of Webb's Fine Wine and Spirits, 800 W. 23rd St., and other area business owners have recently posted signs from several Lawrence banks warning customers of counterfeit money that has been turning up in Douglas County.
"I'm honest with my customers when they buy something from me, and I think they should be honest, too, in terms of what they pay with, whether it be cash or anything else," he said. "This is reminding them of that responsibility."
Information for the signs was supplied by the Douglas County Sheriff's office. The Lawrence banks then distributed the signs to their customers last week, said Kari Wempe, an officer with the Fraud and Forgery Department in the sheriff's office.
The posted signs have two counterfeit $20 bills printed on them and an explanation as to why they are counterfeit. Under the bills, a statement reads: "These bills have been found in the Douglas County area. Be on the look out!"
"it comes and goes, but it has never been a big problem," she said. "We don't consider it a common problem now."
Wempe said that although counterfeit bills had been reported in Lawrence recently, reports of counterfeits went in cycles.
Sgt. Richard Nickell, technical services officer for the Lawrence police department, said that the department had not seen a large increase in the number of counterfeit bills reported.
He said that the $20 bill was not necessarily the favorite bill of counterfeiters and that counterfeited money came in many forms.
"Sometimes they'll cut off the numbers on the corners, tape on other numbers and then try to pass them off," he said. "Other times they'll make photocopies of bills and try to put them in vending machines and coin changers."
Nickell said businesses or people who believe they have counterfeit hills should call the police.
Counterfeit
Some fake bills have been found in Douglas County. Here is one way to identify a counterfeit bill.
The number on the bill should correspond to the position of the letter in the alphabet.
The letter is both inside the circle and the first character of the serial number.
J 12345678H
John Paul Foget/KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
HOW TO REACH US
Call 864-4810 for the newsroom:
■ News tips — Campus Desk
■ Comments/Complaints/
Corrections — KC Trauer, Editor or
Joe Harder, Managing Editor for News
Call 864-4358 for advertising:
■ Classified Department
■ Comments/Complaints —
Janice Davis, Classified Manager
■ Display Advertising
Components/Complaints — Amy Casey, Business Manager
University Daily Kansan fax number — 913-864-5261
VOLLEYBALL
GENERAL INFORMATION
GENERALINFORMATION Each team will consist of six players. Individuals may only play on one team.(Exception: An individual may play on a Hill Division team, a Co-Rec team, and a team in the JAYHAWK division).Check with the Recreation Services Office, 208 Robinson, at 864-3546 for individual eligibility
V
A.
MANAGERS' MEETING
There will be a MANDATORY MANAGERS' MEETING on MONDAY, OCTOBER 4 at 7:00PM in Robinson, Room115. 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 thru 4:00PM on TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5 and WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6. All team managers who do not attend the MANAGERS' MEETING will not be allowed to sign up until OCTOBER 6 at 2:00PM.
ENTRY DEADLINE: Wednesday, Oct. 6 at 4:00 p.m.
Entry fee: $25/team
DIVISIONS: Men's & Women's, Greek, Open, Residence hall, Jayhawk & Co-Rec A & B
Sponsored by KU Recreation Services,208 Robinson,864-3546
SAGITTARIUS
KARATE
街事通
KU KARATE CLUB OKINAWAN GOJU RYU
Robinson Gymnasium, Room 130
Classes Forming Now
Tuesdays and Thursdays Robinson Gymnasium, Room 130
The KUKARATE CLUB studies a traditional style of karate known as: KOWAIWAN HUJIN
KARATETEACHES: SELF DEFENSE, SELF CONFIDENCE, SELF AWARENESS For more information contact Brad at 832-2157
4
Wednesday, September 29, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
The Kansas Board of Healing Arts is holding hearings on whether to allow Kansas physician Yolanda Huet-Vaughn to retain her license to practice.
THE BACKGROUND
Huet-Vaughn refused to serve with her Army Reserve unit in the Persian Gulf, stating that when she joined the Reserves, she did not expect a war to break out and that she objected to the war on moral grounds. The Army punished Huet-Vaughn by dishonorably discharging her and sentencing her to eight months in prison.
THE OPINION
Huet-Vaughn has done her time. Her poor record in the military has no bearing on her ability to practice medicine, and that ability is the question in this case.
Huet-Vaughn did time shouldn't suffer twice
The Kansas Board of Healing Arts should not revoke Yolanda Huet-Vaughn's license to practice medicine. It has no reason to do so. Huet-Vaughn paid her debt to society and should not be forced to pay twice for her crime.
Make no mistake; what Huet-Vaughn did was wrong. She enlisted in the Army Reserves and took the government's money, but when it came time to do her duty, she backed out. In the face of war, her moral beliefs suddenly appeared.
To punish her again for a crime she has already paid for is unnecessary. The Kansas medical board's pursuance of Huet-Vaughn smacks of a political witchhunt for a person who held an unpopular view. The Kansas Board of Healing Arts should stick to medicine and leave military discipline to the military.
While the rest of Huet-Vaughn's unit reported for duty, she remained behind, a deserter. The Army court-martialed Huet-Vaughn and found her guilty. She was issued a dishonorable discharge and an eight-month prison sentence, which she has served.
One may wonder why she joined the Reserves in the first place. According to Huet-Vaughn, she did not think a war was likely. As an adult, she was expected to know the rules. She saw no moral conflict until Desert Shield began.
MIKE SILVERMAN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Harvest of Arts festival downtown is place to be
Downtown Lawrence has been buzzing with activity. The Harvest of Arts festival has taken over Lawrence and will continue through Sunday, Oct. 3. The festival is a great way to support local artists. It also provides an avenue for experiencing diverse and entertaining exhibits and shows. Most of the festival events are free or have nominal fees and range from a street dance to alternative theater. The festival will culminate Sunday with the unveiling of the Community Mural on the north wall of the Johnson Furniture building.
Festival organizers and local businesses have spent a great deal of time coordinating the week-long celebration. Take a break from your busy schedule and go to the festival. Even if you can only attend one exhibit or show, your contribution will be appreciated. For information about events, call 865-0114.
Too often, we take for granted the diversity and talent that the University and community have to offer. Support the festival. You might be surprised how much you enjoy the arts.
MANNY LOPEZ FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
THEY'VE KEPT THIS MAN'S COMATOSE BODY
ALIVE AGAINST HIS FAMILY'S WISHES FOR
OVER 10 YEARS. DAY IN, DAY OUT HE LIES
MOTIONLESS IN THIS BED WITH MACHINES
PUMPING HIS HEART...
TOO BAD HE NEVER
MURDERED ANYONE...
MAYBE WE COULD'VE
GOTTEN HIM EXECUTED
A FINE EXAMPLE
OF OUR RESPECT FOR
HUMAN LIFE!
IN THIS COUNTRY,
YOU'VE GOT TO EARN
THE RIGHT TO DIE
BRIAN THOMPSON
There is such a thing as a stupid question
People all over are stupid. The best time to see this stupidity is during a crisis of some sort. Real or imagined, large or small, it doesn't matter. Well, actually, come to think of it, you can see it anime.
Take, for instance, this Kenny Draymond thing last week. Remember? The guy who played football here at KU and then went to prison in Arizona for rape, sodomy and comma misplacement? Well, the police put fliers up in the dorms, and since I live in a dorm, I got to hear what people had to say about it.
Here's how it works: The higher the
I strategically stationed myself near the front desk because the front desk is a very important looking fixture in the lobby where people usually take all their stupid questions to the person sitting behind it. I sat with pen and paper in hand — in the interest of journalistic accuracy — and recorded all I saw and heard. Later, I went back to my room, and through a very complicated, technical and accurate — acrit, as we say in Wyoming — mathematical formula, found the exact Stupid Quotient (SQ) of each response. I have prepared my report, and will be submitting it to a congressional task force subcommittee's members' secretaries' assistant, at which point its impact should be felt far and wide. So remember, you read it here first. All these are actual responses I heard to the fliers on the walls — just ask me.
STAFF COLUMNIST
RYAN
McGEE
SQ, the stupider the question or comment. Please excuse the technical jargon. It's unavoidable in a report of this significance. Here are the results:
"Why is he coming here?" This one was quite common and could be seen as a legitimate question if the information wasn't so easily obtained from more appropriate sources than the person they were standing next to, which was usually whom they were asking. SQ: 106.32.
"What's sodomy?" Not very stupid. Some people just don't know what the key words in many front-page type news items like the Bottoms ruling and all its after effects mean. SQ: 220.
"Are you guys serious about this?" Now we're getting into some of the stupider stuff. This is a stupid question no matter how you look at it. It was asked mostly of the desk assistant and security monitors, who, while they may have given the tape to the cops to put the fliers up, obviously are not responsible for the actual filers and their content. I suppose the people asking this question thought
something like this: The desk assistant or security monitor comes home from a hard day at class and checks his or her answering-machine messages. Lo and behold, there's one from the Arizona Cops, personal friends of theirs, saying that their mutual arch enemy, Kenny D., has escaped and is headed for the Lawrence area. Could they please warn everybody. After a bite to eat, they go to Kinko's, make some fliers and hang them up...or is it all a joke? Even if the proper people had been around to ask, it would be a stupid question. How often does KUPD play pranks like that? Assume it wasn't KUPD at all, just some prankster kids, and it's still a stupid question. What does it hurt, after all, to play it safe anyway? SQ: 3,457.
"He's in a lot of trouble when they catch him." No kidding? They don't just give you a slap on the wrist for those these days? Boy, times have changed. SQ: 4,000,14159.
"Have you seen him?" What kind of response besides "no" can be given to this one? Uh, yeah. I saw him in the bathroom on your floor. Was I supposed to say something to somebody about it? SQ: 5.643.
"How are we supposed to recognize him? All black guys look the same." SQ: incalculably large.
Conclusion: People can be stupider than I thought.
Ryan McGee is a Worland, Wyo., sophomore.
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
Television encourages our culture of violence
Congressional efforts to curb violence on television received a dash of cold water with the testimony of Surgeon General Joycelyn Elders, who dismissed media violence as primarily reflective of a pervasive problem in American culture.
Her description of television as a passive agent, however, is in contrast to numerous studies that have linked violent behavior among children with what they watch on television.
preoccupation with violence, but help promote a culture of violence. To limit the effect of television violence on children, some congressmen have recommended the use of existing technology to allow parents to block out violent programming on their television sets at all times. Others have suggested federal laws that would require the medium to diminish its level of violent programming.
The point is that the violent acts dramatically presented on television not only reflect the nation's
In her testimony, Dr. Elders described violence in America as a "critical public health issue," and urged that its root causes be dealt with. No one would suggest that television is solely or even largely responsible for violence in this
nation. Yet there is wide agreement by researchers that television plays a significant role in promoting violence.
So far, the industry has taken preliminary steps to reduce the pervasive level of violence on television only under the threat of congressional intervention. Despite Dr. Elders' lack of enthusiasm for those efforts, Congress should keep up the pressure. If the administration wants to cozy up the industry by downplaying the importance of this issue, Congress shouldn't.
The Post and Courier Charleston, S.C.
JIM KIMMEL
JIM KIMMEL Government lacks needed trust to fix health care
We are beginning to seriously talk about health care. As usual we are somewhat late in addressing the issue. One of the biggest problems that we have as a nation is a refusal to confront important issues until they become crises. For 12 years the Republicans talked about wasteful government spending while the presidents signed budgets that created the largest deficits in history. The Democrats were no better, gladly helping the Republicans increase the deficits. Now when they tell us that in order to solve the federal budget problem, spending must be cut and taxes raised. Since they have been telling us for so long that we didn't really have to do either, their credibility is gone. Small wonder their talk of shared sacrifice finds a skeptical public. Now a new president along with the old Congress is attempting to improve the way we handle health care. But many of us are skeptical.
Our national government has lost our trust. Most Americans no longer believe that it acts in their best interest. However most people like their representatives and senators, they see them as the lone good servants looking out for their voters' interest. When people no longer believe in their government's ability to make their lives better, then it is a very short step to believing that they would be better off without it.
The problem can be fixed with some reforms that have already been suggested. First and most important, term limits for both senators and representatives. I hate to quote Ross Perot, but we do need people who serve and then go home.
Second, campaign finance reform. Contributions should be limited to $100 for both individual and groups. Contributions should also come only from the area that the representatives and senators represent. Is it really necessary for people all over the nation to contribute to Bob Dole's reelection in Kansas, or Bob Kerry's in Nebraska? Third, the free trips that political action committees and other groups provide in exchange for speeches should be eliminated. Some members of Congress travel on these free vacations almost every weekend. It's called buying access to the system, but it is really buying votes. After all, if someone had just bought you and your family a expenses-paid weekend in Aspen, and told you how much they wanted you to come back next year, their side of an issue could make a lot more sense.
The national health care proposal has the potential to have the greatest impact on all Americans since social security was created during the 1930s. For the first time all Americans could have their health care guaranteed, just as we now try to guarantee financial security in retirement. This is an important contract that we are making. Without that trust it will be very difficult for any plan to gain the public support necessary for passage. It will be very unfortunate if a program that could do so many of us so much good is ruined because we have a political system that no one is willing to trust.
Jim Kimmel is a McLouth junior majoring in history and sociology.
KANSAN STAFF
KC TRAUER, Editor
STAFF COLUMNIST
L
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE Managing editors
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
editor
Assistant to the editor ... J.R. Clairbome
News ... Stacy Friedman
Editorial ... Terrilyn McCormick
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Kristi Fogler
Photo ... Kip Chin, Renese Knoeber
Features ... Erza Wolfe
Graphics ... John Paul Fogel
TOM EBLEN
Business Staff
by Joel Francke
Business Start
Campus sales mgr ... Ed Schager
Regional Sales mgr ... Jennifer Perrier
National sales mgr ... Jennifer Evanson
Co-op sales mgr ... Blythe Focht
Production mgrs ... Jennifer Blowey
... Kate Burgess
Marketing director ... Shelly McConnell
Creative director ... Brian Fusco
Classified mgr ... Janice Davis
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
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 the Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
University of Mars
8
Pow!
00
a
FERNANDO 93
!
I will do it
POW
X
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 29, 1993
Minorities in engineering
Hispanic engineers promote their field
1508864350
By Christoph Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
Pedro Echeverria, Quito, Ecuador, junior, wants to dispel a common stereotype of Hispanics.
Hispanics have a stereotype that we go for the low-paying jobs," he said.
Echeverria is president of KU's chapter of the Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers or SHPE.
"SHPE is trying to reverse that stereotype," he said. SHPE is an organization that strives to encourage Hispanics to become involved in engineering and works for the advancement of Hispanics in engineering, Echeverria said.
Even though SHPE is a national organization with 33 professional chapters and 118 student chapters across the nation, Echeverria said the society did not attract much attention at KU.
"We'd like to get more support from
Hispanic Heritage Month
the other student organizations," he said.
Echeverria said SHPE had been working with the Hispanic-American Leadership Organization to become a more active part in KU's Hispanic community.
This has been difficult because the only source of funding for SHPE has come from public corporation grants, he said.
"We're trying to get funding from Student Sepate," he said.
One way SHPE helps Hispanic engineering students is to pair juniors and seniors in SHPE with underclassmen for tutoring.
SHPE is not only for college students, he said.
"We try to visit high schools so they will be aware there is an organization for them at KU," he said. "Our main task is to have them take a look at
what engineering is. Then comes trying to get them to come to KU."
SHPE was added to the School of Engineering's minority engineering programs in 1989. The National Society of Black Engineers and the American Indian Science and Engineering Society are the other two groups that belong to the minority program.
Florence Boldridge, director of minority engineering programs, said the minority program was established for black engineering students.
"Now the program is three-fourths Hispanic," she said.
Carl Locke, dean of engineering, said SHPE was an important part of the school and the school should reflect the state population. Locke said Kansas had a 10 percent Hispanic population and Hispanics now make up 5 percent of the students in the school of engineering.
"My goal is for us to enroll as many minority students as the percentage in the state," Locke said.
SHPE will elect its board members tomorrow night. Echeverria was elected Thursday along with vice president Gerardo Prado, Fenton, Mo., senior.
Man teaches Hispanic heritage
Bv Carlos Telada
Kansan staff writer
As a doctoral student at the University of California-Los Angeles, Juan Velasco watched last spring's riots in Los Angeles from a cultural perspective.
"It was a very shocking experience," said Velasco, assistant professor of Latin American studies. "The rites in Los Angeles taught me we have to be more aware of what we want to be as a country."
Velasco said he wanted to bring that lesson to the University of Kansas. He he wanted to fulfill a demand by KU students and others around the nation to understand the influx of Hispanic culture in American life.
"The Labyrinths of Self," Velasco's class on the relation of Latin American literature to culture, is full despite neither being listed nor advertised, he said. He said the class fulfilled the curiosity many KU students had
about Latin American culture. "All kinds of students are taking this course, and they show a lot of interest in things like race and nationalism," Velasco said.
Elizabeth Kuzness, head of the Latin American studies department, said Velasco's classes served an important niche at KU.
A. C. A.
"You can see how this brings together notions of race
Juan Velasco
Kuznesof also said Velasco, who has doctorate degrees from both UCLA and the University of Spain in Madrid, was in demand from other universities for his area of research.
literature and identity in the same platform," she said.
"People who are into any kind of Chicano studies, there's an incredible market for them," she said. "Anyone with his expertise can get 16 jobs."
Although magical realism is hard to define, Velasco said, it represents a common theme that pervades through Latin American culture.
Velasco said he mostly teaches about such Latin American authors as Jorge Luis Borges, Alejo Carpentier, and Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Such authors, who mostly write in a style known as magical realism, dominate world literature today, he said.
"It's a point of view," he said. "It's a different way of looking at life, where you find things have a meaning behind the way they work."
Velasco said he wrote literature as well as taught it. A short fiction story based on his experiences in Los Angeles will appear this summer in a magazine in Spain, he said.
Although he likes to write, Velasco said he would continue to teach.
"One of the most fascinating things about teaching is that you have a lot to learn from students," he said.
Velasco said he liked to teach Hispanic students about their own culture as well as American students. Hispanics who do not know their culture are putting themselves in danger, he said.
"We don't know our own culture, and we don't know our own history in the United States," he said. "You don't have any future if you don't have a past."
GENERATIONAL POLITICS:
X marks the spot
Do you suspect that the American Dream is over?
Do you find it ironic that so few people stayed after Woodstock to pick up the trash?
Find out what may define a generation that hates to be called a generation, and what the future could hold for you.
Are you already bored with these subjects and wishing you had a beer?
Meet Neil Howe co-author of
13thGEN
Random House Publishing
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BOOKSHOP
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
BOOKSIGNING Thursday, September 30 1:30-3:30 pm at the Mt. Oread Bookshop In the Kansas Union
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
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R
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
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GENERATION X: Twenty something Organizes
JONATHAN KARL CO-FOUNDER THIRD MILLENNIUM WRITER / EDITOR WITH FREEDOM HOUSE DOUGLAS KENNEDY CO-FOUNDER 3RD MILLENIUM ROCKY NICHOLS KANSAS STATE REPRESENTATIVE FOR THE 58th DISTRICT NEIL HOWE AUTHOR OF 13th GEN: ABORT, RETRY, IGNORE, FAIL? DARYL EVANS, PHD. ASSOC. PROFESSOR OF SOCIOLOGY MODERATOR
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Wednesday, September 29, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
DICKINSON HEAIR
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On the 6th page of Wolfe's Camera's insert in todays Daily Kansan, Tripods are shown as on Sale for "Now $14.99." This should read "Now $14.99 up". We apologize for any confusion or inconvenience this may have caused.
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Sun., Oct. 3, 2:00 PM
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The University of Kansas
HOMECOMING 1993 KU VS. ISU Recycle the Cyclones! Parade applications available in the SUA office
KU VS. ISU
- Float
- Marching Bands
- Band Signs
Entry Categories:
Entry Applications & Deadlines;
for entry applications is Friday, Oct. 1 at 5:00pm.
- Float - Deadline for entry applications is Friday, Oct. 1 at 5:00pm.
- Marching Bands and Banners- Deadline for entry applications is Friday, Oct. 8 at 5:00pm.
- All entry applications should be submitted to the SUA Office, Level 4, Kansas Union.
For more information call 864-3477
Required Parade Meetings
- Wednesday, Oct. 6 at 5:00pm in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union, Level 5. All FLOAT entries must have a representative present for rules and safety review by the KU Police. An ascendance from this meeting could result in disqualifications from the parade or loss of points.
Yeltsin supporters surround Russian parliament buildings
MOSCOW — President Boris Yeltsin tried to break the nerve of defiant hard-line lawmakers yesterday, surrounding the Russian parliament with thousands of riot police and troops in his biggest show of force yet.
The Associated Press
FAS
Trucks and barbed wire blocked roads leading to the parliament building. Senior Interior Ministry officials barked through loudspeakers, ordering the lawmakers and their supporters to surrender their weapons and leave the building by today.
But top presidential aides later backed off the 24-hour deadline and, said Yeltsin had no intention of using force.
The ultimatum triggered a protest by about 3,000 hard-line demonstrators, some of whom broke through police lines and marched near parliament, beating on cars, throwing rocks at riot police and building a barricade across a main street.
Shouting "Shame!" and "Death to
Yeltsin!," the protesters marched past the U.S. Embassy, stopping at an underpass where three young men died during the August 1991 hard-line coup attempt. Hundreds of police in full riot gear and armed with shields dispersed the crowd, which threw rocks at the troops.
Many lawmakers have deserted the hard-line cause to work in Yeltsin's administration. More than 200 deputies are negotiating job offers with the government, which set up an employment office for lawmakers and their staffs.
Yeltsin ordered December elections for a new parliament in an attempt to
At least two people were arrested and several people suffered minor injuries.
Yeltsin has ruled out compromising with his opponents, and the deployment of more troops stepped up the war of nerves with the increasingly demoralized and isolated lawmakers, who have been holed up in the building since Yeltsin dissolved parliament on Sept. 21.
end a bitter power struggle with parliamentary hard-liners over his political and free-market reforms. He has called for presidential elections in June.
The standoff appeared to be taking its toll on the nerves of police as well.
The demonstration followed a failed attempt by a smaller group of hundreds of protesters to break through police lines to join hard-liners inside the parliament.
"It's about time we start shooting," one officer said, as the police force withdrew into a large courtyard. (11)
But Yeltsin's press representative, Vyacheslav Kostikov, said the government had no plans to attack the parliament building, where Yeltsin made his famous stand against hard-liners who tried to overthrow the government in 1991.
The Interior Ministry said yesterday that the hard-liners in parliament were becoming desperate and had ignored orders to surrender their guns. It said the area was being cordoned off to prevent trouble.
INDIVIDUALIZED WEIGHT CONDITIONING PROGRAMS
For Students, Faculty, & Staff
Recreation Services has a staff member on duty in the Robinson Center Weight Room to help you with such a conditioning program. During Open Recreation, this individual will be able to assist you with proper lifting techniques, machine usage, and a variety of individual work-out packages.
Staff will be available at these times:
MONDAYS
TUESDAYS
WEDNESDAYS
FRIDAYS
7:00PM-10:30PM
7:00PM-10:30PM
7:30PM-10:30PM
12:30PM-2:30PM
Drop by during these times and design your own program today! For more information call 864-3546, Recreation Services, 208 Robinson.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 29, 1993
Clinton discusses health care
First lady testifies about nationwide system to House
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton implored members of Congress yesterday, "as a mother, a wife, a daughter, a sister, a woman," to work with the administration to overhaul America's health care system.
"Americans can no longer wait for health care reform. As we sit here today, literally hundreds and hundreds of Americans will lose their health care," Mrs. Clinton told the House Ways and Means Committee.
"Thousands more will turn up at emergency rooms to seek health care because it is the only place for them to turn to." she said.
"The task confronting us is complex, but it is urgent. The American people, rightly, are watching all of us. They are impatient. But they are also hopeful," she said. "They want to know that we have heard their stories."
With members of the panel looking on in the committee hearing room, Mrs. Clinton said she knew there would be disagreements in the months ahead as Congress debates and drafts legislation.
The first lady's appearance was historic. Only two presidential wives havepreviously gone to Capitol Hill to testify before a committee of Congress—Eleanor Roosevelt on the plight of welfare institutions in the District of Columbia and Rosalynn Carter on funding for mental health facilities.
But in the end, she said, lawmakers should assure that "every American will receive a health security card guaranteeing a comprehensive package of benefits that can never be
taken away under any circumstances."
Lawmakers lauded President Clinton's goal of guaranteed health care for all Americans, but even Democrats expressed reservations about details of the Clinton plan. Chairman Dan Rostenkowski, D-III, voiced "concerns about how your plan will affect the many small employers in my district."
But Rostenkowski pledged "that I will commit all of my energy and resources to meet this challenge and to enact health care reform legislation before this Congress adjourns next year. Many are skeptical, but it can and must be done. It would be a tragedy for this country if we fail."
Rep. Bill Archer, R-Texas, the committee's ranking Republican, said Clinton would put the health of the economy and the American people at risk with a plan that has never been tried anywhere.
THE NEWS in brief
WASHINGTON
Clinton wants to set deadline for U.S. troop removal from Somalia
地球
There must be a "date certain" for withdrawing troops from Somalia. President Clinton declared yesterday.
from Somalia, President Clinton declared, the president said he wanted the United Nations to first develop a political strategy that ensured that starvation and chaos would not revisit the East African nation after U.N. troops pulled out.
"Every peacekeeping mission or every humanitarian mission has to have a date certain when it's over," Clinton said in a picture-taking session as he met with Democratic congressional leaders.
Clinton's push for an exit comes under pressure from Congress, where concern is growing that the United States could be mired in a long military engagement. His comments shifted gears from hunting for fugitive warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid to placing new urgency on achieving political stability.
While the administration still believes the capture of Aidid would make it easier to ensure lasting peace in Somalia, the White House is trying to change the view that the United States is a combatant.
"The enforcement strategy did not change," Clinton said. His announcement came as the House neared a vote on a resolution asking him to report to Congress by Oct. 15 on the goals of the Somalia operation. It also urges Clinton to seek congressional authorization by Nov. 15 to continue U.S. involvement.
"The enforcement strategy did not change," Clinton said.
The Senate approved the same provision earlier this month by a resounding vote of 90-7.
House discourages gay enlistment
WASHINGTON
The House adopted legislation yesterday to discourage homosexual enlistment in the military as the Pentagon considered a delay in implementing President Clinton's more lenient policy.
By a vote of 301-134, the House branded homosexuality an "unacceptable risk" to morale and approved the same policy adopted by the Senate earlier this month.
The House action came as the Pentagon considered delaying the enforcing Clinton's policy on Friday pending completion of the defense budget by the House and the Senate, said Defense Department sources, who requested anonymity.
Three administrative directives are set to go into effect Friday, but Pentagon officials may wait to see what Congress writes into law.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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The Department of Student Housing is now taking applications to fill 90+ student jobs in the residence hall dining facilities. These positions offer convenient and flexible schedules with wages beginning at $4.25 per hour. by the office in any dining hall, or call 864-7203 for more informa
Stop by the office in any dining hall, or call 864-7203 for more information.
... YOU'LL GET TO SEE YOUR FAVORITE FACES EVERY MONTH $$$
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DEADLINE: WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 29,5PM 208 ROBINSON ENTRYFEE: $5/PERSON
Football
MEN'S AND WOMEN'S DIVISIONS WILL BE AVAILABLE CONTEST WILL BE HELD ON SATURDAY,OCTOBER2,1993.
CONTEST SPONSORED BY KU RECREATION SERVICES, 208 ROBINSON 864-3546
KU STUDENT TICKETS HALF PRICE FOR SEPTEMBER 29 PERFORMANCE ONLY!
IT WON THE AWARDS. IT WILL WIN YOUR HEART.
THE SECRET GARDEN
Student tickets also available at the SUA office, Kansas Union.
THE SECRET GARDEN
At the Lied Center
THE LION CAFE
September 29 (KU Student Night) - October 3 Wednesday-Saturday performances at 8:00 p.m. Saturday and Sunday matinees at 2:00 p.m. Sunday evening at 7:00 p.m. Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office; all seats reserved tickets $35 and $30 special discounts available.
To charge tickets by phone using MasterCard or Visa call 864-ARTS; or call any Ticketmaster outlet (816) 931-3300 or (913) 245-4545.
At the Lied Center University of Kansas
TICKETS AT:
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DISCOVERY
8
Wednesday, September 29, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BLUE BIRD
DINER
- Fresh Pies, Cakes and Pastries baked in our own bakery.
- Burgers • Fresh Pasta • Espresso Bar 814 Massachusetts 843-BIRD
+ =
THE WAR RAGES ON!
KU VS K-STATE
MANHATTAN, KS
TICKETS AVAILABLE
AT SUA OFFICE 864-3477
OCTOBER 9, 1993
828 INCLUDES
TICKET € BUS RIDE
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THE WAR RAGES ON!
KU VS K-STATE
MANHATTAN, KS
TICKETS AVAILABLE
AT SUA OFFICE 864-3477
OCTOBER 9, 1993
828 INCLUDES
TICKET € BUS RIDE
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
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THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KU
STATE
BUMBLIN',STUMBLIN',RUMBLIN',RAMRUN
2. 2 MILES FUN RUN ACROSS WEST CAMPUS SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2ND 9:00 AM (Before the JAYHAWKS take on Colorado State)
REGISTRATION: $5 (T-shirt awarded upon completion)
Runners may enter at no cost. (No awards)
MAY REGISTER IN 208 ROBINSON PRIOR TO EVENT
MAY ALSO REGISTER AT CHECK-IN
CHECK-IN AT SHENK COMPLEX SOUTH PARKING LOT FROM 8:15 AM - 8:45 AM
SPONSORED BY KU RECREATION SERVICES, 208 ROBINSON 864-3546
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KU
Rape program warns all
Bv Carlos Telada
Kansan staffwriter
Susan Hickman, graduate assistant at the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, told an audience of mostly KU students last night to count one out of every 20 men in their classes.
20 men said that they had forced sexual activity on someone at some point, Hickman said.
She then told the audience those men could be rapists.
At last night's program, called "Rape: Who is Responsible?" Hickman told the audience of about 20 that studies of college students during a 25-year period had indicated that one out of every six women had been raped while attending college.
"It affects, family, friends, boyfriends, and girlfriend if the victims are men," she said.
Although men can be raped, 90 percent of rape victims are women, she said.
In the same survey, one out of every
Hickman said 80 to 90 percent of rapes are committed by people the victim knew. The myth that most rapes are committed by strangers hides the truth, she said.
"Men who rape are not sick, necessarily," she said. "They're normal college students and they could be in class with you. That's pretty scary."
To avoid acquaintance rape, potential victims must take precautions. Hickman said. Women and men must listen carefully to what the other is communicating to make sure one does not expect sex when the other does. She also said the two should know of each other's sexual intentions and make sure that no means no.
But Julie Watts, Washington, D.C., junior, said after the program that it placed too much emphasis on what women could do to avoid rape. She said a video that Hickman played for the audience did the same thing.
"It's not intentional, but the effect is victim-blaming," she said. "It sets up in the minds of women that they are responsible for what happens in a sexual-assault situation."
New students need vaccines
By Liz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
New students who have not been immunized or recorded as being immunized for measles, mumps and rubella at Watkins Memorial Health Center by 4:30 p.m. on Thursday will be prevented from enrolling for spring semester until they get their shots.
Approximately 2,000 new KU students have not yet been immunized, said Diane Hendry, supervisor of the radiology and immunization department at Watkins.
Since 1989, KU has required every new student to be immunized for the viruses before enrolling for classes, said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center. The majority of students who needed to fulfill immunization requirements were notified last May.
Beginning this year, new students must have proof of two vaccinations or one since 1980. Yockey said new students who have not had a vaccination since 1980 may not be protected because the vaccines were not completely reliable until 1979.
Yockey said it was important that all students be immunized because a few cases of a disease such as measles could shut down an entire university.
"If you have one case it's not an epidemic," Yockey said. "If you have two cases it's an epidemic. That's how contagious it is. It can spread like wildfire."
Hendry said measles, mumps and rubella could be dangerous if adults catch it.
"We're not talking about a cold," Hendry said. "We're talking about a disease that ultimately can cause death, and the older you are, the harder the disease is on you."
Hendry said the number of students fulfilling immunization requirements was highest within the first month of the semester.
Hendry and Mandy Burmeister, a registered radiological technologist, are responsible for processing student immunization paperwork. Dur
Immunizations
The Watkins immunization department is open Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. No appointment is necessary.
New students not immunized since 1980 may go to Watkins and receive a vaccine, which is covered under the student health fee.
- Students receiving a vaccine must fill out a health history form, read a vaccine information article and sign a statement saying they have read the article.
- Pregnant women may not be immunized.
Students that are allergic to eggs may not be immunized because the vaccine is manufactured inside a fertilized egg embryo.
Source: Watkins Memorial Health Center
ing the first two weeks of school, Hendry said they saw about 75 students a day. The pace is expected to slow to about 20 students per day during the next three weeks. This week 75 to 100 patients will probably be seen each day.
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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
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
HATS HATS HA
HATS HATS HATS
HATS HATS HATS
HATS HATS HATS
HATS HATS HATS
HATS HATS HATS
Keira Blanchard, Leavenworth sophomore, wears a black crushed velvet top hat given to her as a gift.
HAYS HATS
20
-20
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90
HATS HATS HATS HATS HATS HATS HATS
HATS HATS HATS HATS HATS HATS HATS HATS
HATS HATS
Keira Blanchard, Leavenworth sophomore, wears a black crushed velvet top hat given to her as a gift.
HATS
Photos by Tom Leininger/KANSAN
Above, Wayne Chinander. Lawrence graduate student, wears a Soviet worker's hat that he purchased in Moscow last summer. That hat was a symbol of solidarity among workers after the 1917 Russian Revolution.
Left, Toby Eastland, an employee of Jock's Nitch, 840 Massachusetts some of the most popular University of Kansas fitted cap that he has
HATS
K
KU STUDENTS HAVE FASHION ON THE BRAIN
By Sara Bennett Kansan Staff writer
When Wayne Chinander, Lawrence graduate student, wore the black vinyl biker-style hat he bought in Izhmailovsky Park in Moscow on the streets of the former Soviet Union, he found that his fashion statement had unwittingly turned political.
"In Russia, this is a definite fashion statement," he said, gesturing toward the symbol of the Communist Party on the brim. "I was getting a lot of stares and I found that this is the kind of hat workers wore before the revolution. This hat became the fashion symbol of the communist worker."
Hats may not have such an impact here in the United States, but they are having a definite impact as far as fashion goes. From demure straw picture hats trimmed with ribbons and flowers to the classic baseball cap, hats are fast becoming the preferred remedy for bad hair and cold heads as well as creative fashion statements.
Linda Campbell, owner of Campbell's Clothing. 814 Massachusetts St. said hat
Things we used to think of as very dressy, young people are dressing them down."
Linda Campbell Campbell's Clothing
sales are up because young people are now willing to wear them casually instead of just on special occasions.
"That's just the way our lifestyle is right now," Campbell said. "Things we used to think of as very dresy, young people are dressing them down."
Avenue, on the Country Club Plaza in Kansas City, Mo., said hats, especially velvet and crocheted ones reminiscent of the '30s and '40s, complement the vintage look that is popular right now.
"We like to think of it in terms of attic chic," she said. "The wave right now is the romantic look with the ruffles, and cameos and soft fabrics."
Willsey said the Annie Hall look of crushed, brimmed, unstructured hats is popular with women who prefer wash-and-wear hairstyles. Berets and baseball caps are also bif sellers, she said.
Sue Willsey, fashion director for Saks Fifth
"Hats are our best accessory," she said. "They can change and update an outfit and add important color and texture."
Kandy Hopkins, Eudora sophomore, said hats could be as important as any other fashion item.
"After a while, you find yourself creating outfits around a hat," she said.
Men have bought into the hat craze as well. The most popular style for younger men is
See HATS, Page 10.
University listed as cool school in 'Cool Daze'
QUIPS AND QUOTES
This week's issue of Entertainment Weekly magazine reintroduces the University of Kansas to the world. The University was included in the magazine's "Cool Daze, Special College Section." Inside sources said the magazine's reporter interviewed Kansan editors and KJHK personalities for their information.
Glam quotient: Hillary Rodham Clinton stopped by during 1992 presidential campaign
Student rep: Snob Hill
TV fix: "Beavis and Butt-head"
Coolest local band: Paw (Soundgarden-ente)
Unit video refresher "This is Spinal Tap"
Amazing tome: Anything by John Grisham
Kitschy/kick-ass-alum: Clyde Tombaugh (discovered Photo)
Grooviest road trip: Westport in Kansas City, Mo.
Pop-culture course: "The American Dream"
What's underground: Disco night at local bars
Local radio's heavy rotation: Cypress Hill, Fugazi
Hot dorm poster: "A Hard Man Is Good to Find"
Recent speaker: Faye Wattleton
Junk food of choice: Beer from Free State Brewery
Weirdest body adornment: Pierced eyebrows
Bubble-gum heartthrob
Ubiquitous T-shirt: Soul Assylum
LOS ANGELES — Joey Lawrence of
"I can't explain it," Lawrence said. "I still can't get over girls screaming and chanting and fainting."
His fans are so crazy about him one girl recently begged him for the wad of gum he was chewing. He handed it over. The Associated Press
"Blossom" knows he's the latest heart-throb of the bubble-gum set, but he doesn't know why.
Tabloid Roundup Last straw
Distraught Dominique Daxerue leaped to her death from a 1,000-foot cliff because of her husband's deafening snoring. "I've tolerated this nightmare through 29 bellish years of marriage." Daxerue
42, wrote in a suicide note found in her car parked near the cliff a few miles from Normandy, France. "I just can't stand another sleepless night."
21 hellish years of marriage," Dauxerre,
Abel is back
In a hush-hush experiment that succeeded beyond scientist's wildest dreams, doctors administered an amazing new drug to the corpse of Abraham Lincoln — and brought the former president back to life.
The mummified remains of the dead American leader moved, spoke and even wept during the breathtaking 95 seconds that Lincoln was conscience, witnesses said. Lincoln then died again.
— Weekly World News
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SEPTEMBER 29, 1993 PAGE 9 KU Life
People and places at the University of Kansas.
calendar
EXHIBITIONS
"American Indian Baskets from the University of Kansas Museum of Anthropology" Exhibit runs through Oct. 10 at the White Gallery in Spencer Museum of Art
Tour du jour—"Aesthetic Scanning: Making Sense of Art."
October Tour of the Month—"Symbols In Art"
1 p.m. Sunday at the lobby in Spencer Museum of Art
By Pat Villeneuve, curator of education, 12:15
12:45 p.m. Thursday at the lobby in Spencer
Museum of Art
"The Secret Garden"
Yueon Gayh Yehp, professor, and Jean Giguet, curator of exhibits from the University of Las Vegas Paintings and drawings on display Sunday through Oct. 8 in the gallery of the Art and Design building
Illustrations by Tom Allen on display in the Study Gallery runs through Oct. 1
Movie poster sale
Monday through Sept. 30 in the gallery on level four of the Kansas Union
Exhibit: KU and Kansas Union history on display.
Friday through Oct. 16 in the gallery on level four of the Kansas Union
RECITALS
Fall Concert: Concert Wind Ensemble Robert Foster and James Barnes, co-conductors; Jack Winerock, piano soloist Wednesday at the Lied Center
PERFORMANCES
English Alternative Theatre presentation:
"The Abvas Gazes Also"
A play by Shawn Trimble at 8 p.m. Friday, Sat
urdav and 2:30 p.m. Sunday at Hashinger Hall
Comedy show: Jeff Cesario
8 p.m. Saturday at the Kansas Union Ballroom
Inge Theater Series—"An Evening With Sam"
Three short plays by Samuel Beckett; "Foot-
falls," "Ohio Impromptu" and "Rockaby" runs
through Oct. 9 at Inge Theatre in Murphy Hall
See CALENDAR, Page 10.
10
Wednesday, September 29, 1993
---
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Office of Public Education, City, County, State and JFK + Code (program)
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119 Staffer Flint Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence KS Douglas County 60645
6. Compile Making Actions of the Hibernation of General Business Office at the Patrol员 Net!
Joe Harder, 1335 Louisiana, Lawrence, KS 66045
Christine Clausen, 1731 Ohio, OHI, Lawrence, KS 66044
Michael Clausen, 1731 Ohio, OHI, Lawrence, KS 66044
This information is provided by the names and addresses of stockholders and may not be correct. It is provided on a person's own behalf of their own stock. If owned by a corporation, the name and address of the individual owned must be known. If owned by a partnership or other organization, its name and address will not be known. If such an individual owns more than one share of the corporation, if the publication is a company, or if
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1A Title of Publication
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS
Complete Making Address
The University of Kansas Douglas County
State of Kansas Lawrence, KS 66065
"The Secret Garden"
- Browse Boulder, Mariages, and Other Security Holders Owing or Holding 1 Percent or More of Total Amount of Bonds, Mortgage or Other Securities on arm or near arm.
"Ive worn baseball hats ever since I can remember," said Jason Oehlert, Lawrence freshman, gesturing to his well-worn Boston Red
Security if there are none, so name:
Full Name Complete Mailing Address
None
--the large-brimmed, felt fedora reminiscent of Indiana Jones, said Brandon Woodward, an employee of Jack Henry, on the Country Club Plaza.
Sox cap. "I wear them mostly for the teams, but in the morning if I'm in a rush, I just toss on a hat."
Just as timeless and classic is a look that's accommodating for both sexes—the baseball cap.
"I think it's really sexy," he said.
Concert to celebrate American composer Morton Gould's birthday at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Lied Center
R. In Compensation by Nonprofit Organization Authorized to Act at Special Events CRM Section 621.2 (1) notice the government, history, and status of the eligibility of the annual request for federal income tax purposes (Check out www.rnc.gov/hrt).
B. Full Master and Completes Mailing Address of Publisher, Editor, and Management Editor (the award NOT IS MOST NOT BEING)
The University of Chicago, State of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66015
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"For a white, hats were kind of geeky, but now it's more of a fashion item," he said. "There's a certain panache about a guy in a nice trench coat and fedora. It's a timeless, classic look."
KU Wind Ensemble
[Edit] Barney and Company Address (Address)
Cases抚耶, 1417 Meat 7th, Apt. 2, Lawrence, KS 60044
**Barney and Company Address (Address)**
Cases抚耶, 1417 Meat 7th, Apt. 2, Lawrence, KS 60044
Women have taken to wearing baseball caps as well. Toby Eastland, employee of Jock's Nitch Inc., 840 Massachusetts St., said women buy adjustable baseball caps so they can pull their hair through the back instead of styling it in the morning.
"Women have always had to wake up an hour earlier to get ready," he said. "Now they don't have to."
10. Exams and Notes of Challenges for Invoice or invoice Average No. Codes Each Issue During Preceding 12 Months Actual No. Codes of Single Issue Published Nearest to Filing Data
A. Total No. Codes (Per Price Box) 14,700 14,500
B. Paid and/or Requested Circulation 1. Sales through dealers and centers, asset vendors and counter sales 13,950 13,750
C. Mkd Subscription (per application) 320 320
D. Total Paid and/or Requested Circulation (total of BM) 14,270 14,070
E. Free Distribution (Bm of C and D) 180 180
F. Total Distribution (Bm of C and D) 14,500 14,250
G. Cases Not Distributed 1. Offers left, left out, unaccounted, spalled after printing 250 250
H. Return from New Agents 14,700 14,500
I. Total Gift (Bm of E, F1 and J) should equal no price can come in at J
11. Certify that the statements made by me above are correct and complete Signature of Title Editor, Publisher, Business Manager, or Owner
Do men mind that women have borrowed their signature fashion accessory? Not Eastland.
CALENDAR: Event listings
"I think it's really sexy," he said. But hats will always have another use, as Chinander pointed out when asked why he wears his communist worker hat.
"It's a real light, casual look especially with a bomber jacket or a nice tweed coat," he said.
KU Symphony Orchestra 7:30 p.m. Friday at the Lied Center
Continued from Page 9.
HATS: Bad hair days now thing of the past with hat
Continued from Page 9.
"Because it keeps my head dry and warm," he said.
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---
Wednesday, September 29, 1993
11
Jayhawk returns from injury
Despite broken leg, linebacker proves he can return to field
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas senior linebacker Larry Thiel proved that he could bounce back from tough times, and now he hopes that he and the Jayhawks can bounce back from the 1-3 start this season.
Tough times hit Thiel last season in the game against Colorado when he suffered a broken tibia in his lower left leg. The injury kept him out of the final game against Missouri, the 23-20 victory in the Aloha Bowl against Brigham Young and spring practice.
There were thoughts in Thiel's mind during the off-season that he would not be able to play this season.
"In the back of my mind I always thought I would make it back, but the coaches wanted to prepare me just in case I didn't." Thiel said. "I spent a lot of time in the training room over the summer rehabbing the injury because I really wanted to play. I couldn't imagine sitting out the season."
Under the supervision of head athletic trainer Lynn Bott, Thiel did calf raisers and other types of leg exercises to strengthen the area around the ankle and the lower
On July 9, X-rays taken on the injured area revealed that Thiel's leg was healing faster than expected, and he received medical clearance to participate this season.
So far, the football season has not gone the way Thiel or his teammates had hoped.
leg to ensure that he would not have to miss the season.
Richard Devinki/KANSAN
"Our goals were way beyond this," he said. "We expected that we would be better at this point, but we have to put this start behind us and move on."
Thiel's efforts cannot be blamed for the slow start this season by the Jayhawks. He has 30 tackles after four games, which ties him for third with sophomore linebacker Ronnie Ward in that statistical category. After four games last season, Thiel had 34 of his 66 tackles.
However, defensive coordinator Bob Fello said that Thiel, as well as the rest of the defense, was capable of performing better and would be expected to if the Jayhawks were to bounce back.
75
Thiel said the nine-month layoff from competition because of the injury left him with some concerns that he might have lost some speed and quickness. Those concerns were laid to rest once he returned to practice in August.
"Our defense has been up and down so far this season," Fello said. "Larry's performances have mirrored the rest of the defense that has been up and down, more down than up."
Tiel passed the team running test, a series of 110-yard sprints, running each in less than 16 seconds on the first day of fall practice.
Senior linebacker Larry Thiel works out during practice at Memorial Stadium. Thiel has returned nine months after sustaining a broken leg late last season in the game against Colorado.
"I can't tell if I've lost a step or not," Thiel said. "The leg
feels good to me and I can move well with it. My lateral movement got better every day in practice in August."
Now that his leg is better, Thiel wants to help the Jayhawks' record get better.
"I wished we could have played last Saturday because I really would have liked to go out and hit someone," he said. "We have no excuses for our performance so far."
KC falls 3-2 to Cleveland
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kevin Appier lowered his American League-leading ERA to 2.61 but was outpitched by Jason Grimstey as the Cleveland Indians beat the Kansas City Royals 3-2.
The Associated Press
Appier, 17-8, considered a longshot for the Cy Young Award, lost his second game in a row after having a sixgame winning streak and a 33-inning scoreless streak snapped Thursday at Oakland. He allowed two earned runs, seven hits and four walks in seven innings.
Grimsley, 3-4, allowed eight hits, struck out five and walked one in seven innings. The right-hander has allowed three runs in his last three starts — of two which he won. Eric Phrunck pitched the ninth for his 15th save.
Kenny Lofton led off the game with a single, went to third when first baseman Bob Hamelin could not field Appier's pickoff attempt and scored on a double by Wayne Kirbv.
Kansas City tied it in the second on Brent Mayne's RBI single, but Albert Belle hit a sacrifice fly in the third, driving in Kirbv.
A throwing error by leftfielder Chris Gwynn led to the Indians' third run in the seventh. Loft on walked with one out, and Kirby singled him to third. Gwynn threw in the dirt at second, and the ball got away from second baseman Chico Lind, allowing Lofton to score.
Gaely Gaetti hit a sacrifice fly in the eighth, cutting the lead to 3-1 after singles by Felix Jose and George Brett.
Notes: Brett's eighth-inning single was the 3,152nd of his career, tying Paul Waner for 11th on the all-time list.
John Gamble/KANSAN
Stephani Williams, senior pitcher for the Kansas softball team, winds up to release a pitch as Kim Newbern, senior infielder, guards against a Johnson County Community College threat from second base. Kansas won the first game 4-1 and came back to tie the second game 2-2 against Johnson County yesterday. Sophomore Johnson County pitcher Annie Hare kept Kansas hitters at bay in game 2. Kansas tied the game in the bottom of the seventh on junior Ker Riggs' 'infield BR hit'.
15
Coach at home on links after life in basketball
By Kent Hohlfeld
Ken on sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas golf coach Jerry Waugh has gone from the lights and fame of starting for the Kansas basketball team to the relative anonymity of the women's golf program.
Waugh played golf in highschool but gave it up in favor of 6f.
That is fine with the 1951 physical education graduate, who began playing golf on the sandy greens of a municipal golf course in Wellington.
-------
basketball, which came to dominate the majority of his playing and coaching career. He began his basketball career as a player at Kansas after a short stint in the Army during World War II. Waugh started every game except his first during his career from 1947 to 1951.
After graduating, he coached at Emporia High School, returning three years later to become Lawrence High School's basketball coach. He said he understood that he
Jerry Waugh
would become Kansas' assistant coach when Phog Allen retired.
The 1956-1957 season gave Waugh what he sought, a chance to be a Kansas assistant coach. His first season was one of the most successful in Kansas' history, which included a 24-3 record and a trip to the NCAA finals. Most people, however, remember it as the season Kansas lost to North Carolina in the triple-overtime final game.
"I never thought we'd lose that game," Waugh said. "Even in the overtimes I never thought we'd lose."
He said memories of the 1957 title game no longer haunted him.
"I can honestly say that I haven't thought about that game in a long time," Waugh said.
"I missed coaching," Waugh said.
Waugh left Kansas in 1960 to try a career in sales, a decision he said he later regretted.
His quest to restart his coaching career took him from a high school in Phoenix, to a small college in Chico, Calif., and to San Francisco State. He left coaching in 1972 for an administration position at Prebber Brown High School in Phoenix because of health problems.
He returned to Kansas as an assistant athletic director in 1975. He left that position in 1979 to work for Alvamar Golf and Country Club where he became vice president of operations.
Richard Konzem, assistant athletic director, said Waugh's affiliation with Alvamar — where the team practices — his long-time associations with the University, the Kansas Golf Association and United States Golf Association made him the perfect choice to coach the women's golf team.
"His previous experience in coaching was also very attractive," Konzem said.
Waugh said that he liked coaching and helping young people. He said that many of the motivational principals he learned from Phog Allen were applicable to his golf team. He said players were not that different from 25 years ago. "Kids still need someone who cares about them," Waugh said.
Fall ball gives junior college players exposure
Junior golfer Ann Holbrook said that Waugh motivated her and the rest of the team.
"He really supports and cares about his players," Holbrook said.
By Gerry Fey
Kansas calls it a baseball game. The Brown Mackie team calls it a scrimmage. But both teams will use today's 4 p.m. match up at Hogland-Maupin Stadium as an experience-builder for young players.
Kansan sportswriter
"As a junior varsity game, it is designed to give our new recruits and young players some playing time," Kansas coach Dave Dingham said.
The team's first game against Coffeyville Community College was rained out Saturday.
Brown Mackie coach Rob Hole said the team from Overland Park had to use the game as a scrimmage because it could not have an official fall schedule. National Junior College Athletic Association rules prohibit the team from scheduling official games in the fall.
For a junior college like Brown Mackie, its players can only show their abilities to Division I schools during the fall, Hole said. The team schedules games against other junior colleges in the spring season.
Occasionally, Division I schools will recruit a player
This game offers Kansas players experience and Brown Mackie players exposure, Hole said.
"It's good for them," Bingham said. "It gets their kids a chance to play at the University. And we may be looking at some of their players."
from a junior college to play at the higher level.
Hole said he hoped some Brown Mackie players would
Bingham said one reason he scheduled junior colleges in the fall was to do some scouting. He said it was easier to scout if he saw the players in Lawrence.
"This is only our second year, and my first year coaching." Hole said. "I want to have players go on to Division I schools."
move past the junior college level in the future.
Kansas may seem like a tough opponent for Brown Mackie, but Hole said it was good for the team. He said Kansas deserved to be called a "great team" since the Jayhawks went to the College World Series last year.
"The main reason for the scrimmage is to play a team at the highest level," he said. "I want my players to see the things a great team does to win."
Green, woed by the Suns for nearly three months, joins the Western Conference champions after eight years with the Los Angeles Lakers.
PHOENIX — A.C. Green, a durable power forward with championship experience, signed with Phoenix yesterday, helping the Suns offset the loss of Richard Dumas to drug rehabilitation.
He signed a five-year contract worth an average of $3.02 million a year. The contract starts at $1.88 million, with a 30 percent pay raise each succeeding year.
Green, 6-foot-9, will team at forward with league MVP Charles Barkley, bolstering the
Green averaged 12.8 points and 8.7 rebounds last season but stepped up the pace by averaging 14.6 rebounds in the first round of the playoffs against the Suns. He has not missed a game since Nov. 16, 1986, appearing in 567 consecutive regular-season games.
"He brings everything that we need because we haven't won a championship," said Cotton Fitzsimmons, the Suns' senior executive vice president. "That's so vital to us. I think he will bring his character, he will bring his work ethic, and he will do whatever it takes for us to win."
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Multiculturalism and Diversity Bridging the Differences
- Let's begin by talking with each other.
- Make a commitment to be part of the solution.
As a member of a small, facilitated dialogue group, you can more fully explore isues surrounding diversity and multiculturalism as it affects you. Find out what you can do to make a difference. We invite you to participate in four ongoing sessions beginning:
Kick-Off
Tuesday, October 5, 1993
7:00 AM to 8:00 PM
200 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.
Big 8 Room, Kansas Union
7:00p.m-9:00p.m.
Small Group Discussions
Tuesday, October 12, 1993
8:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m.
Small Group Discussions Tuesday, October 19, 1993 7:00 PM-9:00 p.m.
Wrap-Up
Tuesday, October 26, 1993
7:00 PM-9:00 p.m.
Big 8 Room, Kansas Union
Supported by the KU Coalition Against Racism and Discrimination, an action coalition of the Lawrence Alliance. The Lawrence Alliance is a community organization dedicated to a discrimination-free environment.
For more information, contact Ann Walk at 864-7120 or Sherill Robinson at 864-3552.
1
12
Wednesday, September 29.1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop
FREE medium drink
with the purchase of any sandwich.
1618 W.23rd exp.10/6/93
Not valid with any other offer.
ASSERTIVENESS
Training
Learn about your rights as an individual.
Through examples and role play, participants
will learn how to more effectively manage a variety
of situations and issues; these will include
authority, peers, romantic relationships,
Thursday, October 7, 1993
7:00PM - 9:00PM
Pine Room, Kansas Union
and parents
Facilitator: Sherrill A.C. Robinson, LMSW Assistant Director,
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 118 Strong Hall.
For more information, contact Renée Cappler at 864-3552.
Graduate Women Students
Wednesday, October 6, 1993
1201 S. Vesey Blvd., St. Louis, MO 63105
English Room, Kansas UNION
Strategies for Success Meet with other graduate women on campus and participate in a discussion of women's issues in relation to academics and professional careers.
Facilitator: Dr. Ann Weick, Dean, School of Social Welfare
V
Center, 1 is strong inn.
For more information, call Renée Speicher at 864-3552.
Now accepting receipts from the Spring 1993 semester for rebate payments
Receipts from cash or check purchases are eligible for a 6% rebate at the Customer Service counters of the KU Bookstores.
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Ks. Union 864-4640
Burga Un. 864-5697
KU student I.D. required for rebate. Spring semesterrebates (period 93) are available until Dec. 30, 1993. Computer hardware purchases are not eligible. Other restrictions may apply.
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students
WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL
No.12 regional ranking gives program boost, hope for making NCAAs
For the first time this year, the Kansas volleyball team is regionally ranked. Currently, the team is ranked No.12 in the Mideast region.
Notre Dame is No. 1 in the region. No.2 Nebraska and No.3 Colorado join the Jayhawks as the only representatives of the Big Eight.
Coaches around the Mideast decide which 15 teams get into the poll and in what order they are placed.
Kansas coach Frankie Albitz said being ranked was a boost for the program.
"It was one of the team's goals for this season," Albizt said. "It makes scheduling games a lot easier. With a regional ranking, teams are willing to play you because it won't hurt them if they lose."
Another of Kansas' goals this season is to make the NCAA tournament, held in December — but the goal is lofty, Albitz said. This year, the tournament was expanded from 32 to 48 teams, giving Kansas a better chance to make the tournament.
Albitz said if the Jayhawks did not defeat the best teams in the Big Eight, it would be hard to get into the tournament, unless the team's record was good.
"I think we're good enough, but I don't know if the girls know we're that good yet," Albitz said. "It's hard to get past the tradition of those schools."
The regional ranking is a step toward getting selected for the NCAA tournament, Albizt said.
"The goal is a high one," she said. "But if we continue playing at the level we are now, it is possible."
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Gimme a U! Gimme an A!
Gimme a B! Gimme a politically correct school mascot!
SPORTS in brief
Complaints have forced the University of Alabama at Birmingham to sideline its mascot, a rough-and-tumble Norseman who drew fire for being too mean, too masculine and too white.
KU
COLLEGE ATHLETICS Complaints sideline mascot
"He was — I hate to use the word — too Aryan," Alabama-Birmingham sports information director Grant Shingleton said yesterday.
"Blaze," a mustached, Caucasian warrior dressed in bright green with a silver battle helmet was introduced last January. His job was to promote the school's athletic teams, the Blazers.
But the complaints began pouring in from students and fans, and Blaze's career burned out before football season. There were no organized protests, just lots of calls to university offices, plus some ribbing in the local media.
University spokesman Mike Ellis said officials felt it was best to be responsive to the complaints rather than letting the issue fester.
"I think our main concern was it was a white male figure who didn't represent women on campus or the ethnic mix on campus." Ellis said.
So after spending two years and $20,000 developing a mascot, the university will now replace Blaze with ... who knows what.
said. "How do you pick a mascot to represent something that is rather abstract?"
Callers to all-sports radio station, WJOX, had several suggestions yesterday for the Blazers including a big green sports coat, a four-wheel drive Chevrolet Blazer utility vehicle and a geeky student who is actually doused with gasoline and set afire before each game. It was unclear whether the same student would be used more than one.
"It all goes back to the name Blazer." Shingleton
PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL Cubs southpaw earns 50th save
LOS ANGELES — All those Randy Myers posters the hostile Bleacher Bums at Wrigley Field throw away in disgust are probably collectors items by now.
The Chicago Cubs' reliever increased their value considerably Monday night at Dodger Stadium, when he became the first left-hander in baseball history and the first National Leaguer to record 50 saves in a season.
The low point for Myers came on Aug. 15 against the Giants — on "Randy Myers Poster Day" — when the hostile bleacher occupants littered Wrigley Field with the freebies moments after Myers sustained one of his six blown saves.
"I got a lot of letters after that from fans who said those people weren't true fans," he said.
835 Massachusetts In Beautiful Downtown Lawrence
LAST TWO DAYS MOVIE POSTER SALE
Same Posters Different Location I KNOW WHAT I KNOW. WE COME & WE GO. IT'S IN THE BACK OF MY EYES
The End
ICONOGRAPHICS
ORIGINAL MOVIE POSTERS
HARPER'S FASHIONS
Thursday, Sept. 30 & Friday, Oct. 1
9:00 am - 5:00 pm
International Room
Level 5, Kansas Union
Compiled by Kansan sportswriter Gerry Fey and The Associated Press.
Sponored by
SUNDAY
Knit Poet Blouse $14.90 Reg.$28.00
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
PILOT or LAWYER Commission Guaranteed
- SUMMER PAY $1,600 - $2,695
STARTING SALARY AFTER YOU GRADUATE
$24,100 - $28,900
MARINE OFFICER PROGRAMS
- NO OBLIGATION
Freshmen, sophomores, juniors and seniors are eligible for Marine Officer Programs that have no on-campus requirements.
- LEADERSHIP TRAINING
FOR MORE INFORMATION SEE
in the Student Union from 10 am to 3 pm 1·800·531·1885
Capt. Curtis Everett & GySgt. Cynthia Deans
Marines
SEPTEMBER 29 & 30
We're looking for a few good men and women.
U.S. MARINE CORPS
PERSONAL HEALTH CARE FOR WOMEN CONFIDENTIAL ABORTION SERVICES
- Licensed Physicians/Caring Staff • Modern State-Licensed Facility
- Complete GYN Care - Pregnancy Testing
- Depo Provera & Norplant - Tubal Ligation
- Licensed Physicians/Caring Staff - Modern State-Licensed Facility
PROVIDING QUALITY HEALTH CARE TO WOMEN SINCE 1974
Insurance plans accepted.
VISA
MasterCard
COMPREHENSIVE 345-1400
health for women OUTSIDE KC AREA
4401 W. 109th (I-435 & Roe) 1-800-227-1918
Overland Park, KS TOLL FREE
Alvin'sIGA We gladly accept MasterCard
MasterCard
Prices good Sept. 29 to Oct.5.
Sprite
Coca-Cola
Limit1 with $10 in other purchases.
Coke,
Sprite & Diets
24
pk. $399
Limit 1 with
924000
IGA 2% Milk
$1.99
Gallon Limit2
MILK COFFEE
Ben & Jerry's Ice Cream Assorted Variety Pints 2/$300
Pie
Ruffles Chips
Large Bag 2/$400
Red or Golden Delicious Apples Large $149 5 lb Bag
Miller High Life
$3999
+ Deposits
16 gal Kegs
Call 843-2313
Alvin's
9th and Iowa, Lawrence, KS Open 6 a.m. to Midnight Call 843-2313
IGA
HOMETOWN
Proud
7
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
13
Wednesdav. September 29. 1993
Philadelphia clinches first crown in 10 years
Pennant sweet for team with worst-to-first year
The Associated Press
PITTSBURGH — The Philadelphia Phillies waited 10 years to win the National League East. They were not the sort to wait another night.
"It is a great feeling after the year we had last year," said manager Jim Fregosi, whose club nearly squandered a 141/2-game August lead over Montreal. "It's really gratifying to come back and win the division. These guys wanted to win it tonight, they were going to do whatever was needed."
Len Dykstra got Philadelphia going with four hits and three RBIs and Mariano Duncan finished off with a dramatic grand slam in the seventh inning as the Phillies clinched their division with a 10-7 victory against the Pittsburgh Pirates last night.
Philadelphia completed a remarkable worst-to-first turnaround. Last year, the Phillies were in sixth place, 26 games behind the division champion Pirates. This year they clinched 10 years to the day since they last won the East in 1983.
The near collapse brought back memories of Philadelphia's monumental late-season blowup in 1964, but the 1993 Phillies were not about to re-live those memories.
"Where's the ghost? Where's the
ghost?" outfielder Wes Chamberlain yelled. "I don't see any ghosts."
What's so remarkable about this championship is the Phillies' unremarkable record since they last won in 1983: three last-place finishes and only one finish higher than third.
"You're used to going out there brain-dead in September, and, all of a sudden, you're playing for a championship," first baseman John Kruk said. "For seven years the teams I played on weren't just bad, they were bad. I've been sick having to watch people I know in baseball do this, so it's our turn."
"As soon as we clinched a tie (Monday), it was like we all got our second wind," outfielder Pete Incaviglia said. "It's unbelievable. We all came to the park today like it was a playoff game. We were ready to get this over with."
"It doesn't make any difference, we start the playoffs at home so that's not a factor," Fregosi said of the Phillies possible opponents.
They now have a week to rest and relax. The Phillies will play either Atlanta or San Francisco when the NL playoffs start on Oct. 6 at Veterans Stadium.
The Phillies also could have clinched the division if second-place Montreal had lost one more game.
The Phillies, who also won the division in 1976, 1977, 1978, 1980 and 1983, are the third-straight NL East champion to clinch in Pittsburgh. The Pirates clinched at home in 1991 and 1992.
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MASSAGE THERAPY
CLASS
MASSAGE THERAPY CLASS
SESSION 1
TUESDAY: 7:15-8:45PM
OCTOBER 5, 12, 19, 26
OR
WEDNESDAY: 7:15-8:45
OCTOBER 6, 13, 20, 27
SESSION 2
TUESDAY:7:15-8:45PM
OR
WEDNESDAY:7:15-8:45PM
NOVEMBER 3,10,17,24
ENROLL IN 208 ROBINSON 8AM-5PM SPONSORED BY KU RECREATION SERVICES 864-3546
COST IS $20
Jayhawk Bookstore
"Your Book Professions At The Age of Haulmith Hill"
Hrs: 8-7 M-Th, 5 Fri, 9-5 Sat, 12-4 Sun.
843-3828
Paradise
Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner
728 Massachusetts • 842-5199
Fine Line Tattoo
Tattoo
Quality work, reasonably priced,
hospital sterilization
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September 29, 1993
Jayhawk Bookstore
"Your Book Professionals "At the top of Nilesmith Hill"
Hrs.8-7 M-Th. 8-5 Fri. 9-5 Sat. 12-4 Sun.
843-3873
Paradise
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hospital sterilization
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fifiS
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841-7226
Lunch & Dinner
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STUDENT & YOUTH
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Sun. 12:00-5:00
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14
Wednesday, September 29, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
CLIP A COUPON!
Billiards
$2.40 per hour
until 6:00 p.m.
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Have you dined at The Castle Tea Room
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Reservations only:
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Christian Dior
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21 W9th Street
749-0004
I want you to call me for Student Loans!
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That's the motto at Mercantile Bank.
If you want service in addition to your PLUS, SLS, or Stafford Loans, you want Mercantile!
Call now: 865-0278
MERCANTILE BANK
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If you want service in addition to your PLUS, SLS, or Stafford Loans, you want Mercantile!
Call now: 865-0278
MERCANTILE BANK
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The KU department of counseling and psychological services will hold its second-annual National Depression Screening Day Thursday, Oct. 7, from 2:30 to 4 p.m. at the first-floor conference room in Watkins Memorial Health Center.
A program designed to remove the stigma associated with depression and mental illness will be conducted by a KU psychological service next week.
At the screening, Linda Keeler, counseling and psychological services psychiatrist, will give a brief presentation on depression and show a video on different treatments for the
Screening day focuses on stigma
By Liz Kilinger
Kansan staff writer
DeSalvo said the symptoms of depression included a severe sleep disturbance, a significant increase in weight loss or gain, significant change in level of energy or motivation and a marked decline in performance at school or work.
Frank DeSalvo, director of counseling and psychological services, said 1,024 clients were seen in the service's department last year. He said 6,902 therapy sessions ranging from 50 to 90 minutes were provided in that time.
About 20 percent of the U.S. population may at some time experience depression serious enough to seek professional help, Keeler said.
Concentration lapses are especially prevalent in college students afflicted with depression, Keeler said.
"Up until now, we have not had a lot of good information about how the brain works," Keeler said. "Understanding the brain is the last great frontier of medical science."
While a person in a state of good mental health will be able to manage daily stress without severe difficulties, depressed people must learn how to deal with regular emotions and experiences, Keeler said.
"They feel so bad that they just simply cannot function," she said.
disease. During the program, students may complete anonymous depression screenings offered by the department.
39¢
(PLUSTAX)
ORIGINAL
1220 W6th & 1408 W23rd
Commission votes to rezone land
By Traci Carl
Kansan staff writer
©1993 Taco Bell Corp.
TACOS
It voted to approve annexation of 26.23 acres south of 31st Street, west of Iowa Street and north of 33rd Street. The land is now the site of several single-family homes, and the owners wish to sell their land to Target because of increased commercial development.
The City Commission gave Target Inc. a vote of confidence last night during its weekly meeting.
TACO BELL.
The rezoning vote included a request for the planning staff to recommend restrictions that the remaining land Target did not occupy be zoned with light commercial or multi-family development. Mayor John Nalbandian said he thought that evidence had proved Nieder Acres, the land in question, was unsuitable for single-family residences. The area is surrounded by developments like Kmart and Wal-Mart.
The commission also voted to rezone 28.5 acres, which included the 26.23 annexed acres, from agricultural and single-family residence to planned commercial development. Part of the annexed land would be
used by Target to build a store. A final vote will be made by the commission after Target's preliminary site plan is approved by the Lawrence/Douglas County Planning Commission.
Nalbandian said land not designated for Target should be developed in such a way that it would buffer the
SATURDAYANDSUNDAYONLY OCTOBER2&3
CommissionerJo Andersen said she would prefer to defer the rezoning vote. Commissioners should be more specific on the zoning they wanted, she said.
"It will be too hard to back up from we've done," she said.
Part of the annexed land would be
"It has been such a long, drawn-out affair, I think we're all a little numb," she said. "I consider it encouraging that they recognize that we don't work as a residential area."
Marsha Goff, a resident of Nieder Acres, said she hoped the commission would be flexible in allowing different forms of development.
Easy Living Mobile Home Park, south of Nieder Acres, from developments like Target.
FAMILY CATERING
Delivering from Lawrence's favorite restaurants:
Waiters on Wheels
- Cornucopia
- *Low Rider
- Quinton's Bar & Dell
- Tin Pan Alley
*Paradise Cafe
Uptown Bagels
842-2662
FREE 6 PACK
October 4th--the 8th MAJOR EVENTS
Celebrate Women's Week?
expdate Oct 9
Coke, Diet Coke, Sprite, or Mr Pibb with a minimum food order purchase
MONDAY: Lecture by Bobbi Larson in the Kansas Union. TUESDAY: Women's Fair with information and recruitment in the Kansas Union!!
FEATURING: THE STUDENT ASSISTANCE CENTER, PLACEMENT CENTER, WATKINS HEALTH CENTER, EMILY TAYLOR WOMEN'S RESOURCE CENTER, AND OTHER STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS.
A LECTURE SERIES OF EDUCATIONAL AND GROUP DISCUSSION SESSIONS ON WOMEN'S ISSUES IN THE KANSAS UNION!!
INCLUDING: AIDS/HIV LEADERSHIP
AND INVOLVEMENT, JOB SEARCH AND OPPORTUNITIES,
NUTRITION AND EXERCISE, VOLUNTEERISM, AND
MALE/FEMALE COMMUNICATIONS.
WEDNESDAY: Women's Fair / Lecture Series Continued!
CONGRATULATIONS
ALL WOMEN WELCOME!!!
CONGRATULATIONS
to
the winners of AOII OMICRON OPEN
KΔ and ΦΔΘ
Thanks to all participants and to
all who attended our kickoff party!
Hope you had fun!
Thanks to those who donated:
THE HARTENS
THE DENVERS
HORU
ODY OUTIQUE
John Wallace
Dodge
LAZER
DOOR MOMBERS
LAWRENCE BUS
Gresh
CLASSICS
ПВФ ΔΔΔ ΣΔT
Our philanthropy is a key focus.
The Martens
HORRORS
BODY OUTIQUE
The American Outdoor League
boogel
John Wallace
Dodge
THE LAZER
JOB HOMERES
LAWRENCE BUS
Greek Classics
ПВФ $\Delta \Delta \Delta$ $\Sigma \Delta T$
Our philanthropy was a huge success!
VIRGINIA'S CHILDREN SCHOOL
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
FAMILY WEEKEND COMEDY SHOW
JEFF CESARIO
As seen on The Tonight Show and Late Night with David Letterman
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
A smart, easy way to meet people in a sophisticated, safe and confidential manner.
Saturday, October 2, 1993
Classification available
1-Men Seeking Women
2-Men Seeking Men
3-Men Seeking Men
4-Women Seeking Women
8 pm KANSAS UNION BALLROOM KU Students $9 General Public $11 For more info call 864-3477
Classifications available:
To place an ae:
1. Call or come by the Kansan
at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
@ LINES for @ DAYS ABSOLUTELY FREEL!
CALL 864-4358 TODAY TO PLACE AN AD
4. You choose the people you want to meet and set up a time and place.
Here's how it works...
To place an ad:
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own so the two of you can set up a meeting.
5-Friends Seeking Friends
6-Seeking Sports Interest
7-Mutual Hobbies
8-Shared Religion
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.
2. Call 1-900-285-4560 (you need a touch-tone phone) and listen to the message. The charge is $1.95 per minute.
To check out an ad:
1. Read the ads in the Jaytalk Meeting Network on the back page of the Kansan.
STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE
Is now accepting applications for the four $1000 Gordon L. Woods Leadership Scholarships $$$$$$
Applications are available at the
- Student Senate Office
- Office of Student Life
Applications are due
Monday, October 4th at 5 p.m.
.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 29, 1993
15
Classified Directory
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for booking or employment that discriminates based on group of persons based on face, sex, age, gender, nationality, or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
Our readers are hereby reminded that all jobs
that require you to provide your resume and paper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1988 which makes it advertiable "any practitioner of law, whether a barrister, race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to such preference, limitation or discrimination."
沪
100s Announcements
110 Bus. Personals
REMEMBER!
Costumes on 2nd floor for party parties
and of course Hallowen. Come on up!
The Ets. Shop.
924 Mansion Road
KU Women! Mary Kay Cosmetics free facial and makeup. All new fall colors, personalized selection. No obligation to purchase. 643-820-3393 Unique Scent Beverage Bars Hoops, Ponds & More! For Guys and Gals The ETC, Shop 928 Mass. Downstairs
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8:40am-
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Tuesday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-9pm
Saturday 12:30pm
Sunday 11.30am
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
FUNDRAISERS, FUNDRAISERS
FUNDRAISERS!
RAISE $150 - $300!
QUARENTEED in one
week PLUS BONUS
up to $500!
Manage promotions for top camp
manifest one week on your camp.
Can use the FREE TRIP and add it to
FREE TRIP #1.
SPRING BACK 94.
SPRING BACK 94.
Fall Specials
Smirnoff 1.75L $12.99
Canadian Mist 1.75L $12.99
Bacardi 1.75L $14.99
Varietals 1.5L $7.99
Lite Family 24pk $11.99
120 Announcements
WEBB'S
800 West 23rd Street
841-2277
GET AWAY TO PRAIRIEWOODS: Treat you sweaty to a day of relaxed hospitality. Massage outdoor space, healthy foods, trees and privacy! 863-817 for rates/reservations.
GREEKS & CLUBS
RAISE UP TO $1000 in JUST ONE WEEK! For your fraternity, security & club. Plus $1000 for yourself! And a FREE T-SHIRT for calling. 1-800-923-0528. ext. 75.
CHRISTMAS SKI BREAKS
JANUARY 2-16, 1994 * 5, 6 or 7 NIGHTS
JANUARY 2-16, 1994 • 5, 6 or 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT* $199 from
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK*
TELLURIDE
* FREE 1/2 DAY
LIFT TICKET!
MUST BOOK BY 10/15
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
1·800·SUNCHASE
Interested in Volunteer Literacy Work?
TU training Workshop
Sunday, Oct. 3rd
1:10 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
Jefferson, Kansas Union
For More information Call Students Tutoring
at 864-3660 and 864-1528
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 FREE GIFT and to qualify for FREE TRIP to MTU
Call 1-800-950-1037, ext.25
Hillel Upcoming Events Erav Sukkot-Wednesday Come help us decorate
Come help us decorate the Sukkah at the Hillet House. Call 864-3948 for more information
SHABBAT DINNER THIS FRIDAY
THIS FRIDAY
You must sign up at the Hillel office or call 864-3948 by noon on Friday
Hillel members $2
non-members $4
(or use your free tickets)
call 864-3948 for rides and info.
Intramural Softball:
Team A: Tues. 3:30
Team B: Sun. 5:30
130 Entertainment
MALE EXECUTION DANCER available for birthdays with the funniest gift ever! Reasonable rates listed.
Drummer needed for Lawrence based band. Must be able to play weeksend and some weeknights.
Female or male.
MINDFLUX. A Cyberdelle Dance Experience,
Sat. Oct. 2, DJ J Ray Velasquez, DJ Roland, All
alcohol/glacial 9pm; OUTHOUSE, 4 miles E.
of Mass. Str. on 15th.
MONDO DISCO Techno. House. Hypnotic
am 18 & over. Cover, Hides cover. 10 N. Park S.
St.
140 Lost & Found
Found: A pair of Sunglasses near Robinson.
Please call 749-4500, ask for Rick.
Male and Female
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS
* 90-Startling
* No 30-starting
* Flexible schedules
* Interships/scholarships
Adams Alumni Center needs Dishwasher AM & PM. Flexible hours, 3 days a week. Position available immediately. Apply in person, no phone calls 1266 Adroad Avenue.
Adams Alumni Center needs AM pantry salad person 84, 3 days ago. Flexible schedule. Position available immediately. Apply in person 1266 Groad Ave.
ALASKA EMPLOYMENT. Fisheries. Earn up to $4000/$4000 + m./ on fishing vessels or canneries.
Many companies provide transportation and room & board. For more info; i.e. 1-265-5415-4155.
Sabisytter wanted 3-6:15 M-F, 2 boys, ages 7 & 8!
call 842-59328
Cash Carriers, Kansas and Burge Union Catering
3:00 p.m., $4.25 per hour, pay cash Monday follow-
ing employment. Must follow dress code. Apply
to ksunewm@kansas.edu, Office Level,
5. Kansas University Building, EOE
Day care needs experienced person. Must be available in the morning. $5/hr. 841-7581
Domino is Pizza now has 5 delivery positions available. Apply after p.m. any day all shifts avail. Flexible hrs. average driver earns $7-410 an hour. 841-802-3600
Clinical psychologist, full-time or eligible for Kansas license, with established experience in counseling, group therapy, small group therapy, brief, family, individual, and group therapy; crisis interventions; psychological evaluations; and interdisciplinary team operations. Resumes should include a detailed description of behavioral health care in a CMHC setting preferred. Applications accepted until position is filled. Send resumes and letter of interest to Outpatient Services, 5300 W. 12th St., Center, Inc., #364 Missouri, Suite 202, Lawrence, Kansas 60044, OE, Open until filled, EOE.
Entry level marketing positions opening for people to work P/T in K.C. Lawrence and Topeka. Get your foot in the door now! Excl $$$$ Full Training 541-0795
Evening and weekday NCNA's need to work with
their families at St. Mary's at Douglas County Visiting Nurses-483-7378
For a sale pizza basket. Want hungry students to
eat at Mazel's pizza place. Mazel's pizza, 258
lowe. Men-Sun-1up-1p.
Raise $500 in % days. Groups, Clubs, motivated individuals 1-800-775-3811 ext 101
Executive Director. Graduate Student Council. University academic programs and University governance structure. Successful candidate will manage the GSC office; act as liaison to University Administration, governance, and Regents; and, develop curriculum for GSC programs in a sensitive Assembly. Excellent communication skills essential. Must be KU graduate student. 25% position for fall semester 1985. 50% position for spring semester 1984. 25% time. $600/month at 6% time. Submit resume and three references to Search Committee, GSC #24 Kansas Union, University of Kansas. 66045. Application materials is now October 8, 1985. EOE.
indig sinkhawer 2 days a week, minimum wage
position available immediately, apply in person.
Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Previous food service and supervisory experience mandatory. Start at $5.25 per hour. Future pay raises based on performance. Up to $8.50 per hour, 20-30 hrs per week. Meetings and weeks. Apply at Schumm Food Co. (800) 597-4548. 5-9am-pm. (Ustairs above smokehouse)
PART-TIME SUPERVISOR WANTED.
SALES REPS WANTED. Develop your own marketing strategy and go sell. Prefer marketing or sales. Use word-of-mouth. Order koffer delicatessen food. Work on commission for 316-857-5088 before 11:00 am and after 1:30 am.
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
WALK-INS WELCOME!
By dounatig your lia savin g bldoor plaisma
By dounatig your lia savin g bldoor plaisma
Kansas and Burge Union hiring part-time, hourly,
part-time staff. Call 312-587-4590,
Catering and Custodian with varying schedule.
Come to Personnel Office, Level 5, Kansas Union
Building for job specities. EOB
Call 312-587-4590, Fax 312-587-4590
Looking for a change second semester? Come live in our living room. Free room, board plus salary. Work 5 plus hours a day while getting your education and be a mother's helper. Job consists of baby-sitting 2 year old and newborn, light housekeeping, errand-running, etc. If interested, please call in 100 words or less, why you are the best person for this job. P.O. Box 1832, Lawrence KS 60498
Live in nanny young 7:30-5:30 M/F, $42 monthly +
room & board, vacation & sick leave. Kids 7, 6 &
4. House keeping & cooking duties. P /t students
accepted, need references. 843-3887.
Now accepting applications for quality minded, dependable individuals for part-time banquet service. Willing to train the right people. Morning and evening classes. Apply at Admire Alumni Center, 1268 Oread Ave
Need Cash? Start immediately. 3-painters for
and more term jobs. At $6.00/hr. Gt C91-749 and 0288-
0034.
Part time student hourly receptionist /typist want
Cente Center
2099 Constant Ave, west bellton 844-513-9
2099 Constant Ave, west bellton 844-513-9
Part-time assistant manager needed immediate contact. Contact Peggy at 841-868, morning only.
steak veal pasta NOW HIRING FULL STAFF
Martinis
at Johnson County's Hottest New Restaurant at 117th & Roe!
Our high volume restaurant specializes in quality, customer, service and, hospitality.
Brought to you by MICHAEL FORDES RESTAURANTS
Great wages and benefits
We are now accepting applications for:
*SERVERS
*BUSERS
*COOKS
*DISHWASHERS
*HOST/HOSTESS
*BARTENDERS
Mpply'pHperSon'
9-5 p.m. m.Lagoonway 600
on the Country Club Plaza
600 Ward Parkway,
K.C.M. 64112
SALES REPS WANTED: Develop your own marketing strategy and go sell. Prefer marketing or sales majors. Product to sell is mail order deli-ware. Mail to: 314-5167-5928 before 11:00 am and after 1:00 pm.
SALES-College Students. Your chance
to work with us. Work with
your own hours. Call (618) 987-9433
**Port Officials:** Lawrence Parks and Recreational Department is hiring individuals who want to be sports officials for adult basketball leagues. Must be in college or university qualify. Contact Bob Stankell ASN 843-712-61
SPORTS OFFICIALS NEEDED! Intramural referes are needed for Voleyball and Football Hockey Leagues. No experience necessary. $4.70-45.90 Call 864-3544 for details.
TRAVEL FREE! SPRING BREAK! Quality vacations to HOT! INSTITUTES in Camajama, Florida, S. Padre! Sell 'Professional' tour packages/service/service! Sun Splax Tours 1:00pm-6:77pm
225 Professional Services
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
MINIENTAINEMENT. Deadline: 90/03/08 EMAIL: MINTENANCE. Deadline: 60/02/18 MAJOR: $45/hr. Duties include pickup and delivery of equipment; receiving and write up of orders; check inventory levels; data entry; assist technicians in light mechanical and electronic repair; provide technical support to currentently enrolled a student at the University of Kansas, demonstrated ability to work with customers, good oral and written communication skills, 6 months previous hardware experience, computer proficiency, and/or hourly blocks To apply, complete a job application which is available in Room 202 of the Computer Center. EO/AA EMPLOYER.
Experienced organist will play for weddings at Danforth Callop. Callop at 841-1373 and leave
Rick Frydman,Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense For free consultation call
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Birthright 843-421. Free pregnancy testing
TRAFFIC.DUI'S
Macintosh repairs and upgrades
Friendly, Affordable, In-Home Service
The Mac Deckers 802-9448
Prompt abortion and contraceptive services, Dale L. Clinton M.D. 841-5716.
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Tutor: BS in Eng. Ed, MA in Eng., yrs. ESL. teachexp.教, I work with AEC courses, all EG. classes, foreign students all papers. Arthur, 841-3313 5 - 10 pm.
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce. criminal & civil matters The law offices of
Are you Makin' the Grade?
WORD PROCESSING PRINTING
For all your TYPING needs
The law offices of
DONALDG. STROLE
Word processing, applications, term papers, dissertations, resumes, Editing, commenting, rush projects.
C Desktop Publishing: Resumes, Cover Letters,
Forms, Templates, Paper Moms, Newsletters.
Call 944-0639.
GOOD RESUMES get job interviews!
Meadowkard desk top publishing call 833-0003.
ProType - fast, reliable service, professional quality.
Any kind of typing accepted. Call today at 681-7425.
235 Typing Services
I-der Women Word Processing. Former editor transforms text into accurate pages of letter format. 843-209-6300, 843-209-6302.
X
305 For Sale
Kansas City fall guitar show Oct. 2 & 3 heart of America Center 411 W. Mapple, Ind. MO. Buy, sell, trade bring your used musical gear for sale or rent in performance B5, for show information 16-836.
300s Merchandise
GUITAR SHOW
983 Honda Shadow. $900 OBO. Supersingle
watered B7. Call 832-099-0991
1993 Sender Stratocaster with hard case and accessories for $45. Call 841-7702.
Most Books 35 to 50 Cents
Fri., Oct 1, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.
Sat., Oct 2, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Mon., Oct 4, 5-9 p.m.
"$3 a Grocery Bag Night"
7th and Kentucky
7th and Kentucky Lawrence Public Library Garage and a Big Tent
Sponsored by Friends of the Lawrence Public Library
Beds, desks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
968 Mass.
Color photos of 61-93 Tornado wallcloud over KU
and NYC. From $5 each, call 780-243-1414.
From $4 each, call 780-243-1414.
Quantrill's Flea Market open every Frl., Sat. & Sun 10AM-5PM 811 New Hampshire 842-6616 Downtown
Dorm-sized refrigerator, 3.4 cuf. (larger model),
new, $80,00; call 864-2414, late.
Fall Clearance: All adult tapes on sale $12.25 and
Miracle Video, 1910 Hailey B41-7504.
Miracle Video, 1910 Hailey B41-7504.
HARTKE BASS AMPLIFIER 350 watts exc, cond,
and sound $300 823-0386 Chris. Leave a message.
Rust air ticket from KC1 to HARTKE.Ville. You
must arrive at KC1 by the time or whenever.
Must sell soon. $150 IOB 1-723-3789.
340 Auto Sales
73 VW Bus, reliable, good condition. New engine,
new transmission and new brakes. $1250 b.o. c.a. call
1982 Audi 4000 S reliable, good condition HIMI
$1,000 o.b.o. b.323-2988
370 Want to Buy
Cash for Boy Scout patches patches, uniforms. We buy alf scout-related and military collection items.
Recycled Sounds
Some people sell their souls, we just buy contact discs.
12th & Oread
841-9475
TRADE BUY SELL Cd's Lp's & Tapes
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1 bdm apartment in Meadowbrook. Free cab and swimming pool. On bus route. 843-450. Ask for
4 rooms for rent for tran-trad. female(s) available
oct. 1. 2800 + unit. Live 10 min. south of Lawrence.
Private country home-kids and pets O.K. K. 760016-
leave message.
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
very nice! Interested? Call 842-4455.
JEFFERSON PLACE
The best place to live at KU is in KC!!!
Available Nov. 1 at West Hills apts. 1012 Eryer Rd. Spacious, 2-bdrm. unfurnished apt. w/balcony & on bus route 4. laundry close to cam-park & on bus route 4. monthly Water paid. no patrons. 841-3800 or 54-3884.
Over the Edge
764-1471
119th & 1-35
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
Naismith Halls'
24 hr. computer center
services give students the competitive edge.
Available now, 2 bedroom at 912 tennessean, small pet okay, $425 plus utilities 745-7586.
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
*2 Bedroom, 1 ½ Bath $425
*3 Bedroom, 2 Bath $550
Fitness room
Front door bus service
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS 2040 Heatherwood
Call Now!843-4754
Dine anytime meals
Weekly maid service
NAISMITH
1800 Naismith Drive (913) 843-8559
Available Oct. 1. One bdrm, newly renovated balcony
parking area, new parking lot, street parking
yard. No pdt. Books $89. 801-744-3500
Choice room in large quiet residence *Uplift paid*
one bedroom, two bathrooms, new deli
on 3rd. $864/mo. Call Al 409-856-2272
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Extra nice and quiet, 2 bedroom apt. including central apt. Cohowiew and low bedroom. No pets. 800-394-6700. www.cohowiew.com
Looking for a place to live? Try cooperative living at the Sunflower House. Low rent, utilities pd, washer/dryer. Come check us out at 1406 Tennessee, or call 841-0484.
Newly remodeled 1B droom. Ideal for graduate student. Available now $400 monthly. 841-769-971.
Rm. avail for item, in 2 story townhouse. Close to school. Rentals available. Rm. rent already paid. Lease to May 31. 749-773-841.
How to schedule an ad:
430 Roommate Wanted
Female roommate (s) needed to BR 18, BR
18. On KU bus route 2®, $28/188 mo +½
sales. B31-34.
Country house-quiet-$200/per month. Need a ear
10 minutes from camp. Call 543-3813 evening
mornings.
Male or Female roommate needed for 3 bedroom
unit. 2 bathrooms, and on KC bus route,
794-7148
Responsible, non-smoking female student to share
knowledge of quick complex. 85 / +/ui until:
84/1977
Roommate wanted: Responsible female to share nice 2IB, zebutti, bathtu DW, cable pd, very affordable 827/mm + 1/4 utils. Pets O.K. Call 841-4287 message leave
Looking for respondent roommate to share 4 BR, 1/2 bath, 2 level duplex apt. @ 2th & Oustahl w 2 males, 1 female. Have washer/dryer. Rent $16.25/mo. + 1/4 until starting. On 1 KU bus route. Close to Post Office, Dillons. Please call 822-3070 or enter for more info. no-discriminatory household
Nest & reliable, to live in 5 bdr house w/ 4 ffts $190/mo + 1/3 ulf. Very close to campus -83-106. Oms N/S/Grad. Student needed for now. Nice, quiet room. Call 862-7022 to visit A/C, close to home. Call 862-7023 to visit A/C.
Wanted graduate student to share house with 2 male graduate students. Non-smoker, no pets.
Rent $233/mo + 1/2 util. For info, Call Richard@
8231047957.
As phone in may be killed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* In person: 119 Stairwater Flint
Stop by the Kansan 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.
Calculating Rates:
Classified Information and order form
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansan offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or VISA, the advertiser a account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of again lines $Dm$ ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
Rates
t per Use per day
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to notification
Classifications
105 personal
110 business persons
120 announcements
130 entreatignant
Cost per line per day
1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 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
140 lost & found
262 help wanted
265 help needed
225 professional services
225 miscellaneous
292 juvenile services
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
370 want to buy
405 for rent
438 roommate wanted
Name:
1
2
3
4
5
Date ad begins: Total days in paper:
Total ad cef: Classification:
Address:
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansas)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Expiration Date:
MasterCard
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hali, Lawrence, KS. 60445
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1993 FarWorks, Inc./Dial by Universal Press Syndicate
FUTURE WORLD
Yeah, right.
Primitive theme parks
16
Wednesday, September 29, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE PROVEN LOW PRICE LEADER! BY NOT-FOR-PROFIT GROUPS! FOOD 4 LESS.
Farm Fresh
Farm Fresh
BONELESS CHICKEN
BREASTS
Family Pack
$258
lb.
BAKERY SPECIAL
Our Special Touch
MINI DOUGHNUTS
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98¢
3-Pack
DIAL
Bath Soap
$149
3 5-oz. Bars
3-lb. Bowl
SHEDD'S
SPREAD
Country Crock
$149
Farm Fresh
BONELESS CHICKEN BREASTS
$258
Family Pack
Ib.
Best Choice Assorted POTATO CHIPS
7 oz. Bag
2 for $1
Boneless Beef
TOP SIRLOIN STEAK
Family Pack
$248
Ib.
Salad Time SALAD MIX
1-Ib. Bag
19¢
WITH 50¢ OFF COUPON BELOW
BAKERY SPECIAL
Our Special Touch
MINI DOUGHNUTS
20 Count Pkg.
98¢
3-Pack DIAL Bath Soap
$149
3 5-oz. Bars
3-lb. Bowl SHEDD'S SPREAD
Country Crock
$149
Eggo FruitTop WAFFLES
Assorted Varieties
6¼ oz. Pkg.
2 for $3
M&M MARS
FUN SIZE CANDY
$199
14 oz. Pkg.
VALUABLE FOOD 4 LESS COUPON★
50¢ OFF
1-POUND BAG SALAD TIME
SALAD MIX WITH COUPON
Limit 1 please. Expires 10-7-93.
This is only a sample of the hundreds of Green Tag Specials now in effect. Even though we don't always advertise, nobody saves you money on groceries like Food 4 Less.
•2525 Iowa St. in Lawrence
FRESH DAILY BAKERY!
These Green Tag Specials in effect thru October 7, 1993.
Quantity rights reserved.
TIDE Detergent
98 oz. Box
$599
Speas Farm APPLE JUICE
48 oz. Btl.
99¢
AND SHOP FOOD 4 LESS FOR FREE!
No membership fees or limited hours!
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potato chips
potato chips
Best Choice Assorted
POTATO CHIPS
7 oz. Bag
2$1 for
Eggo.
FruitTop
WAFFLES
Assorted Varieties
6¼ oz. Pkg.
Fruit on
2 Thick & Crispy
Microwaveable Waffles
2$3 for
M&M MARS
FUN SIZE
CANDY
$199
14 oz. Pkg.
TIDE Detergent
98 oz. Box
$599
Speas Farm.
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48 oz.
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IF YOU LIKE SAVING AT FOOD4LESS. Tell A Friend!
FEATURES: Brown-bagging Jayhawks hit the pavement in search of lunchtime hot spots. Page 9.
VOL.103.NO.29
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
Basketball ticket plan is unveiled
Lottery to select 141 KU students By Shan Schwartz
NEWS:864-4810
By Shan Schwartz Kansan staff writer
Students who have not picked up their football tickets have missed two football games and may miss out on the entire men's basketball season.
The KU Athletic Department yesterday announced a new student ticket distribution policy for men's basketball games. The policy guarantees tickets to all 6,159 students who have picked up football tickets as part of their sports combo packages but will involve two separate lotteries for students who have not.
"This policy assures capacity crowds at each game, addresses safety issues and maintains the longstanding tradition of great student enthusiasm," said Bob Frederick, athletic director.
The department will conduct a lottery no later than Monday to deter
mine who will be offered the remaining 141 basketball ticket packages. The lottery will include the 641 students who have not yet picked up their football tickets and 409 students who are on a waiting list for basketball tickets — a total of 1,050 students.
The department will post a list on Wednesday of all students guaranteed basketball seats.
Those students must pick up a coupon sheet from the athletic ticket office between Oct.11 and Oct.29. The coupon sheets will be redeemable for tickets later during seven separate distribution periods. After Oct.29, the department will conduct another lottery to distribute unclaimed coupon sheets.
If any student tickets remain after each distribution period, the ticket office will distribute them to coupon holders or sell them to students for $3 on a first-come, first-serve basis.
Students who do not pick up their football tickets and are not selected in the lottery to receive basketball tickets are eligible for a full $85 refund.
Students who pick up their football tickets and are not selected for basketball tickets are eligible for a $52 refund.
"Nobody's being penalized," Warren said. "When students ordered their tickets, they knew they'd be subject to a lottery."
The need for the department's first ticket lottery stemmed from more students pre-ordering sports combo packages on their options cards.
The options card, which students used to order ticket packages during enrollment, states that tickets are subject to a lottery distribution.
Warren said students on the Athletic Corporation Board considered many different options and reviewed other universities' distribution policies.
For those who have tickets
Student tickets to home men's basketball games will be distributed in seven periods. Eligible students must first pick up coupon sheets before 5 p.m. at the Allen Field House ticket office and then redeem coupons for tickets on the dates below ___
TICKETS
Pick up coupons
Oct. 11 - Oct. 29
Group Pick up tickets Games
1 before Nov. 10 1, 2, 3
2 Nov. 29 - Dec. 1 4, 5, 6
3 Dec. 5 - Dec. 7 7
4 Dec. 8 - Dec. 10 8, 9
5 Dec. 13 - Dec. 15 10, 11, 12
6 Jan. 26 - Jan. 28 13, 14
7 Feb. 16 - Feb. 18 15, 16
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
Source: KU Soorts Information
ALEXANDER RICHTLER
Surviving grueling tour is an art form
'Secret Garden' company travels from city to city By Sara Bennett Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Kevin McGuire, who plays Uncle Archie in "The Secret Garden," sings "Race You to theTop of the Morning" to Chad Hutchison, 13, who stars as Colin. McGuire and Hutchison were rehearsing the scene yesterday before an evening performance at Lied Center.
A a crate located backstage among scenery and unpacked props does not contain costumes or plastic flowers for "The Secret Garden," playing at the Lied Center through Oct. 3.
Instead, the crate contains a VCR computer and Nintendo for the children in the production. These diversions are reminders that performers are ordinary people when the curtain goes down.
Touring with a Broadway show like the "The Secret Garden" may seem glamorous, but performing the same show in a different city every week can take its toll on the performers' health and relationships.
"People think it's glamorous, but it’s really not," said Eric Inso, stage manager for the touring company. "It’s tiring, it’s exciting, sometimes it’s thrilling. But if you don’t take care of yourself physically, it’s exhausting."
A touring show is perhaps the only job where a day spent traveling across the country is considered a day off. Kevin McGuire, who plays Archibald in "The Secret Garden," said the constant traveling could make it difficult to stay healthy, but understudies are always available to fill in if a performer gets sick.
Touring with a show also can be a challenge to relationships. But children in the show have their mothers travel with them as well as a tutor and guardian. Also, a lot of the performers are married.
McGuire said it was difficult to be away from his wife and son, who live in New York City. However, his family joins him on the tour during school vacations. The strain of the separation disappeens when his son is traveling with him, he said.
"For a kid, traveling is one of the most important things they can do," he said. "Each trip has been a rite of passage for my son."
McGuire said working on a touring
production was rewarding because the shows sometimes were better than the original Broadway production. And touring shows travel around the country. Broadway is in the same city every night.
"There's more energy because it's always different," he said. "These are full-fledged, full-talented, full-scale
Broadway productions."
But do the performers ever get tired of performing the same show night after night?
McGuiere said he had not grown weary of the "The Secret Garden."
"I can honestly say I'm not tired of this show," McGuire said. "Every show I try different things. I try to
make things fresh and keep it alive."
make things fresh and keep it alive." McGuire said one of the biggest challenges for his touring company was playing in unfamiliar theaters.
Being the production that initiated the Lied Center last night was an honor he said.
"Opening nights are always scary on the road," he said. "The hall sounds different. It feels different. Most of the time you feel like you're stumbling around in the dark."
"We're excited and nervous," he said. "This is a big show to start with, but it's good the Lied Center is jumping right into the fray with a big Broadway musical."
Christians criticize program
By Kathleen Stolle
Kansan staff writer
Members of a campus Christian group believe Christians at KU are being browbeaten by western civilization texts and teachers.
"I think anyone who looks at the text can see bias." Nitz said.
Ward Nitz, Lake Winnebago, Mo., senior and a member of Kansas City Baptist Temple Student Ministries, said readings about the Bible in the course textbook, "Patterns in Western Civilization," gave little reference to traditional Christian views and lent credibility to modern theories.
Nitz said he disagreed with the readings' suggestion that some stories in the Bible were myths. and that there were two versions of the creation story. He also said he opposed a theory in the text that suggested four different authors wrote the first five books of the Bible. Christians traditionally credit Moses as the sole author of the five books. he said.
"They just assume it's true since it's in a text and it's written as though there are no faults in the theory," Nitz said. "We find that very much a concern to us."
Nitz said his biggest concern was that students who were not familiar with traditional Christian views would be influenced.
Nitz also contested a statement in the text that the theory is supported by most modern scholars.
However, Shawn Trimble, a religious studies graduate teaching assistant , said the theory was well-supported by scholars. He said Daniel Breslauer, KU professor of religious studies and author of one of the disputed readings, based his work on the research of many credible scholars.
"What he's doing is he's representing the results of 150 years of very complicated and very laborious scholarship." Trumble said.
Breslauer is on sabbatical this semester and was not available for comment.
Trimble said the University's approach to studying the Bible was not an attack on Christianity. As a secular institution, it could not approach the Bible as a faith document or address ultimate faith questions, he said.
"The basic tenet of scholarship here is you don't touch big questions like 'Does God exist?' and 'Is Jesus the son of God?'" Trimble said.
Tremble said scholars in academics used the historical-critical method, which uses history, archeology and geography to investigate the documents that form the Bible.
James Woolelf, director of the western civilization program, said the historical-critical approach was pioneered mainly by Christian scholars.
Woelfel said that because KU is a public university, it could not take any theological positions.
He said the program's approach to the Bible was not often challenged.
On Sept. 22, KCBT Student Ministries sponsored a forum to discuss how traditional Christian views were overlooked in western civilization courses.
David Winslow, Liberal senior and member of Nitz's group, said the attention the issue had received would help others better understand traditional Christian views.
"It raised awareness that this is an issue and that we're not just a bunch of kooks out here who say there's a God without reasons to our beliefs," he said.
INSIDE
Goodbye RBI
George Brett played his last game yesterday in Kansas City for the Royals. An eight-inning RBI was the tying run in the Royals 3-2 victory against the Indians.
Page 11.
KC
Group attacks apathy in Generation X
By David Stewart
X-ers. Slackers. Baby busters. The boomerang kids.
Kansan staff writer
But Matt Jordan, Wichita junior, said he hoped to find some agreement among KU's sub-30 generation on the issues affecting its future.
By creating a KU chapter of Third Millennium, Jordan said, he intended to make college students more politically aware and active.
It seems no one has found the best label for the amorphous set of America's twentysomethings.
Third Millennium is a newly formed national group that represents the interests of young voters.
Jordan's announcement intentionally co-incides with tonight's panel discussion
at the Kansas Union Ballroom, he said.
"There are too many problems that exist today that aren't being addressed by today's political leaders," Jordan said. "Unlike the '60s, this is no longer an issue over civil rights. It's now an economic issue."
The program will feature a round-table discussion by authors and politicians on the issues that concern today's youth, Jordan said.
Third Millennium's economic concerns were cited in a pamphlet issued by the national group's co-founders, Jonathan Karl and Douglas Kennedy, son of Robert F. Kennedy.
According to the pamphlet, concerned individuals need to take action to eliminate the growing national debt and to reduce unnecessary social security payments to wealthy retirees.
"By 1989, our generation could potentially be the largest voting bloc in America," Jordan said. "We should take a more active role in our politics."
Many students said they had not heard of Third Millennium but said they agreed many of their peers remained politically unaware and inactive.
"Most students think they can't affect the process directly." Zerger said. "It can get too complicated to deal with the problems."
Jordan said Third Millennium would attempt to educate individuals about the power their votes have to induce change locally and nationally.
Chris Zerger, Hesston senior, said organizations such as Third Millennium would have success informing college students about political issues but would have trouble getting them to initiate change.
Third Millennium
What: "Third Millennium — Voices of Generation X," a discussion of the issues and concerns of the twentysomething generation and of the KU chapter of Third Millennium. Moderated by Daryl Evans, associate professor of sociology, Free.
Where: Kansas Union Ballroom
Source: The Associated Press KANSAH
Kelly Ross, Topeka freshman, said she did not know many people who had heard about Third Millennium or who could stay politically aware.
"I don't have a lot of time to find out what is going on in politics," Ross said. "Maybe it says something about how we really are."
1
2
Thursday, September 30, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stairwater-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119
Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
Celebrate Women's Week?
October 4th--the 8th MAJOR EVENTS
MONDAY: Lecture by Bobbi Larson in the Kansas Union. TUESDAY: Women's Fair with information and recruitment in the Kansas Union!!
FEATURING: THE STUDENT ASSISTANCE CENTER, PLACEMENT CENTER, WATKINS HEALTH CENTER, EMILY TAYLOR WOMEN'S RESOURCE CENTER, AND OTHER STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS. A LECTURE SERIES OF EDUCATIONAL AND GROUP DISCUSSION SESSIONS ON WOMEN'S ISSUES IN THE KANSAS
ON THE RECORD
INCLUDING: AIDS/HIV, LEADERSHIP AND INVOLVEMENT, JOB SEARCH AND OPPORTUNITIES, NUTRITION AND EXERCISE, VOLUNTEERISM, AND MALE/FEMALE COMMUNICATIONS.
WEDNESDAY: Women's Fair / Lecture Series Continued!
ALL WOMEN WELCOME!!!
A KU employee's engagement ring, pearl ring, bracelet, watch and arm band, valued together at $1,100, was taken in the 1400 block of Tennessee Street on Friday; Lawrence police reported.
A KU employee's compact discs, shorts, denim shirt and compact disc player, valued together at $315, were taken in the 2500 block of West Sixth Street on Tuesday, Lawrence police reported.
A KU student was bitten by a dog in the 1300 block of Tennessee Street on Tuesday, Lawrence police reported.
A KU student's refund check, psychology book, microbiology book and biology book, valued together at $180, were taken in the 2400 block of West 25th Street on Tuesday, Lawrence police reported.
A KU employee's fatigues, basketball and sleeping bag, valued
A KU student's moped, valued at $500, was taken in the 1300 block of West Campus Road on Sunday or Monday, Lawrence police reported.
together at $280, were taken in the 1000 block of Emery Road between Saturday and Tuesday, Lawrence police said.
A KU employee's padlock, chain and various tools, valued together at $449, were taken from parking lot No. 73 on Friday night or Saturday morning, KU police reported.
A KU student's bicycle, valued at $250, was taken from the Gertrude Sellars Pearson-Corbin Hall bicycle rack on Monday night or Tuesday morning. KU police reported.
A KU employee's parking permit, valued at $35, was taken from parking lot No. 110 on Sept. 19 or Sept. 20, KU police reported.
WEATHER
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Low: 61°
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Have you dined at The Castle Tea Room lately? Reservations only: 843-1151
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 30, 1993
3
Report predicts slow growth
Boeing layoffs signal sluggish Kansas economy
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
Economic growth in Kansas will be slow in the next two years, according to an economic forecast released by a KU research group.
"It will be sluggish," said Norman Clifford, director of KU's Institute for Public Policy and Business Research. "Compared to what it has been, it is not the kind of growth we had expected, relative to the rest of the United States."
Contributing to the slow economic growth rate will be increasing
employment. Clifford said.
Although the number of jobs will increase, the labor force is increasing at a greater rate in Kansas. The unemployment rate in Kansas was 4.2 percent in 1992, compared to the national rate of 7.2 percent. Kansas' unemployment rate is expected to grow to 5.1 percent in 1993 and 5.4 percent in 1994, according to the institute's forecast released last week.
Layoffs at Boeing Corp. in Wichita and other corporations have had significant effects on the Kansas economy, Clifford said.
"You're talking about 6,000 workers in little over a year being laid off at Boeing," he said. "The total employment in Kansas is about 1.2 million. That would be about one-half percent off the growth chart right there, without even considering the indirect effects. It is significant, but I'm not saying it is the only reason for the
Personal income growth, adjusted for inflation, also would be sluggish over the next two years, Clifford said. In Kansas, the income growth rate will be only 1.1 percent, compared with 2.1 nationally.
decrease."
The Institute for Public Policy and Business Research analyzed information from the Kansas Department of Human Resources, the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the U.S. Department of Commerce.
Lindy Eakin, associate vice chancellor for administration and finance, said a slow-growing economy affected KU in several ways.
Tight state budgets probably would not allow for increased funding for KU, he said.
"When the pie doesn't get any larger, it's tough to get a larger piece of that pie."
Eakin said a sluggish economy also made it hard on KU students.
"Parents may not be able to afford to send their kids to school or some students may not find summer jobs that help them through school," he said.
But Eakin said a sluggish economy was not all bad for KU.
Endowments made to the University potentially could decrease if the economy worsened, he said.
He said that in a slow economy, construction companies offered lower bids for University construction projects.
"With construction jobs we're working on, we can keep wages and costs down," he said. "It is really a buyer's market in construction right now."
Eakin said universities were typically considered good places for job security when the economy is weak.
CENTENNIAL
William Alix / KANSAN
Taking a stand
Brad Barish, Overland Park freshman and public relations officer for NORMAL, National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, speaks to 200 people yesterday during JKHK's Soap Box. Every Wednesday from 12:30 to 13:00 p.m., people are invited to voice opinions on any subject.
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Dog repels attacker
The man fled on foot after a dog started barking at him, police said.
A party Tuesday night in the 900 block of Louisiana Street was disrupted when a man began threatening people with a hammer, Lawrence police reported.
The party had been thrown on behalf of the dog's birthday.
School vandalized
No one was injured, police said.
Officers were dispatched to the scene shortly after 8 p.m., police said, and the suspect was found and arrested near the corner of 11th and Kentucky streets.
Two red swastikas were spray painted Friday night or Saturday morning on the southwest side of Centennial Elementary School, 2145 Louisiana St., Lawrence police reported.
Police said they had no suspects. Damage was estimated at $20.
Police said they did not know whether the incident was related to Semitic vandalism found Sept. 6 on the Jewish Community Center. Police said they had no suspects in that case, either.
Canterbury House will hold Holy Eucharist at noon today in Danforth Chapel.
Anthropology Club will give a study abroad presentation at 5 p.m. today in 633 Fraser Hall. For more information, call Destiny Crider at 832-1469.
Center of Latin American Studies will sponsor a brown bag luncheon and lecture at noon today at Alcove D in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Nancy Chaison at 864-4213.
OAKS-Non-Traditional Student Organization will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove I in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Gerry Vernon at 864-7317.
KU Champions club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at Parlors A, B and C in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Erik Lindsley at 841-4585.
- Latin American Solidarity will sponsor a rice and beans dinner and a lecture at 6:30 p.m. today
ON CAMPUS
at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
The Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers will elect its remaining officers at 7 tonight at Pizza Hut, 1606 W. 23rd St. Anyone can attend the meeting. Free pizza and pop will be served. For more information, call Pedro Echeverria at 864-5810.
The Association for Women Geoscientists will sponsor "Earth Science Undergraduate Night" at 7 tonight in 302 Lindley Hall. For more information, call Lynne, Tracey or Kathy at 864-2733.
InterVarsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call David Zimmerman at 864-7117.
University Chess Society will meet at 7 tonight at the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Nathan at 842-0049.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will conduct a scripture study at 7:30 tonight in the center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
Jayhawkier Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call John Dale at 864-1115.
Lesbian, Bisexual and Gay Services of Kansas will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union.
Amnesty International will meet for a letter writing session at 8 tonight in the Glass Onion, 624 W.12th St.
Icthus Christian Outreach will meet at 8:30 tonight at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mark Winton at 843-2630 or Noel Storey at 749-5848.
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"NO COUPON SPECIALS"EVERYDAY
In 1986, Nicolas Shump, Lawrence senior, left Leed College in Portland, Ore., for the University of Kansas.
2-PIZZAS
2-TOPPINGS
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$9.00
"The only reason I left was so I could study Italian literature and culture," he said.
PARTY10"
Shump is one of 211 students in the Italian bachelor of arts degree program that possibly could lose its degree if the Academic Procedures and Policies committee recommends that the program be eliminated.
10-PIZZAS
1-TOPPING
"Because it's performed in the same way by all members of species, it's likely to have a strong genetic basis and is produced by specific neurocircuits."
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
1992 report picked language program for discontinuance
When the University's academic program review was completed in 1992, the review recommended the B.A. in Italian for elimination because there was not enough student demand and lack of full-time faculty members for the program.
Shump and about 50 other people defended the degree program last night at the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union during the discontinuance hearing for KU's only Italian degree.
"We have never canceled a section for lack of enrollment," she said. "The Italian B.A. is the only one in the state and in the Midwest area. The quality
Jan Kozma, the only full-time professor in the program and head of the department of French and Italian, spoke first at the hearing and gave a 20-minute presentation, complete with graphs.
"The striking thing about yawning is its stereotyped nature," he said. "Everyone yawns in pretty much the same wav.
PRIMETIME
Women's studies had the most awarded degrees with 49. American studies had 42, classical antiquity had 32, African studies had 23, and classical languages had 18.
"Itian and French are very different languages." she said.
CARRY-OUT
The contagiousness of yawns is a topic of great but overlooked significance to both the social and neurological sciences," Provine said. "You don't see someone else yawn and say, 'I think I'll do what they did.'"
In his study, Provine found that people had "yawn detectors."
"I can't see attending University without an American program," she said.
Jean Winter, Lawrence senior, said eliminating the program would harm KU.
"Why was it plucked out?" she said. If the degree is eliminated, an Italian concentration will be provided in the French degree program, which Kozma said she did not understand.
1-PIZZA
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Provine said yawning research provided insight into problems in the behavioral sciences and neurosciences.
"I didn't just study this as a diversion," he said. "Yawning can make some important contributions."
Robert Provine still is not tired of yawning.
Kansan staff writer
at an Italian program," she said. After the hearing, Kozma said she hoped the committee would not recommend the degree for elimination, but did not want to anticipate the committee's recommendation.
Kozma said it puzzled her that program review findings called for the elimination of the Italian degree, which was the second largest of the smaller humanities programs in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Forty-four Italian degrees were awarded from 1987 to 1991.
University debates Italian degree's fate
Provine has written eight papers on yawning since 1986.
Provine's interest in yawning was sparked when he studied the nervous systems of a variety of animals. Any animal that has a vertebra yawns, he said.
"It's a behavior that most people perform every day," said Provine, a professor of psychology at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, who has been studying yawning for 10 years.
Yawns don't bore, tire researcher of behavior
By Liz Klinger
Theories about yawning at the University of Kansas have not been researched as thoroughly.
"I'm so beyond predicting," she said. "I'm not surprised by anything the University does, but I will remain optimistic."
842-1212
DELIVERYHOURS
Mon-Thurs Fri-Sat Sunday
PROGRAM review
of the B.A. in Italian is there and is recognized across the nation."
11 am-2 am
11 am-3 am
11 am-1 am
Kara Wittman, a Topeka freshman who yawns at the mention of the word, said, "I think it's a little warning bell that goes off when you're about to fall asleep in class so you can smack yourself to stay awake, I guess I'm just
Southern Hills Center
Provine, who now is studying laughter, said that yawning research would offer new information about the nervous system and human social behavior.
Facts on vawns
"I think I do it so unconciously that I don't even notice it," he said.
There is no indication that yawning increases alertness.
In studies of at least 800 people, yawn researcher Robert Provine found:
The typical yawn lasts about six seconds.
"I'm afraid if they're yawning it's because they were up too late the night before or are finding that part of the lecture boring." Prosser said.
Claude Howard, Kaiserslautern,
Germany, freshman, said he yawned
the most after classes and lunch.
"I see this as a beginning of a whole neglected class of human behavior," he said.
Videotapes of people yawning, with their mouths edited out, triggered as many yawns from viewers as tapes of faces with vavinng mouths.
People tend to yawn the most during the hour after waking and the hour before going to bed.
■ Anything associated with yawning,
even thinking or reading about it, will
trigger yawning.
People who are bored yawn more often than those who are not.
Yawning is not a response to a shortage of oxygen or a build-up of carbon dioxide.
Yawning is contagious among humans — an observation of someone yawning triggers an urge to yawn in the observer.
Francis Prosser, professor of physics and astronomy, said yawners tended to sit in the backs of classrooms and generally were not as involved as other students.
Source: The Associated Press KANBAN
not a very alert person."
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4
Thursday, September 30, 1993
OPINION
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
Last week the Senate rejected a motion to stop the closing of bases listed by the Defense Base Closure and Realignment Commission.
THE BACKGROUND
Important to getting the commission's work approved was the requirement for President Clinton and Congress to accept or reject the list of bases in its entirety.
THE OPINION
All-or-nothing method useful for reform votes
For once, we cannot complain about government gridlock. The provision requiring Congress to reject or approve the entire list was an effective way of achieving government reform. There was input from all sides, and political games were reduced to a minimum Because of the decision to close bases, however, jobs were to be lost and community businesses catering to soldiers would lose money. It was essential that the process be as fair as possible.
The final list of bases to be closed was the result of input from the four military services, Defense Secretary Les Aspin, a bipartisan commission, local officials President Clinton and finally Congress. Because the President and Congress had to say yes or no to the entire list, there was no room for bargaining on behalf of a lawmaker's own constituency. Many senators voted with the majority on this issue despite the fact their own districts contained bases slated to be closed. No lawmaker wants to be seen destroying work leading to billions of dollars in tax revenue savings for the sake of one military base.
Using an all-or-nothing stipulation might work well in reforming other areas of government. It could greatly reduce the number of restrictive line items attached to budget bills and encourage lawmakers to vote for what is in the best interest of the nation rather than according to their own narrow preferences. That could allow government to move past the rhetoric of reform and toward a government that, as Vice-President Gore's report states, "works better and costs less."
CHRISTINA CORNISH FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Olympic Committee's selection most qualified
The rejection of Beijing as the host city for the 2000 Olympics was a bold and momentous move by the International Olympic Committee. Human rights violations, a less than adequate infrastructure and the horrendous state of the environment in China cost it the games.
The selection of Sydney, Australia, as the host city for the Games eliminates these problems and legitimizes the importance of logistics over politics. The only weakness that critics have concerning Sydney is the time difference affecting major television markets. Choosing Sydney instead of Beijing was as simple as choosing between a Cadillac and a Yugo.
Although no one will deny that human rights violations exist in every country, the issue is the magnitude of the violations in China. We have instances of mistreatment of individuals in the United States. Germans have to deal with skinheads. But who can explain China's decision to postpone the trial of 15 "counterrevolutionary dissidents" until after the committee made its decision?
The integrity of the Games was preserved with the selection of Sydney. The committee members should be commended for avoiding a potentially disastrous situation.
MANNY LOPEZ FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
where it can catch young people before they commit the crimes, education. It is more important to upgrade our schools so that the first experiences they have with computers and brand-new basketball uniforms isn't in jail. We could only hope that a better education would sway them from crime.
KANSAN STAFF
KC TRAUER, Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
Editors
Assistant to the editor ...J.R. Clairbome
News ...Stacy Friedman
Editorial ...Terrellyn McCormick
Campus ...Ben Grove
Sports ...kristi Fogel
Photo ...Kip Chin, Renee Knoeber
Features ...Ezra Wolfe
Graphics ...John Paul Fogel
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ...Ed Schager
Regional sales mgr ...Jennifer Perrier
National sales mgr ...Jennifer Evenson
Co-op sales mgr ...Blythe Focht
Production mgrs ...Jennifer Blowey
Kate Burgess
Marketing director ...Shelly McConnell
Creative director ...Brian Fusco
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.
Great columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Fint Hall.
Capital punishment sentences fair, essential in curbing crime
This society has a tendency to downplay or ignore the suffering of the victims while portraying the perpetrator in a sympathetic light. "Discovery Journal" suggested that we feel sorry for the convicts. It was a cruel gesture considering the victims and their families were the ones deserving the true sympathy.
Big families provide experience in negotiation, passing the buck
As the announcer of the program proclaimed, "Prison is where society sends its failures." Let's make sure prisoners are being justly punished for the crimes they have committed, that money is being spent on education to prevent more crimes, and that the true victims are not denied the justice they deserve.
On Sept. 12, the program "Discovery Journal" on the Discovery Channel aired an informative yet extremely aggravating episode regarding capital punishment. Although I watch the channel religiously, the pro-convict coverage of the death penalty made me furious.
Anne Balley is a Denver sophomore majoring in psychology.
MANNELY Chicago Tribune
YALE LAW
B. CLINTON
For those of you who didn't catch the show, it revolved around three inmates on death row complaining how unfair life is for them in jail. These men killed innocent people and ripped families apart, but their sob stories were shoved down the viewers' throats. The last thing I want to hear is three men who have admitted to horrendous crimes complain that society is unfair because they have to die for the crimes they have committed. There is no question of the guilt of these men-nor that they should have thought about the consequences of their actions before they started killing people.
Why shouldn't criminals pay for their crimes? Prison has become an overfinanced retreat that pampers its inmates with access to collegiate libraries, a version of cable television and expensive gymnasiums. Except for the fact that the inmates can't go outside the gates, this doesn't sound like punishment for murder, rape and theft. The judicial and criminal systems need to make nationwide decisions on which crimes deserve capital punishment and administer those verdicts accordingly. The money used to beautify prisons needs to go
I have heard the plea that capital punishment only condones murder, but I find that defense severely lacking. There is a big difference between killing innocent people and killing
In 1976, capital punishment became legal once again in the United States. Currently two-thirds of the states practice the death penalty, and 2,500 people are on death row. Unfortunately, they will spend an average of eight years in jail, spending close to $2 million on appeals. Now, the appeal process is important to a certain extent. It is important not to condemn an innocent person to death, but supporting appeal after appeal from admitted convicts is ludicrous. Who do you think is paying for it? Yes — you, the taxpayer. But realistically, you will pay for it one way or another.
As I've certainly mentioned many times before, large families frighten me. During my life I've enjoyed the luxury of living with a mere four people. This group includes father, sister, brother and brother. It was cozy and there was much food to be eaten. Then my father decided to remarry in the spring. After I got over the fear of my stepmother being evil — because as we see on television, all stepmothers are — I had to deal with the fact that I had three brand-new stepbrothers. Luckily, we moved into a bigger house.
STAFF COLUMNIST
ANNE BAILEY
people who deserve the punishment. Besides, the prison these men were stationed in had nicer facilities than my high school. The library and gymnasium were better equipped than most inner-city schools. Does anyone see a problem here? Criminals are being sent to retreat camps, not prisons. I guess I was wrong in assuming that people were sent to prison for punishment.
But what was so aggravating about the program and the convicts was that they were suggesting that they had become victims because society was now unjustly murdering them. If killing them in response to their crimes is the only way to administer adequate punishment, then so be it.
Living with more people took a lot of adjustment, the biggest of which was getting used to the food cabinets being empty the day after a supermarket trip. This was very distressing. However, you learn a lot about the art of "negotiation" in a heavily populated home. This comes in handy when trying to get food, which is in high
STAFF COLUMNIST
STAFF COLUMNIST
CHRIS
RONAN
demand - especially when it's cooked. One day I returned home to find brother Cary ready to feast on a delicious-looking pizza.
ME: "Hey Cary, I see you made me lunch."
ME: "Yes sir, I've been thinking about eating pizza all day long."
CARY:"Hub?"
ME: "You must have read my mind."
CARY: "Huh?"
CARY: "Huh?"
I then take my prize and reflect on
how easily it was obtained.
You also can observe a lot about the art of debate. One day, there was a showdown at the "TV Corral." Brother Corey was watching a provocative "Brady Bunch" episode when brother Josh changed it. The ensuing "debate" went something like this:
COREY: "Change that back!"
Our new family will take some getting used to. The change requires some adjustments, but not too many. If we do have a problem, it's probably Corey's fault anyway.
JOSH: "No."
COREY: "Change it, you dummy!"
*dontify*
JOSH: "No, stupid." (Note: "stupid" is used as a noun here)
COREY: "You're the one that's
bitting it's sort of an adjective"
cost (now)
Well, you get my drift. If you can't take the heat, you're gonna get burned.
COREY: "YUH-HUH!"
There are many advantages to living in a nine-person home. If you play your cards right, nothing is ever your fault, especially if there are six people
Another of these advantages is that you can always bump chores off on someone else. Unloading the dishwasher, cleaning the kitchen and walking the dog are a thing of the past for this "elder." I just tell Corey to do it. Somebody his wife will surely thank me for helping to shape his household skills.
younger than you. It was funny this summer because whenever anyone did anything wrong, it got blamed on Corey. Of course, now he hates us all. But one day he'll look back on all of this and be glad that we helped him become a tougher person.
Chris Ronan is an Overland Park sophomore majoring in radio T.V. broadcast,
For the Birds
HEY BUZZ, WHAT'S WRONG WITH SEYMORE? MAN, HE'S SPINNIN'!
by Jeff Fitzpatrick
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 30, 1993
5
Peer program to introduce minorities to University life
STEP will provide mentors to help new students cope
By Sanaka Samarasinha
Special to the Korea
By Sanaka Samarasinha Special to the Kansan
Some first-semester minority students at the University of Kansas may find the transition from high school to a little less stressful when Students Together Excelling in Education as Peers, or STEP, begins tonight.
The program, now in its fifth year, will begin with an informational meeting at 6:30 p.m. in the southwest lobby of the Burge Union.
Settling into a new home, meeting new friends, finding a job and making good grades can be overwhelming for freshmen and transfer students.
But minority students may find it especially difficult adjusting to life at the University, where minorities account for less than 10 percent of students.
Sherwood Thompson, director of minority affairs, said STEP was more than an informational program.
STEP, run by the Office of Minority Affairs, is designed to educate minority students about the campus resources that can help them cope with the stress of college life.
Rachel Duran, Garden City senior and a former peer adviser, said that the system helped students establish a relationship with their peers.
"It is a retentive program," he said.
"We provide information, speakers and other programs to help students buy ownership into the University. We hope that this will motivate them to stay in school."
Several minority upperclassmen will serve as mentors for those who join the program. Peer advisers will be assigned four to 10 students with whom they will work individually during the year. The advisers will meet with each of their assigned students at least once a week.
The program also is helpful because minority students in an unfamiliar environment generally relate better to other minority students than to the majority, she said.
ranging from problems with roommates to questions on how to get financial aid."
"This is especially helpful for timid students who are having a hard time making friends," Duran said.
Thompson said that on a campus where every sector was dominated by the majority - with the exception of the football and basketball programs-minority students needed a support group.
Enrique Torres, assistant director of minority affairs, said, "The idea is to try to maintain constant contact so the students won't feel neglected. They will meet anywhere at any time to discuss practically anything —
"However, it is not in any way an exclusive program," he said. "It is one which acknowledges that it is very difficult being a minority in a majority population and tries to provide a nurturing environment where people can feel a sense of self-worth."
---
William Alix/KANSAN
Jeff Fears, Overland Park freshman practices his racquetball moves at Robinson Center.
Committee sends funding bills to full Senate
By Donella Hearne Kansan staff writer
The Student Senate Finance Committee voted last night to send $7,193.46 worth of bills to the full Senate for consideration.
The committee passed a bill for $3,000 to be used by attorneys who advise students through KU's Legal Services for Students. The money will be used by the attorneys for transportation expenses for required Continuing Legal Education courses held in cities all over the state. The committee also
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The Public Relations Students Society of America's bill for $423. The group provides assistance in public relations to student groups.
bill for $988.50. KUHC said the money would be used for operating costs and for Homeless Awareness Week activities.
Promoting Alcohol Responsibility Through You presented a bill for $1,109, which also passed. PARTY said it would use the money for general expenses such as office supplies and to finance special events such as Alcohol Awareness Week.
passed a bill for $1,204 to finance the Engineering Expo in February 1994. The money was requested for exhibit materials planned by engineering students and for special attractions such as hot-air balloon rides.
The KU African Affairs Student Association's bill for $468.96 to pay for expenses related to African Awareness Week.
The bills will be further debated at the Student Senate meeting at 6:30 p.m. on Oct. 6 at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union.
The committee also approved:
The Kansas University Homeless Coalition's
5 East $ 7^{\mathrm{TH}} $ 842-1376
PETER HUNTINGTON
O. H. H.
Your Invitation to Join Us ...
The Kansas Union was built as a living memorial to those 130 University of Kansas alumni and students who gave their lives for their Country in service in World War I. A roll of honor, along with mementos and artifacts, were sealed in a copper box in the cornerstone at the dedication of the completed building in 1926.
Under the direction of the Kenneth Spencer Research Library Department of Special Collections and University Archives, the damaged contents have been replicated and will be replaced in the cornerstone of the renovated Union.
Renovation of the Kansas Union in the 1990s required the removal of the pillar containing the original cornerstone. At that time it was discovered that age and water seepage had damaged the copper box and its contents. The box was then opened and the artifacts examined in a ceremony on April 2, 1993.
In honor of those alumni and students who sacrificed their lives and to whom the Kansas Union is a living memorial, you are cordially invited to attend the ceremony for the Interment and Rededication of the 1925 Memorial Cornerstone of the Kansas Union.
Joining with friends and relatives of those men and women who served in World War I. Chancellor Emeritus Raymond Nichols, who was present at the dedication of the original building in 1926, will deliver the keynote address.
On Friday, October 1, 1993. outside on the Kansas Union Plaza at 10:30 a.m., please join us for this rededication and remembrance.
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6
Thursday, September 30, 1993
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NATION/WORLD
First Republican backs health plan
First Repub Hillary Clinton courts Congress for support
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Hillary Rodham Clinton picked up the first Republican cosponsor for the administration's health care plan yesterday as Sen. Jeffords pleaded his backing during the first lady's second round of hearings before Congress.
"I am pleased to be the first, but I am absolutely confident I will not be the last," Jeffords, a moderate from Vermont, said after a Senate Labor and Human Resources hearing.
No Republicans backed the president on the budget.
Although the White House is courting many Republicans — and believes no bill will get through Congress if it turns into a partisan fight like the budget battle — Jeffords is the first GOP lawyer who has been willing to put his name on President Clinton's bill.
Jeffords, who posed for pictures with Mrs. Clinton after her testimony, said he had informed her of his decision Tuesday night.
She spoke before two House committees on Tuesday, addressed the Senate and House Labor panels yesterday and will wrap up the week with the Senate Finance Committee today.
Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H., said he was confused by the plan's claims to save $280 billion in Medicare and Medicaid spending and reduce the federal budget deficit by $90 billion while at the same time starting new entitlements such as money for long-term care and prescription drugs.
"I sort of scratch my head, because in a lot of areas the boot doesn't seem to fit the binding," Gregg said.
Sen. Paul Wellstone, D-Minn., supports a rival plan to have the government
ment pay all medical bills, an idea backed by liberal Democrats whom the White House will need to win over to get the bill passed.
"It's a legitimate worry," said Mrs Clinton. But she added that consumers could vote against a plan and show their displeasure by just not rejoining it the next year.
Politely, Wellstone disagreed.
Wellstone complained that the Clinton plan might set up tiers of health care, with the basic plan not high enough in quality.
"That's not exactly the case, because some people don't have that vote to buy up to a higher-priced plan because they don't have the income," he said.
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said he agreed with the Clinton goals for health reform, but added that "the problem is we don't need to create more problems than we fix."
Yeltsin deploys elite troops around parliament
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Elite paratroopers reinforced police surrounding parliament yesterday as the government gave hard-line lawmakers until Monday to surrender and end their defiance of President Boris Yeltsin.
A senior police officer died of injuries yesterday after being pushed in front of a car by anti-Yeltsin protesters during a clash with police, the Interior Ministry said. Lt. Col. Vladimir Reshtuk was the third person to be killed in connection with the parliament crisis.
Riot police wielding shields and batons chased away some 300 parliament supporters who had been waiting peacefully outside police lines around parliament today. Police pursued the crowd into a nearby train station.
Police on Tuesday gave lawmakers
and their supporters occupying the parliament building a 24-hour ultimatum to surrender their weapons and leave. But the government said today that the deadline to depart was Monday, warning that failure to comply "may entail serious consequences." The government statement said that all those who left peacefully before the deadline would not face prosecution.
In Washington, President Clinton today strongly endorsed Yeltsin's handling of the standoff.
"I think so far they've done quite well," Clinton said. "I don't think that any of us should be here basically armchair quarter backing the unfolding events."
Snow and rain drenched Moscow as police huddled in overcoats, stopping anyone entering parliament. Earlier, police pushed back demonstrators who tried to break through to parliament.
Glum lawmakers and their supporters inside sang during the night to keep up their spirits.
Yeltsin has ruled out compromise since he dissolved the Soviet-era parliament a week ago. He ordered parliamentary elections for December to end a bitter power struggle with parliamentary hard-liners over his political and free-market reforms. He set presidential elections in June.
The deployment of police reinforcements around parliament Tuesday increased the war of nerves on the increasingly demoralized and isolated lawmakers who have been holed up in the building, called the White House.
Special red-betet paratroopers armed with machine guns were trucked in overnight, boosting the riot police and Interior Ministry military already deployed.
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Now accepting receipts from the Spring 1993 semester for rebate payments
Receipts from cash or check purchases are eligible for a 6% rebate at the Customer Service counters of the KU Bookstores.
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Burra Un. 864-5697
KU student I.D. required for rebate. Spring semester rebates (period 93) are available until Dec. 30, 1993. Computer hardware purchases are not eligible. Other restrictions may apply.
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 30. 1993
---
LOS ANGELES
Defense says client not proven as man who attacked Denny
Prosecutors are looking for scapegoats in the beating of Reginald Denny and failed to prove that the man charged with hurling a brick at the trucker was the attacker seen on a videotape, a defense attorney said yesterday.
"This case has no credibility whatsoever. This case should not have been before you," attorney Edi Faal said in closing arguments.
Faal, who represents Damian Williams, said prosecutors failed in their primary mission: identifying Williams as the man seen beating Denny on videotape in the opening moments of the April 1992 riots.
On Tuesday, the lawyer representing defendant Henry Watson conceded during his closing argument that his client probably assaulted Denny when he put his foot on Denny's neck but said Watson certainly did not intend to kill him.
Watson and Williams, who are African Americans, are charged with attempted murder in the attack on Denny, a white trucker who was pulled from his rig and bloodied after four policemen were acquitted in the Rodney King beating.
THE NEWS in brief
NEW YORK
Jury picked for bombing trial
An anonymous jury of 12 people — all of whom described themselves as Christians or said they did not practice a religion — was selected for the trial of four Muslim fundamentalists accused of bombing the World Trade Center.
E
Six alternate jurors were to be selected yesterday. The eight women and four men were selected Tuesday after more than a week of screening in which more than 150 prospective jurors were questioned.
Opening statements could begin as early as today. Six alternate hurors were to be selected yesterday.
The bomb blew a 150-foot-wide crater beneath the second-tallest building in the world on Feb. 26, killing six people and injuring more than 1,000. One woman selected said she was Christian and had "a love for Israel."
A 28-year-old man on the jury said he was a member of the National Rifle Association, had read Soldier of Fortune magazine and liked to play "paint ball," a game in which adults shoot each other with paint in a mock battle.
Each juror will be referred to by number only.
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CLEVELAND Court OKs Demjanjuk protests
Demonstrators will be allowed to march outside John Demajurki's house but must schedule their protests with police in advance so that opposing factions don't meet on the street.
Common Pleas Court Judge Daniel Gaul issued the order on Tuesday. It embodies an agreement worked out by the American Civil Liberties Union, which represents anti-Demnjarjuk demonstrators, and the prosecutor for the suburb of Seven Hills.
Jewish groups and the Ku Klux Klan have demonstrated outside Demjanjuk's empty home in Seven Hills since his return from Israel, where he was convicted and later acquitted of being the Nazi death camp guard Ivan the Terrible.
The 73-year-old retired Ohio autoworker has not been seen at his house since he returned to the United States on Sept. 22.
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There's a new art to Thursday nights...
The Spencer Museum of Art at the University of Kansas is open Thursdays until 9:00 p.m.— and the Museum Book Shop until 8:30 p.m.
Enjoy over 4,000 years of world art history four more hours per week at the only comprehensive art museum in Kansas.
SPECIAL EXHIBITIONS Contemporary Czech and Slovakian Photography August 22-October 3
GALLERY TALK
American Indian Baskets from the University of Kansas Museum of Anthropology August 29-October 10
- "The Secret Garden": Illustrations by Tom Allen
September 19-October 17
- "Japanese Folk Textiles," Mary Dusenbury, Spencer Museum curatorial associate.
Asian Gallery, Thursday, September 30, 7:00 p.m.
SPENCER MUSEUM HOURS
MUSEUM Monday . . . . .
As always----admission is free!
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8
Thursday, September 30, 1993
GENERATIONAL POLITICS:
X marks the spot
Do you find it ironic that so few people stayed after Woodstock to pick up the trash?
Do you suspect that the American Dream is over?
Are you already bored with these subjects and wishing you had a beer?
Find out what may define a generation that hates to be called a generation, and what the future could hold for you.
Meet Neil Howe co-author of 13thGEN
Random House Publishing
M'OREAD
BOOKSHOP
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
BOOKSIGNING Thursday, September 30 1:30-3:30 pm at the Mt. Oread Bookshop In the Kansas Union
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Commerce secretary investigated
Brown tells Clinton charges are untrue
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Clinton defended Commerce Secretary Ron Brown yesterday against accusations that Brown was paid to lift the trade embargo against Vietnam as two House Republicans demanded appointment of a special prosecutor.
toward lifting of the U.S. trade embargo against that nation.
The FBI and a federal grand jury in Miami are investigating the allegations by a Vietnamese businessman that Brown accepted $700,000 from the Vietnamese government to work
Clinton defended his commerce secretary as Brown was sitting a few feet away during a White House announcement of a new strategy to increase American exports.
"He's told me that he hasn't done anything wrong. He's done just about everything right as commerce secretary. I think he's done a great job, and I have no reason not to believe him," Clinton said.
The president entered the room with Brown at his side and made a point of praising his performance as commerce secretary during prepared remarks.
But Republican Reps. Dana Rohrabacher of California and Dan Burton of Indiana, in brief speeches on the House floor, called for appointment of a special prosecutor.
"If they (the Clinton administration) try to whitewash this thing the way they whitewashed the Travelgate affair, then the American people will be justifiably outraged," Robrabacher told The Associated Press, referring to the recent episode involving the administration's handling of allegations of financial mismanagement in the White House travel office.
He said the Brown matter must be "investigated and examined in a very professional way."
Cuban prisoners remain confined
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — About 2,600 Cubans held in federal prison spent a second day yesterday confined to their cells to avert violence after they were told many of them would be returned to Cuba.
list to be repatriated unless they successfully appeal, he said.
The Cuban prisoners were placed in special security status before dawn Tuesday when they learned about plans to repatriate 1,567 of the inmates.
Among those in the lockdown were Cubans who arrived in the 1980 Mariel boatlift and subsequently were convicted in the United States of serious crimes such as murder, rape, violent assaults and drug trafficking. They must complete their sentences before being returned to Cuba.
The lockdowns affected all but about 340 of the 2,940 Cuban nationals in federal prisons nationwide, Bureau of Prisons representative Greg Bogdan said yesterday. Only those in maximum- and medium-security prisons were put in the special detention, and they included the 1,567 on the
"There's no plan to release the Mariel Cubans from the secure setting that they're in right now," Boadan said.
PART 6
The rest are being returned gradually to the general prison populations, he said.
In Miami, the Task Force of Cuban Civil Organizations issued a statement saying it was "alarmed at the announcement and actions taken ... involving Cuban nationals and immigration detainees."
The group called the issuance of the new list of 1,567 to be repatriated "ill-advised, violative of due process, discriminatory" and "ominous."
The preventive strategy — taking the prisoners to separate, secure areas or simply locking them in their cells apparently had the desired effect.
Justice Department representative John Russell said there were no disturbances at any of the three dozen federal prisons that house Cuban nationals.
Radar use in train crash questioned
The Associated Press
MOBILE, Ala. - Investigators want to know whether a toowbat's radar was turned on the night one of its barges apparently struck the fog-bound train trestle where 47 people aboard the Sunset Limited limped to their death.
The radar had a range of 24 miles and presumably could have alerted the towboat crew members that they were approaching the bridge, despite fog so thick that Coast Guard rescuers could not see the front of their own boat.
The radar was in operating condition when checked by a National Transportation Safety Board investigator after the Sept. 22 crash, agency representative Ted Lopatkiewicz said Tuesday.
the towboat may have struck the railroad bridge, leading to the train wreck.
But lawyers for the four men aboard the towboat have not allowed the safety board to interview them.
Because they cannot talk to the crew members, investigators also have not determined who was at the wheel the night of the wreck in Big Bayou Canot.
Russell Gober, chief investigator with the safety board on the accident, said the vessel's owner, Warrior & Gulf Navigation Co., had reported having two licensed pilots on the towboat that night.
Investigators say one of the six barges being pushed by
Lawyers refused to identify the pilots or their two crewmates. However, news organizations have identified the pilots as Andrew Stabler of Atmore, Ala., and Willie C. Odom of Grand Bay, Ala. Both are 46.
Safety board officials have said it could take a year to complete their report on the accident, the deadliest crash in Amtrak history.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUAK
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
GENERATION X: Twenty-something Organizes
GUEST SPEAKERS
JONATHAN KARL CO-FOUNDER THIRD MILLENNIUM WRITER / EDITOR WITH FREEDOM HOUSE DOUGLAS KENNEDY CO-FOUNDER 3RD MILLENIUM ROCKY NICHOLS KANSAS STATE REPRESENTATIVE FOR THE 58th DISTRICT NEIL HOWE AUTHOR OF 13th GEN: ABORT, RETRY IGNORE. FAIL? DARYL EVANS, PHD. ASSOC. PROFESSOR OF SOCIOLOGY MODERATOR
3RD MILLENNIUM
VOICES OF GENERATION X
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Sometimes it's the scene and not the season ing that makes a meal worth eating.
NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM
1891
Kate Shaw, Edmonton, Alberta, graduate student, and Mike Ghedotti, Detroit graduate student, eat lunch in front of the Natural History Museum.
John Gamble / KAN$AN
Take lunch.
Every noontide, thousands of students, faculty and staff descend upon the feeding pens of the campus eateries Union Square, Wescoe Terrace Burge Cafeteria. They have their fill of cafeteria food eaten on cafeteria tables with cafeteria chairs under cafeteria lighting.
But there are the midday mavericks, those who need more than food at lunchtime, those who want to make their chance to eat also a chance to relax. For these people, a lunch spent in the right place can replenish the soul as well as the stomach.
Prime example: the front steps of Dyche Hall, also known as the Museum of Natural History. At high noon, these stone stairs evolve from a convenient lunch spot to an informal eating and meeting place for the building's faculty and staff.
Norman Slade, professor of ecolo
gy, said he had eaten lunch regularly on the steps of the museum for 21 years.
dows in our office. Out here, there's sunlight and warm air."
Ghedotti said he tried to get out to the steps for lunch during good weather but drew the line when it was too hot or too cold.
"We don't eat lunch in the offices," Slade said. "The food would attract bugs and they would eat the museum displays."
"I'm a fair-weather step person," Ghedotti said. "There are others who live out here for lunch."
Across the way, other Dyche Hall lunch eaters stayed in the shade of the building's northeast entrance to dine.
Sitting on the top step while finishing his homemade hamsalad sandwich.
After keeping inside all day sitting behind a desk, Gwen Leonard, accountant for the Museum of Natural History, said she went outside the
Tent
"They've referred to us as being very reptilian, sitting out there soaking up the sun."
"We're all biologists out here, so we like being outside anyway" he said.
"I come out here to thermo-regulate." Shaw said. "There are no win-
Slade said he welcomed the chance to eat lunch on the steps.
Just three steps down and a few feet over from Slade sat two other lunchers, graduate students Mike Ghedotti, Detroit, and Kate Shaw, Alberta, Canada. Both Ghedoti and Shaws said they appreciated taking lunch outdoors.
museum for lunch every day in good weather.
Bob McClaim museum administrator
"I'm a peoplewatcher. This is an ideal setting for people like me," she said as a steady stream of students passed by on the sidewalk.
Leonard's boss, Barb McClain, associate director for administration for the museum, said she expected the trips outside for lunch
would end sometime in mid-October when the weather turns cold. In the meantime, she and her staff continue the daily ritual from noon to 1 p.m.
Across the street from Dyche Hall, at Spooner Hall's Arthur Weaver Court, Barbara Breitung, Lawrence senior, said she liked eating her lunch close to Watson Library, where she works as an assistant.
"They've referred to us as being very reptilian, sitting out there soaking up the sun," McClain said.
Little-known lunch spots
1. Pavilion and picnic grounds
2. Spencer Library plaza
3. Joyhawk Boulevard
4. Arthur Weaver Court
5. Mississippi Street
Natural History Museum
Dread Avenue
West Campus Road
Why students and staff eat here
1. Spectacular scenery behind Carruth- O'Leary Hall.
2. Spot KU's head honchos while soaking up the sun.
3. Ideal for those eaters who are readers.
Setting next to Spooner Hall.
In take in the Union scene.
"I definitely need the break," Breitung said. "It's nice to get outside where it's green."
Enclosed on three sides by a black iron fence, the court had the sound of tricking water coming from its small central fountain. Even with recent cold nights, flowers still bloom along the court's sides.
In the placid atmosphere of the court, Breitung ate her lunch — two peanut-butter sandwiches, a cup full of grapes and a banana — on a wooden bench only 20 feet away from the bustle of Jayhawk Boulevard.
"This is really quiet here," Breitung said as five other people sat around the court's scattered seats. "You're closed off from all that activity."
Toreally getaway for the noon hour, some lunchers recommended the white stone walkway to the side of and underneath the front steps of Watson Library.
bought at Wescoe Terrace, Wanda Dyer, library assistant for Watson, said she tried to eat at least two or three times a month at the library's nearly hidden stone niche.
Dyer said she often brought a book or magazine to read. But she added that she found the library's gothic architecture just as interesting.
Unwrapping a cheese sandwich she
"Maybe it does remind you of some kind of castle when you look at it down here," she said.
With its solitude, its scenery and its sense of place, Dyer's chosen dining site outside Watson has much in common with the other, lesser-known lunch spots on campus. For Dyer, its uniqueness lies in its unplanned exclusivity.
"I don't think you would be imposing on each other's space if there were more people," Dyer said. "But there is never going to be a crowd down here. It really isn't used that much at all."
Salty Iguanas tap into acoustic sound to satisfy fans
A worn-out couch clutters the stage, and an old lamp provides most of the light. No, it is not a basement ree room. It is Tuesday night at The Bottleneck, and the Salty Iguanas are playing and lounging — simultaneously.
Kansan staff writer
By JL Watson
What makes the Iguanas' Tuesday night performances different is not the furniture but the style — acoustic.
Maybe that is because at home excruciatingly loud amps make for grumpy neighbors. At home, it is necessary to turn those amps down. That is the idea behind Tuesday nights at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.
"It's a lot like bein' at home," said Iguana's bassist, Charlie Wolf.
"We're acoustic .but not unplugged." said guitarist Barry Osbourne. "It can't be completely unplugged. Even MTV runs guitars out of a P.A."
The band brought the sound to Lawrence audiences at the suggestion of Brett Mosiman, owner of The Bottleneck.
"He got tired of us being in here on Tuesday nights so he finally said, 'Why don't you work for your beer?' " said drummer Jesse Sharson.
The band got together and decided to do a slightly different version of their usual songs.
Even so, listeners are treated to a more laid-back version of Salty Iguana's regular songs.
The enthusiasm of fans for acoustic music comes from a need to hear good, real music, Wolfsaid.
"The trend toward loud, grung-
bands was on the upswing last
year," Osbourne said. "This is flip-
floppin."
In looking to their future sound, the Salty Iguanas seek musical influences from the past. "We listen to John Lee Hooker and Homeschick James," Wolf said.
The Salty Iguanas point out that despite interest in acoustic music, they do not intend to get stuck in a rut.
Wolf, Osbourne, Larson and guitarist/vocalist David Thompson plan to release a compact disc in January on the Mercy label. The Tuesday night performances last throughout the semester. Cover charge is $3.
"Mostly, I listen to my mom," Larson said. "She's an ass-kicker. She plays banjo like a bat outta hell."
TOMMY JOHNSON AND BOB MILLER
Melissa Lacey/KANSAN
Bassist Charlie Wolf, left, and singer Barry Osborne of the Salty Iguanas perform an acoustic set at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. On the stage floor is their friend's dog, Simba.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SEPTEMBER 30, 1993 PAGE 9
KU Life
People and places at the University of Kansas.
calendar
NIGHTLIFE
enchwarmers Sports Bar & Grill
1601 W, 23rd St
Broken English CD Release Party, 9 tonight.
Monterey Jack, 9 p.m. tomorrow.
Parent's Weekend: Liverpool As The Beatles,
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Transylvania 2000, 9 tonight
Deb Griusi, p.m. Saturday
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814 New Hampshire St.
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Bill Crayhan, 10:30 p.m. tomorrow, free
Einstein, 10:30 p.m. Saturday, free
MOVIES
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2339 Iowa St.
Man Without a Face (PG-13), 7, 9:30 tonight
See CALENDAR Page 14
---
See CALENDAR, Page 14.
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10
Thursday, September 30, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 30, 1993
11
TODD
SEIFERT
KC says goodbye to Brett
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Even the most aloof fans at Kauffman Stadium found themselves fighting back tears last night when George Brett played his final home game in a Kansas City Royals uniform.
Tears of joy for Brett's game-tying single with two outs in the eighth inning. Tears of sadness because that swing was the last Brett would take in front of the home crowd.
Two emotions. So different, yet so intertwined.
The day's activities were meant to be festive. Brett, playing his final game in the stadium, watched with a smile as an eight-minute tribute played on the stadium's large video screen.
Scenes of past triumphs helped fans relive parts of their hero's career. His home run off Goose Gossage in Yankee Stadium in the 1980 playoffs, a replay of his 3,000th hit against the California Angels in Anaheim, his attempt to catch a foul ball while sliding feet-first into the third-base dugout in the 1985 playoffs.
Some fans responded to the scenes with loud cheers. One man behind the Royals dugout, just sat in his chair and nodded whenever a highlight that he remembered flashed across the screen.
The tears began to form in the bottom of the eighth inning. The crowd came to its feet as Brett marched to the plate like it had in his three previous at bats. Indians pitcher Jeremy Hernandez threw a fastball Brett swung at and missed for strike one. A breaking pitch yielded a harmless foul ball for strike two.
Knuckles turned white. A young girl stood on her chair and yelled, "Get a hit George."
That is exactly what happened. Brett singled past a diving second baseman, driving in Kevin Koslofski with the tying run.
As Brett reached first base, a roar of applause filled the air. Another man who hadn't stood and cheered all evening jumped to his feet waving his fist in the air. Fans threw toilet-paper rolls from the upper deck of the stadium like they did after the final out was recorded in the 1985 World Series.
The stadium shook.
Brett moved to second after Bob Hamlin was walked. Manager Hal McRae then made the decision to replace Brett with a pinch runner, Phil Hiatt.
Fans gave Brett yet another standing ovation as he jogged off the field.
Even after the ninth-inning hit by Koslofski that gave the Royals avbattery, the fans wanted to see more of their long-time hero. So Brett took a seat in a golf cart and was chaufeured around what one of the many signs displayed called "The house that Brett built."
He rode past first base, where he played from 1987 to 1990. He rode past the Royals bullpen in right field where he ran sprints before games for 21 years. He rode beside the right-center field wall where he hit a double in 1980 that put him over the infamous 400 mark.
He finished his ride by stopping the cart at home plate, laying on the ground and giving the plate a kiss.
Tears of happiness. Tears of joy.
Thanks for the memories, George
Brett RBI highlights home finale
Royals eke out win in ninth
Todd Selfen is the associate sports editor for
the Kansan
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — George Brett drove in the tying run in the eighth inning with his last swing in the Royals Kauffman Stadium, and Kevin Koslofski drove in the game-winner in the ninth as the Kansas City Royals beat the Cleveland Indians 3-2 last night.
Felix Jose drew a leadoff walk in the ninth from Jeremy Hernandez (6-3). Keith Miller singled Jose to third before Brett Mayne was intentionally walked, loading the bases for Koslofski, who singled for the victory.
After the game, Brett took a ride in a golf cart around the stadium he starred in for 20 years to the cheers of the crowd.
Jeff Montgomery (7-5) was the winner in relief.
Brett's single with two outs in the eighth scored Koslofski, who had singled.
It was Brett's 1,595th RBI, tying Mike Schmidt for 22nd place on the all-time list, and his 3,153rd hit, passing Paul Waner for 11th place all-time.
The Royals trailed 2-0 in the eighth when Mayne doubled with one out off starter Jose Mesa. Koslofki followed with his single, and right fielder Wayne Kirby bobbled the ball, allowing Koslofki to take second.
Hernandez then relieved Mesa and struck out Brian McRae before Brett thrilled the sellout crowd with one more late-game heroic.
Brett, who won three batting titles in three different decades, was honored in pre-game ceremonies that delayed the start of the game almost 15 minutes.
Kansas City starter Hipolito Picharro gave up only four hits through eight innings, striking out three and walking one, and giving up two runs in the fourth. Jim Thome and Albert Belle singled leading off and went to second on a throwing error by right fielder Jose.
Kansas City goes to Texas for three games to finish the season while the Indians go home for the last three games to be played in Cleveland Stadium before it is demolished.
Thome scored on Paul Sorrento's infield out and Belle came home on Sam Horn's sacrifice fly.
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — No one should have been the least bit surprised when George Brett delivered yet another clutch hit in his last home at-bat last night.
With a kiss to home plate, No.5 says goodbye
Brett's eight-inning single tied the game for Kansas City, and the Royals scored in the ninth for a 3-2 victory over the Cleveland Indians.
After the game Brett was driven around the field in a golf cart following a brief fireworks show as a crowd of more than 37,000 stood and cheered.
Brett, who played all 20 of his seasons in Kansas City, kissed home plate at the end of the ride.
Royals players wore their uniform socks hiked up old-fashioned style in tribute to Brett, who occasionally wore his that way.
"I'm sure that this is a special moment that I will always remember," he said. "The fans have been very appreciative over the years. It's just a very warm feeling."
"I'll do that sometimes on Sunday games or on getaway games," said Brett, who went 1-for-4 last night. "We may have looked ugly out there."
KC
but I've always said it isn't a beauty contest out there, it's a war."
George Brett
Manager Hal McRae, who played with Brett for 15 years, said he doubled he would ever see another player like him.
"They don't put good wood in them anymore," McRae said. "He has a knack of getting it done. He has a knack for getting the clutch hit. He gets the city excited. He gets the fans involved.
Brett was honored before the game with a tape played on the Kauffman Stadium Jumbotron of the highlights of his career, including the 1980 home run in Game 3 of the 1980 playoffs that put the Royals in their first World Series and the Pine Tar game.
He was given a standing ovation when his name was announced in the lineup and a longer ovation when the tape was over and he was shown live in the dugout.
His teammates then took the field and presented him with a set of jet skis, a piece of the AstroTurf that Brett abrasions and a signed iersey.
"You're the greatest person we've ever known," said Jamie Quirk, a Royals coach and Brett's best friend. "It's been an incredible honor to have been able to play with you."
Brett was in a jolly mood, thanking the fans; Muriel Kauffman, wife of the late Royals owner Ewing Kauffman; and the board of directors, with whom he will now work as vice president of baseball operations.
Long lines formed well before game time for the 5,000 general admission tickets — the only tickets left. When the gates opened, the fans ran to get the choice seats.
A banner hanging over the right field wall said: "No. 5. Enough said."
Brett was unemotional as he prepared to close out his team's home season.
"I think I'll have a lot more butterflies in the sixth, seventh or eighth inning at Texas in anticipation of my last at-bat ever," he said. "I was a lot more nervous before the seventh game of the World Series.
THOMAS SCHNEIDER
Doug Hesse/KANSAN
Jason Schreiber, Kansas pitcher and outfielder, hits a pop fly to center field. The Jayhawks played a doubleheader last night against Brown Mackie Community College of Kansas City, Kan. Schreiber pitched four-inning shutout in the second game.
Jayhawks whip Cougars
Aggressive Kansas play a key to wins
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Despite defeating Brown Mackie College of Kansas City, Kan., 4-1 in game one and 21-4 in game two yesterday, it took the Kansas baseball team 12 innings to wear the Cougars down.
Kansas coach Dave Bingham said the team did not wear down Brown Mackle until the sixth inning of game two, when Kansas exploded for 10 runs. In that inning, the Jayhawks had six of their 17 hits in the game.
"We haven't had any batting practice," he said. "Today was the first time. We didn't have many RBI hits the first game, but we had a lot of well-hit RBI balls in the second game."
In game one, Kansas used its aggressive offense to score runs. The Jayhawks tried for extra bases on several occasions, and they had two stolen bases.
"That's our style," Bingham said. "We like to have a pressure offense by the hitter and the runner."
"I was the most pleased with Baird," Bingham said. "He really pitched well and followed our system. It was good because he was the one we were most worried about."
Bingham said sophomore Clay Baird pitched well in game one. Baird pitched the first four innings, giving up no hits, no runs and striking out four.
Bingham said sophomore catcher Ted Meadows did an outstanding job calling pitches with Baird in game one.
Even though Kansas played a junior college, Baird said it was easy to stay focused during the game.
"It's still a chance to pitch," he said "A team's a team."
For freshman Jason Schreiber, yesterday was his first game that he pitched as a Jayhawk. Schreiber pitched the last four innings of game two, giving up no runs. But he hit a batter and walked one. Schreiber said he was a little wild.
"Jason has a lot of talent," Bingham said. "And that allows him to overcome mistakes, and he made a lot of mistakes."
Bingham said Schreiber did not fulfill the team's expectations as well as Baird did.
"I was a little nervous," Schreiber said. "It was kind of exciting. It was a nice change from practices."
Bingham said he was pleased with his team's overall performance.
"I was really worried about this game because we have a lot of young players out there," he said. "The kids played hard for 14 innings."
Separate tournaments for team this weekend
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
The women's tennis team will split up this weekend, with two of the top
The women's team up this weekend, with players traveling to Jackson, Miss., and the rest of the team competing in Manhattan in Kansas State's Fall Invitational game.
WOMEN'S TENNIS
Juniors Rebecca Jensen and Nora Koves are seeded as the No.1 doubles team going into the Intercollegiate Tennis Association's National Clay Court Tournament. Jensen will also be competing in the singles division ranked No.4.
Invitational tournament.
Jensen and Koves did not travel with the team last weekend so they could compete this weekend in a more important tournament, coach Chuck Merzbacher said. The NCAA restricts tennis players to 30 dates of competition for the entire year, and the University allows any varsity athlete to miss eight days of class. Koves and Jensen left westerdav morning.
Senior Abby Woods said the rest of the team would miss Jensen and Koves this weekend.
"They represent what KU tennis is about," she said. "They put out a good picture for other schools to see."
Players are invited to special tournaments like the one in Mississippi only by qualifying with the ITA. Jensen qualified two ways. She is one of the top two singles players in the region and an ITA tennis all-American. Koves and Jensen are the allAmerican No.1 doubles team in the region.
This tournament is the first leg of the national collegiate circuit. It is the only tournament of the four to be played on clay. The other three tournaments are the Rivieria All-American Championship, the National Indoor Championship and the NCAA Championship.
Merzbacher said they were favored heavily to win the tournament.
The usual tennis court is hard and Merzbach said the slower surface of clay was not advantageous to Jensen and Koves' fast-paced style.
He said he had high expectations for the players traveling to the K-State Invitational as well.
Despite the slower, unfamiliar surface, Merzbacher said the duo should win.
The Jayhawks will compete against Oklahoma State, Tyler Junior College in Texas and K-State. Merzbacher said that these teams did not present the same level of competition as the teams in last weekend's tournament at William and Mary but that every player would be challenged at her position.
Woods said she wanted to keep improving and using each match as an opportunity to work on what would make her a better player.
The team has next weekend off but will be back on the courts in Bloomington, Ind., Oct. 15-17 for the Indiana Fall Invitational.
Kansas golfer tied for first after two rounds
The Kansas men's golf team was in third place yesterday after round two of the Topy Cup in Fukushima Prefecture, Japan. With 610 strokes, the team trailed tournament leader Nihon University, which had 578 strokes, and Kent State, which had 593 strokes, in the three-round, 15-team tournament.
Kansanstaff report
Kansas senior Matt Gogel is tied
Gogel, the Jayhawks top golfer, is followed by senior John Hess, who is tied for 30th and senior Cassy Brozek at 34th. Junior Tom Sims and senior Jeff Moeillerare also playing for the Jayhawks. The final round will be played today.
for first place with Nihon's K. Yokoo. Gogel shot 71 during both rounds on the par 72 Tanagura Country Club, which is located 150 miles northeast of Tokyo.
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Thursday, September 30,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Injuries continue to ail Jayhawks
75
Defense strapped by long disabled list
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
Senior center Dan Schmidt hikes the ball to junior quarterback Fred Thomas during practice at Memorial Stadium. Schmidt was listed as questionable for Saturday's Colorado State game because of a recurring ankle injury.
Murphy's Law has taken over on the Kansas football team. Anything that could go wrong has gone wrong for the Jayhawks.
The Jayhawk defense has been affected by numerous injuries so far this season, and the situation has not improved in the last week. The top four defensive ends on this week's depth chart are not the same four players who were listed on the depth chart before the season opener against Florida State.
Junior Brent Willeford and redshirt freshman Jason Brown are scheduled to start at the defensive end positions in Saturday's 1 p.m. game against Colorado State at Memorial Stadium. Willeford was switched over from tight end before the Michigan State game, and Brown recently returned to action after suffering from a knee injury.
Senior Brian Christian and junior Sylvester Wright started at defensive end against the Seminoles in the Kickoff Classic. Wright fractured his kneecap inthe Florida State game and is listed as questionable for this week's game. Last week Christian, who had been bothered by several nagging injuries and ailments throughout his Jayhawk career, decided to give up playing football for Kansas.
"Brian and I sat down last week and we both agreed that it was probably better to go on than going out there for two plays every day and getting injured," Kansas coach Glen Mason said at his weekly press conference yesterday. "I told him he might as well concentrate on his academics and graduate."
Christian is the latest Jayhawk casu
alty on the defense. Senior free safety Kwamie Lassiter, senior defensive end Ty Moeder and freshman cornerback Charles Davis each went down with season-ending injuries earlier this season.
"Most of the time I underestimate our injury situation because I want to talk about the guys that are going to play, not the guys that aren't going to play," Mason said. "We're in bad shape injury-wise."
Mason then pulled out this season's team photograph and rattled off the names of 22 players who have suffered injuries this season.
"We've had our share, and we'll march on," Mason said. "We'll get the ones ready that are there, get them to play hard, coach them well and do the best we can."
Willeford and Brown will be backed up at defensive end by freshmen Kevin Kopp and Chris Jones. Senior Guy Howard and sophomore Kevin
Polian, who both started this season likely will miss the Colorado State game because of injuries.
The move to defensive end was an unexpected one for Willeford, who was the third-string tight end at the beginning of the season. To help in his adjustment to the position, Willeford studied film of Howard and Wright.
"They have been helping me out alot since they know I am a little wet behind the ears at the position," Willford said. "They have been coaching me up and giving me pointers. They are our true starters, and if they were healthy, our defense would be a lot more sound."
Mason said he would like to keep senior defensive tackle Chris Maumalanga out of Saturday's game. Maumalanga has been bothered by an ankle injury he suffered against Utah.
Sophomore Daryl Jones will replace Maumalanga in the starting lineup.
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842-4336
Act Now to Enjoy Added Benefits
Low Cost Equipment
Reduced Airtime Rates
Reduced Activation Cost
CELLULAR ONE
The Official Provider of Cellular Service to the KU Coaches
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursdav. September 30,1993
13
One Stop Source for All Laser Printer Needs
865-0505
Laser Logic
Sales•Supplies•Rentals
Paradise
and Banquet
Prestigious Luncheon & Dinner
865-0505
Classified Directory
100s
Announcements
108 Personal
101 Business
Personal
12 Announcements
13 Entertainment
14 Lost and Found
Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner
728 Massachusetts • 842-5199
200s Employment
208 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
225 Training Services
Services 235 Typing Services
Classified Policv
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, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
Y
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 (FHA) and its enforcement, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
100s Announcements
REMEMBER!
110 Bits. Personals
REMEMBER!
Costumes on 2nd floor for theme parties
and of course! Howevee them on up!
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass-Downstow
KU Women! Mary Kay Cosmetics free facial and
makeover. All new fall colors, personalized
selection. No resale.
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
Hops, Pendant & More!
For Guys and Gals
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass-Downstow
400s Real Estate
408 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
Add professional polish to class projects, maps and posters. (up to 25 inches wide)
Plastic Laminating
Howell Creative Studios 1203 Iowa 842-9289
corner of Orchard Lane & Iowa 1 BLK south of Capitol Fed.
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am:4:30pm
Saturday 8am:11:30am
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8:40am-3:00
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
120 Announcements
G AWAY TO PRAIRIEWOODS: Treat your sweetie to a day of relaxed hospitality. Massage, outdoor spa, healthy foods, trees and privacy! 863-3137 for rates/reservations.
Interested in Volunteer Literacy Work?
Tutra Training Workshop
Sunday, Oct. 3rd.
11:30 a.m - 4:30 p.m.
North Dakota Kansas Union
For More information Call Students Tutoring
at 844-360-844 or 844-1528
LODGING* + LIFTS* + PARTIES* + PICNICS* + TAXES*
JANUARY 2-16, 1994 • 5, 6 or 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT* $199
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK*
TELLURIDE
CHRISTMAS SKI BREAKS
* FREE 1/2 DAY
LIFT TICKET!
MUST BOOK BY 10/15
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
1·800·SUNCHASE
-Kansan Classified:864-4358-
130 Entertainment
MALE EXOTIC DANCER available for birthdays
etc. by sending a coupon to the funniest
gift offer rates! 864-6513
Drummer needed for Lawrence based band. Must be able to play weeks and some weekdays.
30US Merchandise
305 For Sale
304 Auto Sales
306 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
140 Lost & Found
nDIPLUX A Cyberdelic Dance Experience,
Sat. Oct. 2, J Day Ray Velasquez, DJ Roland. All
alcohol/acreol free, 5pm*, OUTHOUSE, 4 miles E.
of Mass. Str. on 15th.
Found-Gray Black tabby male call: 749-8295
10th and Misa.
Found: A pair of Sunglasses near Robinson.
Call please 749-4506, ask for Rick.
Male Female
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS
* No 30 Starring
* *No 10 Starring*
* Flexible schedules
* CALL: 425-822-9101*
CALL: 425-822-9101*
Adams Alumni Center needs Dishwasher AM & PM. Flexible hours, 3 days a week. Position available immediately. Apply in person, no phone calls 1266 Adore Avenue.
Adams Alumni Center needs AM pantry schedule for 8-4days a week. Flexible schedule. Position available immediately. Apply in person 1266 Oread Avenue.
ALASKA EMPLOYMENT - Fisheries. Earn up to $2000/$4000 + on m fishing vessels or canneries. Many companies provide transport and room & board. For more info; i call 1-286-5155-1155.
Babyitter wanted 3-15 M-F, 2 boys, ages 7 & 9
Please call 849-5329.
Cater Caters, Kansas and Burge Union Catering
3:09 p.m. $4.25 per hour, pay cash Monday following employment. Must follow dress code. Apply
to the K.C.A. onneloune Office, Level 2.
Kansas Uni Building, EOE
Clinical psychologist, full-time or eligible for Kansas licensure, with established experience in sexual abuse services to children; psychoeducational groups; clinical interventions; psychological evaluations; and interdisciplinary team operations. Experience in design and delivery of managed care services. Req. Master's degree orferred. Applications accepted until position is filled. Send resumes and letter of interest to Outpatient Director, Bertash Community Health Center, Kansas City, MO. Email kansas6444.EOE, Open until completed, EOE.
CAMPUS REP WANTED
The nation's leader in college marketing is seeking an energetic, entrepreneurial student for the position of camp rep. No sales involved. Place advertising on bulletin boards for companies such as American Express and Hewlett. Choose Great part time job or Make Choice courses. 4-8 hours per week Required Call
(800) 487-2434 EXT. 4444
Day care needs experienced person. Must be available in the morning. $5/hr. 841-7581
Domino's Pizza now has 5 delivery positions available. Apply after 4pm, any day all shifts avail. Flexible hrs. average driver earns $7-$10 an hour. 941-8002.
Campus Rep Program
American Passage Media Corp.
215 W. Harrison, Seattle, WA 98119
407-857-3600
EARN $15 CASH!
$
$
$
RECEIVE $15 CASH TODAY FOR A 45 MINUTE BLOOD PLASMA DONATION
IT'S QUICK, SAFE AND EASY
STUDY WHILE DONATING
DONATING PLASMA SAVES LIVES
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
WALK-INS WELCOME
Hours:
Mon - Fri 9am-6pm
Sat 10am-3pm
Entry level marketing positioning opening for people to work P/7 in K.C. Lawrence and Topena. Get your foot in the door now! Excl $$$$ Full Training 541-0795
Executive Director, Graduate Student Council. Applicant should be knowledgeable about campus academic programs and University governance structure. Successful candidate will manage the college's strategic planning, recruitment, governance, and Regents; and, develop and implement the policies of the Graduate Represe-
nteration Department. Graduate student skills essential. Must be KU graduate student. 25% position for fall semester 1993. 50% position thereafter. 12 month appointment. Salary $20/month at KU. Apply to the Office of Academic and three references to Search Committee, GSC 426 Kansas Union, University of Kansas, 60045. Application materials is noon October 8, 2009. EOE.
816 W.94'* *Suit B*
(Behind Lord Holter F47)
749-5750
Evening and weekend CNA needs to work with
their clients. Visit at Dogues
County Visiting Center 843-7378.
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
NABI BIOMEDICAL CENTER
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
$15 Today $30 This week
For sale skip cake buffet. Wanted hungry students to
buy. 806-297-4311. Skipcake $360, Pizzia $360,
Iow. Mon-Sat 11am-1:3pm.
FUND RAISER
WALK-INS WELCOME!
By donating your life saving blood plasma
Raise $500 in % days. Groups, Clubs, motivated individuals 1-900-785-365 ext. 101
Kansas and Burge Union hiring part-time, hourly for Fall Semester. Many jobs in Food Service, Catering and Custodial with varying schedules. Come to Personnel Office, Level 5, Kansas Union
Live in nany play 7:30-8:30 M-F, $400 monthly + room & board, vacation & sick leave. Kids 7, G 6. 4. House keeping & cooking duties. P/t students accepted, need references, 843-3887.
Martini's steak veal pasta NOW HIRING FULL STAFF
Martini's
Ourhighvolumerestaurant
Our high volume restaurant specializes in quality, customer service and, hospitality.
at Johnson County's Hottest New Restaurant at 117th & Roe! Brought to you by MICHAEL FORBES RESTAURANTS
17
Great wages and benefits!
We are now accepting applications for:
*SERVERS
*BUSSSERS
*COOKS
*DISHWASHERS
*HOST/HOSTESS
*BARTENDERS
Looking for a change second semester? Come live in our loving home. Free room, board plus salary. Work 5 hours a day while getting your education and be a mother's helper. Job consists of babySitting 2 year old and newborn, light housekeeping, errand-running, etc. If interested, please send in 100 words or less. You are the best fit for this job. P.O. Box 162, Lawrence KS 6049
9-5p.m., Mon.-Fri. at Parkway 600 on the Country Club Plaza 600 Ward Parkway, K.C.M.O. 64112
Apply in person
Now accepting applications for quality minded, dependable individuals for part-time banquet service. Willing to help the right people. Morning and afternoon appointments. Apply at Adams Alumni Center, 1286 Oread Ave.
Part-time assistant manager need immediate on-site contact Peery at 814-8468, mornin' out.
Part-time dependable delivery person. Valid license and heavy lifting ability required. Some experience. Part-time maintenance person needed for Local Management Co. Apply in person, 2-5 pm, weekdays.
Part-time, live in childcare in exchange for rent. experience necessary. References required. 843-183
SALES REPS WANTED. Develop your own marketing strategy and go sell. Prefer marketing or sales majors. Product to sell in mail-order kosher restaurants. Send resume to 314-567-8689 before 11 am and after 1 a.m.
Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Previous food service and supervisory experience mandatory. Start at $2.50 per hour. Future pay raises based on performance. Up to $6.25 per hour. 20-30 hours. per week. Most eveningly and weekends. Apply at Schumm or McCormick M-P-M-49m-4pm. (Upstarts above Smokehouse)
PART-TIME SUPERVISOR WANTED
SALES REEPS WANTED: Develop your own marketing strategy and go sell. Prefer marketing or local catering. Work on a mail-order catered food店. Work on community. Call 814-357-9563 before 11:00am and after 1:30pm
SALES-College Students. Here's your chance!
Work with our staff to help people Work.
your own calls. Call (818) 387-4532
SPORTS OFFICIALS NEEDED. Intramural refee are needed for Volleyball and Floor Hockey Leagues. No experience necessary. $4.70-45.90. Call 864-3546 for details.
235 Typing Services
STUDENT ASSISTANT IN ENGINEERING/MAINENANCE. Deadline: 09/30/93. Salary: $4.35/hour. Duties include pickup and delivery of inventory check inventory levels; data entry; assist technicians in light mechanical and electronic repair; and other duties as assigned. Required qualification: Bachelor's degree in a field of knowledge of Konsas, demonstrated ability to work with customers, good oral and written communication skills, 6 months previous hardware experience, available to work 16 to 20 hours a week. In to 4 months previous experience in the office which is available in Room 202 of the Computer Center. EO/AA Employer.
Everyday 7:00-1:00, 11:30-5:00, 10:00-2:00. Must
be operated on-site.
Related field. Sunshine Airline Pre-School #42422
Sunshine Airline Pre-School #42422
Everyday 7:00-10:00; 11:35-5:30; or 10:00-2:00. Must have experience and be a Junior or Senior in child related field. Sunhouses Acres Pre-School. 749-3532. Teachers Aide for Infant Room 1:00-4:55 weekdays $4.35/hr. Also need Substitute Children's Learning Center 205 N. Michigan EOE
TRAVALE RÉEL !!! SIRMING BREAKAU Quantile
TAVALLE FREEL !!! SIRMING BREAKAU Jacqueline,
Lorenza, S. Patricia (Sherwin-Williams)
Fotografie, S. Patricia (Sherwin-Williams)
Statistical support, S. Patricia
Statistical support, S. Patricia
Statistical support, S. Patricia
Statistical support, S. Patricia
Statistical support, S. Patricia
Statistical support, S. Patricia
Statistical support, S. Patricia
Statistical support, S. Patricia
Statistical support, S. Patricia
Statistical support, S. Patricia
A REVOLUTION WOULD MEDIENT
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749
Experienced organist will play for weddings at Chapel. Call Carol at 841-1937 and leave a message.
225 Professional Services
Experienced teacher (French native speaker, former G.T.A. in German) can help you get a good job and learn French. You will receive a French German class. Flexible hrs and reasonable rates. Call Lambat at 814-6447 (leave me).
A confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Birthright 843-4021. Free pregnancy testing
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor训读型 documents into accurate pages, letter untype. type: 943-200-8000
Are you Makin' the Grade?
WORD BLASTING
For all your TVFIP needs
For all your TVFIP needs
Tutor: BS in Eng, Ed, MA in Eng, a yrs. ESL
teach exp. I work with AEC courses, all EG.
classes, foreign students all papers. Arthur, 8i-3313 5 - 10 pm.
Word processing, applications, term papers, di-
sertation writing, billing, consulting, job
robs available. Master's or bachelor's
robs available. Masters or bachelor's
robs available.
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
CC Desktop Publishing: Resumes, Cover Letters,
Brochures & Fluores. Term Paper, Newletters.
Booklet Plans.
Meadowpark top desk publishing call 823-6033
Protype - fast, reliable service, professional quality.
Any kind of typing accepted. Call today at 941-
6242
Macintosh repairs and upgrades
Friendly, Affordable, In-Home Service
The Mac Doctors 842-0848
X
Prompt abortion and contraceptive services. Dale L.
Clinton M.D. 841-5716.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
305 For Sale
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
Good RES1MES get job interviews!
300s Merchandise
Rick Frydman, Attorney
833 Missouri 843-4023
J
GUITAR SHOW
Kansas City fall git show Oct. 2 & heart of America Center 41W W. Maple, Ind. MO, Buy sell, trade bring your used musical gear for sale or purchase E5, for show information phone 816-836-7555
TUTORING SERVICE; B32-0925
SOME GROUP PERSONALS may need a
I'll help you make an *A*. Word process, too.
Forfree consultation call
1983 Honda Shadow, $900 OBO. Supersingle
waterbed $70. Call 823-9281.
Lawrence's Best and Biggest BOOK SALE
1993 Fender Stratocaster with hard case and
accessories for B&M, Call 841-7762
Most Books 35 to 50 Cents
Sat., Oct 2, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Fri., Oct 1, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.
Sun., Oct 3, Noon-5 p.m.
"Half Price Day"
Mon., Oct 4, 5-9 p.m.
"$3 a Grocery Bag Night"
7th and Kentucky Lawrence Public Library Garage and a Big Tent
Sponsored by Friends of the Lawrence Public Library
200 gallon and 160 gallon aquarium both with tops,
and some accessories $250 = $350 = $450. Also a complete
30 gallon set v/ hood, lights, filters,
storage tank, and water heaters with best offers.
Leave message for Max.
Beds, desks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
90% Mass.
Body Boutique Membership through 4/9/94.
129 call Stuart at 843-6707
Quantrill's Flea Market
open every Fri, Sat. & Sun.
10AM-5PM 811 New Hampshire
842-6616 Downtown
Color photos of 62-913 Tornado wallcloud over KU campus. Set of 12 or enlargements. Framed and unframed. From $45 and up, call 749-2923.
computer system including Hyundai SuperMega, VGA monitor, PANasonic KX-P1080 NLQ printer, lots of software, manuals, all cables etc. Currently up and running. 841-7013 leave message
dorm-sized refrigerator, 3.4 cuf (larger model),
new, 800, call 864-2441, late.
Fall Clearance: All adult tapes on sale $12.95 and
$14.95, with discounts of 890-905, or Mirada
Video Too, 1910, Haskell 841-7540.
HARTKRE BASS AMPLIFIER 50 watts exc. cond.
and sound $300 832-8369 Chris. Leave a message.
Power Book 145B 4/80. Opening price winner
card number. Call 310-765-3244, all documents
packaging. etc. $130 841-4839
RT airline ticket from KCI to NASHVILLE. You choose dates, issuing agent, or whenever.
Sharp PC-450 laptop computer. IBM compatible.
Includes owner's manual, word processing program and power bar. $300 Call 842-9816 Ask for Amy or leave message.
340 Auto Sales
"73 VW Bus, reliable, good condition. New engine,
transmission and new brakes. $1200 b.o. c. call
(866) 423-2599."
370 Want to Buy
Cash for boy Scouts patches badges, uniforms. We are scout-saluted and military collection. Located in Madison, WI.
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
Over the Edge
2 BR apartment on KU bus route. 830m/率. Perfect for 1 or 2. Call 7.249 or 842-3416.
2 rooms for rent for non-trad. female(s) available
Oct. 1. $200 +Util. Live 10 min. of Lawrence.
Private country home-kids and pets O.K. K768016-
leave message.
Naismith Halls' services give students the competitive edge.
24 hr. computer center
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
very nice! Interested? Call 842-4455.
Fitness room
Front door bus service
Available Nov. 1 at West Hills apts. 1012 Emery
Rd. Spacious, 3-bdrm. unfurnished w/w/bal-
nard. Fully equipped. laundry close to home.
pets & on bus route. $405/month. Water paid.
841-380-745 or 842-384-738.
Available now, 2 bedroom at 912 fenneses, small petok $425, plus utilities 794-7568.
Available Oct. 1, one bdm, newly renovated base parking area, street park street parking area, hard water pn. No. pets $69,841-7014
Dine anytime meals
Weekly maid service
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS 2040 Heatherwood
NAISMITH Hall
- 2 Bedroom, 1 $1/2$ Bath $425
- 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath $550
Call Now!843-4754
1800 Naismith Drive (913) 843-8559
Choice room in large quiet residence. Utilities used except phone, private bath. On bus route, near EFJons on 32R1, $436/mo. Call A1 865-2499
Extra nice and quiet, two bedrooms, including central air, dishwasher and low utilities. No pets. $725 Spanish Crest Apartments 841-6868
Newly remodeled 1 bedroom on campus. Water & gas paid Call 841-8469.
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and
wardrobe from KU. Off-street parking.
No pets. KU 841-9500.
gas pair. Call 811-8496.
Rm. avail, for fem. in 2 story townhouse. Close to campus & on bus rent. $24/mo. + mtl. Sept. rent already paid. Lease to May 31. 749-7234.
430 Roommate Wanted
THE UNIVERSITY DAIIX KANSAN
How to schedule an ad:
Country house quiet-300/person per month. Need a car 10 minutes from campus. Call 543-3361. Earnings $270/week.
- Byphone: 864-4358
Female Grad. student w/ j1 or y0 old girl & cat looking for roommate to share nics 1 Bed, bodge 2, book from campus w/ hwd firs & music studio. No smappers/motors. $200 + /l call. Call 864-1475
Male or Female roommate needed for 3 bedroom house tuition $145 = will 2 bathrooms, on KU L
**Personale roommate (a) needed to BR 2, BR 8,**
**150 cm off. on KU bus route. $303/88 +/-**
**10% off. on KU bus route. $303/88 +/-**
- by phone: 904-4358
Ads phoned in may be required to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
Looking for responsible roommate to share 481, 1/2 bath, 2 level duplex apt. @ 24th & Ousdahl w/ 2 males, 1 female. Have washed/dryer. Rent $162.50/mo + /+ until starting Oct. 1. On KU bus luggage to Office, Dillona. Please call 822-1940 or 749-5119 for more info. A non-discriminatory household.
- b & bu Mailal! 11.90$Staffer Film l anwarne US $B.A.S.F.*
Responsible, non-smoking female student to share
their knowledge in a very quick集会. $162.50 + \frac{1}{4}$
times 3 = $97.50.
Wanted graduate student to share house with 2 male graduate students. Non-smoker, no pets. Rent $233/mo. + 1/2 util. For info. Call Richard @ 832-830-5762.
Nest & reliable, to live in 5 bdr house w/ 4 f-1-
$190/mo. + /u/l. Very close to campus w/ 843-816.
N哥/N Grad. Student needed for now. Nice, quiet
room. WIFI, A/C, A/C close to campus. Call 846-7022 evening.
Roommate wanted: Responsible female to share two 2 BR, jacuzzi, bathuit, DW, dCable pd, very affordable $270/mo + 1/2 utils. Pets O.K. Call 841-4874 leave message.
Stop by the Kansas offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charge-on
MasterCard or Visa.
Classified Information and order form
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
When canceling a classified class that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of again lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
Rates
at per line per day
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00
Num. of insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
365 for sale
340 auto sales
360 miscellaneous
Cost per line per day
1X 1.2M 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30+X
2.05 1.55 1.05 .35 .75 .50
1.90 1.15 .80 .78 .65 .45
1.85 1.05 .75 .65 .60 .40
1.75 .90 .65 .60 .55 .35
Classifications
140 lest & found
20 help wasted
25 professional services
25 twine services
105 personal
118 business personalis
129 announcements
130 entertainment
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | |
3 | | | | |
4 | | | | |
5 | | | | |
370 want to buy
405 for rent
438 roommate wanted
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper___
Total ad cost:___ Classification___
Name:___ 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 charing your ad:
Account number:
Expiration Date:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
MasterCard
Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 60445
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1993 FireWorks, Inc./Oat by Universal Press Syndicate
9-30
Jason
"Hey. Quit complaining. ... We all live out in the sticks."
14
Thursday, September 30, 1993
1105 MASSACHUSETTS *
749-9750
LAWRENCE'S
BEST!
TIM PAN ALLEY
HP DeskJet 600 Printer
$335.00
HP DeskJet 500C Printer
$435.00
HP DeskJet 500C Printer
$639.00
ComputerLand
841-4611
1105 MASSACHUSETTS
LAWRENCE'S
BEST!
JIM PAN ALEY
749-9750
The Power of Essential Oils
Salon.
The Power of Essential Oils Ever since the time of the Pharaoh's, essential oils of flowers and plants have been used to promote Health, Beauty and Well Being. The latest scientific research has confirmed this ancient knowledge, revealing the amazing power of scents to influence our moods and emotions, to relax or stimulate the Body, Mind and Spirit. Aroma Vera is the very first company to bring a full line of true aromatherapy products to the United States, importing the finest quality oils from all over the
Beat the Clock.
As of August 28, Kyle Owen
joined our staff of Hairstylists.
Call Kyle for an appointment at
Beat the Clock.
B43-5088 *B43 New Hampshire
M-F 10-7* Gat 9-5
TIGI • LANZA • REDKEN • AROMA VERA
1
- Tired of making the same mistakes over and over again? In relationships? At school?
- Having a hard time completing assignments,
* straining focused on goals, achieving success?
- staying focused on goals, achieving success?
- Suffer from depression, anxiety, or a drug problem? Concerned about sexual issues?
- Want prompt help from a professional with any of these or other personal problems?
- Short and longer term individual psychotherapy.
- Psychological evaluations.
- Insurance accepted.
John B. Greene, Ph.D.
Licensed Psychologist
1012 Mass. Street, Suite 209
832-2134
Psychotherapie auch in deutscher Sprache.
PRE-BUSINESS STUDENTS
who will complete the minimum requirements for admission by the end of the Fall Semester
APPLICATIONS FOR SPRING 1993
ADMISSION TO THE
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
ARE DUE
FRIDAY, 1 OCTOBER IN
206 SUMMERFIELD
APPLICATIONS ARE AVAILABLE IN
206 SUMMERFIELD
864-3844
ENATION DEVOTION FAMILY LOVE GRIE SPAIR ABANDON SACRIFICE FAITH HONG Y VOWS STRENGTH PAIN LONELINESS.CMPT OBLIGATION DUTY ALLEGIANCE ABS EFFERING DISTRESS ESTRANGEMENT ALIE
Madame Butterfly
ON FAMILY LOVE GRIEF AGONY DESPAIR
ON SACRIFICE FAITH HONOR LOYALTY VO
RENGTH PAIN LONELINESS CONTEMPT C
ON DUTY ALLEGIANCE ABSENCE SUFFERI
ESS ESTRANGEMENT ALLENATION DEVOT
Come see a performance of Puccini's classic, "Madame Butterfly," at The Lyric Opera, and you'll hear a Butterfly's voice soar with the pain of her tragic love for a United States Navy lieutenant.
range from $8 to $37 and can be purchased at the Lytic ticket office. Seats are selling quickly, so call 417-7344 soon to order tickets.
Final performances will be October 1 and 3. Tickets
the performance on Friday,
October 1st is sponsored by
Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Miller.
THE FOUR STARS
Lyric Opera. Get Caught in the Act. 1029 Central, Kansas City, MO 64105
Student rush $4.00 with ID, 30 minutes prior to curtain.
Financial assistance provided by the Missouri Arts Council and the National Endowment for the Arts. The Lyric fees USAF
Secret Garden (G), 4:30 p.m.
today; Undercover Blues (PG-13),
7:25, 9:35 tonight; Manhattan
Murder Mystery (PG), 7:10, 9:40
tonight; The Fugitive (PG-13),
7:05, 9:55 tonight; The Program
(R), 7:20, 9:45 tonight; True
Romance (R), 7:15, 9:50 tonight
Continued from Page 9.
ENTERTAINMENT
CALENDAR:
Liberty Hall Cinema
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
642 Massachusetts St.
Orlando (PG-13), 5:15, 7:15, 9:15
p.m. today, tomorrow, with an
additional 3:15 p.m. Saturday,
Sunday
Cinema Twin
31st and Iowa St.
Hard Target (R), 5, 7:30, 9:30
SBM seeking SF. If you’re tired of games and ready for a "real" romance, are fun-loving, exciting, and love to watch, look ye no further and get ready for a real romance! a waiting only fine ladies need护应 .#26283
Hillcrest Theater
Ninth and Iowa Streets
Cool Runners, (PG), 5:15, 7:30,
9:30 p.m.
Ninth and Iowa Streets'
SCANDINAVIAN RESEARCHER, 30, 6'5", wishes to meet an intelligent, mature and attractive SDF with a great sense of humor. Hope you'll enjoy intellectual conversation, being outdoors, watching wildlife, eating out and listening to live music. I've learned so much from our time here we've learned that Lawrence, KS, seems to consist of kids or married couples—hope this ad proves me wrong. Call box #18107
My girlfriend has skipped town, and I am seeking a female companion. Please help, #43360
Jurassic Park (PG-13), 5, 7:20,
9:40 p.m.
Bronx Tail (R), 5, 7:20, 9:40 p.m.
Age of Innocence (PG), 5, 8 p.m.
The Good Son (R), 5:15, 7:30,
9:30 p.m.
35 year old graduate student would like to meet a
student who is student who is serious and
likes to have #4208
5'10" 160 lbs, attractive, athletic, blonde hair,
blue-eyed, SWM looking for attractive, athletic
woman who likes biking, camping, dancing,
native music, and a monogamous relationship. If
your 21-28 years old, please call. Smokers and bar
flower need not respond #47770
Striking Distance (R), 5:15, 7:30,
9:30 p.m.
14 year grad student from New England is looking for running partner who enjoys cold weather, eating vegetables, reading philosophy, and owns at most one phone number on Jones Albany | Call #2826423. Blond hair and a male seeking land back female to study with and make him happy. Has to enjoy the local music scene @ 49123
MEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
Wooldruff auditorium, level 5 in the Kansas Union
SUA Movies
To check out these ads call 1-900-285-4560 You will be charged $1.95 per minute
21-yr-old SWM 6! 1,18 ls, looking for SWF 19+ that enjoys the finer aspects of life, the outdoors. mt, biking, boarding snow, playing (Music, Funkadelic, & Zoom) t.v., sports and loves road trips. If you fit at least 10 of these give me a call P.S. I hate the Grateful Dead. #44307
22yr. old Asian male seeking companionship with
fult-in loving Asian female who is short, likes sports
and enjoys playing cards and going out for frozen
vouzur. #85236
A small town boy with small town manners who has his feet planted firmly in firmboots, his boots on the ground and his hard work and time in the gym, and his dreams arm reach away. Seeks a girl whose mind, body, spirit and strength are alive; dates that have a possibility of turning to romantic nights, give this visit a call. #82456
5'8" Soll brown sophomore transfer student with a tan seeking friendly female companion. Have a car, will travel. Not a jack but fitness conscious. I am an experienced student that can tutor Math 002 and 101 free of charge. Good company is all that required. #82209
The Beatles' Yellow Submarine (R), midnight Saturday, Sunday
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
PLACE AN AD FREE! Call 864-4358
Aladdin (G), 7, 9:30 p.m. tomorrow, Saturday, with a 2 p.m. Sunday show
♂
Kind, sensitive, earth-loving. Phish-head male
basketball players are a nice addition to such
concerts, late nights in front of the TV and bating cookies in the nude. You must be a
Saturday night. You need 2 Pingers. Serbia girls
need not apply. #82276
Latin lower seeking beautiful American woman to heat up the long nights. Must enjoy shaking all of us on the floor.
Looking for androgynous woman, pleasant, spiritual, growth oriented for experiencing life. I'm receptive, friendly, and good-looking. Age 24. Box 443677
1015 Massachusetts St.
Ambitious grad student seek attractive, mature, N/S female single. 21-27 years old with dark hair (no wavy curls) or short hair, hazel eyes and excellent muscle tone. I have left-of-center political beliefs, am a impassioned classical guitar virtuoso. I am esp. interested in music with intelligence, charm, wit, and sagacity. #8181
Fun, wonderly responsible NS Grad Student seek interesting motivated buxom FGrade/undergrad for drives discussions study sessions, going out, avoiding work and doing what you want to do. Light smoker? okay. Poor? okay. Bad speller? okay call #47580.
Fate made you notice this ad. Now, my hopeful romantic mister thy courage and let this knight become you soulmate. Check the feet and let this air sienn you off your foot. #a3388
I'm looking for a girl that listens to good music like
R.E.M. Costello, or Pearl Jarr, #2672
Hello, I'm fairly tall. Like bluegrass and sports. It *is* in *going* in out, give that number a call. #29467
Ableistic, communicative in good shape, intelligent (somatic) and self-aware; activities: learning, building, New to Area 2a23.
Grad student will love to meet with blood
pressure tests and a knockout body. All replies
are received. #6221
Common abbreviations
M Male A Asian
F Female J Jewish
D Divorced C Christian
S Single C
W White G Gay
B Black L Lesbian
H Hispanic N/S Non-Smoker
Common abbreviations
SDW-21, 6 Ft., 185, muscular, handsome, conservative gentleman seated naturally tanned (Tasian, Hispanic, Mid-Eastern) infant, 18-24 for intimate friendship. Must be pretty, soft hearted and mature. Please, no drug users or promiscuous girls.
Single white male, 23, seeks single white female, 21-24 for casual relationship. I'm $8'11, well built, have it. brown hair, green eyes. I like to work out, mountain bike and ski. I'm looking for someone to go out in the town or sometimes spend a quiet night in my serious but have a quiet sense of humor. **22684**
Single white male 60, brown hair, blue eyes. I am looking for a down to earth, mature woman to drink some beer with. Must have a good age. box 4712, give me a call, mail a good
Single, white male, age 21, brown hair, and blue eyes. Looking for 19 + female for partying, road trips, hanging out, and drinking. Must be spontaneous, plus willing to sit on the cushion all day. Smokers need apply. Skiers a plus, but I'll teach you! Must have a good attitude.
SM 11 '7 looking for SB 18-23. Must be sensitive
humor. Must be outgoing with a good sense of
humor. #1857
SWM. 23. 5"11' Dark So. German, brown eyes.
Bait not all tank, but inlalt music not all foods.
Enjoy dancing in KC, live music and f.l.ozen forget my phone, do you? Seeking mutual back rubs and conversation under the steam of the cupcake machine. #22704
SM seeks for a N/J SF who has and long has wanted a partner who enjoys traveling by car, I like jazz very much and I want a partner who can spend time in the mjuz bar while having glasses of beer.
SWM - seeking good looking, great body, intelligent woman 18-24 years, old who likes to play darts, watch Ren & Stimpy and like beer. No hairy armps or mustaches. #9098
SWIM*V a very motivated person, I like to get involved. My favorite hobby is hunting wild animals. I love the outdoors. Looking for a 18-29岁, old would want to get involved, like
Swim"I'm tall have blonde surfer hair. I look like the blonde guy on the Real World. I enjoy romantic dinners and long夕暹 events. Give me a call, I'd love to meet you. (N/M please). 863997
SWM 5'10 looking for an athletic, outgoing, confident beautiful young woman 20-24 who doesn't need to paint her face before she goes out for the evening or sequestrate in a playground. You can dress up as the outdoors & playing the guitar. If your into one night stands & traveling from bed to bed, call another #.22693
SWM 21 years old's 5 Athlete looking for SWF who likes sports, dancing and having a good time. I am a gentleman that it's looking for someone to share a great friendship with and may be #82166
Tall, dark and handmade law student sees kninks
and bombs iron into Slacker and reggae. #e2318
great friendship and may have more. *earth*
SWM 22 socially conscious strong silent type seeks
intelligent independent and radiant woman to
explore life with. *2#400*
SWM looking for tall mellow women. Recently moved to Lawrence from Eastern Iowa. Hoping to a cored-forn, Kansas-grown beauty queen. I enjoy long walks and water sports. Must be a smoker. I enjoy chop-pop & wessel rock. I love the warmth in the PAW while not monitoring a watch. #48377
SWM Graduate student seeking friendship and possible serious relationship. I’m honest, kind, humorous, generous, and intelligent, with a clean-cut look. I’m looking for a non-smoking boy who is moral and kind. My ideal lady enjoys athletic activities, has blue eyes, and a bright smile.
2023
SWM non-smoker #69' 180 lb be hair browes, all-American look, humorous sports fan, listens to music. Connick Jr., gives great messages attracts interactive, intelligent SWT (18-24) w/ beautiful eyes & knock out smile who loves a good time & is ready for #1914
SWM non-trad. fine art student who enjoys SUA
skills. Seeks scans of SEF, 25 + for
account #,43380.
SWM wants gorgeous SWM/N/S who can pound a lot of beer and who's interested in going to parties and getting cray. It isn't a nerd and don't call it. Sleek.白蜡色 blind is preferred but any other color is fine.
SWM-25 on 4th floor Elsworth. Looking for 25 attractive fun loving woman. Must like all types of music & find Mony Python funny.
SWM-Handsome, with athletic build, looking for fun SP-152, who appreciates fine art and loves to play.
Tall, dark-haired Englishman, 21 yrs, old, who loves movies, walking, music, travel, talking, and all things American seeks like minded American female (who doesn't mind guys with a slight accent) for casual friendship. So go on and make the translantic connection. Prefer fun-loving, lively friends who are not afraid to be chained just let's hang out together and see what happens.
61800
Toned 5' guy, 21. seeking attractive, fun girl to share some quality time. fz2606
WM, girlfriend lives out of town. Interested in meeting WF to spend time with during the week and some weekends. From a friend from candelight to the bars. #43228
♂
WOMEN SEEKING MEN
Are you tall, dark, and handsome—but a little shy?
From a small town? Brown eyes and light turn me
bright. Can I dance with you? CRK, it will moll it over but I can't vanish as, as long as you love to dance and women with Nod hair
Are you tired of endless bar hunting for a sincere, flattering smile? I'm a 21 year old SWP with curly hair fair, skin and brown eyes. I'm looking for someone with crayon skin and spontanity to have a good time with Crown.
Blonde hair, blue eyed swif S 9" seeking a tail laid back guy in to TMBG and Drinker. Drinker and in to spontaneous road trips. Call box #64254 Down to earth, fun-loving female who is looking for a great time. If you're open-minded, like long stories, be sure you hell of a time never forget-zimmie a call? **#64254**
Am I $3. have short, sexy hair & blue eyes. I am very outgoing and make friends easily. However, I spend the summer in France and am looking for romance. I am very versatile in my interests and enjoy doing a variety of things. I like guys with hard, chiseled looks, intelligent and they must know how to dance. If you would like to try to our way we can help each other, call my box.
I'm seeking a man who's interested in art, reading,
writing. Must be good-looking, humorous and
honest. #20299
Intriguing female searching for a majestic male to
share intimate weddings together. #82902
Outgoing, spontaneous 19 yr old SWF looking for semi-partying man that likes to talk. Must be concerned about school, but able to say 'to hell with you' and not allow a slight minus the air in the head, give me a call.
Laid back 20 year-old smoker. Avid movie fan.
applied to the School of Education. Sees a melown,
fun and sweet man for activities at late nights
and enjoys road trips. If you fit the bill, give me a call. #4793.
SAP 22, 5*, 7*, looking for SM 21-36, must be good
and romantic, and romantic fun, humor-loving,
and romantic #x0285
SBF-Tall, brown eyes, serious I like movies (comedies and action adventure) I like reggae music. I am religious and would like a gentleman who shares my beliefs.440037
SWF. 19, seeking male for intimate friendship only
SWF. 19, seeking mutual hidden husbands to be found
out. at #446
SWF 20, 5.4" brown hair, brown eyes. I am looking for someone who brings me flowers and that I can cook cake light dinner for him. Must be a nice dresser, call me to find out more. #47719
SWF, 21 years old, 5'4" with caviar wishes and champagne dreams seeks SWF 21-23 years old to help me fullfill all my desires. If you prefer Flii to talk, to Help to talk to you. #22820
SWF, 21 yr., engaged and engaged one last fling.
e9199
SWF, 22, 5'3, dark brown hair and brown eyes.
SWF, 20, 23 who is mature, open and into romantic nights at home. I like going to movies, long walks and candle light dinners. No smokers, beer drinkers, or beer bellys, please.
80205
SWF, 23 pre-med, and attractive. Serious student, but likes to have fun. Everyone here is young. Looking for science grade student/pre-MED, 23-30, handless. Let's get a goe be a drink and talk about it.
SWF, Brown hair, brown eyes & "If you like pina-
cela, getin' caught in the rain, if you're not
into yoga, if you have 1/2 a brain, you're the man I
have looked for. Call me & escape." @82266
SWF $10 Blood attractive, athletic figure looking
young. Compatible with build Solid Friendship maybe even more, simply
WSC Catholic, seeking 6 ft. plus athletic, 30 to 35 yrs. old, who enjoys the outdoors. Loves walks, salsa, sunsets, & stargazing. Enjoys tennis, golf, biking, & dancing. Looking for someone who knows how to live & enjoy life with a good sense of humor, also a non-monster & non-drinker. **82483**
SWF desperately seeking tall, dark, gorgeous, sun-kissed, well-toned, musically inclined, and a little shiny. You can be incredibly fun, enjoy after-after水的 sports, not be afraid to bend a few rules, love foot-long coneys, Twizzlers, 31-Flavors and Disney classics (can you tell me if this sounds like you need I call box # 87775?
SWF grad. student戴和confused seals some
SWM). Call box.47680.
SWF graduate student seeking romance with
military art and music; knowledge, interest in
martial arts and musi. sci.
SWP looking for my soul mate! If you love to read, and walk, on 70's music like ABBA, then let the phone "ring, ring, ring." I brunette, $4, attac... "rang," "ring," "ring!" "ragged" for women (Women need no apology!)
SWP looking for SWM. I enjoy mountain biking and the outdoors and am seeking someone to just hang out with and get some coffee. I am a bandleader and have five coffee shops. I’m 22 years old. I’m 5.4” attractive. Please click if interested. #22031
SWF N/S! I am looking for a very kind, and kind,
to brighten my pretty life. #20233
SWF seeking an attractive SWM to go to a party
and have a good time. #84242
SWF seeking a good-looking athletic male. Must be fun & out-going. Like beer and blue eyes. Prefer someone 18 or older. Warm to wait to meet ya #23297
SWF, seeking a SM 30-40 who can jayms lazy days and wild nights. Must take disco music and a dancing tilt I am open-minded and乐 loving. Call box #2303
SWF seeking SWM. I like alternative music, but you don't have to. I like guys around 5'10 with long hair, or maybe 5'8. They usually preferably BD Light. So, if you're a lot of fun and like to hang out, give me a call. #2280
SWJF, 19, 5'4", 115 lbs. Enjoys working out, dancing, playing volleyball, and occasional partying, as well as getting to know some Blossoms. Seeking SWJM with similar interests. Smokers and drug users need not apply. #26504
WANTED: SWM. Prefer tail and dark. It wouldn't hurte if you were handsome and richer. Nicely defined nets, little, preferably no chest hair or *back hair*. Bee of choice: Bud Light. #40077
SWJP looking for that special guy to sweep me off my feet and can enjoy high times chilling out at home or around you. I drink, dance, and smoke. Call me for fun. I like to party! #1059
WF looking for a strictly plastic relationship with a normal WM. I enjoy light drinking, movies, eating out, and meaningful conversations. People with annoying personalities need not respond. Friendly-looking men only, please, who are just looking for a friend to hang with at 483204
Woman seeking Scandinavian man. More or less blue and blue-eyed. European ideas and attitudes. Neutral politically. Hard worker affectionate. I'm looking for my equal. #82968
MEN SEEKING MEN
oo
Are you as comfortable in a "gay" scene as an 'A' or an 'G'? No, you're with a muscular build and at least somewhat intelligent. I am a GWM, 24, G'SI, 191bif not so serious senior with good looks intelligence and neurotic self-confidence.
Dark long hair, athletic looking or male with similar lifestyle #2539
GWM. 19, #140, 511, blue blonde, very cute sharp
look and masculine. Seeking good look,
sharp dressing guy 18-26 for possible friendship
and discrete fun. #8290
GWM I'm looking to find a lot of new friends where we can share a lot of ideas and wants. Who enjoys others company. Let's if we've got anything in common, #82586
GWM, liberal arts, grad, cute, sees GAM for friendship and disregate romance. Call Box #82195.
Hey? If you fit the following, to meet the same:
Body, Great Backs, Tanned, Closed Stud
Hip.
Very good looking. BBlm, 17%, 6' quality fit,
college apparel, 18, to 16 only, #2234
age group, 18, to 16 only, #2234
FRIENDS
SEEKING
FRIENDS
19 yr. old Chicago boy looking for 19 yr. old Jewish girl
80283
SHAKER
Any non-traitional students hoping to get into med school, call my boots for studying groups and ask me to help with your research.
MUTUAL
HOBBIES
TREASURE BOX
SWM seeking Female partner to play tennis and golf with me. Also looking for any person that is interested in going to the woodlands race track. # 61039
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS To place an ad
1. Call or come into the Kansan at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
2. You'll place an ad in the Jaytalk Network section of the Kansan (up to 6 lines) and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people who respond to your ad. Your voice message will remain in the system for 21 days.
3. After your ad runs in the Mon., Tues., & Thurs. editions of the Kansan, you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages people leave for you.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
To check out an ad
1. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them.
2. Call 1-900-285-4560 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touch-tone phone), enter the mailbox number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category. You can interrupt to skip over messages that don't interest you. Voice pron,pts will lead you along the way. You'll be charged $1.95 per minute.
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached.
1
SPORTS: Setting a football nonconference schedule involves playing quality teams at a low cost. Page 11
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103.NO.9
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1993
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Hurricane Emily heads north
Advancing cold front is expected to hold Emily's eye offshore
Hurricane warning
N.C.
Gulf Stream
Hurricane Emily
8 p.m. Tues.
S.C.
Hurricane strengthened as it crossed Gulf Stream's warm waters
75°W
70°W
30°N
Source: News reports
Knight-Ridder Tribune
Emily threatens East Coast
The Associated Press
HATTERAS, N.C. — Storm warnings were extended up the East Coast today as Hurricane Emily drew strength from the warm Gulf Stream and advanced toward shore with wind blowing steadily up to 105 mph.
south, Pacific to north.
With Emily turning northward, forecasters yesterday morning added the coasts of Virginia, Maryland and southern Delaware to the hurricane warning that already covered the northern half of North Carolina.
But there also were signs that it would turn back out to sea, sparing everywhere except North Carolina from the worst of the storm's fury, a top meteorologist said.
1 mousands of people — mostly vacationers — left the low-lying Outer Banks island chain to get out of Emily's way. Others stayed, waiting to see exactly where the zig zagging storm would blow ashore.
Virginia Gov. L. Douglas Wilder declared a state of emergency, placing the National Guard on alert.
At 11 a.m. yesterday, Emily's center was about 90 miles south-southeast of Cape Hatteras, near latitude 34.1 degrees north and longitude 74.8 degrees west. Emily was moving northwest at nearly 9 mph and was expected to turn northward, the National Hurricane Center said. Wind gusts around the center reached up to 125 mph.
Fears mounted that Emily would grow stronger as it continued to move over the warm Gulf Stream. Bob Sheets, director of the hurricane center in Coral Gables, Fla., said wind could reach 115 mph or more.
But Sheets also said yesterday at midmorning that it was appearing more likely that a cold front pushing toward the area could affect Emily, so that after the storm hits the coast along the Outer Banks and the area just to the north it could then turn rapidly out to the northeast.
A hurricane warning was posted from Bogue Inlet, 20 miles southwest of Morehead City near the Marine Corps' Camp Lejeune, to Cape Henlopen, Del. A warning the storm may hit in 24 hours.
Wind began to pick up over the Outer Banks late Monday as the outer reaches of the storm system arrived. By 8 a.m. yesterday, wind was up to 26 mph. Wind was expected to reach tropical storm force, 39 mph, by late yesterday morning and hurricane force, 74 mph, last night when the eye was expected to make landfall.
It tturns northward before or shortly after hitting the Outer Banks, Emily would head back out to sea and would be expected to stay offshore, said forecaster Tony Zalekski. That could cause large swells and 40-50 mph wind along the coastline from Virginia to New York's Long Island.
It e.m.y moves inland before veering north, it might weaken to tropical storm status but could bring heavy rain and high wind up the East Coast, Zaleski said.
Three file lawsuit against KU police
Men say April incident violated their civil rights
By Scott J. Anderson
Kansan staff writer
Three KU graduates have filed a lawsuit against the University, the KU police department and KU police officers who they say violated their rights.
The lawsuit claims that four KU police officers violated the three men's rights when they were stopped and handcuffed on April 27 near Robinson Center after playing basketball there.
Attorney Donald Strole filed the seven-count lawsuit in Topeka yesterday on behalf of Jonathan Jasmine, Ted Newman and Chad Clark. The suit seeks more than $350,000 in damages against the defendants.
Jasmin, Newman and Clark were "trash talking" — exchanging insults and obscenities — with their opponents as they left the center, the lawsuit said. One of their opponents, an unidentified Nigerian, was unfamiliar with trash talking and was afraid a fight would ensue. He glanced into a gold Chevrolet Beretta that belonged to one of the plaintiffs and saw what he thought was a gun in a gym bag.
He called Lawrence police, who transferred the call to KU police dispatch. The message that four African-American men were by a brown Beretta in the parking lot behind the center with
one of the men "brandishing a gun" was relayed to officers.
According to the suit, Jasmine, Newman and Clark were stopped on Naimsinh drive in Jasmine's maroon Honda Accord as they were leaving the center. The officers ordered the men out of the car, and they were frisked and hand-cuffed. The suit said the officers pointed shotguns and pistols at the three men.
They were released after a search of the car failed to produce a gun. No charges were filed.
"There was no basis to make that stop," Strole said. "If this is a normal pattern of practice, to stop anyone who meets a description given by an anonymous caller without an investigation, that puts people in a very dangerous situation."
The lawsuit said Jasmine was so distraught over the incident that he dropped plans to attend summer school and left the country for a while.
Jim Denney, director of the KU police department, said an investigation into the incident showed that the officers had acted properly. All the officers named in the lawsuit are still on the force, he said.
Denny said yesterday he could not comment specifically on the lawsuit.
A representative from the University's General Counsel's office could not be reached for comment yesterday.
Strole said the defendants would be notified of the lawsuit and would have 20 to 30 days to respond.
I'll just use a simple black and white photo of an artist sketching outdoors. The artist is sitting in a chair, with an easel on their desk, holding several sheets of paper. They are drawing a large whiteboard or canvas in front of them, which is blank except for a few scribbles. In the background, there is a grassy area with trees, and a street with cars driving by. The setting appears to be a park or university campus.
John Gamble / KANSAN
Picture perfect
Linda Brennaman, Lansing junior, works on a landscape sketch on Jayhawk Boulevard. Brennaman was working on the project yesterday for a class.
Memo encourages teachers to warn about cheating
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
Plagiarizers, note cribbers and test peekers, consider yourself forewarned.
In the memo, Shulenburger said that all University instructors should educate their students about cheating, reduce the opportunity for cheating and report all incidents to the Office of Academic Affairs.
A survey showing that almost one out of five KU students who were polled had engaged in some form of cheating has prompted David Shulenburg, vice chancellor for academic affairs, to send a memorandum to all instructors asking them to take stronger steps against academic misconduct.
Shulenburger also indicated in the memo that his office would keep track of repeat offenders of cheating. He said those students could receive more severe penalties.
"Make clear to students the standards to which they are expected to adhere." Shulenburger wrote in the memo. "Become more alert to the various forms of academic misconduct."
The Student Affairs Research Committee conducted the survey cited in Shulenburger's memo in Spring 1989, said Carly Smith, dean of student life. The survey asked 1,250 KU students about their experiences with cheating and other forms of academic misconduct.
had deserved greater attention by his office for a long time and was making cheating a little more conspicuous than it had been.
In writing the memo, Shulenburger said he was addressing a topic that
Faculty has differed in its responses to the effect of the memo.
Getting her staff of 80 instructors to spell out exactly the consequences of
cheating has been the biggest change for Marilyn Carlson, who, as supervisor of the Kansas Algebra Program, is in charge of intermediate and college algebra classes.
"Dr. Shulenburger's memo caused me to keep my staff well-informed about the problems of cheating." Carlson said. "We will benefit and the students will benefit by this increased attention."
"I always have admonished my students about the consequences of
Although he has seen his share of cheating during 30 years at KU, Marlin Harmony, professor of chemistry, said he had not seen a noticeable increase or decrease in the amount of cheating during his tenure.
cheating," said E. O. Wiley, professor of biology. "But I've never had a student prosecuted for cheating."
He said that he was not too concerned with the survey's result that one out of two KU students thought it was easy to cheat.
"I'm not always impressed by people saying what they could do if they haven't done it," Harmony said.
Cheaters at KU
Although the results of the 1989 survey on cheating have never been published, Shulenburger's memo to instructors cites several findings:
50 percent of the students surveyed agreed with the statement, "It is relatively easy to get a way with academic disburses at KU."
23 percent said they had given answers to other students during an exam.
22 percent said they had copied
22 percent said they had copied answers from another student's exam.
22 percent said they had plagiarized.
Source: Student Affairs Research Committee
INSIDE
A. J. F.
James Ralston, director of KU's choral department who will retire this year, has spent 27 years coaxing the right notes out of students.
A director's finale
Last night's full moon was feeling blue
Page 9
By Shan Schwartz
Kansan staff writer
If you know of something that happens only once in a blue moon, it may have happened last night.
The moon's appearance did not seem any different last night, but it was indeed a blue moon.
Barbara Twarog, associate professor of physics and astronomy, said that because of the 29%-day cycle of the moon, a blue moon happened about once every three years. The next blue moon will be in July 1996. Twarog said.
A "blue moon" occurs when a full moon annears twice in one calendar month.
There was a dispute, Twarog said, about whether the blue moon occurred in August or September. The peak of full moon was officially recorded at 2:30 this morning Greenwich Mean Time, although it occurred in Lawrence at 6:30 last night.
Greenwich Mean Time is considered the
standard for world time.
Since the full moon was seen in much of the world after.
Twarog said
m a n y
w o u l d
observe
the blue
moon in
September
b e r
instead
o f
have no perspective on it," Twarog
Angela:
But do not get the idea that astronomers get excited about the blue moon.
much of
world after
night,
said
n y
d
ve
in
n
r
id
f
t
do
the
hat
ners
excited
the blue
have no perspective on it, I twang
said. "It's just a legend with a
life of its own."
Where did this leg come from? The Facts on File Encyclopedia of Word and Phrase Origins explains the phrase "once in a blue moon."
To say that the moon is blue or to believe an absurdity, the encyclopedia states, comes from an old proverb first recorded around 1528:
*Yf they saye the mone is
believe, We must believe that it is true."
The encyclopedia states that at that time it was ridiculous to think of the moon as blue.
The phrase "till a blue moon" started in the mid-19th century, meaning "never." The book states that a change in meaning to "hardly ever" may have been influenced by rare observations of a blue tinge on the moon.
Twarog said the moon very seldom appears blue. The only recorded sightings of a blue-colored moon, she said, came after unusually large volcanic activity.
Although color is subjective to the viewer, she said, a blue moon would be an unusual sight.
"If there's dust in the air or you're viewing the moon on a low horizon, it usually appears red," she said. "The particles in the air filter out the blue to make it that way. It would be really odd that the moon would appear blue."
2
Wednesday, September 1, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Sandy Praeger, Kansas State Senator, will hold a lecture, "Health Care in Kansas," at noon today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call 843-4933
■ Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will hold an open house from 2 to 4 p.m. today in 115 Strong Hall. For more information, call 864-3552.
The office of Study Abroad will hold an informal meeting at 3:30 p.m. today in 4010 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call 804-3742.
OAKS Non-traditional Student Organization will hold a brown bag lunch at 11 a.m. today in Alcove G at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Gerry Vernon at 864-7317.
The KU Ad Chub will hold a picnic at 5 tonight at Potter Lake. Anyone interested in joining the club is invited to attend.
KU Environics will meet at 6 tonight in Parlors A and B at the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-7325.
**KU Gamers and Role Players will meet at 5:30 tonight on the third floor of the Burge Union. For more information, call Alex Baker at 864-7314.**
842-6069
919MASSACHUSETTS 3 P.M.TO 10 P.M.
The KU Tae Kwon Do Club will
TONIGHTONLY
KU Kempo meetings will be at 6 and 7 tonight in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Ershadi 842-4713.
The KU Homeless Commission will meet at 7 tonight in room 101 of the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call Marla Hallacy at 864-2583.
meet at 6 tonight in 207 Robinson Center. Beginners are welcome. For more information, call Jacob Wright at 749-2084.
The University Dance Company will hold auditions at 7 tonight in 242 Robinson Center. No solo material is required. For more information, call 864-4264.
Asian American Student Union will meet at 7:30 tonight in 100 Smith Hall. For more information, call Arthur Chu at 832-8332.
The KU chapter of Habitat for Humanity will meet at 7:30 tonight at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call 832-0777.
Students Tutoring for Literacy will meet at 7:30 tonight in Parlors A, B and C at the Kansas Union. For more information, call 841-5973.
WEATHER
Omaha: 82°/61°
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 87°/69°
Chicago: 75°/60°
Houston: 94°/71°
Miami: 90°/77
Minneapolis: 78°/57°
Phoenix: 100°/79°
Salt Lake City: 83°/57°
Seattle: 76°/51°
LAWRENCE: 81'/62°
Kansas City: 80'/63°
St. Louis: 81'/66°
Wichita: 82'/64°
Tulsa: 82'/67°
TODAY
Tomorrow Friday
Sunny and warmer, south winds
5-10 m.p.h.
High: 81'
Low: 62'
Sunny.
Mostly sunny.
High: 85'
Low: 64'
High: 87'
Low: 66'
Source: John Pfeifer KU Weather Service: 864-3300
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
CORRECTION
A photographed on Page 11 of yesterday's Kansan misidentified the two volleyball players. Cadi
Stuteville, Paola sophomore, is spiking the ball. Shelby Lard, Gardner senior, is on the right.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stairer-Finn Hall, Lawn. Kanen, K6044, 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. K6044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
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DEPT. 093
H I N J
PROGRAM AND EXERCISE
SEPT. '93
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
.
Wednesday, September 1, 1993
KU joins new lobbying group
Student Senate links up with larger schools
By Donella Hearne
Kansan staff writer
Student Senate decided last semester to discontinue its membership in the Board of Regents schools' lobbying group. The University of Kansas will now join Kansas State University, Wichita State University and Washburn University in hopes of creating better representation of students.
The group, Associated Students of Kansas, or ASK, formerly represented KU and other Kansas universities at the state legislature in Topeka. The organization included KU, K-State, Wichita State, Fort Hays State University, Emporia State University and Pittsburg State University.
The larger universities split off from the others
because of conflicting interests. One of the issues cited by student lobby directors was qualified admissions.
Alan Tikwart, co-director of KU's student lobby group, said the schools did not see eye to eye on many important issues.
"We have our own interests," he said. "One example is qualified admissions. We'd like to see it happen, and they're scared to death of it."
Qualified admissions deals with proposed standards for students who live in Kansas and wish to enroll at a state university. All Kansas state universities have an open admissions policy, which requires students to have only a diploma from a Kansas high school to be admitted.
By breaking off from ASK, KU will be able to have more student representatives than the past, said Beniv Schwartz, co-director of KU's lobby group.
In the past, universities involved with ASK paid a lobby staff, usually one lobbyist and an assistant, to stay in Topeka and represent the university in legislative actions.
Michael Henry, K.State's lobby director, said lack of representation of student concerns was one of the reasons K-State decided to break away from ASK.
mstead of tackling legislative, state issues, we want to address generational issues." Henry said. Lowering the drinking age to 18 years is one of the issues Henry wants to address this year.
On Sept. 10 the four schools will meet to create a constitution for the new lobby group and discuss the group's main objectives. Blake Fry, student lobby director at Wichita State, said he was impressed by cooperation in the group so far and felt encouraged.
Joe Peterson, campus director for ASK at Pittsburg State, is not as enthusiastic about the new group. Because Pittsburgh State is still a member of ASK, Peterson said he thought the organization's lobbying power would be reduced by the loss of the larger schools' influence.
Detour forces locals to tolerate traffic
By Traci Carl
Kansan staff writer
Second Street hole soon to be repaired
Lawrence resident Richard Demby stood at the end of his driveway on Lincoln Street, a two-lane residential road lined with trees, and watched a line of traffic zoom by Tuesday morning.
Demby and other North Lawrence residents have had to deal with congested traffic ever since a hole in the northbound lane of North Second Street caused traffic to be re-route along Elm. Third and Lincoln streets.
But Tom Orzulak, assistant director of public works, said the detour would not be needed any longer when two lanes of the street open for Labor Day weekend.
After the weekend, northbound traffic will follow the detour again. Orzulak said. Two-lane traffic will be opened each weekend, if possible he said.
"We're shooting to have it ready to go by Thursday," Orzulak said. "The problem right now is we are pumping out ground water."
Roger Kuker, owner of Roger's Food Center, 608 N. Second St., said business was down about 25 percent because of the detour.
"We're to the point now where
The hole was discovered June 3 after a storm and sewer drainage pipe collapsed from flooding and washed away the soil under the road. The hole now is about 15 feet wide, 50 feet long and 20 feet deep. Orzulak said.
we're suffering." Kuker said.
With the storm and sewer pipe broken, the challenge has been to fix the pipe and pump out water around the pipe at the same time, he said.
Three wells are pumping water to lower the water content of the soil, Orzulak said, and more wells may be added next week.
LRM industries, the contractor in charge of repairing the hole and replacing the pipe, finished pumping out water north of the hole last Wednesday. Orzulza said. Now they are working on keeping water away from the broken pipe and the hole.
Before the hole can be repaired, the broken pipe must be replaced, Orzulak said.
The rest of the pipe from Elm to Locust streets will be replaced, he said, but it will be re-routed from its old position.
Kucker said daily traffic jams at 5 p.m. from the detour had caused regular customers to find another way home.
Orzulak said he didn't know when the road would be back to normal.
"There's just been one problem after another," he said. "I could talk about it for hours."
UNITED STATES TRAFFIC SYSTEMS CO., LTD.
From Laininder / WANGAN
The city has almost finished work on a damaged storm and sewer drainage pipe on North Second Street. The construction has congested traffic there.
Hispanic Enrollment at KU
The percentage of Hispanic students at KU has been increasing the last five years.
Number of Hispanic students
500
450
400
350
1.4%
1.4%
1.6%
1.7%
1.8%
88 89 90 91 92
Year
The percentage of Hispanic students at KU has been increasing the last five years.
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
Source University Profiles
HALO searches for funds for trip
Attending leadership conference aids in recruiting Hispanic students to KU
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Octavio Hinojosa, president of the Hispanic American Leadership Organization, remembered when he met then-presidential candidate Bill Clinton.
Hinojosa, Hutchinson senior, attended the United States Hispanic Leadership Conference in Chicago in 1991. He said in addition to meeting Clinton, he met Hispanic business and government leaders from around the country.
But the real benefit was seeing an estimated 3,000 Hispanic college students. Hinoiosa said.
"It is by far the largest Hispanic conference in the northwest and northeast," he said. "You get to meet so many individual, quality students."
But this year a trip to the conference, scheduled for Oct. 29-31, is in doubt, he said. HALO has yet to raise most of the money.
Hinjoosa said the trip was important to attract Hispanics to KU. Although the University's percentage of Hispanic students has risen steadily since the early '80s, its 1.8 percent is well below the national population of Hispanics. According to the 1990 census, Hispanics make up 9 percent of the nation's population of about 250 million.
The Office of Minority Affairs has pledged $700, Hinojosa said. A bill before the Student Senate would give participants an additional $350 if it were to pass.
But Hinojima said the group planned to send about 30 students at an estimated total cost of $1,950.
He said the group thought the cost was necessary for such a unifying event.
"It was like a rebirth," Hinojosa said of the 1991 conference.
The group also wanted a representative from the Office of Admissions to accompany them. Hinojosa said he was disappointed when the office turned down the request over the summer.
"Ifeels incomplete," he said. "We go out there to represent this University in a positive way, and I wish we could have support from this office, too."
Such support is unlikely, said Deborah Castrop, director of undergraduate admissions. She said the budget for the admissions office was too tight, and HALO's request on June 2 was after the office had made out its budget for fiscal year 1994.
"Unfortunately, we did not have enough flexibility to send somebody," she said.
Castrop said it was possible that a previously planned program would be canceled and free up money, but she said the chances were unlikely. But she said that she hoped the office could help in the future.
Eladio Valdez, former president of HALO and former Office of Admissions representative, said the group could get by without an admissions office representative. He said the students were a better advertisement.
"This is a prime example where HALO could go up to the Office of Admissions and get to work themselves," said Valdez, Kansas City, Kan. senior.
'Fun runs' to begin Saturday
Kansan staff report
Saturday morning free "fun runs" will take place the days of each home football game this fall, said Tim Willett, graduate assistant for intramurals in recreation services.
KU Recreation Services is sponsoring a new activity this fall for those from the University who enjoy running.
Writing center adjusts to budget crunch
initiation of tide recession in Texas
Willet said the 2-mile mile
would begin at 9 a.m. at the Shenk
Complex at 23rd and Iowa streets,
proceed through West Campus
and return to the complex. The run
is open to KU students, faculty and staff.
Competitors can purchase $5 commemorative T-shirts.
Willett said themes for each run would be related to the mascot of the visiting football team. The theme for this Saturday is "Cataumont Crawl," which refers to the Western Carolina team mascot.
Willett said participants could register for each run in advance at the recreation services office, 208 Robinson, or at the complex on the day of the run.
By Kathleen Stolle Kansan staff writer
Growing popularity coupled with a limited budget spelled change for the KU writing center this semester.
But the center's director, Jim Hartman, said an adjustment for the program was actually an improvement.
"In the long run, the students are going to benefit," Hartman said.
Unlike the tutors, who typically worked one-on-
At the end of last semester, the center eliminated two undergraduate tutor positions when those students graduated. This semester the center hired a graduate student to act as its campus liaison.
one with students, the liaison meets with an entire class about a specific topic, such as research-paper writing. The liaison, who is requested by an instructor, is also available to meet with smaller groups or individuals.
"We thought hiring a graduate student would allow us to deal with higher level courses," he said.
The liaison, the sixth member of the center's staff, is available to instructors in the humanities, social sciences and fine arts departments. Hartman said the center would re-evaluate the new position at the end of the academic year.
Although the center's budget has nearly doubled since 1885, the center's first year in existence, increasing popularity is taxing the center's resources.
During that first year, only two or three departments used the service, said Pat McQueeney, associate director. Last spring more than 100 instructors from nearly 20 programs asked for assistance from the center, she said.
Despite the high demand, Brower Burchill, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said he did not think the University could give the center any more money.
"Considering the funding the future does not book good," Burchell said.
He said that the center was the University's "pride and joy." However, private entities or other University programs would probably be the only possible sources of additional funding for the center in the near future.
WATKINS
"We Care For KU"
Anonymous HIV Antibody Testing
864-9507
"Anonymous Testing" means that you do not use your real name when being tested. Your test results will be provided to you in person two weeks after your initial visit. Testing includes pre- and post-test counseling.
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
864-9500
What? The Test for HIV- the AIDS virus
Where? Watkins Health Center
When? Mondays
Cost? $18.50 cash (paid at initial visit)
How? By Appointment Only
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
University Dance Company
Audition
Wednesday, September 1st
7:00 p.m.
Robinson Center, Studio 242
Ballet, Modern and Jazz
Ballet, Modern and Jazz
No Solo Material Required
Playhouse
806 W.24th (Behind McDonalds)
Thurs., Sept.2
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4
Wednesday, September 1, 1993
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
The Issue
Each year the Organization & Activities office holds a fair designed to attract new membership for student groups.
The Background
Because of budget restraints and the remodeling of the Kansas Union, the fair has been moved and reorganized each of the last several years.
Union accommodations inadequate for activity
The Opinion
This semester's Activities Fair failed to attract the attention necessary to provide new KU students with information about student groups on campus.
To student organizations, the Activities Fair at the beginning of each semester provides the single largest opportunity to inform students about their organization. Without this opportunity, many campus groups fold because of lack of membership.
Alarge percentage of students have no reason to go to the Union after the first of the semester, which is what makes the Activities Fair so important.
This semester, however, all the tables were squeezed together in one area that the waves of traffic flowed easily around. Because no signs in the area explained the event, many students followed the crowd past the tables without ever knowing what purpose they held.
In addition, the wait to claim a table for an organization was as long as 45 minutes at times. This was partially because of the new facilities and area for the Union staff to work with; however, this does not reduce the impact on student groups.
From clubs promoting literature to those supporting religious beliefs, student organizations are a comfort, an outlet and a necessity to the KU student body. As such, they need to have help from the University to stay accessible and keep the new student body informed.
College life is more than simply an education. It is also ideas and friends that will last a lifetime.
DAVID BURGETT FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Fighting racism should be responsibility of all
Another life is over because of the color of a person's skin. Amy Biehl, a Fulbright scholar studying in South Africa, was killed Wednesday by an angry mob of township youth. Biehl had been working since 1991 to improve the racial situation in South Africa. Her friends and colleagues said that she was a leading activist in bringing harmony and democracy to the racially-torn country.
Biehl's senseless death brings home that racism is a worldwide problem, not just the one of the U.S. It also illustrates that despite all the strides made toward equality of people there still is a long way to go. Her death marks one more in the long, irrational persecution because of skin color. Whether it was a white American Fulbright scholar, a Black South African township member, a L.A. Korean store owner or a Japanese foreign exchange student, any death from racism is one too many.
Resolving racism is everyone's personal responsibility. Biehl's death should remind us all the burden we carry. Biehl had one wish for the world — that all people would work together as individuals and racism and violence would not be issues. This dream was something she would never see in her lifetime, but a dream that we all should strive to realize.
TERRILYN MCORMICK FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
A QU12:
FIND THE MOST DANGEROUS, HEINOUS
TERRORIST ROAMING THE STREETS TODAY...
A.
KNIFE WIELDING
RED BRIGADE SOLDIER
POWER TO
THE PEOPLE!
A. KNIFE WIELDING RED BRIGADE SOLDIER
POWER TO THE PEOPLE!
B. BOMB PLANTING IRA MEMBER...
FREEDOM OR DEATH!
C. GUN TOTING PRO-LIFER...
I'll save INNOCENT LIVES IF I HAVE TO KILL TO DO IT!
@ BRIAN THOMPSON
BOMB PLANTING
IRA MEMBER...
FREEDOM OR DEATH!
GUN TOTING
PRO-LIFER...
MEDICAL
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U.S. needs protection from 3rd World weapons
After the collapse of the Soviet Union most Americans felt secure in assuming that the prospects of a nuclear attack against the United States had significantly diminished. Such optimistic assumptions, however, are extremely premature and disregard the serious threat posed by the increased demand and availability of nuclear weapons throughout the Third World. Currently, nations such as North Korea, China and the republics of the former Soviet Union possess the technology to manufacture crude nuclear devices and have demonstrated a willingness to profit from their sales without regard for the intended purposes of the buyers. Russia has further complicated this precarious situation by selling, to any buyer, the missile systems needed to deliver a nuclear payload.
STAFF COLUMNIST
Despite the best efforts of the United States to control the spread of nuclear weapons, a nation like Iraq requires only 15 pounds of plutonium to build a nuclear device. With millions of pounds of plutonium scattered throughout the world, it is virtually impossible to safeguard all of it.
In February of this year, the Clinton administration canceled the proposed Strategic Defense Initiative, which would have provided global protection against nuclear strikes. Clinton cited budget restrictions as his rationale for discontinuing the program. At the same time, Clinton proposed a pork-laden $15 billion "economic stimulus package," costing roughly the same amount as the proposed space-based missile defense systems. The expense of a
LANCE
HAMBY
strategic defense system seems almost inconsequential when compared with the number of lives it could possibly save. If government's most fundamental responsibility is to safeguard the lives of its citizens, then Clinton defaults on this responsibility by failing to provide even minimal nuclear protection for America's cities.
The United States should renew its commitment to strategic defense by endorsing Boris Yeltsin's program for a "Global Protection System" against limited nuclear strikes. Such a system is not only technically feasible but also should be available for deployment by the year 2000. The type of system proposed, called "Briliant Pebbles," would consist of 1,000 desk-sized orbiting satellites that would maneuver into the paths of incoming missiles and effectively destroy them before their warheads could be released and targeted at American cities. The advantage that a single space-based system would have over the multiple ground-based systems that Clinton did support is that it would eliminate redundant components, making the missile
defense cheaper and easier to maintain.
The arguments used against strategic defense in the 1980s have almost no validity today. Keith Payne, professor of national security studies at Georgetown University, said "The arguments against missile defense that it would set off an arms race, destroy the future of arms control, cost too much, prove to be technically infeasible, require violations of the ABM Treaty — were all based on the assumption of Soviet opposition." Now that the Soviet Union has disintegrated, these arguments carry very little weight. Strategic defense must be reconsidered in light of the threat posed by hostile Third World nations with nuclear weapons.
The greatest threat to international security lies in the increasing number of countries seeking nuclear weapons coupled with an increasing number of cash-starved nuclear powers willing to sell them those weapons. The solution to this problem is the deployment of a global protection system. Until this universally beneficial program is implemented, the U.S., along with the rest of the world, remains vulnerable to the potential vengeful actions of Middle Eastern and other Third World leaders. Clinton recognized the urgency of this situation when he stated, "The United States can't afford to wait until a host of Third World nations acquire arsenals full of First World weapons."
Lance Hamby is a Wichita junior majoring in political science and journalism.
INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
Russia going the way of
Ann 24
underdeveloped nations
La Republica, Rome, on changes in Russia and China:
Those who say that Russia is drawing closer to the West should think again. It is actually becoming much more like the world's underdeveloped countries.
How is it possible that a country that boasts the best balance in the world between its population and its resources is beginning to resemble regions that never have developed
from extreme poverty? And how do you explain the fact that China, which has an unfavorable proportion between its population and its resources, seems to be flourishing?
It is tempting to attribute everything to the fact that, while China is becoming capitalist, Russia is still trapped in socialism's stranglehold.
Since the death of Stalin, the former Soviet Union has produced the worst ruling class imaginable. Not one ruler is exempt, least of all Gorbachev.
They were all Communists, but so were the successors of Mao. The group of rulers that emerged after Mao's revolution have produced much better results for their country than the statesmen that came out of the school of Lenin and Stalin.
Russia is growing away from the world in which we live, and it is not at all clear where it is headed.
This explanation seems too simplistic, but one fact is certain: the majority of industry in China is state owned and works, as the economic indicators testify. On the other hand, in Russia everything is under threat of paralysis.
KC TRAUER, Editor
JOE HOER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
Well, I didn't shoot anyone yesterday. I'd decided at breakfast that I should try to go at least one day without firing any shots. It wasn't as easy as you might think.
KC TRAUER, Editor
Then there was the professor who gave a pop quiz two classes in a row. I know where he lives, it could have been an excellent drive-by opportunity.
Random violence has become so commonplace that it no longer even makes the front page of the paper. instead we find it in small stories in sections tabbed "local interest" or "metro."
We used to think of drive-by shootings as things that happened in inner cities, between rival, mostly minority gangs. It seems that the problem has outgrown our stereotypes of it. In late July, Time magazine ran a cover story feature on violence and teen-agers. The main interview was with a 15-year-old named Doug.
Doug it seemed had not long ago purchased his first weapon, a saewed-off shotgun, for $25. He and his buddies would drive around the neighborhood shooting up cars, houses and basically anything else that caught their eye.
You don't have to go to Omaha to find Dough though. He's also in Topeka, population 250,000. He's even been seen recently in Lawrence, population 65,000.
So what are we going to do about Doug? What will Doug be like when he's 25? What will today's 5-year-olds be doing when they are 15?
There were so many opportunities. First there was the woman who whipped her subcompact into the last parking stall in the lot next to the art museum, while I was attempting attempting to dock my boat in the same place. This forced me to park all the way down by the stadium. She was a very tempting target.
Doug doesn't fit many of our stereotypes. He's white His parents are still married. The family isn't poor, they're well-fed, warm and dry. His family isn't perfect, but whose is?
I sense that you're not very impressed with my achievement. Maybe I should add that I didn't shoot at anyone the day before either. Still not impressed? Well, I have a confession to make. I've never actually shot at anyone. It seems that there are fewer and fewer people today who can make that statement.
Somehow in less that a decade something has gone terribly wrong. Human life has lost its meaning for an entire generation. They're teenagers now — what happens when they become adults?
KANSAN STAFF
JIM KIMME Guns have permeated suburbs via today's kids
Editors
Assistant to the editor J.R. Claiborne
News Stacy Friedman
Editorial Terrilyn McCormick
Campus Ben Grove
Sports Krilet Fogler
Photo Kip Chin, Renee Kneeber
Features Erra Wrofe
Graphics John Paul Fogel
As a society we have been either unable or unwilling to deal with them. Eventually we will have to deal with them. We'd better be ready.
One more thing about Doug. He doesn't live in a poor inner city, he lives in a working class neighbor in Omaha, Neb. Population 350,000.
We can only hide in the suburbs for so long. Omaha didn't use to have a problem. Will all of our doors have to have a bullet hole before we respond?
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Jim Kimmel is a McCloth junior majoring in history and sociology.
STAFF COLUMNIST
JIM KIMME
Campus sales mgr Ed Schager
Regional Sales mgr Jennifer Perrier
National sales mgr Jennifer Evenson
Co-op sales mgr Blythe the
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Marketing director Shelly Macintosh
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Business Staff
PETER BLAIR
**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 university, or faculty or staff position.**
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by Jeff Fitzpatrick
For the Birds
10
YOU CAN TELL
THAT THEY WENT
TO SUMMER SCHOOL
HEE
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HEE HEE
Fitz 1993 Univ Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 1, 1993
5
Haskell finds new name beneficial, encouraging
Former junior college now Indian Nations University
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas is no longer the only university in Lawrence.
in lawrence.
At yesterday's Convocation of Haskell Indian Junior College, Bob Martin, Haskell president, announced that the Office of Indian Educational Programs in Washington, D.C., had approved changing the school's name to Haskell Indian Nations University that day.
Martin told the audience to thank Haskell's founders and past students.
"We all know Haskell is here as a legacy for us," he said.
"This land and this building have all been paid for by the blood and sweat of our ancestors."
The announcement followed a year of delays for the name change. Last spring, the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools awarded Haskell's elementary teachers education program four-year baccalaureate accreditation. The move allowed the college to grant bachelor's degrees to graduates of that program.
Haskell's Board of Regents approved the name change soon after, Martin said.
But because Haskell falls under federal jurisdiction, it had more hurdles to clear. Martin said the name change could not go through until the Office of Indian Educational Programs, a branch of the Bureau of Indian Affairs in the Department of the Interior, approved it.
"This provides the stimulus for us," he said. "We think it's going to be very beneficial to us."
"We cannot come in any more with a junior college attitude," he said. "We cannot walk into our classes and think we're going to get a two-year education."
After the Convocation, Martin said the name change was not just cosmetic. Baccalaureate accreditation for other Haskell programs will be the university's next goal, he said.
The Convocation's keynote address was given by Howard Rainer, program administrator for the Native American Outreach Program at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah. He said the name change entailed a change in the attitudes of the students as well.
Rainer told students to look at KU as an example of what being a university means.
"Take a look at how many students there are up there, and try to imagine 5,000 Indian students here," he said.
Campus building checks show high levels of radon gas
By Liz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
In May, Pieter Berendsen's curiosity launched a hunt for an invisible gas in three KU West Campus buildings.
Berendsen, senior scientist with the Kansas Geological Survey, enlisted the help of Ron Fraass and Khalid Kalout from the Kansas Department of Health and Environment Bureau of Air and Radiation, which placed 12 detectors in the three halls.
amount of radiation per hour of air is measured in pick curies. A level of four or more pico curies warrants further action.
sen said.
Radon is a decay product of Uranium 238, which Berendsen said occurred naturally in rocks. It is a gas that can be dangerous to one's health if inhaled in large quantities. The amount of radon per liter of air is $m^{-1}$.
Two detectors placed in the base-ment and first floor of Moore Hall had readings of 12 and 17 pico curies per liter. The basement in Parker Hall had a reading of 4.87.
"It wouldn't be that bad if you inhaled and just blew it out." Berend-
"Some radon will change to polonium when you inhale it, which is a solid."
He said the polonium would deposit on lung tissue. Within minutes, the polonium turns to lead, which poses the threat of lung cancer.
"You cannot get rid of it," said Berendsen. "It stays there and gives off radiation."
Berendsen said that the Environmental Protection Agency became involved with determining the dangerous level of radon about 10 years ago.
Although Berendsen cannot determine the exact cause of the higher readings, he did say that the buildings were built on shale, which has a higher concentration of uranium than other rocks in the area. He also said that long-term radon testing was needed for more accurate readings
Berendsen said that the United States had higher radon testing standards than other countries. He also said that people who are thought to have lung cancer from radon intake
were usually exposed to a lot of it, such as miners in uranium mines.
Although the ratings were higher than what is considered normal, people in the affected areas are not necessarily exposed to large amounts of radon. The areas are also more open and ventilated than confined areas, such as mines.
Berendsen said that Kalout and Fraass will conduct a four- to sixmonth study beginning in October.
Berendsen said the results of the study may lead to further radon stud-
The radon readings in Moore, Parker and Hambleton, were probably the first tests of their kind to be conducted in public buildings in Kansas, Berendsen said.
Berendsen said that homes are typically measured for radon because people tend to spend more time at home, while public buildings are not given as much attention, as people spend less time in them. To date, there are no requirements in Kansas for radon testing in either public buildings or homes.
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September 9 - 10, 1993 • Kansas Expocentre • Topeka, KS
Women's Issues Related to Science Careers
- PROGRAM TOPICS -
Grant Funding and Proposal Writing
agement: Your Professional Image and Tomorrow's Opportunities
Attitudes and Abilities: A Look at the Gender Issues in Pre-collegiate Science Education
K
Upward Mobility: The Glass Ceiling
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Entrepreneurialism: No Guts, No Glory!
K STAR
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NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION
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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.
6
Wednesday, September 1, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Experimental medicine used to fight hepatitis kills fifth trial volunteer
A fifth volunteer died yesterday from an experimental drug towed as a miracle cure for hepatitis B, beyond medical rescue even as scientists unravel the mystery of what went gravely wrong in a clinical trial.
The drug Fialuridine, or FLAU, had shown great promise for fighting the hepatitis B virus, which can cause deadly cirrhosis and liver cancer. When dogs passed toxicity tests unharmed, the Food and Drug Administration approved FIAU for human trials.
"Something terrible happened, and we missed it," Dr. Jay Hoifnagel said in an emotional interview describing the horror of realizing the drug was killing people months after they stopped taking it.
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THE NEWS in brief
VISA
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As an active member of Mademoiseille's College Marketing Board, you'll not only answer questionnaires about your buying and lifestyle habits – you'll be eligible to receive product samples and information from the company. You may even have the opportunity to test new products and to assist Mademoiseille in coordinating an event on your campus!
Mademoiselle magazine invites you to voice your opinion as a member of the College Marketing Board.
One by one, from June 16 through August, seven people fell ill with damaged livers, kidneys and nerves as frustrated doctors and frightened fellow volunteers watched.
If you would like to be considered for membership on Mademoiselle's College Marketing Board, please complete this form and return to Annalisa Damley, Mademoiselle's College Marketing Board, Mademoiselle's 350 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10017. Fax (212) 880-8165.
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Five people treated with FIAU have died of liver and kidney failure, despite liver transplants for three of them. Yesterday, a 37-year-old woman died after two months in critical condition and two liver transplants at the University of Virginia Medical Center.
Be the voice of your generation
Now, with five of the seven dead, the remaining eight patients in the trial are being watched to determine if they escaped serious harm.
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A proposal to restart the computer was rejected Monday by project scientists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. A written statement released by the laboratory said that restarting the Mars Observer computer would pose an unnecessary risk to telecommunications with other spacecraft.
NASA, which last heard from the craft Aug 21, continued to send messages to salvage the $800 million mission.
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Had the restart command been given, Mars Observer would have been expected to communicate with the laboratory after a 65-hour waiting period.
PASADENA, Calif.
QUETTA, Pakistan 27 killed in pre-election massacre
QUETTA, Pakistan
--to the country's October elections, reports said yesterday. Zulfikar Ali Magsi, a powerful tribal chief in the southwestern Baluchistan province, was en route to file nomination papers for the Oct. 9 provincial election when gunmen fired on a procession of his supporters. The News reported.
NASA can't reach craft by computer
Twenty people were reported injured.
Gummen massacred 27 people in the first violence related to the country's October elections, reports said yesterday.
Scientists still want to speak with the mussing Mars Observer but think trying to restart its central computer is too risky.
Pakistan's caretaker prime minister, Moeen Qureshi, has said 150,000 soldiers would be deployed to prevent violence during the Oct. 6 elections for the National Assembly and the provincial elections three days later.
Dozens of people died in Pakistan's last general elections in 1990.
Compiled from The Associated Press
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 1, 1993
7
BERLIN, Germany
Neo-Nazis may unite in national network, German official says
The chief of Germany's internal security agency says that neo-Nazi groups have taken the first steps toward forming a national network and that his agents are busy infiltrating them in a massive undercover operation.
But the acts of hatred go on unabated: gasoline bombs are hurled at a Turkish club and an Afghan immigrant's small grocery is firebombed. Swastikas and "Foreigners Out" are painted in black enamel on walls.
Authorities say the anti-foreigner violence is largely unorganized—most of it, at least.
But Eckart Werthebach, director of the Office for the Protection of the Constitution, has noted for the first time the emergence of "action alliances" among previously splintered neo-Nazi groups and said his agency was responding with large-scale infiltration.
"These are the first steps toward a network" he told the ZDF television network Sunday. "The aim is, in fact, to form a united front."
A short drive from Berlin, an entire hamlet in eastern Germany is under investigation for allegedly paying a neo-Nazi youth $1,200 to firebomb a vacant, newly built shelter for foreign asylum-seekers.
On Monday, the villagers' council explained in a statement why they remain opposed — nine months after the firebombing — to a shelter for foreigners in their mudst.
They said theirs was "a remote place with absolutely no public transportation links, with nearly no social-help agencies, with more than 600 vacation bungalows and without a police station far and wide."
Extremists have carried out more than 1,300 acts of violence this year, mostly against foreigners, killing seven people. Last year, a total of 2,584 acts of far-right violence were committed, in which 17 people were killed.
THE NEWS in brief
having dealt a heavy blow to one Chinatown based gang blamed for smuggling illegal Chinese immigrants into the United States, authorities caution that other gangs night step in to take over the lucrative business.
NEW YORK
Arrests may not curb gangs
The alleged leader and 15 members of the Fuk Ching gang were charged with a litany of crimes including murder, kidnapping, extortion and smuggling in indictments issued Monday by federal prosecutors.
Although they called it a key step toward destroying Chinese gangs in New York, law enforcement officials said other gangs may seize the opportunity to take over Fuk Ching's turf, especially smuggling, in which Chinese are charged between $25,000 and $30,000 for passage to the United States.
Fourteen alleged Fuk Ching members were arraigned Monday in federal court in Manhattan. The alleged leader, Kwok Lay Kang, and a key aide were arrested in Hong Kong on Friday and extradition proceedings were under way to return them to the United States.
Kwok, 27, fled to his native China last January after a series of gang-related murders in the New York area, said James Fox, an assistant director of the FBI and head of its New York office. He later arrived in Hong Kong.
LOS ANGELES
Witness identifies assailant
A man accused of beating tracer Reginald Denny during last year's riot had declared earlier that day that he was "going to hit and kill people," a witness of the rioting testified yesterday.
Gabriel Quintana, a gas-station attendant working at the corner of Florence and Normandie avenues on April 29, 1992, said defender Damian Williams approached him that afternoon and made the threat.
The witness identified Williams, 20, as one of Denny's attackers.
Williams and Henry Keith Watson, 28, are on trial on charges of attempted murder, assault and robbery for attacks on Denny and seven others during the riots. Denny's beating was broadcast live by a TV news helicopter.
The rioting erupted in South Central Los Angeles several hours after a jury acquitted four police officers of all but one count in the March 3, 1901, beating of African-American motorist Rodney King after an auto chase.
FARRAGUT, Iowa
FARRAGUT, Iowa Heavy rains return to Midwest
Twice in July, the Nishamabotna River breached a levee and flooded Roger Stoooker's 340 acres of corn and soybeans, turning his farmhouse into a muddy island.
By the weekend, it seemed the worst was past. The fields were dry and the Fremont County farmer was getting around to cleaning out his flood-stained basement.
"Two days ago, there wasn't a drop of water around here," Stooker said yesterday as he steered his four-wheel-drive pickup across what he insisted was a sovibe field. The truck left a wake.
Then, the rains returned.
In a normal year, some of the soybeans would be shoulder-high. No plants were visible through the murkv water.
Strong thunderstorms that developed Sunday from the remnants of Pacific Tropical Storm Hilary dumped up to 6 inches of rain in the Nishnabotna watershed upstream from Stooker's home. Heavy weekend rains also pounded eight other states in the Midwest, which has suffered from flooding throughout the summer.
Dick McClure, an extension agent in southwestern Iowa's Fremont County for 30 years, said soybeans in a normal year are hip to shoulder high by Sept. 1. The county normally has 210,000 to 220,000 acres planted in corn and soybeans.
Compiled from The Associated Press
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8
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Easier access to CDs
New technology places favorite musical works at customers' fingertips
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
Richard Wright loves his collection of more than 20,000 jazz albums.
But Wright, associate professor of music history, said he wanted to expand his collection of jazz compact discs. But finding many of the rare jazz discs he wants is a problem.
The Blockbuster Entertainment Corp. and the IBM Corp. think they have the answer for Wright and other music collectors.
The two businesses announced plans late this summer to market technology that would produce compact discs for customers inside a music store.
Blockbuster representative Wally Knief said the new technology would allow customers to purchase any one of the 80,000 different compact discs titles available in a record store.
A customer would select the compact disc they want on a touch-sensitive monitor. A computer linked to the monitor would tap into a massive central database of digital information, download the disc information via satellite or fiber-optic network and produce a fresh compact disc — complete with artwork and written material — on the spot. The entire process would take about 10 minutes.
"It's also going to assist music collectors who are searching for compact discs that record companies stopped making or stores stopped ordering," Knief said.
Wright, who has hosted a Saturday morning jazz show on KANU for 33 years, said he thought this new system would be wonderful.
"I'm interested in picking up quite rare things, stuff from Miles Davis, Bill Evans, John Coltrane, to name a few," he said. "If they had access to these recordings on compact disc, it would be the greatest thing."
Knief said Blockbuster expected to have the compact disc units in its stores nationwide by next year. Eventually the system could be licensed to competitors.
David Leibowitz, executive vice president of the Recording Association of America, said the new system would allow record companies to keep a smaller inventory of compact discs.
However, the new marketing strategy, when first announced, was met with hostility from record companies, Leibowitz said. Blockbuster and IBM have not come to financial terms yet with the record labels that hold the copyrights to the recorded music needed for the database.
Lawrence music retailers said they were not concerned about the new marketing innovation.
"I expect the labels will demand a lucrative royalty for their product to be marketed like this," he said.
Steve Wilson, manager of Kief's Discount Records & Stero Supply, 2429 Iowa St., said the new system would not be visually appealing to customers.
SCHWEDENBACH & CO.
Lori Stites, Mound City junior, looks at CDs at Hasting's Books, Music & Video. A new technology, may make it possible to produce the CDs inside the store.
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
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RALSTON
CHORAL ICON TO RETIRE AFTER 27 YEARS
How a cheap gig turned into director's life and love.
By Sara Bennett Kansan staff writer
Members of the University of Kansas Chamber Choir ring the cavernous Murphy Hall rehearsal room, attempting to blend their voices in perfect harmony. In the middle of the circle, James Ralston, director of KU's choral department, sways with the music.
Ralston is in perpetual motion. His arms outline a circular path, illustrating the flow of the music. He runs back and forth between sections, and then descends upon the piano to pound out lost notes. As the piece draws to a close, he closes his eyes and cups his hands, drawing them into his heart as if to capture the last, precious note.
the sound needs to be more personal and generated from within," he says when the singers have fallen at ease. "We're not quite there yet."
Ralston has spent his entire career getting there, trying to achieve that moment of perfection when singers and director become one and the composer's true intent is realized. Now, after 27 years with KU'S choral department, Ralston will return at the end of the year.
Throughout his career, Ralston has worked with a number of illustrious music figures, including Lucas Foss and Aaron Copland. Sitting in hischtered yet sparsely decorated office, he recalled when modern composer Norman Dello Joio visited a rehearsal of one of his own works.
"He sat down at the piano and, all of a sudden, it all just made sense." "Ralston said."
But Ralston's true mentors were such well known KU figures as D.M. Swarthout, the first true dean of the music school, and Clayton Krehbiel, who musician Robert Shaw described as one of the most talented choral directors ever.
Ralston said his love affair with KU began when Swarthout and his a capella choir performed at the Kansas City junior college he was attending. Influenced by Swarthout's choral conducting, Ralton transferred in 1950 to KU, where he earned three degrees in music education.
Ralston threw himself into KU life with such enthusiasm that he often didn't have time to practice. "Plus I didn't think it was necessary to practice," he said. "My voice teacher threw me out of her studio a few times because I wasn't prepared."
the Navy. He was stationed in the Far East during the Korean War but still found a way to keep up with his music. Because his unit could not receive armed services radio, Radalton put together a quartet of sailors to sing over the ship's radio and perform in bars on the mainland.
Ralston graduated from KU in 1952 and joined
When he retired from the university back to KU and earned a master's degree in 1958 he then taught music at Washington High School in Kansas City.
Meanwhile, Clayton Krehbiel, Ralston's mentor and then dean of the music school, went to Russia. He asked Ralston to direct the KU Chorale for him.
"He needed someone cheap to do this gig, and he asked me to fill in," Ralston said. "That was the crossroads of my life."
Ralston went on to earn his Ph.D. and when Krebiel left KU to conduct the Cleveland Chorus in 1966, Ralston stepped into his position. In 1970, he founded the master's and doctoral programs in choral conducting, which he still teaches.
In the 27 years he has been at KU, Ralston has witnessed much of the University's history.
"He's like a historian," said his wife, Susan Ralston, who teaches vocal music at Schwegler Elementary School, 2201 Oushald Road. "KU is very dear to his heart. When Hoched was, it almost like losing a definite friend. He's also done a lot of old KU songs with the choirs."
In addition to keeping KU's traditional music alive, Ralston has helped build its major works program that exposes students to choral master works.
"KU now has a huge library of major works," said Randel Wolf, Bakersfield, Calif., doctoral student. "He's built up and that's inspiring."
Susan Ralston said, "He's offered some of the most wonderful musical experiences his students will ever have. I don't know how many kids in their lifetime get to sing the Brahms' Reamion."
Directing such powerful music requires discipline and outstanding musicianship. Ralston has gained a reputation as a musician of high standards, ultimately concerned with preserving the integrity of a piece of music.
"As the years have gone on, his respect for music has increased," said his wife. "He kind of stands in awe of it. So he tries to do as much justice to each
See RALSTON, Page 10.
THE NEW YORK CITY MUSIC CENTER
Holly McQueen / KANSAN
Above: James Ralston directs the Chamber Choir. Ralston has been a key figure in keeping KU's traditional music alive and has helped build its major works program that exposes students to choral master works.
(2)
A.
Holly McQueen / KANBAN
At left, Ralston relaxes after a rehearsal. Above, Ralston directs the Chamber Choir through a Bruckner composition. Ralston will retire this year.
music
Hymn meant to ease pain of AIDS
By Sara Bennett
Kansan staff writer
KC chorister who died of AIDS was inspiration
When faced with an issue as terrifying and complicated as AIDS, churches may have a difficult time meeting the spiritual needs of those touched by the tragedy. Sometimes, the best way to deal with the pain is to universalize it in song.
John Fowler, Gladstone, Mo., graduate student, understands the healing power of music in ministry to those whose lives are touched by AIDS. Fowler has set to music an AIDS crisis hymn text he commissioned renowned poet Brian Wren to write. The hymn, used in the AIDS ministry he and his wife are helping create at the Grace and Holy Trinity Cathedral in Kansas City, Mo., has received widespread recognition.
recognition. Fowler and his wife began the AIDS ministry at the cathedral because they had witnessed the spiritual struggles of infected friends. Fowler said Dan Vowell, a chorister in the cathedral choir who died in April, was a particular inspiration.
"That impact made it more present to us," he said. "I'm particularly aware of the impact that AIDS is having on the arts community. It has a devastating impact on some music's best and brightest."
rower's wife, E. Charmaine Fowler, chairperson of the AIDS task force at the Grace and Holy Trinity, said Vowell inspired the idea for a hymn while he
"He was very interested in the topic," Fowler said. "He said he had no experience with the subject and asked for input. I had a wonderful phone call with him. I felt like I was talking to a sponge."
"Dan was in the choir, so the vehicle that came to mind when you thought of him was a hymn," she said. "It was a way we could incorporate his life work into a resource for other church musicians."
struggled with AIDS.
Fowler met Wren, an ordained minister of the Reformed Church of Great Britain whose hymn texts appear in the hymns of most Protestant denominations, in February at a workshop for church musicians in Overland Park. Fowler approached Wren about commissioning a text dealing with the concerns of AIDS patients and their loved ones.
ture. He was among the few Fowler told Wren of his friends' experiences and his own frustrations in trying to establish an AIDS ministry. He also told Wren about Fred Phelps, a Topeka anti-homosexual minister. Wren communicated with relatives of deceased AIDS patients.
"I tried to be sensitive, to listen to a whole spectrum of experiences," he said. "I try to put words into people's mouths, things they maybe haven't clarified for themselves."
Wren donated half of his commission fee to a Kansas City AIDS program. He said the challenges of writing about AIDS drew him to the project.
Wren said he tried to weave all the information he had gathered into a poem that church congregations could identify with.
I try to cover every aspect of the Christian faith, and thishack hadn't been addressed yet," he said. "It was
a challenge to try to write something to speak to and pray around those issues of what AIDS does to people and those who love them."
The text had to be completed with some sense of urgency because Fowler wanted Vowell to experience it before his death. While the piece was being written, Vowell's condition worsened. Fowler had given up on receiving it in time when the text arrived in the mail the week after Easter.
I was completely overwhelmed by the text, "said Fowler, who immediately sat down to compose the hymn's melody. That night, he played it for Vowell, who was profoldly moved.
who was probably not here.
"The nurses said every time they went in to feed him or give him his medication, they had to take the paper out of his hands," Fowler said.
paper out of his marks. P. O'Leary, Vowell died a week later, and the hymn, entitled "When Illness Meets Denial and Rejection," had its first performance at his funeral, April 29, 1983.
Since then, the hymn has been performed at the joint conference of the Hymn Society of the USA and Canada and the Canadian Liturgical Society. Fowler submitted it as an entry in the 1903 new hymn competition of the Kansas City Chapter of the American Guild of Organists. It will be announced as a winner in September.
Fowler said the hymn has enriched both his life and the Trinity Cathedral's fledgling AIDS ministry, while waving tribute to the life of Dan Vowell.
white pearls on my desk. "It has focused our thoughts on the needs and concerns of persons with AIDS more acutely," he said. "It provided me the outlet to deal with some of my own pain. I associate it with the loss I've experienced as well as the concern I have for the future."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
September 1, 1993 PAGE 9
KULife
People and places at the University of Kansas.
calendar
LECTURES AND SEMINARS
"Romance Language," a play by Peter Parnell, will be read by English Alternative Theatre at 8 p.m. Sunday and Monday at Downs Auditorium in Dyche Hall, Free.
EXHIBITIONS
"Contemporary Czech and Slovakian Photography" Exhibit runs through Oct. 3 at Kress and Balconies Galleries in Spencer Museum of Art.
"Canyon Revisited: Rephotographing the 1923 Grand Canyon Expeditions"
Exhibit runs through Sept. 26 at Museum of Natural History.
"NCAA Laughead Collection" Exhibit runs through Sept. 11 in the gallery on level 4 of Kansas Union.
...
QUIPS AND QUOTES
'Ugly Kid Joe' singer charged with assault
COLUMBUS, Ohio — William Crane IV, lead singer of the rock band Ungy Kid Joe, was charged with felonious assault after allegedly urging 10,000 concertgoers to join him in attacking the security guards.
Crane, arrested after the Friday night show, also faces a charge of inciting a riot.
Charge of insuring Police were unsure what prompted the outburst during the warm-up show before the main event, Def Leppard, at Cooper Stadium.
Detective Zachary Scott said Crane screamed, "kill the pigs," jumped on a guard's back and hit him with a microphone stand. The audience responded with cheering and a few men close to the stage also attacked the guard, who wasn't seriously hurt.
Ugly Kid Joe is known for the song "I Hate Everything About You."
Tryaguineapig
ANAHEIM, Calif. --- A pet rat living in a station wagon with a homeless family attacked and killed a 4-month-old boy as his parents slept.
A friend of the Gigueres, Steve Smith, said the family caught the rat when they were living in a motel.
"It was a wild rat, like a sewer rat, and they caught it as a pet," he said. They kept it even though it bit family members on several occasions, he said.
"I told them, 'You need to get rid of the rat,' and they still continue to keep it," he said.
See QUIPS, Page 9
10
Wednesday, September 1, 1993
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Ralston: Finale for director
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Continued from Page 9.
John Fowler, Gladstone, Mo., graduate student said,"Emoting the music and expressing the emotional power of the music becomes his chief concern."
CHECK OUT OUR NEW PATIO OUTSIDE BAR
Daniel Politoske, professor of music history, said Ralston carries out this trust though his talents in communicating with his students.
piece because he respects it so much."
"He has quite a bit of charisma about him," he said. "His students can sense his leadership and abilities as a musician, and he's able to inspire and stimulate students to express themselves in a very sensitive and dramatic way."
FRIDAY
lunk of what it was to compose that piece," he said. "I try to bring all those little specks to life. That's my sacred trust, to search out the intent of the composer."
Ralston picked up a sheet of the Bruckner composition he had just directed and thumbed through it.
Ralston said KU has been an ideal place to strive for the musical perfection he seeks.
Quips: Elvis ate big at Graceland kitchen
"Who could ask for a better gig than making music with nice, talented kids," he said.
"Nobody's perfect, but what a wonderful place to try to find perfection. We may never find it, but it sure is fun trying."
Continued from Page 9.
NEW YORK — These items were to be kept in the Graceland "kitchen and house for Elvis" — AT ALL TIMES — EVERYDAY." Purchases often were made at the local Piggly Wiggly. The four major Elvis food groups; meat, vegetables, tobacco and over-the-counter medication. The cost: about $600 a week.
Fresh, lean unfrozen ground round meat.
- One case regular Pepsi.
- One case orange drink.
- Bolls.
One case regular Pepsi.
At least six cans of biscuits
Hamburger buns
Pickles
Hamburger buns.
Assorted fresh fruit.
Potatoes and onions.
ans of sauerkraut.
At least three bottles of milk, and half and half.
Lean bacon. Mustard
Peanut butter.
Fresh, hand-squeezed cold orange juice
Banana pudding.
Ingredients for meat loaf and sauce.
Brownies.
- Ice cream (vanilla and chocolate)
Shredded coconut.
Fudge cookies.
Fudge cookies.
Gum (Spearmint, Doublemint,
Juicy Fruit — three each).
Cigars (El Producto Diamond
Cigarettes.
Super Anahist.
Sucrets (antibiotic red box)
Matches (four to five books)
Compiled from The Associated Press
TABLOID ROUNDUP
From the Sun: A man believed to be a space alien was arrested by Secret Service agents as he was roaming the White House grounds.
Beni Garalus, who claims to be an Albanian immigrant, was nabbed by two agents who say they saw him chewing a "strange substance" while in the White House.
Agents first suspected the "fibrous green" material was some sort of drug, but it later turned out to be an ordinary blade of grass.
Garalus was taken to a hospital under arrest and was examined by a doctor. The doctor told agents Garalus has two hearts and a ruminant's stomach, like deer, cows and goats.
"They found his face had been surgically altered to look human," the source told a Sun reporter.
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 1, 1993
11
Kansas schedule set by coach, directors
Jayhawk football opposition lined up until 1997-1998
By Gerry Fey
By Gerry Fey Kansan sportswriter
Forming a college football schedule may seem like a difficult task, but Richard Konzem, assistant athletic director, said that it was a fairly easy job.
Konzem, along with Bob Frederick,
athletic director, and Kansas coach
Glen Mason, decide on the teams that
will ultimately be out on the schedule.
"Coach Mason decides who we're going to play from an opponent standpoint," Konzem said. "Frederick
looks at the ticket-selling aspect. My part of it is the negotiations and setting up a date for the games."
Setting up the schedule was not difficult, Konzem said, because Kansas only had to worry about four nonconference games out of an 11-game schedule each year. The seven other games are in the Big Eight conference and are always on the schedule.
Jim Epps, Kansas State senior associate athletic director, said that when Kansas State scheduled its non-conference games, officials were not looking for the elite teams in the nation.
"We look for a team that has some name recognition. "Epps said. "We're not interested in a Miami or Notre Dame. You know that scheduling them would be like scheduling another Nebraska or Colorado."
Konzem said occasionally Kansas
would look for teams that would play only one year at Kansas, such as Western Carolina. The Catamounts will play at Kansas 1 p.m. Saturday.
Although the Jayhawk schedule appears to be set for the future, with games scheduled into 1997-98, there is still one date open for next season.
Being locked into a schedule too far in advance is something Epss said he didn't like either. A problem that arises during scheduling is whether a team will maintain its caliber in five years.
"Right now we're looking at some made-for-TV games." Konzem said. "You don't want to be too locked in."
"There are some schools we want to play, but their availability won't be for five years." Epps said. "It a roll of the dice. Maybe a school has struggled for a couple years, but the year you play them they do well."
Konzem said Kansas looked at four key factors when determining opponents: quality of the opponent, attractiveness to fans for ticket selling, travel expenses for fan games, and a good location for recruiting in the case of an away game.
"For us, it is going to Texas or Ohio," Konzem said of the states where Kansas traditionally like to recruit. "That is why TCU (Texas Christian University) and Michigan State games make a lot of sense. But that is one of many factors."
Last year, Kansas played at Oregon State, a team with slightly different ideas on scheduling Hal Cowan, Oregon State assistant athletic director, said that travel cost was a major factor in scheduling an away game, and recruiting was of lesser importance.
"Being in the Pac-10, we're involved in four states already, so we don't
really consider recruiting that much when picking away games," Cowan said. "Travel cost is a big concern. We had a home-and-home contract with Rice, but they had to get out of it because of travel cost."
The Big Eight and other conferences' strength also has to be considered, K-States' Epps said. He said K-State tried to balance the tough conference games with less difficult opponents.
"It is tough for a team to play at peak for 11 games," Epps said. "In the Big Eight, your looking at a dog fight. This year, Colorado plays tough nonconference games, but they're a good team."
Colorado coach Bill McCartney said having tough games on the schedule was good for college football. Colorado plays top-25 teams Stanford and Miami this season.
Planning Ahead
1994
The Kansas football schedule is set through the 1997-1998 season. Some of the notable nonreference players in the season play in the next few seasons include:
At Houston, Sep. 3
Michigan State, Sept. 10
At Texas Christian Sept. 17
1995
Texas Christian, Sept. 16
Houston, Sept. 23
Kansas 'games against Houston are scheduled, but no contract has yet been signed by either Kansas or Houston. The team, assisted athletic director, said.
KANSAN
1982
Rugby club member Doug Martin passes to senior Jorge Reyes yesterday at practice at Shenk Complex.The club plays host to Missouri State and the St. Louis Ramblers this weekend
Top 10 Kansas rugby team ready for play
Rv Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
Ranked as a top-10 team in the United States, the Kansas men's rugby team won first place in the Heart of America tournament last spring and took second in the Western division last year.
From that winning team three players — graduate student Phil Olson and seniors Colin Gotham and Joel Foster — were selected as all Americans by the United States Rugby Union. Only 40 rugby players from the United States are selected to that all-American team.
The rugby team, a Kansas club sport, is divided into two sections, the club side and the collegiate side. The club side consists of graduate players and area residents and
the collegiate side is restricted to undergraduate players, coach Dominic Barnao said.
This year, both teams combined have about 75 players, with approximately 25 newcomers, Barnao said.
Senior Scott Collin said the team started practicing about three weeks ago, but that anyone would still be welcome to join the team.
To get the team ready for its first match Saturday, Collins said the team spent about 60 to 70 percent of its time doing conditioning drills. He said the team also had been doing a lot of technique drills, but they also involved conditioning.
Collin, a former football player, said this was the only contact sport he knew where a player could tackle his opponent and the
one tackled would still ask the tackler to have a beer afterward.
An old English saying about ruffian states,
"It's a sport for ruffians, played by gentlemen.
'Matter Delargy,' a London senior said.
Barnao, a former rugby player, characterized
rugby players as having strength,
speed and endurance.
Every two years, the team travels abroad to play rugby. Delargy said. He said each country played the game a little differently.
He said in America, the players were known for their harder tackles, probably because of many players' background in football. In England, the game was played with more finesse because the players had played longer, he said.
playing fields at 23rd and Iowa streets.
Reserve side, the junior varsity team, plays
Southwest Missouri State 3 p.m. Saturday.
The varsity side plays Missouri State 2:30
p.m. Sunday. The club team takes on the
Saint Louis Rambers 1 p.m. Sunday.
Cunn said he hoped fans would come out in groups because it was a fun sport to watch. He also said having a lot of fans at games helped the players because it kept their adrenaline up and kept them fighting to the end of the 80-minute, nonstop game. It has been estimated that a rugby player runs approximately 12 miles in a game, Delargy said.
"Everybody is dead serious about representing KU," Collin said. "Rugby is athletics at its best."
The team plays its first games of the season this weekend at Shenk Complex, the
Kansas set to take rival Wichita State
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
A volleyball match between Kansas and Wichita State is always a rivalry, but tonight's game will mean more for both teams than it has in the past.
Although Kansas holds a 24-10 advantage in this series, Wichita State won the season-opener at home last year 15-7, 16-14, 15-11. It was the Shockers' first victory against the Jayhawks in years and Kansas is looking to avenge last year's defeat. The teams will put their state pride on the line at 7 tonight at Allen Field House.
Phil Shoemaker, Wichita State coach, said he was not worried about the series record that heavily favors Kansas.
"KU has had a lot longer volleyball history than us," Shoemaker said. "It's only in the last five or six years that we've gotten things together."
Barb Bella, Kansas right side and middle player, said she was excited to open her senior season with this game.
"We play them every year at least once," Bella said. "It's definitely a rivalry. They're in-state, and in their conference they are very good. This time we have the home court advantage."
Kansas coach Frankie Albitz said her players would be excited for the game, but that right now, they thought the only thing in life was practice.
Shoemaker said he was sure that both teams would be ready for the game.
Albitz said she was worried about Wichita State's sophomore setter, Kori Rosenkranz. Last year, Rosenkranz was named Missouri Valley Conference freshman of the year.
"I don't think you'll have any problem getting players on either of these teams fired up," Shoemaker said. "It's the season-opener, and it's a rival."
"I was impressed with her," Albitz said. "She was the one that probably hurt us the most. Also, they were consistently hitting down the line."
This week, practice time has been set aside to work on covering the lines. Albiz said.
"That is something we always work on," Albitz said. "The diggers tend to move from the line. We want to keep diggers on the line since they used that against us last year."
One player who will not be in the front line tonight is junior Jauer Uher, Albiz said. Uer will be unable to play in the front line for a couple weeks because of an inflamed shoulder injury she suffered in practice.
As a result, Albiz said freshman Katie Walsh might see playing time in the front line.
Kansas senior Bella said that Wichita State's outside hitter confused Kansas last year but that Rosenkrantz did a good job of finding openings in the Jayhawk defense.
sne knows when to dump the ball and where," Bella said. "She was knowledgeable about her side of the court and our side of the court."
Kansas golfer works toward career on professional tour
By Kent Hohlfeld
Wichita State must pass the ball well and play good defense to win tonight's match, Shoemaker said.
Kansan sportswriter
When Matt Gogel started playing golf on a lighted Tulsa, Okla, golf course at age 13, he didn't figure that he would someday find himself at the U.S. Open practicing with professional golfers Ted Couples, Tom Watson and Seve Ballesteros. Last June that is exactly where the Kansas senior golfer found himself.
He said that by the end of that championship freshman year he was sure that golf was the sport to which he was going to dedicate his time. Gogel said he liked the individual aspect of the sport. By the end of his high school career he had narrowed his college choices to Kansas, Oklahoma and Louisiana State. He decided to attend Oklahoma in Fall 1989.
He changed his mind his freshman year, when he decided to transfer to Kansas. He said the fact that he had lived in Lawrence as a child made the decision to come to Kansas easier.
Gogel said that it was a long road that led him from Tulsa to Kansas.
"The first thrill I had was when my high school team won the state championship." Gostel said.
He said that he thought he would be able to make a bigger impact at Kansas than he did at Oklahoma. That impact was realized his freshman year when he won the Big Eight championship.
"I just didn't fit in at Oklahoma," Gogel said. "I thought I'd be happier at Kansas."
His accomplishments on the course have continued throughout his college career. Last summer he competed in a variety of tournaments, including defending the
championship.
"I wouldn't say it was a revenge factor that year, but after that I didn't have to second guess my choice," Gogel said of his victory over the Oklahoma players.
Kansas Amateur Championship title he won in 1992. He also played at the U.S. Open amateur division.
Randall said that Gogel was one of 10 nonunees for the Dave Williams award for outstanding college golfers, which is given by the Intercollegiate Golf/Tennis Awards of Dallas. Randall said that preseason hype could add some pressure to Gogel's play.
Ross Randall, Kansas men's golf coach, said that Gogel had been named to the John Hancock Bowl All-American Classic for the top 24 returning college golf players in the nation.
Gogel said he hoped that his busy off-season golfing schedule would help prepare him for what could be the most important season of his young career.
One way that Gogel will try to deal with that pressure is by watching a healthy dose of other sports with his teammate senior John Hess.
"That's just a challenge that he'll have to accept," Randall said.
"You can ask anyone, we're extreme sports fanatics," Hess said.
Hess said that one of the friends' favorite past times was watching their favorite teams at a small tavern called the Sandbar on West Eighth Street.
Gogel said that he could not wait for college football and professional football to start and that he hoped to attend a lot of Kansas basketball games during his senior year. Gogel said he thought that those games would be temporary breaks from what was going to be a hectic schedule.
Gogel said that he hoped this year's schedule would help prepare him for the professional golfers tour and that his experience at the U.S. Open taught him that the professional scene required much more time than the amateur level he had become used to.
Gogel said he hoped to join the professional ranks after the collegiate season."
LAKESIDE
John Gamble/KANSAN
Senior Matt Mogel practices his drive before playing nine holes at Aviana Country Club yesterday. Gopher practiced with golf greats Tom Watson, Fred Couples and Seve Ballesteros at last year's U.S. Open.
French soccer scandal may keep team out of international play
The Associated Press
ZURICH, Switzerland — France could be suspended from international competition because of a bribery scandal, the head of world soccer's governing body said yesterday.
The president of the Federation of International Football Associations Thursday postponed crucial questioning of players and officials until Saturday after six of the eight people scheduled to appear asked for a delay.
French officials were openly scornful of the Union of European Football Association's Aug. 30 deadline and the delay in the hearing was seen as a direct challenge to UEFA's authority.
Noel Le Graet, the president of the soccer league, said French authorities could not impose "sanctions if they don't have evidence."
Marseille's former general manager Jean-Pierre Bernes and a player, Jean-Jacques Eydelie, face charges they bribed two players from the team Valenciennes to play badly in a league match. The match took place a few days before Marseille faced AC Milan in the European Champions Cup final.
The Marseille scandal has rocked both French sports and politics. The club's flamboyant owner, socialist lawmaker Bernard Tapie, has accused opponents of trying to destroy France's greatest soccer team and his own political ambitions. He denies any involvement.
Valencienne's former coach, Boro Primorac, alleges that Tapie tried to persuade him to take the blame in the scandal at a June meeting.
12
Wednesday, September 1, 1993
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SPORTS NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Western Carolina's offense 'freezes' opponents on field
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
Just like they did for the opener against Florida State, the Kansas defense must prepare for another highly-potent offensive unit this week.
Western Carolina produced a school-record 415 yards per game and averaged 30.2 points a game last season. Eight starters return this season, including each of the top six skill positions.
The Catamounts "freeze option" offense is led by senior quarterback Lonnie Galloway, who passed for 2,181 yards and was second in passing efficiency for NCAA Division I-AA quarterbacks last season.
The Catamounts employ the freeze option, which run both passing and running plays to keep the opposing defenses off balance.
game first," Galloway said. "We try to mix it up and never allow the defense know what to key on."
"We do not go out and try to establish either the passing or running
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.
Galloway is complemented by a par of All Southern Conference wide receivers in
Lonnie Galloway
juniors Craig Aiken and Kerry Hayes.
Aiken caught 44 passes for 942 yards
and six touchdowns in 1902, and
Hayes added 40 receptions for 896
yards and eight touchdowns.
"Craig and Kerry complement each other very well," Galloway said. "They both help me out a lot, and when they're both clicking you can't concentrate your attention on just one."
Senior Kevin Thiagen, who rushed for 1,079 yards in 1992, adds running to the mix for the freeze option attack.
Western Carolina coach Steve Hodgkin said he credited the offense for improving the Catamounts from a 2.9-0 record in 1991 to a 7-record year last week.
"We don't plan any major changes in our offensive philosophy," Hodgin said. "You don't make changes when you've got a good thing going."
The Catamounts proved last season that their offense could move the football against a quality NCAA Division 1-A school when they played Georgia Tech.
Western Carolina gained 417 yards of total offense in a 37-19 defeat last September at Atlanta to the Yellow Jackets, who only led 23-19 entering the fourth quarter. Galloway passed for 283 yards, 133 of which went to Aiken, and Thugen run for 87 yards in the game.
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Wednesday, September 1, 1993
13
Day brings upsets at U.S. Open
Capriati, Stich lose chances at title
The Associated Press
Jennifer Capriati was upset in the first round of the U.S. Open yesterday, done in by her own errors in a 1-6, 6-4, 6-4 loss to Leila Meshki.
Meski, from Georgia, stuck to the baseline and let the women's seventh seed unravel. She broke Capriati's serve on four unforced errors in the seventh game of the third set and served out the match when Capriati hit a forehand long. The poor stroke was Capriati's 61st unforced error of the match.
Capriati was the second big name eliminated on a crowded second day.
US OPEN
Earlier, former Wimbledon champion Michael Stich lost in four sets.
Heinck Holm of Sweden was the one who defeated sixth-seeded Stich, the 1991 Wimbledon champion from Germany, 6-3, 7-6 (10-8) 3-6, 4-3.
Stefan Edberg barely survived a five-set scare from an upstart Frenchman yesterday to successfully begin his quest for a third consecutive Open title and top-seeded Jim Courier won in straight sets.
Edberg, bothered by trouble with
his normally potent serve, dropped seven consecutive games at one stretch and appeared listless in the New York heat and humidity. But he had enough strength and too much talent for Oliver Delaire in a 6-2, 6-4, 7-6 (9-7), 5-7, 6-3 victory, his 15th consecutive victory at Flushing Meadow since a first-round loss in 1909.
The match lasted 3:24.
"I had a chance and I didn't take it," Dalatre said. "That's life."
Edberg said he was happy to have escaped with a victory from a match in which he did not play well.
Edberg's match on the sun-baked stadium court started a long day of action at the National Tennis Center.
After a desultory opening day in which just seven of the 32 seeded players took the courts, day two was
more of atypical August day in the big Apple; hazy sun, temperatures around 90 degrees and lots of hustle and bustle.
It was a record-breaking day, too,
with 22,357 fans jamming the
grounds. The old record for a U.S.
Open session was 22,166, for the day
session on Aug. 26, 1991.
Counter beat Marcus Aurelio Goritz of Spain, 6-1, 6-3, 6-3 Michael Chang, the men's seventh seed, crushed by Shelby Cannon 6-1, 7-5, 6-2, on the grandstand court. Thomas Muster, the 12th seed from Austria, beat Alex Corretta 6-4, 6-4, 6-3.
Jana Novotna, the Wimbledon women runner-up and No. 8 seed, beat Angelica Gavaldon 62-1, 64-4, and the women's 11th seed, Manuela Maleva-Fragniere, bear Larisa Neiland 63-1, 63-1.
Home runs lift Kansas City past Milwaukee
Montgomery earns 41st save in victory
The Associated Press
MILWAUKEE — Gary Gaetti and Hubie Brooks each hit two-run homers to power the Kansas City Royals past the Milwaukee Brewers 6-5 last night.
The Royals remain six games behind first-place Chicago in the AL West heading into September.
Royals 25th Anniversary Season
Kansas City snapped a 5-5 tie on George Brett's sacrifice飞 in the seventh inning Jose Lund walked to open the inning, moved to third on Brian McRae's one-out single and scored on Brett's fly ball to left.
a two-run hit in the sixth off starter
Angel Miranda (3-4), tide it at 5-5.
Brooks pulled the Royals even at 3-3 in the fourth with his first home run of the season. The two-run shot was his first since Sept. 25 of last season against Chicago.
Gaetti's eighth homer of the season.
Greg Cadaret (1-0) pitched three innings in relief for the victory. Stan Beinda worked the eighth and Jeff Montgomery pitched the ninth for his league-leading 41st save. Miranda gave up six runs on 11 hits in seven innings.
John Jaha drove in a career-high four runs for Milwaukee with a two-run homer in the fourth, his 13th, and a bases-loaded single.
Notes: Robin Yount moved past Al Kaline into ninth place on the all-time games played list with 2,835 games. Brooks Robinson is next with 2,986 Yount, who has spent his entire career with Milwaukee, also moved into fourth past Kaline for games played with the same team at 2,835. Yount also scored in the first inning, tying him for 28th in runs scored with Fred Clarke.
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NATION/WORLD
Israel and PLO finalize agreement
WASHINGTON — A top PLO official said yesterday that an agreement had been finalized with Israel on self-government for the Palestinians and that Israel and the PLO would announce mutual recognition within a day or two.
The Associated Press
day approved the broad outlines of the agreement worked out secretly between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization.
"We hope to hear very soon — tomorrow or the day after" statements of "full mutual recognition" by PLO chairman Yasser Arafat and Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, said Nabil Shaah, the top PLO coordinator for the Mideast peace talks.
ebrogo general. Shaaith said the agreement had already been worked out and that negotiators in Washington were in a "holding pattern" awaiting ratification of the accord by the PLO's executive committee and the Israeli parliament.
He spoke as the 11th round of negotiations began at the State Department after Israel's Cabinet on Mon-
Afterward, Shaath said in an interview that the agreement could be signed by both sides — possibly in Washington — and then negotiators could work out the fine print.
stand side by side with the parties so that progress could be made "as rapidly as we can to formalize this agreement."
agreement.
Christopher, at a photo opportunity, said the United States was reconsidering its three-year ban on contacts with the PLO. "Obviously there are developments taking place that we are going to follow very closely," he said.
Cherian Syrian negotiator Muwaaffiqall Allat registered hope that progress on the Palestinian front would spread throughout the talks. "We hope the Israeli delegation will be following a more serious approach," he said.
The new agreement foresees selt rule for the Palestinians in the Israeli-
occupied Gaza Strip and in the biblical West Bank town of Jericho, as a first step toward autonomy for all 1.8 million Palestinians in the West Bank.
Israel and the PLO appear to have reached an understanding that says that once the PLO renounces all terrorism, recognition will follow.
It also implies a fact to recognition of the PLO, a group long reviled by Israel for its terrorism but which now appears to be the key to any peace agreement with the Palestinians.
Bosnian conference gets mixed results
The Associated Press
GENEVA — Bosnia's Muslim-led government and rebel Sberg agreed yesterday on a new cease-fire as year-old negotiations to end the brutal war by splitting the country reached a decisive phase.
Serb President Slobodan Milosevic and Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic, meanwhile, said they expected Bosnian President Alja iztebegovic to accept a separate plan to split Bosnia into three ethnic republics today.
"The conference continues tomorrow (today) and we are expecting the Muslim side to sign the whole package," Karadzic said as he emerged from day-long talks.
But Izzebekovic said there was no breakthrough in discussions on the boundaries of the republics.
"No progress so far," he said. "Maybe tomorrow. Izetbegovic has been consistently downbeat in public comments about the peace talks.
He has slammed a peace plan proposed by international mediators as rewarding Serb and Croat aggression. But he fears the outgunned government forces, and suffering Muslim civilians may not survive another winter.
vive about. Earlier, Bosnian Serb and government officials said the two sides agreed to a cessation of hostilities as part of a five-point plan. The three warring factions — Muslims, Serbs, Croats — have repeatedly agreed on cease-fires and then broken them.
eiyan. Kearadic aide Nikola Koljivec said other provisions included prison exchanges and a telephone hot line between government headquarters in Sarajevo and the Bosnian Serb base in nearby Pale, the first phone link since the war began nearly 17 months ago.
Izebegovic and Karadzic also agreed to set up a joint commission to regulate electricity and water supplies in all cities and pledged to calm news media, which have been used to incite hatred
among the three ethnic groups.
Government spokesman Mirza Hajr confirmed the agreement, which has yet to be signed and is separate from the plan to divide up the country. However, he played down its importance.
Koljevic said Izetbegovic made only minimal demands for changes in the map proposed by international mediators despite his earlier statements that the proposals were unacceptable.
Croatian President Franjo Tudjman said the Bosnian Croats had dropped their demands for changes in the borders on the proposed maps and were ready to sign the peace plan.
The Sorbs have already said they would sign the deal proposed by mediators Lord Owen of the European Community and Thorvald Stoltenberg of the United Nations.
United Nations It would divide Bosnia-Herzegovina into three ethnic republics with only a weak central government.
Latest stats: Americans living longer than ever
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — More Americans died in 1991 than ever before, but life expectancy at birth rose to a record 75.5 years, the government's record-keepers reported yesterday.
Heart disease, cancer and strokes remain the three big killers, claiming 64 percent of the 2,169,518 lives lost in 1991, the National Center for Health Statistics said.
Heath status assessed
Chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases —
including bronchitis, asthma and emphysema
overtook accidents as the fourth-leading cause of death. That was due in part to an 8 percent drop in motor-vehicle fatalities.
AIDS moved from 10th to ninth place on the list. Some 29,555 people died of AIDS complications. Men outnumbered women among the victims by more than 7 to 1.
Although the overall number of deaths broke a 1988 record by 1,519, the center said the death rate was actually down because the population was growing. There were 8,603 deaths for every 1 million people, down from 8,638 deaths in 1990 and from 8,713 deaths in 1991.
and the third-leading killer among black women in that age group. It is the second-leading cause of death among white men in that age range and sixth among women.
AIDS is the leading killer of black men ages 25-44
"Provisional data for 1992 suggest that the death rate is continuing to decline," the center said.
The infant mortality rate of 8.9 deaths per 1,000 live births was a record low. The mortality rate for black infants was 17.6 deaths, or more than double the rate of 7.3 deaths among white infants.
Women currently are expected to outlive men by an average of 6.9 years, and white persons are
Life expectancy at birth was 78.9 years for women and 72 years for men. It was 79.6 years for white females; 73.8 for black females; 72.9 for white males and 64.6 for black males.
expected to outlive black persons by an average of 7 years," the center said in its monthly vital-statistics report.
A person who turned 50 in 1991 could expect to live on average to 79.2 years; a person who turned 65 that year could expect to live to 82.4 years.
Life expectancy at birth was up by 0.1 years to its new high of 75.5 years.
Accidental deaths, including auto fatalities, have been declining since 1968.
Dr. Philip R. Lee, the assistant secretary for the department, called the increase in deaths from lung diseases "disturbing, particularly since many of these diseases are linked to smoking."
Health and Human Services Secretary Donna E. Spaldau it said that prevention worked.
The figures were drawn from all death certificates filed in the 50 states and the District of Columbia
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The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person because of race, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any advertisement on race, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or disinformation
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Wanted
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8:40am-5:30pm
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-10pm
Saturday 11am-3pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
120 Announcements
APPLICATIONS for the University Scholars Program, open to first semester semophores with a GPA of 3.8 or above, may be obtained in the Acadia School Library. Deadline for notifications is September 22nd, 1993.
BAPTIST STUDENT UNION. Thursday's 6:30pm at the American Baptist Hospice in Chicago, SLC, Lee LEE, BUSEL president. Small groups, music and drama, retreats, introsalms, sports mission, events for everyone. A
JAZZ DANCE CLASSES for beginning and experiencedLawrence Art Center Call 845-239-7111
NOTETAKING Workshop. Learn how to listen more effectively and take useful notes using the Cornell Method. FREE! Wed. Sept. 1, 8-9pm 4035 Wescoe. Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
DANCE!
LesBiGays
OK
Terrace Behind Strong Hall
September 10
9am-1am
1
STUDENT
SENATE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday. September 1. 1993
15
VOLUNTEER NEeded
Headquarter Counseling Center. Counselor training provided INFO meeting. Sun, #8 or Wed, 9/1,
8:49, 11:49 MBA meetings. Michigan.edu: 341-254.
LISTENING AND NOTETAKING WORKSHOP learn the Cornell method FRIDAY
4055 Wescoe Hall offered by the Student Assistance Center
130 Entertainment
Wednesday, September 1,
7-9 p.m.
4035 Wescoe Hall
MONDO DISCO Industrial, Alternative, Techno,
10' x 6' HDMI, HD-ready. 800-watt, 100-amp.
Cover hideaway 10 N East Park St., 800-125-1000.
Jayhawk
CARW
Jayhawk CAFE
Presents
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
They Came In Droves
Thursday September 2nd
BENCHWARMERS 25c DRAW!
Friday & Saturday
Soul Food
Cafe
with Deep Blue
Something
at
BENCHWARMERS
2 for 1 WELLS!
18 & over shows
Both Nights!
BENCHWARMERS 2 for 1 WELLS! 18 & over shows Both Nights!
140 Lost & Found
LOST-Thin navy blue sweatshirt w/raised white sleeve and navy blue collared shirt. School & Strength Hall Reward $29, call 814-9260. Lost one pair black rimmed men's glasses on black jacket. On 8-25-20. Sweet reward. call 814-9260.
MEN AND WOMEN
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
2 persons to care and/or live in an care giver for a child. Must have training in transfer, beds, chair. Nursing/therapeutic help. Experience preferred, will train. Separate living facility. Please refer to School for necessary School. Plus salary. Mail resume to: School of Nursing, N.Y.C., 125 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10024.
Child care and cook wanted from 3-4 M F M 66 as
call 842-6122
Accounting major familiar with Macintosh and
Windows program Blue Heron 837 Mass
No phone calls please
Adama Alumni Center needs AMP MF Dilwasser.
Contact us at 800-631-4572 or
phone no. phone call, Address 1284 Overall ADR
After-Hours Emergency Screener. Part-time for experience in emergency medical services; dieable be available 5 p.m. m. a.m. i night a week and weekend a month. Requires Master's in Emergency Medicine or related field and experience with clinical psychiatric services. Send resume and letter of interest to Bert Nash Manley, Department of Psychiatry, Attn Sharon Zehr. Open up position filled. EOE
Part-time position available for individual inter-
view opportunities in a veterinary environ-
ment. Includes fees and cages. Mornings hour M-F & every other weekend.
If interested, inquire at 828-256-9301, Temporary Ses-
rior 328, 828-256-9301.
BabySitter needed for some afternoons & evenings. In our home, must have car. Call 841-793-6205
Bucky's drive in now taking applications for part-time employment. Apply in person by 18AM or by mail to Bucky at bucky@kennedy.edu.
Child care wanted late November
evenings Mon - Thur. 32 Hours per call 842-
Children Learning Center is now hiring 1 am and 2 pm teacher seats for infant and preschool class Monday through Friday weekdays. Apply at 311 Main. 841-2185
CRUISER SHIPS NEW HIRING Earn up to $2000 *m* + world travel Summer & career employment available. No experience necessary. For more information call 1-963-643-6466 or ext. C958. DEADLINE 09/08/93. Salary $4.35 hr. Duties include typing, filing, photocopying distributing reports, and performing all assigned clerical duties; enter and edit text from a computer terminal; M-F 8:00 a.m - 10:00 p.m; M-2 Fork in work 2-3 hours. **3** Ability to follow company procedures. **3** Skill in typing skills at a speed of 4%pm; **3** Willingness to learn WordPerfect VM, XEVID, and FOCUS. To apply, complete a job application which is available with the Computer Center EO/AA EMPLOYER
Drivers needed for a fun job. Meet lots of people while making good money. The *Lawrence Bus Co.* offers a job for SAFERIDE. Must be 21 years old & have good driving skills on 22 per hr w/ -very flexible. £5/hr B4-804-054
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
WALK-INS WELCOME!
By donating your life saving blood plasma
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
Immediate part time positions. Tennis front desk snack bar-events and weekends. Nursery-Tue/Thu 8 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Apply at Alva racerio 4120 Clinton Park between 9:45 a.m. - 10:30 a.m.
Kansas and Burge Unions hire part-time, hourly for Fall Semester. Many jobs in Food Service. Catering and Custodian with varying schedule. Training in Kansas Union Building for job specifics EOE
KU Hille seeks a graduate student of Lawrence resident to work approximately 40 hours per week, typing, filling prepaid bulk mail and other tasks incl. Computer science. Must have well with students and be interested in learning about Jewish life. Pleible hours: wages negotiation based on calls. Skill Call: 86-394-8386.
Needed before and after school care for 2
children with special contact
Jackie #625-729. Leave a message
Office help needed 11-39-20 30 WMF 41-39-50 TTH. Must be a business major, be enrolled at least 12 hrs, at KU have GAP of at least 2 and be a Kaman教师 Call 841-695-9-M-F.
Part time evening delivery person. Must have own
Apply in person (apply Peking Restaurant 23rd &
1wk) behind Hastings! Ph : +98-4000, after ppm
TU, TAFILM LTD, Phone: +98-4000-749-8100
TU, TAFILM LTD, Phone: +98-4000-749-8100
Part-time s眼 needed. Would like some experi-
mental help. S.A. Inc. 2000; E 234; or call 865-
142 for Aebr.
PART-TIME TIMESUPERVISOR. Mass Street Dell or Buffalo Bob Food Store. Previous food service and supervisory experience mandatory. Start up with a job for up to $25, fr 20-30 wk, a week, e威 and evends. Apply at Schumann Food Company Business office at 179 Mass, (upstairs above Smokehouse). M. P. 4-18.
Part-time telephone marketer needed. No experience.
Inc. 2206 E 23rd,
816-3514a Kirk for Bendricks.
Party pie photographers and lab help needed.
Must be able to work weekdays,weekdays,
no experience needed. Apply at True Colors Photo
1119 Massachusetts.
PHILIPS 166 secs cashiers to work the following
times, 6am-12pm, 5pm-12pm, 12am-4pm. Must be neat,
clean and enjoy working with public. Apply in
person to PHILIPS 166 - 900 Iowa.
Rainire Montessori School is interviewing for 3 positions. Teachers-Master teach be native speaker, have experiencing working with children. Instructor-Instructor Experience in non-competitive games with elementary-aged kids. Hrs 1:15-3:00 MJ. Pantier-Yeates hour 2:00 hrs Wk 84 Call 843-6900
Phoenix Carriage is now hiring part-time cleaners Must have transportation and phone Call 843-260-3598
Read Books for Pay Earn $100 per item Free details, Rates and Stamp Envelope to get a free 2nd book. (899) 567-4200
Reliable responsible person to drive to my house to baby sit two boys age three and seven. Call #871-342-9266.
The Resident Assistant (RA) holds a 10-month, 40% live-in position with the KU Department of Nursing, and provides training in grammering, and paraprofessional advising/facilitating functions for the approximately 40% adult resident in the KU residence, and the resident hall in general, under supervision of the Complex Director. Required: At least 6 years of experience in providing 30 or more credit hours, 1989-94 KU enrollment. Compensation: A single room and meals are provided for staff tuition/fees. Average cost for staff tuition/fees is addition. A maximum number of applicants to Apply. For complete job description and application materials, contact the Department of Student Affairs at 800-256-4750, day. September 6, 1989. EDD/AE Employer
Small design firm needs part time job 24-30 hours
Good communication skills a must. AJR for fic 415
STUDENT TRAINER/CONSULTANT-MICROCOMPUTER Deadline: 9/14/93 Salary: $550-$650/month 20 hours/week Duties include teach computer skills in applications packages commonly in DOS, Windows and Macintosh computers. Provide microcomputer support. Develop and maintain expertise in applications packages commonly in DOS, Windows and Macintosh computers. Provide course descriptions, and mailing lists. Other duties as assigned. To apply, submit a letter of application, a current resume with reference letters, a copy of your resumes from the Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045. Applicants may be asked to give a short instructional presentation on a computing topic of interest.
No experience necessary. Please full and
time schedules. No caravans or telephone calls.
STUDENT WORK
Established Lawrence band song for female vocalist.
Must have desire, creativity, and growth in the vocal exaltant need. If we always wanted to be on that stage and not just watching it then call for a vocal exaltant.
Full-time live in nanny needs for 3 active children (toddler, 4, 7). Reliable, non-smoker, have own car. Housekeeping duties mfld B/+ B salary (previous). Previous, refs Calls 749-8253 after 7am
Help Wanted: Reliable, responsible person to drive to my house to baby-sit two boys ages three and four.
HELP WANTED: Female personal care attend-
nants. Hours and times vary. Call 841-9080
Home-based Therapist, Part-time. Fee for service. To provide clinical services to severely emotionally disturbed children, adolescents, and families. Requires Masters degree with reimbursable health services to SED children and families. Send resume and letter of interest to Bert Nash CMHC 385 Missouri, Ste. 202; Lawrence KS 66044, Patricia Rach. Open until position filled EOE
PYRAMID
PIZZA
Looking for enthusiastic people who understand what great service is all about!
Now Taking Applications
Now Hiring
Drivers
Must have car
and insurance
Fast growing company Looking for quality minded people. Good opportunity for growth
Full & Part Time
Fast growing company
Apply in person 14th & Ohio(under the Wheel)
Varied hours prefer 3 courses in child development and experience. Sunshine Acres B2-223
Lancaster County Department of Corrections seeks individual to perform responsible technical work involving the overall operation of a mainframe computer system, and to operate operating system, including an associated personal computer network, i. e. Lotus, Word Perfect and Quattro Pro and associated personal computer systems. The role is also required by vocational or college level coursework in system analysis and programming with 6 mos-2 yrs experience performing system analysis and application. Please apply for a position requiring 2-4 years experience as described desired. Salary: $12.55 Hrs 8-40 M-F. Must complete a Supplemental Questionnaire and an application form. Please send resumes to Lancaster County Employment Office, 555 10th Street, Rm B113, Lincoln NC
TRAVEL SALES! * Sunshine SKi & Beach is accepting applications for Campus Rep. top $55
Tumbling / Acrobatic instructor needed. Must be able to aerial work. Dance Gallery 841-1213.
UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER seeks
super-organized graduate
student for half-time en-
gagement at the University.
Salary $641.66 per month. Want individual
skills, experience with kU and
community resources, highly
matte (Macintosh), solid research skills, leadership
experience, organizational skills, sense of humor,
social skills, knowledge of kU Info.
KU Info, 420 Union, for an application. Applica-
ment must be received at 420 Union by 5pm, Friday.
WORK STUDY POSITION AVAIL. at the East
Wall of Avalon CAPITAL. Apply for a 2118
Wescor or call 864-310-3109
WORK STUDY POSITIONS AVAILABLE at the School of Business at Northwestern and the department 1185 Summer Program #1134.
225 Professional Services
White's Music Has Guitar Lessons. JazzRock
Blues and lyrics. Sign up with White's #1 Eighth, 8th St.
1234567890.
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense For free consultation call Rick Frydman, Attorney 823 Missouri 843-4023
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
BMC Sailboard and rig $98. Backpack rack $30. BMC Mountain Bike $12 OBO. Child bike set $15
235 Typing Services
Donald G Strole Sally G Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-1133
*Idier Women Word Processing. Former editor*
*quality type 84-2663*
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters the law offices of
C CD Desktop Publishing: Resumes. Cover Letters.
Brocures, Fliesers. Term Paper. Newsletters.
Bridgeside MH 4 Mountain Bike for sale 15 inch
Bicycle. Please call between 10:00 & 8:00
m. 824.91 m. 16288
DONALDG. STROLE
305 For Sale
**19" Giant ATX mk.16; Shimano Deore LX, barends, Ritty tires, perfect cond. $385 call 841-2390
1978 Toyota Corolla, 5-speed, very reliable $255.00 or best offer 841-3713
Are you Makein' the grade
WORD PROCESSING LASER PRINTING
For all your typing needs
call Makin' the grade at 865-2855
1982 Mercury Cougar, wagon. AT.PS. good shape
1062 Mercury Cougar. $1,000; 466-8635
1983 Rabbit L. Standard, Great condition, no rust.
No chips or cracks.
1986 14-40 mobile home b 2 br. 5 bath. CA, Fenced
1986 14-40 mobile home b 2 br. 5 bath. CA, Fenced
& shed Kitchen b 3 br. D/Call 811-744-4899
300s Merchandise
Double bed with shell headboard 66. Color TV 825
ST stand 34. Love seat 37. Call 859-3612
X
black pickguard Under new yr 18 Perfect condition.
Please call between 8:35 a.m. 842-1088
GREAT RUG x80 dark green w / pattern
GREAT condition x120 Linear tracking turntable
Gray contemporary love seat. Light gray with dark gray skirt. Very comfortable. $159 Call (800) 234-6767.
FOR SALE. MOTION BIKE, RED TREK 390
w, all the mountains. Brand new, a gift ridden
twice. Leave message, along with offer, goes to
bidder. 492-9533
Hydraul 3885X BM 4M Arm HD MVGA, mouse
that hop 110 IP perfect for Word Processing
and Macro Typing.
1986 600R Ninja New tires, chain, batt. tune $1,000
1986 600R Ninja New tires, chain, batt. tune $1,000
MC AE 56-Meg hard drive 2.5 meg RAM
Dell original version of Claris Works
B09 Call 841 6532
KONA *Klaus* M*Bike* 18" Shim XT, Tangerine
Gorgeous look *Gorgeous* $800-434. Gorgeous look *Gorgeous* $800-434.
58 for your HP 48 box flap with bar code. Leave message at 804-3269.
For sale: Monster's 20 inch Raleigh Iguana 12 sp.
Ride for good ride. Great price
$890 B O R 0893-7857-214
Lizard for law; 2; ? (not black and gold Tegu
Healy, good eater, $80 B O M-127. Leaf
eater, $80 B O M-127.
388 IBM Compatible Computer 60MB 3.5 & 8
inch disk Drive, Mouse, keyboard 12 inch mso
drive
montana Road bike, all campy equipment, cost over $1200 new, only $90. Many extra. Also for sale a new condition call 855-1234, leave message if not home
Macintosh LCV with 4 mg ram, 80 HD, 16" color monitor. HP DeskJet Ink Jet Printer key, printer
1990 Schwan Sierra min. bike 21 spd. 21 in $350
1990 Schwan Sierra Call Mkp.
**Moving Sales** *Contemp* bk lacquer glass cocktail
end table only 110*§* Vacas auto 35-130mm camera uses; - negative 72 - pieces 19.6$ *Pans*
45-110mm camera uses; - negative 15.0$ *Pans* (15 $ *Nanot* Big Savings) 816-942-0246
INTERNATIONAL
ReadTrader
LICENSE
LAWRENCE
Make-Your-Own-Jewelry STORE
10171/2 Massachusetts
Lawrence KS 66044
865-4181
Nearly new two '10" 12 speed Pujol road bike like $196 each, less than 50 miles of use. One Taurent axle and a Fuji wheel for less than $196.
One-way ticket, K C to Miami. (fly anytime
for sale) 789-2415, 789-7577
Packard Bell and Best Data 2400 bpm modems. 50% each. Currer HST high speed modem. 825% each.
PC26. 480 meg. 2 hoppy drives. 490 Hauk internal
module, VGA card, extra slots. Software box 650 neg.
Also. Gray carpet $30; sofa sleeper & love seat
$200. 713万 713mm
Patrick Nagel limited frameed prints for sale call Francisco at 843-7292 a message if needed.
Read Bed i996 Cannondale S1060 $40 92.99
Bio Connect i996 Cannondale S1060 $40 92.99
Bio Connect i996 Cannondale S1060 $40 92.99
Starburst blue Westone (Spectrum s six string guitar. Two dual outside pick-ups, and one center pick-up. Tremolo with finger fine tuning and separate treble and treble combs. Comes with a locking hard case and a Crate G 46 amplifier in a Celestion speaker. $ 800. 760-666 or 842-9386
Two person dome tent $23. Three person dome $55
Four person dome $85. 8425-4245 After $5
Viola 16 and one hill, new case & Steenkow;
wireless quality 913-895-4516
White Hardrock mountain bike 20" i yr, old like
new. $820. 842-8498
340 Auto Sales
1983 Honda Acca, runs great! AT. AC
1984 Honda Acca, runs great! 1420 days.
1985-86 Accord Ai for Waterer
Bellable transportation 80 Ford Pinto / Best offer
Corry Tater at 841-7246
360 Miscellaneous
THE CHAPMAN
(Used & Curious Goods)
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
Noon: 6:00 Tue. Sat.
Buy * Sell * Trade
370 Want to Buy
Looking for a Kiel mountain bike, good condition
Call 864-8016
A
$5 for your HP48 box flap with bar code Leave
the box open.
400s Real Estate
105 For Rent
2 BR attb & Itho & IBM in Lawrence, DW, CA W/D
hipkits, microwave, brand new market. #44. Call
(718) 523-9000.
3 bbr 2 hr aft for rent Campus Place. Very close to campus. Requestable in Smoker please. Call
Naismith Halls' services give students the competitive edge.
Front door bus service
Over the Edge
3 BR. 2 bath hpt. for rent, Campus Place, Close to
Campus. Reasonable rent. Smoker 162-808
24 hr. computer center
Fitness room
Delta Corporation
842-8428
Renta WASHER & DRYER ForOnly $40 a Month
Dine anytime meals
-
Weekly maid service
NAISMITH tall
3301 Clinton Parkway Ct., Suite #5 Lawrence, KS 66047
- Free Maintenance
• GE Two Speed, Heavy Duty
Large Capacity
Excellent location, close to KU, town 2 BR apartment in 4 bays, CA, no pets, kbrs at 104 Tennesse
BIG BR 21R 3AIR fire or unfurn. new 6b & lova in
LAGERY WINDOWS MICROWINDOWS IW. TOW $400 000 $780 000
$150 000 $190 000 $220 000
1800 Naismith Drive (913) 843-8559
Large (16x18) room for non-smoking female, 3m²
Large (16x18) room, $210. UTL Call, P249-0166
move IN MOVE 1 bedroom w./ fridge in nice house $165/m. + 2 fulls from campus. Call 843-2243 Tiffin 3 bdr. bw. New $650 beds, spreads, plus carpeteting. Graduate engineers preferred. No TV, computers or games. Take trash, is not for you. This is unique. Call 749-1492 bet. 6 - 1am & 6 - 1pm) 2926/person.
430 Roommate Wanted
2 male, NS roommates needed to share d house
ID, DW 325/mi) utilities + cable pair (cable
pair)
Female non-smoker to 2 BR Apt 1 block from crossing Newly rebuilt $200 + utility room
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
2nd Bath kit bfor rent Campus Place. Close to campus. Reasonable rent. Smoker please. 842
Roommee needed. Gas and water paid on the K1
bus route. Call after 8pm. 843-6577.
- By phone: 864-4358
Female roommate needed ASAP for 2-bdrm. fc
location; cost $200. phone Call Angle 841 1838
Non-smoking female for female bed 1 hdupl duplex
b坚果 northeast of campus $160 + /Ullman Calles
Responsible female to share 2 birch aid. 1pm walk from工厂. Furnished $235 an hour and uif
$45 an hour.
Female roommate to share a two-bed room with one person. Close to campus, $153 monthly rent.
FREE CULTILITIES? & private bath: DW, CA microwave in Lawrence. Share with quiet毕业grad student. Smoker OK Call: -314-9429 college Non-smoking female for quiet 3 bed, bain douche
Responsible non smoking fom roommate need to share fire 2 HR appl. $485 + Call 663-6000
How to schedule an ad:
Third roommate needed at Orchard Corners for $210 + utilities. Call 842-3708
- By Mail; 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
10 person(s) 1991 Stair Print Card
for use between 8.4 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, AC, cable CHEAP! will go fast CAST! 865-26231mz message
Ads phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* **person:** 19* *Snapper Flint*
Calculating Rates:
Classified Information and order form
You may print your classifier classification on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kanai office. You may have to submit your MasterCard or visa card. Ads that are charged to VISA or MasterCardcard require a refund on orders made by you.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of gate lines to ad occupants). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the ad that is qualifying for that. That amount must be calculated using the following formula:
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105 personal
110 business personalis
120 announcements
130 entertainment
Classifications
1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30-X
1.05 1.55 1.05 1.85 .75 .50
1.90 1.15 .80 .70 .65 .45
1.95 1.05 .75 .60 .60 .45
1.75 1.50 .75 .60 .55 .35
140 lst & found 360 for sale
225 hired wanted 440 auto sales
225 professional services 360 miscellaneous
225 prins services
1
2
3
4
5
379 want to buy
405 for rent
438 roommate wanted
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
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(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charming your ad:
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Signature
The University Daily Kansas, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66445
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
"I'm sorry, Roger.
but I've met someone else with brighter plumage."
16
LAKE MENDOTA. THE PROJECT CONSUMED HALF THE STUDENT BUDGET FOR THE YEAR AND CAUSED A CAMPUS FURO
Wednesday, September 1, 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
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.
MIDNIGHT
Machines
Sprint.
COLLEGIATE
FONCARD™
816 854 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
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 through Thursday, September 2 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 LTD.
RECTED 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: The Kansas volleyball team defeats Wichita State in its season opener. Page 11
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103.NO.10
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2,1993
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Multicultural center funds nearing goal
Student Senate will try to match $10.000 this year
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
In November 1991, Student Senate passed a petition calling on the University of Kansas to build a multicultural center on campus.
Now, two years and several changes later for the planned multicultural center, the Senate has yet to match the $10,000 the University contributed a year ago.
The matching funds from the Senate are likely to come this year, said Tim Dawson, Topeka senior and student body vice president.
"It's realistic we could do that, and I think the Student Senate will back the multicultural center," he said.
Pressure to finance the center has plagued the Senate since April 1992, when David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, announced KU's plan to erect a multicultural center by this fall. In that speech, he said KU would pledge $10,000 for programming costs and challenged the Senate to match that amount.
The center has been delayed at least until Spring 1994. The multicultural planning committee moved its loca-
Dawson said he was optimistic this year's Senate would appropriate the money.
"We stressed in our campaign that our goals are centered around multicultural interests," he said.
Dawson said he wanted to change the Senate's attitude toward multicultural affairs. Last year some senators complained about the amount of money the Senate spent on such groups, he said. He estimated that 80 percent of Senate funds were spent on multicultural groups last year.
There was some underlying tension," he said. "Even from some members of the executive board, there was tension."
The tension culminated with a column written by then-student body president Brad Garlinghouse in a newsletter published by the Organizations and Activities Committee. The column criticized spending such a high amount of money on groups that "represent exactly 5 percent of the student body."
Dawson said, " hopefully, I can portray a new attitude."
Sherwood Thompson, director of the Office of Minority Affairs, said he would be "disappointed" if the Senate did not appropriate money for the center.
"Student Senate support for the establishment of the multicultural center is critical to its success," he said. "The Senate is a representative body of the students, and the Senate has the voice of the students on campus."
Arthur Chiu, Joplin, Mo., senior and president of the Asian American Student Union, said he was optimistic the Senate would appropriate the money. The center is too important to be ignored, he said.
"It would be an advantage to the University," he said. "Many major universities have cultural centers, and this would be the University of Kansas' sign of the times."
The effort to create a multicultural center on campus has spanned two years and three buildings. The center is scheduled for completion in late spring.
Fall 1991 - Student Senate recommends multicultural center in renovated Hoch Auditorium.
Spring 1992 — KU announces multifacial center to be established in house at 1400 Louisiana St.
Spring 1993 - Garlinghouse protests spending 80 percent of Senate funds on multicultural affairs.
Summer 1993 - Multicultural planning committee suggests housing the proposed center in Supportive Educational Services building.
Source: Staff research KANSAN
Lottery system could determine basketball seats
By Shan Schwartz
Kansan staff writer
For the first time ever, a lottery may decide which students get tickets to KU basketball games this year.
Students picking up their sports combo tickets this week at Memorial Stadium are receiving only their football tickets. They are being told that basketball tickets will be available after October 1 and that some of them may not get tickets at all.
Bernie Kish, director of ticket operations for the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation, said the number of tickets ordered by students during spring and summer enrollment might be higher than the number of student seats available in Allen Field House.
This leaves officials in the department trying to determine the exact number of seats available in the field house and the exact number of students who have purchased tickets for those seats.
Most students had the opportunity to order tickets on an options card when they enrolled in the spring or summer, and they paid for those tickets with their tuition and fees. Kish said additional students who wanted tickets but did not order them on the options card were placed on a waiting list.
If there are not enough seats available for everyone who purchased tickets, the student members of the KUAC board will organize a lottery. Kish said.
Forty-five percent of the total seating in the field house, Kish said, was reserved for students. He said the actual number of seats available this year could not be determined until the department counted the seats and the capacity was approved by the fire marshal.
Last year, about 7,000 seats were available for students.
Last year, about 7,000 seats were available for students. Several hundred student seats, however, are used each day by both students and members and others on a pass list who get into the games free, said Pat Warren, student member of the KUAC board.
Warren said that the department was cross-checking the names on the pass list with the names of students who ordered tickets to eliminate duplications. When the cross-check is finished, the board will know exactly how many tickets are needed to supply all those who ordered them. At that point, the department will know if a lottery is necessary.
Warren said that a lottery was a likely possibility.
"Our hope is that everyone can get tickets," he said
If a lottery does take place, Warren said, students who paid for the combo package but did not get basketball tickets will be refunded the price of the basketball tickets. Any student can purchase season football tickets for $33. Basketball tickets, however, are only sold as part of the $85 sports combo.
"It's sad that we might have to go to a lottery," Warren said, "but we're still better off than a lot of schools. We have more seats than anyone in the Big Eight.
"I'd rather have a good program and a ticket lottery than a bad program with plenty of available seats."
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
front, Brookings, S.D. freshman auditions for the University Dance Company at Robinson Gym. The results of last night's auditions will be announced today.
KU officials may shorten dismissal process
Tryouts
CHEVYNE DANCE CLUB
Bv David Stewart
In its final report for the dismissal hearing of Emil Tonkovich, the Faculty Tenture and Related Problems Committee that considered his fate also considered how it could shorten the hearing process. It was a process that involved 33 days of hearings and generated 8,176 pages of testimony.
INSIDE
It was a process that some KU officials do not want to see again.
It took more than 2,500 hours of KU faculty members' volunteered time during 323 days.
Members of the Lawrence band Mountain Clyde may live and practice in a ramshackle warehouse, but their music and the following it has attracted are anything but shabby.
Kansan staff writer
"Capital trials for murder don't last that long," said David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs. "We have a need to look at the rules of the procedure. We have to find a way to shorten this."
SCHWELLMAN
Out of the warehouse
, don't see how it can be shortened if you're going to give both sides an opportunity to present their arguments," Michel said. "If you give the hearing panel time off, that will put an added burden on the rest of their department."
Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, said he wanted to maintain a balance between a fair hearing and a quick hearing.
Among these suggestions, the report said the University should free future committee members from other faculty duties, including teaching and on-going research, while serving at dismissal hearings.
The University Senate Executive Committee will consider proposed changes in the hearing process in late September, said Robert Friau, head of University Council. In the recent case of the nine-month Tonkovich hearing, the committee wrote 17 specific suggestions in its final 250-page report on how to shorten and improve the hearing process.
Tonkovich was dismissed from his position as KU Professor of Law on July 30 when the committee voted 3-2 to uphold Chancellor Gene Budig's decision to fire him based on moral turpitude.
"The basic problem was that I worked a minimum of 10 hours a week on this committee all year." Daid said. "In the meantime, I still had all my classes. This was an add-on load."
As a member of the committee for the Tonkovich case, Nancy Dahl, professor of biology, said she and other members each spent from 500 to 600 hours conducting the hearings and weighing the evidence.
The committee members also expressed concern in the report that they were losing research and teaching time, often factors that determine merit-based pay raises.
"The University's interest in securing a prompt resolution of a grievance against a professor ... is so great, and the service burden for committee members so extraordinary," the report stated, "that the members' other responsibilities should be suspended."
Committee member John Michel, professor of speech, language and hearing, said he doubted the University could realistically make the changes necessary for shortening the hearing process.
"When you don't have much experience with the process, you just do the best you can," Meyen said.
Female condom has high failure rate
By Liz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
The first FDA-approved female condom will be made available at the end of this year, and health officials at KU are considering whether to carry the contraceptive at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
"If people buy something at the health center, it should be effective." Yockey said. "This is the first thing that's come along that's not an automatic, it's available, let's get it." To my knowledge, the FDA hasn't authorized any contraceptive that has this high of a failure rate."
Watkins chief of staff Charles Yockey said a decision about carrying the female condom — a six-inch polyurethane sheath with two polyurethane rings — would be made in mid-fall.
Wisconsin Pharmaceutical company, the manufacturer of the Reality Female Condom, listed the failure rate at 26 percent.
The company conducted a study of 200
women who used the condom for six months. Since most contraceptive studies last one year, Pharmacal doubled the 15 six months to get 28 percent for the year.
The high rate of failure has raised doubts among health care professionals.
"The way the figures are only quoted for six months is highly unusual for contraceptives." Watkins physician Henry Buck said. He said that a 13 percent failure rate in a six-month study did not necessarily mean that the percentage would double in a year's time.
Health officials at Watkins said the failure rate for the male condom varied from 4 percent to 15 percent.
"It's very sad that the FDA is not letting us put that 13 percent in perspective," said Mary Ann Leeper, the condom manufacturer's senior vice president for development.
Buck said the Reality condom also did not completely protect the outer vaginal area from infection.
Students who examined the female condom for the first time had mixed reactions.
Leeper said the company used two measures for contraceptive effectiveness. When people in the study used the condom incorrectly or did not use it all the time, the condom had a 13 percent failure rate. If the condom was used correctly, she said, it had a 2.6 percent failure rate.
- That it covers the fact
Disadvantages include:
A 1 percent tear rate.
That it covers the labia.
The cost, which is about $2 to $2.50 per condom. They can be used only once.
harmful for Watkins nurse and health educator Candyce Waitley said some of the advantages of the female condom were:
- That people may find if cumbersome and difficult to insert and keep in place
the first time she had missed her day. Ann Francis, Lawrence said, "I defined in my place in society because women are taking more control of their lives."
Female condom
condom is still soon available. Thus far, they are the first barrier designated for women that provides protection against some sexually
outer ring
sheath
inner ring
10
transmitted diseases.
2) The inner ring is squeezed for insertion, and the condom is inserted like a tampon.
2. The inner ring is pushed up as far as possible with the index finger. The open end will remain aligned with the index finger.
Source: reality condom packet John Paul Fogler/RAANSE
2
Thursday, September 2,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KU Men's Fall Soccer Club Fall Season Practice
WHEN: Thurs., Sept. 2 5:30pm
WHERE: 23rd & Iowa Shenk Complex
QUESTIONS:
QUESTIONS:
KIPPER HESSE 841-6472
BRIAN ROBEY 842-6971
"THRIFTY THURSDAY!" SAVE BIG BUCKS!
From Your Friends at Pyramid Pizza (of course!)
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BASEBALL/SOFTBALL
Sept. 1 through Sept. 19.
BAT, GLOVE and CAP SALE
Don't play another season with worn out gear!
Bats
Bats now $50 to $80, take $10 off.
Bats now $81 to $100, take $20 off.
Bats now $101 up, take $30 off. Louisville Slugger*
More bats
All Easton softball bats 1/2 price.
EASTON
Choose from a wall full -- *hundreds* -- of ball gloves.
Markdown make way for '94 models.
(For example: Wilson A2000 194, $110, Sale $60!)
ON CAMPUS
NEW
Selected, fitted New Era major/minor leagues. K.U. hats. $10.
Since 1947.
Caps
Monday through Friday, 9:00 to 5:30. Thursday 'till 8:30.
Sunday 12:00 to 4:00. Closed Sept. 5 and 6 for Labor Day.
The American Meteorology School Chapter at KU will hold a meeting at 4:30 p.m. today in 3005 Malt Hall.
Selected, fitted New Era
A program, "Indigo Girls—Bands of Significance," will be presented at 5 p.m. toronto at 1200 Avenue of the Stars, 1204 Ave. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933.
The KU Anthropology Club will hold a meeting at 5 p.m. today in 633 Fraser Hall. For details, call Destiny Corder at 832-1469.
■ The KU Champions Club will hold a meeting at 6:30 p.m. today at Parlors A, B and C in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Erik Lindsley at 841-4585
■ Intervarsity Christian Fellowship will hold a meeting at 7 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call David Zimmerman at 844-7117.
The KU Pre-Law Society will hold a meeting at 7 tonight at
■ The University Chess Society will hold a meeting at 7 tonight at the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union. Players of all levels are welcome and should bring chess sets if possible.
Lesbian, Bisexual and Gay Services of Kansas will hold a meeting at 7:30 tonight at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union.
the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union.
Jayhawk Campus Fellowship will hold a meeting 8 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call John Dale at 864-1115.
KU Libertarians will hold a meeting at 8 tonight at Alcove D in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Allen Tiffany at 842-2411.
The KU Fencing Club will hold a meeting at 8:30 tonight in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445.
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Investigate internship possibilities
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All majors invited to attend
Over 90 companies represented
- Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
- Cargil Inc.
- Olde Discount Corp.
- Hallmark Cards, Inc.
- Big 6 Public Accounting Firms
- Toys "R" Us
WEATHER
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 91°/70°
Chicago: 79°/56°
Houston: 96°/73°
Miami: 90°/77°
Minneapolis: 71°/49°
Phoenix: 97°/70°
Salt Lake City: 78°/51°
Seattle: 81°/57°
Omaha: 74°/50°
LAWRENCE: 79°/62°
Kansas City: 81°/56°
St. Louis: 84°/65°
Wichita: 88°/59°
Tulsa: 90°/67°
TODAY
Cloudy with 60% chance for rain
High: 79°
Low: 62°
Tomorrow
Sunny
High: 82°
Low: 65°
Saturday
Partly cloudy
High: 84°
Low: 68°
Source: Greece Potter, KU Weather Service; 864-1300
John Paul Foerer/KANSAN
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119
Stauffer-Finn Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
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PRE-LAW SOCIETY
Speaker: Robert Jerry II Law School Dean
LAW SYSTEMS
Sept. 2
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The Spencer Museum of Art at the University of Kansas is now open Thursdays until 9:00 p.m.
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CZECH FILM SERIES
Enjoy over 4,000 years of world art history four more hours per week-at the only comprehensive art museum in Kansas.
SPECIAL EXHIBITIONS
The Unbearable Lightness of Being Spencer Museum Auditorium Thursday, September 2, 7:00 p.m.
Contemporary Czech and Slovakian Photography August 22-October 3
American Indian Baskets from the University of Kansas Museum of Anthropology August 29-October 10
SPENCER
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The University of Kansas
Lawrence, Kansas 60645
Telephones 913-864-4710
Tuesday & Wednesday . 8:30 m.-5:00 p.m.
Thursday . 8:30 m.-5:00 p.m.
Friday & Saturday . 8:30 m.-5:00 p.m.
Sunday . Noon-5:00 p.m.
The galleries are closed on Mondays.
As always—admission is free!
JAYHAWK PAWN & JEWELRY Some CD's as low as $4.00!!
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Monday- $2.75 Pitchers
Tuesday- $.25 Draws ($3.00 cover)
Wednesday- $1.50 Big Beers/ $.75 Draws
Thursday- $1.00 Big Beers ($3.00 cover)
Friday- $1.25 Cans/ Free Burgers
Sunday- $1.75 Imports
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 2, 1993
3
Haskell visiting professor narrates movie
Documentary shows decline of Black Hills
Many cable television viewers who tuned in last night to the Home Box Office channel had an eye-opening experience.
By Brian James Kansan staffwriter
At least that is what Henrietta Mann
hopes.
Mann, a University of Montana professor on sabbatical and now a visiting professor at Haskell Indian Nations University, narrated parts of the movie, "Paha Sapa. The Struggle for the Black Hills." The movie was shown on IHB at 6 p.m. yesterday.
About 250 people attended the premier showing of the movie in Haskell's auditorium. Members of a KU political science class, Tribal-Federal Relations, also attended the screening.
The movie, Mann said, was created to offer a different perspective of the history and ownership of the Black Hills in western South Dakota and eastern Montana.
"We were part of the 20 million people who saw this tonight," she said. "I hope we all had our eyes and ears opened to what has happened to this place we cherish."
The movie began with sweeping aerial photography of the Black Hills, and narrators from the Lakota and Cheyenne tribes telling of the spiritual importance of the region.
giant billboards dotting the hills.
The sequence of scenes summed up the message of the hour-long movie: American Indians said they have seen their holy lands — the Black Hills — stolen and desecrated by people who have used the land for commercial reasons.
Mann is a former coordinator of the American Indian Religious Freedom Coalition, a group that fights to protect existing American Indian lands in the western United States.
Even Mount Rushmore, one narrator said, was an example of misuse of the land.
"If you look at those individuals up there, they have a lot to do with the demise of the Lakota people," the narrator said.
Mann said she had been nervous during the filming.
"I've got to admit I was a little
tongue-tied at first," she said. "Then I thought of my responsibility to help fight for your right and your grandchildren's right to inherit this land."
American Indians have been fighting to reclaim control of the Black Hills, an area of land that they say belonged to them.
Congress is currently considering the Native American Free Exercise of Religion Act, which would ease restrictions on the use of the Black Hills by American Indians, Mann said.
Tina Haladay, Lawrence senior, was among those from the KU political science class that attended the screening.
She said she was glad the movie was on HBO.
"More people need to be exposed to the American Indians' feelings and their perspective," Haladay said.
FRIENDSHIP
Hernietta Mann, a visiting professor at Haskell Indian Nations University, hags Cavern Smith, Lawrence senior at KU and part time student at Haskell.
GESSO
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Nikole Hendricks, Rockford ill. senior, gessos a canvas in the Art and Design Building. Gesso is a base that is put on canvas so that it can be painted.
Preparing to paint
KU mentor program helps minorities with grad school
By Kathleen Stolle Kensan staff writer
Roieo Munoz-Dunbar's license plate reads "GQOHP]I"
"On a driving advertisement," she said with a laugh.
Tina and her Diving Instructor Munoz-Dunbar is also a driving force behind the College of Liberal Arts and Science's Dean's Scholars Program. The program matches KU Hispanics, African Americans, Asian Americans and American Indians with KU faculty mentors. Munoz-Dunbar recruits candidates to apply.
SAMMER BURKE
"We're particularly interested in the kids who have a lot of latent but may not show it in traditional ways," said Katherine McCuskey-Fawcett, program director and associate dean of the college.
Since the program began in March 1992, 19 scholars have been named. The five newest scholars were announced this fall.
Right now there are not a lot of minorities going to grad school," said Crystal Collier, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, and one of the new scholars. "This helps boosts numbers and give a better understanding of the graduate school process."
Scholars are encouraged to apply for graduate school and consider teaching at the college level as a career. The scholars also attend weekly seminars on graduate school preparation.
McCluskey-Fawcett and Munoz-Dunbar said the impetus for the program was the low number of minorities in university faculty positions.
arity positions. "It's extremely difficult to find people of color who are interested in faculty jobs," McCluskey-Fawcett said of the arts and sciences.
sciences.
According to statistics from the Office of Institutional Research and Planning, 91.6 percent of KU's faculty in the fall of 1992 was white. Asians composed 4.8 percent of the faculty African Americans composed 2.0 percent, followed by Hispanics with 1.4 percent and American Indians with 2 percent.
Rocio Munoz Dunbar, right, coordinator of the College of Liberal Arts and Science's Dean's Scholars Program, gives an introduction to students.
Kristina Gonzales-Redding, Kansas City, Kan., senior, said her mentor and the seminars have helped her sift through the complex process of preparing for and applying to graduate school. "It's opened all kinds of doors I never would have thought of," she said.
Kathleen Zanoli, assistant professor of human development and family life, is Gonzales-Redding's mentor. She said all undergraduates needed a mentor's guidance into the graduate world.
"The best way to enter that world—the only way, really—is to have someone to show you the ropes." Zanali said.
Auto illiterates beware: Rip-offs happen
Kansan staff writer
By Chesley Dohl
Many students know certain things about cars — how to fill the gas tank and how to check the oil. If it gets more technical than that, call them car illiterate.
"Especially in the college setting, I think students are more interested in academics and social life than the maintenance of their cars," said Byron Edmondson, owner of Byron's Autohaus, 640 N. 2nd. "They drive them until they won't go, and then they bring them to us."
Edmondson defended auto mechanics, but he admitted that there was a stereotype that mechanics take advantage of students who don't know much about their cars.
Sandra Albrecht, director of women's studies, said that female students were especially likely to get ripped off.
more, said she was overcharged when she recently sought maintenance for her car
Melissa Miller, Sioux Falls, S.D., sophothat some businesses do overcharge
"I took my car in to get it worked on, and I got charged an arm and a leg." Miller said. "Then my dad took his car in, had the same thing done, and they charged my dad less."
Edmondson teaches a basic auto mechanics class at his shop each semester for female students.
"There is a stereotype that women don't know very much about cars," he said. "From my experience, I think that's true."
Shelly Wachter, Topeka freshman, said she usually relied on her father to take care of her car.
"I can put gas in my car and that's about it," she said.
Gary Hill, owner of Bob's Import Service, 714 W. 6th, said he rarely run into problems with customers. But he said
"I don't like that at all." Hill said. "It makes everyone skeptical about mechanics, and that's not right for the honest businessman."
Edmondson said that poor communication was the culprit when customers felt they were overcharged or ripped off. He said that the best way for students to find quality mechanics was through word of mouth.
"If you're new in town, probably the best thing to do is ask around," he said. "Find out from friends who's good and dependable."
Everyone needs to know the basics of car maintenance, Edmondson said.
"You have to check the oil and keep the transmission lubricated," he said. "Find a mechanic you trust and establish a relationship for the bigger jobs."
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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
Tryouts start Sept. 10
Represent KU in intercollegiate competition. For more information contact Coach Michael Fine or Tim DeMars. The Kansas Union Jaybow Level One • 864-3545
4
OPINION
thursday, September 2,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
Despite giving the University of Kansas four out of five stars. The Fiske Guide to Colleges, 1994, criticized race relations at the University.
THE BACKGROUND
The Fiske Guide to Colleges is a bestseller reference guide to higher education that is edited by Edward Fiske, a former education editor for The New York Times. Fiske's guide claims to expound on 314 of the "best and most interesting colleges and universities in the United States." The guide quotes an unnamed KU student this year as saying race relations "are becoming more visible and tense because of the activist nature of minority groups" which are "widely supported."
THE OPINION
Fiske's Guide makes KU appear anti-activist
Criticizing student organizations, minority or not, for being activist goes against ideals that have made KU a "flagship for education." That such a widely read publication as Fiske's would criticize our race relations because one unnamed student frowns on activism is irresponsible and is an injustice to the University.
University officials have frequently praised both the activism and the diversity of the student body. Minority students, whether of race or opinion, are welcomed with a voice and the means to protest, educate and inform.
Activism should be viewed as a means to combat racism by raising awareness. However, Fiske's presents activism at KU as the cause of racial tensions instead of the solution. Such a portrait of the University could be harmful in recruiting efforts and could also alienate minority students who utilize their voice. A university where students apparently view activism as negative could be unappealing to many prospective students. This year, Fiske's let one anonymous student give KU an anti-activism appearance.
Unfortunately, Fiske's also made no mention of the new director of the Office of Affirmative Action or of the plans for the new multicultural center. By quoting that student, Fiske's makes KU look racist compared with other schools of our size that may not encourage student diversity and participation as much as KU does.
Granted, KU has had its share of racial incidents over the past five years. Although these are not mentioned, the unnamed student could have been alluding to them. However, KU is not given credit for acting on these incidents in a timely and appropriate manner. Whether they were administrative or student responses to these incidents, they did not go unnoticed.
The 1994 Fiske's Guide includes a special section on choosing an exceptional liberal arts curriculum. The liberal arts program at KU is greatly enriched by the activism of our students. To claim that race relations is harmed by this presence reflects a lack of research on the part of the editors at Fiske's that will hopefully not occur again. The University community can and should prove this assumption wrong.
EISHA TIERNEY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS;
TRACY BEDELL, DAVID BURGETT, J.R. CLARBORNE, CHRISTIAN CORNISH, CARSON ELROD, MATT HOOD, MANNY LOPEZ, COLLEEN McCAIN, TERRILYN McCORMICK, MUNEERA NASEER, MIKE O'CONNER, KIRK REDMOND, CHRIS REEDY, MARK SLIMAN, MIKE SLIVERMAN, EISHA TIERNEY, BRIAN THOMPSON, KC TRAUER AND DAVID WANEK
KANSAN STAFF
KC TRAUER, Editor
R. KHAUSER, EDITOR
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE,
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
Assistant to the editor ... J.R. Claiborne
News ... Stacey Friedman
Editorial ... Terthyn McCormick
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Kristi Fogler
Photo ... Kip Chin, Renee Kneeer
Features ... Erza Wraff
Graphics ... John Paul Fogel
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Campus sales mgr ... Ed Schaper
Regional sales mgr ... Jennifer Perrier
National sales mgr ... Jennifer Evanson
Co-op sales mgr ... Blythe Fucht
Production mgrs ... Jennifer Blowey
Marketing director ... Shellie Dorsey
Marketing director ... Brian Fuec
Classified mgrs ... Janice Davis
Business Staff
**Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number.** Write affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and homework, or faculty or staff position.
**Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.**
The Kansas university has the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Staircase Flint Hall.
MARNELEY
I CLOCKED YOU
GOING 75 IN A
55 MPH ZONE.
SO I'VE GOT
SOME FORMS
FOR YOU TO
FILL OUT...
Add/drop more a test of skill than easy way to get classes
While making it through the first week of classes, I came up with an idea for a new class. Actually it came to me during add/drop, when I was planning to drop a Danish class and a class titled The History of Sound Film. Neither class, I felt, would do much to better my life. The class I came up with could be offered by each school in the University at a relatively low cost. It would be one of the few classes that would give students experience with real-life situations.
Here's how the description may look.
Bureaucracy 101: Add/Drop as a Fact of Life. A true-to-life account of what happens in many large organizations when something needs to be done. Students will be able to get hands-on experience with waiting in lines, filling out several forms that all mean the same thing and then realizing that they did all of this for nothing.
STAFF COLUMNIST
The instructor — None. It up to the student to figure out what is going on.
student to figure out what is going on
the syllabus — Go through
add/drop, dropping and adding at
least two classes. No class policies,
just do what you can to obtain closed-
class openers, get into the enrollment
center as quickly as you can and then
get enrolled in the classes you want.
The grading policy will be as follows:
completion of add/drop in one
SCOTT GILLASPIE
attempt receives an 'A', two attempts a 'B', three a 'C', four or more an 'F'.
I came up with this idea while going over my schedule. It turned out that dropping and adding my classes would be harder than I expected. My goal was to add two English classes and an accounting class. One of my English classes still had openings during my Thursday add/drop appointment, and for the other I received a closed-class opener from the instructor. The problem came when I tried to add a discussion section for it.
Only one discussion section fit my schedule, and I failed to get into it during my first add/drop attempt, therefore losing my 'A' for Bureaucracy 101. I went to the school of business to see if I could get an opener from the school.
My consultation with the school didn't give me an opener, but instead
more paperwork. Instead of putting me on a waiting list like many other departments, I had to fill out a petition to add the class and had to get a letter from my employer stating that I worked at times that would prohibit me from taking certain sections. My employer was more than happy to write the letter for me that same day and I filled out the petition. I returned it to the school just a few short hours after my first visit.
I have my petition and a letter from my employer, so they'll give me the owner now, right?
Wrong. I was told that it would take 48 hours to review my petition and letter to determine if I could add the discussion section.
Later that day, while at work in Wescoe Hall, I learned that a spot in the discussion had opened up. I sprinted across the street to Strong Hall and, although my add/drop period had already passed, I talked my way into the enrollment center.
I made it to a computer and told the woman working there my plan. She was going to let me go through with it and change the class. The problem; during my sprint across the street to Strong, the class had closed. No 'B'.
I went to my second chance add/drop that night and had no luck. I add/drop with my third attempt, lost my
C', and became one of the first students to fail Bureaucracy 101.
one of the largest problems with the add/drop process comes from the way drop transactions are handled. Optimally, students who know that they are dropping classes are to do so as soon as possible. They are allowed at the front of the line so they don't have to wait. But most wait until their add/drop time and take care of their drops and adds at the same time. Few students will take the time to fight the crowds at the enrollment center just so they can drop their classes.
Some universities charge fees for dropping classes. Wichita State University charges $10 to drop a class. This fee is a deterrent from adding unnecessary classes and helps to leave open spaces for students truly needing them. For KU, it appears that the only idea that has been considered is basing the tuition rate on the number of hours a student enrolls in.
It seems that there's not much that can be done about the problem. Right now, the only recourse is to properly use the system. People should submit their drops as soon as possible, making it simpler for others to enroll in the classes that they may need.
Scott Gillaspice is a Wichita junior major in political science and journalism.
Rule banning relationships not needed
A policy banning consensual relationships between students and faculty members recently went into effect. The policy requires that faculty members involved with students give up their positions of authority over those particular students.
This policy was created by the KU administration in order to cut down on sexual harassment. Sexual harassment has been a topic of great concern among students and faculty members in the past few years.
STAFF COLUMNIST
Accusations against Emil Tonkovich, former professor of law, really have made people stand up and take notice of the problem. This new policy was modeled after similar policies at other universities.
STAFF COLUMNIST
TISHA
HEYK
I believe in what the policy is trying to prevent, but I don't believe in the policy itself. As we all know, it takes more than policies and laws to change behaviors. It is our responsibility as
individuals to make these changes. I guess many people think this is a step in the right direction.
I think that college students and faculty members should be treated as mature adults. Consensual or non-consensual — it is wrong to mix school business and pleasure.
The students and the faculty members need to take the responsibility to protect themselves. If students are not careful, they can fall prey to sexual harassment. Furthermore, faculty
members open themselves to accusations of sexual harassment.
f faculty members and students wish to date, they will do so regardless of rules or standards created by the administration.
The administrators are in denial if they think otherwise. Sexual harassment can occur just as easily with this new policy.
Favoritism in grading is also of great concern. Teachers put professionalism in jeopardy when they choose to date students. Faculty and students need to keep their relationships on strictly professional levels until the courses are completed. They should have the common sense to make this decision independently of rules and policies.
Now, I am not trying to say that I think everything about this new policy is bad, because I don't. I think people need to change their attitudes.
Students and faculty members should focus on why they are in classrooms
students to learn and teachers to teach. Beyond classrooms, they should maintain the same professional relationships.
It is unfortunate for students that the administration thought they needed this policy to protect us. For most of us, college was the first opportunity for independence from parents, but we still have people making our decisions for us.
I think that we, as students, should take the responsibility upon ourselves to make intelligent decisions. Then, we could cut down on the number of policies people are making for us.
Tisha Heyka is a Leawood senior majoring in psychology and creative writing.
University of Mars
MAN, this semester's gonna be "the semester of hell! I've got a Hellacious schedule!
My English Prof.
already doesn't like
me? She told me I
looked like "gumby."
like, what the HELL
does mean?
Hell
that who the
IS GUMBY?
by Joel Franke
Excuse me, Could you please be more careful in your word selection— I find what you're sayin' offensive!
who the Hell
does He think
HE is?
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 2, 1993
5
Praeger addresses health care
Many questions remain, she says
By Brian James
By Brian James
Korean staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Many questions remain unanswered about health care reform presented by the Clinton administration, said State Sen. Sandy Praeger, R-Lawrence.
In a speech yesterday at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, Praeger proposed questions that she said needed to be addressed, not only by the president but also by state legislators. About 35 people attended the speech.
Praeger said questions about what services would be funded under the new reform, who is eligible, and how
the new system would be funded remained important in the health care reform debate.
Praeger, one of the state's top health-care legislators, said students had not yet become active in the health-care reform debate. But students express concern when they learn they may pay as much for health care as people in higher income and are brackets, she said.
"Most young, healthy people feel,
'That's not fair, because I'm not going
to get as much for my money.'
Paeragle said. "But we're all going to move up the age ladder, and that same system is going to benefit us all."
Praeger displayed charts during the speech that showed national health care expenditures and average daily costs of hospital stays had risen dramatically in the last three years.
One chart also showed that 15 percent of citizens in the United States are without health insurance.
"Often it becomes a choice of putting food on the table or buying health insurance," she said. Praeger said one of the reasons health care had become unaffordable to a growing number of U.S. citizens was the increase in specialty practitioners
Specialty practitioners, she said, charged more for their services than general family practitioners
"Creating a balance of these two groups of doctors will be one of the goals of this reform." she said after the speech. "My husband is a surgeon, so this makes for some interesting discussions around the dinner table."
Health care expenditures, including research and development, currently make up 14 percent of the gross
domestic product in the U.S., she said.
"Until we get a handle on these health care costs,we really can't focus our resources on any other areas,especially education."
Praeger said that while most students did not know about specific health-care reform facts, they had become more concerned about getting a job with good benefits.
Pnager, a KU alumna and the only state senator from Lawrence, is the chair of the Senate Health and Public Welfare Committee and of the Joint House/Senate Committee on Health Care Decisions for the 1990s.
"They are asking employers about health packages and how the new reform will affect the company," she said.
Amendments may help grade appeals
By Christoph Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
Students now have a better chance of appealing their grades, thanks to two amendments of the University Senate Rules and Regulations.
The amendments deal with appeal grades given by graduate teaching assistants and the chances of grade changes during the appeals process.
Last year, if a grade was appealed in a class taught by a GTA, the GTA was in charge of giving grades. With the amendment, all grades appealed by students in those classes will go to
the professor in charge of the course. The other change is in the final stage of annealing grades.
When a student requests a grade change, the professor of the course hears the appeal. If the problem cannot be solved, it is taken to the department head. If the department head cannot solve the problem, the appeal is taken to the dean of the school.
The grade may be changed by either the head of the department or the dean of the school if.
The professor has been found guilty of sexual harassment or academic misconduct;
The student has been found guilty of academic misconduct.
A clerical error has been discovered;
The professor cannot be contacted.
If the matter still cannot be resolved, a judicial board hearing is set.
Before the amendment, a professor did not have to change a grade unless one of the four situations occurred, even if the judicial board ruled in favor of the student. In order to increase students' chances, the amendment of procedural regularities was added as possible grounds for a grade change.
Friauf said an example of an irregularity would be if at the end of a course a professor changed the final grade percentage of a test or project was worth and that affected the grade.
If the judicial board rules in favor of the professor, the grade remains the same. But if the board agrees with the student's appeal, the case is assigned back to the dean of the school. The dean then will give the proper grade after consulting with a committee of three faculty members from the school.
Student Senate allocates funding for groups
By Donella Hearne
Kansan staff writer
Money talk began as the Student Senate Finance Committee dove right into a stack of legislation at yesterday's first committee meeting.
The first meeting of the five standing Student Senate committees consisted of election of chairs for each committee and preparation of bills for Student Senate hearings. The Finance, University Affairs, Multicultural Affairs, Arts and Events, and Student Rights committees all met to debate which bills they wanted to send to Student Senate for further legislation.
The Finance Committee heard from ten student groups and passed eight of the bills. The committee will hear legislation from student groups all
semester as the groups take their proposals through the legislative process
All ten groups requested funding for their organizations.
The Pakistan Club's bill requesting $3,959 was reduced to $3,329 before it was passed to Student Senate with a favorable recommendation. If the bill passes legislation, the club will receive the money to use for special events to promote awareness on campus of Pakistan culture.
The General Union of Palestinian Students of Kansas University was appropriated the most money of the 10 groups. The group received $3,500 for two speakers for Palestine Heritage Week in November. If awarded, the money will be used to bring speakers Lela Diab and Noam Chomsky to campus during the week's activities.
Hispanic-American Leadership Organization and The Original Club of Kansas University Looney Tunes did not get their funding requests through the Finance Committee.
HALO's request for $325 for registration fees for the United States Hispanic Leadership Conference was denied by the committee. The extra money would have allowed more students to attend.
Environs' original request for $2,574 was amended down to $787 in the committee before being passed. The environmental activist group requested funding for activities including the Earth Day
The overall turnout of students for the night was good, said Eric Midell, Finance Committee vicechairperson.
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KARATE
KU KARATE CLUB OKINAWANGOJURYU
FREE demonstration and opening meeting THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 7 PM Robinson Gymnasium. Room 130
Robinson Gymnasium, Room 130
Classes will meet on Tuesdays and Thursdays
eginners at 5:30, Advanced at 6:30 Robinson Gymnasium, Room 130
OKINAWAN GOJURYU
The KU KARATE CLUB studies a traditional style of karate known as:
KARATE TEACHES: SELF DEFENSE, SELF CONFIDENCE, SELFAWARENESS
For more information contact Brad at 832-2157
---
6
Thursday, September 2. 1993
State Radiator
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and metals.
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radiators-heaters
a/c water pumps
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radiators-heaters
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story idea? 864-4810
SEE THE CLASSIFICATION
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Pizza with 2 drinks for
only $8.50 FREE Delivery
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620 w 12th (behind the Crossing)
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NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Hurricane Emily edges up North Carolinian coast
MANTEO, N.C. — Hurricane Emily blew away roofs and swamped the Outer Banks on Tuesday as it slowly brushed by the fragile island chain, pounding the sandy shoreline with 15-foot waves during a mid-moon high tide.
But the hurricane's eye, with 115 mph wind swirling around it, stayed just offshore. Forecasters said it likely would be the storm's closest encounter with the U.S. mainland, though hurricane conditions were expected overnight in southeastern Virginia.
"The house is shaking terribly from the wind and waves. Water is pouring in everywhere, from cracks in the doors and windows and from the roof," Irene Nolan said from her home in the tiny seaside village of Frisco, where she rode out the storm.
"Everything under the house ... is floating down the street with the current." she said.
Hatteras islands lost roofs as wind gusts topped 90 mph, said Dare County emergency management officials, who abandoned their operations center on Hatteras because of flooding.
Cars were floating in a parking lot in Buxton, and fallen trees were blocking roads, said the National Weather Service in Buxton, which also reported flooding in the yard of its office, a mile inland from Pamlico Sound.
Many buildings along Ocracoke and
The extent of the damage would not be known before morning. "It's too dark to say. There's no power down there. But at the crack of dawn, we'll be down there," said Ray Sturza, Dare County spokesman.
But on Oracoke Island, immediately southwest of Hatteras, Hyde County Commissioner David Styron said there did not immediately seem to be a great deal of damage.
"All in, Ocracoke Island came through this one pretty good," said Stvron, who lives on Ocracoke and
weathered the storm there.
The center of the hurricane got as close as about 20 miles due east of Cape Hatteras late Tuesday afternoon, and the eye wall — the region of strongest wind around the calm eye — moved over Hatteras Island, said
strongest wind around the calm eye — moved over Hatteras Island, said Bob Sheets, director of the National Hurricane Center.
No part of the eye crossed land, however. The eye had grown to 45 miles wide Tuesday evening and was 35 to 40 miles due east of Oregon Inlet at 10 p.m.
The slow-moving hurricane passed the Outer Banks as the tide, higher than normal because of the full moon, peaked at about 8 p.m. The storm was expected to create a tidal surge 6 feet to 8 feet high, though the weather service said flooding reports on Hatteras, indicated the surge was even higher.
Bosnians break off peace talks want more land for Muslim state
GENEVA — Bosnian peace talks abruptly broke off yesterday just as it seemed the warring factions were on the verge of a final accord on how to carve up the country.
Bosnian President Aljza Izetbegovic said the peace plan on the table failed to guarantee the survival of a future Muslim state. Other leaders accused Izetbegovic and his government of making unreasonable demands.
"Unfortunately the war will continue," Croatian President Frano Tudjman said as he left the meeting.
But Izeer begovei the Crabt and Serbs were unwilling to offer "most basic compromises", referring to their refusal to give the Muslims access to the sea and more land in northwestern Bosnia.
"It's a tragedy they could not come to a solution," said U.S. special envoy Charles Redman. "They were very close to an agreement but I accept Izetbegovic's reasons."
both izetbegovic and Tudman said they were willing to return to the negotiating table. But Tudman warned that a peaceful settlement would now take "weeks if not months."
European Community mediator Lord Owen voiced fears that fighting now would increase in many parts of Bosnia, particularly central Bosnia where Muslim forces have
been battling Croats in a land grab.
"There is a cease-fire in existence but we have seen that broken in the past five weeks of negotiations," Owen said, "I don't think we should count on that holding."
Just minutes before the breakdown, a peace deal seemed imminent.
The government had scaled back its demands for extra territory for the planned Muslim republic and said it would settle for an additional 4 percent more than what was proposed by international mediators. Izetbegovic had previously pressed for an extra 10 percent.
He also wanted the northwestern town of Prijedor back from the Serbs, a proposal the Serbs apparently rejected.
Izbetgebovic held out for land access to the Adriatic Sea through the Croatian resort of Neum. This proved unacceptable to the Croats, as it would have split Croatia.
Izetebogiv said the only concession the Serbs were willing to make was the widening of a land corridor linking Muslim-populated enclaves in Serb-held eastern Bosnia with the main body of the Muslim republic.
owen and co-mediator Thorvald Stoltenberg had proposed splitting Bosnia-Herzegovina into three ethnic republics linked by a very weak central government.
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PRODUCED BY CONTEMPORARY
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 2, 1993
7
WASHINGTON
U.S. Postal Service to release stamp for World AIDS Day
A postage stamp encouraging awareness of the AIDS epidemic will be issued Dec. 1 to mark World AIDS Dav
"For more than 60 years the Postal Service has introduced new stamps to help raise awareness for a variety of health and social issues," said Postmaster General Marvin Runyon. "We are building on that tradition with the AIDS Awareness stamp."
The stamp, unveiled by Runyon yesterday, features a red ribbon. Such ribbons have become the symbol of compassion and awareness in the battle against AIDS.
"This special effort will greatly increase AIDS awareness all across the country," said National AIDS Policy Coordinator Kristine Gebbie.
The 29-cent stamps will be sold in sheets and booklets. The booklets will include telephone numbers for the AIDS Hotline at the national Centers for Disease Control and the Points of Light Foundation as well as the American Association for World Health. All three organizations provide AIDS information.
The postal service also announced that it would sell AIDS-stamp lapels to nonprofit organizations at cost and would waive its licensing fee for such groups that want to use the stamp design on products such as T-shirts and mugs.
SAN ANTONIO
Rapist uses condom in attacks
A rapist who used condoms in two attacks and ordered his victims to bathe after he assaulted them appears to be targeting women who are alone in upcale homes, police said.
The rapist also usually cuts the phone lines in the house and puts a pillow or sheet over the victim's face during the attack, police Sgt. Joe MacKay of the sex crimes unit said yesterday.
Four rape-burglaries and three additional burglaries have occurred since November in neighborhoods on the city's far-north side. Investigators said Monday that the rapist had targeted women who were alone in their homes, attacking them at knife point between midnight and 6 a.m.
In one attack, the rapist used a condom he had brought with him, and in another he asked the victim for one, police said. He also insisted his victims bathe afterward, presumably to destroy physical evidence, investigators said.
SEATTLE
Group aids in patient suicide
A new group formed to help the terminally ill end their lives helped a second person commit suicide, its director said.
Ralph Mero, executive director of Compassion in Dying, declined to identify the person or give other details, except to say that the person was well-known in the Seattle area.
The group counsels terminally ill patients who want to end their lives and helps them obtain prescriptions for potentially lethal medications, he said.
THE NEWS in brief
Mero, a Unitarian minister, said Monday that as many as 10 other terminally ill patients are receiving counseling from the Seattle group, which was founded this year.
Earlier this summer, the group reported helping a terminally ill cancer patient in his 70s end his life with barbiturates. The Seattle Times reported it had independently confirmed that suicide.
Under state law, promoting suicide is a felony punishable by up to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine. No such cases have been prosecuted recently, city and county authorities said.
GALVESTON, Texas
African-American to defend KKK
Attorney Anthony Griffin does not like the Ku Klux Klan yet still signed on to defend a Klan grand dragon's right to free speech.
In May, Griffin got a call from the Texas Civil Liberties Union, which was seeking an attorney for Michael Lowe, grand dragon of the Knights of the KKK Realm of Texas in Waco.
The civil liberties group didn't know Griffin is African American. There was no arm-twisting. Griffin took the case almost immediately.
"I don't like the Klan. But if I don't stand up and defend the Klan's right to free speech, my right to free speech will be gone."
"I said, 'No problem,' he said. "Once the facts were explained to me I considered it an honor. It is any time you have an opportunity to defend the Bill of Rights."
Texas NAACP leader Gary Bledsoe doesn't see it that way. He is seeking guidance from the NAACP's national headquarters about whether his office should dissease with Griffin as a pro-bono attorney.
"We think it's inconsistent that someone has an association with them and with us," Bledsoe said.
Pepsi-tampering case unfolds
The husband of a woman charged with stuffing a syringe into a Pepsi can was fired by the soft-drink company 18 years ago.
Gail Levine, 62, is scheduled to stand trial in U.S. District Court next week on a product-tampering charge. She was captured on videotape while putting a syringe into a can of Diet Pepsi at a store June 15.
Prosecutors told Judge Jim Carrigan yesterday that they had uncovered evidence that Levine's husband, David, was fired by Pepsi Cola Co. in 1975.
Defense attorney Raymond Moore acknowledged the firing but argued that such evidence was unrelated to the tampering allegations.
Men cite sex abuse by priest
BALTIMORE
At least five men have come forward to say they were molested by a priest who killed himself when confronted with an allegation that he sexually abused a boy in 1983.
They contacted church officials after parishioners of St. Stephen Church in Bradshaw were told Sunday that the Rev. Thomas W. Smith had a history of sexual abuse by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese experts said.
The current and former parishioners said Smith "improperly touched or fondled" them, generally when they were in seventh or eighth grade, archdiocese representative Rob Rehg said.
Smith, 68, who was revered as a dynamic and caring pastor for 20 years, shot himself in the church rectory Aug. 21. He left a note referring to depression over his mother's death in December.
Several days before his death, the arch迪孝ce received a letter from an attorney alleging Smith had abused a 10-year old boy. Smith was confronted with the letter and directed to report to a clinic Aug.21 for psychological evaluation.
LOS ANGELES
L.A. police accuse officer of lying
A suspended policeman twice acquired in the Rodney King beating lied on the stand and lacks "the integrity and forthrightness" to be an officer, the Los Angeles Police Department said yesterday.
At a department hearing on whether Officer Theodore Brisoen should be reinstated, Sgt. Corrie Malinka did not specify what he allegedly lied about during his state assault trial.
But "the department intends to show this is not the first time he was untruthful," she said in an opening statement.
Briseno's attorney, Greg Peterson, objected bitterly, saying the department is trying Briscoe for perjury when the charge against him is using excessive force by stomping on the prone King in the March 1991 beating.
In his opening statement, Peterson predicted the police department would not prove wrongdoing by Briseno
"What I've heard here today is insinulation, "Peterson said. "The clear evidence here must be firsthand testimony: Was Mr. King unnecessarily kicked?"
He said that the best witness to answer the question would be King himself but that the department probably did not want to call him.
The department Board of Rights hearing will determine whether Brenso, 40, a Los Angeles officer for nine years, gets his job back or is dismissed.
The three-member panel also will consider a 66-day suspension Briseno served in 1987 for beating a handcuffed suspect.
Compiled from The Associated Press
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Israel, PLO await revisions
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Israeli and Palestinian negotiators are marking time while secret talks continue elsewhere about mutual recognition by Israel and the PLO and about who will sign a new agreement on Palestinian self-rule.
The talks are designed to lead to simultaneous statements in which the Palestine Liberation Organization revisits its charter to renounce terrorism and Israel accepts the group as the legitimate representative of the 1.8 million Palestinian in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip.
Tuesday night, PLO and Israeli officials left Oslo, where they had met secretly since Sunday, said PLO representatives. "We returned the officials returned to their headquarter."
Also, Egypt has launched a mediation effort to bridge differences over the text of the mutual-recognition accord, Shaah said.
ters in Tunis, where they continued their contacts with the Israelis by phone, he said in an interview.
One of the stumbling blocks, he said, is how the PLO charter must be revised — as Israel insists — to remove references to the organization's goal of dismantling the Jewish state. He said a revision of the charter would require the approval of the PLO's executive committee and possibly of its mini-parliament, the Central Committee.
Shaath said he could not predict when all these details would be made
20, establishing Palestinian self-government in the West Bank and Gaza, is ready for signature once it is decided who will sign for Israel and for the Palestinians, he said.
A declaration of principles completed
ed in the back-channel talks on Auc
Shaath said his organization was seeking a presence at the signing, possibly at the level of the PLO's foreign minister.
In Jerusalem, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was feted with bouquets of roses at a Palestinian school, but later he was pelted with eggs and called a traitor when he visited a Jewish neighborhood.
In the Middle East on Tuesday, protests were staged by Jewish hardliners, Islamic fundamentalists and dissident PLO factions.
Jerusalem, whereas militant Arabs questioned settling for less than a state at this stage.
Many Israelis worried about giving PLO leader Yasser Arafat a toehold on the West Bank, some 20 miles from
But Arafat told reporters Tuesday he was not giving up claims on Jerusalem.
"Whoever would relinquish an inch from Jerusalem is not an Arab or a Muslim," said the PLO leader, who lived in the Arab capital Abqaiq to lobby for the nact.
Pakistani negotiators told their Israeli counterparts at a one-hour session Tuesday at the State Department that as things stood now, they might not agree to sign the agreement. The Pakistaniers were awaiting clarifications and instructions from Arafat.
Israel's Cabinet has already endured it, and Rabin reportedly hopes to take the signed agreement to his parliament for approval by Sept. 9.
Bush aides named in Iran-Contra
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - Two aides to Vice President Bush engaged in "acts of concealment" to protect the Reagan White House from being linked to a secret Contra aid network after one of its planes was shot down in 1986, Iran-Contra prosecutors concluded in their final report.
Excerpts obtained by The Associated Press from the still-unreleased report say "there was strong evidence that following the shootout" of the plane, Bush's national security aides Donald Gregg and Samuel Watson "were aware of (Oliver) North's connection to the resupply operation."
Both Bush aides "remained silent as administration representatives stated that there was no U.S. involvement in the flight," said the report by Iran-Contra prosecutor Lawrence Walsh.
Contraproducere
Gregg and Watson have said they had only vague
knowledge of the operation that funneled weapons to the Contra rebels and that they did not realize that North, then a White House aide, was running it.
The excerpts reveal that Walsh investigated Gregg and Watson "for possible false testimony" when they denied knowing that Felix Rodriguez, a longtime friend of Gregg, was working for North.
Rodriguez had "informed" (Gregg and Watson) of North's involvement" in the Contra operation and "Rodriguez called Watson to tell him the downed plane was one of North's," the report said. Prosecutors, however, decided there was not enough evidence to cool criminal charges.
"Despite these acts of concealment ... the evidence did not prove that Watson or Gregg committed chargeable offenses ... beyond a reasonable doubt," the excerpts said.
Gregg's lawyer, Judah Best, declined comment on the excerpts. "When the report is finally released, I
will undoubtedly have an observation," he said. Watson's lawyer, Jacob Siebel, said he wants to see "the people."
Walsh submitted his final report on the scandal a month ago to a special three-judge federal appeals court in Washington, D.C.
The judges are giving people named in the report until Oct. 4 to respond in writing. Operating under strict secrecy, the judges are not distributing copies of the report to defense lawyers. They have invited Iran-Contra figures named in the report to examine portions of the report pertaining to them.
The excerpts obtained by the AP are a 600-word sliver of a massive multivideo document.
Criminals released by African dictator
The excerpts do not address the question of whether Bush knew about the secret Contra resupply network, which North set up after Congress banned U.S. military assistance to the rebels fighting the leftist government of Nicaragua.
BANGUI, Central Africa Republic
BENGUT Central Africa replenish-
生-proclaimed Emperor Jean-
bal Rousseau, accused of
ism and slaughtering schoolchildren,
walked out of prison a free man with
all the nation's other criminals yester-
day.
In a stunning move, outgoing military dictator Gen. Andre Kolongba ordered freedom for all inmates in the nation's 20 prisons, including the 72-year-old tyrant infamous for his brutality and greed.
More than 3,000 people cheered Bokassa as he left his cell at a military barracks on the grounds of the presidential Renaissance Palace.
"Victory to Bokasa!" they shouted.
"Bokasa for president!"
retire and live like the peasant he was before he was orphaned at age 6 and adopted by French missionaries.
Bokassa, frail, hunched over and with his hair and beard turned white, told his supporters that he had found God in prison. He said he wanted to
Opposition leader Abel Goumba charged that Kolingba was unleashing the criminals to punish Central Africans for trouncing him in elections Aug 22.
Kolingba placed fourth in the election with only 12.1 percent of votes, the Supreme Court said yesterday.
Ange-Felix Patasea, a former prime minister under Bokassa who led with 37.3 percent of votes, will contest a run-off with Goumbia, the second place finisher, on Sept. 12.
Goumba said Bokassa's supporters were in the minority. But it was unclear how his release would affect the elections.
"He has always insisted that he was the emperor for life of Central Africa," Goubmba said. "Who can predict what he may do?"
Tests find math deficit
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Few U.S. students can solve math problems that require more than an educated guess, as shown by statistics unveiled yesterday by the Department of Education.
Only 16 percent of fourth-graders, eight percent of eighth-graders and nine percent of high school seniors tested could answer mathematics questions requiring problem solving skills according to the National Center for Education Statistics.
The results show that students are "getting few opportunities to participate in problem solving in classrooms," said John Dossey, a visiting math professor at the U.S. Military Academy and former president of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics.
tests, the new tests did not give students a choice of answers. Instead, students were required to draw pictures and diagrams and write explanations of their answers.
"Here, we see what a student is capable of doing," Dossey said, adding that a multiple-choice test question with five potential answers gave the student a 20 percent chance of guessing correctly.
Fourth graders were asked to use words and pictures to show that a boy named Jose who ate half a pizza could have eaten more pizza than a friend, Ella, who ate half of another pizza.
Unlike traditionally standardized
The answer was Jose could have eaten half of a larger pizza. But less than a fourth of the students — 23 percent — gave a satisfactory or better answer. Nearly half — 49 percent — gave an incorrect answer. Seven percent did not respond.
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1
people
THE NIGHT SHIFT
Bills and love of the night draw workers to the late shift
By JL Watson Kansan staff writer
The parking lot is almost empty. The only activity comes from the insects swarming around the overhead lights. It is 2 a.m. and George Dewey has stepped outside for a smoke. He is taking a break from the night shift.
"I've done this for six years," he said of his night job at Checkers, 2300 Louisiana St. He has worked two jobs for six years: During the day Dewey works in power plant maintenance at the University of Kansas. "I work this job because I have to," Dewey said. "The bills have got to be paid."
Perhaps the best and worst thing about working the night shift are the same — the hours. Dewey said he liked working the night shift because it didn't conflict with his day schedule. However, if he did not have the night job he would spend more time going to movies and relaxing with his wife.
"It's not all bad," he said. "I get to meet a lot of interesting people. Some of the customers like to visit."
One problem Dewey encounters is nighttime shoplifters.
"I think we get a lot more of it on this shift," he said. "They usually take small items and snack food."
Julia Clarke/ KANSAN
Snack foods are popular items among late-night shop- pets.
"We get a lot of college students and shift workers in here," Dewey said. "They end up buying junk food, burritos, pop and chips."
Shannon Wright, Pittsburgh junior, isn't among the late-night snackers, but she knows what it's like to go to work when most people are heading home. Like Dewey, she works under artificial lights. She is a clerk at Kinko's, 520 W. 23rd St.
"Even in the middle of the night there's a lot of work to do," Wright said. Wright said she runs copies for big jobs or cleans. She also listens to music to help her stay awake.
"I usually have enough to keep me to keep me busy until 4 a.m." Wright said. After that she reads or catches up on homework.
Wright said she likes the solitude of working alone. "I would rather work this shift because I don't have to deal with management or other co-workers," she said. Instead, she prefers to deal with the public on her own.
MECHANICALS
Shannon Wright, Pittsburg junior, is a clerk at Kinko's.
"A lot of people who come in at this time are procrastinators," Wright said. "They know if they come in late they will get more attention."
Wright said the number of late-night customers varies as the semester progresses. "During finals or when big projects are due people come and camp out," Wright said.
Wright said that despite the fact that she works alone she is not concerned about safety. A Lawrence police officer routinely patrols the area.
sometimes I'll be in the back and if he doesn't see me he'll come in and yell." she said.
Although nighttime safety may not be a major concern for Wright, it is for KU police officer Troy Mailen. Mailen
Shannon Wright:
"Even in the middle of the night there is a lot of work to do."
patrols campus 10 hours a night, four days a week. He would prefer to work the day shift but doesn't mind staving up all night.
"We go on an annual rotation," he said. "I did this three years ago, and right before this I was working the evening shift and didn't get off until 2 a.m. anyway, so it's not too difficult for me."
Maileen patrolling at night presents problems not usually found on the day shift.
"During the day we see a lot more petty larceny crimes, like stolen backpacks, and at night there are more traffic violations and alcohol-related incidents."
Alcohol-related incidents increase during weekends, Malten said.
Malien said he spends most of his time doing routine
Robb Scherff:
"I've always stayed up late."
patrols and traffic enforcement. He works a straight shift, without a break.
"It's not like I have to be busy all the time, but I always have to be ready," he said. "Nevertheless, I'm seldom interrupted while I'm eating my lunch."
Mailen said the most difficult thing about working all night is lack of sleep — not for himself, but for his wife. "She has trouble sleeping when no one else is home," he said. "But she never complains about my hours."
Robb Scherff, Lawrence freshman, doesn't complain about lack of sleep, either.
"I've always stayed up late," he said. Scherff is a disc jockey for the heavy metal show on KJHK from midnight to 3 a.m.
He got the job this summer and liked it so much he decided to keep it for the fall semester.
"I like doing this so I don't consider this a job," Scherff said.
A natural night owl, Scherff built his class schedule around his job and sleeping patterns. "When I had morning classes I never made it to them," he said. Now, Scherff takes classes that don't begin until after noon.
When Scherff is at the studio he putters around, looking for music to play and taking listeners' requests. About 2 a.m. Sunday morning, the phone lines were silent.
"People should be calling soon." Scherff said. "I get a lot of calls between two and three by drunk people. Usually, they're really happy and just want me to play something. Try to accommodate everyone."
Well, almost everyone. Scherff deals only in heavy metal and said he recently received a request for an Elvis song.
"I thought, 'Are you listening to the show right now?' I told the woman she would have to call back during another show."
Scherff doesn't see a down side to working in the middle of the night. The only drawback, he said, was finding enough time to do daytime errands.
Even so, Scherff considers it a small price to pay. "I love what I do," he said.
Mountain Clyde sound: '70s rock meets funk
ALEXANDRA MARIE
Melissa Lacey/KANSAN
move, lead guitarist Chris Ruffin, left, and singer Charlie Keel, belt out songs during a recent practice. Right, members of Mountain Clyde rehearse songs in their downtown warehouse studio. They are, from left to right, Matt Giltlouen, drums; Dan Hines, bass guitar; and Charlie Keel, vocals.
By JL Watson Kansan staff writer
From the outside it appears to be just another downtown warehouse, but a look, or rather a listen, inside reveals more. Musical instruments, a recording studio, a broken-down pickup truck, several sofas and two dogs occupy most of the space where the members of the band Mountain Clyde live and practice.
"When we practice we usually have an audience of one, or sometimes two girls who dance in the alley," said drummer Matt Gilhousen.
Guitarist Ruffin said, "The experience is completely intoxicating."
The audience becomes considerably bigger when Mountain Clyde plays other Lawrence museums. They have become regulars at local bars.
'Mom, I'm going to do this for the rest of my life!'
Keel said it is difficult to categorize Mountain Clyde's sound. "We just sound like ourselves," he said. "Our four styles just come together and we can listen to ourselves objectively."
"It is extremely hard to break into the local music scene," said lead singer Charlie Keel. "But once you're in, the owners treat you right. They really like for local acts to get exposure, so they try to get us to open for national acts."
Ruffin describes the band's sound as a cross between '70s rock with funky bass lines and drumming. He also says that which is kind of grungy," he said.
Keel, Gilhousen, bassist Dian Dines and lead guitarist Chris Ruffin have been together as a performing band for almost a year. They played their first club gig at Benchwarmer's Sports Bar, Grill 1601, 23rd St.
"When we came off the stage that night I grabbed my brother. It was a very emotional experience," Keel said. "I called my mom and said,
All four members have a singular objective: to play music for as many people as will listen.
"We all have a strong passion for this," said Keel.
The band plans to start traveling soon, said Ruffin. They have recorded 12 tracks on their first CD.
"It put us in debt for the rest of our lives, but it was worth it," Ruffin said.
"We recently played with Nic Cosmos and that has probably been our best show," he said. "We didn't have to do a first set warm-up. People were dancing by the second song. It was like turning on a switch, and we just tapped it."
Audiences interested in being tapped can catch Mountain Clyde Sept. 4 at the Jazzhaus, 926 1/2 Massachusetts St., and Sept. 10 at Benchwarmers.
Mellissa Lacey/KANSAS
ALEXANDER ROGERS
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
SEPTEMBER 2, 1993 PAGE 9
KULIife
ife
People and places at the University of Kansas.
calendar
NIGHTLIFE
Benchwarmers Sports Bar & Grill
1024 W 39th St
They Came In Droves, 9:30 to 10 p.m. Thursday
Soul Food Cafe, 9:30 to 10 p.m. Friday, Saturday
The Crossing
Dos Hombres
12th and Oread
Bartley's dream, 9 p.m. Thursday
Dirt Weed, 9 p.m. Friday
Danger Bob, 9 p.m. Saturday
The Jazzhaus
815 New Hampshire St.
Eight Men Out, 9 p.m. Friday
926 1/2 Massachusetts St.
David Garza, 9:30 p.m. Thursday, Friday
Mountain Clyde, 9:30 p.m. Saturday
Granada Theater
1020 Massachusetts St.
River City Six, 8 p.m. Thursday
Steve Erickson, 6 to 8 p.m. Friday
The Brass Apple
3300 W. 15th St.
So What Band, 9 p.m. Saturday to 2 a.m. Sunday,
$2
Free State Brewing Co.
Bill Crahan Trio, 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday
Free State Jazz Quartet, 7 to 9 p.m. Friday
Paradise Cafe
So What Band, 10 p.m. to midnight Thursday
The Bottleneck
The Bottleneck 737 New Hampshire
Webb Wilder with The Irritators, 10:30 Friday,
$7
"Loaded in Lawrence" CD release party: Nick Cosmos, Kill Creek, Love Squad, Lowlife, 10 p.m. Saturday, $5
Soul Food Cafe, 11 to 11:30 p.m. Sunday, $4
Hockenbury's Tavern
1016 Massachusetts St.
Flint Gray, 10:30 p.m. Thursday, $3
Chubby Smith and His Orchestra with White
Trash, 10:30 p.m. Friday, $3
Soul Shaker, 10:30 p.m. Saturday, $3
Blues, Brew and Barbeque 1910 Haskell Ave.
Back To School Party For Students: DJ Joe Clemmons, 8 p.m. to 2 a.m. Thursday, $2 Lawman's Blues Band, 9 p.m. Saturday
See CALENDAR, Page 10
10
Thursday, September 2, 1993
ENTERTAINMENT
AFRICAN ADORNED
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUNY AOMA ACTIVITY
SUA FILMS
• EL MARIACHI
Tues., Aug. 31, 9:30 PM
Wed., Sept. 1, 7:00 PM
Thurs., Sept. 2, 9:30 PM
• ROADSIDE PROPHETS
Wed., Sept. 1, 9:30 PM
Thurs., Sept. 2, 7:00 PM
All shows in Woodruff Auditorium.
All seats $2.50
Free admission with SUA Movie Card.
For information, call 864-SHOW.
Optical Dispensary VISIONS 841-7421
Compact Discs
$5.95 each
5or more, $4.95 each
Lawrence Pawn
718 New Hampshire
Lawrence 813-1344
Mon-Sat 9-5:30
Learn to Fly
Lawrence Air Services
Instruction·Charter
Service·Rental
842-0000
OPEN
11AM
EN AM DRINK SPECIALS Quinton's BAR & DELI SANDWICHES SALADS BREAD BOWL SOUPS
THURSDAY NIGHT SPECIAL:
$1.75 23 oz. Pale Ale on tap
FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL: $2.50 23 oz.Margaritas
615 Massachusetts
Carry Out Available • 842-6560
CALENDAR
Guest DJ, 6 p.m. Sunday
Continued from Page 9.
Movies
Friday through Sunday only
31st and Iowa Streets
31st and Iowa Streets
Made In America (PG-13), 7:20, 9:30 p.m.
Snow White (G), 5 p.m.
Dennis The Menace (PG), 5, 7:30, 9:30 p.m.
Hillcrest Theater Ninth and Iowa streets
Heart and Souls (PG-13), 7:15, 9:30 p.m.
Son of the Pink Panther (PG), 5:15 p.m.
In the Line of Fire (R), 5, 7:20 and 9:40 p.m.
Sleepless in Seattle (PG), 7:15, 9:45 p.m.
A Thing Called Love (PG-13), 5, 7:20, 9:45 p.m.
Rookie of The Year (PG), 5 p.m.
Fortress (R), 5:15, 7:30, 9:30 p.m.
Varsity Theatre
Dickinson Theaters
1015 massachusetts Needful Things (R), 5, 7:20, 9:45 p.m.
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), 9:30 p.m., with a 1:20 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 n.m.
Fatherhood (PG-13), 4:35, 7:15, 9:35 p.m., with a
2:10 p.m. on Saturday, Sunday
The Secret Garden (G), 4:30, 7 p.m., with a 2:05
p.m. on Saturday, Sunday
Liberty Hall Cinema
642 Massachusetts St.
The Firm (R), 5, 8:30 p.m., with a 1:45, 9:30 p.m.
on Saturday, Sunday
Much Abo Adop About Nothing (PG-13), 4:45, 7:15, 9:30 p.m. with a 4:45, 7:15 p.m. on Saturday, Sunday
SUA movie
'Fifth Beatle'on Broadway
Casabanca, 7; 9:30 p.m. Friday in Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union
LONDON — For years, he was the "fifth Beatle," the man responsible for making the Beatles sing.
The Associated Press
These days, the Beatles are merely a photograph above George Martin's desk, and he is touting a new tune as producer of the hottest Broadway cast recording of the year, "The Who's Tommy."
Twenty-five years ago, Pete Townshend's sustained howl about a deaf, dumb and blind boy turned pinball wizard seemed to address the frustrations and the fiery passions of an age.
Now, as Broadway's rock 'n' roll smash hit, it nightly is bringing audiences to their feet with its emotionally tempered, visually extravagant tale of the self-exiled Tommy learning at last to embrace his family.
To borrow a song title from the show, it's been an "amazing journey," indeed: Who would have thought an angry artifact from the '60s could make sense in the kinder, gentler '90s?
"It would have been beyond anyone's comprehension," said Martin, 67, a polite, even patrirician, silver-haired figure more suggestive of an English country aristocrat than a rock legend. "Mostly, you didn't have any higher flown ideas in those days.
"You mostly thought, 'Well, it's great for now; it'll be great this year,' Martin said. "I never thought I'd be talking about it 25 years later; that would have been too pretentious for words."
When "Tommy" came out, Martin was at the peak of his eight-year association with the Beatles, having produced "Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" a year earlier.
After the Beatles disbanded in 1970, Martin kept busy, working with Paul McCartney on two solo albums as well as with Neil Sedaka, Jimmy Webb, the Mahavishnu Orchestra and America, among many others.
In a long career embracing comedy albums, composition and his own past as a professional oboist, Martin never tried Broadway — and admitted that it took some arm-twisting to take on "Tommy."
"Pete (Townshend) rang me up in January and said, 'We've got this show coming up on Broadway and would you like to record it,'" Martin recalled.
"I was so astonished and said, 'Thank you, but why ask me? Why not do it yourself?'"
Wait, the quote is actually "Why not do it yourself?".
The word after "why" is "ask".
The word after "you" is "but".
The word after "this" is "really".
The word after "not" is "do".
The word after "it" is "yourself".
According to Martin, Townshend wanted some distance from the material — a professional, outside eye, as it were.
The challenge during the May 9-11 session at the Hit Factory recording studios in Manhattan was a fresh one.
"With a group like the Beatles, you're starting from scratch," Martin said. "You're forming the talent and actually arranging it or shaping it.
"You can't do that with Broadway shows; the shape is already there. All you can do is do it as quickly, efficiently, and painlessly as possible — and hopefully give it some extra dimension."
'Fire' adds sparks to singer's music
The Associated Press Writer
SEATTLE — From the wild ride of Lone Justice to the easing streets of Ireland, singer-songwriter Maria McKeen has come to rely on “fire” as the motivating force behind her music.
"I guess I'm not overly ambitious," she says. "I get ideas musically. Certain things set fire beneath me. I get a certain notion and I have to follow it through."
On "You Gotta sin to Get Saved," the singer-songwriter's second solo album, McKee finds her fire in the music on which she was raised. She calls it "rootsy, American rock'n roll."
Although she's never had formal vocal training, at 28, McKee seems to have taken control of an untamed and powerful voice and expresses
The album shows she's done some growing — vocally and emotionally — since her days as the wildly careening lead vocalist for Lone Justice and since the heart-wrenching solo effort that followed the band's demise.
herself more deeply and clearly than ever before
The changes show on stage. too.
"I'm never really completely peaceful, but I'm managing in those situations," McKee said in an interview. "I've discovered a certain poise and reserves that I dredge up."
"You Gotta Sin to Get Saved" was released in June with only a fraction of the hoopla that promised to make her a household name in the mid-1980s.
Aside from two songs by her hero, Van Morriens, most of the material on "You Gotta Sin to Get Saved" is original. Like her solo debut, the new album is tinged with gospel, rock 'n' roll, folk and country.
Three former members of Lone Justice — bassist Marvin Eziioni, drummer Don Heffington and keyboardist Bruce Brody — recorded with her, along with members of the Jayhawks and the Posies.
MEETING
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Starting today...the first 20 people who place a FREE Jaytalk ad will win 2 complimentary Planet Party
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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!
1. Call or come by the Kansan at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
3. After your ad runs in the Kansan, you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages you receive.
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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.
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2. Call the 900-number (you need a touch-tone phone) and listen to the message. The charge is $1.95 per minute.
To check out an ad:
1. Read the ads in the Jaytalk Meeting Network on the back page of the Kansan.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 2, 1993
11
Swimmer sees Midwestern flooding firsthand
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
Frankie Hanson loves the water, but this summer she saw more of it than she would have liked.
Hanson, a junior All-American swimmer, was in the middle of some of the worst of the flooding in the Midwest. Hanson is from Ankeny, Iowa, a suburb of Des Moines, which was without drinking water for more than a week during last summer's flood.
She said that the flood had been a major hardship and had hampered her summer practice schedule because her pool was flooded by rain water.
"I was only able to practice for about an hour and a half day compared to the four to five hours I normally practice." Hanson said.
Frankie Hanson
city of nearly 200,000, her family still had to use bottled water or boil their water to drink.
Hanson said that once running water was received to the
"It was a bad inconvenience." Hansen said. "We had to get our
A flooded pool was'hTanson's only obstacle this summer. An illness limited her to competing only one day of the 15 day U.S. Distance Camp meet in Flag Staff, Arizona. The meet was comprised of the nation's elite distance swimmers, some of which later qualified for the Pan American games in Japan.
water from a supplier on the other side of town."
Hanson said that even though she was at the meet only one day she thought that competing against the meet would be better. The meet would help her this season.
Gary Kemp, Kansas swimming coach, agrees with Hanson's assessment of her summer training.
"She has the ability to be one of the elite swimmers in the nation." Kempt said. "First she has to see herself in that league."
Kempf saw that potential when he decided to recruit the Iowa native. He said that her work ethic made her a good fit for the Kansas program. He said that Hanson had filled a hole for distance swimmers on his team.
Hanson said that she thought she would fit in at Kansas coming out of high school. She was recruited heavily by many Midwestern schools, including conference rival Nebraska. It was on the Nebraska trip that she
tried to convince her roommate and high school rival, Jean Gordon, to visit Kansas. The two are now best friends, but that wasn't always the case.
"Her junior year in high school she beat me in the 100 meter fly," Hanson said. "We were big rivals after that."
Hanson said that people in and near her home had a hard time believing that the two are now roommates and good friends.
"Now we're almost connected at the hip." Hanson said.
Gordon said that during her high school career her coach put a picture of Hanson on a wall as the person to
beat. She said that their former rivalry helped push them both to improve in the pool.
"She is very confident and focused in the pool," Gordon said. "You get her in the pool and she knows she can beat the people there."
Both Hanson and Gordon will focus their attention toward continuing their reign as Big Eight champions. Hansson said that she hoped to see a top 10 finish from this year's team.
"We want to go for another undefeated dual season," said Hanson. "We have 10 to 12 people who are capable of going to nationals."
'Hawks defeat Shockers
70
WICKITA
7
STATE
KANSAS
7
Kansas uses strong serves to control foe
7
KU front line player Jenny Larson, Omaha, Neb., sophomore, spikes the ball over Wichita State's Becky Sutter. The Jawhays swells the Shockers in three games to win the match last night at Allen Field House.
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Good serving and good instincts added up to a volleyball victory as Kansas defeated Wichita State. 16-14. 15-5. 15-9.
"Our serving was good," said Kansas volleyball coach Frankie Albitz. "We did it well all night. I was surprised because there were some things the girls did that we hadn't practiced yet."
The match, which took less than 90 minutes to complete, was a reversal of last year's match, said Wichita State coach Phil Shoe-
The Shockers defeated Kansas 15-7,16-14,15-11 last season.
"they really felt like they were in control most of the match," Shoe-maker said of Kansas. "We had to run it, but we couldn't get any points."
The first game began with Kansas taking a 9-5 lead after a service ace by sophomore Jenny Larson. Later in the match, freshman Katie Walsh, starting her first game, missed a spike, allowing Wichita State to tie the match 10-10. But the Hawks eventually won the game.
"After we pulled out that first game, it really deflated them," senior Dyce Kanabel said.
Shoemaker said his team was disappointed after losing the first game.
He said his team would have to learn to make adjustments to the opposing team's style of play.
Wichita State's passing was disrupted most of the match by Kansas' defense, but in the first game,koren Kiser Krankenkruz was consistently hitting the ball away from Kansas players.
She did not get away with that strategy as frequently in the later games. Shoemaker said bad passing hurt Rosenkrantz.
"We didn't pass the way we wanted to," Shoeman说. "It's difficult for a setter to highlight her mistakes in not as good as it should be."
Shoemaker said one reason for the bad passing was good Kansas serving.
"You have to contribute some of that to their serving," Shoemaker said. "But it shouldn't have been as big a factor as it was."
Although Kansas' serving was strong, Walsh and other players did make a few service errors. Walsh started at a position where the usual Kansas starters have been stricken with injuries. Junior Janet Uher injured her shoulder in practice and could not play in the front line, but she did play sparingly on the back
The last points of the final game displayed Kansas' serving power, Larson served for three straight points, culminating in a service ace to make the score 13-8.
line against the Shockers.
"For her first game, she did well," Albitz said. "She made some errors, but that is to be expected."
Kanabel said she was surprised by Walsh's play.
"She did not look nervous at all."
The lack of substitutes might have made Walsh nervous. Albats said.
Despite Kanabel's comments, Walsh said she was nervous since it was her first game.
Kanabel said. "She had a couple hits into the net, but she stayed composed."
"I wasn't swinging well, because I was afraid to," Walsh said. "I've got to get used to that."
Soccer club's schedule suffers major setback
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas men's soccer club had about 14 games dropped from its schedule this season because of problems with its parent association.
Mike Bartlime, former director of the Midwest region, was in charge of scheduling soccer games for the Midwest Collegiate Club Soccer Conference of the National Collegiate Club Association, of which Kansas is a member. Bartlime made a schedule, but Bob Wright, the new director, said the schedule paired teams together that would cause a realignment of the region, forcing teams to travel longer distances for games.
Wright, who also coaches the University of Nebraska at Omaha team, said his team was scheduled to play Minnesota. He thought the game was too far away and called the national organization to complain.
Kipper Hesse, Kansas soccer president, said the Kansas team had a full schedule set up last spring, but it had since fallen apart. He said he had tried to contact Bartline to correct the problem, but Bartline could not be found.
When Wright kept coming to plain, he said the association placed him in charge of putting the fallen program back together.
Bartime could not be reached for comment on the matter.
Wright said he had told Hesse and the other coaches of Midwest region teams to contact one another to schedule their own games, and he would contact them later to finalize the dates.
Rick Rosenstein, the assistant director of Recreational Services at Kansas, said the Kansas team had March Sept. 24 to submit their schedule.
Kansas players have mixed reactions to the scheduling problems.
"We are trying to add games, but it's really disappointing," senior player Sandy Newman said.
Senior player Darren Hendricks said he really didn't care that the games were dropped. He said it would give him more time to do homework.
"I'd like to play more games, but I' just go to the flow." Hendricks said.
The team's first game is tentatively scheduled to be in the Maverick Tournament, Sept. 11-12 at the University of Nebraska at Omaha.
First-round carnage goes on as men's seeds keep losing
The Associated Press
Lendl, three times an Open champion, limped closer to the end of his career Wednesday, hobbling away on a burn left knee in the middle of his match.
NEW YORK — The carnage on the courts goes on, with Ivan Lendl the latest victim in the worst collapse of men's seeds in the first round in U.S. Open history.
Lendl believes he can still play, but the evidence is mounting that his pursuit of another major title is as futile as his efforts in losing to Neil Borwick 4-6, 6-3, 3-1.
Lendl's loss came a day after the departure of Andre Agassi and Jennifer Capriati. The U.S. open started without Jimmy Connors, John McEnroe and Monica Seles, and the other marque names of tennis were vanishing fast. French Open champ Sergi Bruguera, the No. 5 seed, contributed to the slaughter by losing 7-6 (7-5), 6-3, 6-4 to Javier Sanchez.
The fall of Lendl and Bruguera made it five men's seeds to lose in the first round, a record for the Open era. That was two more than the previous record set in 1986 and matched in 1991.
"I came in with a bad knee and it started getting worse," Lendil said. "It was a bit painful to push off. I had no strength to push off, so I didn't see any point of playing."
The top women did not have any trouble Wednesday, with straight-set victories coming from No.1 Steffi
US OPEN
Graf, No. 4 Conchita Martinez, No. 5 Gabriela Sabatini, No. 8 Jana Novotna, No. 9 Anke Huber, No. 11 Manuela Maleeva-Fragriane, No. 13 Mary Pierce and No. 15 Amanda Coetzer.
During the afternoon, it was looking grim for the fans. Then along came the colossal serves of Goran Ivanisevic and the comic schick of Andrei Medvedev.
Ivanisevic served 19 aces past Daniel Nestor and outlasted him 6-4, 7-6 (7-5), 7-6 (20-18). The 38-point, third-set tiebreaker was the longest in U.S. Open history and tied the record for any Grand Slam. Bjorn Borg and Premjit Lall of India played a 20-18 tiebreaker at Wimbledon in 1973.
"Every time I hit when I had match point, he played unbelievable," Ivan-sevic said.
Almost as long and certainly as dramatic was the third set of wild-card and 1988 Open champion Mats Wanderl's 7-5, 7-6 (7-2), 7-6 (18-16) victory over Jaime Oncins. Oncins screamed at the ampire when a passing forehand by Wanderl was called good to give Wilander a 16-15 lead in the last tiebreaker. But all the shouting and racket throwing did not change the ampire's mind or the score
White headed for own record-busting year
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
Running back's skills give Kansas potential to make exciting plays
The opportunity finally has arrived for Kansas senior tailback George White.
No longer does he have to wait behind Tony Sands or Maurice Douglas for playing time. At last, White's time has come.
"It's a different feeling for me, because I am used to being a follower," White said. "I've never had to be the leader in my time here."
White, making only his second career start for Kansas, was the leading rusher for the Jayhawks in last Saturday's 42-0 loss to Florida State. The senior from Allen, Texas, had 15
carries for 74 yards, added another 18 yards in receptions and had 115 yards on kickoff returns against the Seminoles. ABC-TV named White the Jayhawks' player of the game.
The versatility of running, catching and returning the football that White provides gives Kansas a player with the potential to make big plays.
"Last year, I kept complaining that we could not get any big plays. We could not buy a big play," sad Kansas coach Glen Mason. "All of a sudden, on Saturday, we had some big plays. I guess you need some big play people to get big plays. But that excited me."
White gave the Jayhawk coaches, players and fans a gimpse of his big-play potential early in the Kickoff Classic when he returned the opening kickoff 48 yards to the Seminole 38 yard line.
might have gone all the way," White said.
"If one of their players had not tripped me, I
The 48-yard kickoff return by White exceeded last season's best in that category by two yards, and was one yard shy of tying his career best.
Kansas only had three running plays that exceeded 23 yards last season. Against Florida State, White had a run of 24 yards, and freshman June Henley had a run of 29 yards.
Henley and sophomore L.T. Levine provide talent and depth at the tailback position behind White and give Mason the ability to rotate all three. The rotation of the tailbacks does not bother White.
"We really don't worry about that because we have the ability to use two tailbacks in the backfield at the same time." White said. "We tend to get fatigued at times, and the rotating helps us because we all consider ourselves as the main man at tailback."
In the Kickoff Classic; Kansas had eight
consecutive plays inside the Florida State 2-yard line during the second quarter, but failed to score. The three tailbacks rotated on the plays near the Florida State goal line, but none of them could penetrate the Seminole end zone.
Some career milestones will be within White's reach if he performs against Western Carolina on Saturday as he did last week against Florida State.
"That frustrated me because we have a great line to run behind, and we could not score with all those chances," White said. "I place the blame on myself and the other tailbacks, because when you're that close, you should put it in."
He needs 75 more yards rushing to become the 30th Jayhawk to run for 1,000 yards in his career, and in kickoff-return yardage he is just 88 yards shy of setting a Kansas career record.
2
Susan McSoadden / KANSAN
Tailback George White is expected to be a key performer on offense for the Jayhawks this year
12
Thursday, September 2, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
IT WON THE AWARDS.
IT WILL WIN YOUR HEART.
THE SECRET GARDEN
THE SECRET GARDEN
HALF PRICE TICKETS! HALF PRICE TICKETS! HALF PRICE TICKETS! HALF PRICE TICKETS!
K. U. Students...This is your night! Grand Opening of the Lied Center at the University of Kansas Wednesday, September 29 8:00 p.m. Half Price Tickets this night only!
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.
Tickets held exclusively for students until September 7; after September 7 tickets will continue to be on sale for students at the discounted price until tickets sell out.
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Brewer pitching stymies KC
MILWAUKEE — Jaime Navarro pitched a seven-hitter and B.J. Surhoff drove in three runs yesterday as the Milwaukee Brewers defeated the Kansas City Royals, 7-1.
Navarro (9-9) struck out six and walked none for his fifth complete
Royals R
The Associated Press
Chris Haney (9-7) allowed seven runs on six hits and four walks in 2.2-3 innings, his shortest outing since June 9.
The third-place Royals fell seven games behind Chicago in the American League West. The White Sox defeated New York yesterday 5-3.
Kansas City manager Hal McRae
was thrown out of a ball game for the eighth time this season when home plate umpire Joe Brinkman ejected him in the third inning for arguing ball and strike calls.
Surhoff's two-run double in the first inning gave the Brewers a 2-1 lead.
Milwaukee then scored five runs in the third off Haney to build a 7-1 lead.
Walks to Darryl Hamilton, Robin Yount and Greg Vaughn loaded the
bases with one out. Surhoff and Pat Listach each had run-scoring bloopings. Juan Bell drove in a run on a fielder's choice and Tom Lampkin capped the inning with a two-run double.
John Habyan replaced Haney and struck out Alex Diaz to end the tird. Yenagas City's run came on Greg
Kansas City's run came on Greg Gagne's sacrifice fly in the fourth.
Notes: Robin Yount's two singles moved him past Frankie Frisch into 17th place on the all-time singles list with 2,172. Kansas City left cfleider Kevin McReynolds left the game in the fourth with a bruised left hip, suffered in the first inning when he crashed into the wall while catching Greg Vaughn's fly ball.
Chiefs' final cut leaves Snow out in the cold
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Linebackers Dino Hackett and Percy Snow, who were rumored to be competing for a job during Kansas City's training camp, found themselves on the outside looking in yesterday after the Chiefs announced their final cuts.
Coach Marty Schottenheimer said that Hackett, who sat out last year with an inner ear injury, and Snow, who never seemed to mesh after being the first-round draft choice three years ago, would not return.
Wide receiver Michael Young and defensive backs Wes Hopkins and Martin Bavless also were cut.
Three of the players cut Monday — offensive linemen Reggie McEilroy and Tom Rickett and defensive back John O'Reilly — returned to the team Tuesday.
Under National Football League rules, teams were required to limit their roster to 47 players by noon Monday but were allowed to recall up to six players the following day.
Counting quarterback Joe Montana, the Chiefs could have 10 new starters when they begin their season Sunday at Tampa Bay.
KC, Okoye reach injury settlement
The Associated Press
Veteran running back Marcus Allen, who signed with the Chiefs as a free agent after leaving the Raiders, will back up third-year man Harvey Williams at tailback. Kimble Anders will replaces the traded Barry Word at fullback.
"I think that the type of backs we have now is exactly what we've been
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Chiefs have reached an injury settlement with former 1,000-yard rusher Christian Okoye, who has left the team to continue rehabilitation on his injured knee.
Okoye went home to California and expects to be ready in about three or four weeks to try out for other teams, said his agent, Jack Mills.
Okoye played six years for the Chiefs and is the team's all-time leading rusher with 4,897 yards. He led the National Football League in rushing with 1,480 yards in 1989 and gained 1,031 yards in 1991, but rushed for 448 yards last year.
looking for—guys who are versatile, that can do everything," Schottenheimer said.
David Whitmore, who the Chiefs acquired in the deal that brought Montana from San Francisco, will start at safety with second-year man Doug Terry.
The Chiefs also announced Tuesday the signing of last year's starting free safety Charles Mincy and free agent wide receiver Hassan Jones.
BRIEFS
Quarterback leaves Javhawk program
Kansanstaffreport
Junior quarterback Rodney Hogan has left the Kansas football team, coach Glen Mason said yesterday.
"He was tired of playing college football and he wanted to concentrate on his academics," Mason said.
Hogan transferred to Kansas this year from Independence Community College. He and Van Davis were both listed as the third string quarterback behind Fred Thomas and Asheki Preston.
Mason said Hogan was no longer attending Kansas.
New coach to join Kansas tennis team Kansan staff report
Michael Center, Kansas tennis director, announced yesterday the hiring of a new assistant coach for the men's team.
Mark Riley, a former NCAA Division III All-American tennis player, is a graduate of Kalamazoo College in Kalamazoo, Mich., where he received his tennis honors. He replaces Mike Slattery, who accepted the associate head coach's position at South Alabama.
APPLE
Compiled by Kansan staff writers Matt Doyle and Anne Felstet
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THEN PAINSTAKINGLY REASSEMBLED THE ENTIRE DORM ROOM RIGHT DOWN TO THE UNDERWEAR STREWN ON THE FLOOR.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 2, 1993
13
ONE NIGHT AN M.I.T. FRESHMAN FELL ASLEEP IN A STUDY LOUNGE
Dorm room on the Charles.
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THINKING QUICKLY, HIS FELLOW DORM RESIDENTS WENT TO WORK. THEY NETICULOUSLY REMOVED THE ENTIRE CONTENTS
HIS ROOM AND PACKED THEM A HALF MILE TO THE CHARLES RIVER. THEY
14
Thursday, September 2, 1993
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The Thing Called Love PG 13
5.90 .9.40
CINEMA TWIN
3110 IOWA 841-5191
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841-6191
Aladdin $^{6}$
Dave PG-13
Last Action Hero PG-13
5.00
7.30 9.40
5.00
7.20 9.40
SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
YARNBARN
BEGINNING KNITTING CLASSES
MAKE A SWEATER!
$20.00 for 8 weeks
CLASSES START:
Sept. 16 (Thurs.), 7-9 p.m.
Oct. 4 (Mon), 7-8 p.m.
Oct. 19 (Tues.), 7-9 p.m.
Pre-Enrollment Required
20% Off Class Yarn
Full Schedule At THE YARN BARN
WAGON WHEEL CAFE
Open Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30
till: 8:00; till: 1:40
918 MASS. 842-4333
Uphold a KU Tradition– Visit the Wagon Wheel Cafe
$2 DAILY LUNCH $2 SPECIALS
The Etc.
Shop
$2.50
The Etc. Shop is the place to be for Sunglasses!
• Bausch & Lomb
• i-s sunglasses*
• Killer Loop*
• Ray-Ban*
• Diamondhard*
• Ri. Shop*
• Mary McFadden
• Vuarmet-France
• Marilyn Monroe
• Rendolph Engr
• Revo
Serengeti
928 Mass.
843-0611
Loving the Wendy
But I don't like it.
Monday- Hamburger & Fries
Tuesday- 3 Tacos
Wednesday- Taco Salad
or
Russian Salad
Thursday- Grilled Cheese
& Fries
Friday- Cheeseburger
& Fries
Need Some?
Greenbacks Bucks
Bread Moolah Dough
Bones Cash JACK
Only 10% Interest per Month
or any part of a month on Temporary Loans
Lawrence Pawn
718 New Hampshire 843-4344
Mon-Sat 9-5:30
Football Game
Breakfast Special
Eggs, Hashbrowns, Toast
Bacon or Ham
$2.50
-Work Program Coordinator
-P. R./Marketing Coordinator
-Community Liaison
CCO center for community outreach APPLY NOW FOR THESE POSITIONS
INTO THE STREETS COALITION
CCO STUDENT BOARD
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN THE STUDENT
SENATE OFFICE, 410 KANSA SUNION
Due Friday Sept. 10th at 5pm
Call 864-3710
STUDENT
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SENATE
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 PLAN
© 1993 AT&T
To sign up, stop by our booth on campus or call 1800 654-0471, Ext. 4119.
AT&T
AT&T
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 2, 1993
15
Classified Directory
105 Personals
Create Your Look!
Interchangeable wrap-around shields for the creative life!
Killer Loops
Exclusively at The Etc. Shop
928 Mass-Downton
Unique Silver Jewelry
Loops, Pendants & More!
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass-Downton
110 Bus. Personals
KU Women* Mary Kay Comics free facial and makeup in all fall colors, personalized settee, head wrap, brunette wig
WATKINS
HEALTH CENTER
864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday Friday 8am-4 30pm
Saturday 8am-11 30am
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday Friday 4 30pm-10pm
Saturday 11 30am-4 30pm
Sunday 8am-4 30pm
Pharmacy Hours
Monday Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8 9am-12 30pm
Sunday 11am-30pm
120 Announcements
BAPSTEH STUDENT UNION. Thursday 8:30pm at the American Baptist Center, 150 W. Rueck 911, Rockville, MD 20876. Small groups, music and drama, retreats, intra-mural sports, mission projects, friendships
START
YOGA
September 8th
ALVAMAR
842-7766
Taking Control of Calculus
JAZZ DANCE CLASSES for beginners and experienced dancers. Lawrence Art Center Call 851-627-4900
learn skills for success in Math 115 & 116 FREE!
Tuesday, September 7,
7-9 p.m.
4035 Wescoe Hall offered by the Student Assistance Center
130 Entertainment
TONIGHT!
THEY CAME
IN DROVES
at
BENCHWARMERS
25¢ DRAWS
Friday & Saturday Soul Food Cafe
with Deep Blue Something
BENCHWARMERS
PSYCHOUT! l interground House & Tweech, DJ Ray Velaque, Saturday, Sep 14, 4:5pm - Thumbu B201 note McGee. Take I.7K0. to downstown KCMO. For more info, call 913-841-7801.
2 for 1 WELLS!
18 & over shows
Both Nights!
140 Lost & Found
Lost, one pair black wine rimmed men's glasses or
Jayhawk涨 on. Bvd % 8-12. Sweet reward. call 865-329-4570.
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
2 persons to share and or live in an care givers for disabled professor. Requires max. assist. w/ transfers, bed, chair. Nurseries/therapeutic help. Experience preferred, will train. Separate living quarters 18 hrs. W. Exchanger for care giving. School hours free: 842-387 after 5 p.m.
Accounting major familiar with Macintosh and MYCI accounting program, Blue Heron 817 Mass.
Adams a alumni Center needs AM-PM Dishwasher, Cook & Installer. Flexible hours. Apply in person. 1-800-745-3236. www.adams.edu
After-Hours Emergency Screener. Part time for occupational therapists or physical therapists. Be available 3 p.m. to 4 p.m., 8 a.m. to 1 a.m. a week and 1 weekend a month. Requires Master's in psychology, social work or nursing with 2 years of experience. Send resume and letter of interest to Hert Hart SA, Attn Sharon Zerh. Open until position filled. EOE
Part-time position available for individual interested in working with laboratory animals in a safer and more effective manner in cages. Morning hours M-F E-M every other weekend If interested contact Manpower Temperature Sensor
Babysitter needed for some afternoons & evenings. In our home, must have car Call 811
BASS PLAYER NEEDED
Bassist needed to complete all original 4 piece band. Original music in the vein of tools, tool, and technique.
Child care and cook wanted from 3-4 M F $6 an hour. call 842-6129
Child care wanted late November
evenings Mon - Thur 32 Hours per week call 8421
Tuesday & Wednesday
Child Care caregivers, Friday mornings 10 to 15 12 to 15 at Immunarium Lutheran Church 19th & Iowa. Call (866) 347-8000.
Children Learning Center is now hiring 1 am and 2 pm teacher aides for infant and preschool children. Monday through Friday weekdays. Apply at 313 Main, 841 2185
CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING. Earn up to $2000
per week. Please submit resume with
available no. Experiences needed. For
information, call 1-800-749-3561.
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
DOCUMENTATION LIBRARY ASSISTANT
Deadline 09/08/93. Salary $4.35 /hr. Durés include typing, filing, photocopying distributing documents and answering queries; enter, and edit text from a computer terminal. Required 1. Able to work 10-20 hours per week in an office. 2. Ability to work in 2-3 hour blocks. 3. Ability to follow complex verbal and written instruction. 4. Accurate use of a word processor. 5. Learn WordPerfect. VM XEDIT, and FOCUS. To apply, complete a job application which is available Room 202 of the Computer Center EO/AA
Drivers needed for a fun job. Meet lots of people while making good money. The Lawrence Bus Co. inns need drivers for SAFERIDE. Must be 21 yrs old and 22 hr per week - MTD CHEM 82hr & Brl 649-6444.
Established Lawrence band seeks female vocalist who has best deserves creativity, and growth; they have the ability to perform at the ecstasy we need. If you we're always wanted to be on her bar stage and not just watching it then call for a male vocalist.
Full-time live in nanny needed for 3 active children (toddler, 4, 7) Reliable, non-smoker, have own car. Housekeeping duties incl R/B + salary + good benefits. Previous exp, res. Call 749-6232
HELP WANTED Female personal care attent
hours. Hours and times vary. Call 841-9108.
Agrowing computer distributor seeks student sales rep. Must have a good personality. Excellent opportunity for the right person! Send resume to:
Need Extra Cash?
Home-based Therapist, Part-time. Fee-for-service. To provide clinical services to severely emotionally disturbed children, adolescents, and families. Requires Masters degree with reimbursable medical health services to SED children and families. Send resume and letter of interest. Bert Nash CMIC, 354 Missouri, Ste. 202, Lawrence KS 60044 CMIC, Parchae Roach, Open until position fill EOE
Suite 201
868 S. Brunswick
Marshal MO 65340
Simply Software Inc.
Help Wanted. Reliable, responsible person to drive to my house to baby-to-toddler boys three years old.
Immediate part time positions. Tennis front desk/nack snack - bar-evenings and weekends Nursery-Tea/Thu 8:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. Apply at AltaVita 417.506.3400 Clinton Park between 9:30 a.m. & 8:30 p.m.
KU HILI seek a graduate student of Lawrence resident to work approximately 15 hours/week on research and other tasks incl building mail and other tasks incl helping students with their help. Help skills include Must work well with students be interested in learning about Jewish life Flexible hours, wages negotiable based on skills. Call Steele 804-762-9300.
Lawrence Public Schools needs a part-time computer operator. Experience on the IBM DAS-VSE operating system preferred. Apply at 3706 Clinton Parkway EOE
Job Available for dependable person with own transportation and experience in lawn care and landscaping.
Kansas and Burge Unions hiring part-time, bourry for Fall Semester. Many jobs in Food Service. Catering and Cuadratel with varying schedules. Part-time positions in Kansas, Kansas Union Building for job specific EOE
Needed before and after school child care for
school age children. Salary negotiable contact
number.
Office help needed 11-30-20 **MWF** & 11-30-7TH. Must be a business major, be enrolled in at least 12 hrs at KU have GPA of at least 2.0 or a Kansasan Student Call 841-6000-9. M-F
Part-time Office Assistant needed 20 wks hw M W am,
T/T/W / S/ F pm. Please call 749 0130
Part time sewse needed. Would like some experience come by HASI, Inc. 2000 E, 237d, or call 866-251-2900.
Part time evening delivery person. Must have own car
Apply in person. Peking Bakery staff.
PART-TIME SUPERVISOR - Mass Street Dell or Buffalo Bills' Smokehouse. Previous food service and supervisory experience mandated for position. Apply to 6-25 lb. hr. 20-30 hrs. a week, e and wends. Apply at Schumman Food Company. Business office 719. Mass upgrades above Smokehouse. M-F-堂食.
Party pie photographers and lab help needed.
Must be able to work weekdays/weekdays,
no experience needed. Apply at True Colors Photo
1119 Massachusetts.
Part-time telephone market needer. No experience. AS, Inc. 2200 F.284. cpm351591 Aik for Phone.
Phoenix Cleaning is now hiring part-time cleaners. Must have transportation and phone Call 843
Raintine Montessori School is interviewing for 3 positions. Spanish Teacher•must be native speaker, have experience working 6-12 yrs. Olds. Hours: 5:30-8:30 a.m. Session in non-competitive games with elementary-aged children required. Hir. 3. 15-3. 0 M.-F. Jianxie-Flexible hours. 20 hw.chr B4 83608 for phone.
Read Books for Pay. Earn $100 per title. Free
Stamp Envelope. Stamp Empty.
Reliable responsible person to drive to my house to baby sit two boys age three and seven. Call 847-396-1100.
STUDENT TRAINER/CONSULT MICRO-COMPUTER. Deadline 9/14/93. $500-$600 monthly 20 hours week. Duties include teach computer skills, perform basic tasks on DOS, Windows and Macintosh computers. Provide microcomputer support. Develop and maintain expertise in applications package commonly in use for Windows and Macintosh computers; materials, course descriptions, and mailing lists. Other duties as assigned. To apply, submit a letter of interest to the Computer Center, a current transcript to Angela Barnett, Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60045. Applicants may be asked to give a short interview to evaluate topic of their choice EO/AE MOEMLOYER.
STUDENT WORK
Students guaranteed hourly wage and great bonus for good phone voice Day; evening shifts 794-9687
Varied Hours prior 3 courses in child development and experience. Sunshine Area 482-2231
PYRAMID
PIZZA
Looking for enthusiastic people who understand what great service is all about!
Now Taking Applications
TOWNSEND
CHAPEL
Now Hiring Drivers Must have car and insurance
Fast growing company
Fast growing company Looking for quality minded people. Good opportunity for growth
Full & Part Time
Apply in person
Apply in person 14th & Ohio(under the Wheel)
SYSTEM SPECIALIST
X
Lancaster County Department of Corrections seeks individuals to perform responsible technical work involving the overall operation of a mainframe operating system, including an associated personal computer network, i.e. Locus. Wear Perfect and non-slip shoes. Require a minimum of H.S. Grad or equiv. supplemented by vocational or college level coursework in system analysis and programming with 6 mo. experience. Req. Knowledge of “Primo” and “Novel” is strongly desired. 2-4 years experience as described desired. Job duties include creating and maintaining Supplemental Questionnaire and an application postmarked on or before the closing date, September 10.1998. Apply at City/Co. Employment location. Mail resume to: B.L. Lincoln, NE 8028 4800 | 4914-7596 | EOE/AA
TRAVEL SALES! $unsubset SKI & Beach is @cpost!
free TREES! $unsubset TOP 49%
free TREES! $100$UNSUBSTITUTE
Wanted student women to tutor LB high school
481-393-9600
Leave name and telephone no.
**BOOK STUDY POSITIONS AVAILABLE at**
**THE SCHOOL OF BIOLOGY, Professor Fausto and other depart-
ments.**
Tumbling/ Acrobatic instructor needed. Must be able to spot aerial dance. Dance臂门 841-4215 UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER Assistant student for half time Graduate Assistant position. Salary $641.66 per month. Want individual experience, and community resources, highly computer literate (Macintosh), solid research skills, leadership experience, organizational skills, sense of humor. Job location: Bristol, UK KU Info, 420 Union, for an application. Application must be received at 420 Union by 5pm. Friday.
WORK STUDY POSITION AVAIL, at the East Asian Language and Culture Dept. by a1218
305 For Sale
225 Professional Services
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense For free consultation call Rick Frydman, Attorney 823 Missouri 843-4023
TRAEFIC-DUL'S
300s Merchandise
Donald G Strole Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
DONALDG.STROLE
235 Typing Services
1883 Rabbit L. Standard. Great condition, no rust, needs
wrapping $ 1000. 841-3441.
19" Giant ATX肌马 Kit, Shimano Deore LX l夹绳, Richy tires, perfect cone, $85 call 841-2390
1979 Toyota Corolla, 5-speed, very reliable $85.00 or买完 841-3731
89 600 R Ninja w new tires & new batt.
Call 845 735 2100
CC Deskbook Publishing: Resumes, Cover Letters
Brochures, Fliers. Term Paper, Newsletters
1-der Wonen Werden Powernachie. Psychum
der Liederen Wert
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce criminal & civil matters The law offices of
1986 600R Ninja New tires, chain, batt, t tune
1980 540R Ninja 843,760
Are you Makin' the *grade*
WORD PROCESSING& LASER PRINTING
For all your typing needs
call Makin' the *grade* at 863-2853.
1990 Schmidt Sierra mtl. bike 21 spd. .21 in $330
841-7538 Call Mark
888 IHM Compatible Computer 60MR 3.5 & 3
i disk drive Mouse, keyboard 14 ga momen-
tal drive
Bianchi Road bike, all campaing, equip cost $1200 new, only $550. Many extras. Also for sale sofa new condition call 855-3826, leave message if not home.
$8 for your HP 40 box flap with bar code. Leave message at 842 569 3269
BIC Sailboat and rig $89. BIC Sport rack $45. Montague Mountain Rockie Bike. Child bike unit
Double bed with shell headboard $6. Color TV $25
STAND 15. Stand 1 Love Call $15. Color TV $36-392
Bridgestone MB-4 Mountain Bike for sale 15 inch
frame, good condition. Please call between 3 60
877-297-9777
Fender JP-90 Bass Guitar for sale Body & black pickguard. Under one yr old. Perfect condition. Fender made in the U.S.A.
Ft Sale 21 in 1990 Miele Road Elkhane, Shimano, Lock and Field components. Equiped to race
For sale, *men* 82 inch Raleigh 12 sp
ouring bike (good shape) Good ride. Great pri-
erty.
Gray contemporary leeat seat. Light gray with dark gray stripe. Very comfortable. $19 Call
GREAT RUG 8 + x12 dark green w/ pattern
GREAT RUG 8 - x12 dark green w/ pattern
Linear tracking rug
Huyundai 386XS8 XR 4M Ram 40M HD SVGA, mouse,
nugget: 100mg. Use with Word Processing
of Windows 95/98 or Macintosh
KONA *Klauae* Mln Bike 18*. Shim XT, Tange Concept Rock Frame. Shock Titanium. Color Goran
MC ASE 15 mg hard drive 2.5 meg MAG
Includes unregistered version of Claris Works
Librarian for sale. $2; foot black and
Gold Tega.
Good light, good eat. B.O. B-0 843-1271.
Leather cover.
Macintosh LC1 with 4 meg ram, 80 HD, 14" color monitor, HD2xWireless ink Jet Printer, kite monitor.
Moving Sale Contemp. bk. lacquer glass cocktail
table end only 110" $195. Vacha auto 35-130mm camera
aura; < negative to 60 mm roll = 72 pics $196. Pana
card (value $45) not card value ($45) case (value $45)
Hot Valuation 834/64/04
Nearly new two '19 i28 *12 speed* Pujol road bike $160 more than the lower tier 110. Call 843-722-9522. Tauren exerture to tower 110. Call 843-722-9522.
One way ticket to Boston via Cincinnati, must be used by lt of September $100 or best offer *call*
One-way ticket. K.C to Miami. Fly anytime but here not now. $130, bike Race bicycle 749-827-928 749-827-928
Packard Belt and Best Data 2400 bpm modems a
each Courter HST high speed modem. 826-650
Patrick Nagel limited edition framed prints at San Francisco at 843-6728 a message if you want to see them.
360, 28g, 40g or a floppy drives, 1940 Guard inlet,
1000 GSM card. Also, Gray carpet bag; 900 sleeper &
1600 rug.
Road Bike 1999 Camdonnel SLR 5600 $454 82-93
Sony compact bicycle w / 2 speakers $99
Cycle shop in Edinburgh
Two person dome tent $25. Three person dome $65.
Four person dome $85. Three-85 or 4-85 after 5.
Viacol-16 and one half, new case & Steinlow, professional quality. 893-897-456
White Hardcover mountain bike 20" 1 yr, old, like
new. $500. 849-8490.
340 Auto Sales
1983 Honda Acca, runs great. AT, AC,
1983 Honda/cassette, 4-door. Hibachi 831-1200, or,
AC
Reliable transportation 80 Ford Pinto /Best offer
Call Terry at 841-7246
C7-148 Renameage 1 tops, Sony CD. New 31" i900
i900. Po. Calc. I900.
370 Want to Buy
45 for your HP48 box flap with bar code. Leave message at 864-5269
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
FRATS! SORORITIES!
STUDENT GROUPS!
Over the Edge
Naismith Halls' services give students the competitive edge.
Raise as Mucha you Want In One Week!
$100...$600...$1500!
Market Applications for VISA,
MASTERCARD, MCI,
FREE T-SHIRT. Call for your FREE T-SHIRT for FREE TRIP to MTV
SPRING BREAK 94.
Call 1-800-750-1039. ext. 75.
Front door bus service
Controlling your blood pressure can reduce your risk of heart disease.
Lower the numbers and raise the odds.
24 hr. computer center
Fitness room
Dine anytime meals
血压
Weekly maid service
NAISMITH
American Heart Association WERE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE
1800 Naismith Drive (913)843-8559
2 BB at 10th & Ohio in Lawrence, DW, CA, W. 417
745-863-7288, www.dwlawrence.com
3 new carpat 'Call: 417
6 new carpat after a fall in dm
3 bbr lift apt for rent Campus Very close to campus Tourless rent Smoker please Call
3 BR. 2 bath apt. for rent, Campus Place, Close to
Campus. Request reason. Smoker. #42 6089
I
Large (18x18 kit) for non-smoking female. 3 m.
from campus. 610, UTL PD. Call 749.0166.
3 quinters 2 bdr. $2, New (460) beds, spreads, plush carpeting. Graduate engineers preferred. No furnishings to avail. If you want a room to crash or jail, call 749-1492 1492 bed. 6-1am & 6-8pm. $295 person. Call 749-1492 1492 bed. 6-1am & 6-8pm. $295 person.
430 Roommate Wanted
walk from Union. Furnished $235 mo. and ui.
water pd Call 749-2315
FREE UTILITIES! & private bath. DW, CA
microwave in Lawrence. Share with quiet
grad student. Smoker OK. Call +334-9492-612
Responsible female to share 2 bdr apt. 1 minute
THE UNIVERSITY DAIX
KANSAN
Room female roommate need ASAP for 2 bdrm
room : $200
11 mos. Call Care Annale 841: 1385
14 mos. Call Care Annale 841: 1385
3 bdr 2 bath apt for rent Campus Place Close to
Campus. Reasonable rent Smoker please. 842
How to schedule an ad:
Female roommate to share a two bed room with
roommate. Roommates must meet month meal req.
using 542-387-Ask for Jail
Stop by the Kaiser 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.
Roommate needed. Gas and water paid on the KL bus
route. Call back 843-6577.
Responsible non smoking female roommate need to share a fire 2 HR apst $185 + Call 843 697-0144
Third roommate needed at Orchard Corners apt
$210 * 8 utilities. Call events
By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
As phone in may be released to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* **In person:** 119 Shannon Flint
Classified Information and order form
You may print your classified order in the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas Office. You may choose to have client request for a visa or a passport admiration. Ads that are allowed to VISA or MASTERCard require a refund on unused dates.
Classified lines are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of gait lines that ad occupied). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
When canceling a classified card that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds can be cancelled at those were pre-paid by check or with cash and are not available.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
| Num. of insertions: | Cost per line per day |
|---|
| 1X | 2-3X | 4-7X | 8-14X | 15-29X | 30+X |
|---|
| 3 lines | | 2.05 | 1.55 | 1.05 | .65 | .75 | .50 |
| 4 lines | | 1.90 | 1.15 | .80 | .70 | .65 | .45 |
| 5-7 lines | | 1.85 | 1.05 | .75 | .65 | .60 | .40 |
| 8+ lines | | 1.75 | .90 | .65 | .60 | .55 | .35 |
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Rates
195 personal 140 land & lock 385 for sale
116 business personales 205 help wanted 340 auto sales
120 announcements 225 professional services 380 miscellaneous
128 entertainment 235 jypsies services
Classifications
1
2
3
4
5
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print
Date ad begins: Total days in paper.
Total ad cost: Classification.
Address:
VISA
Method of Payment (Check one) ☐ Check enclosed ☐ MasterCard ☐ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansas)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad-
MasterCard
Account number;
Expiration Date:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University of Surrey Dalvik Kannan. 119 Saftier FIll Hall LAwareness. KS. 680454
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
WARNING THIS TIME IS PREPARED BY MONTHLY STOCK CARDS. © THE WORKS OF JIM LETTLE.
"Well, the defendant and I had made this deal in which we both prospered...One of those 'you-scratch-me behind-my-ears-I'll-scratch-you-behind-yours' arrangements."
16
Thursday, September 2, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Some choose to excel in sports. Others, academics.
Pete Vang Senior, University of Kansas Tight End Exercise Science, GPA 3.05
Here's to a guy who couldn't make up his mind.
Honda is proud to acknowledge a football player who really uses his head. A $3,000 contribution will be made to the general scholarship fund of his school. For the past six years, the Scholar Athlete Program has honored amateur athletes for their standard of excellence on the field and in the classroom. Throughout the football season, Scholar Athlete winners will be announced during ABC's television coverage of college games. Please join us in congratulating a guy who's all work. And all play. HONDA
THE HONDA SCHOLAR ATHLETE AWARD
© 1983 American Honda Motor Co., Inc.
---
✓
SPORTS: Kansas opens its home schedule against Western Carolina. Page 11
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103.NO.11
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
(USPS 650-640)
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3,1993
NEWS:864-4810
Peace accord brings optimism at KU
Middle East talks provide hope for conflict's end
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
The politicians, negotiators and warriors who debated this week in Oslo, Norway, seem so remote and removed from the lives of KU students.
But the mediators' words directly affect the war-torn region of Israel and its occupied territories — and those same words bring both hope and apprehension to students who call that region home.
"Anything at this point in time is the beginning for peace," said Debra
Brodsky, Lincolnwood, Ill., senior.
"It's a start, and it should not be shunned. It has the possibility of being built upon."
Brodsky, who has family in Israel, said she was encouraged by the negotiations in Oslo earlier this week between Israel, led by Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, and the Palestine Liberation Organization, led by Yasser Arafat.
A history of three wars, occupied territories and attacks on civilians on both sides has kept the two sides apart since the PLO's creation in 1964.
Jamal Saeh, president of the KU General Union of Palestinians Students, said peace was possible for a region fought over since Biblical
"Israelis and Palestinians have lived together for a long enough time, and we've taken a lot of customs from
each other," said Saeh, a graduate student from Bethelem. "I think we've made a framework for a peaceful setting."
Israel occupied Bethlehem when it took the West Bank from neighboring Jordan in 1967's Six-Day War.
But the possible peace accords brings an apprehension — and even an ambivalence, Saeh said.
"On one hand I'm very happy because it raises possibilities for peace in the future," he said. "On the other hand, it's too naive to think great things will happen."
Ahmad Abdelhadi, graduate student from the town of Nabius on the West Bank, that the accords were not satisfactory to most Palestinians. The accords fail to mention a connection between Gaza and the West Bank, the two occupied territories separated by the nation of Israel itself and populated mostly by Palestinians. He also said the accords did not give enough autonomy to Palestinians.
"It doesn't meet our rights in general," Abdelhadi said. "It doesn't give us our land back, and it doesn't tell us what kind of sovereignty we get."
For Israelis, violence by Palestinian groups trying to disrupt the peace process is a concern, said Nimrod Posner. Tel Aviv, Israel, sophomore.
"I want to see from their side that they are willing to stop terrorist attacks," he said.
Such worries are common in the Middle East, said Felix Moos, professor of anthropology.
"When you have as small an area as Israel and you bargain with Gaza and the West Bank in a country that is essentially a sliver, you don't have much to bargain with," said Moos, who has taught Middle East politics in
He said the divided territories presented difficult problems.
some of his classes.
"Are you going to have Palestine A and Palestine B?" Moos said. "What makes a country a country?"
Despite these problems, he said, a solution was possible.
"It seems to me that the best solution is now being attempted," he said. "It creates some autonomy and self-confidence but it can't cut apart the country completely."
Regev Alon, Naharya, Israel, sophomore, agreed with Moos. He said he had seen enough bombs thrown at his village by attackers in nearby Lebanon.
"We have to be optimistic that the process will continue, and we will build mutual trust," he said.
The Associated Press contributed Information to this story.
Terms of accord
■ Palestinians will have limited self-rule, including their own police forces. ■ Israel will recognize the PLO as the Palestinians' representative.
■ Israel will agree to discuss other controversial areas, such as Jerusalem, in the future.
PLO's concessions:
■ Israeli troops will remain in the occupied territories, although they will be moved to "security locations."
The PLO will recognize Israel's right to exist.
■ Israel will control entry point into the occupied territories, including entry points to other countries
Israel will control Jewish settlements in occupied territories.
Ceremonial Flag
K
Source: The Associated Press KANSAN
KU
Original Flag
Special flags fly on game days
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
A little-known tradition flies quietly in the wind on days when there is a KU home football or basketball game.
game days, during Hawk Week, on the first day of school in the fall semester and on federal holidays, ceremonial flags replace the original KU flags that fly on top of Fraser Hall and on flag poles outside Strong Hall and Lindley Hall.
The original KU flags are solid blue. The letters "KU" are crimson and outlined in white. The ceremonial flags are split into thirds, with the outside sections in blue and the center third in white. A large crimson "K," outlined in blue, dominates the center.
Phil Endacott, associate facilities operations director in housekeeping, said housekeeping workers raise one of the KU flags and a United States flag at 7 a.m. every day and leave them up until midnight, if weather permits.
The American flag was first fown from atop old Fraser Hall in 1915, and the original KU flag made its first appearance on Fraser Hall on Dec. 6, 1939. The new Fraser Hall was built in 1967.
But the origins of the ceremonial flag are more of a mystery.
Many University officials and historians said they did not know when or why the flag was created. The game-day flag switch is not documented in any KU history book at Watson Library or the University Archives in Spencer Research Library.
Most KU students and faculty do not even know that the flags are switched on game days, said Jack Beerbower, assistant director of housekeeping.
"It's just something we've been doing in the 32 years I've been here," he said. "I really don't know who created this tradition."
Endacott said that when he arrived at KU in 1980, the housekeeping department raised the flag only on home-football game days. The housekeeping department decided several years later to raise the ceremonial flag on days of men's and women's home-basketball games.
"We just felt these sports were big-camp activities," he said. "They're special, like the flags."
90
61
2
The Kansas football Kickoff '93 came to a close with the entire team gathering and singing the Rock Chalk chant at Anschutz Sports Pavilion. Last night's rally, which attracted about 400 people, was a way for fans to meet the players. Kickoff for tomorrow's game is 1 p.m.
Holly McQueen / KANSAN
Jayhawk fans greet football team at rally
BIG
Bv Cheslev Dohl
Senior cornerback Chris Vaughn signs a poster for Aaron Payne, 10, left, and Adam Payne, 8, both of Lawrence.
Kansan staff writer
Lawrence youths decked out in crimson and blue swarmed around their idolized Jayhawk football players in Anschutz Sports Pavilion last night.
More than 400 Lawrence residents and KU students turned out to meet the Jayhawk team at the second annual Kansas Football Kickoff '93.
Best friends Brandon Womack and Ryan Rowland, both 10, wore matching KU hats and shirts.
"I wish we were all here under better circumstances," he said, referring to Sattomorrow's game. Page 5.
"We both have season tickets, and we watch all their games," Womack said, clutching an autographed football. "Our favorite player is Fred Thomas, and we might even write him a letter like we did Chip last year."
Coach Glen Mason greeted the crowd that assembled on the west bleachers and thanked the fans for coming in spite of the rain.
MONEYMAKER: Home games gener
MAKER: Home games generate as much as $1 million for
ice's economy. Page 5.
**TRAFFIC TANGLE:** Amaphelps you
**TRAFFIC TANGLE:** A map helps you dodge the traffic jams and barriers for you.
urday a 42-0 loss to Florida State at the Kickoff Classic in New Jersey.
Not many KU students showed up at the rally.
Kristin Jacobson, Overland Park freshman, said she found out about it from the 9-year-old boy she was baby-sitting.
"I don't think it was publicized enough," Jacobson said. "I think a lot more girls would be here if they knew about it."
Jill Godfrey, director of promotions, said the event was becoming more of a community event.
"I think there was a really good turnout," she said. "I was pleased with it, and I think the kids had a good time."
Rachel Kotwitz, 9, was dressed in full KUAR and carried a post she had
made at home. Grimming with excitement, she said she had looked forward to this night all week.
"I made this poster two days ago for autographs," she said. "I like football and watching the cheerleaders."
The KU marching band played as the team walked into Anschutz, and for the next half-hour, KU football players talked to their young admirers and signed autographs.
Clint Bowen, senior strong safety, said that the players always had a good time with the kids.
"This is for the kids so they can see what we look like without our helmets," he said. "We don't look as ugly with them off — or at least some of us don't," he said, laughing.
Most of the KU fans at the rally were children, but grown-ups were there, too.
"I'm just a crazy fan from Kansas City." 1980 KU graduate Crowell Thompson said. "I saw a lot of good things in the game against Florida State."
INSIDE
Comeback
THE MAN WHO LOVED THE WORLD
KU student Andrew Mitchell tries to piece his life back together after breaking his leg Aug. 23 when his bicycle collided with a truck.
Page 3.
Computers to replace lines at enrollment
By Donella Hearne Kansan staff writer
KU officials hope that after the summer of 1904 enrolling in classes will be as simple as pushing a few buttons.
A system that will allow KU students to enroll from computer terminals across campus will be implemented beginning in the summer of 1994, and the system eventually will enable students to change their addresses and get transcripts just by sitting down at a computer, said Richard Morrell, University Registrar.
The system, called distributed enrollment, will be introduced to new students when they enroll next summer, and it will continue until the end of fall 1944. Morrall said add/drop period of Fall 1944. Morrall said
Students will be assigned specific "start times" after which students can enroll in classes. Start times will be staggered, so that there will not be a rush on terminals. Students, however, may log on to the system at anytime up until the announced closing date. This will allow students to go back and adjust their schedules if they need to.
Morrall said distributed enrollment was KU's best option for saving money.
Telephone registration systems require the installation of additional phone lines to handle the students' calls, Morrell said. Distributed enrollment by computer could be used with existing terminals across campus.
Morrall said the only expenses incurred by the introduction of the system would be for redesign of the current enrollment center in Strong Hall.
"There are no actual hardware costs," Morrell said.
He defined "hardware" as computer equipment and lines and said that enough of it would be necessary.
Although enrollment will change, fee payment will not change to a new feasible system can be found. Morrell said
"That was a complete waste of time," he said.
Lahti said he had to wait in seemingly endless lines for add/drop twice this semester.
John Lahti, Wichita sophomore, was enthusiastic when he was heard about the new system.
"Oh, God, that would be wonderful," Laah said. "It's about time."
The system provides files identifying students who have permission from their advisers to enroll. Similar files will ensure that students can enroll only in courses for which all requirements are met, Selman said.
The distributed enrollment system being introduced will provide students with personal access codes to provide security, said Brenda Selman, assistant registrar. As long as no one else knows a student's code, the student's enrollment cannot be tampered with.
The new enrollment system will eliminate the long lines that have plagued Strong Hall during add/drop this semester, Selman said.
She said students and administration would benefit from the new system.
"It's going to affect them in a very positive way," she said.
The University of Iowa already uses such a system for all of its enrollment functions. Jerry Dallam, registrar at Iowa, said the university has had the system for three years and has never had a problem.
"We have nothing but good things to say about the system," Dalium said, "You never see a registration line."
He also praised the system for its advantages over telephone enrollment.
One advantage is that the students are provided with an immediate printout of their schedules as well as a visual display, Dallam said. The other advantage is cost efficiency.
2
Friday, September 3, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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ON CAMPUS
Women's Student Union will meet at 5 p.m. today in Alcove A at the Kansas Union.
Elizabeth Kunesoff, director of Latin American Studies, will present a program "Brazilian Identity As Seen Through Canudos: The War at the End of the World, 1830-1897," at noon Tuesday in Alcove A at the Kansas Union.
The Office of Study Abroad will have an informational meeting at 4 p.m. Tuesday in 4046 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call 864-3742.
KU Gamers and Role Player will meet at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday on the third floor of the Burge Union. For more information, call Alex Baker at 864-7316.
meet at 6 p.m. Tuesday in Alcove A at the Kansas University. For more information, call Danielle Myron at 842-5407.
Amnesty International will
Hispanic-American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Octavio Hinojosa at 864-4256.
The Student Assistance Center will present a program "Taking Control of Calculus," at 7 p.m. Tuesday in 4035 Wescott Hall.
A movie, "Creation of the World: A Samba-Opera," will be shown at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union. A presentation on Afro-Brazilian culture and music will be after the movie.
Police arrest robbery suspect
Kansan staff report
Lawrence police yesterday arrested a man who was named one of Kansas 'Most Wanted.
Police received information soon after midnight that Henry Hylton III was in Lawrence, Sgt. Mark Warren said. They went to a trailer park at 2200 Harper, where Hylton surrendered without incident. A woman
anircuit who were in the residence were removed before police contacted Hylton.
Hylton was arrested for allegedly committing two armed robberies this summer in Lawrence. Johnson County also had two warrants on Hylton for aggravated robbery and felony theft. Hylton also was wanted by the FBI in the armed robbery of a Nebraska bank.
WEATHER
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 83'/70'
Chicago: 70'/53'
Houston: 93'/71'
Miami: 89'/77'
Minneapolis: 71'/55'
Phoenix: 80'/50
Salt Lake City: 86'/59
Seattle: 79'/52
Omaha: 77'/53'
LAWRENCE: 78'/53'
Kansas City: 76'/53'
St. Louis: 74'/58'
Wichita: 82'/54'
Tulsa: 79'/57'
TODAY
Tomorrow Sunday
Mostly Sunny
Northerly wind 5-10mph
High: 78'
Low: 53'
Partly cloudy
N. wind 5-10mph
High: 79'
Low: 60'
Partly cloudy
N. wind 5-10mph
High: 78'
Low: 60'
Sunny
Mostly cloudy
Cloudy
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119
Stauffer-Film-Lawrence, Kan. 66045
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stairwater - Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN THE STUDENT
SENATE OFFICE, 410 KANSAS UNION
Due Friday Sept. 10th at 5pm
Call 864-3710
A story on Page 5 of yesterday's Kansan did not give the complete name of Robert Friauf, professor of physics and astronomy and head of University Council.
A story on Page 5 of yesterday's Kansan misspelled the name of Eric Medil, vice-chair of Student Senate Finance Committee.
A headline on Page 5 of yesterday's Kansan was incorrect. The Student Senate Finance Committee passed the bills for funding of campus groups. The bills must still be passed by Student Senate before the money is appropriated.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Fridav. September 3, 1993
3
Pain lingers after collision
Leg injury keeps student away from his classes and the sport he loves
By Scott J. Anderson
Kansan staff writer
Andrew Mitchell, Lawrence sophomore, attended his French class for only the second time yesterday.
After breaking his left leg in a bicycle accident Aug. 23, Mitchell is considering dropping out of school this semester.
"It's just not happening right now," Mitchell said. "At the very least, I am going to have to cut back hours. I have three professors I have never even met."
Mitchell, a French major, said the pain in his leg kept him from focusing on what was happening in class.
I understood what was being said, but I couldn't pay attention to what was going on," he said.
Mitchell was injured when he collided with a truck that was turning into the loading dock area behind the Kansas Union, Mitchell was thrown from his bicycle and landed head first. He said his helmet saved his life.
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
"It could have been a lot worse," he said. "It's important to me that people always wear a helmet because you never know when an accident like this can come up."
The accident did more than take Mitchell away from classes for a week and a half. It took him away from his first love — cycling. He said he was riding 40 miles a day before the accident and used to ride competitively. He said he hoped to do some light cycling by next April, but now he is training his leg to move again.
"I'm learning how to lift my lower leg with my quads, how to roll my leg over and how to make my leg bend at the knee," Mitchell said. "Everything is so atrophic right now that it doesn't move. Right now learning how to move again is taking all my energy."
Mitchell had surgery on his leg at Lawrence Memorial Hospital the day after the accident. Richard Wendt, an orthopedic surgeon, put one rod and two screws in Mitchell leg to stabilize the two main fragments of bone. Mitchell's leg was broken in several pieces below his knee.
Mitchell said he may have to have surgery again in about a year to repair the groove and rod.
Wendt saw Mitchell again on Wednesday and said he was making good progress.
"Everything is in good alignment, and he's moving his foot well," Wendt said. "It's just a matter of time, but I don't foresee any complications at this point."
A French friend has agreed to help Mitchell keep up his speaking skills if he does not return this semester, he said. He also said he planned to keep the textbooks he bought and do some reading in his spare time.
"I plan to take those courses in the spring, so hopefully that semester will be a cakewalk," he said.
Cheryl Mitchell, Mitchell's mother, said the family was taking a wait and see attitude toward his recovery.
"We're just playing it by ear," she said. "He thought he could just jump back into it after sitting on the couch. He's real anxious to get back, but we just don't know what he's going to be able to do right now."
Stephen Mitchell, right, helps his son, Andrew Mitchell, Lawrence sophomore, into the back seat of a car. Andrew Mitchell was injured last week when he collided with a truck near the loading dock behind the Kansas Union.
Add/drop process frustrates, angers students
Kansan staff writer
Bv David Stewart
Holding up her wish list of potential classes to add, Elisabeth Anderson, Fort Leavenworth sophomore, scanned the computer printout of closed classes posted outside the enrollment center in Strong Hall yesterday afternoon.
D
Making checks for open classes and slashes for those closed, Anderson took a minute or two to whittle her eight possibilities to four choices.
To the right of the glass-enclosed case holding that morning's most recently added, closed and canceled class lists, a sign warns of how fletching those class openings could be:
"Notice. The Closed Class list is accurate as of 8 a.m. Classes may close or be reopened without notice."
From the remaining courses, Anderson said, she thought she would take Communication Studies 455, The Living Relationship.
"I thread it's a good class," she said she filled out her white add/drop form. "Besides, it'll fit in my schedule."
John Gamble / KANSAN
But in her trip through the center, Anderson changed her mind. She chose Psychology 470 instead, a career she said she needed for her major.
Students had many reasons for waiting until the end of this final week to finish adding and dropping classes at the enrollment center in Strong Hall.
"I don't know how many times I've come in here, and they've told me that I had to do this or had to do that after waiting in line for God knows how long," said Aaron King, Kansas City, Kan, senior, as he waited to enter the enrollment center for a sixth time this week. "I've done this so many times, it's almost mind-numbing."
King expressed frustration with the process,including his need to get four closed class openers,and said he hoped the process could be improved.
"I know the people in the enrollment center are doing the best they can," he said, "but there must be an easier way. I haven't really seen any improvements on it since I've been here."
Deciding on courses, bypassing long lines and getting the right forms:
Steve Meduna, Dickinson, N.D., graduate student, worked on his add/drop form yesterday in a window well in Strong Hall.
"Still, I think they could make this system easier. I'd just like to do it by phone or computer. Too bad it can't be done like that," Williams said with a snap of his fingers.
Even students spared from repeated trips to the center wanted to see the system rewarmed.
An enrollment system allowing KU students to sign up to classes on comby next year. However, for now,
students are suffering through long lines.
Jarrod Williams, Republic, Mo. senior, got his late enrollment done in two hours.
"Just having in a little corner of Strong, it's so stupid. There's something like 26,000 people who go here, right?" asked Ciaran Molloy, Overland Park junior.
said that while lines for the enrollment center do get long at times, the center's staff does a good job handling the students that hit the center in sporadic waves.
by and large, the University has been able to accommodate the students using the center," Selman said.
Honor students to use computer voting system
Brenda Selman, assistant registrar,
By Christoph Fuhrmans
Instead of pulling a lever, 200 KU honor students will press computer keys to elect representatives for the honors student research organization.
Kansan staff writer
KUSEARCH, whose goal is to promote academic research at KU, will begin the University's first electronic elections today, said Zin Mak. Alor Setar, Malaysia, junior and president of KUSEARCH.
Honor students can participate in the elections from any campus computer or from a home computer with a modem. The electronic mailing pro
The elections will be done through electronic mailing, which will speed up the process, Maksaid.
Any student in the honors program with a computer account from the Computer Center will be able to participate in the election. Accounts from the center are free. An account allows computer operators across the nation to receive electronic mail and to talk to each other through their computers. The majority of accounts at KU are with OREAD, KUHUB and UKANVM.
Jason Underwood, Lenexa sophomore and head of KUSEARCH's academic committee, said KUSEARCH should be able to allow everyone with a computer account to participate in next year's election.
More than 7,500 students with computer accounts were supposed to participate in the elections, but the electronic mailing system could not handle sending the information to so many computers.
cess of the elections can be sent through INTERNET, BITNET or KERMIT, three different electronic mailing systems, to KUSEARCH's electronic mailing address, KUHUB-KUSEARCH.
Dave Nordlund, associate director of computing services for KU, said electronic mailing systems have a promising future but still have some problems.
Underwood said KUSEARCH was optimistic about the use of electronic elections.
Another problem could be security, Nordlund said. Identification procedures would need to be installed to prevent tampering.
"The problem with electronic mail is that everyone doesn't have access to it," he said.
"The actual technology is probably in place right now, but the problem is giving everyone access."
"We think it might be the wave of the future to elect people," he said. "There's almost no effort in it at all and no waste going into the environment."
The elections will take place during three one-week periods. The nominations will begin today and last until Thursday. The campaign will start the week of Sept. 15, and the voting will take place during the week of Sept. 23.
Each student can nominate only two different people for each of the 100 committees, and each candidate can run for only one committee. Two students will be elected to represent each committee.
Correspondence study creates class options
By Kathleen Stolle
Kansan staff writer
But KU's independent study program may provide one solution to the dilemma.
About 125 college-level correspondence courses are offered through independent study. Director Nancy Clover said about 2,800 people now were taking KU courses by mail. She estimated 30 to 40 percent of those were KU students who also were enrolled on campus.
Today is the last day to add a class,
and that could mean panic for students who have yet to get all of their classes this semester.
"Correspondence remains a simple, tried and true means of instruction," Cover said.
Most wanted
ENGL 101: Composition
ENGLE 570: Kansas Lit
MATH 101: Algebra
ENGL 101: Composition
ENGL 570: Kansas Literature
MATH 101: Algebra
These are the most popular independent study courses, according to KU's independent study program:
Among the traditional favorites such as Math 101 and English 101 are several new offerings.
However, correspondence classes are unique in many ways.
At $72 per credit hour, correspondence course tuition is slightly less
Other new additions include Introduction to Organizational Communication and Introduction to Radio Television and Their New Technologies. Revised courses include General Psychology, Social Psychology and Elementary Latin.
Because the correspondence courses are written by professors who teach campus courses, the courses often replicate their campus counterparts. Colyer said.
Western Civilization I, a course required by many departments, is available through correspondence for the first time. Western Civilization II will be offered for the first time during spring semester, Colyer said.
HDFL 220: Principles of Nutrition and Health in Development
HIST 619: History of the American Indian
HIST 620: History of Kansas
KANSAN
an individual campus courses. The length of each course, up to nine months with a possible three-month extension, allows for more flexibility. And working independently is favorable to some students.
"Some people think they've learned more from a correspondence course because they've had to think through things in a different way," Colyer said.
Sheri Plenert, Marion senior, is taking Western Civilization I through independent study. She said working independently fit her schedule better and made her responsible for creating her own ideas.
"Some people really need the structure of a classroom and the discipline an instructor and a syllabus provide," she said. "Independent study is not for everybody, but for people who like the independence, it's marvelous."
By next spring, students will be able to browse through independent study's correspondence course offerings in KU FACTS, the campus-wide computer information system.
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4
Friday, September 3, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
Street maintenance and repairs are needed around Lawrence.
BACKGROUND
Many roads have treacherous potholes left over from the heavy snowstorm and summer rains.
THE OPINION
Better plans, repairs needed for city streets
The road conditions and problems are nothing new to Lawrence residents, and most problems can be blamed on the terrible weather that seems continually to beleaguer this area. But bad planning by the city and short-terms repairs are costing more in the long run.
Record snowfalls last winter and a record rainfall this summer have made huge potholes in many of the city's streets.
The City of Lawrence should have addressed the problem immediately after the snowfall, and they should have taken steps to save themselves the monetary burden of having to repair the same streets after every bad storm. One would think that the entire summer would be enough time; after all, a problem of this nature is not going to get better with 20,000 more people traveling these streets.
City officials blamed the delays on the inclement summer weather, but this is a problem, for which a solution should have been initiated before the July rains. By postponing these repairs, the city is inconveniencing more and more people. The lane obstructions that cut traffic down to one lane each way on Iowa Street near the 23rd Street intersection are another example of poor planning. This construction is not scheduled to be completed until November 1. Steps were taken, however, to make a long-term commitment to correct the road conditions when the city chose to repave most of 23rd Street — which was done in a couple of weeks and before classes started.
This is the kind of planning that will make that road last much longer than had they simply filled each hole. This is the kind of long-term solution that many of Lawrence's streets need.
DAVID WANEK FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Under-21 crowd, bars should work together
One of the things that makes Lawrence a great place to live is the vibrant and diverse local music scene. Unfortunately, a significant segment of KU's student body cannot experience much of the quality live music available, because of the 21-year-old age requirement of Lawrence bars. The anxiety of bar owners caused from admitting 18- to 20-year-olds is certainly understandable. It may seem like a legal and economic hassle to admit people who cannot buy beer. But with cooperation from all concerned parties, more 18-and-over shows in Lawrence is a realistic prospect.
The primary responsibility for gaining access to local shows falls on the shoulders of those under 21. A few bars now have periodic 18-and-over shows, which should present an opportunity to demonstrate to bar owners that admitting underage patrons is good business. If these shows continue to be successful, perhaps other bar owners will be persuaded to open their establishments to a wider audience. But even a few incidents of fighting, drinking or other disruptions could mean that many KU students will continue to be denied access to quality live music.
KIRK REDMOND FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
Complications at KU? It's the Martians' doing
KCTRAUER, Editor
KC TRAUER, Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
It was not too long ago that I figured out how to find a non-Western Civilization class in the timetable. Yesterday, to be precise. Or maybe the day before. No matter. All know is that a non-Western Civilization class is very, very important, for a number of reasons: (1) I needed it to graduate.
Parking Department
After eight semesters of not knowing how to distinguish a non-Western Civilization class from, say, a barnacle, I stumbled across an important discovery: You have to look at the timetable through a piece of smoked glass.
But I don't have it nearly as bad as the freshmen. They haven't had the benefit of understanding what exactly goes on at KU. Sure, figuring out that GSP stands for "Get Some Perfection" is easy. But I'm talking about more complicated things. Things that should — but for some reason don't — exist in a parallel universe (which is a rather interesting phenomenon caused mainly by Democrat presidents). So I've compiled a list:
WILL MICHAEL JACKSON TOP THIS CHART?
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
Which all goes to show how complicated things can be at KU. Things such as enrolling or going to class. This is college, for Pete's sake, not real life. Why should I have to worry about these little things when I've got bigger problems to deal with, such as which bodily fluid should I give up next to raise money for groceries?
AMERICA'S
MOST
WANTED
Hood
UDK '43
Assistant to the editor J.R. Clairborne
News Stacy Friedman
Editorial Terrynn McCormick
Campus Ben Grove
Sports Krietl Foster
Photo Kip Chin, Renee Kneeer
Features Erza Walle
Graphics John Paul Fogel
This is an extremely nasty and evil place. Here, bloodless employees slave over Cray computers, trying to figure out all the different combinations and permutations of how to make each student's life worthwhile, in the sense that they want all our worth while we're here. Seriously, it's
A unscared proposal for transporting students from the parking lot at Robinson to Wescoe. This plan was scrapped, however, when the same Martian engineer who designed 23rd Street one day came up with another solution by slapping himself on the forehead and exclaiming, "I'll design Wescoe so that it actually slides down the hill and will one day join with Robinson and form a new continent."
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Of course, this isn't the entire list. I have yet to mention such things as the Martians in Strong Hall, or the fact that Chancellor Budig can physically remove his face. And let's not forget; there no way in Parking Department you're going to graduate on time.
Todd Punteny is a Manhattan senior majoring in Journalism.
Inventor of basketball. Also, one of the people in those old pictures on "Cheers." Also, a famous and quite retired quarterback.
Campus sales mgr Ed Schager
Regional sales mgr Jennifer Pierrier
National sales mgr Jennifer Evanson
Co-op sales mgr Blythe Focht
Production mgrs Jennifer Blowey
Marketing director Study McConnell
Creative director Brian Fusec
Classified mgr Jane Davis
This is a complicated and highly prudent means of providing people with easy transportation routes and sharpening their reflexive skills. Also, state law regulates road construction by using simple mathematical formulas, such as: the amount of construction is directly proportional to the arrival of students, or the number of barrels minus the number of side streets used divided by 27,000 students equals the IQ of the construction engineer, which is somewhere close to a turnip's.
Ski lift up Mt. Oread
Business Staff
James "Joe" Naismith
Clever, nifty devices whose most notable accomplishment is that they were invented by Martians and work for exactly two seconds a day, depending upon the moon's cycle and whether Congress is in session.
Road construction
Dollar-bill changers
See also, Kamikaze
No definite pronunciation. Commonly referred to as "that big tall thing on the Hill."
Multicultural center not necessary; University just jumping on bandwag
STAFF COLUMNIST
Campanile
**Letters** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and homework, or faculty or staff position.
**Great columns** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be
The KU Multicultural Center ... The KU Black Student Union ... The KU "We're not racist!" building ... The KU Politically Correct Center ...
photographs. The Kauai reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be furnished or brought to the Kauai newman, 111 Sturner Fint Hall.
So named because only one out of every 23rd attempt are you able to successfully complete a left turn out of Dillons or McDonald's. You'd have a better chance in Parking Department than you would crossing the street here.
TODD
PUNTNEY
an office policy. Even the roving tick-etissuer have mini-Cray computers. Of course, those are just attachments to the rest of their android bodies, because they are really Martian robots sent here to suck the brain juices from our body and give us gas.
Also, the words "Parking Department" are common in everyday speech as a substitute for expletives, such as "Burn in Parking Department," or "Go to Parking Department," or "When Parking Department freezes over."
Isn't the Kansas Union already a multicultural center?
And the Burge Union as well?
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
23rd Street
See also, Gestapo.
Come on people. Why segregate ourselves even more?
Running away and having your own clubhouse built
reminds me of my preschool mentality.
The unions can't be too crowded or booked to house
multicultural activities, and if I'm wrong and they are, if there simply isn't enough room to provide meeting areas for students of diverse ethnic backgrounds, then they need to expand.
Yes, I know. Other leading universities have them. Well, KU go right ahead and follow the leader. Jump on the bandwagon. The cud with the rest of the herd. The more things change, the more they stay the same.
Kevin Beckwith
Broken Arrow junior
We must never forget what makes being female so special and realize that anger and resentment will only hurt our children and ourselves.
STAFF COLUMNIST
Equality between the two sexes, within a single sex, will never be passed out at the door. For women, the struggle for equality may always remain, but it makes us stronger. The lesson that must be learned is that men are not our enemies, and blaming them only hinders our growth.
So I stand here in this unfamiliar territory clinging to my understanding of what feminism should be: A woman who does what she feels is necessary, whether it is stripping at a night club, running a nation or tending the home in order to maintain and support herself and her family while standing equal in the eyes of men and women. But there can be no equality without respect, and that is something that must be earned.
Anne Bailey is a Denver sophomore majoring in psychology.
Targeting men wrong if feminism to succeed
ANNE BAILEY
For the Birds
Somewhere along the way, I got lost. I entered unfamiliar territory that only moments before was recognizable and sensible. I'm still not sure when it happened, but feminism took a turn for the worse.
ALL THESE GUYS JUST
STAND AROUND WITH ONE
EYE ON THEIR QUARTERS
AND THE OTHER ON
THEIR BEER
POOL IS SUCH A
MACHO GAME...
---
Independence and a strong will was something I inherited from a long line of Southern women. My grandmother was the second woman to receive a Ph.D. from Louisiana State University, and I was raised by a single, working mother who has some amazing accomplishments of her own.
In this day and age, I whole-heartedly believe that condemning men as a whole for the conduct of a few only perpetuates a negative stereotype that will undoubtedly push the two sexes farther apart. Placing the blame is no longer a valid weapon, and I question whether or not it ever was. I don't believe you can solve your problems by blaming someone else.
or better or for worse, I have stood up for what I believe and have handled situations accordingly. I still believe that girls with the will and knowledge can compete successfully with boys of similar status; and that women and men should work together for the equality of each other.
In a class over the summer, I found myself defending the white, middle class man to a group of angry women. While making them more angry by understanding their plea, I tried to explain why simply blaming the actions of men that happened years ago would not help their campaign today. These women were so full of hate that they began to cloud the issue of feminism. They were more concerned with defacing men than celebrating how far women have come and how far they can go.
Unfortunately, feminism has snowballed into a war against men. Don't get me wrong, I realize that women are portrayed in confining roles mainly because of a male-dominated society. But when do we as women stop placing the blame on the shoulders of our male counterparts?
菲尼 (Linus Pauling)
THEY JUST DON'T UNDERSTAND THE SUBTLE BEAUTY OF THIS GAME...
by Jeff Fitzpatrick
MARKETS
SPRAGH!
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 3. 1993
R
Football a big moneymaker for city
Game weekends draw $1 million for Lawrence
By Traci Carl
By Traci Can Kansan staff writer
Talgate parties and out-of-towners are traditionally a part of football weekends, but for the city of Lawrence, they are also big business. Judy Billings, director of Lawrence Convention and Visitors Bureau, estimated that each home football weekend generated about $1 million for Lawrence's economy.
"I think it has to do with the team's success," Billings said. "It's important to everybody, not just KU"
Billings said she based the estimate on the fact that there were 858 hotel rooms in Lawrence with an average of two people staying in each room.
"We are getting more and more weekends with full hotel rooms." Billings said. "The flood of the number of people who come into town to sleep, to eat, to drink, to shop and to enjoy the activities around Lawrence has a large impact."
Mary Grover, director of sales and marketing at Holiday Inn Holidome, 200 W. Turnpike Access Road, said the Holidome was almost sold out for all six home football game weekends.
Much of Lawrence's out-of-town crowd are KU's alumni, who return for KU Alumni Association activities, which often were scheduled on home football weekends, Grover said.
Lee Messinger, a manager at Molly McGee's, 2429 Iowa St., said home games were moneymakers for the staff, but the size of the tips depended on the team KU played.
"The best weekends are when the people from Nebraska come," he said. "They spend a lot of money.
"Those people from Columbia, they don't spend any money. I can say that because my wife graduated from there."
Messinger said the crowd was the same whether KU won or lost, but the crowd for away games was smaller and the number of people served was fewer.
Bernie Kish, director of ticket operations, said football season ticket sales increased 22 percent from last
year. Last year, there was only an 8 or 9 percent increase in season ticket sales, he said.
Billings said that the city saw an increase in spending with a more successful football season. Last year's successful season and national exposure boosted interest in the team, she said
"It was just such a festival atmosphere," she said. "I haven't seen that in years."
A night game against the University of California featured on ESPN and KU's victory against Brigham Young University in the Alaoha Bowl was priceless exposure, Billings said.
"You can't buy that kind of publicity." Billings said. "All that feeds into more people knowing about the University and Lawrence. If they're driving down the highway, they might say, 'Hey, I remember that, let's stop and see what it's like.'"
Billings said the impact of basketball games on the city's economy was less because Allen Field House didn't seat as many people as Memorial Stadium and because the games were often on weekdays.
Road Closed
KU prepares for traffic turmoil at first home game
River Hill Terrace N
Missouri Maine Northen Illinus
Stratford Road West Amherst Road
University Drive
Crescent Road
450 Street Irving Hill
Nassau
Memorial Drive
Louisville House Close to traffic
Memorial Stadium
Memorial Drive
Sunflower Road
Sunnyvale Avenue
Indiana
11th St Closed to traffic
Memorial Y Caldwell Mall
P Parking Lot One Way Traffic (One Lane)
One Way Traffic (Two Lane) Two Way Traffic
North Second Street will be open to through traffic. Northbound traffic going across the bridge will be brigadeed to the right after the bridge. Two lane, two way traffic will be open around the hole in front of Johnny's tavern, but four lane traffic will resume after the hole. The detour will be held for another 10 minutes. Northbound left turns onto Locust Street will be prohibited from 4 o'6 p.m.
STOP
STOP
Four lanes will be open Saturday during the day at the construction on Iowa Street, north of 67th Street.
Parking along Mississippi Street from the stadium to the Spencer Museum of Art will not be open to the public. it will be reserved for Athletic Department park.
Source, George Williams, director of Public Works
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It's Not Just A Game!
- 1993 HOME OPENER· KANSAS
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6
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Clinton backs Bosnians
He threatens air strikes if demands are not met
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Clinton administration yesterday backed Bosnian Muslim negotiating demands for a larger slice of territory and threatened air strikes if Serbs and Croats resumed offensives against key cities.
Clinton tied his threat to any resumption of Serb shelling of Sarajevo or interference with relief supplies now that peace talks have broken down.
The State Department broadened the threat to include any new Croat drive against Muslims in Mostar.
It was rejected by Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic as inadequate to guarantee his nation's survival. The talks in Geneva, Switzerland, collapsed Wednesday night.
At the White House, Clinton held out hope for a quick resumption of the peace talks.
State Department representative Michael McCurry said a renewal of the shelling of Sarajevo or Mostar could prompt the North Atlantic Treaty Organization to implement a plan to use force in defense of the Muslims.
"They are stalled," he said. "I don't believe they are collapsed. The United States will do everything it can in the next few days to get the parties to resume the talks in good faith."
The president went on in an
exchange with reporters: "If, while the talks are in abeyance, there is abuse by those who would seek to interfere with the humanitarian aid, attack the protected areas and resume the sustained shelling of Sarajevo, for example, then first. I would remind you that the NATO military option is very much alive.
“And, secondly, I would say, as you know, I have always favored lifting the arms embargo. I think the policy of the United Nations as it applies to that government is wrong. But I am in the minority. I don't know that I can prevail.”
Secretary of State Warren Christopher, meanwhile, called on Serbia and Croatia to yield to demands from Bosnian Muslims for more territory.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Fridav. September 3,1993
7
THE NEWS in brief
WASHINGTON
Emergency agency's flood relief plan draws criticism from states
A
The Clinton administration announced plans yesterday for distributing aid to the flood-raved Midwest, saying states and local governments will have to pick up between 10 and 25 percent of the cost.
One Republican governor accused President Clinton of reneging on a promise to pay for all the losses.
A formula announced by the Federal Emergency Management Agency would require the federal government to pay 90 percent of the cost of damage to public facilities — but only if a state's total losses exceed $64 per person. None of the nine Midwestern states so far has met that standard.
The government would pay 75 percent of the cost for any state with less than $64 in damage per resident.
Republican Gov. Terry Branstad of Iowa said that President Clinton led him to believe the federal government
"It's certainly better than nothing, but it's not what the president promised," Branstad said. "We hope this isn't the last we hear of it."
He said that Iowa would be forced to come up with $70 million it doesn't have even if, as expected, the state's losses exceed $64 per person.
North Dakota Gov. Ed Schafer, also a Republican, said that the state expected all along it would be required to pay 25 percent.
Administration officials attending a "food summit" in Des Moines, Iowa, last week said that the president likely would wave the requirement that states and communities now a fourth of the cleanup costs.
DETROIT
lacocca resigns as Chrysler chair
Former Chrysler Corp. Chairman Lee lacocca quit the Chrysler board of directors yesterday, saying he wants to get on to other things.
Jacocca, 68, who retired from the No. 3 automaker in December after 14 tumultuous years, said he was confident that Chrysler was on firm financial footing and had good management
The announcement was made at yesterday's board meeting, which lacocca did not attend.
"It's been a fantastic ride, but it's time to let the younger people do the driving," lacopea said in a statement. "I said when I left the company last year that I wanted to do some new and different things with my life, and I'm eager to start doing them now."
Chrysler spokesman Steve Harris said lacocca was out of the country.
'Atocca also is stepping down as chairman of the board's executive committee, a position he demanded when he worked out his retirement last year. He recently cashed in about half of his Chrysler stock holdings, collecting about $56 million.
BUXTON, N.C.
Emily causes little damage, moves out
Tourists picked up their vacations where they left off, and storekeepers removed the tape and plywood boards they had put over windows in preparation for Hurricane Emily, the storm that didn't come.
Emily struck only a glancing bounce to the narrow, lowlying Outer Banks islands before veering out to sea. But its aftermath may have proved more deadly: Two swimmers were missing after being swept into the surf at Nags Head.
Despite the winds of about 100 mph that scoured the shoreline, only pockets of damage were reported in North Carolina. The worst damage — caused more by water than by wind — was to the easternmost Outer Banks.
"Where it's bad, it's real bad," state Transportation Secretary Sam Hunt said after touring the scene. "The state got off pretty good. But if you're one of these homeowners, it’s still a disaster to you."
ATLANTA
Banker pleads guilty in Iraq loan case
A banker who had claimed he was made a scapegoat for failed U.S. policy in the Middle East pleased guilty yesterday to making unauthorized loans to Iraq.
Christopher Drogoul's plea came just six days before he was to go on federal trial on a 70-count bank-fraud indictment charging him with making $5.5 billion in illegal loans to Iraq. Some of the money helped finance Iraq's military before the Persian Gulf war.
Last fall, Drogoul pleaded guilty to some of the charges but withdrew the plea during a politically charged sentencing hearing
Drogoul, who will be sentenced Nov. 29, could receive up to 68 years in prison. His attorney, Robert Simels, said he would ask U.S. District Judge G. Ernest Tidwell to limit Drogoul's sentence to the 17 months he has already served.
Simels said Drogoul agreed to the plea "as a result of the urging of his family to terminate the nightmare of this Alice-in-Wonderland setting" and get him out of prison soon.
Drogoul was the former Atlanta branch manager for italy's state-owned Banca Nazione del Lavoro.
No POWs left in Russia, group says
MOSCOW
No American POWs are still living against their will in the former Soviet Union, a U.S.-Russian commission said yesterday in its most definitive statement yet.
The commission has been looking into the fate of the thousands of American servicemen still unaccounted for from World War II and the Korean and Vietnam wars.
The Russian co-chairman, Gen. Dmitry Volkogonov, a military historian and an adviser to President Boris Yeltsin, said that more than 22,000 Americans were held on Soviet territory during World War II. The overwhelming majority returned home and nearly all the rest died in prison camps, he said.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
University Audio 2319 Louis
841-3775
KFNWOOD KAC-714
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10
CAR STEREO SALE
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KU
AMPLIFIERS
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on home get
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18 memory presets, auto reverse and memory preset scan 20 w total power. (5w x4) compact chassis
WOOFERS
TRANSPORTATION PROVIDED. A VAN WILL RUN FROM SUMMERFIELD TO STAUFFER-FLINT THEN TO THE HOLIDOME EVERY HALF HOUR BEGINNING AT 12:30.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9
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Talk with company representatives
---
School of Business
CLARION 3680 RC/6201 CD combo Special purchase on this combo am-fm cassette and disc CD changer. Detachable face in dash controller with 120 watts power. Dolby N.R., music scan switchable color illumination, electronic controls for vol, bass, treble, balance and fader
(Across from Dillon's on 6th) * excluding keg purchases
University Audio stocks woofers from various top name manufacturers, Kicker, Punch, Series One, Super Pro, Infinity, Audiophile by Fosgate, Mohawk, Thump, Bazooka, Cerwin-Vega, Pyle, Etc. **Prices start at $9.95 each for 8" woofers.** Band pass and standard enclosures available
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- Big 6 Public Accounting Firms
- Olde Discount Corp.
- Toys "R" Us
2UK FILMS
• CASABLANCA
Friday, Sep. 3 7:00 & 9:30 PM
All shows in Woodruff Auditorium.
All seats $2.50
All seats $2.50
Free admission with SUA Movie Card For information, call 864-SHOW
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841 5191
DICKINSO
THEATRE
Dickinson 6
1143 E. 1000
2239 South Epworth St.
**53 Prismetime Show (*)** Hearing Dalby
*Senior Citizen Anytime* Impared Stere
Crown Cinema
Rising Sun *P*(*4.15*) 9:50
Secret Garden *P*(*4.30*) 7:00
Hard Target *P*(*4.28*) 9:45
Deer Tale *P*(*4.26*) 7:00
Fruitful Girl **P**(*4.35*) 7:10, 9:40
The Fugitive Girl **P**(*4.35*) 7:10, 9:55
Man Without a Face **P**(*4.20*) 7:00, 9:30
Fatherhood *P*(*4.15*) 9:35
BEFORE 6 PM ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
Needful Things $ ^{R} $ 5.80
7.20 9.45
Hearts and Souls P*1-3
Son of the Pink Pinter **P**1-3
Steeples in Seattle P*1-3
the Year P*1-3
Fortress
In the Line of Fire **P**1-3
The Things Loved Love P*1-3
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841-5191
CINEMA TWIN $1.25
WILLOWA 44.519
SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
*Made in America PG* 13 7.24, 8.26
*Snow White* G$ 5.00
5.00
*Dennis the Menace* PG 7.94, 8.30
$5 Off
2
$5 OFF
Hair Design
Not valid with any other offer
EXPRES 10/15/93
Discover Our Difference
Hair Experts Design Team
Holiday Plaza • 25th & Iowa
841-6886
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
A-E Monday, August 30m
E-K Tuesday, August 31st
L-R Wednesday, September 1st
F-7 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)
8
Friday, September 3, 1993
Learn to Fly
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842-0000
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Fri(5:00),8:30, Sat.Sun(1:45),9:30
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Fri(4:45),7:15,9:30 Sat-Sun(4:45),7:15 ONLY
Mon-Tue-Wed(4:45),7:15,9:30
642 Massachusetts
749-1912
Theater 1 is accessible to all persons.
LIBERTY HALL
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Fri(5:00)8:30 Sat-Sun(1:45)9:30
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Fri(4:45)7:15,9:30 Sat-Sun(4:45)7:15 ONLY
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NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Clinton rebuffs Perot attack on proposed free trade pact
WASHINGTON — The Clinton administration mounted an attack yesterday on Ross Perot's new book that is critical of the proposed North American Free Trade Agreement.
The Associated Press
U. S. Trade Representative Mickey Kantor called a news conference to issue a 73-page rebuttal and said that the newly issued book by the 1992 independent presidential candidate was "ridden with inaccuracies, errors and misleading statements."
"We want to make sure that as we start this critical debate for the country that the facts are clear and straight," Kantor said.
The charge against Perot, one of the most vocal opponents of the NAFTA treaty, comes just weeks before the White House makes its formal sales pitch to a Congress
that is sharply divided over the merits of the pact.
Over a 15-year period, NAFTA would phase out most barriers to the free movement of goods, services and investment between the United States, Mexico and Canada.
President Clinton is expected to present officially the 2,000-page treaty and accompanying side accords on the environment and labor to lawmakers during a speech Sept. 14, congressional sources said.
Congressional hearings on the trade accord, which has been roundly denounced by labor unions and many environmentalists, are planned for after the accord is sent to Capitol Hill.
The outcome in Congress remains unclear, said William Daley, who is leading the administration's NAFTA lobbying effort.
"I don't think anyone has the votes on either side to have that vote today and feel confident," he said.
Air bags to be standard in 1998 cars
But industry compliance is likely to come sooner
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Front-seat air bags will be a mandatory feature in new cars starting with the 1998 model year, but automakers likely will meet the federal regulation before then.
air bags and lap and shoulder belts for the driver and front-seat passengers
The final rule was scheduled to be issued yesterday by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
At least 95 percent of each manufacturer's car fleet built on or after Sept. 1, 1996, must be equipped with both
For the model year beginning Sept. 1, 1997, all passenger cars will be required to have air bags and manual belts in the front seat.
"We want to emphasize that it is critical for passengers in automobiles and trucks to wear both lap and shoulder seat belts even with air bags," Transportation Secretary Federico Pena said.
Judith Stone, president of the Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety, said air bags became a marketing issue because "they work, they're wonderful in their efficiency and their effectiveness."
Pena also emphasized that parents shouldn't put rear-facing child seats in the front-seat of vehicles with air bags because the child could be injured when the bags inflate.
Issuance of the final rule is anti-chimactic because most manufacturers will meet the standard before they are required to, said Brian O'Neill, president of the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.
"Therefore, it became good business to sell them," Stone said. "We're absolutely delighted the manufacturers are moving as quickly as they are to put air bags in."
Sorority Members
Kennedy GLASS
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3rd floor, across from Bass
40
Have you dined at The Castle Tea Room lately? Reservations only: 843-1151
AFRICAN ADORNED
For Unusual Jewelry & Imported Gift Items 5 Foot 7/8"
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
Starting today...the first 20 people who place a FREE Jaytalk ad will win 2 complimentary Planet Party tickets to The New Sandstone Amphitheatre on Sunday
Let's talk FREE concert tickets!
September 12, 1993.
Featuring:
CALL 864-4358
- MIDNIGHT OIL
TO PLACE YOUR AD NOW!
Offer good only while supplies last. Persons currently employed by or affiliated with the Kansan not eligible for this offer.
- HOTHOUSE FLOWERS
- MATTHEW SWEET
- THEY MIGHT BE GIANTS
DRAMARAMA
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.
Classifications
1 Men Seeking Women
2 Women Seeking Men
3 Men Seeking Men
4 Women Seeking Women
5 Friends Seeking Friends
6 Mutual Hobbies
7 Seeking Sports Interest
8 Shared Religion
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.
THIS WEEK ONLY...10 LINES, 10 DAYS FREE!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 3, 1993
9
Retirement doesn't put an end to professor's teaching career
By Shan Schwartz Kansan staff writer
When some KU faculty members think of retirement, they may dream of traveling the world, cruising the oceans or spending weekday mornings on the golf course.
But some faculty keep coming to the University every day to teach courses or work on projects they enjoy.
George Byers, professor emeritus of entomology, is one of several retired KU faculty members who continue to teach and work at the University — for no pay.
"I did it for years because I think it's fun," he said, "and I'm still doing it just for that reason.
Byers said he had never really taught just for the money.
"Some professors who teach, I guess they enjoy it, but I'm doing it purely for the fun."
Byers spent his entire career at KU, from 1956 to 1988, teaching classes within the biology department. Most of his classes involved anatomy, and
classification and development of insects.
Since 1988 he has continued teaching one class, medical entomology, and has worked in the Museum of Entomology in Snow Hall.
Before his retirement, he was the director and half-time curator of the Museum of Entomology, head of the entomology department, and he taught six courses a year.
Now that he's retired, he has more time to do the projects he enjoys the most.
"I'm just picking up several loose ends that I couldn't finish during those last few years of my regular employment," he said.
Byers said that he was identifying the species of hundreds of crane flies. Other boxes containing more crane flies from Oregon and scorpion flies from Colorado are waiting for his attention in his office, he said.
Byers said he often got to examine insects that the federal government had found on airplanes arriving from international flights or in produce
imported from other countries.
"Hey, this is fun stuff," he said. "I get to see things from all over the world."
James Orr, head of biological sciences, said the department had no problems with keeping Byers on campus.
"As long as that valuable resource is available to us, I think it's great that he's here," Orr said.
nyers said he continued teaching after retirement mostly for the students' benefit.
"If my chairman wanted me to teach, I'd say, You just want something for free," he said. "But if the students wanted a course that I could teach best, that's a significant difference."
Byers said he enjoyed the contact with students the most.
"The students come from all over the country and all over the world," he said. "These people bring new ideas and information, and that's great."
"And I think working with young folks keeps your mind from getting old."
Grunge rules MTV music awards
UNIVERSAL CITY, Calif. — The grunge sound of Pearl Jam and stylish Evnogue w won honors at the 10th annual MTV Video Music Awards
Madonna set the tone last night with a laccvious opening number.
tions, accepted via videotape from Minneapolis.
En Vogue's "Free Your Mind" won the rhythm and blues trophy, best dance video and choreography. The quartet, which entered the competition with a leading seven nomina-
"Jeremy," Pearl Jam's lament for a teen suicide, earned the band best group video and top metal-hard rock video.
The best rap video was "People Everyday" by the hip-hop group Arrested Development.
Auxuode-clad Madonna opened the show with a gender-bending song-and-dance number with three scantily clad women in a brothel-style atmosphere.
Wearing a Marlene Dietrich-style
tux and top hat, Madonna caressed
"Get the picture?" Madonna teased the audience at the end.
the thigh and slapped the buttocks of a lingerie-clad female dancer.
The Associated Press
"If you're looking for trouble you've definitely come to the right place," said actor Christian Slater, host of the three-hour awards show telecast on the cable network from Universal Amphitheatre.
Beauty WAREHOUSE Salon & Supplies
Pearl Jam's lead singer, Eddie Vedder, was scarcely impressed with the group video trophy.
"We're a group, and I guess it was a video. It just a little piece of art. You can't really put art into a competition," Vedder mumbled.
Beauty
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Guys and Gals come into The Etc. Shop and check out our wide selection of
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843-0611
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914 Massachusetts 841-6966
Compact Discs
$5.95 each
5or more, $4.95 each
Lawrence Pawn
718 New Hampshire
Lawrence 843-4344
Mon-Sat 9-5:30
Cottin's Coast to Coast. Total Hardware
Total Hardware
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1832
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843-2981
Store Hrs: Mon - Fr 8am-8pm
Sat - 8am-6pm
Sun - 10am-5pm
oo
Are You Left In The Dark About Your Future?
Open Your World To The Jayhawker Yearbook And Expand Your Experience!
Positions Available:
S. C W.
Section Editors Greek
- Sports
- Entertainment
- Portraits
- Academics
- Organizations
- News
- News
Additional Staff Copy Editors Writers Photographers
pick up applications at 428 Kansas Union
Application deadline Sept.8
Any questions? Call 864-3728
Pancho's
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
Where the Jayhawk goes for Homestyle Mexican Food
Margaritas and the largest variety of Mexican beers
Free soft drinks with KUID offer expires Sept.27,1993
843-4044
Call in for take out orders
711 W23rd
in the Malls Shopping Center
MasterCard
VISA
KANSAS
KANSAS VS. Baylor
Monday, September 6th 1:00 PM ALLEN FIELD HOUSE Register to win a Schwinn DX9 Stationary Bicycle courtesy of Cycle Works
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10
Friday, September 3, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Etc. Shop
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843-0611
928 Mass
REVIEW WORLD
Ray Ban
BAKERY & LIFE
for your eye care needs
Announcing:
Spiritual Awareness Week Monday - Saturday September 6-11
meet the KU Religious Advisors on the Stauffer-Flint Lawn next Tuesday and Wednesday 9:00-2:00
Labor Day (Monday) Community Service Projects: LINK Kitchen - Serving a noon meal to the Hungry of Lawrence call 841-8001 to help Construction - of an outdoor environmental education classroom
Construction - of an outdoor environmental education classroom call 843-4933 to help
Largest Tanning Salon in Lawrence!
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(913) 842-4949
Attention:
KU Students!
Be Left
Don't
(
September 7
In The Dark!
Bring your smiling face to Strong Hall to have your yearbook portrait taken for free! Monday, wednesday through Friday: 9a.m.-12p.m.&1-5p.m. Tuesday: 1-5p.m.&6-9p.m. Portraits run September 7-29 Call 864-5499 to make an appointment. Walk-ins accepted. Any Questions? Call 864-3728
THE FIXX
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HARD WEAR GYM AND FITNESS CENTER
Student Discount of $140 per semester (aerobics only for $95) (gym only for $100)
ARE TEAMING UP!
William Alix / KANSAN
First class always free!
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
Corinna Estep, St. Louis sophomore, had been away from home before. She attended summer camp and even took a two-month tour in Europe.
ARE TEAMING UP! NOW YOU CAN HAVE THE BEST OF BOTH FOR ONE LOW PRICE!
Everyone Welcome!!
Doug Baker, equipment operator for WA Dumber, cleans up mud and dead branches in Burcham Park in North Lawrence. Much of the debris Baker cleaned up yesterday was left over from this summer's floods.
Call or Stop By for
But nothing could prepare Estep for the college transition.
Staying active relieves homesickness
The FIXX
Hard Wear
More Information
Park pickup
2223 Louisiana
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2329 Iowa Suite H Dickinson Plaza
Today!
"I went potluck last year and tried the dorms," Estep said. "I had a rough time my first semester — I guess I just wasn't made for dorm life."
Shopping Center
842-1442
A large log is being lifted by a tractor. The log has been cut down and is now lying on the ground. There are trees in the background.
842-BODY
Francis Desalvo, director of counseling and psychology services at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said homickness is usually considered the result of being away from home, friends and family. But that is not necessarily true, he said.
Shopping Center
Above all, students should not isolate themselves. Desalvo said.
Many KU students, unfamiliar with their new atmosphere and surrounded by new faces, find it hard to make their way into the social arena.
"Homesickness is the discomfort felt in any type of unfamiliar situation," he said.
Desalvo said students who tend to be homesick withdraw from the crowd and try to keep it to themselves. That is a step in the wrong direction, he said.
"One of the best ways to deal with homesickness is to determine what it is that made you feel comfortable in your previous situation," Desalvo said. "Get yourself out of your room, find those activities on campus and get involved with those same situations that made you feel comfortable."
Estep said that this year she joined a sorority and felt right at home.
Jim Schmaedeke, director of Lewis and Templin residence halls, said thousands of incoming students choose to live in residence halls each year.
---
Weekly Re-affirmation
I can listen at anytime to the always positive guidance and love of spirit
"Don't concentrate on missing people," she said. "Instead, concentrate on meeting people."
"I'm certain it's true that incoming freshman have a tendency to feel homeschick," he said. "But that's true of anyone who enters into a new situation."
From K-Unity & Unity of Lawrence 843-8832 416 Lincoln
Schmaedeeke said that each year special programs were designated to acquaint students with campus, academics and social life.
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813 Mass • Downtown Lawrence • 843-7584
We're not just a theater anymore! The Granada
$1.00 Domestic Bottles
Tuesday
Monday
$2.50 Bud&Bud Light Pitchers
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Wednesday
2 for 1 Well Drinks
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$1.50 Spritzers
$2.00 Imports
$1.00 Sex on the Beach &
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Saturday
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HAVANA THEATRE
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Mon-Fri
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Sat, noon - 2 a.m.
842-1390
West Coast Saloon
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$1 50 Busride to KU Football
Saturday: Schooners
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2222 Iowa
841BREW
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Fridav. September 3, 1993
11
Game 2
Kansas
Jayhawks KU
Head Coach: Glen Mason
Offense:
Time: 1 p.m., Saturday Memorial Stadium
WR 84 Rodney Harris 6-6 Jr.
TE 1 Dwayne Chandler 6-2 Jr.
LT 54 Rod Jones 6-4 Soo
LG 64 Hessley Hepstead 6-1 Soo
C 63 Joe Hornbeck 6-1 Soo
G 63 John Howes 6-1 Soo
RT 78 Mark Nelson 6-3 Soo
WR 6 Ashaunal Smith 5-6 Soo
QB 12 Fred Thomas 6-0 Jr.
TB 2 George White 5-10 Sr.
RB 33 Costello Good 6-1 Sr.
DEFENSES
OLB 16 Keith Rodgers 5·11 So.
LT 72 Chris Maumalaanga 5·11 So.
RT 98 Daryl Jones 6·2 So.
RE 99 Brian Christian 6·2 So.
LE 90 Guy Howard 6·4 So.
OLB 46 Ronnie Ward 6·0 So.
MLB 35 Larry Thiel 6·0 So.
CB 51 Toni Lassiter 6·0 Fr.
FS 8 Kwanie Lissier 5·1 Fr.
SS 38 Robert Vaughn 5·11 So.
FS 8 Gerald McBurrows 5·11 Jr.
Defense:
WESTERN CAROLINA UNIVERSITY
Western Carolina Catamounts
Head Coach: Steve Hodgin
Offense:
WR 3 Kerry Hayes 5-9 Jr.
TE 83 Anthony Jordan 6-5 Sr.
LT 55 Thomas Jackson 6-4 Sr.
LG 63 Scott Stinson 6-1 So.
C 62 Wes Greenwell 6-5 So.
RG 66 Trek Ekins 6-5 So.
RT 60 Tony Smith 6-5 Jr.
WR 37 Craig Aiken 5-10 Jr.
QB 7 Lonnie Galloway 6-3 Sr.
TB 41 Kevin Thigpen 6-0 Sr.
FB 36 Harold Hines 6-0 Jr.
Defense:
LOLB 50 Kenny Banks 6-0 Jr.
LT 7 Jim Henn 6-5 Sr.
NT 91 Tony Johnson 6-0 Sr.
RT 98 Billy Bumper 6-6 Jr.
ROLB 92 Greg Foushee 6-0 Sr.
LILB 70 Tom Bodine 6-2 Jr.
PULB 51 Rhoenie Wake 5-10 Sr.
CB 27 Ja Braithwaite 5-8 Sr.
FS 42 Jonathan Jenkins 6-3 Jr.
SS 1 Julius Grant 6-1 Sr.
CB 25 Stanley Marrow 6-1 Sr.
Micah Laaker/KANSAN
Kansas prepares to face Catamounts
90
Defense faces challenge in home opener
Freshman wide receiver Andre Carter waits for a pass while freshman defensive back Tony Blevins tries to catch him during practice. Kansas plays Western Carolina at 1 p.m. tomorrow at Memorial Stadium.
By Matt Doyle
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
By Matt Doyle Kansan sportswrite
Kansas freshman cornerback Charles Davis is getting a baptism at the position early in his career.
Last week, Davis had to go against the fast break off of No.1 Florida State led by quarterback Charlie Ward and wide receivers Tamarick Vanover and Kez McCorvey. It does not get any easier for Davis and his defensive teammates this week.
Western Carolina, ranked No. 1 in NCAA Division I-4A by Sports Illustrated, brings its "freeze option" attack to Lawrence for a contest at 1 p.m. tomorrow against Kansas at Memorial Stadium.
The Catamount offense averaged 415 yards and 30 points a game last season and posted a 7-4 record. Senior quarterback Lonnie Galloway returns to lead the Catamount attack and has junior wide receiver Craig Alken and Kerry Hayes to throw the football to.
Hayes caught 44 passes for 942 yards, and Hayes caught 40 passes for 806 yards in 1992.
"They like to pass the ball a lot looking at the film, but film doesn't tell you much until you get on the field against them." Davis said.
Western Carolina reminds Kansas coach Glen Mason of a team to which he was once associated.
"They play like my Kent State guys did," said Mason, who coached at Kent State in 1986 and 1987. "They're scrappy, they like playing, but they're a lot bigger than my Kent State guys were."
Mason said that the Catamounts have Big Eight Conference-type size with an offensive line that averages 280 pounds a man and a defensive line that averages 277 pounds a man.
The Jayhawks will have some changes in their starting lines entering this game. Sophomore Joe Hornback will start at center based on his play against Florida State last week
Junior defensive end Sylvester Wright fractured his left kneecap against Florida State and will miss two to three weeks. Senior captain Guy Howard will move into Wright's spot.
Centers Dan Schmidt and Jared Smith both are recuperating from ankle injuries, and Mason hopes both will play.
Kansas spent a lot of time in practice this week working on fundamentals in hopes of a better performance.
"When we don't play well it is because we haven't executed on the
Western Carolina has played Division I-A teams such as Georgia, North Carolina State and Georgia Tech the last three seasons, but Catamount coach Steve Hodgin said Kansas is the best Division I-A team that his team has faced since Auburn in 1986.
Even though Western Carolina is a IAA team, Davis does not underestimate its ability and talent.
"We can't underestimate them at all because they execute their plan well," he said. "Hey, they're not No. 1 for nothing."
fundamentals," Mason said.
Cross country teams ready for first meet of the season
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
High expectations surround this season's Kansas women's cross country team. The team will begin the difficult job of living up to those expectations tomorrow. Those expectations include a trip to the NCAA Championships.
CROSS COUNTRY
Both the men's and women's teams will travel to Carbondale, Ill., to take part in the Southern Illinois Invitational. Kansas and Southern Illinois are sending both men's and women's teams to the meet. Western Illinois is sending only its men's team to compete.
"It's really more of a dual meet on the women's side and a tri-met on the men's side," Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said.
he said that although the first meet of the season was important, this season's opening meet also would serve as an opportunity to evaluate his runners' fitness levels.
"We want our kids to be as competitive as their fitness level will allow," Schwartz said.
Schwartz said the team's workouts
to this point had been primarily aimed at determining who would make the nine-person travel squad.
Schwartz said that he was confident the women's team would perform well against the Southern Illinois Salukis. He said that this was the strongest women's squad that he has seen in his six-year tenure at Kansas
"I feel confident that we are the stronger team," said Schwartz. "Anything can happen, but I'd be very surprised if we didn't win the meet."
Ashley Ace, a senior cross country runner, shares her coach's confidence but said that the team was still building itself at this point in the season. Ace said the practice times between the runners were closer to each other than they had been in several years.
Ace said that the Southern Illinois course was one of the easier ones the team would compete on during the season. That fact may help the men's squad, which will be trying to keep a string of six straight victories over Southern Illinois alive. Schwartz said
the men's team will face a tough challenge in Carbondale.
It is a challenge that John Hays, senior cross country runner, said the team was ready for.
"The guys are pretty confident that we can compete with them," Hays said.
He said that in past years the team had significantly better athletes than Southern Illinois, which had made a victory more certain in the past. He said that this year's team won't have the significant athletic advantage of past years.
Hays said this weekend's meet was just one step in the team's goal toward winning conference meets and the District V meet, which will be held at Southern Illinois in November.
Schwartz said that seeing the course early in the season could give the team an advantage when district competition arrived. Ace said she agreed that seeing the course now could be a big advantage at district competition.
"It'll help a lot," said Ace. "We'll know exactly what to expect. I think it'll be a big plus."
Chiefs, franchise player continue to haggle about terms of contract
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Neil Smith, the Kansas City Chiefs' designated franchise player, probably would play in the season opener against Tampa Bay, but he has not signed a contract yet.
And chances of the Pro Bowl defensive end coming to terms with the Chiefs did not appear good late this week, said Eugene Parker, Smith's agent.
KC CHIEFS
Smith has been working on his own in Kansas City and was seen watching at least one Chiefs practice. Kansas City coach Marty Schottenheimer said that signing Smith by tomorrow was the key to playing him on Sunday against the Bucaneers.
"I wouldn't rule him out if the came in Saturday," Schottenheimer said. "In a limited role, if we thought he could help us, sure, he could play."
Parker, of Fort Wayne, Ind., said the Chiefs and Smith remained far apart.
"We're as close as Fort Wayne is to Kansas City," Parker said.
The Chiefs are believed to have offered Smith, who made his second straight Pro Bowl appearance last year after afterting Derrick Thomas for the team lead with 14-12-2acks, a four-year contract for $10 million.
Smith was paid $575,000 last year.
Smith must be paid at least $1.7 million this year because of his designated franchise player status. That represents the average pay of the five highest paid players at his position in the league last year.
Parker figures that if the Chiefs continue to designate Smith the franchise
player through the life of a four-year contract, he would be making $5.4 million in the final year. Such a contract would average $3.85 million per season, Parker said.
"Nei is not asking for anywhere near that." Parker said.
Parker would not say exactly what Smith wanted, but the average pay of the five highest-paid defensive linemen this year probably would be around $3 million.
That means Smith and the Chiefs are probably $500,000 per year apart.
On a radio talk show Monday, Chiefs president Carl Peterson issued an appeal to Smith to talk to him. But Peterson also indicated he would not budge from his offer.
"There certainly is going to come a time here where I'm going to have to change my offer in regards to reducing it," Peterson said. "He won't be able to contribute as much if he's not here for 16 regular-season games and hopefully a few games after that."
The Associated Press
Iowa State uses potent offense in defeat of Northern Illinois
AMES, Iowa — Bob Utter threw three long touchdown passes and scored on a 50-yard run, leading Iowa State to a 54-10 season-opening victory over Northern Illinois last night.
night.
The man, who missed most of the last two seasons because of injuries, was sharp after the Cyclones struggled through a slow first quarter that ended with Northern Illinois ahead 7-0.
He directed Iowa State to 17 second-quarter points, then sparked a 28-point third quarter that broke the game open. Uttered completion 7 of 9 passes for 206 yards, including scoring passes of 53 and 77 yards to James Brooks and 46 yards to Mickal Horacek.
The three touchdown passes were the most by an Iowa State quarterback since Bret Oberg threw four in a 43-40 loss to Oklahoma in 1989. And it was the most points for IowaState since a 64-9 victory over Indiana State in 1986.
Iowa State also got a 48-yard run from Artis Garris, who set up his own 11-yard touchdown run. Defensive back Kevin Fulton returned a fumble 41 yards for a score.
Northern Illinois' LesShon Johnson, the nation's No. 2 returning rusher behind San Diego State's Marshall Fauk, rushed for 102 yards in 23 carries but did not score. He had a 72-yard run nullified by a holding penalty.
78-yard run run hummed by a loud penalty. The Huskies got their only touchdown when the ball
popped loose from Iowa State running back Calvin Branch and went right to linebacker Larry Williams, who outran the Cyclones 34 yards to the end zone four minutes into the game.
iowa State turned the game its way in the second quarter with the help of a fumble and a Northern Illinois mistake on a kickoff.
on a kickoff.
Matt Nitchie recovered a fumble by Johnson at the Iowa State 36 yard line early in the second quarter. Four plays later, Ute kept the ball on an option to the left at midfield, sped down the sideline, cut to his right at the 15 and ran into the end zone untouched.
On the ensuing kickoff, Northern Illinois' Eddie Davis went to his knee fielding the kick at his own 4-yard line, putting the Huskies deep inside their own territory. Iowa State forced a punt and Utter connected with Horace five plays later to give the Cyclones the lead.
Iowa State then blew away the Huskies in the third quarter. Brooks caught a 53-yard touchdown pass from Utter on a fly pattern down the right sideline on the third play of the quarter, Garris scored less than six minutes later and Fulton had a clear field to the end zone when he scooped up Johnson's fumble on the first bounce at the Northern Illinois 41 yard line.
Kansas volleyball set to play Northern Illinois
The next time Iowa State got the ball, Utter's perfect pump fake freed up Brooks for their 77-yard scoring play, which made it 45-10.
Tough opponent awaits Jayhawks at tournament
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
There will be something, or rather someone, waiting for Kansas when it plays in the Northern Illinois tournament this weekend.
row.
Kansas coach Frankie Albitz said that Northern Illinois would be the toughest team in the tournament. Colorado State and Northwestern also will be playing in DeKalb, Ill.
Kori Schauer, a 6-foot-4 senior, will be waiting in the Northern Illinois front line when the two teams meet at 1 p.m. tomorrow.
Albiz said Schauer could dominate a volleyball game.
"I am worried about her." Abltz said. "She dominated the front line when we played them last year."
"Kori is one of a number of seniors who have started for three years." Waite said. "We matched up well against them last year. I'm looking for a strong performance. We have five seniors starting with a lot of experience."
northern Illinois dropped the Jayhawks in three games last year 15-7, 15-5, 15-9, and Northern Illinois coach Pete Waite said his team was even better this year.
Northern Illinois ended last season with a 33-6 record and an invitation to the National Invitational Volleyball Championships. The team finished No. 10 in the regional rankings, but Watie said that this year's team was the best he has seen in his 6-year tenure there.
"We are deeper than we've ever been and more experienced than we've ever been." Waite said.
The dayhawks came into last year's tournament after losing their opener to Wichita State. This year, Wichita State became Kansas first victory. Waite said he would see
a different Kansas team from the previous year.
"The win against Wichita State is a great win for their program." Waite said. "It makes me think that they have gone a step up in their level of play from last year."
"It was a boost of confidence," Kanabel said. "It's always the best way to start off the year. In the year's I've played, whenever we start the season with a win it gets better from there."
Kansas senior Cyndee Kanabel said the victory over Wichita State would help the team going into the tournament.
Last year's loss to Northern Illinois was mainly caused by a lack of concentration, Kanabel said.
"We didn't have our heads in the game," Kanabel said yesterday. "We didn't have focus last year. If we keep our heads into it like we did in the second and third games last night against Wichita State, we can beat them."
hem Kanabel said that Kansas had to take
advantage of the situation when Schauer was out of the game.
"I remember her," Kanabel said. "I don't think she plays in the back line. What we have to do is exploit the players in the front when she's not playing. There are three other rotations when she's not in."
Albitz said that Kansas' challenge when trying to stop Schauer would be more on defense than on offense.
Although Colorado State won its opening game and Northwestern has been good in the past, Albizt said that Northern Illinois is definitely the team to beat. The Jayhawks will play Colorado State at 5 p.m. today and Northwestern at 5 p.m. tomorrow.
"We need to move the ball quickly with quick sets," Albitz said. "It's not such a matter of getting around her offensively as stopping when she spikes. Our if front line can't get the block, we will have to dig the ball well."
eZh
William Alix / KANSAN
Katie Walsh spikes the ball during Wednesday's game between Kansas and Wichita State.
12
Friday, September 3, 1993
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Defending men's champion suffers loss in tournament
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Stefan Edberg barely glanced up at the final lob. He couldn't reach it and he couldn't race back for it. And with that lob, he knew, the defense of his two straight U.S. Open titles was over.
Edberg danced on the tightrope until he finally fell off, going down hard yesterday in the second round. He teetered precariously in the first round, surviving in five sets just as he did three times before winning the title last year. He tried to do it again after losing the first two sets against 18th-ranked Karel Novacek, but this time Edberg fell 6-7 (3-7), 6-4, 4-6, 4-6
US OPEN
Edberg's loss marked only the third time in the Open era that a defending champion has lost as early as the second round. Mats Wilander in 1989 and Ilie Nastase in 1973 were the two other former champs to suffer an early exit.
Edberg also became the sixth men's seed to fall, following five others who departed in the first round. The women's seeds moved along easily. Arantxa Sanchez Vicario, No. 2, reached the third round with a 6-2, 6-2 victory over Linda Warel-Wild, and No. 3 Martina Navriallova beat Sabine Appelmans 6-1, 6-3.
"It was one of those days," Edberg said. "He played a solid, good match. I was struggling with my timing. I couldn't generate any power for some reason. I was pushing the ball instead of hitting it.
"It's sad. I've been playing pretty well and I had a reasonable draw. You can't bring it back. I did what I could. I felt I was fighting back, and within five minutes the match was over."
Edberg, appeared to be on the verge of coming back in the fourth set. He hit a leaping overhead backhand to hold serve and tied the set at 4-4. But Novacek, who out-acced Edberg 14-1, held with a clever combination of attack and baseline tennis.
Edberg's coach, Tony Pickard,
watched in amazement at the chances
Novacek took on returns of Edberg's
serves.
"Novacke was just teeing off at everything," Pickard said. "They could play that match tomorrow and
most of his winners would hit the backstop. In the first round, Olivier Delaire did the same thing. More and more guys are coming out and teeing off like this. On the days they all go in, there isn't much you can do about it. But still, honestly, I thought Stefan could get out of it."
Edberg, a Swede who lives in London, has never enjoyed playing in hot, humid weather. It bothered him in the first round, when he nearly lost. It wasn't hot yesterday, but the clammy, heavy air weir him down.
"I played well in patches," Ederg said. "But I was seeing the ball a little late. I hesitated on a lot of occasions. There's always pressure when you've been before. You look forward to performing as good as last year."
Novacek was deservedly proud of the biggest victory of his life.
"I showed the U.S. public I can play some good tennis," he said.
The Edberg-Novacek drama was played on the grandstand court at the same time No. 4 Boris Becker, the 1989 Open champion, labored on the stadium court against Andrei Clerakov. Rain interrupted that match moments after Edburg's loss, with Clerakov leading 6-3, 7-6 (10-8), 5-7.
Penn State to make Big Ten debut
The Associated Press
Nittany Lions fans ready for Gophers
STATE COLLEGE, Penn. — Electronic signs on State College's city buses have been reprogrammed to read "Beat Minnesota." Now how do you reprogram Penn State fans who have grown up on Eastern football?
"In Philadelphia, we pretty much look down on the Big Ten. They're always trying someone or losing in the Rose Bowl," said Brad Youtz, a Penn State junior from southeast Pennsylvania.
Tomorrow, the Nittany Lions' move to the Big Ten Conference will be completed. They play Minnesota's Golden Gophers in their first conference football game after 106 years as an independent.
Coach Joe Paterno said the team isn't ready, but the town is.
"We're selling a lot of roses," said Stephanie Woodring, manager of the Woodring's Floral Gardens, which is located less than a block from campus.
In scores of storefronts downtown Big Ten paraphernalia shares space with Penn State regalia. Stuffed Gophers, Wildcats and Spartans in display cases have replaced the Mountainers, Owls and Eagles of opponents past. Hoosiers, Hawkeyes and Buckeyes are a little tougher to find.
"Once we beat a team, we'll put their mascot in the window with bandages on it," Woodring said. "Finding a wolverine is going to take some major effort. Maybe we can take a beaver and cut the tail off."
Penn State, where everything other than football is a minor sport, has competed for Big Ten titles in every venue except the football stadium.
At the Penn State Sub Shop No. 1,
where Youtz works, people can order
the "Sloppy Joope", your choice of
meat, cheese, cole slaw, fries and
a tomato on French bread. No other
coach has a sandwich.
"It's a pain to make, but it's cheap and it's filling." Youtz said, squeezing one together beneath a spatula.
There are about 30,000 people in State College and their mayor is Arnold Addison, a 1930s West Vir-
gina graduate sad to see the old rivalries go.
The power of 16 years as mayor couldn't deter Penn State from changing from an Eastern school to a Midwestern school.
"The people are in the mood to play football in the Big Ten — which we know as the Big Eleven." Addison said. "We look at some of the teams the Big Ten has, and we don't look too shabby. And our basketball team is going to beat some of these people someday, too."
The optimism that comes from a 27-1 record against traditional Eastern schools is tempered some this year. Fans fear two things — that the Lions will do poorly or that they'll do too well.
"The worry in my house is that Joe, if he wins the Rose Bowl, will bow out," said David Gelman, Norristown, Pa. senior.
"I think we're going to go to the Rose Bowl." Youtze said. "We only have to get past Michigan, and they're coming here."
Tomorrow, Minnesota will be the first team to test Penn State.
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12 lrs. at KU have GPA of at least 2.0 and be
a Kansasan Student. Call 641-895-3 9-M, F
Part time evening delivery person. Must have own car. Apply in person. Peking Restaurant 2nd & 3rd floor. Contact us at [email protected] Part time Office Assistant needed 20 bw/kr W/M w/p. T/T/H/S /P, please call 749-1030.
Occasionally nappy for afternoon childcare in our
bear near KU. Phone 832-0191.
Lawrence Public Schools needs a part-time computer operator. Experience on the IBM DOS-VSE server preferred. Apply at 3705 Clinton WOR
Read Books for Pay. Earn $100 per title. Free details in details.Final price $17.99.
Lieberman FL 31270 FI
Reliable responsible person to give to my house to baby sit two ages, ages three and seven. Call 185-670-2322.
Phoenix Cleaning is now hiring part-time cleaners Must have transportation and phone Call 843-675-0212
STUDENT DISTRIBUTION TECHNICIAN
Date: 19/09/19 Salary: $43.35 per hour Duties include performing bursting and decodifying functions; delivery of equipment to students from van, paper shredding functions; on occasion will assist in receiving shipments, stocking and maintaining inventory from warehouse functions; on occasion will operate forklift and assist in maintenance; assists in Open Landscape Furniture maintenance; assists in wide recycle software uses personal computer or mainframe software as part of record keeping function To apply complete an application to Computer EOE/EOA EMPLOYER
Small design firm needs part time help to 24-80 hours
good communication skills a must. Ask for H4-65
or H4-70.
Student Trainer/Consultant-Microcomputer
Deadline: 9/14/93. Salary $500/600 month 20 hours/week. Required qualifications. Current enrollment at KU, working as a tutor with MS-DOS, or Macintosh OS, working knowledge of at least two major microcomputer applications packages, teaching experiential skills, at least six hours of course work in computing. To apply, submit a letter of application, a current resume with relevant experience, and a detailed description of the Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 65045. Applicants may be asked to give a short instructional demonstration of EOAA EMPLOYER STUDENT TRAINER/ConsultANT-MICROCOMPUTER Deadline: 9/14/93. Salary $500/600 month 20 hours/week. Duties include teach hands-on computer programs using Microsoft Macintosh computers. Provide microcomputer support. Develop and maintain expertise in applications packages commonly in use by students. Requires a Master's degree, course descriptions, and mailing lists. Other duties as assigned. To apply, submit a letter of application, a current resume with relevant experience, and a detailed description of the Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence KS 65045. Applicants may be asked to give a short instructional presentation on a computing topic of interest.
No experience necessary. Flexible full and part-
time schedules. No canvassing telephone sales
For interview now!
STUDENT WORK
Students guaranteed hourly wage and great bonus for good phone voice. Day/evening shifts 794-9697
Students guaranteed hourly wages and great bonus for good phone voice. Day.evening shifts.
molly mcgees
grill bar
MOLLY MCGEES IS
APPLICATIONS FOR
EXPERIENCED COOKS:
APPLY BETWEEN
2-4 P.M.
AT 2429 IOWA.
arrest Hours prior 3 courses in child development and experience. Sunshine Acres 842-2233
SYSTEM SPECIALIST
SUB TEACHERS
Lancaster County Department of Corrections seeks individual to perform responsible technical work involving the use of a Primo 2850 using PICK operating system, including an associated personal computer network, i.e. Lotus. Words: **Quartet**, **Computer** and **Computer**. Minutes: H.S. grad or equiv. supplemented by vocational or college level course in system analysis and program development or most experience in system analysis. Knowledge of "Primos" and "Novel" is strongly desired. 2-4 years experience required. Applicant must complete M.F.M. Must complete a Supplemental Questionnaire and an application postmarked on or before the closing date, September 10, 1998. Apply at City.Co恩恩 NE 86058 (404) 241-7569, EOE/AE
Taking applications for dishwasher/kitchen utility law. Lawrence Country Club. Ask for Frank
UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER seeks
high-energy, motivated, super-organized
assistant position. Assistant salary $841.66 per month. Want individual with wide range of interests, familiarity with KU experience (Macintosh), solid research skills, leadership experiences, organizational skills others. Come by KU Info, 420 Union, for an application. Application must be received at 420 Union by 5pm, Friday
TRAVEL SALES * Sumble SkI & SKit is accepting applications on our website. top $15 per card * SNUGHASE, SNUGHASE
Looking for enthusiastic people who understand what great service is all about!
Are you Makin' the grade
WORD PROCESSING LASER PRINTING
For all your typing needs
call Makin' the grade at 865-2855
**Adult Women Word Processing.** Former editor transforms scribbles into accurate pages of letters.
X
Now Taking Applications
Wanted woman tutor to tutor LB high school senior. 4-5 eve, per week. 7-9p.m. Call 842-3968. leave name and telephone no.
WORK STUDY DIRECTOR
235 Typing Services
Fast growing company Looking for quality minded people. Good opportunity for growth
White & Music Has Guitar Lessons Jazz Rock
Blues, and theory. Sign up at White & I'8. E.th St.
CC Desk Publishing: *Remaines, Cover Letters,
Flyers, Term Papers*, Newsletter,
Call 842-365-1700
Now Hiring Drivers Must have car and insurance
PYRAMID PIZZA
WORK STUDY POSITION AVAIL. at the East Ulaian Language and Culture Depot. apply at 218 310 4695.
Macintosh repairs and upgrades
Friendly, Affordable, In-Home Service
The Mac Doctors 942-0848
305 For Sale
Apply in person 14th & Ohio(under the Wheel)
FORK STUDY POSITIONS AVAILABLE at the school of Business Administration, 1035 Summer field call +647-782-9400.
Full & Part Time
19" Giant ATX M1 bike, Shimane Doreo LX, bareshocks. Ritty tires, perfect cond. $858 call 814-2390
1978 Toyota Corolla, S-speed, very reliable, $285.00 or best offer. 841-3731
1983 Rabbit L. Standard. Great condition, no rust,
needs no work. $1300. 814-3411
300s Merchandise
pseudo Sebera mini bake 21 spd, 21 in $330
2.25" Call Mark
1986 6000 Ninja. New tires, chain, batt., tune.
1980 842-7620
225 Professional Services
'89 600 R Ninja w, new tires & new batt
Excellent condition. Call 842-8420.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
80M TIM Compatible Computer 60MB 3.5 & 8
inch disk drive, Microsoft keyboard 14 gi mm
shaped drive.
TRAFFICBOYS
Fake IDs & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
$f for your HP48 box flap with bar code. Leave message at 864-5269.
Bianchi Road bike, all camp setup, cost over $1200 now, only $550. Many extras. Also for sale sofa new condition call 865-828, leave message if not home.
Bridgestone MH-4 Mountain Bike for 11 mch
frame, good condition. Plea call between 9:00
and 10:30.
DONALD L
Donald G Strole Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Double bed with shell headboard #6. Color TV $25.
TV Stand $15. Love Seat $16. Call 639-5827.
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 843-6023
IV
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
For free consultation call
THE LAW OF DONALDG. STROLE
*D* 96 Bass Guitar for sale. Black body & black neck.
Please contact &买 8.5 m 842-1688
www.firestone.com
HELP! I `me*s-means-trable`. My neighbors want me to stay in, and now there a puppy, here too. I am a nectured, 3-yr old, de-clawed cat. FREE to a living home. 841-3657
Hyundai 386X8 XR 40M 4M HD SVGA, mouse,
numeric, noplay, 1KH KBD for Word Processing
Dos.
KONA *Kliunas* Mint Bike 18" Shim XT, Tange
Color Gorgeous GorseRide 18" Titanium Color
Gorgeous GorseRide 18" Titanium Color
MAC SE4 36g hard drive, 2.5 meg RAM
$500 included version of Claris Works
Call: 800-6912
Macintosh LCTH with 4 meg ram. HD, 10" color.
Macintosh LCTH with 4 meg ram. HD, 10" color.
modern & software $ 500.00 in PC,
desktop & office products.
Moving Sales Contemp. blk. lacquer glass cocktail end table only 110ysa With Yachia roof 35-150mm canopy receptive to 36 roll = 72 pice $195. Tissue cell ceiling canopy 40 roll = 150 mm (Nanotrap) Big Savings 816-924-0424
Nearest new 12' x 19" 12 speed Fuji road kit $195
Taurus rooftop kit $100 Taurus exercise
rooftop kit $110 Mackenzie 822-922 seasoned
One way ticket to Boston via Cincinnati; must be used September 11 or best offer B1 at R2-8200.
Packard Bell and Best Data 200 bpm modems
each. Courter HST high speed modem . 826 - 865
286, 204 meg. 2 floppy drives, 240 Baud internal modem, VGA card, extra slots, software 650/ng. Also. Gray carpet $30; sofa sleeper & loveseat $20, 749 7313 time.
Bike Read 1999 Cannondale N5006 $450 82-91
Compact compact w/ z/ speakers 1999 Cannondale N5006 $450 82-91
Two person dome tent £85. Three person dome £65.
Four person dome 85-924-524 After 5.
**Papaya**
*Dome dome* $85 842-2045 After
Via one half, 16 and half *Case* & Stenblow; pro-
tector.
340 Auto Sales
1983 Honda Accord, runs great. AT, AC,
BMW 525i, 640i, 8530-1320 days.
Accord asks for Warmer.
83 Honda Accord. Reliable, loaded, new tires.
DVM4DM4.
Relieable transportation 80 Ford Pinto /Best offer Call Terry at 841-2746.
370 Want to Buy
$ for your HP48 box flap with bar code. Leave message at 864-5269.
SELL IT FAST IN THE KANSAN CLASSIFIED
400s Real Estate
Over the Edge
Death is forever. Heart disease doesn't have to be.
Naismith Halls' services give students the competitive edge.
THE AMERICAN HEART
ASSOCIATION
MEMORIAL PROGRAM-
- Front door bus service
WERE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE
24 hr. computer center
Fitness room
Dine anytime meals
American Heart Association
NAISMITH
Weekly maid service
I
This space provided as a public service.
2 BR at 18th & Ohio in Lawrence DW/CWA/WJ
hookup, microwave, brand new carpet. $475.
Pager 1-819-647-5332 for quick reply
Bdrph 2 both irf for Rent Carmen B
1800 Naismith Drive (913) 843-8559
bdrh 28 apk for rent in Campus Place. Very close to bathroom. Request rent. Smoker please. Call
$ BR, 2 bath apl for; rent. Campus Place Close to Campus reasonable Rate. Smoker 842-8098
campus. Reasonable rent. Smoker 482-6089
BIG B1R 342 burn. or unfair near dh & Iowa in
Lawrence Microwave, DW, patio $700/$700
Call 1-334-842 collect after p. 497
Large (18x18 inch) for non-smoking female 3 ml.
from campus. 6201 UTL PD. Call 749-6166.
3 quiet 2b. 2 b. New $600 beds, spreads, plush carpeting. Graduates graduate preferred. No WD's WVd allow. If you want a place to crash or sit, choose a bedroom. Call 149 1629 bet. 6-10am & 8-1pm. $255 per person.
Sublet at Graystone Apts' Call Phil at (816) 468-5735 for a good deal
430 Roommate Wanted
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
How to schedule an ad:
Female roommate to share a two-bedroom with
a boy, age 18, for a month. $1600 per
pleasantition. 342-507 ASK for 2b.
2 N S F seeking 3 roommate in townhouse W/B/
D/F/U/Y/Z/AA/BB/CC/DD/GG/HD/HH/IJ/KK/LL/MM/NN/PP/VV/WW
$130 + v cull & moll
624 Leave message
Responsible female to share 8 belfast 1pm. initial
payment for bessels $235 and an uml.
water call PpL 749-2137
FREE tilt. vpt & bath DWCA, microwave in,
Lawrence Shire w/ squat G. student, Skim.
Snowboarder w/ squat G. student
Female homecamp needed ASAP for 2-batch
new campus, west of KRI. on his route, $20/m
hour; $40/m to campus, $15/hour.
*share non smoking female room need*
*share non smoking female room need*
*share non smoking female room need*
7099 | 2 bfr ABP $185 + $15 | Call #891-
7099
Roommate needed Gas and water paid On the KIu bus route. Call 8 am ppm 843-6577
3rd roommate needed at Orchard Corners are:
$410. Callollens Callell 842-3798
e. by phone: 804-433-3988
a. ads phone may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
*in person.* 191 Sullivan Print
*on request.* 312 Koch Street between 8 a. m. and 5 p. m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be posted, cash or check, or charged on the Canon Card or Visa.
By Mail: 119 Staafler Flint, Fawnsburg, KS 65045
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas office. You may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or VISA account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
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Please print your ad one word per box.
Rates per line per da
185 personal 149 lost & found 340 for sale
110 business personales 295 help wanted 340 auto sales
125 announcements 225 professional services 366 miscellaneous
185 orders 225 impulse services
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
Classifications
Cost per line per day
1.0x 1-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30-X
2.05 1.55 1.05 .85 .75 .65 .50
1.90 1.15 .80 .70 .75 .45
1.85 1.05 .75 .65 .60 .45
1.75 .90 .65 .60 .50 .30
370 want to buy
485 for rent
438 roommate wanted
1
2
3
4
5
Classification:
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The University Daly Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
BLUEBERRY HILL
THE WORKING MAN
"Norm? This is Mitch. ...
You were right — I found my drill."
14
THEN PAINSTAKINGLY REASSEMBLED THE ENTIRE DORM ROOM RIGHT DOWN TO THE UNDERWEAR STREWN ON THE FLOOR.
Friday, September 3, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ONE NIGHT AN M.I.T. FRESHMAN FELL ASLEEP IN A STUDY LOUNGE.
Dorm room on the Charles.
M.I.T.
A strange thing happened on campus last night.
Students were using their Sprint COLLEGIATE FONCARDS to make long distance calls for just 9¢ a minute. That's weird. That's the late night MOONLIGHT MADNESS rate. Not to mention the GREAT STUFF you get just
MOONLIGHT
Mobile 555
Sprint®
COLLEGIATE
FONCARD™
815 654 1139 1234
Dial 1-800-877-8000. At Tone, Dial 0 + Area Code + Number
At Tone, Enter FONCARD Number.
THIS COLLEGIATE FONCARD IS SO EASY,IT'S WEIRD.
how about 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
for using your calling card. Free goodies? That's weird. And
weirdest thing of all.
---
Sprint
Be there now.
1. 800.795.5971
FIND OUT HOW WEIRD IT IS. CALL FOR YOUR COLLEGIATE FONCARD TODAY!
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.
HIS ROOM AND PACKED THEM A HALE MILE TO THE CHARLES RIVER. THEY
THINKING QUICKLY, HIS FELLOW DORM RESIDENTS WENT TO WORK. THEY METICULOUSLY REMOVED THE ENTIRE CONTENTS OF
FEATURES: The temporary-iob market is growing — and eating away at permanent positions. Page 9
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103.NO.12
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7,1993
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(0315 0600-040)
Finney's announcement surprises some
NEWS:864-4810
University officials react to decision not to run in '94
By Brian James and David Stewart Kansan staff writers
Governor Joan Finney's announcement Friday that she would not seek reelection in 1994 came as a surprise to some Lawrence legislators and Udi
issues. Finney,
she said, made
no indication
then of her decision
not to run.
State Sen. Sandy Praeger, R-
Lawrence, said she was in Finney's
office Aug 31 discussing health care
"In fact, she she said she had been on an 8-mile bike ride over the week end," Praeger said. "She chuckled and
Gov. Joan Finney
PETER B. HAYES
said. "Those who thought I was in poor health should take notice of that." I took that as a statement of letting people know she wanted to be there another term."
Lawrence, and director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, said she was very surprised by Finney's announcement.
State Rep. Barbara Ballard, D
Some University officials said they were not so surprised.
"I had every indication she would be working with us," she said. "This was a shock."
"It's been in the paper for the last week—'Will she or won't she'" said Lindy Eakin, associate vice chancellor of administration and finance.
Finney, whose term expires in January 1995, said in press conferences that she felt that a re-election campaign would interfere with her agenda for the 1994 Legislature.
STYLE: Regardless of her record as governor, Finney's style is unique and memorable. Page 7.
Ballard said she respected Finney's reasoning.
"I'm just speculating, but maybe she felt she didn't have anything else to prove — she's accomplished so much," Ballard said.
Leigh Smith, Tulsa, Okla., senior and coordinator of the KU College Republicans, said Finney made a "very mature decision."
Members of KU Democrats were
"Finney's right." Smith said. "She would not have accomplished very much in the next year."
not available for comment yesterday.
Ballard said Finney had supported the University of Kansas and higher education in Kansas during her term.
Ballard cited the few KU faculty lay-offs in the past three years and the funds provided for Hoch Auditorium as important accomplishments by Finney for the University.
"KU has been very fortunate compared to other universities," she said. "We're much better off than so many other states."
Finney supported the allocation in March 1902 of $18 million of an unexpected $185 million in federal Medicaid reimbursements for the reconstruction of Hoch.
"The likelihood of Hoch being rebuilt without that money was very small," said David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs.
But Praeger said funding for Hoch Auditorium should not be considered a big accomplishment. "She was in the right place at the right time with providing funding," Praeger said. "Politically, she had to support that."
Ambler and Eakin said that Finney had continually supported educational budgets above those approved by the Legislature.
Store is target of land dispute
"Finney has generally proposed better budgets for the University and the Regents system than the Legislature has passed," Eakin said.
By Traci Carl
Kansan staff write
Marsha Goff said she was tired of coming home to the fluorescent glare of the Kmart sign.
Goff and other residents of Nieder Acres, a small, residential area bordered by 31st, 33rd and Iowa streets, have been fighting commercial development for 25 years.
Now they want to sell their homes and property to Target, Inc.
Target wants to build on the land a 117,000-square-foot department store that would employ 200 people.
"What has really driven us out is the commercial development," Goff said. "There is no hope to even maintain any semblance of a neighborhood."
On Sept. 28, the City Commission is scheduled to make the final rezoning decision.
With a five-to-four vote, the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission decided Wednesday to rezone 285 acres of land, including Nieder Acres, from agriculture and single-family residence land to planned commercial development.
The Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission is creating a plan for future development along the trafficway in order to avoid future controversy over development.
He said the rezoning would create a large area of commercial land that would negatively affect downtown area business.
Myles Schacter said he was concerned with the trend Target was setting toward commercial development. Schacter served on the planning commission when Plan 95, a comprehensive plan for the growth of Lawrence and Douglas County that was adopted in 1977, was being considered. Rezoning Nieder Acres and the surrounding land would violate Plan 95, he said.
Schafter said the planning commission should be consistent with the fact that they denied Wal-Mart's
"There was a flood plain and commercial development, so you couldn't put more homes around," Peaslee said. "They were an island."
Dwayne Peasele, who also served on the planning commission when Plan 95 was adopted, said that in 1977 the planning commission would have zoned the Nieder Acres land as commercial if houses were not there.
Land zoned for Target store
31st
K-Mart
Nieder
Acres
33rd
N
request in 1901 to rezone land south of Nieder Aesca as commercial.
Price Banks, director of Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission, said that if the Target plan were approved, the city could face a lawsuit from other companies who had been denied similar rezoning requests.
But Wint Winter, the attorney representing Target, said a lawsuit was not probable because the commission was within its rights to approve Target's plan.
Target chose the Nieder Acres spot after reviewing a computer analysis of factors such as traffic counts, competition and the number of houses in the area, Winter said.
Residents in areas outside the proposed commercial rezoning area are not in favor of Target locating near their neighborhood.
Harry Warren, an attorney for Charles and Alice Stone, owners of Easy Living Trailer Park, 3323 Iowa St., said the Stones were opposed to Target locating in the Nieder Acres area near their trailer park, where 217 families live.
Jack Hope, a Lawrence resident who moved to Lawrence from Oakland, Calif., said he did not want urban sprawl in Lawrence.
Warren said the Stones were worried that their trailer park would become an island in a sea of commercial development.
"When I look down 23rd Street from Iowa, it scares me because it looks like California," he said.
THE STADIUM IS ON CLOSE HARDLY WITH THE FIELD
William Alix / KANSAN
The leader of the band
Drum Majer Jonathan Glauer, Lawrence sophomore, helps conduct the KU Marching Band at Memorial Stadium. The band performed for a crowd of 200 after Saturday's game against Western Carolina. For more on the football game, see page 11.
State's computers fall short of needs
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Several KU schools that have been unable to use computers provided by the state have turned to companies outside the state's contract.
The computer contracts for Kansas provide adequate computer systems for most state agencies, but can be somewhat limited for the specific needs of the Regents schools, said Steven McCabe, associate professor of civil engineering.
"There are a number of limited possibilities for faculty and staff." McCabe said. "It's not necessarily one size fits all."
McCabe said each school at KU had
different projects and research programs that required specific computers and equipment.
Jack Shipman, state director for the division of purchases, said that it would be impossible to provide specialized computers for every division of an organization as diverse as a university.
"We try to buy configurations for everybody's needs," he said. "There will always be something that won't fit someone."
The computer contracts are awarded through a selective bidding process by the state division of purchases and the state division of information systems and communications. Both divisions consider the needs and requests of state agencies before the
contract is approved.
KU's academic computing and telecommunications committee monitors the computer services and tries to offer another set of options for the University during the contract's selection process, said McCabe, who headed the committee last year.
The state has many different computer contracts, but the two that affect KU the most are with Microtech Computers and ComputerLand of Kansas City, Mo. Microtech, based in Lawrence, deals with desktop microcomputers, and ComputerLand deals with Apple computers.
When a KU department needs a specific computer system that cannot be provided by the state contract, the department must prove that the contracted equipment is not adequate.
The department must submit a written justification to the state division of purchases that explains why the contracted system cannot be used, said Beverly Peasele, contracting officer of the state division of purchases.
If the purchase of a new system is approved, the department must go through a selective bidding process for the lowest bid that must be approved by the state.
Computer contracts are for short periods of time, usually about six months, because the technology and financial markets are always changing, said Jerry Niebaum, director of academic computing services for FD.
INSIDE
Volleyball losses
Nazi graffiti scars Jewish center
The Kansas volleyball team fell short in a match against Baylor yesterday and in the Northern Illinois Tournament during the weekend.
Page 11.
0
By Carlos Tejada
Kanpo staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Lois Schneider, president of the Jewish Community Center, said the neo-Nazi graffiti spray-painted on the center's metal walls Saturday night was easy to remove.
But the shock and the surprise will be more difficult to erase, she said.
"I didn't expect this kind of thing to happen in Lawrence," Schoeider said.
The center, 917 Highland Dr., was vandalized late Saturday night, Lawrence police said. Swastikas, German words and lightning bolts resembling the insignias worn by World War II SS soldiers in Nazi Germany were scrawled in black spray-paint. They covered the front door, the sign on the center's front lawn, the metal walls on the west side of the building, and the brick walls on the south and east sides of the building.
The police said yesterday that they had no information. One of the words painted on the bricks was "ZOG." David Katzman, head of KU's American Studies department and member of the center since 1960, said the word was an acronym for "Zionist Occupational Government." The title is a reference to what far-right-wing groups claim is a Jew.
The police said yesterday that they had no suspects
ish conspiracy to control the world, he said.
"These people weave fantasies that have nothing to do with reality," Katzman said.
with relativity. Warren Maurer, written in German, was barely understandable. Warren Maurer, professor of German languages and literatures, said the phrase might have been: "Wenn alle bruder schweigen," or "If all brothers are silent."
"It does seem like a slagon," he said. Schneider said the graffiti on the metal walls came off with cleaning chemicals, but it may take sandblasting to clear the brick walls.
She said the center had never been vandalized or attacked in the six years she had been a member.
attacked in the six years she is alive.
"We're surprised and shocked and disappointed that something like this would happen," Schneider said. "We think it's important to let people know how it can happen."
But Katzman said attacks such as the one this weekend were common to jewish centers and even to such places as the door of his Wescro Hall office. He said he was saddened but not surprised about the graffiti.
"I wish it didn't happen," he said. "We generally think of mid-America as tolerant toward minorities."
Schneider said that despite the attacks, members of the center were more disappointed than afraid. She said she
X
Swastikas and anti-Semitic graffiti were painted Saturday night on the Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Dr., police reported.
wanted the community to know of the attack and to know such sentiments existed in Lawrence.
"I feel these kinds of things need to be taken seriously," she said.
Kansas staff writer Scott J. Anderson contributed information to this story.
2
Tuesday, September 7, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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1528 W. 23rd
Expires 10/05/93
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820-822 Mass. Downtown Lawrence
820-822 Mass. Downtown Lawrence
KUW-KEEPNINEN
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15th & Kasold Orchard Corners Shopping Center Lawrence, KS 841-8444 WE DELIVER!
OAKS — Nontraditional Student Organization will hold a brown baglunch at 11 a.m. today in the Rock Chalk Room at the Burge Union. For more information, call Gerry Vernon at 804-7317.
Elizabeth Kuznesof, professor of history and director of Latin American studies, will present a lecture, "Brazilian Identity as Seen Though Camodos: The War at the End of the World," at noon today in Alcove A at the Kansas Union.
The Early Education Organization will meet at 5:30 p.m. today in 1004 Dole Center. For more information, call Angela Lucero at 864-0674.
ON CAMPUS
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 804-7316
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting at 4 p.m. today in 4046 Wesco Hall. For more information, call 864-3742.
Amnesty International will meet at 6 p.m. today in Alcove Aat
The Student Assistance Center will present a lecture, "Taking Control of Calculus," at 7 tonight in 4035 Wescoe Hall. For more information,电话 864-1064.
The KU Triathalon and Swim Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at the pool in Robinson Center. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
Hispanic-American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-4256.
the Kansas Union. For more information, call Danielle Myron at 842 5407.
A film, "Creation of the World:
A Samba-Opera" will be shown at 7:30 tonight in Alderson Auditorium
at the Kansas Union. A lecture on Afro-Brazilian culture and
music will follow.
The KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 tonight in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445.
WEATHER
Omaha: 61'/50'
LAWRENCE: 60'/51
Kansas City: 62'/53'
St. Louis: 73'/63'
Attanta: 86'/68'
Chicago: 66'/54'
Houston: 95'/71'
Miami: 90'/78
Minneapolis: 70'/47'
Phoenix: 103'/80'
Salt Lake City: 88'/60'
Tulsa: 79'/64'
Seattle: 83'/56'
WEATHER
Weather around the country:
Attanta: 86'/68'
Chicago: 66'/54'
Houston: 95'/71'
Miami: 90'/78
Minneapolis: 70'/47'
Phoenix: 103'/80'
Salt Lake City: 88'/60'
Seattle: 83'/56'
Omaha: 61'/50'
LAWRENCE: 60'/51'
Kansas City: 62'/53'
St. Louis: 73'/63'
Wichita: 67'/56'
Tulsa: 79'/64'
TODAY
Tomorrow Thursday
Rain likely, E wind 10-20 mph
High: 60'
Lov: 11'
Partly cloudy and warmer
High: 70'
Low: 54'
Sunny and dry
High: 80'
Low: 60'
Sunny Cloudy
Sunny
KANSAN CLASSIFIED WORK
The University Daily Kansan (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60404, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60044 Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 68045
AFRICAN ADORNED
5 East $ 7^{\mathrm{TH}} $ 842-1376
STUDENT ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
CELEBRATE KU!
COME TO THE SAA MEETING. JOIN A COMMITTEE AND GET INVOLVED.BRING YOUR CALENDAR.
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IN THE ADAMS ALUMNI CENTER
QUESTIONS? CALL 864-4760
SAA
AUSTINTALUMMIA ASSOCIATION
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TEXAS INSTRUMENTS TI-81
YEZ YEZ-3+25172
RANGER TODAY TRACK GRAPH
SHIFT ALE OLE ALCOOK ALUMIN AJ MTOC LOWER A SIT A B DRAMC HARM OUT MATHE MATHE MATHE ABS D SPN E GDV TANX G R H AP S PN DOX TZN A RE I M OF R LOG 7 8 9 X AP V A A F M N REST U STOCK 7 8 9 ON OFF ORI ABS ENTER
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TEXAS INSTRUMENTS 71-36X SOLAR.
1234567890.99
DEG
ADON
DRG+ JF FF
QRS+ MN CMN
HYP LOG LN CACE
D RB+ CD DN YI
6N COG TAN YI
A B C D E F G H I
J/K I/J J/T
U/V V/W W/X
STAT+ CAC TRK QC QR QS
Z+ EE A B C D E F G H I
ASTO LM ADON AMN NOST
STD 7 9 10
COPA LD OCP OCPA
RCL 4 8 1
AUTO - - - - - -
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0
0 - + - - - - -
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TEXAS INSTRUMENTS
TEAM INSTRUMENTS
PV = 1234567890
CHRT
CPI
GET
ENTER
DEL
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ON/OFF
2MP
CPY
MPV
JRn
ANFOT
PV
PMT
PV
N
UV
AVDFT
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PV
X
VT
U2
RAND
BRA
BRA
BRA
TAZ
X
LEN
LEN
LEN
LEN
POWER
BYTE
BYTE
BYTE
NC
NC
NC
CLASSMENU
CRIT
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4
Tuesday,September 7,1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
Violent crime and the number of illegal guns in Kansas City and throughout the country have produced a need for positive measures to try to curb senseless violence.
THE BACKGROUND
Kansas City, Mo., city council member Carol Coe has sponsored a resolution calling for the chief of police to explore the possibility of conducting weapons checkpoints on Kansas City's streets. This resolution, if turned into law, will give police the permission to set up weapons checkpoints.
THE OPINION
Checkpoints will not help solve gun problems
This resolution sponsored by council member Coe, and passed on August 26, is a noble attempt to attack the ever present problem of violence associated with illegal weapons. But the resolution does not take into account the more pressing questions and tensions which will arise if the resolution becomes law. The proposal, if voted into law, would set a bad precedent that could justify setting up weapons checkpoints in other cities, including Lawrence.
In Kansas City alone there is a murder every 58 minutes and an aggravated assault every 72 minutes, according to another related resolution sponsored by council member Coe. While we all realize the need and urgency for aggressive police action in fighting crime, this resolution is not the answer. The legality, individual privacy rights, effectiveness and community-police trust issues that would arise outweigh the resolution's intended goal, which is "to curb violence associated with access to illegal weapons."
Proponents of the resolution draw a parallel between sobriety checkpoints and proposed weapons checkpoints. This comparison is flawed because the majority of people stopped at sobriety checkpoints are of legal drinking age. Yet, many of the people who own guns are not old enough to drive cars. And although weapons checkpoints may keep guns off the street on given nights, it does not address the greater problem of the numbers of guns still floating around our neighborhoods.
More importantly, this resolution would subject too many people, specifically minorities, to degrading and humiliating searches. The Black National Congress in Kansas City, as recently as Wednesday, protested in front of City Hall against the resolution. Most of us have heard about or know someone who has been searched by the police, and the stories are far from glamorous. We should be able to retain our personal right to drive from point A to point B without being unjustly accused of concealing illegal weapons.
Although the resolution passed with a vote of 10-1, the lone dissenting vote came from Mayor Emmanuel Cleaver. This should serve as a strong message to the people when the city's highest official disagrees with the proposal.
An alternative program that has been successful in getting guns off the streets without bothering innocent people is the gun buy-back program. This program has worked in cities as close as Omaha, Neb.The ambitious efforts of council member Coe should be applauded, but in order to maintain our rights and lessen the violence in our streets, alternate programs must be investigated.
MANNY LOPEZ FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
KC TRAUER, Editor
RC TRAUER, EDURO
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM ELBEN
General manager, news adviser
Editors
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
Assistant to the editor .. J.R. Clairborne
News .. Stacy Friedman
Editorial .. Territyn McCormick
Campus .. Ben Grove
Sports .. Krietli Foster
Photo .. Klip Chin, Renee Kneeer
Features .. Erza Wrafe
Graphics .. John Paul Fogel
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ... Ed Schaper
Regional sales mgr ... Jennifer Perrier
National sales mgr ... Jennifer Evenson
Co-op sales mgr ... Blythe Fucht
Production mgrs ... Jennifer Blowey
Kate Burgess
Marketing director ... Shelly McConnell
Manager ... Janice Davis
Classified mgrs ... Janice Davis
**Students 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 photographed.**
The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest column and cartoons. They can also be brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Stauffer Hall.
MARLEY Chicago Tribune
MOST FAVORED NATION
CHINESE
RESTAURANT
TAKE
OUT
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THE MISSILES.
AND DOES THE NUCLEAR
TECHNOLOGY COME
WITH FORTUNE COOKIES?
Death could come at any time, so plan ahead for best results
Today's Humor Topic Is: Death.
Eventually everybody has to die, except Elvis. You never know when your time will come. One minute you could be as healthy as a horse, and the next minute you could be killed by exploding bat dung.
COLUMNIST
This is what nearly happened to rangers at Tahquamenon Falls State Park in Michigan, where, according to news articles sent in by many alert readers, a building was leveled by a monster blast — audible 14 miles away — that resulted when a sump pump spark ignited methane gas that had been generated by large quantities of bat dung. Fortunately, nobody was in the building at the time except bats, whose names are being withheld pending notification of next of kin.
DAVE BARRY
But even you do not set foot in Tabuquenon Falls State Park — and that is certainly my recommendation, at least until after the funeral services — death can come at any time. In the words of the Old Testament prophet, Abbr. speaking in the Book of Longitudes, Chapter Nine, Verse Four, Sector Seven: "For whom amongst ye can know the exact day, nor hour, nor
minute nor GAAAACCCK (thud)."
Yes, the big moment could come at any time, which is why you should be thinking NOW about making arrangements for your post-death lifestyle. You want to spare your loved ones the pain and agony of having to make funeral arrangements for you later at a time when, for example, they might have tickets to the playoffs
Now before I get a lot of trade mail from the funeral industry, let me stress that your modern bereavement counselor is NOT just out to make money. He is a highly trained professional who is interested only in servicing the family of the deceased at a very reasonable cost, if necessary ("Well Mrs. Deeleg, if you are looking to save a few dollars, we offer a 'Basic'
package that includes this durable,
high quality, four-ply 'Hefty' bag with
a sturdy twist tie to ...'.
so make these arrangements NOW.
And be sure to leave explicit written instructions with your next of kin stating what kind of funeral service you want. ESPECIALLY what kind of music I say this in light of an alarm article from The Star, sent in by Katherine Ryanan, listing the most popular recorded songs played at funerals. These include "My Way," sung by Frank Sinatra (Regrets, I've had a few, but then again, too few to mention);" and "Ben" sung by Michael Jackson. Correct我 if I'm wrong here, but isn't the song "Ben" from the movie "Ben," which is about a rat? Do you want Michael Jackson singing a love song to a RAT at your funeral?
Of course not. You want something more suitable, such as — this would be my selection — "Mony Mony," by Tommy James and the Sandhills. Also, you'd want to close with an appropriate inspirational song by James Brown, such as:
"This is a brand new day.
So let a man come in,
And do the popcorn."
Another thing you definitely should do prior to dying is make sure you have a proper will. According to the nation's largest lawyer organization, the American Association of Aforementioned Legal Professionals, the best way to get a will is to copy down the following paragraph and sign it:
L. (YOUR NAME, being of sound mind and reasonable body, do heretofore set forth the following (hereafter the mortgage)) and do thereby attest and affirm thereto etc. blah blah blah there is no need to read this too carefully it is all just standard legal "boilerplate" blah blah blah and therefore I bequeath and bestow and begive all my money and everything to Dave Barry blah blah so I'll sign this right now here I go I'm signing it (SIGN HERE).
There! That pesky chore has been taken care of. Now you can forget about this morbid topic and get on with your life, have fun, maybe take a nice trip somewhere. Speaking purely as your friend, I recommend some place with bats.
Dave Barry is a syndicated columnist with the Miami Herald.
Songs provide excellent pickup lines
While trying to readjust myself to the routine of student life during the first week of school, I also was able to re-acclimate myself with ways to get my mind off of, or more appropriately, ignore my studying obligations.
One great interest of mine and of many my fellow students is music. Not only is music a lot of fun to listen to, but it also provides me with an opportunity to analyze or philosophize. The thing with most of the songs I hear is that although I derive great pleasure from listening, I couldn't always tell what is being said. I've had this problem since elementary school.
When I first realized that some songs had words that meant something (last year sometime), it was like a whole new world opened up. I encourage all of you to listen to the words of your favorite songs, or maybe even songs that you don't like. It can provide great entertainment, and you can learn many things. Even a little about the art of romance. I look at some examples:
STAFF COLUMNIST
CHRIS RONAN
1) One of the great movie flops of 1902 was, in my opinion, "Boomerang." Although I enjoyed the great performances of Halle Berry and well, Halle Berry, the basic story line was pretty pathetic. The soundtrack was better, and I do own it, but a lame movie deserves at least one lame song. "Boomerang" boasts "Give My Heart" by Babyface. This "should have been a Grammy winner" produced one of the great pick-up lines of our time for you guys out there. I quote, "I would give U my heart and I would always be true and I would love you forever if I could just make love to
Let's envision:
U. " Hmmm. Try that one on your next date. I've heard it is amazingly successful.
WOMAN: "You know, things aren't working. I just don't think you really love me, and it seems like you're scared of making a commitment."
YOU: "Hey now, that's just not fair.
And to prove it, I promise to do all the things you just said if we can have sex,
I mean, make love."
I think the obvious intelligence of the argument speaks for itself.
2) I was driving home one day and heard this song. It's called "Talk it Over," and I'm not sure of the artist, so I won't incriminate an innocent person by throwing out names. But anyway, this made me laugh aloud. The premise of the tune is that a man is having some emotional difficulties with his honeybunch, so he suggests very surely that they, and I quote, "talk it over in bed."
Most women that I've talked to say this is a great thing to suggest, so all men should try it. For practical purposes, your goal conversation should follow this format.
WOMAN: "Hey, I'm really, really mad at you."
YOU: "Hey (insert your unique love term here, i.e., honey, baby, sugar), I know you are upset, but I'm sure if we go back to my place and have sex, I mean, make love, we'll both feel a lot better."
Your woman will certainly see that you have a flawless argument, and all problems will be solved.
So as you can see, there is much to hear and learn from the music industry. Not only do we get something to dance to, but it also could very well improve your relationship with that "significant other." If you just follow the suggestions and ideas in your favorite tunes, you too can follow in the footsteps of great American lovers like Humphrey Bogart and Ted Kennedy.
Chris Ronen is an Overland Park sophomore majoring in radio-TV broadcast.
University of Mars
In the Dorm Cafeteria... AAargh!! Some body Help me, Dennis Just ate my right Arm
Slurp!
Did you take his Arm, Dennis? You produce that arm immediately, or you'll be in big trouble!
by Joel Francke
I
Hey Cool, I don't Suppose
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FRANK E.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 7, 1993
5
Seth Wiley, left, Lawrence senior, and Susan Cooper, Leaward senior, work at the control booth in the new instructional classroom on the third floor of Strong Hall.
Video classroom moves on campus
By Kathleen Stoile
Korean staffunter
Kansan staff writer
With his shoulder-length hair fastened securely behind his ears, Chris Sheridan stared intently at the maze of monitors and switches before him.
It was showtime in the new instructional television classroom.
- "Tape is rolling ... instructor's microphone up ...
... fade music ..." he instructed from his technical director's chair.
After two semesters in an old television studio at Seventh and New Hampshire streets, the cast and crew have relocated to a renovated room on the third floor of Strong Hall.
"It's great having a permanent home for the video classroom," said Sheridan, a Lawrence graduate student and production assistant for Media Services, a part of the Division of Continuing Education.
Six graduate level classes are being broadcast live this semester from the KU classroom to the Regents Center in Overland Park. This is the third semester for Regents broadcasts. The classes are a service of the Division of Continuing Education.
Breek Marion, director of Media Services,
said the 1,200-square-foot classroom and 300-
square-foot control room were renovated during
the summer at a cost of $1,000. The
room will be used with classroads.
Marion said the old location had bad acoustics and lighting
in a learning environment, not a studio," Marion said.
The classroom also features three cameras from which the director can choose different images for broadcast. A fourth camera, yet to be installed, will run on a track over the instructor's lectern console to view objects.
"The shot we can get on camera is better than what most students get from their seats unless the professor passes the item around," said Jim Jewell, producer and director of ITV classes.
Eventually, the students in Strong Hall will be able to see their Regents Center counterparts on the monitors. But for now, only audio interaction is possible. Marton said more funds were needed before the equipment necessary for two-way video could be purchased.
Images displayed on the professor's electric overhead or videos or slides prepared in the control room can be viewed on any one of three TV monitors flanking the classroom's five rows of tables.
Tom Glavinich, who teaches two architectural engineering courses through ITV classroom, said the relocation of the classroom was an improvement.
Another room on the other side of the control room is being prepared as an ITV classroom, but Marion said he did not know when it would be finished. There are also plans for ITV classrooms in Hoch Auditorium and in Joseph R. Pearson Hall, where the department of education plans to move he said.
"The new facility is very nice and it's convenient." he said.
Bikes challenge cars as top campus ride
Only a few years after mountain bike sales began to skyrocket in the United States, KU students are still buying up the most popular way to get around on campus.
Bv Cheslev Dohl
Kansan staff writer
"About two years ago, things went crazy in Lawrence," he said.
Rick Stell, owner of Rick's Bike Shop, 916 Massachusetts St., said mountain bikes became popular in the Midwest in the early '80s. He said that five years later the sale of mountain bikes really took off.
A recent chart in USA Today reported that the revenue from U.S. sales of mountain bikes soared from $113 million in 1982 to an estimated $2.3 billion this year.
The mountain-bike share of the U.S. bicycle market has shot up from a mere 5 percent in 1982 to 67 percent in 1993.
Stein said that the mountain bike was a big seller because of its comfort and durability.
"The mountain bike has more of an upright build, and it tends to have a wider saddle," he said. "With a mountain bike, speed isn't of the essence, so it's a popular bike for students to get up to campus."
High-quality, affordable mountain bikes for students start in the mid-$200 range, but prices go up drastically with different options.
Gary Long, owner of Cycle Works, 1601 W. 23rd, said that there was a great deal of technology incorporated in the making of a bicycle — technology that was changing all the time.
"Look at this bike, for example," he said, resting his hand on the seat of a 22-pound $2,000 Univega, made from chromoly, a steel alloy that is stronger yet lighter than regular steel.
"It's light enough to carry on your shoulder," he said.
Stein agreed that certain high-grade bikes cost as much as used cars.
"Bikes vary as far as mechanics and materials, but some people can justify the price," he said. "Some people fish off canoes, and some people go out and buy bass boats to fish off of," he said. "It's the same with bicycles."
Long said that the first bike "turned mountain bike" was the 1953 Schwinn Black Phantom.
"They put gears in these old bikes because they were durable with strong bikes," he said. "This was the perfect bike for off-roading."
Besides the mere simplicity of owning a bike, Mike Combes, manager of Rick's Bike Shop, said that owning a mountain bike was a means of expression.
"It's the anti-social, ultimate-free bike," he said. "When people can't express themselves by doing something radical like joining Greenpeace, they can always go out and buy one of these," he said.
Week of events to promote KU pride
'Celebrate KU' offers programs to recognize 127 years of history
By Donella Hearne Kansan staff writer
everyone is invited.
The Student Alumni Association will put on "Celebrate
the 1970s." This
week, SAA will present in front of Wescoe Hall a variety of informational events designed to teach students about University programs.
The University of Kansas is having a birthday party and everyone is invited.
Sunday marks the day the University was founded in 1866.
A representative of SAA said the purpose of "Celebrate KU" was to boost student loveyto the University.
"We're doing this to remind everybody of the common tie
to KU," said Jodi Breckenridge, director of Student and Kansas Honors Programs at the Kansas Alumni Association.
Flyers with facts about KUhistory and achievements will focus on "points of pride." Deans, administrators and coaches are invited to talk with students this week in front of Wescow, Breckenridge said.
SAA got the idea from the University of Southern Mississippi where an event like "Celebrate KU!" is held every year, said Andrew Pitts, St. Louis, Mo. senior, and SAA president.
SAA tries to get students involved in alumi activities to train them as recruiting volunteers after graduation, Breckenridge said. There are 70 chapters of KU alumi across the country.
"It's done across the country," he said. "We wanted to do something for the University."
Breckenridge said money for the celebration was raised through fund raisers.
Celebrate KU!
The Student Alumni Association will hold activities in front of Wescoe Hall from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. every week. Please contact the University's 12th birthday club.
Today — Academics Day. Deans of University schools will talk with students about their school's programs.
Tomorrow — Athletics Day. Coaches are invited to share information about University sports. The Jayhawk mascot and Baby law will be there.
*Thursday — Alumni Day, Kansas*
*Alumni Association and Endowment*
Center staff members will talk with students about the Alumni Association's
**Friday — Student Day. SAA will pass out our birthday cake to all students and ask students to sign a giant birthday card.** (Ada Chancellor Gene Budig in his office.)
KANSAN
KU
TRANSPORTATION PROVIDED. A VAN WILL RUN FROM SUMMERFIELD TO STAUFFER-FLINT THEN TO THE HOLIDUME EVERY HALF HOUR BEGINING AT 12:30.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9
1:00 P.M. - 6:00 P.M.
Investigate internship possibilities
LAWRENCE HOLIDAY INN HOLIDOME
BUSINESS CAREER FAIR
School of Business
12TH ANNUAL
Investigate internship possibilities
Talk with company representatives
Over 90 companies represented
All majors invited to attend
- Cargil Inc.
- Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
- Hallmark Cards, Inc.
- Tovs "R" Us
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- Olde Discount Corp.
- Big 6 Public Accounting Firms
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916 Mass.. Lawrence, KS 841-6642
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6
Tuesday, September 7, 1993
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C
September 7
Bring your smiling face to Strong Hall to have your
yearbook portrait taken for free!
Monday, wednesday through Friday:
9a.m.-12p.m. & 1-5p.m.
Tuesday: 1-5p.m. & 6-9p.m.
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Call 864-5499 to make an appointment.
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NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
U.N. blames ambush on Aidid
Seven Nigerian soldiers die in Sunday's attack
The Associated Press
MOGADISHU, Somalia — The United Nations blamed an ambush that killed seven Nigerian soldiers on warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidd, and a U.S. official said the attack demonstrated the need to capture quickly the fugitive leader.
The attack was the deadliest assault on U.N. peacekeepers in Somalia since June, when 24 Pakistani soldiers died. Seven Nigerian soldiers and a U.S. diplomat were wounded Sunday. A Nigerian soldier also was missing.
The Nigerian commander accused the Italian U.N. contingent of not providing adequate rations.
Later Sunday, Somali fighters fired on a U.N. airfield, and American troops in helicopters responded by attacking the Somali mortar position with cannons and rockets, a U.N. representative in Mogadishu said.
Representative Maj. David Stockwell said he had no of ksumon or U.N.
casualties. He said the Somali fighters took cover in a nearby building used as a hospital, and the U.N. forces held their fire.
The seven Nigerians were killed as they went to the aid of other U.N. peacekeepers surrounded by a mob of stone-throwing Somalis.
Capt, Tim McDavitt, a U.N. military representative, said the platoon of Nigerian soldiers returned fire for at least half an hour, but it was not known if there were any Somali casualties.
Somali bystanders said at least 30 of their countrymen were killed or wounded.
McDavitt said that in addition to the seven Nigerians killed and seven wounded, one was missing. Somali bystanders said one Nigerian, a sergeant, had been captured.
An unidentified American diplomat attached to the U.S. liaison office in Mogadishu was shot in the chest after he and five colleagues apparently stumbled into the ambush, the official said. The diplomat later was listed in fair to good condition at an U.S. military hospital.
In New York, U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali deplored the deaths, and said they demonstrated "the urgent need" to disarm all of Somalia's factions.
Retired Adm. Jonathan Howe, the U.N. special envoy to Somalia, called the ambush a "wanton, unprovoked and premeditated attack" and blamed it on Aidd.
Robert Gosende, the U.S. special representative in Somalia, said the attack emphasized the need to quickly capture Aidid, who has been waging an urban guerrilla war against the United Nations for months.
The commander of Nigerian forces in Somalia, Lt. Col. Oyinolimo, heatly accused Italian troops of not coming to the aid of his soldiers, underscoring divisions within the 29-nation U.N. force.
Reporters visiting the scene hours after the ambush occurred saw Italian soldiers lolling behind their sandbags, with the bodies of four Nigerians clearly visible several hundred yards down the road.
Italian officials suggested hard-nosed U.N. tactics were to blame for the clash.
Arafat takes peace plan to Egypt
---
The Associated Press
CAIRO, Egypt — Yasser Arafat brought his campaign to sell the Palestine Liberation Organization-Israeli peace agreement to Egypt yesterday after receiving lukewarm support in Syria.
The PLO Executive Committee meeting could begin this week. Israel has already approved the deal.
If Assad's backing materializes, it could help Arafat secure approval for the plan from the PLO's ruling Executive Committee. Hard-line PLO factions based in Damascus are represented in the ruling body, and Assad has influence over them, although he does not control them.
Before arriving in Egypt, the only Arab country that has given wholehearted support to the plan, the PLO chief picked up endorsements for the accord from the Gulf Cooperation Council, a six-nation group led by Saudi Arabia.
The agreement calls for Palestinian self-rule in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank town of Jericho — a small portion of the Arab land Israel has occupied since 1967.
It called the accord "a first step toward reaching a just, lasting and comprehensive settlement to the Palestinian problem and the Arab-Iraeli conflict."
in Syra, Arafat met for six and one-half hours with President Hafez Assaf, who asked to study the plan more fully. The PLO took Assad's request as an expression of support, with reservations, a PLO official said in Cairo, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Radical Palestinian groups and even members of Arafat's own faction have said the agreement contains no guarantees for a Palestinian state and avoids dealing with the status of Jerusalem, Israeli settlements and the 3.5 million Palestinian refugees who live outside the occupied territories.
Muslim fundamentalist groups oppose any deal with Israel.
After Arafat's visit to Damascus, Syrian Foreign Minister Farouk al-Sharaa went to Lebanon, apparently to try to soften Lebanese outrage over the PLO's separate deal with Israel. Israel was exchanging mortar fire with Lebanese militias less than a week ago.
Sources at the headquarters of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine — the two largest groups in the PLO after Arafat's Fatah faction — said they rejected Arafat's request for meetings in Damascus.
In Egypt, Arafat was likely to have an easier time.
Egypt's foreign policy is based on its peace with Israel, which President Anwar Sadat signed in 1979, and friendship with the United States. Arafa and most other Arabs broke relations with Cairo because of that peace agreement.
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HALF PRICE TICKETS! HALF PRICE TICKETS! HALF PRICE TICKETS! HALF PRICE TICKETS!
K.U. Students...This is your night!
Grand Opening
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at the
University of Kansas
Wednesday, September 29
8:00 p.m.
Half Price Tickets this night only!
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.
Tickets held exclusively for students until September 7; after September 7 tickets will
continue to be on sale for students at the discounted price until tickets sell out.
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NATION/WORLD
Tuesday, September 7, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Finnev's style unconventional
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Joan Finney might be remembered more for her personality and her unconventional style than for anything she did in office, and other politicians say she has a mixed record as governor.
Finney, who announced last week she would not seek a second term, will leave office after having the state's school finance and workers' compensation systems overhauled on her watch. The state's economy, while not booming, has managed to remain steady.
At the same time, she waged a public feud with Attorney General Bob Stephan and faced criticism of some of her appointments. She fired two cabinet secretaries, withdrew the nomination of a third and had two more resign in the face of public controversies.
ANALYSIS
"And this is what has concerned me
"She was a governor who had a great heart and compassion for people," said Senate Minority Leader Jerry Karr, D-Emporia. "She had a mixed record, but much of her record will look better over time because of the really high peaks."
—the people, the people in the cafeterias, the people that I see in the grocery store and visit throughout the state, and this was the difficult part about this," Finney said.
Republicans often ridicule her populist rhetoric and suggest it is all blarney, but Finney built her career by attending small events in small towns.
In 1992, her late promise to sign an increase in the state sales tax rate gave the historic bill that overhauled
the state's school finance system the momentum it needed to pass. The measure cut property taxes in almost all of the state's school districts and by $273 million statewide.
This past session, Finney intervened personally in legislative negotiations over a workers' compensation reform bill. The 137-page measure passed, allowing a freeze in insurance rates that had increased by 50 percent in the two previous years.
However, Republicans and Democrats alike expressed concern that Finney had ignored other issues, such as the health care crisis, and they have questioned how much commitment she has to economic development.
"She's been very unconventional, and it's created a lot of problems for her," said former House Speaker Marvin Barkis of Louisburg, who is running for governor.
THE NEWS in brief
Eurasia
NEW YORK
Nixon and Kissinger targets for alleged terrorism by extremists
Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger were among the possible kidnap targets discussed by a government informer and the alleged leader of a radical Muslim terrorist plot, The New York Times reported yesterday.
Emad Salem, the informant, and Siddig Ibrahim Sidig Ali talked about kidnapping influential U.S. citizens, including the former president and his secretary of state, according to lawyers who have seen transcripts of tape-recorded conversations in the case.
The names were suggested by El Sayyid A. Nosair, who is in prison on a weapons conviction stemming from the 1990 slaying of radical Rabbi Meir Kahane, the unidentified lawyers told the newspaper.
The hostage-taking plan was aimed at winning the release of Muslims held in the Feb. 26 World Trade Center bombing, the Times said.
An indictment last month charged that Nosair, Siddig Alh and other members of a radical Muslim ring conspired to assassinate, bomb various New York targets and kidnap to
nurter its aims across the globe. The federal indictment did not identify the kidnap targets.
Salem and Siddig Ali had just returned from visiting Nosair at Attica State Prison on May 23 when the conversation about kidnappings was secretly recorded, the Times said.
Lesbian, her mom in custody battle
RICHMOND, Va.
Gay rights advocates are closely watching a potential landmark case in Virginia, where a judge this week will consider whether a woman may retain custody of her lesbian daughter's 2-year-old son.
It is a highly unusual custody battle because it pits a nonparent against a mother whose only alleged parental shortcoming has been her sexual relationship. A trial is scheduled for today in Henrico County Circuit Court.
Sharon Bottoms, 23, lives with her partner, 27-year-old April Wade. Kay Bottoms, 42, contends that fact makes her daughter unfit to be a mother.
"The question is whether a parent should be disqualified because of sexual orientation or lifestyle," said Donald Butler, Sharon Bottoms' lawyer. "We don't think the law should allow people to lose a child on that basis."
Compiled from The Associated Press
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UNIVERSITY FORUM
12:00 - 1:00 on Wednesdays at the ECM Center, 1204 Oread.
AKU tradition since the 1940's, the University Forum provides an arena for commentary and discussion on a variety of issues.
discussion on a variety of issues. It is open to faculty, students, staff and persons from the Lawrence community.
It is open to faculty, students, staff and persons from the Lawrence community. The dates, topics, and speakers are as follows:
Sept. 8 "Cults" in the Wake of Waco, Tim Miller, Prof. of Religious Studies Misteries on Christianity and Homosexuality
Mini-series on Christianity and Homosexuality
Sept. 15 Christ and the Homosexual, bBirth/Married Prof. of Civil Engineering
Sept. 22 Christ and the Homosexual, Johnathan Knight, Pastor, Plymouth Congregational
Church (Christ)
Sept. 29 On Stage and Off with Lawrence Community Theatre, Mary Doveton, Director the Lawrence Community Theatre
Oct. 6 Spitting on the Sidewalk: Health Care Reform, Michael Roberts, Prof. of Human Development and Family Life
Oct. 13 Russia and Eastern Europe: Current Trends and the Legacy of Communism, Prof. of Philosophy
Oct. 20 The Kurds: How it Happened, Rose Greaves, Prof. Of History
Mith Academy
North America Free Trade Agreement, Phillip Kely, Prof. of History, Emporia
State University
Nov.3 Historical and Current Trends in World Population Growth, Helen Alexander, Prof. of Botrytus, Systematics, and Ecology
Nov. 10 U.S. Immigration Is Totally Out of Control Today? Suzanne Gladney, Managing Attorney at Office Legal Aid of Western Missouri
Nov. 17 Recent Advances in Genetic Technology and Their Impact on Society, Dean Stetler, Prof. of Biochemistry
Nov. 24 THANKSGIVING BREAK!
Dec. 1 Impact of T.V. on Society, Aletha Huston/John Wright, Professors of Human Development and Family Life
Dec. 8 Issues in 94 Kansas Legislature, Barbara Ballard, State Representative
Dec. 15 **SPRING UNIVERSITY** An optional soup and salad lunch is available ($3.50) by making a reservation the Tuesday before
the event. "The soup is also available. Coffee, tea, and soft drinks are also available."
the Forum. "Brown bags" are also welcome. Concerned teachers, the University Forum is sponsored by the Ecumenical Christian Ministries at KU (Presbyterian, United Church of Christ, Church of the Brethren denomination). For more information, contact Thad Holcombe. ECM Pastor, 843-4933.
8
Tuesday, September 7,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NATURALWAY
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Calendar Girl $^{T}$ (4:30) 7:40, 9:40
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1
Temp work:
Expendable
(exploitable)
experience
By Sara Bennett
Kansan staff writer
A company president gazes across his office. A new employee catches his eye, and he says to his partner, "See the guy with the glasses? He's a temp. His salary is low, he gets no training, no health benefits, no vacations and no sick days. In short, he's the perfect employee. And he's inspired me to rethink the future. Ben, I've decided to fire everyone, then rehire the one..."
"Companies can use the workers on a temporary basis to see if they like them without the expense of putting them on the payroll and then having to terminate them if they don't work out," she said.
Joseph Weintraub, a professor of management at Babson College in Babson Park, Mass., and director of a consulting firm for temporary agencies, said using temporary agencies to land a permanent job can be effective.
"Anything people can do to get in the positive," he said. "It's a great way to see these people."
costs down.
"It's a response to compet-
es." Ash said.
"eluctant to hire
workers and make an
contract because they don't
how business is going to hold
on a consultant basis.
Is this real?
No, it was a Doonbury cartoon published June 20. But these days, the situation is closer to reality than many people think.
A weak economy and cutbacks at many businesses have made temp agencies, which place workers in short-term clerical and light industrial jobs, a growing industry. The down side of this is that firms are increasingly hiring temporary workers in place of permanent workers.
For students who are looking for flexible part-time work or employment after graduation, temporary jobs can help them gain experience while getting a foot in the door.
Joshua Rosenbloom, assistant professor of economics, said working for a temp agency can help students understand the importance of helping them experience employers wan
"It's not a bad way to get those kinds of experiences," he said. "It can be used as a good transition, and it provides a way to pay the bills."
Often, short-term jobs located by temporary agencies can lead to permanent positions.
Nancy Slabaugh, branch manager for Manpower Temporary Services, 211 Eighth St., said companies often hire temporary workers to fill permanent positions because it saves training costs. This process also gives employers and workers the chance to get to know each other before making an employment commitment.
Isaak Bell, a Wichita sophomore who found work through a temp agency this summer, said he enjoyed gaining experience while allowing the agency to find work for him.
"It gave me the option of not having to sling pizzas or try to get into a work environment I didn't have connections to," he said. "If I didn't temp, I'd probably still be working at Village Inn on the graveyard shift helping drunkins find their seats."
Hiring temporary workers can be cost effective for companies as well.
Because they pay temp agencies a set fee, companies don't have to provide benefits such as health insurance and retirement plans. Firmsalso can terminate temp workers without paying severance or unemployment.
Companies that are forced to cut back permanent workers and later have a surge in business or begin a project for which they need more workers often turn to temps. Weintraub said this has made temporary
"Anything people can do to get in the door is positive."
the dark side of temporary agencies comes in. Because temporary workers are so convenient, more companies are hiring them in place of permanent employees, or laying off employees in order to hire temps.
agencies into a growthindustry.
Joseph Weintraub Babson College professor
Ronald Ash, KU professor of business and psychology, said that today's economy is forcing companies that are sensitive to economic fluctuations, like IBM and General Motors, to seek greater flexibility while keeping
"Companies want to minimize their aggravation," he said. "They can get as much as they can out of temps in a short period of time, and it gives them the leverage of not having to lay people off."
As the Doonesbury quote indicated, the term trend
Weintraub said this paranoia creates instability in the workplace.
has caused permanent workers to fear for their jobs.
"The psychological contract of lifetime employment has been violated," he said. "It shows that all of us are vulnerable."
Jennifer Foust, an Arkansas City sophomore who has worked as a temp, said she felt the permanent workers at the Rubber Maid plant she
Dohae
worked in resent ed her.
"A lot of people at Rubber Maid complained when temps got hired because they thought it was unnecessary," she said.
Ash said the trend toward hiring more temporary workers should send a message, especially to students, that there are no truly permanent jobs anymore and that flexibility is increasingly valued in the work place.
"The bottom line is that a worker has to be in a constant mode of growth and change," Ash said. "We're going from a time when you'd go to a company thinking you'll work there forever. Now, either the company will change and you'll change with it, or you'll become obsolete."
Temporary agencies offer valuable opportunities for students looking for part-time work, but students should be aware that this system which may benefit today could threaten them once they find permanent work.
As companies scale back their work forces, permanent workers who are unable to be flexible and compete, may find their jobs taken over by temps — like Mike Doonesbury.
Mercy CD showcases 16 local bands
By JL Watson
Kansan staff writer
Start with some Low Life. Add a generous helping of "Nic Cosmos." Sprinkle with "Love Squad," and the end result is a successful turnout at "Loaded in Lawrence," the release party for Mercy recording studios' compilation disc.
The disc, "Loaded in Lawrence," showcases the talents of 16 local bands. Each band submitted one song for the CD. Several of the bands played Satellite at the Bottleneck shown at The Bottleneck 739 New Hampshire St.
"We used Mercy for our first CD," said Love Squad guitarist Al Levine. "The guys at the studio liked it so much they asked if they could use it for the label. We were on Mercy records before there was a Mercy records."
"By playing here tonight, we'll reach a bigger audience," said LowLife member Scott Allen. "We get to play for a lot of people who haven't seen us before."
"Three years ago it was just Outhouse bands making a lot of noise."
For Love Squad, playing on the compilation disc seemed natural because the band is already ahead of the pack.
Allen said his band contributed the song that its members thought best represented their sound.
"No one here is really the same type of band," he said. "It gives people a chance to see what's up with different styles."
Levine said the CD party allowed audiences to bear different types of bands.
Stacey Schmitz
Olathe freshman
"We can offer them lots of cool flyers, free pub
liety and a good show," he said. "Whenever we have bands, we pack the theater, the lobby and the stairs."
Suzanne Etheridge, Norman, Okla, senior, said she attended the party so she could hear a variety of music.
"Ilove the variety we have now," he said. "Three years ago it was just Outhouse bands making a lot of noise. Over the past year or two things have there, where are a lot of intelligent bands out there now."
Stacey Schmutz, Olathe freshman, is arts chair for Hashinger Hall. He attended the party hoping to convince at least one of the bands to play at the residence hall.
Schmitz said he would be pleased if any of the bands on the Mercy label played at the University.
"I just wanted to know what the bands sounded like," she said. "I'm not that familiar with all of them."
The "Loaded in Lawrence" CD features diverse musical styles, from the recently signed, hard-hitting Stick to the aw-shucks bluegrass of the band loaded in Lawrence* is available in local music stores.
KILLBILLY
MIX BOTH NECK
Wed. Sept. 8
KILLBILLY
MIX BOTH NECK
Wed. Sept. 8
KILLBILLY
EXCLUSIVE
WED. SEPT. 8
SEPT. 4
PM COMMENT
LIVE POPUP
LIVE POUND
BOOMER
ALBUM RELEASE
PARTY
SEPT. 4
PM COMMENT
LIVE POPUP
LIVE POUND
BOOMER
ALBUM RELEASE
PARTY
SEPT. 4
PM COMMENT
LIVE POPUP
LIVE POUND
BOOMER
ALBUM RELEASE
PARTY
The "Loaded in Lawrence" CD release party was held at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. The disc showcases the talents of 16 local bands. Each band submitted one song for the CD, which is available in stores now.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
September 7, 1993 PAGE 9
KULIFE
People and places at the University of Kansas.
WEIRD
Drano and acid drug use makes stink for police
— thus requiring police to treat all manufacturing and sales sites they raid as toxic waste dumps. Symptoms of use include: sweating, quivering, shaking, experiencing long periods of stupor and paranoid hallucinations, and, said Wausau, Wis., sheeriff's deputy Tom Kujawa, smelling bad. Said Kujawa, "The people who use it stink."
In a January report, The New York Times described New Year's Eve on a mountain near Ashikaga, 50 miles north of Tokyo, in which participants in an annual festival walked in darkness to a temple while expressing themselves vocally in ways never permitted by their polite society. They screamed obscenities and indecencies aimed at politicians or supervisors. ("My teacher is an idiot!" "Give me a raise!")
According to several reports, the latest synthetic drug craze in some U.S. cities is methathionone, or "Cat," which is made with various industrial chemicals, including battery acid and Drano
Multiculturalism
Cairo, Egypt, governor Omar Abdel-Akheer announced in August that the centuries-old tradition of throwing virginies (and in recent years, statues representing virginies) into the Nile to hold back floods would have to end soon because of concern that the river is becoming too polluted.
Women are also permitted this rare opportunity to use abusive language.
The Independence (Mo.) Examiner reported in April that residents of the Tennessee towns of Peters Hollow and Rome Hollow have been engaged for 169 years in an Eastertime battle about which Hollow produces the most solid hard-boiled eggs. The contestants sit in a circle and tap each other's eggs together, little end first, then big end. The last person who has an uncracked egg is declared the winner.
In July, the interior minister of Sudan called to a halt the week-long fighting between the Awlad Umlran and Zlod clans. The clans took up arms when a bride's brother took offense at not being consulted over his sister's impending marriage to a man in the other clan. At least 108 clan members were killed and 50 wounded.
Last fall, Sean Fowler, 22, of Chilliwack, British Columbia, enlisted in the U.S. Army because he had been turned down when he attempted to enlist in the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, whose quota system, said a spokesman, precluded
See WEIRD, Page 10.
10
Tuesday, September 7.1993
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WEIRD Nude dance at funeral
Continued from Page 9.
ed applications from white males for the next four or five years.
The Associated Press reported in April on the recent popularity of hiring nude dancers to entertain mourners at funerals in Taiwan. Supposedly, the dancers make the event more festive, and although the practice is illegal, police so far have not made arrests for fear of offending the dead.
Japan's labor department in March ruled against the claim of Yuji Iguchi, who had filed for compensation, arguing that her husband's recent death at age 43 was due to his having worked 360 days straight at a supermarket just before he died. The office said the work record did not qualify as excessive.
The Weirdo-American Community
David Allison Smoak, 22, was arrested in May in Raleigh, N.C., and charged with breaking into the Night Dreams adult store and taking two $40, life-size inflatable dolls and a $15 vibrator. Smok allegedly broke the front door of the building next door before realizing it wasn't Night Dream. Once inside the adult novelty store, he walked past a computer and more expensive merchandise in order to get to the dolls. Smok was arrested in his apartment just after he had inflated "John" and "Kitty."
Least Competent Person
Albert Leroy Rozier was arrested in Yazoo City, Miss, in August after he and a colleague broke out of the county jail by stealing a gun and overpowering a guard. Rozier was arrested the next day when he stopped by the local unemployment office to pick up the check he had been expecting just before he was originally arrested.
Students' book records diverse KU memories
By Susanna Loof
Special to the Kansan
Everyone has different memories of their years at the University of Kansas. For Ron Totarsky, former football player, it's hiding a tenpound weight in his underwear to make him look heavier. For David MacCallum, 1991 graduate, it's hiding in his laundry basket during a 3 a.m. fire drill.
"Spoken Like a True Jayhawk," a book written by two KU students, brings such diverse thoughts together.
The book was written by Chad Towers, Corpus Christi, Texas, senior and Melissa Thomas, Tula senior, in Spring 1993.
"We wanted to do something outside of school, an entrepreneurial project that would give us experience and perhaps also money," Towers said.
Towers and Thomas, who have been dating for a year and a half, invested all their time left from full-time studies and part-time jobs, most of their savings and a lot of hard work in the project. In July, the book was on the shelves in bookstores in Lawrence and Kansas City. It is a small, ring-bound book the size of a large notecard and filled with quotations and advice from past and present Jayhawks.
"Some days when I wake up in the mornings I see the books on my desk and I think, 'Gee, I am an author!' " Towers said.
Both Towers and Thomas are proud of their work.
To collect material for the book, the two interviewed about 100 students, faculty and other employees about their thoughts and feeling about being Jayhawks and about KU.
"Interviewing was the hardest but also the most funny part of the job," Thomas said. "There are so many different personalities, perspec-
True Jayhawks
These quotes appear in the book, "Spoken Like a True Jayhawk," by Melissa Thomas and Chad Towers.
Rex Walters
"I try to beat the big guys, I always try to beat the big guys."
"I've found students locked in Strong Hall who shouldn't have been there in the first place."
Pat Watkins custodial worker
"One of the funniest things was seeing women dressing their boyfriends up as women to sneak them into the ball."
KAMBAN
— Jant Worthington
Assistant Residence Hall Director
Corbin Hall
wives are philosophers.
"There is something in the book that everybody can recognize themselves in," Towers said.
"Then I started doubting," Towers said. "It might have been like we stood there with 500 books nobody wanted to buy."
tives and philosophies."
However, other bookstores were interested in the books, and now Thomas and Towers are considering a second print run of the book
After the interviews, Towers and Thomas picked out almost fifty quotations, wrote a quotation each, started a publishing company and published the book. The process involved a lot of work.
But, getting bookstores to buy the book was also difficult. The first store they visited with their book turned it down.
"The choices were the toughest part"Towers said.
"There is a demand for it," Thomas said. "The Jayhawk is a bird every wants pieces of."
meet the KU Religious Advisors on the Stauffer-Flint Lawn this Tuesday and Wednesday 9:00-2:00
The Professional Religious Advisors affiliated with the organizations listed below are each certified members of the KU Religious Advisors We are here to serve you.
Announcing: Spiritual Awareness Week September 6-11
Please drop by and meet us on the Stauffer-Flint Lawn or give us a call and we can fill you in on what activities & services we can offer you.
HARAMBEE
Black Christian Fellowship
Campus Center - 1629 W. 19th
841-8001
LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY (ELCA)
1204 Oread
843-4948
ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES
Presbyterian Church (USA), United Church of Christ, Church of the Brethren
EMC Center, 1204 Broad, 843-4933
ST LAWRENCE CATHOLIC
CHAPEL & CAMPUS BUREAU
1631 Crescent Road, 843-0357
CANTENBURY HOUSE
and St Anselm's Chapel
(Episcopal Church, Anglican Communion)
1116 Louisiana, 843-8202
UNITED METHODIST CAMPUS MINISTRY
946 Vermont
841-8661
WINDBLOWN (MUSTARD SEED
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP)
700 Wakara Drive .. 841.294.747
CHRISTIAN BIBLE FELLOWSHIP
Southeast Church of Christ
25th & Missouri
843-0770
AMERICAN BAPTIST CENTER
1629 W. 19th
841-8001
JAYHAWKER CAMPUS FELLOWSHIP
2909 W 30th St
841-2588 or 749-0023
THE KU NavIGATORS
Office 1031 Vermont
841-7999
INTER VARSITY CHRISTIAN
FELLOWSHIP 864-7117
400 Kansas Union, Box 1
K-UNITY (UNITY CHURCH)
416 Lincoln
841-1447
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF
LATTER DAY SAINTS (LDS)
3655 M 10th St. B42-0213
LAWRENCE MENNONITE FELLOWSHIP
1204 Oread
843-4933
BAPTIST STUDENT UNION
Baptist Center, 1629 W 19th
841-8001
HILLEL · JEWISH STUDENT
ORGANIZATION · 864.3948
Office: Kansas Union Room 429
LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER
(Immanuel Lutheran Church)
15th & Iowa. 843-0620
CHI-ALPHA
(Assembly of God)
3200 Clinton PKWY
843-7189
CAMPUS CHRISTIANS
Office 2120 W 25th Suite J
842-6592
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST
2617 Louisiana
832 2318
The nature of a public, state-supported institution makes it difficult for the University to effectively respond to all the spiritual needs of its students. The University of Kansas, therefore, relies heavily on the services of the campus religious advisors to respond to this important dimension of a student's life. The collegiate years are often times when students seek to clarify their own value system and the availability of religious advisors of different faiths is an important necessity in this process.
Dr. David A. Ambler Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs The University of Kansas
Other Spiritual Awareness Week Activities:
Campus-wide gathering
Tuesday, September 7
with music & an inter-fair dialogue
Frontier Room of the Burge Union
8-10 pm
Panel Discussions with KU Religious Advisors
Wednesday, September 8
7-8pm
Sellards Scholarship Hall
mursday, September 9
9-10pm
Hashinger Hall
SPORTS
.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 7, 1993
11
98
LENNE 25
Susan McSpadden / KANSAN
Jayhawks breeze to victory
But three players are lost to injuries
Rv Matt Dovle
Kansan sportswriter
In injuries not withstanding, Kansas' 46-3 victory against Western Carolina Saturday at Memorial Stadium was an improvement on the performance from the previous week against Florida State.
The aahawks offense moved the ball effectively in gaining 625 yards, and the defense limited Western Carolina's "freeze option" offense to 187 yards for the contest.
"I think we did what we needed to pick up after last weekend," said Kansas coach Glen Mason. "On a day when your defense plays great and your offense plays great, I would take the defense over the offense. We played tough defense."
However, Mason said yesterday that the lashwavs lost three key contributions.
players for the season due to injuries.
The Jayhawk offense also found a familiar target against the Catamounts that it did not against Florida State. Senior tight end Dwayne Chandler caught three passes for 101 yards and a touchdown after being held without a catch last week against Florida State.
Chandler's touchdown could be considered the turning point of the contest. With the Jayhawks leading 60, Western Carolina fullback Harold Hines fumbled at the Kansas 25 yard line with 11:13
Senior tailback George White hurt the medial collateral ligament of his left knee late in the first quarter Saturday. Senior free safety Kwanie Lassiter fractured his left collarbone in the second quarter and freshman cornerback Charles Davis said he tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee in the third quarter while recovering a fumble.
senior defensive linemen Chris Manila-
menta and Guy Howard each suffered
sprained ankles, but both are expected to
play Saturday at Michigan State.
Mason was visibly upset after the game about his team's injury situation. But he said that it was an aspect of the game of which he had no control.
The running game, which at times showed the potential to break big plays against Florida State, was dominant against the Catamounts Kansas totaled 317 yards on the ground Saturday, led by sophomore LT. Levine's 92 yard performance on 22 carries.
"You can't worry about injuries because those things happen," he said. "They're a part of the game. Some years you stay injury-free, others you don't."
With White out for a while, freshman running back June Henley will be asked to contribute more in the coming weeks. Henley made a contribution on his 18th
birthday Saturday with 61 yards on 12
carries and two touchdowns.
"This is what we need to get our con-
fidence back," said Henley, referring to
the victory. "I'm sorry about George, but
we have to pick it up now and keep
going."
Galloway's two favorite targets, junior wide receivers Kerry Hayes and Craig Alken, were held in check by the Kansas defense. Hayes caught three passes for 40 yards and Aiken two for 40 yards. Each player also dropped several passes.
Western Carolina coach Steve Hodgkin said Mason deserved credit for the Jayhawks rebound from their first-game loss to No. 1 Florida State.
remaining in the first half. On Kansas' first play after the fumble, junior quarterback Fred Thomas connected with Chandler at the 50-yard line and Chandler outran the Catamount defense for a 75-yard touchdown.
Western Carolina's "freeze option" offense was frozen for most of the contest by the Jayhawk defense. Quarterback Lonnie Galloway completed only 8 of 24 passes for 94 yards.
"We knew Kansas had a good football team, but it was still a devastating loss," Hodgkin said. "Our offense couldn't get anything going and our defense was holding on for its life."
Senior threw, caught, carried as crucial instrument in victory
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
Coming out of high school, Greg Ballard insisted on taking a shot at playing quarterback for a competitive team.
Four years later, he got that shot, completing a 41-yard pass to sophomore receiver Ashaudai Smith in Saturday's 46-3 Kansas victory against Western Carolina.
Kansas coach Glen Mason utilized Ballard's natural athletic ability, calling for the senior wide receiver to carry, catch and throw the ball. He rushed for 14 yards on two carries, caught one pass for 11 yards and passed for 41 yards on two attempts.
Ballard's completion to Smith, which was followed on the next play by Costello Good's two yard touchdown run, was actually his second-memorable play of the day.
"We probably overused him," Mason said of Ballard, who also played on kick-off and punt-return teams, "or we didn't use him enough. I don't know which."
"The official ruled that I inadvertently stepped out of bounds while I was running my route." Ballard said. "I felt that the defensive back made contact with me, forcing me out."
On Kansas' second drive of the game, junior quarterback Fred Thomas hooked up with Ballard for a 60-yard pass completion. However, the play was called back because Ballard stepped out of bounds before he caught the pass.
According to NCAA rules, a receiver can come back in bounds to catch a pass if he was bumped out by a defender.
Ballard's multidimensional contributions kept him from dwelling on the great catch that wasn't and allowed him to remember
the great pass that was.
Ballard, who in his senior year at Lawrence High School compiled a 10-2 record as the team's quarterback, was offered a scholarship by Stanford as a wide receiver.
"At the time, playing quarterback was the first thing on my mind."
Greg Ballard
he said. "I figured if I went out and tried to play quarterback and it didn't work out, I could switch then."
Ballard chose Southern Methodist University instead of Stanford and Texas Christian, which offered him a chance to play quarterback.
His switch came sooner than he expected.
After speaking with Gregg, Ballard switched to catching spirals instead of throwing them.
Within two days of practice, SMU coach Forrest Gregg saw three wide receivers go down with injuries.
A tinge of homesickness and the departure of John Jefferson, who was the receiver coach at SMU before to Kansas, led Ballard back home.
Ballard's sophomore season brought yet another switch. He transferred to Kansas and back to his hometown of Lawrence.
Can Kansas nas expect to see more passing from the former quarterback turned receiver? He hopes so.
'it's the best of both worlds,' said Ballard, who now knows receiving is his forte. 'I gave me the opportunity to live out the quarterback dream too.'
50 53
Kansas linebacker Terence Sullivan sacks Western Carolina quarterback Lonnie Galloway during Kansas' first home game of the 1990
Volleyball team drops close match
10 8
Kansas voneyball players Jenny Larson, left, and Tracie Walt attempt to block a shot during yesterday's game against Baylor. Kansas started the match by winning the first two games, but Baylor won the last three and the match.
Holly McQueen / KANSAN
Baylor comes back after two; reminds Kansas of tourney
By Gerry Fey Kansan sportswriter
What began as a possible three-game victory for the Kansas volleyball team yesterday turned into a five-game defeat at the hands of Baylor.
"They found our weaker blockers and exploited them," Albitz said. "Their blockers and diggers did well. They caused us a lot of trouble, but we caused ourselves trouble."
Kansas coach Frankle Albizt said Baylor played well defensively. Offensively, the Bears found Kansas' weaknesses, but the Jayhawks also made some costly mistakes.
The Jayhawks jumped to a two-game lead, winning 15-7 and 15-8. Then Baylor's defense got tough.
The match started with Kansas taking a 1-9 lead in the first game, led by the front-line play of senior Barb Bella and sonomore Tracie Walt.
Bella and Walt combined for five kills in the first game and six in the second.
The Kansas lead didn't last long, as Baylor won the last three games 15-13. 15-8 and 15-8.
"we started getting sloppy," Albiz said. "We were sloppy with our defense and positioning — the things we can control. And when you give a team like that momentum as we did, you get beat."
Albiz said her team's lack of intensity was the cause.
Lesli Steinert, sophomore setter.
"I don't really know how we came back," Sonnichson said. "We got exceptional play from Brenda Kunz. When we realized that she was playing well we tried to get her the ball as much as we could."
said there was a lack of communication on the Kansas side of the net during the last three games of the match.
Bella said she thought it was Taylor's adjustments after the first two games that caused problems for the Jayhawks, rather than a lack of intensity on Kansas' part.
Kansas took an early lead in game four, winning the first five points with the help of two kills by Walt and one by Bella. But the Jayhawks scored only three more points in that game.
"Their coaches altered a lot of their plays after the second game to find our holes. They made adjustments," Bella said. "It's very hard to come off two games and lose the next one."
Baylor coach Tom Sonichomson said the play of senior Brenda Kunz on the Baylor front line surprised him.
"The trouble with Kansas is they're so quick at what they do," Sonnichson said. "If we don't technically do well with our blocks, a team like Kansas will kill you."
Kansas needed to stop giving up victories after winning the first two games, Albizt said. The team won the first two games against Colorado State in the Northern Illinois tournament Friday but lost the match.
won the next three games and the match 16-14, 15-11 and 16-14.
A team with Kansas' speed usually gives Baylor trouble, Sonnickson said. That speed was one of the reasons Baylor lost the two games.
Kansas lost in three games to Northern Illinois and lost in four games to Northwestern.
"We had streaks," Albizt said. "We gave teams a lead and back we showed a lot of character coming back, but we have to work on not giving the teams those leads in the first place."
Colorado State was the Jayhawks' first opponent in the round-robin tournament. Kansas won the first two games 15-6 and 15-10, but the Rams
Despite losing all three matches Kansas played at the tournament, Coach Albiz said that traveling to Dekab. Ill., was worthwhile.
Senior Cyndee Kanabel said that playing high-caliber teams was an advantage early in the season.
"This will get us ready to play Colorado and Nebraska," she said. "It's good to see this kind of competition early."
Jayhawk runners take first second at Southern Illinois
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas cross country team had mixed results at the Southern Illinois Invitational Saturday in Carbondale III. The men's team finished second out of three teams, while the women's team defeated its only opponent, Southern Illinois.
By Kent Hohlfeld
The women's team defeated the Southern Illinois Salukis with seven Jayhawk runners finishing in the top nine spots. The Salukis finished 31 points higher than the Jayhawks, 46-15.
Juta Saul, senior cross country runner, said that it would be hard to draw conclusions from the early-season meet. She said the fact that Kansas was made up of veteran runners who knew the different styles of one another helped the team in the meet.
The team's finish wasn't much of a surprise to players or coaches. Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said Friday that he would have been surprised if the women's team had lost the meet to the Sulukis.
Saul also said that the meet gave the team a good indication of where the team was physically as members prepared for the top-ranked Arkansas Razorbacks, which will compete $^{10}$
The low score wins at cross country meets.
One of the few surprises of the meet came when junior Kristi Kloster finished first, upsetting Saul, a returning All-American, by 12 seconds.
Saul said her second-place performance showed she wasn't in as good of condition coming into the season this year as she was in previous seasons. She said that her second-place finish would take some pressure off of her to win every race.
the Jayhawk Invitational this weekend.
Assistant coach Steve Guymon said he was surprised by the Kansas women's domination of the Southern Illinois team.
"Southern Illinois told the local media they were going to beat our women's team." Guymon said. "So they were pretty confident."
Guymon said he was especially encouraged by the men's performance, even though it had a string of six straight victories against Southern Illinois broken Saturday.
The team finished with two runners, Bryan Schultz and Bobby Palmer, placing in the top five. Kansas came in second to Southern Illinois 41-31, but defeated Southwest Missouri State 41-48.
Palmer, a senior runner, said the team wanted to build on its performance for next week's home meet. He said that with the high number of new runners on the team, the coaches decided to have runners start out in a pack for the first two miles as opposed to letting everyone run their own races for the entire five miles.
Palmer said that the tactic was used to intimidate the other team as well as help the new runners gain confidence in their first collegiate meet. He said teams they would face later in the season use similar tactics.
"Air Force uses similar strategies when they run," Palmer said. "Obviously the strategy didn't work as well as we would've liked, but with practice it will work."
Guymon said the team planned to use the strategy or some slight variation of it next weekend when the team plays host to the Jayhawk Invitational at Rim Rock Farm, which is northwest of Lawrence.
AAAAAAAAAA
1
12
Tuesday, September 7, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kennedy GLASS For All Your Glass Needs car windshields, desk top glass, picture frame glass 730 New Jersey 843-4416
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Start-up Special:
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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
Tryouts start Sept. 10
Represent KU in intercollegiate competition. For more information contact Coach Michael Fine or Tim DeMars.
The Kansas Union Jaybow Level One • 864-3545
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SEPTEMBER 16, 17, 18, 19, 1993
WINEFIELD. KANSAS
WINFIELD, KANSAS
E
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(Thurs. Only)
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Bryan Bowers
G
California
H
John McCutcheon
I
Tradition
J
Tom Paxton
K
Ranch Romance
L
Tim & Mollie O'Brien
S
Scarlett
R
Robin & Linda Williams &
Their Fine Group
S
Sugarbeat
WW
The Great Gatsby
• Sugarbeat
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Weekend (4 Day) $43 $50
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* Children age 6-11 $15 each, payable at gate upon initial entry. NOT payable in advance.*
- Pat Donohue
* No Strings Attached
* Beppe Gambetta
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* Cathy Barton & Dave Parra
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Chiefs cruise in season opener
Montana cleans up in debut as a Chief
TAMPA, Fla. — Joe Montana says that a lot of people forget the Kansas City Chiefs are a team with championshipential even before they acquired jumbo.
Nevertheless, Montana's debut for the Chiefs clearly demonstrated why expectations have risen since the 37-year-old quarterback was snagged from the San Francisco 49ers in an off-season trade.
"I don't believe I'm the magic ingredient for anything," the three-time Super Bowl MVP said Sunday. "This is a very talented team."
The Associated Press
KC CHIEFS
He completed 14 of21 passes for 246 yards and three touchdowns in Kansas City's 27-3 rout of the Tampa
EOEM/F
Dave Krieg finished the game for the Chiefs, whose new 49ers-style offense produced 400 yards. He led a fourth-quarter field goal drive and was 4-for-5 passing for 38 yards.
Bay Buccaneers. The Chiefs defense held the Bucs to 157 yards in a performance overshadowed by Montana's day.
"We took a clean licking from a good team," Tampa Bay coach Sam Wyche said. "Joe had the hot hand. And when he's on the money, there's none better."
It was Montana's first start since the 1900 NFC championship game. An elbow injury kept him on the sidelines during most of the last two sea-
more often than not — find his target.
He completed his first nine attempts and threw touchdown passes of 19 yards to Willie Davis, 50 yards to J.J. Birden and 12 yards to Marcus Allen.
An unaided group of receivers sped past befuddled Tampa Bay defenders who watched Montana —
Tampa Bay, meanwhile, was inepot on offense after using a first-quarter fumble to set up a 35-yard field goal and a 3-lead.
Montana left the game late in the third quarter with a sore right wrist.
Steve DeBerg, whom Montana replaced as San Francisco's quarterback in 1980, completed 12 of 20 passes for 79 yards for Tampa Bay. He was benched after throwing a third-quarter interception, giving way to Craig Erickson.
Bues' running game garnered just 25 yards on 20 carries.
Cowboys tripped up by Redskins, mistakes
The Associated Press
The whole Dallas team failed to show up.
WASHINGTON — Don't blame the Dallas Cowboys' 35-16 loss to the Washington Redskins last night on Emmitt Smith's holdout.
The Cowboys lost the ball four times on fumbles, twice on punts, dropped a half dozen passes, never came close to sacking Rypian and were penalized seven times for 63 yards.
They would have lost by more had Washington not made its share of missteps.
It was not the absence of Smith, the NFL's leading rusher the past two years. Rookie Derrick Lassie, Smith's replacement, gained 75 yards in 16 carries.
It was a general run of mistakes that began with a fumbled snap on the first play of the game. And they even accompanied success — an 80-yard touchdown pass from Troy Alkman to Alvin Harper that gave the Cowboys a 6-1 lead. The touchdown was followed by a missed extra point by Lin Elliott.
owed a recovery by Pat Eilers of a punt that bounced off James Washington as he was trying to get away from the ball at the Dallas 17. The second, a 1-yard touchdown pass from Rypien to Ron Middleton, was set up by a 36-yard pass interference call on Dallas' Larry Brown.
The Cowboys finally got going after that one — taking just 2:13 to go 80 yards with Aikman hitting Harper on a post pattern from 32 yards out for the score.
Washington came right back after that to go 80 yards in 13 plays, the final one a 15-yard pass from Rypien to Ricky Sanders early in the second quarter. Rookie Reggie Brooks had 48 yards in eight carries on the drive.
Then came two gift touchdowns six minutes apart on either side of half-time that gave the Redskins a 21-6 lead.
But they could not benefit from a horrible Washington mistake — Mitchell, thinking he was in the end zone, knelt on the L- yard line with the kickoff and the Redskins had to take over there.
One, a 1 yard run by Brian Mitchell with 40 seconds left in the half, foll-
unstead, the Redskins went 99 yards in 13 plays for another touchdown.
AFC
WEST
CENTRAL
EAST
WEST overall PF PA
Denver 1 0 26 20
Kansas City 1 0 27 3
L.A. Raiders 1 0 24 7
San Diego 1 0 18 12
Seattle 0 1 12 18
CENTRAL Cleveland 1 0 27 17
Cincinnati 1 0 14 27
Houston 0 1 21 33
Pittsburgh 0 1 13 34
STANDINGS
Buffalo 1 0 38 14
Miami 1 0 24 20
Indianapolis 0 1 20 24
New England 0 1 14 38
N.Y. Jets 0 1 20 26
NFC
STANDINGS week 1
week 1
NFL
CENTRAL
Detroit 1 1 0 30 13
Green Bay 1 0 1 36 6
Chicago 0 1 1 20 6
Milwaukee 0 1 1 7 24
Tampa Bay 1 0 1 3 27
WEST overall PF PA 21
New Orleans 1 0 0 33
San Francisco 1 0 0 24 13
Oakland 1 0 1 19
L.A. Rams 1 0 1 32
Your Future?
EAST
N.Y. Giants 1 1 0 26 20
Philadelphia 1 0 0 23 17
Washington 1 0 0 35 18
Oakland 1 0 1 19 35
Phoenix 1 0 1 17 23
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HUNDRED METERS, YOU MUST THEN BE ABLE TO DEBATE THEM ON CURRENT EVENTS, THE BOND MARKET AND LATEST HOCKEY SCORES
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 7, 1993
13
SHOWING A FIRM COMMITMENT TO THE IDEAL OF DEVELOPING A STRONG MIND
Speed-reading.
University of Houston
Daily
Health Speaks
Read all
Read all about it! College just got weirder.
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AND BODY, STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON CONDUCT SWIM RACES WHILE PERUSING THE DAILY COUGAR. IN THIS
EVENT, IT'S NOT ENOUGH TO MERELY DEFEAT YOUR OPPONENTS AFTER TWO
14
SPORTS
Tuesday, September 7, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
AP Top 25
Kansas received three votes in the poll following its victory Saturday. The top six teams remained the same as last week.
rank team record pts. pr
1. Florida St. (50) 2-00 1,535 1
2. Alabama (10) 1-00 1,464 2
3. Michigan (2) 1-00 1,426 3
4. Miami 1-00 1,301 4
5. Texas & MM 1-00 1,225 5
6. Syracuse 1-00 1,179 6
7. Florida 1-00 1,097 8
8. Tennessee 1-00 1,075 10
9. Nebraska 1-0-0 1,057 9
10. Colorado 1-0-0 1,051 11
11. Notre Dame 1-0-0 996 7
12. Washington 1-0-0 959 12
13. Arizona 1-0-0 764 13
14. North Carolina 2-0-0 729 16
15. Penn State 1-0-0 708 17
16. Ohio State 1-0-0 637 18
17. Oklahoma 1-0-0 489 21
18. N. Carolina St. 1-0-0 345 24
19. South Carolina 1-0-0 327 —
20. Brigham Young 1-0-0 323 19
21. Clemmon 1-0-0 288 22
22. Georgia 0-10 191 14
23. Stanford 0-10 187 15
24. Baylor 1-0-0 153 —
25. Boston College 1-0-0 116 20
Sukova defeats Navratilova in U.S. Open
Chang, Sampras to meet again in quarterfinals
KANSAN
The Associated Press
Source: The Associated Press
NEW YORK — The sad look in Martina Navratilova's eyes, the weak, final wave to the crowd, the disgust in her voice, all told the story U.S. Open fans hated to hear.
Suddenly, she was gone in the round of 16 Sunday, beaten by Helena Sukova again at a crucial moment in her career.
This time, Sukova won 7-5, 6-4, her long arms reaching out to swat returns that Navratilova was a bit too slow to catch. Once before, Sukova was there to stop Navratilova's bid for a Grand Slam, in 1984 at the Australian Open, and end her 74-match winning streak.
The loss left the United States with out a women's singles quarterfinalist for the first time in the tournament's history, dating to 1887.
US OPEN
Navratilova, a month shy of age 37,
was the oldest player in the play,
and she gave it more life than anyone.
Fans packed her matches,
cheered her almost the way they cheered Jimmy Connors when he made his final charges at 39 and 40.
They wanted her to win a fifth Open,
show everyone she wasn't too old,
too slow to do it again.
In truth, she was. She couldn't get to the net quickly enough to pick up Sukova's returns. She couldn't volley with the agility and sharpness she had for so many years. She hit too many shots just a tad wide or long, and she couldn't put pressure on Sukova's serves.
Navratilova said. "I felt like I was playing golf. They weren't going in by inches. I didn't make one lob. I tried that shot too many times. If I play well, I win easily. If I'm a little off it's always a struggle. There wasn't any huck for me today. She made some great shots and I didn't.
"They just weren't falling,"
"The crowd was fantastic. This is what I always wanted. To have the chance and the crowd. Then I blow it, I was tied up in knots. I didn't let myself go and play with reckless abandon."
It was Sukova, 6-foot-2 with long pipestem arms, who had the lucky net cords, the shots that nicked the edges of the lines, the calls that went her way. She needed all that luck. She had been out 21/2 months this year with a broken foot, and she was the second-oldest in the tournament at 28.
And just like that, in 1 hour and 23 minutes, Navratilova was gone, like so many other players in this Open.
her think about, quitting tennis. And it makes her think about fighting back, going for a championship once more.
This loss, Navratilova said, makes
"Unfortunately, all those things go through my head in the match," she said. "It doesn't matter how much you win. You want to win one more time. I had a chance here and I blew it. It's like a drug. You want to taste it one more time. It isn't like I need it. It would be a nice way to go. I know my game is there. My mind won't let me perform. That's what aggravates me, and why i bang my head on the wall."
In other women's matches, No. 2
Arantxa Sanchez Vicario beat No. 14
Nathalie Tauziat 6-4, 6-3, No. 10 Magdalena Maleea defeated her sister Katerina 6-2, 6-3, and Natalia Zvereva beat Maria Jose Gaidano to reach the quarterfinals.
Among the men, Pete Sampas and Michael Chang set up a quarterfinal match. Alexander Volkov also advanced to the quarters, beating Chuck Adams 6-2, 7-6 (7-2), 6-1. Volkov will play No. 12 Thomas
Muster, who beat Brad Gilbert 6-4, 7-5, 6-7 (5-7), 6-2.
Fourteen years ago, Sampras and Chang played each other for the first time on a school court in Poway, Calif., near San Diego. They were about 7 years old, toting big rockets they needed both hands to swing.
Neither one can remember who won, though Sampras thinks he might have taken it and Chang recalls it went three sets.
Now the U.S. Open quarters will be their playground following Samra's 6-4, 5-4, 7-6 (7-4) victory over Thomas Enquist and Chang's 6-4, 6-3, 6-4 decision over Worries Ferreira.
"It is pretty amazing where we have come from and now where we are," Sampras said. "He is the youngest French Open winner. I am the youngest U.S. Open winner. There are pretty interesting memories to go back to."
They played each other all the way through the juniors and then eight matches as professionals, Chang winning six of those.
Men's rugby teams steal victories at Heart of America tournament
Coach says three teams still need to improve play
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansasmen's rugby teams went two-for-three this weekend at the Heart of America tournament in Kansas City, Mo.
On Saturday, the senior reserve side team squashed Southwest Missouri State's team, 57-0. On Sunday, the collegiate team took an 18-17 loss to Missouri. The club team beat the Saint Louis Rambler, 47-25.
Rick Renfro, coach of the senior reserve side team, which consists of collegiate, club and first-time players.
said that the team's strength was its players' positioning without the ball. He said that Mark Soffee, club player, Randy Renfro, club player, and Herman Leke, collegiate-side player, ran well without the ball.
He said the game also illustrated that the team needed to be in better physical shape. To accomplish that, Renfro said the team would spend more time running at practice.
The team needed to run plays and support the other players, and they did that, Rick Renfro said.
Nine tries, which is similar to a goal,
produced 45 of the total 57 points. Six
conversions, all kicked by Mana
Rangi, completed the scoring.
Dominic Barnao, the coach for all
three Kansas teams, said that the club team needed to improve on its urgency, because the team hesitated and was slow to respond to some situations.
"The team will be working hard to accomplish more in a limited time," Barnao said of improving the team's urgency.
This weekend, the teams will travel to Omaha for nonmite games, which do not count in league standings. The club side takes on the Omaha rugby club, the senior reserve side plays Creighton's B team, and the collegiate team plays Creighton's A team.
To increase the team's urgency, Barnao said the pace of practice drills would increase.
...
KU Rugby Club member Mark Duffy, from Kansas City, rushes through the St. Louis Ramblers' defense. The Jayhawks won Sunday's game against the Ramblers 47 to 25.
William Alix / KANSAN
Brewers keep Royals struggling at home
The Associated Press
Orosco has not given up a run in his last 13 innings in the past nine games.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Milwaukee manager Phil Garner is not going to have to look too far for his bullpup close if Jesse Orosco keeps this up.
Orosco earned his sixth save yesterday when he struck out four of the six batters he faced in the Brewers' 3-2 victory over the fading Kansas City Royals.
"I'm trying to get more aggressive, trying to make guys chase pitches," Orosco said. "Before, I was just trying to make pitches that would make guys hit ground balls. Now I'm more aggressive. I'm trying to get ahead in the count and when I do, I go after the guy.
"I'm surprised I'm getting so many strikeouts. It's scary."
Orosco has struck out 21 batters in his last 12 1-3 innings, including the side in the ninth yesterday. Garner stayed with the lefty Orosco even with three right-handed hitters coming to bat.
Royals 25th Anniversary Season
Garner said it is too early to say what role Rosco will fill next year.
"He's been outstanding," Garner said. "As I watch him throw, I just keep staying with him. I had to face the guy and I couldn't hit him. Jesse's got a funny delivery. It's easy for a righthander to pick up. It's not like some lefthanders where it is easy for the righthanders to pick up the ball."
The Royals went into the game trailing Chicago by 61/2 games in the AL West. Kansas City had just swept Boston but played lushest to start this homestand, nursing several scoring opportunities in the early innings.
Mieske, hitting .194 on 6-for-31 with four RBL knocked in the winning run in the seventh off Greg Cadarat (1-1), who had relieved Mike Magnane.
Seldom-used Matt Mieske singled in the winning run and Pat Listack hit his first home in a month for the Brewers.
Magnante allowed only three hits in six innings, but one was Listisch's game-tying, two-run homer in the sixth.
Cadaret began the seventh by hitting John Jaha, who went to second on Dave Nilsson's sacrifice. Mieske followed with a liner to center.
Jaine Navarro (10-9) won his third consecutive decision, giving up two runs and six hits in seven innings. He struck out six and walked one.
Kansas City scored on a sacrifice fly by Mike Macfarlane in the first and another in the third by George Brett.
Orosco struck out Kevin McReynolds, Gary Gaetti and Greg Gagne to end the game.
Milwaukee tied the game 2-2 in the sixth when Darryl Hamilton singled and Listach lined a shot just over the wall in left field. It was the third homer of the season for Listach, his first since Aug. 1.
New tennis coach played pro tour
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
Mark Riley, the new men's assistant tennis coach, knows the game.
He was a District III All-American at Kalamazoo College in Kalamazoo, Mich. he played and coached on the professional tour, he was the assistant men's and women's tennis coach at the University of Pennsylvania at Philadelphia, and he coached underprivileged children in the Washington, D.C., area.
Now he has set his sights on helping the Kansas men's team improve.
Michael Center, men's tennis head coach, said Riley was highly recommended to replace Mike Slattery, the former assistant.
Slatter left the team earlier this year to accept an associate head tennis position at South Alabama.
Center met Riley last summer when the two were recruiting at a junior national tournament. At that meeting Center told him about the open position.
As Center's assistant, Riley will be responsible for helping with every aspect of running the program. Center said Riley would help with recruiting, fund raising and scheduling and would help conduct practices.
"I think he will be a very good addition to the staff." Center said.
Riley said he thought his tennis experience would help him in coaching the Kansas team, that he had learned the most about tennis from his former college coach, George Acker. Riley said Acker taught him that every player was an individual and that no two players could be taught the same.
"A coach can never compromise the integrity of an individual player," Riley said.
He also said Acker balanced academics and athletics, which was a very important aspect of college sports.
Riley said he thought his professional tennis experience would help him because he would be able to tell the players what competitive tennis was really like.
Riley joined the pro tour when his twin brother Eric was competing on it. Riley said he went on the road with Eric as his doubles partner. Mark Riley also played singles.
While he was on the protour, Riley said he played doubles with Kansas women's tennis coach Chuck Merzbacher.
Riley said his goal for the year was to give Kansas players the opportunity to be successful on the court.
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WATKINS
"We Care For KU"
Busy schedule? Watkins Pharmacy Is Conveniently Open Til 9 p.m. Monday-Thursday.
Pharmacy Hours
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8 a.m.-9 p.m.
Friday 8 a.m.-6 p.m.
Saturday 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
Sunday 11 a.m.-3 p.m.
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
941-5700
1
864-9500
Serving Only Laurence Campus Students
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 7, 1993
15
KU Women's Fall Soccer Club
Fall Season Practice WHEN: Tuesday, Sept. 7 5p.m.
Fall Season Practice
WHERE: at the field next to Robinson Come ready to practice! QUESTIONS: Lori 841-3792
1907
WATKINS
"We Care For KU
Anonymous HIV Antibody Testing
What? The Test for HIV - the AIDS virus
Where? Welcome to Health Center
When? Mondays
Cost? $18.50 cash (paid at initial visit)
How? By Appointment Only.
864-9507
"Anonymous Testing" means that you do not use your real name when being tested. Your test results will be provided to you in person two weeks after your initial visit. Testing includes pre- and post-test counseling.
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
864-9500
Serving Only Laurence Campus Students
100s
Approvements
Classified Directory
Acknowledgments
105 Personal
110 Business
200s
Feminine
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
235 Typing Services
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any admission for housing or employment that discriminates against gender or group differences in education, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is submitted to the Federal FAA Housing Act of 1968 and is subject to examination by an enforcement, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, head circumference, status of national origin, or an intention to make any such preference. Limitation or disclosure may be determined.
卫
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
110 Business Personals
Announcements
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 10am-9pm
Sunday 9am-11am
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120 Announcements
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
YOGA
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Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8:40am-4:30pm
- Kansan Classified: 864-4358
September 8th
ALVAMAR
842-7766
BAPTIST STUDENT UNION. Thursday's 6:30pm at The American University in Washington, Scott Lea, BISP president. Small groups, music and drama, retreats, intramural sports, guest speakers open to everyone.
Taking Control of Calculus
Brandon Woods Retirement Community is cur-
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pay. Must be hard working and willing to work
weekdays and some holiday. Apply at 160 inver-
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Taking Control of Calculus learn skills for success in Math 115 & 116 FREE!
Tuesday, September 7,
7-9 p.m.
4035 Wescoe Hall
Child Caregivers, Friday mornings 10 to 12 10 to 12
Brown or White 15th & Iowa. Call
843-2900 or M-843 for help!
ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE WORKSHOP
offered by the Student Assistance Center
TIME MANAGEMENT WORKSHOP
Christian day care needs enuistic/relieving morning assistant ASAP. Experience preferr
Fourth Sundgeslam in a case on Jayhawk Blvd.
Thursday 6aub 26th Call 841-140 and talk the
council.
For students who want to study smarter, not harder FREE!
Thursday, September 9,
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offered by the Student Assistance Center
Found. Windbreaker in Wescoe. Call 749-1040 to identify.
140 Lost & Found
Found: Windbreaker in Wescoe. Call 748-1040 to identify
Part-time, temporary positions as Lifeguard,
quarter instructor and Simmaseer for CFS
Civilian Information Services. Certifications
and applications are available at Admin. Services.
1000 318 City Hall 6th & Mass Auditoracy RS
(322) 972-8185.
take control of your time and your life
FREE!
Wednesday, September 8,
7-8 p.m.
4035 Wescoe Hall
attributed to the Student Assistance Center
Adams alumni Center needs AM-PM Dishwashers.
Cook & Desert appliances. Flexible hours. Apply in person, no phone call. Address 1306 Oread Ave.
812-795-4020
205 Help Wanted
CITY OF LAWRENCE PARKS & CREATION DEPT
200s Employment
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Bassist needed to complete all original 4 piece band. Original music in the wind of the bands, tool, and equipment.
CRUISE SHIPS NO WHIRING - Earn up to $2000 +/mo. + world travel. Summer & career employment available. No experience necessary for this position. **DOCUMENTATION LIBRARY ASSISTANT** Deadline: 09/08/93. Salary: $4.35/h. Duties include typing, filing, photocopying distributing reports, and performing all assigned clerical tasks required. Required: 1. Ability to work 10-20 hours per week, M-F 8:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m.; 2. Ability to schedule work in 28 days of business. 3. Ability to follow complex job instructions including typing skills at a speed of 45 wpm; 4. Willingness to learn WordPerfect, VM XEDIT, and FOCUS. To apply, complete a job application which is available from the Companion Center, EO/AEMployer.
Dynamic person with initiative & sales ability for part-time snack vending route in Lawrence area. Must have transportation. Base rate + allowance. *vending*: (913) 727-5612
Drivers needed for a job. Meet lots of people while making good money. The Lawrence Bus Co. needs drivers for SAFERIDE. Must be 21 years old & have a good driving record. 8-22 hrs per week. Send resume to Lawrence Bus Co., 430 N. Broadway, Suite 900, New York, NY 10017.
Job Available for dependable person with own transportation and experience in lawn care.
Kansas and Burge Uniones hiring part-time, hourly for Fall Semester. Many jobs in Food Service, Catering and Custodial with varying schedule. Kansas University building for job specifications. EOE
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STUDENT DISTRICTION TECHNIAC. Deadline: 09/19. Salary: $43.5 per hour. Duties include performing bursing and decoding time clocks, stocking and maintaining inventory, email using the delivery van; paper shredding functions; on occasion will assist in receiving shipments, stocking and maintaining inventories; perform computer-based functions; on occasion will operate forklift and assist in maintenance; assists in Open Landscape Purburit maintenance; performs computer-based recycle program; uses personal computer or mainframe software as part of record keeping function. To apply, complete an application online with Computer Repair Manager. EMPLOYER
Student Trainer/Consultant-Microcomputer.
Deadline: 9/14/93. $550-$650/month 20 hours/week. Required qualifications: Current college degree or equivalent. One of following operating systems: MS-DOS, Windows, or Macintosh OS, working knowledge of at least two major microcomputer applications. Must possess written communication skills, at least six hours of course work in computing. To apply, submit a letter of application, a current resume with reference to the position offered by the Microcomputer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 65045. Applicants may be asked to provide his/her name and job title on top of their EOA/EMployER STUDENT TRAINER/CONSULTANT-MICROCOMPUTER. Deadline: 9/14/93. $550-$650/month 20 hours/week. Duties include teach computer programs to students using materials, course descriptions, and mailing lists. Other duties as assigned. To apply, submit a letter of application, a current resume with reference to the position offered by the Microcomputer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 65045. Applicants may be asked to give a short presentation of their role in creating topic of choice. EOA/EMPLOYER
SYSTEM SPECIALIST
Taco Bell now hiring for full or part time day job.
Apply to person at 123 W 8th or 410 W 12th
m Lancaster County Department of Corrections seeks individuals to perform responsible technical operations in the computer network, a Prime 850 using PICK operating system, including an associated person/ computer network, i. Lotus Wide Perform and other related network minimums. H.S. grad or equiv. supplemented by vocational or college level course work in a network minimum. I: yrs, experience performing system analysis. knowledge of "Primes" and "Novel" is strongly required. 16 years experience with Microsoft Office. M: Must complete a Supplemental Questionnaire and an application postmarked on or before the closing date. September 25, 2009. Office: 555 S. 156 Street. Rm. B113. Lincoln, NE 80420 (402) 484-7600. EOE/AW
Talik application for dixhawer Child protection
Law applicable to child abuse (UK)
University Council for Human Rights
UK
state Farm has a lot to offer:
competitive salaries,
pleasant work
atmosphere,
up-todate equipment opportunities for training and advancement, excellent
in the Insurance industry
in the Insurance industry If interested please visit
with a State Farm
Representative at the
University Business Career Fair
1:00pm-6:00pm
Holiday Inn/Holidome
Convention Center
STATE FARM
TIME TIME
INSURANCE
The Kansas and Burge Unions hire part-time, hourly in the following areas: Food Service; Catering, and Customized. Many jobs with varying days are offered at Level 1, Kansas Union for job specific EOE.
AnEqual Opportunity Employer
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED *Rape/Viomur Survivor Service* ASAP is seeking volunteers. Applications await at Headquarters Counseling Center, KU San Francisco Center and Haskell Indian Nations University.
WORK STUDY POSITIONS AVAILABLE AT THE
WORK STUDY POSITIONS. Professor W. and other departm
ents are required to complete their stu-
dies.
Start at $96.88 per month Qualify for up to $160,000 education assistance.
Kansas Army National Guard call (913) 842-9293
225 Professional Services
Macintosh repairs and upgrades
Friendly, Affordable, In-Home Service
The Mac Doctors 842-0648
Prompt abortion and contraceptive services Dale J.
Clinton M.D. 841-5736
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
For free consultation call
Whitley's Music Has Guitar Lessons, JazzRock
Bleu, and signage. Sign up at Whitley @ 12th E. Sth
Room
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
THE LAW OF DONALDG. STROLE
Donald G Strole Sally G Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-1133
For Sale Mac Plus with Everex 20 MH Hard
Cover. All for $199.99. Call us at (800) 753-7600.
allfor$199.99.Callus.com
**lateral Women Word Processing.** Former editor
quality type 84-2063
quality type 84-2063
CU Deskbook Publishing: Resumes, Cover Letters,
Brochures, Flyers. Term Paper, Newsletters
235 Typing Services
Resumes
- coverletters
• writing
• consultation
Are you Makin' the grade
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your typing needs
call Makin' the Grade at 865-2855.
Transcriptions
1012 Mass 842-4619
Suite 201-upstairs
HELP! "me" *newe* *srable*. My neighbors want me to stay in, and now there's a puppy, her pet, too. I am a neutered, 3-yr old, de-clawed cat. FREE to a loving home. 841-3657
300s
Merchandise
X
305 For Sale
98 600 R Ninja w. new tires & new batt. Excellent condition. Call 842-8420.
**19" Giant AFX MTX bike. Shimano Deore LX, labs. Ritches, tires perfect, cone light. $385 call 841-243-9090. 1990 yamaha 200 street bike. It looks great at rear. $285-721 after 4pm. 1960 Schwinn Scooter. $349.
750 GPO Caller and 847-7821 after sp. 1960 Schmucker Stirrs mtl. bike 21 op. 21 in 1936 (Woodbury, NY)
MAC SE 486 hard drive 2.5 meg RAM
modified version of Claris Works
Faxol 691-84572
Faxol 691-84572
Nearly new two 19" 12 speed Fuji road like $165
carbon fiber roof cover. $480 boxed.
Rower size $150. Call 843 922 9074 weekday.
**Moving Table** Contemp. bhk lacquer glass cocktail end table only 110* Yachas auto 35-150mm camera uses % negative film -21 x 26es $196. Panae 84x170mm film -18 x 24es $18 (N coat) Big Savings 816-942-0246
one way ticket to Boston via Cincoln; must be
from September 110 or best offer. Call Md in
Mail in 847-596-2800.
**Lunchbox** portable computer 40 HD.13
**Luncheshell** 41-438 days 41-438 days
41-435 days, Ask for Dan 61丹
41-425 days, Ask for Dan 61丹
Repile Sales Cubicle Column Boasts $99. Baby Iguanas $23, Burmese Pythons $115, etc. care information included. Call Jim 816-857-2471. Will deliver from KC Visa. Mastercard
Two person dome tent $25. Three person dome $53.
Four person dome $85. 942-5245 After 5
Vilac-16 and one half, new case and Steinbauer, professional quality. 913-897-4516
Stereo system. Like new. Sony receiver (DJ player. Pioneer cassette/speakers. Tissue bass EQ. Reteam. $1500, new $500. Two bar stools, solid airtight, $280, new $75 for the car. B41-1253.
Power wood winder; used over 1000 times.
388 IBM Compatible Computer 4MB 3.5 & 5
inch disk drive. Mouse, keyboard 14 inch ga monitor.
Software. $850 854 2469
340 Auto Sales
1923 Dodge Coronet, four-door, $500. Call Rick at
841-8035
i6 for your HP-14 box flap with har code. Leave message at 864-5269
1985 Honda Accord, Reliable, loaded, new tires.
1,010 OBO Call Liang at 841-4824
Apple ImageWriter II Printer for Apple or Macintosh computer with a B or O Small microwave only
$1,000 OBO Call Langer at 841-9824
$1,000 OBO Call Langer at $100.00 o b o 100.00 miles
Shipping, Tail, Faxes 749-8359
Macintosh LWV with 4 megram, 80 hd, 16" color monitor, HP Deskwriter 10h Jet Printer Viewer XL, Lexmark T503c
Reliable transportation 80 Ford Pinto /Best offer.
Carry Terry at 814-2746.
Clearance. All adult tails on sale at 89 $10 up.
Miracle Kid, 29c, 24l. (triple)
Bullet, 26c, 24l. (triple)
370 Want to Buy
$5 for your HP48 box flap with bar code. Leave message at 842-5692
A
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
Large (13x18) room for non-smoking female 3 ml
from campus. UTLPD, UTLP 749-6016.
430 Roommate Wanted
b 3 htr a bt4 apt for rent Campus Place. Very close to campus. Responnsid rent. Smoker please. Call
3 BR, 2 bath apt for rent, Campus Place, Close to
Campus Reasonable rent Smoker #60-609
from campas 821, UTL P31 Call 749-6166.
Subtet at Graystone Ips' Call Phil at (816) 468
Subtet at Graystone Ips' Call Phil at (816) 468
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
- By phone: 864-4358
Ads shared in my
How to schedule an ad:
2 NS F seeking 3rd roommate in towhouse W/J/
water pad w/ $30. furnish $13 more /+ moll c/uL
$16. furnish $14.
*Adehn logged in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
Third roommate needed at Orchard Corsers apt.
$210. + utilities. Call events
Room available for a female in 2 story town house close to campas and on bus route B $242 per month plus utilities. Sept. Rent already paid. Leased thru May 31. For 319-749-7234.
Responsible non smoking female room needed to share a fire 2 Hpr 185 $ +185. Call 843 705-9777
Stuy by the Kaiser offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Wifu.
Classified Information and order form
Bv Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint. Lawrence. KS. 66045
Responsible female to share 3 liter ap tp. 1 minute of blood purified by $25 amo and mt oil water pd. Cell 749 2315
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansan offices. Or you may choose to not have it billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by check with your cash are all available.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of gate lines then ad occurs). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kasan office for a fee of $4.00.
Number of insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
Cost per minute per day
1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 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 1.05 .65 .60 .55 .35
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Num. of insertions:
Classifications
Please print your ad one word per box
105 personal
110 business personals
120 announcements
130 entertainment
148 lt/ft & found 580 for sale
225 help wanted 440 auto sales
225 professional services 360 miscellaneous
225 juices services
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print
379 want to buy
405 for rent
438 roommate wanted
Name:
Total ad cost: ___ Classification:___
Address:
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 charmine your ad:
Expiration Date:
MasterCard
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
© 1987 FarWorks, Inc./Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate
4-17
Rocking the anthropological world, a second "Lucy is discovered in southern Uganda.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
OUR PRICES ARE PROVEN THE LOWEST.
SAVE UP TO 54¹⁰¹ on the identical surveyed items
JUST BY SHOPPING AT FOOD 4 LESS
Three not-for-profit organizations participated in the survey taken 8-11-93. They are in no way affiliated with Food 4 Less and acted independently to ensure unplanned findings. Survey copies available for viewing upon request.
$54.01 or 16.7% More
Alvin's IGA Total 376⁵⁵
$47.27 or 14.7% More
B&L Apple Mkt. Total 369⁸¹
$32.90 or 10.2% More
Dillons Total 355⁴⁴
$11.69 or 3.6% More
Checkers Total 334²³
We asked three not-for profit organizations to conduct a survey in order to compare the low prices at Food 4 Less to our competitors' prices. The results are in, and once again Food 4 Less remains the undisputed low price leader.
Three not-for-profit organizations participated in the survey taken 8-11-93. They are in no way affiliated with Food 4 Less and acted independently to ensure unbiased findings. Survey copies available for viewing upon request.
Food 4 Less
Total
32254
$54.01
or 16.7 %
More
Three not-for-profit
organizations
participated in the
survey taken 8-11-93.
They are in no way
affiliated with
Food 4 Less and acted
independently to ensure
unbiased findings.
Survey copies available
for viewing upon
request
Food 4 Less
Total
32254
Alvin's IGA Total
37655
youll get the LOW PRICE DAY IN & DAY OUT!
We only advertise on special occasions and pass the savings on to you in lower food prices. Our everyday low prices are often lower than other stores' ad prices! And with hundreds of Green Tag Specials every time you shop-no other store can match the savings you get by shopping Food 4 Less.
PLEASE ACCEPT THESE COUPONS AS OUR SPECIAL INVITATION TO COME IN AND SHOP WITH US...YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU DID!
★FOOD 4 LESS VALUABLE COUPON★
Assorted Frozen
WEEK 1:
Sept. 7 thru
14, 1993 only.
Limit 2
Please.
BUY 1, GET 1
FREE!
Limit 1 coupon per customer please.
★FOOD 4 LESS VALUABLE COUPON★
COTTONELLE
WEEK 2:
Sept. 15 thru
21, 1993 only.
Limit 1
Please.
TISSUE
4-Roll Pack
BUY 1, GET 1
FREE!
Limit 1 coupon per customer please.
★FOOD 4 LESS VALUABLE COUPON★
COTTONELLE
WEEK 2:
TISSUE
Sept. 15 thru
21, 1993 only.
4-Roll Pack
Limit 1
Please.
BUY 1, GET 1
FREE!
Limit 1 coupon per customer please
WEEK 3: Food 4 Less Sept. 22 thru SANDWICH 28,1993 only. BREAD Limit 1 Please. BUY 1 GET 1 FREE! Limit 1 coupon per customer please
★FOOD 4 LESS VALUABLE COUPON★
WEEK 3:
Sept. 22 thru
28,1993 only.
Limit 1
Please.
Food 4 Less
SANDWICH
BREAD
BUY 1,
GET 1
FREE!
Limit 1 coupon per customer please
★FOOD 4 LESS VALUABLE COUPON★
WEEK 4:
Sept. 29 thru
Oct. 4,1993 only.
Limit 2
Please.
COUNTRY RICH
ICE CREAM
1/2 Gallon Square Ctn.
BUY 1,GET 1
FREE!
Limit 1 coupon per customer please
One special coupon every week, for 4 weeks, just for coming in!
OPEN 24 HRS.
2525 Iowa St.
in Lawrence
FRESH DAILY
BAKERY
FOOD4LESS.
SPORTS: True freshman tailback June Henley will have a bigger role because of teammate's injury. Page 11
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103.NO.13
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8,1993
Three ways the plan changes government and some examples
2)
(USPS 650-640)
- Set funding ceilings for each agency
Close 1200 agriculture department field of fires.
Scissors
3)
NEWS: 864-4810
1) $
Streamlining
- Close housing and urban development department regional offices
- Reduce Army Corps of Engineers from 11 offices to six
- Enact federal budgets for two years instead of annually
■ Consolidate food safety work under Food and Drug Administration
- Increase manager/worker ratio from one-to-seven to one-to-15
Reduce time required to fire workers for cause.
帅
Require agencies to develop performance objectives
Cutting red tape
Empowering employee
Abolish time sheets and time cards Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics
Clinton unveils plan to 'fix' government
Proposal slashes federal work force by 252,000 people
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Seizing on public dissatisfaction with government, President Clinton put forward an ambitious plan yesterday to make the bureaucracy work better and cost less, aming to save $108 billion and shrink the federal work force by 252,000 people.
"The government is broken, and we intend to fit it," Clinton said.
Launching his campaign to "reinvent government" in a ceremony on the South Lawn, Clinton endorsed a book of more than 800 recommendations to cut waste, reduce red tape, streamline the bureaucracy and simplify personnel and purchasing rules.
The backdrop behind Clinton dramatized the idea of a bloated government. Two forklifts held aloft tons of budget rules, purchasing regulations and the 10,000-page federal personnel code.
The administration proposes closing hundreds of government offices outside Washington, giving managers more control over personnel decisions, making it easier to fire incompetent employees and requiring government agencies that provide services to compete with private business.
Some proposals would have a direct impact on consumers.
One proposal calls for the Internal Revenue Service to let people pay
taxes by credit cards. Another would eliminate restrictions that keep the IRS and other agencies from using private companies to collect debts
Vice President Al Gore, who over saw six-month study that produced the proposals for Clinton, said that more than half of the plan would require congressional approval. Administration officials said they did not know how or when Clinton's plan would be presented to Congress.
"Make no mistake about this: This is one report that will not gather dust in a warehouse," he said.
But Clinton spoke confidently about the proposal.
He plans to begin selling the program with appearances this week in Virginia, Ohio, California and Texas.
Republicans were quick to endorse
Clinton's aims but were skeptical that Democrats would actually cut government.
"These make for a good start but unless Congress can act to implement these federal spending cuts and government reform proposals, we really haven't made any progress," said House Republican Leader Bob Michel.
Senate Republican Leader Bob Dole said, "I don't know of any Republican not willing to vote to reduce the cost of government."
Three labor unions representing the bulk of federal workers offered qualified support, as long as the proposed job reductions are achieved
Organized labor was hesitant to attack the plan even though it calls for slashing the 2.1 million federal work force by 252,000 within five years.
through ways other than layoffs
Clinton's program envisions achieving the reductions through early retirements, attrition and job buyouts, but administration officials said layoffs were possible.
John Strudvild, president of the American Federation of Government Employees, said the proposals were "positive steps to move the government into the 21st Century."
The government overhaul plan was developed by Gore and a team of specialists who made an agency-by-agency review and held hearings with government employees around the country.
For Clinton, the proposals offer a fresh start for his administration and a foundation to counter GOP criticism that he's an old-fashioned tax-and-spend Democrat.
Cutting the fat
Anticipated savings
The Clinton administration hopes to save the government $108 billion by the end of fiscal year 1999.
1995 $12.6
1996 $18.8
1997 $21.9
1998 $24.7
1999 $30
Sources of savings In billions
Modernization
Less paperwork
$5.4 $3.3
New buying methods
$22.5 $36.4
$40.4 Staff cuts
Reorganization
Haskell bid alive for Nobel winner
2017 Fall Festival KANSAH
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Rigoberta Menchu, 1992 Nobel Peace Prize winner, has said no to speaking engagements at Kansas State University and Bethel College in Newton.
But Beatriz Zapata, director of the Sisters of St. Joseph's Justice and Peace office in Salina, said Menchu had not yet ruled out an invitation to speak at Haskell Indian Nations University in Lawrence
Menchu
BENEDETTA RUSSELL
"Being Indian herself, and the first Indian Nobel Peace Prize winner, she would probably give more consideration to them than to the other two," Zapata said.
Zapata said there was a "good chance" Menchu would visit Haskell as a stop on her trip to Oklahoma sometime next year.
Menchu won the award last year for her work on the rights of indigenous people around the world. American Indians, the original inhabitants of the american continents, are considered indigenous people.
Zapata said she called Haskell when she was contacted by Bethel and Kansas State about bringing Menchu to Kansas. The original plan was to add Haskell to a statewide speaking tour.
But Menchu limits her engagements in the United States and has said no to most requests. Zapata said.
She said Menzel limited her appearance in the United States because its
government had yet to address the concerns of its own indigenous people as well as the indigenous people of other nations, such as Guatemala.
"Even though the U.S. does have influence in Guatemala, it doesn't have a lot of power in the Nobel Peace Prize system and doesn't stand up for indigenous people in Guatemala." Zapata said.
Zapata said she was a personal friend of Menchu through her work with Menchu's Committee for Campesino Unity. The group works for the rights of Guatemala's farm workers, who are mostly indigenous people. Menchu herself is a member of the Quiche tribe in Guatemala. The tribe is a descendant of the Mayans.
Dan Wildcat, head of the department of natural and social sciences at Haskell, said Menchu's decline of other schools' invitations but not Haskell's was a good sign.
"She will give our school a sense of the kind of heroism and leadership native people can offer throughout their lives," he said. "She speaks well of native women. She embodies that sense of survival with dignity and respect."
Wildcat said he consulted with Zapata and the department of Latin American studies at KU on Menchu's invitation.
With Haskell's recent name change, a visit by Menchuk would show the university's progress and growth. Wildcat said.
"With that change in status, it would be an appropriate place for Ms. Menchu to visit," he said.
"She's a native woman with a positive message of what it's going to take for us to live together," he said.
Wildcat said Menchu's message also would appeal to non-natives.
John Gamble / KANSAN
Facilities Operations employee Ed Osterhout took to the ledges of Lewis Hall yesterday to repair a fifth floor window.
Out on a ledge
R
INSIDE
Vending machine fans paying more
Disco returns
A Lawrence bar is holding a disco night every Thursday, and bartenders say the dance music's popularity is rising. Are you ready for a flashback to the '70s?
Page 9.
For some KU students, dinner may consist of an entree of peanut M&M's, a side order of chips, cookies for dessert and a Diet Coke to wash it all down.
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
Five-cent increase necessary for service
The 5-cent increase of these goods in August follows a spring 1992 increase in candy bar prices at KU vending machines from 50 cents to 55 cents, said Robert Derby, manager of KU Concessions.
But students who substitute campus vending machines for home cooking have had to fork up an extra nickel since August for gum, cookies and potato chip products sold at vending machines around campus.
He said increases in operating and
product costs caused an inevitable in price increases at the vending machines.
"Our retail prices are based on all our costs, not just the costs of our products." Derby said. "We're very careful in our price decisions. In no way, shape or form are we out to gouge the students."
Operating costs include maintenance of the machines and the delivery involved in replenishing the 200 vending machines around campus, Derby said.
Although a candy bar may cost less at some stores around Lawrence, Derby said the higher retail price of KU concessions included both the cost of convenience and the state sales tax.
"The only people that are lower than us are places like Dillons and Wail-Mart that can buy their candy in such high quantities," Derby said. "Historically and traditionally, vending prices have always been higher than other
retail because the costs of vending have been higher."
Some students said they accepted the trade-off for higher prices in exchange for the convenience of readily available snack foods and soda.
Boyell Linderbock of Treat America, a Kansas City, Kan., vending machine wholesaler, agreed that KU Concessions charged a lot less than it could for vending machine products, including their 55-cent candy bars.
"They're really being fair to you, alot fairer than they have to be," Linderblood said.
"What else can I do about it?" asked Frank Bonafila, Anioch, III, senior, after he bought a 60-cent package of oatmeal raisin cookies from the Wescoe Hall first-floor vending machine. "It's aprice you've got to pay for the service."
Kansan staff writer
By Kathleen Stolle
Architect group to help represent minority students
David Alcindor, Paris junior and executive board member, said minorities in the school of architecture needed a group with which they could identify.
After nearly a year of planning, KU students have organized a chapter of the National Organization of Minority Architecture Students.
Of the 600 students in the school, 53 are minorities
"It's just been a matter of being represented or misrepresented or not represented at all," he said.
Cal Jones, Kansas City, Mo., senior, and organizer of the group, said that one of its goals was to expose all students to lesser-known types of architecture.
“It's been dominated so long by Europeans,” he said.
“What we're trying to get out is that there's different archi- tecture all over the world.”
Jones said the group also hoped to increase the number of minority faculty members in the school by keeping qualified regional minority instructors' resumes on file. When faculty positions open in the school, the group will present administrators with their recommendations. Jones said
Three of the school's 39 full-time faculty members are minorities.
Hobart Jackson, associate professor of architecture and urban design, and Carmina Sanchez, assistant professor of architecture and urban design, are the group's advisers.
The group also wants to encourage high school minorities and women to consider pursuing architecture as a career. Jones said.
Membership in the group is not limited to minorities, Jackson said.
"Any student who wants to affiliate with NOMAS or supports those goals would be welcome to be a NOMAS member," he said.
Jackson said that although the group has not been officially chartered by the national organization, the mandatory seven dues-paying members have received certificates from the national office. Plans are under way for the organization to be formally recognized in a spring ceremony, he said.
Mike Cummings, president of the KU chapter of American Institute of Architecture Students, said his organization and NOMAS were discussing working together on future projects.
Junk Food Price Jump
Chips
1984 $0.35
1990 $0.45
1993 - present $0.50
Candy Bars
1984 $0.45
1991 $0.50
1992 - present $0.55
Soda
1983 $0.45
1984 - present $0.50
non concessions expects to earn $102,674 on sales out of vending machines this year. Profits from these are used to support the Kansas and Burge Unions, a non-profit organization.
Source: Robert Derby, AU Concessions Dave Campbell / KANBAN
2
Wednesday, September 8, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kennedy
GLASS
For All Your
Glass Needs
car windshields, desk top glass,
picture frame glass.
730 New Jersey 843-4416
642
Miss
749
1972
Much Ado About Nothing(PG-13) Today 4.45, 7.15, 9.30
THE FIRM(R) (Tuesday) 5.00, 8.30
162
Mass.
749
1912
DICKINSO
THEATRE
Dickinson 6 411-8000
2339 South Ivy St.
Rising Sun RP* (4:15) 9:50
Secret Garden RP* (4:30) 7:00
Hard Target RT* (4:30) 7:20, 9:45
Calendar Girl RT* (4:30) 8:40, 9:45
Man Without a Face RT* (4:20) 7:00, 9:30
Father Hood RT* (4:15) 7:15, 9:35
**Primetime Show (-)** Hearing Daley
Senior Caitan Aniye... Impered Stere
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 6 PM-ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
VARSITY
1019 SMAJAC HISPETS
841 5191
Needful Things®
5.00
7.20 9.45
HILLCREST
92% JOWA
841 5191
Hearts and Sounds ™ P13
7.11 8.30
Son of the Pink Panther®
8.15
Sleepless in Seattle®
8.15
Rookie of the Year®
8.15
Fortress®
8.15
In the Line of Fire®
8.15
The Thing Loved Love® P13
8.20 9.45
CINEMA TWIN 11/10 IOWA A41-5191 $1.25
Made in America PG^12 7.250 9.30
Snow White G^12 7.250 9.30
Dennis the Menace PG^12 7.250 9.30
SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
JOHN WOOD'S
• THE KILLER
Tues., Sept. 7, 9:30 PM
Wed., Sept. 8, 7:00 PM
Thurs., Sept. 9, 9:30 PM
• RAISE THE RED
LANTERN
Wed., Sept. 8, 9:30 PM
Thurs., Sept. 9, 7:00 PM
• INDECENT PROPOSAL
Fri., Sept. 10, 7 & 9:30 PM
Sat., Sept. 11, 7 & 9:30 PM
Sun., Sept. 12, 2:00 PM
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OAKS Non-traditional Student Organization will hold a brown bag lunch at 11 a.m. today in Alcove G of the Kansas Union. For more information, call Gerry Vernon at 864-7317.
■ Tim Miller, professor of religious studies, will present a lecture, "Cults: In the Wake of Waco," at noon today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries. 1204 Oral Ave. For more information, call 843-4933.
■ The Jewish Student Artist Coalition will meet at 6 p.m. today in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union. For more information, call
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 Alex Baker at 864-7316.
The KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6 p.m. today in 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jacob Wright at 749-2084 or Jason Anishansin at 843-3099.
KU Kempu will have meetings at 6 and 7 tonight in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Freshiad at 842-4713.
KU Enviros will meet at 7 tonight in the International Room of the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-7325.
Golden Years," will be shown at 7 tonight in the College Hall main lobby. For more information, call Cathy McClure at 864-1411.
A video. "Brazilian Soccer. The
Le Cercle Francais will meet at 7
Tuesday in the Free State Hotel
& Pub. 638 Massachusetts St. Fiori
@ 638-852-1077, www.lecerclefrancais.com
852-1077-8521, www.lecerclefrancais.com
■ The Student Assistance Center will hold an time-management workshop at 7 tonight in 4035 Wescoe for more information, call 810-404-6441.
The Student Alumni Association will meet at 7 tonight at the Adams Alumni Center. For more information, call 864-4760.
The KU Chapter of Habitat for Humanity will meet at 7:30 tonight at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call 823-0777.
The School of Education Student Organization will meet at 7:30 tonight in 301 Bailey Hall. For more information, call Caroline Elton at 844-3726.
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Miami: 90°/78'
Minneapolis: 73°/55'
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Salt Lake City: 81°/55'
Seattle: 75°/56'
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Tulaa: 79°/61'
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Tomorrow Friday
Partly sunny, variable winds
Partly sunny, variable winds
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Omaha: 77'/57'
LAWRENCE: 76'/54'
Kansas City: 73'/57'
St. Louis: 79'/61'
Wichita: 79'/56'
Tulsa: 79'/61'
Partly cloudy, variable Partly cloudy, variable
Partly sunny, variable
Sunny day
Source: John Pfefer, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
High: 78'
Low: 57'
Dave Campbell | KANSAN
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This program will focus on a variety of important issues to women.
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4
Wednesday, September 8,1993
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE ISSUE
After generations of bloodshed, Israel and the Palestinians have agreed to sign a peace treaty.
THE BACKGROUND
After capturing additional territory in a war 26 years ago, Israel occupied two regions that are home to many Palestinians - the West Bank (previously part of Jordan) and the Gaza Strip (previously part of Egypt). Israel claimed it needed the land for religious and security reasons. The Palestinian, led by the Palestinian Liberation Organization, have rebelled against Israeli rule. The Intifada (Palestinian revolt) has continued off and on for the past six years. Both sides have suffered greatly.
Middle East peace offers opportunity for success
The continuous conflict in the Middle East has been an open sore in the world for generations. Through war, terrorism and propaganda, the conflict between the Palestinians and Israel has affected United States foreign policy and sown deep bitterness on both sides of the conflict. The possibility of peace between Israel and the Palestinians could be as monumental as the end of the Berlin Wall coming down or the collapse of the Soviet Union. Both sides deserve the praise of the world for their courage in drafting a peace treaty.
THE ISSUE
As recently as the Gulf War, peace between Israel and the Palestinians was a pipe dream. But recently, representatives of the two parties have started talking peace. In a secret meeting last month in Norway, a landmark agreement was hammered out: Israel will be handing control of the Gaza Strip and the strategic city of Jericho over to the Palestinians, with negotiations on other territories to follow. In addition, both sides will recognize each other's right to exist. This treaty is now waiting to be signed, pending last minute details.
The treaty, once signed, will open up a world of opportunity. At peace, the two sides could cooperate to form a strong economy. Prospects for peace between Israel and other Arab nations will increase. Already Jordan and Israel, spurred on by the treaty, are closer to peace than ever before.
Not all is well, however. Extremists on both sides want to wreck the peace treaty. Radical Palestinian terrorists and gun-toting Israeli settlers will do everything in their power to scuttle peace. It is in the interests of the leadership of both sides to prevent this. The danger is particularly acute on the Palestinian side, where PLO splinter groups and the terrorist group Hamas have promised a bloody civil war if the peace treaty is signed. On the Israeli side, right-wing groups have made similarly threatening statements. Both the Israeli government and the Palestinian leadership should spare no effort in insuring that anti-peace groups are not successful.
The United States also must not let the opportunity for peace get away. It should continue to be actively involved in the peace process. It has strong ties to Israel and the region and stands to benefit from peace. Just two years ago the United States tied itself in knots trying to placate Israel and the Arabs during the Gulf War. With peace, foreign-policy headaches like this could be avoided.
It is time for optimism in the Middle East. Hopefully, the treaty between Israel and the Palestinians will be the all-important first step. The flower of peace is starting to open up. Now it must be watered.
MIKE SILVERMAN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
MTV's video censorship contradicts open stance
HOOD
UDK 93
One of the highlights — if I can call that — of this summer was "Beavis and Butthead." They were on the cover of Rolling Stone, ABC News did a short piece on them, and even The New York Times mentioned them in a recent editorial. Clearly, they are hot.
KC TRAUER, Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
For those not yet initiated, Beavis and Butthead are animated teenagers who have a show on MTV. They spend their days either destroying things (and/or themselves) or watching videos; occasionally, they go to school. Their philosophy is that they like things that are "cool" and don't like things that "suck." Their humor revolves around bodily functions and words and phrases that, when stretched to their outer limits, may refer to genitalia.
While appeasing everyone isn't inherently bad, it can lead to contra-
Essentially, MTV wants to be everybody's buddy. At times, it works very well. Last year, though biased toward Bill Clinton, the network gave time to all the candidates and to both of the national conventions. But at other times it means condemning the openly homophobic, racist and xenophobic Guns 'N Roses song "One in a Million" while continuing to play other Guns 'N Roses videos. The end result sounds less like a philosophy than a fashion, a politically-correct "stance" that becomes indisinguishable from, say, the VJ Kennedy's attempts at wearing "grunge" clothes.
They are funny, in a kind of moronic way. Butthead, the Einstein of the pair, controls a magic remote control that lets him change videos whenever he wants. (I would love to get ahold of one of those myself.) Together they watch videos and comment on them. Their comments are the funniest part of the show (example: "Depeche Mode is French for 'We wussies'"); in part because "Beavis and Buthead" represent a large segment of MTV's audience. With the program, the network brilliantly appeases both 15-year-olds such as Beavis and/or Buthead and older audiences who like to think they are beyond sophomoric humor.
FINNEY
THANK GOODNESS
So those who still want their MTV are forced to accept it, contradictions and all. Perhaps salvation can come, finally, from Butthead, who rightly acknowledges that Kris Kross "could kick Axl's ass."
Nathan Olson is a Lawrence graduate student majoring in English.
the very concept against which the program on neo-Nazis was trying fight.
young people who flirted while washing their clothes. The flirting was contrasted by an old woman who sneered at the couple. At one point the woman picked up a newspaper. It was written in Hebrew.
What purpose did it serve to add that little detail? The old woman was the only negative figure in the video, and to associate that negativity with her Judaism bordered on anti-Semitism
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
(THANK GOODNESS)
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Kansan over reacting about Fiske's comment
Assistant to the editor . J.R. Clairborne
News . Stacey Friedman
Editorial . Territhyn McCormick
Campus . Ben Grove
Sports . Kristi Fogli
Photo . Klip Chin, Renee Kneeer
Features . Erza Walo
Graphics . John Paul Fogel
DUH - DUH - DAT'S ALL FOLKS!
If "Fiske's Guide makes KU appear anti-activist, "then perhaps it should be noted that the *Kansan*'s September 2 "Viewpoint" makes activist advocates (such as the *Kansan*) at KU appear either paranoid or pretentiously above criticism.
What botheres me the most, though, is MTV's supposed tough stance on "hate speech" while condoning it in videos. About six months ago, the network ran a fascinating program on the rise of neo-Nazi groups in Germany and the United States. The program was both terrifying and necessary. Yet about a year and a half the network showed a video by Amy Grant. The video showed an innocuous little scene in a laundromat between two
dictions, MTV consistently denounces censorship but censor videos, as in blurring a marijuana leaf in Dr. Dre's "Dre Day," and cutting an intense confrontation with the police in Ice Cube's "It was a Good Day." (Strange how both performers are Black, isn't it? At least Black Entertainment Television doesn't censor). Just as contradictory is a network that censor Madonna's breasts in "Justify My Love" but has no problem showing a piece of cherry pie fall into the lap of a young woman in Warrant's "Cherry Pie." (Can we say symbolism? Can we say sexism?)
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Regional sales mgr...Jennifer Perrier
National sales mgr...Jennifer Evanson
Co-op sales mgr...Blythe Foote
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Creative director...Brian Fusco
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PAT BOYLE, Business coordinator
The guide quoted an anonymous KU student as saying that race relations at KU are becoming more visible and tense because of the activist nature of minority groups," which are "widely supported." It seems, therefore, that the *Kansan*'s lament that this quote "criticizes race relations" and "presents activism at KU
STAFF COLUMNIST
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
NATHAN
OLSON
dictions MTV consistently
**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 780 words. The writer will be photographed.
They must receive 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.
Further, if KU is truly a forum for diversity and a "flagship for education," how shall it continue to thrive as such if certain groups — or certain Kansan editors — adopt a self-righteous attitude of unassailable perfection in their endeavors?
Read More.
Overland Park sophomore
How can groups hope to "raise awareness" and "combat racism" while protesting, educating and informing without heightening visibility, and, logically, tension? The visibility and tension may have existed prior to the surge of these groups. Fiske's guide merely accrets these groups with increasing them a bit, which seems necessary for such problems to be dealt with effectively. Chill, Kansan — I doubt seriously that Fiske presented KU as an oppressive, liberal stinkhole. I was under the assumption that activist groups use visibility and tension to raise awareness of the (supposedly) imperative problems of race relations.
There is a growing fear in the United States of "society" corrupping our children. I fear parents who do not teach their children to think for themselves or find out who they truly are.
as the cause of racial tensions instead of the solution" reflects a degree of paranoia on the part of activists and their supporters — or at least on the part of those who write for the Kansan. The report simply states that relations are tense and visible due to activist groups; it does not criticize said tension or visibility. Lighten up!
Patrick Dilley is a Lawrence graduate student majoring in N higher education.
Children discover the complexities and verisimilitudes of life at a young age, and they can be taught to discover their own feelings. I have a friend with a young son. She tries, when he asks about life, to give as objective a view as possible: the facts. Then she tells him her beliefs and those of others: the opinions. She encourages him to think about these things and to relate them to his own experiences. She teaches him to think about life and not to recite her beliefs.
STAFF COLUMNIST
PATRICK
DILLEY
Although I might disagree with the Smocks' message, I certainly do not begrudge them the right to voice their convictions. But try to remember when you were 7 years old. What did you believe? What did you feel strongly about? That your second grade teacher was the nicest, prettiest person you ever met? That you would always be close to your friends? That adults really knew what they were doing? Compare your childhood convictions, if you can remember them, with what you feel now. Have they changed?
PATRICK DILLEY Kids should be allowed to form their own opinions
I wasn't on campus last Monday to hear jed Smock's presentation, but the photo in Tuesday's Kansan caught my eye. Seven-year-old Evangeline Smock was shown reading from the Bible, a part of her family's crusade to reform our sinning students.
Two years ago in Wichita, some children and their parents were arrested for blockading clinics. I listened to the children speak on the radio and watched them talk to television reporters. I was struck by the unwavering stance these kids, 9 and 10 years old, were taking on issues they had probably neither received objective information or conflicting opinions about, nor experienced.
The language they used was beyond the vocabulary and structure of most children. The rapidity and clarity of their sentences appeared by rote to me, as if only a repetition, a supporting act in an adult play. Law enforcement and judicial agencies eventually concluded that the parents, by allowing and encouraging the children to participate in the anti-abortion activities, were endangering the children.
I believe such actions give children too little credit and too little respect. A child becomes an adult, eventually, who must think and reason for herself or himself. What purpose do we serve children if we only teach them to repeat what they are told? How is society bettered if our children cannot reason and cannot make up their own minds about any given subject? And how will they cope if, when they grow, they discover they do not agree with what they were made to say or do?
Children occupy a very special spot in our collective imagination in a bright grove of innocence and joy. We strive to protect them and to nurture them. I am sure that the parents of the Wichita children, and the Smocks, believe that is what they are doing.
University of Mars
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This is ABSURD? As long as there are these white dashed lines pedestrians have the right of way and these cars won't let us cross!
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This is ABSURD! As long as there are these white dashed lines, pedestrians have the right of way and these cars want let us cross!
were being oppressed by the owners of the means of automotive transportation, and I'm going to do something about it.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 8, 1993
5
'Freshman 15' can be given the pinch
By Liz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
Leneca freshman Krisissie Killay said beer and her roommate's food have already made her gain the dreaded "freshman 15."
Killoy is one of many freshmen who will put on unwanted pounds this year.
KU dietitians Adrienne Moore Baxter and Am Chapman regularly instruct students on how to avoid weight gain and stay fit.
Baxter, a registered dietitian and KU Medical Center instructor, said one way for students to avoid weight gain was to focus on what they were eating and to enjoy the food rather than scarfing it down in a few moments.
Baker also suggested alternating exercise with eating during study breaks, avoiding trips to vendling machines that display high-fat foods, visiting local supermarkets' salad bars for fresh vegetables and vegetables.
and eating foods that have more nutrients than calories.
"Students talk a good game when they say they want to eat less fat and more healthfully," Baxter said. "But when it comes to actual behavior, they may select the higher fat foods."
Chapman, a dietitian at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said it was important that students vary their diets and not skip meals.
"The greater variety of foods you give your body on a daily basis, the more physically and psychologically satisfied your body will be," she said.
Chapman also recommended exercising 30 to 45 minutes at least three to five times a week and avoiding high-fat foods.
"I'm not saying eliminate fat," Chapman said. "You need some fat in your diet. Many women are going overboard and not eating anything with fat in it."
She said that few of the calorie students consume through alcohol offer
the nutrients necessary for good health. Some calorie-smart choices would be drinking light beer, alternating alcoholic drinks with non-alcoholic drinks, using diet soda in mixed drinks and avoiding high-calorie liments.
Baxter listed three factors that make freshmen gain weight: psychological stress, being less active because they spend more time studying and making unhealthy food choices while studying or socializing.
Two days of minimal exercise and downing an extra piece of pizza and a soda may not seem like a big deal. But following this pattern for two semesters could mean consuming an extra 125 calories a day while expending 100 fewer calories, Chapman said.
If this happened, a surplus of 54,000 calories would be created. By dividing that surplus by the calories per pound of fat, 3,500, the weight gain would be 15.4 pounds — what many students call the "freshman 15."
Diet tips
Nutrient-dense foods vs. calorie-dense foods
bagels
raisin bread
pretzels
English muffins
whole-grain muffins
dried fruit
roasted beef on a bun
Calorie-dense foods
doughnuts
sweet rolls
French fries
Danish pastries
cupcakes
candybars
KU Medical Center dietitian Adrienne Moore Baxter said nutrient dense foods supply one or more of the 50 nutrients necessary for good health. Calorie-dense foods supply calories but no necessary nutrients.
Nutrient-dense foods
Commission OKs tax relief for printwear firm
By Tracl Carl
Kansan staff writer
Carrousel Printwear Inc., a local producer of screenprint sportswear, is working on an account with Sea World Enterprises, said Dan Hix, the company's president. However, there is one problem.
"We can't produce enough to fill the order." He said.
To help solve the problem, Carousel Printwear, currently at 2600 Iowa St., is planning a $1,253,000 land, building and equipment expansion in the Oread West Research Park. And the City Commission helped the company last night with the expansion plans.
The commission approved a 50 percent tax abatement, which provides for a tax relief as a way to
attract businesses, and $1.5 million in industrial revenue bonds.
Carrousel's expansion would provide 22 full-time and 8 part-time jobs in Lawrence, said Bill Martin, director of economic development for the Chamber of Commerce.
Hix said the company, which also provides sportswear for NASA and Budweiser, will not take away from local printwear businesses. He said that 90 percent of the company's business was from out of town.
But Commissioner Bob Moody said he had talked to other local printwear companies who were concerned that the Carrousel Printwear's expansion would hurt their businesses.
Allen Ford, KU professor of business, said that the commission should deny the company's request
because it had a low cost-benefit ratio for Lawrence. The cost-benefit ratio, a measure of community benefits associated with expansion, was 1.03 to 1 for Carrousel Printwear. The suggested ratio should not be lower than 1.25 to 1. Ford said.
Commissioner Bob Schute said the commission should consider Hix's past business history.
"What these papers and figures don't show is the success Dan Hix has had in various businesses he has owned." Schulte said.
Hix said that the company, which started 18 months ago, needed the abatement in view of President Clinton's new plan to raise taxes.
"The whole matter here is to gain a tax advantage because taxes are so high," His said.
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Attention Greek Students Don't Forget that Next Week is the
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Western Area Conference Open to All Greeks
September 10th and 11th Registration Fee is $30
Hockenbury Tavern 1016 Massachusetts
Wed. - So What
Thurs. - Billy Dean Sinatra
Fri. - Mustang Lightning opening for Kelly Hunt
Sat. - Salty Iguanas
Tailgate Party Time KEG BEER AVAILABLE B-B-Q Beef Sandwiches Smoked Sausage Kraut Every Saturday 11am-2pm on the parking lot
Dr Pepper
PEPSI
Pepsi, Dr Pepper & Mt. Dew $488
Limit 1 with $10 in other purchases.
American Beauty
Spaghetti
Buy One
Get One
10oz.
Bag
FREE
BAGU
Tulipa
BAGU
Tulipa
BAGU
RICE
BAGU
RICE
Ragu
Spaghetti Sauce
Buy One
Get One
40 oz.
Jar
FREE
Milk Tea
Milk Tea
Blue Bunny Ice Cream Buy One Get One 1/2 Gal. FREE
RED BARON
THE BEST IN THE WORLD
RED BARON
THE BEST IN THE WORLD
Red Baron Pizza Buy One Get One FREE 12 in.
Keg Beer
$4299
16 gal. +Deposits
Call 843-2313
Prices Good Sept. 8 to Sept. 14.
Alvin's
9th and Iowa, Lawrence, KS
Open 6 a.m. to Midnight
Call 843-2313
IGA
IGA
HOMETOWN
PRUD
We accept MasterCard & Visa
6
Wednesday, September 8, 1993
SEE THE CLASSIFIEDS
YARNBARN
BEGINNING
KNITTING
CLASSES
MAKE A SWEATER!
$20.00 for 8 weeks
CLASSES START:
Sept. 16 (Tues.), 7-9 p.m.
Oct. 4 (Mon.), 7-9 p.m.
Oct. 19 (Tues.), 7-9 p.m.
Pre-Enrollment Required
20% Off Class Yarn
Full Schedule At the YARN BARN
Open Mon.-Sat. 9:30-6:30
Thurs. till 8:00; Sun. 1-4:00
918 MAS. 842-4333
GRANADA
Bar and Matinee Café
Drink Specials
Monday
$2.50 Bud & Bud Light Pitchers
$3.00 Boulevard Pitchers
$2.00 Iced Grasshopper
Tuesday
$1.00 Domestic Bottles
$1.00 Espresso
Wednesday
2 for 1 Wells
$1.25 Caffe Latte
Thursday
$1.50 Spritzes
$2.00 Imports
$2.00 Iced Cocoa Cloud
Friday
$1.00 Sex on the Beach &
Kamakazi Shots
$1.00 Macchiato
Saturday
$1.50 Imports
$1.50 Double Cappuccino
1020 Mass
Mon-Fri
5:00-2:00 a.m.
Sat:non-
2:00 a.m.
842-1390
Wednesdays Only!
As Easy as 1-2-3!
THEATRE
PYRAMID
PIZZA
"We Pile It On!"
Buy a large, get a second of equal value for $3!
Buy a medium, get a second of equal value for $2!
Buy a small, get a second of equal value for $1!
School of Business
12TH ANNUAL
BUSINESS CAREER FAIR
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9
1:00 P.M. - 6:00 P.M.
LAWRENCE HOLIDAY INN HOLIDOME
TRANSPORTATION PROVIDED. A VAN WILL RUN FROM SUMMERFIELD TO STAUFFER-FLINT THEN TO THE HOLIDOME EVERY HALF HOUR BEGINING AT 12:30.
KU
Investigate internship possibilities
Investigate internship possibilities
Talk with company representatives
All majors invited to attend
Over 90 companies represented
- Cargil Inc.
- Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
- Hallmark Cards, Inc.
- Olde Discount Corp.
- Toys "R" Us
- Big 6 Public Accounting Firms
total look!
JENNIFER RAYMOND
INTRODUCES Nail Specialist
to Lawrence
Start-upSpecial:
$5.00 off extensions or overlays
$3.00 off fills
$2.00 off manicures
DES
ist
D
842-5921
Expires 9/23/93
FLAG FOOTBALL
There will be a MANDATORY MEETING on Monday, September 13 at 7 p.m. in Robinson, Room 115. Rules will be handed out and league procedures will be discussed. All managers attending will have the first opportunity in signing up for league play.
MANAGERS' MEETING
NOTE: Entries are accepted on a first come, first serve basis beginning at 8:30 a.m. thru 4:00 p.m. Tuesday, September 14th and Wednesday, September 15th. Team managers not represented at the managers' meeting will not be allowed to sign up until Wednesday. September 15th at 2:00 p.m.
DIVISIONS
MEN'S WOMEN'S CO-REC RESIDENCE HALL, CLUB, OPEN, GREEK, JAYHAWK ENTRY DEADLINE: WED., SEPT.15TH ENTRY FEE: $25 per team Sponsored by KU Recreation Services - 208 Robinson - 864-3546
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Associated Press
MUSCAT, Oman — Yasser Arafat brought his peace campaign to the Persian Gulf yesterday, hoping to win back support from wealthy Arab oil states that have shunned him for three years.
PLO leader searches for nations' support
The plan for Palestinian self-rein力 the occupied Gaza Strip and West Bank town of Jericho was warmly received in Oman. But Arafat headed for a chiller reception today at a meeting of the PLO's ruling committee — several members consider the Israeli-PLO deal a sellout.
The Palestine Liberation Organization leader came to Oman from Cairo, where President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt predicted the PLO and Israel would recognize each other by nightfall tomorrow.
before Israel and the PLO sign the accord.
The plan has won the backing of the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council, which has called the proposed agreement a first step toward a "just, lasting and comprehensive settlement."
Arafat wants mutual recognition
Relations between most of the gulf's Arab countries and the PLO have been icy since Arafat backed Iraq after its August 1990 invasion of kuwait.
Gulf states retaliated by cutting off hundreds of millions of dollars of aid to the PLO and expelling hundreds of thousands of Palestinian workers.
Arafat's visit to Oman was his first to the region since the rupture, and the prospect of his arrival was so touchy that Oman's foreign minister, Youssef bin Alaaw, toured other gulf states last week to prepare them.
Sultan Qaboos of Oman has mediated between feuding Arab parties before, and Arafat likely decided to visit him first in the hope that the sultan could help restore the PLO to favor in the gulf.
The gulf states also are expected to come under U.S. pressure to swallow their differences with the PLO and contribute money needed to make Palestinian self-rule work.
Oman, the only gulf country to support President Anwar Sadat of Egypt when he launched his peace initiative with Israel in 1977, has praised the Palestinian-Israeli deal effusively.
The agency said the talks were "warm and positive."
After Qaboos and Arafat met, the state-run Omani News Agency said the sultan had given "his backing and blessing to this agreement as the Palestinians chose it for themselves and by themselves."
Arafat's greatest opposition comes from within the ranks of his own people. The PLO's ruling Executive Committee, which is meeting in Tunis at Arafat's behest, apparently needs to approve the deal.
Men found guilty of burning tourist
The Associated Press
WEST PALM BEACH. Fla. — Two white laborers were convicted of all charges yesterday in the burning of a Black tourist, who said the men taunted him with racial slurs, doused him with gasoline and set him on fire.
Mark Kohut and Charles Rourk showed no reaction when the jury of five white people and one African American found them guilty of attempted murder, kidnapping and robbery. The jury returned its decision after a 10-day trial and 12 hours of deliberations.
Burn victim Christopher Wilson sat looking straight ahead next to his mother, Enid Plummer, as the first guilty verdict was read.
Kohut and Rourk, both day laborers from Lakeland, could be sentenced to life in prison. Sentencing was set for Oct. 22.
Wilson made no comment as he left the courthouse, but his mother said they were happy that justice had been served.
"As a Black mother, I would like to say that never waived I wish for anyone, whether Black or white, to have to undergo the pain and agony and frustration we have been through and are still going through."
Wilson, a 32-year-old stock broker clerk from New York City, was burned on nearly 40 percent of his body.
He described being abducted by gun-wielding attackers on New Year's Day outside a suburban Tampa shopping plaza and being forced to drive to a remote field, where he was doused with gasoline and set ablaze.
Wilson called Rourk, 33. "the mean one" who barked racial slurs during the abduction and sloshed him with the gasoline. Kohut, 27, was "the one
with bright eyes" who spoke little during the attack.
But there were no fingerprints, hairs, fibers or DNA traces tying Kohut and Rourk to the scene, and there was no link found through a handwriting analysis of a note left behind that read "One les nigger more to go."
Defense attorneys also questioned the credibility of the state's other key witness, Jeffery Pellett, an 18-year-old from Plant City originally charged in the attack. He struck a plea bargain to testify against his friends, admitting under cross-examination that he had changed his story several times and would lie to the jury to protect his own interests.
The prosecution's problems were compounded on the third day of testimony when the lead state litigator on the case, Len Register, abruptly resigned.
The Associated Press
Senate confirms Elders as surgeon general
Republicans had acknowledged in advance of the vote that the former Arkansas health chief would be elevated to the position of surgeon general, the nation's No.1 doctor.
Senators debated her nomination for more than six hours on the first day of their return from a summer recess. Elders was not present for the final vote.
WASHINGTON — Dr. Joyceyn Elders, President Clinton's choice for surgeon general, was confirmed by the Senate last night, surmounting vigorous opposition from conservatives. The vote was 65 to 34.
Sen. Wendell Ford of Kentucky, the second-ranking Democrat in the leadership ranks, voted against Elders. Three other Democrats, Sens. Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia, John Breaux of Louisiana and James Exon of Nebraska joined 30 Republicans in opposing her confirmation. Thirteen Republican voters for Elders.
"I am, by training and temperament, a healer," Elders said in a statement after the vote.
"It is time to look forward — not back — to a time when all American children are planned and wanted, when all American children are immunized, when all American citizens have the security of quality health care, and when all dread diseases are a distant and haunting memory," said the statement, released by the Department of Health and Human Services.
HHS Secretary Donna Shalala said that "Joyceylin Elders is a sharecropper's daughter who never met a doctor until she was 16 years old. Tomorrow, she will be sworn in as surgeon general of the United States. She is the embodiment of the American dream."
At the White House, Clinton expressed satisfaction that Elders was confirmed
"Her dedication to improving the lives of all Americans, especially the children of America, won her the strong backing of a bipartisan majority of the Senate," the president said. "I look forward to working with her in confronting the pressing issues facing the public health of our nation."
Conservative Republican opponents had conceded that they lacked the strength to block Elders' elevation to the post.
Democrats praised Elders as an up-from-the-bootstraps fighter whose bluntness would be an attribute at the Public Health Service.
Weekly Re-affirmation
I am being loving when I see
the good in all people and in all situations.
from K-Unity & Unity of Lawrence 843-8832 416 Lincoln
atBenchwarmers 8:30pm September14
ANCHOR SPLASH
1993
DELTAGAMMA
ANCHOR SPLASH
WHEN: SEPT11,1-4PM WHERE: AlvamarPool Then get ready for ...
featuring...
Torquise Soul
$5 cover charge or $4 for advance tickets
Money goes to
Aid to the Blind and Sight Conservation
locally and nationally
Fortickets and T-shirts call 843-5990
Fine Line Tattoo
Tattoo
Tattoo
Quality work, reasonably priced,
hospital sterilization
Everyday 29th Massachusetts
12-8 323-8288 Topeka
R
One Stop Source for All Laser Printer Needs
865-0505
Laser Logic Sales•Supplies•Rentals
Wilderness Discovery
Camping Equipment Rentals Everything You Need!
Jaybowl
Not just for bowling any more!
864-3545
AFRICAN ADORNED
Royal Crest
4
For Unusua
Jewelry
&
Imported
Gift Items
5 East $ ^{7 \mathrm{H}} $
842-1376
10-5:30 MON-SAT
-
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 8, 1993
7
THE NEWS in brief
Eurasia
WICHITA
Anti-abortion activist ordered to stand trial in shooting of doctor
An anti-abortion activist charged with shooting and wounding a physician outside his abortion clinic was ordered yesterday to stand trial on attempted murder and assault charges.
During a preliminary hearing in Sedgwick County District Court, two workers from the clinic of George Tiller, physician, identified Rachelle "Shelley" Shannon, 37, of Grants Pass, Ore., as the woman who shot Tiller on Aug. 19 and pointed a gun at them.
Judge Michael Corrigan ordered Shannon held on $1 million bond and scheduled trial for Nov. 15 on one count of attempted first-degree murder and two counts of aggravated assault.
Tiller, a frequent target of protests because he is one of about a half-dozen U.S. physicians who perform late-term abortions, said under cross-examination that he thought the woman who attacked him was Shannon but that he could not positively identify her.
The assault charges, filed yesterday, alleged that Shannon pointed the gun at the two clinic workers.
He testified he was "absolutely, unequivocally terrified" as he chased a woman who had fired five gunshots into his vehicle and wounded him in both arms outside his abortion clinic.
The two clinic employees positively identified Shannon, however, pointing her out in the courtroom.
Traops have been trying to hunt down Aidid since June, when his fighters killed 24 Pakistani soldiers in a series of ambushes.
Since the United Nations took over the humanitarian effort in Somalia from a U.S.-led military coalition in May, 47 peacekeepers have been killed and 175 have been wounded.
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa Bill will give Blacks governing power
The bill would set up a Transitional Executive Council, a multiparty body that would assume joint control of some functions with the white-minority government even before multiracial elections take place in April.
Negotiators agreed yesterday on a draft law that would give Blacks a role in running the country for the first time in South Africa's history.
Thabo Mbeki, chair of the African National Congress, said yesterday that approval of the transitional council by Parliament would allow the ANC to call for all remaining international economic sanctions to be lifted. He said such an announcement by the end of the month was likely
The draft law would severely inhibit President F W. de Klerk's power to act independently, requiring him to consult with the transitional council on security matters and any major changes to laws.
The draft law and three others approved by negotiators now will go to Parliament, which convenes in a special session next week.
Penguin
RMSIZE REFREGATOR
FOR RENT
2 cubic ft. $45
4 cubic ft. $46
FREE DELIVERY!
926 MASS. 843-4170
STONEBACK'S APPLIANCE
Pre-Med Club
MEDICAL CLINIC
USE DAILY KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS
"Meet an Advisor night and Student Mixer"
September 9th
STUDENT TRAVEL
1-800-777-0112
THE WORLD'S LARGEST
EDUCATION
TRAVEL ORGANIZATION
STA TRAVEL
7:00p.m.
Kansas Union
at
CLUB
Rock Climbing Club Meeting
September 9, 1993
7PM
Room 156 Robinson
KU CLIMBING CLUB
Everyone is Welcome!
Informational Meeting
No Experience Necessary
Questions or Concerns Contact
Melissa Smith 864-1086 or Louis Rogers 842-7985
KU CLIMBING Everyone is Welcome! Informational Meeting No Experience Necessary Questions or Concerns Contact Melissa Smith 864-1086 or Louis Rogers 842-7985
WELCOMES YOU TO KU!
NOW IS YOUR CHANCE! Take advantage of this one time limited offer and join Lawrence's best fitness facility! You've heard rumors about the "Freshman Fifteen"and the "Senior Sag". Don't let it happen to you!
BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility
The Women's Fitness Facility
12 month
Semester
Graduates!
Graduates!
full membership only
$23
membership at a per month average of
$99
expires 9/10/93
11
expires 9/10/93
Your membership includes:
2 tanning beds
*steam room/sauna/jacuzzi*
*personal training*
*co-ed aerobic classes offered*
ADVERTISING WORKS!
749-2424
9th & Iowa
925 Hillcrest
*over 65 aerobic classes*
*step aerobic classes*
*stairmasters/ lifecycles*
*nautilus & freeweights*
Not just for bowling any more!
Jaubowl
COLLEGE UNIVERSITY
Introducing
Full Service
Engraving
Name Tags, Name Plates,
Plaques and More!
Jaybowl
GENERAL UNION
Notjust for
bowling
any more!
914 Massachusetts 841-6966
Athlete's The Foot.
520 W.23rd·841-5885
Beauty
WAREHOUSE
Salon & Supplies
MAGE
520 W. 23rd St. 841-5865
KMS JOICO NEXUS
Brocat
S
CASTLETON
FUNDISTRICT
REDKEN
S
frames PAUL MITCHELL
Billiards $2.40 per hour until 6:00 p.m.
Jaybowl
KAPPA'S SHOP
Notjust for bowling any more!
864-3545
Compact Discs
$5.95 each
5or more, $4.95 each
Lawrence Pawn
718 New Hampshire
Lawrence 843-434-44
Mon-Sat 9-5:30
$2599
ZENITH DATA SYSTEMS
PRESENTS
KICK OFF CLASSIC
Z-NOTE 325Lp Notebook Productivity Package
STATS:
- Intel 25MHz i386SL Processor
- 4MB RAM, 120MB Hard Drive
- 9.5" STN Passive-Matrix Color LCD
- MS-DOS and Microsoft Windows 3.1 preinstalled
- Epson Laser Printer (AL-1500)
- Logitech® TrackMan® Portable Mouse
- EXTRA POINTS
- Lotus SmartSuite Productivity Software
- Ethernet-Compatible LAN Port
- 10' Parallel Printer Cable
- READYDESK™ Port Replicator
Dragon
FAST, FRIENDLY FINANCING Jayhawk Bookstore
your Computer source at the top of Naismith Hill 1420 Crescent Road Lawrence, KS 66044 843-3826
For A Limited Time Only While Supplies Last
KIM BASINGER · VAL KLMER
20 guards.
30 tons of steel.
A security system second to none.
They said there wasn't a man on earth who could pull off a bank job like this.
They were right.
THE REAL McCOY
COMING SOON TO A THEATRE NEAR YOU
COMING SOON TO A THEATRE NEAR YOU.
8
Wednesday, September 8, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ABORTION ASSISTANCE
Low Cost Early Abortion Services Wichita Women's Center·BC/BS·Mastercard·Visa Toll Free Dial "1" & then...800 467 4340
ATHLETIC GROUP
Gaupon
Special Student Memberships!
Lawrence's Only Total Athletic Club
US OUT!
1993 Fall Arts & Crafts Festival
Graystone Athletic Club, Inc.
2500 W 6th 841-7230
√
Sunday September 12th NOON to 5:00 p.m. Exhibitors South Park 1141 Massachusetts
Lawrence, Kansas
200 Artists & Craftsmen Exhibiting
Performing Artists Noon-Billy Spears Band
Noon- Billy Spears ... Heart of America Country Western Dances
HAPPY BIRD
1:00 - Lonnie Ray's Blues Band
2:00 - The Lawrence City Band. Sponsored by the Rice Foundation and City of Lawrence Parks and Rec Dent.
3:00- River City Six Band.
4:00- Blue Stem Band.
Sponsored by:
Lawrence Parks & Recreation
For information call 841-4411
I want you to call me for Student Loans!
"Service,
service,
service."
That's the moto at
Mercantile Bank.
If you want service in addition to your PLUS, SLS, or Stafford Loans, you want Mercantiel
Call now: 865-0278
MERCANTILE BANK
Member FDDC
Lender ID #864069
Equal Opportunity Lender
Don't Get Lost
In The Crowd!
Get Noticed!
Noti
Get
Have your Yearbook Portrait taken now at Strong Hall. It's FREE! September 7-29.
Monday, Wednesday & Friday: 9a.m.-12p.m. & 1-5 p.m.
Tuesday: 1-5p.m. & 6-9 p.m.
Call 864-5499 for an appointment... Walk-ins accepted.
WORK SMARTER. NOT HARDER.
E engineering student?
Smart.
Math or science
major? Also smart
Math of science major? Also smart.
You don't have to do that anymore. Not when you use the TI-68 Advanced Scientific or TI-85 Graphics Calculator, with their last equation replay feature — and many other smart functions.
On tests, you probably run equations over again to make sure they're right. So you're working harder.
We've spent years with students like you
843-2981
1832 Massachusetts
cos (5+1.8)_
and educators like your professors to develop the TL-68 and the TL-85. That's why they're so highly recommended.
For engineering students, the TL-68 solves up to five simultaneous equations, has complex number functions and offers formula programming.
The TI-85 builds on the power of the TI-68 by adding a wide range of graphing capabilities. Math students can handle calculus problems more easily. And technical students can see the functions for a better understanding of problems.
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS 71-85
ROBOT
x=4.7123089804 y=0
M1 M2 M3 M4 M5
F1 F2 F3 F4 F5
QUIT EXIT MODE MORE
ALPHA LINK INS DEL
SOLVER GRAPH SIMUL STAT POLY PRGM CATALOG CUSTOM TOLER CLEAR
TAN UNT SIN COR COS TAN TAN
LIN EE ( ) ( ) ( )
MARK X WESTR M CPX N MATH O
P CONG O CONV R STRING S UST I
RCL B BASE J TEST V VARS W MEM Y
GP GYMM ANI EBTH ENTER
The TI-85 also handles
Try a TL-68 or TL-85 at your local retailer today. And start working smarter. Instead of harder.
complex numbers. Matrices.
Vectors. Lists. Strings. Plus, it
offers a powerful one-equation
SOLVER.
© 1983 Texas Instruments Incorporated 814000201A
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS TI-85
ROOT
x=4.7123889804 v=0
F1 F2 M3 M4 M5
F3 F4 F5
OUT EXIT MODE MOHE
ALPHA LVL KVA ING DEL
SOLVER SIMULT STAT POLY PROM CATALOG CUSTOM TOLER CLEAR
GRAPH AIN SIN COS COS TAN B
LOG AIN SIN COS TAN B
X X X ( ) CALC
LN EE ( )
MATRIX VECTR M DEX X MATH O
X X
CONS G CONV STRING USTY I
R
RANGE R TEST V NARS W MEM I
RSL STO
BASE B TEST V NARS W MEM I
OFF ON ANG ENTER
CHANNEL V ANG ENTER
Cottin's Coast to Coast.
Begins
NOW AT CHECKERS:
ALL NATIONAL BIRD POKEER
CHECKERS INVOICE CUSY + 50TH SATURDAY
FRESH KANSAS RAISED BUFFALO DAILY
DAILY SPECIAL
Sept. 9, 7am & ENDS Fri., Sept. 10, 7am
ANAHAS
19¢
LB.
Natural
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OHSE
SLICER
HAWLEY
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675
$4 PLC
120Z
SURFACE
KRISPY KRISPY CRACKERS
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I LU
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888
APPLE VALLEY SMOKED SAUSAGE
9
FRESH NEW CROP
JONATHON
APPLES
129
3 I.B. BAG
T.V.
APPLE CRUST
100L $ 3.99
GRADES
"AA"
MEDIUM
EGGS
GREEN
GIANT
CORN,
PEAS OR
MIXED
VEGETABLES
FRESH CALIFORNIA
25 LB.
2576 LB. 16 OZ. FROZEN
Any 2 MooseBros.
Pizzas Just $8.88
JUMBO SIZE
UNIQUE
TOURNAMENT
FROM THE DELI
SLICED OR
SHAVED
ROASTED
OR MILKED
PARTLY PAK
IMPORTED FROM TRAVELY $ 599
JARLSBERG SWISSE TEESHEE
LB.
TURKEY BREAST
C
FROZEN W/ RIB BONE
F
98¢ LB.
FRESH, CRISP ICEBURG HEAD LETTUCE
58¢ LARGE SIZE EA.
SWETT, PEELED
BARRY CARROTS 12 OZ. $39^{\circ}$
BONELESS
DFS
CHUCK ROAST
128 FAMILY PAK LB.
COUNTRY STYLE SPARE RIBS
CUT FROM PORK BUTT
128 FAMILY PAK LB.
FROM THE BANKY
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16 OZ.
CREME OR MILLED
6 CT. $ 1 25
MELTAWA
Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES
AMBASSADOR CARDS 25% OFF EVERY DAY
OPEN 24
HOURS
EVERY DAY
23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE
PRICES EFFECTIVE SEPT. '93
Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES
AMMANDAOR
25% OFF
EVERY DAY!
PRICES EFFECTIVE
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100
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people
Disco, polyester, bellbottoms, velvet
GOLD
I'll see you.
Top, Chris Manly, on left, Boston graduate student, enjoy the disco moment with Mary Baldwin, Lawrence graduate student, Left, Jamie Stratton. Wichita senior, posing in his glittery, synthetic and open retro shirt, tends the bar. Above, Jennifer Poison, Kansas City, Mo., is the center of attention on the crowded dance floor. To her left is "The Disco Pimp," Steve Noble, St. Louis junior.
Disco fever revives '70s in Lawrence
A disco ball whirls and glitters as lines of young people do the bus-stop to "The Hustle" by Van McCoy. Bardenders in bright yellow polyester hip-huggers and butterfly collars serve up drinks while the D.J. slips a BeeGee disc into the sound-system. On the dance floor, a man who calls himself "The Disco Pimp" wears a maroon velvet hat complete with a feather and jewel.
Welcome to Disco Night at Duffy's Lounge at the Quality Inn, 2222 W. Sixth St. Outside the tiny hotel bar, it '1983 Inside on Thursday nights, it '1975 as KU students and Lawrence locals relate that shameful decade of knit polyester, which until recently, no one would admit they enjoyed.
Brebca Clothier, manager of Duffy's, said, "We never expected it to be as big as it is for us."
Clothed she noticed disco showing up on play lists from trade magazines and decided to try a disco night because the trend seemed to be taking off on the East and West coasts.
"it was a time with the only true dance music," she said. "As a whole, it is kind of stupid and silly, but you tap your foot when you hear it and shake your butt."
Johnny Medina, a D.J. at Manhattan's on the eight floor of the Ramada Inn on 87th and I-35 in Kansas City, Kan., said disco is definitely coming back.
"We've noticed a resurgence in it," he said. "If you play 'Night Fever' or 'Staying Alive' people laugh, but it always packs the dance floor."
Cynics who would rather keep their lava lamps and leisure suits in the attic may ask, why disco, and why now? Why are students, most of whom were in grade school during the 70s, suddenly lining up to dance to Abba and to the Brady kids singing "Sunshiny Day?"
"it's the music we grew up with," said Mark Dominic, Lawrence senior.
"I used to roller skate to Abba," he said.
Wade Freeman, Lawrence senior, said disco reminded him of his childhood.
But are childhood memories enough to make people wear platform shoes to class or listen to Donna Summer on their car stereos? Many would agree the charm of bringing back
the '70s lies in making fun of that decade.
Pointing to his black and white polkadotted polyester shirt, Windell said, "There's no way I'd wear this on campus. It's fun to wear polyester as a joke, but I can understand why it went out of style after wearing it for five hours."
THE LOVE OF MUSIC
Gary Bartz, a Lawrence resident who was in high school during the 70s preferred to sit at the bar and wax nostalgic
about shag carpets rather than join the crunch of bodies on the dance floor.
"What a turbulent, weird time it was," he reminisced. "It was so bizarre, it's almost laughable. They could never have as much fun with any other decade."
Steve Noble, St. Louis senior self-
proclaimed "Disco Pimp," said people
can forget about the problems of the '70s by making fun of the '70s.
"It was a pretty free era when people wore ugly clothes and didn't care," he said. "That ten-year span is one that everyone looks back on with humility and disgrace. It was even tacky politically. You can't get any tackier than Carter. These days, people are down and we need something to make fun of."
William Tuttle, professor of history and American studies, said people
in the '90s may be looking wistfully back on the freedom of the '70s.
"There was a great deal of personal freedom," he said. "There were few STDs and getting caught smoking a reefer was like getting a parking ticket. It was a time to be self-indulgent in a most extraordinarily mansicistic way."
Whether they truly enjoy Sister Sledge, or they just want to have fun, young people are giving the 70s another
look. It is a frightening prospect for some.
Kevin Lyons, Tulsa, Oka. senior,
stood against the wall, shaking his head
in dismay as he watched Duffy's patrons
boogie to "Stavin' Alive."
"I hope the '70s don't come back," he said. "I think they should just let it die."
Story by Sara Bennett Photos by Tom Leininger
From school to street — pet peeves abound
Bv JL Watson
Kansan staff writer
Some are big, some are little. Some cause huge fights, and others are laughed about. Everyone has them, even if they try to hide them. They are pet peeves, those small and sometimes irrational annoyances we encounter in life.
"I know I have about 50 million of them," said Sumitra Ghate, Chicago senior. "There are a lot of things I hate about people, like when they whine. Another thing I hate is when people put their feet on me. When my boyfriend puts his feet on me it's like Ewww!"
Paul Sobieski, Emporia junior, also has a hang-up with feet. "My big pet peeve is when people walk around barefoot with stuff between their toes," he said.
Rue Cromwell, professor of psychology said that minor irritations are well within the range of normal behavior.
Cromwell said it was better to show emotions and resolve conflicts as soon as they arise rather than holding them in. "If people restrain their anger instead of getting it out, then it builds up until it really bugs them," he said.
"If someone has a recurring pet peeve, the likelihood is great that there is a background or history to it." If a person had a recurring similar circumstance in the past.
Traffic, even on a good day, can be the source of irritation for some people.
Amy Sparks, Lawrence graduate student, finds slow-paced people irksome. She lacks patience for slow drivers or walkers. "I want them to get out of my way!" she said.
For Lee Hombrook, Lawrence graduate student, it is drivers who leave their blinkers on after they have turned who annoy him most.
"My big pet peeve is people who don't take their turn at four-way stops," said Carol Estes, professor of English.
small as cleaning practices. "My sister is super clean," said Alana Farrar, Denver freshman. "She's always cleaning her room, and I'm just a messy person."
Sometimes annoyances can be as
"Another thing I hate is when people put their feet on me."
Sumitra Ghate Chicago senior
Adam Bozich, Kansas City senior,
said his biggest source of irritation is
fake people. "Like when people try to
act like something they're not," he said.
Ruth Gross, Setauket, N.Y., sophmore, agrees. "I bothers me when people aren't real," she said. "They try to act like what they think you want them to or be something they're not. I just want them to tell it like it is."
Amy Watkins, Topeka senior, once had a roommate with a problem alarm clock. "It was right beside her bed and it would go off for probably 30 minutes and they not hear it. Eventually I'd have to get out of bed, walk all the way across the house, and wake her up. She slept right through the noise and it was so loud you could hear it outside."
"I hate it when my roommates walk around naked, especially in the kitchen," said Matt Keel, Glen Ellyn, ill., senior. "It's OK if they are in their own room but not in other parts of the house."
Roommates, no matter how compatible, sometimes get on each other's nerves.
Dave Pahl, Edmond, Okla., junior,
has a much bigger problem. "My
roommate is dating my ex-girlfriend
and he wants her to have her own
kev," he said.
Perhaps the biggest sources of student aggravation are school related.
"I don't have that many pet peeves," said Tina Huang, Hillsboro graduate student. "I'm pretty easy going, but I don't like it when people talk in class."
bakee Hyland, Topeka senior, has
several Universitetspee. "I do not
See PEEVES, Page 10.
Students serve to irk professors
By JL Watson Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
It is still early in the semester, but already the minds of some students are in a whirl. They ponder the consequences of skipping class or attending class unprepared. What's the worst that can happen? At the least, they should expect an irritated professor. Unexcused absences are number five on the list of KU professors' top pet peeves.
"Thad a student a few years ago who was taking birth control pills in preparation for marriage, and they only made her sick at 9 a.m. on Tuesday and Thursday," said Donn Parson, professor of communications studies. "The quality of excuses is getting better." My computer broke' is replacing 'My grandmother got sick.'
When Gail Bossenga came to KU she didn't realize how much family meant to students. "This is the first place I've taught where so many grandmothers got sick," she said. "At least we can say that KU is family-oriented."
Paul Fallon teaches Spanish and doesn't have a problem
See PROFS, Page 10.
Professors' pet peeves
in informal survey of KU professors resulted in this list of top pet peeves on student behavior.
1. Unprepared students with unbelievable excuses.
3. Students who make and don 't I keep appointments
4. Students who sleep in class.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KANSAS
Source: Kansan staff research
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
September 8, 1993 PAGE 9
KU Life
People and places at the University of Kansas.
calendar
LECTURES AND SEMINARS
Hallmark Symposium:
Estelle Ellis, promotion/marketing, Business Image, New York, N.Y., 6 p.m. Monday, auditorium at Spencer Museum of Art.
"Canyon Revisited: Rephotographing the 1923 Grand Canyon Expeditions"
Exhibit runs through Sept. 26 at the Museum of Natural History.
EXHIBITIONS
"Contemporary Czech and Slovakian Photogranhy"
Exhibit runs through Oct. 3 at Kress and Balconies Galleries in the Spencer Museum of Art.
"American Indian Baskets from the University of Kansas Museum of Anthropology Exhibit runs through Oct. 10 in the White Gallery in the Spencer Museum of Art.
Czech film series—"Alchemist of the Surreal"
1964-83
7 p.m. Thursday in the auditorium of the Spencer Museum of Art.
Czech film series — "The Apple Game" 7 p.m. Sept. 16 in the auditorium of the Spencer Museum of Art.
"NCAA Laugheed Collection"
Exhibit runs through Sept. 11 in the gallery on level 4 of the Kansas Union.
RECITALS
Free concert by musicians from Milyagl
Gakuln Women's College, Sendal, Japan.
Sponsored by KU Department of Music and
Dance at 8 p.m. Monday in White Concert Hall
at Washburn University.
Free concert by Miyagi Gakulin Women's College.
7:30 p.m. in Plymouth Congregational Church 925 Vermont St.
Band Day Parade
9 a.m. Sept. 18 downtown Lawrence
}
10
Wednesday, September 8, 1993
ENTERTAINMENT
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Jewish High Holiday Schedule
September 15: EREV ROSH HASHANA
5:30: Dinner; Big Eight Room, Kansas Union
Hillelmembers: $5.00
non-members: $8.00
7:30: Services; Lawrence Jewish Community Center (LJCC)
917 Highland Drive
[To sign up for dinner, call 864-3948 or come by the Hillel office in the Kansas Union.]
September 16: First day of Rosh Hashana
9:30 a.m.: Services; LJCC
7:30 p.m.: Services LJCC
September 17: Second day of ROSH
HASHANA
9:30 a.m.: Services; LJCC
7:45 p.m.: Shabbot services ; LJCC
September24: KOL NIDRE
7:30 p.m.: Services; Kansas Union Ballroom
September 25: YOM KIPPUR
9:30 a.m.: Services;LJCC
11:00 a.m.: Yiskor Services;LJCC
5:30 p.m.: Nilah Services;LJCC
Sundown: break-the-fast
{To sign up for break-the-fast, call 864-3948 or come by the Hillel Office in the Kansas Union.} All services are free. Rides can be provided by calling the Hillel office at 864-3948. The LJCC is at the corner of 9th and Iowa behind the Amoco Station.
PEEVES Kansan ink on fingers irks student
like foreign teachers' inability to speak English, Add/Drop, and the ink on my fingers from the UDK," she said.
Continued from Page 9
For David Criner, the biggest classroom nuisance is a small item, thumb tacks. "Sometimes they don't stick all the way on the memo boards," he said.
For the most part, pet peeves are more apt to be the cause of a minor debate than a war. Until someone puts their feet on someone else, that
with absent students. Rather, his pet peeve is the attitude he sees in students in the classroom.
Continued from Page 9.
PROFS:
In-class naps bothersome for teacher
"My biggest pet peeve is apathy," he said. "The effects of that apathy are students who don't contribute." A lot of students act as if they are sponges, Fallon said.
Sponge-like behavior includes sleeping in class, something that most instructors find annoying. Students often wake to find that they have missed part of an important discussion and are left scrambling to fill in the missing pieces.
"I don't like it when students ask me to repeat what's on the course description," said Helene Germain-Simões, Italian teaching assistant.
I don't have any pet peeves with my students," said English professor Joel Gold. "I love them all. You should note that I teach irony."
For the most part, professors like their students and are satisfied with the progress of the semester so far.
QUIPS AND QUOTES
Secret club now exists for avid haters of Barney
DAVIE, Fla. — Sprawled in front of the television, 2 1/2-year-old Michelle Christine Curran cradles her Barney dolls as another "Barney & Friends" episode comes to a close.
"I love you, you love me" goes the theme song. "I love Barney! I love Barney!" she squeals.
Little does she know she is in Barnev-Bashing Central.
"You don't have to tell your kids you belong," is the motto of The I Hate Barney Secret Society, founded by advertising salesman Robert Curran — father of Barney-addict Michelle-Christine.
Members can vent Tyran-nasaurus-sized wrath at the "Purple Bore-asaurus" or "inspizuid Rex."
As the strains of Barney's theme emanate from the living room, Curran goes through a stack of papers on the kitchen table filled with anti-Barney venom.
"I am sick of Barney," Greg Hudson writes from Richmond, Va. "What did we parents do to deserve this?"
Donna L. of Hollywood blames her failure to conceive on terror about bringing another Barney fan into the world.
**note wishing to join the I.He Barney Secret Society should send 50 cents and a self-addressed, stamped envelope to: THIHSS, 10071 S.W. 17th Court, Davie, Fl. 3324
11 Unpleasant feelings
(rated on a scale of 0-10)
1. Having the watchband pull the hair out of your arm. (35)
(Rated on a scale of 0-100)
The Associated Press
2. A piece of popcorn shell between your back teeth (35.7)
3. Sand in your swimsuit (38)
4. Morning breath, (55)
5. Your dog's morning breath, (65)
6. Your dog's evening breath, (75)
7. A wet toilet seat, (75)
8. Knowing that a patroiman's flashing blue light is for you (80)
9. Being drafted, (95)
10. Death (100)
11. Marriage (102)
Source: "The People's Almanac. The Book Of Lists #3" by Amy Wallace, David Wallechinsky and Irving Wallace
Tabloid Roundup More Elvis
The Weekly World News writes in their Sept. 14 issue that the recently released book, "The Life and Cuisine of Elvis" offers these two staples from Elvis' diet:
Fried Peanut Butter Sandwich
2 slices white bread; 2 heaping tablespoons peanut butter, 1/2 very ripe banana mashed with fork; 2 tablespoons butter or margarine.
Spread bread with peanut butter and banana. Fry in butter, browning both sides in skillet on medium heat.
7-Up Salad
Elvis Presley
1 package
demon gelatin; 1 package
lime gelatin; 2 cups
hot 7-Up; 1 cup
mamaiseau; 1 cup
cottage
cheese; 1 cup
crushed pineapple.
Prepare
gelatin, substi-
titating 7-Up for
water. Let cool and stir in remaining ingredients. Pour into molds.
Satan's Skull Stolen
Also from the Weekly World News, this report on the continuing saga of Satan's skull, first brought to the world's attention in the Aug. 17 issue of the News:
A sinister, horned skull believed to be that of Satan himself has been stolen from a heavily guarded research laboratory in Hungary — and police say the theft may be the work of a satanic terrorist!
Other sources believe the 2,000-year-old skull was removed from the lab and transferred to a secret vault in the Vatican by religious leaders fearful the priceless relic would fall into the wrong hands.
Hungarian archaeologist Ervin Veres said tests performed by world-renowned experts proved beyond a doubt that the artifact was the skull of the Devil.
Chevy Chase debuts late-night TV show
Jay Leno and AS050 that seemed to be the message "The Chevy Chase Show" tried hard to get across in its Fox Broadcasting Co.
premiere.
LOS ANGELES — Chevy Chase's new late-night show debuted last night with one of his trademark prat-falls, Goldie Hawn serenading the host and a hand puppet tossing his cookies.
In other words, he's Chevy Chase and competitors David Letterman, Jay Leno and Arsenio Hall are not.
"And now — he's still not ready for prime time — Chevy Chase," trumpeted announcer Ron Russ. Out strolled Chase, dapper in a navy blue suit and pocket square.
The one-time star of "Saturday Night Live" reprinted the satirical
"I knew you were going to be this enthusiastic, I would have rehearsed," a smiling Chase told the audience.
news reports that gained him fame on that NBC show in 1975-76.
Even though it was only Chase's late-night premiere, already he was ahead of the pack. Debating at 11 p.m. in most markets, "The Chevy Chase Show" enjoyed a 35-minute head start on CBS "The Late Show with David Letterman," NBC's "The Tonight Show with Jay Lenio," and the syndicated "Arsenio Hall Show."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 8, 1993
11
True freshman has quick season start
Coach praises tailback's skills
Kansas freshman tailback June Henley came to Kansas with impressive credentials out of Brookhaven High School in Columbus, Ohio.
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
He rushed for 2,582 yards and 35 touchdowns last season at Brookhaven, and the yardage set a new single-season rushing record in Ohio that was formerly held by two-time Heisman Trophy winner Archie Griffin.
Henley has showed signs of living up to his advance billing after two games on the college level by rushing for 106 yards and scoring two touchdowns.
"I adjusted very well coming here." Henley said. "Kansas plays the same way we did in high school. I feel at home."
The running back position and Lawrence are home to Henley. Last winter, Ohio State recruited Henley — who also intercepted nine passes during his senior season — strictly as a defensive back.
But Henley wanted to play running back and thus departed Columbus for Kansas coach Glen Mason's program in Lawrence. Mason said he has been impressed by Henley since he arrived in August.
"He really has stood out since he stepped on
campus," Mason said. "I think he really is ahead in development than some of the young running backs that have helped us in the past.
"L.T. Levine, a year ago, started coming around at mid-year and Tony Sands started to come around at midyear. June Henley has got the ability, size, strength and good hands to help us right now."
The freshman will be expected to take on a greater role in the running game since senior George White, who is Henley's roommate, went down with a season-ending knee injury in last week's 46-3 victory against Western Carolina. Henley now will back up sophomore Levine at the tailback position.
"We're pretty confident, but we'll have to pick it up now and fill in for George White," Henley said. "I think that we can do it."
Levine said he agreed with Henley that the team must fill in for White.
"I told June after George got hurt that we have to step up now and play good football," Levine said.
Henley celebrated his 18th birthday Saturday in grand fashion against Western Carolina with a 61-yard performance and two touchdowns. Henley enjoyed this year's birthday more than last year's.
"I had 110 yards on 10 carries and two touchdowns in a losing cause," Henley said with a wide grin on his face of his 17th birthday.
If Henley turns in the type of performance did on Saturday during the next four years, there may not be many losing causes for the Jayhawks.
20 51
Douz Hesse/KANSAN
Kansas true freshman running back June Henley evades Western Carolina's Robbie Brown during last Saturday's season home opener.
The hoops of summer
Scott, Woodberry net international tournament golds
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
As the Midwestern summer brought down sheets of rain, two Kansas basketball players reigned in international competition.
Senior forward Richard Scott and senior guard Steve Woodberry both represented the United States while playing in international tournaments this summer. Both men brought home gold medals.
Scott, 6-foot-7 and 15 pounds, played on the 1993 USA Men's World University Games Team. The games were played July 8-17 in Buffalo, N.Y. Buffalo was home to 22 teams from all over the world.
The U.S. team went 7-0, defeating Canada 95-90 in the gold medal game.
Scott said that many reasons, besides the opportunity to win a gold medal, prompted him to participate in the games.
"I wanted to play to keep in shape," Scott said. "I also wanted to play with different guys from different teams and get a little notoriety for myself."
Scott's performance was worthy of more than a little notoriety.
The Little Rock, Ark, native led the U.S.'s World University team in rebounding with an average of five per game while playing
an average of 15 minutes. As for scoring, he compiled the fifth-best at 10.3 points per game. During the third round, in a game in which the U.S. team defeated Iraq,
THE HISTORY OF JACKSON C. SMITH
the team in scoring. pouring in 21 points.
"Richard did a tremendous job for us this summer," said Reggie Minton, the Air Force coach who coached Scott on the World University team. "On a given night he could be the leading scorer or defend the opposition's leading scorer."
Richard Scott
In addition to lifting weights and gaining 15 pounds of muscle during the summer, Scott said he also improved his outside game.
"I was playing some at the three spot, so I worked on my ball-handling skills." he said. "I was working on making moves off the dribble, and I shot pretty well. If Coach lets me, I think I could hold my own out there."
While Scott and his teammates dominated in the United States, Woodberry went abroad to claim his gold.
Woodberry, 6-4 and 180 pounds, was a member of the 1993 USA Men's Confederation of Pan American Basketball Association Under 22 World Championship team. Kansas coach Roy Williams coached the squad during the qualifying tournament in Argentina.
The U.S. Under 22 Team went 3-1 in Argentina, qualifying for the World Championships, which were July 22-31 in Spain. Once in Spain, George Washington
coach Mike Jarvis relieved Williams, who began his summer camps back in Lawrence.
Woodberry, who played the majority of his minutes at the point guard position, led the team to an impressive 8-0 record in Spain and the gold, dishing out 30 assists while turning over the ball just three times.
PETER J. GOLDSMITH
Steve Woodberry
"It felt good going to another place where you're not known and beating everyone convincingly," Woodberry said.
Well, not exactly everyone.
While the average margin of victory for Woodberry's team was 21 points, the U.S. team did have its troubles with Italy, defeating the Italians 74-71 early in the tournament and again 85-72 in the semifinals.
"In addition to representing their country, which is nice, I believe it was something they enjoyed," Williams said. "Anytime that you have concentrated time in basketball, it's much more valuable than doing things on your own for a long period of time."
Williams said he was pleased with both the seniors who competed this summer and with their performances.
Tough schedule priority for Jayhawk volleyball
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswrite
A volleyball budget increase and a need to improve the level of competition have made Kansas coach Frankie Albizt's scheduling job this year more difficult than in years past.
"Last year it was not as hard," Albitz said. "I have so many choices now because I can get to the whole country."
She said that the budget increase allowed her to schedule the better teams in the nation.
Having more money to work with has given Kansas the chance to travel to more tournaments with better competition, she said.
"Normally, we had to travel to close tournments," Albitz said. "We went to the Arkansas State tournament. Arkansas State is a good team, but that was it. This year, I wanted to be really particular about who we played."
For that reason, tournaments like the Kansas Invitational will be no more beginning next year. Albitz said. Tulsa, Southeast Missouri State, McNeese and Northeastern Illinois will be participating in this year's tournament. Albizz said these teams were the only opponents on the schedule not regionally or nationally ranked.
"We could have done it two years ago, but our budget wasn't ready for it," Albiz said. "I felt it was the next step for our program. We have the ability to go to the next level.
"Next year we're not going to have the tournament because I could not get great teams in it," Albitz said. "I almost had Northern Illinois and Arkansas State nailed down for next year's tournament, but it didn't work out."
The teams in the Arby's Big Eight-Southeastern Conference Classic on Sept. 17-18 in Lin
colm, Neb., will be the toughest Kansas will face. Albitz said. Kansas will play nationally ranked No. 14 Louisiana State and No. 21 Georgia. The better opponents will assist in Albitz's primary goal of developing Kansas into a top-20 team.
"Kansas has great academics, a good practice facility, a good playing facility and great support from fans," Albizt said. "All we need is time to attract players, and it snowballs from there. Our budget is not as big as major programs. But now, at least I can breathe."
Colorado, one of the toughest teams in the Big Eight, went to the NCAA tournament in 1989, 1991 and 1992, and won the Big Eight tournament last year.
Albizt said that traditionally in the Big Eight the teams with the bigger budgets finished higher in the conference.
"There are enough good teams around the Big Eight teams that you can play just as hard a schedule with a low budget than a high one," Saidson said. "It's important for Kansas and all Big Eight teams to have a tough nonconference schedule. It helps the conference's image."
Colorado coach Brad Saindon said that his budget was not a primary factor in creating a tough schedule.
Although playing good nonconference teams prepares Kansas for the Big Eight schedule, Albiz said she was a little worried about how her team would react. She said the team was in transition right now, but it was not intimidated by tough opponents.
Albitz said that reaching the elite level might take time.
"I'd like to see it sooner," she said. "I'd like to see this year, but it usually takes five years to turn a program around."
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Golfer's commitment makes her one of Jayhawks' best
By Kent Hohlfeld
When Ann Holbrook is not on the golf course she usually can be found exercising or reading one of her Steven King novels. Those two activities along with her golf career take most of the Kansas junior's time.
"She's kind of an exercise fanatic," sophomore teammate Lynn Williamson said.
Kansan sportswriter
Williamson, who also played golf with Holbrook in high school, said that Holbrook's commitment to exercise helped make Holbrook one of the strongest people she knew. She said Holbrook's commitment combined with an optimistic outlook had helped her become one of Kansas' top golfers.
She said that the team's seniors helped her gain confidence in her play during her freshman year. She competed in only one tournament that year. Playing on a team that was dominated by seniors who made it difficult for Holbrook to make the five-person travel squad.
Holbrook said that when she was in high school in Kansas City, Kan., she had looked at Texas Christian and New Mexico but had always loved the Kansas campus. She decided to attend Kansas, following in her father's foot steps — he played golf for Kansas from 1961-1964.
"I was always in the shadow of someone in high school," Holbrook said. "When I came here I was in the shadow again, and the seniors really helped me keep my confidence."
Holbrook said the toughest part of golf was its mental aspects rather than the physical ones. She said that the step up from high school-level competition was hard to get used to.
Coach Jerry Waugh said that one of the biggest challenges for new players was dealing with the mental pressures of college-level competition.
"The physical aspect of their game doesn't change much, Waugh said. "The mental maturation is what's important."
Maturity is one aspect that Waugh said he hoped would lead to more consistency from Holbrook, who competed in all of last year's tournaments.
"She's definitely turned herself into one of our two golfers." Waugh said.
He said that he thought that fact would take some of the pressure of making the travel squad off Holbrook. He said that he hoped this would increase her confidence on the course.
Holbrook said that she wanted to see more consistency from her play this season. She thought that consistency would come from her experience last year. She said that she thought this year's team had a lot of potential.
Holbrook said that the team had the ability to compete with the big schools around the country. She said her biggest goal was to reach regional competition, in which golfers qualify for the NCAA championships. Last year, senior Holly Reynolds was the only Jayhawk to qualify for regional competition.
"This year I think we are all hungrier to make it to regional," Holbrook said.
Tigers suspend player
"In this situation, we want to do two things
10
The Associated Press
GOLFING
GOLF
—what's best for the bullduck and what's best for Jevon Crudup. Coach Norm Stewart said. "To that end, I expect him to concentrate on maintaining his status as a solid student and take advantage of the additional counseling services available through the athletic department's Total Person Program."
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Star forward Jevon Crudup was arrested Tuesday for driving drunk and has been temporarily suspended from the Missoula basketball team.
Stewart said school officials would review Crudup's semester suspension at its end in December and evaluate his future status with the basketball team then.
A first offense driving while intoxicated is a misdemeanor that usually results in a fine, she said. The maximum punishment is a $500 fine or six months in jail.
Crudup, a 6-foot-9 starting forward, and teammate Melvin Booker were cited by campus police for disturbing the peace after fighting erupted during a dance at Memorial Union on Aug. 29.
Stewart had said he planned to deal with Booker and Crudup, both seniors, "in harsh terms."
Missouri State Highway Patrol Sgt. Jerry Liley said Crudup was stopped around 3 a.m. yesterday on Interstate 70, just west of Columbia, for driving on the wrong side of the road. He was taken to the Boone County Jail and released on bond.
The case was referred to the Boone County prosecuting attorney. Assistant County Prosecutor Eva Sterner said that the case probably would not reach her for several days, and that the court's decision would depend on Crudup's driving history.
Junior Ann Holbrook practices putting yesterday at Alvamar Golf and Country Club.
Upsets continue to rock U.S. Open
The Associated Press
Who are these guys?
They came out of nowhere — mystery men ambushing Jim Courier by day and Boris Becker by night in this zeniest of U.S. Opens.
Most fans had never heard of Cedric Pioline and Magnus Larsson, yet they stood in the quarterfinals while No.1 Coruer and No.4 Becker skulked away.
And when it was over, when Courier and his snarling, cursing and ricket-dropping nowhere else to go. Pioine had a 7-5, 6-7 (7-4) 6-4, 6-4 victory over the world's top-ranked plaver.
Hours later, it was Becker's turn. With the crowd behind him, he seemed ready to make another trademark comeback from two sets down as he had done seven times before. His once-mighty serve failed him in the end and he, too, was beaten by a stranger, losing to Larsson 6-2, 6-3, 3-6, 7-5.
Immediately after Pioline's victory, a brief thunder and lightning storm struck, as if to punctuate the moment. When the storm passed, women's No. 1 Steffi Graf shakily advanced to the semifinals with a 6-2, 5-7, 6-1 victory over 1990 champion and No. 5 seed Gabriela Sabatin.
Graf, winner of the French Open and Wimbledon, will play Manuela Maleeva-Fragniere, who beat Kimiko Date 7-5. 7-5
RACQUETBALLCLUB
University of Kansas
Robinson Gymnasium Racquet Courts
NOWPRACTICING Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday 5:30-7:30PM
For more information call Brannon Hertel 865-0868
Men and Women of All Levels Welcome!
7th Year Anniversary Special
One Week Intro
TAE KWON DO
$19.95
includes uniform ($40 value)
Offer Ends 9/30/93
Open House
Sat., Sept. 11, 10 A.M. - 2 P.M.
BLACK BELT
DEMONSTRATIONS
11 A.M. - NOON - 1 P.M.
KWON DO
FREE
REFRESHMENTS
New Horizons
Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa 749-4400
Classic Value
Claris
New Version 2.0
ClarisWorks
WINDOWS EXCELLENT PRINTABLE
Want a great computer but think you can't afford one? Look into the Macintosh Color Classic. The Color Classic is a dependable, affordable proven performer. And now it is
even a better value because the Union Tech Center is featuring the Color Classic at its lowest price ever. Macintosh. The power to be your best at KU.
A. K. LEE
Macintosh Color-Classic 4/80 with ClarisWorks.
Standard Keyboard, and Macintosh Promo CD
$1099.00
KU
union
technology
center
KU
Academic Computer Supplies & Equipment
Burge Union • Level 3 • 913/864-5690
KU
union
technology
center
KU
Academic Computer Supplies & Equipment
Burge Union - Level 3 + 913/864-5690
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 8, 1993
13
Classified Directory
100s
Announcements
108 Personal
110 Business
112 Announcements
120 Announcements
124 Location
126 Location
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
202 Professional Services
235 Typing Service
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358-
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against personal gender-based benefits based on nationality, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or law.
cinnamaline
Ou raterat are hery informt that all ous
housing局 affermed in the nisswafer a
housing局 affermed in the nisswafer a
All real estate advertisers in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any pre-immigrant race, color or national origin, sex, family status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, imitation or disqualification.
1
100s
Announcements
110 Business Personals
Create Your Look!
Interchangeable wrap around shields
for the active firefight!
Killer Loops
Exclusively at The Etc. Shop
928 Mass-Downstreet
KW Women's Wear
Makeover all new fall colors, personalized selection.
No obligation to purchase 843-4280
Unique Silver Jewelry
Loops, Pendants & More!
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass-Downstreet
120 Announcements
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday Bam 4:30pm
Saturday Bam 11:30am
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:36am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
DANCE!
Pharmacy Hours
Monday Thursday 9am-4pm
Friday 6am-5pm
Saturday 10am-3pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
OK
Terrace Behind
Strong Hall
September 10
9pm-1am
Cost: $3-5
STUDENT
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SENATE
FRATS! SORORITIES!
STUDENT GROUPS!
Raise as Much as You Want in One Week!
$100... $600... $1500.
Market Applications for the hottest credit card answer - NEW GMASTER DISCOUNTS on GMC CARS! Quality for FREE FISH TUNG! Call 800-332-8285. ex 65
CHRISTMAS SKI BREAKS
LODGING • LIFTS • PARTIES • PICNICS • TAXES
JANUARY 2-16, 1994 * 5, 6 or 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT* $199
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK*
TELLURIDE
*FREE 1/2 DAY
LIFT TICKET!
MUST BOOK BY 10:15
BAPISTI STUDENT UNION. Thursday 6:30pm at the American Baptist Center, College campus. Hosts an event in the President's room, music and drama, retreats, intracultural sports, mission project friendships. A
SEA & BEACH
SUNCHOW
BREATHING
1. 800.SUNCHASE
ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE
WORKSHOP
For students
who want to study
smarter, not harder
FREE!
Thursday, September 9,
7-8 p.m.
4057 Wescoe
hired by the Student Assistance Center
TIME MANAGEMENT
WORKSHOP
take control of your time and your life FREE!
Wednesday, September 8,
7-8 p.m.
4035 Wescoe Hall
Attended the Student Assistance Center
Time Management Workshop
Take control of your time and your life FREE!
Wednesday, September 13th at the Student Assistance Center
WORK STUDY POSITIONS AVAILABLE at the School of Study. Apply at 350 numberfield of call 864-4590.
START
YOGA
September 8th
ALVAMAR
842-7766
130 Entertainmenl
Jayhawk
CAFFE
Presents
25c DRAWS -plus-
75c Monster Draws &
75c Well Drinks
TONIGHT &
EVERY WEDNESDAY
- 7 Beers on Tap
- 4 Pool Tables
- Darts & Air Hockey
- Darts & Air Hockey
It could only happen at...
THE HAWK
1340 OHIO* 843-9273
A Campus Tradition Since 1919
130 Entertainment
MONDO DISCO Industrial, Alternative, Techno,
DJ RAxza Mondays上午 am 18 to 6
DJ RAxza Wednesdays上午 am 10 to 5
140 Lost & Found
Men and Women
Found Sunsignes in a case on Jayhawk Blvd
Tuesday August 31 Call 641-496 and talk the
effects.
205 Help Wanted
Found Windbreaker in Wescoe. Call 749-1640 to identify
Found Windbreaker in Wescos Call 789-1040 to identify
Brandon Wood Retirement Community is currently hiring a full-time position in the office for 5 p.m. shift. Above minimum wage pay. Must be hard working and willing to work weekends and some holidays. Apply at 169 Inverness Library, 208 W. Main St., Bendon, ME 04301.
Bassist needed to complete all original 4 piece band. Original music in the vein of lounge, folk and rock. Proven track record. Send resume to Bassist@soundtravel.com
200s Employment
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED. Rape/ Victim Survivor Service-ASAP is seeking volunteers. Applications at, headquarters Counseling Center, KU Hospital Center and Haskell Indian Nations University.
Child Careigrants, Frida mornings 10 to 12 to 15
at IntimaMed 18th inch & Iowa. Call
423-4901 or 423-4901.
Christian day care needs enthusiastic/reliable morning assistant ASAP. Experience preferred.
Nammy full time for 2 yr old and 4mo old. References required 823-1919.
Start at $96.88 per month. Qualify for up to $16,000 education assistance
Kansas Army National Guard call (913) 842-9283
NANNIES, spend a year near NYC with a family that truly "trains" You. Call 1-800-760-1700, an ad agency.
PARKS & RECREATION DEPT
Part-time, temporary positions as Lifeguard,
Aquatic Instructor and Slimspace instructor.
Information and applications are available at Admin. Services,
Room 210 City Hall, 6th & Mass. Lawrence, KS
6044. D deadline 13秋. 19E 8M/F/D
every evening delivery person. Must have own car. Apply in person. Peking Restaurant 28& 38.
CITY OF LAWRENCE
DAKES RECREATION DEP
CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING - Earn up to $2000 / mo * world travel Summer & career employer * 1-year contract with more information call 1-264-8349 for ext. C955 Delivery Drives needed New Company hiring
restaurant delivery drivers . . .
DOCUMENTATION INTERN. Student monthly.
Deadline: 9/17/82, 20 hrs wk. Duties include organ-
ization of the kitchen; assisting in the preparation of user-oriented documentation, on-line help files and manuals describing
computer systems; assisting in the presentation of pro-
grams to students; and other duties as assigned. To apply, submit a letter of application and a current resume to Angela Barnett, Personnel officer, Computer Com-
munications, Lawrence, CA 65004-6600/EAO AAEMOYER
DOCUMENTATION LIBRARY ASSISTANT.
Deadline: 09/08/93. Salary: $43.00/hr. Duties include typing, filing, processing, distributing materials and managing all office duties; enter and edit text from a computer terminal. Required: 1. Ability to work 120 hours per day. 2. Ability to work in 2-3 hour blocks. 3. Ability to follow complex verbal and written instruction. 4. Accurate memory of job descriptions. 5. Learn WordPerfect, VM XEDIT, and FOCUS. To apply, complete a job application which is available online at www.theComputer Center/EOA/AMO EMPLOYER
Dynamic person with initiative & sales ability for time mask vending route in Laverance area. Must have transportation. Base rate + allowance Cable Vending. 0312-727-6012.
Drivers needed for a job. Meet lots of people while making good money. The Lawrence Bus Co. needs drivers for SAFERIDE. Must be 21 years old & have a good driving record. @ 22 hrs per week.
FLAG F B REFRESHES Recreation Services will be hiring BIRMURAL officials to work Flag Football. No exp necessary. $47-$49.90 Attend meeting Monday, 13 at 6 p.m. in 160 Hibernia Road.
Kansas and Burge Unionions hiring part-time, hourly for Fall Semester. Many jobs in Food Service, Catering and Campus with varying schedules. EOE Job Title: Kansas Union建造 for job specific EOE.
Job Available for dependable person with care and maintenance 149-601-7832
molly mcgees
grill & bar
Lawrence Public Schools needs a part-time computer operator. Experience on the IBM DOS-VSE operating system preferred. Apply at 3706 Clinton Parkway EOE
MOLLY MCGEES IS
NOW ACCEPTING
APPLICATIONS FOR
EXPERIENCED COOKS.
APPLY BETWEEN
2-4 P.M.
AT 2429 IOWA.
**STUDENT DISTRIBUTION TECHNIQUEN.**
Deadline: 09/19. Salary: $43.85 per hour. Duties:
- preparing and organizing materials; delivery of computer output and interoffice mail using the delivery van; paper shredding functions; on occasion will assist in receiving shipments; on occasion will work with equipment, tape library duties, and other warehouse functions; on occasion will operate forklift and assist in maintenance; assists in Open Landscape junction; assists in campus recycling junction with the campus wide recycle program; uses personal computer or mainframe software as part of record keeping function. To apply, contact Computer Center in room 202. EO2 AAEMPLOYER
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
Students guaranteed hourly wages and great bonus for good phone voice. Day-even shifts
Students guaranteed hourly wage and great bonus for good phone voice. Day/evening shifts
Taco Bell now hiring for or part time day or evening help. Apply in person at 1238 W or 468
9:48AM
The Kansas and Burge Uions hiring part-time, hourly in the following areas: Food Service, Catering and Custodial. Many jobs with varying days of work, Level 1, Kansas Union for job species EOE
$15 Today $3U This week
Summer's over. Do you need $?$ THE
week's work to place to work! We
are currently recruiting for
Taking applications for dishwasher/kitchen utility
vacancy Country Club. Ask for Frank
843-260-296
STATE FARM
IS A GREAT
PLACE TO
WORK!
Banquet servers
Restaurant wait staff
Hostess
Cooks
Room attendants
If interested apply at the Holidome 200 McDonald Dr. EOE
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
225 Professional Services
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALKING WELCOME!
a lot to offer:
competitive salaries,
pleasant work
atmosphere,
opportunities for training and advancement, excellent benefits package.
WALK-INS WELCOME!
Have fun harmonizing mind and body. Learn Tai Chi
have the eating stress. Call Marcia Atkinson at 612-348-7500.
State Farm has
in the Insurance industry
up-todate equipment,
STATE FARM
LIFE LAMP INSURANCE
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
Macintosh repairs and upgrades
Friendly, Affordable. In-Home Service
DUI 84-984 80-984
Prompt abortion and preacute services
L. Clinton D. M 841-5716
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce criminal & civil matters The law offices of
University Business Career Fair Sept. 9.1993.
Resumes
1:00pm-6:00pm Holiday Inn/Holidome Convention Center
AnEqual Opportunity Employer
DONALDG.STROLE
benefits packa
Great career
opportunity
Spanish tutor. Experienced teacher and fluent grad student available for private tutoring sessions. Flexible hours and reasonable rates. Call Scott #842-2811.
If interested please visit with a State Farm
- coverletters
- writing
- consultation
Transcriptions
1012 Mass 842-4619
Suite 201-upstairs
White's Music Has Guitar Lessons Jazz Rock
Blues, and music. Sign up with White 12.8th E. Sth.
235 Typing Services
CC Deskbook Publishing: Resumes, Cover Letters,
Brochures, Fliers, Term Paper, Newsletters
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor
1-der Women Word Processing into accurate pages of letter
type. 842 206 397
Are you Makin' the grade
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your typing needs
call Makin' the grade at 865-2853
X
I'll ask you this thing:
call Makin' the Grade at 865-2855
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
19'color T. V. Queen waveless water bed. Queen water bed frame. Table kitchen. Table barbecue, filing cabinets, posters, kitchen items & telephone. Call 842-3881.
1993 Yamaha 200 Street bike Rims and looks great.
1996 Yamaha 250 Street bike Rims and looks great.
1996 Schwinn Skipper mini bike bi 15 in $130
1997 Schwinn Skipper mini bike bi 15 in $130
286 "Lunchbox" portable computer 40 HD.1.2
288 "Lunchbox" portable computer 6941 4138 days 843
289 "Lunchbox" Ask for Day 45
3-drawer wood dresser. Best offer 843-6138
Image Appiewer II Printer for Apple or Macintosh
Image Appiewer II Printer for Apple or Macintosh
Use Toshiba $6.00 Call 800-732-1456
Use Toshiba $6.00 Call 800-732-1456
Fall Clearance. All adult tapes on sale £9 95 or
Miracle Two. Adult Haskell: £499, or Miracle
Two. Adult Haskell: £499.
Beds, deks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
908 Mass.
For Sale Mac Plus with Evoers 30 MB Hardware
for sale for $800. Call David R. Caffedd for
solr software.
HELP! I "meews-wrable." My neighbors want me to stay in, and now there a puppy, too; me a anneted, 3-yr old, de-clawed cat. FREE to a loving home. 841-3657
King waterbed, 8 drawer pedestal, mirrored floor board, plus all the extras: $100 Ibo B4-84-1090
KONA "kiluaes" Min Bike 18", Shim XT, Tange Frame, Rock Conck, Titanium color. Gor
3 bbr 2 apt for aft Campus Place Very close to campus. Reasonable rest. Smoker please Call
405 For Rent
MAC SE 45 mg hard drive. 2.5 meg RAM
include unregistered version of Clarock Works.
Macintosh LCD with 4 megram. HD 10, 8" color monitor, HP Desktop printer In Jet Printer, keyboard, modem and software. $2000 Call 841-0387.
$59.99 per book. Last sale! tax $50
3 BR, 2 bath apt. for rent, Campus Place, Close to Campus. Reasonable rent. Smoker 840-6099
Extra nice, quiet, and spacious 2 bath apt. Low utilities, has central air, dishwasher, on bus route. No parking.
Large (18x18 ft) for non-smoking female; 3 m from campus. 101 UTL, PLL Call 749-0166
**Desk. Call:** Day 1-296 8383, Evenings 841-2844
**Moving Sales Compet.** b墨 lacquer glass table end table only 8102 *Yashica auto 815-36mm canam*
*Solar phone* 815-36mm canam *Cosmic cellular phone* weather case 815-40 (No contour)
*Battery Charger*
HEATHERWOOD
VALLEY
APARTMENTS
2040 Heatherwood
*2 Bedroom, 1 $1/2 Bath$425
*3 Bedroom, 2 Bath$550
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
Call Now!843-4754
One way ticket to Boston via Caliincoln; must be used by 15th of September $100 or best offer. Call
Panasonic word processor XK-W990 like new
and completely functional with RAM
BAM memory, the speeden妙算 and more!
The Panasonic word processor XK-W990 like new
and completely functional with RAM
BAM memory, the speeden妙算 and more!
Heptile Sales Caliburn Boas $99 Buy Iguanas $29 Burnes P$115 etc. care Information included. Call Jim i816-587-2471. Will deliver from KCV, Visa, Mastercard
Stereo system like new. Sny receive CD/player. Pioneer cassette speaker. Teachs bass E.Q. Remote. $1500 now, new $500 Two bar stocks, solid oak. $209, new $4 for the pair 81-123
*vona-16 and one half, new case & Steinhow, pro-fessional quality.* 913-807-4516
340 Auto Sales
941-8055
1985 Honda Accord Reliable, loaded new tires
941-8055 Call 866-4844
1973 Dodge Coronet, four-door, $900 Call Rick at
41-803-2000.
1. **Honda Accord** Accelerate loaded new tires.
2. **Mazda CX-5** Accelerate loaded new tires.
3. **MIT Tredia** for sale $1,000.00 o b 100.00
4. **BMW X5** Accelerate loaded new tires.
The best place to live at KU is in KC!!!
JEFFERSON PLACE
Reliable transportation 80 Pord Pinto /Best offer
Carry Terry at 841-2746
LEVIT'S 501's, will pay up to $13.00 and $10.00 for Levi's Jean Jackets #41-046
764-1471
119th & I-35
=
370 Want to Buy
Renta WASHER & DRYER For Only $40 a Month
A
- No Deposit
- No Deposit
* Free Maintenance
* GE Two Speed, Heavy Duty
Large Capacity
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Delta Corporation
842-8428
3301 Clinton Parkway Ct., Suite #5 Lawrence, KS 66047
Sublet at Graystone Apts! Call Phil at (816) $66.
$7535 for a good deal
Bx phone: 864-4358
430 Roommate Wanted
How to schedule an ad:
Resistanz firmae scharf zu harf 2 bief p um largeur von firmie Unterarm zur shared 2 bief p um largeur von firmie Unterarm
Responsible roommate to share upleats 3 blt 2 bath townhouses in Miami FL at 824-965-1068 Call al after Cafmil Aafter cal 824-965-1068
- By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
Retired grandmother wants to share modded home reference to books to be 10 by 13. Returns to box at 10
Calculating Rates:
2 NS Peking 3rd roommate in townhome WTD,
840-6236 Leave message
840-6236 Leave message
Third roommate at Orchard Corners apt.
$210 + 5 utilities. Call evenings 842-3978.
- By Mail 11 Squirrel Print, Lawrence, AR 80502
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have gifted you 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.
4d-aligned in may be billed to your MasterGard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
1100 FIREFLAT 592
Stop by the Kaiser offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be spread, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa.
Classified Information and order form
Refunds:
**UC Berkeley Math Journal**
Based on the base of the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of gates the ad decreases). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of times in the ad by the rate at which it qualifies for. That amount equals the number of days inserted into each gate.
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00.
When canceling a classified job that was charged at MasterCard or Credit card, the advertiser account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds can cancel ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash not available.
Rates per line per day
DEADLINE for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to
10 personal 140 last & loved 385 for sale
11 business personal 205 hot wanted 340 auto sales
12 announcements 225 professional services 360 miscellaneous
13 entertainment 225 tyres services
Classifications
Cost per line per day
1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 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 1.00 .65 .60 .55 .35
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
Date ad begins: Total days in paper.
Total ad cost: Classification:
Address:
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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:
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Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University of Dalrymbe Karnal, 119 Squamish Street Falmouth, Lawrence KS. 68045
*The University of Dalrymbe Karnal, 119 Squamish Street Falmouth, Lawrence KS. 68045*
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1983 For Works, Inc. Goal by Universal Press Syndicate
"I dunno, Andy... Mom said we were never to go near the old Sutter place."
14
HUNDRED METERS, YOU MUST THEN BE ABLE TO DEBATE THEM ON CURRENT EVENTS, THE BOND MARKET AND LATEST HOCKEY SCORES
Wednesday, September 8, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SHOWING A FIRM COMMITMENT TO THE IDEAL OF DEVELOPING A STRONG MIND
Speed-reading.
University of Houston
Read all
about it! College just
got weirder
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
Machines
Sprint
COLLEGIATE
FONCARD™
816 854 1138 1234
Dial 1-800-877-8000. At Tone, Dial 0 + Area Code + Number
At Tone, Enter FONCARD Number.
THIS COLLEGIATE FONCARD IS SO EASY, IT'S WEIRD.
Free goodies? That's weird. And how about 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
weirdest thing of all.
---
Sprint.
Be there now.
1. 800.795.5971
FIND OUT HOW WEIRD IT IS. CALL FOR YOUR COLLEGIATE FONCARD TODAY!
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.
EVENT, IT'S NOT ENOUGH TO MERELY DEFEAT YOUR OPPONENTS AFTER TWO
STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON CONDUCT SWIM RACES WHILE PERUSING THE DAILY COUGAR. IN THIS
]
SPORTS: Iniuries plague the Kansas football team. Page 11.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103, NO.14
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9,1993
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Former KU student charged in shooting
KC physician shot in head, remains stable
By Scott J. Anderson and Kathleen Stolle Kansan staff writers
A former KU student has been charged with attempted first-degree murder in the shooting of her father, a Kansas City, Mo., physician, in their Lake Quivira home.
Charles Castleberry, 49, was shot once in the head while he was in bed
Monday. He was listed in serious but stable condition yesterday at Overland Park Regional Medical Center, a nursing sunsprey said.
His daughter, Caroline Castleberry, also faces an alternative charge of aggravated battery. A Johnson County judge and jury will decide between the two charges.
The Johnson County Sheriff's Department is investigating a claim made by Caroline Castleberry that she had been abused by her father.
Caroline Castleberry was enrolled at the University from Fall 1990 to Spring 1993, said Richard Morrell, University registrar. In Spring 1993, she was a senior in the College of Labor Arts and Sciences and a biology
major. She was not enrolled for Fall 1903
A KU student who knows Castleberry said she was surprised by the news when she heard it from a mutual friend Monday evening.
"I was shocked," said Yumi Chikamori, a sophomore from Japan. "She's not violent at all."
Chikamori said that Charles Castleberry seemed overprotective and that Caroline Castleberry was very obedient. For example, she said Castleberry had to call her father every night last year at 9:30. It was his way of making sure his daughter was in her room by then, Chikamori said.
"Actually, she wanted to move to an apartment, but her father wouldn't let
her," Chikamori said. Before she made any important decisions, she had to call her father, said Chikamori. Charles Castleberry was not aware that his daughter had a boyfriend, she said.
McCollum Hall president Amanda
Harkins lived on the same floor as
Castleberry last year but did not talk
to her often.
Castleberry was living in McColum Hall even though she was not enrolled at KU.
University housing officials knew
Castleberry was not enrolled for the fall semester, Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said housing officials review a list of students each week who are not enrolled but are living in residence halls. Castleberry appeared on that list this week.
"We check those people out individually and take the appropriate action." Stoner said.
Johnson County District Attorney Paul Morrison said a family argument had occurred before the shooting but could not comment on the abuse allegations.
Kevin Moriarty, Caroline Castleberry's attorney, could not be reached for comment yesterday.
L. Ivan Wicke of the Johnson County Sheriff's Department said Caroline Castleberry was arrested at her father's home about 3:20 a.m. Monday after respuestas responded to a 911 call. She appeared in Johnson County District Court on Tuesday. She was released from custody after a $100,000 bond was posted. As a condition of her bond, she was ordered not to have contact with her father.
Her next court appearance was scheduled for Sept. 24.
kansan staff writers David Stewart and Brian James contributed information to this story.
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
Goalie on guard
Steve Aaronson, Flossmoor, III, junior, closes in on goaiei Jim Mead, Hastings, Neb. Junior. The two play roller hockey with friends about two or three times a
Senate divided over funding of famed speaker
By Donella Hearne
Student Senate passed a bill last night providing funds to bring world-renowned scholar Noam Chomsky to speak on campus Nov. 12 during Palestine Heritage Week.
Kansan staff writer
In the speech he will give at KU, "Manufacturing Consent: Noam Chomsky in the Media," Chomsky will discuss the media's use of language to influence the public's perceptions of events.
Nine University departments are providing funds to pay part of Chomsky's $8,000 speaking fee. The bill,
proposed to Student Senate by the
General Union of Palestinian Students
of Kansas University, asked for
$2,000 toward Chomsky's honorarium.
Chonsky, professor of linguistics at MIT, has received numerous honors for his studies in history and linguistics. He has received honorary doctorates of literature and has written many books and articles on politics and linguistics.
Debate over the bill at the Student Senate meeting focused on Chomsky's political views.
The materials Marks presented included excerpts from a book by Warner Cohn called, "The Hidden Alliances of Noam Chomsky." Sections of the book, which Marks said were highlighted by Golzar, accused Chomsky of being affiliated with neo-Nazi groups in France and of denying the occurrence of the Holocaust.
Marks said Golzar asked him to express her concern over Chomsky's political affiliations.
Jamal C. Saeh, graduate student from Bethlehem, Israel, said he was shocked at the opposition to the proposal to bring Chomsky to KU.
Tim Marks, journalism senator, read from a memo that he said was given to him by Lisa Golzar, Liberal Arts and Sciences senator. The memo proposed an amendment to cut all the bill's funding for Chomsky's speech. Golzar could not attend the meeting soon not be reached for comment.
"He does not speak on neo-Nazis, he does not portray himself as a neo-Nazi," Saeh said.
I don't understand how anyone could oppose a speaker of such caliber. Kansas does not get this kind of honor often."
Atmospheric science may lose 2 of its3 degrees
Students, faculty fight for program
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
In October 1992, KU's atmospheric science program was admitted to the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research, a national association of universities.
But despite its growing reputation, the atmospheric science program now faces losing two of its three degrees.
When Joe Eaglerman, professor of atmospheric science, returned from the corporation induction ceremony in Boulder, Colo., he found a letter on his desk from Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor.
Atmospheric science has been one of the hardest hit by the University's academic program review. Now students and faculty are fighting for their program.
The letter said the master's and bachelor of arts degrees in atmospheric science had been recommended for elimination.
"If you want to have a diverse University, you have to have an atmospheric science degree," said Andrew Kula, Leawood senior, and director of KU's severe storms intercept project. KU's academic program review rated the master's degree program "good" but "peripheral" to the University and cited the program's lack of faculty.
"I was completely frustrated." Eagleman said "We've never had a lack of interest."
Meyen said that the University wanted to reallocate resources to strong programs that had both large student and faculty involvement.
"That's a major issue if there is not enough faculty," he said.
In 1989 the department of physics and astronomy did a comparison of atmospheric science faculty in the Big Eight Conference. KU had the fewest number of faculty members with only three. Colorado had the most with 62.
Atmospheric science's lack of faculty had been addressed several years earlier. In 1855 and 1990 the Board of Regents recommended that more professors be hired for the program. More professors were never hired.
In 1989 and 1991 the department of physics and astronomy conducted departmental reviews which recommended that more faculty be hired for the atmospheric science program. The 1991 department review stressed the importance of the program and recommended that it become a separate department.
Kula said if the degrees would be discontinued, the lack of atmospheric science research could hurt the program and the University.
"You can't put a price on research. It's viable to the future field of weather forecasters."
Robyn Weeks, president of KU's chapter of the American Meteorology Society, said if the degrees were discontinued it would hurt the state since KU had the only atmospheric science program in Kansas.
"I can't see anybody coming here if there isn't research," she said. "I think it would be very detrimental to Kansas, especially to such an agricultural state."
The elimination of the degrees would have other adverse effects for the atmospheric science program. Eagleton said.
Graduate teaching assistants have been teaching Introductory Meteorology. Without a master's program, there would be no one to teach those classes. Eagleman said.
The program review hearings should begin by the end of September, said Robert Friauf, professor of physics and astronomy and head of University Council.
The hearings will be conducted by the academic policies and procedures committee. After the hearings the committee will make its recommendations to University Council. Council will review the committee's findings and make its own recommendations to David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs. Shulenburger will make his recommendation to Chancellor Gene Budig, who will make the final decision.
If the atmospheric science program degrees are discontinued, Budig will announce date when students will no longer be admitted to the program. Students who are enrolled in the degree programs would have three years to finish their degrees.
Eagleman said that faculty members would not lose their jobs if the degrees are discontinued.
INSIDE
Dance fever
Billie Mahoney, who has produced her own dance show, is teaching two classes this week with the University Dance Company.
Sunflower Cable may drop KSHB and KMBC
(1)
Page 9.
Networks may request fees for broadcasts
By Brian James
Kansan staff writer
Cable TV viewers soon may be seeing a snowy TV screen when they turn to sunny Beverly Hills.
Sunflower Cablevision and the Fox affiliate, KHSB-TV, Channel 41, and the area ABC affiliate, KMBC-TV, Channel 9, have until Oct. 6 to reach an agreement that would allow Sunflower to continue carrying their stations.
Unless Sunflower receives permission from KMBC and KSHB, which carries popular programs such as "Beverly Hills 90210" and "Star Trek The Next Generation," the cable service will no longer be able to carry the stations, said Dennis
Knipfer, general manager of Sunflower Cablevision.
New federal regulations enacted by Congress allow broadcasting networks such as Fox and ABC to charge local cable systems to use their programs.
Both KSIB and KMBC, based in Kansas City, Mo, are asking that Sunflower pay for its programming.
"We don't feel it's fair to pay for broadcasting that's available to everyone else for free," Knipfer said. "I'm puzzled by their reluctance to meet our terms."
Dino Dinovitz, general manager of KMBC, and Sue Kiel, national affiliate relations manager for the Fox network, would negotiate with Sunflower this week.
Knapfer would not disclose how much the affiliates were seeking for their programs, but he said the eventual cost to Sunflower Cablevision customers would be "substantial."
"We would have to soak up the cost ourselves until 1994, and then pass those extra costs along to customers in 1994." Knipfer said. "Those are things we don't want to do."
Knipfer said most television owners still should be able to receive the channels with regular TV antennas if an agreement was not reached.
"Star Trek is supposed to be this futuristic show," said Janus Jaworski, Prairie Nature sophomore. "Now we'll all be seeing snow and trying to fix the picture with rabbit ears."
The channels are not being eliminated from the Lawrence area all together," he said. "Customers would still be able to get the channels, though the picture would not be as good as cable."
The possibility of Fox going off cable in Lawrence has infuriated some KU students.
Sunflower customers will still be able to get ABC shows through KTKA-TV in Topeka. Fox viewers may have a more difficult time picking up the signal without cable, Knipfer said.
when Dan Redmond, Pittsburg, Kan,
senior, was told of $ ^{\mathrm{f}} $ Fox's possible departure,
he started counting on his fingers how many new "Simpsons" episodes he would be able to see.
"They want to get us both ways," Redmond said. "Everyone is wanting to get a piece — cable, and now the networks — and we're the ones getting screwed."
inugnare. "It wouldn't be that much more expensive than those channels," he said.
Chad Horsely, Topeka junior, said he thought the cable company was at fault.
sive to carry those chlamas 'lured'
Horsewise said you could be irritated
by their scent.
"We just got cable in all the dorms this year, and now they're taking away the best channel," he said.
2
Thursday. September 9. 1993
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A video, "Decade of Destruction:
The Killing of Chico Mendes," will be shown at noon today in Alcevo D at the Kansas Union. For more information, call McClyte McAulay at 864-4141.
Canterbury House will celebrate
Becairist at noon today at Dancroft
Your branch office
KU NOW will meet at 5:30 p.m. today in the International Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-7337.
The KU AGC Student Chapter will hold a general meeting and "Subway Social" at 6 p.m. today in 232 Art and Design. For more information, call Charlie Sun at 832-2170.
The KU Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m, today in Pariors A, B and C at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Erick Lindsey at 841-
Intervarsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight in the International Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call David Zimmerman at 864-7117.
■ The Emily Taylor Women's Center will sponsor a discussion, "Respect: Do you know how to get it?" at 7 ontun in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-3552.
United We Stand, America at KU will meet at 7 and 8:30 tonight at the entrance of Anchutz Library. For more information, call Richard Heap 984-1802.
The Student Assistance Center will hold an "Academic Excellence Workshop" at 7 tonight in 4057 Wesco Hall. For more information, call 864-4064.
■ ichthus will meet at 8:30 tonight in the Big Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mark Wintner at 843-2250 or Noel Storey at 749-
Anmnest International will hold a letter-writing session at 8 tonight at the Glass Onion, 624 W. 12th St.
KU Democrats will meet at 8 tonight in the Regionalist Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Stacy McHugh at 749-0338.
Lesbian, Bisexual Gay Services of Kansas will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Frontier room at the Burge Union.
Jayhawkier Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 tonight in the Pioneer Room at the Burge Union. For more information, call John Dale at 864-1115.
The KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 tonight in 130 Robinson. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445.
A story on Page 3 of yesterday's Kansan contained incorrect information. Thalia Toooke, San Francisco senior, was a volunteer last summer for Amigos De Las Americas.
Open 24 hours.
WEATHER
Omaha: 77'/46'
LAWRENCE: 83'/51
Kansas City: 82'/53'
St. Louis: 81'/56'
Wichita: 83'/51'
Tulsa: 84'/61'
CORRECTION
WEATHER
Omaha: 77°/46°
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 87°/66°
Chicago: 73°/50°
Houston: 93°/65°
Miami: 92°/71°
Minneapolis: 69°/46°
Phoenix: 77°/42°
Salt Lake City: 84°/54°
Seattle: 80°/55°
LAWRENCE: 83°/51°
Kansas City: 82°/53°
St. Louis: 81°/56°
Wichita: 83°/51°
Tulsa: 84°/61°
TODAY
Tomorrow Saturday
Partly cloudy
DW winds 5-10
Partly cloudy
NW winds 5-10
520 W. 23rd St.·749-5392
Sun
Sunny
High: 83'
Low: 51'
Source: The Associated Press
Partly cloudy SW winds 5-10
High: 78°
Low: 52°
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 9, 1993
3
Task force results questioned
Opponents claim sticking to system stymies progress
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Peter Braithwaite, Evanston, Ill., senior said he was sick of task forces
Braithwaite, a member of the African-American Student Concerns Task Force since its formation in May 1991, said the task force's report had been lost in University bureaucracy for longer than necessary.
"Instead of actually doing it, they threw it right back into the committee system," he said.
Braithwaite said the administration had fallen short of expectations by appointing committees to study the task force's recommendations on discrimination policies, African-American retention and working with
African-American alumni.
He also said the administration's memorandum instructing deans to hire more African-American faculty fell short of expectations. The task force recommended increasing African-American faculty from 2 percent to 4 percent by the year 2000.
Braithwaite's complaint centers around a common tool of KU administrators — the task force. Task forces are committees made up of students, faculty, administrators and staff appointed by the administration. This year, the University has responded to two task forces — the African-American Task Force in January and the Sexual Harassment Task Force in July — and plans to respond to the Gay and Lesbian Task Force within three weeks.
of time when you don't get results," he said.
Braithwaite said the task force system could work against minority groups. By working within the system, they actually may lose momentum, he said.
"Sitting down in meetings is a waste
The administration's response depends on the nature and scope of the task force, said Sandra Wick, a member of the Sexual Harassment Task Force. She said task forces either could be narrowly focused, such as the Sexual Harassment Task Force, or they could be broad, such as the Gay and Lesbian and the African-American task forces.
Wick, assistant director of the college honors program, said her task force was requested by Chancellor Gene Budig and appointed by Del Shankel, former executive vice chancellor. It came in the wake of allegations that Emil Tonkovich, professor of law, sexually harassed his female students. Tonkovich was dismissed from the University in July on grounds of moral turpitude.
The task force's findings and recommendations led to the administration's consensual relationship policy announced last month, Wick said.
She said that in the past task force recommendations were a way to ignore an issue.
"They would come out of a task force, and Governance would look at them and say, 'Oh, gee, now what do we do?" Wick said.
Although Wick said she was pleased with the attention task forces had received lately, she said appointing a task force still could slow down progress.
Scott Manning, Lawrence graduate student and co-director of Lesbian, Bisexual and Gay Services of Kansas, said he thought task forces were the best way for minority groups to be heard by the administration.
"If you've got an issue that's boiling around campus but you don't want to deal with it directly, appoint a task officer," she said. "That my cynical side."
"It's what always happens," he said. "The best way for the administration to deal with problems is to appoint a task force."
But Manning also said the administration dealt with all such problems by appointing task forces regardless of the situation.
"You look at the issue,you give input and you choose the people who will give you the best thinking," he said.
Meyen said the issues minority groups face were too important for unilateral action.
"It's a very indirect way of dealing with things," he said. "It's almost a stereotype. A problem comes up, let's appoint a task force."
Task forces are important to delicate situations, said Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor. He said he recently appointed a task force on child care on campus and he wanted the opinions of different people.
"There are some issues which require collective thinking," he said. "There are some issues that require print — a narrative — to be clearly understood."
Rains bring snails, slugs
By Shan Schwartz
Kansan staff writer
When Lisa Molina walks up the sidewalk on Mississippi Street to campus everyday, there are creepy, crawly obstacles she often has to avoid.
Snails and slugs.
Straits and slugs,
"This summer, when it
was raining, there were so
young you couldn't miss
'em," said Molina, Knob
Nob, Mo. senor.
"I definitely try to step around them, because I don't want to crush them. Especially when I'm bare-foot," she said.
"All of the snails around here are air-breathers, and they can drown." Fautin said. "They're not adapted to extracting oxygen from water; they're getting it from the air."
The wet weather in Lawrence this year may be a cause for more sidewalk snail sightings, said Daphne Fautin, adjunct professor of systematics and ecology. She said the snails could be coming to the surface for air.
Fautin said another possibility was that the cool evenings were causing the snails to seek out warmer places to live. Fautin said decomposing organic matter, such as a rotting tree trunk, produced heat that could keep a snail alive for the winter.
"When water freezes, the snails do too." she said.
"Maybe they're seeking a place where they be less
likely to freeze."
Another reason for seeing snails or slugs on the sidewalk, Fautin said, was that they couldn't make it all the way across the dry surface.
Snails lay down a slime trail and glide on top of it, Fautin said. The slime is made mostly of water, and if a sidewalk does not contain any moisture, Fautin said, a snail must use water from its own body to produce the slime.
So what should one do if concerned about a snail on the sidewalk? Fautin said probably the best thing to do would be to pick it up and toss it back into the grass.
Snails are not the only noticeable creatures on campus this time of year.
Dog Day Cicadas, commonly known as locusts, are usually heard at night with their chirp-like songs.
"they're singing during the day, too," said Robert Brooks, collection manager of the museum of entomology in Snow Hall. Brooks said that there was less noise at night, making the cicadas easier to hear.
Brooks said the males sing two different songs to attract female mates. A long-range song is sung to attract females to the vicinity, he said. The song changes to a short-range song once a female is visible.
SURPRISE
Brian Vandervliet / KANSAN
Calling attention
Midshipman fourth class Chris Willits, Leeward freshman, is inspected closely by midshipman first class Tim Newland, Lawrence senior, while staff sergeant Todd Manyx watches with a discerning eye.
ON THE RECORD
A student's parking permit valued at $53 was taken from a car in the 500 block of Mississippi Street on Friday, Lawrence police reported.
A student's KUID and drivers license were taken in the 700 block of New Hampshire Street on Monday, Lawrence police reported.
tools, valued together at 8170, were taken from a car in the 1000 block of West 23rd Street on Tuesday, Lawrence police reported.
A student's radar detector and bag of
A student's parking permit valued at $53 was taken from a car in parking lot No. 50 on Tuesday, KU police reported.
A student's purse and its contents, valued at $36, were taken from the
ladies locker room at Robinson Center on Tuesday. KU police reported.
A student's car was damaged and a stereo, amplifier, speakers, compact discs and sunglasses, valued together at $1,510, were taken from the car in parking lot No. 112 on Tuesday, KU police reported. Damage to the car was estimated at $100.
Ruling on gay mom upsets local residents
By Shan Schwartz
Kansan staff writer
Homosexual students and parents in Lawrence are angered by a Virginia court ruling that has taken a boy away from his mother because she is a lesbian.
Circuit Judge Buford Parsons ruled Tuesday that Sharon Bottoms "immoral" relationship with live-in lover April Wade "renders her an unfit parent."
The case pitted Sharon Bottoms against her mother, Kay Bottoms, who said that Sharon's two-year-old son would be mentally and physically harmed if raised by the lesbian couple.
Parsons said that the "extraordinary nature" of Bottom's deficiency as a parent outweighed legal presumption in keeping the mother and child together.
Diane Silver, a Lawrence resident who is also a lesbian and a mother of a 7-year-old boy, was angered by the ruling.
"It's a terrifying decision based on ignorance," Silver said. "It's terrifying because it says a mother can lose her child, no matter how good a mother she is, simply because she's a lesbian."
"You cannot judge a person by a group they're a part of. The judges have to look at parents as individuals. Lesbians can be good parents, and lesbians can be bad parents, just like anyone else."
The judge also noted that Sharon Bottoms admitted to engaging in oral sex, which is a felony in Virginia.
Kay Bottoms had the judge that the child calls Wade "Da-Da"—proof, she said, that the boy could grow up so comfortable with her. She walked through a mug from a woman.
Sharon Bottoms said that she and her lover had kissed in front of the boy but that they had never engaged in sex in front of him.
Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare, said the ruling exemplified the rawness and destructive mythology about gays and lesbians.
"It's avery heterosexist bias," Dailey said. "That's saying that if a person isn't heterosexual, they can't be a good parent. And we know that there are a good number of homosexuals who are good parents."
Dailey said that engaging in oral sex was no reason for someone to be labeled as an unfit parent.
If that is so, in the state of Virginia, probably sixty to seventy percent of all parents are immoral, and they should lose custody of their children, too.
"It was probably a conservative, moralistic judge. He reached for a law to justify his decision."
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Thursday, September 9, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
The Lawrence Jewish Community Center was vandalized on Sept. 4.
THE BACKGROUND
There has been a nationwide resurgence in hate groups, in particular skinheads. The last year has also seen a frightening rise in neo-Nazi activities in Germany.
THE OPINION
'Terrorism' from hate groups must end now
Lawrence is believed by most of its citizens to be an oasis of tolerance and humanity. This vision was shattered for many by the recent vandalism of the Jewish Community Center. The swastika, which was part of the graffiti, is a symbol of importance to many hate groups, including the skinheads and neo-Nazis. The attack last weekend may have been just a couple of kids who went too far in misbehaving. However, the perpetrators knew what to target and with what symbol; this makes it dangerous.
When the economy in an area or nation declines, the incidents of racial and/or ethnic violence rise. Simply, this is due to many people's need to have a scapegoat. One must ask: Are the youth of Lawrence following the trend of rising hate groups? According to a report from the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rithin in New York, the number of white supremacist skinheads has grown from 1,500 members in twelve states in 1988 to an estimated 3,500 in forty states this year.
Those facts, along with the violent rise of neo-Nazism in Germany, should cause everyone to ask what he or she can do. Whether the action would be to educate a younger sibling or to write government officials insisting on hate-crime legislation, this type of terrorism must be stopped.
MICHELLE SMITH FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
New enrollment process will save time, money
The list of complaints surrounding the University's present enrollment system is as long as the enrollment lines.
However, many students' wishes will come true when computer enrollment is implemented at KU during the summer of 1994. Adapting a computer enrollment format is a progressive step that should prove to be beneficial for all students.
The new system, called distributed enrollment, will streamline enrollment as students will enroll from numerous computer terminals throughout the campus. Students also will be able to add and drop classes, change their addresses and obtain transcripts through the computer system.
Distributed enrollment will benefit both students and administrators. Students no longer will be faced with long, frustrating enrollment lines, and administrators should receive fewer complaints with the new approach.
The effectiveness and cost efficiency of distributed enrollment have been proven at other universities. Only minimal expenditures are required to initiate distributed enrollment, and student support for distributed enrollment is great.
Distributed enrollment is a much-needed system that will benefit the University as a whole. Students and administrators should applaud the decision to implement distributed enrollment.
COLLEEN McCAIN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
KC TRAUER, Editor
AMY CASEY Business manager
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
AMY CASEY
AMYSTUMBO
Assistant to the editor J.R. Clairborne
News Stacy Friedman
Editorial Terrilyn McCormick
Campus Ben Grove
Sports Krietl Foster
Photo Klp Chin, Ramese Kneeer
Features Erza Wiese
Graphics John Paul Fogel
AMY STUMBO Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ... Ed Schagar
Regional sales mgr ... Jennifer Perrier
National sales mgr ... Jennifer Evanson
Co-op sales mgr ... Blythe Focht
Production mgrs ... Jennifer Blowey
Kate Burgess
Marketing director ... Shellie Hickman
Brian Funco
Classified mgrs ... Janice Davis
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, a reference line, the class name, the class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. **Guest column** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be asked to request the right to re-edit letters, guest column and cartoons. They can submit their work online at www.kansas.edu.
MAX NELLY Chicago Inhouse
IT'S A HUGE DINOSAUR! TURN AROUND!
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Lessons learned shopping not in classes, libraries
Frustrated with the quality of your education? Dissatisfied with your classes? You're probably looking in the wrong places. Most people think of classes and libraries when they think of their university education. Wrong-o. Don't feel bad, I used to have that very same misconception. My eyes were opened, though, the other day in the supermarket.
"You ever had these? These crackers?" He pointed to some crackers behind me, which were on sale. "I always get some of these. Every time I go to the store, I get some of these. They're better than the name brand ones. Not too tough; and crunchy, but strong enough so that you can spread peanut butter on 'em. They don't make a big crumble mess when you eat them, either. You can practically live on these things. Put peanut but-
All I needed was some coffee. So I went to the coffee aisle (What an inspired idea). Behind me, I could hear a man asking someone something. No one answered. He came over closer to me and asked again, louder, so that I could hear. I turned around and found that he and I were the only people there. Quickly deduced that he must be asking his question of me. Unfortunately, I was so busy deducing that I didn't hear the question. He asked again:
STAFF COLUMNIST
RYAN McGEE
ter, cheese, bean dip, jam, anything on 'em. Or just eat 'em plain. And they're on sale right now, too. They do that here. Every couple of weeks, they put these things on sale. Seventy cents a box. Can't beat that."
I suspected this guy was paid to impersonate a shopper and go around playing up the sales in the store. I guessed he'd done his job, and would go away soon. Wrong.
"When that happens, I stock up. Seventy cents a box, you can bet I'm gonna stock up. I fill two or three carts with just these crackers. Let 'em sit on my shelf instead of theirs. I mean, they're just gotta jack up the price again. Get 'em while the gin's good."
"I try to do that whenever I can. Reminds me of when, back in the Carter administration, I would wait for a sale on toilet paper, then buy it by the case. That was when I still had
all of my property, and they were taxing like crazy, so I was pretty bad off. That’s where they went wrong, you know. Taxed too much and used it to pay off the deficit — didn’t put enough of it back into the economy. “Course I got rid of all my property, thank God. Now that Clinton guy wants to do the same thing. Tax, tax, tax, and put it all toward paying off the deficit. He’ll end up screwing up the economy. You can bet on it. I'm just glad I don’t still have my properties. I lost money on them then, and I’d lose even more now.”
I said something, but I don't remember what, because I was in the middle of a huge discovery. The place to really learn is the coffee aisle in the grocery store. Upon my startling realization, I looked to my newfound paragon of knowledge in order to absorb more wisdom, but whatever I said must have been a farewell type of thing, because he was waddling away toward the paper goods, skillfully piloting two carts overflowing with crackers, wishing me happy shopping and successful bargain hunting over his shoulder.
Ryan Mcee is a Worland, Wyo., sophomore undecided on a major.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Focus on issues other than blame
I'm happy Anne Bailey grew up with a strong will and a sense of independence. Unfortunately these qualities alone don't begin to address the issues that women face today. A sense of independence doesn't alter the fact that women routinely earn less money than men, that studies of women's health issues are inadequate, that 78 reported rapes occur every hour, or that a woman is the victim of abuse every 15 seconds in this country. A strong will doesn't change the fact that the leading cause of death in the workplace for women is murder.
Ms. Bailey is correct. It's time for the blaming to cease. But let's not confuse blame with responsibility. Both sexes must take responsibility for their actions and attitudes. Women must start by valuing all the choices women make, take a stand against the violence that affects them, and say no to unwanted advances. Men must start reexamining beliefs that say "she asked for it," she made me hit her, "a woman can't be as effective as a man," etc.
Janet Cull Lawrence sophomore
Watkins needs to improve services
STAFF COLUMNIST
Slowly I stagger into a chaotic room and an signaled to take a seat. I sit down and demand to thumb through a 1974 issue of Good Housekeeping but feel a little too ill. I look up at the clock and realize I must have lost consciousness because 45 minutes have gone by. Looking around the room, I see the same people are there exchanging germs and diseases. I begin to realize that by the time they call my name I'll either be twice as sick as when I came in or I'll be completely over my illness. Finally a nurse emerges and calls a name, but it is not mine.
If this sounds familiar then you have been one of the fortunate students to visit Watkins Memorial Health Center. Also known as Student Death, this is one place where rumors prove to be true. If you want to wait for hours, be misdiagnosed and buy unnecessary medications, then this is the place to
TISHA
HEYKA
go.
One time I was allowed to diagnose myself. I went into the examining room and the doctor asked, "What seems to be the problem?"
Without looking at my throat he said, "Well, you're right. You must
I said, "I think I might have strep throat." He asked why I thought I had strep throat, and I said because my throat hurt.
have strep. "With that he wrot me a prescription and sent me on my way."
Instead of spending half the day in the waiting room to see a doctor I could have been in bed recovering. I could have simply walked up to the pharmacist and said, "Give me the strep throat package" and saved a lot of time by skipping everything else.
Now I can't say every experience at Watkins has been horrendous, but I always leave feeling edgy about my diagnosis. A friend of mine made several visits to Watkins and tried several different medications before the doctors were able to correctly diagnose a simple illness. Someone else I know was given two different medications, which all counteracted each other. It is instances like these that make people ridicule Watkins.
Unfortunately, I don't have a solution on how to fix things at Watkins.
but I do have some suggestions. The doctors should be qualified and not be afraid to look things up, I would rather have the physicians do this than guess about an illness or proper medications. Also, the Watkins itself needs better organization. Anyone who has made a visit there knows how chaotic it can be. And last, people should not have to spend hours in the waiting room.
For a student health facility we could probably do a lot worse, but we also could do a lot better. I feel the Center needs to put as much concentration into its health care as it does for its specialized programs. The specialized programs are great, but the basic health care needs work.
For the Birds
Tisha Heyka is a Leaward senior majoring in psychology and creative writing.
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The eleven galleries of art include the special exhibitions: Contemporary Czech and Slovakian Photography August 22-October 3
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Works of art by Thomas Hart Benton, Elizabeth Murray, Window Homer, and hundreds of other artists are included in the Spencer Museum of Art collection.
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
21 South Africans killed in attacks
The Associated Press
Attackers in two mini-vans pulled up alongside a line of hundreds of commuters and began firing wildly, leaving dead and wounded the length of a 70-year parking lot.
Yesterday's massacre came a day after Black and white negotiators agreed to set up a transitional council to help run the country until the nation's first multiraccial election, planned for April.
Violence follows reform negotiations
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Gunmen firing automatic rifles killed at least 21 Black commuters and wounded 25 others in two separate attacks yesterday night, police said.
Three hours later and a few miles away, gunmen standing on a street corner fired on a passing taxi-van.
There has been an increase in violence since negotiators set the election date in July.
Police gave conflicting reports on the casualties at each site but said at least 21 people died and 25 were wounded in both incidents.
The attacks followed a landmark agreement reached Tuesday by Black and white groups that will end white-minority rule. Political violence has soared as negotiations on reform proceed, and yesterday's attack was similar to several others that coincided with major steps forward.
Broken glass and blood covered the parking lot outside the small shopping mall in the Wadeville industrial area outside Johannesburg.
"This is absolutely senseless," he said while noting the victims were from various townships and did not represent any particular political group.
Police Brig. T.J. Kookeemoer said all the victims were Black and were
Panicked people, some wounded,
fought their way into a nearby butcher shop to escape, leaping over the counter for shelter. Victims' blood covered the counter and floors, said the butterer, Hannes Venter.
attacked by several gunmen, also Black, who then fled in their vehicles.
Attacks on Black commuters have been part of the political violence that has killed thousands of Black South Africans in recent years and hindered reforms toward ending apartheid.
Police blame the violence on a power feud between the African National Congress and the rival Inkatha Freedom Party. But the ANC, the nation's leading political group, says groups opposed to the planned elections instigate violence in a bid to destabilize the country and stall reforms.
Israeli demonstrators protest PLO plan
The Associated Press
The clash occurred in the early morning hours, after the crowd, which police said numbered about 50,000 at its peak, had dwindled to less than 2,000. Police said 45 people were injured and 33 people were arrested in the skirmish outside the prime minister's office.
The crowd, including seminary students, Jewish settlers and the Likud Party faithful bused in from around the country, held up signs calling government officials "traitors" and saying "The Land of Israel Is In Danger."
JERUSALEM — Police used water cannons and clubs yesterday to break up a demonstration by thousands of Israelis protesting a plan for Palestinian self-rule.
They chanted slogans, danced to pop music and saw their leaders speak on a huge television screen.
Organizers said hundreds of thousands came to protest the plan, outstripping the number at a Tel Aviv event.
The plan's opponents had vowed to lay siege to Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin's office for 24 hours, but by yesterday the crowd had dwindled to about 800 who were outnumbered by lines of riot police
Although the demonstration fell short of the numbers predicted by the right, it was a show of strength and stressed the ability of its right-wing organizers to put people in the streets to show opposition.
Heights to Syria.
But it is unlikely to derail the self-rule plan that will see Palestinian autonomy in the Gaza Strip and West Bank by year's end. But the angry slogans and the strong applause for the most militant speakers showed the depth of emotion involved.
The strong opposition may also give the government second thoughts about going forward with other concessions — such as giving up the Golan
The Israeli parlament, the Knesset, is expected to begin reviewing the plan today.
Israeli right-wingers object to yielding any land to the Arabs and think the autonomy plan is a first step to a military withdrawal.
Arafat says Israel has agreed to exchange land for peace
"We want to announce clearly that the dogs are done barking and are starting to bite. The dogs will start acting and make sure, physically, that this agreement is not executed," said Nissan Slonyan-ya, head of the Elkana settlement's council.
JERUSALEM — PLO leader Yasser Arafat was quoted Wednesday as saying Israel has agreed to a two-stage withdrawal from the Golan Heights in exchange for peace with Syria.
Rabin's Cabinet has approved the plan to begin self-rule in the occupied Gaza Strip and West Bank town of Jericho and is trying to work out details of mutual recognition with the PLO before next week's hoped-for signing of the agreement.
His comments were published two days after Israeli officials denied newspaper reports that Israel was working out a secret deal with Syria on giving up the strategic highlands. Syrian artillery bombarded northern Israel from the Golan until Israeli troops captured the area in the 1967 Mideast war.
The demonstration was organized by the Likud opposition bloc as part of a campaign to force new elections.
The Associated Press
"I know in the clearest fashion that there is a firm understanding between Israel and Syria," Arafat was quoted as telling the weekly magazine Haoai Hazeh.
Interviewed at his headquarters in Tunis, Tunisia, Arafat reported said that Israel's prime minister, Yizhak Rabin, "agreed, according to the information I have, to a withdrawal from all the Golan Heights, with a commitment that the territory returns to the Syrians within 10 years."
Arafat's account conflicts with Rabin's declared position that Israel would not be prepared to give back the entire plateau. Israeli officials
refused to comment on the story, but a Foreign Ministry spokesman said Israeli officials had no information on the matter.
Arafat said the withdrawal was planned in two phases and that U.S. troops and possibly a multinational force would police the areas evacuated by Israel.
Arafat also supported earlier reports in Israeli newspapers that Israel had asked to lease the Golan from Syria for 99 years. The Syrians rejected that idea, he said.
Long shuned by Israel, Arafat has become a news media star in the country since agreement was announced last week on the Gaza-Jericho plan.
The Israeli magazine's reporter, Uzi Mahaneim, said there was a festive atmosphere in the kitchen, where Arafat's wife, Soha, was also present during the interview. He said that Unm Jihad, widow of Abu Jihad, the Fatah leader allegedly assassinated by Israeli commandos in April 1988, also was there.
Mara. Arafat was quoted as commenting that her husband had not slept in two days. "I'm not complaining," she said. "I'm sure Rabin also isn't getting a lot of sleep these days."
The Associated Press
Iraq still holding prisoners Amnesty International says
LONDON — Two years after the Gulf War, Iraq is still holding hundreds of Kuwaitis and other foreign prisoners. Amnesty International said yesterday.
Iraq overran Kuwait in August 1990 and was defeated seven months later in the Gulf War.
In another report, the London-based human rights group said Saddam Hussein's regime last month arrested scores of prominent Iraqi in a crackdown against his traditional supporters.
During the invasion, thousands of Kuwaitis and third-country nationals were arrested and transferred to Iraq. More than 7,000 were repatriated after the war, and Iraq says no prisoners remain. Amnesty said. Do the Kuwaiti remain, Amnesty said.
The group said the reasons for the detention were unclear, but claimed it "forms part of a wider crackdown which began in the aftermath of the Gulf War, targeting sectors of Iraqi society traditionally thought to be loyal to the regime, the majority of whom are Sunni (Muslim) Arabs."
But the Kuwaiti government contends that more than 650 Kuwatis captured in Kuwait are still missing in Iraq. Amnesty said it believes hundreds are still being held and it detailed the cases of 140.
"Some may have been tortured and others may have died as a result of torture or have been executed," the group said.
In a separate report, Amnesty said scores of prominent Iraqis were arrested last month.
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Of the 140, 129 are Kuwaiti nationals and more than two-thirds of the 129 are civilians. The other 11 are from other Arab countries or Iran.
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Amnesty it says it regards them all as prisoners of conscience "now held solely on account of their ethnic origin or for their real or perceived association with states which Iraq's government considers to be its enemies."
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It said most were Sunni Muslims, including individuals from Saddam's hometown of Tikir, where he draws his strongest support. Among those arrested were retired officers, economists, lawyers and former government officials.
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Thursday, September 9. 1993
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
Senate to vote on national service bill
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Senate neared a final vote yesterday on a $1.5 billion compromise version of President Clinton's plan for students to earn money for college with national service.
The bill, which would create the first all-new program of the administration, appeared headed for passage with support from most of the Democratic majority and some Republicans. But GOP opponents echoed their complaints of a month ago, when they stalled the measure just before Congress went on vacation.
Sen. Nancy Kassebaum argued that the bill was "fraught with ... overlapping programs, unnecessary legislative requirements and cumbersome bureaeratic structures*
She said it was ironic that the Senate was considering the legislation a day after Clinton presented his "reinventing government" plan, which he said would streamline the federal bureaucracy and cut costs by $108 billion in the next five years.
"We have lost a tremendous opportunity ... to lead the way in reinventing government," she said. "We chose to take the old tried-and-true way."
But Sen. Harris Wofford, D.Pa., said that the National Service program was an "innovative public-private partnership" that is "part of a process of reinventing government not by more government but by igniting citizen action and citizen responsibility."
Congressional Democrats had hoped to hand Clinton a new program before they began a month-long recess in August, and the national service bill had been their best hope. The House adopted the compromise, but it got bogged down in the Senate.
The plan allows 20,000 participants the first year, 33,000 the second year and 47,000 the third year, assuming an average annual cost of $15,000 for each participant. Spending would be limited to $300 million in the first year of the program, $500 million in the second year and $700 million in the third year.
Supporters have argued that the program would benefit communities across the nation while helping some middle-class students afford college educations. But opponents have said it is too costly and the money would be better spent on existing college-aid programs like Pell grants.
Under terms of the compromise, students who complete two years of community-service work can earn $4,725 a year to apply toward college tuition. Clinton initially proposed
Participants also would receive living allowances of at least $7,400 a year and health-care and child day-care benefits.
Clinton originally wanted a far more ambitious $9.5 billion, five-year program. His plan would have allowed 25,000 participants the first year and 150,000 by the third year.
$5,000 a year.
WASHINGTON
Russia, U.S. develop plan to strengthen defense connection
Defense Secretary Les Aspin and his Russian counterpart signed agreements yesterday to strengthen defense ties between the former Cold War foes, including a plan to hold joint peacekeeping exercises and set up a "defense hotline."
"This is a new symbol of the new ties between our countries," Russian Defense Minister Pavel Grachev said after meeting with Aspin at the Pentagon.
The agreements stem from last spring's Vancouver summit between President Clinton and Russian President Boris Yeltsin.
Aspin said the generals in charge of the U.S. and Russian forces designated to participate in the joint peacekeeping exercises would meet today to discuss details. He said it was too early to know when the exercises would be held.
"It is an agreement that recognizes that the wellbeing and security of the United States and the Russian Federation are vitally related," Aspin said. "It is an agreement that seeks to put the years of superpower rivalry and nuclear confrontation behind us."
Among the other elements of the agreement:
Among the other elements of the agreement:
- Establishing what Aspin called a defense hotline, a communications system linking the Pentagon and the Russian Ministry of Defense to permit easy telephone communication on routine matters.
Grachev said it also could be helpful in an emergentwo military helicopters collided in flight, killing four Marines during a training exercise in the Mojave Desert yesterday, the military said.
- Setting up joint exercises between the two nations' navies and other armed forces.
THE NEWS in brief
TOPEKA
TOPEKA Slattery says no to re-election
U. S. Rep. Jim Slattery announced yesterday that he did not plan to seek re-election to Congress, but he stopped short of announcing his candidacy for governor.
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Slattery has been considered a candidate for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination ever since Friday, when incumbent Gov. Joan Finney announced she would not seek another term in 1994. Slattery's announcement yesterday to leave a position he has held since 1983 may have indicated that he has decided to run for the office.
"I went to Washington to serve the people of Kansas, not to make it my home," Slattery said about his decision.
MOSCOW
Villagers take rescuers hostage
Villagers took hostage a 15-member Russian search team retrieving bodies from a wrecked helicopter in Georgia, a Russian official said yesterday.
The hostage-takers demanded the release of four Georgian prisoners held by Abkhazian separatists in the former Soviet republic, said Marina Rykvina, spokeswoman for the State Committee on Emergencies.
The rescue team had found the bodies in a mountain pass Sunday and taken them to the village of Azhara in the Georgian province of Abkhazia, Rykvina said. The villagers refused to let the team leave when their helicopter arrived, she said.
The emergency committee filed a protest with Georgia yesterday, Rykvina said. The village is under the control of the Georgian military.
The Russian relief helicopter crashed in June with 16 people aboard, Rykvina said. No survivors have been located.
Abkhazian separatists battled Georgian troops for nearly a year before a cease-fire recently took hold in the Black Sea province. Georgia has accused Russia of supporting the separatists, a charge Moscow denies.
TWENTY NINE PALMS, Calif 4 Marines killed in collision
The victims' identities were withheld until relatives could be contacted. They had been assigned to Marine Aircraft Group 29 at the Marine Corps Air Station at New River, N.C.
The AH-1 Cobra helicopters collided just after midnight while on a shooting exercise at the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center, said Sgt. Ray Rodriguez. The center is a Mojave Desert base 120 miles northeast of Los Angeles.
The cause of the crash was not known, he said. No other details of the crash were released at press time.
Compiled from The Associated Press
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841-8444
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Thursday, September 9, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
AFRICAN ADORNED
642 Mass LIBERTY HALL 749 1012
642
Mass
LIBERTY
HALL
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1912
The Firm (R)
Today (5:00), 8:00 Final 8 Days!
Much Ado About Nothing (PG-13)
Today (4:45), 7:15, 9:30 Final 8 Days!
ACK'S APPLIANCE
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DICKINSON
THEATRE
Dickinson 6 2339 South Iowa 5r.
YOGIER
Rising Sun (*4:15* 9:50)
Secret Garden (*4:30* 7:00)
Hard Target (*4:30* 7:00 9:45)
Calendar Girl (*4:30* 7:00 9:40)
Man Without a Face (*4:10* 7:05 9:55)
Man Without a Face (*4:20* 7:00 9:30
Father Hood (*4:15* 7:35
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 6 PM ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
Prismatic Show [+] Hearing Deby
Saving Guitar Actives Implied Stereo
VARSITY
1015 MASSAC HUSEETS 841 5191
$ 5.00
Needful Things $ ^{R} $ 5.00
1.28 9.43
Hearts and Souls PG-13
Sone of the Pink Panther $^R$
Sleepless in Seattle $^{PG}$
Rookie of the Year $^R$
Fortress $^R$
In the Line of Fire $^R$
The Thing Loved Love $^{PG}$
Hearts and Souls $^{PG-13}$
7.15.38 $^R$
6.12 $^R$
7.15.48 $^R$
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841-5191
CINEMA TWIN
3110 IOWA 641-5191
ALL SEATS
$1.25
Made in America $^{PC}$ **11** .28.5, 3.26
Snow White $^C$
Dennis the Menace $^{PC}$ .750 8.30
SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
SUK FILMS
John Woo's
• THE KILLER
Tues., Sept. 7, 9:30 PM
Wed., Sept. 8, 7:00 PM
Thurs., Sept. 9, 9:30 PM
• RAISE THE RED
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Wed., Sept. 8, 9:30 PM
Thurs., Sept. 9, 7:00 PM
• INDECENT PROPOSAL
Fri., Sept. 10, 7 & 9:30 PM
Sat., Sept. 11, 7 & 9:30 PM
Sun., Sept. 12, 2:00 PM
• SID & NANCY
Fri., Sept. 10, midnight
Sat., Sept. 11, midnight
All shows in Woodruff Auditorium.
Tickets $2.50, midnight $3.
Free admission with SUA Movie Card
For information, call 864-SHOW.
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BodyShapes
Rock Climbing Club Meeting
September 9, 1993
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KU CLIMBING CLUB
Everyone is Welcome!
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Questions or Concerns Contact
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people
From her start as a baton twirler to a teaching visit to KU, Billie Maboney has spent
A LIFE IN DANCE
DANCE
Dancer Billie Mahonev leads a class at Robinson Center. Mahonev's first job was leading a holiday parade in New York City
Mahoney, above, is the producer and host of the television series "Dance on with Billie Mahoney," which airs in New York City and on American Cablevision in Kansas City.
Story by JL Watson Photos by William Alix
W
hen Billie Mahoney first stepped onto the streets of New York she
was a dancer with a baton, a dream, and not much else.
"I was flat broke and in debt," said the Kansas City native. "I found out about the local Y's (YMCAs) from friends, and the first day I was there I picked up a copy of 'Actor's Cues' and looked for auditions."
Mahoney landed her first job the same day.
She has come a long way since then. She has danced all across the United States and the world, sharing her craft with students.
This week she brings her talents to KU students. Mahoney is teaching two classes with the University Dance Company.
Mahoney's first job was leading the St. Patrick's Day Parade for the Arthur Gottfried and his TV show while twirling a baton.
When she teaches classes this week, Mahoney will not be using a baton.
"I told them I would do jazz and soft shoe, but I've thrown in some other styles, including tap. Tap is my specialty," she said, shuffing a steady rhythm on the tile floor.
Labanotation is another of Mahoney's specialities. Labanotation is a system of recording movement and writing dance scripts. It allows choreographers to write down details of movements, in order to preserve them for future generations. Mahoney said.
"We break down all movement into direction, level, and timing." Mahoney said.
Billie Mahoney Dancer and producer
"Tap is my specialty."
"That way we can reproduce a dance from the 1920s or '30s, keeping true to the choreography, right down to the facial expressions."
In 1976 Mahoney was faced with one of her greatest personal challenges. She was struck with inflammation of the joints, and was hospitalized for two weeks.
"During that time the doctors told me I wouldn't be able to dance again for two years," she said. "I knew I had to do something, so I saw an ad in the paper for media studies and decided to look into it."
Because Mahoney already had earned a Bachelor of Arts
degree in foreign languages and had spent all of her life dancing, she said she felt it would be cheating to get a master's degree in dance. Instead, she attended The New School for Social Research in New York City and got her master's in media studies.
It opened a new set of doors for her.
"I learned how to run the camera, produce a show, and do all the things required of producing a show for television," Mahoney said. Mahoney's experience led her to produce her own show, "Dance On: with Billie Mahoney." The show airs in New York City and on American Cablevision in Kansas City, Kan.
Patrick Suzela, professor of dance, said he met Mahoney at a Jose Limon Dance Company rehearsal several years ago.
"She is a great performer," he said. "She has a huge background in so many fields, like notation, tap, and reconstructions."
Mahoney said she enjoyed working with students because it allowed her to pass on her knowledge to a new generation of dancers.
"In dance, since our bodies are our instruments, it's important to have a well-trained body," she said. "But more than that we need to communicate what's inside. It's away to share with others what we know."
theater
Play addresses issues from child's viewpoint
"Step on a Crack," presented by KU Theater for Young People, deals with children's concerns about stepparents.
By Sara Bennett Kansan staff writer
"Step on a crack, break your mother's back"
Almost every child plays this game. Skipping to the bus stop, children instinctively hop over sidewalk imperfections in the superstitious belief that treading on them would inflict harm on the backs of their dear mothers. Although most children would not wish such a gruesome fate on their moms, some may have different feelings when it comes to new stepparents.
"Step on a Crack," an original children's play by Susan Zeder, addresses those feelings. The play, performed by KU students and directed by Rena Cook, assistant professor of theater and film, will be presented by the University of Kansas Theater for Young People Sept. 20-25 in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall.
Jeanne Klein, head of the children's theater program at KU, said "Step on a Crack" broke new ground for young audiences when it was published.
"Step on a Crack" tells the story of Ellie, a 10-year-old girl who turns to imaginary friends to help her deal with her fears, jealousies and insecurities about her new stepmother. As her emotions unfold through her fantasies, Ellie realizes that she really does want a mother.
"Step on a Crack" was first staged in 1974 at Southern Methodist University. It won the 1976 Charlotte B. Chorpenning Award for excellence in play writing and went on to become a classic in the children's repertoire. It was first staged at KU in 1980.
"It's a pretty loaded issue," she said. "About 50 percent of young people deal with it directly, and everyone deals with it indirectly."
Cook said the play effectively addressed the concerns of children who have stenoses.
"This play dares to treat a difficult subject, close to the hearts of many children, but untouched in any other children's script," she
said. "The play is a challenge for a young audience because it deals with both real and imagined action and an emotional topic."
The children's theater program at KU was founded in 1954 by Sally Six Hersh, a drama teacher who recently retired from West, Junior High School in Lawrence. It sponsors two performances for children every year. Fourth, fifth and sixth graders from Lawrence and Douglas County will be bussed to Murphy Hall to watch the productions. The play will be performed for them at 1 p.m. from Sept. 20-25. The public performance is scheduled for 7 p.m. on Sept. 25.
Cook said another challenge of the play was that adults play children. The six-member cast, led by Piaf Latham-Winter-Green, Lawrence senior, as Ellie, has succeeded in making the characters believable, she said.
"Susan Zeder is the top playwright in the children's theater genre in this country." Cook said. "There's always an element of fun and whimsy in her work, and she doesn't talk down to children."
Cook, who directed a children's theater troupe in Tulsa, Okla., before coming to KU three years ago, said these challenges, in addition to the author's reputation, had convinced her to do the play.
"The kids are going to look at that stage and say, 'That's me, or that's my best friend,'" Cook said.
"The problems are extremely real and extremely painful at times. Anyone who's in a family will relate to it," she said. "There's a lot of insight and understanding to be gained from this play no matter what the age."
Cook said the hour-long play dealt with issues that students and adults could relate to as well as children.
film
*Tickets for the public performance of "Step on a Crack" are $3 and are on sale in the Murphy Hall and Lied Center box offices.
Romance flick entertains you with violence
At first "True Romance" is disgusting. The violent scenes are too long, too violent and too detailed. Actually, they are so repulsive a few people left the
the preview. In this film, it is no longer a question of shooting your enemies, it is a question of perforating them.
So this movie is definitely not for viewers who cannot stand watching violence on
REVIEWER
SUSANNA
LOOF
the big screen. But those who can stand violence, even those who generally don't like violent movies, should give this movie a chance. Because as the movie continues, the violence becomes ironic. The violence is mixed with a warm sense of humor, and it is partially a sad parody of violent society.
Clarence, played by Christian Slater, is a lonely guy who gets a call girl, Patricia Arquette, as a birthday present from a friend. They fall in love and marry after knowing each other less than a week. Suddenly, by mistake, they become owners of a suitcase crammed with cocaine. The case could be their ticket to wealth, but it also causes trouble, because the mob and the police are interested in the cocaine.
Arquette is perfect as Alabama, the blond prostitute who is smarter than she looks. Even her voice fits the character.
Quentin Tarantino, the author of "Reservoir Dogs," wrote "True Romance." He filled it with vulgar words unprintable here. Most sentences in "True Romance" contain at least three of those forbidden words. But between the obscenities, Tarantino has created a remarkably dynamic script. The movie also contains a few screaming funny but bizarre situations. The action doesn't build up until later in the film, as does the plot, and by the movie's end, the plot is truly thrilling. True Romance, directed by Tony Scott, stars Christian Slater, Patricia Arnette, Dennis Hopper, Val Kilmer, Gary Oldman, Brad Pitt and Christopher Walken.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SEPTEMBER 9, 1993 PAGE 9
KULIFE
People and places at the University of Kansas.
calendar
NIGHTLIFE
Benchwarmers Sports Bar & Grill
1803 92rd st
Benchwarner Sports Bar & Grill
1601 W. 23rd St.
The Cuddies, 9 p.m. Thursday
Mountain Clyde, 9 p.m. Friday
Lonesome Hound Dogs, 9 p.m. Saturday
The Crossing
The Crossing
12th and Oread
Bubble Boys, 9 p.m. Thursday
Tenderloin, 9 p.m. Friday
Spam Skinners, 9 p.m. Saturday
The Jazzhaus
Dos Hombres
815 New Hampshire St.
Eight Men Out, 9 p.m. Friday
926 1/2 Massachusetts St.
Living Proof, 8:30 p.m. Thursday
Common Ground, 8:30 p.m. Friday
Crap Supper, 8:30 p.m. Saturday
Granada Theater
**1020 Massachusetts St.**
Ben Graham Band, 8 to 11 p.m. Thursday
Blues Jam; 8:30 p.m. to midnight Friday
Rick's Neighborhood Bar & Grill 623 Vermont St.
Timber Rattlers, 9:30 p.m. Saturday
Free State Brewing Co.
636 Massachusetts St.
Bill Crahan Trio, 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday
Free State Jazz Quartet, 7 to 9 p.m. Friday
Paradise Cafe
728 Massachusetts St.
So What Jazz Band, 10 p.m. to midnight
Thursday
The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire
Jack O'Pierce with The Young Johnny Carson
Story, 9 to 10 p.m. Thursday
Caribe, 9 to 10 p.m. Friday
Pumpkin Head, 9 to 10 p.m. Saturday
Hockenbury's Tavern
1016 Massachusetts St.
Ricky Dean's Sinatra with Eudora's, 10 p.m.
Thursday
Kelley Hunt with Mustang Lightning, 10 p.m.
Friday
Salty Iguanas, 10 p.m. Saturday
Salty liguans, 10 p.m. Saturday
Acoustic open mike, 10 p.m. Sunday
Blues, Brew and Barbeque
1910 Haskell Ave.
Guest DJ, 9 p.m. Friday, Saturday and 6 p.m.
Sunday
See CALENDAR, Page 10.
10
Thursday, September 9, 1993
Pre-Med Club
THE ROBIN MAN
Pre-Med Club
"Meet an Advisor night and Student Mixer"
September 9th
at
7:00p.m.
Kansas Union
1993 Fall Arts & Crafts Festival Sunday September 12th NOON to 5:00 p.m. Exhibitors South Park 1141 Massachusetts
Lawrence, Kansas
200 Artists & Craftsmen Exhibiting
42a
- Piper Clowns * Supervised Children's Paint and Play Pen * Food Concessions *
Performing Artists Noon- Billy Spears Band Heart of America Country Western Dancers. 1:00- Lonnie Ray's Blues Band. 2:00- The Lawrence City Band. Sponsored by the Rice Foundation and City of Lawrence Parks and Rec Dept.
3:00- River City Six Band.
4:00- Blue Stem Band.
ENTERTAINMENT
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
Sponsored by: Lawrence Parks & Recreation
For information call 841-4411
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Fat
Sugars
Milk Meat
Vegetables Fruit
Grains
WATKINS
"We Care For KU"
Questions about diet, eating patterns, weight loss/gain/ maintenance? Contact Anchapman,
Reg. Dietitian 864-9575, M-Th, 8:30-1:30.
A Picture of Health
ANAD
Wednesdays (beginning Sept. 6), 7:30-8:30 p.m.
Walkin 2 doors Floor Conference Room
Contacts Ani Chapman 864-9575
Sarah Kirk 864-1211
ANAD EATING DISORDERS SUPPORT GROUP
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES 864-9500
Serving Only Laurence Campus Students
CALENDAR
Continued from Page 9.
Movies
Cinema Twin Theatres
31st and Iowa Streets
List and Iowa Streets
Made In America (PG-13), 7:20,
9:30 p.m.
Snow White (G), 5 p.m.
Dennis The Menace (PG), 5, 7:30,
9:30 p.m.
Hillcrest Theatres
Heart and Souls (PG-13),7:15, 9:30 p.m.
Ninth and Iowa streets
Son of the Pink Panther (PG), 5:15 n.m
In the Line of Fire (R), 5, 7:20 and 9:40 p.m.
Sleepless in Seattle (PG), 7:15. 9:45 p.m.
A Thing Called Love (PG-13), 5, 7:20, 9:45 p.m.
7:20, 9:45 p.m.
Brockin of the Year (PG), 5 p.m.
Rookie of The Year (PG), 5 p.m.
Fortress (R), 5:15, 7:30,
9:30 p.m.
Needful Things (R), 5, 7:20,
9:45 p.m.
Dickinson Theatres
Saturday and Sunday.
Varsity Theatre
Saturday and Sunday.
The Fugitive (PG 13), 4:10, 7:05
and 9:55 p.m. daily and 1:15,
4:10, 7:05 and 9:55 p.m. on Sat
urday, Sunday.
Calendar Girl (PG-13) 4:35; 7:10 and 9:40 p.m. Friday, with 2:10; 4:35; 7:10 and 9:40 p.m. Saturday, Sunday.
2339 Iowa St.
Hard Target (R), 9:45 p.m. Friday,
urday, Sunday.
Man Without a Face (PG-13), 4:20, 7 and 9:30 p.m.
2, 4:20, 7:05 and 9:55 p.m. on Saturday, Sunday.
The Secret Garden (G), 4:30, 7 p.m., with a 2:05, 4:30 and 7 p.m. on Saturday, Sunday.
True Romance (R), 4:15, 7 and 9:50 p.m., with a 1:20, 4:15, 7 and 9:50 p.m. Saturday, Sunday.
Undercover Blues (PG-13), 4:25, 7:15, 9:35 p.m., with a 2:15, 4:25, 7:15 and 9:35 p.m.
Saturday, Sunday.
Liberty Hall Cinema
642 Massachusetts St.
The Firm (R), 5, 8:30 p.m., with a
2, 5 and 8:30 p.m. on Saturday,
Sunday.
Much Ado About Nothing (PG-13)
4:45, 7:15, 9:30 p.m., with a
2:15, 4:45, 7:15, 9:30 p.m.
on Saturday, Sunday.
SUA MOVIES
All SUA movies are shown at Woodruff Auditorium on level 5 in the Kansas Union.
Sid & Nancy (R), midnight Friday. Saturday.
Indecent Proposal (R), 7, 9:30 p.m. Friday, Sunday; 2 p.m. Sunday
Al 'not-so-stiff' Gore loosens upon'Letterman'
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Vice President Al Gore.scheduled government-issued ash trays and read his own Top 10 list on CBS "Late Show With David Letterman" yesterday.
Gore set the tone in a brief, backstage stage that opened the show, poking fun at his own reputation as an earnest, upfight straight-arrow:
The vice president pitched jokes at an unreceptive Letterman: "How about, I'm so stiff that I wanted for a checkup and the doctors declared me legally dead?" Gore asked.
Letterman rejected the I'm-souff stuff gags and countered. "How about 'Know what words are the president's favorite, the one he most likes to hear?' Gore doesn't know, and Letterman cracks up, telling him: 'Would you like fries with that?'
Gore ripped into the comedian saying, "That's the president of the United States you're talking about."
The vice president charmed the studio audience and host Letterman, receiving a standing ovation from the former and an invitation to return from the latter. Paul Shaffer and the CBS Orchestra even punctuated Gore's jokes with rimshot.
Gore's appearance was a coup for Letterman, who left NBC's
"Late Night" in June and whose "Late Show" has been on CBS just one week.
It was an even bigger coup for Gore, who got to boost President Clinton's plan to overhaul government while proving that his own sense of humor was more than equal to Letterman's oblique, New York-edged comedy.
Gore backed up the administration's case for boosting government efficiency with a demonstration of the government's method of safety-testing an "ash receiver, tobacco (desk type) — sorry, that's an ash tray."
"They actually specify the exact way people have to break this in order to test it." Gore explained. "They have to count the number of pieces, and it can be no more than 35 pieces."
He and Letterman donned safety goggles and smashed the astray with a hammer on a U.S.-mandated maple plank.
Gore closed his appearance by reciting his Top 10 list of good things about being vice president. (No. 7, "Close your left eye and the seal on the podium says President of the United States." No. 3, "You get to eat all the french fries the president can't get to.)
And the No. 1 good thing about being vice president? Gore grinned and said it:
"Your Secret Service code name:
Buttafuoco!"
Grunge 'Muzak' tries to kill grunge era
The Associated Press
SEATTLE — Daniel House says it's time for grunge rock to die.
"It's time to nail the final nail in the coffin," the head of C/Z Records said, tutting the new C/Z release, "Grunge Lite," a collection of Muzak-style covers of popular grunge songs.
He's sick of seeing New York designers rip off the working-class boots and flannel affected by pioneer Seattle grunge musicians. He's sick of reading and hearing about grunge and running into people who think the only music coming out of Seattle is low, loud and raw.
The release is mainly for fun. That's what they still have at C/Z, where the staff works in T-shirts and jeans on desks plastered with band stickers and such pronouncements as "Hate Your Band," and "I Buy Music for Minors."
"If this doesn't formally end the phenomena, then nothing will." House said.
The label, which 2 1/2 years ago consisted of House and a one-person staff using one computer, one phone and a fax machine, now has 10 employ-
and blue sneakers looks like he could be getting ready to go onstage with his former band, Skin Yard, runs a loose but extremely busy shop.
That's a fair chunk of Seattle scene history on one release. Malfunkshun's lead singer, Andrew Wood, went on to sing for Mother Love Bone before his death, and Mother Love Bone's members went on to form the hugely successful Pearl Jam.
ees, six computers on a network and two or three releases each month. The label still signs mostly Northwest bands, but is now considering bands in New York, Chicago and San Francisco, House said.
Green River was a seminal band early in the scene
"We'd like to think we're cementing a solid place for ourselves in indie (independent
House, who with his neatly buzzed hair, shorts
"I hate your band."
music label) America. $^2$ House said. "We're getting respect from a lot of people out there in the scene
The label had its beginnings in 1986, with a release called "Deep Six", featuring the first recordings by Skin Yard, Green River, The Melvins, Malfunkshun and Soundgarden.
The Melvins have been credited with inventing grunge on a whim by deciding to slow their hardcore punk set down about 10 notches and going with it. Soundgarden, of course, has gone platinum and made wads of grungy money.
Sticker seen in office of C/ZRecords
eventually to the point where bands that sign with the label can quit their day jobs. House said. But he says the label intends to keep its indie spirit.
C/Z hopes to keep growing.
"Everybody here is a fan first, that's why we're doing this. We take a lot of excitement in playing music for each other."
AFRICAN ADORNED
842-1376
Rings Fixed Fast!
Kipn Cummings
EMBERS
749-4333
833 Mass *Lawrence, KS
7th Year
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includes uniform ($40 value)
Offer Ends 9/30/93
Open House
Sat., Sept. 11, 10 A.M. - 2 P.M.
BLACK BELT
DEMONSTRATIONS
11 A.M. - NOON - 1 P.M.
New Horizons
Black Belt Academy of Tae Kwon Do
Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa 749-4400
KWON DO
FREE
REFRESHMENTS
Thursday Sept. 9
THURSDAY SOPHRA
JACKOPIERCE
W/ special guests
The Young Johnny Carson Story
Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire - Lawrence
841-LIVE
12
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
. 1/2>
Thursday, September 9, 1993
Injuries abound on Kansas football team
Mason compares squad to'88 team
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
Only two games into the 1993 season and Kansas coach Glen Mason is drawing comparisons with the 1988 season, his first year coaching at Kansas.
No, the Jayhawks are not a bad football team this year, but they are slowly seeing a decline in the number of players.
This season Mason was not faced with the dilemma of having only 51 players on scholarship, which was the case in 1988 — 44 less than the NCAA allowed. But the layhawk coach has had many players suffer injuries early this season, with no fewer than 10 regular contributing players missing game action.
"This is the worst injury situation that I have ever been involved with," Mason said. "It's back to 1988 for us, but I'm more prepared for it now. We're really depleted in the number of able bodies that can play right now."
Kansas lost three players for the season in last Sat
urday's 4-3 victory against Western Carolina, and another four players will miss this Saturday's game at Michigan State.
Senior starting tailback George White and freshman reserve comeback Charles Davis will miss the remainder of the season because of knee injuries. Senior starting free safety Kwami Lasster suffered a fractured collarbone and will miss the season as well.
McBurrows said that the injuries would affect the defense as a whole, but that defensive coordinator Bob Fello looked at the defense as a puzzle.
"Kwamie will be a big loss because he was an inspirational and emotional leader," junior cornerback Gerald McBurrows said.
"If everyone contributes their piece of the puzzle the defense will come together." McBurrows said.
Lassiter will be replaced in the startline lineup by senior strong safety Clint Bowen, who started the first two games of the 1992 season when Lassiter was out with an ankle injury.
The Jayhawks defense has probably been affected the worst by the injury situation. Harvey ruptured his Achilles' tendon while jogging across the field during spring practice in April. Wright and Holt both suffered injuries to their knees in the Florida State game and are out for two weeks.
White and Davis will both redshift this season, but Lassiter will not. Lassiter, who transferred to Kansas last season, played at Buler County Community College in 1989 and 1990 and did not play in 1991. NCAA rules state that players have five years to complete their four years of eligibility.
"We're having to service each other now," Mason said. "The one and two offense at times will portray the Michigan State offense in practice, and the one and two defense portrays Michigan State's defense."
Mason did have some good news regarding the Jayhawks' injury situation. Senior center Dan Schmidt, who saw limited action against Florida State and did not play against Western Carolina because of a sprained ankle, will start against Michigan State. Junior outside linebacker Don Davis, out since August with a sprained knee, will also play against the Spartans.
Players who will miss the Michigan State game include junior linebacker Steve Harvey, sophomore linebacker Dick Holt, senior defensive end Sylvester Wright and junior fullback Chris Powell.
Ten Kansas football players have sustained injuries this season. All three players injured during the game were taken off the field.
Banged up
This week Mason moved sophomore guard Chris Banks and junior tight end Brent Willeford to defensive ends to add more depth on the defensive side of the ball.
Player Yr. Pos. Injury Status
George White Sr. RB ligament damage in knee out for season
Kwamie Lassiter Sr. FS broken collabone out for season
Charles Davis Fr. CB ligament damage in knee out for season
Steve Harvey Jr. LB ruptured Achilles tendon out indefinitely
Chris Powell Jr. FB broken foot out 2-3 weeks
Sylvester Wright Jr. DE fractured patella out 2-3 weeks
Dick Holt So. LB sprained knee out 2-3 weeks
Jared Smith Fr. OG sprained ankle probable for Sat.
Don Davis Jr. LB sprained knee probable for Sat.
Dan Schmidt Sr. C sprained ankle will start Sat.
Kansas hopes for good finish in invitational
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
It is hard to know what to expect when a new season opens, but Kansas
It is haro
whenanew
women's
golf coach
Jerry
Waert
WOMEN'S GOLF
said he hoped to see more consistency from a team that had its ups and downs last season.
The team's first opportunity to show that consistency will be at the Roadrunner Invitational in Las Cruces, N.M this weekend.
Waugh said this tournament would give his team a good chance to see nationally strong teams Arizona, New Mexico and New Mexico State. He said the team would also have a chance to evaluate Big Eight opponents Oklahoma, Nebraska, and Kansas State in the 16-team tournament.
Waugh said that he hoped to use the fall season to evaluate players and prepare for the Big Eight and regional competitions.
The Jayhawks return with all but one player from last year's roster and are coming off a fifth place finish in the Big Eight. Waugh said the team would be led by returning senior Holly Reynolds. He said the returning players combined with some promising freshmen should give this team both experience and depth.
"We don't go into the season with too many preconceived ideas but we do expect Holly to do pretty well," Wang said.
Junior Ann Holbrook said that it was important for the team to get off to a good start to help erase last year's disappointing fifth-place competition. She said that the players were ready to get back into competition.
Holbrook said going into the tournament, the team members' practice scores were much closer than in previous years. Tuesday, sophomore Lynn Wiliamson defeated senior Pamela Wineinger in a playoff for the fifth spot on the five-person travel squad.
Holbrook said that the fall season gave the Jayhawks a chance to see teams from different areas of the country.
She said that later in the season the Jayhawks would see teams from the West Coast when it traveled to the Oregon State Women's Invitational. Holbrook said that many of the teams they were competing against now would be competitors in the regionals for a berth in the NCAA tournament. Holbrook said seeing those teams now would show Kansas the level on which those teams were competing.
"These tournaments let you see what you need to work on," she said. "They also let you see what you need to work on as a team."
This weekend we'll see a lot of teams from Texas and New Mexico. Holbrook said. "New Mexico State won last year and they are pretty hard to beat on their home course."
Sophomore teammate Lynn Williamson said the evaluation process would also extend to the Jayhawk team.
Waugh said that he hoped to see his team post a top-six finish in the Roadrunner Invitational. He said that with tough teams like Arizona, a finish in the middle of the pack would be a reasonable expectation for the team.
Holly McQueen/KANSAN
ZEB
Hit or miss
Corey Benjamin, Highland Park, Ill., junior, prepares to hit the ball during the Zeta Beta Tau and Delta Upsilon intramural softball game yesterday on the field south of Watkins Memorial Health Center. Benjamin and his team were participating in intramural softball sponsored by KU Recreational Services.
The Associated Press
Brewers pitcher stops KC Royals
"I want to see the level of skill and play improve so that the University sees us as a varsity team." Zito said.
Zito said she was not emphasizing winning this year either, she was more interested in building up the program.
Women's soccer may turn varsity
Ricky Bones was in control and the Kansas City Royals were in trouble.
players would be divided into A and B teams.
The loss was the Royals second straight at the hands of the last place Brewers and, coupled with Chicago's victory over Boston, puts the Royals at a deficit that matches their largest of the season.
Bones threw a two-hitter and retired the final 21 batters he faced last night as the Milwaukee Brewers beat the Royals 2, dropping Kansas City seven games out of first place in the AL West with 23 games to play.
Kansan sportswriter
"Everybody is welcome." Zito said. "I think everybody should be able to enjoy the sport if they want to."
Bv Anne Felstet
The team does not have a record from last year. Zito said she did not keep one because the team plued more for fun, than to win.
"I just wanted to stay focused, keep ahead of the count," he said. "All I was thinking was three up, three down and I wanted to keep it up, especially after we took the lead."
The possibility of a varsity ranking has motivated the women's soccer club to improve its program.
"This is a day I will never forget," said Bones who reached a career high with his 10th victory. "Hopefully I will keep myself healthy and be able to take this many victories again." He was the first of three men in one of those days where I was able to control everything.
The Brewers took the lead on John Jaha's 15th homer with two outs in the sixth.
According to the gender equity law under TITLE IX of NCAA regulations, universities are required to have equal athletic opportunities for both male and female athletes. Lori Zito, women's soccer coach, said that it was important to increase the chance of becoming an added varsity sport.
Sophomore Carrie Gabbard said that more experienced players had shied away from practice last year because dedication to the sport was lacking. This year, she said that she hoped the new arrangement would keep the experienced players interested.
To help the team's chances, Zito is using a new approach to organize the team. Tryouts, used for the first time, began at Tuesday's practice. Tryouts continue today at 5 p.m. and will end next Tuesday. Zito said that no one would be cut from the team, but that she
Kevin McReynolds homered in the second and Greg Gagne singled in the third and that was it for the Royals as Bones threw 106 pitches and got 16 groundouts.
"We're not swinging the bats." Royals manager Hal McRae said. "It's just a matter of the hitters being able to relax. It's just something that we have to ride out. We're not going to throw in the towel. We need to win seven or eight games in a row. The White Sox need to lose four in a row. It's happened before. It will happen again."
Hipolito Pichardo started for Kansas City and left after five innings with the scored tied 1-1. It was Pichardo's first start after a being on the 15-day disabled list.
The Rovals managed just six hits in the two games.
"I used to eat, sleep and breathe soccer." Gabbard said of her high school days.
Approximately 20 women showed up to practice Tuesday.
Last fall, Gabbard played some on the team, but she did not play at all in the spring. She said she did not show much dedication last year. This year would be different.
Billy Broer (2-2) relieved Pichardo at the start of the sixth and gave up the long homer to Jaha.
Now her passion has returned to help build a strong team.
Any woman interested in joining the team may attend practice Tuesdays and Thursdays from 5 to 7 p.m. Zito said she was trying to arrange a Wednesday practice as well, but that the time and space for practice was limited.
The team's schedule is not final, but its first match is set for Oct. 9 at Missouri.
McReynolds hit his 10th homer into the fountains in left field to give Kansas City's a 1-0 lead in the second.
Jose Valentin, who singled for his first major league hit in the third, doubled in the fifth to tie the score after Troy O'Leary singled.
The Associated Press
Woman shatters 10,000-meter world record,42 seconds faster
Wang Junxia of China shattered the women's 10,000-meter world mark by 42 seconds yesterday with a time of 29 minutes, 31.78 seconds.
Juxia's time was more than a minute better than her previous personal best, recorded last month at the World Championships at Stuttgart, Germany, and nearly three minutes better than her best time last year.
The 20-year-old Junxia competing in China's 7th National Games, smashed the record of 30:13.74 set by Ingrid Kristiansen of Norway July 5, 1886.
Kansas crew foursome reunited after year apart
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
Jinxia ran the final 100 meters of the race with none of her competitors in sight.
Nancy Herriott, a member of that open four with coxwain shell, said she had to look at the judge to know who won. Kansas took second and third, two seconds behind the shell from Princeton.
It came down to the official result; mere sight could not determine the winner.
Kansas crew coach, Rob Catloth, said the College National Championships' announcer did not even mention Kansas until the last 1000 meters of the race.
That was two years ago. Now, the rowers of that shell are back together to compete for the first time since that memorable race.
Last year, senior McCallie studied abroad in Japan, and senior Tam Odelwat was out
Herrtott said the best thing about rowing with the foursome was the feeling of confidence.
with a back injury. Now McCallie and Odell are back to join their fellow owrsews graduate student Herriot and senior Kendra Luna.
"Psychologically and physically, everything is there," she said. "The only thing I have to worry about is rowing hard. I trust the other people in the boat to work hard. I know I will work hard."
The main crew season is in the spring, but Odell said the women's team was already setting its sights on big competitions. She said the team's usual goal revolved around the Midwest Championships in April. Already this fall, she said the team had discussed its desire to compete in the national championships held in June.
FORD STREET
With this summer's flooding, the team has not been able to use the Kansas River as in previous years. It now is practicing at Clinton Lake.
Odell said it was hard to get psyched about the spring season already, but that setting goals helped the team get mentally prepared.
William Alix / KANSAN
McCallie said that she hoped the coming season would be as successful as the season two years ago, but that she wouldn't know until the foursome had spent some time on the water.
Members of the Kansas Crew Team prepare for landing after practice at Clinton Lake Marina.
Luna said that once winter came and forced the team off the lake, the team prepared itself for competition through weight lifting and aerobic conditioning twice a day.
While this preparation may have helped the team qualify for nationals two years ago, it did not prepare them for what they would feel.
Hernott said sitting at the starting line of that race was very intense; so intense that she wanted to get out of the boat. She said the cameras were on them, and everything was official.
Herriott said that once the race started, the rush of competition took over and the race went great.
12
SPORTS
Thursday, September 9, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sampras defeats Chang
Sanchez Vicario victorious after ill opponent defaults
The Associated Press
For two glorious sets, Pete Sampras and Michael Chang put on a show that could have been the final of the U.S. Open.
They played with power and touch, speed and artistry. Sampsam slugging shots as hard as he could. Chang running them down and driving them back just as hard.
Then as the third set began and the hour grew late yesterday, Sampras simply wore Chang down game by game with 125 mph aces and baseline-kissing groundstrokes to march into the semifinals with a 6-7 (7-0), 7-6 (7-2), 6-1-6 victory.
It was the first time Sampras beat his boyhood chum on a hard court in their professional careers. And it made Sampras, the world's No. 2 player, the favorite to win this championship and take the title he first captured in 1900 when he was just 19.
The only other top-10 player in the tournament is No. 8 Andriet Medvedev, who could meet Sampras in the final. But judging by the way Sampras played against Chang, serving 13 aces and smacking 70 winners, nobody is likely to beat him
"At the start, he was taking it to me, and that's not my style," Sampras said. "I'm not used to being on the defensive. Then I got in a good rhythm.
"I think I was a little uncertain at the start, I wasn't sure I should come in or what."
Earlier, Arantxa Sanchez Vicario and Natalia Zvereva waited 8 1/2 hours and played 8 minutes, the perfect match in another U.S. Open flasco.
In a tournament plagued by sickness, injuries, rain and freaky upsets, nothing could have been more fitting than Natalia Zvervea's default yesterday after losing three games to Arantxa Sanchez Vicario.
This is a U.S. Open ruled by Murphy's Law, where anything that can go wrong, will go wrong. So it hardly was surprising when Zvereva turned to the umpire and said, in effect, "No mas," giving Sanchez Vicario a free pass into the semifinals.
Helena Sukova, who knocked Martina Navratilova out in the fourth round, will play Sanchez Vicario after beating Katerina Maleeva 6-4, 6-7 (7-3), 6-3 in a match that ended nearly 11 hours after its scheduled start.
Persistent drizzle wiped out the day session, pushing the women's quarters to the evening, and driving everyone a little stir crazy.
Zvereva, meanwhile, was feeling sick. Two nights earlier she came down with congestion and a fever. she said, and a doctor prescribed "a whole lot of pills—antibiotics and some other stuff."
She spent the whole day hoping the rain would continue until Friday.
"My whole body aches," she said. "It is very weak and I am so hot and congested. I was praying, praying for it to be raining at 7:30, which didn't happen, unfortunately."
Upsets leave finals without top seeds
There was trouble from the outset; Jimny Comons on the sidelines, John McEnroe in the television booth.
The Associated Press
Then came the upsets. Out went Andre Agassi. Goodbye Stefan Edberg. So long Jim Courier and Boris Becker.
The women also did their part.
The U.S. Open was left with no top men's seed, no defending champion and no Zen master. Instead, there were names like Cedric Pioile, Andrel Medvedev, Wally Masur and Magnus Larsson.
The woman also drowned. Monica Seles never made it to the draw, still recovering from a stab wound. Jennifer Capriati lost in the first week. Gabriela Sabatini and Martina Navratilova were soon to follow.
Apart from No. 1 Steffi Graf and No. 2 Arantxa Sanchez Vicario there is not much in the field.
All of which do not make for the prospects of soaring television ratings. After years of big names for Super Saturday and Championship Sunday, CBS heads for the climax of the season's final Grand Sham event with a flock of anonymous players.
"Obviously, you'd like the glamour names in the championship matches," said Tim Ryan, who is a co-anchor for the coverage with Mary Carillo. "But the nature of tournaments is that they include upsets and sometimes stars don't make it to the finals."
ryan said the absence of the big names was a challenge for television, an opportunity to introduce some new names in their place.
Tennis
Richard Devinki/KANSAN
For the love of tennis
Nora Koves, Budapest, Hungary, junior, works on her backhand during a team practice. Yesterday marked the first day of formal tennis practice for the season.
American League supports expanding to three divisions
The Associated Press
Baseball's proposed switch to a three-division format won American League support yesterday after Cleveland and Detroit agreed to shift divisions, but the National League's position remained unclear.
AL president Bobby Brown said Cleveland agreed to play in the AL Central instead of remaining in the East, and Detroit would stay in the East instead of moving to the Central.
While each league requires 10 of 14 votes
NL president Bill White said various alignments were still under discussion in his league, and others said the talks involved Atlanta and Pittsburgh, which both prefer the East.
to make any changes. NL teams switching divisions have veto power over moves. The Chicago Cubs, who blocked realignment last year, apparently are willing to go along with this plan.
"Those teams that would be in the Central have to vote to be in the Central." White said.
Owners voted in to expand the playoffs from four teams to eight next season, but the players' union said last month that it would not give its approval without a switch to three division formats. Because the current plan would move Atlanta from the West to the Central, the Braves can block a move. Pittsburgh would be in the same position if an attempt is made to move it from the East to the Central.
After Cleveland and Detroit agreed to switch, Brown said 12 AL teams indicated that they favored the three-division plan as long as a balanced schedule is kept through at least 1997. Brown said the Texas Rangers and Chicago White Sox opposed the plan.
Owners will attempt a formal vote at today's joint meeting of the two leagues, but probably won't be able to take one because they didn't give clubs the required 20 days notice and need unanimity to waive it. Texas general partner George W Bush, who objects to expanded playoffs, said he would vote no but expected a three-division proposal to eventually pass.
"This is an exercise in folly, but I will go down defending principle and history history
judges me correct. "Bush said. "I represent the frequent voices of baseball's purists."
Brown also said he was opposed, but he doesn't have a vote.
"I'm a dinosaur," he said. "I don't like any of it."
Brown said the AL wanted to maintain a balanced schedule, in which teams play about the same number of games against each other. AL West teams don't want to lose games against East Coast clubs that are big draws. The NL would keep a balanced schedule in 1994, but it's unclear what would happen in future seasons.
John Harrington of the Red Sox, chairman of the schedule-format committee, said owners could still vote to stick with two divisions in each league.
Proposed divisions, teams
The proposal, after yesterday's change, calls for the following
AL East:
Baltimore
Boston
Detroit
New York.Yankees
Toronto
NL East:
Florida
Montreal
New York Mets
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
AL Central:
Chicago White Sox
Cleveland
Kansas City
Milwaukee
Minnesota
NL Central:
Atlanta
Chicago Cubs
Cincinnati
Houston
St. Louis
AL West:
California
Oakland
Seattle
Texas
Source: The Associated Press
NL West:
Colorado
Los Angeles
San Diego
San Francisco
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Thursday, September 9, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Creating time through design
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
Under a strict deadline, competing architecture students on Friday raced to design an instrument that measures the very opponent they faced time.
With a four-hour time restriction, architecture students brainstormed, visualized and sketched their designs of a sundial.
The "Sundial Charrette" contest was sponsored by the National Organization of Minority Architecture Students, or NOMAS.
The contest, open to all architecture school students, was won by a team of four graduate students.
"What this amounted to was the four of us standing on the street corner brainstorming for one and a half hours," said James Laws, Lawrence graduate student and winning team member. "We each pushed our own ideas and accepted others, then collaborated to design the final project."
The KU architectural projects were judged by two juries, one administrative and one student group comprised
Carmina Sanchez, architecture professor, sat on the faculty jury. She said that 60 architecture students submitted entries.
"Each jury chose five of the best designs and the student jury selected the winner," Sanchez said.
In the contest rules, NOMAS officials explained that the sundial was chosen as the subject of the contest because it "reflects a conscientious study of the human environment and the universe."
Each student group had to turn in its project Friday afternoon four hours after learning the subject of the contest.
The thorough sketches included elevations, site plans and a brief explanation of the design concept.
Tom Cloyd, Dorinda Vontersch and James Pattillo, all Lawrence graduate students, and Laws designed the winning project.
Laws accepted recognition for the winning team project at Marvin Hall last night, but he stressed that the project was a team effort.
COATING ITS HEAD WITH A TIE.
of NOMAS members.
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
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My first impression of the Macintosh LC III was that this was a powerful machine able to give my presentations some punch. I was right. Its a great computer that will help you make some
powerful impressions of your own. And right now is a great time to look at the LC III because the Union Tech Center has it on sale at its lowest price ever.
Macintosh LC III 4.80 With Basic Color Monitor, Standard,
Keyboard, ClarisWorks, and Macintosh Promo CD
$1455.00
KU
Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU.
union
technology
KU
VISA
MasterCard
Discover
Computer Supplies & Equipment
+1-913-864-5690
KU
KU
APPLE
KANSAS
Have you dined at The Castle Tea Room lately?
Reservations only:
843-1151
Advertise in the Kansan!
SELL IT FAST IN THE KANSAN CLASSIFIED
Classified Directory
200s Emulate
100s
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional
300s
Merchandise
235 Typing Services
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
commission.
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Classified Policy
The Kansasan 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 Kansasan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
All real estate Federal in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to discriminate based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or deprivation.
Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
Kansan Classified: 864-4358
110 Business Personals
Create Your Look!
Interchangeable wrap-around shields
for the actuation life!
Killer Loops
Exclusively at The Etc. Shop
322 Mass Ave.
KU Women's Mismatches a facial free and
makeover. All new full colors, personalized
selection. No obligation to purchase. 643 4280
Unique Silver Jewelry
Hope, Pendants & More!
The Kie Shop
322 Mass Downown
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, September 9, 1993
15
Plastic Laminating
Add professional polish to class projects, maps and posters. (up to 25 inches wide)
Howell Creative Studios
1203 Iowa 842-9289
corner of Orchard Lane & Iowa
1 BLK south of Capitol Fed.
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
120 Announcements
BAPSTIT STUDENT UNION. Thursday 6:30pm at The American Baptist Center, 1629 W. Rikk Rock, clock, minister. Scott Lee. BSU president. Small groups, music and drama, retreats, introspection. A Christian ministry open to everyone. A Christian ministry open to everyone. WORK STUDY POSitions AVAILABLE at the School of Bus. Apply at 358 Summerfield or call 844-4500
ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE WORKSHOP
ACADEMIC EXCELLENT WORKSHOP
For students who want to study smarter, not harder FREE!
Thursday, September 9,
7-8 p.m.
4057 Wescoe offered by the Student Assistance Center
Interested In
LITERACY TUTORING?
Tutor Training
Workshop
Sat. Sept.11, 9 a.m.
2.p.m
ECM (1204 Oread)
Call Students Tutoring
for Literacy at
864 2660 865 1528
864-3660 or 865-1528
FRATS! SORORITIES!
STUDENT GROUPS!
Raisees Muchs You Want In One Week!
$100...,$600...$1500!
Market Applications for VISA,
MASTERCARD, MCL,
FREE T-SHIFT and to qualify
for FREE TRIP to MTV
SPRING BEAK 94.
Call 1-800-994-103, ext. 75.
CHRISTMAS SKI BREAKS
LODGING • LIFTS • PARTIES • PICNICS • TAXES
STEAMBOAT* s199
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK*
TELLURIDE
FREE 1/2 DAY
LIFT TICKET!
MUST BOOR BY 1815
1·800·SUNCHASE
HARVARD
Hiliel Upcoming Events
Rosh Hashana Dinner, 5:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Sept. 15
SIGN UP
In the Hillel Office or Call
864-3948 BY 5:00 Fri.
To Make a Reservation
HIGH HOLIDAYS
SERVICES
(See advertisement in
today's Kansan)
Intramural CO-ED
Softball
A-Team; Tuesdays-3:30
B-Teaim; Sundays-5:30
If interested call Caryn
at 864-3948
130 Entertainment
Lonsome Houndogs Saturday Sept.11th
BENCHWARMERS
2 for 1 WELLS
TONIGHT!
COOTIES
BENCHWARMERS
25¢ DRAWS
Mountain Clyde
Friday
Sept. 10
BENCHWARMERS
2 for 1 WELLS
140 Lost & Found
Found Sunglasses in a case on Jayhawk
Bldr. Thurs 8th Aug 2016: Call 841-4964 and talk to
me.
Found. Windbreaker in Wescoe Call 749-1040 to identify
Found Windbreaker in Wescoe Call 749-1040 to
LOST little black sweater with a hole in the right shoulder. Last seen Sept. 14. I wescote. If found call
205 Help Wanted
Brandon Woods Retirement Community is currently hiring him. All in the morning 9 a.m. up. Above minimum wage job. Must be hard working and willing to work weekends and some holiday. Apply at 1630 Inverness Ave.
Bassist needed to complete all original 4 piece hand. Original music in the vein of tools, tool, and instrument.
Christian day care needs enthusiastic/reliable
morning assistant ASAP. Experience preferred
Drivers needed for a fun job. Meet lots of people while making good money. The Lawrence Bus Co needs drivers for SAFERIDE. Must be 21岁 old & have a good driving record. #24 per hr wk-
**DOCUMENTATION INTERNET.** Student monthly deadline, 9/17/95, 20 wk hr. includes organizational support; requires assistance in the preparation of user-oriented documentation; on-line help files and手册 descriptions; and on-site training for use of user-education seminars and workshops; and other duties as assigned. To apply, submit a personal resume to Angela Barnett, Personnel Officer, Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66043.
CRUISSE NOW HIRING Earn up $2000 + / mo. world travel Summer & career employer package + more information call 1-263-644-9848 (for ext. C9765 Delivery drivers needed. New Company hiring
Part-time, temporary positions as Lifeguard,
Aquatic Instructor and Simmataz Instructor.
Certification required. The following positions are available at Admin. Services.
Room 210. Room 61b. *h* & Mass. Lawrence. KS
510. Room 54c. *h* & Mass. Lawrence. KS
STATE FARM
IS A GREAT
PLACE TO
WORK!
CITY OF LAWRENCE
NAPLES & RECREATION DEPT
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma.
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W 24th 749-5750
State Farm has a lot to offer: competitive salaries, pleasant work atmosphere.
opportunities for training and advancement, excellent benefits and exchange
up-todate equipment,
in the Insurance industry
If interested please visit
with a State Farm
Representant
benefits package Great career opportunity
University Business Career Fair
Sept. 9, 1993.
STATE FARM
Insurance
1:00pm-6:00pm
1:00pm-6:00pm Holiday Inn/Holidome Convention Center
An Equal Opportunity Employer
FLAG B REFEREES Recreation Services will be hiring IRAMural officials to work Flag Football. No exp necessary. $47.50-$90. Attend meeting Monday, Sept. 13 at 6 a.m. in 165 Holmes Street.
Dynamic person with initiative & sales ability for part-time snack vending route in Lawrence area. Must have transportation. Base rate + allowance. Carriage Vendue. 911-723-5612
Kansas and Burge Uions hiring part-time, hourly for Fall Semester. Many jobs in Food Science, Catering and Custodian with varying schedule. All positions in Kansas Uions foundation for job specifics EOE
Library Assistant for retrieval and photocopying for $4.25 per hour. Flexible schedule 12-16 hours per week. Department of Medical Chemistry
Apply 4070 Alters, 864-4495
NANNIES spend a year near NYC with a family that "truces" you: Call 1-800-858-1899, any day of the week.
Nanny full time for 2 yr. old and 4 mo. old. Referrals required 893-1919
Part time evening delivery person. Must have own car. Apply in person. Peking Restaurant 23rd and 8th below Hasting Street, New York. Hair Design Expert Design Team needs an energetic person to work full time in a busy salon. Typing abilities and customer service experience a plus. Please stop by to pick up an appointment.
STUDENT DISTRIBUTION TECHNICIAN
Deadline: 09/16/18
barring garsing and decoupling functions; delivery of computer output and interoffice mail using the computer van; paper tearing (titanium); printing of student research reports.
memories, stocking and maintaining inventory figures, tape library duties, and other warehouse responsibilities; assist in maintenance; performs in Open Landscape Furniture maintenance; performs duties in conjunction with the campus wide recycle program; uses personal computer or mainframe software as a means of performing all tasks; prepares an application available at the Computer Center in room 202, EO/AEEMPLOYER
molly mckees
grillbar
- Pedicures • Back Scratchers
• Manicures • Linen Wraps
• Sculptured Nails • Overlays
MOLLY MCGEES IS
NOW ACCEPTING
APPLICATIONS FOR
EXPERIENCED COOKS.
APPLY BETWEEN
2-4 P.M.
AT 2429 IOWA.
Students guaranteed hourly wages and great for good phone work. Day-evenings shifts.
Summer's over. Do you need $5? **THE HOLIDAYS** is the happenin' place to work! We
NAILTIQUE
Grand Opening!
Taco Bell now hiring for full or part time hour or evening help. Apply in person at 1250 W or 648 E
Taking applications for dishwasher/kitchen utility helene Country Club. Ask for Frank
The Kansas and Burge Uions hiring part-time, hourly in the following areas: Food Service, Catering, and Custodial. Many jobs with varying days and hours. See Job Board, Level 3, Kansas Union
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED. Rape/Viaticum Survival Service=ASAP is seeking volunteers. Applications at Headquarters Counseling Center, KU Jerusalem Assistance Center and Haskell Indian Nations
Sanguet servers restaurant wait staff Host/Hostess Cooks Room attendants Maintenance Engineers
WORKSHIP
Start at $98.88 per month. Qualify for up to $160.00 annual
bonus.
$5.00 off first visit!
Call Heidi at 832-2900
If interested apply at the Holidome 200 McDonald Dr. EOE.
225 Professional Services
Have fun harmonizing mind and body. Learn Pair Ai
Chi Great for heating seas. Call Marce Fai 84-69-3100
Kansas Army National Guard call (913) 842-9293
Criminal Defense
for free consultation call
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri
843-4023
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
Macintosh repairs and upgrades
Friendly, Affordable, In-Home Service
The Mac Porters 910-6488
C Deskbook Publishing. Resumes, Cover Letters,
Form Letters, Term Paper, Newsletters
M42-1883 8905
For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and talk with you.
Spanish tutor. Experienced teacher and fluent grad student available for private tutoring sessions. Flexible hours and reasonable rates. Call Scott 842-2481
We're in front of 1000s who talk with you.
Birthright 843-4821 Free pregnancy testing
Prompt abortion and contraceptive services. Dale
J. Chateau MD, 841-5736
235 Typing Services
Lder Women Word Processing. Former editor
Lder Women Word Processing to accurate pieces of letter
grade type. 842-2005
TRAFFIC.DUI'S
Are you Makin' the grade
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your typing needs
call Makin' the grade at 865-2853.
Resumes
the law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G Strole Sally Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
- coverletters
• writing
• consultation
TRAPEICIDUS
Fake ID'D and alcoholic divorce criminal & civil matters
The lawoffices of
Transcriptions
X
Transcriptions
1012 Mass 842-4619
Suite 201-upstairs
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
92 Spe. Rockhopper Sport plus lock, rack, light,
and jobshell for all $pall for KU3 823-2165
15p color T V. Queen waveness water bed. Queen water bed frame. Kitchen table. Barbecue grill. cabinets, posters, kitchen items & telephone. Call 842-5891
1970 Vanahi 280 Street bike. Is looks great.
765 ORO, CDL Address at: 1-423-7421 by 4pm.
286 *Lunebox* `portable computer` 60 HD i 1.2
924 *Lunebox* `portable computer` 604 413-838 day 43
924 *Lunebox* `ask for Day, Ask for Computer`
ImageWriter II Printer for Apple or Macintosh computer. $150 O B. Small microwave oven.
Beds, drinks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
Vacuum Mass.
Couch, 3x6 desk, recliner chair, queen waterbed with six drawer underdresser, super single waterbed with six drawer underdresser Call 841-055
Fall Clearance. All adult tapes on sale up $9.95
up, Miracle Video, 910 n°298, or Miracle
video, 910 n°298, or Miracle video
For Sale 23 in. in Miele Cycle Road Bike Shimano,
e.g., handlebars and toe pieces. Enabled to race
tradition 1928. For Sale 26 in. in Miele Cycle Road
For Sale Mac Plus with Everex 20 MH Hard
Drive, Image Printer & ton of free soft
foam. For Sale 24 in. in Miele Cycle Road
HELP! "I'm mewes-trale." My neighbors want me to stay in, and now there a puppy, here too; a aneuried, 3-yed child, de-clawed FREE to a loving home. 841-3657
King waterhed. 8 drainer pedestal, mirrored head
King waterbed. 8 drainer pedestal, mirrored head
KONA *klauses* BM 19h*. BIM XT. TANGE
MAC SE 45 mrg hard drive, 2.5 megram
Included unregistered version of Claris Works
Men *Schwinch Crisscross min. bike* 21 speed 18.
Men *Schwinch Crisscross condition* $20 or best offer 84-
69. Calgary Gear
Microwave Oven 800 Per 1 table w glass top 600 Per 1 table w glass top 400 Infinity Infinity Monitor 13 Home Speakers. Very nice speakers, well taken care of with b y warranty 8600/ or b o to 86299/ or b o to 86599/
Panicasm word processor KX-W90 like new.
Large 7 line LK disk, w/3.5" drive disk & 98 RAM
Memory, thesaurus,拼查 and more!
Manual & cover irv $230.00 B4-83-4206
One way ticket to Boston via Cincinnati, must be used of 19th of September 10 or best offer.
**Reale Sale!** Columbian Boat $99, Baby Iguanas $29, Burrsen Phoris $115, etc. care Information included Call Jjm 816-587-247. Will deliver from KCK, Visit Mastercard.
Stereo system like. New Sony receiver/CD player. Pioneer cassette speakers. Tee bass E Q. Remote. $150, new 100, $500. Two bar stools, solid oak, $280, new 875 for the guitar. B41-1253.
Over the Edge
services give students the competitive edge.
Naismith Halls'
- Front door bus service
24 hr. computer center
1938 Honda Accord, runs great! AT, AC,
Battery +4 door- Call 641-1220 120,
or 641-994-8894.
340 Auto Sales
1973 Dodge Coronet, four-door, $800. Call Rick at 617-254-5000.
Fitness room
1983 cassette, Ace Aircrd, runs great! AT, AC AM/PM
4-cheveron, 4-door, 841-1230 or 841-5858.
For more information see **www.acerd.com**.
Dine anytime meals
1983 Honda Accord,信赖,loaded,new tires,
$1,000 OBO Call Liang at 841-6824
IBI VNCI ND, large cond. new breaks, new tiers
AM/FM case, speedering $2000, b.o. call BAI
$1799.99
for sale at a price of
1983 Mk I Fedra for sale $1000.00 o.b.o 100,000 miles
Shelf 748-2490 Shelf 748-2490
Weekly maid service
---
400s
370 Want to Buy
Real Estate
LEVI'S 501's, will pay up to $13.00 and $10.00 for Levi
Jean Jackets: 841-0546
---
Large (1548 room) for non-smoking a female 3 mi.
from campus. 9210 UTL. Call PD: 784-0166
405 For Rent
NAISMITH
1800 Naismith Drive (913) 843-8559
sunet at Graystone Apts! Call Phil at (816) 405-
7253 for a good deal
ADVERTISING WORKS!
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS 2040 Heatherwood
*2 Bedroom, 1½ Bath $425
*2 Bedroom, 2 Bath $550
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
Call Now!843-4754
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
How to schedule an ad:
LOWER YOUR RENT Male NS looking for a place to live: 842-9275
Responsible roommate to share upstate 3 btl or
1 townhouse to rent. Call after 8:59 a.m.
Call after 6:42 p.m. Bike calls Call after 6:34 p.m.
2. NS looking for 3rd mrt for 3 bld apt. Req
+5 mo/+12 months. Near camp. Call John 611
987-645-3000
2 NSF seeking 3rd roommate in twintown WTU
3 NSF seeking 4th roommate in twintown WTU
862-2368 - Leave 8590 - visit ucf.edu
862-2368 - Leave
Responsible female to share 2 belf apl. 180 ml. Pursued for $235 mln and ulf pcl Caterpillar.
- 8 phone numbers:
As an phone number may be limited to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
119 Stuart Flueler 119 Stuart Flueler
Relived grandmother wants to share modest home letters and send letter adresses to her by Sept. 17th.
- Bu Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint. Lawrence. KS. 65045
Calculating Rates:
Room available for a female in 2 store town house close to campus and on bus route. $424 per month plus utilities. Sept. Rent already paid. Leased through May 31. For info: 749-723-691
- person: 1911 SSTaff Print
Step by the Kayman office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged for the mail.
Classified Information and order form
- by Yen I. * 1st Student Paper, LaTeXbook AS Usual
You may print your classifying form on the order below and mail it with payment to the Kansas City. Or you may choose to have it mailing 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 appointments and the size of the ad (the number of帖 lines the ad occupies). To calculate cost, multiply the total number of days in an 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 clicking on a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused refunds. Fees on cancelled ads that were paid before a check with cash are available.
Bring box numbers.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
Number of insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8 lines
Rates per line per day
Classifications
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
105 personal
110 business persons
120 announcements
130 entertainment
Cost per line per day
1X 2-3M 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 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
140 item "bait"
125 waited for
225 professional services
225 typing services
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
Date ad begins: ___ Total days in paper ___
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
Name:
1
2
3
4
5
How do begins:___ Total days in paper___
Total ad cost:___ Classification:
Name:___ Phone:___
VISA
Method of Payment (Check one) Check enclosed MasterCard Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan)
Furnish the following of you are charging your ad.
MasterCard
Expiration Date;
Print exact name appearing on credit card.
Signature:
The University of Dalkey Kannan. 119 Saataff Trial Flinf Hall, Lawrence KS. 60045
*The University of Dalkey Kannan.* 119 Saataff Trial Flinf Hall, Lawrence KS. 60045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Joon
© 1935 HarWorks Inc. All rights by Universal Press Syndicate
9-9
"You were hit last night by some cutt, Mr. Gilbert.
... Not the sickest cutt I've ever seen,
but a cult nonetheless."
16
Thursday, September 9, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Follow the Sign for
★OPEN 24 HOURSEveryday!
HUNDREDS OF GREEN TAG SPECIALS IN EFFECT EVERY TIME YOU SHOP!
These and more Green Tag Specials in effect thru Sept. 14, 1993. Quantity rights reserved.
Savings!
- 2525 Iowa St.
in Lawrence
Here's just a sample of the savings you'll get by shopping Food 4 Less...
FOOD 4 LESS
Chicken LEG
QUARTERS
28¢
lb.
6-PACK PEPSI Non-
Returnable
Bottles 99¢
MILWAUKEE'S BEST $328 -12-Pk. Regular or Light
Fresh Picked SWEET CORN 10 $1
Surveys show that 85% of purchases are made from the shelf. And Food 4 Less always has the lowest everyday shelf prices. Just another way Food 4 Less saves you more!
ears for
While Supplies Last! BOSTON FERNS $299 each
Welch's
PIZZA CONCERT AT THE FIESTA COSTAL
GRAPE
VIEW TIME
Welch's Frozen GRAPE JUICE 58¢ 12-oz. Can
Kraft PARKAY MARGARINE 1-lb. Sticks
88¢
PECAN
SWIRLS
Pkg. of -6-
98¢
CAMPUS/AREA: Artisans from 60 different tribes will display their wares at the Fifth Annual Indian Market this weekend. Page 3.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103.NO.15
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
UNDER THE BIG TOP
THE ELEPHANT WAS DESTROYED BY AN ARROW.
TEDDY HARRIS
Above left, Jim Zajacek washes Barbra the elephant after she helped poke the poles into place for the Culpeper and Merriweather circus tents are set up yesterday. Above right, David "Stu" Volponi, tail man for the circus, tackles the challenge of moving around ordinary places in his extraordinary height.
It's home to the few performers who still live for the circus circuit
By Traci Carl
Kansan staff write
David "Stitits" Volponi stood high above the small crowd of children and parents yesterday morning belting out the names of Snickers the miniature horse and Hamhock the Vietnamese pot-bellied pig as they arrived at the petting area.
"Can I touch your legs?" asked 4-year-old Davy Frick.
"Sure!" Volponi said.
Davy cautiously approached the wooden stilts shrouded in red and white pants and quickly poked at the wood underneath.
"He has big knees. Davy said as he backed up to get a better look at Volponi, who was the first person to walk 10 miles on stilts when he performed the feat for the March of Dimes.
The public was invited to watch Barbra the elephant help put up the circus tent yesterday morning and many stayed to watch the animals and visit with performers. Ninety-minute shows were performed at 7 and 9 last night. The circus is in its ninth season.
Goponit was one of the 38 members of the Culpepper and Merriweather Great Combined Circus that performed last night at the Douglas County 4-H Furgrounds, Lawrence Masonic Lodge No. 6 sponsored the circus.
The circus, which is one of about 10 tent circles left in the United States, travels from California through Colorado and Nebraska to Chicago, down
to Texas and over to Arizona, said Red Johnson, the owner.
Johnson joined a circus in 1976 after he lost his job. He started Culpepper and Merrweather in 1984 with fourpeople, he said. They performed in campgrounds and passed a hat around for money.
One of the circus veterans, 85-year-old Darrell Davis, said he ran away with the circus six years ago to make balloon animals.
"They came to my town and I left with them that night," he said.
He learned his trade by studying books and watching other people, he said. Even so, he does not rely on lung power to blow the balloons up.
"At my age I'm not wasting air on balloons," he said.
This is not Davis' first experience with the circus.
He said he remembered riding in the carback of Gargantua the Gorilla on the Ringling Brothers Barnum and Bailey Circus train. The gorilla rode in a refrigerated car.
"He's mean lookin'," he said. "I've seen him many times."
Jef Gates, a mechanic with the circus,
said he joined because he needed a job.
"It's a paycheck," he said. "I get to see
the country."
His 14-year-old son lives in California, he said, but he is not impressed with his father's occupation.
him many times."
J. Gates, a mechanic with the circus.
"He thinks it's kinda strange," he said.
"Nobody else's dad is in the circus, he says."
FREDERICK MURRAY
Lester Burrage put the remaining poles of the main tent in place yesterday for the Culpepper and Merriweather Circus. The tent, when completely raised, was three stories high.
INSIDE
6 2
20
STATE
Home-court advantage
The Kansas volleyball team will defend its Kansas Invitational Tournament title this weekend at Allen Field House.
Page 9
Look before you leap: Injuries from bungee jumping a danger
Steinberg, Memphis, Tenn, freshman, was on vacation in Fort Walton Beach, Fla., when, on the spur of the moment, she decided to bungee jump. She paid a bungee company $30, watched a demonstration jump, was briefed on safety measures and signed forms that released the company of liability if she was injured.
Besides parasailing and getting a tattoo on her right hip, bungee jumping is the scariest thing Jennifer Steinberg has ever done.
Steinberg was then strapped into a vest and had ropes around her arms and legs. Before plumming 70 feet, Steinberg experienced the usual pre-bungee emotion fear.
By Liz Klinger
Pamela Hite, associate director for emergency medicine at the University of Kansas Medical Center, said people should be aware of the risks of bungee jumping.
"I think people should take more seriously the potential dangers involved and understand that they're participating in a sport that could cost them their life or permanent disabilities." Hite
"My initial thought was' Oh my God. What am I doing? I'm going to die." Steinberg said.
Hite is one of four authors of "Injuries Result"
The article described the injuries that a 19-year-old woman and a 28-year-old man sustained while bungee jumping. The woman suffered abrasions when the bungee cord wrapped around her neck and caused a temporary hanging. The man was paralyzed from the neck down because of a spinal-cord injury sustained during a reverse jump. Before he was injured, he had completed 100 jumps.
ing From Bunge-Cord Jumping," an article in the June 1993 issue of *Annals of Emergency Medicine* that outlines the potential dangers of bungee jumping.
Hite said the sport should be regulated more closely. The article said that neither bungee equipment nor instructor certification were regulated by the government.
People are always looking for something that will give them a feeling of excitement or a rush
Hite said people who jumped described feeling their stomachs go 30 feet above their bodies. That thrill is what seems to draw people to the soot desiite the potential injuries.
Josh Ediger, McPherson sophomore who bungee jumped during spring break in the Padre Islands, said he liked the potential danger.
"That's part of the fun," Ediger said.
Satellite labs key to breaking logjam at computer center
Many students don't know what's available computing director says
By Shan Schwartz
Kansan staff writer
Lee Grimes walked through the KU Computer Center labs yesterday afternoon, and seeing no computers available, sat down in the hall.
"We could definitely use more computers," she said. "At other universities, it seems like there are computers all over the place. It's a pain to walk all the way down here from GSP."
Grimes, Manhattan freshman, said she went to the center every day and often had to wait for a computer, sometimes for 20 minutes or more.
What Grimes did not know was that there was a lab in Fraser Hall, much closer to her residence hall, that could provide the same services she needed at the computer center.
Niebaum said he was beginning to contact computer lab coordinators, academic affairs officials and student government representatives to discuss how to better meet student needs.
The real challenges, he said, were keeping the computers modernized, keeping a staff able to support the new computers and software, and keeping students informed of the availability of those computers.
Students can get specific information about the labs from KU Information or the Computer Center, Niebaum said.
Jerry Niebium, director of academic computing services, said computers were in abundance at KU. However, many students do not know about all the labs on campus, and many problems arose from the fact that each lab is independently managed and maintained by academic departments close to the labs.
Until recently, the labs in Fraser, Strong, Summerfield and Learned halls were maintained by the computer center, Niebaum said, and were undated consistently with the center.
But in the last couple of years, those labs were turned over to academic offices in those buildings. Other labs also were created and developed by departments throughout campus.
"The departments were getting
Computer labs
The following labs are open to all students:
Having labs are also available to students:
■ Fraser Hall, room 121 and 122*
■ Snow Hall, room 210
■ Strong Hall, room 17*
■ Summerfield Hall, room 418
Restricted labs are also available in Art & Design, Balley, Dole, Green,
Learned*, Lindley, Marvin, Stauffer Flint, Twente, Wescoe and all residence halls.
* Labs open 24 hours
Source: Academic Computing Services KANSAN
funding and creating labs, so this was the way to go," Niebaum said. "It solved problems for us, because it's difficult to manage labs from a distance. It made sense that the departments there in those buildings took care of them."
However, by decentralizing control of those labs, Niebaum said, other problems arose for students. He said the rapid advance of technology made consistency between the labs difficult.
"You normally expect a product life cycle to be five to seven years," Niebaum said. "But the life cycle in the microcomputer area is two to three years."
After that time, Niebaum said, computers are often obsolete because of new software and the high cost of maintenance. Because each lab is independent of the others, frequent upgrades are not consistent from one lab to another.
"So students are finding the projects they worked on in one lab are incompatible with software in other labs on campus," Niebaum said.
"It's a wonderful opportunity for the student government to have a say in this instruction aspect of the University," Niebaum said.
Niebaum said that lab coordinators he had spoken with also were interested in more communication and said that student input would be a key to improved services.
John Shoemaker, Student Senate president, said that he had just made appointments this week to the Academic Computing Committee and that those students would be working on improving computer services on campus.
Club helps students invest in the market
KU grads want to open world of stocks to novices
By Emily Gibson Special to the Kansan
KU graduates Brian Boeger and John Baker have made it their mission to help college students succeed in life—at least financially.
Boeger and Baker are founders of Investors Quarterly, an investment club designed to teach its members how to understand the complex financial world.
"We want them to be able to make intelligent, informed financial decisions on their own," said Boeger, a licensed financial counselor. "We want them to know and understand all the options available to them."
At quarterly meetings, members of the Kansas City, Mo.-based group will be given information on how the stock market works, how to decipher business news and will learn a few key financial terms, Boeger said.
The group had its first Lawrence chapter meeting last night. They plan to have one more meeting Oct. 7 before they hold a voting session Oct. 30 to decide what stock the group will invest in.
Three days before the session, members will be given stock choices and information about the stocks. They will vote at the session during a breakfast meeting.
Boeger said that to help members build an investment portfolio, the
group would allow them to invest in the stock market with little or no commission charges.
There is a $45 annual fee to be a standard member, which Boeger said was to cover the cost of the meetings.
"When I got out of college, I had no idea where to invest my savings or what investment options were risky or not," Boeer said. "We want to give these people a firm foundation and a good base of knowledge."
Spencer Marquardt,a business major, said that experience with a group such as Investors Quarterly would be valuable career training.
"It sounds like a great idea that would let people get an idea of how to play the stock market." Marquardt said. "It would be a good opportunity to see if that's something you'd want to go into."
Boerger emphasized that Investors Quarterly, which operates in association with the family-run Boerger Financial Group, is intended for college juniors, seniors and recent graduates.
"We want members who are at a point in their life when they need to be thinking about the future." Boeger said.
For more information about Investors Quarterly, call 1-800-726-9308.
2
Friday, September 10, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Jewish High Holiday Schedule
September 15: EREV ROSH HASHANA
5:30: Dinner; Big Eight Room, Kansas Union
Hillel members: $5.00
non-members: $8.00
7:30: Services; Lawrence Jewish Community Center
(LJCC)
917 Highland Drive
[To sign up for dinner, call 864-3948 or come
by the Hillel office in the Kansas Union.]
September 16: First day of Rosh Hashana
9:30 a.m.: Services;LJCC
7:30 p.m.: Services;LJCC
September 17: Second day of ROSH HASHANA
9:30 a.m.: Services; LJCC
7:45 p.m.: Shabbat services; LJCC
September 24: KOL NIDRE
7:30 p.m.:Services;Kansas Union Ballroom
September 25: YOM KIPPUR
9:30 a.m.: Services; LJCC
11:00 a.m.: Yiskor Services; LJCC
5:30 p.m.: Nilah Services; LJCC
**Sundown:** break-the-fast
sign up for break-the-fast, call 864-3948 or come by the Hillel
Office in the Kansas Union.
All services are free. Rides can be provided by calling the Hillel Office at 864-3948. The LJCC is at the corner of 9th and Iowa behind the Amoco Station.
TO MAKE RESERVATIONS FOR ROSH HASHANA DINNER CALL 864-3948 by 5:00 TODAY.
ON CAMPUS
A lecture, "The Creation of Brazilian Self-Identity," will be presented by Dr. Jon Vincent at 3 p.m. today at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
The Women's Student Union will meet at 5 p.m. today at Alceve A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call WSU Workspace through the Organizations and Activities office at 804-4861.
A video, "Images of Jesus on Film," sponsored by Ecumenical Christian Ministries and Canterbury House, will be shown from 6 to 8 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933.
The KU BabaI Club will sponsor a lecture, "Life After Death," by Scott Jaenicke from 7:30 to 9:30 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Meholi Khoshsabegheh at 841-7585.
The Early Education Organization will sponsor a Potuck Picnic from 1 to 3 p.m. tomorrow at Potter Pavilion. For more information, call Angela at 841-4264 or Katie at 864-2069.
A Brazilian Food Stand will be held from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. tomorrow at Ninth and Massachusetts in front of Adventure A Bookstore.
Kansas City's premier Brazilian jazz band, The Sons of Brazil, will play Carribean music from 8:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. tomorrow at the Ballroom in the Kansas Union. Admission is $3.50.
G R.E.E.C.S will meet at 3 p.m. Sunday at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Christopher Livingston at 749-2114.
A soccer tournament will be from 3 to 7 p.m. tomorrow at 23rd and Iowa streets. To enter, call Antonio Simoes at S84-3851 or Pablo Villana at 1:549-2121.
The Office of Study Abroad will have an information table from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday on the fourth floor lobby in the Kansas Union.
The Spencer Museum of Art will sponsor a Hallmark symposium by Estelle Ellis, director of Promotion/Marketing at Business Image, New York at 6 p.m. Monday at the Spencer Museum Auditorium.
KU Taew Kao Do Club will meet from 6 to 8:30 p.m. Monday in 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jacob Wright at 749-2084 or Jason Anishanslin at 843-3099.
KU Kempo Club will meet from 6 to 8:30 p.m. Monday in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Eshradi at 842-7131.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60445, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60444 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, KA 60454
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WEATHER
the country:
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Houston; 64/66'
Miami; 92/76'
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Seattle; 72/52'
Weather around the country:
TODAY
Partly cloudy, N wind 5-10 mph
TO JOIN SAA, CALL 864-4760
High: 71*
Low: 50*
Source: John Pfeiter, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
Omaha: 68'/45'
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Partly cloudy Light S winds 5 mph
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Micah Laaker/KANSAN
KANSAN
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YOU'VE GOT THE WHOLE WORLD RIGHT HERE AT KU!
PARTY!
Friday, September 10th
- Quality Inn (on 6th & Iowa).
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• Doors open at 9 o'clock
Night Ranger
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CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
3
Fridav September 10.1993
New position sought for office
Proposal to move Minority Affairs under consideration
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Ten years after the Office of Minority Affairs was moved from under the direct supervision of the executive vice chancellor's office, some students and student senators want to move it back in an effort to improve the representation of minority students on campus.
A proposal would move the office from its current position under the dean of student life, who reports to the vice chancellor for students affairs before reporting to the executive vice chancellor. The student proposal recommends that the office report directly to the executive vice chancellor.
In November 1992, Tim Dawson, Topeka senior and student body vice president, sponsored a resolution with then-senator Peter Braithwaite that called for the move. The resolution passed Student Senate one month later.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the situation was under review by a committee that wanted to coordinate efforts to help minority students. Barbara Ballard, associate dean of student life and head of the committee, was not available for comment.
"We felt that in the position of Minority Affairs is in now, it doesn't have much weight," Dawson said. "The University hasn't given it any authority."
The office was moved under the authority of the dean of student life in 1983 to protect the program from budget cuts, Dawson said. At that time, branches of the administration were more susceptible to cuts than individual programs, he said.
Dawson said that by moving the office up the administrative ladder, the University would be able to deal more directly with minority concerns.
"For instance, if the Office of Minority Affairs were in a vice chancellor's spot, we would see a lot more done on the multicultural center," he said.
Dawson compared the search for space for the center with the School of Education's search for space. He said the school had received help from Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, when it asked for and received permission to move into vacant Joseph R. Pearson Hall. Meyen is a faculty member and was dean of the school before he was appointed executive vice chancellor.
"When they needed space, they got that immediately," Dawson said. "With the multicultural center, they had to look around and around for space."
Braithwaite, Evanston, III, senior, agreed with Dawson. Braithwaite was a member of the African-American Student Concerns Task Force, which recommended moving the office last year.
"It does no good if they have no power over policies to help students," he said. "It's almost like a multicultural trash can. The University shoves all its problems with people of color into there."
Sherwood Thompson, director of the office, declined to comment.
"When there is a need to meet with the vice chancellor and the executive vice chancellor, that can be accomplished without any difficulty at all," he said. "Reporting directly there doesn't mean you'll have a stronger voice." He said the administration was too complex to consider
Ambler said he would keep an open mind about the proposal, but he questioned whether the office would be more effective if attached to the executive vice chancellor's office.
He said the administration was too complex to consider one dean or position higher than another.
"I understand that mentality, but unless you know how an administration works, you just don't understand," he said.
Going up?
Changing the status of the Office of Minority Affairs was suggested by Student Senate and the African American Student Concerns Task Force in 1992. The proposed change would make the office closer administratively to the Executive Vice Chancellor's Office.
Present organizational structure
Executive Vice Chancellor
Student Affairs
Student Life
Minority Affairs
Proposed status change
Source: KANSAN staff reports
Micah Laaker / KANSAN
Festival shares Indian culture
Food, artwork to be featured
Kansan staff writer
By Donella Hearne Kansan staff writer
Between 10,000 and 15,000 people are expected to be roaming the Powwow grounds at Haskell Indian Nations University this weekend.
Show highlights
Patrons of the Fifth Annual Indian Market will be taking in food and entertainment while checking out the work of artists and craftsmans from across the country. The artists are being brought together by the Lawrence Indian Arts Show, a group that provides American-Indian artists with opportunities to showcase and sell their work.
"There will be items there selling for $2 and for some thousands of dollars," Hazlett said, "There's something for everyone."
Hazlett said there also would be food booths serving traditional Indian dishes. Several Haskell clubs also will be providing entertainment such as traditional dances.
The market will feature about 105 booths displaying and selling traditional and nontraditional artwork. Bead work, pottery, jewelry, sculpture, paintings and clothing are some of the items by the artists visiting the fair, said Sandra Hazlett, who is working at the market.
The Fifth Annual Lawrence Indian Arts Show begins with the benefit opening tonight and end Oct. 24.
Lawrence resident and painter, Laurie Houseman-WhiteHawk, said she would be displaying five or six of her paintings and would also have limited edition prints for sale. Houseman-WhiteHawk said she was on the founding committee of the Lawrence Indian Arts Show and said she thought the market was worth seeing.
"The one thing about the show is its quality," she said. "The work is all disjointed."
"It's educational too. People can see what the traditional crafts of many different tribes are."
Benefit Opening - 7:30-9:30 p.m.
Sept. 10 at the University of Kansas
Museum of Anthropology. By reservation.
$35 per person.
**Indian Market** — 10:00 a.m. -6:00
p.m. Sept. 11 and 11 a.m. a:500
p.m. Sept. 12 at the Haskell Indian
Nation Museum, Grounds
KANSAN
Indian Arts Show - Juried Competition.
Indian Arts Show, Sept. 11, 2014 at the Museum of Anthropology. Admission: adult $3, students $1, under 5 free.
Houseman-WhiteHawk said that at least 60 different tribes were represented at last year's show and that she expected at least that many this year.
One benefit of the show, she said, was that buyers could meet the artists whose work they were buying.
"I go to these shows all over. I've made friends, sold work and made gallery contacts." Houseman-White-Hawk said.
Don Nieto, a lab technician in the University of Kansas physics department, said he learned to make jewelry while growing up on the Santo Domingo Indian reservation in New Mexico.
Nieto makes contemporary and traditional jewelry from silver, turquoise, malachite and other shells and stones. Making jewelry and sculpting stone is something Nieto does part time. He said this would be his third year to have a booth at the market.
"We want to develop a community relationship between the Lawrence community and the Haskell community," he said. "I think it's a wonderful concept to have a market in Lawrence."
Nieto said he thought the show was great for the community.
BANK IV FOURTH FINANCIAL CORPORATION
William Alix / KANSAN
Paul Rabbideau, Lawrence graduate student, discusses business with Bank IV Human Resources Officer Bob Southern. The 12th Annual Business Career Fair was held yesterday afternoon at the Holiday Inn Holdome, 200 McDonald Drive.
Networking
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Ex-basketball player pleads not guilty in 1992 burglaries
Former Jayhawk basketball player Terry Brown pleaded not guilty Tuesday to charges stemming from three 1992 burglaries.
Brown was arrested Aug. 20 and charged with one count of burglary, one count of felony theft and one count of midemionear theft. The charges involved two cases from August 1992 and one from December 1992
Brown was a guard on the 1989-90 and 1990-91 Hawk basketball teams. He made 200 three-point field goals, a Jayhawk record, in his two years at Kansas. Brown's trial has been scheduled to begin Sept. 22.
Man charged in drug possession
A 33-year old man was arrested by KU police on Wednesday and was charged with possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia.
Vitale was taken to the Law Enforcement Center, where he was charged with operating a vehicle under the influence, possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia.
Police stopped Dan Vitale in the 500 block of West 14th Street on Wednesday night. He was given a sobriety test and a breath test at the site and failed both. Police also found a gold container containing what was thought to be marijuana.
He was later released after posting a $2,000 bond. His first appearance in Douglas County District Court is scheduled for Sept. 20.
Traveling show comes to town
A traveling bus with solar-powered refrigeration will bring Ben and Jerry's Ice Cream and a traveling performance to Lawrence on Saturday.
Ben and Jerry's traveling show will perform at 1 and 4 p.m. in South Park. The show, which is free, will include juggling, music, mimes and acrobatics, sad Kelly Kriegh, market and cheese manager of Wild Oats Community Market. The market is sponsoring the show.
Proceeds from ice cream sales will be donated to Therapeutic horseback riding in Lawrence, Kriegh said
The audience is encouraged to bring blankets and lawn chairs to the performance. Kriegh said.
Compiled by Scott J. Anderson and Tracl Carl
Cafeterias offer catering service
By Brian James
Kansan staff writer
When Mel Sandfort, director of Hashinger Hall, wanted to plan a retreat this weekend for 20 staff members, she knew one thing would be easy; planning their meals.
Sandfort ordered catering for the retreat from KU dining services.
"We're having it catered out of convenience," she said. "We want to focus on bonding and not so much the cooking."
All three dining halls — Lenoir Ekdahl dining commons, GSP-Corbin and Oliver — provide catering to KU residence hall students and staff members who request food or beverages for group activities in or out of the halls. Items are sold only in large quantities.
Barbara Quintero, assistant director of Student Housing, said the dining halls had been providing catering for eight to 10 years.
Sandfort and other Hashinger staff members will take beverages, cold cereal, sandwiches and ingredients for eight pizzas to cook on the retreat.
The group plans to stay at Camp Chippewa in Ottawa tomorrow and Sunday.
Mindy Pendreigh, director of dining services at the Ekdahl dineh commons in Lewis Hall, said the catering service was popular with staff members or residents who like to plan group activities.
"Sometimes an RA on the floor will arrange for food to be brought in for an activity or a meeting," she said. "It's not hard to do, since every floor has the funds to pay for it."
Dining services also provides catering for large, annual events such as "ClubMia" at McCollim Hall and "Rock-a-blee" at Columbo Restaurant.
She said that the number of catering events each week varied but that she needed to fill 10 catering orders within the next two weeks.
Pendrigue said the most common catered foods were fruit platters, cookies and beverages such as fruit punch. Picnic foods such as hamburgers, hot dogs and chips and summies such as nankins and cups are also available.
"We brought in ice cream also for the 'Ice Cream for Sex' event this week, which seemed to be a pretty popular program," she said.
ON THE RECORD
A student's car was damaged in the 1600 block of Edgehill Road on Monday or Tuesday, and the damage was estimated at $300.
A student's backpack and compact discs, valued together at $450, were taken in the 1500 block of Sigma Nu Place on Sept. 3. Lawrence police reported.
A student's bicycle valued at $26 was taken from the 1400 block of Ohio Street on Tuesday or Wednesday, Lawrence police reported.
A student's wallet and its contents, valued together at $60, were taken from a car in parking lot No. 72 on Sept. 3 or 4, KU police reported.
A student's parking permit valued at $35 was taken from a car in parking lot No. 100 on Tuesday or Wednesday, KU police reported.
STDs pose threat for students
Despite efforts at education, cases of disease not declining
By Liz Klinger
Gynecologist Henry Buck thinks things may have to get worse before they get better with sexually transmitted diseases.
Kansan staff writer
"The biggest concern is that we are still seeing huge numbers of new cases after a number of years of very intensive educational efforts," said Buck, a physician at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins, said STDs, urinary tract infections and pregnancy tests accounted for about 400 visits every month. The visits, which can average more than three a month per patient, primarily are by students.
No matter how much information or how many warnings students are given about the dangers of sexual activity,
Many students are too busy to pay attention. Buck said the only safe way to prevent an STD was through abstaining from sex. But for many that means a change in lifestyle.
"We have not yet learned the most effective way to bring
about prevention, which basically involves behavior modification," Buck said.
There are a number of precautions students can take to prevent STDs. Buck said it was important not to mix sexual activity with alcohol consumption, which is a common activity among college students.
it's as important to avoid mixing sexual activity with alcohol as it is to avoid mixing alcohol and driving." Buck said.
Long-standing mutual monogamy also reduces the risk of disease transmission.
Buck said that most cases of STDs occurred in relationships that partners considered monogamous. But having a series of monogamous relationships is not the same as having one relationship with one person, he said.
The three STDs most commonly treated at Watkins are chlamydia, human papillomavirus and genital herpes. Buck said.
Back said the vast majority of people who have STDs did not experience any of the diseases'symptoms.
Symptoms for chlamydia are burning in the pelvic area for women and pain in the testes for men. Both may experience a burning sensation when urinating.
Human papillomavirus can cause itching and painless warts that may not be visible to the naked eye.
Symptoms of genital herpes include painful lesions around the genitalia.
Risky business
high risk receptive anal intercourse insertive anal intercourse receptive vaginal intercourse insertive vaginal intercourse
low risk oral sex on a man with ejaculation oral sex on a man without ejaculation oral sex on a woman oral-anal contact intimate kissing casual kissing touching, massage
no risk masturbation talking, fantasy
Sexual behaviors have different levels of risk in getting sexually transmitted diseases. Using a condom can lower the risk in anal, vaginal
high risk
low risk
no risk
Source: American College Health Association
John Paul Fogel/KANBAR
.
---
4
OPINION
Friday, August 10, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
The North American Free Trade Agreement, supported by Presidents Bush and Clinton, will soon go to the U.S. Senate for ratification.
THE BACKGROUND
The controversial agreement would eventually abolish all tariffs between the United States, Mexico and Canada, in effect establishing one open economy for the whole of North America. Negotiations on side agreements for the treaty are still taking place. The economic and environmental consequences of NAFTA have been debated fiercely as it approaches an unsure fate in the Senate.
THE OPINION
NAFTA would benefit both U.S. and Mexico
NAFTA will benefit the U.S. economy despite the changes it will bring about. Ross Perot, labor groups and some economists have argued that the abolition of tariffs on goods imported from Mexico will cause a southward exodus of manufacturers. They think significant job losses will result, and the U.S. economy will be damaged.
We think that the overall economic prospects for NAFTA involves more than labor costs for manufacturers and is much more positive. Almost three-fourths of U.S. imports from Mexico already cross the border tariff-free, and there are still many manufacturers in the U.S. The reduction of current tariffs is smaller and more gradual than commonly believed, and NAFTA has provisions to prevent rapid job loss by reinstating tariffs on industries that destabilize too quickly. Also, cheap labor is not always reason enough for U.S. manufacturers to head south; G.M. recently moved 1,000 jobs back to the U.S.because the U.S.factory and work force were more cost-effective. We concede that there will be some loss of manufacturing jobs, but manufacturers are already leaving the U.S. not only for Mexico but also for the Far East. Most economists think that the U.S. job growth brought by the opened markets of Mexico and Canada will more than compensate for job losses to Mexico or Canada. Some projections show twice as many jobs gained as will be lost. These gains will result from increased U.S. exports and the intercontinental expansion of U.S. businesses.
Few dispute that the post-NAFTA Mexican economy will be stronger than it is today. We think that U.S.failure to support NAFTA and Mexican President Salinas would cripple Mexico's economic future and destabilize the nation. A stronger Mexican economy will come along with our own and can only benefit the United States in the future.
We disagree with fears that the elimination of tariffs will cause polluters to relocate in Mexico, where environmental regulations are light and unenforced. Under new NAFTA additions being negotiated, Mexico will commit to enforcement of environmental laws. These agreements, while not up to U.S. or environmentalist standards, will lead to stronger Mexican environmental policies in the future. Without NAFTA, Mexico will be forced to lure outside investment by any means possible and will sacrifice its environment in the process. With NAFTA, the U.S. has some assurance of Mexican environmental regulation and enforcement; without it, there is none. In the words of the National Wildlife Federation's president, "The ideal should not be the enemy of the good."
Kansas Senators have indicated support of NAFTA. We applaud them and ask that out-of-state students voice their support for U.S.economic growth, a better environment and a more politically stable Mexico.
CHRIS REEDY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
2060 A.D.
HERE YOU ARE!
OUR GRANDPARENTS AND
PARENTS GAVE IT TO US
TO TAKE CARE OF...
AND NOW IT'S ALL YOURS!
GEE, YOU
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DO YOU THINK
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Lightning, elevators strike on Friday 13th
An old saving goes: "Lightning never strikes twice. Except, of course, to golfers and outdoormen, who possess certain physical qualities that make them more susceptible to lightning because they do not get out of the way."
That is a very wise saying. Only sayings such as "a penny saved is a penny you found in the couch cushions" are wiser.
At any rate, the elevator behaved as it should and began its ascent. It did this quite nicely, in fact, inasmuch as
But I have a friend who would testify in a court of law that lightning does strike twice. She is not a golfer, nor does she use semi-automatic weapons to hunt guppies. But lightning struck her house twice. Count them on your fingers; once, twice.
This friend has Rotten Bad Luck Disorder. She shall remain anonymous, primarily because I cannot remember her name, for a number of reasons, but especially because she is Martian and by divulging her name she would face prosecution from the government for not having (1) a green card, and (2) an American Express. At any rate, she has bad luck. Her whole family, in fact, has the disease because they were all born on Friday the 13th. Really.
The bad luck, however, does not end with lightning. Last week, on Friday the 13th, my friend proceeded to enter an elevator for the sole purpose of having it transport her two floors up. She was not on the elevator for fun, nor was she taunting the elevator, which is mean because elevators tend to be very delicate in nature.
STAFF COLUMNIST
TODD
PUNTNEY
it kept going up and would have been in lower Earth orbit by now had it not been for the fact that the building had a sturdy roof.
That's right. The elevator hit the roof and came to a screeching halt. My friend was thrown into the air, and, because she did not understand the laws of physics, she fell back down. I'm talking about the Second Law of Physics, which states that you can step off a falling phone booth the instant before impact, and you will be all right. She did not heed this law and therefore did a face plant on the elevator's floor. The ceiling of the elevator fitted suit.
Of course we had a hearty laugh at this when our friend told us. We laughed and laughed and lauged, at least while she remained stunned. It is interesting to observe stunned humans, because they always look like they have just paid the Parking Department $4,567.23 for ticket violations dating back to the Roman Empire.
Elevator sandwich. Hold the squash.
The bad luck, in keeping with the tradition of movies such as "Joe vs. The Volcano," does not end. A few
years ago on Friday the 13th, my friend was riding a horse and experienced the Eighth Law of Physics one who is new at horseback riding will surely get bucked off and break one's back. And then over the summer, my friend had her purse stolen on two separate occasions: one on Friday the 13th and the other on Friday the 13th. Count them on your fingers; once, twice.
Of course I have yet to mention the Brush With Death Bad Luck Vacation Story. My friend averted death during a rock slide in the Grand Canyon by pausing to look at some cacti and using the bathroom. Had she not stopped to potty, she would have died and, more importantly, died while pacing.
"But what does it all mean?" you might possibly ask. And I would heartily respond, "I don't know, pass me another cool one."
Sure, it's a sad story. We can almost hear the violins, were it not for the ever-present buzz that's filled our head since Labor Day weekend. I do know that a few weeks ago her family's insurance agent, named Newt (because all insurance agents are amphibians), told them they would no longer be insured.
"Sorry." Newt had said. "We have conducted scientific studies that show people who have bad luck tend to have it the rest of their lives."
At which point in time Newt was struck by a large lightning bolt.
Todd Puntney is a Manhattan senior major ing in Journalism.
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
U.S. unfairly accuses immigrants instead of re-evaluating policies
There is no doubt that illegal immigrants cause a huge financial drain on ... states. But ... any figure that's thrown out probably doesn't take into account the benefits of immigration. Immigrants cross the border legally and illegally to work and to buy American-produced goods and services on which they pay taxes.
When times get tough, it's natural to look for someone to blame — a sacrificial lamb to be tossed into the maw of the problems in hopes that they will vanish.
Today, in much of the United States, it is the immigrants — legal and illegal — who are being singled out for criticism.
Immigration policy needs to look at all sides of the issue and be more than angrily striking out at the most visible signs of a largely invisible problem.
California Gov. Pete Wilson was among the first to blame immigrants for a lot of his state's problems, calling for a constitutional amendment to deny citizenship to U.S.-born citizens of illegal immigrants ...
STAFF COLUMNIST
TUCSON CITIZEN
VAL
HUBER
ARIZONA
R
Let me preface this by describing what campus looked like my freshman year, all those many years ago.
Fashions of the '70s resurface with a twist
times have changed.
Maybe it's me. I know I'm at the waning end of the 20-something generation, but don't you think that the campus is getting kind of — well grooey?
It was preppy hell. Plaid shorts, Polos under sweaters swais casual over shoulders and penny loafers were the order of the day. (In case you were wondering, that was sometime in the early 80s — the dark ages.) Occasionally, you would run into a guy who would challenge the social norms by slyly revealing a diamond-stud earring beneath short, well-groomed hair. But of course, the ring had to be in the appropriate ear. If not, it could detrimentally affect the masculinity of its wearer.
Times have changed.
The Preppy has taken a back seat to the vivid blues, purples and greens of tied-dye t-shirts and Guatemalan dresses worn by the Slacker and the Dead Head. Birkestones adorn the feet of every 10th passer-by. Where clouds of Lauren and Polo colognes once preceded groups of students, the essences of patchouli and sandalwood have taken over. Now, you can wear earrings in any ear, nose or eyebrow. In order to be radical, you have to get a tattoo. And just the other day, I saw someone wearing bell-bottoms and platform shoes.
1 trunk what scares me most about this is the fact that I remember these styles from my childhood.
in second grade, everyone wore bell-bottoms. And if you wanted to be really cool, they had to cover your shoes. This sometimes made walking difficult, but in the second grade, kind of like now, fashion sense ruled out common sense every time.
Although styles today resemble the styles of the past, our generation of 18- to 20-somethings behaves much differently than the same age group in the early '70s. We want to be free, but we want jobs. Or could be that we all wanted jobs, took a look at the economy and decided it was much easier just to be free?
Surviving Reagan and Bush has left
regio residual effects.
We are the most cynical generation since the Industrial Revolution. Our age group expects to make less then our parents, own less and owe more. We've been told again and again that our divorced parents didn't provide the emotional support we needed and that MTV is destroying our mind. Politically speaking, we finally get organized but can't find anyone who deserves our votes.
It's no wonder everyone looks like a hiphoe.
I like to think that there is a little bit of hope for us. We are probably the most-educated generation thus far. Although the hippies were idealistic, our goals are pragmatic, probably because we have seen that unfocused idealism doesn't work.
A friend once sent me a photo of a graffiti-covered wall in Portland; Ore., that he thought summed up the entire generation: "Peace and Stocks, Bong Hits and Espresso."
I'm not really sure what it means but it just seems to fit.
Val Huber is a Lawrence graduate student in Journalism.
KANSAN STAFF
KC TRAUER
Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
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BILL SKEET
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Fridav. September 10. 1993
The search continues...
Spring 1991
Spring 1992
Spring 1993
Present
Oct. 15, 1993
Nov. 1, 1993
December 1993
July 4, 1994
Howard Mossberg, chief dean of the School of Pharmacy, temporarily replaced Frances Howitz as vice chancellor for graduate studies.
As Ronald Borchardt, chair of pharmacology department, advises his interment pharmacy dean that he will not remove his permanent position as vice chancellor for graduate studies.
Borchardt appointed that he will not remove his interment dean.
Gary Grawaldwalt is interim chair of School of Pharmacy.
Projected date for dean search committee to begin review of applications.
Projected date for narrowing applicant list to 35 candidates.
Projected date for interviews with final candidates.
Projected date for selected candidate's appointment.
Michael Leaker/KANSAI
Pharmacy school continues two-year search for dean
By David Stewart
kansan staff writer
Entering its second academic year without a permanent dean, the KU School of Pharmacy has finished mailing 500 letters in its search for qualified candidates.
Valentino Stella, professor of pharmaceutical chemistry and head of the dean search committee, said the school sent out the last of the letters yesterday. The committee targeted colleagues and current deans in the 75 pharmacy schools around the country as potential applicants, Stella said.
The committee had two top finalists for the dean's position in April, but both chose to decline the position for personal reasons, Stella said.
... the bad news was we weren't able in the end to attract those two candidates, "Stella said. "The good news is that we didn't appoint the wrong dean. Let's not just appoint someone to appoint someone."
Gary Grunewald, professor of medicinal chemistry and the current intern dean for the School of Pharmacy, replaced Ronald Borchardt;
cear of pharmaceutical chemistry, after Borchardt stepped down in the spring after a year as interm dean.
"We would like to start serious evaluations of candidates in mid-October." Stella said. "We hope to reach a decision on who we can interview fairly quickly, with maybe a final candidate by the end of this calendar year. Whether that's realistic or not, I don't know."
Jeremy Matchett, associate dean of the School of Pharmacy, described the search for a new dean as a long and laborious process. He said 12 other universities were looking for a permanent dean for their pharmacy schools.
Among the other schools that are also searching for a new dean of their pharmacy school are the University of Minnesota, the University of Utah and the University of California in San Francisco, Stella said.
The dean of pharmacy's responsibilities have moved from strictly academic and administrative guidance to a less academic, more fund-raising and budget-related role, Stella said.
"I think the dean's position is a very
stressful job, "Stella said." With harder economic times, it's not as attractive. The new dean will have hard budget decisions to make."
With its national recognition and its high enrollment, the KU School of Pharmacy should be able to attract a large number of students. Ed Wheeler executive vice chancellor
Some of the characteristics that make a good dean include being a good manager and keeping the faculty responsive to changes in the field of study. Meyen said.
The committee has an additional incentive this year to find a permanent dean because of the school's move for all undergraduates to earn a 6-year doctor of pharmacy degree instead of the required 5-year bachelor of science of pharmacy, Stella said.
"The new dean will have to get the new curriculum in place to see if there are any changes needed in classes or funding," Stella said. "You can't ask the interm dean to take responsibility for these decisions. That would hamstring the newly appointed dean."
Flooding hurts Johnny's business
By Traci Carl
Kansan staff writer
"Business is bad, and the building is sinking.
Things have looked better for Doug Hassig and Rick Renroff, co-owners of Johnny's Tavern, 401 North Second St.
"The whole thing's just killed us," Hassig said. "This is the worst summer we've ever had."
Since a storm and sewer pipe under North Second Street collapsed and caused a large hole in the street in front of Johnny's this summer, the bar has lost customers, and the south wall of the building has sunk.
Renko said the bar had not been attracting the large crowds of college students it used to attract. Free buses that Johnny's hired at the start of school have not helped business either. Renko said. The buses picked up and delivered students safely to
and from campus to the tavern, he said, but they were discontinued last weekend because students were not interested in riding them.
"The most we ever had ride a bus was 10," he said. "Sometimes, they were empty."
The buses would stop at various points around campus and at sorority and fraternity houses.
Renko said he sent out letters to fraternities and sororites asking for suggestions on how to make the buses more popular or if they were even a feasible idea.
But Brett Atlas, president of Zeta Beta Tau and Glenview, Ill., sophomore, said he thought the buses were a good idea.
"I would definitely use it," he said.
"It's a lot easier than trying to get a ride home."
Johnny's should have waited longer for the buses to catch on. Atlas said. Rush and other beginning-of-the-year
activities probably kept many students away.
A lack of customers is not the only problem Johnny's faces.
The building, which is about 100 years old, was built on sandy ground, Hassig said. Extra ground water from the broken storm and sewer pipe probably was causing the building to settle, he said.
Three electric pumps had been pumping water out of the building's basement until last week, Hassig said.
The only visible damage is a stuck delivery door and cracks in the wall, which will be repaired when the insurance money arrives, he said.
Damage done to business is not repaired as easily.
The hole brought construction and a detour that complicated traffic to Johnny's, Renko said.
"People think they can't get here," he said. "They think we're closed."
Juice bar lacks permit, closes temporarily
Kansan Staff Writer
Bv Traci Carl
"Juicers, a club at 913 N. Second St. that features nude dancing and does not sell alcoholic beverages, voluntarily closed Wednesday night after police issued the owner's citation for not displaying a valid adult-entertainment license. Lawrence police reported
*Pat McAllister, the owner, bought the bar from Jeff Wallace on Friday, police said.*
An ordinance for sexually oriented entertainment businesses was passed in August by the City Commission, and Wallace had 30 days to comply with new regulations, said Rod Bremmy, assistant city manager. Wednesday was Wallace's deadline to meet the regulations.
"The new owner must now comply with the regulations," Bremmy said.
The fine for operating without a license is up to $500 and six months in jail. Bremby said.
McAllister said he was applying for a license through his attorney and would be opening the club as soon as he made changes in his stage and sign to meet city requirements. According to the ordinance, nudity is prohibited unless the performer is on a stage that is a certain height and distance from the patrons, and the patrons can not interact or touch the performers, said Jo Andersen, city.
commissioner.
"We stopped short of prohibiting nudity because we thought the constitutionality would be challenged," Andersen said. "We didn't think it would fly."
McAllister said the citation was a misunderstanding about the amount of time he had to apply for a license.
The ordinance prohibits the club from operating within 1,000 feet of a business that sells liquor, he said. Wehner Retail Liquor, 923 N. Second St., is across the street from the club.
But Brentley said there were other requirements McAllister needed to meet.
McAllister said he was not aware of that requirement. Bremby said he could not say whether McAllister's license would be approved, but the club did not meet requirements when it was originally operating.
McAllister said the city responder wasn't suspicious. They don't deny the existence of businesses, and that's their purpose. McAllester said.
"I know that we are going to evaluate his license in view of the new ordinance," he said.
Kansan staff writer Scott J. Anderson contributed information to this story.
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Dad went ballistic over the phone bill
his daughter, Jennifer, ran up talking to that low-life, Snake, in Chicago
Before he hung himself with the phone cord, he cut off Jen's calling card — for life.
Now Jennifer's really bummed. How can she call Snake to let him know the heat's off and they can run off together?
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Lucky for jen, she can go to The Times Machine and buy a "cash" calling card for $4.50 for 10 minutes of interstate long-distance. Or should she get a 30-minute card for $9.90? Better make that a 75-minute card for $24.75. After all, it's more than 50% cheaper than using a payphone. And it's private.
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THE UNIVERSITY OF KANBAIR
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Board of Class Officers
and
B.O.C.O.
Student Union Activities
Nominations are now being accepted for the
EX.C.E.L. Award $500.00 Scholarship
EXcellence in Community, Education, and Leadership
One male and one female will be chosen on the basis of their capacity for leadership, effective communication skills, involvement in the KU community, academics and their
Nomination forms available at:
ability to work with a wide variety of student recipients of the EXCEL Award will receive a $500.00 scholarship.
EXCEL AWARD WINNER
All applicants must be nominated.
4th Floor Kansas Union
*Organizations and Activities Office, 4th Floor Kansas Union
*SUA Office, 4th Floor Kansas Union
Nomination forms are due by the 15th of September at 5:00 pm
University of Kansas
5:30-7:30 PM
For more information, call SUA at 864-3477
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6
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NATION/WORLD
PLO, Israel prepare to sign treaty
The Associated Press
TUNIS, Tunisia — PLO leaders and Israel swept away one of the major obstacles to Mideast peace yesterday when they agreed to recognize each other and take the risky path to peace.
The mutual recognition agreement, worked out during months of secret meetings, cleared the way for a separate pact that will give Palestinians a measure of self-rule in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, occupied by Israel since the 1967 Middle East war.
It is a risk both for Yitzhak Rabin, whose Israeli government is under attack by hard-liners who refuse to cede an inch of what they consider the biblical land of Israel, and for Yasser Arafat, who is already wanted by guerrillas who consider him a traitor.
accord on Palestinian self-rule in the occupied Gaza Strip and West Bank town of Jericho, sad norway's foreign minister, Johan Jorgen Holst.
President Clinton called the agreement "a very brave and courageous thing" between the two enemies.
The two sides are to sign the recognition agreement separately in Jerusalem and Tunis, and on Monday in Washington they will sign an
Under the recognition agreement, the Palestine Liberation Organization would renounce terrorism and recognize Israel's right to exist. The agreement on self-rule could eventually lead to a more comprehensive autonomy for Palestinians in lands captured by Israel in the 1967 war.
Texts of the unsigned recognition letters were released by Rabin's office yesterday.
Arafat, in a letter to Rabin, pledged that the PLO will renounce terrorism and declared that sections of the PLO covenant calling for Israel's destruction are "no longer valid."
Rabin, in a letter to his longtime enemy, said Israel had decided to recognize the PLO "as the representative of the Palestinian people" and vowed to start negotiations with the organization.
The letters, written in English, were to be signed in simultaneous ceremonies in Tunis and Jerusalem. The
prime minister's office said Rabin would sign the letter in his office at 9 a.m. today (2 a.m. CST).
"The importance of the agreement reached today is that it is a historical breakthrough which was the result of the foresight, vision and courage of chairman Arafat and the leadership of Israel." Holt told reporters in Tunis
In Jerusalem, Rabin's 10-member inner Cabinet voted unanimously to approve the mutual recognition clearing the way for Rabbinot sign.
"The PLO has received a telephone call a few minutes ago saying that the Israeli side has accepted the final wording of the statement on mutual recognition," said Yasser Abed-Rabbo, one of the Palestinian officials closest to Arafat.
He said that the call came from Norwegian intermediaries in Paris and that Arafat would announce the agreement at a news conference scheduled for today.
In Washington, Hanan Ashrawi, representative for the Palestinian delegation at the Mideast peace talks, said.
"There are very few moments in history that are comparable to this moment."
She said the agreement "recognizes Palestinian national rights and allows for genuine reconciliation based on the rights of both peoples to live in the region."
Arafat appeared to have the necessary majority for approval by the Executive Committee, with backing from nine of the committee's 13 attending members.
In the Syrian capital Damascus, radical Palestinian guerrilla commander Ahmed Jibril predicted Arafat would be assassinated and his acceptance of partial autonomy would not be honored.
"I am not saying that I personally will kill Arafat." Jibril said Wednesday night in an interview with Western reporters.
"I am saying that the people will not be lenient with a man who has given away 90 percent of their land. When Arafat is killed, the accord will fade away," he said.
20 years later, coup leader not a threat in Chile
The Associated Press
SANTAGO. Chile — It has been 20 years since Gen. August Pinochet led a bloody coup that destroyed one of Latin America's longest-lasting democracies. Now he's getting some credit — albeit grudgingly — for returning Chile to its democratic roots.
After ruling for 16% years, Pinochet handed power to President Patricio Aylwin in 1990 but remained commander of the army.
The move angered his critics, but some of them now say it helped keep the army in check during a crucial transition.
"I think Pinochet has been an element restraining those who wanted a more autonomous position for the military," Ricardo Lagos, a leading socialist in the fight against Pinochet, told the Santiago daily El Mercurio.
"It's better to talk to a single person and not to many," he added, referring to Pinochet's uncontested control of the army.
On Sep 11, 1973, Pinochet led the armed forces in an uprising against Marxist President Salvador Allende amid a deep economic crisis and social unrest.
As his palace was under ground and air attack. Allende committed suicide, becoming a martyr for leftists in Chile and abroad.
U. S. President Richard Nixon's administration did not back the coup, but it had been involved in destabilizing Allende through covert operations, supplying funds to his opponents and promoting civil unrest.
This is a new light on Pinochet's role in history.
But as Marxism collapsed around the world, Allende's legacy faded. Even in Chile, his own Socialist Party has abandoned the hard-line Marxist ideology he promoted for decades.
Pinchet, meanwhile, has been harshly criticized for his human rights record. According to government figures, 2,215 people were killed, 1,000 more disappeared after being arrested by security forces, and thousands were tortured, arrested or forced into exile under his reign.
show of force last May to protest media coverage of officers being tried for human-rights violations, few see the military as a threat to democracy.
Aylwin's four-year term is widely considered successful, but the president himself still thinks there is work to be done mending military-civilian relations and settling rights issues.
In spite of occasional tensions, including an army
Although Pinochet is generally no longer seen as a threat to democracy, his controversial comments on a variety of subjects keep him in the news.
He once described members of the German army as "marijuana smokers, homosexuals" and "long-haired unionists."
He caused an uproar when 30 victims of his regime's repression were found at a local cemetery. Several coffins had two bodies, a move Pinochet said was a good way to save cemetery space.
Still tomorrow will be a legal holiday, as the government has failed to master a congressional majority to repel the Pinochet-issued law that established the holiday.
The Associated Press
Aylwin has several times summoned Pinochet to the palace for a reprimand.
U.S. troops fire upon women, children assailants in Somalia
their way.
MOGADISHU, Somalia — U.S. Cobra helicopters fired on Somali women and children yesterday in what the United Nations claimed was "a last-resort" effort to keep them from killing peacekeepers
Nearly residents said the street was littered with the bodies of as many as 100 Somalis. A U.N. representative said a Pakistani soldier was killed, and three Americans and two Pakistanans were injured.
The peacekeepers had come under fire from heavy weapons by Somali militiamen and were trying to withdraw when women and children joined in the attack with grenades and small arms, said Mai David Stockwell.
Stockwell, the chief U.N. military representative, initially said a mob of women and children was swarming over the U.N. vehicles when the helicopters fired on them with 20mm cannons.
Later, however, he said that the women and children had joined militiamen in attacking the soldiers from behind walls lining the route of their withdrawal and were clambering over roadblocks in
"When the helicopters came in they shot at the gunmen behind the walls and the women and children who were actively engaged as combatants as well." Stockwell said. "Whoever was behind the walls was shot at.
"There were some people swarming on the roadblocks, but not directly on the vehicles ... and the helicopters shot down the middle of the road to persuade people to leave." Stockwell said.
The incident was sure to fire the debate in Congress over U.S. involvement in Somalia and to add fuel to the arguments of some U.N. members, notably Italy, that the United Nations has lost sight of its humanitarian mission in the country.
Stockwell blamed the attack on the forces of fugitive warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid, who is wanted by the United Nations for a series of assaults that have killed 48 peacekeepers and wounded more than 175 since May.
Stockwell said he had no information on the number of Somalis killed or wounded but said, "What I am acknowledging is that if you go out there tomorrow.
row, you may find some women and children casualties."
The report of scores of Somalis killed could not be independently confirmed. But Stockwell acknowledged that U.N. troops, tanks, armored personnel carriers and helicopters used "heavy casualty-producing weapons" in defending themselves.
The U.S. Senate is debating whether to push for an end to the United States' Somalia involvement, which was initiated to ensure delivery of humanitarian aid and restore stability. More than 350,000 Somalis died in 1992.
Gen. Colin Powell, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said yesterday that U.S. troops should stay in Somalia "for the foreseeable future" to ensure the success of the U.N. operation there and to preserve the United States' credibility.
The battle was broken off as dusk fell over the city with Somalia still in control of the road.
n three Americans wounded were evacuated by helicopter to a U.S. field hospital, where Stockwell said they were in stable condition. They were not identified.
AR ANGER FRUSTRATION AGONY WEAKN STRESS FAINT THUNDER LIGHTNING JOY LEF SADNESS PRIDE COMPANIONSHIP ST ENCE ANGUISH JOY EXCITEMENT HAPPI STACY TORMENT LOVE FEAR ANGER FRUS
ON AGONY W
UNDER LIGHT
DE COMPANI
GUISH JOY EX
RMENT LOVE
AKNESS PAIN
The Magic Flute
NG JOY AGONY GRIEF SADNESS PRIDE CNSHIP STRENGTH SILENCE ANGUISH JOINT HAPPINESS ECSTACY TORMENT LOVEGER FRUSTRATION AGONY WEAKNESS PRESS FAINT THUNDER LIGHTNING JOY AC
N DISTRESS FA
GONY GRIEF
ENGTH SILENG
APPINESS ECS
FRUSTRATION
NT THUNDER
Come see a performance of Mozart's classic, "The Magic Flute." At the Lyric Opera and you'll travel with a young prince and his magic flute on an emotional journey inspired by love.
and 22. Tickets range from $8 to $37 and can be purchased at The Lyric ticket office. Seats are selling quickly, so call 471-7344 soon to order tickets.
Performances will be staged September 17, 18, 20
PLEASE PUT ON A NEW PAGE.
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图 5
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Friday, September 10, 1993
Clinton targets funding gridlock
Federal aid to be more accessible
CLEVELAND — President Clinton ordered the formation of a new Cabinet-level board today to make it easier for states and communities to tap into federal coffers.
The Associated Press
"Washington has often gotten in the way, instead of helping," the president said.
The directive, signed by Clinton in the parking lot of a shopping center, is the first recommendation in a 168-page plan to "reinvent government" being implemented by the president. Other more sweeping proposals
require congressional approval.
Headed by Vice President Al Gore, the Community Enterprise Board will look for ways to cut red tape in federal programs that local governments now complain make it too difficult to apply for federal grants.
Clinton said that $226 billion in federal money goes back to state and local government each year.
"If we make a mess of it, we waste a lot of your money. And if we don't do it right, (local officials) can't do what you hired them to do," he said, with a grocery store and pharmacy as his backdrop.
The president and Gore, flying on separate planes, visited the Church Square Shopping Center.
The center was built on vacant property made attractive to developers by streamlining the city's foreclosure rules. Federal money was used to develop the land.
"As opposed to having boarded up buildings in downtown Cleveland, they now have productive commercial space, and it was achieved through a series of regulatory and red-tape reform." White House representative Dee Dee Myers said. "It's an example of the kind of things people can do when they work to achieve results and not just follow rules."
The White House called the center a symbol of how Washington can work better with local governments, one of the hundreds of goals outlined in the plan to overhaul government.
According to the report, the council
will comprise Cabinet level officials with leadership from Gore, the president, the Domestic Policy Council and the National Economic Council.
More than half of the report's suggestions need congressional approval. Legislators have lauded the report's goals, but many of the initiatives will not be addressed by Congress until next year.
Clinton and Gore went to a Virginia suburb of Washington on Wednesday to pitch their efforts to improve government purchasing policies. They will travel to California and Texas later this week to promote the package, specifically its provisions designed to update the government's technology systems.
Kevorkian to stand trial in suicide case
Charges follow first arrest under new Michigan statute The Associated Press
DETROIT — A judge yesterday ordered Jack Kevorkian to stand trial on a charge that he broke a new state law by assisting the suicide of a 30-year-old man suffering from Lou Grehig's disease.
Kevorkian, a retired pathologist who advocates doctor-assisted suicide for the terminally ill, is the first person charged under the law, which was passed to stop Kevorkian from helping people kill
themselves.
District Judge Willie Lipscomb said that the law is enforceable — despite criticisms that it is unconstitutional; and that there is evidence Kevorkian violated it. Arrangement was set for Sept. 24.
Kevorkian's attorney, Geoffrey Fieger, had urged Lapsch to dismiss the charge.
"To save a man's life against a man's will is the same as killing him." Fleer said.
The American Civil Liberties Union filed a brief supporting Kevkarian. The group filed a constitutional challenge to the assisted-suicide ban soon after it took effect.
wayne County Assistant Prosecutor Tim Baughman argued that Michigan's ban on assisted suicide was enacted by an elected Legislature. He added that assisted suicide never had been recognized as a constitutional right.
Wayne County Circuit Judge Cynthia Stephens ruled the law unconstitutional in May, but the state Court of Appeals reinstated it in June while it considers the appeal.
Kevorkian has acknowledged supplying the carbon monoxide gas and equipment Thomas Hyde used to kill himself in the back of Kevorkian's van on Belle Isle, an island park in the Detroit River.
Kevorkian has aided or been present at 17 suicides since 1990.
Without a few 'yes'es, it's rape under Ohio college's rules
DAYTON, Ohio — There may be 'yes, yes' in her eyes, but unless her lips say the same thing — over and over — sex is a no-no at Antioch College.
The Associated Press
The small liberal arts school in Yellow Springs, Ohio, requires all students to give and get verbal consent before any type of romantic contact.
And one 'yes' won't do. Consent must be given for each specific act, from kissing to intercourse.
The policy — adopted in January at the school known for innovation and social activism — is aimed at date rape.
"What this establishes is, 'I did say no,'" college representative Jim Mann said. "It also establishes that if someone is drunk or passed out, they do not have the ability to consent."
Other schools are trying to define more clearly their policies on sexual harassment and other
offenses. But Caryn McTighe Musil, a senior research associate for the Washington-based Association of American Colleges, said she knew of no other college with a policy like Antoch's.
"I think what it's suggesting is that students talk to each other and communicate to each other about the relationship they want," she said.
Violators can be expelled from Antioch, which has 700 students, 70 percent of them women. But Mann said he knows of no reported violations.
"On one level it has been widely supported," he said. "On another level it has been greeted with some humor."
Jonathan Platt, a 24-year-old sophomore, told the Dayton Daily News that the policy is "well-cushioned in common sense."
"The policy is not radical." Platt said. "It's not asking too much from somebody."
Antioch developed a "relatively harsh" policy to deal with sexual assaults after an alleged date rape in 1990. Mann said. Under the policy, students can be removed from campus within 24 hours if accused of sexual offenses, and the alleged victims are assigned advocates to represent them.
The expanded policy reads: "Verbal consent should be obtained with each new level of physical and/or sexual contact or conduct in any given interaction, regardless of who initiates it. Ask, 'Do you want to have sex with me?' is not enough. The request for consent must be specific for each act."
Antioch has a history of innovation. It opened in 1853 with a pledge of equal rights for women. In 1971 it opened a law school in Washington to train lawyers in social activism. In 1987, it banned Peace Corps recruiters because, it said, the agency did not ban sexual discrimination.
Mars Observer staff uses humor as outlet
The Associated Press
PASADENA, Calif. — A milk carton taped to a wall in the Mars Observer mission office has a picture of the vanished spacecraft. Instead of a missing child ad, the caption reads: "Have You Seen Me?"
Three weeks after Mars Observer disappeared, engineers with humor and hope, as well as determination and new computer commands, still are struggling to save the $800 million mission, even though NASA's management is investigating its apparent demise.
"They're doing an autopsy, and we think possibly the victim is still kicking," said Leigh Torgerson, deputy chief of the spacecraft team.
Controllers lost touch with Mars
Observer on Aug 21, only three
days before the spacecraft was
supposed to fire its thrusters, enter
Martian orbit and start the first U.S.
exploration of the red planet in 17
years. The spacecraft, launched
from Florida last year, remained
silent yesterday.
Gloom has descended on NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, where Mars Observer workers are suffering from the disappearance of a decade's work, face some layoffs and feel anxiety and exhaustion. Colleagues constantly approach them to offer support.
"It's sort of like you lost somebody in your family — the condolences you get," said Suzanne Dodd, chief of the mission planning team.
Nevertheless, workers recount the latest jokes from David Letterman, who this week quipped that NASA was launching a blood-hound with a ajetpack to hunt down Mars Observer.
"Humor helps relieve the tension." Dodd said.
Mars Observer's disappearance has revived criticism of NASA and renewed emphasis on the agency's failures, but "the thing that bothered me most is that some people
have given up hope — NASA, JPL management and the public," mission manager Sam Dallas said. "They're not close to what's going on."
Dallas and other engineers insist real hope exists that Mars Observer didn't suffer an irreversible failure but instead was silenced by a malfunction that might be fixed by transmitting new computer commands from Earth.
So day after day, the engineers meet to devise more theories of what may have gone wrong. During the daily command conference they review and approve new computer programs, which then are radiated into space in an attempt to restore contact.
Engineers doubt Mars Observer was destroyed, but they don't know whether it went into orbit around Mars. So the commands are radiated toward both Mars and the spacecraft's presumed position if it flew past the planet.
"There's enough hope that were not just going through the motions," Torgerson said.
Efforts to find Mars Observer will continue until late October, said David Durham, spacecraft team chief.
Dallas has proposed that, for the next year, NASA's tracking antennas should listen for Mars Observer once a week. It's possible the spacecraft could rescue itself with an onboard program designed to turn the computers off and on if power levels drop significantly, Dallas said.
The engineers note the U.S. Energy Department's Earth-orbiting Alexis scientific satellite was lost after launch April 25 but abruptly sent a radio signal six weeks later and was brought under control in July.
At some point, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration might use the Hubble Space Telescope to look for Mars Observer, although it's unknown whether the telescope could spot such a small object, Dallas said.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Board of Class Officers Informational Meeting
On Running for Office in Fall 1993 Elections!! Informational Meeting Will be Held on
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BROOKLYN N.Y. - BROWN BURKE, a New Yorker who was born in Chicago and raised in Brooklyn, died on February 28 at age 69. He is survived by his wife of 43 years, Marilyn Burke; his son, Christopher Burke; his daughter, Emily Burke; his brother, Dennis Burke; and his sister, Teresa Burke. A memorial service will be held at Chelsea Community Church on Saturday, March 15 from 1 to 4 p.m. at the church located at 70-72 East 4th Street.
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Police arrest, chargeman in connection with tourist's death
MIAMI
A 19-year-old man was arrested in the slaying of a German tourist who was gunned downright his rental car when he refused to fall for a "bump-and-rob" scheme.
Police acting on a tip arrested Ricondall Wiggins on charges of murder and attempted robbery Wednesday, less than 24 hours after the slaying of 33-year-old Uwe Wenckes, who was the eighth foreign visitor killed in Fulda in a year.
Rakebrand was killed by a shot fired through his window and into his back from a van that had repeatedly bumped his car. Police said Rakebrand's pregnant wife had told him to keep going, as the safety pamphlet she was reading at the time advised.
Wiggins told police he was driving a rented van and led police to his aunt's house, where they found the sawed-off rifle used to kill Rakebrand, an agriculture engineer from Adendorf, Germany, police representative Dave Magmusson said.
Based on Wiggins' statements, police think at least one other person was involved and today are seeking a 19-year-old woman. Police arrested a woman they thought was the other suspect, but they let her go, citing a case of mistaken identity.
"It could have been your family. It could have been anybody in the community," he said.
Sgt. Gerald Green described the suspects as "hunters ... hunting for robbery victims."
U. S. Attorney General Janet Reno said she had asked aides for a report on the killing to help her determine what the federal government can do to help stem further attacks on tourists.
DETROIT
Breast implant lawsuits near end
Dow Corning Inc. said yesterday a $4.75 billion global settlement over silicone breast implants is being discussed by plaintiffs and defendants in the cases.
Under the proposal, industry participants, including manufacturers, raw material suppliers, insurance carriers, physicians and other health-care providers would pay into a fund that would serve as an insurance policy for women with breast implants.
Concern about silicone implants leaking or otherwise deteriorating and leading to a range of health problems in women has led to a wave of lawsuits against makers and suppliers. Dow Corning was the leading manufacturer of silicone gel breast implants before leaving the business last year. It began making the implants in 1964.
How much each defendant would contribute is being worked out. More than 1 million women are thought to have breast implants.
Dow Corning, equally owned by Midland-based Dow Chemical Co. and Corning Inc. of Corning, N.Y., is named in 6,800 lawsuits.
LOS ANGELES
Union blames lawyer for trial loss
The United Farm Workers asked a court to overturn a $2.9 million judgment against the union, saying its lawyer never disclosed that he suffered from depression and was ill-prepared for the high-stakes case.
In papers filed Wednesday in Superior Court, the union places much of the blame for its trial loss on attorney Carlos Castro.
Castro, who withdrew from the case in March, said that the union knew about his depression and that his condition didn't affect his performance.
On June 10, a Superior Court jury in Yuma, Ariz., awarded Bruce Church inc. of Salinas, Calif., $2.9 million after the grower claimed a union boycott scared grocery chains into dropping its Red Coach brand of lettuce in the mid-1980s.
The judgment, if upheld, could financially destroy the union, which has about $2 million in assets.
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti
Mavoral choice brings violence
Mayoral choice brings violence
The casualty toll from Wednesday's violence mounted to five people killed and 31 wounded, including 11 with severe stab wounds. Mayor Evans Paul said
Police failed to protect supporters of Haiti's exiled president during a bloody battle at City Hall and even turned a mayoral aide over to an armed mob for a beating, the mavera said yesterday.
The violence broke out as Paul was being reinstated as mayor, a post he held until the 1991 military coup that ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
The shootings, stabbeds and beatings of Aristide supporters also raised the specter that more bloodshed could follow the exiled president's scheduled return in seven weeks.
"The complexity of the police with the assailants is obvious," Paul said. "The country cannot go on living in unchart this way. ... We will end up in control."
SYDNEY, Australia
Senate investigates navy scandal
In Australia's version of the Tailhook scandal, the Senate is set to examine claims of widespread sexual harassment and women-hating in the male-dominated Royal Australian Navy.
Defense Personnel Minister John Faulkner announced the investigation yesterday after a newspaper published the findings of a naval board of inquiry that last March upheld a complaint by a female naval reserve doctor, former Lt. Carol Wheat, 37.
Wheat said she resigned from the navy after she and four other female sailors were harassed by male officers during a voyage on the destroyer escort, H.M.A.S. (Her Majesty's Australian Ship) Swan, in 1992
Compiled from The Associated Press
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 10, 1993
1
9
Spartans prepare for season opener
Michigan State works to avoid first-game loss
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriters
The season-opening football game has presented problems for Michigan State coach George Perles and his Spartans during the last five seasons
The Spartans have won only one of their last five openers, losing three and tying one. Central Michigan has defeated Michigan State in the Spartans' last two season openers.
The Chippewaw won 20-3 in 1991 and 24-20 last season. Those two losses started losing seasons for Michigan State, which went 3-8 in 1991 and 5-6 in 1992
Kansas, the Spartans' season-opening opponent this season, might provide Michigan State with a bigger challenge than Central Michigan The
two teams play at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow in East Lansing, Mich.
"They have had a problem competing in the nonconference part of their schedule the last few years, but not in the Big Ten," said Kansas coach Glen Mason. "They have put a great deal of emphasis on the Kansas game this year."
The Spartans are 4-13-1 in nonconference games during the last five seasons, and two of those victories came in bowl games.
Perles said he was not making the Kansas game more important than any of the other 10 games on his schedule. But he knows the Jayhawks will present a formidable challenge to the Spartans.
"Don't be fooled by the Florida State score because they can do that to a lot of teams in this country," Perles said. "If Kansas had been able to take advantage of their early opportunities, it could have been a much closer game. I expect Kansas to be ready to play MSU on Sept. 11."
defensive sides of the football from the 5-6 team of a year ago.
Michigan State returns eight starters each on the offensive and
Junior wide receiver Mill Coleman is the Spartans' highlight performer on offense. Coleman made 37 passes for 586 yards and three touchdowns last year. He also saw time at quarterback, starting the final two games of last season at quarterback, replacing Jim Miller, who was injured.
Miller is healthy this season and will start at quarterback against the Jayhawks, but Perles said that Coleman also will see time at quarterback this season.
"We want Mill to get the ball either by returning kicks, running reverses, throwing passes off of the reverse or by catching it." Perles said. "He is the most versatile and smartest player I've ever coached."
The Spartans have an offensive line that averages 303 pounds per lineman to help protect Miller. Kansas senior defensive end Guy Howard said Michigan State's offensive line was similar to lines in the Big Eight Conference.
"Their offensive line compares a lot
Game 3
Kansas
Jayhawks
(KU)
(1-1-O)
KU
Head Coach: Glen Mason
2:30 p.m., Saturday Spartan Stadium, Lansing, MI ABC
Offense:
Michigan State
Spartans
(0-0-0)
S.
Head Coach: George Perles
WR 84 Rodney Harris 6-6 210 Jr. WR 8 Napoleon Outlaw 5-10 160 So. Jr.
TE 1 Dwayne Chandler 6-2 235 Sr. WR 9 Bob Organ 6-3 265 So. TE
LT 4 James Hallam 6-4 295 So. LT 63 Shane Hannah 6-5 321 So. LG 66 Hessley Hempstead 6-2 295 So. LG 66 Colin Cohn 6-3 275 So. C 75 Dan Schmidt 6-2 285 Sr. C 57 Mark Birchmire 6-4 275 So. RG 69 John Jones 6-2 285 Sr. RG 79 Brian DeMarco 6-5 316 So. RT 78 Mark Allison 6-2 285 Sr. RT 79 Brian DeMarco 6-5 316 So. WR 78 Ashaunal Smith 6-5 155 So. WR 6 Mill Coleman 5-10 168 So. WR 61 Fred Thomas 6-5 180 Jr. OB 16 Jim Miller 6-4 208 So. OB 22 LT Levine 5-10 210 So. TB 33 Craig Thomas 6-0 194 So. TB 22 Rachel Goodo 5-10 212 So. FB 49 Brice Abrams 6-1 254 So. RB 33 Costello Good
Offense:
Defense:
Defense:
OLB 16 Keith Rodgers 5-11 190 So. OB LB 45 Matt Christensen 6-4 235 Jr.
LE 97 Kevin Penn 5-11 286 So. JE Juan Hammonds 6-4 241 Jr.
LT 72 Kevin Mumalangala 6-2 286 Sr. LT RD 23 Yakim Allen 6-2 276 Jr.
RT 61 Mike Steele 6-2 276 Sr. RT 23 Yakim Allen 6-2 276 Jr.
RE 90 Guy Howard 6-4 245 Sr. RE 63 Yakim Allen 6-4 269 Jr.
OLB 46 Ronnie Ward 6-4 245 Sr. OLB 83 Rob Frederickson 6-3 236 Jr.
MLM 32 Lennard 6-3 223 Sr. MLB 34 Greg Anderson 6-3 219 So.
CB 28 Tony Blevens 6-0 170 Fr. CB 29 Stan Callender 6-4 191 Jr.
FS 47 Clint Blowen 6-0 190 Sr. FS 37 Steve Wasyik 6-4 197 Jr.
SS 38 Robert Vaughn 6-0 188 Sr. SS 31 Dimitri Manson 6-2 202 Jr.
CB 3 Gerald McBurrows 5-11 188 Jr. CB 24 Myrrol Bell 6-1 203 Sr.
Despite returning eight starters, Perles said he was concerned about
like Nebraska's and Missouri's.' Howard said. "The Big Ten teams have a lot of size in their linemen, but I think the Big Eight linemen have more quickness."
his defense, specifically at the middle linebacker position.
"The middle linebacker is the nucleus of our defense since he makes all the defensive calls," he said. "We've always seemed to have to have a decent middle linebacker, and we're
Micah Leaker/KANSAN
Sophomore Greg Anderson will start at middle linebacker, but Perles said true freshman Reggie Garnett also would play at that position.
going to need one to cover the whole field against Kansas because they run and pass the ball effectively."
Oelschlager returns home after injury
USA
BATTLE
Ron Oelschiager, Lawrence senior, swings his bat to hot up at Hoglund MaupinStadium. Oelschiager was out with injuries last year at Arizona.
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
The ball headed into left-center field, but center fielder Ron Oelschlager had called for it. Suddenly, as he dove head first to make the play, a blur entered the corner of his eye. It was his Arizona teammate, left fielder Ralph Lemonz.
Lemons, 6-foot-5 and 210 pounds, tried to stop his dive in time, and he did just in time to plant his knee into Oelschlager's chest.
"I didn't see him until I knew we were going to hit," Oelschlaier said. "It took me four to five months to recover and just walk around."
The collision cost him his spleen, two-thirds of a kidney and part of his pancreas. He also broke six of his ribs. Now Owlschaler, a lawrence native, is back in town to play for the Kansas baseball team.
After recovering physically, Oelschlag decided it would be best to leave Arizona, where he went to get away from Lawrence.
Oelschlager said he called Kansas coach Dave Bingham to see if he could come back for his senior year to play baseball.
"When I first got a hold of him, I was afraid he would still hold a grudge for me not going to Kansas in the first place," Oelschlager said. "But he understood."
Oleigh Chambers, LLC
Although Arizona coach Jerry Kindall wanted Olechlager to stay at Arizona, he also understood his plight.
Oelschlager's injury occurred in an intrasquared game, which typifies the hard-working mind set Oelschlager has. Lawrence High School coach Lynn Harrod said.
he also dolesse him." Kindall said. "I tried to persuade him," Kindall said. "in the whole picture, with the injury and emotionally, I think it was for the best that he go back to KU. We're all pushing for him down here."
rod, who coached Oelschlager and Kansas center fielder Darryl Monroe in high school. "It shows how much effort he gives. He worked hard in practice and gave 100 percent in games."
"The best way to describe him is that the injury was in a practice," said Hargave Oelschlager came back to his family after the injury because he didn't know where he belonged, Harrod said.
"He has such a close-knut family," Harrod said. "It's great because he could come back home after the injury."
Oelschlager's family is full of past and present athletes. His father, Ron, was a Kansas running back from 1962 to 1964. His older sister, Jodi, was on the Karsas volleyball team from 1986 to 1989, and his younger sister, Jill, is starting on Iowa's volleyball team as a freshman.
"Early on, it was competitive." Oelschlager said. "Athletics was a huge part and still is a big part of my family. After my injury, it put athletics in perspective."
Harred said he thought it was great for Kaness to give Oelschlager a chance.
He has a chance to play outfield with Monroe, his high school and Babe Ruth league teammate.
"He's got to work hard, but for him that's not a change," Harrod said. "He and Darryl Monroe together will be fun for me to see."
Monroe said Oelschlager was working out with the team in informal practices, which are conducted without coaches.
"I've seen him in batting practice," Monroe said. "He has pop. He has more pop than in high school. He keeps himself in good shape and is better conditioned than most of the guys on the team."
Oelschlager said that he was confident he could contribute to the team and that he would enjoy the first game he played at Hogdunst-Maupin Stadium.
at Hoghill-Madison Park "It will be exciting to wear a Kansas jersey because the Arizona uniform just didn't feel right," he said. "I didn't come here to sit the bench. I'm here to contribute big time."
Baseball owners OK new playoff format
The Associated Press
BOSTON — Baseball owners broke tradition yesterday, voting to divide each league into three divisions starting next year.
next year.
The plan, subject to approval by the Major League Baseball Players' Association, would lead to an expansion of the playoffs from four to eight teams, beginning in 1994, and end the two-division setup that has existed in both leagues since 1969.
leagues since 1806.
With the new set up, six division winners and two wildcard teams will make the playoffs, which will expand to three rounds.
"I made my arguments and went down in flames," said Texas Rangers general partner George W. Bush, the leading opponent of the change. "History will prove me right."
National League president Bill White said the division makeups may be decided as early as next week.
The proposal originally won American League support Wednesday after Cleveland and Detroit agreed to shift divisions.
American League president Bobby Brown said Cleveland agreed to play in the AL Central instead of remaining in the East, and Detroit would stay in the East instead of moving to the Central.
"Those teams that would be in the Central have to vote to be in the Central." White said.
White said various alignments were under discussion Talks have involved Atlanta and Pittsburgh, which both prefer the East.
After Cleveland and Detroit agreed to switch, Brown said 12 American League teams indicated they favored the three-division plan as long as a balanced schedule was kept through at least 1997. Brown said the Rangers and Chicago White Sox opposed the plan.
Brown said he was opposed, but he didn't have a vote. "I a dinosaur," he said. "I don't like any of it."
The P
East — Baltimore, Boston, Detroit, New York Yankees,
Albertsport, Toronto
City, Milwaukee, Minneapolis
AL West — California, Oakland, Seattle, Texas
ROCK AL Central — Chicago White Sox, Cleveland, Kansas City, Milwaukee, Minnesota
AL West - California, Oakland, Seattle;
NL East - Florida, Montreal, New York Mets.
Phoenix — Atlanta
NL Central — Atlanta, Chicago Cubs, Cincinnati,
Houston St, Louis
NL West — Colorado, Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco
Kansas runners set for Jayhawk Invitational
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
Challenging the No. 1 Arkansas Razorbacks on one of the most difficult courses of the season is the task facing the women's cross country team this weekend at Rim Rock Farm, northwest of Lawrence. The Kansas men's and the Jayhawk invitational.
Guymon said the women's teams in the Invitational would present more of a challenge to the Jayhawks than Southern Illinois did last week, when Kansas runners swept the top five spots.
sab.
Although the Razorbacks will be the top name in the Invitational, other traditionally strong teams such as the Air Force Academy and Missouri will compete in the eight-team meet.
"It's one of the more difficult courses we'll run on this year," assistant cross country coach Steve Guymon said.
Ashl Mister, the top runner for Kansas last weekend, said the Southern Illinois meet had been a good tune-up for this week's competition.
Guymon said that Kansas could possibly defeat Arkansas, which beat the Jayhawks last season. But a loss to the Razorbacks would not devastate the team.
"Four years ago we couldn't compete with Arkansas," Guymon said. "When they lift up this year, they'll have a battle on their hands."
"We got the first-meet jitters out of us." Kloster said.
Guyman said Air Force and Missouri would field strong teams. He said the freshmen and sophomores, who make up a majority of the team, would run in a pack like they did last weekend.
While the women's team faces Arkansas, the men's team hopes to continue what Guyton said was an encouraging start to its season.
The team finished second last week end at Southern Illinois.
freshman runner Brian Schultz, Kansas's top finisher at third place last weekend, said he thought the tactic helped him. He said he was nervous going into his first meet and the strategy helped boost his confidence. Gummino said the teams were excited to meet him.
"In the past, our teams have been a little intimidated by the course," Guymon said. "This year, we told them to attack the course and have pride in our home course."
6
2
3
20
STATE
William Altx / KANSAN
Kansas' Eri Kramer, left, and Cindy Kanabel attempt to block a shot during a game against Wichita State.
Volleyball team sets great expectations for matches
Tournament provides opportunity for victory
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Expectations are high for the Kansas volleyball team as they go into this weekend's Kansas Invitational. Coach Frankie Albitz said.
Kansas has won the invitational the past three years.
"We did goals during the season, and one of them was to win at least two tournaments," Albitz said.
The Jayhawks are 1-4 and have played in one tournament already this year. Albiz said one of the team's goals for the season was to win this particular tournament.
"I've seen us play at a high level," Albitz said. "These teams are not as tough as the teams we've played. Those two things together should mean we will do very well."
Southeast Missouri State, McNeese State, Northeastern Illinois and Tulsa are participating in the tournament. Kansas has a lifetime record of 19-5 against Tulsa and 1-0 against Northeastern Illinois. McNeese State and Southeastern Missouri State are new to the Kansas schedule
All four teams play before Kansas, which plays its first game at 3 p.m. today against 0-4 Tulsa. Albitz said that would give her a chance to do some much needed scouting.
Tulsa coach Dawn Colston said that she wanted her team to compete successfully but that being successful was not measured by victories and defeats.
"We'll be comparable to half of the teams in the tournament," Colston said. "Kansas will be the longest team we play. I am really excited to be in this tournament. I want to play this kind of competition."
With one senior, two juniors, three sophomores and four freshmen, Tulisa's roster is young.
Kansas freshman Katie Walsh might be a key player for the Jayhawks. Walsh is third on the team with 48 kills, and she has a team-high six service aces. If junior Janet Uher recoverts from her shoulder injury, there will be competition for the outside hitter position, Albizt said.
"She'll get a lot of playing time," Abbitz said of Walsh. "Whether she starts depends on if Janet can play. If she can, it really changes things."
1
Walsh said that she wanted to do her best in this tournament and that the team wanted to win.
"We have tons of talent physically," Walsh said. "We need to develop more as a team mentaly because the mental part is killing us. We better win this one."
10
Friday, September 10, 1993
Learn to Fly
Lawrence Air Services
Instruction • Charter
Service • Rental
842-0000
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KANSAS
INVITATIONAL TOURNAMENT
Sept. 10th & 11th Friday, Sept. 10th
Friday, Sept. 10th
3:00 PM KU vs. Tulsa
8:00 PM KU vs. McNeese
Saturday, Sept. 11th
Saturday, Sept. 11th 2:00 PM KU vs. N.E. Illinois 7:00 PM KU vs. S.E. Missouri St. All matches held at Allen Fieldhouse
- Students Free with KU ID *
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Tennis player prepares for future
Sophomore balances school and athletics
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
Taking 18 credit-hours during a semester can be a fearsome thought for some students.
Kansas sophomore tennis player Reid Slattery not only carries 18 hours, but he balances that with daily tennis practices, which include three hours of work on the court, one hour of weightlifting and 30 minutes of conditioning workouts.
His 18 hours include general courses and some business prerequisites. He said that he was majoring in business because he could go into the business side of athletics when his tennis career was over and that business would offer him many opportunities.
Slattery, who is one of the team's stop returning players, compiled a 19-12 singles record last season and a 15-4 doubles record with then-freshman partner Michael Isroff.
Slattery that Michael Center, men's tennis coach, instilled a lot of confidence in him by placing him at the No.2 position as a freshman.
Center said it was easy to have faith in Slattery because he showed up ready to perform and he gave his best every day.
Since he has been at Kansas, Slattery said that he had worked to
improve his weaknesses and that he had become more aggressive. He said he also had learned to use his 6-foot-4 frame to his advantage.
"He moves really well for a guy his size." Center said.
Slattery said he had hopes of playing on the professional tour after college. This summer, he got a taste of the professional circuit. He said he played in the "minor leagues" of the professional tour in Midwestern and California tournaments.
That experience is different from college athletics because there was more cutthroat competition, he said.
"These tournaments are a living for these people; it's their livelihood," Slattery said.
Before playing in the pros, Slattery has made some short range goals for himself. This fall, he said he wanted to qualify as an individual and as part of the Kansas team for the Regional Rolex tournament. The tournament which is held the last week of October, is the indoor national championship tournament.
J. P. Visspeo, sophomore player from Puerto Rico, said Slattery worked hard and was always looking to improve. He said Slattery had confidence in himself and was not afraid to play anyone.
Center said that Slattery's mental toughness was one of his greatest attributes.
"Satterty is a mature and tough player for only being a sophomore." Center said. "He carries himself well on the court."
KANSAS
TENNIS
Sophomore tennis player Reid Slatier receives instructions from Coach Michael Center during practice at the tennis courts behind Allen Field House.
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
Frenchman continues upsets in U.S. Open
The Associated Press
NEW YORK—Another day, another meet
Cedric Pioline became the first Frenchman in 61 years to reach the seminals of the U.S. Open last night, following his triumph over top-ranked Jim Courier by knocking out No. 8 Andrei Medvedev.
Poline, who has never won a professional tournament and came in seeded No. 15, took advantage of Medvedev's repeated errors in the first two sets and double-faults on crucial points, winning 6-3, 6-1, 3-6, 6-2.
Medvedev lost the second set when he double-faulted with a second serve six feet past the service box. But just when he seen beaten by his own mistakes, Poiline let him back in with a flurry of his own errors and a double-fault on set point.
"To beat him I have to show my best tennis." Medvedev said, "and I was far away from that today."
Proline settled down in the fourth set, pounding approach shots into the corners.
Polline flew his 19-year-old opponent was nervous at the start of his first match on the stadium court, with its larger, noisier crowd and distract-
US OPEN
tions. But Pliny, 24, also acknowledged his own problems.
"I was very up and down," he said.
"Sometimes I played very well, sometimes I played badly. I was more consistent than him."
Poline, seeking to become the first French U.S. Open champion since Henri Cochet won the Nationals in 1928, next faces Wally Masur.
Masur, the oldest man left in the U.S. Open has wrinkles around his eyes, furrups in his brow and a look of perpetual exhaustion on his unshaven face. Masur is the Australian version of Jimmy Connors, minus the flash, cockiness and championships. In Australia, fans love him. Around the world he is virtually unknown.
Yet here is Masur, 30 years old and in the semifinals of a Grand Slam event for the second time in 42 tries, 6-2, 7-5, 7-5 winner over Magnus Larsson, who gave all he had in his fourth-round upset of upset Becker.
into the semifinals as he clawed his way in. He trailed 5-0 in the fifth set against fellow Australian Brian Morgan in the fourth round, then simply refused to lose, grabbing seven straight games.
It wasn't nearly as tough against Larsson, who missed by inches the same kind of groundstrokes he made by inches against Becker. Masur never lost a service game and took Larsson apart at the net, winning 59 of 82 approaches. Larsson ventured to the net only 26 times, winning just half those points.
Masur didn't so much play his way
Larsson's 15 aces kept him close, but when it came down to the final point, Larsson didn't prolong the end at all, double-faulting and ending the match.
"Yeah, it was a different match for me when I played against Becker," Larsson said. "No one expected me to do well. I played a great match I felt a little more pressure on my serve today, couldn't keep it up. Wally mixed it up very well and didn't give me any chance to win. I was more nervous today and I felt a lot of pressure."
Few players work harder or train more ruggedly than Masur, who runs drills and pumps iron under the guidance of an Australian Rules Football trainer. When Masur took off his shirt
at courtside, his rippling muscles
drew whistles from female fans.
"Today I did play a smart game," Masur said. "I was aware that you can't play this guy too much straight up and down. I confused him pretty much with my serve. I was barely serving two balls in the same place. That is a great tactic, but it is another thing to execute."
Masur, who hadn't gotten past the third round at the U.S. Open in nine previous appearances, became the first Australian in the Open semifinals since Daren Cahill in 1988. The only other Grand Slam semifinal Masur reached was at home in the Australian Open in 1987, which is played on a grass court. En route he defeated reigning Wimbledon champion Boris Becker.
Masur also became the first unseeded man to reach the men's semifinals in New York since Connors did two years ago and only the 26th man to do it since seedings began in the U.S. Nationals in 1927. Only one other man, Gene Scott in 1967, got as far as the semifinals without having to beat a seeded player on the way.
Masur didn't so much play his way
"I am happy to have made the semis, but I don't want to stop there," Masur said.
Grand Opening!
COMMUNITY
MERCANTILE
September 10-26
friday
Your Neighborhood Grocery, Community-Owned Committed to Service & Education for 18 Years! In the Big Yellow Building at 9th & Mississippi monday-saturday 8am-9pm sunday 10am-9pm 843-8544
monday
wednesday
thursday
saturday
6
10
6:40-8:30 sampling
International Foods
Robson Cutting
5:00-6:00
Come See Baby Jay!
5:30-7:30
sunday monday tuesday wednesday
12 Grandparent's Day! Seminare receive 5% off
1:00-2:00 Have your picture taken with Baby Jay!
Noon 4:00 Sampling Healthy Snacks
19 1:00-5:00 Time for a Massage Noon 6:00 sampling Quick & oods
Activities 5:00 DIF. WING. Supply Cover Dishwashing Soap Putsy脂 Sauce
13 5:00-8:00 Time for a Massage! 7:00-8:30 class Baking Naturally Leavened (Sourdough) Braid pregister. 5:00 DRAWING Years' Supply Krundsen Apple Juice
14 4:00-6:30 What's for Dinner Tonight? 5:00 DRAWING Years' Supply Kwai Garlic
15 4:00-7:30 class How to Pack a Healthy Lunch for your Child—and yourself 5:00 DRAWING Years' Supply Alta Yoghurt
16 4:00-5:00 Improving Your Eating Habits with You Comm 5:00-8:00 Time for a Massage! 5:00 DRAWING Years' Supply Bob's Red Milk Mix & Kiss My Face Shampoo
17 Live Music! 4:00-8:00 sampling Wolfgang Puck Pizza 5:00-8:00 sampling Amazing Bakery Bakey 5:00 DRAWING Years' Supply Essential Herb Caplets Eddle & Confetti Pasta
18 9:00-11:00 KLZR REMOTE Noon 9:00 sampling Windles Waffles 5:00 DRAWING Years' Supply Thompson Children Chewable Vitamins Millano's Kitchen
20 7:00-8:30 demonstration Amazing Grains Braid Please Pregister. 5:00 DRAWING Years' Supply Barbara's Puff Chips
21 4:00-6:00 What's for Dinner Tonight? 5:00 DRAWING 2nd Nature Toilet Paper San Francisco Soap Carrots
22 5:00-7:00 sampling Watch Our Prices Fall on the Autumnal Equinox! Pick a leaf from our barrel at 25% off your total purchase! 5:00 DRAWING Years' Supply Ayla's Attecza Garlic Salad
23 7:00-8:30 class Variations on a Bean Please Peregrine 10% off all bulk beant! 5:00 DRAWING Years' Supply Alta Yoghurt & Basic Spices & Herbs
24 Live Music! 4:00-7:00 sampling Bulk grains, beans & pasta 5:00 DRAWING Years' Supply Biglow Tea Nature's Gate Shampoo
25 Noon 4:00 sample Apple Dishes Noon 2:00 demo Make an Applet Pie 1:00-4:00 demo Nature's Gate Petal Fresh Fruit Cake Solary Mulit Virti Herbs, Etc. Tir
10:00-4:00 sampling
Anderson Erikson
Noona 4:00 sampling
Purvey Daiset Pastei
Geremy Rose
Geremy Rose
Fresh Facial Care
26 Grand Finale!
Autumn Bumble
Bike Ride
(call us or Rick's Bike
Store for info)
1:30-3:00 workshop/demo
Making Paper
3:00-5:00 workshop
Consciousness & Health
Bookstore
8:00 DRAWING
Year's Supply
Frontier Organic Oilce
Ben & Jenny's Ice Cream
א
We will be giving away a year's supply of the following items:
Call us or stop by for information on any of our grand Opening Activities
Bim Bym Bim Cream
Kwai Garlic
Alta Dena Yoghurt
Bob's Red Mill Pancake &/or Muffin Mix
Kiss My Face Olive & Aloe Shampoo
Essential Herbs Capsules
Eddie's Confetti Pasta
Thompson Children's Chewable Vitamins
Millano's Organic Ketchup
Ecover Diswasbing Soap
Putney Paste & Sauce
א
Cinnamon
Barbara's Pinta Chips Second Nature Toilet Paper San Francisco Soap Ayla's Azteca Garlic Salsa Ground Pepper, Basil, Garlic, Cinnamon Bigelow Tea Nature's Gate Shampoo Solaray Spectro Multi-Vitamins Herb's Etc. Tinctures Frontier Organic Coffee Knudsen Apple Juice
Drawings will be held at 5:00pm every day September 14-26 Come in and register to WIN, WIN, WIN! Our Grand Opening Means Grand Savings for You!
shark
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, September 10, 1993
11
Classified Directory
1
100s Announcements
110 Bus. Personals
Create Your Look!
Interchangeable wrap-around shields
for the active fun life!
Kilroy Loops
Exclusively at The Etc. Shop
$28 Mass-Downward
Unique Silver Jewelry
Hoops, Fendall Aurea!
The Ect. Shop
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Advertise in the Kansan!
Plastic Laminating
Add professional polish to class projects, maps and posters. (up to 25 inches wide)
Howell Creative Studios
1203 love
corner of Orchard Lane & Iowa
1 BLK south of Capitol Fed.
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8:40am-10pm
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 10am-3pm
Sunday 11am-11pm
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
120 Announcements
Dog training classes with Lawrence Wiley Keneel Club. $25 for 10 weeks. Wednesday nights at National Guard Army. Registration 7:00 p.m. Noels / Noes Info call 482-6884
PREFIRING FOR EXAMS Workshop Time management, memory techniques, test-taking strategies FREE Tuesday, September 14 7-9pm. 802 Wesley. Presented by the Student Association
WORK STUDY POSITIONS AVAILABLE at
THE SCHOOL OF BUS.
451 ackman st, 25th floor of all-tech
building.
VOLUNTEER IN THE FIGHT AGAINST AIDS
Training in September 18th, call both at:
453-690-7288
LODGING • LIFTS • PARTIES • PICNICS • TAXES
CHRISTMAS SKI BREAKS
JANUARY 2-16, 1994 * 5, 6 or 7 NIGHTS
PREPARING FOR EXAMS WORKSHOP
STEAMBOAT' $199
BRECKENRIDGE
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TELLURIDE
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Tuesday, September 14, 7-9 p.m.
4035 Wescoe Hall.
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BAY 10/13
Offered by the Student Assistance Center
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
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SUNCARE BEACH BREWS
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TONIGHT!
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Lonsome Houndogs
Saturday
Sept. 11th
BENCHWARMERS
2 for 1 WELLS
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
Jayhawk CAFE
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
Presents
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NIGHT
featuring
25¢ DRAWS
-plus-
75¢ Monster Draws
&
75¢ Well Drinks
TONIGHT &
EVERY FRIDAY
- 7 Beers on Tap
- 4 Pool Tables
- Darts & Air Hockey
- THE HAWK will be open at 11 a.m. Saturday for the GAME!
- Darts & Air Hockey
It could only happen at THE HAWK
Found Sunglasses in a case on Jayhawk
August 26th Call B1-41-00 and talk to
the machine.
the mirror
FOUND. Men watch at the intersection of
FAIRBANK and 9/79s. Call 841-8905.
1340 OHIO·843-9273 A Campus Tradition Since 1919
140 Lost & Found
smith and Sunshine on 0/7/93 Call 843-8005
Found Windbreaker in Wescoe. Call 140-140 to
me.
Found Windbreaker in Wescoe. Call 749-1040 to知
Christian day care needs emphasis/reliable
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LOSST little black sweater with a hole in the right sleeve, Sept. 1 at Wescow, If found, call Krauth 349-578-2011.
Cruise Ships NOW HIRING: Ears up to $2000 +/mo = world travel. Summer & Holidays. Travel for business or more information call 1-206-634-0480 for ext. C9565.
Delivery needed. New Company hiring
Brandon Woods Retirement Community is currently hiring staff for 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on average wage. Must be hard working and willing to work weekends and some holiday. Apply at 160 Iverson Ave.
男 女
Bassist needed to complete all original 4 piece band. Original music in the wine of bands, tool, and equipment.
DEVELOPMENT/CONSTRUCTION CO. has part-time openings with flexible day hours for an employment and training chance for the software industry. Experience on IBM or Apple computers. Please note: some accounting/bookkeeping duties may be updressed on experience and hours. Resume to F.O. Box 3084, Lawrence, KS 65066. Attn: Gustavo Rodriguez.
205 Help Wanted
**DOCUMENTATION INITIATION** Student monthly. Deadline: 9/17, 9/28. hwk! Duties include organizing and maintaining a collection of user-oriented documentation on line help books and manuscript descriptions of user-education seminars and workshops; and other duties as assigned. App to apply for position at the University of Angola Harambe, Personnel Office, Computer Center, University of Rannes, Lawrence, KC 65043.
200s Employment
Children home daycare. Full-time opening
and drop-in age. Hrs. 7:30 - 9:50m, M-F
10am - 6pm. Call 843-276-1895.
Bucky's drive-in now taking applications for part-
ment flexible hours. Apply in person btw.
10 a.m. and SPM. Bucky's drive-in 9th and
iowa.
Drivers needed for a fun job. Meet lots of people while making good money. The Lawrence Bus Co. needs drivers for SAFERIDE. Must be 21 years old & have a good driving record. 8-22 hrs per wk.
very flexible
Dynamic person with initiative & sales ability for
winding route in Lawrence area.
Must have transportation. Base rate + allowance
Caryling Vendle (913) 727-5612
Expand your experience. Positions are available for section editors and writers on the Jayhawker yearbook. Pick up applications at 428 Kansas Union. Application deadline is September 15.
Kansas and Burge Uions hiring part-time, hourly for Fall Semester. Many jobs in Food Service, Catering and Training, vary scheduling schedules. Office Offer, 4 Kansas Uions Building for job specific EOE
FLAG B REFERENCES. Recreation Services will be hiring IRM administrative to work Flag Football. No exp necessary. $47-$50.90 Attend meeting Monday, 13 at 10 a.m in 16th Floor.
Library Assistant for retrieval and photocopying
at 8.45 per hour. Flexible schedule 12-16 hours
per week. Department of Medical Chemistry.
Apply 4070 Mainline 864-4495
NABI Biomedical Center Introduces its Fall Special
CASH Have A Night Out On Us!
By donating your life saving Plastic
*Walk in Today*
9-6 M-F 10-35at.
816 W 24th
749-5750
Earn $30 this week
Earn $15 today
$30
Service Provider
molly mcgees
grill bar
MOLLY MCGEES IS
NOW ACCEPTING
APPLICATIONS FOR
EXPERIENCED COOKS.
APPLY BETWEEN
2-4 P.M.
AT 2429 IOWA.
NANIENES. spend a year near NYC with family
NANIENES. call You; I call 810-780-1709, any
no fees. you
Nanny full time for 2 yr old and 4mo old. Refer-
rence required 853-1919
Exceptional Wanted! Hair Experts Design Team needs an energetic employee to work full time in a busy salon. Typing abilities and customer service experience a plus. Please stop by to pick up an appointment.
Mass St. Dell or Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Previous coursework and supervised experience is required. The course may raiseases based on performance. Up to 60 student apply at Buffalo Food Co. at 719 Mass M-F Apply at Schlumberger Food Co. at 719 Mass M-F
Part time evening delivery person. Must have own car. Apply in person. Peking Restaurant 23rd & 1kw (behind Hasting's). Ph. +49-1003, after 2 p.m. EARLY TIME SUPERVISED W/
Students guaranteed hourly wages and great bonus for good phone voice. Day/evening shifts
mail using the delivery van; paper shredding
mails; on occasion will assist in receiving ship-
ments, stocking and maintaining inventory;
providing equipment and processing functions;
on occasion will operate forklift and
assist in maintenance; in Open Landscape
Furniture management; in the campus wide recycle program;
junction with three user ports uses performant or mainframe software as a record keeping function. To apply, complete an application available at the Computer Center in room 203. EO/AAEMPLOYER
TUDENT DISTRIBITION TECHNIQUEN
daily: 10/19 8:00 Salary: $43.35 per hour Duties include performing bursting and decalining functions; delivery computer output and interoffice
Summer's over. Do you need **$?** THE team is ready to place work! We are currently recruiting for
Taco Bell now hiring for a part time day or evening help. Apply in person at 120 W. or 468 E.
Taking applications for dishwasher/kitchen utility law. Lawrence Country Club. Ask for Frank
vOLUNTEERS NEEDED. Rapid/Victim Survivor Service-ASAP is seeking volunteers. Applications avail at Headquarters Counseling Center, KU Student Assistance Center and Haskell Indian Nation School.
The Kansas and Burge Union hires part-time, hourly in the following areas: Food Service; Catering, and Custodian. Many jobs with varying days are available, Level 1, Kansas Union for job specific EOE.
Banquet servers
Restaurant wait staff
Host/Hostess
Cooks
Room attendants
Ministry Pavilion
If interested apply at the Holidome 200 McDonald
Dr DFOE
USE
KANSAN
CLASSIFIED
Kansas Army National Guard call (913) 842-9283
Start at $68.88 per month. Qualify for up to $16,000 educational assistance.
NAILTIQUE
TRAFFIC-DUTY
Fake ID and alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G Strole Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
225 Professional Services
Macintosh repairs and upgrades
Friendly, Affordable, In-Home Service
The Mac Doctors 842-0848
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
- Pedicures * Back Scratchers
* Manicures * Linen Wraps
* Sculptured Nails * Overlays
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Birthright 842-4621. Free pregnancy testing
Spanish tutor. Experienced teacher and fluent grad student available for private tutoring sessions. Flexible hours and reasonable rates. Call Scott 943-2681.
Prompt abortion and contraceptive services Dale L. Clinton M.D. 841-9716
$5.00 off first visit!
Grand Opening!
235 Typing Services
Call Heidi at 832-2900
THE law office
DONALD G. STROLE
(Next to Ultimate Tail)
CC Desktop Publishing: Resumes, Cover Letters,
Biochurches, Flies, Term Paper, Newletters.
oer Women Word Processing. Former editor
of Women Word Processing into accurate pages of letter
type. int. no 290-293
Are you Makin' the Grade
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your typing needs
call Makin' the Grade 845-2655
-
300s
305 For Sale
Merchandise
92 Spec. Rockhopper Sport plus rack, light and jubles at all for $40 call Kerr 821-2165
1P color T V. Wqueen waveless water bed. Queen water bed frame. Kitchen table. Barbecue grill, cabinet bins, posters, kitchen items & telephone. Call 442.800.
19. 70% Yumba Mall 20.00% SunTrust 10.30% Cara 20.00% Uber 8.50% Capita 10.30%
**Lanbush's portable computer 40 HD. I 32**
Ploppy some software, 861-4134 day 143;
Ploppy some software, 861-4134 day 143;
Apple ImageWriter II Printer for Apple or Macintosh
apples $100 B.O. B. Small microaview with
snap-on support
books, deks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
900 Max.
Cumb,ick dex reamier reclair chair qawter watered by six drawers in the watered watered watered with six drawer underdresser Call 614-830-2576
1043
For Sale: Student Football tickets
Must Call Best offer 841-6370
HELP! "I'm moone-writable" My neighbors want me to stay in, and now there a puppy here, too. I am a nestered, 3-year old, de-clawed cat. FREE to a living home. 844-3657
IBM Select II electric (typymakers for sale. All in working condition). Call 913/342-1952, if not hoorbased.
MAC SE-45 mg hard drive. 2.5 meg RAM
included unregistered version of Claris Works
Men's Schwinn Crisscross mtn. bike 21 speed, 18-inch frame condition $20 or best offer, 18-in. Cal Gauz
Microwave Oven 60$ Per 1 table, class w/up to $50
Desktop $9 Call. 855-432-7660
Gramware, Infinity Studio Monitor 106 Home Speak-
er, well take care of Care with 5 warranty (400$ per or b.o. a 832-2998 or
b.o. a 832-2998).
One way ticket to Boston via Cincinnati; must be held in September. $10 or best offer. Mayatt at 620-835-4799.
Panasonic word processor KX-W80 like new.
Large 7 line LCD drive, w/3.5" disk drive & 36M RAM memory, thesaurus, spell check and more!
Memory & cover in incl. 4230 $B09-843-4206
Kepite Sale! Columbus Bears $99. Baby Iguanas
$25. Bursame Firemen $115. Care information
included. Call Jim 816-857-2471. Will deliver from
KC Visa. Mastercard
Stereo system Like new. Sony receiver (D) player. Pioneer cassette speaker. Teac bass EQ. Remote $150 new, now $502. Two barstools, solid oilc. $290, new for the $4i. 814-1233
81 Suzuki GS250 T Good cond. $500 o.b. call 855-389-
2608
Holden Auto驰 run great AT, AM/AM
cassette, 4-door at 843-1220 or 843-1588
or 843-1968
1979 Kaball 46e, auto a/c, $/c. 400 Call Deborah at
843-733-1230 see machine on machine.
1975 Dodge Coronet, four-door, $500. Call Rick at
841-8035.
Over the Edge
1985 Honda Accord. Recorded, loaded, new tires.
$1,090 ROW. Cell Lining at 841-2842.
1860 Valve DL, great cond. new breaks, new tires,
1860 Valve DL, great cond. new breaks, $2200 to Call 811-
524, leave message
1985 KAWA 609R Ninja Trick paint, plenty of extra.
$1980 805-017
360 Miscellaneous
Naismith Halls' services give students the competitive edge.
24 hr. computer center
THE CHAPMAN
Used & Curious Goods
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
Noon · 6:00 Tues · Sat.
Buy • Sell • Trade
Front door bus service
MARRIAGE
Fitness room
Dine anytime meals
Weekly maid service
370 Want to Buy
NAISMITH
---
EVT's 501' s体会 up to $13.00 and $19.00 for
new Jeans Jackets. bqi-0546
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1800 Naismith Drive
(913) 843-8559
Large (14x18)床 for non-smoking female. 3 m.
from campus. BSA ULTF. Call 749-01-66.
Studio apartment available. Close to campus, totally remodeled, like new. Water and heat are required. Please call for more info. Wanted for rent. Light setup up for D.J. One night Set. Sept. 11. Please call ASAP 841-2355
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY
APARTMENTS
2040 Heatherwood
-2 Bedroom, 1/1 Bath $425
-2 Bedroom, 2 Bath $550
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
Call Now!843-4754
430 Roommate Wanted
**HELP!** I am stranded without an apt. I am a mime
looking for an apt for $200 lower if you have a
mime.
- By phone: 864-4358
NNlookup for 3rd trimester job $165/mn
+ Vitalities. New campus. Call John 841-3282
*
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
+ /\ utilities. New campus. Call John 841-7262
+ 2 NSF Seeing 3 roommate in housewife W/O,
A/C, water Dp mostly furn, $135/m + \/util Call
840-4236. Leave message
How to schedule an ad:
$85. utilizes paid, 3-bedroom, fully furnished
kitchen. Accommodates AC, faced tile for Right
male make-up.
available for a female in a story town house close to campus and on bus route. $242 per month plus utilities. Sept. Rent already paid. Leased through May 31. For info, call 749-724-6120.
LOWER YOUR RENT: Male NS looking for a place to live 942-9757
Responsible female to share 2 bif apt 1 minute
responsible bids $235 and umil
water pd. Water 798 3131
- Bv Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
- by phone: 843-424-3960
A phone used may be limited to your MasterCard or Visit account. Otherwise, they will be held until the payment is made.
Responsable roommate to share upcale Sdf 2
Responsible roommate to share upscale Sdf 1
+ vultilite Call after 6pm c53.829-9044
+ vultilite Call after 6pm c53.829-9044
Calculating Rates:
- in person : 119 Stauffer Flint
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 via phone.
- By Mail 119 Quarter Stort Floor, Lawrence R. A3.60035
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kranen office. Or you may choose to have bills billed to your MasterCard or Vaccum Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard quality for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Karsan office for a fee of $4.00.
Calculating Rates:
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of gate lines the ad occupies). To calculate cost, multiply the total number of times in which the ad is rated by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run
Blind Box Numbers:
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be given unpaid days. Refunds on classified ads that were pre-paid by check or with cash are not available.
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
105 personal
110 business personals
120 announcements
130 entertainment
Number of insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8-12 lines
Classifications
Cost per line per day
1X 2-5X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30-X
2.05 1.55 1.05 .85 .75 .50
1.90 1.15 1.00 .70 .65 .45
1.85 1.05 .75 .65 .60 .40
1.75 1.05 .65 .60 .55 .35
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
Classifications
140 lost & found
225 wanted help
225 waiting services
225 tying services
300 for sale
360 miscellaneous
360 miscellaneous
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 recommend wanted
Total days in paper:
Total ad cost: Classification:
Name: Phone:
1
2
3
4
5
Name:
Total days in paper
Name:_
Address:
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:
MasterCard
Expiration Date
Account number:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66845
By GARY LARSON
THE FAR SIDE
SILVER
SPROUT
CHECK YOUR
POTATO GUN
HERE
Vegetarian towns of the Old West
12
Friday, September 10, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Late professor lauded
Widow, colleagues to honor career in Slavic programs By Kathleen Stollie
By Kathleen Stolle
Kansan staff writer
A plaque commemorating the late KU professor Oswald P. Backus III as the "Father of Slavic Studies at KU" will be unveiled today.
The unveiling will be at 3:30 p.m. in the Slavic alcove of Watson Library's reference room on the third floor. A commemoration program on the library's fifth floor will follow and will feature speeches by his former colleagues, his widow, Barbara Backus-McCorkle and the Slavic collection curator.
Backus is being recognized for his contributions to KU's Slavic literature collection and Slavic programs. Backustaught history, law and Slavic and Soviet area studies during his 22 years at the University of Kansas. He died of a heart attack in 1972 while still an active member of KU's faculty.
guages and literature, said one of Backus's greatest contributions to the library was Nikolai Karamzin's 12-volume "History of the Russian State," published from 1818-1826.
Oswald Backus
Gerald Mikkelson, professor of Slavic lan
BENOIT HARRIS
"Our University is probably one of the few universities in the United States to have the complete set, no volumes missing." Mikkelson said.
In the 1960s, Backus helped found the Slavic
Backus is credited as having helped Ku's Slavic collection rise to the ranking of 12th in the nation.
and Soviet Area Studies program,now known as the Center for Russian and East European Studies.He later established an exchange program between KU and the University of Poznan in Poland.
"All of us who have been here long enough to know him agree, Ozzie was our leader," Mikkelson said. "He was an inspiration to all of us."
More degrees in jeopardy
By Christoph Fuhrman
By Christoph Fuhrm
Kansan staff writer
The University Senate Executive Committee was notified yesterday that three more degrees were being recommended for elimination by the Office of Academic Affairs.
The bachelor of general studies in atmospheric science and the bachelor of science and general studies degrees in computer science were added to four other degree programs up for discontinuance this fall.
David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the decision to propose the elimination of the computer science degrees was made when the merger of the computer science program into the department of engineering was finished.
"It developed over the summer as the departmental merger occurred," he said.
Shulenburger said that the bachelor of science degree could be offered in the department of engineering but that the bachelor of arts and general studies could not.
"There is no desire to have two computer science departments." he said.
The bachelor of general studies in atmospheric science was first recommended for discontinuance along with the bachelor of arts and master's degrees in atmospheric science in Fall 1992. Shulenburger said.
T. P. Srinivasan, head of SenEx, said when the Office of Academic Affairs realized the degree was not being used, they recommended it be discontinued.
In other business:
The Faculty Executive Committee reviewed recommendations on improving the hearing process of firing officials with tenure. The recommendations came from Rutherford Turnbull, professor of special education and former head of the Tenure and Related Problems committee that heard the Tennok Ilonkov hearing.
The recommendations will be sent to the tenure committee for review. The committee's comment then will be sent to the Faculty Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities Committee for comment. Both committees' recommendations will be sent to FacEx for review with the heads of the tenure committee and faculty rights committee.
Those recommendations will be sent to the Organizational and Administration committee and then to University Council in late Fall 1993 or early Spring 1994.
*FaxEx requested that Dick Himes, professor of biochemistry and biological sciences and head of the Research Policies Committee, present the recommendations of the committee for improving research at KU to University Council at its Oct. 14 meeting.
Whim landed student summer job at MTV
Suppose someone called and said, "Hi, this is Sergio from MTV," and then proceeded to invite you to a job interview in New York.
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
Not a very believable situation.
But for Betsy Rate, Leavenworth junior, that is exactly what happened.
Last October, while sitting around with friends watching MTV, Rate began to daydream a little, thinking of excuses to get to New York.
So for fun, Rate jotted down an MTV address that flashed onto the screen and wrote a letter requesting MTV summer internship program information.
PENNESE A. BERTHA
"It was all a lark," Rate said, "I really had no idea they would even write
Asit turned out, MTV replied asking
tate to send her resume. She did and waited for a reply. Rate said that she had forgotten about the whole thing until she received a telephone call a few weeks before finals.
"My roommate handed the phone to me, and a guy said, 'Hi, this is Sergio from MTV.' I about died," she said.
KU and took off for a two-month job with MHP. When she said she was in a duo, she said she was sitting on the desk, but that it all began to sink in.
"I was a little nervous, but it was more of an excitement," Rate said. "Even while I was sitting there it seemed like I was in a dream."
Rate said that her living situation was ideal. Her apartment was located in one of the safest neighborhoods in the heart of the city, and it was just a short walk down Park Avenue to Times Square and then to the Viacom Building, where she worked.
Her job consisted of menial work a lot of the time, such as typing, filing, sending faxes and copying, but she said something always kept her job interesting.
Celebrities, such as Paula Abdul, walked in and out of the MTV offices everyday, and she met and worked with MTV on-air personalities.
One of Rate's daily highlights was witnessing the making of "Beavis and Butt-head" because the editing room for the segment was next door to her office.
"It was so funny because everyday at the same time I would hear this laughter from the other room," she said,
Rate said the internship was the greatest experience of her life, and she encouraged anyone who has an interest in anything to try for it.
Kennedy CLASS
"This was one of those things that people just don't think happens to them," she said. "I didn't think it could happen to me, but I just spent my summer in New York with MTV."
LASTING IMPRESSIONS
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12
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/
SPORTS: Saturday's defeat marked the first time in three years that the Kansas football team has had a losing record. Page 7.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSA
VOL.103,NO.16
( v+v+v+v )
MONDAY,SEPTEMBER 13,1993
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
CLAS programs setting standards
Requirements replace guarantees in four departments
NEWS:864-4810
Kansan staff writer
By Kathleen Stolle Kansan staff writer
Before Fall 1901, students in any of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences' 80 departments just completed a form to declare a major.
But times have changed.
In the past two years, four majors in the college communication studies,political science, environmental studies and English have implemented admissions requirements.
Now, psychology department officials are considering setting their own standards.
James Muyskens, dean of the college.
"It would be much easier if we could count on more rigorous preparation," he said.
said that the University's open admissions policy prompted some departments to implement their own standards
Muyskens said the basic goals of the m admission policies were to boost the quality of the majors and, in some cases, to reduce the overwhelming number of incoming students.
or at least one department, the results have been mixed so far.
"I'm not sure we've seen or felt as much as we thought we would," said Howard Sypher, head of the department of communication studies.
To become a communication studies major, a student now must complete 30 hours of general course work, have an overall GPA of 2.0 and earn a 2.5 in two introductory communication studies classes and one mid-level class.
Sypher said the average GPA of commu
nication studies majors had increased since the new policy was implemented, but student numbers were still a problem.
Before the communication studies department implemented its admission policy, the student-to-faculty ratio in the major was 45:1.
major was 64.7.
"We had the highest major-to-faculty ratio in liberal arts and sciences, possibly in the University," Sypher said.
Since implementation, the number of communication studies majors has dropped from about 740 to just less than 500.
"Officially, on paper we may look like we're down some, but classes are still closing," he said.
But the numbers are deceiving. Syphen said.
ng, he said.
In fact, classroom size has not changed much at all. Sypher said. Many communication studies classes still have about five students per section over the maximum capacity. Sypher's class, Introduction to
mara, it should have been. Despite the admissions policy, classroom size has not decreased. All of the college's other departments and some of the professional schools still require courses from the communication studies department. An estimated 200 pre-majors also enroll in the classes.
Behavioral Research Methods in Communication, has 52 students. Ideally, as a seminar, it should have 15 students, he said.
Muyskens said it was too early to judge the success of the new admissions requirements.
Pam Houston, director of the liberal arts and sciences undergraduate center, said that she thought the admission standards would not only increase the quality of majors in the various programs but also help other students find direction.
help other students be ready.
"I think it's a good idea to tell students,
You have to do well in introductory classes,
If you don't, you need to be looking for a major you can be more successful in," she said.
The theme is out for Revue's 1994 edition Move to Lied Center brings new promise for fund-raiser
By Shan Schwartz
By Shan Schwar
Kansan staff writer
For this year's Rock Chalk Revue, "The Word is Out." That is the theme for this year's Revue, a campus-wide variety show and philanthropy project benefiting the Douglas Counts United Way.
The theme was announced Thursday evening and marked the official kickoff for KU living groups competing for a spot in the show, said Tad Gomez, executive producer of Rock Chalk Revue.
er of Rock Clark reveal
Each group competing for the show creates an original musical and theatrical script, Gomez said. The groups then assemble notebooks including the scripts, musical numbers, characters and stage set descriptions. Notebooks are due Nov. 5.
A panel of judges will review the notebooks and select five groups for the show, Gomez said. Selections will be announced Nov. 22.
announced NOV. 22
The selected performers then have three months to prepare the show, which will be presented Feb. 23-26 in the Lied Center.
fourteen groups are competing for five spots in the show this year. Gomez said, including 12 fraternity-sorority pairs, a group from the residence halls and one from the scholarship halls.
scholarship hints
Individuals also can perform in the show as in-between acts, Gomez said. Auditions for in-between acts will be in December.
Last year's Revue raised $26,500, Gomez said, and organizers hope to surpass that total this year. In addition, the Revue chalked up 16,000 hours of community service from all the living groups competing for the show.
artist living group. This year, any living group can participate in community service activities to contribute to the Revue's total and compete for the "Most Charitable" award, Gomez said. Rock Chalk Revue traditionally took place in Hoch Auditorium but was moved to Lawrence High School two years ago after Hoch was destroyed by fire. The move to the Lied Center, Gomez said, promised a new and exciting show.
Center, Golzhie Zakit "The quality of the show is definitely going to improve," he said. "Lied it much larger, the acoustics are much better, and overall it will be a much higher quality performance."
Thursday's theme announcement also kicked off a contest for this year's Rock Chalk Revue poster design, Gomez said. Any student may submit entries for the contest, and the winner will receive $100. Gomez said pamphlets with details of the contest were available at the Organizations and Activities Center, 400 Kansas Union. On rock Chalk Revue, call the
For more information on Rock Chalk Revue, call the Revue office at 864-4033.
TOMBOW
Mud bath
Above, Audra Theis,
Shawnee sophomore,
gets a face full of water
from Chris Lake, Hinds-
dale, ill., junior, during a
mud volleyball tournamen-
sponsored by the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity and Gamma Phi Beta
sorority. At right, Matt
Leonard, Prainie Village
sophomore, retrieves a
ball. Event proceeds go to
Camp Sechelt, a Kansas
City camp for underprivi-
leged girls, and to the
Ronald McDonald House
1980
Rising to the challenge
Yesterday, the amounts raised by paceetter companies and Rock Chalk Reve for the United Way were announced. Current progress is listed below.
Goal or $1,112,230 %2 $303,747
Goal of $1,112,230
27% $303,747 Goal of $140,000 18.5% $26,000 Goal for Duquesne County Goal for University of Kansas
$26,000
38.5%
Goal for Douglas County Goal for University of Kansas
Source: C. Carl Kain, Dr. Cheman James Frederick. **KANEN**
Students help in United Way work fund drive
By Traci Carl
Kansan staff writer
His child psychology class requires that each student spend 50 hours at the Boys and Girls Club of Lawrence, 1520 Haskell Ave.
At first Andy Margolis, Northbrook, Ill., senior, was not very excited about fitting 50 hours of volunteer work into his 18-hour class schedule.
"Iactually have out like it," Margolis said. "I just means I have to work that much harder in school."
Margolis is one of many KU students who donate their time and money for United Way agencies, which includes the Boys and Girls Club of Lawrence.
United Way of Douglas County kicked off their 1993-94 fund-raising campaign, "Rising to the Challenge," with ice cream, clowns and horseback rides from 3 to 5 p.m. yesterday at Broken Arrow Park The campaign ends Oct. 29.
The United Way goal for Douglas County is $1,112,230, which is about 3.3 percent more than was raised in 1992. The University's campaign goal is $140,000.
Headquarters, 1419 Massachusetts St., is an organization that offers listening and counseling services.
Marcia Epstein, director of Headquarters, Inc., said that the $60,680 it has asked for from United Way is almost two-thirds of its budget. The rest of its budget comes from KU student activity fees.
It has received funds from United Way since 1972, Epstein said.
About 60 percent of Headquarters' 90 member staff are KU students, Epstein said. Volunteers have to complete a two-month training program that costs $30 and requires almost 300 hours, she said. After the training, they are asked to work eight hours a week for at least six months.
KU students also use Headquarters, Epstein said. Of 16,000 people who turned to the agency for help last year, she said she estimated that almost half were KU students.
Connie Burk, coordinator of the child advocacy program, said she started as a volunteer four years ago when she was a student at KU. Two years ago she became an employee.
were KU students. Another United Way organization where KU students play a direct part is Lawrence Women's Transitional Care Services, Inc. The organization is the only house for battered and abused women and children in Douglas and Franklin counties.
The organization has asked for $37,449 from United Way, which will provide about one-fourth of its budget. Burk said.
The set-up of the organization is similar to United Way's set-up, she said.
"What we are about is community helping itself," Burk said.
Burk said. Along with the shelter, Transitional Care Services offers a 24-hour hot line, emergency transportation and community referrals.
KU students are part of the more than 50-member volunteer staff, Burk said, and many also use the house as a safe haven.
INSIDE
Storytellers, artists and dancers from Haskell Indian Nations University and around the country performed at the Fifth Annual Indian Market this weekend.
Traditional step
Page 3.
Former KU student brings experience to job
Enrique Torres, new assistant director of the Office of Minority Affairs, has firsthand knowledge of discrimination.
By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer
A photograph of an older man and woman, squinting in the sun and holding bunches of grapes, hangs in Enrique Torres' office.
"They were like other farm workers in their time, in the '50s and early '60s," said Torres, the new assistant director of the Office of Minority Affairs. "They were discriminated against because they were Mexican-American."
PRESIDENT
Torres
The workers are his parents
Torres, who graduated from the University of Kansas School of Law last spring, said his education had been emphasized throughout his life. But other family members spent their days picking fruit for rich farmers near his home in Brownsville, Texas.
"The situation was horrible," Torres said. "No bathrooms, less than minimum wage — because they could get with it, and they still can."
away with it, and they started working Torres said he began working with minority issues as an undergraduate majoring in history at the University of Texas in Austin. He founded a Hispanic-oriented newspaper with a few friends to protest negative stereotypes of Hispanics in the Daily Texan, the university's student newspaper, he said.
paper, he said.
By working with such issues, Torres said, he spoke with and understood other minority groups.
Sherwon Thompson, director of the office, said Torres' work in minority affairs made him the best choice for the job.
Torres work with minorities was necessary for KU's welfare.
All students can benefit from working with issues of multiculturalism, Torres said. Those who protest multifor the job.
"His qualifications were very unique to the job description," he said. "He had the background that related to the specific area that this position would cover."
"In order to have a well-rounded society we need all kinds of people," he said. "And if you exclude one, you exclude them all."
"I worked with African-American students and gay and lesbian students," he said. "You saw the differences and the beauty and appreciated them instead of making stereotypes."
"In order to have a well-rounded society we need all kinds of people."
Enrique Torres Minority affairs assistant director
culturalism at KU and other universities did not realize that.
But multiculturalism does not need to be enforced, Torres said.
"It is not something that should be forced down their throats," he said. It's just something that should be opened up for everybody."
2
Monday, September 13, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Health Fair'93
Cholesterol Screening/Percent Body Fat Caloric Needs Assessment/Stress Assessment Diabetes and Cancer Information/Health Literature Free Nutritional Snacks/Prize Drawings/And More]
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES 864-9500
The Office of Study Abroad will hold an informational meeting for students interested in studying in Spanish-speaking countries at 9:30 a.m. today in 4010 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Ellen Hart Strubert at 864-3742.
hu., Sept. 16 & Fri., Sept. 17
9 a.m.- 3 p.m.
Watkins West Entrance
The Office of Study Abroad will have an information table from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. today in the Lobby at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Cathy McClure at 864-414.
**KU Yoga will meet at 7 tonight at Room 310 in the Burge Union. Membership dues for the 13 weeks is $39 or $3 per session. Guest memberships are available for walk-ins at $4 per session. Bring a mat or blanket and wear loose clothing. For more information, call Yvonne Coldera at 841-0766.
- The Spencer Museum of Art will sponsor a Hallmark symposium by Estelle Ellis, director of Promotion/Marketing at Business Image. New York at 6 p.m. today in the Spencer Museum Auditorium.
United We Stand, America will hold a meeting at 8:30 tonight in the main floor meeting room at Anschutz Science Library.
KU Kempo will meet at 6 and 7 tonight in 130 Robinson. For more information, call Mandana Ershadi at 842-4713.
The Veteran GTA Panel will hold a brown bag lunch at noon today in Alcove H at the Kansas Union.
KU Black Student Union will hold an inaugural meeting welcoming the newest members of the Black Student Body and faculty at 7 tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. For more information, contact Terry Bell at 864-3084.
KU Tae Kwo Do Club will meet at 6 p.m. today in 207 Robinson. For more information, call Jacob Wright at 749-2084 or Jason Anishanshui at 843-3099.
ON THE RECORD
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
A student's stereo valued at $400 was taken from a car in the 1300 block of West Campus Road between Sept. 3 and Sept. 6, Lawrence police reported.
A student's motorcycle was damaged in parking lot No. 103 on Wednesday. KU police reported. Damage was estimated at $550.
A student's window screen was damaged at a residence in the 500 block of Eldridge on Thursday. Damage was estimated at $50.
Thursday, Lawrence police reported. Damage was estimated at $40.
A student's car windshield was damaged in the 1100 block of West 18th Street on Thursday, Lawrence police reported. Damage was estimated at $250.
A student's window was damaged at a residence in the 1200 block of Tennessee Street on
A story on Page 1 of Thursday's Kansan misidentified a student. Janal C. Saeh is a graduate student from Bethlehem, which is in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
CORRECTION
HP Inkjet BK Printer
WEATHER
Omaha: 68°/48'
LAWRENCE: 78°/58'
Kansas City: 76°/57'
St. Louis: 79°/68'
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 83°/63'
Chicago: 75°/64'
Houston: 89°/76'
Miami: 88°/77'
Minneapolis: 61°/46'
Phoenix: 90°/67'
Salt Lake City: 60°/39'
Seattle: 73°/50'
Wichita: 79°/67'
Tulsa: 81°/65'
TODAY
Tomorrow Wednesday
chance for
Mostly cloudy
NW winds 5-10 mph
Partly cloudy /
SW winds 5-10 mph
Omaha: 65'/48'
LAWRENCE: 78'/66'
Kansas City: 76'/57'
St. Louis: 79'/68'
Wichita: 79'/57'
Tulsa: 81'/65'
ComputerLand
841-4611
thunderstorm
North winds 15-20 mph High:79
Sun
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119
Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045
Source: John Preifer, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
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 $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
High: 74°
Low: 55°
James Frederick/KAN$AN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Call 864-4810 for the newsroom:
News tips — Campus Desk
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*C Trauer, Editor or
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Call 864-4358 for advertising:
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Come to the Kansan news-
room, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall
for:
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comments/Complaints — Amy Casey, Business Manager
■ placing announcements of meetings or events of campus groups for the "On Campus" calendar. Announcements must be submitted on form provided by 5 p.m. two days prior to despatch of publication. No dismissions will be taken by telephone.
submitting "Letters to the Editor." See the Opinion page for details.
University Daily Kansan fax number— 913-864-5261
MISS KU-LAWRENCESCHOLARSHIP PAGEANT
Informational meeting for all interested contestants Tuesday, September 14 at 8:30 pm
For more information call Karen Fender 841-0215
Tel: 843-7936
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 13, 1993
3
KU lagging in research spending
Report calls for specific funding goals
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas is falling behind its peer institutions as a research university, says a report by a University Governance committee.
The Research Policies Committee sent its recommendations on how research could be improved at KU to the University Senate Executive Committee on Thursday.
The committee compared KU's research funding with the top 100 schools in the Association of State Universities, of which KU is a mem-
ber. KU was No. 93.
"Our position has been falling down the last 20 years," said Dick Himes, professor of biochemistry and biological sciences and chair of the research committee.
Himes said the recommendations focused primarily on improving research funding at KU.
"Research is critical to a major university," he said.
Himes said most research was done by graduate students and supervised by professors.
The report focused on six areas where KU could improve research.
increased awareness of the necessity for research at KU.
Set specific monetary goals for research funding.
Himes said that most research funds come from federal institutions such as the National Science Foundation.
According to the office of Research Support and Grants Administration, the Lawrence campus has increased its share of grant research money each of the last five years from about $30 million in 1989 to an estimated $50 million in 1993.
Despite the increase, Himes said that KU still was not on the same scale as other universities.
Set up programs to improve research.
- Develop related policies to sup
Improve the process of submitting grant proposals.
Kevin Reed, assistant director of research support and grants administration, said once a department filed a research grant request it took six to nine weeks to process.
Identify specific funds to improve research flexibility.
An example of how KU rated among its peer institutions in research was shown in a 1991 study by the Office of Institutional Research and Planning. The study compared engineering research and development expenditures at KU with eight other universities. The comparison was to the universities of Colorado, Iowa, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Missouri and Nebraska and Iowa State and Oklahoma State universities.
With only $65.9 million slated for research, KU ranked the lowest of the nine schools in the study. Colorado, No. 29, had the highest ranking of the nine schools with $161.97 million.
For KU to become a better research institution, it must become more aggressive in seeking federal grants, Himes said.
"We just have to do a better job of competing," he said.
KU allocations
Kansas legislature allocated $702,806 for KU for '93. Here's how it breaks down by school.
James Frederick XANANS
Source The Office of Institutional Research and Planning
how it breathes
Pharmacy $120,710
Law $40,726
Journalism $13,997
Fine Arts $50,647
Engineering $53,595
Education
College of Liber
Arts and Science
Business $14,108
Architecture $47,140
and over
$120,000
$80,000
$60,000
$40,000
$20,000
$0
LESSONS FROM ART Dances, storytelling revive Indian traditions
By Donella Hearne
Kansan staff writer
Brilliant yellow feathers whirled making Walter Alhairya nothing but a blur. Eight white hoops encircled his body in intricate designs. The hoop dancer never stopped moving his feet to the steady rhythm of the drum.
Even though his costume was heavy and hot, Ahahty, freshmen at Haskell Indian Nations University, said it was all worthwhile. Ahahty is Kiowa, Comanche and Cherokee from Los Angeles
Pat Melody, said the group tries to represent many tribes.
It feels good if everyone likes it, he said. "It a way of letting go of bad feelings and getting back to what medicine to heal the mind."
Ahhaity was one of the Haskell performers who entertained the crowd at the Fifth Indian Annual Market this weekend. The Kiowa Cultural Commission a Haskell
"We tour all over the country," Melody said. "This is part of our tour production called 'Songs of Life,' which tells stories that are inter-tribal." All the performers at the market said they leamed the stories and dances as children.
"We've all grown up with traditional stories. They're part of us." William Edmond Haskell freshman and performer
tribal club, and the Thunderbird Theater's Honors Company performed traditional Indian stories and dances.
William Edmo Haskell freshman and performer
The market was one of the events of the Lawrence Indian Arts Show.
The Haskell groups performed among the tents where artists were showing their work.
Haskell facilities manager, Virgil Allen, estimated there were between 15,000 and 20,000 people at the market Saturday.
The Thunderbird Theater group brought laughter to children and adults alike as it acted out the story of Coyote the Creator's foolish ways.
Jennifer Attocknie, a Comanche and Pampa, Texas, senior, was recruited from KU to be the narrator of the story.
each individual brings his or her own traditional costume to the group. The director of the group,
"We've all grown up with traditional stories," said William Edmo, a Blackfoot from Browning, Mont., and Haskell freshman, who plays the part of Coyote. "They're part of us."
Tom Mauchahty-Ware, Kiowa and Comanche from Anadarko, Okla., said that he tours playing traditional music on the flute and that he tries to educate people about true Indian ways.
"The true beat is not like in the movies, the one created by the great chief, Mr. Goldwyn," Mauchatty-Ware said. "We're still mad at him for the
way he made people think of Indians. We're still mad, even though he's gone to that great cash box in the sky."
Steve Queton, a Haskell senior who descends from Kiowa and Cheyenne ancestors as well as Italian heritage, said that dancing in the Kiowa Cultural Organization's group was important to him because of his religious beliefs.
"The dancing and the stories are all religious."
Quenoton said "Indians are very close to God."
He said he also danced to remind people of the Indian tradition and to educate others about Indian traditions. He said he thought it was important to keep tribal traditions alive.
"Years ago, we were told not to speak our languages and practice our traditions," Queton said. "Many tribes lost their languages because of that. Now we're fighting to try to hold on to it."
DANCE
Melissa Lacey/ KANSAN
Steve Quetelet of Lawrence performs a traditional Kiowa fancy dance at the Fifth Annual Indian Market.
Students converge for greek conference
By Shan Schwartz Kansan staffwriter
One hundred-fifty Greek students and advisers from four states converged in Lawrence this weekend as KU played host at an annual regional conference.
The Mid-American Interfraternity Council Association/Mid-American Panhellenic Council Association Western Area Conference was Friday and Saturday in the Kansas Union.
The MIFCA/MAPCA conference, called "Foundations for the Future," encouraged participants to analyze individual, relationship and Greek issues, said Jennifer MacDonald, Shawnee senior and MAPCA Western Area vice president. Conference presenters challenged students to carry their leadership skills into their everyday adult lives.
Students and greek affairs administrators from schools in Colorado, Nebraska, Kansas and Missouri participated in the conference. It was coordinated by students and advisers from KU and the Colorado School of Mines in Golden, Colo., an engineering school.
Speakers at the conference included Vic Boschini, dean of students at Butler University in Indianapolis; T.J. Schmitz, chief executive officer of Tau Kappa Epsilon Fraternity; Caryl Smith, KU dean of student life; and David Ambler, KU vice chancellor for student affairs.
MacDonald said conference participants took part in three-phase workshops that offered them interpersonal exercises. The workshops focused on individual issues, such as time management, etiquette and goal setting, relationship issues, such as gender and cultural issues; and Greek issues, including risk management, creative social planning and scholarship.
Melissa Jenkins, a member of the conference planning committee, said the speakers and presenters at the conference were inspiring.
"The speakers were all prominent in society, and they told us how to use the leadership experiences we gain in greek life to become leaders in our adult lives," she said.
Jenkins said the opportunity to meet with greek students from other schools was also valuable.
"we got to work intimately with people we didn't previously know," she said. "It was good to find that everyone had the same problems and concerns about Greek life, and we learned from each other."
KU physicists to rally for super collider
$10 billion project faces U.S. Senate vote
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
Particle physics and political muscle will come together today when a KU professor and other researchers meet in Washington, D.C.
Participants from all over the country will gather at George Washington University to support the Texas superconducting super collider before this month's U.S. Senate vote to finance the $10 billion project.
Vice President AlGore, physicist Stephen Hawking and astronaut Steve Young are scheduled to address the crowd of scientists and physicists about the necessity of the super collider project, said Alice Bean,
professor of physics. The rally was organized by the American Physical Society.
Twenty times more powerful than any atom smasher in existence, the 40-trillion-volt super collider would consist of two rings 54 miles long, said Francis Prosser, associate chair of the physics and astronomy department.
By accelerating protons, or positively charged nuclear particles, around the rings, smashing them together and detecting the resulting crash, researchers hope to get a better understanding of the nature of matter. Prosser said.
Bean said she hoped that a large turnout at the meeting at George Washington University would demonstrate to the Senate that the physics community stands firm in its support for the project.
"We haven't communicated to the public yet why it's so important to have a super collider," Bean said. "I couldn't imagine we could let a vote in the Senate kill it."
Sen. Bob Dole strongly supported the project, but Sen. Nancy Kassebaum intended to oppose the project's financing, legislative aides said.
As one of the KU researchers on the project, Philip Baringer, assistant professor of physics and astronomy, said that despite critics' complaints of few immediate or definite benefits from the project, the super collider would provide data and research opportunities unavailable anywhere else.
"It's been judged by several scientific committees to be the most important project in the field of particle physics," Baringer said. "History tells us that society reaps some type of benefit from these types of projects."
"The project is pretty far along," Baringer said. "They've spent $2 billion on it already. The lab in Dallas employs a couple thousand people. They may be reluctant to come back when they get laid off if the project is delayed for a few years. This is a door-die vote."
If the Senate does concur with the House's vote of 280-150 in June to stop financing the super collider, scientists would have great difficulty attempting to
restart the project in the distant future. Baringer said.
"If the (superconducting super collider) is not built, you might wreck fundamental physics for 50 years," Ralston said. "There should be a little more appreciation for how things are discovered. It's a reasonable function of government to spend a tiny fraction of its budget on new discoveries."
Trees going bald
June / July wet spell
Saturated soil
Heavy rain saturated the soil, forcing trees
Early changes in area trees is just another result of the adverse summer weather.
Rains, heat damage campus trees
August dry spell
Dry soil
Moist soil
June / July wet spell
Saturated soil
Heavy rain saturated the soil, forcing trees to grow some roots closer to the surface. The water also rotted some older, deeper roots.
August dry spell
Dry soil
Moist soil
When the heat dried the soil, roots near the surface could not supply the tree with enough water. Leaves prematurely turning colors or falling off are signs of tree stress.
Source: Douglas County Extension Office
James Frederick / KANBAR
By Brian James
Vancouver staff writer
One of the wettest summers on record followed by a sweltering August has made life hard for trees, experts said.
"Nearly all the trees on campus are under stress right now," said Steve Helsel, assistant director of landscape in facilities operations.
Students are not the only ones who may be stressed out this fall.
Heilsel said that as a result of the stress, leaves on trees are turning autumn colors or falling off altogether about one month earlier than usual.
"The defoliation can be seen on some upper parts of campus, but it is especially common on trees around Potter Lake and those lower grove areas," he said.
Dennis Bejot, a horticulturist for the Douglas County Extension Service, said the heavy rain in early summer saturated the soil, depleting the oxygen in the soil used by tree roots. The ample water forced trees, especially young ones, to grow new roots near the surface. Some deeper roots may have even rotted. Bejot said.
As the August heat dried out the soil, the roots could not get enough water to the tree. he said.
"We have many trees that are starting to thin out and drop their leaves as a result of the stress," Bejot said. "With others, their leaves are beginning to turn yellow or brown."
even oak trees," he said.
The rain and humidity also caused an onslaught of diseases to trees on campus, Helsel said.
"We've had fungus problems in older sycamores, haples and maples,
Helsel said that facilities operations workers are watering and aerating trees to get oxygen to root systems.
"But we're at a loss to the number of things we can do to help now," he said. "Most of the damage has already been done."
Both Helsel and Bejot said that despite the stress on trees this season, they expect few will die.
Helsel said he does not expect to see the brilliant colors of last autumn appear again this year.
"This fall the trees will look kind of raggy," he said. "But that happens in Kansas — nobody did this was Vermont."
"Most have enough of a root system to survive." Bejot said. "But if we have a hard winter, you can bet we will lose some trees."
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Nominations are being accepted through Wednesday at the Student Union Activities office in the Kansas Union for the E.X.C.E.L. scholarship search. E.X.C.E.L., excellence in community, education and leadership, is an award given annually to outstanding students.
Nominations due for students who E.X.C.E.L. at KU
Any full-time undergraduate student with a 3.0 or higher grade point average can be nominated for the scholarship.
One female and one male student will be recognized with a $500 scholarship during homecoming. Oct. 15-16.
After nominations are received, applications will be mailed to the student nonnues. The application deadline is Sept. 28 in the Student Union Activities office.
Finalist interviews will be Oct.7.
KU architecture students take first place in competition
SIX KU students accepted a $1,500 first-place prize Friday for their drawings of Lecompton's Constitution Hall, a 137-year-old building.
The 1993 Charles E. Petersen Prize competition is designed to increase awareness of historic U.S. buildings.
During the summer of 1992, the architecture students spent 10 weeks measuring every detail of the building down to each nail and floorboard.
Fifth-year architecture students Edward Schmitz, Prairie Village; Steven Harrington, Seneca; Kenia Winslow, Liberal; David Wayne Haase-Divine, Gainesville, Fla.; Eric Zabilka, Wilmor, Ky.; and Kurt Brunner, Ottawa graduate student, received the award.
Compiled from Kansan staff reports.
4
Monday, September 13, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
Governor Joan Finney announced last week that she would not run for re-election in 1994.
THE BACKGROUND
Finney's term will expire at the end of 1994
THE OPINION
Finney's decision not to run good for voters
Joan Finney should be applauded for finally taking a firm stand and making a decision that will please voters.
From a questionable stand on abortion that seemed to change before and during her gubernatorial campaign to her first major action of school-finance reforms, Finney has done little to benefit the people of Kansas.
In addition, there is the issue of nepotism in the capital brought about by the surprise hiring of several of Finney's relatives, hiring that only served to reaffirm the people's need for a new governor.
Finney's announcement came as a surprise because she failed to give any indication she was not determined to continue her "work for the people."
Perhaps Finney finally came to a realization that she had not been working in the interest of her constituents. Perhaps she realized her chances of re-election were virtually nonexistent in nearly every county across the state.
In a hope to salvage something out of her political career, Finney would not even admit to the people the reason she is not running again. Her weak excuse was that a re-election campaign would interfere with her work plans for the 1994 session. One more lie added to the heap won't have that much of an effect.
As Kansans, we need to lick our wounds, let bygones be bygones and applaud Finney's accurate assessment of the situation. And let's hope she will not be another Ross Perot and re-enter the election.
DAVID BURGETT FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Students should visit art museum to learn
Works of art have been called better teachers than books and classes. Whether this is true or not, it does elevate art to a position it deserves: essential.
Essential to the education of both the mind and the spirit. The University of Kansas boasts one of the best collegiate art museums in the country, and the Lawrence community also has several excellent galleries spotlighting local art.
While at KU, students who do not take advantage of the opportunity to see some of the reputable works at the Spencer Museum of Art are missing out on an essential part of their education. Two special exhibitions are at the museum now — Native American Baskets and Contemporary Czech and Slovacian Photography.
Students who have not visited the museum, located behind the Kansas Union, should take the opportunity to view these exhibitions and find out firsthand what makes this museum one of the best in the nation.
It does not take an art history degree to appreciate and learn from art. Whether it is in a local gallery or the art museum, students should go out and enjoy the beauty of art available to them.
TERRILYN McCORMICK FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
KC TRAUER, Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
Editors
Editors
Assistant to the editor. J.R. Claiborne
News ... Stacy Friedman
Editorial ... Terrilyn McCormick
Campus ... Ben Grove
Spiritual ... Kripti Foster
Photo ... Kip Chin, Kreee Knoerbe
Features ... Erza Wroth
Graphics ... John Paul Fugel
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr . Ed Schagar
Regional sales mgr . Jennifer Perrier
National sales mgr . Jennifer Evenson
Coop sales mgr . Blythe Focht
Production mgrs . Jennifer Blowey
Marketing director . Kate Burgesa
Creative director . Shailesh Gandhi
Classified mpr . Brian Funco
**Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's name, address, name and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kaisa must include class and homework, or faculty or staff position. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 40 words. The writer will use them.**
The Kaiwan reserves the right to request editable letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the kaiwan newsroom, 111 Saffner Fink Hall
MIDEAST
PEACE
AGREEMENT
HOOD
UDK '93
THE PEN IS MIGHTIER THAN THE SWORD
Government benefits not worth paying taxes
There are times when, as a taxpayer,
I have to put my head between my legs
and weep with joy at the benefits I'm
receiving from the federal government
("Official Motto: This Motto
Alone Cost $13.2 Billion").
You'll feel the same way when I share some news items sent in by readers concerning government agencies servicing the public in ways that the public could never have thought of itself without powerful narcotics. (As is often the case when discussing the government, I need to stress that I'm not making these items up.)
Our first item:
EARCANDLES
COLUMNIST
The Food and Drug Administration recently seized 100 ear candles from a Columbus, Ohio, health store. A few months back I wrote a column about ear candles, an old home remedy consisting of wax-covered cotton cones that you insert into your ears, after which you set the cones on fire. This supposedly creates a draft that sucks the wax out of your ears. Many people claimed they've used ear candles for years with great results; some people claim that it it's a fraud and that all the "earwax" is produced by the candles. Another menace that the FDA is pro-
NUTRITIONAL MISINFORMATION REGARDING TEQUILA-FLAVORED LOLLIPOPS CONTAINING DEADINSECTS
Another menace that the FDA is protecting you from is:
Perhaps you have seen these novelty lollipops, which consist of a clear, tequila-flavored hard candy, inside of which is what appears to be a dead worm. If so, you no doubt asked yourself. "What assurance do I have, as a consumer, that this worm is identified with federal terminology?"
COLUMNIST
DAVE
BARRY
Rest easy! According to the May 13 issue of Food Labeling News, the FDA sent a warning letter to the manufacturers of the "Sugar-Free Hotlix Tequila Flavored Candy With Genuine Worm," because the company failed to properly identify the worm as "insect larva." Not only THAT, but the FDA says the product is NOT sugar-free.
We can only imagine how much harm has been done to innocent consumers who bought this product in the mistaken belief that it complied with nutritional programs requiring the consumption of low-calorie-candy-encased worms that are NOT insect larva. Perhaps we should ask the government to set up a program to locate these victims and award each of them $1.4 million. Why not? We're taxpayers!
Now, let's salute the Occupational Safety and Health Administration office in Idaho for its prompt action regarding: *
IMPROPERLY ATTIFIED RESCUE
PERSONNEL.
Here's what happened, according to an article in The Idaho Statesman: On May 11, two employees of Best Rest, a plumbing company,
were working at a construction site in Garden City, Idaho, when they heard a backhoe operator yell for help. They ran over, and found that the wall of a trench — NOT dog by DeBest — had collapsed on a worker, pinning him under dirt.
"We could hear muffled screams." said one of the DeBest employees.
So the men jumped into the trench and dug the victim out, quite possibly saving his life.
What do you think OSHA did about this? Do you think it gave the rescuers a medal? If so, I can see why you are a mere lowlife taxpayer, as opposed to an OSHA executive. What OSHA did remember. I am not making this up
— was FINE DEBEST INC. 87,875. Yes, OSHA said that the two men should not have gone into the trench without 1) putting on approved hard hats, and 2) taking steps to insure that other trench walls did not collapse and water did not seep in. Of course this might have resulted in some discomfort for the suffocating victim ("Hang in there! We should have the OSHA trench-seepage-prevention guidelines here within hours") But that's the price you pay for occupational health and safety.
Unfortunately, after DeBest Inc complained to Idaho Sen. Dirk Kempthorne, OSHAbacked off on the fines. Nevertheless this incident should serve as a warning to would-be rescusers out there to comply with ALL federal regulations before attempting to rescue people.
ESPECIALLY if those people are in a burning OSA Office.
Dave Berry is a syndicated columnist with the Miami Herald.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
University needs policy against harassment
I am writing this letter in response to Tisha Heyka's column on Sept. 2. Students, she believes, "should take responsibility for themselves to make intelligent decisions."
When it comes to relationships, even the most intelligent, independent students do not necessarily make "intelligent decisions," especially when an authority figure is
This summer I was a victim of sexual harassment. When I would not comply to a boss' advances, choosing to keep our "professional relationship professional", he fired me. Even though I made the ethical choice not to date a boss, I still got burned. Unequal power relationships simply cannot work.
involved. As we saw in the Tonkovich case, it can be intimidating and embarrassing to speak up even in an unethical situation.
ships shipy carriers The University of Kansas is not
saying students and faculty cannot date. Once the course is finished, they can continue relations as they wish.
On Oct. 5 at noon in front of the Kansas Union, there will be an anonymous sexual harassment speak-out. Perhaps Heyka (as well as anyone else who denies the need for a sexual harassment policy) should attend and learn a few things.
Vered Hankin
STAFF COLUMNIST
Overland Park junior
TIFFANY HURT
PARKER
HURT The college experience is what you make of it
As college students look at the syllabi for their classes, it may appear that this is going to be a long semester. But I know better. It will be final time before we know it.
But I believe that life is what you make it. If you sit back and watch life pass you by, it will. As a college student, it is up to you to get everything you can out of your college career.
As I enter the final year of my college career, I can't help but minceise on the past four years of my life. The goals I've achieved and the mistakes I've made have truly college the best and the worst time of my life.
Getting involved with organizations and activities can strengthen your character and your ability to work with other people. If you choose to hold an office in an organization, it can also develop your leadership skills.
The skills you develop from being an organization will add to your development as an individual. They are the same skills that you will need when you graduate (and hopefully) find a job. The Organizations and Activities Center in the Union is the headquarters for most of the organizations on campus. Out of about 250 activities, I am sure that there is an organization for everyone.
The advisers, professors, deans and other officials in the professional school or department of your major are there to help you. Get to know them. Take advantage of their expertise and advice. They can make your life a lot easier.
No problem is too big or small. The Student Assistance Center located in Strong Hall, provides a variety of workshops and other services to counsel and support students with academic problems and other difficulties.
As an African-American female, there are two other services in Strong Hall that I personally have found to be helpful: the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center and the Office of Minority Affairs. The resource center focuses on equality for women. It provides workshops and other services on a variety of topics.
The Office of Minority Affairs strives to help minorities succeed at the University. It holds a variety of programs for all students, which are designed to meet the needs of minorities.
These are just a few of the many services that are available to you. Make it your mission to seek the others. It may make your life easier.
College should teach you how to think. But you have to do your part. You can not get the most out of your college career if you do not put all of your effort into it. Get the most you can out of your college money. Have.
If you leave this University without getting the best education you can and without learning how to survive on your own, you will have failed College 101.
Make sure that you adequately prepare yourself for the world that awaits you. And never let anyone or anything prevent you from obtaining your education.
University of Mars
Tiffany Hurt is a Overland Park senior majoring in Journalism and English.
by Joel Francke
oops, I think we've Stumbled into a Freshman class...
I love you...
you love me...
.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 13, 1993
5
THE NEWS in brief
+
JERUSALEM
Clinton will be host to Israeli, PLO leaders signing peace accord
Israel's Cabinet unanimously approved yesterday the mutual recognition of the Palestine Liberation Organization. Israel army radio said.
rLO chairman Yasser Arafat is to attend the signing today.
this is actually fairly simple.
The vote took place at the weekly Cabinet meeting before Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin's trip to Washington where he is to attend the signing of an agreement with the PLO that grants the Palestinians limited autonomy in the occupied territories.
In the occupied West Bank, a protest against the accord escalated into violent clashes Saturday as Israeli soldiers shot dead two Palestinian youths and wounded eight others.
"We're living in truly revolutionary times," President Clinton said Saturday as he prepared to be host to the first public meeting between an Israeli head of government and the chief of the organization that was sworn to dismantle the Jewish state.
At yesterday's Cabinet meeting, Interior Minister Aryeh Deri resigned, raising doubts about whether his six-member Shas party would vote for the autonomy agreement when it is brought before parliament.
GAZA CITY, occupied Gaza Strip
Israeli soldiers killed in ambush
Three Israeli soldiers were killed in an ambush yesterday, and Muslim militants claimed responsibility, saying it was a gift for "Yasser Arafat, the peace accord and all the traitors."
In the Rafah refugee camp, a member of an anti-Arafat Palestinian group was killed when a grenade he was carrying in his hand exploded as he was fleeing from soldiers, Israeli and Arab sources said. Two Palestinian bystanders were wounded.
In southern Lebanon, a roadside bomb exploded while an Israeli army unit patrolled on foot in Israel's self-styled security zone.
Security Zone
The Islamic Resistance, the guerrilla wing of the Muslim fundamentalist Hezbollah movement, claimed responsibility. A Hezbollah statement in Beirut said the bomb "wiped out an enemy patrol" in retaliation for "the pact of betrayance between the PLO and Israel."
Iraqis, many security sources said there were believed to be casualties but had no further details. They said two Israeli helicopters were seen evacuating men from the site at Wadi Selouki near the Lebanese border town of Houla.
The attacks yesterday came on the eve of a historic ceremony in Washington today. Israel and Arafat's Palestine Liberation Organization are to sign an accord granting Palestinians self-rule in the occupied Gaza Strip and the
West Bank town of Jericho.
Two Muslim fundamentalist groups took responsibility for killing the three soldiers in the occupied Gaza Strip.
In calls to media offices in Gaza City, a man said the Islamic Jihad "assumes responsibility for taking the weapons of the Israeli soldiers and leaving their bodies to the dogs."
The army confirmed that three soldiers were killed in gunfire in an ambush east of Gaza City.
It said that a flyer left at the site claimed responsibility in the name of the Izedinel-qAssam group, the military wing of the Hames fundamentalist group.
Arab opponents of the accord said the continued violence in the occupied lands was an attempt by leftist and Muslim fundamentalist groups to show the armed struggle against Israel would persist despite Arafat's pledges.
U.S. may send troops to Bosnia
U. S. military planners believe that about 50,000 peacekeepers would be needed to implement a possible Bosnia peace accord, and about half the troops would be American, Defense Secretary Les Aspin said yesterday.
In remarks at a defense conference in Brussels, Aspin said that no final decisions had been made. He predicted that it would be hard to get Congress to approve U.S. participation if the allies did not contribute at least half the force.
force.
Aspin's comments were the most specific to date on the size and makeup of a U.N.-sanctioned multinational force that might be asked to enforce an accord in Bosnia.
Aspin at first said it was "too sensitive" to discuss in public when asked about plans for implementing a possible peace agreement that would divide Bosnia among the Croats. Serbs and Muslims.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla
Discovery lifts off during try No.4
On its fourth try, the space shuttle Discovery roared away on a satellite-delivery mission yesterday with five astronauts ibilant to be in space at last.
"Hey Houston, I gotta tell ya, you've never seen five pahrier guys up here," commander Frank Culbertson Jr. told Mission Control. "It's been a long time come
Culbertson and his crew quickly began preparing for their first major job in orbit — releasing an experimental communications satellite.
The Advanced Communications Technology Satellite was to be ejected from Discovery eight hours into the flight. An attached rocket was to propel the satellite from Discovery's 184-mile-high orbit to an altitude of 22,300 miles.
Discovery's flight had been delayed five times since mid-July for equipment failures, payload concerns and even a meteor shower. Two of the three earlier countdowns had been halted in the final 19 seconds.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUAK
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANBAE
Board of Class Officers
Student Union Activities
B.O.C.O.
Nominations are now being accepted for the
EX.C.E.L. Award $500.00 Scholarship
EXcellence in Community, Education, and Leadership
One male and one female will be chosen on the basis of their capacity for leadership, effective communication skills, involvement in the KU community, academics and their work. We will work with a wide variety of students and student organizations. Each
Award will receive a $900
All applicants must be nominated
recipient of the EXCEL Award will receive a $9000
All applicants must be nominated.
Nomination forms available at:
- Organizations and Activities Office, 4th Floor Kansas Union
*SUA Office,4th Floor Kansas Union
Nomination forms are due by the 15th of September at 5:00 pm
For more information, call SUA at 864-3477
6
Monday, September 13, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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FLAG FOOTBALL
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There will be aMANDATORY MEETING on Monday, September 13 at 7 p.m. in Robinson, Room 115. Rules will be handed out and league procedures will be discussed. All managers attending will have the first opportunity in signing up for league play.
NOTE: Entries are accepted on a first come, first serve basis beginning at 8:30 a.m. thru 4:00 p.m. Tuesday, September 14th and Wednesday, September 15th. Team managers not represented at the managers' meeting will not be allowed to sign up until Wednesday. September 15th at 2:00 p.m.
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Douglass Koenig, Shawnee junior, teaches Danny DeLaTorre of Lawrence to float in the water.
Paul Katz / KANSAS
Swim lessons benefit children
By Liz Klinger Kansan staff writer
A mass of swimsuit-clad children accompanied by towel-laden parents stood by the 25 meter pool in Robinson Center on Saturday morning.
Everyone looks to the first fall swim class to begin. For two months, eight KU students will teach children, ages 6 months to 14 years, how to swim and will focus on water safety and have fun.
"It's like a big bathtub," said Sheri McCue, Hutchinson senior, trying to make everyone feel at ease.
"I seem to be on the same wavelengths as the kids," said McCue, who has been swimming since age 3. "I get along with the children well. For me, to teach swimming is kind of passing on what I've learned."
It was the third class of the day for
Cue, who has been teaching swim-
ing all summer long.
After an hour with McCue, the children's nervousness had worn off and they were frolicking in the water.
Else Edmands, Salina sophomore, who teaches a parent/tot course, said that it was important for children to be comfortable in a water environment.
"You're around water all the time," Edmands said. "You never know when you're going to be in a situation when you're going to need to swim."
Aquatics director George Lottes said that in addition to water safety, learning how to swim had health benefits such as an improved cardiovasc-
cular system, stress reduction and increased self-confidence
Lottes said that swimming was also easier on the joints.
Jance Clark Young, coordinator for the children's swim program, said that swimming was a calming and tranquil experience.
"Physically, you can still be working hard and mentally be doing other things." Clark Young said.
Some parents felt strongly enough about swimming that they chose to enroll themselves and their children in the parent and tot class.
University of Kansas Medical Center graduate student Cathy Fox Bacon helped her 21/2 year-old son learn to kick and blow bubbles.
in s always fun to do stuff with your kid," she said.
B.O.C.O.
Board of Class Officers Informational Meeting On Running for Office in Fall 1993 Elections!! Informational Meeting Will be Held on September 14th at 6p.m.
Kansas Union's Hawk's Nest Elections are September 21st and 22nd
from
9a.m. to 4p.m.
For More Information Call Benji Schwartz at 832-2274
军
Join
Join
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Committee Informational Meetings
Feature Films
Fine Arts / Forums Public Relations / Live Music Recreation & Travel / Special Events Spectrum Films / Graphic Designers
Tuesday, Sept. 14 at 7:30 Wednesday, Sept. 15 at 7:30 Frontier Room, Burge Union
For more information call 864-3477.
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, September 13. 1993
7
Spartans stomp Jayhawks 31-14
Jayhawk errors give Spartans easier time in lopsided defeat
MICHIGAN 2 1
Kansan sportswrite
By Matt Doyle
EAST LANSING, Mich. — Turnovers. Fundamental breakdowns. Poor execution. Just a few reasons why the Kansas football team has a record below .500 for the first time in three years.
Michigan State took advantage of the miscues by the Jayhawks for a 31-14 victory Saturday before a crowd of 53,797 at Spartan Stadium and an ABC regional television audience. The loss drops Kansas' record to 1-2. Michigan State starts the season at 1-0.
The Kansas offense committed five turnovers during the game and was limited to 265 yards of total offense. Two of the turnovers led to 14 Michigan State points, and another two came when the Jayhawks were driving deep in Spartan territory.
Kansas coach Glen Mason said that he was not pleased with the performance of his son.
"We made too many mistakes," Mason said. "We are just not clicking. I really believe we are capable of being better."
Junior quarterback Fred Thomas maneuvers around the Michigan State defense Saturday. Kansas was defeated 31-14 but scored their first points ever against Michigan State.
The reality was that Michigan State was a better team than Kansas on Saturday. After Spartan cornerback Stan Callender intercepted a Fred Thomas pass on the opening possession of the game, quarterback Jim Miller directed Michigan State 94 yards for the Spartans opening touchdown in the first quarter.
Miller completed the drive by tossing a 1-yard touchdown pass to fullback Scott Greene on fourth down and goal, and the Spartans took the lead 7-0.
"It's a new formation we haven't used before on the goal line," said Michigan State coach George Perles. "You can't be conservative and just try to jam the ball down people's throats."
Turnovers ended two potential scoring opportunities for Kansas in the first half. Near the end of the first quarter, Michigan State linebacker Rob Fredrickson jarred the football loose from Kansas wide receiver Robert Reed after Reed caught a pass at the Spartan 5-yard line. Spartan safety Steve Wasyk recovered the fumble.
Late in the second quarter, sophomore tailback L.T. Levine fumbled at the Spartan 23-yard line while diving toward the first down marker.
"Mistakes killed us today." Levine said. "We need to go back and work on our fundamentals and try to conquer our mistakes."
Whenever the Jayhawks pulled within striking distance, the Snartans responded with a long drive or a big play.
Dan Eichloff's 52-yard field goal with 8:07 remaining in the third quarter pulled Kansas to 14-5. But the Spartans countered by marching 80 yards in eight plays, culminating with a Craig Thomas 12-vard touchdown run.
Thomas finished with 143 yards on 21 carries. Thomas's
backus, Duane Goulbourne, gained 84 yards on 15 carries.
Thomas said that although Michigan running back Tyrone Wheatley got all of the attention as the top running back in the Big Ten he thought he also deserved recognition. Kansas free safety Clint Bowen said.
The Jayhawks narrowed the margin to 24-14 with 8:13 left on June Henley's 1-yard touchdown run. But when the Jayhawks needed a defensive stop they could not come up with one.
"I think after today he definitely deserves it now, too." Bowen said.
Michigan State took four minutes off the clock on the ensuing drive and converted two third-down plays into first downs. Kansas finally forced the Spartans to punt the ball, and the Jayhawks gained possession of it on their own 7-yard line with only four minutes remaining.
"They disguised their coverages great," Thomas said. "Half the time I didn't know what I was throwing into because of their pressure."
Thomas completed 18 of 37 passes for 151 yards with the three interceptions.
Four plays later the Spartans added the finishing touch on their victory when Damian Manson returned Fred Thomas' third interception of the game five yards for a touchdown.
free's capable of doing better." Mason said. "He's going to have to do better."
Spartan rushers overwork safeties
Kansan staff report
EAST LANSING, Mich. — Michigan State offensive players became quite familiar with Kansas free safety Clint Bowen as Saturday's game went on.
Bowen had 16 tackles, leading the Jayhawks in that statistical category against the Spartans. However, he said he wished he did not have to make that many tackles.
"I made too many tackles today," he said. "The free safety shouldn't be making that many tackles. We need to get more physical up on the line of scrimmage."
Kansas coach Glen Mason also was not thrilled by the number of tackles that Bowen had to make.
"It's a bad sign when your safety's making that many tactics," Mason said. "That's how many tackles your linebackers are supposed to make."
Dan Eichloff's 52-yard field goal in the third quarter was his 54th career field goal, which set a new Kansas record. Bruce Kallmeyer previously held the record.
Those two points were the first points Kansas ever had scored against Michigan State. In the four previous games against Michigan State, the Spartans outscored the Jayhawks 105-0.
Kansas first scored when sophomore linebacker Ronnie Ward tackled Michigan State running back Craig Thomas in the end zone for a safety in the second quarter.
FIVE BETTER SUCCESS.
Five Kansas turnovers were a concern for coach Glen Mason in the Spartans victory over the Jawhaws.
12
Susan McSoadden/KANSAN
Herman Katie Walsh works to keep a volley going during the championship game against Southeast Missouri State. Kansas captured first place in the Kansas Invitational Saturday at Allen Field House.
Jayhawks capture fourth invitational tournament title
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
After dropping only two games throughout the Kansas Invitalion, the Kansas volleyball team defeated Southeast Missouri State on Saturday to capture first place.
The Jayhawks defeated the Oaklandians 15-3, 15-12, 12-15 and 15-9, winning the tournament and giving a match record of 4-0 in the invitational. The victory gave the team its fourth consecutive KansasInvitational championship.
Kansas was in control most of the match until game three. Southeast Missouri State allied to a 10-4 lead, but senior Cyndee Kanabel produced three kills to lead a Kansas comeback. The comeback ended at 12-10, and the Otaikans took the game. 15-12.
Southeast Missouri State coach Cindy Gannon said her team used quick hits in the middle to win game three. Although the team lost the final match and ended with a 3-1 tournament record, Gannon said she was happy.
Kanabel led Kansas in the final match with 27 kills, which broke Kansas's 'single match kill record'. She was the Most Valuable Player of the invitational with 52 total kills, an award which Kanabel said was a shock.
"It was weird. Anybody could have won it for us," Kanabel said. "Everyone on the team deserved it."
said. Everone on the team offered Kanabel's teammates said she earned the MVP title.
Larson said Kansas played with more togetherness in this tournament than in other games. Kansas was 1-4 overall going into the weekend's action.
"I thought she played very well," said junior Jenny Larson. "I thought she showed good leadership."
Larson did not get much playing time in the championship match, but Kansas coach Frankie Albitz continually jugged the line-up during the tournament. Albitz stuck with the starters for the first two games against Southeast Missouri State.
"The they played well, so I left them in," Abtiz said. "I played who I thought we would have the best chance of winning with, but they got tired. Against Northeastern Illinois this afternoon, I used a lot of players to keep everybody sharp."
Kansas opened the tournament against Tusa on Friday and won 15-4, 15-4 and 15-1. In game three, Kansas had a 14-7 lead when Tusa came back with the help of Jayhawk errors. In two previous matches, Kansas had blown two-game leads, but Albitz said the team kept its concentration.
Aside from the one game in the final match, the only other tournament game the Jayhawks lost was against McNeese State. McNeese State won the first game of the match 15-0, but Kansas took the next three 15-5, 15-5 and 15-4.
McNeese State blanked Kansas in the first game with good serves. Alhitz said.
They used a floater serve on us and gave us trouble." Albitz said. "They would hit a good serve or we would have an error."
The Jayhawks defeated Northeastern Illinois on Saturday afternoon 15-7, 15-7 and 15-6, staying undefeated and within reach of the championship.
Top 25 teams
The Associated Press 1992 college football poll: first place votes in parentheses, records through Sept. 11, total points based on 25 points for a first place vote through one point for a 25th place vote, and ranking in last place.
| | Record | Points | Previous |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1. Florida St. (59) | 3-0-0 | 1,546 | 1 |
| 2. Alabama (3) | 2-0-0 | 1,464 | 2 |
| 3. Miami | 1-0-0 | 1,384 | 4 |
| 4. Notre Dame | 1-0-0 | 1,267 | 11 |
| 5. Tennessee | 1-0-0 | 1,260 | 8 |
| 6. Syracuse | 1-0-0 | 1,240 | 6 |
| **7. Colorado** | **2-0-0** | **1,172** | **10** |
| **8. Nebraska** | **2-0-0** | **1,132** | **9** |
| 9. Florida | **2-0-0** | 1,063 | 7 |
| 10. Michigan | 1-1-0 | 970 | 3 |
| 11. Ohio St. | 1-1-0 | 902 | 16 |
| **12. Oklahoma** | **2-0-0** | **876** | **17** |
| 13. North Carolina | 2-0-0 | 829 | 14 |
| 14. Penn. St. | 2-0-0 | 752 | 15 |
| 15. Arizona | 2-0-0 | 701 | 13 |
| 16. Texas A & M | 1-1-0 | 560 | 5 |
| 17. N. Carolina St. | 2-0-0 | 545 | 18 |
| 18. Washington | 1-1-0 | 532 | 12 |
| 19. Brigham Young | 1-1-0 | 406 | 20 |
| 20. Stanford | 1-1-0 | 237 | 23 |
| 21. California | 1-2-0 | 185 | — |
| 22. Boston College | 0-1-0 | 179 | 25 |
| 23. Arizona St. | 1-0-0 | 158 | — |
| 24. Wisconsin | 2-0-0 | 138 | — |
| 25. Virginia | 2-0-0 | 98 | — |
WOMEN'S GOLF
owners receiving votes in Arkansas 88, Louisiana 84, Michigan State 40, South Carolina 40, Iowa 41, Alabama 38, Southern California 29.
Source: The Associated Press
Kansas team finishes 11th in Roadrunner tournament
The Kansas women's golf team began its fall season with an 11th place finish this weekend at the Roadrunner Invitational in Las Cruces, N.M. The team shot rounds of 341, 338 and 331 for a three day total of 1010 strokes, narrowly edging out Nebraska by two strokes for 11th place.
SPORTS in brief
Senior goffer Holly Reynolds had Kansas' best finish in the three-day tournament with a tie for seventh place. She got off to a slow start shooting rounds of 80 and 78 on the pa 74 University Golf Course. She rebounded during the final round, which was delayed 30 minutes due to rain and lightning, and shot a 72, giving her an seventh place finish.
Ann Holbrook, who shot her tournament low of 85 in the final round, was the second highest Jayhawk finisher. Her three-day total of 259 tied her with Amber Paulos of Southern Methodist and Andre Fleming of Texas-EI Paso for 63rd place. Lynn Williamson and Pam Wineinger both tied for 71st while Laurit Lauritson, finishing in 76th place, rounded out the Jayhawks.
Conference rival Oklahoma took top honors at the invitational with a tournament low 906 for the three days followed by Arizona at 923 and Texas Tech at 929. Intrastate rival Kansas State topped the Jayhawks by shooting 996 and capturing ninth place.
The Jayhawks will take a two-week break from competition as they prepare for the Hawkeye Invitational September 24-26 in Iowa City, Iowa.
Oklahoma's Kim O'Connor and Rachel Preble captured first and second place respectively. O'Connor shot twoounds of 76 followed by three under par for the final day giving her the tournament title. Preble shot a total of four over par to end in second place.
KU
WOMEN'S RUGBY Jayhawks shut out opponent 26-0
The Kansas women's rugby team crushed Northeast Missouri State 26-0 in Saturday's season opener held at Shenk Complex, the playing fields at 23rd and Iowa streets.
Loundon Seelye, a club player, and graduate student Chris Minske, each scored two tries for 20 points. Minske added six more when she attempted four conversions, making three.
Norm Chase, a selector for the Heart of America Select Side tournament, chose 12 Kansas players to become members of the Heart of America Select Side team. Northeast Missouri State had three players chosen for the team.
The Heart of America Select Side team, made up of members from the rugby teams of Kansas, Kansas State and Northeast Missouri State, will represent the region in a tournament held Oct. 2.
MEN'S RUGBY Collegiate team 2-1 at tournament
senior man Delargy make the two points.
In Kansas' second game, it defeated Wichita 14-0 Senior
Blake Reeves and sophomore Eric Sutton each scored a try,
Delargy made two conversions.
Senior Brooke Walles scored a try for five points and senior Matt Dallaroy made the two-point conversion.
A fight at the end of the first half ended the men's rugby game and gave Kansas' collegiate team a victory over the Toropek Rugby Club, 7-0, in Kansas' first game Saturday.
In its third game, Kansas lost to Kansas State's club side team 7-10. Senior Joel Foster scored a try; Delargy made the conversion.
Kansas was scheduled to play Creighton University but played in the Toneka tournament instead.
Senior Scott Collin said the team traveled to Topeka's tournament because it offered more games and gave the new players more chances to play. The Jayhawks collegiate team will face the Missouri Tigers on Saturday at Columbia.
MEN'S SOCCER Kansas defeats Wichita State 5-1
MEN'S SOCCER
Wichita State was still in the game at halftime yesterday, but the Kansas men's soccer team put them away with a 4-0 second half, winning 5-1.
Senior strikers Birigir Armarson and Matt Jones, freshman midfielder Kyle Retzleff, sophomore midfielder Fetsi Ngopee and freshman striker Ryan Henkel all booted in one goal apiece.
Six yellow penalty cards were given in the game; Wichita received five and Kansas received one.
senior Brian Robey said that the team did what needed to be done in its first game and that the future looked promiscuous.
The team plays again Saturday and Sunday in Onahua at the Maverick Invitational sponsored by Nebraska-Onahua.
Kanaan sportwriters Anne Folstet and Kent Hohlfeld contributed to this report
Monday, September 13, 1993
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RSITY DAILY KANSAN
Women take second at invitational
Bv Kent Hohlfeld
ARKANSAS
162
ARKANSAS
164
ARKANSAS
160
Kansan sportswriter
Saturday at
R i m
R ock
F a r m
north.
Running on what Arkansas Razorback coach Lance Harter called one of the toughest courses in the nation, the Kansas cross country team played host at the Jayhawk Invitational on
MEN'S & WOMEN'S CROSS COUNTRY
west of Lawrence
University of Arkansas cross country team members Staci Snider, left. Megan Flowers, Shelley Taylor and Sarah Schwaki hold hands as they cross the finish line and place first though fourth at the 1993 Jayhawk Invitational. Kansas finished in second place at the meet on Saturday at Rim Rock Farm, northwest of Lawrence.
The Kansas women's team finished second, placing three runners in the top ten and scoring 46 points, defeating Missouri, Air Force Academy, Pittsburg State, Central Missouri and Southwest Baptist.
Kansas' top runner for the second straight week was junior Kristi Kloster beating out freshman Bridget Mann and returning senior Julia Saul.
Harter said that he was elated with his team's performance at the meet, but that losing Deanna Drassin and Michelle Byrne to injuries this week made the team's success surprise.
"We're showing improvements each week," Schwartz said. "Nobody likes to lose, but competing with teams like Arkansas will help us in the long run."
kansas Coach Gary Schwartz said he was pleased with his team's performance in the meet even without defeating the Razorbacks.
Schwartz said that the performance turned in by Kloster did not surprise him. He said that the team's practice times had been closer than any time in several years.
"It really comes down to whoever has a good day," Schwartz said.
pleased with her performance, she was frustrated because she thought she could have caught the Arkansas runners.
has a good day, so she was
Klover said that although she was
runners.
"By the time I realized that they were within striking distance it was too late," Kloster said.
While the women's performance was about what Schwartz expected, he said he had hoped for higher than the men's third place finish. The team
unjusted with 62 points behind the Air Force Academy's 23 and Big Eight rival Missouri's 51.
There is no way we should lose to Missouri," Schwartz said. "This isn't taking anything away from Missouri but as an old KU guy, I hate losing to Missouri."
The Air Force Academy placed three of the top five runners; the other two were from Missouri. Kansas
runner for the second straight week was freshman Bryan Schultz who finished seventh overall, followed by senior Bobby Palmer's eight place finish. Central Missouri, Pittsburgh State, Northeast Missouri State, Missouri-Kansas City and Southwest Baptist all placed behind the Jayahws. Schwartz said the early part of the season was helpful in evaluating the team and making adjustments.
Despite upsets, top players victorious
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Pete Sampras faced only two dangers in the U.S. Open final: popping the strings on all his rackets and getting whacked in the head by a wild shot from Cedric Pioline.
US OPEN
Other than that, Sampras had little trouble defeating Pilingi 6-4, 6-4, 6-3 yesterday to follow up his Wimbledon championship with a second U.S. Open title and punctuate his ascendancy again to No. 1.
From the moment of Sampras' first serve, a 127 mph screamer that landed a bit long but evoked knowing laughter from the crowd, there was never a doubt that Sampras would take home the $535,000 winner's check.
If anything would derail him, it would have to be something strange, like running out of rackets. One after another, Sampras' tauk racket strings
snapped from his booming serves and the topspin shots, sending him to the sideline with a couple of rackets to be restring quickly.
routine, meanwhile, scattered balls all over the stadium. He knocked one return in the first set 25 rows into the stands, where a man in a blue suit made a nice catch. Then in the first game of the second set, Pioiline snapped a second serve to the left temple of a fan in the second row. That fellow happened to be a former World Cup goalie for Yugoslavia who knows what it is like to get hit with a ball.
Piline's next hardest shot was a
ball he skipped into the crowd after he double-faulted, falling behind 4-3 in the same set. That brought a warning from the umpire for ball abuse.
When Pioline wasn't abusing the balls and spectators, he played well enough not to embarrass himself but not enough to threaten Sampras.
Helena Sukova was not a threat to Steffi Graf, either.
In her most subline moments, Graf slammed shots as perfectly as she ever did to win a third U.S. Open and a third straight Grand Slam title Saturday.
No tension, no throb of excitement ever intruded upon Graf's 6-3, 6-3 victory Saturday over Helena Sukova. This was the day, more than any other in the two-week tournament, when 1901 and 1929 Open champion Monica Seles was missed dearly — by the fans and by Graf.
Everyone knew Graf could have been handed the trophy and check at
the start of the tournament, so certain was her eventual victory.
Graft swept the Grand Slams in 1988, won the U.S. Open, Wimbledon and the French Open the following year and held the No.1 ranking for a record 186 weeks until Seles took over the top spot for more than two years.
this was Graf's 14th Grand Slam title. In the past dozen Grand Slam events, either Graf or Seles has won.
Sukova teamed with Arantxa Sanchez Vicario to win the women's doubles over Amanda Coretzer and Ines Morrochateira 6-4, 6-2 yesterday. On Thursday, Sukova and Todd Woodbridge claimed the first championship of the Grand Slam tournament in the mixed doubles, beating Martina Navratilova and Mark Woodforde 6-3, 7-6(8-6).
Ken Flach and No. 12 Rick Leach defeated Martin Damm and Karel Novacke, 6-7 (7-3), 6-4, 6-2 in Saturday's men's doubles final.
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Monday. September 13, 1993
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Applied in person at Alters Auctioneers 1001 Lexington Ave.
Christian day care services enbushtable/reliable morning assistance ASAP! Experience preferr
DEVELOPMENT/CONSTRUCTION CO. has part-time work with flexible day hours for an office assistant. Chance for full-time summer employment and after graduation. Experience on IBM or Apple computers. Some account book keeping experience necessary. Book keepers up and down depending on experience and hours. Send name to O.P. Box 3081, Lawrence KS 66046. Attn. Tina.
Work experience
and a pay check too
Do you need work experience?
Did you have trouble making the income you needed this summer?
Vector Marketing can help you
VECTOR
$9.30 starting
842-8531
DOCUMENTATION INTERN. Student monthly deadline: 9/17, 80 hrs. 20 min. work organization; manage organization documents assisting in the preparation of user-oriented documentation, on-line help files and manuals describe tasks for students to complete of user-education seminars and workshops; and other duties at assigned. To apply, submit a resume and cover letter to Angela Barrera, Personnel Officer, Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045.
Kansas and Burge Uions hiring part-time, hourly for Fall Semester. Many jobs in Food Service, Catering and Custodial with varying schedule and requirements. Kansas Union Building for job specifics EOE
FLAG F REREFREShes Recreation Services will be hiring Infirmalural officers to work Flag Football. No exp necessary. $4.70-$8.50. Attend meet with the team, 17 at s. 19 a.m. in m. 16 h. Johnson 864-3546 864-3546
Expand your experience! Positions are available for section editors and writers on the Jayhawk yearbook. Pick up applications at 428 Kansas Union. Application deadline is September 15
Library Assistant for retrieval and photocopying for $4.25 per hour. Flexible schedule 12-16 hours per week. Department of Medical Chemistry Apply 6070 Malvern. 864-4495
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
Motivated District manager
Needed for Property Management Co...
full time, experience preferred,
send resume to P.O. Box 182
$15 Today $30 This week
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NANNIES, spend a year near NYC with a family who truly 'treasures you' (Call 1-800-878-4399, any day).
The earnings potential in Lawrence is explosive.
Sab opportunity from your residence. Please call
us at (800) 734-9261.
Mass S.Del or Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Previous Mass food service and supervision experience mandatory Start at $ 25 per hour. Future pay raises based on performance. Up to $ 48 per hour. Apply to Schumann Food Co. at T197 M. F 9-4m. up-4m (above air Smokehouse)
ne University of Kansas Athletic Department Student Support Services unit is currently accepting new students in the fall 1993 fall semester. Tutors are needed in English, Math, and other areas. Interested applicants must have a Bachelor's degree or equivalent in the subject area with a GPA of 4.0 or better. Tutors should be committed to helping students master course material. Students are required to learnerns are available to acquire knowledge, experience academic success, and graduate. A complete application package for admission is available on request. $46/hour with the potential for regular merit awards. Application processing is required. Tutoring services are available at the Academic Achievement center, located in Jayhawk Tower or at Room 221, Attention: JAYHWK, 518-879-5000, 4:00 p.m. Monday through Thursday. The University of Kansas is anEqual Opportunity/Affirmative
Nanny full time for 2 yr old and 4mo old. Refer
records required 832-1919
By donating your life saving blood plasma
Rainier Montessori School is interviewing for a position at Rainier Montessori.
Recipiential Wanted! Hair Experts Design Team needs an energetic person to work full time in a busy salon. Typing abilities and customer experience a pair. Please stop by to pick up an appointment.
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED. Rapie/Viper Survive
VOLUNTEER SASAP is seeking volunteers. Applications
await at headquarters Counseling Center, KU Student
Assistance Center and Haskell Indian University.
Students guaranteed hourly wages and great fun for good phone work. Day-evenings shifts
Work/Study classes open in Speech/Language/Hearing Clinics and Departments. Apply by calling 312-587-4261.
TUTORS
Summer's over. Do you need $9? THE
team will be placed to place work! We
are currently recruiting for
Banquet servers
Restaurant wait staff
Housekeepers
Cooks
Room attendants
225 Professional Services
f interested apply at the Holiday 200 McDonald's
EOE
Room attendants Maintenance Engineers
For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and talk with you.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Birthright #481-482. Free pregnancy testing.
Have fun harming mindful mind. Learn Wai-
tion, understanding stress. Call Mare 481-980-
or information
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal and civil matters The law offices of
The lawrence of DONALDG. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Prompt启动 and contraceptive services, Dale L. Clinton M.D. 841-576
Macintosh repairs and upgrades
Friendly. Affordable. In-Home Service
The Mac Doctors 842-6048
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri
843-4023
Spanish tutor. Experienced teacher and fluent grad student available for private tutoring sessions. Flexible hours and reasonable rates. Call Scott 842-241.
235 Typing Services
CC Desktop Publishing: Resumes, Cover Letters,
Newspapers, Term Papers, Newletters.
B42-845389
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor
2-der Women Word Processing into accurate pages of letter
sheets. 584-293
ABSOLUTELY EXCELLENT EDITING! Discussion and thesis experience. No paper loss large
Are you Makin' the Grade
WORD PROCESSING&LASER PRINTING
For all your typing needs
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your typing needs
call Makin' the Grade at 865-2855
X
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
1987 Honda Hurricane 620cc red on white; Runs and
greatest $260.00; Call: 842-1400
*Lunachos* *portable computer* 40 mg MD 183
692-4150, Ask for Dan 814-4150, 833-4150
eighteen. Ask for Dan
Beds, deks, and bookcases Everything But Ice. 908 Mass.
900 mm
Couch, 1x5 desk, recliner chair, queen waterbed with six drawer underdresser, super single waterbed with six drawer underdresser Call 811-403-2222
For Sale Microwave 46, Irrs Full-size headset
And Brother WDwordprocessor 80, Connetz B21-800
And Brother WDwordprocessor 80, Connetz B21-800
IBM Select II electric typwriters for sale. All in working condition. Call 913-342-1589, if not bwoom
Men's Schwinn Crisscross min. bike 21 speed 18mm.
Excellent condition $20 or best offer. 94-119
$379.95
For Sale: Student Football tickets Must Sell-Best offer: 841-6370
One way ticket to Boston via Cincinnati, must be paid in September, 10 per cent or best offer. Matts at 83-92 611-555-7400.
One pair, Infinity Studio Monitor 152 Home Speakers. Very nice speakers, well taken care of. Come with 5 yr. warranty. $650/pr or o.b.o. 832-2899 or 842-0606.
Pannasonic wcdr processor KX-W500 like new.
Large 7-line LCD display, w/3 dS drive & 26M RAM memory, thenasus, pincheck and more.
& cover mycr in $220.80 OR 843-4206
340 Auto Sales
81 Suzuki GS250 T. Good cond. $50 o b o. Call 865-
1979 Kabau, 4dr, auto, a/c, $/c, $400 Call Deborah at
843-230-1239 leave machine on machine.
Volvo DL, great cond, new brews, new tires,
new seats, new tires, $2200 b o call 811-
5209, leave money
1985 KAWA 600R Ninja, Trick paint, plenty of
extras $1900-8917
Over the Edge
Naismith Halls'
24 hr. computer center
- Front door bus service
services give students the competitive edge.
360 Miscellaneous
Cheetts tickets: 4 Broncos, 2 Raiders, 4 Bengals, 1 Packers, 4 Bearrs, 6 Bills, and 4 Seahawks. Best offer. All are single seats but most are in same section. Call 843-3566.
400s Real Estate
Fitness room
405 For Rent
370 Want to Buy
Dine anytime meals
4 bedn, 2 baths; furnished/unfurnished, walk to
barn, basement & garage; backed backyard.
Master suite.
Weekly maid service
LEVIS 501's still up to $13.00 and $10.00 for Levin, Jean Jackets. B41-0546
-
NAISMITH
1800 Naismith Drive [913]843-8559
USE KANSAN CLASSIFIED
Studio apartment available. Close to campus,
remaining rooms. Bathroom and heat and water
heater. Call 610-284-7305.
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS 2040 Heatherwood
- 2 Bedroom, $1 \frac{1}{2}$ Bath $425
- 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath $550
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
Call Now!843-4754
430 Roommate Wanted
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
- By phone: 864-4358
How to schedule an ad:
$265, utilities paid, 3-bedroom, fully furnished
building. AFFORDABLE. AC, fenced yard. For right-
facing male
**IBELP! I am stranded without an apt. I am a male**
**free room leave message at 864-8541**
I have free room leave message at 864-8541
Female roommate to share new condo on bus trip to smoking No pets. Oct 1 May 31, 4200
Male roommate must at Sundance $197/month. Male roommate may rent a furnished house. Available for a female in 2 story town house close to campus and on bus route. $242 per month plus utilities. Sept. Rent already paid. Leased the house to someone else.
- 8 phone number: 844-333-4333
* 46 phones may be made to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* 86 phone number: 844-333-4333
* 86 phone number: 844-333-4333
N 2 NS F seeking 3 roommate in townhouse W/D/
N 2 NS F seeking 3 roommate in townhouse W/D/
N 2 NS F seeking 3 roommate in townhouse W/D/
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140 lost & found 365 for sale
205 her help wanted 340 auto sales
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
I'm shocked, Lois!...
But on the other hand, I
still... well... I still...
God, this is so confusing!
Scene from "The Crying Game II: the Rural Version"
10
Monday, September 13, 1993
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Yankee errors help Royals
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — New York fell two games behind Toronto in the American League race yesterday as Royal Tom Gordon pitched an eight-hitter to help Kansas City rout the Yankees 10-2.
The Yankees, who start a threegame series today at Milwaukee, have lost five of their last six games. Yesterday the Blue Jays defeated the Angels 4-1.
Gordon walked two and struck out five to爱 personal three-game losing streak against the Yankees. It was the 10th complete game of his career and second this season.
The Yankees spoiled Gordon's
shutout bid when Paul O'Neill and Jim Leyritz hit home runs in the ninth inning. It was O'Neill's 18th homer.
Rookie Mark Hutton, an emergency starter for the injured Scott Kanneiecki, pitched 4½ innings, giving up five runs — three earned — and five hits. Hutton, 1-1, was a replacement for Kanneiecki, who has a pulled right hannstring.
Five of the 10 runs against four New York outfitters were unearned.
Brian McRae doubled and tripled to drive in three runs for the Royals. Kevin McReynolds hit a two-run homer, his 11th, off Rich Monteleone in a five-seventh run.
The Royals loaded the bases in a four-run fifth when Hutton threw into
the dirt at first on a perfect sacrifice attempt by Chico Lind after Brent Mayne and Gary Gaetti led off with singles.
Rice Rossy grounded out to the shortstop for one run. Felix Jose singled driving in Gaetti. Jose stole second on a poor throw from catcher Matt Nokes, and McRae doubled both runners home.
George Brett reached on second baseman Mike Gallego's throwing error in the first and scored on Wally Joiner's double.
Joyner's club
Kansas City put the game away in the seventh aided by a three-base error by center fielder Bernie Williams, who appeared to lose Rossvy's drive in the sun.
KC stumbles without Montana
Krieg, offense unable to score against Oilers
The Associated Press
HOUSTON — Joe Montana wore a baseball cap yesterday, and the Houston Oilers wore a smile.
With the Chiefs, 1,1, grounded by the loss of Montana with an injured wrist, the Oilers defense teed off on backup Dake Krieg for a 30-0 victory that marked big turnarounds for both teams from the first week.
Houston rebounded from 33-21 loss to New Orleans while Kansas City started the Montana era last week with a 2-13 victory over Tampa Bay, aided by Montana's three touchdown passes.
"I don't know if this cures everything, but it will do for a week." Coach Jack Pardee said. "We didn't get as much wardage as we were."
KC CHIEFS
used to, but it helped that the defense scored too."
The Oilers,1-1, stuffed the Chiefs' running game, holding it to 46 yards, caused five turnovers and sacked Krieg four times. Defensive end William Fuller batted down three of Krieg's passes.
"We knew he wasn't the tallest of quarterbacks, and Buddy told the ends, don't get too far up field." Fuller said. "That enabled us to keep him in front of us. After I got the first one, I started looking for others."
Cris Dishman took the ball away from tight end Mike Dyal and ran 58 yards for a touchdown with 5:34 to
play. Then Lorenzo White scored from the 1 yard line after Marcus Robertson's second interception to finish off the rout.
"You don't know how happy I was to see Kriet come out." Disha said.
she hung on the sidelines to
Montana suited up for the game but
remained on the sidelines on Coach
Marty Schottenheimer's orders.
"We made the decision last night that I would not play." Montana said. "You always want to play, but Marty explained that we have a long season, and if Krieg got hurt, that's the only way I would have played.
I had a feeling it wouldn't happen. I knew Marty's mind was already made up.
p. Houston defensive coordinator Buddy Ryan was happy with his defensive results.
instead of making mental errors, we got turnovers, Ryan said. "That's how you win. We had a lot of people playing good today."
AFC
NFC
CENTRAL
**WEST**
Denver 2 0 1 0
L.A. Raiders 2 0 0 1
Kansas City 1 1 1 0
San Diego 1 1 1 0
Seattle 0 2 0 1
**EAST**
Cleveland 1 0 1 0
Houston 1 1 0 0
Dincinnati 0 2 0 1
Pittsburgh 0 2 0 0
**Buffalo**
2 0 1 0
Indianapolis 1 1 0 1
Miami 1 1 1 1
N.Y. Jets 1 1 1 0
New England 0 2 0 1
NFL
STANDINGS week 2
WEST overall division
New Orleans 2 0 1 0
San Francisco 1 0 0 0
L.A. Rams 1 1 0 0
Atlanta 0 2 0 1
CENTRAL Detroit 2 0 0 0 Green Bay 1 1 0 0 Minnesota 1 1 1 0 Chicago 0 2 0 1 Tampa Bay 0 2 0 0
N.Y. Giants 2 0 1 0
Philadelphia 2 0 1 0
Phoenix 1 1 1 1
Washington 1 1 1 1
Dallas 0 2 0 1
FLAG FOOTBALL
FLAG
ENTRY FEE: $5/Team
ENTRY DEADLINE: Thurs., Sept. 16th
DIVISIONS
MEN'S & WOMEN'S
Tourney will be played
Sunday, September 19th
H
SPONSORED BY KU RECREATION SERVICES 208 ROBINSON 864-3546
Don't Get Lost
In The Crowd!
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Have your Yearbook Portrait taken now at Strong Hall. It's FREE! September 7-29.
Monday, Wednesday & Friday: 9a.m.-12p.m. & 1-5 p.m.
Tuesday: 1-5p.m. & 6-9 p.m.
Call 864-5499 for an appointment... Walk-ins accepted.
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If you want to know all about
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STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE
REPLACEMENT SENATOR
is
NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR OFF-CAMPUS EPLACEMENT SENATC
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN THE STUDENT SENATE,OFFICE 410 KANSAS UNION CALL 864-3710 FOR QUESTIONS.
A WORLD WITHOUT RINGS
"With this cabbage I thee wed..."
"Quack!"
pandercross
America's College Ring
Jastervs
Your past. It's your future. It's your Finger.
Date Time
PLACE
L
ADVERTISING WORKS!
p1983 Jessica No. CP 788
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Laser Logic Sales•Supplies•Rentals
One Stop Source for All Laser Printer Needs 865-0505
Learn to Fly
AIRPLANE
Lawrence Air Services
Instruction-Charter
Service-Rental
842-0000
Have you dined at
The Castle Tea Room
lately?
Reservations only:
843-1151
Beauty
WAREHOUSE
Salon & Supplies
520 W. 23rd-841-5885
JOICO
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Broadway
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FRASTIAN
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Introducing
Full Service
Engraving
Name Tags, Name Plates,
Plaques and More!
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any more!
864-3545
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864-3545
Red Lyon Tavern
944 Massachusetts 832-8228
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
NEW!
SUNGLASSES BY BAUCH & LOMB
available
3 different lens colors available
The Etc. Shop
The
928 Mass
Etc.
843-061
Shop
Granada
Wednesday Night STAYIN' ALIVE
The Ultimate 70's Flashback Dance to your favorite DISCO HITS
Drink Specials
$2.50 Bud & Bud Light Fitchers
$3.00 Boulevard Fitchers
★★★★★★
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1020 Mass
Downtown
9pm-2am
842-1390
FEATURES: Lawrence's pool halls — Where to rack them up. Page 6.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103,NO.17
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
(USPS 650-640)
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1993
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
"We hope to embark on a new era in the history of the Middle East"
— Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin
JEWISH BANKING UNION
FOR THE COMMUNITY AFFAIRS
PLO, Israel sign peace accord
Knight-Ridder/Tribune
Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, left, and Yasser Arafat, head of the Palestine Liberation Organization, shake hands during a White House ceremony as President Clinton looks on. Some 3,000 spectators gathered yesterday for the historic signing of a peace agreement between the PLO and Israel.
Palestinian self-rule is just a start
By Barry Schweld The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — In careful words of Arabic, of Hebrew and English, the speeches that marked yesterday's Middle East peace ceremony were largely optimistic, the soothing words of a diplomatic triumph.
Indeed, much is at stake as the two former enemies move to implement the era of Palestinian self-rule.
But no one could gloss over the crises and complications sure to come, or the pain of the decades past.
ANALYSIS
Israel is betting that turning over administrative control of Gaza, Jericho and, before long, much of the West Bank will cool the Palestinian arder for an independent nation and especially for control of Jerusalem.
It was Mahmoud Abbas of the PLO Executive Committee who signed the agreement, embraced the concept of peaceful coexistence, and then said, knowingly, "We know quite well that this is merely the beginning of a journey that is surrounded by numerous dangers and difficulties."
Yasser Arafat and those in the PLO who support this limited accord are placing an exactly opposite bet; that the experience of peaceful coexistence will induce Israel — with prodding from the United States and most of the world — to agree in two to three years to a state with its capital in Jerusalem.
Told that Arafat had predicted to reporters that the accords would lead to just such an arrangement, Rabin replied gruffy "He can forget about it." Of course Rabin knows that isn't going to happen. "The Palestinian state is within our grasp," Arafat said recently "Soon the Palestinian flag will fly on the walls, the minarets and the cathedrals of Jerusalem."
With a foothold now on the West Bank, and with the United
likely to be a peaceful one.
States embracing the PLO with exceptional speed and warmth, Arafat has achieved momentum. Even without formal U.S. recognition, he was invited to meet Secretary of State Warren Christopher at the State Department.
The diplomatic euphoria after nearly 30 years of bloody conflict is a celebration of mutual recognition, pledges to live in peace and Arafat's renunciation of violence.
The Clinton administration will try to shape a safe future, organizing assistance to the fledgling Palestinian authority from the European Community, Japan, Scandinavia, and Saudi Arabia and other rich Persian Gulf countries.
This has the enthusiastic support of the Rabin government. The premise is that a stable Palestinian entity is more
Next, Christopher will try to broaden the agreement with the PLO and follow it with one due to be announced today between Israel and Jordan.
An implacable impasse? Few predicted yesterday's agreement between the PLO and Israel, even a month ago.
The Rabin government has advised Syria it would consider at least a partial withdrawal. Syria is demanding a complete pullback, and the talks are stalemated with Israel saying it has not been told what kind of peace Syria intends to offer.
Then negotiators would focus on Israel's conflict with Syria. Syria wants Israel to give up the Golan Heights, a strategic enclave at the border captured by Israel in the 1967 Six Day War. Taking over the Golan Heights, which was barrier attacked in 1981, ended cross-border attacks.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Highlights of the Mideast peace accord, signed yesterday by Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat, head of the Palestine Liberation Organization:
An elected Palestinian council will govern the West Bank and Gaza for a transitional period of no more than five years. The council will be elected within nine months after the agreement takes effect, and will have some legislative powers.
Palestinians in Gaza and Jericho will be responsible for administrative affairs such as education and culture, health and social welfare, taxes and tourism.
A Palestinian police force will be set up to guarantee internal security for the Palestinians, but
Israeli troops will control the external borders and be responsible for the security of the approximately 4,000 Jewish settlers in Gaza and the Jericho area.
Within two months after the agreement takes effect, the two sides will sign an agreement on the withdrawal of Israeli troops from populated Palestinian areas in Gaza and Jericho. The pullout is to be completed within four months.
■ Between the time the agreement goes into effect and the Palestinian governing council is sworn in, Israeli troops will be redeployed outside populated areas in the West Bank and Gaza.
Negotiations on the territories 'permanent status will begin no later than the beginning of the interim period's third year
NEWS: 864-4810
ISRAEL AND PALESTINE:
Lebanon
Syria
Golan Heights
Map area
Tel Aviv
Jerusalem C
West Bank
Jericho
Gaza Strip
Dead Sea
Israel
Jordan
Egypt
Source: Klaus Rinder Tribute
May 1948
A legacy of conflict
Israel is declared an independent state. Arabs whose ancestors had lived in Palestine since about 600 A.D. reject the partition.
May 1967
The United Nations withdraws troops from the region, threatening the uneasy 11-year truce between Israel and Arab countries.
October 1991
Israel begins the Six Day War, in which it took the Gaza Strip, the Sinai Peninsula, the Golan Heights and the West Bank.
June 1967
Egypt and Syria attack Israel on Yom Kippur, the most solemn day on the Jewish calendar. Israel drives the Syrians across the Suez Canal.
Middle East peace talks begin in Madrid, Spain.
Egypt and Israel sign the Camp David accords, establishing diplomatic relations.
March 1979
Israel bombs PLO strongholds in 'ebanon
October 1973
June 1992
Mav 1982
Israeli troops invade Lebanon; the PLO evacuates West Beirut.
The Labor Party of Vitzhak Rabin wins the Israeli national election. Rabin calls for peace and reconciliation with Arab neighbors
Sept. 13, 1993
June 1982
rne Palestinian-Israeli peace accords are signed in Washington, D.C.
Source: The 1993 World Almanac
Architecture dean to leave post in 1994
Lucas ends 13 years as head of school; teaching in future
Source: Knight-Ridder Tribune
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
Max Lucas
Lucas said he would continue as dean until June 30, 1994.
After serving as architecture dean since 1980, Lucas said he welcomed the career change.
PETER S. WILSON
Max Lucas, dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Planning, announced yesterday that he would step down as dean next June.
"I'm looking forward to it," Lucas said. "I've been in administration for a few years."
Along with his plans for teaching in the architectural engineer program, Lucas said he would return to research projects, including
13 years as dean,it's time to do some other things."
in preparation for a new dean search, David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said he would meet soon with faculty from the architecture school to take nominations for potential members of the dean search committee.
analyzing the design structure of buildings,
During his time as dean, Lucas over saw several changes at the school, including the creation of the bachelor of science degree in architectural studies.
soumenburger said Lucas' 13 years as architecture dean showed how dedicated Lucas was to the school.
Lucas also served as assistant to the chancellor from 1774-76 and as University director of facilities planning from 1976-78.
Steve Padget, associate professor of architecture and urban design, said the architecture school would need some time to get used to Lucas' absence as dean.
"It's such a big change," Patad said.
"He's almost been a given; he's been here so long. He's practically an institution."
"Max's time as dean is about as long as we've seen in years," Shulenburger said. "This is a man who served long and hard and well."
Eric Mersmann, Chesterfield, Mo. senior and student senator for the school, said students were divided about the school's academic direction under Lucas.
"My assessment is some students were looking for change," Mr. Mersmann said. "I think the decision is probably best for him and best for the school."
As president of the KU chapter of the American Institute of Architecture Students, Mike Cummings, Overland Park senior, said he thought the new dean should try to work more closely with students to address their needs.
The current administration seems to be more interested in maintaining the way things are being run now." Cummings said.
INSIDE
Siblings swimmers
[Image of two swimmers]
Janette and Marc Bontrager are siblings who compete for the Kansas swimming teams.
Recommendations for tenure review offered
Tonkovich hearings display imperfections in dismissal procedures
Rud Turbull, head of last year's Tenure and Related Problems Committee, does not want future dismissal hearings of tenured professors to continue as long as last year's dismissal of Emul Tonkovich, former professor of law.
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
So Tumbull has made his own recommendations on how to streamline the process of firing tenured professors.
Turnball said he spent about 720 hours working for the committee.
"That's a wail of a lot of time," said the professor of special education and courtesy professor of law.
Turnbull's recommendations are separate from the committee's recommendations, he said. The committee sent its own recommendations to the University Senate Executive Committee on July 30.
Most of the possible improvements to the dismissal process already had been covered by the committee's 17 recommendations, Turbull said. But his recommendations were not included with the committee's because they were never brought up, and the committee was busy with the other recommendations.
Turnbull said he was not necessarily supporting all of the five recommendations, but he wanted to present more options to improve the dismissal process.
The Tenure and Related Problems Committee should not have jurisdiction in dismissal or even suspension cases. Instead, the dismissal process should go directly to a court of proper jurisdiction.
Turnbull said while this would eliminate
"The faculty ought to set the norms for faculty behavior," he said.
the hearings for the committee and save time for the members, not having the committee hear the dismissal process would not benefit faculty members.
Clarify the process of how a tenured professor could appeal to the Board of Regents if he or she was fired.
Turnbull said a professor could file an appeal with the Board of Regents, but the procedure was not clear.
procedures in it." It says in the handbook a professor can file an appeal with the Board of Regents — period," he said.
The last two recommendations also were recognized by the tenure committee.
- Allow a professor to file charges against an administrator.
turnbull said it would not be fair to professors if they were not able to file a counter suit.
Create a statute of limitations for filing
grievances against faculty members by students and administrators.
Turnbull said the University community would have to decide how long the time limit would be for filing grievances for different situations.
Provide judicial immunity for all tenure committee members.
Turnbull said he wanted KU to make sure that no committee members would be sued for performing their judiciary function.
KU should encourage faculty members to serve on committees and faculty might not if there was a chance they could be sued, he said.
Turnbull's recommendations will go to several faculty committees for revision. The revised recommendations will then go to University Council, a Governance body of faculty and students, which either rejects proposals or passes them. Chancellor Gene Budig then makes the final decision before it becomes University policy
2
Tuesday, September 14, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Staircase-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, dailies during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044 Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
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Choose from a wall full -- *hundreds* -- of ball gloves.
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NEW
KU Gamers and Role Players will meet from 5:30-10:00 tonight on the third floor of the Burge Union. For more information, call 864-7316
KU Graduate Student Council will hold an assembly meeting at 5:30 p.m. today in the Centennial Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Nancy Scott at 864-4914.
Bill Tsutsui of the department of history will present a lecture, "Rising Sun and the Mythology of Japanese Management," from noon to 1:00 p.m. today in Alcove A at the Kansas Union.
Monday through Friday, 9:00 to 5:30, Thursday 'till 8:30,
Sunday 12:00 to 4:00, Closed Sept. 5 and 6 for Labor Day.
Gloves
The Hispanic-American Leadership organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in the Big Eight Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Octavio Hinojosa at 864-4256.
Since 1947.
Amnesty International will meet at 6 p.m. today in Alcove A at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Damey Nelson at 842-5407
KU International Students Association will meet at us p.m. today in the International Room at the Kansas Union.
KU Libertarians will sponsor a lecture at 7 tonight in the Centennial Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Allen Tiffany at 842-2411.
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will sponsor a program, "Violence Against Women" from 7-9 tonight in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Renee Speicher at 864-3552.
PRSSA will meet at 7 onight in 100 Staffer Flint Hall. Journalism and communication students are encouraged to attend. For more information, call Kevin Grace 865-3744.
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will have swimming practice at 7:30 tonight at Robinson Pool. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
The Student Assistance Center will sponsor a "Preparing for Exams" workshop from 7-9 tonight in 4035 Wescoe.
College Republicans will hold a discussion at 7:30 tonight in the Pioneer Room at the Burge Union. For more information, call Leigh Smith at 832-8505.
The Original Klub of KU Looney Tunes will meet at 7:30 tonight in Alcove A at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Doug Hesse at 841-8250.
LesBiGaysOK will sponsor a Candlelight Vigil and March Against Intolerance at 8 tonight at Wescoe Beach. For more information, call 864-3091.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
HOW TO REACH US
Call 864-4810 for the newsroom:
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WEATHER
Weather around the country:
Atlanta '85 / 66'
Chicago '51 / 43'
Houston '76 / 55'
Miami '88 / 77'
Minneapolis '49 / 39'
Phoenix '92 / 35'
Salt Lake City '74 / 54'
Seattle '65 / 45'
Omaha: 56'/36'
LAWRENCE: 61'/41
Kansas City: 64'/56'
St. Louis: 67'/41'
Wichita: 60'/42'
Tulsa: 55'/47'
TODAY
Tomorrow Thursday
---
Partly cloudy and drier
Sunny
Cloudy and cooler,with a 70 percent chance for rain
High: 71° Low: 52°
Partly cloudy and warmer
High: 61
Low: 41
Source: Greg Potter, KU Weather Service: 864 3300
High: 80°
Low: 60°
ON THE RECORD
A student's car was damaged in the 600 block of Kasold Drive on Friday. Lawrence police reported Damage was estimated at $700.
A student's television and VCR, valued together at $500, were taken from a residence in the 400 block of Wisconsin Street on Friday or Saturday, Lawrence police reported.
A student's truck was damaged and a stereo valued at $250 was taken from it in parking lot No. 110 on Friday or Saturday, KU police
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reported. Damage to the truck was estimated at $1,000.
A student's car hood and windshield were damaged in parking lot No. 58 on Saturday, KU police reported. Damage was estimated at $700.
A story on Page 12 of Friday's Kansan contained incorrect information. The bachelor of arts degree in the department of computer science is up for discontinuance.
CORRECTIONS
A column chart on Page 3 of yesterday's Kansas was incomplete. The Kansas legislature allocated $702,806 to the University of Kansas specifically for research.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 14, 1993
3
Engineering students earn top wages after graduation
Engineering fair informs students of opportunities
By Kathleen Stolle Kansan staff writer
When Mike Hess finished a bachelor's degree in civil engineering, he could have slipped into a cool $29,000 job. But it was not enough.
"I kind of felt like I wanted a little more," said Hess, a Lawrence graduate student.
More knowledge, that is. This December, Hess will receive a master's degree and venture out into the professional world.
But today he - with an expected 800 other KU students - is checking out the job market at the engineering and computer science career fair. The fair, sponsored by the School of Engineering career service center, is from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. at the Lawrence Holiday Inn Holdome.
About 50 employers, including Exxon Corporation, McDonnell Douglas and Southwestern Bell, and a few graduate programs will be represented. Students majoring in math, physics, geology and chemistry are also invited.
With his advanced degree, Hess can expect offers around $33,000. Salary is still not a top concern, he said.
Based on Julie Cunningham's research, Hess is not alone. Cunningham, director of the School of Engineering's career service center, examined KU engineering students' priorities when accepting job offers.
"I found by far they did not always take the highest salary offer," she said.
Instead a company's status or geographic location, or the specific position or chance for advancement, were often higher priorities, Cunningham said.
Their indifference is ironic, considering that engineering students fare better financially than most other majors. According to statistics from the College Placement Council, on the average, engineering undergraduates received higher offers than their architecture, business, education, journalism or nursing counterparts. Of about 70 majors cited by the council, chemical engineering students were offered the second-highest salary, at $39,747. Pharmacy students topped the list with $42,796.
"Even though the number of job opportunities has dropped off, the salaries have stayed strong," Cunningham said.
She said students were finding jobs with mid-sized companies and consulting firms. In the past, large manufacturers dominated the recruiting scene, she said.
"A very large oil company would hire 800 to 1,000 engineering students a year, she said. "Now they're hiring maybe 10 engineers."
van off of NCR, an AT&T computer company, said its two Wichita locations would hire about 10 college graduates this year, down from previous years.
"All businesses now are trying to operate more efficiently, do more with less," she said.
Voth, like most representatives at the fair, will be networking, rather than actually offering jobs. She said the company would probably do its hiring in the spring.
Carl Locke, dean of the School of Engineering, said enrollment in the school peaked in the early 80s when
Average salaries
Engineering graduates receive on the average higher entry-level salaries than other majors.
Bachelor's degree candidates Average salary offers (July 1993)
Engineering $33,855
Nursing $31,876
Accounting $27,775
Business Admin. $24,465
Architectural Design $23,668
Performing Arts $20,667
Elementary Education $20,112
Journalism $19,893
Engineering degree salaries
Chemical $39,747
Mechanical $34,535
Electrical $34,228
Computer $33,743
Aerospace $31,641
Civil $29,234
Source: College Placement Council KANSAN
engineers were in high demand.The school had about 2,200 undergraduate and 400 graduate students.
About 1,300 undergraduates and 600 graduates are enrolled this semester, he said.
"There's always been a tie with employment opportunity and enrollment "locke said.
Hess said he realized that opportunities and competition would be fewer for master's engineering students.
"I know I'm not just going to wave my hand and say, 'Here I am.'" he said, cocking his head and flagging his hand overhead. "But I'm not really worried about getting a job."
Hispanics at home in HALO
Kansan staff writer
By Carlos Telada
"I was lacking my culture," she said. "I couldn't find anyone of my ethnic background."
Suzanne Racine, Arlington Heights,
III. senior, said finding fellow Hispanics in a state with a Hispanic population of 3.8 percent could be difficult
But Racine said she found the Hispanic community of the University of Kansas when she joined the Hispanic-American Leadership Organization in the spring of 1990. Racine, who was president of the group in 1992, said it gave Hispanics an important sense of community.
"When they come up here, they don't have their culture," she said.
The group supplies a sense of family
Uniting to be Heard
Eladio Valdez, Kansas City, Kan., senior, had HALO had pushed for Hispanic concerns since its founding in 1986. But he also said the group's main purpose was to hold KU's Hispanic community together.
"It's a student group. HALO has always kept that support aspect. I don't think it's changed at all in that respect."
that is important in Latin American culture that Valdez said he felt it when he joined the group in the fall of 1886.
"It was a nice feeling," Valdez said. "They wanted to extend the homeaway-from-home feeling."
Valdez told the group began after its predecessor, Movimiento Estandil Chicaco at Dazlan, disbanded in 1984. MECA had been an activist group that was founded in the late 1960s to work for the rights of Mexican Americans.
But individual members of the group kept in touch socially, Valdez said. They formed HALO in the spring of 1986 to give Hispanic students a reason to meet.
Since then, 14 other HALO groups have formed in Midwest colleges and universities.
Valdez sad the racial emphasis had changed between the two groups.
MECA's membership mostly consisted of Chicanos, or Mexican Americans. But Valdez had HALO encouraged Hispanics from Central America, South America, and the Caribbean to join as well.
"There was a major shift from the Chicanos," he said. "The main emphasis is now on the Indian part of our heritage."
The group also works with Hispanic high school students. They travel to Garden City or Kansas City area high schools to perform skits about the benefits of college life. Valdez said the trips were necessary get more Hispanic students into college.
Valdez said non-Hispanics also played a role in the group. It has had both white and African-American officers in the past.
"HALO has been a way for me to help with my personal development, and that will help me with my other endeavors," he said.
Octavio Hinojosa, Hutchinson senior and president of HALO, said the group had affected him.
"We're able to tell them, 'this is what you need to do for the next few steps,'"
10000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
Doug Hesse/KANSAN
Raindrops keep fallin' on my Keds
buckets used to catch water leaking from the roof of Robinson are scattered around the basketball courts on which Jim Kunce, Overland Park senior, is playing. The roof was leaking yesterday because of the rains. Three of the four courts had buckets or rags and mops to soak up the water.
KU student injured in fight in parking lot
CAMPUS BRIEFS
One KU student was injured in a fight in a fraternity house parking lot early Sunday morning, Lawrence police reported.
The police officers found 40 to 50 people fighting in the parking lot of the Pi Kappa Alpha house about 2 a.m. Sunday, Sgt. Mark Warren said. When the fight was broken up, Matthew Meives, St. Charles, M.o., sophomore, was lying on the ground and appeared to be unconscious according to the report.
Meives was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital and treated for cuts and bruises to his face. He was then released.
One member of the Pi Kappa Alpha house told police the inci
dent started when he saw a crowd of people jumping on a truck that belonged to one of his fraternity brothers. When he confronted the people, he was told "When you break one of our windows, we'll break something of yours," according to the police report. Warren said that the comment may have referred to a window that was broken at the Phi Kappa Theta house Wednesday.
The report said the fight escalated after more members of the Pi Kappa Alpha house came out of the house. Meives was injured when he was hit and fell to the ground, then kicked several times.
The pickup truck and a 1991 Corvette were damaged during the fight. Damage to the truck was estimated at $750. Damage to the Corvette was not reported.
A related fight broke out about 3:30 a.m. at the pHi Kappa Theta house. No injuries sustained in the second fight required medical attention. One person was taken into custody from that fight but was released when he had an asthma attack, according to the report.
Japan Week planned
Japanese culture and history will be the focus of Japan Week activities this week at KU.
The week includes activities sponsored by International Studies, the Center for East Asian Studies, and the Society for East Asian Studies.
The activities, including speeches, a concert and a film, are designed to increase awareness of the Japanese way of life.
For more information, call the office of International Studies, 864-4141.
Briefs compiled from Kansan staff reports
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4
Tuesday. September 14, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
Sharon Bottoms lost custody of her child last week because of her supposed immorality and her admission that she had engaged in oral sex with her mate. This activity is a felony in Virginia.
THE BACKGROUND
About half the states in the United States, including Kansas, have statutes called sodomy laws which prohibit homosexual activity, intercourse between unmarried persons, extramarital sex, oral-genital sex and anal intercourse. Legislatures of these states consider these activities to be abnormal or antisocial.
THE OPINION
Laws against sodomy should be struck down
Should a copy of the penal code replace the Tao of Sex on people's nightstands? If one has a child or a career then probably so. It is ludicrous that in the late twentieth century there are puritanical laws in Kansas still in effect, and utilized, to dictate morality between consenting adults. These laws are unnecessary and should be struck down.
The kind of discriminatory use of the Virginia sodomy laws, which are similar to those of Kansas, as seen in the Sharon Bottoms case is dangerous for all people. Should the single mother lose her child because she engages in sex without the " sanctity" of marriage? Should the married man who gets drunk at the office party and has sex with a co-worker in an empty office have his child taken away? As one can see, if the answer is yes then the next question should be: Who will care for the children? Not Jim and Tammy Faye because they too have broken these laws. If one looks at the statistics of commission of the above listed activities, one will see that almost nobody could have custody of the children.
The only way to prevent this kind of discriminatory use of these archaic laws is through legislation. Before another child is taken from a loving family or another life is adversely affected due to the government's presence in our bedrooms, the legislature should be urged to remove these laws from the books.
MICHELLE SMITH FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
South Africans prepare for multi-racial election
To the people of the United States voting may seem a simple, four-year routine of which we are often persuaded to take advantage, but to Black South Africans, the vote will mean they are no longer an invisible, silent majority but voices that must be heard in their own homeland.
This transition to democracy has not been without violence, chaos and killings. Last Wednesday, gunmen in minivans drove up to a line of people, killed about 21 Blacks and wounded about 25 others in two attacks.
Next April will be a historic month for South Africa when the nation will hold its first multi-racial election. Many Blacks are preparing for that moment by attending workshops that are aimed at teaching them the basic steps in election voting. Such basics include how to fill out a ballot, fold it and put it in a ballot box.
MUNEERA NASEER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Such senseless killings serve to remind us that we take our election process for granted. Unlike South Africans, we do not have to fear rioting or massacre at the hands of political opponents. Perhaps in our criticism of government and its laws, we forget that our system allows us to elect the person of our choice and the peaceful transition of power from one leader to the next. The right to vote should be appreciated and taken advantage of by all legal voters.
KANSAN STAFF
KC TRAUER, Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
Editors
Asistant to the editor ... R. J. Claiborn
Nowe ... Stacy Friedman
Editor ... Terrlyn McCormick
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Kripti Foster
Photo ... Kip Chin, Renee Knoerbe
Features ... Erza Wroth
Graphics ... John Paul Fogel
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STU/MBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Campus sales mgr . Ed Schoger
Regional sales mgr . Jennifer Perrier
National sales mgr . Jennifer Evenson
Co-op sales mgr . Blythe Focht
Production mgrs . Jennifer Blowey
Kate Burgess
Marketing director . Shelley McConnell
Sales manager
Classified mgrs . jance 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 homeunet, or faculty or staff position. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed. The Kansas university the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can also be brought to the Kansas newroom, 111 Stauffer Flint Hall.
MAGGIEY Chicago-Itinane
IT'S A SIMPLE OPERATION, REALLY. HERE'S YOUR SCALPEL
THE FEDERAL TUMMY TUCK
South's views on homosexuality narrow-minded, disrespectful
I grew up in the South, and recently my mind has been returning to it. There are a few reasons. The first is a documentary on the civil rights movement I saw recently on PBS. The second is Cobb County, Georgia, which condemned homosexuality and decided to forgo all funding for the arts next year. The third is a decision handed down in a Virginia court that says, in effect, that homosexuals do not make good parents.
It is great to see that hatred is alive and well in the South.
The documentary, which was called 'Eyes on the Prize' was, at times, difficult to watch. It is hard to believe that 30 years ago African Americans were sprayed with fire hoses for the offense of wanting to sit in the same lunch counters that whites had occupied for years. So much hatred for something so simple as equality.
Equality certainly was not the issue last month in Cobb County, Georgia, a county just outside Atlanta. On Aug. 10, the county commission voted to condemn homosexuality. Though the measure has no legal implications, it certainly shows where gays are not
STAFF COLUMNIST
wanted. Two weeks later, the commission voted to deny funding for the arts next year so the it would not have to determine which art should be funded and which should not.
The latter vote sounds like a child who has an extra piece of gum and two friends and, unable to choose which friend should get the gum, decides to keep it for himself. The former vote does have interesting possibilities — maybe Douglas County should condemn Fred Phelps — but I do not think county commissions should be in the business of setting moral standards for everyone.
NATHAN
OLSON
her child. The reasoning, said Judge Duford Parsons, was based, in part, on a 1985 Virginia Supreme Court decision which held that parents could lose custody of their children if the adults are homosexual. In the words of Judge Parsons, "The mother's conduct is illegal and immoral and renders her an unfit parent."
Perhaps the most galling example of hatred occurred last week when a lesbian mother in Virginia lost custody of
What a perfect statement. According to last Thursday's Kansan, Virginia has a law forbidding oral sex. Thus, the state of Virginia can evoke custody rights based on where a parent places his/her body parts. I can envision somewhere in the Virginia State Code a table with the headings, "Penis," "Vagina," and "Mouth" going across and down and little "legal" or "illegal" marks in the table cells. Vagina and vagina? Nope. Penis and mouth? Not a chance. Only penis and vagina in this state, boys and girls.
Apart from sarcasm, something is sickening with the idea that sexual orientation relates to someone's ability to be a parent. There are many complicated factors involved in being a parent; to single out sexual orientation as a determining factor is hopelessly narrow. What's next? Shintoism as a determining factor? Once I saw a televangelist discuss the "satanic" principles of Shintoism. I can just see some judge from, say, North Carolina, who says that Shintoists can lose custody of their children because their religion is immoral.
The word "hate" is at times thrown around too loosely. But denying rights — not special but equal rights
—to a group of people whose actions are private implies a lack of respect for those individuals. Once we condemn adults for their private, consensual actions, how can we be considered a free country?
In the movie "Something Wild," Jeff Daniels buys a T-shirt which reads, "Virginia is for Lovers." The irony of the motto now makes me laugh. Or cry — I'm not sure which.
[Postscript: There will be a candlelight vigil in support of the Virginia woman. The vigil will be held at 8 tonight in front of Wescoe. Bring your own candles.]
Nathan Olson is a Lawrence graduate student in English.
Keen observations about singers, pedestrians and Barrow, Alaska
So here goes...
Sometimes I feel it's necessary to let some of the keen observations I've made out into the open. Other times, I forget that my column is due and can't come up with a great idea. I've decided to integrate these two things.
Keen Observation (KO.1) 1 What ever happened to Patrick Swayze's once sky-rocketing singing career? I thought his big album "I Can't Act, but hey, I Can't Sing Either!" was a great effort. Now don't tell me that "She Likes to Swim" wasn't your favorite song too. Or was it "She'S like a Him"? No, no matter.
K. O. 2) Why is it that when Peter Cetera sings, his jaw doesn't move? His lips move and his facial expressions change, but I think he has lock-jaw. If you watch Chicago's video for "Hard to Say I'm Sorry", which could be called "Sorry I jerked you, but will you take me back because I have lockjaw?" you'll notice that Al
STAFF COLUMNIST
from "Home Improvement" sings. Further research reveals that he was also one of the Doobie Brothers.
CHRIS
RONAN
K. O. 3) Have you ever noticed how people walk on this campus? It's really an interesting science. It's funny, because even though there may be a several thousand-pound vehicle barrel toward them as they nonchallantly transcend the crosswalk, they just lay that "I am pedestrian, hear me roar!" look on the driver and think the vehicle will stop in its tracks. As the
Saturday Night Live dwelt would say,
"It's called a brain — look into one."
K. O. 4) One thing that interests me is when you're riding the bus, and you get some happy person who rings the "neat bell." You'll be coming up to someplace, like oh, I don't know, Wescoe for instance. This person will wring the bell like the driver isn't going to stop at Wescoe or something! Then they stand next to the back door, looking like if they don't get off that bus quickly, they're going to pee their pants or something. They also think that a bus driver that doesn't give a crap whether they're 10.15 minutes late to a stop, cares that this cretin is standing next to the door. Meanwhile, you're pissed off because you have to go to a 7:30 a.m. Spanish class, and you'll face it, no one wants to screw around with a foreign language at all, much less before your brain neurons wake up. Oh, come on, don't look at this page like I'm the only one
this has ever happened to!
K. O. I) I have to credit my geography lab instructor for this K.O. The other day, while pouring over maps, I noticed a place called Barrow, Alaska. I'm sure you're familiar with it. I couldn't help wondering what it would be if you were a second grader in Barrow, and your family moved to somewhere like Kansas City. The first day of school, one of the "cool" kids would almost surely come up and ask, "Hey, where are you from?" You'd say, "Barrow, Alaska." Then the other kids would laugh as the cool kid announced, "Hey everybody, better watch out for this kid. He may want to BARROW something from you. HA-HA-HA!" Then you'd probably end up crying and the cool kid wouldn't get to go to recess or something. Man, kids these days can be so cruel.
Chris Ronan is a Overland Park sophomore major in radio and TV broadcast.
For the Birds
WELL, YES, I
THINK WE
COULD USE
YOU
WELL, YES, I THINK WE COULD USE YOU
HOWEVER, WE CAN'T AFFORD TO PAY MORE THAN MINIMUM WAGE WITH NO HEALTH BENEFITS, VACATION, RAISES, OR ANY ADVANCEMENT
OKAY, BUT I'LL HAVE TO MOVE BACK HOME
YOUR MOTHER AND I WOULDN'T HAVE IT ANY OTHER WAY CONGRATULATIONS SON 8
Fitz Univ. Daily Kenssen 1943
A
by Jeff Fitzpatrick
OKAY, BUT I'LL
HAVE TO MOVE BACK
HOME
F. J. Zinn v. Daily Kensan 1993
SON 8
OPINION
Tuesday, September 14, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Racist skin heads do not exist. Skin heads often take the blame for senseless acts of hate. We are constantly misrepresented by the media, thus portrayed to the public a negative image that does not convey the truth about our movement.
Skin head label is used inappropriately
Skin heads first appeared in England in the late 1960s. They were blue-collar youths ranging in age from 16 to 25. The skin heads were a multi-racial group who believed in their country and used hard work to achieve their goals. After working long hours they would frequent the dance halls to dance to the latest soul and reggae sounds. This was skin head life, and their efforts to improve the country in which they believed could not have been better celebrated than by dancing the night away and drinking a few pints. This remains true 25 years later. Those
original skin heads still do the same thing they did when they were 20 years old, only now there are skin heads throughout the world.
heads in tough weather. No one in the media ever bothered to research this. They automatically assume that since some bald racist punk-rocker called himself a "skin head," then that was what the movement was about. So these so-called "skin heads" are nothing but misled, bigoted youths. An editorial in the Kansan stated that there are 3,500 rocker bone-heads. I do not think so. We have a great deal of pride in what we believe in and will not compromise the skin head name for the sake of some bigot's current fad. The editor asked the University public to take action in any way possible to help combat hate; we suggest the media start finding out the whole truth about the people they condemn before they go to print. Leave the boneheads to us—we can take care of them.
Richard Burk Lawrence senior
Rights should not be based on orientation
Sharon Bottoms experienced one of the joys of life when she had her first son, Tyler, two years ago. Last week she experienced one of its sorrows: seeing her child abducted by a legal system tainted by prejudice.
system cannot be prepared. There is a growing awareness in the United States about the daily discrimination against lesbian, bisexual and gay people. Many cities and states have enacted laws to protect their citizens from discrimination based on sexual orientation.
The injury of this case goes far beyond being an insult to bisexuals, gays and especially lesbians. Judge Buford Parsons explained that his reasoning was based on the "immoral" behavior of the mother. But any attack on the rights of an individual is an attack on the rights of all individuals. Is the way now cleared for an anti-Semitic judge to take away
the child of a mother who has converted to Judaism, and deliver it to a "moral, Christian" grandparent? With the stream of cases of physical, verbal and sexual child abuse perpetuated by heterosexuals, and the equally steady return of abused children to such parents, why take a child away from an environment where it is happy, safe and protected?
We must all, regardless of our sexual orientation, speak out against the violence and hatred of difference. We must take action when violence and hatred are directed at us from our government. The members of Lesbian, Bisexual and Gay Services of Kansas urge you to write to express your outrage to Governor L. Douglas Wilder of Virginia. We urge you to attend a candlelight vigil at 8 tonight on Wescoe beach to protest intolerance. And we urge you to support Sharon Bottoms 'struggle through the courts to regain custody of her son.
Lesbian, Bisexual and Gay Services of Kansas
Watkins offers good services, low prices
Tisha Heyka must surely have been practicing for her creative-writing major when she wrote her editorial concerning Watkins Memorial Health Center. With thousands of students at KU, it would be impossible to have no waiting for walk-in patients. There are only so many staff members doing the best they can. Try making an appointment.
For services that require a fee, Watkins offers lower prices than off-campus clinics with more one-on-one attention from the doctors. I, for one, am glad we have the health center.
As for self-diagnosis, well, Ms. Heyka, everyone knows that you can't tell if it's strep throat by looking. You have to be tested. Try a different doctor.
Feresa Corcoran
Ottawa sophomore
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Get a cue here's where to play
Late afternoon light pours through a window at The Crossing, 61.8 W. 12th St., as John Sykes, Lawrence sophomore, left, and Paul Barbosa, Coimbra, Portugal, senior, discuss the next shot.
BIL
A steady hand is a must to keep the cue in line and to sink the shot. Different people have different styles for holding the cue.
10
When students want to take a break from homework and relax with friends, many head to the nearest tavern for a game or two
THE POOL ROOM:
taverns, the billiards table is a hub of activity where seasoned sharks and novices alike plunk down their quarters to shoot colorful balls into uncooperative pockets. Lawrence has many places to play pool, each with its own atmosphere. For billiards afficados and weekend players, here is a brief guide.
the Pool Room, 925 iowa St. is, the place for hard-core pool players to go. With 27 tables, two rooms and a pro shop. The Pool Room is the largest billiard parlor in Lawrence and the second largest in Kansas, owner Dana Hacker said. The Pool Room has four nine-foot tables, one snooker table and the only right-angle table in Kansas.
Hacker described The Pool Room as spacious, adaptable to both families and pool sharks and especially good for dates.
Peter Monaghen, Bloomfield Hills, Mich., senior, said he enjoyed the people at The Pool Room.
"There are a lot of locals in here, so you get a family atmosphere. It's one of the few towny bars where students are welcome," he said. "There are guys here who've been shooting all their lives, and they'll teach you."
KANSAS UNION JAYBOWL:
One hour of pool at The Pool Room is $4 50. Eight-ball coin-operated tables are 50 cents and nine-ball tables are 25 cents. Hacker said he was planning a ladies night.
oems.
"We're right here on campus, so it's easy to come in and play for a half hour between classes," he said.
The Jaybow, located on the first floor in the Kansas Union, has three Brunswick Gold Crown nine-foot tables purchased in the 1940s. The tables have a retro look with blue felt, rounded corners and silver trim.
Fine said the Jaybowl's convenient location makes it popular with students.
"They're wonderful old tables," sad Michael Fine, recreation coordinator for the Kansas and Burge Unions. "They're kind of classy."
The standard rate for students at the Jaybowl is $2.40 an hour in the afternoon and $3.60 after 6 p.m.
Mike Whalen, York, Pa., law student, lines up his shot on the snooker table at King Arthur's, 2228 Iowa St. There are two snooker tables in town, one at King Arthur's and one at The Pool Room, 929 Iowa St.
Story by Sara Bennett Photos by Tom Leininger
KING ARTHUR'S:
root is free every day from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at King Arthur's, 2228 Iowa St. After 1 p.m., patrons can play for $4 an hour on King Arthur's four six-foot regulation Brunswick tables, two nine-foot tables and snooker table.
Richard Ramos, Kansas City, Mo,
senior and King Arthur's employee,
said the bar took special pride in its
tables.
"They're great tables," he said. "We get them refelted constantly and brush them down two times a day."
Damon Carreiro, Tulsa, Okla. junior, said he liked the drink selection and atmosphere at King Arthur's.
"They have the best bar selection for a pool hall," he said. "And the ambiance we love the locals."
THE CROSSING:
The Crossing, 618 W. 12th St., may have only one table, but where else in town does a pool table double as a dance floor? When bands visit the tiny bar at the edge of campus, a special covering is put on the table for people to stand on.
Tom Conroy, Clearwater, Fla.
senior and Crossing employee,
the atmosphere at The Crossing drew people in to play pool.
"It's alternative and laid-back, a mix of everybody," he said. "They can shoot a game of pool then sit on our big front porch and get a tan."
BENCHWARMERS
BENCHWARMERS SPORTS BAR AND GRILL:
Tuesday night is "Neighborhood Hang- out Night" at Benchwarmers, 1601 W. 23rd St. That means free pool all night on the bar's five tables with no cover charge. Owner Reed Brinton said the night honors those who live around the bar, but everyone is welcome.
the house and take a break," he said.
"I like the atmosphere and the sports. It's laid-back, and there's always a game on."
Jeff Konkel, Harper junior, said he went to Benchwarmers because it was close to home.
"It's the closest place to get out of
ASTRO'S
Astro's, 601 Kasold Drive, may be out of the way, but that's the way they like it. Tim Terfler, Chicago junior and Astro's employee, said Astro's is a good place for a quiet game of pool.
"It's a little bit more relaxed here," he said. "It's not bad for a date. You can find your own table and have your own conversation."
Steve Kluck, Olathe senior, said he feels more comfortable shooting pool at Astro's.
"All pool rooms are smoky and cheesy, and this is pretty much the cheesiest," he said. "But it's still fun to play pool, and you're not intimidated here. Other places, everyone's real good."
Astro's has 10 tables. Six are coin-operated, and the four nine-foot tables are rented for $4.50 an hour.
"And the ambience... we love the locals."
Damon Carreiro
Tulsa, Okla., junior
music
Japanese visitors share music, culture
By JL Watson Kansan staff writer
The choir from a women's college in Sendai, Japan, traveled to Kansas to study with KU faculty and give concerts.
The halls are alive with the sound of music. Murphy Hall is home to the music department, so it is not uncommon to hear music wafting through the air. During the past week, the regular voices were joined by those of Japanese students.
The choir from the Miyagi Gaukin Women's College in Sendai, Japan, traveled to the University of Kansas to study with faculty and give concerts in the area.
"It's a once in a lifetime trip for them," said Richard Reber, professor of music and dance. "There are about 65 members, all junior and seniors, and they've been saving for this trip for two or three years."
KU has had a relationship with the Miyagi Gaukin Women's College for many years, Reber said. The relationship began early in the twentieth century when a graduate of KU, Kate Hansen, went to Japan as a missionary and music teacher. She founded the music program at the college.
one idea behind the trip is to bring a group of students to visit the school where the founder was from," Reber said. "This is a small way for them to get to know the school."
Japanese culture at the concert," Reber said. "It should give us an awareness of the musical life going on in Japan."
The students must pay for the week-long trip but later may qualify for added benefits, Reber said.
"There is a scholarship for them to come to KU to study at the master's level." he said. "Over the years, several students have taken advantage
The students are staying at McCol-
"It should give us an awareness of the musical life ... in Japan" Richard Rebei
shup and have graduated from KU."
The students perform traditional music, including Brahms, but also include Japanese folk songs in their repertoire.
Richard Reber
The audience should get an enjoyable musical experience and a bit of
Richard Reber professor of music and dance
staying at McColum Hall but also have spent time with host families in Lawrence.
Louis Copt,
Lawrence artist,
has spent time in
Japan and painted
a picture that was
presented to Lawrence's
sister city of
Hiratsuka,
Japan. He and
his wife, Phyllis,
had a barbecue
for several of the
students.
Copt said, "It gives them a chance to interact with a family and visit a real house. Since we've been to Japan, we know some of their customs, so we can make them comfortable."
Chie Ito said she had come on the trip because it would be a different experience and she had wanted to take advantage of the opportunity.
Haskell Indian Market, shopping and on a tour of Lawrence.
Copt took the students to the
"Taking the private lessons and shopping have been the most memorable experiences," she said.
Ho's classmates were surprised at the size of the KU campus.
Yuriko Sugita said, "it's bigger than I thought it would be."
"We felt safe in coming because we were with a big group." Sugita said.
The students' parents were concerned about safety in the United States because of the recent killings of two Japanese exchange students
The students have had nothing to fear on the KU campus. The students here have been helpful and nice to talk to. It said.
The Miyagi Women's Choir performed at Washburn University last night. They will be performing at 7:30 tonight at the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SEPTEMBER 14,1993 PAGE 6 KU Life
People and places at the University of Kansas.
WEIRD
Chicken-fried cocaine leads man to forging
Leadstory
Gary. Williams, 38, pleaded guilty to forgery in Louisville, Ky., in August, involving checks totaling more than $4, 800. Williams told the judge that he needed the money to pay off a man who had just threatened his life in the group house in which he was staying. Williams said it all started when he fried some chicken gizzards using what he thought was flour; it was actually the other man's cocaine.
The democratic process
Hermosa Beach, Calif., City Councilman Bob Benz helped run this year's annual July Fourth "Ironman" competition, which requires contestants to run a mile, paddle a surboard a mile and then down a six-pack of beer without vomiting. Benz was co-producer of a video of the event that aired on local cable TV and featured contestants for the "most picturesque vomition" award. "Ironman" was held on a public beach, where drinking is illegal and spilled over to nearby homes, whose owners complained of contestants urinating publicly. Said Councilman Benz, "I had a great time."
Generous guy
Among the winners in Russia's local elections in April was billionaire Kirsan Yuzhnimzhin, elected president of the republic of Kalmyk. One of his campaign promises was simply to give the equivalent of $100 to every family in the republic.
Gambling saves the day
A team from the North Carolina Legislature scheduled a basketball game with a team from the South Carolina Legislature in May to help decide where to build a nuclear waste landfill. If the North Carolinians won, the landfill would be close to the border; if they lost, it would be located in the interior of the state. The South Carolinians played the game, but renounced the stakes, which they said would violate their state's anti-gambling laws.
Just doesn't vote
Woodruff Adams II, 36, the Republican candidate for mayor of Toledo, Ohio, in this month's combined primary, told the press in July that he had never registered to vote before this year because he needed to avoid jury duty because of the obligations of his financial consulting business. (Candidates for jury duty come from voter registration lists.)
See WEIRD,Page 7
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 14, 1993
7
THE NEWS in brief
Eurasia
CAPETOWN, South Africa
Parliament expected to pass legislation ending white rule
A special session of Parliament began considering legislation yesterday to end white rule, and Black leader Nelson Mandela promised to endorse lifting sanctions once the laws are passed.
The 11-day session is expected to pass bills giving Blacks a role in running the country for the first time in South African history. A vote on the key measure — setting up a transitional multiracial council that would help govern the country until elections next year — is expected next week.
Approval appears certain because President F.W. de Klerk's governing National Party, which supports the plan, controls the all-white Parliament.
Still, legislators face bitter opposition from white conservatives who have threatened civil war if the bill is passed.
Mandela said his African National Congress would call for lifting all remaining international sanctions once Parliament approves the creation of a transitional council.
Sweden lifted a ban on trade yesterday, but kept a ban on investment. The United Nations and the Commonwealth are among those expected to end sanctions when the ANC gives its blessing.
The United States lifted most economic sanctions against South Africa in 1991, but is expected to remove a restriction on International Monetary Fund loans after the South African parliament passes the legislation ending white rule.
TOPEKA
TOPEKA Wichita appeals protester ruling
The City of Wichita contended in a brief submitted to the Kansas Supreme Court yesterday that blocking an abortion clinic is not protected by the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
Wichita appeals protester ruling
A district judge had ruled that the protection the Kansas Constitution guarantees for citizens exceeds those guarantees in the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.
Wichita appealed a Sedgwick County District Court decision that found Bryan J. Brown innocent of trespassing for blocking access to Women's Health Care Services in east Wichita.
Assistant Wichita City Attorney Dana J. Winkler said in the brief, "Blocking access to public and private buildings has never been upheld as a proper method of communication."
MOGADISHU, Somalia
U.S. soldiers return sniper fire
U. S. soldiers came under what they described as heavy sniper fire yesterday and responded by calling helicopter gunships into an intense, two-hour firefight.
About 200 soldiers from the U.S. Quick Reaction Force came under fire after detaining 50 Somalis in a compound in southern Mogadishu that Capt. Tim McDavitt said he suspected to be gathering places for fugitive warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid's militia. He said three U.S. soldiers were wounded.
A spokesman for Aidid said at least 25 Somali were killed and many more wounded, including civilians.
WEIRD: State poet paid in wine
Compiled from The Associated Press.
Apay-off of wine
Continued from Page 6.
washington state Rep. Ron Jacobson introduced a resolution in February calling for the appointment of a state laureate "to write poetry and lofty expressions to be read at appropriate state occasions." The state wine industry would pay the laureate's salary. 126 gallons of wine a year.
Another glitch
In January, Illinois Gov. Jim Edgar vetoeed a bill to correct a glitch in the state's reapportionment based on the 1990 census. The glitch is that only one person, Lydia Thorpe, 87, is in both the Kewanee, Ill., 6th precinct and the state's 93rd district. Thus, whenever she votes, he distinctly
colored ballot and the process of separate reporting by precinct will permit any interested person to know precisely for whom Thorpe voted.
Bill roundup
A March Associated Press roundup of bills introduced in state legislatures included an attempt in Maine to outlaw electronic moose calls, a proposal in Minnesota to permit tavern customers to roll dice (without violating anti-gambling laws) to see who pays the tab, and a Florida proposal to require a man who has extramartial sex to register with the state in order to preserve parental rights he may have to any offspring.
More from congress
(such as artificial penises) law to permit health professionals to legally possess six or more. For other people, possession of six or more is a felony, and still at issue under the state's penal code is whether possession of even a single marital aid will continue to be treated as a misdemeanor.
Texas lawmakers this term amended the state's unique aids aids
Creme de la weird
Phoenix New Times, covering a human-branding demonstration at a downtown art gallery in August by "bodyartist" Steve Haworth, reported that a 38-year-old female sought Haworth's services, intending to have her S & M master's three initials burned into her buttocks with stainless steel. However, after one initial, she called it off because of the pain, scrapped the second initial altogether and said she would add the last if the couple stayed together a year.
To charge tickets by phone using MasterCard or Visa call 864-ARTS; or call any Ticketmaster outlet (816) 913-3300 or (913) 234-4545.
September 29 (KU Student Night) - October 3
Wednesday-Saturday performances at 8:00 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday matinees at 2:00 p.m.
Sunday evening at 7:00 p.m.
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office; all seats reserved;
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- Taxation
- Computer Science
- Business Administration
(principally masters level)
- Computer Science
* Information Systems
* Engineering
(principally electrical & industrial)
(principally masters level)
- Management Science
We will be visiting the University of Kansas on October 18 to interview qualified students for overseas positions. If you are interested in meeting with one of our representatives, please submit your resume to the appropriate placement office. Engineering Career Services Center resumes until September 27. Business Placement Center will be collecting resumes until September 29. Please contact those offices for further details. Only short listed candidates will be contacted.
Equal Opportunity Employer
8
SPORTS
Tuesdav. September 14, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Siblings compete in pool
Swimmers set goals for future
By Kent Hohlfeld Kansan sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
From the time Marc Bontrager fell off a dock into Crystal Lake at his Minnesota home and came out smiling, his parents knew that swimming was going to be a big part of his life.
"All anyone could see was my blond hair,"
"Bontrager said."
His enthusiasm for the sport continued in summer swim leagues where he and his sister Janette Bontraguer, now a Kansas freshman, spent many of their summers competing. He went on to win the YMCA nationals in the 50- and 100-meter freestyle competitions and was a three-time high
school All-American. Marc Bontrager said that there wasn't any competition between his sister and him in high school.
"I always knew I could beat her," Merron Brountte said iokingly.
Janette Bontrager said that their high school times were a little closer than her brother might like to admit.
"He always had the backstroke records," Janetelle Bontraguer said. "I always had the freestyle records."
She said their records hung along side each other in their high school in Naperville, Ill, which is a suburb of Chicago. Janette said that the rivalry was more of a motivational tool.
"We're at each other's throats or anything." Janette Bontrager said. "He's really encouraging, and we help other out."
Kansas coach Gary Kempf said that having Marc at Kansas would be a big
asset to Janette. Kempfshould know.
He followed his brother in Kansas
where Kempf swam during his college career.
Kempf said that he thought having Marc on the Kansas team helped in Janette's decision to attend Kansas
"I didn't get it all sugarcoated," Janette Bontrager said. "The other schools were honest in recruiting me but I got more points of view from
Janette Bontrager said that two of those viewpoints came from their father, who graduated from Kansas in 1972, and their mother, who worked as a nurse at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Both Janette and Marc said their parents were happy they chose Kansas.
"My parents were real happy when I decided to go Kansas," Marc Bontrader said. "They used to joke that I
could go anywhere, but they'd pay for Kansas."
Marc said that he tried not to influence his sister's decision of where to go to school and that he had tried to let his sister live her own life.
"We usually see each other at practice, but I haven't even seen her on campus," Marc Bontrader said.
ALEXANDRA
While his sister adjusts to college life and books to the future, Marc said that he had set some goals for the season.
Janette Bontrager said her goals for her freshman year, aside from getting used to the intense workouts, were to improve on her high school times and to adjust to college competition.
"This is really the first season that I've set specific goals for myself," Marc Bontrager said.
He said that he wanted to make a return trip to the NCAA championships and bring home the 50- and 100-meter freestyle titles. He said that he also hoped to make the 1996 Olympic team. He has aspirations of breaking the world record in the 50-meter freestyle. He said currently he was six-tenths of a second from the world record.
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
Senior Marc Bontrager (right), and freshman Janette Bontrager, take a break during practice. The siblings are members of the Kansas swimming teams
"That six-tenths is a long time though," Marc Bontrager said.
Kempf said that the high aspirations Bontrager set were within his capabilities. He said that Bontrager had turned himself into one of the elite college sprint swimmers in the nation.
Rugby rookies play their way onto tournament team
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
An old saying claims that practice makes perfect, but for senior Christa Gizia, four rugby team practices was all it took to be chosen for the regional Heart of America Select Side Tournament.
Gizza, who had never played rugby, joined the Kansas women's rugby team a few weeks ago. In her first game, the team's season opener last Saturday, she was one of 12 Kansas players selected to go to the regional rugby tournament Oct. 2 in Norman, Okla.
Although Giza is new to the sport, the concepts of tackling and moving a ball up a field are not new to her. In high school she played powder-puff football — football played by women — and at Kansas she played on her sorority's intramural football team.
Sophomore Christy Price is also relatively new to the team and was selected to play in the tournament. She joined the women's rugby team in February. Before playing with Kansas, she had competed in high school track, softball, basketball and volleyball, but never rugby.
Players from the women's rugby teams of Northeast Missouri State and Kansas State will join Gizza. Price and the other 10 Jayhawks for the tournament team. The team has 20 players in all.
Last year's coach, Jackie Vogel, said Gizza and Price were chosen of their potential to become national players. She said the more experienced players were chosen for their leadership abilities and their decision making.
Vogel, who has selected team members in the past, said that selectors looked for development of basic skills, athletic ability, agility, quickness and strength in the players chosen for the higher level of competition.
In addition to practicing with the team, Price lifts weights.
These players, despite competing as a team in Oklahoma, will be competing individually for a spot on the Western Select Side team. Players in the Western Select Side Tournament held in December could be selected for the national team.
Gizza said she ran about three or four miles every other day and she played on an indoor soccer team in the Kansas City area once or twice a week to keep in shape for rugby. In addition to these activities, she is taking 21 credit hours of classes. She is majoring in sports management.
Now Giza will have to add Select Side Tournament team practices to her busy schedule. The team will have its first practice at 10 a.m. Sunday at Shenk Complex, on the practice fields at 23rd and Iowa streets.
Royals blank Chicago 9-0; Appier grabs win
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Chicago's lead over Texas in the AL West fell to 2 1/2 games last night as the Kansas City Royals defeated the White Sox 9-0.
Kevin Appier allowed just two hits in seven innings of work for Kansas City.
The Royals have won three straight games to move with in five games of Chicago. Felix Jose hit a three-run home run for Kansas City.
appier was in trouble, but the only hits off him were doubles by Lance Johnson in the second inning and Frank Thomas in the sixth. Thomas' double was his 73rd extra base hit of the season, leaving him one short of the club record set by "Shoeless" Joe Jackson in 1920.
Appier (16-8) has pitched 19 1-3 straight scoreless innings, lowering his ERA to 2.73. He walked a season-high five while striking out seven.
The game was delayed one hour, 39 minutes by rain. A stiff wind blew out to right field throughout, blowing mist around Kauffman Stadium. The temperature dropped 28 degrees to 50 at the scheduled 7:36 p.m. start.
Mark Gubicza finished up, allowing two hits, as the two pitchers handed the White Sox their 13th shutout this season.
Chicago starter Tim Belcher (3-5) lasted 5 1-3 innings, giving up six runs on seven hits while walking two and striking out three.
Wally Joyner singled in another run and Gary Gaetti hit a sacrifice fly in a two-run seventh.
Jose lifted a ball high into the wind, and it carried deep into the right field seats in the fifth inning for his fifth home run and first since Aug. 20. Gary Gaetti and Chico Lind singled ahead of the home run.
Mike Macfarlane hit his 20th home run with the bases empty in the fourth inning for a 1-0 Royals lead. Gaetti and Lind each singled in runs in the sixth.
DRAKE RELAYS 99.1
53 53
Susan McSpadden / KANSAN
Junior track team member Nick Johansen makes his way up the steps of Memorial Stadium with the burden of senior teammate Brandon Blain on his back. The two were working on a drill called "partner step-ups" yesterday during track practice while junior teammate Harun Hazim acted as their spotter.
High Stepping
Browns break 49ers' winning streak 23-13
Defense, miscues sabotage Niners
The Associated Press
CLEVELAND - The Cleveland Brown could think of no better test.
And after three painful losing seasons, the Browns proved last night they can play with the best again, beating the San Francisco 48ers 23-13 in the biggest victory of Bill Belichick's three years as coach.
The Brown's, 2-0 on the season did it with defense, intercepting three passes from Steve Young, forcing him to fumble once, and blocking a field goal. San Francisco also muffed a 40-yard field goal attempt when holder Klaus Wilmsmeyer jugged the snap with 4:32 to play.
The 49ers, 1-1, did not score in the second half.
Cleveland's James Jones, a defensive tackle, turned the game around with a 1-yard touchdown run in the second quarter, and Bernie Kosar and Michael Jackson teamed on a 30-yard scoring pass that put Cleveland ahead for good just 35 seconds before halftime.
Jackson had dropped a potential touchdown pass on the Browns'
very first play, and Kosar overthrew him on another play early in the fourth quarter.
Young, still bothered by a fractured thumb sustained during the preseason, was intercepted three times for the second straight week, and two of the three led to Cleveland scores.
The loss stopped the 49ers' nine-game regular-season winning streak. It was only the second loss in the last 13 Monday night games for San Francisco.
Matt Stover kicked three field goals for Cleveland. Mike Cofer had two for the 49ers, and a third try — a 37-yard attempt — was blocked by Rob Burnett.
Marc Logan, filling in for the injured Tomas Rothman, scored the 48ers' only touchdown on a 4-yard run in the second quarter. San Francisco also played without injured defensive lineman Ken Fagan, and it lost receiver Odessa Turner for part of the game. Turner left because of a concussion that resulted from a scary collision with Cleveland's Eric Turner early in third quarter.
The 49ers out-gained the Browns by a 3-to-1 ratio for much of the first half, but interceptions by Clay Matthews and Selwyn Jones stopped a couple of San Francisco drives.
Williams visits Iowa recruit
Kansanstaffreport
Autumn the 1993-94 basketball season is months away, Kansas is making continual efforts to keep its program strong.
Dedham said that Williams had been interested in LaFrentz, who averaged 29.9 points per game last year.
Raaf Lefrenda, 7-7foot power forward from Monona, Iowa, was visited by Kansas coach Roy Williams Sunday.
"As far as I know, everything went great in the in-home meeting," said Eric Dettbarn, LaFrentz's high school coach. "He really likes Roy Williams. Roy has spent the most time recruiting him and has been there the longest."
Recruiting expert Bob Gibbons rated LaFrentz as the second-best prospect in the country.
Dettbarn agrees with Gibbons.
"He stands a little over 7 feet tall right now," Dettbarn said. "But he's more of a forward. He can step back and shoot the three, and handle the ball on the break."
LaFrentz also has scheduled visits with Iowa, Notre Dame and Missouri. Dettbarn said that Iowa and Kansas are the top two of the four colleges in contact with LaFrentz, but that he thought LaFrentz was leaning toward Kansas.
Ricky Price, a 6-foot 5-inch guard out of Long Beach, Calif., will visit Kansas this weekend. Price is also interested in Duke, California and Arizona.
Two other prospects, Omm'A Givens, a 6-10 center from Aberdeen, Wash., and Charlie Miller, 6-4 forward from Miami, are also considering Kansas.
Improvement seen in Big Eight
Teams gain more victories against nonconference foes
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
The Big Eight Conference is off to its best football start in 18 years.
Through two complete weeks of competition, the conference has a 12-3 record in games against nonconference opponents. The Big Eight's best record against nonconference foes was in 1975 when it went 28-4, including two consecutive 8-0 weeks.
Two of the three losses belong to Kansas, but the Jayhawks probably have played the toughest nonconference schedule so far this season. No.1 Florida State beat Kansas 42-0 in the Kickoff Classic, and Michigan State of the Big Ten Conference defeated the Jayhawks 31-14 Saturday in the Spartans' home opener.
However, one conference coach does not
foresee a denise in the Jayhawk program.
"Kansas, by virtue of their 1-2 start and their schedule, will get better by the time Big Eight Conference play starts," said Colorado coach Bill McCartney in a telephone conference call yesterday.
Last weekend saw the Big Eight post a 6-2 record, including three impressive victories over Southwest Conference opponents.
Oklahoma surprised many by dismantling Southwest Conference favorite Texas A&M 44-14 in Norman, Okla. The Aggies entered the contest ranked No. 5 in the Associated Press poll.
Nebraska defeated Texas Tech 50-27 in Lincoln, Neb., and Colorado dropped Baylor 45-21 in Boulder, Colo. Both Texas Tech and Baylor were preseason favorites to finish in the ton half of the Southwest Conference.
Missouri opened its season with a 31-3 victory at home against Illinois, and Oklahoma State and Kansas State had victories against Division I-AA schools Southwest Missouri State and Western Kentucky, respectively.
Iowa State fell to intrastate rival Iowa 31-28 at home in Ames.
Many of the Big Eight coaches agree that the image and on-field performance of the conference has changed during the last few years.
McCarthy said another reason the level of conference competition had improved was due to the stability of the head coaches at all eight conference institutions.
This season is the fifth consecutive season that the same head coaches have been at their respective schools.
"The teams in the conference are much stronger now than they were a few years ago," said Nebraska coach Tom Osborne. "Overall, it should be a competitive year in the Big Eight."
"I don't remember another conference being in this type of situation," McCartney said. "Some administrators in the conference are probably glad that they stuck with their coaches."
BIG 8
CONFERENCE
Standings
Colorado 2 ... 0
Kansas St. 2 ... 0
Nebraska 2 ... 0
Oklahoma 2 ... 0
Missouri 1 ... 0
Oklahoma St. 1.0
Iowa St. 1 ... 1
KANSAS 1 ... 2
This week:
Colorado at Stanford,
Kansas St. at Minnesota,
Nebraska at UCLA, Oklahoma
St. at Tulsa, Missouri at Texas
A&M, Iowa St. at Wisconsin,
Utah vs. Kansas
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, September 14, 1993
9
90¢ Bowling 3:30-6:00 p.m.
Not just for bowling any more!
Jaybowl
BASKETBALL GAME
NEXUS
REDKEN
0139201
1105 MASSACHUSETTS
749-9750
LAWRENCE'S
BEST!
TIN PAN ALLEY
Fats
Classified Directory
300s Merchandise
400s Real Estate
305 For Sale
403 Real Estate
340 Auto Sales
430 Roommate
360 Miscellaneous
310 Want to Buy
- 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, 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 law providing such limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, ramial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation of dison back call 841-7299 ask for new
FOUND. Men's watch at Sears of Nassau
call to sell. Call at cafe 3567
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are not available.
Y
100s Announcements
110 Bus. Personals
Create Your Lifetime
Interchangeable ground shields for the active/fun life!
Killer Loops
Exclusively at The Exc. Shop
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
Unique Silver Jewelry
Hospice, Pendants & More
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass-Downfort
Pharmacy Hours
Monday Thursday 8am-5pm
Saturday 9am-12pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
120 Announcements
COMMUTERS. Self Serve Car Pool Exchange Main Lobby, Kansas Union
Dog training classes with Lawrence Jayhawk Kennel Club 62 for 10 weeks. Wednesday nights at National Guard Armory. Registration 7 30pm 15 pm. (No dogs) Info call 842-6844
FRATS! SORORITIES! STUDENT GROUPS!
Raise as Much as You Want in One Week!
FOREIGN LANGUAGE Study Skills Program
Workshop on foreign language skills. Improve reading, writing, listening comprehension and conversation skills. Wednesday, September 15, 3:30-3:30 p.m. 407 Weston. Presented by the FOREIGN LANGUAGE Center.
Market Applications for VBSA MASTERCARD
for FLEX and to quality for FREE EXEC with MTV-SPRINT
PREPARING FOR EXAMS WORKSHOP
Tuesday, September 14, 7-9 p.m.
4025 Worcester Hall
Learn memory techniques.
FREE!
Offered by the Student Assistance Center
NEED A RIDE/RIDER! Use the Student Can Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union
PREPARING FOR EXAMS Workshop. Time management, memory testing, text taking strategies. FREE! Tuesday, September 14, 7-9 PM. Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
K-Unity is going to Winfield! Call Scott for more info: 843-8247
NEED A RIDE/RIDER* Use the Self Serv Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union
LEARNING A FOREIGN LANGUAGE WORKSHOP
For students of any language FREE!
Wednesday, September 15, 3:30
5:30 p.m.
4057 Wescoe Hall
Offered by the Student Assistance Center
DOCUMENTATION INTEGRITY. Student monthly deadline: 9/11/1979, 20 hr wktn. Items include organization of student information, assisting in the preparation of user-oriented documentation, on-line helpifies and manuals description of user education seminars and workshops, and other duties as assigned. To apply, submit a简历 to Angelina Harnett, Personnel Officer, Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 65048.
TUTORS List your name with us. We refer inquiries to you. Student Assistance Center
DEVELOPMENT/CONSTRUCTION CO. has part-time opening with flexible day hours. You must possess a current job assistance card and after graduation. Experience on HRM or Apple computers. Some accounting bookkeeping work required. Resume to O. Box 300, Lawrence KS 64165. Attn:
VOLUNTEER in THE FIGHT AGAINST AIDS
Training, Saturday September 19th. Call Beth at
800-257-4400.
WANT TO HIRE TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Visit Assistance Center, 138 Strong Street.
CHRISTMAS
SKI
JANUARY 2-16, 1994 * 5, 6 or 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT* $199
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK*
TELLURIDE
- FREE 1/2DAY
LIFT TICKET*
MUST BOOK BY 18151
SKI & BEACH
Sunchair
BREAKS
& RESERVATIONS
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
1·800·SUNCHASE
130 Entertainment
ATTENTION WEEK OF ROCK TANS The show is on Jimmy Witheris coming to town but his two shows on Sept. 27th have been moved up 1 hour to 7:30 and 10 pm. Get your Week of rock passes and Witheris tickets now! Liberty Hall will be open from 11am to 5pm giveaway. Remember all shows are 18 and over.
140-Lost & Found
Found. Gold watch outside Robinson w. inscription on back. call 841.719.425 ask for Rex.
smith and Sundyse on 9/7/9 Call 843-8901
Lost Prescription glasses in gray case. Cash
invoice $250.00
reward. Call 749-5041.
Red Bull Cars in format at Smith Hall. Call 866
Red and Blue jacket found in Smith Hall Call 865-2110 to identify.
男性卫生间
Brandon Woods Retirement Community is currently hiring wait staff for 1 a.m. to 5 p.m. on the weekends. Please call 703-624-1818 and pay. Must be hard working and willing to work weekdays and some holidays. Apply at 180 fauver roads, Brownsville, TX 76801.
Employment
CLEER
Part-time. WORK STUDY, position now available in Medical Records Department. Can work eight hours every Sunday, or split the time Saturday and Sunday. Salary range is $8.75-$8.42 per hour. Must present study eligibility prior to application to the hospital. Apply for work-study in Strong Hall
Bucky's drive in now taking applications for part-time employment. Flexible hours. Apply in person btw. 10a.m. and 5PM. Bucky's drive in 9th and Iowa.
205 Help Wanted
Courier helen needS 9-11. Answering phone and needing skills needed. Apply in person at alena's Alea Hospice.
CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING - Earn up to $5000 / mo = world travel Summer & career employer needed for US based job with more information call 1-263-614-6484 for ext. C/756 Delivery Drives needed New Companionhip Delivery Drives needed New Company帮忙
PN, as needed, position now available in our DP
area. Must have good working knowledge of
system systems. Must be available for all shifts.
Salary range is $6.64-89.74 per hour.
If interested in the above positions, please apply to the Human Resource Dept. Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
and a pay check too
Work experience
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
Do you need work experience?
Did you have trouble making the income you needed this summer?
Vector Marketing can help you
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WALK-INS WELCOME!
By donating your life saving blood plasma
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
Internships & Scholarship
NABI Biomedical Center
Expand your experience *Positions are available*
*expand* your experience at ERSKANS
*earbook* pick up applications at ERSKANS
*expand* your experience at ERSKANS
Keyboard players whined for variety dance band. Good Money 789, Bad Money 789, Exp. MB 789, Group 789-1089.
Library Assistant for retrieval and photocopying
for $4.35 per hour. Flexible schedule 12-16 hours
week. Department of Medical Chemistry
Arbore 4020, Mgmt. 3644, 4905
Motivated District Manager Needed for Property Management Co.
Motivated District Manager
full time, experience preferred.
send resume to P.O. Box 1832
Need dependable care given for my 8yr old daughter, approx. 1hr, early eve 3 X wk, and possi bly more. Must have own transportation. Call 841 7068 after 6 p.m.
NANIENS • spend a year near NYC with a family who trusts “research” Call 1-800-858-1001, or email naniens@naniens.com
235 Typing Services
Mass St. Dell or Buffalo Bills the Smokeehouse. Previous food service and supervisory experience mandatory Start at $25 per hour. Future pay raises based on performance Up to 66 pts pay raises. Apply to St. John's Food Co. at 719 M-F 9:40 m - 4p (upstairs above Smokee house).
Position Available. A local business needs a person to do maintenance work including, lawn work, washing cars, cleaning, painting etc. Flexible and available on weekends or during some weekend hours. Must have valid driver's license and be very responsible. Within walking distance of U. For additional information and an
PART-TIME SUPERVISOR WANTED
Position Available. A local business needs a person to do maintenance work including, lawn work, washing cars, cleaning, painting etc. Flexible with any time and any day, some weekend hours. Must have valid driver's license and be very responsible. Within walking distance of U.S. for additional information and an online contact.
Rainier Montessori School is intervening for a
practical gifted girl with exceptional cognitive
gifted children with elementary age children.
She is one of the first of its kind.
843-1120 and ask for Larry or Phil
Receptionist Wanted! Hair Experts Design Team needs an energetic person to work full time in a busy salon. Typing abilities and customer service experience a plus. Please stop by to pick up an interview.
Summer's over. Do you need $8? The HOLIDOME is the applique place to work. We can help.
Students guaranteed hourly wages great
bond for good phone voice. Day-evenings shift
for extended hours.
Banquet servers
Restaurant wait staff
Housekeeper
Cooks
Room attendants
CC Desktop Publishing. Resumes, Cover Letters,
Firm Letters, Term Paper, Newsletters.
电话 442-893858
Tac Bell now hireing for full or part time day or evening help. Apply in person at 1220 W or 400
837-6625.
1-def Women Word Processing - Former editor transforms scribbles into accurate pages of letter format.
If interested apply at the Holidore 200 McDonald
Dr. EOE
Room attendants Maintenance Engineers
ABSOLUTELY EXCELLENT EDITING! Dissertation and research paper. No paper too large or complex.
University Information Center seeks student hourly who is motivated, familiar with KU and community resources, organized, computer literate, good communication, interested in helping other students, skilled at humor. Pick up application at ktuInfo 28600 Union. Applications by d. Sep 10
Work/Study position open in Speech/Language
Departments Apply in 100 Haworth or 2011 Job site
The University of Kansas Department Student Support Services unit is currently accepting applications for part-time tutors during the summer. Students will receive Math, and other areas. Interested applicants must have at least twenty-one hours of course work in the subject area with a GPAS or a better Tutors' License. Students must complete course content and teaching the strategies expert learners use to acquire knowledge, experience academic success, and graduate. A complete list of courses available on campus are available on request. Salary: 46 hour with the potential for regular merit raises. Application procedures. Complete the tutor application form. Call the student support services department located in Jaijayk Tower I or at Room 221, Allen Fieldhouse. Hours of application are 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Monday through Thursday. The Universito campus. Reasonable rent. One female room,
smoker. Please call 842-6089
3 bedroom. 2 bath available at 1 sublease for
$6 a month. Call 841-8414, leave message.
1 bbfm. 2 bfth, furnished unit with balcony.
Mail to: Office of Facilities, backyard,
hardwood floors, C/A 72-0542 or 829-0299
Studio facility available Close to campus.
Roommates required. Heat and heat are
paid, quiet building. Call 841-3190
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED: Rape Victim Survivor Service-ASAP is seeking volunteers. Applications avail at Headquarters Counseling Center, KU Student Assistance Center and Haskell Institute.
Are you Makek 'the grade
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your typing needs
call Makek 'the grade' at 865-2853
Children home daycare. Full-time openings
and drop-ins welcome. Hrs. 7:30am-8:30pm, M-P
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense For free consultation call
225 Professional Services
For a confidential, caring friend, call us
Waters were to listen and talk with you.
305 For Sale
Rick Frydman,Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
X
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
We have fun harboring mind and body. Learn to
Oh. Great for heating stress. Call Me at 843-9700
or email me at heathart.com
1987 Honda Hurricane 600cc red on white. Runs and
sports around $200.00 Call: 842-1400
300s
Macintosh repairs and upgrades
Friendly, Affordable, In-Home Services
The Mac Doctors 842-0848
1985 Honda Spree Scooter, cooler, low, lows
extra eau, cutlun A1 644 1863 or 843-4164
B&W 2 way wsprs DMS, Replaced woolers and
Mends to accommodate I500. Call Chad B82-2741
DONALDG. STROLE
Prompt almpaign and contraceptive services. Dale L. Clinton M.D. 541-9716
26" Women's schweitzer Word Sport bicycle excellent cond. Ridden $150.
1992 Gibson Les Paul Studio, wine color with gold hardware on a medium old, beautiful dress $495.00
Johnson Drive, East to Quivira 5928 Garnett, Shawnee, Ks
Fake IDs a alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
Beds, desks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice
998 Mass.
For Sale Microwave 465, Brass Full-size headset
& Brother Wordpress 465, Condenser
Headset 465
GARAGE SALE 17-18 Sept Neons Beer & Liquor Signs
Donald G Strole Sally G Kelsey 16 East13th 842-1133
For Sale: Student Football tickets
Must Call West offer, 811-6270
For Sale: Student Football ticker
Must Sell-Best offer: 841-6370
Men's Schwinn Crisscross min. bike 21 speed, 18
incentiles. Excellent price $20 or buy offer, 841
Pair, infinity Studio Monitor 152 Home Speakers.
Very nice speakers, well taken care of. Come with 3 yr warranty $650/pr or o b o 832-2899 or 842-9069.
IBM Select II electric typewriter for all in working condition. Call (91) 342-1928, if not皂房
in use.
One way ticket to Boston via Cincinnati, must be
earned from September 10 or best offer at Mail
at RS 8256.
340 Auto Sales
81 Suzuki GS250 T Good cond. $300 b o b Call 965-
87 Cavalier, Auto, cruise, AC, PS, sunroof, Ken
Wood Storm, $3000 841-286-Stone
7978 Calica 85 miles. Excellent condition. New
**DVD**
1979 Kabuki, 6dr. auto, a/c, $/¥ 500; Call Deborah at
1852 720-200-1266
843-5330 leave machine on machine
Volvo VDL great, dcnl new, breaks, new tires.
[1830 Valvo DL, great cond, new breaks, new tires,
1985 KAWA 600R Ninja Trick paint, plenty of extra
paper 985-065-017
360 Miscellaneous
Cheetis tickets: 4 Broncos, 2 Raiders, 4 Bengals, 10 Packers, 4 Bears, 6 Bills, and 4 Seahawks. Best offer. All are single seats but most are in same section.缸力 843-356.
SAGA
THE CHAPMAN
731 New Hampshire 841-0550
Buy · Sell · Trade
370 Want to Buy
LEVIS 501's, will pay up to $12.00 and $10.00 for Levy
the Jean Jackets 841-0546.
400s
Real Estate
405 For Rent
Over the Edge
SELL IT FAST IN THE KANSAN CLASSIFIED
Naismith Halls' services give students the competitive edge.
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
Front door bus service
24 hr. computer center
Fitness room
- 2 Bedroom, 1 $1/2$ Bath $425
- 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath $550
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
430 Roommate Wanted
How to schedule an ad:
Male roommate was at Sundance $197/month.
Water paid, furnished. Call after 7 p.m. 249-1388.
$265, utilities paid. 3 bedroom, fully furnished modern home with 2 bedrooms. For right front door. Call 842-8498.
Ads phoned in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
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Stay by the Kauai canteen between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on *MasterCard* or Visa.
Classified Information and order form
Female roommate to share new condo
burt r. No smoking in pets. Oct 11, 8:20p
$499.00
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The *I*-theory *l*-intersection *Dali*-Kanman. *11*superscript{19} *Slaufer* **Film Hall**_Lawerence_ KS. **6.6045**
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1990 TEN WAYS, INC. Dust by Cinema Press Services
"Sorry, ma'am, but your neighbors have reported not seeing your husband in weeks. We just have a few questions, and then you can get back to your canning."
10
Tuesday. September 14, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Individual recycling can help the environment
By Liz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
( )
Kim Kennedy, Midland, Texas, senior, is one of many KU students concerned about the environment who realizes the difference one person can make by recycling.
"I've been to a lot a lot of landfills and it's just kind of sad, all the trash that one person contributes," Kennedy said.
Traci Sears, assistant environmental ombudsman at KU, said people in the United States generated an average of three to four pounds of garbage every day.
"I think it's important for individuals to know that they make an impact on the total scheme of things," Sears said.
Although individual recycling efforts may seem small, Sears said they have a significant impact.
"It's hard for people to understand the connection between things." Sears said. "When each person does something little, it adds up."
Sears said that students who are starting to recycle and conserve energy should focus on the simple things, such as putting aluminum and newspapers in the correct bins on campus. Other measures include reducing driving time, using cloth lunch bags, turning off the lights when leaving home, shutting off the water when brushing one's teeth, and reducing air conditioner and heat use.
Diane Debinski, assistant professor of environmental studies, said products such as health and beauty aids, household cleaners and bulk foods could be purchased at local health food stores. These products tend to be less expensive because customers bring their own container, which
eliminates the packaging cost placed on many retail items, Debinski said.
Chris Stewart, manager of the Community Recycling Center at Wai Mart, 3300 Iowa St., said hundreds of people visit each day to recycle.
"The reason I think we're doing so much recycling is that Lawrence is an ecologically aware community." Stewart said.
Stewart said it was important that people begin developing a recycling system. Kansas landfills are already starting to close.
"It won't be much longer before we don't have a choice to recycle," Stewart don't said. "We'll have to."
Sears said books such as "The Recycler's Handbook" by The Earthworks Group and "You Can Make A Difference; Help Protect the Earth" by Judith Getis, would help new recyclers get started.
Recycling tips
they are more efficient, last longer and use only one-fourth the energy of a regular bulb.
Buy compact fluorescent lights
■ Use a mug or sipper and refill drinks instead of buying new drink containers.
Use sponges, cloth towels and bags, handkerchiefs and washcloth instead of paper towels and bags, cotton tissues and cotton balls.
Get your name removed from junk mail lists by writing to the following organization:
Mail Preference Service
Direct Mail Marketing Association
6 East 43rd St., New York, N.Y.
10017-4609
Source: Diane Debinski
Bv Cheslev Dohl
KU students did not get a chance to voice their concerns at the first Governor's Conference on Housing and Homeless, which ends today in Topeka.
Kansan staff writer
Christine Knepper, Chesterfield, Mo., sophomore and head of the KU Homeless Coalition, said she did not find out about the conference until yesterday
knepper said that even if she had known about the conference, she did not know if members of the coalition would have attended it this early in the semester.
"I think it might have been a little above our heads this early on," she said. "We haven't made it to the governmental level yet, but we do have plans for the future."
future. She said the coalition plans to attend next year's conference with the goal of improving conditions in Lawrence.
Even though we're a small group, I think we could still contribute our point of view from the Lawrence area," she said.
The coalition is trying to organize campus volunteer activities this semester because the group is too small for much else. Kneper said.
Kathleen Thomas, executive director of Cornerstone,
a Toneke-based transitional organization for
working homeless families, said that few local organizations were represented at the conference.
"This was the first year for all of us," Thomas said. "Our main goal now is to work on getting funds in the government housing fund."
Thomas said organizations such as Cornerstone and the KU Homeless Coalition could help push legislation through Kansas government that would appropriate money for the homeless.
Tom Bishop, Kansas secretary of commerce and housing, said the main goal of the three-day Governor's conference, which started on Sunday, was to stimulate awareness of Kansas' homeless and to make housing improvements within the state.
Jayhawkers who are jaywalkers need to find crosswalk
Kansan staff writer
By Scott J. Anderson
Three KU students have been hit by vehicles while walking on campus this semester. KU police said that with a little caution others could avoid vehicle-pedestrian accidents.
Rozmiraek said students must be
"It always seems like we get more accidents in the fall," sad Sgt. Rose Rozmairek of KU police "Students have to get back into their old safety habits. It will usually slow down after a few weeks."
aware of Lawrence's definition of a crosswalk and the responsibilities of pedestrians which may be different than those in their hometowns.
Lawrence city ordinations define crosswalk as marked areas that connect sidewalks across intersection or other areas marked on the road.
reestrelens often have a problem determining who has the right of way, said John Mullens, KU police safety and security officer.
The city ordinance says a pedestrian must make an attempt to enter the roadway before a driver has to yield
the right of way. It also says that a pedestrian cannot suddenly leave the curb and enter the road in a way that would create a hazard.
According to police reports, that is what happened in the most recent vehicle-pedestrian accident. Christy Brown, Lake Quivira sophomore, was hit when she stepped off a curb on West Campus Road on Wednesday. She was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital, treated and released.
Brown was issued a citation for entering the roadway.
But drivers are cited more often
than pedestrians, for failure to yield the right of way. In the past three years, at least 58 such tickets have been issued, according to police records. In contrast, only two jaywalking citations have been issued in the same period.
Mullens said that the number of crosswalks has decreased in the past several years, but that the campus could handle vehicle and pedestrian traffic flow.
"Unfortunately, the only way to get people to use the crosswalk is to herd them toward it," he said.
Congratulations new members!
AmyGolzar StacyGrabiner Rachel Wilneff
Heather Teneble
jennifer Salomon
jennifer Small
Elise Snower
jennifer Steinberg
Rachel Sterling
Jill Strauss
Kelly Rome
Abby Weinstein
Erin Weiss
LauraSchultz
AmySchwartz
Ellen Babbitt
Dana Bass
Deborah Berman
Rebecca Berns
Danielle Bernstein
Michelle Block
Ami Bruner
Erin Korogedaky
Julie Dubrow
Lesley Freed
Ken Frischer
Marco Goldfine
Amy Coler
Karen Gamss
Heidi Garson
Robyn Goldstein
Heather Hencel
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Jill Misler
Rochelle Mblen
Donna Oved
Jennifer Pick
Kira Pinsky
Cortney Sachs
Amie Sandler
Hockenbury
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Massachusetts
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Danielle Bernstein
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8:00 and 10:30 p.m.
Friday-Sept.17th Bo Diddley
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car windshields, desk top glass,
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OVERCBIER
Candlebox with Gretta 18 and Over
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Wednesday September 15
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Love Battery CherUK Small Ball Paul 18 and Over
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841-7226
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THE FIRM(R)
Mon, Wed (5/9) 8:00
Tue NoShow. Ends Thursday
MICHAEL ABOUT NOTHING (PG-13)
Mon, Tue (4/4) 7:15 9:30
Mon, Tue (4/4) 7:15 9:30
Ends Thursday! OR Daylight On Friday!
DICKINSON THEATRE
841-8600
Dickinson 6 641-8000
2339 South Iowa St.
Primetime Show (+) Hearing Imbalay
Senin Cilaitan Aiteng Daisy Stereo
CalendarGirl P13(*4*35), 7.10, 9.40
SecretGarden P13(*4*30), 7.00
HardTarget R P9.45 only
UndercoverBlues P13(*7.15, 9.35)
ManWithoutFace P13(*4*20), 7.00, 9.30
TheFugile P13(*7.05, 9.55)
TrueRomance P13(*4*15), 7.00, 9.50
BEFORE $ 6 PM, ADULTS $ 3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CIZENTS $ 3.00
Crown Cinema
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1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5197
Needful Things $ ^{R} $
Hearts and Souls PG^13 5.96
Sleepless in Seattle PG 11.90
Fortress R^4 5.96
Line of Fire R^4 5.96
The Real McCoy PG^13 7.26
The Real McCoy PG^13 7.15
CINEMA TWIN
1110/OWA 841-5191
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Dennisthe Menace PG
TEMERIC TOSSON
Dennis the Menace **P** 5.8
Made in America **P** 7.0
Makes Love Go To Do With It **P** 7.9
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*crazy old Asian male seeking companionship with fun-loving Asian female who is short, like sports and enjoys playing cards and going out for frozen yogurt.* #45238
Common abbreviations
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You will be charged $1.95 per minute
Ambitious grad student seek attractive, mature N/S/单生 female students in the SWM. 25' 51" *115 lbs.* with short dark hair, hazel eyes on a clean dress and a political beliefs, am an impassioned classical tar virtuoso. I am especially attracted to women with intelligence, charm, wilt, and sagacity.
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To place an ad
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
1. Call or come into the Kansan at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
2. You'll place an ad in the Jaytalk Network section of the Kansan (up to 8 lines) and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people who respond to your ad. Your voice message will remain in the system for 21 days.
3. After your ad runs in the Kansan, you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages people leave for you.
To check out an ad
4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
1. Choose the ads you want to respond to and note the voice mail number in them.
2. Call 1-900-285-4560 (you need an off-campus, private residence, touch-tone phone), enter the mailbox number from the ad, and listen to the message. Or browse through all the voice messages in a category. You can interrupt to skip over messages that don't interest you. Voice prompts will lead you along the way. You'll be charged $1.95 per minute.
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached.
√
SPORTS: After a slow start, Dan Eichloff is kicking his way into the Kansas record books. Page 11.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KANSAS STATE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA KS 66612
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.104.NO.18
WEDNESDAY,SEPTEMBER15,1993
(USPS 650-640)
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
Students saw dean as obstacle
Architecture head's resignation a needed change, some say
NEWS:864-4810
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
A day after Max Lucas, dean of architecture and urban design, announced his intention to resign, some architecture students saw the move as an opportunity to correct some of the problems they said they thought existed under Lucas.
Eric Zabika, Wilmore, Ky. senior, said he thought Lucas' resignation would allow for greater change in the school.
"It will be a welcomed change." Zabilka said. "The dean's office wanted the status quo. He has a few specific ideas of what is appropriate and what is not appropriate."
Certain students have said that Lucas was resistant to dealing with issues in the school that they thought important, such as acquiring computer technology for student use.
The dean's office has been consistently unresponsive and unresourceful when it comes to
improving the facilities," Zabilka said.
Joe Stamberg, Olathe senior, agreed that changes had come slowly under Lucas.
"It's been like trying to move a mountain to get anything done in that school." Stamberg said.
anything done in that school. Stamberg said. Lucas said he thought students who had criticisms of his administration were in the minority among the 750 students in the school.
"I'll let the record for the school speak for itself." Lucas said. "The school has a very strong reputation nationally. We have a strong faculty. We have high admission standards by accepting only one out of six applicants. I'm very proud of the school."
Certain members of the student body and faculty said they thought Lucas did an effective job in maintaining high prestige for the school nationally and at the University.
"He's a natural administrator who knows how the administration works," said Wojciech Lesnikowski, distinguished professor of architecture. "He brought a lot of good things to this school."
oast coast. I go to work for Zabilka said Lucas needed to be commended for financing the school through hard economic times. "He does an exceptional job at promoting archithe tact that he's not an architect bothered me." Zabilka said. "Ultimately, I don't think he was qualified to be the dean of the school of architecture because he's not an architect."
"He does an exceptional job at promoting architecture and raising funds from alumni," he said.
However, some students shared the complaint that Lucas lacked the vision to run the school because he did not have a degree in architecture. Lucas expertise is in architectural engineering.
Perhaps because of his background, students said, Lucas did not interact with students on academic issues and activities, such as attending juries, where students' work is evaluated by the school's faculty.
Lucas said complaints about his interaction with students were uncommon. He said he made himself as accessible as he could as dean.
"I believe I have very good rapport with students," Lucas said. "I've made myself available. I consistently have students come in to talk to me."
The most prominent reason for Lucas' decision to resign may have been that he was dean for 13 years, the longest reign of any current dean in the University, said David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs. The average tenure of a dean at the University is five years.
Matthew Edmonds, University City, Mo., senior, said he thought the change in the dean's office would bring improvement to the school.
"There's been a feeling that things in the administration had to change." Edmonds said. "I want the school to change for the better. Fortunately, because he is resigning, things will change for the better."
Scott Manning, co-director of LesBiGay Services of Kansas and Lawrence graduate student, speaks about intolerance to those at a candlelight vigil in front of Wescote Hall. About 80 people braved the cold last night to protest a recent court decision that separated a lesbian mother from her child.
Candlelight vigil protests discrimination
Bv Carlos Telada
Kansan staff writer
Therese Martin, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, said she should have been studying for today's Asian art history test.
But attending last night's candlelight vigil on Wescoe Beach seemed more important, she sar
wescoe Beach seemed more important, she said. Despite a below-average temperature in the high 40s, about 80 people lined up along Jayhawk Boulevard last night to protest a decision in a Virginia court that separated a child from his lesbian mother on moral grounds. The gathering also protested the vandalism of the Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Dr., which had anti-Semitic graffiti sprayed upon its walls Sept. 5.
somebody just like me had somebody take their children away from them," said Martin, a member of LesBiGay Services of Kansas. "That scares me."
Scribes Inc.
Scott Manning, Lawrence graduate student and
Ann Weick, dean of the social welfare administration and a member of an anti-racism group, Lawrence Alliance, told the gathering that the two issues were connected and represented a common thread of discrimination.
Ben Zinnerman, professor emeritus of social welfare, lit the candles at one end of the line with a handle that he said he was at the first services held at the new Holocaust Memorial in Washington, D.C., last April. He said he hoped he would never have a reason to use it in a protest again.
"That anyone can enforce the law with their own sense of morality is very frightening," he said.
never had to mention it. I'd rather keep it just as a memoir, perhaps in a museum, so people can say, What is that? What was wrong with those people?" he said.
co-director of the group, told the group before the candle lighting that the court decision affected all gay and lesbian students.
The group then stood single-file along Jayhawk Boulevard. They then began lighting the candles, starting and passing the flame from both ends of the line. They cupped their hands over the burning wicks to keep the cold breeze from extinguishing them.
This group here tonight is a wonderful reflection of the goals of the Alliance, she said. "If we're going to stand against racism and bigotry, we're going to have to stand together."
it's uscrimination here against gays and lesbians," she said. "I don't think this meeting is just for gays and lesbians. It's for fighting any sort of discrimination that exists."
Branka Gruber, Baijulakua, Bosnia, freshman, said that discrimination was the root of the problems in her country. Bosnia has been besieged by renewed ethnic strife in recent years.
While some passers-by showed support, others told the group to read the Bible.
Hispanic Heritage Month Activities
For Sept. 15 - 20
'EL GRITO DE DOLORES'
Celebrating the Independence Day of Mexico and the Central American Republics
Wednesday, Sept. 15
Kansas Union Ballroom
7:00- 10:00 p.m.
Proclamation given by Gov. Joan Finney
Friday, September 17
Capitol Rotunda, Topeka
Nopn
Mexico
'Flamenco Performance by Zambra Gitana Monday, Sept. 20 Kansas Union
KANRAN
Flower Emblem
HALO to celebrate Hispanic heritage
Bv Donella Hearne
Kansan staff writer
One hundred eighty-three years ago today, Father Dolores called out to the lower classes of Mexico. His cry was for independence from Spanish oppression.
That first cry sparked a revolution that lasted 11 years and ended with a free Mexico.
Tonight at 7 at the Kansas Union Ballroom, the Hispanic-American Leadership Organization will begin celebrating the independence of Mexico and the Central American Republics with a re-enactment of the cry for independence.
The celebration begins Hispanic Heritage Month, which lasts until Oct. 15. Enrique Torres, assistant director of the Office of Minority Affairs, said Hispanic Heritage Month was meant to raise awareness of Hispanic culture in America. But he stressed that the events of the month were not only for Hispanics.
"It's not a Hispanic celebration, it's an American celebration," Torres said. "It's a celebration for everyone."
The theme HALO has chosen this year is "United by a Culture." Sandra Olivas, chair of Hispanic Heritage Month, said HALO wanted to especially dedicate the month to the memory of Cesar Chavez, former president of United Farmworkers of America who died last year.
Convas sand Chavez' dedication to the fight to reduce chemicals used in farming was admirable because he
Hispanic Heritage Month
did it out of concern for everyone.
"He was not fighting just for Hispanics," she said, "He was fighting for everyone. Everyone eats grapes and fruits. He fought so we could all have fruits and vegetables without harmful chemicals."
Chavez was the keynote speaker for Hispanic Heritage Month three years ago. It was the first time HALO organized events for the month.
"The people here at the University are the next leaders of the country." Olivas said. "If they're familiar with Hispanic culture, they will be able to work better with Hispanics."
Along the same lines, Olivas said she thought it was especially important for college students to learn more about Hispanic culture.
Octavio Hinojosa, president of HALO, said the purpose of this month's events is to provide students with more information about Hispanic culture.
"Hispanic culture is fast becoming an element in this country," Hojosja said. "Students need to learn more about it."
"The events this month are geared for people who haven't been exposed to as much Hispanic culture and for Hispanics to rediscover themselves."
The Associated Press
Regents member: Repair study needs financing
TOPEKA — A member of the Kansas Board of Regents said yesterday that the Legislature needed to come up with an alternative way of financing building construction in the state's university system, contending that the present method was inadequate.
"It's something that has to be addressed," Regent Frank Sabatini of Topeka told the Joint Committee on Building Construction.
Presently, the state imposes a 1.5 mill property tax levy statewide, with 1 mill going to the Regents' educational building fund and the rest going to state hospitals.
The net income for the educational building fund in the 1995 fiscal year is projected to be about $18.5 million,
write the capital improvement request for that year is expected to be about $35.1 million.
"The funding is inadequate for the size of the universities we have," Sabatin said. "We're just putting our heads in the sand if we don't look at it."
Warren Corman, interim executive director for the Regents, presented the committee with an outline for $292.5 million worth of projects, including $64 million in major remodeling, $123 million in new construction and $74.1 million in rehabilitation and repair.
"This is a staggering sum but it is something we have to deal with," Cornan said. "Every campus has a serious need for extensive remodeling, additions and some new construction."
INSIDE
Creative break
William Tuttle, professor of history and American studies, is taking the semester off—and he's busier than ever. He has a new book, "Daddy's Gone to War," and he is spending his days researching his next book.
PETER E. BARRINGTON
Page 9.
Case centered on the constitutionality of casino gambling
By Kathleen Stolle
When representatives for Attorney General Bob Stephan and Gov. Joan Finney face off before the Kansas Supreme Court today, Genevieve Scanlan plans to catch the action live.
Kansan staff writer
"It's something I've been following throughout the summer," said Scanlan, Belvue law student.
Oral arguments in the state's controversial Indian gambling issue will be broadcast live throughout the state today, from 1:30 to 3 p.m. KU students can watch the
proceedings at Frontier Room in the Burge Union. Seating, limited to 100, is available on a first-come, first-served basis.
"It's interesting because it's the AG fighting against the governor, and it's also an Indian issue," Scanlan said.
The case focuses on the constitutionality of gambling on American Indian reservations in Kansas. In 1866 Kansans voted to amend the state constitution to allow the state to own and operate a lottery. Two years later the federal Indian Gambling Regulatory Act was enacted. The act states that casino-type gambling is allowable on American Indian lands only if located in a state that permits that style of gambling.
Finney supports gambling on American Indian land and has clashed with the state legislature about the issue. Last spring the
The state argues that the amendment to the constitution allows only for a state-operated lottery, not casino gambling.
The governor maintains that the amendment allows state-operated casino-type gambling, and therefore, under the gaming act, American Indians should be allowed to operate the gambling as well.
However, Levy said that he thought Stephan's focus on the law of the Kansas Constitution was misdirected.
state senate passed a resolution requiring Stephan to file a lawsuit. The suit questions whether the amendment allows for casinotype gambling.
"This is an example of the three jurisdictions overlap," said Rick Levy, professor of law, referring to the federal, state and tribal jurisdictions.
"If they want to try to stop this, they're going to have to tackle the federal law itself," he said.
Levy said the attorney general could challenge the constitutionality of the regulatory act on the grounds that it interferes with the state's sovereignty.
Typically, the Supreme Court takes about four to six weeks to discuss a case and write opinions before filing a decision, according to the Kansas Office of Judicial Administration.
Mitch Ghodstinat, Pittsburg law student, said he thought the broadcast was a good idea.
"I think it's good for people to understand where the law comes from and how it's developed," he said. "People think it comes from attorneys."
2
Wednesday, September 15, 1993
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ON CAMPUS
THE KU Student Alumni Association will hold a membership drive from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. today in front of Wescock Hall. For more information, call 864-4760.
The School of Education Student Organization will hold a brown-bag lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. today in 105 Bailey Hall. For more information, contact Nan Harper at 864-3726.
OARS: Nontraditional Student Organization will hold a brown-bag lunch from 1 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at Alcove G in the Kansas University. For more information, contact Gerri Vernon at 864-7317.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will have a salad luncheon at 11:30 a.m. and a lecture following at noon today at ECM, 1204 Oread Ave. Reservations for the luncheon are $3.50. For more information, call Thad Holmberg at 843-4933.
■ The Student Assistance Center will sponsor a "Learning a Foreign Language" workshop from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. today in 4057 Wesson Hall.
The Office of Study Abroad will hold an informational meeting for students interested in studying in French-speaking countries at 4 p.m. in today 410 Wescoe Hall.
The KU Gamers and Role Players will meet from 5:30 to 10 tonight on the third floor of the Burge Union. For more information, call 864-7316.
The KU German Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at the Free State Brewing Company, Inc., 636 Massachusetts. For more information, call Adrienne at 842-3456.
BIOLOGY • CALCULUS • CHEMISTRY • ECONOMICS • PHYSICS • STATISTICS
today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Amy Trainer at 841-4484.
KU.N.O.R.M.L will meet from 7 to 9 tonight in the Ijawk Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kenda Sessions at 843-2566.
KU Environs will meet at 6 p.m.
The KU Ad Club will meet at 7 tonight in 100 Stauffer-Flint Hall. For more information, contact Wade Baxter at 749-7487 or Ed Schager at 844-4358.
The Pre-Physical Therapy Club will meet at 7 tonight in the first-floor conference room at Watkins Memorial Health Center. For more information, contact Tamara Fifer at 749-1786.
Students Tutoring for Literacy will meet at 7 tonight at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 841-5973.
The KU Sailing Club will hold an officer election meeting at 7:30 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Valerie at 865-1899.
The Asian-American Student Union will meet at 7:30 tonight in 100 Smith Hall. For more information, call Arthur Chiu at 823-8332.
Watkins Memorial Health Center will sponsor an eating-disorders support group meeting from 7:30 to 8:30 tonight in the second-floor conference room at Watkins. For more information, call Sarah Kirk at 864-4121.
F. A.C.T.S. will meet at 8 tonight at the first-floor conference room in Watkins Memorial Health Center.
The University Dialy Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Staircase-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are邮挂 through the student activity fee.
**Postmaster:** Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119
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Wichita: 71'/50'
Weather around LAWRENCE: 72°/45° Kansas City: 70°/48' the country:
Omaha: 69 X43
St. Louis: 66'/52"
Tulsa: 70°/54°
TODAY
Tomorrow | Friday
Sunny
Sunny Cloudy
Mostly sunny, east winds 5-10 mph
Sunny
Party cloudy, light southerly winds
High: 75'
Low: 53'
High: 72° Low: 45°
CORRECTION
A story on Page 3 of Monday's Kansan contained several errors. William Edmo is a Blackfeet Indian from Browning, Mont., and a Haskell
Indian Nations University sophomore. Steve Quoeton is a Haskell sophomore.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
HOW TO REACH US
Joe Harder, Managing Editor for News
Call 864-4810 for the newsroom:
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1) Each individual is required to supply their own clubs and balls.
2) Tee time is forift time! Be ready to play 15 prior to tee time.
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Tee Times start at 8:00am. The Orchards Golf Course is located
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The University of Oklahoma Fourteenth Annual Festival of Books for Young People Saturday, October 2,1993 Oklahoma Memorial Ballroom
Guest speakers
David Wisner — Respondent of the Caldwell Medal for Tuesday in 1992 and the
Medal for Free Fall
Guest speakers:
*Phyllis Naylor* - Winner of the 1992 Newbury Medal for Shiloh the Children's Choice Award for How I Came to Be a Writer, the Edgar Allen Poe Award for Night Cry, and the Christopher Award for Keeping a Christmas Secret
Diane Stanley - Winner of the Children's Award for *The Farmer in the Dell* recognized by the ALA Notable Book List for *Good Queen Bess* and the Last Princess
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For more information call 864-3477.
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 15, 1993
3
Skateboarding, in-line skating on campus violates city law
By Christoph Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
In-line skating and skateboarding on campus could be more painful than skinned knees and elbows.
Anybody caught skateboarding or in-line skating will be in violation of city law and could face a $35 fine and an $11 municipal court fee, said officer Burdel Welsh of the KU police.
Roller boundaries
Skateboards and in-line skates are not allowed at the parking garage or on or within 1,000 feet of Jayhawk Boulevard (indicated with shading).
Spencer Art Museum
Adams Alumni Center
Kansas Union
Smith
Spooner
Dyche Lippencott
Lindley
Art & Design
Marvell Hock
Strong
Jayhawk Bvd Wescoe
Bailey
Flint
Watson Library
Twente
Blake
Science Library
Murphy
Military Science
Summerfield
Haworth
Dole Center
Source: KU police
Yet despite the possible fine and court appearance, people continue to skateboard and in-line skate on campus.
The possible $46 fine did not keep two juveniles from skateboarding on the newly renovated plaza between Dyche Hall and the Kansas Union on Sept. 8.
The juveniles had been skateboarding down the steps of the plaza and chipped the edges of the stairs, which resulted in damages of $1,000. Welsh said.
He said the juveniles were taken to a juvenile officer. KU students would go to jail if they caused the same amount of damage. Welsh said, because damage of more than $500 is a felony. If the damage was less than $500 a fine would be imposed.
When people are caught in-line skating or skateboarding, it's better to pay the fine than try to run. Welsh said.
He said anyone who tried to run after being stopped would be charged with failure to obey a lawful order by a police officer, which would give the person a criminal record and a fine of up to $250.
To me, it is just not worth it. "Welsh said
T. P.Srivanina, head of the University Sen
ate Executive Committee, said he was shocked when he learned of the damage done to the plaza.
"Do they care for anything at all besides their own pleasure?" he said.
Srinivasan said that the damage was bad enough, but that for it to happen to the newly renovated Union was horrible.
"It kind of turned my stomach upside down" he said.
Bruce Gleason, Seattle senior, said skateboarding could damage property, but in-line skating was harmless.
"There's absolutely no damage a roller blade can do." he said.
In-line skates, including the brakes, are
made of plastic, so they usually do not break anything, he said.
Gleason said the differences should show on the city ordinance.
"In regard to roller blades, it should be changed." he said.
Lawrence modified its city code of banning skateboarding and in-line skating to include KU's campus in September 1990.
Welsh said the University adopted the code because campus property was being damaged and people were being injured.
When people skateboarded in front of Wescoe Hall and jumped off their boards, the boards would keep going and crack the windows, he said.
Forum is on homosexuality, religion
Bv Shan Schwartz
Kansan staff writer
The University Forum in the coming week will feature two different views on the relationship between homosexuality and Christianity.
"Christ and the Homosexual" is the forum's topic today and next Wednesday. The forum begins at noon at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread.
The University Forum is a weekly presentation at which university staff and faculty speak about current topics. It is free and open to the public.
Carl Burkhead, professor of civil engineering, will speak today. Burkhead said he believed that according to the Bible homosexuality is a sin.
"Christ came to set people free from their sins," he said. "Homosexuality is no different than any other sin."
Burkhead said he would examine homosexuality as only one of the many sins
involved in the relationship between Christianity and the Bible.
"I don't put myself above a homosexual." Burkhead said "We are all sinners, and Jesus came to save us from those sins."
Jonathan Knight, pastor at Plymouth Congregational Church, has a different view on gays and religion. He said he thought there was a place for homosexuals in Christianity. Knight will speak at the forum next Wednesday.
"I think people's view on this depends on the way they view or read the Bible," he said. "I don't think homosexuality is a sin.
"Like any other sexual orientation, the way we use our gift of sexuality can be good or bad. But I don't think a homosexual act is, in itself, a sin."
Knight said that in his presentation he would explore how society interprets the Bible and how to view homosexuality as something positive rather than something negative.
Some homosexual students said that
although accepting their sexuality made them re-evaluate their religious faith, they did not think Christianity was incompatible with homosexuality.
Eric Moore, Lawrence junior, said he was raised as a Baptist and had participated in a Pentecostal and Christian charismatic religious movement before coming to terms with his sexuality.
"I was a part of the far-Christian right," he said.
But after accepting his sexuality, Moore said, he re-evaluated his religious faith. He said he now saw little conflict between homosexuality and Christianity.
"I think they're compatible," he said. "If you read the Bible, Jesus never said a word about gays. The concept of homosexuality didn't even develop until the 1890s.
"There are 362 admonitions about heterosexual behavior, which were addressed by Jesus," Moore said. "People should take note of those, too."
Signing renews Costa Rican exchange
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
A treaty was signed in Washington this week for peace and friendship — Lawrence was no exception.
The University of Kansas and the University of Costa Rica formally signed an agreement yesterday, making their relationship the oldest educational and cultural exchange of students and faculty in the Western Hemisphere.
"It's been a week of historic occasions," said Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, at the signing ceremony yesterday. "An important document was signed in the White House and now here in Lawrence." Meyen said.
Before signing the agreement, Chancellor Gene Budig said the number of students passing through the program, now in it's 35th year, was proof of its success.
"It's an agreement used as a prototype for other institutions," Budig said.
About 20 faculty members were at the sign
ing. Some of them were at KU when the agreement began 35 years ago.
Charles L. Stansifer, head of the department of history, said he remembered when the first agreement was signed.
"This was one of six exchanges that began around 1960," Stansifer said. "And this program is the only survivor."
Stansifer said that in 1958, Franklin Murphy and Rector Rodrigo Fazio, chancellors from each university, met in Chile. He said the two men put their heads together and decided to form an exchange of students.
Mary Elizabeth Debicki, director of study abroad, said that classes at the University of Costa Rica are taught in Spanish so KU students must have a concentration in the language. But she said that classes in nearly all majors from journalism to biology are offered through the exchange.
Stansifer said that 750 to 800 students from KU had taken part in the exchange program since its start.
Every four or five years since then, the agreement has been renewed.
KU students live with Costa Rican families during their semester of study. Debicki said that students usually are fluent in Spanish when they return.
Manuel Murillo, dean of international studies at the University of Costa Rica, signed the agreement in the absence of Rector Luis E. Garta.
Murillo said the agreement made a big impact on the University of Costa Rica, helping it to become one of the leading universities in Latin America.
"This opens our university to international students by providing them with opportunities to learn our way of life and culture," Murillo said. "Likewise, this allows Costa Ricans to learn about America."
The American and Puerto Rican education systems are different systems all together, both in culture and in disciplines taught, Murillo said.
"There are many differences that separate us as people but we cannot forget the great relationship we have between us," Murillo said.
John Garnham / KANSAN
John Cameron / MANSAM
Daniel Pfifer, foreground, Vanguard Products employee, and Jim Frost, employee of Young's inc., position an 18,000-pound concrete valve box behind Dyche Hall.
Boxed in
Riding bikes does not alleviate parking hassle
Crowded racks in some areas lead to damaged bikes, frustrated riders
By Shan Schwal
Kansan staff writer
Many students ride bikes to campus each day to eliminate the hassles of parking a car.
But at some places on campus during the day, students find that parking their bike can be a hassle as well.
Even facilities operations director Mike Richardson, whose department is responsible for maintaining most bike racks on campus, agreed that bike parking could be a problem.
"It's a mess," Richardson said. "But right now, there is no mechanism to fund bike racks on campus. I wish there was, because we need them."
Facilities operations does have some portable bike racks, he said, which can be moved around to meet the needs in areas typically overcrowded with bikes.
But some students prefer not to use the portable racks because they say it is difficult to properly lock up the bike.
"These are a pain to use," said Julie Cline, Park Ridge, Ill., senior, as she locked her bike to one of the portable racks outside Wescoe Hall. "I don't know who designed them, but they don't work very well."
Cline said the most crowded areas were around Wescoe and the Kansas Union.
The crowded rocks also may lead to a damaged bicycle. Jeremiah Johnson, Wichita sophomore, said his bike was damaged last month while it was locked up in front of the Union.
"I had one of my spokes taken out," Johnson said. "It looked like someone got their pedal caught in my tire and just yanked it."
Johnson said that since his bike was damaged, he tried to park his bike in more open areas.
Richardson said bikes were occasionally towed off campus if they blocked stairways or building ramps. He said facilities operations would determine if a bike was actually obstructing a passageway if supervisors spotted it on campus or if they received a complaint.
"I've locked it to trees and shed sighs, no
suicide. I can't help the end of a rack so no
could it hit me."
The only law controlling bike parking on campus comes from a Lawrence municipal ordinance, which prohibits bike parking "in such a manner as to obstruct or endanger pedestrians or vehicular traffic."
Richardson said that the lock would be cut under police supervision and the bike removed from campus and impounded by a towing company.
Amy Baguyos, Overland Park junior, said she often locked her bike to the guard rails between Wescoe and Malot halls.
naguyos said, "I don't know if those are bike racks, or I park there anyway."
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From K-Unity & Unity of Lawrence 843-8832 416 Lincoln
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Panel Discussions: 9-12p.m.
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Law Fair:
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For information, call 864-4371.
Paid for by Student Senate
4
Wednesday, September 15, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
THE ISSUE
The University of Kansas women's studies program is having a speak-out on sexual harassment, Oct. 5, 1993, in front of the Kansas Union.
THE BACKGROUND
The women's studies program is collecting anonymous testimonials concerning experiences with sexual harassment for a speak-out. These testimonials are due by Sept. 20 and will be presented in hopes of educating the KU community of the definitions, extent and effects of sexual harassment.
THE OPINION
Sexual harassment talks aim to educate
The sexual harassment speak-out is a valuable opportunity for members of the University to express their concerns about this dehumanizing crime.
With some crimes, it is difficult to detect how many times they occur.
Sexual harassment, which includes sexist comments, sexual threats and rape, is one such crime. Until recently, this crime had attained social tolerance, it was so rarely reported or investigated. It is because of education and exposure that sexual harassment is finally being viewed as a crime which subjugates human beings.
Recent graffiti displays on campus have targeted such female subjugation. Defacing campus property is an unacceptable and counterproductive method of change, but the graffiti, which includes such pleas as "Stop raping," is a strong indication of the frustration of women today.
Sexual harassment is not going to subside until people are educated about its effects on the victims. Anyone with an experience to share, whether male or female, should submit a testimonial for the speak-out.
Accounts of sexual harassment such as the Clarence Thomas confirmation hearings and the recent dismissal of KU law professor Emil Tonkovich have inundated the media, but the quest for awareness is far from over. Members of the KU community should take steps toward eradicating this crime by either participating in or attending the speak-out.
EISHA TIERNEY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Support Clinton's plan to reinvent government
President Bill Clinton's plan to reinvent government is long overdue and should be implemented as soon as possible. If all goes well, it will not suffer the same fate as Reagan's mid-1980s Grace Commission, which offered recommendations to eliminate more than $400 billion in government waste but was given no power to implement solutions.
Vice President Al Gore has suggested changes to three areas of federal government that together could save $108 billion. His main objectives included eliminating 252,000 public-sector jobs, consolidating government agencies, creating biennial federal budgets and empowering agencies by reducing regulations.
This initiative should be encouraged, although labor groups and members of Congress who rely on pork-barrel spending will oppose it. Through telephone calls and letters, we can persuade wavering members of Congress to vote appropriately to eliminate waste
Less than half of Clinton and Gore's objectives can be achieved through executive orders, so it is imperative that members of Congress stand behind the necessary legislation to reform government and reduce the federal budget deficit.
TOM GRELINGER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
KCTRAUER, Editor
KC TRAUER, Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUER
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
Editors
Assistant to the editor J.R. Clairborne
News Stacy Friedman
Editorial Territyn McCormick
Campus Ben Grove
Sports Krietfogi
Photo Kip Chin, Ranee Kneeer
Features Erra Wolfe
Graphics John Paul Fogel
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
I loaded down my tray with not only an entree, but drink, dessert, and salad, mosedey to a table, and sat down to eat and reflect on my E's experience to date. I thought long and hard, properly weighing all the times I'd been treated nicely there, and settled on my opinion of our new cafeteria alternative: This place sucks.
Ryan McGee is a Worland, Wyo., sophomore.
As she accused us of conspiring to all show up to eat at the same time, I stopped listening and moved to the other cash register. The operator was much more sane and calm, and swiped my card with the same cheer and jollity I had come to expect from the Mrs. E's staff.
BARRY CUNY
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
marketing adviser
KEEP THOSE BLINDS DOWN...
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr. Ed Schager
Regional sales mgr. Jennifer Perrier
National sales mgr. Jennifer Evenson
Co-op sales mgr. Blythe Focht
Production mgrs. Jennifer Blowey
Kate Burgese
Marketing director. Shelly Muncey
Muncey Funco
Classified mgr. Janice Davis
Mrs. E's provides time to reflect living space
KEEP THOSE GLINDES DOWN...
UH,OH...
LOOKS LIKE
THAT POSITION
COULD COST US
$1,000 AND ANY
RESULTING
CHILDREN!
HMMM...
SEE WHAT
IT SAYS
UNDER
"JELLO"...
BRIAN THOMPSON
KANSAS
SEX LAWS
2003
EDITION
REMEMBER,
IT'S YOUR BODY
BUT IT'S THE
GOVERNMENT'S
BUSINESS.
There's no place in the world like the dorms. Not a day goes by that I don't have something to complain about. I don't always choose to complain, mind you. Most of the time, I either have something more important to complain about, or I'm feeling too jovial to be bothered by it.
Usually, I try not to say anything for fear it might annoy everyone else as much as it would annoy me if they complained. But last Thursday was bad enough that I'll risk it, for the sake of my mental health if nothing else. I was having a fairly nice day. My favorite class meets on Thursdays, and I had time in the afternoon for a much-deserved nap, so I didn't have much to say to the world — until about 4:45.
She also told us that we needed only one entree. No drinks, no napkins, no dessert. Also, we should run at top speed with our single entree to the seating area so as to make room for more people to do the same.
A natural disaster was not the reason my room was shaking and rattling and my books were being vibrated off their shelves, it was the stereo down the hall. "The guys down the hall suck," I decided. More accurately, it was the air displaced by the apparently massive speakers, which, had the waves been traveling in water, would
My mood took a turn for the worse when I was awakened by an earthquake. I began to curse the earth for waking me but realized how silly I was being, both for cursing the earth and for thinking there was an earthquake in the first place. So I stopped. As I listened more closely to the earthquake, I realized it sounded an awful lot like the Beastie Boys.
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and homework, or faculty or staff position. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be
Upon further investigation, I found myself still standing in the dining commons and still surrounded by my peers. I couldn't quite shake the feeling that I was 5 or 6 years old as I listened to the woman telling us we were the cause of the huge lines wrapping seven or eight times around the block because we took too much time deciding what we wanted once we were past the cashiers and in the actual commons.
Heyka's column wrong
This knowledge reserves the right to respect or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kawasan newsroom, 111 Stuart-Flint Hall.
have been classified as tsunami. This brought me back to where I started — deciding whether to blame my woes on an act of God.
Finding myself stymied by the question of where to place the blame — God, or man, or those speakers that suck — I decided to leave the whole ugly mess behind me and go to dinner at the new Lenoir D. Ekdahl Dining Commons, a.k.a. E.'s.
Normally, this is a very crowded place. Not a problem. I bring a paper or something to read while I stand in line. The people there usually work hard to serve as many people as quickly as possible, and they do it without a trown crossing any of their faces.
I was thinking about what a nice contrast this fast, friendly service would make to my neighbors' stereoquake, when I looked up to find myself in the middle of a group of small children in trouble. That was the impression I got, anyway, from the tone of the unsolicited lecture the
RYAN
McGEE
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The text is clearly legible and the instructions are clear.
cashier was giving us.
I am writing this letter in regards to the column titled "Watkins needs to improve services" written by Tisha Heyka. I felt it was my obligation to respond on behalf of the hard working and dedicated individuals, who work for the benefit of the students body.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
about Watkin's services
My first question to Ms. Heyka would be: Have you ever had to wait at a doctor's office before other than Watkins before? I also would ask Ms. Heyka if she had called and made an appointment? Watkins does take appointments and they do their best to get you in and out as quickly as possible. This aspect of
her amuse seemed trivial to me, so I will not spend much time on this point because Americans have grown accustomed to reading their favorite literary works while in the waiting room. Did I say waiting room? What a concept!! You wait in a room, thus the name waiting room.
Some students, like myself rely on Watkins because we are students, and are not covered under health insurance of any kind. For those like myself, Watkins is a welcome relief. I appreciate the staff and all they do to provide the best medical care with the bare minimal of cost to the student.
I would also recommend to Ms. Heyka that she stick to creative writing not "destructive writing" as her article was.
The most troubling part of her article for me is her misconstrued idea that the doctors at Watkins are not qualified. Ms. Heyka, you do not get your medical license from a Cracker Jack box.
Nine of the eleven physicians are University of Kansas graduates. University of Kansas Medical Center was ranked ninth in the nation by "US News and World Report" in
Vincent Francis Wildwood, Ill., senior
March of 1892. For Ms. Heyka, to suggest that our physicians are not qualified is to do each of them a great disservice.
GUEST COLUMNIST
WILL LEWIS
Male seeks an activist a mother could love
I was riding my bike home from campus the other day when a car with a bumper sticker caught my eye. All I could make of it at first was that it had the words "men" and "women" on it. I immediately knew that the car belonged to an intelligent and caring female. So I turned around to see what kind of wisdom this mystery woman was trying to spread. It read, "Women who seek to be equal to men lack ambition."
"Wow," I said to myself. "This woman has got it going for her. This is exactly the kind of woman I want to take home to mom. This is the woman for me."
I thought about leaving my name and number on the windshield. But that would have been too forward. The last thing I need on my record is a sexual harassment charge.
SWM seeks attractive, fun-loving woman. Activist preferred.
My alternate plan was to circle the block until she returned to her car. I could only take that for a couple hours and then my legs started cramping up.
I ended up chickening out. But I haven't been able to get her out of my mind, so I've been using my time thinking about things we could do on our first date (if I ever meet her).
My mom would be so proud.
I'll start out by pulling up to her house and giving her a couple of roses. No, too much femininity applied there. How about if I just start things out right by opening the car door for her. No, that was a really dumidea idea she's probably insist on driving. OK, I'll let her drive and open the door for me. I'm getting excited just thinking about this.
Gosh, I wonder what we'll talk about. Something interesting I hope, like, how women are so oppressed in this country (thanks to men like myself). Then she'll start getting really upset and convince me that I'm worthless. That'll be good for me. There's nothing wrong with a good character builder.
I'm sorry, I'm getting a little ahead of myself here. I've still got to find and meet this goddess. But how? I know. I'll get a bumper sticker that reads, "Male object desiring domineering woman who will show me my place in life."
After I convince her that I'm a sensitive guy, she'll probably want to marry me and be the single parent of our children. How delightful it would be waking up to her raspy voice as she sends the kids off to school each morning. "Bye Beyen. Bye little Jessie. I'll be home from work at 5, but you can call your father at home if you need anything. He'd better get that damn laundry done and clean up the kitchen. By the way, have I told you kids that I'm getting sick of him telling me I should let him go out and find a job? I don't deserve this."
All right, how much cash will need? Wait. If I tell her I'm buying, she'll probably think I'm looking for a little more than dinner on our first date. Good. No cash—I'm off to a good start.
Will Lewis is a Topeka senior majoring in Journalism and Spanish.
University of Mars
we at U 00M. in
search to bring
trends of "Generation
"How to get a
Hip haircut" or
"How to jump on
X", present
the band-
wagon."
First Place a Bowl Firmly
on your head. Tupperware
© is Flexible it comes
in a variety of sizes,
So it works well.
Now, shave the hair
not covered by the
Bowl. Hint: Get a Barber
with a Sense or Humor.
무서울로-
무서울로
GROW OUT TOP LAVER
1 week
Few Months
1 week
Few Months
GROW OUT TOP LAVER
1 week
Few Months
ADD a cigarette, and/or
Flannel shirt to add
that stamp of Authenticity.
Hey, Billy2, when did you
grow hair?
PULL into pony-tail so it
looks like a "coon-skin CAP"
ALL PART OF the
IMAGE, BABY.
by Joel Francke
looks like a com
D. CROCKETT
ADD a cigarette, and/or Flannel shirt to add that stump of Authenticity.
Hey, Billy2, when did you grow hair?
ALL PART OF the IMAGE, BABY.
ALL PART OF the
IMAGE, BABY.
5
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 15. 1993
5
Police say high-density areas have potential for more theft
By Scott J. Anderson
Kansan staff writer
Students living in highly populated areas should take precautions to ensure their safety and their belongings.
Just ask members of the Delta Upsilon Fraternity, 1025 Emery Road.
Just ask members of the Devil Upson Fraternity, 1025 Emery Road. Ten bicycles were taken from the fraternity house's basement during the Labor Day weekend, when many of the residents were gone.
Lawrence police have reported seven other incidents in the 1000 block of Emery Road this semester, ranging from minor property damage to car stereos being taken from parking lots.
Sgt. Mark Warren of the Lawrence police department said the amount of reports was not unusual considering the population of the area.
"When you have an area with a large amount of automobiles and a large amount of people who do not know each other, you have the potential for these kinds of problems," Warren said.
Any area with high-density housing, such as greeks houses and apartment buildings, are susceptible to this kind of criminal activity. Warren said.
Police are patrolling with bicycles and motorcycles in the area parking lots. Warren said. Police are also trying to educate people moving into these environments about securing their property and reporting suspicious activity.
"When there are a lot of new people moving into an area, people don't realize who belongs." Warren said. "They need to get to know their neighbors at least well to know what kind of car they drive."
Warren said thefts increased when students left for holidays and semester breaks.
"It's well known by the criminal element in town when these areas will be vacant," he said. "People need to be sure someone is watching their houses."
Kipp Vann, president of Delta Upsilon, said fraternity members made sure new members were aware of the potential for such problems.
"The same situation happens every year," the Austin, Texas, senior said. "It's just unfortunate that they took the bikes this year."
Vann said fraternity members were encouraged to keep their doors locked whenever they leave the house. The house mother and alumni see that the house is secure when the residents leave for extended periods of time.
Gates guard store against thieves
By Brian James
Kansan staff writer
The three Dillons food stores in Lawrence want to make sure customers do not walk out without paying for groceries.
So last week Dillons installed security gates in all of their check-out lines in the store at 1740 Massachusetts st. Surveillance cameras also were added in the two other stores, 3000 W. Sixth St. and 1015 W. 23rd St.
The 5-foot-high, gates are new to grocery store chains in Lawrence, said Larry Bulla, security supervisor for Dillons stores.
An alarm sounds whenever a product that has not been scanned by the cashier passes through the gate.
"It will assure us that inventory levels are properly being maintained," he said. "If an item passes through the gate
without being checked out, we will know it."
He said the gates' effectiveness would be measured against the camera's effectiveness in preventing shoplifting
Those results will determine whether all of the stores use camera surveillance or the gate system, Bulla said.
Donald Schick, night manager at Checkers Foods, 2300 Louisiana St., said shoplifting was a problem for all Lawrence grocery stores.
All three Dillons stores in Lawrence have security guards on duty in addition to the new security systems.
Checkers has undercover security workers watching for shoplifters, he said.
stimpaity, it said,
"This new system at Dillons might be slick, but a fella is still going to find one way or another to get something out of the store." Schick said.
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Call 864-5499 for an appointment... Walk-ins accepted.
Monday, Wednesday, Thursday & Friday: 9 a.m.-12 p.m. & 1-5 p.m.
Tuesday: 1-5 p.m. & 6-9 p.m.
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To place an ad:
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2-Women Seeking Men
3-Men Seeking Men
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Classifications available:
3. After your ad runs in the Kansan, you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages you receive.
Call or come by the Kansan at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358
2. You'll place an ad in the Jaitik Meeting Network section of the Kansan and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people to listen to your ad.
5-Friends Seeking Friends
6-Seeking Sports Interest
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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 Jaïtaik Meeting Network on the back page of the Kansan.
2. Call 1-900-285-4560 (you need a touch-one 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.
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NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
World Trade jury selection to begin
The Associated Press
NEW YORK—The judge in the World Trade Center bombing trial started sorting through a list of 5,000 prospective jurors yesterday, saying he doubted he could find anyone unfamiliar with the case "if I went to a monastery."
"Something happened at the World Trade Center." Duffy said. "Exactly what happened and who was responsible can only be ascertained by injury willing to listen to what the evidence is, not what the speculation is."
U. S. District Judge Kevin Duffy told jury candidates to forget anything they've heard or read about the case — even the federal grand jury's charges against the four defendants.
"At this point, the indictment in this case is good for making paper airplanes," Duffy told the first 50 or so jury candidates.
Security was heightened at the courthouse and at the Trade Center several blocks away, where six people were injured and 1,000 injured in the Feb. 26 blast.
Outside the courthouse, about 50 police officers stood around blockades. In the courtroom, U.S. Marshals stood guard.
At the Trade Center, extra guards were in the garage where the bomb exploded and a police officer and his
dog patrolled near the turnstiles of the nearby PATH train platform that was damaged.
The defendants — Mahmud Abouhailma, 33, the purported ringleader; Nidal A. Ayyad, 25; Ahmad Ajaj, 27; and Mohammad Salameh, 25 — stood and nodded at the jury pool as they were introduced by the judge. Ajaj smiled slightly. The four Islamic fundamentalists born in the Middle East are charged with conspiracy and face a maximum penalty of life in prison without parole if convicted. Two other suspects are fugitives; a seventh has been removed from this trial for reasons that remain unclear. The tree is focused narrowly on the
The case is focused narrowly on the
Trade Center bombing even though some of the suspects have been named as unindicted co-conspirators in a related case accusing 15 men of scheming to overthrow the U.S. government. That plot allegedly was to consist of murders, kidnappings, bombings and assassinations.
At the Trade Center trial, experts will testify about evidence gathered from the rubble, from defendant's homes and in a bomb-building storage shed that prosecutors content link the four to the conspiracy.
Jury selection is expected to take weeks. Duffy said the trial should be finished in three to four months.
Violence continues after PLO peace agreement
The Associated Press
JERUSALEM — Two Palestinians died yesterday in attacks on Israelis that injured one soldier, and gunmen wounded three other soldiers less than a day after Israel signed an accord with the Palestinian Liberation Organization.
The army said it would seal off the Gaza Strip from 2 p.m. today (7 a.m. CDT) to 3 a.m. Sunday (8 p.m. CDT Saturday) in an attempt to prevent anti-Israeli assaults during the Jewish New Year.
Some Palestinian and Israeli hard-liners oppose the peace agreement, and the Palestinian opponents have sworn to keep attacking Israeli authorities.
PLO chairman Yasser Arafat pledged to curb
attacks on Israel as part of the accord that preceded the autonomy押. But violence is expected to increase as Hamas and other radical Palestinian groups try to wreck the deal.
Alaa Najjar, 19, of Gaza City, carried out an apparent suicide attack by blowing himself up when the electric gate of a Gaza police station opened for a car, the Israeli army and Palestinian reporters said.
Adullah Shehaber, also 19 and of Gaza City, was shot and killed by Israeli soldiers after he wounded a soldier at the observation post atop the municipal building in Palestine Square, the army and Pales-Saheh.
In the West Bank, shots fired at an army jeep badly wounded two soldiers and slightly wounded a third, Israeli reports said. The army spokesman
office could not immediately confirm the reports.
office could not immediately confirm the reports.
In other developments, about 10,000 people marched for five hours yesterday in the West Bank city of Nablus in the largest rally yet in support of Palestinian self-rule. About 5,000 supporters also marched through Israeli-occupied Gaza.
Jordan and Israel announced they had agreed on a framework for peace negotiations in Washington, D.C., as reports sprang up that many Arab and Islamic countries that had treated Israel as a pariah were ready to establish ties because of the Palestinian autonomy plan.
Tunisia, the smaller Persian Gulf emirates, Zimbabwe, Malaysia and Indonesia were among the countries mentioned.
If You Missed the first,don't miss the second
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FOR MORE
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102 Sweet & Sour Pork $ 3.25
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207 Chickens (4) 1.95
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602 Gapic Spicy Pork 5.10
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702 Sweet and Sour Shrimp 5.5.0
703 Zzechwan Shrimp 5.8.0
704 Hunan Dbl. Delight 5.8.0
705 Spicy Garlic Shrimp 5.8.0
706 Kung Pao Shrimp 5.8.0
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901 Chicken Chow Mein $4.50
902 Chicken Le Mein 4.50
903 Pork Chow Mein 4.50
904 Pork Lo Mein 4.50
905 Beef Chow Mein 4.80
906 Beef Lo Mein 4.80
907 Shrimp Chow Mein 5.10
908 Shrimp Lo Mein 5.10
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882 Chicken Fried Rice $3.95
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 15, 1993
7
THE NEWS in brief
EASTER ISLAND
GENEVA
Croatia, Bosnia sign cease-fire agreement after heavy fighting
The presidents of Croatia and the Muslim-led Bosnian government signed a cease-fire for Bosnia yesterday and pledged to open routes for aid convoys. They also agreed to close all prisoners camps.
Croatian President Franjo Tudiman and Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic agreed fighting should stop "immediately and by no later than" Saturday.
Several previous agreements between the two sides have failed to stop the battles for territory that have raged for most of the summer in central and southern Bosnia.
The accord came as pressure mounted on Tudman in Croatia, where his troops and Serb fighters had been engaged in the worst fighting since January. Bosnia's Croats and Muslims also have continued combat.
Bosnian state radio reported heavy clashes yesterday between Croat and Muslim-led government forces in the central town of Gornji Kavuf. In the besieged city of Mostar, at least 10 people were killed in an attack by Croatian troops from Bosnia and Croatia, Sarajevo radio said.
Croatian state-run media also reported that Bosnian government forces killed Croat civilians yesterday in the village of Uzdol in central Bosnia. There was no independent confirmation of the reports, which cited varying casualty reports of up to 38 dead.
Serb fighters claimed to have shot down a Croatian army jet. Croatian government would not comment on the report.
Tension flared when Croatian troops captured two Serbheld villages and Serbs responded with rocket attacks near the Croatian capital, Zagreb, during the weekend.
NEW YORK
Airlines cutting fares in price feud
Major airlines are cutting fares up to 45 percent for those who move fast.
The industry — led by Northwest — scrapped a $20 round-trip increase Monday, then went a step further by cutting some fares nearly in half.
American, United, Delta, Continental, USAir, TWA and America West said they would match the Northwest fares on nearly all their competitive routes.
Passengers have to buy the discounted tickets by Friday but must travel at least two weeks after purchase. Trips must be completed by Dec. 16.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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I will generate a text based on the provided image. The text is:
"THE WEEKLY NEWS 1970 NOVEMBER 23"
The characters are black and white, with no visible text inside them.
Let's re-read the image carefully:
- The first line is "THE WEEKLY NEWS 1970 NOVEMBER 23".
- The second line is "(A MOMENT IN THE WEEKLY NEWS 1970 NOVEMBER 23)".
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ROCK CLIMBING
Singers at home at University
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
Japan resident Tamae Sekimoto considers Lawrence her second hometown.
"It is exciting to be back finally," she said.
Sekimoto is visiting the University of Kansas this week with 65 members of a women's choir from the Miyagi Gaukin Women's College in Sendai, Japan. Sekimoto, who is from Sendai, is one of the group's chaperones and a piano accompanist during performances.
She and Yoko Fuda, also a former KU student and a chaperone for the group, said they were enjoying their visit to Lawrence.
Sekimoto is also a KU graduate.
"I love the campus here," she said. "It gives me many memories."
Sekimoto, who received a master's degree in piano from the University in 1987, said she had not been back to Lawrence for five years.
1
Fuda, who studied voice at the University from 1973 to 1975, said the school was special to her.
"It is nice coming back to a place that you always enjoyed." she said.
Sekimoto said the choir schedule, which includes a trip to Kansas City today, has been busy.
"We've been going everywhere, and I haven't had any private time." Sekimoto said. "But it has been fun."
The trip, she said, served as a reunion for her and Richard Reber, a professor with whom she studied piano at the University.
Both Sekimoto and Fuda are music professors at the women's college in Japan. Sekimoto teaches piano. Fuda teaches voice and opera.
Sekimoto said she felt more comfortable expressing her views on KU's campus than she did in Japan. She said the women in the group seemed to feel the same.
Reber said Sekimoto was a very dedicated piano student. "Conscientious and hard-working both describe her well." Reber said.
"I came back three years ago and gave a recital," Fuda said. "After that, I wanted to come visit again as soon as possible."
"At KL it is easier to let your feelings be heard or be seen."
Tamae Sekimoto, KU alumni and resident of Sendai,
Japan, accompanies a soloist during a concert at Plymouth Congregational Church.
she said. "In Japan, that does not happen very much." The group is staying in McCollum Hall, the same hall Sekimoto and Fuda lived in while they attended the University.
"I've enjoyed staying in the dorms with students," Fuda said. "They're very fun."
Sekimoto said the halls had not changed much in five years.
"There are still many different types of students there so people can learn about other cultures," Sekimoto said.
Building permit fees to increase
By Tracl Carl
Kansan staff writer
KU students are not paying their fair share of budget increases, said Ron Durflinger, president of Lawrence Home Builders Association.
But they are contributing to the use and abuse of city services and public roads, he said.
"Students are getting a good deal on infrastructure maintenance costs because many of them are exempt," said Durfinger, who also owns Ron Durfinger Construction.
Last night at their weekly meeting, the City Commission approved several fee increases, including a 25 percent increase in building permit fees. The increases will raise an estimated
$478,000 for Lawrence's $48 million budget for 1904, which was passed in August. The increases will pay for storm draining and sewer improvements, road repairs, a new summer youth employment program and a part-time city planner.
Those other resources should come
from KU students, he said.
Durfinger said he thought raising building permit fees from 50 percent to 75 percent of the recommended rates in the Uniform Building Code was too much to ask of local builders. "What they are doing is putting $150,000 burden on the 450 home buyers and the handful of business who construct in the coming calendar year," Durfinger said. "I can't see the fairness in that in light of the other resources available."
Many KU students do not own homes or register their cars in Douglas County, so they do not pay property taxes, he said.
The building permit increase would generate an estimated $162,000.
Commissioner Bob Schulte, who is also vice president of Gene Fritzel Construction, said he understood Durfinger's concerns, but he still supported the increase.
"Much of what the city does is focused on planning and zoning," he said.
Commissioner Bob Moody said increased construction meant more work for the city.
IT WON THE AWARDS. IT WILLWIN YOUR HEART.
"It's more of an attempt to cover the cost of doing business," he said.
THE SECRET GARDEN
THE SECRET GARDEN
THE SECRET GARDEN
At the Lied Center
THE LION CENTER COMPANY
THE LION GARDEN
September 29 (KU Student Night) - October 3
Wednesday-Saturday performances at 8:00 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday matinees at 2:00 p.m.
Sunday evening at 7:00 p.m.
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office; all seats reserved;
tickets $35 and $30;
special discounts available.
To charge tickets by phone using MasterCard or Visa call 864-ARTS; or call any Ticketmaster outlet (816) 931-3330 or (819) 923-4545.
TICKETS AT:
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KU STUDENT TICKETS HALF PRICE FOR SEPTEMBER 29 PERFORMANCE ONLY!
Student tickets also available at the SUA office, Kansas Union.
Now accepting receipts from the Spring 1993 semester for rebate payments
Receipts from cash or check purchases are eligible for a 6% rebate at the Customer Service counters of the KU Bookstores.
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Ks. Union 864-4640
Burge Un. 864-5697
KU student I.D. required for rebate. Spring semester rebates (period 93) are available until Dec. 30,1993. Computer hardware purchases are not eligible. Other restrictions may apply.
Other restrictions may apply.
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store that offers rebates to KU students
The only store that offers rebates to KU students
people
By JL Watson Kansan staff write
he study is less than four years old, but it has the feel and air of comfort of one long inhabited. Rows of bookshelves line two walls, juxtaposed by a cross-country ski machine, an old couch, a wood desk, a computer and boxes of papers, many from his current project.
William M. Tuttle, KU professor and published author, holds a cup of cofputer and boxes of papers, many from his current project.
teens back in his chair and props his sneakered feet on a desk.
"My whole life is right here," he said, "g l a n c i n g around his domain." "Have everything in one room."
"Father's return was not always the happy return families thought it would be."
Tuttle did not have to look far to begin his research. He is a child of the war that changed so many lives.
The library is separated from the rest of Turtle's two-story house by a sidewalk wide
“When I finished the first draft of the book, I realized it was dry and needed something more, so I sent letters to newspapers and magazines, asking for other people to send in their stories,” Turtle said.
The letters began arriving in droves. One summer Tuttle and his fiance, Kathryn Kretschner, drove north to the family cabin in Michigan and took the letters, reading them aloud along the way.
William Tuttle
William Tuttle history, American studies professor
William Tuttle:
A new book
on World War II
and children
and an outdoor hot tub.
Tuttle spends most of the day in the library, working on research and compiling information for his writing projects. He is on sabbatical from his position as a professor of history and American studies. Far from taking a breather from his usual pursuits, he is busier than ever.
"During the war there was this image of home front unity, and patriotism. It was the 'good war'. We were fighting for a noble purpose, when in fact, kids suffered a great deal during the war," Tuttle said. "There were also the issues of anti-Semitism, racism and abuse. There were lots of lessons to be learned and someone had to set the record straight."
His book, "Daddy's Gone to War," was released in August. It recounts the effects that World War II had on children of the era.
Tuttle has kept and read all of the letters he received. He wrote back to some of the writers, asking for more information.
Tuttle said the purpose in writing the book was to tell intimate, compelling stories of how history works and aspects of society that had to be corrected.
"There were so many it was necessary for me to develop a coding system," he said.
"It was a difficult experience for some people," he said. "One man who had been repeatedly sexually abused by relatives and friends or relatives wrote poetry as part of his therapy, and sent it to me."
Tuttle said the stories he received were touching and revealed information about emotions during and after the war.
"Father's return was not always the happy event families thought it would be "he said
Tuttle's father, a surgeon, left when William was five years old, returning nearly three years later.
"I don't know how our relationship would have been different if he had stayed home, but there is no doubt that we lost valuable years," Tuttle said.
Tuttle felt like he never truly got to know the father who had left the family in Michigan to help troops halfway around the world.
He was determined not to approach parenting the same way with his three children.
"I think I had the same lack of information my father had, but I think I did a better job," Tuttle said, chuckling.
"The greatest reward of parenting is to develop and maintain a wonderfully close relationship with your children. If you can do that then you are a success." Tuttle said.
Tuttle also maintains close friendships with his students and colleagues.
One of those colleagues is KU history professor David Katzman. The two
co-authored a book, "Plain Folk", and work together updating their textbook every four years.
They have maintained a close friendship since first meeting at a convention in 1968.
"He has given me tremendous sup-
port and has really been a mentor for
me."
"One of my greatest memories is
See TUTTLE. Page 10
---
Jennifer Howrey Diggs, Lawrence resident, applies makeup before going on stage at the Renegade Theater Comedy Shop. She was preparing for Saturday night's performance.
THE LADY OF THE BIG BLUE CHEESE
Live from Lawrence it's risque theater
By Sara Bennett
Kansan staff writer
Saturday Night Live has never done a skit called Gynecology Today. Nor have they extolled the virtues of a huge vibrating sex toy. Such topics are too risque for TV.
But at the Renegade Theater, 518 E. Eighth St., these truly hilarious and irreverent topics are typical.
The Renegade Theater's East Side Comedy Shop is the best-kept secret in Lawrence. Tucked away in a tiny cinderblock building among the abandoned gas stations and cornfields that line the outskirts of town, the makehup 60-seat theater is easy to miss. But stumbling upon this troupe of talented amateurs whose raw and raucous comedy rivals Saturday Night Live is like stumbling upon buried treasure.
Founded in 1991 by New York-based playwright Doug Delany, the Renegade Theater is a not-for-profit troupe of about 30 people, most of whom have no previous theater experience.
"Never apologize. Never explain is the troupe's motto, a philosophy put to good use in their material, written by troupe members.
But who could be offended by a group whose tongues are always stuck just the right distance in their cheeks? From Flamin' Dave Koresh's Fire Sale to a sketch on Trailer
"Nothing is sacred," said Shawn Trimble, Topeka graduate student in religious studies. "We're an equal opportunity offender."
Mate Mac n' Cheese — "So your white trash can grow up like white trash should" — some of the sketches are racy and irreverent, yet stop just short of gratutiousness.
Many of the skits display a wry and sophisticated humor that is amazingly dead-on and always bitingly clever. In "Typically French", a trio of English women compare the shortcomings of their neighbors across the channel with Warner Brothers' Pepe LePew. In a skied叫作 "Young White Male Angst," a 20-year-old would-be writer exclaims, "I spend most of my time at the Prima Taza. That's where the artists hang out."
some of the best sketches involve local humor. One skit called the Phelpson places Topea anti-gay pastor Fred Phelps in the stone age. And in a sketch about a fictitious shop called "Simple Oats," a granula space-cadeted named Nurture proclaims that "Every day is closet capitalist day."
The Renegade Theater East Side Comedy Shop actors can afford to be offensive and irreverent in ways other troupes can't because they have nothing to lose. None of the actors gets paid, and the $5 admission charge allows them to break even on production costs.
"Our original intent was to have fun and do something different," said Delany.
The Best of 1-The East Side Comedy Shops 1-7 will run Friday and Saturday nights at 8 p.m. through September. Tickets are $5. Reservations can be made by calling 842-8808.
Hidden horrors found on video-store shelves
REVIEWER
BRIAN
WHITBURN
Tired of renting typical Hollywood flicks? Want to rent something different for a change? I have reviewed four! not well-known and low-budget horror films — all with dead bodies as a common feature.
The first movie is the Body Snatcher (NR), (1945). Directed by Robert Wise. 77 min.
utes. The body snatcher is a cabdriver, played by Boris Karloff, who steals cadavers for an anatomy professor named Dr. Macfarlane (Henry Daniell). The movie also stars Bela Lugosi (of "Dracula" fame) as the doctor's servant.
As the movie progresses, we discover an old stride between the cadaver-obsessed doctor and the greedy cab driver. This
The director of "The Body Snatcher," Robert Wise, edited the classics "Citizen Kane" just four years earlier. That alone should tell audiences "The
enjoyable horror movie was adapted from a Robert Louis Stevenson short story.
The next film on my list is the cult classic "Carnival of Souls" (NR), (1962). Directed by Lawrence resident Hark Herway. 80 minutes. The movie's evocative images were filmed by Maurice Rather, a cinematographer who was blind in one eye.
Body Snatcher is a first-rate film. I sure
think so. I give "The Body Snatcher" an A-
The film is about a pretty young woman
"Carnival of Souls" inspired later horror flicks such as George Romero's 1968 "Night of the Living Dead." Interestingly, "Carnival of Souls" was filmed almost entirely in Lawrence. Seeing what Lawrence and the Kansas River looked like in 1962 makes one realize that films — even low-budget ones — often create a record for the history books. I give "Carnival of Souls" a B.
who, after being the sole survivor of a fatal car accident, is haunted by ghastly images. She wants to get her life back together, so she takes a job as an organist in Salt Lake City. But, her lost soul just will not let her.
"Motel Hell" (R), (1980), directed by Kevin Conner and 112 minutes, marks the return of veteran film and television actor Rory Calhoun. Calhoun plays mottel owner Farmer Vincent whose famous smoked meats are made from humans he plants in his secret garden. Except for some cre
ative cannibalism, "Motel Hell" is not worth recommending. I give "Motel Hell" a C.
The last movie is a weird French film called "The Horror Chamber of Dr. Faustus" (NR), (1959). Directed by respected French director George Fringe. 84 minutes. The movie's original title is "Yeuens sans Vise," or "Eyes Without a Face."
The movie is about a mad plastic surgeon who kidnaps young beautiful women and experiments with their faces in his attempt to replace his beautiful daughter's scarred
The film's music was done by Maurice Jarred, who won a Best Music Oscar for "Doctor Zhivago."
The black and white "Dr. Faustus" uses white subtitles that are hard to read. But despite the subtitle problem, I give "The Horror Chamber of Dr. Faustus" a Bcalendar
All reviewed films are available on video.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
SEPTEMBER 15, 1993 PAGE 9
KU Life
People and places at the University of Kansas.
EXHIBITIONS
"Canyon Revisited: Rephotographing the 1923 Grand Canyon Expeditions"
Exhibit runs through Sept. 26 at Museum of Natural History.
"Contemporary Czech and Slovakian Photography"
"American Indian Baskets from the University of Kansas Museum of Anthropology"
Exhibit runs through Oct. 10 at the White Gallery in Spencer Museum of Art.
Exhibit runs through Oct. 3 at Kress and Balconies Galleries in Spencer Museum of Art.
Czech film series—"The Apple Game" (1970) 7 p.m. Thursday in the auditorium of Spencer Museum of Art.
"The Secret Garden"
Illustrations by Tom Allen on display in the Study Gallery Sept. 19 through Oct. 17.
"Internal Divisions: Photography Today in Czech Republic"
Lecture by Colin Westerbeck, assistant curator of photography at the Art Institute of Chicago at 7 p.m. Sept. 23 in the auditorium of Spencer Museum of Art
RECITALS
Doctoral Recital
E
Doctoral Recital
Lynn Trapp, organ, 8 p.m. Friday
day at Holy Trinity Cathedral,
Kansas City, Mo., free
Band Day
Parade at 9 a.m. Saturday, downtown Lawrence, performance at halftime at KU/Utah football game, Memorial Stadium
Faculty Recital
Susan Brasher, oboe, 7:30 p.m. in Swarthout
Recital Hall at Murphy Hall, free
PERFORMANCES
KU Theatre for Young People "Step on a Crack"
ple, "Step on a Crack"
By Susan Zeder, 1 p.m. daily Monday through Friday at Crafton-Preyer Theatre, performances for Lawrence school children only
"The Secret Garden"
Tony award-winning musical Sept. 28 through Oct.
3, with student night Sept. 29 at the Lied Center,
tickets $15, $17.50
10
Wednesday, September 15, 1993
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Man Without Face $^{G*}$ (4.20), 7:00, 9:30
The Fugitive $^{G*}$ (14.10) 7:05, 9:55
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UNIVERSAL UNIVERSAL ACADEMIA
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- HENRY & JUN
Tues., Sept. 14, 9:30 PM
Wed., Sept. 15, 7:00 PM
Thurs., Sept. 16, 9:30 PM
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ORPHEUS
Wed., Sept. 15, 9:30 PM
Thurs., Sept. 16, 7:00 PM
* A FEW GOOD MEN
Fri., Sept. 17, 7 & 9:30 PM
Sat., Sept. 18, 7 & 9:30 PM
Sun., Sept. 19, 2:00 PM
* MONTY PYTHON &
THE MEANING OF LIFE
Fri., Sept. 17, midnight
Sat., Sept. 18, midnight
All shows in Woodford Auditorium.
Tickets $2.50, midnight $3.
SUA Movie Card
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Fortress R*6 9.15
Line of Fire R*6 7.20
The Real McCoy PG*13 7.20
Dennis the Menace ®
$9.99
Made in America P-13
7.28 $9.99
Walts Love Got To Do With It ®
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MOUNTAIN FOR IODAY ONLY
Shop Alvin's IGA for SUPER SAVINGS Prices good Sept. 15 to Sept. 21.
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STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUK
THE UNIVERSITY OF SANBAR
and
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Student Union Activities
EX.C.E.L.Award $500.00 Scholarship
Nominations are now being accepted for the
EXcellence in Community, Education, and Leadership
One male and one female will be chosen on the basis of their capacity for leadership, effective communication skills, involvement in the KU community, academics and their ability to work with a wide variety of students and student organizations. Each recipient of the EX.CEL Award will receive a $500.00 scholarship.
Nomination forms available at:
- Organizations and Activities Office, 4th Floor Kansas Union
*SUA Office, 4th Floor Kansas Union
Nomination forms are due by the 15th of September at 5:00 pm
ENTERTAINMENT
For more information, call SUA at 864-3477
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
QUIPS AND QUOTES
Between 1928 and 1976, there were 1232 reported visitations by the Virgin Mary in 32 different countries. In that almost half-century, the Virgin Mary was seen in the following countries:
The No.1 country for Virgin Mary visits: Italy
1. Italy, 83 visits
2. France, 30 visits
3. Germany, 20 visits
4. Belgium, 17 visits
5. Spain, 12 visits
6. United States, 9 visits
7. Canada, 6 visits
8. Switzerland, 5 visits
From The Book of List:
The 90s Edition, by David Wallchickshy and Amy Wallchickshy. Copyright 1993
Tabloid roundup Women can't get husband off her chest
Sydney, Australia — Shattered bride Sandi Canesco couldn't bear to part with her husband Dustin when he was killed in a car crash, so she had him cremated—
Weekly World News
and implanted his ashes in her breasts.
The widow paid a European firm more than $3,000 to manufacture a pair of implants filled with a mixture of salt water and ashes of her late husband.
TUTTLE: 'He is someone I can emulate'
Continued from Page 9.
dent, studied under Tuttle.
Katzman described Turtle as outgoing and said he is a great historian.
when he took me around to meet people at one of the earliest conventions we attended. They had no idea who I was and went solely on his word. He was and is extremely generous."
Audrey Curtis, Hays graduate stu
ng but said he is a great bear." "He has a great ability to recognize autobiographies of ordinary people," Katzman said.
Curtis has made frequent trips to Tuttle's office, seeking advice. "When I leave his office I feel energized and ready to conquer the world," she said.
Tuttle stressed the importance of his students in his success.
"He was a role model for me as an undergraduate, and as a graduate he is someone I can emulate." Curtis said.
"I want them to know that they are individually responsible for the world
around them," he said. "I hope that they become involved in some way, whether it's political participation, as a part of the environmental movement, gender equality or racial issues, or something else."
For now, Tuttle is enjoying the attention his book has received from The New York Times and the Boston Globe.
"So far the reviews are favorable," he said. "Writing is a lot of fun. It's one word at a time, one sentence at a time, one paragraph at a time, one page at a time."
SHOOT THE UTES
2.2 MILE FUN RUN THROUGH WEST CAMPUS SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 18TH
9:00AM (Before the JAYHAWKS take on the University of Utah REGISTRATION:$5(T-shirt awarded upon completion) Runners may enter at no cost.(No awards) MAY REGISTER IN 208 ROBINSON PRIOR TO EVENT MAY ALSO REGISTER AT CHECK-IN
CHECK-IN-SHENKCOMPLEX SOUTH PARKINGLOT FROM8:15-8:45AM
SPONSOREDBYKURECREATIONSERVICES,208ROBINSON864-3546
THE YACHT CLUB
Lawrence, KS
THE YACHT CLUB DAILY SPECIALS
WEDNESDAY Margaritas $1.25
THURSDAY 75¢ Draws
FRIDAY
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SATURDAY- Yacht Shots $1.00
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Cheeseburger/Curly Fries and either a draw or a Coke $2.50 (refills 75¢)
CHECK OUT OUR NEW PATIO & OUTSIDE BAR
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 15, 1993
11
Eichloff corrects problems
KU
Doug Hesse/KANSAN
Senior kicker Dan Eichloff punts the ball during Kansas' first home game, against Western Carolina. Eichloff broke the Kansas record for most field goals in a career with 54 Saturday at Michigan State.
Kicker focuses on the snap, not the records
By Matt Doyle
Kansansportswriter
Kansas senior kicker Dan Eichloh thinks he has corrected the problems in his kicking that plagued him during the first two games this season.
The preseason All-America selection, according to the NCAA football preview, and three-time All-Big Eight selection struggled in the season opener against No. 1 Florida State. Elchof missed a 23-yard field goal wide left in the first quarter against the Seminoles and had a 27-yard attempt hit off the right upright in the fourth quarter of the 42-0 loss.
Eichloh has rebounded from his performance against Florida State, made his last six field goals attempts and set a school record for the Jayhawks. His 52-yard field goal in the third quarter against Michigan State on Saturday broke Bruce Kalmeyer's school record for most field goals in a career at 54. Eichloh added another field goal later in the contest.
The problems Eichloch experienced against Florida State were a couple of poor snaps and poor concentration on his part, he said.
In the home opener against Western Carolina, he missed an extra point attempt, breaking a streak of 60 consecutive made extra points.
"I don't see it much as a record 'cause I just think I got more opportunities to kick than he did." Eichloh said. "I'm more concerned with making my field goals than breaking records just because of the FSU game and the whole outcome of the kicking game during that day."
Senior center Dan Schmidt, who performed the snapping duties against Florida State, gave a high snap on the 23-year attempt. Eichloff said this threw off his timing and, ultimately, resulted in the miss.
Eichloff said he was concerned entering the season about working with a new snapper and holder, and that concern carried over into the Kickoff Classic. His previous three seasons he worked with the same snapper, Dave Marcum, and the same holder, Chip Hillary.
"I was focusing too much on the snap and hold, but now I'm just concerned with kicking," he said. "Van Davis did an excellent job of getting the ball down, and I just missed those
field goals. Originally, I came off the field thinking it was his fault when it wasn't at all."
Davis, junior quarterback, said the main adjustment he had to make was for Eichloff to feel comfortable with him holding the ball.
"That's a big adjustment for a kicker who's had the same snapper and holder for the last three years, and when you throw a couple of new guys in there, it'a a big change for him," Davis said. "My job is to catch the ball and
put it down. If I do that, then Dan's going to make the kick."
Junior middle linebacker Tyler Quast has done the snapping duties the last two games, and Eichloff has made all six field goal attempts. Davis said that was probably because a chemistry had been established among all three players.
people don't look at that being a tough adjustment, but it really is," Davis said. "We just needed to play together."
A breakdown of the top nine club sports budgets for this year and last
1993 1992
Crew $ 15,825 $ 15.755
Racquetball $ 4,490 $ 1,510
Kl Alido $ 4,020 $ 4,425
Water Ski $ 3,920 $ 4,893
Men's Rugby $ 3,108 $ 1,370
Men's Soccer $ 2,895 $ 1,070
Triathlon $ 2,770 $ 1,980
Women's Soccer $ 2,520 $ 1,560
Women's Rugby $ 2,380 $ 100
Club
A breakdown of the top nine club sports budgets for this year and last.
Club sports funding fluctuates
Source: Linda Mullen, Student Affairs, and Brian Robey, Sport Club Council Dave Campbell / KANSAN
Club sports depend on University funds
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
Without funding from student fees, the Kansas water-ski club could be riding the waves barefoot.
RICK Rosenengle, the assistman director for recreation services who is in charge of club sports, said he looked over the budgets to refine them before the budget hearings in March.
This year, Recreation Services, the administrative body of the sport club program, received $69,050 to help defray the clubs' costs of equipment, entry fees, contractual fees and payment for the assistance of referees and guest lecturers. The water-ski club received $3,920.
Before a team can receive money from this restricted fee, a budget detailing the team's expenses must be submitted to the sport club director every February.
At the hearings, a representative from each club team votes to either ratify or change the proposed budgets. The final draft, ratified by the sport club council, then must be approved by the Student Recreation Advisory Board. The budget ends its approval process after the Student Senate reviews the finalized form at its last business meeting of the spring semester.
women's rugby player Jackie Vogel said the council looked carefully at the expenses of each club and revised them so that the money would be well spent.
Senior soccer club member Brian Robey said he thought the allocation process was fair because the entire council, with representatives from each club, voted on all the budgets.
"Students are involved in every facet of the process," Rosenstengle said. "And they get leadership from the faculty/staff on the advisory board and the professional staff in the Recreation Services office."
If a club missed the budget hearings in March, it could submit a proposal at the supplemental budget hearings held at any council meeting in the fall.
Because a team's budget changes yearly, it reflects the need of purchasing reusable equipment such as boats for crew or goal-pod pads for rugby.
This fall, the supplemental fund, which is surplus club sport money, has $7,715. Linda Mullens, assistant vice chancellor of student affairs, said that $61,335 went to 21 clubs who attended the budget hearings in March.
"The money alleviates our costs," Robey said of the restricted fee's importance. "Without the funding, we would be wearing T-shirts and scrapy shorts."
Runner's choice to drop soccer led her to Kansas
Kloster, the oldest of five children, said that her entire family was involved in sports.
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansas junior runner Kristi Kloster made an important decision her freshman year of high school. She had to choose between playing soccer or running track and field for her Lenexa high school.
Kansan sportswriter
"I took both my soccer shoes and my track shoes to the first day my freshman year." sad Kloster, who has been Kansas' top cross-country runner in the first two meets of the season.
"They didn't pressure us," Kloster said of her parents. "They usually had to stop me from trying to do too many sports."
"I felt very comfortable with the coaches."
"I just loved all sports," Kloster said.
She said she looked at a variety of schools including Texas, Drake and Stanford but said she felt most comfortable at Kansas.
Kloster said the fact that the soccer and track teams practiced at the same time forced her to decide between the two. Her decision to run track led her to Kansas four years later.
Kloster said that she started running track when she was in fifth grade and had always been involved in a variety of sports.
Kloster said. "I also wanted to stay a little closer to home."
Kloster's first two years at Kansas had been hampered by a series of injuries.
"My freshman year I had a tibia stress fracture right before the Big Eight cross-country championships," Kloster said.
C
She also missed the indoor and outdoor track season that year with a fractured femur and was redshirted for the season. Her sophomore year ended with surgery to alleviate restricted blood flow in her calves.
Kristi Kloster
Assistant coach Steve Guymon said that Kloster was an intense competitor and that she had tried to run through many of her injuries. He said that intensity had helped during her recovery.
Kloster said that the layoff in competition during her recovery had been difficult, but it taught her to take better care of herself to prevent future injuries.
Kloster competed last weekend and prevented an Arkansas sweep of the top five spots in the Jayhawk Invitational by placing fifth.
by her strong start, it has not surprised her coaches or senior teammate Abley Achce.
"We're on a higher level than in previous years," Ace said. "Our times are closer this year because we're a stronger team."
Although Kloster said that she was surprised
Ace said that the strength of the team would probably preclude any one team member from dominating every race as had happened in the past.
Roster said she felt this team had the talent to win the Big Eight and compete in nationalists. Guymon said that he expected Kloster to be an important part of reaching those goals.
White Sox rally late, defeat Royals
n she sues healthy, she'll have a great year," Gumylon said.
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Ivan Calderon broke a tie with a three-run double on reliever Stan Belinda's first pitch last night and the Chicago White Sox beat the Kansas City Royals 8-3 to increase their AL West lead to 3% games.
Chicago, which won for only the third time in eight games, gained a game on second-place Texas, which lost 2-0 to Cleveland. The White Sox lead the third-place Royals by six games.
Royals R
Jason Bere (9-5), who struck out 13 batters against Boston in his last start, gave up six hits and four walks while striking out five. He was relieved by Jose DeLeon after walking Greg Gagne, who led off the seventh innning
fourth inning to take a 3-2 lead, but Frank Thomas' one-out double launched Chicago's seventh-inning rally. After Hipolito Pichardo (6-8) walked Ellis Burks and Warren Newson singled off Pichardo's hand, reliever Billy Brewer issued a bassesloaded walk to Kevin Ventura before Calderon cleared the bases with his double.
Pichardo went 1/8 innings, giving up three hits and three runs.
infield single, giving Chicago a 1-0 infield. Calderon doubled in the second and scored on Ozzie Guillen's triple, making it 2-0, but Wally Joyner's RBI single, Gary Gaetti's RBI double and Greg Gagne's run-scoring single gave the Royals a 3-2 lead in the fourth.
The Royals scored three runs in the
Tim Raines doubled leading off the game and scored on Bo Jackson's
The White Sox added a run on Thomas RBI single in the eighth and a run-scoring double in the ninth by Guillen, who had his first four-hit game of the year.
Notes: The White Sox are 1-1 so far on an 11-game road trip to Kansas City, Oakland and California. ... The White Sox are on a pace to hit 173 home runs, which would be the second-highest total in franchise history.
. Frank Thomas' one-out double in the seventh tied Joe Jackson's team record of 74 extra-base hits in a season.
Injury frustrates Kansas volleyball player
Kansan staff report
Frustration describes Kansas volleyball player Janet Uher's feelings of being on the bench. Uher has been fighting shoulder problems this season.
"I don't mind if I'm sitting on the bench because I'm not playing well. Uter, junior outside hitter, said. "But knowing that part of the reason I'm on the bench is because of my shoulder is frustrating."
Although Uher has been hampered by an inflamed right shoulder, she did get some playing time in the Kansas Invitational during weekend.
Uher said that with the sore shoulder, she was not as confident this year as last year.
"It feels so weak," Uher said. "I didn't know where the ball would go. I could not control it. I felt like I was starting over like a freshman out there. I don't mind playing in the back, but my good qualities are in the front line."
Uber's loss doesn't hurt the team too badly with freshman hitter Katie Wahle filling in, Albizt said.
Walsh started for the Jayhawks in their first match against Wichita State.
Quetz said that Uber had seen limited action so far but that she had played her position occasionally.
"If she wasn't able to play at least part of the time, it might hurt us more than it does." Albizt said.
Ironically, the injury occurred while Uher was trying to strengthen her shoulder.
"I have so much inflexibility in my shoulder," Uher said. "Last spring, we started working on the shoulder, and it got a lot stronger. It must have got overworked. The trainers said it will get hurt all year long. When I overuse it in hitting, it will get tight."
Albitz said that Uher might have started at the beginning of the year, but that now it would be competitive between her and Walsh.
"Katie is doing a really good job," she said. "But danet has great work ethics, and I think she'll come back strong."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Softball team uses fall season to fine-tune fundamentals, win
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Fall is a time for softball teams to work on fundamentals, but Kansas assistant coach Gayle Luedke said the Kansas team still wanted to win games.
Kansas' first fall game is against Wichita State at 1 p.m. Sunday at Jayhawk Field, and players are already excited.
I'm excited and nervous," freshman Jacque Wenger said. "I'm nervous about being in college and playing for a college as good as Kansas."
"They are an example to fall back on." Wenger said. "They are all excited about the season. They keep saying, 'Just wait until before the game.' That gets me excited."
Wenger said the older players have made an impression on her.
Freshman Heather Richins also said she was nervous. The combination of fall and spring schedules will be a change for her, but she said she would like it.
"I didn't play during high school." Richins said. "I just played during the summer so it will be a lot of softball."
Eight Fall Classic, scheduled for Oct. 1-3. There, Kansas will see all the Big Eight has to offer.
Luedke said the toughest games during the fall would be in the Big
"Oklahoma State will be by far our toughest game," Luecki said. "This will be the first and only time we will see the Big Eight teams before the spring. You get a very good idea of where you'll end up in the Big Eight standings by how you do in the fall classic."
Luedeke said Sunday's doubleheader with Wichita State would give the team a chance to control the game, such as replaying certain situations in the middle of the game. This way, if the defense makes a mistake, it can call what amounts to a "do over." This allows it to work on fundamentals in a way not available in the spring.
"A game's a game," Wenger said.
"Obviously, you get hyped up to win."
Even though the fall games do not count toward the spring season, Wenger said she wanted to win.
Kansas vs. Wichita State will be the Shockers' first game also. Wichita State coach Jim Maynard said he was looking forward to the first fall game.
"It's evaluation time," Maynard said. "We're using it to find out where we are.
Sept.19 Wichita State
Fall Ball
Kansas softball fall schedule
Oct. 1-3, Eight Fall Classic in Kansas City, Iowa; State Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State
Home games in bold played at Jayhawk Field.
"Playing a team the caliber of Kansas, you can see how your players will respond to that kind of competition," Maynard said.
KANSAN
One thing Maynard said Wichita State would face was tough Kansas pitching in senior Stephani Williams, as well as perennial Jayhawk traits.
"With Stephan Williams, when they have her pitching, they are very good," he said "KU always has a tough, aggressive attitude. They'll fight you all the way. And they always have good team speed. If you're not ready, they'll kill you."
Wichita State names its new athletic director
WICHTA, Kan. — Bill Belknap,
commissioner of the Southland
Conference, was named athletic director
at Wichita State yesterday.
The Associated Press
Before becoming Southland Conference commissioner in 1901, Belknap was director of development at the University of Idaho from February 1989 to March 1991. He was Idaho athletic director from 1788 to 1988.
Belknap, 54, will begin his duties, mid-October, university President Eugene Hughes said. He replaces Gary Hunter, who resigned in early June, less than a year after he took over the job from Tom Shupe.
Beklap also served as associate athletic director at the University of Arizona from December 1974 to January 1978. From 1965 through 1974, he held various coaching jobs in the Arizona football program.
Bellkup and his wife, Donna, now live in Plano, Texas. They have a son and daughter who live in Moscow, Idaho.
Other finalists for the job were: Victor Cegles, an assistant athletic director at Arizona State; D. Barry Dowd, senior associate athletic director at Oklahoma State; and Richard McDuffe, athletic director at Southeast Missouri State.
Darlene Bailey had been interim athletic director at Wichita State since Hunter's resignation.
Hockenbury Tavern 1016 Massachusetts
Friday-Sept.17th Bo Diddley 8:00 and 10:30 p.m. Tickets on sale at Hockenheim
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, September 15, 1993
13
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Classified Directory
Have you dined at The Castle Tea Room lately?
Reservations only:
843-1151
2025 Employment
2025 Help Wanted
2025 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
Classified Policy
1
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any admission for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on nationality, race, religion, disability, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing information in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1988 which makes it illegal to advertise any property color, race or religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin or an intention to make such any preference, discrimination of dis-
100s
Announcements
110 Bus. Personals
REMEMBER!
Costumes on 2nd floor for theme parties
and of course. Halloween. Come on up!
922 Main Dewown
922 Main Dewown
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Add professional polish to class projects, maps and posters. (up to 25 inches wide)
Howell Creative Studios
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WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8:40am-
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120 Announcements
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Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8am-9pm
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COMMUTERS Self Serve Car Pool Exchange
Main Loboy Kansas Union
ATTENTION ROLE-PLAYING GAMES Graduate student seeks other graduate students or professors to form role-playing gaming group. Please call 865-4301.
Dog training classes with Lawrence Jihane Kennel Club $25 for 10 meals. Wednesday nights at National Guard Armory. Registration 7:30 pm 15th. (No Dogs) Info call 842-6884
FOREIGN LANGUAGE Study Skills Program
Help for students of any language
through instruction in grammar,
comprehension and conversation skills. Wednesday, September 13, 3, 30 pm, 467 Weston. Presented by the University of Houston.
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Market Applications for VISA, MASTERCARD
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K-Unity is going to Winfield! Call Scott for more info: 843-8247
NEED A RIDE/RIDER Use the Self Serve Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
School of Education Students
Students who wish to teach student the spring semester (GCI included) must attend the student orientation workshop in the fall p.m. in 303 Bailey. This meeting is mandatory. Preliminary information is available in 117 Bailey. TUTORS: List your name with us. We refer students to you: Student Assistance Center
VOLUNTEER IN THE FIGHT AGAINST AIDS
Training: September 19th call list at hsh:
432-899-2750
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available
LEARNING A FOREIGN LANGUAGE WORKSHOP
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Wednesday, September 15, 3:30
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1057 Waverley Hall
Offered by the Student Assistance Center
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358
Ruth & Kids Floral
832-0704, 935 E 23rd
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130 Entertainment
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THE HAWK
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Found 1 - VIVIS video on the sidewalk between
Science & Mailot. B64-1414 ask for
Science & Mailot. B64-1414 ask for
140 Lost & Found
passive password on both OAuth and Tinker Stacked
passwords. To connect to your OAuth or Tinker Stacked
password, log in on Request Back to UDK, box #15
(if Hime please provide back to UDK), box #15 (if
Hime please provide back to UDK).
Found. Gold watch outside Robinson w/ inscription on back, call 841-7138 ask for Rex
Lost. Prescription glasses in gray case. Cash reward Call 749-5041.
Male Female
205 Help Wanted
Counter help needed Sat 9-14 Answering phone and basic sewing skills needed. Apply in person.
Brandon Wood Retirement Community is currently hiring wait staff for 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and the business will need employees with a job pay. Must be hard working and willing to work weekends and some holidays. Apply at 1348 firewall.
Red and Blue jacket found in Smith Hall. Call 865-2119 to identify
200s Employment
Bucky's drive in now taking applications for part-time employment. Flexible hours. Apply in person btw. 10a.m. and 3PM. Bucky's drive in 9th and 10th
Cash Caterers, Kansas and Burge Union's Catering Department. September 28, 1983. 8:15pm-1:00pm. $40 per hour. Come here at the Kansas and Burge Union's Personnel Office, Level 5. Kansas Union Building. Other dates available for reservations. Listings available at Personnel Office EOE
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Part-time, WORK STUDY, position now available in our Medical Records Dept. Can work eight hours every day, or split the time Saturday and Sunday. Salary ranges are $75, $82-42 per hour. Must be able to attend hospital clinic or the hospital. Apply for work study in Strong Hall DATA PROCESSING CLERK III
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CRUISE SHIPS NO WHIRING Earn up to $2000 +/mo + world travel Summer & career employment available No experience necessary. For employment in DEVELOPMENT CONSTRUCTION CO. has part-time opening with flexible day hours for an office assistant. Chance for full-time summer employment and after graduation Experience on job opportunity. Must keep keeping experience necessary. Starting at $6.00 and up depending on experience and hours. Resume to P.O. Box 3008, Lawrence, KS 56506. Attn:
now available.
Greenspace is seeking dedicated, energetic individuals to work with our grassroots jobbies and fundraising staff. **Grassroots Jobbies** (815) 459-3564. Everyone is welcome regardless of gender, race, or sexual orientation.
Expand your experience. Positions are available
through Jan. 15, 2017. Apply online at 428 Kansas
yearbook. Pick up applications at 428 Kansas
address.
NABI Biomedical Center Introduces its Fall Special
$ Fast Cash $
Earn $15 today
Earn $50 this week
- Walk in Today *
9-6 M-F 10-3 Sat.
816 W 24th
9-49-5750
Kansas and Burge Uions hiring part-time, hourly for Fall Semester. Many jobs in Food Service, Catering and Custodian with varying schedule. Bachelor's degree plus Kansas University Building for job specifics EOE
NANIESS... spend a year near NYC with a family
that I love. Call 1-800-878-100; i say
"No fees!"
Need dependable care give for my 89 old daughter, approx. 1 h; early eve, 3 X w/k, and possibly more. Must have own transportation. Call 841-7088 at 6 p.m.
Keyboard players wanted for variety dance band equipment and exp. MB Entertainment Group, 769 Eighth Ave.
Entertainment Group. 749-3649.
Motivated District Manager.
Part-time day and evening help wanted. Must
part-time days. Apply in person only at
Border Lawn Attorneys.
Mass St. Dell or Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Previous food service and supervisory experience required. Work hours are based on performance. Up to 6 p.m. 25 per hour. Apply at Schunn Food Co. at 179 M.T. Mass F. Apply at Schunn Food Co. at 179 M.T. Mass F.
Position Available. A local business needs a person to do maintenance work including, hawk work on equipment or repairing machinery, schedule, but need 2-8 hours per day with possibly some weekend hours. Must have valid driver's license and a valid driving license. A distance of F for additional information and an interview, please call 841-120 and ask for Larry or
full time, experience preferred
send resume to P.O. Box 1832
Nurtured for Property Management Co full time, experience preferred.
son to do maintenance work including, lawn work, washing cars, cleaning, painting etc. Flexible schedule, but need 2-8 hours per day with possibly no sick days. Permission to license and be very responsible. Within walking distance of U. K. For additional information and an interview, please call 841-1250 or ask for Larry or Kay.
225 Professional Services
PART-TIME SUPERVISOR WANTED
Position Available. A local business needs person to do maintenance work, including lawn care, landscaping, cleaning, and general maintenance.
Work/Study positions open in Speech/Tac
Music; Hearing times and Departments. Apply in
any field.
Program Aide for the Lawrence Arts Center.
Assist with education program classes and work
with students on arts projects, weekends
and weekdays. Start immediately. Must be Ks
Career work study qualified. Study at The
Arts Department.
Rainier Montessori Instructor is interviewing for a Late Afternoon Instructor. Experience in non-competitive games with elementary-aged children provided. Hrs: 1:53-1:50 M. Call: 843-8600
Children home daycare. Full time opening days
and trip-in受理. Irs: 7:0am-6:30pm, M-F
University Information Center seeks student hourly who is motivated, familiar with KU and community resources, organized, computer-literate, good communication, interested in helping students, possessed a degree of humor. Pick up application at KU info 420 Kansas University. Applications by d.p. May 29
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED Rape/Violent Survivor Service ASAP is seeking volunteers. Applications aft at Headquarters Counseling Center, KU University Center and Hacienda Indian Nation University
Rick Frydman,Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here every day.
Birthday 844-881-2921 Free pregnancy testing.
Mimacinish repairs and upgrades
Friendly, Affordable. In Home Service
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense For free consultation call
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
T
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
DONALDG. STROLE
Donald G Strole Sally G Keisey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Prompt implant and contraction services. Dale L. Clinton M.D. 844-5716
235 Typing Services
CC Deskbook Publishing: Resumes, Cover Letters,
Brochures, Flyers. Term Paper, Newletters
I-der Women Word Processing. Former editor
of *Letters* and in secure into accurate pages of Lett-
er type. 854.298
ABSOLUTELY EXCELLENT EDITING! Dissertation and thesis experience. No paper too large.
X
Are You Makin' the grade
WORD PROCESSING& LASER PRINTING
For all your typing needs
call Makin' the grade at 85-2853
300s
305 For Sale
1985 Honda Spree Scooter, good cond, low miles, extra carp, equiv A61 846-3954 or 843-4164
1987 Honda Hurricane 600cc red on white. Runs and
gives look great $2000. Call: 842-1400
1992 Gibson Les Paul Studio, wine color with gold hardware, 6 inch old beautiful, cost $495.00
26 Women's Schwartz Word Sports bicycle excellent, ridden. Duffle $150
Tires $150
lint cord. Ridden tires $15 each
20" front wheels and face welders and
mechanic tops $19, Call Chad 832-2741.
Mechanic tops $19, Call Chad 832-2741.
philosophy/sys/km/charisma
Beeks, desk, and bookcases. Everything But Ice Melt
Full Fall Cleanup. All adult tapes on sale $12 & 85,
$15 & 90, or Miracle Video Tote 3910 Haskell 841-7904.
For Sale Derm carpets $80-$120 each Alpine carpet
$150 for Carpet For Canon FD earphones $495 - Call Haulk 794-4138
For Sale Microwave 46s, Brass Full-size headset
and Brother Wordpress processor. $200.
Contact us at microwave46s@yahoo.com
GARAGE SALE 17-18 Sept
Nees, BEER & Liquor Signs
i-T 8:07 East to 4:435. South to
Drive Jones, East Ks.
Road Ks
For Sale : Student Football tickets
Must Sell-Best offer. 841-6370
BM Select II electric typewriters for all. In all working conditions, call (913) 742-1926, if not home work.
Men & Schoenbruck Crisscross min. bike 21 speed. 18 men. Cal Venture condition $20 or best offer 84-195 Call Giant.
One pair, Infinity Studio Monitor 152 Home Speakers. Very nice speakers, well taken care of. Come with 5 yr. warranty, $650 pr, or o.b. 832-2899 or www.infinitystudio.com
Wedding ring set. • karat round diamond surrounded by margarine & baguettes. Retail value $2,500.
340 Auto Sales
81 Suzuki GS250 T. Good cond. $500 b.o. b. Call 655 3821
872-341-9000, NAME, ADDRESS, SHIPDOWN, MAIN
wood Stereo, $300, 943-287-57eve.
1978 Celica Ski miles Excellent condition. New tran, tires, battle call 864-9728
[186] Volvo DL, great cond, new breaks, new tires,
AM/FM case, speeding $2200 b o call B-148
Toyota Tacoma, large gas tank, 2000cc
1985 KAWA 609R Ninja Trick paint, plenty of
paper. (928) 855-0517
1960 Ford Tempo d 4T, AT, AC, extra clean, $7500
C bailer Call Bruce after 8:42. 849-4972
360 Miscellaneous
Chest ticks健e 4 Broncons, 2 Raiders, 4 Bengals, 10 Packers, 4 Bears, 6 Bills, and 4 Seahawks. Best offer. All are single seats but most are in same section. Call 843-3656
Over the Edge
Naismith Halls'
24 hr. computer center
370 Want to Buy
a bedroom, 5 bath available on October 1 for sublease
8614 mths. Call 841-844, leave message
400s Real Estate
Fitness room
- Front door bus service
Naismith Halls' services give students the competitive edge.
LEVIS 501's will pay up to $13.00 and $10.00 for Levi's Jean Jackets. B41-0546.
Wanted, used Trek 365/970 mtn bike. Will pay $150-$250 cash. Call 843-1982.
405 For Rent
3 Bills l/k for pkt for Campus Place Very close to campus. Req. a phone call at 842-609-6901. Call 842-609-6901.
Dine anytime meals
Weekly maid services
Weekly maid service
Studio apartment available. Close 1- impress,
remodel kited, new water, and heat are
available. Call (800) 253-7800.
Available immediately at West Apt. 103,
Enry Enter Rd, Spacious, one bedroom, unfurished
apt / w/ hallway, ac, dc pool, laundry, great location
near campus $36 per month-water paid No.
$24 per month-$50 per month.
a rooms nor for rent for non-fraud (s)available o. $1,200 - will. Live 10 min. south of Lawrence.
Private country home-kids and pets O. K. 768816-leave message.
Siblingness. Nalmith Room. I mouth call for *call*
187-197 Leave message or ask for Terry
NAISMITH
---
1800 Naismith Drive (913) 843-8559
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS 2040 Heatherwood
*2 Bedroom, 1 1/2 Bath $425
*3 Bedroom, 2 Bath $550
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
Call Now!843-4754
LAND ROAM
JEFFERSON PLACE
764-1471
119th & I-35
430 Roommate Wanted
The best place to live at KU is in KC!!!
- Byphone: 864-4358 Adresse en mobile bille
Female. Grad student roommate wanted to share
the duplex Great Trinity $215 + Utilities and Call
number 714-860-3999. Roommate wanted to have
M roommate wanted to Sundance $198/month.
Water paid, furnished. Call after 7 p.m. 749-1898
Responsible NS P roommate wanted to share 3 bdrs f.,
utilities and call number on KU bus. Rsult:
$185 mgo + until 749-1096
How to schedule an ad:
THE UNIVERSITY DAIRY KANSAN
Firm roommate to share beautiful new condo on
Fern st. No smoking. No pets. Oct 1- May 19. $250 + **
Ads phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
119 Student Flirt E-book
Calculating Rates:
- By my instruction **First, Print** CA: 43-0056.
You may print your classified order in the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas offices. Or you may choose to have it缉封 to your MasterCard or Via account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unexisted days when captured before their expiration date.
Stuy by the Kansan office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charge on MasterCard or Visa.
**Cancelling rates:** 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 the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or Visa, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unpaid days. Refunds can be cancelled at ads that were pre-paid by check on cash and not available.
BRIAR HUMMERS
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kaangan office for a fee of $4.00.
Rates
Num. of insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8-12 lines
Cost per line per day
1X 2-3M 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 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 1.05 .65 .60 .55 .35
Classifications
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior publication.
105 personal
110 business persons
120 announcements
130 entertainment
Please print your ad one word per box:
140 lst & found 365 for sale
295 help wanted 340 auto sales
225 professional services 366 miscellaneous
250 paints jobs
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 | | | | | |
Name
Total begins: Total days in paper
Total ad cost: Classification:
Name: Phone:
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 Dalrymple Manukan, 119 Saulster Fint Hall, Larnark, KS. 60045
The University of Dalrymple Manukan, 119 Saulster Fint Hall, Larnark, KS. 60045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1980 Foley Works Inc. All rights reserved by Universal Press Corporation
Mr.understanding his dying father's advice, Arnie spent several years protecting the family mules.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Not-for-profit organizations prove... THE LOWEST TOTAL FOOD BILL IN LAWRENCE
is at
Big
20-lb.
Bag!
U.S. No.1
RUSSET
POTATOES
$197
Big
20-lb.
Bag!
12-Pack
HOT DOG
BUNS
each 89¢
Rainbo
FOOD4LESS
2525 Iowa St. in Lawrence OPEN 24 HRS everyday!
Prices in effect thru Sept. 21, 1993. Limit rights reserved.
JUMBOS
Wilson
Certified
WORLD BISU
FRANKS
1-Pound Pkg
HASTA
HASTA
HASTA
$
Assorted Flavors
CASE!
of 24/12-OZ. C
WILSON
JUMBOS
Meat Franks
58¢
Mix-or-Match!
SHASTA
POP
288
★BAK each
Sunny Delight
VITAMINS
A-BIC ENRICHED
Florida Citrus Punch
KERY SPECIAL!
Delicious 8-Inch
APPLE
PIES
$188
SUNNY DELIGHT
64 Ounce Jug
98¢
Best Choice
orange
juice
Best Choice
orange
juice
12-oz. Can
Best Choice
Frozen
ORANGE
JUICE
59¢
Here's just a sample of our Green Tag Specials now in effect. Hundreds every time you shop!