CAMPUS: The panorama exhibit at the Museum of Natural History turns 100 years old this month. Page 10.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL. 103, NO. 51
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1993
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Health plan has mixed support at summit
Republican senators offer second opinion on reform
Bv Liz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Midwest Health Care Summit put the issue of bipartisan health care reform on the table for 2,300 health care professionals, community leaders, labor groups, insurers and citizens who attended the all-day event Friday.
Uwe Reinhardt, professor of political economy at Princeton, began the day's summit by saying that the cost of health care has increased 3 percent faster than the gross national product since the 1960s. At this rate, health care costs could account for 19 percent of the GNP by the year 2000, he said.
Reinhardt said the problems of the current
health care plan stemmed from the uninsured; the insured who lose their insurance when they lose their job; the costs of health care, which doubles every five years; and the quality of available health care.
As Republicans and Democrats chewed on the complex problem of how to rework the health care system, it became clear that there was some disagreement about solutions. The primary point of debate between the parties was the Democrats' proposal to mandate employers to contribute to their employees' health care.
Sen. Don Nickles, R-Okla., and Sen. John Chafee, R-R.I., said that mandating employers to contribute to their employees' health care would be a costly measure that could mean a loss of jobs.
Cafee said the Republican plan of less government involvement and a mandate requiring individuals to select and purchase their own health insurance would lead to more
choice in health care and less cost.
In addition to pointing out their disagreements with Clinton's plan, the Republican senators were quick to comment the Clintons on their efforts. Chafee said the reformed health care plan would be a bipartisan process.
"I believe there's going to be a combination of these plans." Chaffe said.
Hillary Rodham Clinton, who received three standing ovations, outlined the six areas of the Clinton administration's plan:
■ Security — Everyone would have health insurance.
Simplicity — The system would be simplified for all involved by using a single form system and electronic billing.
Choice — Everyone would have a choice of three types of health care insurance.
Cost — There would be a saving on health care costs for most individuals
Quality — Guaranteed quality ensured by
educating and informing consumers about the health care system.
■ Responsibility — Everyone must pay something for their health care.
KU students attending the event said the summit was a valuable experience for those involved.
"I heard a lot of discussions on health care and never really completely understood a lot of the problems and potential solutions that have been offered," said Paul Davis, Lawrence senior. "This gave me a broad perspective of all the plans that are out there and the problems that the plans are trying to attack."
Davis said he thought the future health care plan would require students to pay more in the short run and get savings in the long run.
"I would say that both plans got a fair hearing," said Andy Draper, Lawrence graduate student. "I think all that discussion and all that deliberation will result in a good plan in the end."
MIDWEST SUMMIT ON HEALTH CARE:
Rx for Reform
Holly McQueen / KANSAN
Hillary Rodham Clinton held up a copy of the Clinton administration's health care reform plan on Friday during the Midwest Summit on Health Care at Bartle Hall in Kansas City, Mo.
Speaker's mission began with mistake
Visitor, KU professor to debate casual sex
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
Michael Horner never expected a religious experience from a rock band named Jaws.
And he never expected that he would make a living as a religious sneaker.
Horner, a speaker for the international organization Campus Crusade for Christ, will be speaking at the University of Kansas today, tomorrow and Wednesday.
Horner said his life changed when he mistakenly walked in on one of the organization's meetings one day in 1970 in Calgary, Canada.
But Horner stayed, and during the meeting he decided to have a personal relationship with God.
"When I realized it was a religious speaker, I wanted to leave," he said. "I didn't want to deal with evangelists; I thought they all were nuts."
Homer said he read a sign that said Jaws was playing, but the sign actually said speaker Josh McDowell would be at the meeting.
Horner said that during his speeches this week, he would be explaining Christian world views and how those views can affect students.
Homer, who travels and speaks on college campuses in the United States and Canada, said universities are the best places to speak because students have open minds.
"There is a wide variety on college campuses," he said. "That's the time in life when we need to think critically about things."
Homer said that he wanted to clear the intellectual roadblocks that prevent students from considering a relationship with God.
Homer will debate Wednesday with Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare, on whether it is healthier to save sex for a permanent relationship.
"I will be arguing on the basis of public and private health and not the morality of the issue," Horner said.
SALAMAN
Michael Horner
Thisweek
Today—Lecture, "Who did Jesus think he was anyway?" from 7:30 to 9 p.m. in 330 Strong Hall.
Tomorrow—Lecture, "Is one true religion even possible?" from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union.
Wednesday — Debate with Dennis Diademy, professor of social welfare, "Why wait? is it healthier to save sex for a permanent commitment?" from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union.
KANSAN
He said he would base his position against pre-relationship sex on 20 reasons in five categories — the physical, psychological, social, sexual and relational aspects of pre-relationship sex.
Dailey said that there is no right or wrong answer on the issue because everybody has different values.
"I don't think there's any prescription that would fit everybody," he said.
Scott Ketrow, director of KU's branch of Campus Crusade for Christ, which has about 130 members, said that he hoped Horner would reach out and connect with students.
"We want to try to communicate to students what it means to have a personal relationship with God." he said.
Horner, who will be coming from the University of New Hampshire in Durham, N.H., will speak Thursday at the University of Nebraska at Kearney.
Horner graduated from the University of Toronto in 1974 with a bachelor of science degree in mathematics and a master's in philosophy in 1986. He joined the Canadian branch of the organization in 1974.
Campus Crusade for Christ was formed in 1951 by Bill Bright, who is the president of the organization. The organization has its headquarters in Orlando, Fla.
ANSA
Melissa Lacey/KANSAN
Junior Javhawk
Major Wilson, 7, winner of the little Jayhawk slam-dunk contest, receives congratulations from T.J. Whatley and other Kansas basketball players during the annual "Late Night with Rov Williams" celebration. More than 15,000 fans attended the Practice Friday in Allen Field House. See story, Page 7.
Rightists demand Aristide replacement
Saturdays
Saturday deadline passes,and the U.N. plan fails to restore the ousted Haitian leader to power.
The Associated Press
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Buoyed by the failure of a U.N. plan to return President Jean-Bertrand Aristide to power on schedule, about 200 chanting rightists marched yesterday to demand his replacement.
Late yesterday, a coalition of 20 small rightwing political movements demanded the resignation of Aristide, army commander Lt. Gen. Raoul Cedras and U.N. envoy Dante Caputo — the three men who worked out a U.N. plan in July for restoring democracy in Haiti.
FRAPH's leader, Emmanuel Constant, said the U.N. plan "is completely dead" and Caputo should be replaced by Colin Powell, retired chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff. It was unclear whether the coalition's proposal has the ruling military's support.
The groups were led by the army-backed Front for the Advancement and Progress of Haiti, or FRAPH.
"Aristide is not part of the picture. He's not even worth impeachment now," another rightist, Gerard Bissainte, said at the crowded outdoor news conference.
resignation demand.
U. N. spokesman Eric Falt dismissed the
Outside the vacant National Palace at midday, the rightist demonstrators borrowed the tune from "The Farmer in the Dell" for their chant against Aristide Premier Robert Malval: "Arrest Malval! Arrest Malval! Aristide's in deep trouble!"
He said the negotiating process would continue with a meeting set for Wednesday in Port-au-Prince.
One protester carried a black-and-red Duvalier flag atop the stair to the Unknown Slave. Three older women carried color photographs of Francois "Papa Doc" Duvalier as the protesters marched toward the Normandie Bar, a hangout for army-backed civilian gangs known as "attaches."
"We're tired; we're finished with everything; we're going to form our own government!" shouted former Sen. Reynald Georges, a Duvialier supporter. Duvalier and his successor son, Jean-Claude "Baby Doc," ruled Haiti for nearly 29 years. The regime was toppled after popular protests chased Jean-Claude from the country in 1986.
On the street, a prominent businessman looked on sadly.
"I don't see how we are getting out of this
thing," Gerald Allen said, referring to the political and economic impasse. Three months ago, he closed his weekly Journal du Commerce, founded in 1954, because of the collapse of legitimate businesses in the face of a thriving contraband market.
Aristide supporters have been repressed since the military overthrew the elected president in September 1991. Premier Malval was appointed by Aristide in August as part of a U.N. plan envisioning Aristide's return by Oct. 30, but the military has retained control of government ministries.
Although Malval, a businessman, has the respect of the international community, the rightists want to remove him or force him away from Aristide, who was elected in 1990 with a reported two-thirds of the vote.
U. S. and U.N. officials, who have imposed a worldwide oil and arms embargo on Haiti, have warned that a constitutional coup would violate the terms of the U.N. plan to restore Haitian democracy. Despite missing Saturday's deadline for Aristide's return, the United Nations has asked Aristide, Cedras and presidents of both houses of Parliament to meet Wednesday in Haiti to push through the restoration of democracy.
INSIDE
Trick and treat
20
Page 7.
The Kansas football team used a trick play to defeat the Oklahoma State Cowboys 13-6 on Saturday.
United Way fund-raising drives miss KU, overall goals
By Tracl Carl
Kansanstaffwriter
The United Way's fund-raiser goal is just a few feathers short on the Jayhawk campaign boards around campus.
The University of Kansas' campaign, which is part of the overall goal, ended 15 percent, or about $20,000, short of its goal of $140,000.
The Douglas County United Way's campaign officially ended Friday about 17 percent, or almost $190,000, short of its overall goal of $1,112,230.
But it is not over yet, said Cal Karlin, this year's campaign chair for the United Way.
In the past few days, small donations have been trickling into the United Way office, Karlin said, and he expected more to follow.
"We'll go ahead and take contributions," Karlin said. "We will not turn donations away."
Karlin said that the summer flood had dampened many people's ability to contribute.
"This year is a tough economic year, but that adds to people's woes too," he said.
Pat Edgerton, coordinator of Project Acceptance, a mental health support group and United Way nonprofit agency, said she was depending on United Way for almost $5,700. That money helps pay the salaries of its staff of five, rent, utilities and insurance.
That $10,000 and the $195,000 shortfall may have to be cut from nonprofit agencies that depend on United Way funding.
The United Way had hoped to exceed its goal for flood relief bv $10,000. Karlin said.
"We would really be hurt by a cut," she said. "We're on a tight budget."
Edgerton said she did not know how Project Acceptance would raise the money that might be cut by United Way. Even with all of the money the agency requested from United Way, the organization will have trouble meeting its needs, she said, and they have not been able to find new sources of revenue.
"The year before Rock Chalk got more support because of the fire at Hoch," Crowe said.
Money raised by Rock Chalk Revue, an annual student-run variety show, and donations from KU faculty and staff made up most of KU's campaign contributions.
Students also volunteer in the many United Way agencies, he said. About 60 students spent part of last week calling KU faculty and staff and asking for donations.
Bill Crow, dean of libraries and chair of the KU United Way campus campaign, said that although the $26,000 Rock Chalk raised this year was about average, it was less than last year's amount.
Crowe said KU's United Way committee will be meeting next week to think of ways to encourage people to donate.
"I would expect we will raise a couple thousand, but it will be a stretch to reach $140,000," he said.
Falling short
12.99%
KU
$816,833
Total Receipt
$918,000
Dougina County
United Way
The Douglas County United Way fell short of its fund-raising goal of $1,112,230. KU's goal was $140,000. Here is what was raised:
It's not too late to donate
Send donations to the Douglas County
United Way office, 211 E. Elegh St.
Lawrence 60438, or call 843-6626.
James Frederick/MAHBARA
2
Monday, November 1, 1993
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KU Linguistics will sponsor a colloquy by Frank Brown at 3:30 p.m. today in 206 Blake Hall.
Clan na Daghda ValFather (Clans of the Good God all Father) will meet at Alcove F in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Debra or Michael Terry at 841-2606.
BODEANS
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a Catholic law student discussion group at 12:30 p.m. today in 109 Green Hall. For more information, call 843-0357.
■ KU Kempo will meet at 6 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Ershadi at 842-4713.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel.
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 and Jason Anishanshin at 843-3099.
BODEANS
ADV. TIX
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
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2
BENCHWARMER
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a "Fundamentals of Catholicism" class at 7 tonight at the Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity, GAMMA, Interfraternity Council, Panhellenic Association, Legal Services and President's Forum will sponsor a lecture at 7 tonight at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Campus Crusade for Christ will sponsor a lecture at 7:30 tonight in 330 Strong Hall. For more information, call Michael Brown at 832-0799.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a "Festival Liturgy of All Saints," at 7 tonight at the Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
865-1682.
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT BENCHVARMERS AND CHARGE BY PHONE 913-841-0500
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will show a video at 8 tonight at the Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call the Center at 843-0357.
car in parking lot. No 7. On Wednesday or Thursday, KU police said.
ON THE RECORD
A student's parking permit valuated at $53 was taken from a car in parking lot No. 57 on Oct. 25, KU police reported.
A student's bicycle and lock, valued together at $765, were taken from the bicycle rack at Robinson Center on Wednesday or Thursday, KU police reported.
LSAT
GRE
GMAT
MCAT
A student's bicycle and lock, valued together at $360, were taken from the bicycle rack at Pearson Scholarship Hall on Wednesday, KU police reported.
A KU employee's parking permit valued at $58 was taken from a
A student's KUID, bus pass and cash, valued together at $65, were taken from the Kansas Union on Thursday, KU police reported.
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WEATHER
leather around
Atlanta: 57'/47'
Chicago: 39'/30'
Houston: 71'/63'
Miami: 84'/73'
Minneapolis: 35'/30'
Phoenix: 81'/61'
Salt Lake City: 48'/38'
Seattle: 60'/51'
Omaha: 35'/25'
LAWRENCE: 60'/37'
Kansas City: 57'/34'
St. Louis: 44'/39'
Wichita: 37'/32'
Tulsa: 49'/31'
TODAY
Tomorrow Wednesday
Cloudy
High: 60'
Low: 37'
Cloudy
High: 55'
Low: 35'
Partly cloudy
High: 50'
Low: 30'
Source: Associated Press KANSA
cloudy
Tomorrow Wednesday
Cloudy
High: 60'
Low: 37'
Cloudy
High: 55'
Low: 35'
Partly cloudy
High: 50'
Low: 30'
Tomorrow Wednesday
CORRECTIONS
A text box titled "In-state tuition" on Page One of Friday's Kansan contained incorrect information. The last item stated that students from Iowa may be eligible for in-state tuition if they are seeking degrees in Slavic languages and literature. They may
A story on Page 3 of Friday's KYou section misidentified a Lawrence business. International Bead Trader is at 1017% Massachusetts St.
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, KA 66045.
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CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 1, 1993
3
Planned Parenthood opens clinic
Office will serve women and men
By Chesley Dohl Kansan staff writer
Planned Parenthood opens an office today in Lawrence that offers both women and men another option for family planning services.
The office is located at Orchard Corners Shopping Center, 1420C Kasold Drive.
Tamara Morris, marketing assistant for Planned Parenthood of Greater Kansas City, said the services offered to women would include gynecological exams, provision of contraptives, screening and treatment for sexually transmitted diseases, pregnancy tests and referral for options to manage a pregnancy.
"If a patient's pregnancy test comes out positive and she is not sure about her options, we will give our patients information about prenatal care, adoption and, if the need be, abortion referral," Morris said.
The clinic has a staff of full time medical professionals.
Services for men include a general health screening that includes examination for testicular cancer, screening and treatment for sexually transmitted diseases, provision of condoms and referral for vasectomies.
In 1988, Planned Parenthood of Greater Kansas City began looking at counties west of the Missouri state line to locate reproductive healthcare service clinics. Leavenworth, Wyandotte, Miami and Johnson counties were considered, but Patty Brous, executive director of Planned Parenthood of Greater Kansas City, said a review of statistics showed there was more of a need in Douglas County and its surrounding counties.
These figures do not include the women of the University of Kansas or Haskell Indian Nations University
Brous said there were about 25,600 Douglas County women between the ages of 13 and 44 who were considered "at risk" of unintended pregnancy. "At risk" women are those who are sexually active, fertile and not pregnant or trying to become pregnant.
Missouri National University.
"Lawrence was the most centrally located city to service Douglas County and the surrounding counties," Brous said. "Lawrence is not far from
Kansas City, so it will be the best place to make referrals."
Brous said the clinic would work with Watkins Memorial Health Center and other Lawrence health care services to provide quality, confidential and affordable reproductive health care. She said there would be no competition with the University in providing services.
"We anticipate a good referral relationship with Watkins," Brous said. "In case there should be follow-up work and check-ups, the students will be referred to the University clinic."
Henry Buck, head of gynecology at Watkins, said the figures Planned Parenthood used to determine the need for a clinic in Douglas County were two years old. He said that since then the Douglas County Health Department had opened a clinic.
Where to go
PlannedParenthood 832.0281
Planned Parenthood
832-0281
Orchard Corners Shopping Center
1420 C Cosmoid Drive
Open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday,
Tuesday, Thursday and Friday
11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Wednesday
8:30 a.m. to noon Saturday
"Alot has changed in Douglas County in two years time," Buck said. "We'll have to see if there's a demand or not for the clinic."
Buck said Watkins had more affordable and more complete reproductive health care services for students than Planned Parenthood could offer.
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Burned KU student to return to classes
Travis Schupp, Valley Center sophomore, who was severely shocked while on a utility pole Oct. 24, was released from the University of Kansas Medical Center on Thursday after a four-day stay in the hospital's burn unit.
Schupp climbed the pole with a friend at a party at 1115 Louisiana St. and inadvertently came in contact with a live wire.
He said he would return to classes tomorrow after spending the weekend at home.
He said he was wearing a compression sleeve on his right arm to reduce scarring and that he had stitches in his left hip.
Kansan wins national award
The University Daily Kansan on Saturday was awarded the Associated Collegiate Press's 1992-03 Pacemaker Award, which is considered the highest prize for college newspapers.
The Kansan received the award for the second consecutive year. This year's honors, which recognized papers from Fall 1992 through Spring 1993, were given out at the 69th National College Media Convention in Dallas.
Brady Prauser, a Kansas staff writer during Spring 1993, won third place for the Los Angeles Times-Associated Collegeate Press Story of the Year Award. The story described former Kansas basketball star Wilt Chamberlain's reluctance to return to Kansas for a ceremony retiring his jersey.
Economy to improve, expert says
Four other newspapers also were recognized as the best daily newspapers for four-year colleges Indiana Daily Student, Indiana University; Kansas State Collegian, Kansas State University; Daily Pennsylvanian, University of Pennsylvania; and Daily Texan, University of Texas at Austin.
Doug Hesse / KANSAN .
With an expected increase of 1 percent in 1994 Kansas personal income, the state's recovery from recession will continue gradually through next year, a KU economic forecaster said Friday. The recovery is expected despite a slight increase projected in the 1994 Kansas unemployment rate.
Norman Clifford, forecasting director for the Institute for Public Policy and Business Research, released the institute's economic forecast to an audience of 200 businessman, professors and public officials at the day-long 17th annual Economic Outlook Conference at the Kansas Union.
The conference also featured a luncheon keynote address by Thomas Hoenig, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. Hoenig said he hoped for continued stability of government economic policy to help business leaders make decisions in a controlled environment.
LESSONS FROM A MASTER
Compiled from Kansan staff reports.
Kiyoshi Yamazaki, left, seventh degree black belt master, instructs Chris Mayo, Lawrence sophomore, Yamazaki, a chief instructor of Japan Karate-Do Ryobukai, conducted a seminar for martial arts practitioners Saturday in Robinson Center.
Visiting black belt master instructs students to practice Karate ideals
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
"Ichi, ni, san, shi, go . . .
Kiyoshi Yanazaki, Anaheim, Calif., visiting seventh degree black belt master, surveyed 17 wined students as they sweated through a series of warm-ups Saturday afternoon in an otherwise empty Robinson Center gymnasium.
“... roku, shichi, hachi, kyu, jyu.”
The shouts of numbers one to 10 in Japanese echoed off the concrete walls as Yamazaki's karate disciples counted out each move, stretch and pull they made in the gym's dry, still air.
Stephanie Crawford, Yamazaki's manager and training assistant, said Yamazaki visits 15 to 20 countries a year leading karate seminars. Yamazaki is the chief instructor in the United States for Japan Karate-Do Ryobukai, a traditional style of karate that emphasizes basic defense skills and whose members refrain from violent behavior, Crawford said.
Finishing their preliminaries, the students began to practice the holds, kicks and punches Yamazaki said they must
learn to progress to black belt level.
For more than an hour, students paired up and repeatedly practiced the same four steps: right roundhouse kick to the left side of their partner's face, high left kick to the neck, right kick to the lower back and left kick to the stomach. The students kept their blows just short of their target but moved with increasing speed as the afternoon progressed.
"If you lose the target, you lose the point of concentration. Don't look like this," Yamazaki said as he turned his head away from a feigned punch. "Keep your eyes on the same spot."
After the class had finished their rite exercises, Yamazaki called them together to remind them that the focus of the nine-hour seminar was to help students learn some of the basics for self defense and to improve their reaction times.
"Before your opponent attacks, make sure you understand your opponent," Yamazaki said. "Your first move is important. It must be strong."
"With sports karate, you see with the eye more," Yamazaki said. "In self defense, you must concentrate more with the eye, ear and even the nose. The eye can't see behind for you, so what do you do? Use the ear. Look front and back at the same time"
Rather than focusing on the flashier moves of sports karate, Yamazaki said he wanted them to remember the basics of
self-defense karate. Karate should not just rely on vision to detect the presence of potential attackers, he said.
Yamazaki, 53 years old and a 35-year veteran of karate, said that as karate students age, they compensate in mental concentration what they lose in physical ability through correct technique and practice.
"When you practice karate,you need to practice the idea in different parts of life," Yamazaki said.
By attending the seminar, students learned not only the correct technique from Yamazaki but the importance of commitment to karate, said Seilichi Ishii, Sapporo, Japan, sophomore and president of Japan Karate-Do Ryobukai, Kansas Doio.
"It's not just commitment to a few hours in the classroom," Ishii said. "Eventually I think I could improve my discipline as well as improve in the sport."
Diversity center's planners optimistic
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Financial and location plans to create KU's first multicultural center are coming together.
From the financial side, Tim Dawson, Topeka senior and student body vice president, said last week that he would soon submit a bill to the Student Senate requesting funding for the center.
And from the location side, Mike Richardson, director of facilities operations, said the center's proposed location probably would be ready on schedule. He said construction for the new Supportive Educational Services office in Strong Hall would begin next semester as planned. The center will move into the current SES building, next to the Military Science building, after SES moved into Strong Hall.
All of this has made Sherwood Thompson, director of the Office of Minority Affairs and head of the committee, optimistic about the center's future.
"We're looking forward to making the multicultural center a showcase on campus," he said.
These actions end a two-year period of inaction in creating the center, which had been recommended by several task forces in the 1980s. Student Senate passed a resolution in November 1991 calling for a multicultural center. David Amber, vice chancellor of student affairs, announced plans to build a center in April 1992 and pledged $10,000 to its budget.
But since then, the center's creation has been delayed by uncertainty about its location. Originally planned as an addition to a rebuilt Hoch Auditorium, the center's proposed location shifted to a house owned by the University on Louisiana Street in 1992. Last summer, the proposed location was moved again to the SES building.
Thompson said that because the delays were now in the past, the multicultural committee could get together and plan the center's future.
"We want to make sure it has a KU personality," he said.
The committee will look at multicultural centers at other universities before deciding on the material the center would purchase and the programming it would provide, Thompson said.
"This is a campus-wide project," he said. "Many groups from the campus community are getting involved."
Representatives from groups such as the Black Student Union, Student Senate, Lesbian, Bisexual and Gay Services of Kansas and the International Student Association make up the committee's membership, Thompson said.
Melanie Ignacio, a representative to the committee from the Asian American Student Union, said the center would foster cooperation between different minority groups on campus.
"Without it, you will just be segregated," said Ignacio, San Francisco sophomore. "You won't know what other clubs are doing. This way, you can have different activities from different groups."
Ignacio said she hoped the groups involved would help explain the need for a multicultural center at KU.
ADVERTISE IN THE DAILY KANSAN FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS
STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE
announces that applications are now available for the sixth year of the Educational Opportunity Fund
All departments, units, and organizations of the University are eligible to apply. Applications and accompanying materials may be picked up at the Student Senate office, 410 Kansas Union or at the Financial Aid office, 50 Strong Hall.
All grants are for the 1994-1995 academic year. Any Questions? Call the Student Senate office at 864-3710
Submission of application and accompanying materials must be received no later than 5:00 p.m.. on November 8.1993.at the Student Senate Office.
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Judge Crane will inform the Greek system of each chapter's legal liability for the actions of its members. During his presentation he will cite recent court cases dealing with incidents of death, date rape, accidents, and drug and alcohol abuse at Greek organizations. He will also provide ideas on how to significantly reduce the risk and liability of the Greek houses.
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Monday, November 1. 1993
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Speaker at graduation would enhance event
A prominent figure should speak at commencement this May. The KU administration must seriously consider the proposal that the Committee for Speakers at Commencement will be submitting.
The administration should not dictate what they believe to be proper pomp and circumstance and should not be apathetic or have predetermined ideas about the committee's proposal. Instead, the administration should listen to the students and student leaders who have expressed their support and offered their services to help the committee prepare its proposal. This positive and overwhelming support from students demonstrates the importance of the commencement speaker issue.
In recent years, the procession down the Hill has taken a long time. Graduating seniors have said that they do not feel they have anything to look forward to once they are inside Memorial Stadium. A keynote speaker would give students something to be excited about. Also, a prominent speaker would lend more dignity to the ceremony. Students will want to hear the speech, as a result, a sense of order will be maintained.
The University policy prohibiting the issuance of honorary degrees should be lifted. If it were, well-known speakers could be properly acknowledged for their appearance. If money is the issue, then sources can be found to finance the speaker.
The overall-student interest in the presence of a keynote speaker should be a clear message to the administration that students want to hear an original and inspiring speech rather than just the usual rhetoric.
MANNY LOPEZ FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Congress should keep limit on jobless benefits
Congressional action to extend jobless benefits beyond the standard 26 weeks is an unnecessary step in the current recovering economy.
Since October 1991, the House and Senate have voted to extend benefits to those people who had been unable to find jobs after their original 26 weeks of jobless benefits ended. At the time, jobless claims were hovering around 400,000 claims per week. The number has stabilized around 350,000 per week since that time.
Ever since the original extension two years ago, Congress has passed legislation to extend the benefits. Earlier this year, though, Congress allowed the latest unemployment benefits to expire on Oct. 1. The House, with funding from anticipated savings in mandated changes in state jobless aid programs, passed a new bill on Oct. 15 costing an estimated $1.1 billion.
Last Wednesday, the Senate closed debate and passed the measure with one key difference from the House bill. Sen. Hank Brown, R-Colo., had an amendment approved that would forbid any extended jobless benefits going to citizens with taxable incomes over $120,000. This is causing a delay in the signing of the measure by President Clinton.
Hopefully, with this temporary delay, Congress will reconsider its decision to stop extendingjobless benefits. During severe economic times when job growth is extremely slow, it is necessary to extend the benefits so that those who are unemployed can continue to support themselves and their families. With the economy on an apparent upswing, the money that would have been used to extend benefits would be better used in reducing the deficit.
TOM GRELINGER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
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A tale of a cow, brooms and a statue of Elvis
Lately a lot of media attention has been focused on the Mideast, so I felt that it would be a good idea to go out and personally review the situation in the Midwest. Here is my report:
I arrive in Champaign, Ill., and proceed to the University of Illinois agriculture school, which I am able to locate easily because I have clear directions, plus I can smell it. I am greeted by Dan Weber and Jean McAllister, two alert readers who wrote me a letter claiming that the university has cows with research portholes installed in their sides. Enclosed with the letter was a photograph of Dan with his right arm up to his shoulder inside a cow.
Dan and Jeana introduce me to George Fahey, professor of animal sciences, who informs me that the holes are installed because scientists are very interested in finding out what goes on inside the cow digestive system. (I already know what goes on Cows convert grass into cow poop But I'm not going to spoil the surprise for scientists.)
Fahey leads me to a cow named "Fussbudget," who is a very large, cud-chewing aircraft carrier. In Fussbudget's left side is a porthole with a rubber plug in it. Fahey tells me that Fussbudget doesn't mind the porthole, but I'm not so sure.
So Fussbudget has TWO reasons to want revenge.
COLUMNIST
DAVE
BARRY
"What gender is Fussbudget?" I ask.
"He used to be a boy," says Laura Bauer, a lab technician.
Now Bauer is removing Fussbudget's plug. And now she is REACHING INTO THE HOLE.
Bauer, pulling out some dark green material.
"You can see what he just ate," says
"Gack."Iremark.
But it's clear that these people expect me to put my hand inside the cow. Apparently this is a traditional agricultural gesture of hospitality. I put on a long plastic glove and approach Fussbudget, who is eying with a giant cow eyeball.
Squinting hard now, I stick my hand into the mass of dark-green glop. It feels, to use a scientific term, really yucky in there. Plus, I can smell methane. Fearing an explosion, I pull my arm out.
This is when Tom Nash, manager of the Beef Research Farm, tells me about an incident wherein a 4-H Club was checking out Fussbudget's interior, and Fussbudget coughed, and a young man standing in front of the porthole was covered with stomach contents.
I have the University of Illinois with a new appreciation of the benefits that agriculture will someday provide, especially in the field of interrogating captured spies. ("Tell us who your contact is! We have ways to make this cow cough."
"Ha ha! I say, backing away from the hole.
SATURDAY:
I am now in Arcola, Ill., to attend the annual Broom Corn Festival. Arcola boasts the world's largest rocking chair, the world's largest collection of brooms and brushes, and the world's only combination bowling alley and gourmet French restaurant. I am not making any of this up.
I am here to march in the Broom Corn Parade with Arcola's world-famous Lawn Rangers, a top precision lawn mower drill team. This is my third year as a Ranger. I've tried to talk my wife into going to the Broom Corn Festival with me, but she resists.
"It's just a bunch of guys who drink beer and push lawn mowers around and act juvenile," she says.
"Yes! I say, not understanding her point.
Anyway, the Rangers do more than just "push lawn mowers around." We carry brooms, and we perform precision broom-and-lawn-mower maneuvers. Plus, this year we are marching with — get ready — a 10-foot-high painted concrete statue of Elvis. It belongs to Clark and Sandy Stafford of Seneca, Ill, and is available for rent. It's mounted on a trailer, and it weighs 5,000 pounds, almost as much as the King himself near the end.
VERY EARLY SUNDAY MORNING:
After an evening of fellowship with the Lawn Rangers, I return to my room at the Arcola Inn, which is also where Elvis is staying. I reflect back on my trip — on Elvis, the Lawn Rangers and Fussbudget the cow.
Things are good here in the Midwest.
Weird, but good.
Dave Barry is a syndicated columnist with the Miami Herald.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Pregnancy article wrong; roles can be balanced
I should have realized during the interview for Carlos Tejada's "Tough choices await pregnant students at KU" that I was going to help fuel the myth of the debilitating state of pregnancy. He kept asking me about the difficulties that I was encountering balancing my roles as a graduate student, pregnant woman and GTA. I feel that Mr. Tejada's article painted me as some sort of victim; of what I cannot tell.
Mr. Tejada quoted me as saying that if my baby is born before finals then I won't take them, and I will feel my semester has been wasted. This is simply NOT TRUE! Tejada also stated that I had lamented that I could not drop out for academic and financial reasons. Why should I quit my job or drop out? The body's hormone and endorphin levels increase to give a pregnant woman a much-needed emotion and energy
boost after the not-so-pleasant first trimester. The female body also prepares itself for the inevitability of motherhood. I often wake up at night and grade papers or read for class because my body is not tired. This is thought to ready the expectant mother for nocturnal feedings.
I'd like to take this opportunity to dispel the myths of pregnancy and establish the facts of my situation:
My husband and I feel so lucky that we are having our son while we are in school. See you on the Hill on May 15, 1994. We will be the ones with the baby boy!
Little Rock, Ark., graduate student
Holly Larrison
Philadelphia will compete for the NBA championship
Predictions. Every fan has his or hers as the NBA season approaches. With the league now entering its first post-Jordan era, many people think that the throne of the NBA is wide open to a number of teams. However, most experts think that there are only four cities in the running for the title of world champion: New York, Charlotte, Phoenix and Seattle. But I contend that these analysts have grossly underestimated the City of Brotherly Love in their narrow selection of the league's elite teams. The Philadelphia 76ers, with the recent acquisition of Shawn Bradley and Clarence Weatherspoon, are now positioned to win their first championship since their dominant 1982-83 team.
LANCE HAMBY
Shawn Bradley, 7-foot-6 rookie center, is the foundation on which the Sixer organization is built. His immense talent level has prompted virtually every expert to admit that he is the next NBA great. Even the ever-critical Don Nelson, coach of the Golden State Warriors, said that Bradley would revolutionize the game of basketball.
Nelson's comments are understandable when both Bradley's physical and instinctive attributions are put into perspective. Bradley is the second tallest player in the NBA, and yet he has the defenses of a point guard. His shot blocking ability is second to none, and his natural instinct on knowing how to run the floor can only be compared to the legendary point guard Maurice Cheeks. Few NBA teams will be able to contain this combination of court knowledge and unprecedented talent levels interwined in a scrapy 7-foot-8 frame.
The main criticism of Bradley is that he lacks NBA experience. However, the Sixer's insightful owner, Harold Katz, foresaw Bradley's potential weakness and signed the future hall-of-famer Moses Malone to be Bradley's mentor. Malone's ability to control the inside paint has led him to six rebounding titles and to fourth place on the all-time scoring list. If Malone is able to pass on any of this expertise to Bradley, then virtually every past NBA record will be put into jeopardy.
Bradley is the new leader of a team that possess much young talent. Weatherspoon, a power forward, is the most unheralded young talent in the game today. His aggressive play coupled with his muscular body has led many analysts to compare him with the leagues best player, Charles Barkley. This forceful style perfectly compliments Bradley's graceful moves in the lane and will enable the Sixers to dominate the post position throughout the season.
Bradley and Weatherspoon are the two main ingredients of the Sixers national championship formula. Most experts believe that these two players will not be enough for a national championship, but the Sixers also have the best 3-point shooters in the league and a defense that led the league in shot blocks last year. With all of these factors combined, the only reasonable prediction for this year's NBA champion is the Philadelphia 76ers.
Lance Hamby is a Wichita Junior majoring in political science and Journalism.
KANSAN STAFF
KC TRAUER, Editor
COLUMNIST
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE Managing editors
100
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
Editors
Assistant to the editor ... J.R. Claiborne
News ... Stacy Friedman
Editorial ... Terrilyn McCormick
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Krisflet Fogler
Photo ... Klp Chin, Renee Kneeer
Features ... Erzola Wrale
Graphics ... John Paul Fogel
Business Staff
Business manager ... Ed Schager
Campus sales mgr ... Jennifer Perrier
Regional Sales mgr ... Jennifer Everson
National sales mgr ... Jennifer Evanson
Co-op sales mgr ... Blythe Focht
Production mgr ... Jennifer Blowey
Kate Burgess
Marketing director ... Shelly McConnell
Creative director ... Brian Fusco
Classified mgr.. Gretchen Kotterleinchl
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 pleased. The Kanana reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanana newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
University of Mars
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Monday, November 1, 1993
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Violence ravages Northern Ireland
Killings follow failure in round of peace talks
Outsiders talk of peace between the Roman Catholic and Protestant communities. In Northern Ireland, the reality is relentless killing.
0 0 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
The Associated Press
Sunglasses by REVO
BELFAST, Northern Ireland -
Belfast has become a city of fear.
In the past eight days, 23 people have died. It was among the bloodiest periods in the last 25 years.
The province's Roman Catholic minority, in particular, fears the surge in indiscriminate killings by pro-
Both men want British-ruled Northern Ireland reunited with the Republic of Ireland, but Hume's party opposes IRA violence to drive the British out.
British Prime Minister John Major and Irish Premier Albert Reynolds spoke Friday of reviving political talks which collapsed in November after 16 fruitless months.
Before the violence intensified, many Catholics were cautiously optimistic that peace was in the offing. The community's most prominent political leaders — John Hume of the moderate Social Democratic and Labor Party and Gerry Adams of the IRA-supported Sinn Fein — were holding talks to reach a common position.
Most Protestants never liked the Hume-Adams initiative because they felt talking to the IRA was akin to surrender.
Commanders of the Royal Ulster Constabulary, Northern Ireland's mostly Protestant police force, admit that they can't guard every public place and roadway and appealed to citizens to keep their eyes open.
British Protestant gunmen, who have killed more people this year than the outlawed Irish Republican Army.
They held out the possibility of a role for the IRA and Protestant extremists if they renounce violence.
THE NEWS in brief
NORTH AMERICA
LONDON
Newspaper reports plot to assassinate Saddam foiled by U.S. source
The United States refused to support a plot by Iraqi dissidents to kill Saddam Hussein and may have betrayed the coup plotters, The Sunday Times of London reported.
The newspaper quoted a London-based Iraqi dissident, Sa'ad Jabr, as saying that CIA agents and Iraqis discussed the plot at meetings in London in November 1992.
A CIA spokesman in Washington, Kent Harrington, said the agency had no comment on the newspaper's report.
the agency had no comment on the newspaper's report. After months of silence, the Clinton administration said it would not back the plot because turnoil in Iraq could endanger the Middle East peace process, The Sunday Times said.
Jabr pressed the message on to the plotters and assumed they would scrap their plans. Instead, they decided to go ahead with an assassination attempt in Baghdad on July 17, when Saddam was to attend a parade marking the anniversary of his Ba'ath Party's 1968 seizure of power.
The newspaper said unnamed U.S. officials confirmed the talks had taken place but gave no further details.
Italian director Fellini dies at 73
ROME
Federico Fellini, the master Italian director whose imagination and fantasy created Oscar-winning films such as "8%" and "La Dolce Vita," died yesterday, the ANSA news agency reported. He was 73.
Fellini had been in a coma since suffering a heart attack
and respiratory problems Oct. 17. At the time, he had been recovering from a stroke suffered in August.
He died soon after noon at Rome's Polyclinic Hospital. Saturday was the 50th anniversary of his marriage to actress Giulietta Masina. Masina had been too distraught to remain by her husband's bedside and had visited him only a few times.
His condition had steadily worsened since lapsing into the coma. He had been running a fever of between 101 and 102 degrees since Friday.
Fellini was known as "Il Mago," the magician, who conjured make-believe, mystery and film magic that won four Oscars, for "La Strada," "Le Notti di Cabiria," "8½" and "Amarcord."
LOS ANGELES
Actor River Phoenix dies at 23
LOS ANGELES
River Phoenix, whose natural intensity as a teen-age actor in the 1986 film "Stand by Me" launched his career, collapsed outside a nightclub early yesterday and died. He was 23.
Friends reported that Phoenix was "acting strange" as he left the Waco Room in West Hollywood about 1 a.m., said sheriff's Deputy Diane Hecht. She didn't elaborate.
Paramedics were called when the actor collapsed, and he was rushed to Cedars Sinai Medical Center. Phoenix was pronounced dead soon before 2 a.m.
The death is under investigation, and an autopsy will probably be performed today. Sheriff's detectives were handling the case, as a matter of routine, but "it's not a homicide investigation at this time." Hecht said.
A year after his 1985 film debut in "Explorers," Phoenix showed his star potential in director Rob Reiner's "Stand by Me," where he portrayed Chris Chambers.
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BASKETBALL TICKETS
GAMES:
ATTN: STUDENTS REDEMPTION PERIOD
RICK'S BIKE SHOP Inc.
215 Moss Lane, Lawrence KS (913)841-6675
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NOVEMBER 1- NOVEMBER 10 (EXCEPT SATURDAY AND SUNDAY) 8:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
NOV.29 - AUSTRALIA NATIONALS
NOV.16 - MARATHON AAU
Athletic Ticket Office
East Lobby Allen Fieldhouse 8:00 a.m. 5:00 p.m.
*YOU MAY ONLY REDEEM ONE COUPON PER PERSON.
**YOU MUST HAVE A BLUE FALL 1993 FEE STICKER ON YOUR KUID TO RECEIVE YOUR TICKETS.
TO RECEIVE YOUR TICKETS.
٣- لجميع المؤسسات ذات العلاقة .
***WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR LOST OR STOLEN COUPONS.
]
6
Monday, November 1, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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The day after Halloween for many people means putting away masks and costumes. But for others, today is a time to remember those who have died.
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
Solemn holidays reside in shadow of Halloween
"The word 'saints' does not mean just those who are stained glass figures in church windows," he said. "The holiday is meant as a chance to reflect upon the lives of all Christians who have died, particularly in the past year."
All Saints' Day is an important holiday in Roman Catholic, Anglican and some Episcopalian churches, said John Macaulay, associate professor of religious studies.
Tomorrow, another holiday, All Souls' Day, will honor everyone,
including non-Christians, who have died, he said.
Pope Boniface IV began the tradition of honoring saints through All Saints' Day in the 14th century, said Mike Scully, a priest at St. John the Evangelist, 1229 Vermont St.
Religious reformers in the 16th century eliminated the tradition of honoring deceased saints on different days, creating one holiday to honor deceased Christians, Scully said.
"The day is a celebration of the whole church — members from all ages, times and regions," said Vince Krische, a priest at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road.
In Medieval England, the day before All Saints' Day was called Hallow's Eve, hence the name Halloween, Sculls said.
PRE-SEASON NIT STUDENT TICKET SALES
He said Halloween used to be a holy day.
Krische said students did not realize there was a connection between Halloween and a holy holiday.
"Halloween went from a display of saints' clothing and other religious objects to the idea of displaying evil, and the occult," he said. "It seems to be a mixture of good and evil now."
Scully said Halloween had definately turned into a "business holiday."
Tickets on sale at KU Ticket Office (East Lobby/Allen Field House)
"The words hallowed, sanctify,
saints, holy — they are all inter-
changeable," Scully said.
"We're talking about good ol' American marketing," Scully said. "Anytime they see a way to some money, they'll make a holiday out of anything."
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1 THROUGH WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10th (Excluding Nov.6 and 7)
Special masses will be held at all Lawrence Catholic churches today.
Wednesday, November 17th 8:30 p.m.- KU vs. Western Michigan Friday, November 19th 8:30 p.m.- KU -Western Michigan winner
8:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.
TICKET PRICE: $6 for two game package (Cash or check only)
LIMIT: One Two Game Package Per Student (with valid KUID)
Cal-Santa Clara winner
NOTE: Refunds will be made if KU does not play on November 19th.
Cultures meet in beef packing plant
By Kathleen Stolie Kansan staff writer
Anh Vu and his family moved to Garden City to find work in the early 1980s.
What they found were some mistaken assumptions about the Vietnamese culture.
"They assumed that all Vietnamese were uneducated," the KU sophomore said. "They looked at my name and looked at me and put me in an ESL (English as a second language) class."
The next day, Vu, who had lived in the United States since age 6, was transferred into a gifted program.
seven years studying resident and migrant relations in Garden City.
The way Garden City's residents and migrants working in the city's beef packing plants have learned to live together is the focus of an exhibit opening today at the KU Museum of Anthropology.
The exhibit features the findings of Donald Stull, professor of anthropology and a researcher at KU's Institute for Public Policy and Business Research. Stull has spent the past
"It's not heaven on earth, but they're working hard on it," he said.
P. S. MURTHA
Stull was part of a team of six
researchers who studied integration in Garden City from 1988 to 1989. The team studied Hispanics, Southeast Asians and whites, Sponsored by the Ford Foundation the study
was one of six in the nation that considered integration of established residents and newcomers.
Donald Stull
After the world's largest meat-packing plant was built in Garden City in 1980 and an existing plant modernized in 1983, migrants flooded in to find jobs. The study found that population, crime, employment and enrollment grew rapidly as a result.
The researchers determined that while the influx of migrants burdened existing resources, such as housing and schools, it also added to the cultural flavor of the town.
Filled with whites, Vietnamese, Laotians, Mexicans, Cambodians and
others, Garden City High School took on an international feel, said Megan Hope, a Garden City junior.
"You could walk through the halls and hear several different languages being spoken," she said.
Inher hometown, tornado warnings are now broadcast in English, Spanish and Vietnamese, and the city newspaper prints a weekly Spanish edition, Hope said.
Whites, including herself, have benefited from the exposure, she said.
"It's helped me just to know about different people," she said. "I consider myself very fortunate to come from a town so diverse."
In between teaching anthropology courses and rushing back and forth between his offices in Blake and Fraser halls, Stull continues to study the migration's effects on public health in Garden City. He also serves as a liaison between officials in Garden City and Lexington, Neb., another meatpacking community where he conducted a similar study.
Stull and a fellow researcher are working on a book about Garden City.
He said he hoped to apply the Garden City findings to Guymon, Okla., where a pork factory is scheduled to open in two years.
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1
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday. November 1. 1993
:7
Jayhawks slide past Oklahoma State
Fourth-quarter lapse trips Cowboys again
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
STILLWATER, Okla. - The fourth quarter was a problem for Oklahoma State again.
Junior fullback Chris Powell scored on a l yard touch run with 7:23 left in the game to help Kansas beat Oklahoma State 13-6.
The Cowboys, who were outscored this season 51-0 in the fourth quarter entering Saturday's game against Kansas, lost the fourth quarter again and, consequently, lost to the Jayhawks.
"We were able to hang in there, and that's not an easy feat," said Kansas coach Glen Mason. "I couldn't be happier with the attitude of my players. They've had a lot of disappointment, and it's sure fun to go into that locker room to a happy bunch of kids."
Throughout the first three quarters, the game was a battle of field goals. Oklahoma State sophomore kicker Lawson Vaughn connected on field goals of 29 and 33 yards to help the Cowboys to a 6-3 halftime lead.
Kansas senior kicker Dan Eichloff, who made a 22-yard field goal in the second quarter, tied the game at 6-6 with 5:15 remaining in the third quarter with a 27-yard field goal. Then the Jayhawk defense stepped up to shut down the Cowboy offense in the final 20 minutes.
Kansas forced Oklahoma State to punt from its 10-yard line on its opening possession of the fourth quarter after senior defensive tackle Chris Maumalanga sacked Oklahoma State quarterback Andy Loveland.
"Before we took the field, Coach (Bob) Fello said we had to come up with something — a turnover or a three-and-out—and to do whatever it takes to take it," Maumalanga said. "Fortunately, coach called the right play, and I came up with the sack."
The Jayhawks took advantage of excellent field position resulting from Scott Tyner's 33-yard punt. Kansas moved the ball 47 yards for the eventual winning touchdown.
The key play in the drive was a fake
field goal, where holder Van Davis flipped the ball to junior fullback Costello Good. Good ran 8 yards for a first down at the Cowboy 11-yard line.
"That took some nerve and probably not much brains," said Mason of the fake field goal call. "It's Halloween, and that's one of the tricks we pulled out of the bag."
Four plays later, the Jayhawks used no tricks. Powell went up the middle from 1 vard out for the touchdown.
Oklahoma State had its chances to possibly tie or even take the lead in the game in the last 7:23. The Cowboys moved to the Kansas 44-yard line following the touchdown, but sophomore linebacker Keith Rodgers hit Loveland and knocked the ball loose. Senior defensive end Guy Howard recovered the ball at the Cowboy 43-yard line with 6:24 to play.
Kansas freshman June Henley returned the ball to Oklahoma State on the next play with a fumble at the Cowboy 41-yard line. But the Jayhawks held the Cowboys on a fourth-down play when Maumalanga stopped Cowboy freshman running back Louis Adams inches short of a first down at the Kansas 22-yard line with 2:44 left to play.
The Cowboys were able to get the ball back at midfield with 1:37 left and moved it to the 29-yard line. However, junior linebacker Don Davis popped Loveland on a fourth down pass, which fell incomplete.
By the numbers
| | KU | OSU |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| First days | 17 | 21 |
| Rushes-yards | 52-206 | 48-243 |
| Passing yards | 71 | 100 |
| Return yards | 4 | 13 |
| Comp-Att-Int | 7-1.6 | 10-2.20 |
| Sunrise Yards lost | 2.17 | 3-1.3 |
| Punts-Avg | 4.40 | 3-40 |
| Fumbles-Lost | 2.1 | 2.2 |
| Penalties-Yards | 3.30 | 8-60 |
| Time of Possession | 29.10 | 30.50 |
20
KANSAS 13, OKLAHOMA STATE 6
Kansas 0 3 3 7 -13
OKlahomia State 3 0 3 0 -6
OSU - FG Vaughn 29
Kan - FG Eichhoff 22
Kan - FG Eichhoff 33
Kan - FG Eichhoff 27
Kan - Powell 1 run (Eichhoff kick)
William Alix / KANSAN
Kansas running back June Henley and Oklahoma State linebacker Rich Ansley battle to recover a fumble in the third quarter. The Jayhawks beat the Cowboys 1-3 Saturday in Stillwater, Okla.
'Hawks win Halloween horror show
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
STILLWATER, Okla. - It's Hidayeen, so Kansas coach Glen Mason had a trick for Oklahoma State. That trick became a treat for the Javahawks.
That play helped set up junior follow-back Chris Powell's 1-yard touchdown run four plays to give Kansas a 13-6 victory.
Junior fullback Costello Good took a shovel pass from junior holder Van Davis on a fake 36-yard field goal attempt from Dan Eichloff in the fourth quarter. Good ran eight yards for a first down at the Cowboy 11-yard line.
"It was one of those calls, where if it works, it's great," Mason said. "But if it doesn't, everybody wonders why it was made, especially with a kicker like Eichloff on the team."
The play sounded like a good call to Eichloff, who was not sure if he could make the 36-yard attempt into a 20-mph wind.
"I told the coaches that we needed to get to the 20-yard line because I saw Lawson Vaughn's 33-yard barely go through." Eichloff said.
Davis said the coaching staff contemplated calling the fake earlier in the game.
"We watched on film that their defense gives up that play easy," Davis said.
Oklahoma State coach Pat Jones said the fake was not a complete surprise to him. In fact, he thought it was coming on the fourth quarter attempt.
"We were hollering to watch the fake," Jones said. "Ironically, that's exactly the same fake that we've worked on."
However, it was Good that made the trick into a treat for the Jayhawks. He came in motion from the right wing and took Davis' shovel pass eight yards to the Cowboy 11-yard line for the first down. He needed to get the 13-ward line.
"I was worried about the defensive end following right behind me," Good said. "Coach told me that I had to hit the hole quick. I saw the daylight, and went straight forward for the first down."
Late night serves up tricks, treats
Bv Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
For the second straight year, "Late Night with Roy Williams" fell on Halloween weekend.
And although the night's theme was "A Blast from the Past to the Present," the midnight extravaganza had plenty of tricks, treats and horrors for the near-capacity crowd of 15,700.
First. the tricks.
Somehow, the Kansas promotions department, headed by Director Jill Godfrey, managed to serve up a slew of cameo appearances by some of the nation's most loved television sitcom characters.
Among many others on hand for the event, which began sharply at 11 p.m., were freshman Jacque Vaughn as Fonzie and freshman Nick Proud as Richie, from "Happy Days"; senior Patrick Richey as the Skipper and junior Greg Gurley as Gilligan, from "Gilligan's Island"; and freshman B.J. Williams as J.J. from "Good Times."
Try Kansas coach Roy Williams tricking the
crowd with his Fred Astaire impersonation. Actually, this trick proved to be a treat for the crowd, as Williams was coaxed to the dance floor by the Crimson Girls for the fourth consecutive year.
"It was hard to dance because I couldn't hear the music," Williams said. "The crowd was so loud when I was out there. Thank goodness I didn't have to stay long. I couldn't tell if the music was still playing."
The crowd was treated to a children's slam-dunk contest, a crowd costume contest and lip-sync efforts from junior guard Calvin Rayford and junior center Greg Ostertag. Rayford mouthed Ben King's "Stand By Me," with dance accompaniment from Williams, and Ostertag denoted a ten-gallon hat for Brooks and Dunn's "Boot Scootin' Booie."
One treat was for high school basketball recruit Ishua Benjamin from Concord, N.C. Benjamin, 6-foot-4 and 185 pounds, watched the night unfold sitting comfortably next to Williams and the team on the Kansas bench.
Jayhawk's first practice was filled with sloppy play, turnovers and excessive player fouls.
The two teams shot for a combined 39 percent, committed 19 turnovers and accounted for 29 player fouls.
However, not to worry Williams said he knew what the night's nausea was.
"The biggest thing is that it's fun for the people involved," he said. "The fans get to see our guys in a much different light than what they do in the regular season."
Senior forward Richard Scott, who scored 15 points for the blue team that lost 44-43, said he agreed with Williams in that the scrimmage was not a reflection of team's talent.
"The whole game was just for fun and for the crowd," Scott said. "We weren't doing anything to prepare ourselves for the season. It's the only practice in which the players get to have fun, and after this it's strictly business."
And business it was. The 'Hawks finished their weekend with four hours of ghoulish practices split between Saturday afternoon and yesterday morning.
MADISON, Wis. The scene seemed natural: thousands of students euphoric after Wisconsin's victory against Michigan spilling out of the stands and driving relentlessly toward the nearest goal post.
Some realized quickly that something was dreadfully wrong, including football players who rushed to a pile of people at the north end of the stadium. But most others partied on, happy at having pushed past barriers and security guards to reach the artificial turf of Camp Randall Stadium.
At least 60 were injured, seven critically, Saturday when a railing collapsed at the edge of the student section, sending fans tumbling into a 10-foot-wide gap between the stands and a 4-foot chain-link fence.
Others, pressing down from the top of the stadium, swarmed over those
who had fallen and knocked down the fence en route to the wild on field celebration.
Thirteen remained hospitalized yesterday, two of them in serious condition and the rest listed as good to fair.
Wisconsin Chancellor David Ward said the school would immediately review what, if any, changes were needed before Saturday's home game against Ohio State.
Some students said players or other fans saved their lives.
Pinned with dozens of others in the narrow gap between the stands and the chain-link fence, Jansen was ready to pass out when a Wisconsin player came to her aid.
"He grabbed me by my pants and whipped me over," she said. "I know this football player was No. 3, and I know there are two No. 3s. I want to get hold of him because I do believe he saved my life."
AP Top 25
By Richard Eggleston The Associated Press
The top 25 teams in the AP 1993 college football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Oct. 30, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25-th place vote and ranking in last week's pool.
Others receiving votes: Boston College 85, Washington 57, Michigan State 36, Cleveland 34, Kentucky 20, Illinois 16, SouthernCollege 16, Washington 6, Cambridge 6, Bowie Green 2, Michigan 1, Oregon 8.
Rank Team Record Pts Pts
1. Florida St. (62) 8-0 1,550 1
2. Notre Dame 9-0 1,480 2
3. Ohio State 8-0 1,396 3
4. Miami 6-1 1,324 4
5. Alabama 7-0 1,305 5
**6. Nebraska** **8-0 1,282** **6**
7. Tennessee 6-1 1,133 8
8. Auburn 8-0 1,118 9
9. Florida 6-1 1,058 10
10. Texas A&M 7-1 951 11
11. West Virginia 7-0 947 13
12. UCLA 6-2 911 15
13. Louisville 7-1 739 17
14. Arizona 7-1 705 7
15. Wisconsin 7-1 683 21
16. North Carolina 7-2 599 18
17. Indiana 7-1 516 23
**18. Kanaas St.** **6-1 1** 509 25
19. Penn State 5-2 450 12
20. Oklahoma **6-2 0** 320 14
21. Virginia 6-2 288 16
22. N. Carolina St. 6-2 145 —
23. Colorado **4-3 1** 145 —
24. Wyoming 7-1 129 —
25. Virginia Tech 6-2 120 —
Source: The Associated Press KANSAN
The victory over Big Eight foe Iowa State pushed Kansas' record to 15-9 overall and 4-4 in the conference and dropped Iowa State's record to 5-15 and 2-5.
Bv Gerrv Fev
New strategy helps Jayhawks defeat Cyclones
Height 'advantage' leads volleyball team to victory
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
On paper, Iowa State's height seemed to be an advantage. The Cyclones have seven players 5-foot-11 or taller, and Kansas has only one, freshman outside hitter Lara Izokatis at 5-11.
That was the case Saturday as the Kansas volleyball team defeated a bigger Iowa State team 15-9, 15-17, 15-7, 15-12 at Allen Field House.
Bigger is not always better.
But Kansas' height over Iowa State's shortest player, 5-7 freshman setter Jenny Lansink, ironically made the difference. Kansas won the first game by hitting over Lansink's block on the front line. That is when Iowa State replaced her with 5-11 junior setter Kary Law.
"I thought Kansas did a good job of exploiting our setter," Iowa State coach Jackie Nunez said. "That's why we used our other setter."
Sophomore outside hitter Tracie Walt was the beneficiary of Lansink's lack of height. In game one, Kansas setter Lei Steinert continually passed to Lansink's side of the court.
Walt took one set from Steinert in game one
and spiked it around Lansink's outstretched hands to make the score 10-8. She had two more kills in the game and ended the match with 16 kills.
Kansas coach Frankie Alitz said she didn't tell the team to pass to Walt.
"She was just hot," Albizt said. "They figured it out. My team just played a good match."
Game two was a different story for the Jayhawks. With Law on the court, the Cyclones blocking picked up. Kansas lost an early 8-3 lead, mainly because of service errors and lack of communication
"It was our errors that lost the game," Walt said. "They didn't do anything differently."
The turning point of the match for Iowa State may have been when Law injured her thumb and had to leave the match. Lansink had to play, and Kansas went back to its game one strategy.
The last game of the match was close throughout. Neither team had momentum until late in the game when Kansas pulled away to win 15-12. Albitz said her team kept battling.
"They had some good serves," Albitz said of the Cyclones. "Our side-out game was what really kept us in it."
For the Jayhawks to participate in the Big Eight tournament Nov. 26-27, they must be in the top four in the conference. Kansas is currently fourth. 14 matches ahead of Iowa State.
"I'm just trying to get them to play each match," Albitz said of her team. "It gives them a chance to make the Big Eight tournament. We still have to keep going, but it gives us a good chance."
RACHINARY
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
Kansas outside hitter Tracie Walt attempts to return a spike to Iowa State. Kansas kept its post-season hopes alive by defeating the Cyclones on Saturday night.
8
Monday. November 1. 1993
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Women take fifth at Big Eight meet
Men disappointed with eighth place
By Kent Hohlfeld Kansan sportswriter
CROSS COUNTRY
The Kansas women's cross country team saw its hopes of bringing home the first Big Eight championship in team history slip away Saturday on the A.L. Austin Golf Course in Columbia, Mo.
The Kansas men's team finished eighth with 194 points and the women's team finish fifth with 90 points in the Big Eight Championships.
Nebraska, who won the women's meet with 57 points, was followed by Kansas State, Colorado and Oklahoma
Julia Saul led the Kansas women's
team with her best time of the season. She ran the 5,000-meter course in 17 minutes, 55 seconds, matching her time at last year's Big Eight meet in Boulder, Co.
Saul said that the team was disappointed with its performance but that the meet showed the parity within the conference. Kansas finished one point behind fourth place Oklahoma and 12 points behind third place Colorado.
"Ithink we showed we can compete with those teams," Saul said. "We expected it to be close and it was, except for Nebraska."
Nebraska won the meet by 15 points over second place Kansas State. Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said the women's team has the potential to better than it did in the meet Saturday.
"Our result today was just not having our top performers all perform at their best together as a team," Schwartz said.
He said that it was disheartening to see the potential to win not materialize in the competition.
"It's disappointing when you're ready for the challenge, but can't put it all together," Schwartz said.
Saul said the team would have to run better to have a chance of qualifying for the NCAA Championships on Nov. 22. The first step in qualifying will be Nov. 13, when they attend the District V meet at Southern Illinois in Carbondale, Ill.
The men's team also had a difficult time with the level of competition at the meet. The No. 2 Iowa State Cyclones dominated the men's competition, scoring 27 points. The Cyclones came within two points of scoring the lowest possible number
of points that can be scored, which is 25.
The top Kansas runner was freshman Bryan Schultz, who finished 27th with a time of 25:45 on the men's 8,000-meter course. He was followed by Bobby Palmer who finished 32nd with a time of 26:09.
Palmer said that he did not think the team ran up to its capabilities. He said that he was at a loss to explain the team's slow performance.
"I felt sluggish," Palmer said. "The competition was all that we expected though."
He said that he thought the team's runners would use the meet as a learning experience that would help them when they compete in the District Vmeet.
"We need to take a look at some of the mistakes we made and learn from them," Palmer said.
Shula ties coaching mark as Miami tops KC
The Associated Press
MIAMI — Because Scott Mitchell passed for three touchdowns, Don Shula caught George Halas.
Mitchell, making his second start in place of the injured Dan Marino, gave the Miami Dolphins an early lead, and the defense did the rest in a 30-10 victory against Kansas City as Shula tied Halas' NFL record of 324 coaching wins.
"It's nice to be part of it," said Mitchell. "I know he's excited about it. But I also know he would like to get to the Super Bowl, and that would make it even better."
The victory improved Shula's record to 324-152-6 in 31 seasons with the Dolphins and Baltimore Colts. The late Halas was 324-151-31 in 40 years with the Chicago Bears.
"It's been a lot of years," Shula said. "The important thing is the win — beating Kansas City."
Shula will have a chance to break the record Sunday when Miami plays at the New York Jets.
West
AFC
"The players have so much respect for him," safety Louis Oliver said of his coach. "There's so much professionalism in him. He wants to win so badly, and he instills that in you. He makes you want to play for him."
W L T Div.
Kansas City 5 2 0 3-0
L.A. Raiders 4 3 0 2-20
Denver 4 3 0 2-20
Seattle 4 4 0 1-30
San Diego 3 4 0 2-30
Central
Cleveland 5 2 0 3-0
Pittsburgh 4 2 0 1-0
Houston 3 4 0 1-0
Cincinnati 0 7 0 1-0
NFL
East
West
NFC
Miami 6 1 0 34-10
Buffalo 5 1 0 24-0
N.Y. Jets 3 4 0 18-0
Philadelphia 3 4 0 17-0
New England 1 7 0 030
Green Bay 17, Chicago 3
Miami 30, Kansas City 10
Tampa Bay 28, Tampa Bay 31, Atlanta 24
N.Y. Jets 19, N.Y. Gians 6
New Orleans 29, Phoenix 17
San Diego 30, LA Raiders 23
San Francisco 40, L.A. Rams 11
Detroit 30, Minnesota 27
W L T Div.
New Orleans 6 2 0 3-10
San Francisco 6 2 0 2-40
Miami 2 6 0 2-30
L.A. Rams 2 6 0 0-30
Central
Detroit 6 2 0 1-10
Minnesota 4 3 0 4-10
Gilbert 4 3 0 4-10
Gincar Bay 3 4 0 1-30
Tampa Bay 2 5 0 1-30
East
Washington at Buffalo S P.M. on ABC
N.Y. Giants 5 2 0 2-0
Dallas 5 2 0 2-10
Philadelphia 6 2 0 2-10
Philadelphia 2 6 0 2-20
Washington 1 5 0 1-40
Joe Montana aggravated a strained left hamstring and departed in the second quarter with the Chiefs behind 13-0. He did not return, and his status for Kansas City's next game, Nov. 8 against Green Bay, is uncertain.
The matchup was billed as a possible preview of the AFC championship game, but the Dolphins, 6-1, easily won their fifth in a row.
"I'm not even the starting quarterback, and we're still winning," Mitchell said. "So we must have a pretty good team."
Kansas City, 5-2, lost for the first
time in five games.
Linebacker Bryan Cox led Miami's defense with one fumble forced and two recoveries.
"We got our butts kicked all over Joe Robbie Stadium," coach Marty Schottenheimer said. "I did a lousy job, our staff did a lousy job, and our players did a lousy job. I think that says it all."
"We didn't score every time; we didn't stop them every time," Cox said. "So it wasn't perfect. But we played a great game."
Cox's jarring tackle to cause a fumble left running back Harvey Williams motionless on the field for 15 minutes in the second quarter with a concussion. Williams was removed on a stretcher, taken to a hospital and held overnight for observation.
"Everybody on the sidelines was just hoping he was all right," Chiefs receiver Willie Davis said.
Mitchell threw touchdown passes of 27 yards to Irving Fryar, eight yards to Keith Byars and 77 yards to Mark Ingram. Repeatedly fooling the NFL's fourth-ranked defense, Mitchell completed 22 of 33 passes for 344 yards with no interceptions.
"I don't know that you could give a team better quarterbacking and leadership than he's given us," Shula said of Mitchell.
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Sunday 8:40am-4:30pm
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday
Saturday 9am-12pm
Sunday 11am-14pm
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
120 Announcements
*SPRING BREAK*
Early Booking Special
$25 Deposit
LOWEST PAYMENT QUARANTEEED!
Jam at 606-511
Found: The large pizza buffet in Lawrence. Locat-
ness: 350 S. 22nd St. $2.99 p.m. Mon-Sun
11 a.m. - 10:30 p.m.
FREE MONEY
Available for your education
Collegelate Services
Call 1-800-328-9866 for free info.
St. John's Feesta Bake Sale Sun, Nov 7 8:00am
cookery, tortillas, toppings, 1234 Karen
CHRISTMAS SKI BREAKS
1.30 Entertainment
LODGING • LIFTS • PARTIES • PICNICS • TAXES
JANUARY 2-16, 1994 • 5, 6 or 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT $199
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
TELLURIDE
SUNCAFE & BEACHCAFE
BREADED
LAST CHANCE
Free Party Room Available at Johnny's Ta-
mUp/Up and Contact. Call 842-6797 for details.
Treet Readings at Parkes!
Have the most intimate part of the year.
Call 841-2696.
140 Lost & Found
Sudden systemic mutation happened to animals metabolically similar to humans. Substrate metabolism of these animals, produced sudden, lasting, bignel, nuclear, physiological behavior change. If interested
INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
Tarot classes: Ancient mysteries for a modern age. Classes begin on 10. No to register call 841-265-7380.
JOAN
865 - 5611
Lost cat. Siamese mix, long-haired, 3 years old to Gray. Grawen is offered. Call Poggy 618-257-1400.
1·800·SUNCHASE
Lest yellow and grey cocktail bar. 8th and Highland
and garnished. Answers to "Rocky" Reward
Book 834-479
EAGLE
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
AA Cruise & Travel jobs Earn $250/mo. + travel the world free! (Caribbean, Europe, Hawaii, Amrica) Cruise line now hiring for busy holiday; Call (819) 928-4388 for employment! Call (819) 928-4388 ext. 131.
Adams Alumni Center is looking for part-time hangout servers. Must have some am/daytime availability, very flexible jobs. Nice working environment. Apply at 126 Oread. Across from Kana Union.
ADMINISTRATIVE USER SERVICES. Student Monthly. December 11/12/19. $550-$650/month depending on experience. Duties include providing application development, design, documentation and deliver software training sessions for end users, provide LAN installation and problem solution support, and other duties. Required qualifications: Demonstrated skills, knowledgeable about computerized databases and their uses, experience using microcomputers, currently enrolled at KU and continuing in the program, knowledgeable about computer description available. To apply, submit a letter of application and a current resume to Ann Riat, Personnel Assistant, Computer Center, University of Assessa, Lawrence, KS 66445. EOA/EMployER
AMIGOS Supervisor/Assist Mgr.
Supervisor now - Manager later! Learn the business from the ground up and advance according to the needs of your team; are an aggressive customer oriented person and are a customer intense pace, an opportunity to put these skills to work and develop as a leader is available. Relocation benefits also apply. Benefits now at: am仔, 1819 W. 23rd.
9:00 p.m.-HAWKPAC mtng
Israeli Consul Ofra
Ben-Yaacov
COOK assistant every weekday 1am-4pm. Must
have previous experience children Sunrise Acres
Preschool 12am-5pm.
CHEMISTRY LABORATORY ASSISTANT
Requires good academic record in chemistry,
must have a Bachelor's degree, or
enfer describable, 12-20 bwr/wk. Submit application
with names of 3 references, and copies of transcripts to INTERX Research, 2012w 21st Street.
An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/V/H/V.
Comic strip artist, off-bat, entrepreneur. Send 3
books to box 65, 119 Staifer Flint, Lawrence,
KS, 60454.
DOCUMENTATION INTERN. Student Monthly.
Deadline: 11/11/93. Salary: $550-$650/month.
Duties include organizing, maintaining, and
assisting with computer-based training
assist in on-line help files, manuals and presentation
of user-education seminars and workshops.
Required qualifications: must be enrolled at KU,
clear and effective speaking skills. Good com-
puter literacy required. Requires a microcomputer,
mainframes and/or supercomputers. Complete job description available. To apply, submit a letter of application and a current resume to Ann Rai, Personnel Assistant, Comput-
ing Department, Lawrence, Wisconsin.
66045 KOES AA/EMPLOYER
Now hiring delivery drivers, all shifts. Must be 18
or older. Apply at Pizza Hut,
Hat 249, Suite 6, Q4-8500-3200.
Raise $500 in % days, Groups, Clubs, motivated individuals 1-100 785-775 ext. 101
Gardening/Landscaping, part-time workers needed to plant bulbs. 749-4555
Wed., Nov.10.
Part-time artist for original, sports active T-shirt
Call for portfolio review and interview.
Party Photographers needed Please apply in person 3-5pm Tuesday thru Friday at Photographic Occasions, 105 W. 11th Street. 35mm camera experience preferred.
Friday, NOV. 3
6 p.m.-SHABBAT DINNER
Hillel House
Call 864-3948
by noon Friday.
Part-time Supervisor Wanted Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse
C. at 179 Massachusetts, M- F 3am - 4pm.
(Upcoming bookings may be delayed.)
PRE SCHOOL DIRECTOR: Large Established community preschool and child care program looking for acting director while present; director with acting experience with early childhood hours and minimum one year as assistant director. Good personal, positive Preschool Director: Large established community preschool and child care program looking for acting director while present director is on sabbatical. Good personal communication with early childhood hours and minimum one year as assistant director. Good personal, positive communication, and office skills important. This chapter includes a description of a resume with a resume to 4121 W 13 St. LAWRENCE. K66048
Previous food service and supervisory experience mandate. Start at 52 per hour. Maintain 48-60 hours per week, mostly 62 per hour, 20-30 hours per week, mostly evenings and weekends. Apply at Schumm
Hillel Upcoming Events
7:30 p.m.-POETRYSLAM!
Glass Onion, 12th & Oread Poets and amateurs Call 864-3948 to participate.
Earn $15 today Earn $30 this week $1000 CASH GIVEAWAY!
Research assistant; Excellent writing skills;
basic research and office skills; some public relations
experience. English senior, grad. preferred.
64/hr. Contact Lori Whitten 804-4530.
Anyone who donates their blood plasma 8 times between Oct. 30 and Dec. 17 is eligible to win a cash drawing.
EARN CASH
$
Stop to Shop is looking for part time clerk must be to work 20.m, to 19.m, shift, some weekends and holidays. If interested apply in person at 1010 N.3rd.
RESUME SERVICES Professional Business
Business Cover Letters Interview Train-
ing Interviews
Office assistant needed 25 brw kru 3-7p.m. &
Sat: 12-40. Please call 749-0130.
STUDENT HOURLY CUSTODIAL WORKER
Two (2) openings at Watkins Student Health Center. 15-20 hrs. a week evenings and some Saturdays. Work schedules will continue through school year '93-'94. Must and continue through student. Work schedules will vary according to the facility is open. Apply in person to Personnel Office, Watkins Health Center Monday through Friday. Additional information available upon request.
1st Prize: $450
2nd Prize: $150
3rd Prize: $100
4th Prize: $100
5th Prize: $75
6th Prize: $50
7th Prize: $25
8th Prize: $25
9th Prize: $25
SUB COOKS 10am-4pm as needed. Some supervise children. Sunshine Acres Preschool 842-233
SUB LUNCHERS 11:30am-4pm. Must supervise children/Senior/Senior development field. Sunshine Acres Academy 1042-237
"Help pay your tuition by entering our cash giveaway and help save a life today."
Mass. Street Deli or Buffalo Bills's Smokehouse.
must have daytime availability M-F, also some evenings and weekends. Previous food service and supervisory experience mandatory. Start at $8.25 per hour. Pay raises based on performance. Pay $8.25 per hour. Apply to Applym Food Company, 719 Massachusetts, Monday through Friday, 9am-4pm.
(Uptairs above smokehouse).
NABI
The Quality Bureau
Hours:
M-F 9-6
Sat. 10-3
Fraternities and Sororites call
for more information about
fund-raising
**olympian Coach wanted- for women's USWPA**
**experience preferred. Experience required.** Sam & Tom A.
$15 Today $30 This week
FASTCASH
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
$
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
225 Professional Services
Traffic tickets, misdemeanors, landlord/ tenant,
Braxton B. Colev 749-3333
Experienced organit will play for weddings at
Coral Call, Carla Call at 813-173 and leave a message.
Driver education offered through Midwest Diving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
TRAEFIC-DUW'S
THAPICBURS
Fake ID & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The Law offices of
749-5750
816 W.24 F.
Behind Laird-
Noller Ford
NABI Biomedical
Center
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 E. 13th 842-1133
DONALDG. STROLE
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
Weres here to listen and talk with you.
Birthright 843-823 Free pregnancy testing. Prompt abortion and contraceptive services. Dale H. Hornsby
E. Clincher M.D. B43-510
Research Assistance - MS/MLS information specialist available to assist with term papers, theses, dissertations, research projects. B43-4280
TUTORING SERVICE: 832-9625
paper supplier.
Help you make an "A" word process.
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
235 Typing Services
360 Miscellaneous
1-der Woman Word Processing, 843-2603.
A Word Perfect word processing system. Laser
A Word Perfect word processing service. Laser printer. Near campus 842-895-6.
AA Word Processing: Any site, under 30 pp.
overservice week: 8/12.5pp. Cal Rall after
8/17.
Beacon Publication Services-Quality word processing, laser printing, 20/50/paper type, and other types of design. Expert typing. IBM Correcting Selectric. 18/$0 double spaceed. Call Mr. Maitilai 841-367-2222.
X
Sculptured Nails $29 req. #24 Reflections West, West.
$232 Ridgecount Bldg. 841-962 Amk for Pam.
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your TYPING needs call
wordprocess@microsoft.com
Fast, accurate word processing; term paper, dissertation, thesis and graphics services available. Laser printing. Engineering and Law Review experience. Call Pam at 841-1977 anytime.
ProType - fast, reliable service, professional quality. Any kind of typing accepted.
305 For Sale
Protype: fast, reliable service, professional qual-
ity. Any kind of typing accepted. Call us at 845-721-6300.
300s Merchandise
Beds, desks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
908 Mass.
Body Beauty Membership. 7months/ $160 Call Wendy 865-614, Leave a message.
3 year old Apollo DN 2500 unix workstation *19*
*19* 3-year old Apollo DN 2500, APOLLO Tokenkering
Adapter Inquiry 823-6443
MORRINE FILTERING HEADS HEADS &
LOW FLOW SHOWER HEADS at Simple Goods
General Store 753 Mass. M-Set 1-0, 30; Tbill 8.
Fair Clearance: All adult tapes on sale $2.15 and
up, Mirracle Video, N 9.2nd, B41, 84936, or Miracle
Video Too, I100 Video, B41, 794-759.
400s Real Estate
1 roommate to share spacious, furn 4BR 2 bath
ap on campus to share private parking. Lm. rw. g.
lg. hg.
405 For Rent
FITNESS EQUIPMENT
1 bedroom apt. available Jan 1. Close to campus,
on KU bus route. $87/month. Water paid. Plenty
of living space. Call Kara, 842-2457
4 bedrooms apartment for rent, fully furnished,
no pets! Available Spring sem. Interested? Call
415-390-8276.
DP 2500 weight lifting machine, leg curls, etc.
Great condition. DP Body - Tone 300 Rowing Machine. $250 for both. Call 843-0540 evenings and weekends.
Queen Waterproof w/underdressers $19. 50
stereo: Paddle $200 sell for $19. Cory $49-105
Avail. Dec. 1st. Very large, newly remodeled one room apartment. On bus route, on road cable and paid cable.
Macintosh Quadra, new in box. Must sell. 1-800-240
2441.
Female one bedroom avail. in 3 birmat house. All wood floors, new paint, laundry in back, off street parking. Close to campus. Avail. Nov. 1 call 832-8223.
Sub-lease affordable townhome Jan-May, b1 level,
Sub-level 1/4 bath, on bus route. Call 861-273-
0959.
For lease: 4 bedroom, Sundance guests, near campus, occupancy date negotiable. Oct-Jan, 3700 +1234567890
Sanry STR-DT8 receiver $200, Coffee thief. w/ end this
$50, LifeCycle $500R 450R, Dinetet set² a dii th,
with 4 ch. $40, Mirror 39"x39" $50, $45-165 anytime.
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and
bathroom from KU. Off-street parking.
No pets. Bath 841-5600.
Sub-lease fully furnished 1 bdm apt. All utilities
paid $36/m. Available in January. Please call
(800) 241-7945.
340 Auto Sales
1978 Buck Leaverbank-350 v8 PS, PB, AT, AC $608 842
1111-day. Andy-D
1300 IBWK runs good, no muffler, broke tail light,
wrong to lag. Must call. Sell Chip 865-2844.
$1000
1960 Acura Integra, 2-dr. LS, white blint, n.upr.
wiredow, w/window cover
7800 0B00 0B00 0B00 7800 0B00 0B00
unique *pseudonyms* on apa tp, naro wozpo tpz,
*books from campus/countdown* /$40/month.
*posts from community* /$2/month.
430 Roommate Wanted
1 female needed to share 3 BR, 2 bath Campus Place Apt. Smoker, reasonable rent, close to campus. Call Campus Place Office 841-1420
- Bvohone: 864-4358
1 Roommate needed to share 3 bdmm housemates at Mendowbrook $190/month /1.91.Util please.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1 female needa need to a 2 bedroom house. Close
to me, 7624-7620 or 8258- 8258+ 7624-7620 or leave a message
1 i or F needed to bring 3 bedroom houses. On bus
Smoker or not. Artistic minded. Old bus
1976 Mobile Home, resg head stock, $160/mo +/- 10/bits and deposit (Air, Alr storage avail, Mark
A)
How to schedule an ad:
Roommate wanted: Nov 1st Female preferred
either a roommate or usitles.
Call Kail or Christina 841-3971.
2 dbmrs available in Jan 3 bedrooms 3 bath town
home, garage, cable, washer & dryer. Respon-
sible, non-smokers only. 042-1118 Leave message,
7 females need to share 4 dbmr townhouse, 1900
Ada phone in may be labeled in your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
*An amber: 1500 Elkwood Flat.*
ROOMMATE NEEDED. Go to campus.
ROOMMATE NEEDED. Go to campus.
Preserved. Non smoke. 2 full baths. 841-643
0915-738-4124
One roommate should to share a two bedroom
room. You can set up a cell phone, call
Andy or Gary M-41445 for a message.
Attention! We need 2.5 females to help sublease
apricot on Ohio St in January. New W/D A.C. very
clean, nice neighbors. $177/mo. + utilities. Call now
832-851-881
To share 2 bdmr w/ male grad. student A.S.A.P.
A.S.P. Cable T300 1280+ /utilities
749-285
20th yr sr S?; seeking a co-morbid for 3 bdpc beginning decial E1. Call Carrier or Cathy at 885-228
If female needs to share a 3 bedroom house-clas-
cam, call the provider or a Dec "2325-4u-
cal, appears to be available, or a Dept."
Stop by the Kanazan 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.
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 filled to your MasterCard or Visa account. Ads that are billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused fees 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 agate limits 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 on the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
When canceling a classified ad that was charged on MasterCard or VISA, the advertiser's account will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled 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 canciliation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Num. of insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
105 personal
110 business persons
120 announcements
120 entertainment
Classifications
$ per dollar in inventory
1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30
2.05 1.55 1.05 .85 .75 .64
1.90 1.15 .80 .70 .65 .64
1.85 1.05 .75 .65 .60 .55
1.75 .90 .65 .60 .60 .45
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
395 for sale
343 auto sales
360 miscellaneous
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | | |
3 | | | | | |
4 | | | | | |
5 | | | | | |
140 lest & found
265 help wanted
225 professional services
235 twining services
370 want to buy
405 for rent
438 roommate wanted
me: Phone:
Classification:
Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper
Address:
**VISA**
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charring your ad:
Account number:
_Expiration Date:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University Daliy Kansan, 119 Stauffer Fint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 60454
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1993 Farworks Inc. (Not by Universal Press Syndicate)
The entire parliament fell dead silent. For the first time since anyone could remember, one of the members voted "aye."
1
10
Monday. November 1. 1993
UNIVERSITY .DAILY KANSAN
NATURALWAY
fifi's 925.IOWA
841-7226
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
Camera America
ONE HOUR PHOTO
Interviewing? Don't go into that Cold Cruel world Unprepared. 710 Mass. 843-1771 SPECTACULUS
We Process E-6 Slide Film In Only 3 Hours!!! 1610 West 23rd Street 841-7205
M. A. K. S. M. N. P. A. R.
Experience that pays Ryan is the two time winner of a Vector Marketing scholarship. Through his job at Vector he has gained valuable resume experience. He has also sharpened his communication and presentation skills. In addition, he has met many valuable professional contacts which will aid him in finding a future job.
Ryan Pearson KU Junior Lawrence,KS
VECTOR
$9.30 starting
Scholarships and internships available. All majors accepted. 842-8531
United Parcel Service Part time Jobs ups $8 Hour ups
ups
ups $8 Hour ups
Interviews will be held Wednesday, Nov. 3 from 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
Sign up in the placement center, 110 Burge Union
E/O/E m/f
The panorama exhibit was assembled by Lewis Lindsay Dyche for the 1893 world's fair and was kept in Snow Hall until 1902, when it was moved to the newly built Dyche Hall.
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Panorama of natural history has a long history of its own
By Shan Schwartz
Kansan staff writer
Some buffalo, prairie dogs and mountain goats are celebrating a century at KU this month but don't expect a wild celebration. The guests of honor are a little stiff.
The stuffed animals are part of the panorama exhibit at the Museum of Natural History in Dyche Hall. The exhibit has been on display at the University of Kansas since November 1893.
Dyche designed the panorama with the intent of teaching the public to appreciate nature, an appreciation he thought was essential to encourage the preservation of animal species.
Lewis Lindsay Dyche, a noted taxidermist and KU professor, first assembled his collection of stuffed animals for the 1893 World's Fair in Chicago, where it was one of the most popular attractions.
When he returned to KU after the World's Fair, he envisioned constructing a new campus building to house the exhibit and other natural history collections of the University.
The display was kept in old Snow Hall until 1902, when state funds made the completion of Dyche Hall
More than 120,000 people visit the museum each year and consistently select the panorama as the favorite exhibit.
possible. Dyche Hall was designed specifically to display the panorama exhibit.
"LL. Dyche contributed a lot to this museum with that panorama," said Kathryn Wiese Morton, program assistant at the Museum of Natural History. "Back then we didn't have the transportation or communication methods we have now. You couldn't just hop in your car or turn on the TV like you can now. This was a big deal, to see an animal from the arctic or the mountains. It was very exciting for people to come here and see these exhibits."
Morton said that the endangering of many animal species would make the creation of an identical exhibit today very difficult.
"Now, some of those animals you can't just go out and haul away," Morton said, "and that's how it should be. The laws are there now to protect those animals, and that's what Dyche wanted in the creation of this museum."
The Etc. Shop
Many of the animals in the panorama exhibit are the same ones Dyche first put on display at KU 100 years ago.
928 Mass. Downtown
Today, the panorama is still one of the largest such displays in the world, Morton said. More than 200 animal specimens span the perimeter of the museum's main floor in simulated jungle, desert, mountain, plains and arctic environments.
Parking in the rear
Morton said that the Museum of Natural History had more than 120,000 visitors a year and that the panorama was consistently selected by visitors as the favorite exhibit.
The second favorite choice of visitors is a dinosaur fossil collection, Morton said. The museum also contains permanent exhibits featuring live fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals.
Dyche Hall is one of the oldest standing buildings on campus and is listed in the National Register of Historic Places.
Cornerstone SBC
802W 22ndTerrace (behind KFC at dead end)
Come join us in fellowship and Bible Study
Need transportation-call 843-0442
Sunday School 9:30 Worship Service 11:00
CLIP A COUPON!
USE KANSAN CLASSIFIED
Introducing
Full Service
Engraving
Name Tags, Name Plates,
Plaques and Morel
Jaybowl
WARRIOR UNION
Not just for bowling any more!
...
864-3545
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
PLACE AN AD FREE! Call 864-4358
♂
Are you an attractive woman who is sick of being treated poorly by your man? If so, I'm a hamanom man who would like to cut in. Let me show you how a woman should be treated. #46026
MEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
M Male A Asian
F Female J Jewish
D Divorced C Christian
S Single Gay
W White Gay
B Black L Lesbian
H Hispanic N/S Non-Smoker
To check out these ads call 1-900-285-4560 You will be charged $1.95 per minute
5" 6" dark, handmade? laid back, old fashioned,
romantic, teddy bear type, smoker seeks short
attractive, open minded caring $F w/ mainstream
looks and a cosmic sense of life. Must enjoy con-
tact, gentle, kind, patient, caring and watching T.V., drinking and just partying once in a while. #47339
Common abbreviations
If you would rather have a meaningful conversation at a quiet table for two than having to shout over the noise of a crowded beer hall, you should be sure to this 29 year old economics major. Bez4651
SWM Graduate Student seeking athletic, sweet SWF for possible serious relationship. I am honest, kind, humorous, good intellect. I am 6" with an athletic build, brown hair, green eyes, and a clean-cut look. like biking, volleyball, good food, and good conversation. If you want to be treated as a special friend, I'm the one.
---
SWM 40, locks 36, 170' Handsome, smart, athletic race. Seeks SAF-SWF with similar interests. Canoeing, camping, nature, bicycling, runners, diving for possible friendship or beijing #67123.
Look into my crystal ball and see a 'dark eye' Geminian in your future. He will have many Tauren qualities, but is a definite air person. He is me; if you call I will respond #47183.
Out of town gent, 45, refined, mature and capable,
seeks sweet young thing for dates and fun #4011
SWM 20yrs, $10,150ls. long brown hair, I love
Henry Rollin, Tom Waitie, Social Distortion. I own
a motorcycle, don't have job and probably drink to
much. Come save my soul. Birkenton stocking
eec-free need not apply. #45226
Very attractive male, muscular build, would like
to play or for 40's who is still and
attractive. Call box # 6858.
♂
WOMEN SEEKING MEN
SW19, 18, 5'S Brown hair & eye look for a SWM
19-23 who enjoys long walks taking for hours see-
ing any kind of movie and into classic rock and
alternative music. Must be honest hard working
and like to get crazy and have a lot of fun. Sly guys
can apply too. Hope you call. Call #46892.
SWF 10,5'6", with light brown hair. Seeking single white males who like to party but also has a serious side. Enjoy romantic evenings and knows how to treat a girl right. #48375
---
Scorpio sensuous voice seeks SWM for intimate conversation. If you enjoy exploring the mystic realm with imaginative women try me, 44080.
GO
MEN SEEKING MEN
BIBW, 6', 175, good looking, Health/Gym, Quality, Travel, Beach, Fly, Bi-Coastal, Seeks College Guy, 18-28 only, Sharp, Great Looks, Intelligence, Magnificent, Masculine, Mature, Goals. Call
GWM, 20, seeks GM to share in intelligent/mindless conversation and listening to Erasure. Noncloset preferred, but, if not, maybe I can help.
44392.
GWM, 25, looking for a knight in shining Armour to sweep me off my feet. Horse optional. Think you have the qualifications? Call and tell me about them. #44402
GWM Welcome guys to Kansas! It's hard to make new friends. Can't seem to do a good job, so give me a helping hand! #44591
SWM, 6'3", 198, brown hair, green eyes, student looking for discrete but secure SWM for friendship maybe more. #44396.
♥ ♥
DWHIF, 26, 57". long brn hair, lipstick, fenne,
seeks friendship, hanging out in barrel, potential
relationship, I am handsome but beautiful
person, highly cheerful, basket-knife-
I am out-no virgin or tourista. #46548
WOMEN SEEKING WOMEN
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
4. You choose the people you want to meet and call them to set up a time and place.
To place an ad (must be 18 yrs old) 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 (every 3rd day from the day that you initially place your voice message), to listen to the messages people leave for you. Any other day, you may call the 900-number to retrieve your messages at a cost of $1.95 per minute. The average call is 3 mins in length.
To check out an ad
1. Choose the air 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: The Kansas volleyball team, fourth in the conference, must keep its ground to be invited to the Big Eight Tournament. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL. 103, NO.52
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1993
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Number of KU students per county
Number of KU students per county
Fall 1993 enrollment statistics
0-10 10-50 50-250 250-750 750-2,000 2,000-6,500
CN RA DC NT PL SM JW RP WS MS NH MR DP SN TH SD GH RO OB MC CD CY PT JA AT WA LG GO TR EL RS LC OT GE WB SN DC JO GL WH SC LE NS RH ST EW SA DK MR LV OS CR SH HM KE FI NG SF RN NV GW CF AN LN ST GT HS GY ED PR KM SG BO WO AL BB MT SV SW ME CA CM BA HP SU CL EK MO LB CK
High - Johnson (JO) 6,200 Low - Lane (LE)1
Average per county: 167
Total: 17,497
Source: Office of Institutional Research and Planning
Dan Schauer / KANGAN
Western Kansas' rare cry: 'Go east, young students'
Other half of state provides University with 4 percent of its in-state enrollment
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas traditionally has not drawn the bulk of its students from the western part of the state. This year is no exception.
Other institutions such as Kansas State, junior colleges in Kansas, and out-of-state universities attract most of the western Kansas high school students away from KU.
This year more than 700 western Kansas students are enrolled at KU, or 4 percent of the total in-state student enrollment. About 17,500 students from Kansas attend KU.
The number of western Kansas students at the University is lower than at Kansas State, which has 1,306 students from that area. Both universities, however, have about the same number of in-state students.
But Kirk Cerry, a KU admissions representative who recruits students in western Kansas, said KU generally attracted more talented high school seniors from the western part of the state than any other college or university in Kansas.
"People recognize KU as the premier academic institution in the state." he said.
Western Kansas is generally defined as those counties west of Great Bend in Barton County. Cermy said.
Students are attracted to schools primarily because of academic programs, he said.
He said that more western Kansas students attended Kansas State, for example, because the university offers more programs that interest them, such as agriculture and ecology.
Cerny said he was responsible for visiting 102 high schools in 43 counties in central and western Kansas.
He said western Kansas students did not necessarily choose K-State over KU because it was closer to home.
"If students are that hung up on the distance, they'll tend to go to a junior college before they go to K-State anyway," Cerny said.
Cerny said that even though KU was an "instate bargain," western Kansas students often opted for junior colleges because they were less expensive and allowed students to live at home.
"And coming to KU, making that big lifestyle change — not everyone is ready for something like that," he said.
Jane Gregg, a guidance counselor at Dodge City High School in Ford County, said that students living in central Kansas, like most high school students, considered academic programs, financial aid and family traditions when choosing a college.
"Some of them don't mind going across the state or even out-of-state, but an increasing number, I think, are staying right here in Dodge City and going to the community college." she said.
Jill Johnson, Dodge City freshman, said KU's strong social welfare program was the most important reason she decided to come to KU. She said she was influenced by the images she had of other universities in Kansas
Dondy Dinh, Liberal freshman, said he wanted to stay in Kansas and study medicine at KU.
"K-State and Wichita State seemed to me like they were, well, farm schools," Johnson said.
"The trip across Kansas seems convenient when you know that you go to the top university in the state," he said.
Supreme Court ruling keeps anti-gay-rights law in limbo
Colorado amendment must get state court's OK
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court refused yesterday to let Colorado enforce its anti-gay-right amendment while state courts judge its legality.
The court, without comment, rejected the argument that Colorado court rulings set a too-high legal standard for judging whether the amendment violates homosexuals' rights.
Eight states and 75 cities and counties provide some sort of civil-rights protection for homosexuals, according to the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force. But in some communities, opponents of such measures have mobilized to repeal them.
voters in November 1992 bars any law or ordinance aimed at protecting homosexuals from discrimination.
In the Colorado gay-rights case, the constitutional amendment approved by the state's
It would cancel ordinances in Denver, Boulder and Aspen that outlaw discrimination against homosexuals in employment, housing and public accommodations.
Those cities and a group of people — including tennis star Martina Navratilova — sued in state court, contending the amendment violates homosexuals' constitutional rights of equal protection and free speech and the right to petition the government. Navratilova later dropped out of the suit.
In January, state Judge H. Jeffrey Bayless barred enforcement of the amendment until the case is decided.
He said the amendment likely is unconstitutional because it affects homosexuals' fundamental right "not to have the state endorse and give effect to private blases."
The state must show that the amendment is justified by a compelling government interest, Bayless said. He rejected a more lenient
standard that would require the state to show merely that the amendment is rational.
The Colorado Supreme Court upheld Bayless' ruling, saying the amendment "expressly fences out an independently identifiable group" from equal participation in the political process.
In the appeal acted on yesterday, attorneys for the state said the legal standard set by the state courts applies to challenges brought by certain groups, such as racial minorities, but not to homosexuals.
The anti-gay-rights amendment does not infringe on fundamental rights such as the right to vote, the state lawyers said. "All (it) does is limit state and local governments' ability to act with respect to a certain issue," they added.
The amendment's opponents urged the Supreme Court to reject the appeal because state courts have not yet issued a final ruling in the case.
A state trial ended Oct. 22, but the judge has not yet ruled.
A woman is kneeling on a staircase, reaching out to grab a small card from a bag. The background consists of a darkened interior with wooden steps and walls.
Susan McSpadden / KANSAN
Lighting the way
wendy Doyle, outreach minister for the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, lights luminares along the walkway to the chapel. The luminaries, bags containing candles, were lit before Mass last night in celebration of the "Feast of All Saints."
Kansan staff writer
Bv Christoph Fuhrmans
Less than two months before Christmas the University of Kausas already is asking campus organizations to make a wish list.
The steering committee for KU's longrange physical development plan, called the Masterplan, is in the middle of organizing interviews with representatives from student, academic and administrative departments, said Allen Wiechert, University architect and member of the steering committee.
During the interviews, the representatives will have the opportunity to make suggestions on how campus improvements can help each department.
The plan, expected to be completed in July 1995, will chart the future physical and aesthetic growth of the campus and allow University officials to find out how the campus will develop during the next 10 to 15 years.
Wiechert said the committee wanted to make sure all organizations were given a chance to make suggestions on improving the campus.
"What we want to make sure doesn't happen is that people are left out," he said.
Any organization could make suggestions, Wiechert said, but the suggestions should pertain to how the organization's activities could be improved.
He said all organizations should send suggestions as soon as possible to Tom Waechter, planning coordinator for the office of capital programs, 351 Strong Hall.
John Shoemaker, student body president, said he would like KU to improve the aesthetic part of the campus and expand the Hiltop Child Development Center.
He said he was pleased with recent construction on campus but the beauty of the campus had been overlooked.
and director of finance and administration of the Life Span Institute, said the committee would take an inventory of all campus facilities for students to see how the facilities could be improved.
"It's critical that the students tell us what they need." he said.
Edward Zamarripa, a committee member
Zamarripa said the committee was considering mailing a survey to some students in April to get student input.
He said the survey would include every type of student, undergraduate and graduate, traditional and nontraditional.
Sue Morrell, director of Student Union Activities, said SUA needed a performance hall that seated 3,000 people to bring national acts to KU.
Because the Kansas Union holds many conferences and speeches, Morrell said the Union needed more parking.
"We call it over here the parking lottery," she said.
INSIDE
XULI CALENDARIO DE DIA DE MAYO 2014
Day of the Dead Families across Mexico honor their ancestors with a yearly celebration that mocks the dead and living alike.
Page 7
Senate searching for financing plan for minority groups
Shoemaker seeks to avoid paying twice for services
An increase in multicultural and minority organizations at KU is causing the Student Senate to look at the way it determines how much money each group should get.
By Donella Hearne Kansan staff writer
"I think the Senate has made a concerted effort to not fund duplication of services," said John Shoemaker, student body president.
Recently questions have been raised at Senate meetings about financing different groups that provide the same services for students.
To avoid Senate paying twice for the same service, Shoemaker suggests, similar campus minority groups should form umbrella organizations. Senate would give a block of money to the umbrella organization, which would divide the money among the smaller groups.
STUDENT SENATE
Shoemaker used Chinese student organizations as an example.
One association could serve as an umbrella for Asian student organizations such as Asian American Student Union and Taiwanese Students Association.
Shoemaker said he did not think that the Senate could understand the needs of cultural and minority groups and that umbrella groups would be better prepared to allocate money.
In the past, control of student money has been in the hands of a Senate that is predominantly white males, Shoemaker said. The changes in the way groups come to Senate for financing could create a shift in power, he said.
That can be done if groups with similar interests and concerns work together, Shoemakers said.
"Student Senate now has a unique opportunity for multicultural organizations to reclaim some of that power," he said.
Curtis "Cal" Jones, Kansas City, Mo., senior and head of the National Organization of Minority Architectural Students, said he agreed that minority groups should come together to fight for their interests. But he said he was not sure that umbrella organizations would be in the best interest of students.
"The problem I have with that is when you create umbrella organizations it tends to water down the individual cultures," Jones said. "And Student Senate would still be controlling the money."
Jones' group was one that was denied money in the Senate's Finance Committee
last week on the basis that his group provided a duplication of other financed groups.
He said he thought the idea of creating umbrella organizations looked good on paper but would never actually work.
"The up side is that people who know more about the organizations would have a say in where the money goes," Jones said. "The down side is that European male senators will just be handing out the money and won't see what the organizations are doing."
1
Senators' participation in events paid for by Senate is low, Jones said, so senators never really have an idea of what they are financing. The main problem, he said, was just that Senate was uninformed and unwilling to give up its power.
"How many senators are truly willing to relinquish control?" Jones asked. "Student Senate is making a step but many more steps have to be made still."
2
Tuesday, November 2, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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The Kansan prints a calendar of campus events daily as a service to the University. To submit an entry, fill out a form at the newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall two days before publication. No submissions will be taken by phone.
LesBiGayS OK encourages anyone who is lesbian, gay, bisexual or unsure to call the organization or KU Info about confidential meetings.
OAKS — Non-traditional Students will have a brown bag lunch from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. today in the Burge Union. For more information, call Gerry Vernon at 864-7317.
International Studies will have a brown bag lunch and lecture at noon today at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Cathy McClure at 864-4141.
The Office of Study Abroad will have an informational meeting for students interested in studying in French-speaking countries at 3 p.m. today in 4010 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call 864-3742.
Amnesty International will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Danelle Myron at 842-5407.
**Inspirational Gospel Voices** will meet at 6 p.m. today in 328 Murphy Hall. For more information, call Kiat at 749-3819.
International Students Association will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the
KU Pro-Choice Coalition will meet at 6 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Stephanie Gabriel at 842-6894.
Kansas Union.
Hispanic-American Leadership Organization 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.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will have a House/Hall Contacts meeting at 6:30 today at the Center, 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call Wendy at 843-0357.
KU AdClub will sponsor "Meet Your Mentor Club" at 7 tonight in Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. Second. For more information, call Ed Schaer at 865-0720.
Native American Student Association will meet at 7 tonight in 3012 Haworth Hall. For more information, call Johnnie Young at 864-4351.
Campus Crusade for Christ will sponsor a lecture at 7:30 tonight at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Michael Brown at 832-0799.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jen Snver at 841-6445.
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in Robinson Center. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
WEATHER
WEATHER
Omaha: 44°/27°
LAWRENCE: 50°/32°
Kansas City: 48°/31°
St. Louis: 54°/33°
Wichita: 49°/30°
Tulsa: 51°/32°
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 63°/39°
Chicago: 43°/32°
Houston: 60°/53°
Miami: 77°/69°
Minneapolis: 38°/32°
Phoenix: 78°/55°
Salt Lake City: 51°/35°
Seattle: 53°/43°
TODAY
Cloudy with 65 percent chance for rain
High: 50°
Low: 32°
Tomorrow
Partly cloudy
High: 60°
Low: 34°
Thursday
Mostly sunny
High: 63°
Low: 38°
Source: Gregg Potter, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
Rainy day
Sunny
Sun
ON THE RECORD
A student's wallet and its contents, valued together at $165, were taken from the second floor of Blake Hall on Friday, KU police reported.
Konaik Royal PAPER
A student's windshield was broken in the 3000 block of Atchison Way on Saturday or Sunday, Lawrence police reported.
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CORRECTION
A story with the headline "Cultures meet in beef packing plant" on Page 5 of yesterday's Kansan contained incorrect information.
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The findings of Donald Stull, professor of anthropology, will be on display at the KU Museum of Anthropology beginning Monday.
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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.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 2, 1993
3
Trafficways meeting opposition
Proposals could hurt wetlands, spiritual areas
By Traci Carl Kansan staff writer
The stoplight may turn green, but passengers will not be able to go if they are traveling on 23rd Street in the year 2000.
Up to 35,000 cars a day are predicted to travel on Lawrence's busiest street, and Lawrence and Douglas County have two plans for new trafficways to alleviate the problem.
But the proposals have hit a few bumps in the road.
The Haskell Board of Regents has several concerns about the present route of the proposed South Lawrence Trafficway, and the East Lawrence Improvement Association
is worried that exit ramps from the East Lawrence Parkway will dump highway traffic onto its residential streets.
The Wetlands Preservation Committee of the Student Senate at Haskell Indian Nations University is sponsoring a forum at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the Haskell Auditorium. Although the Haskell Board of Regents said it supported the goal of relieving traffic on Lawrence streets, they do not want it to be at the expense of the Haskell wetlands, which are on both sides of the proposed route along 31st Street.
The board also has asked the county to stop action on the trafficway near Haskell because the land that is used for spiritual and academic purposes would be disturbed.
John Pasley, coordinator of the South Lawrence Trafficway, said the county would try to minimize the effects of the trafficway on the wetlands.
"I think we can work it out," he said.
Pasley said moving the trafficway south of the wetlands was not an option.
"We have to go through there," he said. "There aren't any other feasible routes."
The county is in the process of purchasing all the land along the estimated $70 million trafficway. Voters approved $3.5 million in county bond money to help pay for the trafficway. Federal money will cover the rest of the project.
Construction should start in April, he said.
"I would guess that it's going to be 1998 before it's done." Pasjev said.
A second proposed route, the East Lawrence Parkway, would connect Highway 10 to Seventh Street and provide a more direct route to downtown Lawrence at an estimated cost of $14.9 million.
In November 1909, voters approved $4 million in bonds for the parkway, and the city is now waiting for U.S. Congress and Legislature approval
for funds to pay for the rest of the project.
"It's not the city's intention to damage or harm the neighborhoods in any way," he said.
Rod Bremby, assistant city manager, said the East Lawrence Improvement Association's concerns that traffic would travel through their neighborhood would be considered as the parkway exits are planned.
But Richard Kershenbaum, president of the association and manager of technical services at the computer center, said he thought the parkway would bring more traffic to residential streets. Most routes to downtown from the parkway would have to go through residential streets, he said.
Kersenbaum said he did not think that Congress would approve funding because the parkway would not connect two major highways, which is the federal government's criteria for funding local trafficways.
"I am worried," he said. "The city is still actively seeking funding."
Proposed parkway route
Members of the East Lawrence Improvement Association don't want the increased traffic they say the East Lawrence Parkway would bring. Haskell officials are worried about the impact of the South Lawrence Trafficway on area wetlands located near the Haskell exit.
170
East Lawrence Parkway
N
LAWRENCE
U.S. 40
HANSAS
Gth Street
15th Street
K10
23rd Street
Clinton Parkway
Wokarusa
Haskell
K-10
Louisiana
Kasold
South Lawrence Trafficway
U.S. 59
Source: Douglas Co. Dept. of Public Works, City of Lawrence
Dan Schauer / KANSAN
Easy access to ATMs can be curse for some
Convenience can spur more withdrawals than students' budgets allow
By Chesley Dohl Kansan staff writer
For many college students, the abbreviation ATM means Automatic Taker of Money.
Paul Kotz/ KANSAN
"On weekends when you're getting ready to go out, it's pretty tempting," said Amy Shoemake, Seattle sophomore. "It's a lot easier to punch in your number and get cash than waiting in lines to write a check."
The ATM near the west entrance of the Kansas Union is especially convenient for KU students — and potentially dangerous to their pocket books.
Kathy Grubnish, Chicago sophomore, said she tried to withdraw only the money she needed so she would not end up spending more than she could afford. But she said that as a college student that did not work very well.
Grubnich used a checkbook last year. But she said she appreciated easier access to money and could not overdraw her account with her ATM card.
costs me $1.25 each time I take money out but
I can't do anything else."
"Something else will come up that I'll need more money for that same day," she said. "It
"You can't bounce checks with an ATM card," she said. "Last year I had a terrible time with that so this year I have a budgeted amount of money to work with each month."
FINE
SERVICES
Between 300 and 400 transactions are made at the Union teller machine almost every day, according to the Mercantile Bank marketing department.
Jean Milstead, senior vice president of the Douglas County Bank, said that many transactions was unusual compared to other Lawrence teller machines.
"That's a very high number," Milstead said. "On an average day in September we had 186 transactions."
"The yuppie age and the college student are our two biggest users," she said. "I think it's just a whole lot easier, more convenient, and it saves time and checks."
Milstead said most ATM users in Lawrence were 35 years of age and vountier.
Shelley Steele, Fayetteville, Ark., graduate student, uses one of ATMs at the Kansas Union. Between 300 and 400 transactions are made at the Union each day.
Milstead said that people 40 years and older did not show an interest in ATM services.
"Unlike college students, it's not the technology we were raised with and people tend to not like change." Milstead said.
checks from their parents to cash.
Check cashling services are still provided for students in both the Burge and Kansas Unions. Union bank officials said the service was used a lot by students who had payroll checks and
Jennifer Weinstein, Rockville, Md., sophomore, said the ATM service was much easier to use because her hometown was out of state.
"When I want to deposit money it's a lot easier, and it takes a lot less time than mailing the check home to my parents," she said.
City to consider limiting number of bars downtown
Dave Corliss, assistant to the city manager, said in a memo to the commission that Kansas City, Mo., has a maximum of one bar for every 1,500 people. He suggested that the commission issue zoning regulations to limit the number of bars downtown.
The City Commission will discuss limiting bars in the downtown area at its weekly meeting, which begins at 6:35 p.m. today at City Hall. The commission said two weeks ago that it was concerned with the concentration of bars in the downtown area.
CAMPUS in brief
Sexuality debate relocated
"Why wait? Is it healthier to save sex for a permanent commitment?" a debate between Michael Horner, a visiting speaker for Campus Crusade for Christ, and Dennis Dalley, professor of social welfare, has been moved. The debate will be from 7:30 to 9 tonight at the Kansas Union Ballroom.
THE VILLAGE CENTER
United Way goal may fall short
More than $6,000 in donations made Saturday and Sunday pushed United Way of Douglas County a little bit closer to its campaign goal.
Officials think that an extra $150,000 to $160,000 will be pledged before the campaign's victory celebration Nov. 10. Even with that extra money, the campaign will be about $20,000 to $30,000 short.
The campaign, which officially ended Friday,
now has raised $242,811 of its $1,112,230 goal.
The United Way finances 30 nonprofit agencies in Douglas County.
"If we stop to think about it, everyone knows someone who has received services," he said.
Cal Karlin, this year's drive chair, said donations from county residents have been generous.
Kathleen McCluskey-Fawcett, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, will become associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, it was announced yesterday.
Academic affairs post filled
affairs, in January.
McCluskey-Fawcett will replace Carole Ross, acting associate vice cancellor for academic
Ross will resume her position as associate dean of graduate studies in the School of Fine Arts. She has served as acting vice chancellor since June when David Shulenburger was named permanent vice chancellor for academic affairs.
In her new position McCluskey-Fawcett said
Irene E. Mills
she will work for development of undergraduate programs, strategic planning and budget management.
McCluskey Fawcett
McCluskey-Fawcett said her four years as associate dean of the college gave her the opportunity to learn leadership, administration style and long-range planning from her mentor, James Muykskens, dean of the college.
Briefs compiled from Kansan staff reports.
Student group combines cultures
Members' interests cross many borders
The membership of the International Student Association does not limit itself by geography. Sepulveda said membership in the group included students from many countries, whose only bond was curiosity of the world's cultures. Instead of bonding together for identity, like many ethnic and cultural groups, ISA members meet to learn about one another.
"They have people from the same place, so they have that common bond," Sepulveda said. "Here we're different, so we're forced to relate to one another."
By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer
"We have someone from here," said Sepulveda, president of the International Student Association, as she indicated Tanzania. "We have people from Nicaragua, Belize, Palestine, Japan, China and Kenya."
Marcella Sepulveda, San Jose, Costa Rica, junior, pointed to the world map tacked to the wall.
Founded in 1946 as the International Club, ISA sponsors different events throughout the year to show off the different cultures of the members, Sepulveda said.
In April, the members of the group set up booths outside Wesco Hall and displayed handicrafts and art from their native countries. This month, the group will sponsor its International Cultural Show, which highlights the culture of a different region every year.
UNITING TO BE HEARD
Sepulvale said this year's Cultural Show would be Nov. 19 in Woodruff Auditorium and would feature the cultures of Europe and Africa.
But Sepulveda said that despite the differences between the members, ISA staved together as a unit.
"We don't make distinctions between people from different countries," she said. "We're a group. We're a team."
Sepulveda said the opportunity to meet people from different cultures was not found often in other countries. She said KU attracted more international students than many institutions in other nations.
Carol D'Souza, Salina senior and treasurer of ISA, said she joined the group out of curiosity. She said interest in her Indian heritage and a desire to meet different students led her to the group.
"You learn a lot about different countries, but you learn about the world, too." D'Souza said.
Kelli Oliver, Tonganoxie senior and head of the group's cultural events committee, said her Pakistani boyfriend led her to join ISA. Four years later, Oliver is engaged to her boyfriend and has traveled to Pakistan. She said that joining the group helped her understand the world.
"I'm a much broader person because of my experience with the international students," Oliversaid. "I never would have had that in Tonganoxie."
STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE
announces that applications are now available for the sixth year of the Educational Opportunity Fund
All grants are for the 1994-1995 academic year. Any Questions? Call the Student Senate office at 864-3710
All departments, units, and organizations of the University are eligible to apply. Applications and accompanying materials may be picked up at the Student Senate office, 410 Kansas Union or at the Financial Aid office, 50 Strong Hall.
814 Massachusetts
Dine in or Carry-Out
843-BIRD
Submission of application and accompanying materials must be received no later than 5:00 p.m. on November 8,1993, at the Student Senate Office.
BLUEBIRD
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SACRED GROUND/SACRED SKY:
AN ECO-EXPERIENCE
SLIDE SHOW TONIGHT
Featuring Artist Daniel Dancer 7:30 p.m. Alderson Auditorium Exhibit in the Kansas Union Gallery November 1-27,1993
BURNHILL UNION ACTIVITIES
SUAX
INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF CANADA
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4
Tuesday, November 2, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Breast cancer research funds need an increase
Federal funding for breast cancer research is sadly lacking and needs to be increased. On Wednesday, the President's Special Commission on Breast Cancer revealed its findings after 15 months of research and hearings. The Commission found that federal agencies need to spend at least another $500 million a year if substantial progress is to be made in the fight against breast cancer. The suggested increase in funding would more than double the present level of spending by The National Institute of Health and would allow researchers to use new advances in genetics and molecular biology in their research. Additionally, the increase would enact even more basic research that could help in the diagnosis and treatment in the very near future.
The importance of breast cancer research is underscored by the increasing incidence of the disease and resulting deaths in the United States. Two million American women will be diagnosed with breast cancer in the 1990's, and of those, almost half a million are expected to die from the disease. These numbers represent a 53 percent increase in the incidence of breast cancer since 1950. While there are many types of medical and cancer research that are underfunded today, breast cancer is one of the most blatantly neglected. It is among the fastest growing killer disease in the nation and affects women in the prime of their lives. Congress and the President need to heed the recommendations of the Commission when assembling the budget for next year, and voters must remind them of their obligation to alleviate the inequities in the funding of women's health research.
The Senate Ethics Committee should continue its subpoena for Oregon Senator Bob Packwood's personal diaries regarding accusations that he
CHRIS REEDY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Packwood's diaries should be subpoenaed
1 personal diaries regarding accusations that he sexually harassed more than two dozen of his aides and then used his staffers to quiet them. Although he publicly apologized for the commotion, he refuses to comply with the committee's request for the release of his diary entries from Jan. 1, 1989 to the present. Two questions have been brought to the fore concerning this situation. Is this an invasion of Senator Packwood's right to privacy? And what type of precedent would be set if the ethics committee's subpoena is honored by the Supreme Court and the Senate?
In response to the first question, Senator Packwood's willingness to partially comply by offering only certain sections of his diary, suggests foul play; he's not going to incriminate himself. There is a high-level of probability that what has caused Packwood to say there are many references to other senators' sexual affairs is the hope of dissuading any further panel proceedings. This irrelevant warning only seems to make his actions more questionable. More to the point, evidence, outside and in the diary prior to Jan. 1, 1989, seems to suggest that Packwood committed some form of sexual harassment, and the fact that he details his actions in his personal diaries make them crucial pieces of evidence in this case.
The second question deals with the emotional side of the issue. Many people feel threatened knowing that authorities may be able to claim personal items. However, the precedent that would be established would suggest that if one's motives and thoughts are not questionable and do not have illegal intentions then there is nothing to worry about.
NATHAN NASSIF FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
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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 homeout, or faculty or staff position. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be the Kanan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanan newroom, 111 Stauffer-Fint Hall.
BLUE JAYS
TORIES
CANADA
The right to religious freedom put to the test by recent issues
I'm beginning to wonder if the phrase "religious freedom" isn't an oxymoron.
Last week, Congress debated the merits of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. The Act originated from an execusable Supreme Court decision in 1990 that held that smoking peyote as part of a religious ceremony was not protected under the freedom of religion. According to the act, the court must find a compelling reason for restricting religious ceremonies. Liberals and conservatives alike support this bill. I think it's safe to say that it's one of the few issues upon which Pat Robertson and the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws agree.
COLUMNIST
NATHAN
OLSON
Contrasting that, I attended a lecture Thursday presented by the Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship. The featured speaker, Pastor William Vogler, talked about Christianity and homosexuality. His raised two major points. The first was that to be a Christian, at least in the fundamentalist sense, you must accept Jesus as your savior and the Bible as your moral code. The second was that once you become a Christian, you must live by
God's preferences, not by man's.
Both examples can be defended. In the1980s, we were taught how evil drugs were and how doing them was not only illegal, it was just wrong. Similarly, the tenets of fundamental Christianity forbid homosexual activ-
itv.
The talk had little to do with homosexuality *per se*; instead, homosexuality was generally listed with various types of heterosexual "immorality." Pastor Vogler did, however, point out specific Bible passages condemning homosexuality, and he did mention that, for men who have homosexual preferences (his word), "The only way to please God is to be celibate." If you choose to be a Christian, then, you cannot "choose" to be a homosexual.
But both examples frighten me. Smoking peyote because of one's religion hurts no one. It is a singular act effecting only the smoker. Yes, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act could lead to some kooky "religions." Some senators are attempting to exempt prisoners from the act. But that's a minor point. Surely a court can make a reasonable distinction between two American Indians, whose religion compels them to smoke peyote, and two convicts, whose "religion" compels them to eat only lamb and sherry, without further trampling on prisoners' rights.
Creating an exclusive group is as oppressive as not allowing certain people to practice their religion properly. By establishing fundamental Christianity as a singular entity with singular rules, Pastor Vogler and the InterVarsity Christian Fellowship reject all the people who believe in Christianity but not in every tenet of the Bible. Of course, part of the beauty of the talk was its self-containment. According to them, Christianity involves a literal reading of the Bible, so homosexuality is sinful. But it
seems to me that in this day and age of multiculturalism the last thing we should do is reject others.
Even more disturbing was Pastor Vogler's insistence on calling homosexual a "preference." Though all of the information isn't in yet, current research suggests that homosexuality has a genetic component, which is why homosexuals consider homosexuality an orientation. This possible genetic link must be difficult for fundamentalists. My guess is that they will dismiss it as my friend's father dismisses evidence of dinosaurs: the fossils were merely planted by Satan to confuse man.
I have no problems with religion. Whatever god someone wants to worship is fine with me. But when a religion can't be practiced because the government cracks down on something as silly as smoking peyote, or when a religion rejects certain people because of what they do in their own homes, I have to wonder what "religious freedom" means. It doesn't sound very positive anymore.
Nathan Olson is a Chicago graduate student in English.
Bus boarding procedures will protect the public's safety, health and sanity
This has gone on long enough. I am tired of dealing with you people and your ignorance as I try to go about the business of living my life — and, I might add, selflessly serving you. There is just going to have to be a change. In pursuit of that goal, I have once again taken a huge chunk of time out of my busy schedule for you, the reader. I have made a set of rules which I hope you will use to guide your actions as you carry out your daily routines. This guide will come to you in three chapters; the first is "Getting on Buses."
Most of the problems people encounter with buses is during the embarking process. If you follow a few simple rules, however, you will be sure to avoid embarrassment. First, you should have your money or bus pass ready when the bus arrives at your stop. Following the first rule will
COLUMNIST
RYAN
McGEE
prevent you from being the object of animosity from the bus driver, who has a schedule to keep, and the bus passengers, who are usually in a hurry.
The second rule deals more with the physical process of embarking: Condense your carry-on luggage as much as possible. What this means is that you should collapse your umbrella before attempting to board. All too often, on a rainy day, people will start
on their journey up the bus steps without having their umbrellas collapsed, and they are intending to collapse it after they are on the bus. They then will feel rushed by the people behind them wanting to get out of the rain and will have to continue on down the aisle with an open umbrella, gouging body parts of people already seated. This, of course, generally leads to litigation and heartache, so do not do it.
Third, keep your backpack behind you at all times as you travel down the aisle searching for a seat. If you do not, you will smack the face of each person you pass. This will once again lead to litigation and heartbreak.
Fourth, if you pass an empty seat and then decide it is the most desirable seat on the bus, you may not reverse yourself to get to it. This rule is in place to protect the public's general health of the public. If you go
backward, all the people behind you get confused and will stampede, causing heartache and litigation.
Last, buses do indeed have a finite volume. If you see that the bus is so full that people are standing on the steps, it is too full to get on. All too often, people will try to push their way on when the bus stops. They are wrong. The bus is not made of latex rubber, and it will not expand to accommodate as many passengers as want to get on.
Try these rules out for the next week, and I think you will like it. You will certainly make everybody else happier. Watch next week for more ways to make your life easier on me!
Ryan McGee is a Worland , Wyo., sophomore.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Civility needs restored to Christianity debates
Over the four years that I have attended KU, I have observed a regrettable trend of misunderstanding and acrimony. This trend seems to be evident in areas of debate, primarily religion and politics. I would like to offer some ideas to restore some civility to these discussions, especially for issues related to religion, but I hope the idea will apply to all discussions from now on.
Since religious issues are so personal and sensitive, it is extremely easy to be obnoxious or offended. Therefore it is important to know where everyone is coming from. I will stick to describing the Christian position since I understand it best. A Christian is a person who has chosen to be redeemed through the atoning act of the Lord Jesus Christ. After becoming a follower of Jesus, a person is required to obey *all* the commandments of God. One is to warn one's neighbor of the need to repent and about the coming judgment.
Therefore, when it comes to debates about religious/secular issues such as homosexuality, drugs, abortion, etc., the following should be kept in mind. First, everyone has the right to say and write what he or she thinks. Second, everyone has the right to agree or disagree with what was said or written. Third, nobody has the right to intimidate anyone else by name-calling, demanding apologies or any other tactic that has the result of creating an atmosphere of fear and/or hatred.
This is where problems can occur. A Christian has the responsibility to share the good news with everyone so that everyone can know the same joy that the Christian experiences and avoid being condemned. Thus, every Christian should warn his or her neighbor. After warning the neighbor, the Christian is freed of any responsibility toward that neighbor, unless he or she wants to learn more. In that case, the Christian should make sure that the neighbor gets the required information. By no means does the Christian have the right to be "pushy."
I hope that this helps make future discussions occur in a free atmosphere instead of one where everybody seems to be the enemy.
Brain Somers
Lawrence senior
—the lack of infant care on campus.
I am also a pregnant graduate student.
Pregnant students need infant care on campus
Your article on pregnant students (October 25) was good but stopped short of the biggest obstacle we face
dent. So far I've had terrific cooperation from both staff and classmates, but the university really falls down when it comes to infant care. The beauty of being a student mother is that we can carry a light class schedule and still be a new mom. But we have very few options for infant care during the short time we may need it. Hilltop is a fabulous day care center but under-funded and under-staffed for infants. The Human Development Department has occasional openings for infants if you can pay a full-time price for probably part-time care. Some area high schools offer infant care for their students; it's too bad a university of this size cannot offer the same. It leaves many student mothers no other option then to drop out for at least a year, losing academic momentum and possibly never returning.
Elaine Adams
Mission graduate student
62N
NATION/WORLD
Tuesday, November 2, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Approval for Clinton dropping, poll says
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Americans want President Clinton to spend his time on problems at home rather than troubles overseas, says an opinion survey released yesterday.
The poll found Americans deeply disturbed by the way things are going at home and abroad. Their backing for Clinton and his policies — domestic as well as foreign — dropped after the deaths of 18 American soldiers in Somalia.
The survey by Times Mirror Center for the People & the Press includes results from interviews with a population sample of 3,200 as well as with 649 people identified as leaders in nine areas—the media, business, culture, state and local government, religion, academia, foreign affairs defense and security, and science and engineering.
The survey reported the responses from what it called "America's influences" by each group. It did not combine them.
The center conducted telephone interviews with 2,000 people in the sample of the general public between Sept. 9-15. The results have a margin of error of 2 percent, meaning the figures could be off by that much in either direction. Another 1,200 people were interviewed between Oct. 21-24 to get a reading on the impact of the violence in Somalia. The margin of error on those interviews was 3 percent.
After the deaths in Somalia, 44 percent said they approved of Clinton's
job performance, and 42 percent said they disapproved. A month earlier, 49 percent approved and 35 percent disapproved.
Support for Clinton's health and economic proposals also dropped. On health care reform, support went from 53 percent in mid-September to 41 percent in mid-October. Opposition during the same period went from 25 percent to 37 percent.
Andrew Kohut, director of the center, said the figures suggested that "when people get down on the president on foreign policy, it spills over."
A 76 percent majority want Clinton to concentrate on domestic policy; only 13 percent on foreign policy.
Reflecting the same inward-looking trend, the public's top foreign policy goal was "protecting the jobs of American workers." Ranking second was preventing the spread of nuclear weapons, which was the top goal of all nine groups of leaders.
In several instances, the opinions of the general public differed markedly from those of the influentials.
One of the sharpest differences was on the question of whether U.S. forces should serve under United Nations command. A majority of each group of influentials supported that idea. Only 25 percent of the general public approved.
The public is closely divided on the North American Free Trade Agreement with 46 percent in favor and 42 percent opposed. By contrast, every group of the influentials was overwhelmingly in favor of NAFTA.
Haitian military gives no response to U.N. plea
The Associated Press
PORT-AU.PRINCE, Haiti — Haiti's military, having blocked the return of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, has not responded to a U.N. request for new talks on reinstating the ousted leader, U.S. and U.N. officials said yesterday.
The United Nations, trying to keep a moribund peace process alive, hopes to convene the talks by Wednesday.
Haitian rightists have demanded that new political negotiations begin without the major players in the last round of talks: U.N. mediator Dante Caputo, Aristide and the army commander, Lt. Gen. Raoul Cedras.
But the United States, which stationed a new warship carrying 650 Marines off Haiti on Sunday, said the rightists had no right to demand that the three men resisit.
"This country already has a government," U.S. Embassy spokesman Stanley Schrager said. "It has
a democratically elected president and a constitutional government recognized by the international community."
The rightists, few in number but traditionally powerful, were buoyed that their acts of intimidation kept Aristide from returning by Oct. 30, the deadline under the U.N. plan Aristide and Cedras signed in July. The United Nations wants to hold new talks with an Aristide representative, Cedras and the presidents of Haiti's two houses of Parliament beginning Wednesday.
A. U.N. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the military was the only party not to accept the United Nations' invitation. Yesterday was the first day of a two-day holiday commemorating Haiti's dead, and senior military officials were not available for comment.
Schrager also said that the military had not responded, but that negotiators were preparing for a meeting in the capital. Port-au-Prince anyway.
Premier Robert Malval, appointed by Aristide.
said he would represent the exiled president if asked.
The rightists have demanded Malval's resignation. The most powerful of the small right-wing movements is the Front for the Advancement and Progress of Haiti, a new group whose acts of violence have shut down the capital several times in recent weeks.
Throughout the hemisphere's poorest nation, many Haitians followed the holiday tradition of visiting cemeteries to offer food and drink to deceased ancestors. But Jean-Claude Baltazal, selling candles for 8 cents a piece at the capital's main cemetery, was not participating.
Watching the grave sites at dawn, the skinny man, who looked much older than his 35 years, spoke softly, but his message was clear.
"I am hungry because I live," he said. "They are not hungry."
U.S. troops dig in outside Mogadishu to keep low profile
The Associated Press
They hope to spend a quiet few months just outside Mogadishu. If they're lucky, they'll leave a peaceful Somalia by March 31. If they're not, they'll be called in to back up U.N. troops in trouble.
$ ^{12} $ MOGADISHU, Somalia — American reinforcements moved into their new home yesterday, a featureless sprawl of desert scrub dubbed Victory Base.
But while Oakley was looking for political solutions, U.S. reinforcements were thinking of military ones. They packed weapons, ammunition, duffle bags, cookwear, folding chairs and other equipment on to 400 vehicles for the 12-mile journey from
Mogadishu to Victory Base.
13 President Clinton's special envoy to Somalia, Robert Oakley, arrived yesterday to try to promote a political settlement to the country's clan warfare. He is expected to leave Thursday to drum up support among East African leaders for an "African solution" to the crisis.
The troops and vehicles made the trip in 11 groups, winding along a route that military engineers completed only days earlier.
"We're going to be sucking a lot of dust," one soldier said of the road, which is only about halfway paved.
Pitted buildings and bits of garbage lined the right side of the road and the deep blue of the Indian Ocean churned into surf on the left. Six U.S. warships — the amphibious home to fighter jets and Marines still waiting offshore — were barely visible on the horizon.
For many of the soldiers, this was their first glimpse of Mogadishu's scarred and chaotic streets.
Their glimpse was just that: The route was chosen so it passed only on the barest edge of the city. Many of the people they saw were picking through mounds of military refuse.
Victory Base is far enough away as to be almost unobtrusive to most city residents at a time when the United Nations is trying to avoid confrontation with the locals. But it's close enough that Abrams tanks and Bradley troop carriers can roar in quickly in an emergency, trampling their way cross-country if roads are blocked.
There was little there other than hardy shrubs and the battered walls of several roofless buildings when the troops arrived.
Within hours, tents were up and security patrols organized. Sledgehammers battered new doors in the buildings. Trucks hauled away loads of dry brush.
The American soldiers had a brief alarm when an explosion sent thick smoke into the sky nearby. Thinking it was a mortar attack, they quickly checked by radio. No, they were told, it was just a weapons-disposal team blowing up an 82mm shell they had found.
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Need transportation-call 843-0442
The JAEP November meeting features...
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Tuesday, November 2
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Tuesday, November 2,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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719-0055
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Experience that pays Ryan is the two time winner of a Vector Marketing scholarship. Through his job at Vector he has gained valuable resume experience. He has also sharpened his communication and presentation skills. In addition, he has met many valuable professional contacts which will aid him in finding a future job.
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Despite rumors of drug use, autopsy on actor yields no answers to cause of death
River Phoenix died before completing latest film
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — River Phoenix lay dying on the sidewalk while his brother pleaded with a fire department dispatcher to send help for the actor, who collapsed outside a nightclub.
"You must get here, please, you must get here, please," his brother said. "I'm thinking he had Valium or something."
First, the 23-year-old actor was writhing on the sidewalk. Then he lay motionless, as if sleeping. Within an hour, Phoenix was pronounced dead early Sunday at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.
An autopsy yesterday was inconclusive, said coroner's spokesman Scott Carrier. Results of blood and chemical tests will take weeks, he said.
But paramedics were told the actor had been taking drugs, county fire Cant. Ray Bjaral said.
Phoenix, who received an Academy Award nomination for the 1988 movie "Running on Empty," collapsed after partying with his brother, Joaquín "Leaf" Phoenix, 19, and actress Samantha Mathis, 23, at the Viper Room in West Hollywood. The club is owned by actor Johnny Depp.
"After eight minutes of seizures, arms flopping, his knuckles hitting the sidewalk, his head banging back and forth, his feet flopping up and down, after about eight minutes of that, he finally became still, completely still," witness Ron Davis told "Hard Copy."
Several yards away, Phoenix's brother was frantically trying to call for help on a pay telephone. The dramatic four-minute 911 emergency call provided a chilling account of the actor's final minutes.
"Where is the (paramedic) ... Please, cause he's dying, please!" the actor's brother told the dispatcher.
"Where's your brother right now?" the dispatcher asked.
"He's laying on the cement," Leaf Phoenix said.
"Is he breathing?" the dispatcher asked.
"I don't know. The last I checked they said he was breathing," he said, and then asked a companion, "Is he ... breathing? (Back to dispatcher) I don't know if he's breathing. Please, you got to get over here! Where's the ambulance?"
Moments later, a calm "Leaf"
Phoenixi told the dispatcher: "He's not having the seizures anymore. He's just passed out. He just looks like he's sleeping."
Phoenix had been cast opposite Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt in the film version of novelist Anne Rice's "Interview With A Vampire." Filming had been scheduled to begin Nov. 25. Phoenix's role as the interviewer would be recast, Warner Bros. said.
Phil Aldon Robinson, who directed Phoenix in last year's "Sneakers," said the actor was talented and willing to take risks in his acting.
"There are two rivers flowing through him," Robinson said. "One is the adventurous young man, and the other is a very old-fashioned, gentlemanly, kind soul."
Phoenix, who was named after the river of life in Herman Hesse's "Sid'darthha," was known as the model of good health, clean living and professional dedication. He was a vegetarian and animal rights activist who campaigned against wearing animal fur.
The actor's family, gathering in Los Angeles, said in a statement: "His beauty, gentleness, compassion, vulnerability and love is a gift for all eternity."
Phoenix's films:
"The Mosquito Coast," 1986
Funeral arrangements have not been fully arranged.
"Little Nikita." 19RR
"Explorers," 1985
"Stand By Me," 1986
'Indiana Jones and the Last
Crusade.' 1987
'A Night in the Life of Jimmy Reardon,' 1988
"Running On Empty," 1988
"I Love You To Death," 1990
"Dogfight," 1991
"My Own Private idaho," 1991
"Sneakers," 1992
"Silent Tongue," 1992
"Seven Brides for Seven Brothers."
Source: The Associated Press
KANSAN
Day of the Dead
Melissa Lacey/ KANSAN
Colorful skulls, figurines and banners are some of the items used to honor the dead in the Mexican Day of the Dead celebration. The celebration, which started Oct. 28 and ends today, features special foods, picnics and poetry readings.
Food, fun and humor are part of the celebration for Mexican families who honor their ancestors. On the final day of the six-day holiday, the dead are invited back to Earth.
By JL Watson Kansan staff writer
"It's a kind of celebration," Hector Perez, Mexico City junior, said. "There are a lot of parties and we make fun of death."
In a tiny black car, newlywired skeletons drive to their destination in the afterlife. Miniature cigarette-smoking skulls rest comfortably on books. Colorful banners with dancing corpse flutter in the breeze.
It's not a grisly tomb. It's part of the Mexican celebration for the Day of the Dead or El Día de Los Muertos. It is a time Mexicans pay homage to their deceased ancestors and invite their spirits to return home for one day each year.
The celebration begins Oct. 28 and continues through Nov. 2.
"November 2 is the best day because it's when all the dead people are invited back for one day before they go back to Heaven or wherever it is they go," Perez said.
The days leading up to November honor dead children and people who
"Sometimes I think people forget the main point of the day," Liliana Valderrama, Queretaro, Mexico, freshman, said. "They don't care about the dead very much."
Perez said that traditions included poetryreadings, called calaveras, that make fun of death and living and deceased people.
died in violent ways, such as automobile accidents or murder.
Perez said. "We also eat something called dead bread on the morning of November 2." The bread is oversized and topped with sugar.
"We go to bakers and buy small sugar skulls with our names written
"A lot of people picnic for the whole day," Valderrama said. "They buy food and flowers in the cemetery." One of the most popular flowers is zempachuchi, Valderrama said. Orange in color, it is placed abundant-
celebration included socializing with friends and family members.
"A lot of people picnic for the whole day. They buy food and flowers in the cemetery."
ly around cities,
marking the
days of the
dead.
Liliana Valderrama
Queretaro, Mexico freshman
During the celebration, families prepare favorite food dishes of the deceased and leave it on altars. At night the deceased come back and "eat" the food. It is another way to welcome ancestors back from the dead.
not celebrate El Dia de los Muertos this year. "I don't think I could organize all the Mexican students to do it," she said.
Valderrama said she would
Manager Jill Legler chose to focus on the holiday because of the increase in Latin American folk art in the store.
"Originally we just picked up a few skeleton-type things. As time went on we learned more about folk art and became more intrigued," she said.
Though not yet a popular American holiday, Sunflower International, 803 Massachusetts St., chose to use El Día de los Muertos as a theme for the store's display window.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Legler said the public was becoming more aware of the holiday.
"We like to educate people as well as show things they haven't seen before," Legler said. "Also, we thought it was a whole lot of fun."
Legler said that the figures are fun because they depict scenes of life in the afterlife.
"Some of my favorites are the more irreverent ones," she said. "I'm amused by the thought of people peeing on lamp posts."
NOVEMBER 2,1993 PAGE 7 KULife
People and places at the University of Kansas.
WEIRD
In September, police in China and Japan announced the imminent arrests of three men for selling schoolgirls' used underpants in vending machines at a price of about $30 for a set of three. The men are accused of violating the Antique Dealings Act, which regulates the sale of used goods.
The entrepreneurial spirit
That'sstacky
Home improvements
Dennis and Pam Ponsness told The Associated Press in July that they often gagged when they opened their maggot farm in Porthill, Idaho, but have gotten used to the smell. They raise millions of maggots for bait and pet shops by putting a ton of fish out for the fly larvae to feast on and then refrigerating them until they are ready to ship.
Japan's Chindogu Society (an invention support group), according to *Details* magazine, has found new ways to make your household chores easier: "Puss in Boots," a set of four dust slippers enabling cats to dust your floor while they walk around; water-filled compartments that strap on your legs, enabling you to wash clothes by walking vigorously; and a rack worm on your back, secured by a shoulder brace, on which clothing can be hung to dry while you bicycle about. The group also offers a flashlight powered by solar panels.
Among the producers recently brought to market: "PooPets," animal figurines made of cow manure supposedly hand-made by the Amish in Landcaster, Pa., and placed in flower pots as an attractive fertilizer; handcrafted dog beds (starting at $000, plus another $250 for the draperies to hang from the four-poster models) from the New York designer Joseph Biunno; "Fudge in Fire," fudge laced with hot peppers, from the Fudge Farm in Paso Robles, Calif.; and caskets customized in colors of Southeastern Conference football teams, from Loretto Casket Co. in Tennessee.
Available now: solar flashlights, PooPets,caskets
Foot fancy
Gary Richards, founder of a Jupiter, Fla., company that sells lifelike models of human feet for $74.95 a pair, told Palm Beach Post in March that he sells about 150 pairs a month to the 4,000 or so foot fetishists who subscribe to his catalog/newsletter, Fantasy Foot News. A sideline is that women who model their feet for Richards also furnish their used shoes for sale to customers.
"Most guys are into the odor," said Richards, "so we wrap (the shoes) in plastic. The odor will stay for a long time if you keep it in plastic, and then steam it when you want to use it."
Tuesday. November 2, 1993
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Reports link CIA to Aristide critics
Agency paid military foes of ousted chief, papers say
The CIA paid key members of the military regime now controlling Haiti from the mid-1980s until at least the 1991 coup that drove Aristide from office, the New York Times reported yesterday.
NEW YORK — The forces aligned against ousted Haitian President Jean-Bert Ardishe — before and after he was elected to office — included the CIA, according to published reports.
The Associated Press
Meanwhile, the Los Angeles Times reported Sunday that the CIA tried to funnel money to Aristide's critics during Haiti's 1987-88 presidential cam-
Aristide supporters criticized the payments, but Rep. Robert Torricelli, a member of the House Intelligence and Foreign Affairs committees, defended them as crucial to U.S. efforts to gain an understanding of Haitian politics.
The payments to Haitian generals and politicians were part of the CIA's normal intelligence-gathering operations, the New York Times said, quoting government officials it did not identify.
when the CIA tried to funnel money to Aristide's critics in 1987 and 1988, he was not a candidate for president, but his calls for a boycott of the military-sponsored election figured prominently in the campaign.
"We were engaged in covert action on behalf of the National Security Council," the paper quoted one of the sources as saying. "We were involved in a range of support for a range of candidates."
paign, but Senate opposition blocked the plan.
Aristide was ousted by a military coup in 1901. His plans to return to Haiti Sunday with United Nations support were thwarted, and opponents have been threatening to replace him if he does not resign.
The plan was killed after Senate Intelligence Committee members objected to interfering with the election and demanded to know to whom the CIA wanted to give the money.
CIA representative Kent Harrington refused to comment, the Los Angeles Times said.
Columbia lands after longest shuttle mission
The Associated Press
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. — Columbia glided to Earth under a rising sun and setting moon yesterday after the longest space shuttle flight in history. Then, its seven astronauts went to bed — sort of.
After 14 days in orbit, the crew was carried off Columbia on stretchers to preserve the effects of weightlessness for tests that will be conducted on some of them for up to 45 days.
Except for some experiments to measure reactions when the astronauts stand up, the crew was to remain prone much of the time after landing and during an afternoon flight to Johnson Space Center in Houston.
"Our best model for simulating
weightlessness is putting people to bed," said project scientist Frank Sulzman.
Columbia floated through a clear morning sky over the Mojave Desert and 35,000 spectators cheered its 7:05 a.m. touchdown.
At 14 days, 13 minutes, the mission exceeded by nearly five hours the shuttle flight record set by a crew aboard Columbia last year. It was the fourth-longest flight of any kind in U.S. space history.
Columbia logged 5.8 million miles circling the Earth 225 times after its Oct. 18 launch from Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
Touchdown meant the end of the line for all but five of 42 rats that survived the flight. A team of 100 scientists waited to quickly dissect them
after the rats were unloaded from Columbia. Six other rats were dissected in space.
Tom Utsman, NASA's shuttle director, said Columbia sustained some damage to its protective heat tiles and to a thermal shield in the engine area, but the damage wasn't major.
"I don't think it's a show-stoper by "iw" he said.
The crew, which included two physicians, a biochemist and a veterinarian, focused on medical research to better understand how the body reacts to weightlessness.
NASA wants to know what causes side effects of space travel and how those maladies can be counteracted. Common ailments include motion sickness, anemia, weakened muscles and bones, and lightheadedness upon
return to gravity.
The crew will be subjected to "grueling" tests over two weeks, Sulzman said. Some will undergo more tests over 45 days. All will then be part of the on-going lifetime study of NASA's astronauts.
NASA's next shuttle flight and the last one for 1993 is the monumental Hubble Space Telescope repair mission.
Slated for a Dec. 1 liftoff, the 11-day flight by the shuttle Endeavor is considered the most ambitious mission in shuttle history.
Endeavor's astronauts are to perform a record five and possibly seven space walk to correct Hubble's distorted vision and make other repairs.
THE NEWS in brief
ST. LOUIS
Genetically altered bacteria may work as new birth control
Salmonella bacteria have been genetically altered to produce an oral birth control vaccine that primes the immune system to reject sperm before conception, a researcher reported yesterday.
The vaccine causes a harmless, temporary infection in the intestine that triggers antibodies against genetic components of sperm that have been spliced into the bacteria, said Roy Curtiss of Washington University in St. Louis.
Curtiss is using the genetically engineered forms to produce vaccines against hepatitis B and malaria. Human trials of the hepatitis B vaccine have begun, and the Army plans to begin tests of the malaria vaccine this winter, Curtiss said.
Tests of the contraceptive vaccine have been done only in mice so far. But the results suggest that a single dose might prevent conception for several months and would be reversible, Curtiss said.
"The idea now would be you don't get your booster, and within a year or so you can conceive again," he said at a meeting of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.
The method also might be used to produce a male vaccine that would disarm sperm, making men temporarily infertile. Curtiss said.
Curtiss expressed some concern about the potential for abuse of the vaccine.
The vaccines might prove especially useful in developing nations and rural areas because they don't require refrigeration and are cheaper to produce than the bottles that would contain them, Curtiss said.
Because of the temporary nature of the vaccine, however, "this is something someone might be able to undo," he said.
"You could put it in the milk or water and immunize everybody," he said. "You could think of government or some other entity misusing that."
The rapper, whose real name is William Drayton, is facing charges of attempted murder, possession of a weapon and reckless endangerment following the 9:15 a.m. shooting, said Officer Peter Friscia, a police spokesman.
A police officer on patrol heard a shot near an apartment house, entered the building and was told that Drayton fired the round, Friscia said. A 380-caliber semi-automatic pistol was recovered, the spokesman said.
NEW YORK
Rap star Flavor Flav of the million-record-selling group Public Enemy was arrested today in an alleged attempt to shoot another man in a dispute over a woman, possibly Flavor Flav's girlfriend, police said.
Flavor Flav arrested in shooting
Kennedy told The Associated Press in a telephone interview Sunday that despite the pain, he planned to be back training today. But he said he was nagged by the idea that his assailants could have killed him.
No injuries were reported.
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letes departed to Arizona.
Duncan Kennedy, a white luger who stood his ground Friday night to protect an African-American teammate and other team members when about 15 young skinheads chased them from the Kurparkklause bar, suffered a swollen nose, lumps on his head and bruised ribs.
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The debate focused on the clash between the ethics committee's determined inquiry — which began with allegations of sexual misconduct and intimidation against Packwood — and the Oregon Republican's assertion of his constitutional privacy rights.
When the committee requested those entries, Packwood's lawyers — who had been copying committee-designated pages — refused to provide them. The committee, having reviewed the diaries from 1969-89, then voted to subpoena the diaries from Jan. 1, 1989, to the present.
Yesterday's debate, however, focused on the committee's discovery of entries outside those areas, which Bryan said could involve criminal conduct.
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The committee has been investigating allegations that Packwood made unwanted sexual advances to more than two dozen women and attempted to intimidate some of the accusers to keep them quiet.
The full Senate now is deciding whether to vote to enforce that subpoena request.
BERLIN
Mayor Harmut Goebel apologized effusively to the American luge队 Saturday before the athletes departed for Austria.
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Members of the U.S. national luge team were attacked over the weekend in the eastern German winter resort of Oberhof by skinheads who taunted the team's only African-American member.
COMIC CORNER
Drayton, 34, was arrested last year for an outstanding warrant on a traffic violation and a family court warrant when he was accused of punching his girlfriend.
"The Ethics Committee cannot turn a blind eye" to potential violations of criminal law and standards of conduct, Sen. Richard Bryan, the panel's chairman, said in asserting a need for the diaries.
The team left the training ground a day early. They left behind a mayor worried that world-class athletes who come from as far as Japan might now shun Oberhof.
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The debate, sometimes emotional, sometimes stuck on legalities, raged on for nearly seven hours before senators gave up for the night and decided to continue today.
A nervous Senate debated sex, privacy and allegations of possible criminal conduct yesterday in a historic effort to enforce a subpoena for Sen. Bob Packwood's "very, very personal" diaries.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
WASHINGTON Packwood diaries debated
...
Skinheads attack luge team
This time, the targets of neo-Nazi hate were not asylum-seekers from the Third World living in public housing. They were American athletes who came to train for the Olympics.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 2,1993
9
Big 8 tournament goal for volleyball
Only top four teams invited to postseason play; Kansas now No.4
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Before the season started, the perennial teams to beat in Big Eight volleyball, Nebraska and Colorado, were again picked as the conference's elite.
The standings hold true to this prediction as of Oct. 31. But consider this: Oklahoma was second and undefeated on Oct. 17, while Nebraska had two conference defeats for the first time in the school's history.
Kansas coach Frankie Albizt said she thought Colorado would be the only team to give Nebraska trouble. Nebraska has lost to Oklahoma and Colorado, but it was the Sooners 3-1 victory on Oct. 9 that scrambled the standings. Oklahoma impressed Albizt when the teams played earlier in the season.
all Big Eight teams because only the top four go to the postseason tournament Nov. 26-27 in Omaha, Neb. Currently, Kansas is fourth in the Big Eight with a 4-4 record and 15-9 overall.
The conference standings are important to
With Kansas' 3-1 victory against Iowa State on Saturday, the Jayhawks solidified their fourth-seat spot in the standings in front of the Cyclones. After the match, Iowa State coach Jackie Nunez said the match had definite ramifications.
"I think both my team and Kansas recognized the importance of this match," Nunez said. "It will be an interesting race the rest of the way. Kansas has beat Kansas State and Missouri, so we know the task ahead of us."
The rest of the Jayhawks schedule includes the three teams ahead of them, Colorado in Boulder, Colo., and Nebraska and Oklahoma in Allen Field House. Albitz said Kansas might have to defeat one of those three teams to participate in the tournament.
Kansas has to think about the possibility of a tie with Iowa State. It was necessary to defeat the Cyclones on Saturday, but it would have been better not to lose a game as Kansas did.
If there are ties in the conference records of
any two teams, the next step is to look at the teams' head-to-head match record. If there is a 1-1 split, the higher spot is given to the team that has the best winning percentage in all Big Eight games, not matches.
Albitz said her team must win games in its last matches of the season.
"We're either winning or losing in three," Albitz said. "We have to win some games. We only went three at Iowa State and we played four games here against them."
"They're not doing really well, but she has some good players," Albitz said of Kansas State coach Patti Hagemeyer. "They're just young. It's not a match we can overlook."
This parody in the Big Eight will get more common in the future. Albitz said. She says the conference has long been underrated in volleyball.
The last match for Kansas is against Kansas State. Albizt said the Jayhawks must be wary even though the Wildcats are 0-7 in the conference.
"The closer the teams get to each other, the more this will happen," she said. "I think it's good for the conference and it's good for the teams."
Big Eight Standings Through Oct. 31
| Team | Conference | Overall |
|---|
| W | L | Pct. | W | L | Pct. |
|---|
| Colorado | 7 | 1 | .875 | 18 | 5 | .783 |
| Nebraska | 6 | 2 | .750 | 17 | 3 | .850 |
| Oklahoma | 5 | 2 | .714 | 13 | 10 | .565 |
| Kansas | 4 | 4 | .500 | 15 | 9 | .625 |
| IowaState | 5 | 2 | .286 | 6 | 15 | .286 |
| Missouri | 2 | 5 | .286 | 9 | 13 | .409 |
| KansasState | 0 | 7 | .000 | 7 | 18 | .280 |
Next matches
Colorado at Oklahoma, tomorrow
Nebraska vs. Houston at Austin, Texas, Friday
Kansas at Colorado, Saturday
lowa State at Kansas State, tomorrow
Missouri at Iowa State, Saturday
*Oklahoma State does not have a varsity volleyball team.
2
1
KANSAN
Doug Hesse/KANSAN
Kansas' Cyndee Kanabel attempts to spike a ball against Iowa State. Kansas kept its post-season hopes alive by defeating the Cyclones on Saturday night.
Team places fifth in final tournament
By Kent Hohlfeld Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas men's golf team was a little disappointed with a fall season that ended last weekend with a fifthplace finish in the 20-team Stanford Shootout in Stanford, Calif.
Coach Ross Randall said that he thought the
MEN'S GOLF
the team had shown some improvement from what he called a sluggish start to the season.
In the Jayhawks' first tournament they finished last at the 12-tem Jack Nicklaus Invitational, Sept. 19-20.
"That was one of the low points during the season." Randall said.
The high point of the season was the team's trip to Japan Sept. 21-30 to compete in the Topy Cup in Fukushima Prefecture, Japan, Randall said. The trip gave his players a chance to compete against international competitors as well as see a different country...
The team finished third in the tournament behind Nihon University in Japan and Kent State in the 15-team field. The top Kansas golfer was senior Matt Gogel, who won the individual competition.
Gogel, who has been the top Kansas golfer in each of the fall tournaments he has played, finished ninth at Stanford.
Gogel agreed that the Japan trip was the high point in what had been a somewhat inconsistent season for the team.
He sat out the Kansas Invitational because of an NCAA rule that prevents each player from missing more than eight classes in a semester.
Gogel said that he also considered his trip to the John Hancock Invitational in El Paso, Texas, among his personal highlights to the season. The John Hancock Invitational is a tournament for the top 24 golfers in the nation. Gogel came in 23rd in the tournament.
Gogel's teammate senior Tom Sims was the second-best Jayhawk golfer at the Stanford Shootout. He tied for 14th in the tournament. He said that he looked forward to the four-month break from golf. The team will be able to relax until February when its season resumes.
"It'll be nice not to have to travel for a while," Sims said. "Now we've got a couple months to work on our grades."
He said that he thought that the team had gained some consistency during the season and that he hoped to see that carry over to the next season.
Randall said that although coaches could not supervise player's practices during the off season, they could supervise any off-season weight-training programs the team might institute.
"We've got some confidence going into the spring," Sims said.
The most immediate challenge for Randall during the next four months will be recruiting. The early signing period for high school seniors starts Nov. 10 and runs through Nov. 15th.
"I haven't decided on what we might have them do." Randall said.
He said that he would spend much of his time arranging campus visits for prospective recruits. Randall said that many high school golfers did not sign in the early period but that he had high hopes of getting his prospects signed during the early period.
"We have a couple guys we're interested in." Randall said. "I think we have a good chance of getting them."
THE SPORTS BASE
Paul Kotz/KANSAN
Sophomore diver Chris Martin holds his body in a tight tuck in order to complete the two and one-half somersaults in his dive. Martin was practicing yesterday in the Robinson Natatorium.
Taking the plunge
No.3 QB directs Cowboy defeat
Sophomore starter suspended by coach in discipline action
Bv Matt Dovle
Kansas sportswriter
Oklahoma State senior quarterback Andy Loveland did not find out until 3 p.m. Friday that he was going to start against Kansas the next day.
That decision was made when Cowboy coach Pat Jones suspended sophomore starter Gary Porter reportedly for missing classes and a team breakfast. Loveland was only 10 of 22 passing for 100 yards in Saturday's game, but Jones said he was pleased with Loveland's performance.
"For knowing on short notice, I thought the guy played admirably," Jones said. "He was the No. 3 quarterback who had very few repetitions with the No. 1 unit."
Loveland is the third starting quarterback for the Cowboys this season. Freshman starter Tone' Jones suffered a separated shoulder against Missouri Oct. 16 and will miss the remainder of the season.
Loveland said he considered leaving Oklahoma State when he was the No. 3 quarterback at the beginning of the season. He said it would have been the easy thing to do. However, Saturday was an opportunity that came up for him because he stayed.
"Obviously, sometimes things are going to fall into your lap, and that was one of those things today," Loveland said after Oklahoma State's 13-6 defeat to Kansas.
Jones said Loveland would remain the starting quarterback for the rest of the season. He added that he did not think Porter would be back this season.
Kansas' June Henley is not the only freshman running back in the Big Eight Conference having a good season. Three other freshman running backs have contributed in a big way for their teams this season.
Oklahoma's James Allen leads the Sooners in rushing with 529 yards. Allen was regarded as the top high school running back in the country last year by USA Today.
KU
Henley's total is tops Freshman tailback June Henley leads the Big Eight in rushing voles. (✓ indicates freshman)
Fabulous Freshmen
1. JUNE HENLEY **KU** 788
2. Lamont Warren **CU** 696
3. J.J. Smith **KSU** 570
4. Rashae Salaam **CU** 654
5. Calvin Jones **NU** 558
6. L.T. LEVINE **KU** 542
7. James Allen **OU** 529
8. Tommie Frazier **NU** 507
9. Lawrence Phillips **NU** 457
10. Rod Schiller **KSU** 416
Making his mark
Henley's eight touchdowns
have tie the KU
freshman record.
Dan Schauer/KANSAN
Nebraska's Lawrence Phillips'has 457 yards and contributed 58 yards in the 21-17 victory against Colorado on Saturday. Phillips played most of the second half against Colorado because junior starter Calvin Jones suffered from stomach and leg cramps.
Oklahoma State's David Thompson ran for 155 yards against Kansas and has 353 yards to lead the Cowboys. Thompson's performance was the second-best ever by a Cowboy freshman running back. Thurman Thomas had 206 yards against Kansas State in 1974.
Henley has 798 yards, which is best in the conference and first nationally among true freshmen running backs.
Stull Speculation
Stull said the report had not been a distraction to the Tiger team.
The Nov. 1 issue of Sports Illustrated reported that Missouri athletic director Dan Devine would name former Tiger player Vince Tobin as his successor as athletic director. The magazine also said that former Tiger player Johnny Roland would replace Bob Stull as coach after this season.
"All coaches face that stuff," Stull said. "All I want is for the players to play hard and not worry about that stuff."
PROFESSIONAL BASKETBALL
PROFESSIONAL BASKETBALL Unknown to take Jordan's place in Bulls' lineup
DEEERFIELD, Ill. — Journeyman guard Pete Myers will take Michael Jordan's spot in the starting lineup for the Chicago Bulls, coach Phil Jackson said yesterday.
Myers, a sixth-round draft pick of Chicago in 1986, is considered a defensive specialist. He shot only 42 percent from the floor in his three-year NBA career.
The 6-foot-6 Myers, who played for Chicago, San Antonio, Philadelphia and New York before spending the last two years in Italy, was not even expected to make the team when training camp opened.
The Bulls also announced that Scott Williams'in injury shouldn't keep him out of the season as originally thought.
"I just have to stay focused on the things I can do on the floor, not trying to do the fancy things Michael could do," he said.
SPORTS in brief
The 6-10 center, who averaged 5.9 points and 6.4 rebounds off the bench last season, tore his patellar tendon while stretching Friday. Tests showed the injury was less serious than first thought. Trainer Chip Schaefer said Williams should be healthy enough to play in two to four weeks.
The Bulls open the season and the defense of their third consecutive NBA title on Friday night at Charlotte.
PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL Bonds wins consecutive title
NEW YORK — San Francisco Giants outfielder Barry Bonds yesterday became the first player to be voted The Associated Press Baseball Player of the Year in consecutive seasons.
Bonds received 73 votes in nationwide balloting by sportswriters and broadcasters. Chicago White Sox first baseman Frank Thomas was
Yet the Giants fell a game short of Atlanta when they lost to the Los Angeles Dodgers 12-1 on the final day of the season.
Bonds hit .336 with a league-leading 123 RBI and 46 home runs, tying Juan Gonzalez of Texas for the major-league lead.
PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL Schott back on job for Reds
with 17 votes, followed by Philadelphia Phillies outfielder Lenny Dykstra, who was third with six votes.
"They just happened to play one game better than we did." Bonds said.
With Atlanta moving to the NL East next season, San Francisco is the favorite to win the NL West.
CINCINNATI — Marge Schott, the Cincinnati Reds' crude and crusty owner, showed her employees another side yesterday on her first
KU
Sohtt was treated like a returning hero, not a chastised owner, when she drove up to her office at Riverfront Stadium for the first time in eight months. She hadn't been allowed inside during her suspension for using slurs.
day back on the job. She cried.
Employees hung banners and balloons in the hallways, played "Hail to the Chief" when Schott's car pulled up and cheered as she walked her St. Bernard, Schottzie 02, into the team offices.
Schott wiped away tears during a singing telegram bought by the staff, and compared the reception to a World Series celebration.
"I don't know how they did all this," she said.
"This was certainly something special."
Her first step into the office ended one of the toughest times in Reds' history and put Schott back in charge.
Compiled by the Associated Press
10
Tuesday, November 2,1993
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My thighs are too fat!
Do you think your thighs are too fat? Is your nose too big? Would you have more fun if you were blonde? Are you aging "gracefully"?
Everyday women receive messages from society, our families, and ourselves about how we should look. We constantly compare ourselves to an "ideal," and we always seem to fall short. And, very often, our self-worth is defined by not how we look to others, but how we think we look.
The Body Betrayed: Body Image in Women's Lives, a free public program sponsored by The Women's Program at Menninger, will feature panel presentations on:
- how culture influences women's self-esteem
- body image eating disorders
body image & sexuality
how a woman's body ages
The featured presenters are: Linda Sebastian, MN, ARNP; Kathryn Zerbe, MD; Faye Heller, RN, MN, ARNP; and Nancy Jones, MSW. Reservations are recommended.
A reception and book signing with Kathryn Zerbe, MD, author of the recently released book, The Body Betrayed: Women, Eating Disorders, and Treatment will follow the program.
Wednesday, November 3 7-9 pm
Seeley Conference Center 5800 SW Sixth Avenue Topeka, KS
M
For reservations or more information,
please call 913-273-7500, ext. 6100.
Menninger
Directions
To reach Menninger from eastbound or westbound I-70, exit I-70 at Wanamaker Road and turn north onto Wanamaker.
Wanamaker will curve right (east) onto Sixth Avenue. Turn left (north) at the light, the main campus entrance.
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Crew members trade oars for brooms in fund-raiser
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
Approximately $3,500 did not just magically appear in the hands of the Kansas crew club. It took two Saturdays and approximately 80 rowers to do household jobs at 40 area homes.
The crew club's fall semester Rent-A-Rower fund-raising campaign took place Oct. 23 and Saturday. About 40 renters paid the members of the 110-member crew team to complete household tasks, coach Rob Catloth said.
Catloth said he estimated the team raised $3,500.
Each rower was paid 660 for eight hours of work. The renters had the option of hiring a rower for half a day for half the cost.
Catloth said the money would be used for operational expenses incurred by the club. These included maintenance for the truck and trailer, insurance and phone, electric and gas bills. The crew received $15,825 from Recreation Services this year to cover entry fees and equipment costs.
"It is purely money to live on," he said. "It is not used for extra stuff."
Junior Michael Hutchings worked eight and a half hours doing yard work with junior Luke Evans and seniors Terry Staudecher and Rachael McCallie.
Hutchings said they spent the day raking the yard and chopping down tree branches that had fallen in a storm a few weeks ago. He also chopped down 8-foot rose bushes.
The work on the four lots was not left to the rowers alone. The day turned out to be a family affair. Martha West, laboratory education technician for the department of microbiology at Kansas, said her parents-in-law also came over to help clean up the debris with the Wests and the rowers.
Hutchings said all the tools imaginable and gloves to prevent blisters were supplied to the rowers. Pizza was ordered for the workers' lunch.
West said the working group at her place took a few snack breaks and talked. She said she told the rowers about the history of the neighborhood, and they told her a little bit about crew.
Kim Moreland, director of Research Support and Grants Administration,
said the best part of the project was the willingness of the crew members to give eight hours of their own time. The rowers just do not ask for donations, they worked for the money they received.
Morelland hired one rower to do "the things I could not tolerate to do myself or the things which I would put off indefinitely."
Junior Dean Hovind did yard work for Moreland. Moreland said Hovind worked very diligently with great care for what he was doing. Moreland participated in the Rent-A-Rower fund raising campaign for the first time, and she said she would do it again.
"I wish they did it all the time," she said. "I have a lot more work that needs to be done."
She said Hovind lined up 19 bags of garbage along her sidewalk in his full day's work.
The crew club offers the fund-raising campaign every semester. Fliers announcing the project are distributed to the faculty/staff members at the University. Catloth said it was the biggest money-making project for the club.
Bills avenge Super Bowl shame
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — The sween is complete.
The Buffalo Bills defeated the Washington Redskins 24-10 last night to give them victories this season against the teams that defeated them in the last three Super Bowls.
The Bills (6-1) piled up 397 yards against the Redskins (1-6), who entered the game with the NFL's next-to-worst defense.
Jim Kelly completed 18 of 24 passes for 238 yards and two touchdowns
Rypien. Darryl Talley and James Williams got the other picks.
In handing Washington its sixth straight defeat, Buffalo exacted some revenge for the 37-24 defeat to the Redskins in the 1991 Suier Bowl.
The Bills used two interceptions by Nate Odomes to take control of the game in the third quarter.
Trailing 14-10 at the half, the Redskins drove into Buffalo territory at the start of the third quarter before Odomes picked off Rypien at the Buffalo 22-vard line.
Thomas then carried the ball eight times in a 12-play drive that ended with his 1-yard touchdown run.
In all, the Bills stopped four consecutive drives by intercepting Mark
The Redskins drove into Buffalo territory by converting a third-and-20 to the Bills' 28-yard line. But on the next play, Odomes picked off Ryppon again, this time in the end zone.
The Bills took that interception and drove for a 45-yard field goal by Steve Christie.
Reggie Brooks was the star for Washington, carrying 24 times for 117 yards and a 7-yard touchdown.
When Greenslipped, Reed was open at his own 40. Safety Brad Edwards went down the sideline to give the Bills a 7-1 lead six minutes into the game.
slipped on the slick artificial turf to set up Kelly's 65-yard pass to Reed.
Redskin cornerback Darrell Green
The Bills drove 80 yards to go back out in front 14-7.
On Washington's next possession, the Redskins moved to the Buffalo 18-yard line. Lohmiller kicked a 36-yard field goal, but the Bills were called for roughing the kicker.
The Redskins got four more plays but were stopped again. This time, Lohmiller hit from 19 yards to cut the Buffalo lead to 14-10 midway through the second quarter.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 2, 1993
11
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Healthy Men Needed Receive up to $375
IMTCI, a pharmaceutical research company, is now seeking volunteers to participate in a medical research study
Call IMTCI for more info: Mon-Fri from 8am-5pm
To qualify you must:
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be able to attend three
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International Medical Technical Consultants, Inc 16300 College Boulevard Lenexa. Kansas
Classified Directory
100s
Announcements
Announcements
110 Business Personal
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional
Scientist
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
Services 235 Typing Services
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
300s
Merchandise
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, color, religion, 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.
100s Announcements
I
105 Personals
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
307 Want to Buy
On Tuesday morning, 20, you followed a green Honda in from K.C. You had blood and hair draped a red Toyota w/ DG county plates. I would love to talk to you. Reply to box # 30.
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Real Estate
Wanted
110 Bus. Personals
-Kansan Classified:864-4358-
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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-4:30pm
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-9pm
Saturday 10am-12pm
Sunday 1.30am-3pm
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
120 Announcements
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Weekly Drink Specials
Tues: 50¢ Draws
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Free Party Room Available at Johnny's Tavern/
Ur/Up & Under. Call 842-0377 for details.
Wed:$1 Well Drinks
BRANDING IRON SALOON 806 W.24TH 843-2000
Thur:$3 Pitchers
140 Lost & Found
130 Entertainment
806 W. 24th · 843-2000
List Cat. Slemcatch mik, long hairied, 3 years old;
to Gray. Reward offered, epa.
POLYGON 9275
Gray Nylon jab containing important papers. Lost on Thursday night and Friday morning near the corner of Emery and Stratford. Reward for a bounty of $250, returned, to 920 Mass, or 843-777-8140 or 841-0758.
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205 Help Wanted
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AA Cruise & Travel jobs. Earn $250/mo. + travel the world free! (Caribbean, Europe, Hawaii, Asia!) Cruise Lines now hiring for busy holiday, spring and summers sessions. Guaranteed employ
Adams Auln Center is looking for part-time bank servers. Must have some amd/daytime availability, very flexible hour. Nice working environment. Apply at 1286 Oread. Across from Kansas Mountain.
ADMINISTRATIVE USER SERVICES. Student Monthly. Deadline: 11/12/93. $550-$650/month depending on experience. Duties include providing microcomputer庐LAND $C0 UNIX support, provide training sessions for students, and software training sessions for end users, provide LAN installation and problem solution support, and other duties. Required qualifications: Demonstrated proficiency in computer skills, knowledgeable about computerized databases and their use, experience using microcomputers, currently enrolled at KU and continuing in the program. Description available. To apply submit a letter of application and a current resume to Ann Riat; Personnel Assistant, Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60445. EO/A ENEMPLOY-
Afternoon teacher's aide for infant room 1: 5-45 Monday through Friday. Experience with infants preferred apply at Children's Learning Center 205 N Michigan E O E
Afternoon teacher's aide for infant room. I to 5-45 Monday through Friday. Experience with infants preferred apply at Children's Learning Center 205 N. Michigan, E.O.E.
AMIGOS Supervisor/Assist Mgr.
Supervisor now - Manager later! Learn the business from the ground up and advance according to the needs of your team. Be a former oriented person and like to work at a fast intense pace, an opportunity to put these skills to work and develop as a leader is available. Relocation may be required. 18+K is benefits. Apply
DOCUMENTATION INTERN. Student Monthly.
Deadline: 11/19. Salary: $550-$650/month.
Duties include organizing, maintaining, and
preparation of user-oriented documentation,
and training new users of user-education seminars and workshops.
Required qualifications: must be enrolled at KU,
clear and effective speaking skills, Good com-
munication experience in using
computer, mainframe, or networked pu-
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To apply, submit a letter of application and a current
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Office assistant needed 25 hrs/wk M-F 3-7 p.m. &
Sat 12:40.3:40. Please call 749-6130.
Part-time artist for original, sports active t-shirt designs. Call for portfolio review and interview.
Previous food service and supervisory experience mandatory. Start at 5.25 per hour. Workday schedule from 5:25 to 6:25 per hour, 20-30 hours per week, mostly evenings and weekends. Apply at Chick-fil-A Food
Evansville Mall-Mackenzie-Hawk-Cedar Hill Co.
at 719 Massachusetts, M-F, 8-9am, 4pm.
© Openspace the movie museum
Party Photographers needed Please apply in person from 10 a.m. thru Friday at Photographic Occasions, 105 W. 17th Street. 3:30mm camera experience preferred.
Part-time Supervisor Wanted Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse
PRE SCHOOL DIRECTOR: Large Established community preschool and child care program looking for acting director while present director and acting director with early childhood hours and minimum one year as assistant director. Good personal, positive Preschool Director: Large established community preschool and child care program looking for acting director while present director is on sabbatical and working with early childhood hours and minimum one year as assistant director. Good personal, positive communication, and office skills important. This challege requires a resume of 4021 M 13 St., Wellington, KS 66940.
Research assistant: Excellent writing skills, ability to work in a team, experience. English senior, grad. preferrer.
Stop to Shop is looking for part time clerk must be able to work 2p.m. to 10p.m. shift, some weekends and holidays. If interested apply in person at 1010 N.3rd.
Co. at 179 Massachusetts, M-F; 9am-4pm.
(Iustreats above the smokehouse.)
RESUME SERVICES Professional Business Training.
Free initial interview $210.00
Free initial interview $310.00
STUDENT HOURLY CUSTODIAL WORKER (2) two openings at Watkins Student Health Center. 15-20 hr. a week evenings and some Saturdays. Star immediately and continue through fall. Requires a Bachelor's degree. Work schedules will vary according to hours the facility is open. Apply in person to Personnel Office, Watkins Health Center Monday through Friday. Additional information available upon request.
CHEMISTRY LABORATORY ASSISTANT Requires good academic record in chemistry, pharmacy or related science; laboratory experience desirable. 12-30 hrs wk./wk. Submit application for the position to HR. Send resumes toscripts to INTERx Research, 2001 West 121st Street. AnEqual Opportunity Employer, M/F/H/V.
COOK assistant every weekend 1-3pm. Must be able to supervise children Sunshine Acres
CNA's need to work with clients in Dixie Horns.
CNA's need to work with clients in Gallaroon at
Douglas City. Visiting number 96-3201.
*Circum strip artist, off-board, entrepreneur. Send 3 samples box #85, 119 Staffer Flint, Lawrence.*
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STUDENT RECEPTIONISTS (2) : West campus book publisher seeks two students, one to work mornings and one to work afternoons, to answer phones, process incoming/outgoing mail, handle correspondence and other tasks on hrs/day. M.F. $4.25 / $4.75/br. based on experience. Come by 2501 W.11th. St., (684-4154), to complete application. Deadline for applications is m. Friday, 11/19/20. An EEO/AA employer.
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SUB COCKIES 10am-3pm as needed. Same supervie-
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SUB LUNCHROOM 11am-3pm as needed. Same supervie-
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Mass. Street Dell or Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse.
must have daytime availability MAJ, also some
supervisory experience mandatory. Start at $25.50
up to $42.50 per hour, up 20-30 hours per week. Apply at
Schumm Food Company, 719 Massachusetts, Monday through Friday, 9am-4pm. (Upstairs are
225 Professional Services
Valeball Coach wanted - for women's USVBA
Valeball Experience. preferred.
Call @ 814-598-3670
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
Traffic tickets, midmeasurement, landlord/ tenant,
Rainbow Conv.B 248-5333.
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, servicing KU students for 30 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749.
Experienced organist will play for weddings at Dunfermarch Church. Call carol at 16137 and leave a note to the organizer.
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For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We take pride in helping and with you.
Research Assistance - MS/MLS information specialist available to assist with term papers, theses, dissertations, research projects, 843-4209.
Birthright 843-4211 Free pregnancy testing.
Prompt abortion and contraceptive services. Dale L. Clinton M.D. M 841-5718.
Research Assistance - MS/LMS information spec
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Speak in English. Will help with any paper.
Speak to make an 'A'. Word process, too.
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The Law offices of
DONALDG. STROLE
Donald G. Strohe Sally G. Kesley
16 E, 13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
1-der Woman Word Processing, 843-2063.
A Word Perfect word processing service. Laser printer, New campus, 849-895.
AA Word Processing: Any size, under 30 pp.
Word Processing: $1.25/page. Call Rath after
8:43, 643-6438.
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your TYPING needs call
Word Processing at 800-236-7541
Beacon Publication Services-Quality work pro-
graming. IBM Correcting. English, grammar,
grammar, proofing). Call Mrs. Mattsia
410.50 double space pad. Call Mrs. Mattsia
410.50 double space pad.
Fast, accurate word processing; term paper, fast, thesis, and graphics services available. Laser printing. Engineering and Law review experience. Call Pam at 841-977 anytime.
X
300s Merchandise
3 tickets for NU football game. Great seats. Call 841-0244.
305 For Sale
Beds, deks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice
984 Mass.
CHLORINE FILTERING SHOWER HEADS &
LOW FLOW SHOWER HEADS at Simple Goods
General Store 735 Mass. M-Sat 10-5:30, Thill 8.
DP 2500 weight lifting machine, leg curls, etc.
Great condition. DP Body - Tone 300 Rowing Machine. $250 for both. Call 843-0540 evenings and weekends.
Large inventory of classic old Playboy Magazines 1960's, 60's, 70's and 80's. Most in good condition.
Must be purchased in package. Call 843-0540 evenings and weekends.
1 roommate to share spacious, furn. 4 BR 3 BTH
2 roommate to share spacious, furn. 4 BR 3 BTH
2 w/g. on spring. Spending time with family.
4 w/g. on spring. Spending time with family.
$30 STA-7D98 receiver $200, Coffee btl. w/ no
this $20, Cycle 550ER $40, Dinnerette 42" dti.
dbl. with 4 ch. $40, Mirror 30"x38" $50, 843-163 anytime.
Macintosh Quadra, new in box. Must sell. 1-800-246-2441
92 Merc. Tracer & mi., 5spd, pl, plc. @ $3935.749-1005 John
1978 Buc Leisure 350 v8 PS, PB, AT, AC $600 823.
11 days.午天AY
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
Available Spring semester. Contact
858-712-3096.
Avail. dec. int. Very large, newly remodeled one bedroom apc. on bus route, bus and cable paired.
Honda Accord LX coupe, 5 speed, white, spoil-
tor. Power super. Power condition. For
details. 80-0138
340 Auto Sales
$320 BMW runs good, no muffler, broke tall light
afford to tug. Must call. Call Tiger 865-289-
1100
Sculptured Nails $2 reg. $42. Reflections West,
232 Ridge Court. B-941. 846-192. Ank for Pain.
Available Jan. 1st, 2 bdm unfurished api;
available Feb. 1st, 2 bdm rear bus route. Bus
route. Mon./Tue./Wed. mon/Thu.
/mon/Cat.Virginia.
For lease 4 bedroom, Sundance nps, near campus, occupancy date not applicable. Oct- Jan, 7700 +1234567890
360 Miscellaneous
400s Real Estate
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and
room from KU. Off-street parking.
No pets. Call 814-5000.
Female one bedroom avail. in 3 bdrm house. All wood floors, new paint, laundry in back, off-street parking. Close to campus. Avail. Nov. 1 call 823-8223.
Large room with nice view in newer 8 m².
Large kitchen with avail. De30. Prefer蜂蜜, non-smok-
749-1018
Wake up to Cedarwood Apts.
No, it's not a dream!
Path has 2 Great
1 bedroom apartments that are now available! Call today before this great deal slips away.
405 For Rent
1 bedroom apt. available Jan 1. Close to campus.
1 UB宿舍
1 call phone: Call Regs. 45-249
Sub lease affordable downtown Jan. May; BtL level,
offered by Covington, on bus route, call M811,
Groverstone Apt 4a.
www.groverscounty.com
Sub-lease fully furnished 1 bdm apt. All utilities paid; $290/m Available in January. Please call
Call Pat at 843-1116 for details about this special!
MICHAEL MIDDLETON
Sublease: 2 bdc apt. Available Dec. to July. Call
843-711-904 or 843-9296. Birchwood Gardens.
Unique 1 bedroom / 1 bath apt. hard wood floors, 2
bedrooms on campus/campus/4340/month.
Rental $750 per month.
WANTED: Studio or one bedroom apartment to
live in at 443-643.
Call me and leave a message.
430 Roommate Wanted
1 female needed to share 3 BR; 2 bath Campus
1 female needed to share 3 BR; 2 bath Campus.
Cold Campus Office #841-650-7299.
I female needed to share a 2 bedroom house. Please contact Dexter, Dec. 1. 855-431-4101 or leave a message on fax: 855-431-7296.
P or I is needed to bring 3 bedroom house. On bus
Lawnson, ASAP. Private room. Call 641-2890.
Lawrence, ASAP. Private room. Call 641-2890.
- females needed to share 4-bdm townhouse. $190
+ utilitarian/Donna /865-3721
1 frommate needed to share $30 buid owntheatue for
@784-2516, $190/mo / 1.9t. use!!
I will provide the source code if you need it.
3 bdms available in Jan. 3 bedroom, 8 bathtown home, garage, house, washer & dryer. Respondible, non-smokers only: 86-1118 Leave message. 2 females needed to share 4 bdm townhouse. $150
ROOMMATE NEEDED. Close to campus.
Non-smoker. 2 full baths. B4-64-52.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
160 Mobile Home, reep grid stuf, $160/mo +¥
bills and deposit. Central air, storage avail, mark
Mobil Home.
One roommate should to share a two bedroom
room, call Andy or Gary 814-444 or leave a message.
- By phone: 864-4358
How to schedule an ad:
Two 9th Fb's, 'n' seeking a commitee for 3 dbr 65-
beginning deci E.1 Carll Carnier or Cathy at 865-235
Roommate wanted. Nov 1st: Female preferred 2
women/children plus/mutuals. Call Kati
or Charlotte 415-736-9100.
To share 8 bdm / w male grad. student A.S.A.P.
to campus. Cable TV $40 + / utilities.
Calculating Rates:
Ads shown in may be held by your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* In mention: 1191 Stairer Flint
Stop by the Kassan 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.
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 unsured days when cancelled before their expiration date.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansas 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 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 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.
Num. of incursions:
3 lines
5 lines
5-7 lines
8+ lines
105 personal
110 business personals
120 announcements
130 entertainment
130
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 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-28X 30+X
2.65 1.55 1.65 .85 .75 .50
1.90 1.15 .89 .70 .65 .45
1.85 1.95 .75 .65 .60 .40
1.75 .90 .85 .60 .55 .35
Classifications
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
Please print your ad one word per box:
148 lost & found
262 help wanted
225 professional services
99 human resources
380 for sale
340 sales jobs
380 miscellaneous
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | |
3 | | | | |
4 | | | | |
5 | | | | |
379 want to buy
435 for rent
438 roommate wanted
Date ad begins; Total days in paper.
Total ad cost: Classification:
Name.
Address:
**VISA**
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Dally Kansas)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Expiration Date:
Account number:
MasterCard
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University Dalrymple Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
www.stauffer.com
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1993 FarWorks Inc./Dist by Universal Press Serviceate
BIG BOY
VELCRO
KIT
Fortunately, even the Boy Scouts who fall knot-tying get to go camping.
12
Tuesday, November 2, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
928 Mass. Downtown
The
Etc.
Shop
BLUE BIRD
The Athlete's Foot.
S
814 Massachusetts.
7 a.m. 10 p.m. Mon. Sa.
8 a.m. 2 p.m. Sun.
Dine in or Carry Out
843 BIRD
914 Massachusetts
841-6966
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.
843-3826
new THE
HARBOUR LIGHTS
New a full service bar after 57 years
of downtown tradition
1031 Massachusetts
Downtown
AMERICAN BISTRO
701 MASS,
In the Eldridge Hotel
841-8349
Breakfast-Lunch-Dinner
We do Banquets tool
United Parcel Service Part time Jobs ups $8 Hour ups
ups
$8 Hour ups
Interviews will be held Wednesday, Nov. 3 from 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
Sign up in the placement center, 110 Burge Union
E/O/E m/f
University honors retirees for 883 years of dedication
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
In one night, the University not only said farewell to 39 recently retired employees, but also recognized the loss of 883 years of KU work experience.
In honor of their time and effort, the University sponsored a recognition dinner for this past year's classified retirees last night at the Adams Alumni Center.
with their family, travel around the country and in one case, practice the bagpipes.
Phil Rankin, associate director of the department of human resources and organizer of the dinner, said this year's group of retired classified workers was probably the largest since the University first held the ceremony in 1979.
Ranging in years of service from 12 to 42 years, the retirees included fulltime clerical and library staff, custodial workers, and food service staff.
The retirees said they would use their freedom to spend more time
Peggy Baker, former secretary for the Germanic languages department for nine years and 12-year employee, said she welcomed retirement as an opportunity for self-improvement, including spending more time with the instrument of her heritage.
"I'm getting better at it," Baker said with a laugh as her husband, Claud, stood by smiling in his plaid tie and matching kilt. "People find it hard to believe sometimes. I know."
Some retires, given the opportunity to leave their old job, have volunteered to pick up in their retirement what they left off at the University.
Lou Davis, former food service supervisor at Templin Hall, retired in April and said she has been planning menus and preparing meals at the Ballard Community Center in Lawrence.
Despite her new responsibilities, Davis said she changed one part of her routine from her 38 years with KU
food services; she now wakes up at 8 a.m. instead of 4 a.m. for work.
For some classified retirees, a life spent working at the University was not just a personal decision but a family affair.
"My years of service have been wonderful," Mary Beth Johnston said. "But I better retire while I'm ahead."
In presenting Johnston to the rest of the guests at last night's dinner, Stephen Schroeder, director of the Life Span Institute, said the term retirement seemed strange for employees of his department.
As office supervisor for the Life Span Institute in Dole Center, Mary Beth Johnston will leave her job Nov. 17 after almost 22 years at the University. She will join her husband, Roy, who retired four years ago from the department of facilities operations.
"At the Life Span Institute, we've always had difficulty with the idea of 'retirement,'" Schroeder said. "We've sort of thought of it as an 'alternate career choice.'"
Fraternity faces $150,000 lawsuit
By Scott J. Anderson
Kansan staff writer
A KU fraternity has until Nov. 29 to answer a lawsuit filed by a former cook seeking more than $150,000 in damages.
The former cook's lawyer, Richard White, filed the lawsuit Sept. 24 in Douglas County District Court. The suit charges Alpha KappaLambda, 2021 Stewart Ave., with breach of contract, fraud, emotional distress and negligence.
The lawsuit said the fraternity never gave the cook, Sandy Lingle, a written
employment agreement or federal withholding forms.
Lingle was injured on the job early this semester, according to the lawsuit. She asked about workers' compensation but was given no benefits. In the meantime, the fraternity hired another cook.
Lingle then was told that the fraternity was reducing her work schedule and cutting her pay, according to court records. She then turned in her resignation but was fired before she was scheduled to leave.
The lawsuit said Lingle was seeking $50,000 in damages for fraud because the fraternity never intended to hire
her on the terms it offered. She also is seeking $50,000 for the emotional stress caused by her firing
The lawsuit also said the fraternity should pay Lingle $50,000 for negligence that resulted in financial loss suffered by Lingle.
White claimed in the lawsuit that the fraternity offered Lingle $11 an hour as a cook from July 1993 to June 1994.
Lingle, White and the fraternity's lawyer, James Rumsey, could not be reached for comment yesterday.
Lingle was earning $6.52 an hour as a cook for Unified School District 497 when the fraternity offered her the job, the suit said.
PRE-SEASON NIT STUDENT TICKET SALES
Tickets on sale at KU Ticket Office (East Lobby/Allen Field House)
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1 THROUGH WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10th (Excluding Nov. 6 and 7) 8:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. TICKET PRICE: $6 for two game package (Cash or check only)
Wednesday, November 17th 8:30 p.m.- KU vs. Western Michigan Friday, November 19th 8:30 p.m.- KU -Western Michigan winner
Cal-Santa Clara winner
LIMIT: One Two Game Package Per Student (with valid KUID)
NOTE: Refunds will be made if KU does not play on November 19th.
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
α
5' "D back, handsome? laid back, old fashioned romantic, teddy bear type, smoker seeks short attractive, open minded-caring SEP w/ mainstream looks and cosmic sense of life. Must enjoy conversation, rainy days, deep dark brown eyes, dudging, working and just partying in office in SALE 472938
Are you an attractive woman who is sick of being jealous by your man? If so, I'm a handsome man who would like to cut in. Let me show you how a woman should be treated. 440028
*Very attractive male, muscular build, would like*
*to see you in a room or 40' x 60' with a slim*
*and attractive. Call box # 46998*
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
Common abbreviations
To check out these ads call 1-900-285-4560 You will be charged $1.95 per minute
If you would rather have a meaningful conversation at a quiet table for two than having to about the noise of a crowded beer hall, you should be talking this 50 year old economics major. Bigs
SWM "F" 8, 18 yrs. Blue eyes, brown hair. Good-looking, earty earth, looking for quick illusion girl who likes basketball, classic rock and the outdoors. If you're looking for someone to share time with, and you wonder what happened to Sat. night, give me a ring. #46364.
PLACE AN AD FREE! Call 864-4358
Look into my crystal ball and see a 'dark eye Geminian in your future. He will have many Taurean qualities, but is a definite air person. He is me; if you call I will respond #47183.
SWM 40, looks 30, 67'H Handmade, smart, athletic racec. Seeks SAF-SWF with similar interests. Canoeing, nature, bicycling, running for possible friendship or boyhood #4712.
Out of town gut, 45, refined, mature and capable,
seeks sweet young thing for dates and fun. #47011
SWM 29 yrs, 5'10, 150 lbs, long brown hair, I love
Henry Rollin, Tom Wate, Social Distortion. I own
a motorcycle, don't have job and probably drink to
eco-freak need not. #45228
SWM Graduate Student seeking athletic, sweet SWF for possible serious relationship. I am honest, kind, humorous, generous, and intelligent. I am 6'2" with an athletic build, brown hair, green eyes, and a clean-cut look. like bikeing, volleyball, good food, and good conversation. If you want to be
Very good-looking SWM wants to talk "wishful-ly"
and you can say "wishful" (SWM) a plea call if you're
1. am. 9mm. f4.25. (SWM) a plea call if you're
1. am. 9mm. f4.25. (SWM) a plea call if you're
♂
WOMEN SEEKING MEN
18, 5'S Brown hair & eyes looking for a SWM 18-25 who enjoys long walks taking tours for hours ask kind of movie and into classic rock and alternative music. Must be honest hard working and like to get cray and be lots of fun. Shy guys can apply too. Hope you call. Call #6892.
SWF,10'F,6' with light brown hair. Seeking single white males who like to party but also a serious side. Enjoy romantic evenings and knows how to treat a girl right. #48307
OO
MEN SEEKING MEN
BIMW, *6*, 175, Good looking, Health/Gym, Quality, Travel, Beach, Fl, Bi-Coat, Seeks College Guy, 18-26 only, Sharp, Great Looks, Intelligent, Masculine, Masculine, Mature, Golds, Callles
GWM, 20, seeks GM to share in intelligent/mindless conversation and listening to Erasure. No closet preferred, but, if not, maybe I can help. #44392.
GWM Welcome guys to Kansas! It's hard to make new friends. Can't seem to do a good job, so give me a helping hand! #44391
♂♂
WOMEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
DWBIF, 8,5 long brun hair, lipstick, femme,
seeks 2F, friendship, hanging out in pots, potential
relationship. I am french with authentic beauty.
I am out-nvigors or tourists # 45648
1. Call or come into the Kansan at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS To place an ad (must be 18 yrs old)
3. After your ad runs in the Mon., Tues., & Thurs. editions of the Kansan, you call a free 800-number (every 3rd day from the day that you initially place your voice message), to listen to the messages people leave for you. Any other day, you may call the 900-number to retrieve your messages at a cost of $1.95 per minute. The average call is 3 mins in length.
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.
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.
---
SPORTS: Kansas officials say fans rushing the field after football game unlikely to riot. Page 7.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103.NO.53
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING:864-4358
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3,1993
(UPS5 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
City ponders downtown bars
Commission to focus on limiting number
By Traci Carl
Kansan staff writer
After the City Commission met last night, about five or six people mingled outside of a bar on Massachusetts Street. Their voices rose and fell as they talked and every once in a while they would yell at someone across the street or at a passing car.
It is this sort of congregation that has city commissioners worried. Before the group gathered in front of the bar, commissioners pondered the appropriate way to limit the number of downtown bars.
They decided to focus on limiting the proximity of bars, requiring establishments to have a majority of their earnings come from food sales and limiting the amount of square footage that could be developed into a drinking establishment. The commission probably will not be able to make a final decision until January.
No Regulation: The City Commission decided not to regulate Sunflower Cablevision, which could affect Lawrence cable prices. Page 3.
The commission also decided to have its staff draw up a loitering ordinance that would deal with increasing incidents of damage to public property, verbal abuse and graffiti. The ordinance would be based on behavior, not how long or where a person was.
Commissioner Bob Schulte said he wanted an even balance in the variety of downtown stores.
"I don't think any of us are against drinking establishments or evening entertainment," he said.
Earl Reineman, president of Downtown Lawrence Inc., said he supported reducing the number of bars in the downtown area, but he also wanted to see more police patrol Massachusetts Street at night.
"The people who are downtown in the evenings usually are bothered by large numbers of young people congregating downtown," he said.
Dave Corliss, assistant to the city
manager, said voters decided last year to lift the food requirement for drinking establishments. Under the requirement, if bars did not earn a certain percentage of their profits from food sales, they would have to be a private club, and their patrons would need a membership.
When the requirement was lifted, it changed the nature of many bars, Cortliss said.
In August of 1991, when drinking establishments still had to meet the food requirement, there were 36 drinking establishments and 18 private clubs in Lawrence. Now that the requirement has been lifted, there are 68 drinking establishments and one private club.
Daniel Brostella, Panama senior, said Lawrence was a college town, and bars were part of the territory.
The bars had no effect on downtown businesses, he said.
The bars are open at night, and the stores are open in the day," he said.
But he said bars could attract conflict.
"They should control more violence and fights," he said.
HOME FIELD ADVANTAGE
Track recruitment is a global affair
The Kansas track program refuses to follow a national trend of aggressively recruiting foreign athletes in order to bolster its success.
Gary Schwartz
A. MICHAEL HILL
S. K. PRESIDENT
Bob Timmons
ansas is one of a shrinking number of university track programs that does not depend on talent from outside the United States. In the
Big Eight Conference, every school but Colorado and Kansas actively recruits foreign athletes.
Despite making up only 5 percent of the total participants in college track and field, foreign athletes accounted for 12 of the 19 individual championships in the 1991 NCAA Outdoor Championships for track and field.
Tennessee was the last school, in 1991,
to capture the men's national outdoor
championship by winning all its points
from U.S. natives.
"I thought about it, but I never really liked the idea," Timmons said of recruiting foreign athletes.
The trend of recruiting foreign athletes has worried former Kansas track coach Bob Timmons since the late 1960s. Timmons coached Kansas track from 1966 to his retirement in 1988. He now coaches volleyball at Baldwin High School.
One student who made him consider allowing foreign athletes was Tony Watkins. Watkins ran for Kansas during the 1985 and 1986 seasons.
Although Watkins did not compete in Big Eight meets, Timmons said that having Watkins, a walk-on from Dungannon, Northern Ireland, made him feel hypocritical at the time.
He said that in the early 1980s he was forced to rethink his stand against having foreign students on the team.
By Kent Hohlfeld Kansan sportswriter
"Here I was criticizing other teams, and here we had Watkins," Timmons said. "I began to think, 'how can I discriminate
against a whole segment of the student population?"
He said that he still did not believe in recruiting directly from foreign nations and that U.S. universities should recruit from their own country and develop U.S. athletes.
"I'm a flag-waver, and I want to see American kids on those Olympic platforms." Timmons said.
During the 1950s Kansas dominated the Big Eight, winning eight straight conference indoor and outdoor track titles. That span of domination included two outdoor national titles.
When Timmons took over in 1964, that tradition continued as did the recruiting philosophy of staying within U.S. borders.
Kansas won three national indoor titles and one U.S. outdoor title during Timmons' tenure. He said that during the late 1960s and early 70s, the national track power shifted to teams like the University of Houston and Texas at El Paso, which had many by foreign athletes.
Kansas' domination of the Big Eight continued through the early '70s, while most Big Eight teams stayed within the United States for their talent.
That ended in the mid-1970s with the rise of the Iowa State Cyclones track program.
Some coaches say the Big Eight mirrors what has happened around the rest of the country.
The Big Eight:
See INTERNATIONAL ATHLETES, Page 9
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Ready, aim...
Greg Harms, Lawrence graduate student in chemistry, adjusts aiming mirrors to direct a pulsing light laser. The laser, once it is focused and aligned, will be used on different biological samples to study the effects of the laser on each sample.
PLO, Israel hit snag in withdrawal talks
Sides dispute interpretation of word in plan
TABA, Egypt — The Palestine Liberation Organization indefinitely suspended talks with Israel today, saying Israel did not intend to withdraw from occupied lands.
Nabil Shaaah, the chief Palestinian negotiator, said Israel's interpretation of the word "withdrawal" really meant redeployment.
This is the first major dispute since the talks began three weeks ago. But both sides seemed interested in resuming the talks, and the Palestinians might have walked out to demonstrate their anger over the Israeli position on withdrawal.
Shaath said he would return to Tunis to confer with PLO chairman Yasser Arafat. He urged Israeli delegates to consult their leaders to "come up with an interpretation that would allow us to proceed smoothly."
The talks in Taba, in their fourth round, are meant to define how Israel will transfer some powers to Palestinians in the occupied Gaza Strip and Jericho on the West Bank under terms of the Israeli-PLO accord signed Sept. 13.
"We feel that the Israeli interpretation of that agreement is quite falling to grasp the meaning of withdrawal and its requirements," Shaath said.
"The agreement provided for withdrawal by the Israeli forces from the Gaza Strip and the Jericho area, and
not within the Gaza Strip and Jericho area," Shaath said. "This is a withdrawal agreement and not a redeployment agreement."
Under the Sept. 13 autonomy agreement, Israel is to start withdrawing by mid-December from Gaza and Jericho and turn over internal security matters to Palestinian police.
Today's dispute grew from maps and withdrawal plans the Israelis presented Monday.
In the autonomy agreement, the PLO ceded to Israel the right to maintain security over Israeli settlements in the vacated territories. How Israeli forces will provide that security emerged today as the key dispute.
Shaath said at a news conference that the PLO interprets the accord as prohibiting Israel from leaving any troops in Gaza and Jericho.
Shaath's news conference was held almost two hours after it was scheduled, reportedly because of a private meeting between Shaath and Maj. Gen. Amnon Shahak, the chief Israeli delegate.
Shahak later said that he thought the talks should continue. The Israelis had put forth their withdrawal plan expecting it to be negotiated, he said.
"We did not present the withdrawal plan as an ultimatum," Shahak told reporters. "It seems they need the time to clarify some things for themselves."
The withdrawal plan presented the first obstacle in the Taba talks, he said, and it "surely won't be the last one or the most difficult."
Israel's prime minister, Yitzhak Rabin, told reporters in Tel Aviv that he was aware of difficulties in the
talks, but added: "We will not compromise on anything that is linked to the security needs."
Earlier reports said the disagreement focused on whether Israeli soldiers guarding Jewish settlements would have unfettered access to roads through Palestinian areas to other settlements.
The Israeli newspaper Maariv reported today that Palestinians were upset with Israel's demand to use roads connecting three settlement areas in Gaza. Use of these roads would give Israeli troops a presence on major roads in a large part of the strip.
In Jerusalem, Deputy Foreign Minister Yossi Beilin criticized the Palestinians for halting the talks.
"We have made a proposal that I think is very legitimate, and it is a great shame that the Palestinian response is to get up and leave, to pack up instead of talking," said Beilin, one of the architects of the Israel-PLO pact.
Beilin said that while the accord obliged Israel to withdraw, it also required Israeli troops to protect Jewish settlers remaining after the withdrawal. He said the Taba talks were meant to negotiate a way to ensure the settlers' safety.
Israel's housing minister, Benjamin Ben-Eliezer, suggested the talks would be renewed soon when he told Israel army radio he was not too excited about the halt.
"The Palestinians have an interest no less than we to complete the negotiations," said Ben-Eliezer, a former military governor of the occupied lands. "They simply have no other alternative."
INSIDE
INSIDE
Wetland Debate Students at Haskell Indian Nations University discussed the religious significance of Wetlands south of the school with officials.
KU sees increase in grants
Page 3.
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
The quantity and quality of research grant applications has allowed the University of Kansas to receive an increase of $9.8 million in research funding for fiscal year 1993, University officials announced yesterday.
KU this year received a total of $86.8 million in grants — $50.3 million for the Lawrence campus and $6.5 million for the University of Kansas Medical Center.
"I think the faculty deserves a lot of credit for writing strong proposals," said Kim Moreland, director of research support and grants administration, whose office oversees all grant application requests.
Howard Mossberg, vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service, said that he expected KU to reach
$100 million a year in grant funds before the end of the decade.
"The trend reported here supports the belief that our faculty research activities, both sponsored and self-generated, have been growing for an extended period," he said.
Moreland said the Lawrence campus sent out an average of 1,100 grant applications every year. The Lawrence campus usually receives grants from about 150 agencies a year, but most of the funds come from the federal government.
After the application is filed, Moreland said, each agency takes about six to nine months to review the grant application.
A. L Chapman, associate vice chancellor for research administration at the Med Center, said research grants were necessary for the Med Center to operate effectively.
Chapman said the Med Center applied for about 200 different grants each year, most of which came from the National Health Institutes, a government institute that finances biomedical research.
KU's Institute for Life Span Studies, which deals with research and service training for developmental disabilities in children, annually receives the most research money, about $10 million, Moreland said.
"You can't have an academic health institution without the acquisition of new knowledge," he said. "New knowledge leads to technology, and new technology is an added benefit to the state."
Paul Diedrich, associate director for project development at the institute, said research grants were essential to the institute's budget since 90 percent of the budget came from grants.
Funding goes . . .
During the last five years, research grants have increased from $52.9 million to $86.8 million for an average increase of 12 percent a year.
Lawrence Campus
KU Med Center
Millions of dollars
1989 1990 1991 1992 1993
Year
Source: University Relations
Dave Campbell / KAMAN
9
2
Wednesday, November 3, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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It won't be always here, so don't miss the opening celebration of
Always There:
The African-American Presence in American Quilts
Sunday, November 7 2:00-5:00 p.m.
Spencer Museum of Art The University of Kansas
Tours of the exhibition at 2:30, 3:00, 3:30, and 4:00. Music by the Inspirational Gospel Voices and Lynda Canaday. Food and fun for the whole family!
The sun shines brightly over a colorful village with houses, trees, and a central building. The roof is adorned with a decorative rays pattern. The village is surrounded by fields of crops and other vegetation.
Carolyn Mazlooma, The Family Quilt from "Solid Like a Rock" series, 1989, cotton, fabric paint, piece. Collection of the artist.
Support for Always At the Spencer Museum comes from Hallmark Cards, Inc.; the Source; the Kansas Art National Commission; and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency. The exhibition was produced by the Kentucky Museum of Art, Kentucky, Couture Benberry, curator.
Everyone is invited to be a guest of the Friends of the Art Museum!
SPENCER MUSEUM OF ART The University of Kansas
ON CAMPUS
OAKS — Non-traditional Students will hold a brown bag lunch from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at Alceo G in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Gerry Vernon at 864-7317.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor a lunch and forum, "Historical and Current Trends in World Population Growth," from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at the Center, 1204 Oread. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a Catholic student discussion group at 1:10 p.m. today (following 12:30 Mass) at Alcove B in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 843-0357.
Society of Professional Journalists will hold an organizational meeting and forum from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. today in 100 Stauffer-Flint Hall. For more information, call Phil Alfano at 865-4323.
KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 5:30 p.m. today on the third floor in the Burge Union. For more information, call 844-7316.
KU Enviros will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Amy Trainer at 841-4484.
son Center. For more information,
call Jacob Wright at 749-2084 or
Jason Anishanshan at 843-3099.
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will meet at 6 p.m. today in 207 Robin
KU Kempo will meet at 7 tonight in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Ershadi at 842-4713.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will hold a House/Hall Contacts meeting at 6:30 p.m. today at the Center, 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call Wendy at 843-0357.
Campus Crusade for Christ will sponsor "The Great Debate: Why Wait? Is It Healthy to Save Sex for a Permanent Commitment?" , at 7:30 tonight at the Kansas Union Ballroom in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Michael Brown at 832-0799.
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.
KU Sports Administration Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in 155 Robinson Center. For more information, call Brad Finley at 832-8445.
*Watkins Memorial Health Center will sponsor an eating disorders support group from 7:30 to 8:30 tonight at the second floor conference room in Watkins. For more information, call Sarah Kirk at 864-4121.
The University DailyKansan (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-FlintHall, Lawrence, Kan6045.
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for Campus Crusade for Christ, and Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare, will be from 7:30 to 9 tonight at the Kansas Union Ballroom in the Kansas Union.
A student's parking permit and four cassettes, valued together at $45, were taken from a car in parking lot No. 103 on Oct. 27 or 28, KU police reported.
A student's backpack and its contents, valued together at $119, were taken from Ekdahl Dining Commons on Monday, KU police reported.
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A brief with the headline "Sexuality debate relocated" in yesterday's Kansan contained incorrect information. The debate between Michael Horner, a visiting speaker
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CONGRATULATIONS!
PRE-SEASON NIT STUDENT TICKET SALES
Tickets on sale at KU Ticket Office (East Lobby/Allen Field House)
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1 THROUGH
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10th (Excluding Nov. 6 and 7)
(Excluding Nov. 6 and 7)
8:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
TICKET PRICE: $6 for two game package (Cash or check only)
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 3, 1993
3
Panel debates trafficway plan
By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer
Haskell Indian Nations University sophomores Nancy Green, right, and Marnie Lounsbury, take turns expressing their disapproval of the proposed South Lawrence Trafficway through wetlands on Haskell property. Haskell held an open forum on the issue last night at Haskell Auditorium.
I am a Native American who was born in the United States and raised in Oklahoma. I am a member of the Apache tribe and live in Oklahoma. I am a native American who is a member of the Apache tribe and lives in Oklahoma. I am a native American who is a member of the Apache tribe and lives in Oklahoma.
Melissa Lacey / KANSAN
Traffic, spirituality and a history of cultural differences dominated the discussion at Haskell Indian Nations University last night.
About 100 Haskell students, American Indians and supporters gathered at Haskell Auditorium to hear a panel of speakers discuss the proposed South Lawrence Trafficway. Most directed their attention to panel members Mark Buhler, Douglas County commissioner, and John Pasley, project coordinator for the trafficway.
"The students at Haskell will not allow the trafficway to totally destroy their land and their heritage," said Adrian Brown, Haskell Student Senate vice president and member of the panel.
The discussion concerned the route of the proposed trafficway, which has been planned since 1984. Current plans call for the county to build a two-lane trafficway between Kansas Highway 10 and Clinton Parkway. The trafficway, which county officials say will alleviate traffic on Iowa and 23rd streets, would skirt the southern border of Lawrence.
But Haskell students and the Haskell Board of Regents are concerned that the trafficway would cover eight acres of the wetlands at the southern end of Haskell's property. The highway's proximity also
would destroy the religious and spiritual significance of the land.
"The wetlands, for me, are my church," said Josephine Fire Lane Deer, Haskell sophomore and member of the panel. "That's the closest place I can go and pray."
Bob Martin, Haskell president, said the board had not addressed the long-standing issue before because the county waited until this July to answer questions the board asked in 1992 about the trafficway.
Both Pasley and Bukler said they were concerned with both the spiritual and environmental impact of the $60-70 million trafficway. Pasley said they attended the discussion to understand the wetland's significance to the students.
But Henrietta Mann, Haskell professor on leave from the University of Montana and member of the panel, said Buhler and Pasley would need added compassion. She said such governmental land agreements like the trafficway had hurt American Indians in the past.
"Unfortunately, I see nothing but 501 years of having to hold down and battle for the land our fathers gave us," Mann said.
ficway, which called for a two-lane highway to be built on the east side of Lawrence instead of the south side. Supporters said such a plan would help move traffic from Interstate 70 and around the city.
Buhler such a plan would not move traffic in an east-west direction, which he said was the county's bigger need.
After the discussion, Pasley said the feedback from Haskell students
might lead to different plans. He said he might change the height of the trafficway and the plant of trees on the side of the trafficway to reduce noise levels, he said.
But Buhler said he did not know whether any changes would be made.
"it's going to be a difficult process," he said. "I'm not sure who will do it to make everybody happy, and in that I'm discouraged."
Wetlands provide students at Haskell vital link to nature
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer.
The word "wetland" conjures images of crocodiles, marshes and lily pads.
Here, Haskell students hold ceremonies at the medicine wheel, a circular path in the grass symbolizing the cycle of life. Here, sweat lodges — where students come to purify their souls — lie hidden in the grass.
But what possible religious significance could students at Haskell Indian Nations University attribute to the wetlands at the south end of Haskell's campus, where the proposed South Lawrence Trafficway would go?
And here, Sleepy Eye LaFromboise, Haskell Student Senate president, comes to pray at night.
"I know a lot about my Sioux and
Seneca side, and I've been taught to
The answer lies in a visit to the contested area. Instead of swarms and spotted frogs, tall prairie grass and spindly trees cover the field. On a cold fall morning, a light breeze brings a sighing sound from the grass and dead autumn leaves.
take care of this land," he said. "It's our mother."
LaFroboise said he liked to pray at night, because the noise from nearby 31st Street is too bothersome during the day. But the sound of the proposed trafficway, which would replace 31st Street, would be worse, he said.
LaFroboise said the planners of the trafficway did not understand the attachment American Indians have to nature. He said he had been taught that he was cousin to the earth's two- and four-legged animals and brother to the hawk.
"We believe things are in a cycle, and in that cycle everybody is equal," he said. "Nobody is on the top, and nobody is on the bottom."
But John Pasley, project coordinator for the trafficway, said he might understand after all. After a walk through the area last week with LaFomboise, other members of the Student Senate and Douglas County officials, he said he could understand the students' concerns.
"You begin to see how the noise would be a problem," Pasley said. "That's one of the big things I got from it."
It's that time of year again ... time to clear those parking ticket holds on your enrollment. If you've ever wondered where your money goes, here's a look at the parking department's budget for its current fiscal year.
Revenue
$1,650,000
Garage: $100,000
Game parking: $115,000
Meters: $200,000
Fines: $500,000
Permit sales: $735,000
(about 11,000 permits were sold this year)
Expenditures
$1,713,076
Equipment, computing telephone, travel:
$51,610
Lot maintenance:
$64,550
Supplies: $167,250
Utilities: $75,680
Payments on the parking garage:
$616,307
Salaries of 19 full-time employees and 15 students: $737,679
The $63,076 shortfall is covered by money left over from last fiscal year. The department maintains a balance to cover shortfalls and to pay for summer projects.
The department began fiscal year 1994 on July 1 with $268,97 left over from fiscal year 1993. The department is self-supporting and receives no money from the state or the University.
BUSTED
BUSTED
Source: University Budget Office and Donna Hultine, Asst. Director of Parking.
John Paul Fogel/KANSAN
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Student in hospital after jumping to I-70 following car wreck
Cindi Johnico, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, was listed in stable condition last night at Truman Medical Center in Kansas City, Mo. She was flown there by Life Flight after being transported from the scene to Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
A KU student was injured yesterday when she crashed her car and then jumped from an overpass on Kasol Street and landed on Interstate 70.
A Douglas County Sheriff's deputy responded to a report of an accident at I-70 and Kasold Street at 10:26 a.m. yesterday. A witness reported that a vehicle had hit the overpass.
When the deputy arrived at the scene, Johnico ran from her car and jumped off the overpass, landing on the north lane of the westbound I-70, according to reports.
Comedian to perform at Lierl
The sheriff's department could not determine yesterday why Johnko jumped off the overpass.
"Saturday Night Live" star Kevin Nealon will perform stand-up comedy at 8 tonight at the Lied Center.
Nealon has been with "Saturday Night Live" since
Tickets are still on sale and are $10 for students and $12 for nonstudents. Tickets may be purchased at the Student Union Activities box office in the Kansas Union. The box office will be open from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Students will be able to purchase tickets at the door before the performance.
the 1986-87 season. He is most known for his portrayals of Franz in Hans and Franz, Mr. Subliminal and as host of Weekend Update.
"The Kauffman Foundation is certain to be a dominant force for good in the years ahead, and I am honored to be associated with it and its noble objectives," Budig said in a statement.
Budig also serves on the Royals Board of Trustees, which will oversee the financial responsibility of the team pending approval by the Internal Revenue Service.
Chancellor Gene Budig has been elected to the board of directors of the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, the board announced yesterday.
Budig joins Kauffman board
The foundation was established by the late Ewing Kauffman, who owned the Kansas City Royals and founded Marion Laboratories, Inc., which later merged with Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals to become Marion Merrell Dow Inc.
The philanthropic foundation was established to help underprivileged children, to assist youths to become productive members of society and to stimulate entrepreneurial growth in the United States.
Student invests his time helping boys earn badges
Engineering major counts nearly 19 years in Scouts, now volunteers with troop
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staffwriter
At 26, Rod Zinn is still a boy at heart.
Dressed in a tan Scout shirt covered with badges and emblems, Zinn, Overland Park sophomore, appeared to be a Boy Scout again as he was surrounded by a group of 10 Lawrence youths last night.
And he said he would not have it any other way.
Zinn is the assistant Scout master for Lawrence's 52nd troop, the oldest Boy Scout troop in Lawrence.
He volunteers his experience and enthusiasm to Boy Scouts in Lawrence and Overland Park every week when he conducts meetings and teaches scouting skills and responsibility to young Scouts.
"He's kind of like a big kid," said Lawrence resident Todd Hayworth, 11. "He's easy to talk to, and he's a lot of fun. He helped me learn to tie knots so I could earn my Tenderfoot Badge."
Zinn is a civil engineering major at the University of Kansas. Though he enjoys his major, he said that working with young Boy Scouts often makes him question his engineering career.
"I know engineering like the back of my hand — but then there's the boys," he said. "I enjoy giving them something better than what I had when I was their age."
Zinn said many of the Boy Scouts he works with are from single-parent families and live below the poverty line.
Zinn knows what they are going through. His parents were divorced when he was a boy, and his father was an alcoholic who never supported him in his interests.
Zinn's mother put him into a Boy Scout troop along with his two brothers, which gave him the direction missing from his home life.
"I sank all of my energy into the Boy Scouts, and I found I had a knack for it," he said. "I learned discipline and responsibility, and I want to share that with the Scouts."
That direction helped Zinn become the only Eagle Scout, the organization's highest honor, in his family.
Zinn drives to Overland Park every Monday night to conduct meetings and has Lawrence Boy Scout meetings on Tuesday nights. He works with Scouts at his home on Thursday nights to help them earn badges. Satisfaction is the only reward he gets for his time.
"It's a great feeling to know I'm helping these boys, and they appreciate it," he said. "Some of them are in the same boat I was as a kid, so I know where they're coming from."
Zinn is not the only KU student who gives his time to the Boy Scouts.
"I missed 'Late Night,' but I felt like I had a responsibility to go with them," he said. "It's a good feeling to know you're giving back to the Scouts and the community."
Russ McGuire, Harper freshman, attended a Scout camp in Bonner Springs with the Lawrence troop when they needed another assistant Scout master.
Tom Mulinazzi, associate dean and professor of engineering at the University, has a son in the Scouts and works with the troop. He said he thought the Scouts benefited from KU students who donated their time to the organization.
"Rod is the ultimate Scout himself," Mulinazli said. "He knows a lot about the Scoots. He's a motivator."
City commission to withdraw application to regulate cable
Sunflower's record added financial cost among cited reasons
By Traci Carl Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Ralph Gage, general manager of the Lawrence Journal World and a representative of the World Co., stood before the City Commission last night and lifted a 500-page, four-inch-thick pile of paper.
That is what the commission would be dealing with if it received approval from the Federal Communications Commission to regulate Sunflower Cablevision's rates, he said.
"And it is still being written and amended," he said.
So the commission decided last night to withdraw its application for certification to regulate Sunflower's rates.
But last night it decided the extra cost of regulation would not be worth the benefits.
According to the Cable Act of 1992, which was explained in the papers that Gage held up, the city could ask the FCC for permission to regulate Sunflower's rates. The city decided Oct. 19 to ask for the certification required to regulate rates.
Mike Wildgen, city manager, said that the city had sent only a one-page request for certification to the FCC, and that a letter would be sent to inform the FCC to disregard that request.
"I don't believe that I've had any concerns raised about Sunflower cable company," he said.
Commissioner Bob Schulte said he did not want to spend money to regulate something that had a good record.
Commissioner Bob Moody said Sunflower's production was above average, and its rates were below average.
"If there any cost associated with regulation at all, then we probably are wasting money without good cause," Schulte said.
"It is an intense, detailed and time-consuming process," he said. "I don't think it is something you can accomplish without additional personnel or consultants, and all that takes
The city receives part of Sunflower's fees, Gage said, and the cost of regulation could drain the city of those funds.
money."
The cable act gave cities the option to regulate rates because many cities had experienced trouble with cable companies charging unfair rates. Right now, Sunflower is regulated by the FCC, Gage said.
Gage said he thought Sunflower had proved it was a trustworthy company.
"We think we are doing a good job, and we'd like to be recognized by the city," he said.
Although Sunflower is the only cable company in Lawrence now, technology is changing, and soon cable may be available by satellite, Gage said.
"There's so much turmoil and so much change that every time you pick up a newspaper there's something different or some new alliance," he said.
Sunflower is required to notify its customers and the city 30 days before it changes its rates. The city still can apply for the right to regulate Sunflower in the future if it charges unreasonable rates, Gage said.
Although there are companies interested only in making a profit, Gage said, Sunflower is not one of them.
"We are an operator," he said. "We are not an investor."
a
4
Wednesday, November 3,1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Premarital sex should be decision of couple alone
The decision to have sex should be made only by the partners involved, no one else. Campus Crusade for Christ is sponsoring a debate tonight between Canadian Christian philosopher Michael Horner and Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare. The question to be debated is "Why wait - is it healthier to save sex for a permanent commitment?" The debate will take place at the Ballroom in the Kansas Union at 7:30 p.m.
There are many concerns to be accounted for when deciding to have sex. Health concerns should be the first. All members of society should recognize their responsibility to themselves and others to help stop the spread of sexually transmitted diseases.
The next concern should be emotional well-being. Both parties involved must be emotionally ready for sex. If one or both are not confident in their emotional stability, sex will very likely cause more trouble for them than pleasure.
The debate questions the effects of sex on a person's spirituality. Some religions profess that sex is sinful unless the couple is legally married. We disagree with this belief for several reasons. First, deciding whether a person is ready for sex can be made by the person alone, no one else. Second, in many cases, this moral judgment against premarital sex was made to help curb the spread of sexual diseases and unwanted pregnancies.
The simple solution to this is for the couple to practice responsible sex. Although this cannot protect them from all possible negative consequences, it can help Third, there are no physical, mental or spiritual changes granted by a marriage certificate itself. The commitment is made by the couple, not the piece of paper.
The important point here is that sex is a personal decision that must be made based on health, emotional and mental reasons. The only morality in the question should be whether or not both partners honestly address their own concerns and the concerns of each other. Sex before marriage should not be considered unethical or immoral based solely on the premarital status of the couple.
Attend the debate, listen to both sides of the argument; but understand that having sex is a very personal decision, one that can only be made by the individual.
DAVID BURGETT FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
OKAY. WE'LL NEED SOME WIND TUNNEL TESTS...
HEAD FOR CAPITOL HILL.
BIG GOVER
Eulogy of sorts inspired by a favorite bathroom
This past summer I suffered a very traumatic experience. I moved from my residence of 13 years to a new and improved "abode." Leaving my boyhood home produced many tearful goodbyes. As I passed through each room and thought about the experiences that each had afforded me, I stopped at a really special place. I decided as I looked into that room that someday I would give it the tribute it deserved. Today is "someday."
The following emotionally revealing letter/essay/sonnet (OK, not really), is titled "Goodbye, My Friend — Mr. Bathroom" I wanted to leave a copy in this special room, but realized that the new residents might think that if I talked to the bathroom, then maybe I talked to ghosts too and therefore the house was haunted, and let's face it—who wants to buy a haunted house?
I hope when I send it in to respected literary magazines, I will earn much acclaim and many dollars. I could also appear on daytime talk shows and be chronicled in respected news journals. Picture it. "Boy Talks to Bathroom, Eats Foot." But enough of that. The real star is my bathroom, and here is my way of saying, "Thanks."
COLUMNIST
CHRIS
RONAN
Dear Mr. Bathroom,
Woe is today when I realize that
never again will I be graced with your presence. Today the memories crashed down upon me. I will never again share the kind of bond with another room like I did with you, Mr. Bathroom. Nor will I share again the variety of things that I shared with Mr. Toilet (HA-HA). Oh, the times we had.
Remember the first time I "tried to shave? It was for the first date I ever went on and I cut the crap out of my face, then I foolishly experimented with aftershave for the first time (YOW-WEE). Later, I came home as I had made a fool of myself when I spilled that big bowl of spaghetti all over that girl's dress. Whoops.
Then there was that time when you hid me because Dad was looking for me. I know he had told me not to beat up my little brother, but how was I supposed to know when I "nudged"
him that he was on the edge of the staircase? It was just an accident, but you understood, Mr. Bathroom, and didn't ask questions. Actually there were a lot of "hidings" in you.
Or how about that time when I had the flu? Yeah, I know you remember that. Who could forget it? Dad made that chili with the really spicy beans and my stomach wasn't exactly "up to the task." Man, when Ilet that meal go! hurt HURT. My throat burned for two hours and I promised you that I would never eat chili on an upset stomach again. Like someone smart probably once said, "Eating chili is one thing, but on an upset stomach? WOO-WEE, better watch out!"
So I bid farewell to you, Mr. Bathroom. You were a pillar of strength through a life that was constantly changing. For all the other bathrooms that I will enter, I will never forget you. Your late 1970s wallpaper and that convenient towel rack that I never used. May you prosper always, and may your new owner not pee all over you.
Chris
Your Friend Always,
Chris Ronan is an Overland Park sophomore majoring in broadcast journalism.
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
Cheating in the classroom is hardly a new phenomenon, but the findings of a new survey suggest it may be more pervasive than previously thought.
What does high-achieve cheating say about kids?
Of the 1,975 high school students questioned in the 1992-93 term, 78 percent admitted to cheating and 80 percent said cheating is widespread in their schools.
Students said they had copied another student's homework, others said they had cheated on exams, and still others said they read summaries rather than the books that were assigned. Plagiarism in essays was admitted by 14 percent of the respondents.
were so-called high achievers. They are not the laggards at the low end of the grading scale who feel they'll be left behind if they don't resort to dishonest tactics.
What do these responses tell us? That today's high school students are under too much pressure to succeed academically? That earning a grade has become more important than learning the material? That the classroom is not a place where one can revel in the pleasure of acquiring knowledge?
If the brightest high school students feel so little compunction about cheating, how will they behave when they get to college? As adults, how will they behave toward their families, their friends, and those they might transact business with?
The Tribune Tampa, Fla.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
What makes you think it's really Einstein's?
I don't believe it for one second! Albert Einstein's brain on Mass Street? Is suppose Elvis is serving up drafts in a local bar, and Jim Morrison picks up aluminum cans every Saturday on campus.
I have two questions that need answers: Why do you believe it? And, why do you expect me to believe you were the first to discover this peculiar "fact"? Did this guy call you up and tell you he had the brain or did you sniff the story out by yourself? Were there little notes left in your campus mailbox with directions to the brain, or was it a revelation that suddenly came to you in a dream, "Einstein's brain is Lawrence"?
I picture it in ajar on Mass Street!
Call the photo team and follow me!"
Can you understand why I might not believe you? Let me see ... one of the greatest humans of our time dies, and the man doing the autopsy just happens to slip out the back door with the brain under his jacket; nobody notices; his family doesn't mind at all; the rest of the scientific community has no interest in studying the tissue; and our many prestigious national museums and universities don't care to display it.
Now, this brain has been sitting around in Lawrence for 38 years and the Kansan has just come upon the story. You people must be one incredible news staff!
At least you checked with some family, friends and former colleagues to verify the fact of our
brain in residence. I'm sure they were more than willing to supply you with all the credibility you needed. Did any of them let out an uncontrollable chuckle as they gave you the background on their brain-harboring friend?
I must give you this, the week before Halloween is a great time to put an old scientist and a brain on the front page of your tabloid. Readers definitely took notice. (Hell, I was inspired to write you a letter). J bet the man who has the brain will be selling tickets this weekend. Hey, if it's not Elinstein's brain, whose brain is it??! Now, there's a story. How about some real news, Kansan.
Nick Schlyer Lawrence junior
COLUMNIST
PATRICK DILLEY
Religions do not support killing even in Ireland
Ireland is engulfed again in violence and bloodshed. Actually, again is not correct: Ireland is still engulfed. In the last few days, dozens of people have died, the victims of Irish attacking Irish.
Most of us have grown up with the idea that Ireland experiences this onagain, off-again civil war between the north and the south. It has something to do with religion, but does anyone have a clear idea of how it started, and who keeps it going?
I took several hours of British history for my undergraduate degree, and I tried to get a handle on the problem. The more I learned, the less I understand.
These conditions worsened after the English Reformation, when the Protestant Church of England was created and Catholicism outlawed in British lands. The powers of church and state went hand-in-hand, and by the mid-1600s the Irish population was split into at least four factions, divided between the royal government, British Parliament, Scottish coveting forces and the native Catholic Irish.
The rulers of England, royal and otherwise, have ruled over the Irish people since the 12th century. The native Irish people eventually converted to Catholicism, following a series of expeditions to reform and convert them. The English considered that only people born in England or those English born in Ireland to be true citizens of Britain. The English language was forced upon the Irish in the 1500s.
And so began the current series o protests and dissidence.
Today Ireland is split in two. Northern Ireland is controlled by the British, while the Republic of Ireland is an independent state. Pro-Ireland Roman Catholics attack pro-British Protestants. In Northern Ireland we "moderate" political parties try to conduct peace talks with the outlawed radical Irish Republican Army and equally radical Protestant extremist.
This situation is considered, by the people involved in it, a holy war and a civil war. It is a battle between the chosen people of God and those who go against God. It is a fight for who will control the land and the people of Ireland. The terms Irish Catholic and British Protestant are, regrettably, interchangeable.
What tenet of religion, either Catholic or Protestant, advocates killing? What government, advocating self-rule or organized democracy, advocates destruction? What on that island is worth the wholesale demolition of itself?
Irish children grow up scarred, in a war zone, feeling a numb association with death or disability that occurs with no notice, with no reason other than being in the wrong place at the wrong time. Those who survive to be adults are pulled into the factions to survive. Those who avoid the pull await the day when someone they know, someone they love, is killed.
All of this, in the name of God and independence.
KANSAN STAFF
Patrick Dilley is a Lawrence graduated higher education.
KC TRAUER, Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editor
Editors
TOM EBLEN General manager,news adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
Assistant to the editor ... J.R. Clairborne
News ... Stacy Friedman
Editorial ... Terrilyn McCornick
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Kristi Fogler
Photo ... Klip Chin, Renee Knoober
Features ... Extra Wolfe
Graphics ... John Paul Fogel
TOM EBLEN
AMY CASEY
Business Staff
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AMY STUMBO
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JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Campus sales mgr ..Ed Schager
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National sales mgr ..Jennifer Evenson
Co-op sales mgr ..Blythe Focht
Production mgrs ..Jennifer Blowey
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Creative director ..Brian Fusco
Classified mgr ..Gretchen Kotterleinich
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-Flall Hall
by Joel Franck
University of Mars
Man, I feel great. I've managed to avoid those over-Zealous, bible slappin', religious types, all day.
They're all over campus
Heathen trap
Hmmph! Oh no!
SWAP!
Stop, philistine! I offer you salvation and hours of self-righteous conversation.
AT LEAST TAKE a FREE Bible!
Hal, help me gnaw off my leg! Hal!!!
ENTERTAINMENT
Wednesday, November 3, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
01.01.01.02.03
QUIPS AND QUOTES
Entertainment Weekly's 20 Greatest CDs
1. Rolling Stones "Exile on Main St." (1972)
1. Robin Stone's Exile on Martha
2. Led Zeppelin "Remasters" (1982)
2. Led Zeppelin remasters (1982)
3. Miles Davis "Kind of Blue" (1959)
3. Miles Davis "Kind of Blue" (1989)
4. Paul Simon "Grounding" (1986)
4. Paul Smith Gracedale (1983)
5. Pink Floyd "The Dark Side of the Moon" (1973)
6. Bob Dylan "Blonde on Blonde" (1966)
(1967)
7 Elvis Presley "The Sun Sessions" (1987)
v. 10. S.Bach "Goldberer Variations" (1955)
v. 10. S.Bach "Old Time Greatest
7. Efvis Presley The Sun Sessions (1987)
8. Ardea Franklin "30 Greatest Hits" (1986)
10. James Brown "20 All-Time Greatest Hits" (1991)
8. Aretha Franklin '30 Greatest Hits (1965)
9. J.S. Bach 'Goldberg Variations' (1955)
13. Various Artists Hitsville USA: "The Motown Singer"
- Revisited 1956 *107* (1990)
gallery Collection 1958-1971 (1992)
14. Phil Spector "Back to Mono 1958-1969" (1991)
14. Phil Spector "Back to Mono 1958-1969 (1991)
15. Frank Sinatra "Songs for Swingin' Lovers!" (1956)
16. Nirvana "Nevermind" (1991)
12. Guns N' Roses "Appetite for Destruction" (1987)
18. Beach Boys "Pet Sounds" (1966)
16. Nilvana New Endora (2004)
17. The Velvet Underground & Nico "The Velvet
20. ENYA "Watermark" (1988)
19. Hank Williams "40 Greatest Hits" (1978)
20. ENNA "Watertown" (1988)
Adapted from Entertainment Weekly's Nov. 5, 1993 issue
EXHIBITIONS & LECTURES
Exhibition—"Abstract Expressionist Works from the Spencer Museum Collection" will be on display through Jan. 9, 1994, free
Exhibition—"Aspects of Modern Life: 19th Century French Prints and Drawings" will be on display through Jan. 9, 1994, free
$ ^{10} $ Design department faculty will have works on display Sunday through Nov. 12 in the gallery of the Art and Design building, free
Traveling Exhibit: Sacred Ground/Sacred Sky will be on display tomorrow through Nov. 23 in the gallery on level four of the Kansas University, free
English Alternative Theatre will present two staged readings: "Waiting for Leo" by Clifford and directed by Brad Rohrer, and "Inheritance" by Jeff Caster and directed by Paul Stephen Lim, S.p.m. Monday and Tuesday at 100 Smith Hall, free
Film — "Daughters of the Dust" (not rated), explores the culture of the Gullah people at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the auditorium of the Spencer Museum of Art, free
Tour du Jour—by Marie Aquilino, assistant professor of art history, on 19th century French art at 12:15-12:45 p.m. tomorrow in the White Gallery of the Spencer Museum of Art, free
Tour of the Month: "Art from
CALENDAR
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center Workshop: Resume Writing and Interviewing Skills for Women 7-9 p.m. Tuesday Nov. 9 at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union, free
Beyond Diversity — Building Community on Multi-Cultural Campuses: Blandina Cardenas Ramirez, director of minorities in higher education of the American Council of Education 8 p.m. tomorrow Nov. 11 at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union, free
Children's tour: "Traveling through Time with Art" 1 p.m. Sunday at the Central Court
of Spencer Museum of Art, free
Exhibition opening — Always There: The African-American Presence in American Quilts reception for the public and friends of the Art Museum 2.5 p.m. at the Central Court of the Spencer Museum of Art, free
Performances
Around the World" 1 p.m. Sunday at the lobby of the Spencer Museum of Art
Hallmark Symposium Lecture Series: McRay Magleby, professor of illustration at Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah, 6 p.m. Monday at the auditorium of Spencer Museum of art
Kevin Nealon 8 p.m. tonight at The Lied Center, students $10, public $12
Fall Concert — University Symphony Orchestra: Brian Priestman, conductor; 3:30 p.m. Sunday at The Lied Center, public $6, students $3, senior citizens $5
Faculty Recital: Richard Angleletti, piano 7:30 p.m. tonight at Swarthowt Recital Hall, free
Tubafest Visiting Artists Recital: Floyd Cooley, tuba, and Mark Lawrence, trombone, 7:30 p.m. Monday at Swarthout Recital Hall, free
University of Kansas Opera: "The Old Maid and the Thief," "A Hand of Bridge" and "The Stoned Guest" 7:30 p.m. tonight, tomorrow, Friday, Saturday at Inge Theatre, public $6, student $3, senior citizens $5
San Francisco Symphony 8 p.m.
Tuesday at The Lied Center, public
$20, $25, senior citizens $19, 24, KU
faculty and staff $17, 21, KU
students and other students $10, 12.50
Doctoral Recital Hio-MingLeung,
piano, 7:30 tonight at Swarthout
Recital Hall, free
Off campus
Exhibit—“Hand, Mind and Spirit:
An Art Experience of the Sense”
will be on display for individuals with and without disabilities through Dec. 2 at the Raymond Eastwood Gallery in the Lawrence Arts Center, 200 W. Ninth, free — Hours: Mon-Fri, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. and 9 a.m., 3 p.m.
Now a full service bar after 57 years of downtown tradition 1031 Massachusetts
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1031 Massachusetts Downtown
Finding a Course for Your Spring Schedule Just Got
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Stop by Independent Study Student Services, Continuing Education Building, Annex A. just north of the Student Union for a catalog or call 864-4440 for Information.
Earn University of Kansas Credit through Independent Study.
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
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We buy & sell used sports equipment
Interviewing?
Success is Built on Confidence and Focus. A Spectator's consultation can help achieve the professional impression you want. 710 Mass. 843-1771
1029 Massachusetts phone 841-7529
ARTS AND CRAFTS BAZAAR
Applications now Available For Students and Non-Students To Sell Handmade Arts and Crafts Apply at SUA Office, Level 4. Kansas Union Applications Due Friday. Nov. 12 by 5 PM For More Info. Call SUA at 864-3477 Bazaar Will Be Held Nov. 29-Dec. 3 9 AM to 5PM
Kansas Union Gallery. Level 4. Kansas Union.
SUA
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Buy a large, get a second of equal value for $3!
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Buy a small, get a second of equal value for $1!
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The listing of CCN/EPIQual participants and the explanation of Express Scripts in our recent mailing is intended to give you information about the lowest cost alternatives when the use of Watkins Health Center is not possible.
Our previous correspondence regarding CCN/EPIQual may have caused some confusion regarding insurance coverage for services offered at Watkins Health Center and its Pharmacy. Our insurance plan was designed with the intent that Watkins Health Center would be the main or primary site for health coverage for covered students. Under this plan the use of Watkins Health Center and its Pharmacy will result in the lowest out-of-pocket expenses for enrolled students.
A detailed explanation of this coverage can be found on page 12 of the University of Kansas Student Health Plan brochure or you can call us directly at 1-800-521-2623 to make specific inquiries.
SHUCK the HUSKERS
FUN RUN
IN AT SHENK
LEXSOUTH
NG LOT FROM
M-8:45 AM
The University of Kansas
School of Fine Arts
Department of
Music and Dance
The University of Kansas Opera presents
presents
A Hand of Bridge
by Samuel Barber
The Old Maid and the Thief
by Gian Carlo Menotti
The Stoned Guest
by P.D.Q. Bach
Music Director:
Mark Ferrell
Stage Director:
Laure Ronnebaum-Cumley
7:30 p.m.
Wednesday-Saturday,
November 3-6, 1993
Inge Theatre/Murphy Hall
General admission tickets are available through the Murphy Hall Box Office (913/864-3982) and the Lied Center Box Office (913/864-ARTS); tickets are $6 public, $5 senior citizens, and $3 students; VISA and MasterCard are accepted for phone reservations.
1
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H.O.P.E.AWARD
Honorary Outstanding Progressive Educator
Each year this award is given to an educator by the Senior Class.
On Thursday and Friday Ballots for this OUTSTANDING EDUCATOR will be available at every school's Main Office.
This is the start of nominations for the selections of the H.O.P.E.AWARD.
B.O.C.O.
For any questions call Ben Schwartz at 864-3710.
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Post-Soviet Russia adopts no-enemy defense doctrine
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — President Boris Yeltsin approved Russia's first post-Soviet military doctrine Tuesday, establishing a defensive posture in which no nation is considered an enemy.
Military leaders had demanded the new doctrine as payment for crushing Yeltsin's opponents in parliament last month.
It was not immediately known what concessions the government might have made to the military, which has complained about shrinking budgets, arms reductions and inadequate housing for soldiers.
munism and supporting communist allies around the world.
The document is a major turnaround in military strategy from the Cold War. No longer is the military responsible for helping export com-
Instead, the military doctrine has "a clearly expressed defensive character and is oriented toward a firm and active protection of Russia's vital interests and security," Yeltsin's press service said.
"No state or coalition is seen by Russia as a potential enemy," said Valery Manilov, deputy secretary of the Security Council. "All states whose policy does not damage Russia's interests are seen as its partners."
The new doctrine was approved amid growing international concerns about a resurgence of Russian military activity in the border states of the former Soviet Union.
Also Tuesday, Yeltsin warned that Russian democracy was being endangered by some of his top aides who
are continuing to use the strong-arm tactics wielded during the recent unrest in Moscow.
Yeltsin appeared to be distancing himself from some government actions. He has sought recently to portray himself as a leader above party politics, possibly to avoid the unpopularity of some government acts, such as the brief censorship of news media after the crackdown on his opponents in parliament.
Government officials reportedly are divided on the pace of reforms. Yeltsin's speech may have been a warning to slow down.
Within days of the army's crushing of legislative hard-liners last month, Yeltsin promised to approve the long-delayed military doctrine. His Security Council approved the doctrine Tuesday after a 10-minute discussion.
Case argues jury gender preference
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Keeping people off juries because of their sex promotes outmoded stereotypes and should be as unlawful as jury selection based on race, the Supreme Court was told yesterday.
"You should not be able to exclude a male or a female simply because of their gender," argued a lawyer for an Alabama man who says his rights were violated when an all-female jury decided he fathered a baby out of wedlock.
But a lawyer for the state of Alabama said barring jury selection based on sex "would raise more problems than it could possibly cure."
The Supreme Court banned race-based exclusions of potential jurors in a series of rulings starting in 1986.
Sex discrimination in jury selection is not as pervasive as discrimination based on race, said Lois N. Brasfield, assistant Alabama attorney general.
John F. Porter, 31, the lawyer for paternity defendant James E. Bowman, said the equal protection clause of the Constitution's 14th Amendment requires the same ban on jury strikes based on sex.
Sex-based jury decisions often are based on unwarranted stereotypes, Portersaid.
Brasfield argued that the court's ban on race-based jury selection is a special case because many Blacks were
routinely kept off juries until the high court acted in 1986.
But Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg noted that Alabama barred all women from serving on juries until 1967, long after Blacks were allowed to serve.
Brasfield said barring jury selection based on sex would slow the handling of cases and lead to many appeals.
But Clinton administration lawyer Michael R. Dreene said sex-based jury selection already is banned in some states — including New York, California and Massachusetts — and one region of the federal court system. The rule has not been difficult to administer, he said.
The high court is expected to issue a decision by June.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 3, 1993
7
Kansas officials say post-game riot unlikely
Wisconsin incident increases awareness of workers, students
By Gerry Fey
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
There are three faithful seconds on the clock as senior place kicker Dan Eichloff sets up for a 27-yard field goal that could defeat the Nebraska Cornhuskers. The crowd is on its feet as Eichloff approaches the ball.
The kick is away.
the ice is breaking.
As it splits the goal post uprights, thousands of Kansas fans storm the field to tear down the goal posts after a 27-24 uuset victory.
This is a possibility Saturday, but it will not be as big a problem in Lawrence as it was in Madison, Wis., said police Maj. Ralph Oliver of the KU police.
"From the limited knowledge I have of the incident, no people were getting injured at the goal posts," Oliver said. "The people were getting hurt at the fence between the field and the stands. We don't have a fence here."
Indeed that was the problem at Camp Randall Stadium in Madison. After Wisconsin defeated Michigan 13-10 Saturday, thousands of fans swarmed the field from the student sections. The people in the front row were crushed against fences at the foot of the bleachers, leaving at least 69 people injured, seven critically.
"If we beat Nebraskakathi Saturday, we could have fans trying to take down the goal posts," Oliver said. "We always have that to deal with. We anticomit it."
Darren Cook is director of facilities at Kansas and is game manager for football games. The job involves being in contact with Lawrence police officers, KU police officers and the Douglas County Sheriff's department.
Cook said what happened at Wisconsin was something he must always consider.
"I think it always raises your awareness," Cook said. "A facilities manager compares himself to other schools. We need to watch out so we do not have that happen here."
"I don't think that it could happen here, Slabaugh said. "There have been times when fans have taken down the goal posts. In my nine years here, it's only happened once or twice."
Cook deals with issues ranging from parking to preparations at Memorial Stadium before the game. He said that police officers were stationed in the stands to discourage any movement toward the field but that the safety of those officers was a major concern.
Oliver said the police officers' policy was not to defend goal posts from being toppled. The policy was changed about a year ago.
"We certainly don't want there to be any confrontation between police and students," Cook said. "We also like to let the students know that tearing down a goal post is dangerous. They are heavy, and if one of those hits your head it is very dangerous."
"We are more concerned with people being injured by tearing down goal posts than protecting the goal posts," he said. "Before this policy, the only people getting injured were the officers."
The possibility of a Wisconsin tragedy happening in Lawrence is minimal, Slabaugh said.
The ticket takers for the game, hired by Manpower Temporary Services, are also responsible for trying to contain the crowd, said Nancy Slabaugh, Lawrence branch manager of Manpower.
"After the game, the ticket takers surround the field and keep people off the turf." Slabaugh said. "We definitely do try to restrain them, but there comes a time when it just does not work. We are not going to do anything to hurt students or our employees."
Joe Selig is assistant athletic director at Nebraska and is the facilities, events and ticket manager. Nebraska attracts considerably more football fans than Kansas, increasing the danger in these instances.
We have UNL security in the stands, and
they are responsible for their area," Selig said. "It's been our position that you can't hold back a crowd of that size."
One such incident in Lawrence occurred after Kansas upset Oklahoma 27-10 Oct. 24 last year. Jason Dresslar, Phillipsburg sophomore, was one of the many students who stormed the field after the game. He said security guards had been in place but had not made a huge effort to stop the crowd.
"There were 30 seconds left, and we were winning." Dresslar said. "Everyone just flooded down to the field. There was some security but not enough to stop the crowd."
Dresslar said he had changed his mind about rushing the field after a game after the Wisconsin tragedy.
"Before this, I had no problems with it," he said. "Now, I definitely think some precautionary measures should be taken. If it is going to injure people, it shouldn't be done."
W
John Gamble/KANSAN
Kansas swim team takes lofty goals into opening meet
Kansas swim coach Gary Kempf talks to his team during practice. The women's team competes against Colorado State on Friday at Kansas and on Saturday with the men's team against Missouri at Columbia, Mo.
Kansan sportswriter
By Kent Hohlfeld
The Kansas swimming and diving team heads into this season with both talent and high expectations.
This year's team is better equipped to live up to those expectations than many previous Jayhawk teams, said Kansas coach Gary Kempf. This team is one of the most talented he has had at Kansas, he said.
The women's team will face Colorado State on Friday in Robinson Natatorium and then join the men's team for a dual meet against conference rival Missouri on Saturday in Columbia, Mo.
Kempf said the men's team looked particularly strong in the sprint and freestyle events.
"We really have good balance and talent throughout the lineup," Kempf said.
Two areas of the team that have been rebuilt over the last four years are the men's and women's diving squads. Diving coach Don Fearon took over the program in 1898, when it had only two returning divers from the previous season.
During the last four years, Fearon has increased the number of divers from two to eight. Five men and three women make up this year's team. The traveling team takes three men and three women divers. An injury to a female diver would leave the women's team without a full traveling squad.
He said the women's team also would have a balanced lineup this season. The strongest events for the women's team would be the breaststroke, backstroke and individual medley, Kempf said.
"The recruiting had fallen off when I got here," Fearon said.
The team faced that situation last year
Junior diver Erika Rasmusson said that numbers were no guarantee of getting to travel with the team.
when Michelle Rojohn missed the Big Eight Championships while she underwent reconstructive knee surgery.
"They always take our work ethic into account, Rasmusson said.
He said that although depth may be a problem for the women's team, the men's side would have five divers competing for the three spots.
This lack of depth on the women's side is a major concern to Fearon.
Fearon said senior Tim Davidson and sophomore Kris Hoffman probably would anchor the squad.
"I wish we had a few more on the women's side in case of an injury," Fearon said.
"The first two spots are fairly set," junior
Martin will be competing with freshman Brian Humphrey and sophomore Pat Burke for that final travel spot.
diver Chris Martin said. "There is one left to fight for."
That spot is crucial because the men's team has no fall home diving meets.
"At home all our divers can compete, but when you travel it's usually three," Fearon said.
Fearon said he thought this team had the ability to meet higher goals than in previous seasons.
"I'd like to see us get three guys and three girls in the top six in the Big Eight," Fearon said.
He said he also hoped to see his first female diver qualify for the national championships.
"I've never had a woman qualify, and I like to see it happen this year," Fearson said.
Linebacker's success aids Cornhuskers
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
If there is a better defensive football player in the country than Nebraska senior linebacker Trev Alberts, then Kansas coach Glen Mason has not seen him.
And that includes Florida State junior linebacker Derrick Brooks, whom Mason saw a lot of in the Seminoles 42-0 victory against Kansas in the Kickoff Classic. Brooks is considered the leading contender for the Butuk Award, which goes to the top linebacker in college football.
P. R. Nair
Trey Alberts
"I think he has a bigger impact on the game than Brooks," Mason said of Alberts. "I see people try to run away from him, and I see people try to run at him. He's a tremendous football player, as good as I've seen."
Mason will get to see Alberts in person Saturday when No. 6 Nebraska visits Kansas for a 1 p.m. contest at Memorial Stadium.
Alberts said he appreciated Mason's comments about being better than Brooks. But he said that he did not deserve any comparisons with Brooks.
"I'm not at that level with Brooks yet," Alberts said. "The goal of any player is to be recognized as a good football player, but I don't allow myself to feel like I've arrived as a great player. I still make my fair share of mistakes."
But judging from his statistics, Alberts has not made many mistakes this season. He leads the Huskers in sacks this season with 14 and tackles with 73.
He holds the Nebraska career record in sacks with 28.5 and needs two more to set a new single-season record.
"This defense is more tailored for me," he said. "We're able to attack more in this formation and make big plays."
Alberts' success this season has come in a season in which Nebraska changed defensive schemes. The Huskers switched from a 5-2 defensive alignment to a 4-3 alignment, and the change has benefited Alberts.
Nebraska coach Tom Osborne said the change in defenses had improved the Huskers pass rush against opposing quarterbacks. The Huskers have recorded 38 quarterback sacks this season, 10 short of the school record of 48.
"We have really good rush people," Osborne said. "Last season Trev would drop into pass coverage half the time, but now he just rushes the quarterback."
The Huskers lead the Big Eight Conference in total defense by giving up an average of 309 yards a game. Defense has been the key in Nebraska's 8-0 record and run at the national championship.
"Nebraska has been known more for its offense, but to win national championships you need good play from the defense," Alberts said. "History states that national championship teams have great defenses."
Alberts said that Kansas' offense would present a challenge for a Husker team with national championship aspirations.
"Kansas' running attack will be the best we've faced all season, and they have an outstanding offensive line," he said. "Our guys will have to keep focused this week because this is not the same Kansas team that played Florida State."
Athletic directors give wide receiver postgraduate award
Senior wide receiver Greg Ballard was named a recipient of a $5,000 postgraduate scholarship from the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics.
NACDA awarded four of these scholarships to one member of each of the teams that participated in the 1998 Kickoff Classic and Disneyland Pigskin Classic, the two NACDA-sponsored preseason football games. Kansas was defeated by Florida State 42-0 in the Kickoff Classic.
SPORTS BRIEFS
Ballard has a 3.22 grade point average majoring in political science and premedicine. He plans on attending medical school next fall at the University of Kansas.
Each recipient of these scholarships must be in the final year of eligibility and have a GPA of at least 3.0 on a 4.0 scale.
PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL
'Black Jack' captures AL's Cy Young
NEW YORK — Jack McDowell of the Chicago White Sox won his first American League Cy Young Award yesterday, a year after finishing second in the voting.
McDowell, also known as "Black Jack," was 22-10 and led the AL in victories. He easily outdistanced Randy Johnson of the Seattle Mariners in voting by the Baseball Writers Association of America. McDowell received 21 first-place votes, six second-place votes and one third-place vote for 124 points. Players are given five points for each first-place vote, three points for a second and one point for a third-place vote. Johnson had six firsts, 14 seconds and a third for 75 points.
Kevin Appier of the Kansas City Royals was third with one first, four seconds and 13 thirds for 30 points, followed by Jimmy Key of the New York Yankees with 14 points and Toronto reliever Duane Ward with five points. Two Blue Jays followed, with Pat Hentgen getting three points and Juan Guzman getting one.
McDowell, who won 20 games and finished behind
Oakland's Dennis Eckersley in last year's voting, won this time despite a 3.37 ERA, third-highest ever for a Cy Young winner.
LaMarr Hoyt of the White Sox had a 3.68 ERA in 1983 and Rick Sutcliffe had a 3.64 ERA in 1984 with Cleveland and the Chicago Cubs.
McDowell, a 27-year-old right-hander, slumped late, going 2-3 with a 3.51 ERA after Aug. 31. He was also 0-2 with a 10.00 ERA against Toronto in Chicago's six-game playoff loss.
PROFESSIONAL FOOTBALL Tampa Bay releases DeBerg
McDowell led the AL this year with four shutouts and was second in innings pitched with 256 % innings.
TAMPA, Fla. — Steve DeBerg, the NFL's oldest player and Tampa Bay's starting quarterback when the season began, was waived yesterday after appearing in only three games.
DeBerg, 39, lost the starting job to Craig Erickson after
the Buccaneers' season-opening defeat to the Kansas City Chiefs. He played briefly in two other games and had completed 23 of 39 passes for 186 yards, with one touchdown and three interceptions.
In 17 seasons, he has thrown for 32,351 yards, 187 touchdowns and 196 interceptions while playing for Tampa Bay, Kansas City, Denver and San Francisco.
"Steve has been a close friend since our days with the 49ers 15 years ago, so this was a difficult decision," Tampa Bay coach Sam Wheeled. said
Casey Weldon will assume the full-time backup role
"We think the time is now to add a quarterback to the roster who can prepare to compete for a roster spot next year," Wyche said.
Mark Vlassic, who was cut by Tampa Bay during training camp, is expected to re-sign with the team today.
DeBerg said he planned to stay in shape in case another team needed experienced help.
Compiled by Kansan staff reports and the Associated Press.
。
8
Wednesday, November 3, 1993
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Gone are Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson and Larry Bird — players who used skill and intelligence, rather than power.
Jordan's shocking retirement last month leaves a major void, not only in the NBA's visibility, but in its talent in the open court. And the off-season deaths of Reggie Lewis and Drazen Petrovic took away two more players who brought something to the league besides brawn.
After losing its biggest names and signing its largest contracts, the National Basketball Association begins a new season relying on some key players to sustain the growth it has enjoyed for a decade.
It's show time and the league hopes new stars will shine
By Bill Barnard The Associated Press
Stepping into the spotlight when the 1993-94 season starts Friday night are a big group of large players. Their talents, while impressive, don't feature the flair of Jordan, the passing of Johnson or the cocky 3-point wizardry of Bird.
The last eight NBA Finals MVPs were Jordan (three times), Isiah Thomas, Joe Dumars, James Worthy, Johnson and Bird.
Look again, and you'll notice that except for Portland's Clyde Drexler, they are the key players on the teams expected to contend for NBA championships — if not this season, then in the near future.
There's not a power player in that bunch, but the top stars in today's NBA — Shaquille O'Neal, Patrick Ewing, Charles Barkley, Hakeem Olajuwon, David Robinson, Karl Malone, Alonzo Mourning, Larry Johnson, Shawn Kemp and Brad Daugherty — use strength as the essence of their games.
Superior quickness gives them the edge over other players their size. But guile is not their style.
Look further and you'll see that the Chicago Bulls are not considered to be contenders. Winners of three straight titles, the Bulls' remaining talent and experience may get Chicago into the playoffs, but not out of the Eastern Conference.
dimension," Bulls coach Phil Jackson said. "We have a new set of goals in finding a new way to win with a new set of players. We are a longshot to win the title. I heard we went from 5-2 to 2-1 in Las Vegas."
"Our season has taken on a new
Coaches and players agree that defence is the key
New York, last season's Eastern conference runner-up, hopes to ride its defense, the best in the NBA a year ago behind Ewing, Charles Oakley, John Starks and Anthony Mason, to the NBA championship.
"We aspire to the title, and that's a goal of ours," Knicks coach Pat Riley said. "But it's a mistake to assume it's going to be easy just because Michael Jordan retired."
The emphasis placed on defense by the Bulls and Detroit Pistons in winning the last five NBA titles has made an impact on players' and coaches' thinking throughout the league.
"Defense is going to be the key," Barkley said. "You can tell by the way we're training that we're emphasizing defense more. I think, sooner or later, the Western Conference is going to change that myth that that's the difference between the East and West."
Coach Paul Westphal scoffed at Barkley's suggestion that the Suns can win 70 games, but added, "I wouldn't trade our team for any in the league."
The Portland Trail Blazers, criticized for not having the intelligence to match their talent, added free-agent center Chris Dudley, most recently of New Jersey, for defense and rebounding.
"Chris and Buck Williams give us a lot of toughness defensively," coach Rick Adelman said. "We have three guards in Clyde Drexler, Terry Porter and Rod Strickland, and we have six guys up front who have to sort themselves out. The guys who defend are the guys who are going to play."
body-slammers Kemp, Olajuwon,
Robinson and Malone.
Seattle, Houston, San Antonio and Utah are the other top teams in the West, led respectively by athletic
Western body-slammers
Golden State hoped to sneak in among the contenders, but season-ending knee injuries by guards Tim Hardaway and Sarunas Marciulionis means another frustrating season for coach Don Nelson despite the arrival of rookie Chris Webber.
The SuperSonics were bolstered by a trade for guard Kendall Gill, the Spurs traded All-Star forward Sean Elliott for two-time NBA rebounding champion Dennis Rodman, and the Trail Blazers dealt disgruntled center Kevin Duckworth to Washington for forward Harvey Grant.
O'Neal-Mourning match up
In the Eastern Conference, which is more directly affected by the retirement of Jordan, veteran teams like New York and Cleveland could be challenged by the young warriors of Charlotte and Orlando.
O'Neal and Mourning, two of the two best centers ever to enter the NBA at the same time, have better supporting casts.
The Magic, who won the NBA draft lottery in consecutive years, wound up with Anfernee Hardaway and signed him to a $64 million deal that rivaled Webber's contract. Hardaway is expected to start immediately at guard, kicking Nick Anderson to forward and making Dennis Scott a sixth man.
Mourning has the luxury of concentrating on providing the Hornets with inside strength now that the publicrelations spotlight is on teammate Larry Johnson, who signed an $84 million, 12-year contract extension. Charlotte also picked up 20-point scorer Hersey Hawkins from Philadelphia to replace Gill.
"The Mourning O'Neal match up is shaping up like Russell-Chamberlain." Hornets coach Allan Bristow said. "It's a natural rivalry geographically, and they have similar styles. But I still consider New York and Cleveland the elite teams in the East. The way we've accumulated talent in the last few years, we should be a factor, if not this year, then next year. We should be among the elite."
VECTOR
Bulls, NBA continue TV battle
CHICAGO — The National Basketball Association is entitled to regulate television broadcasts by its teams, commissioner David Stern testified yesterday in the Chicago Bulls' federal trial challenging that policy.
The Associated Press
The Bulls and Chicago-based WGN-TV are suing the NBA and trying to void contracts the league signed this year with NBC and Turner Broadcasting, which secured a virtual lock on broadcasting Bulls' games nationally beginning next year.
The Bulls, seeking to increase the number of games televised on WGN, contend they have the right to negotiate directly with the superstation, which broadcasts locally and is carried nationally on cable. WGN wants to increase the number of games it is allowed to television each season from the current 25 to 41.
In largely technical testimony, Stern portrayed the league as a joint venture between all 27 teams. While individual teams can market themselves locally, the teams made the league responsible for national marketing, Stern testified.
The NBA contends the NBC and Turner contracts were made with the consent of the league's Board of Governors, which is comprised of team owners.
Under its $750 million contract, NBC will broadcast no more than 26 regular-season games, plus playoff and finals. Turner paid $352 million to show 70 regular-season games on its cable stations, WTBS and TNT. The contracts don't take effect until the 1994-96 season.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesdav. November 3, 1993
9
Desire to excel forces track coaches to look overseas
International athletes
[地球图]
Continued from Page 1
The Cyclones have risen from that basement to be a perennial Big Eight power. The rise in Ames coincides with the appearance of track coordinator Bill Bergan in 1976 and his philosophy of recruiting foreign athletes.
torship of recording for geriatricians.
Bergan became the track coordinator in 1992 after 16 years as track coach. Assistant coach Steve Lynn took over as coach of men's track in 1992.
In the Big Eight, Nebraska placed first in the men's indoor and second in the men's outdoor competitions behind Iowa State.
Nebraska, which proved to be Iowa State's major competitor in the Big Eight last year, has seven foreign athletes on its 92-member track roster.
Lynn said Bergan recruited the best athletes regardless of where they were from. He said this approach helped both foreign and domestic athletes by improving the level of competition.
Last year the Cyclones excelled in the Big Eight. In the outdoor track and field championships, the men placed first. The men's team also placed second in the indoor championships and seventh in last year's NCAA national outdoor championships.
Nebraska coach Gary Pepin said he saw nothing wrong with recruiting foreign athletes.
Iowa State now has 10 foreign students on its 77-member men's and women's roster. Those 10 foreign students include three of the top five cross country runners.
Iowa State was seventh or eighth in the Big Eight every year between 1946 and 1976. Since then it has won 22 Big Eight track titles, the most of any Big Eight school.
"It doesn't matter whether they are foreign or not," Pepin said. "We recruit them because they're good athletes, not because they're foreign."
He said foreign athletes were no sure fix for a poor program. He said a foreign athlete held a much greater risk for a program than a U.S. athlete because foreign athletes might have
more problems than U.S. students adjusting to a university in the United States.
"All things being equal, I'll take the kid from Omaha over a foreign kid every time," Pein said.
Some Coaches, like Timmons, said they see a problem—the talent of a foreign athlete and a U.S. athlete are seldom equal.
"Programs have brought in kids who have competed for their national teams to compete against 18 and 19-year-old Americans," Timmons said. "Pioneer came on side, however."
BIG 8 CONFERENCE
FOREIGN TRACK & FIELD ATHLETES BIG 8 CONFERENCE 0 Colorado Kansas Kansas SL Iowa SL Missouri Nebraska Oklahoma Oklahoma SL.
Pepin saw a plus side, however.
"Of course you have," Pepin said. "So
"Of course it helps," Pepin said. "But it doesn't give the kid an unfair advantage."
He said bringing in foreign athletes
FOREIGN TRACK & FIELD ATHLETES
BIG 8 CONFERENCE
0 Colorado Kansas Kansas St. Iowa St. Missouri Nebraska Oklahoma Oklahoma St.
KU's FOREIGN ATHLETES
Afton Moxley from Nassau, BAHAMAS
Sophomore
long jump, triple jump, 100 and 200 meters
Age: 21
Major: computer science
Michael Reichert from Terrace, British Columbia, CANADA
Junior
discus, shot put
Age: 21
Major: exercise science
Helena Hafstrom was an example of Shwartz's recruiting philosophy.
"I'm not so much of a pursist to say I'd never have them on my team," Schwartz said. "But I don't go looking for them like some schools."
"You never heard anything about this until the Ethiopians and the Kenyans started winning"
She was an exchange student from Taby, Sweden, who ran for the team
"They have to be good academically to pass an entrance test in a foreign country." Penin said.
raised the level of competition as well as bringing quality students to the University.
NO 9 FOREIGN ARTILIES
Canada
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said that although he would not recruit directly from a foreign country, he would allow foreign students to run if they came to Kansas.
John Chaplin
Washington State University
trackcoach
Sources: KU sports information. Big Eight schools' sports information Dan Schauer/KANSAN
as a walk-on in the 1990-91 season. She was awarded a partial scholarship during the 1991-92 season when she competed in the half mile, 1,500 meter and cross country events.
Although Hafstrom did not bring instant credibility to the Kansas team, Schwartz said several strong foreign athletes could give instant credibility to a team.
The National Scene:
Foreign athletes have competed for U.S. colleges since the late 1940s. Concerns about the trend grew in the late '60s and early '70s when U.S. college teams began to be dominated by foreign athletes.
Washington State coach John Chappin said recruiting from other countries gave smaller schools a way to compete with schools in larger states such as California.
He said he thought schools which proposed rules limiting recruiting were pushing isolationist proposals.
He said factors such as a school's geographic location also made it easier for some schools to recruit from outside the United States.
"That's like me saying, Kansas can only recruit from Kansas," Chaplin said.
"We're close to British Columbia, Canada," Chaplin said. "It's easier for us to recruit in Canada than it is for us to go to Florida and recruit."
"I think a team dominated by foreigners is an abuse." Brown said.
Coach Doug Brown of Tennessee holds the opposite view of foreign recruiting
He said he worried that foreign domination of the NCAA's championships could lead to a domination of the Olympics in the future.
in the 1991 NCAA championships, which his team won, only one of the seven finalist in the 10,000 meter event was a U.S. citizen.
"They've dominated the distance events in the NCAA," Brown said. "Now they're winning the distance events we used to win."
Washington State's Chaplin said it was a lack of interest in distance events by U.S. athletes, not their training in the United States, that had lead to the success of foreign athletes.
this until the Ethiopians and Kenyans started winning," Chaplin said. "It was okay when it was just the Canadians."
Chaplin said he thought that there was a tone of racism in many of the arguments he heard against foreign athletes.
Racism and Politics:
He said that many people did not have a problem as long as it was the "right" people, namely white North Americans winning the events.
"You never heard anything about
He said he thought schools were complaining about something that was not going to change.
"You either have to pass a rule to stomp it or shut up." Chalin said.
Some coaches have tried passing rules to limit the number of foreign athletes in the NCAA or even to change the point system to differentiate between teams with foreign athletes and teams without them.
In 1983 Timmons proposed a plan
Gary Pepin Nebraska track coach
"We recruit them because they're good athletes.Not because they're foreign"
that would promote U.S. athletes in NCAA institutions. The plan would have deleted points obtained by foreign athletes, effectively removing the incentive for teams to have them. Timmons plan was voted down by the U.S. Track Coaches Association.
A proposal must be passed by the coaches association and sent on to the NCAA rules committee for track and field. That committee decides whether to call for legislation to enact the plan.
Nine years later, in 1992, Tennessee's Brown made a proposal to the coaches association to limit each NCAA school to providing two scholarships during a four-year period to foreign athletes. Each NCAA school is allowed to give out 12.6 men's and 18 women's track and field scholarships during a four-year period. Money given as partial scholarships is included as part of the schools' allotment of scholarships.
Brown's proposal was tabled until later this year, pending review to see if such a plan is constitutional. The earliest the plan can be revived is in December at the coaches convention. Many coaches think that such a plan cannot pass.
"It's the institution's money," Frank Gagliano, president f the coaches association and track coach at Georgetown. "You can't tell them what to do with it."
Gagliano said 50 percent of the coaches association supported foreign recruiting and 50 percent opposed it.
Schwartz said he thought such a plan would have a difficult time passing. He said so many schools had foreign athletes that it would be almost impossible to build a consensus within the coaches association.
"People don't like to be regulated," Schwartz said. "Schools that recruit a lot from foreign countries don't want it stopped."
Stopping recruitment of foreign athletes entirely is an emotional issue for some coaches. Schwartz said. `-`
However, changing some rules regarding how foreign athletes are recruited already has taken place.
One of the biggest changes in the rules was imposing a competition age limit of 24 in 1984. Timmons said the rule was aimed at keeping colleges from bringing in older, established athletes from other countries to compete against 18- and 19-year-olds.
The controversy about foreign athletes appears no closer to resolution than it was 30 years ago.
Timmons said the influx of younger coaches made it less likely that new rules would be passed.
"For the younger guys coming in, using foreigners is the only way it's ever been," Timmons said. "Less coaches think like I do today."
Chaplin of Washington State said he believed that the controversy would not be much of an issue in the future.
"It's not that big a deal anymore," Chaplin said. "Almost everyone uses them."
But Schwartz said the Kansas team would not be one of the schools recruiting foreign athletes. He said that U.S. schools had a responsibility to help develop their own athletes and even athletes from within their respective regions.
"If all you want to do is win, then you can go that route." Schwartz said.
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3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own so the two of you can set up a meeting, or browse through additional messages or categories.
1. Read the ads in the Jaytalk Meeting Network on the back page of the Monday, Tuesday and Thursday editions 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.
CATEGORIES AVAILABLE: Men Seeking Women, Women Seeking Men, Men Seeking Men, Women Seeking Women, Seeking Sports Interest, Mutual Hobbies, Shared Religion
Call 864-4358 to place your ad today!
TO RESPOND TO AN AD!
CALL 1-900-285-4560 TO RESPOND TO AN AD!
10
Wednesday, November 3, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
USE
KANSAN
CLASSIFIED
Rings Fixed Fast!
Kiser Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass Lawrence, KS
Dazed and Confused R. SEE IT WITH A BUD
DAZED AND CONFUSED (R)
DAILY (5:00), 7:15,9:30
TWO WEEKS ONLY!
642
Miss
749
1912
DICKINSON
THEATRE
641 8400
2329 Southown St.
Nightmare Before Christmas **4:40**; 7:00; 9:30
The Fugitive **4:10**; 7:00; 9:40
Searching for Bobby Fischer **4:35**; 7:20; 9:45
The Good Son **4:25**; 7:00; 9:35
Beverly Hills Hillies **4:10**; 7:10; 9:35
Malice **4:15**; 7:10; 9:50
3 $1 Premiere Show (All) Meeting Baby
Cabin Cleanup Anyone... Stereo Speaker
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 6 PM. ADULTS $3.00
( LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
VARSITY
(1015 MASSASHA HUSSETS) 841 5191
Demolition Man $5.00
7-18
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 841 5191
- Burgers
- Fresh Pasta
- Espresso Bar
- Great Breakfasts
814 Massachusetts
Age of Innocence PG 5.00,8.90
Cool Runnings PG 4.15, 7.30,9.30
Judgment Night R 5.00, 9.30
Fatal Instinct PG-13 7.30,9.45
Rudgy PG 7.20,9.40
CINEMA TWIN AL 105'
LUJOWA ARL $181
$1.25
Rising Son R 5.00
7.25, 9.45
Hocus Pocus PG 5.00
Needful PhigS 7.20, 9.45
Daily Showing Times
G
Wednesdays
80°F Night
50°F Draws
w/o college ID
18 and up
R
R
Thursda
DANG
50¢ Draw
GRAND OPENING
WEEKEND
Friday Nov. 5th
Lonesome
Houndogs
Saturday Nov. 6th
Lee McBee and
The Passions at the
Masque Jordan Sexual
hors'd oeuvres
Saturday Nov. 20th
Love Squad
w/Grumpy
Sunday Nov. 21st
Lawrence
Symphony
Saturday Nov. 27th
Lee McBee and The Passion
1020Mass
Downtown
9pm-2am
A
BLUEBIRD
A
1020Mass
Downtown
9pm-2am
XX
Sigma Kappa Week of Giving
ΣΚ
Celebrating 119 Years of Sisterhood!
Cannondale + Rockshox = COOL! $779.95
"4F4" +
The new 4F4 Cannondale includes a Rockshox Quadra as standard equipment
Cannondale mountain bikes start at $439.95
RICK'S BIKE SHOP Inc. 916 Mass., Lawrence, KS (913)841-6642
Super Savings at Alvin's IGA
Prices good Nov. 3 to Nov. 9.
Dr Pepper
24 pk.
Pepsi, Dr Pepper & Mt. Dew $448 Limit 1 with $10 purchase
MILK BASE
IGA2% Milk $199 gallon
MACARONI & CHEESE
Original
MACARONI &
CHEESE
Original
Kraft Macaroni & Cheese 7 oz. box 35¢
MUSSET POTATOES MUSSET POTATOES
Russet Potatoes
10 lb.
bag 88¢
MADAME BURKE
Fresh Fryer Parts Drums or Thighs
giant 10lb.pkg $690
Keg Beer
$4299
+Deposit
Call 843-2313
16 gal Keg +Deposit
Alvin's
IGA
9th and Iowa, Lawrence, KS
Open 6 a.m. to Midnight
Call 843-2313
HOMETOWN
PROUD
Packwood diaries subject of intense Senate debate
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Short-tempered senators clashed yesterday over Sen. Bob Packwood's diaries, with one lawmaker calling an ethics committee subpoena "frightening." Another countered that anything less than full compliance would be a cover-up of potential sexual misconduct and criminality.
Packwood himself disclosed that the original sexual misconduct controversy had been expanded to questions of whether he attempted to have lobbyists hire his wife in exchange for some senatorial "guid pro ouo."
The Oregon senator, backed by some fellow Republicans on the subpoena issue, offered to give his diaries
to a neutral third party. The independent examiner could then decide which issues were relevant and turn them over to the ethics committee.
The panel rejected the offer, saying no other American would have the right to bargain this way over the terms of a subpoena.
On the second day of sometimes acrimonious debate on the Senate floor, senators struggled for hours to find a solution to competing interests: the committee's request for all Packwood's diaries and the Oregon Republican's right to privacy.
Senate Republican Whip Alan K. Simpson, answering those who said women are carefully watching the case, said, "What we have some trouble with here is political correctness.
We probably don't get it, because political correctness or media pressure has nothing to do with justice or freedom or due process."
Packwood said yesterday he would turn over "every scintilla of information" in his diaries on efforts to have lobbyists hire his former wife.
Simpson said the committee request for all of Packwood's diaries was "frightening in its scope" because it wasn't narrowed to "relevant" information involving sexual misconduct, intimidation of witnesses and the hiring issue.
Responding, Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., urged senators to reject narrowing the committee's request with the independent hearing examiner determining relevancy.
THE NEWS in brief
Washington
Lower interest rates boost real estate sales, spur economic growth
Low interest rates are finally working their magic on the economy. Sales of new homes in September unexpectedly soared to nearly a seven-year high, and the government's economic forecasting gauge pointed to healthy growth into next year.
Economists said growth is being driven by interest rates hovering at 25-year lows. That makes it less expensive for individuals to buy homes and durable goods such as automobiles, furniture and appliances and easier for businesses to purchase new computers and machinery.
Meanwhile, the department's Index of Leading Economic Indicators rose 0.5 percent, signaling continued moderate growth into 1994.
September marked a fourth month without a decline. It followed a strong 0.9 percent gain in August, no change in July and a slight 0.1 percent rise in June.
It surprised analysts, who were looking for only about a 4 percent rise, and sent tremors through the bond market, where the prospect for stronger economic growth raised inflation fears.
Topeka Kerr announces GOP candidacy
Kerr promised to work to make government more efficient and to create a pro-business environment.
Fred Kerr declared Tuesday his candidacy for the Republican nomination for Governor of Kansas, emphasizing his service in the Legislature.
He staked out moderate positions on abortion, health care and elderly related issues.
So far, Secretary of State Bill Graves is the only other declared candidate for the GOP nomination.
1
Fred Kerr
Los Angeles
New wildfires force hundreds to flee
New fires, fanned by fierce desert winds, destroyed several homes and forced hundreds of people to leave on Tuesday. Eight people were injured.
A 2,000-acre wildfire forced hundreds of residents to flee homes and schools in Malibu, Woodland Hills and Calabasas.
A 7,500-acre wildfire caused by an arcing power line chased more than 500 residents from communities in Riverside County.
Thirteen major wildfires erupted last week with the season's first Santa Ana winds.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
is now accepting applications from students with previous Kansan experience for positions of
Business Manager
and Editor
for the Spring 1994 semester.
Applications may be obtained at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. Return the completed application and a current resumé to the Dean's office, 200 Stauffer Flint Hall, by noon on the appropriate deadline indicated below.
Business Manager Schedule
Editor Schedule
-Friday, Nov. 12:
Application deadline, Interview sign-up
- Monday, Nov.15:
Selection Interviews, 3:30 p.m.
- Monday, Nov. 12:
Application deadline, Interview sign-up
- Tuesday, Nov. 16:
Selection interviews , 3:30 p.m.
Interviews will take place in the conference room, 120 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Applicants will be notified of the successful candidate after everyone has interviewed. Any information you wish to be considered in your interview may be attached to your application.
Real World experience
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 3, 1993
11
2018
Red Lyon Tavern
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
944 Mass 832-8228
Classified Directory
100s
Announcements
108 Personal
110 Business
115 Education
120 Announcements
125 Entertainment
130 Awards
200s
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
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 on law.
Classified Policy
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are paid.
I
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1988 preference, limitation or discrimination basis, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, an intention, to such preference, limitation or discrimination.
100s Announcements
105 Personals
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate
Wanted
On Tuesday morning, 26.秋 you followed a green Handa in from K.C. You had blond hair and drove a red rotao w/ DG county plates. I would love to talk to you. Reply to Box # 30.
110 Bus. Personals
Revolutionary Alpha Hydroxy Acid skin treatment system proven to reduce lines, repair sun damaged skin. Free information 843-4286.
Unique Silvering Silver Jewelry House of Beauty (diamond & silver) For Guys and Girls The Etc, Shop and Gala 926 Mac Dermacare
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday Friday 4:30am-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8:40am-10pm
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
Pharmacy Hour
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 10am-12pm
Sunday 1.3am-9pm
AIRLINE HOTLINE
841-7117
TRAVEL CENTER
Christmas Plans
- Thanksgiving and
- Packages
- Spring Break Packages
- Social Events
- Bus Charters
- Job interviews
Student Discounts
TRAVEL CENTER
Southern Hills Center
1601 W. 23rd. M.-F. 9-5:30 Sat. 9:30
- LOWEST FARES
Located by Perkins
---
120 Announcements
- S3 burger baskets
- domestic longneck special
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
WATCH
90210
&
MELROSE
PLACE
Every Wednesday
at
BENCHWARMERS
• $3 burger baskets
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358-
St. John's Pizza Bake Sale Sun, Nov 7 8:00am-
1:00 in Church basement. Mixed bread,
cookies, tortillas, hot sauce. 1234 Kentucky.
Sudden systemic mutation happened to animals metabolically similar to humans. Substrate differences in the metabolic systems of animals, produced sudden, lasting, benign, nuclear损害, caused a change. If interested please contact Farmer 4683.
*SPRING BREAK*
Early Booking *Special
$25 Discount*
LOWEST PRICES GUARANTEED!
Joan at 865-5611
Found: the best pizza buffet in Lawrence. Located at Marazzo 10.92. $9.99. Eat Non-Sun.
FREE MONEY
Availability Information
Guaranteed results
Collegiate Scholarship Services
Call 1-800-289-4580 for free info.
RAISE UP $1,000 in JUST ONE WEEK! For your fraternity, sorority, & club. Plus $1,000 for yourself! And a FREE T-SHIRT just for calling. 1-800-923-6288, ext. 75
Lebian, gay, bie - or unure? You're not alone!
Come on! Give our support group. Call
1-800-422-7333.
You can find us on:
www.lebian.org
130 Entertainment
Beach Condo-South Padre Island, Texas-sleep-
ight 20-eyes from beach, pool & jeepz-consid-
red hotels beach resort by Current Affairs and
Bloomberg; 431, 400 per room, 1,800-
153-146 deposit required
Free Party Room Available at Johnny's Tavern/
U/Up & U/Call. Burl 842-0377 for details.
BRANDING IRON SALOON
806 W. 24th • 843-2000
Thurs., Nov. 4
Elite
Male Dancers
-5 Dancers
*Only 5 cover charge*
*Doors Open at 4 p.m.*
*Showtime 8-10 pm*
*Man admitted at 10*
Formerly Just A Playhouse Behind McDonalds
140 Lost & Found
Gray Nylon bag containing important papers. Lost between Thursday night and Friday morning near the corner of Emery and Stratford. Reward for a call to 843-7378, returned, to 920 Mass. or calling 843-7378 or 841-0175.
Lost cat. Sliames mix, long-haired, 3 years old.
Answer to Gray. Reward is offered. Call Peggy
Lost yellow and grey cocktail and Highland
area. Hand-tarned. Answers to "Hocky". Reward.
男 女
AA Cruise & Travel jobs. Earn $250/mo. + travel the world free! (Caribbean, Europe, Hawaii,
new job now in hiring for busy holiday,
spring and summer). Get the latest employment.
Call! (919) 899-4388 ext. 131.
200s Employment
Adams Alumni Center is looking for part-time hostet servers. Must have some am/daytime availability, very flexible hours. Nice working environmeni at 1368 Eureg. Across from Kansas Union.
205 Help Wanted
Alfredon teacher's aide for infant room 1 to 5:45 Monday through Friday. Experience with infants preferred apply at Children's Learning Center 205 N. Michigan, E. O.E.
Cater Caterers, Thursday, Friday, Saturday,
November 4, 6, 1993, 4.25 per hour will pay cash on day following employment. Must follow dress code and prefer previous foot service experience.
Apply Kansas and Burgs Uniones' Personnel Work "bits" and dress code listed in office. EOE
Afterpart teacher's aide for infant room I to 5:48 Monday through Friday. Experience with infants prefer apply at Children's Learning Center 205 N Michigan, E.O.E.
ADMINISTRATIVE USER SERVICES. Student Monthly. Deadline: 11/12/93. $550-$650/month depending on experience. Duties include providing application support, UNOIX support, provide application design, document design, and software training sessions for end users, provide LAN installation and problem solutions support, and other duties. Required qualifications: Demonstrated skills, knowledgeable about computerized databases and their use, experience using microcomputers, currently enrolled at KU and continuing to receive training in computer description available. To apply, submit a letter of application and a current resume to Ari Riat. Personnel Assistant, Computer Center. University of Assas, Lawrence, KS 66445. EO/AE ENMLOYER-
DOCUMENTATION INTERN Student Monthly
Deadline: 11/11/93. Salary: $550-$650/month.
Duties include organizing, maintaining, and
assisting in the coordination of an online help files, manuals and presentation of user-education seminars and workshops.
Required qualifications: must be enrolled at KU,
clear and effective speaking skills, Good com-
munication skills, proficiency with microcomputer, mainframes and/or supercomputers. Complete job description available. To apply, submit a letter of application and a current resume to Ann Rai, Personnel Assistant, Compu-
tors, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS
66045 EOAA/EMLPAYER
Supervisor now - Manager later! Learn the business process, your performance. If you are an aggressive customer oriented person and like to work at a fast intense space, an opportunity to put these skills to use will be available. Knowledge of Talent Evaluation may be required. 15-18K bonus. Apply now at: Amigas, 1819 W. 32rd.
AMIGOS Supervisor/Assist Mgr
Clerk, KU Bookstores, Shipping/Receiving Dept. 42.5 per hour, 20-25 hours per week, Monday through Friday. Must work through December office filing, invoice verification, rent item 10 key calculator. Majority of time will be spent on paper work, but could require some lifting up to 50 pound boxes on occasion. Apply at Kansas and University Building, EOE, Level 5, Kansas Union Building, EOE.
CHEMISTRY & LABORATORY ASSISTANT
Requires good academic record in chemistry, pharmacy or biology. Must have desireable 12:30 hw/hr. Submit application with names of 3 references, and copies of transcripts to INTERX Research, 2001 West 21st Street.
AnEqual Opportunity Employer. M/F/W/V.
CNA's need to work with clients in their homes.
CNA's need to necessary yelp Gar声屠 at Dougles CV. Visitation
Comic strip artist, off-bat, entrepreneur. Send 3
to box cd 851 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence,
RSG, 6240.
MAKE MONEY PLAYING NINTH DVIDEO
WE ARE AVAILABLE VARIOUS DAYS AND HOURS
BETWEEN NOV. 20 AND DEC. 26, CALL
WWW.WHOLEBUILDER.COM 1-800-252-9260 FOR
MORE INFORMATION
Office assistant needed 25 brw mkW M 3-7 p.m. & sat.
12:4-10:30. Call 729-0319.
Raffle $500 in % days, Groups, Chubs, motivate individuals i 800-779-3857, ext1 007
Now hiring delivery drivers, all staff. Must be 18+
apply to Atria Place H449, Harbor Suite Q-840, Apply
Part-time Supervisor Wanted
Party Photographers needed Please apply in person 3-5pm, Tuesday 9:30am, Friday at Photographic Occations, 105 W. 11th Street, 33mm camera experience preferred.
evInHg K50 41p-42p HP, Sjmfum FF
Co. 719 Masson HF, R-Fsmfum 4pm-
49m
Visa/inside. about us
Preschool Director: Large established community preschool and child care program looking for a full-time position in the culinary leave. Must have degree in education with early childhood hours and minimum one year as a teacher or other related position in communication, and office skills important. This challenging position is available now. Mail letters with resumes to Preschool Director, 345 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA 90021.
Research assistant: Excellent writing skills; basic research and office skills; some public relations experience. English senior, grad, preferred. $6/hr. Contact Lori Witkens 804-4520.
RECEPTIONISTS (8) West Coast book publisher seeks two students, one to work mornings and one to work afternoons, to answer phone, process incoming/outgoing mail, handle walk-in sales. etc. Must be able to work 4-5 hrs/day, M-F- 8:24-7:48/hour based on experience. Come by 2501 Burlington Road, to complete application Deadline for applications is m. friday. 11/5/98 An EEO/AA employer.
RESUME SERVICES Professional Business Resumes, Cover Letters, IA 171, Interview Trainer, Job Postings, and Advertising.
Stop to Shop is looking for part time clerk must be able to work 2 p.m. to 10 p.m. weekends and holidays. If interested apply in person at 1010 N. 3rd.
**STUDENT HOURLY CUSTODIAL WORKER**
2 (two) openings at Watkins Student Health Center. 15-20 hrs. a week evening and some Saturday. Must be 18 years old. Continue through school. 98-99. Must be certified in work schedules will vary according to hours the facility is open. Apply in person to Personnel Center Monday through Friday between 4:00-5:00. Additional information available upon request.
STUDENT RECEPTIONISTS (2) . West campus book publisher seeks two students; one to work mornings and one to work afternoons, to answer phones, process incoming/outgoing mail, handle walk-in sales, etc. Must be able to work 4-5 days a week. Apply by April 13 at come. Come by 2601 W. St. (ph. 844-9154) to complete application. Deadline for applications is 5 p.m. Friday, 11/5/93. An EEO/AA employer
Mass. Street Deli or Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse.
Must have daytime availability B/M, also some evenings and weekends. Previous food service and kitchen hours vary by day per hour. Future pay raise based on performance up to $2.50 per hour. 20-30 hours per week. Apply at Schumm Food Company, 117 Massachusetts, Monday through Friday, 9am-4pm. (Upstairs above smokehouse.)
Volleyball Coach wanted for women's USVBA teams 6 home matches. Experience preferred. Contact info.
FASTCASH
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
By donating your life saving blood plasma
$15 Today $30 This week
WALK-INS WELCOME!
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, servicing KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
Traffic tickets, misdemeans, landlord/ tenant,
Braxton B. Copley 749-3533
225 Professional Services
Experienced organist will play for weddings at Chapel. Call Carol at 8143 1732 and leave a message
Fake ID& alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The Law offices of
Lebian, gay, bi- or unisex If you need to talk to someone, call a Peer Counsel, CONFIDENTIAL. Call KU info or Headquarters. Promotion and abortion contactives. Dale
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and talk with you.
Bethany R. Smith
ALDG. STROLE
Donald G Smile
16.e13H 842-1133
**IK Word Processing:** Any size, under 30 pp.
**IK Word Processing:** $1.25 pp. Call Ruth affix
pp. 643-863.
A Word Perfect word processing service. Laser printer. Near campus. 842-895-865.
G SERVICE 832-9925
Spc. in English in your area!
Any person you help can an A." Word message.
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
For free consultation call
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman,Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
T
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your TYPING needs call
WWW.TYPING.DESKTOP.COM
1-der Woman Word Processing. 843-2063
235 Typing Services
season Publication Services-Quality word processing, laser printing, $2.00 paper (includes type, grammar, proofing), call Mary, 843-2674.
Expert typing. IBM Correcting Selectric.
$1.50 double spaced page. Call Mrs. Mattila 841-1219.
Pro-Type fast, reliable, professional
Type: any kind of typing. Call today at 814-832-8226
'last, accurate word processing; term paper, dissertation, thesis and graphics services available. ase printing. Engineering and Law Review experience. Call Pam at 91-197 anytime.
X
305 For Sale
Beds, decks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
983 Mass.
300s Merchandise
COMPUTERS: Looks for a high quality PC at low cost, or CPU Compaq, 891138
Full Clearance: All adult tapes on sale £13 & 35
and up or Miracle or Miracle Video Tote, 910 Hikaku, 841-7504.
FITNESS EQUIPMENT
DP 2500 weight lifting machine, leg curts, etc.
Great condition. DP Body - Tone 300 Rowing
Machine. $250 for both. Call 843-0540 evenings and
weekends.
Large inventory of classic old Playboy Magazines 1950's, 60's, 70's and 80'. Most in good condition. Must be purchased in package. Call 843-0540 evenings and weekends.
Macintosh Quadra, new in box. Must sell. 1-800-246-
3441.
SM500 Cannondale Mt. Bike. 19" 3 yrs old $500 In great shape. 749-9695
li:first-child, li:last-child {
text-decoration: underline;
font-size: 24px;
font-weight: bold;
}
li:nth-child(1), li:nth-child(2) {
text-decoration: underline;
font-size: 24px;
font-weight: bold;
}
li:nth-child(3), li:nth-child(4) {
text-decoration: underline;
font-size: 24px;
font-weight: bold;
}
340 Auto Sales
"93 Merc. Tracer 6k mi, 5 spd, pw pl, ac $835 749-1065 John
1975 ACM Pacer; maroon; low mileage;
2015 ACM Pacer; good condition. Call
823-0104, leave message
1978 Buck Leabreau 350 v8 PS, PB, AT, AC $604 821,
1dai dav V4
1900 Honds Accord LX coupe, 5 speed, white, spiller, wheel sport, all wheel. Power Super. Condition.
360 Miscellaneous
Sculptured Nails $29 req. #2. Reflections West
323 Ridgestone Bldg. 841-7462. Ask for Pam.
370 Want to Buy
Recorded Sound
12th & Oread
841-9475
From dreams to reality is a long way and a little cash along the way doesn't hurt.
TRADE BUY SELL Cd's Lp's & Tapes
A
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1 bedroom apt. available Jan 1. Close to campus,
2 bedrooms. Room furnished. Paid. Fluent of living space. Call Kara K, 824-2577
1 roommate to share spacious, furn. 4 BR 2 BHr
on campus; on pcw.edu / private parking. Lrw. ng./rlw.
on campus; on pcw.edu / private parking. Lrw. ng./rlw.
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
very nice! Available Spring sem. interested? Call
Avail. Desc. id.1 Very large,newly remodeled one bed room apb on bus route, water and cable paid.
Wake up to Cedarwood Apts.
No, it isn't a dream!
Pat has 2 Great
1 bedroom apartments
that are now available!
Call today before this
great deal slips away.
SQUIRREL
Call Pat at 843-1116 for details about this special!
For less: 4 bedroom, Sundance ups, near campus; date negotiable, $790 + utilities
Available Jan 1st, 2 bdrm unfurished api,
768 km/h near a busy bus route Only
$36/month/Call 600-555-4111
Sub-base fully furnished I dbtm apt. All utilities $35/m. Available in January. Please call
Sub lease affordable townhome Jan-May. Bk-level.
1 bedroom. 1½ bath, on bus route. Call pit-
lium.
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and
room from KU. Off-street parking.
No pets. Call 841-650-6900.
Large room with nice view in never home 3 ml
large room - available. Dec 20. Prefer female, non-monok
avail.
Office/Storefront /Workplace near downtown
Uppsala, Sweden 841-1560 per unit. Ullages
included. Phone 841-1560
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
apartments
Sublease: 8 bdt apf. assigned De to Judy. Call
Judy. Send resume to:
WANTED: Studio or one bedroom apartment to
WANTED: Studio or one bedroom apartment to
have at 843-254-7961 Call now and leave a message
at 843-254-7961
The Best Place to Live at KU is in K.C.!
Stocked fishing lake, courtyards w/fountain, sand volleyball, pool, jacuzzi & exercise facility
EFFERSON PLACE
- Close to campus
• Spacious 2 bedroom
• Laundry facility
• Swimming Pool
• Waterbed allowed
764-1471
119th&1-35
VILLAGE SQUARE
9th& Avalon 842-3040
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
20th yr sr. S^i, seeking a commarm for 3 mdr
beginning beginning C^i Call Carrier or Cath at 865-2533
1 female needed to share 3 BR, 2 bth Campus
Place Apt. 1Smoker, reasonable rent, close to
campus. Call Campus Place Office 841-1290.
I or F needed to 3 bedroom house. On bus
i route. Smoker or no, artistic mind. Old West
Lawrence. ASAP. Private room. Call 841-5208.
I roommate need to 3 bdmr owntown at
Ameadowbrook. $190/mo. + 1/Util. Please call
'740-7416
A female needed to share a 2 bedroom house. Clare
1
19% Mobile Home, resp grd stud, $160/mo +/- and deposit Central Air, storage avail, Marv 85
2 bdrms home in Jan. 3 bedrooms, 8 bath town home, garage, cable, washer & dryer. Respondible, non-smokers only: 84-118 Leave message. In townhouse $150,000 + utilities/Doona/66-371
$2NSP need NSP to share four 31dbm townhouses,
$90% includes All ul. & pdl. cable on bus route, near 3rd St and Iowa, avail for spring sem. Call Gina 749-1997.
NTRS firmile malerita för springsemester. Share 2
NTRS bus be Roofier, $15 million; v Schulan 20
NTRS bus be Roofier, $15 million; v Schulan 20
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
One female needed to sublease on campus APL$180 mən + util. Call B34 843-1686
How to schedule an ad:
Female N/ to share very nice 3 brim; bafil
house w/ hardwood floors in Old West Lawrence.
Responsible grad-student/prof, only. Avail Jan 1
spring semester. $250/mo + 1/4 u/sl. Call 858-729-5634
Male or female needed to share new 4 bedroom duplex in W. Lawrence starting Jan. 1. Washer/dryer, 2 car garage. Fully furnished (except for room). Call Cameron at 65-8298.
- By phone: 864-4358
One Female to share two bedroom apartments,
next semester; make dogs, very close to him.
ROOMMATE NEEDDED Close to campus;
preferential treatment for patient pre-
ferred. Non smoker full bath, sat-
Roommate wanted: Now! nl: Isfem preferred
and is interested plus /+ utilities. Call
Kal or Christian 941.337.378
- Dv Mail: 118 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS 66045
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66445
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1983 FeWorks, Inc./Cost by Universal Press Syndicate
Summoned by the gonging, Professor Crutchfeld stepped into the clearing. The little caterpillars had done well this time in their offering.
1
12
Wednesday, November 3, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Lab receives research grant
Wireless sending of information to be developed
By Kathleen Stolle
Kansan staff writer
Feeding from a smorgasbord of research projects, researchers in KU's Telecommunications Information Sciences Lab have kept comfortably full.
But when a $1.6 million federal grant recently was offered, they found room for dessert.
"We all have our plates pretty full," said Sam Shammangu, principal investigator on
the new project and professor in the department of electrical engineering and computer science.
The department, which operates the lab, was awarded the three-year grant from the U.S. Department of Defense's Advanced Research Projects Agency. The grant, which may be increased by another half-million dollars depending on military budget allowances, is the single largest research grant in the department's history. The grant is not expected until the first of the year.
The grant will support the "Rapidly Deployable Radio Networks Project," Shannugan said. Researchers, including professors and students in the department, will develop technology to allow for quick, wireless transmission of large amounts of information in audio, video and data
"This is a real thing," Shamugan said. "It's not just a paper and pencil study."
forms.
The technology may be applied during natural disasters or during combat situations, when other forms of communication are down or unavailable, Shanmuang said.
During the first year, researchers will develop several card designs through computer simulation. Cards, which hold programmable chips, serve as the brains of a work station.A final design will be selected at the end of the first year.
During the second and third years, the researchers will actually build portions of the network.
Although the additional project will mean more weekly project meetings, subgroup meetings and supervision of several
labs throughout Nichols Hall, Shanmugan said the sacrifices were worth it.
"It's a good trade-off," he said. "This is definitely a worthwhile project."
Shannugan said the other six professors on the project would put in the most hours during the summer. The dozen graduate students involved would carry out most of the lab work during the next semester, he said.
Researcher Glenn Prescott, associate professor in the department, said he believed the department, which applied for the grant in June, was selected as a recipient because of its idea and work on two related projects.
"They liked what we proposed, and they were convinced we have the capability to get it done," Prescott said.
Leaving KU would be like leaving home for retirees
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
KU students who think their professors will flee from campus after retirement might be surprised when they see who lives at 1400 Lilac Lane.
The Sprague Apartment Building, hidden not more than a block away from Jayhawk Boulevard, is home to 12 retired KU faculty and their spouses, and widows of KU faculty. The complex allows only retired KU professors and family to live there.
The apartments offer the convenience of being close to campus for many of the faculty still active at the University of Kansas.
But many residents said freedom from household chores was what prompted them to move to the complex.
"The apartment is very much a hit with us," said Keith Lawton, former vice chancellor for campus development operations, who retired in 1983.
Lawton said that since moving to an apartment in 1988, he and his wife, Phyllis, have enjoyed a more laidback lifestyle.
"The nature of my work at KU restricted a lot of time spent for travel and leisure," he said. "When I retired, I was not interested in having the basic houseowner's chores, like mowing or yard work. They're not for me."
Sprague, which is owned by the Kansas University Endowment Association, has 10 apartments. Eight are rented to retired faculty or to their widows. Esther Murdock, the manager of the building, and a graduate student who assists with any general medical needs of the faculty, live in the other two apartments.
Daryl Beene, senior vice president of property management for the Endowment Association, said 20 to 25 retired KU faculty members are on a waiting list to move into Sprague.
Beene would not disclose how much the Endowment Association charges for rent, but he said rent is "considerably less than the normal market rate."
Lawton said he and his wife do not mind that their home is near campus.
"We've become accustomed to youth and youthful activities," he said. "We're very understanding of student activities — they're not a problem."
Walter Crockett, retired professor of psychology and communications studies, has lived with his wife, Helen, in the apartment building for two years. He said living in an apartment gave them more peace of mind when they went out for an evening or on an extended vacation.
"It's the kind of place where you can close the door and walk out." he said.
Several residents of Sprague are widows of KU faculty members.
Jeanne Moreau is the widow of Frederick J. Moreau, dean of the KU law school from 1937 to 1957.
She said that after her husband died in 1986, she was considering moving to California, where she had many good friends.
She said she made her decision to stay in Lawrence one night when she was attending a play with a friend.
"I was sitting there in Crafton-Preyer Theatre, and I realized how many friends I really had here," she said. "I realized I belong here at KU. I always get a warm feeling when I think about the people who live around me."
The image shows a man seated on a floral-patterned couch. He is wearing a white shirt and a dark vest, with his legs crossed and resting comfortably on the armrests of the couch. His hair is white, and he appears to be relaxed and at ease in his surroundings. The background consists of a plain wall with no visible decorations or objects.
Walter Crockett, retired professor of psychology and communication studies, rests at his campus apartment. He and 11 other retired faculty or the widows of retired faculty live in Sprague Apartments, 1400 Lilac Lane.
John Gamble / KANSAN
Co-defendant in beating trial pleads guilty
Plea agreement spares man prison time for Denny assault
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — A man who was cleared of most charges in the beating of truck driver Reginald Denny pleaded guilty yesterday to felony assault, the one charge on which the jury had deadlocked. The plea agreement spared him a prison term.
Co-defendant Damian Williams, convicted of felony mayhem in Denny's beating, was denied lower bail. He returned to jail to await sentencing.
Henry Watson pleaded guilty to one count of assault with a deadly weapon or force likely to produce great bodily injury. His plea came in an attack on trucker Larry Tarvin, who like Denny was pulled from his rig and beaten during last year's riots.
"I'd just like to apologize to Mr. Tarvin and Mr. Denny and all the other victims that were there at the intersection on April 29, 1992." Watson said.
The jury convicted Watson on Oct. 20 of misdemeanor assault on Denny and acquitted him of all other charges. Like Williams, he had served 17 months in jail awaiting trial, more than his possible sentence for the Denny assault.
Watson was released pending sentencing Dec. 7. The plea agreement will place him on probation until January 1997 and require community service.
Watson's lawyer, Earl Broady, said prosecutors had told him they planned to retry the unresolved case. On Monday, they offered a deal that was too good to refuse.
"No time in custody? Of course it was in his best interest," Broady said. If convicted, Watson could have drawn seven years behind bars.
Williams, 20, was acquitted of the most serious charges in the attack on Denny but was convicted of felony may-bein and four misdemeanion assault counts. Prosecutors have said they will seek the maximum 10-year prison term.
Superior Court Judge John Ouderkirk refused to lower Williams' $580,000 bail to $35,000, saying he was a danger to society.
williams was videotaped hurling a brick at Denny's head. The scene became a symbol of the riots that erupted after four white police officers were acquitted of most state charges in the videotaped beating of motorist Rodney King.
Williams issued a statement yesterday afternoon calling Ouderkirk's decision unfair and noting that two police officers convicted of violating King's federal civil rights were allowed to be with their families throughout their trial and pending sentence.
District Attorney Gil Garcetti said that meetings with jurors and calls from public officials helped him decide to strike a deal with Watson, even though he felt it would not be popular.
"Given the political nature of the case, realistically the chances of getting a conviction were not going to be great," he said.
He said Watson's age, 29, his status as a father of two and an honorable discharge from the Marines led him to believe that "we are not going to see Mr. Watson again in the criminal justice system."
THE NEW HARBOUR LIGHTS
lowa full service bar after 57 years of downtown tradition
Open Acoustic Night Original Music by Local Artist $1.50 Well Drinks Now open 7 days a week from noon until 2am 1031 Massachusetts
CRAFTSMAN CITY SQUARE
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Now Leasing
Winter & Spring
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Air conditioning & Pool
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.
KU STUDENTS ONLY!
$1 OFF COUPON
COUPON
World's Greatest Haircut
Reg. $795
BUT WITH COUPON
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(MON – THURS, Till 4 PM)
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snip n' clip
FAMILY HAIRCUT SHOPS
OPEN NIGHTS AND SUNDAYS JUST DROP IN!
Orchard Shops
842-5151
15th & Kasold
Under 12 KIDS CUTS $5
EXPIRES: 12-31-93
Orchard Shops
842-5151
15th & Kasold
Under 12 KIDS CUTS $5
EXPIRES: 12-31-93
BASKETBALL TICKETS
ATTN: STUDENTS REDEMPTION PERIOD
Group #1
NOVEMBER 1- NOVEMBER 10 (EXCEPT SATURDAY AND SUNDAY) 8.00 A.M.-5:00 P.M.
8:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
GAMES:
NOV.16 - MARATHON AAU
NOV.29 - AUSTRALIA NATIONALS
DEC. 1 - TEMPLE
Athletic Ticket Office East Lobby Allen Fieldhouse 8:00 a.m. 5:00 p.m.
*YOU MAY ONLY REDEEM ONE COUPON PER PERSON.
**YOU MUST HAVE A BLUE FALL 1993 FEE STICKER ON YOUR KUID TO RECEIVE YOUR TICKETS.
***WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR LOST OR STOLEN COUPONS.
1
CAMPUS: Michael Horner and Dennis Dailey debate whether sex should be saved for a permanent commitment. Page 3.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103,NO.54
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4,1993
(USPS 650-640)
90s Marriage
NEWS:864-4810
SHE'S MARRYING
Duke Naipohn leads his new wife, Jennifer, into their reception at Adams Alumni Center. He goes to school full time while she works as a nurse at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
What makes a marriage work has changed over the years, but the goal is the same:
AHAPPYHOME
When Ward and June Cleaver raised Wally and the Beaver in the 1950s, Americans had a clear idea of what marriage was like.
Ward wore the pants and June wore the pearls.
But when Jennifer Franz, 23, and Duke Naipohn, 27, were married last month, the world had become a different place.
"The Cleavers are unrealistic now," said Duke Naipohn, a Lawrence sophomore. "We have different wants and needs. We both wear the pants now."
Duke and Jennifer Naiphon adapted the traditional ritual of marriage to the changing world of today. And, with greater numbers of women in the work force, higher divorce rates, and the expense and time commitment of raising children, they are doing what families have always done.
Stories by Traci Carl $\Liam$ Photos by Tom Leininger
They are adjusting.
Duke Naipohn, who spent nine years in the U.S. Army, now is a premed student at the University of Kansas. Jennifer Naipohn works full time as a nurse at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
On July 3, Naiphoin and Franz were driving by Danforth Chapel, northeast of Fraser Hall, when he pulled out a ring and pointed to a wedding party outside the chapel.
They're going to the chapel
"I said, 'Hey, you wanna do that sometime?'"
The two had been dating for four months when they got engaged, and they moved in
together after the engagement.
Living together can offer all the basics of marriage, Jennifer Naipohn said, but sharing the same address is not the same as sharing a life together.
She said she wanted the security of an official piece of paper and vows that would last a lifetime. Duke Naipohn agreed.
"We choose the things we do for ourselves instead of trying to fit a mold," he said.
They both share cooking and cleaning responsibilities. They intend to continue that.
He is going to school full time while she works.
That is not always easy.
She's come a long way, baby
Jennifer Naipohn's father asked her to keep her maiden name because there were no men in the family to carry on the Franz name. But she decided to stick with tradition and take her husband's name.
"How do you find time to be in the same state of mind together?" she asked.
"I would much rather have my husband's name," she said.
She thought a hyphenated name would be too much of a haggle, she said.
See AHAPPYHOME, Page 7.
Mike Gregoire, Lyndon senior, faced a different situation when he married Deborah Lee in March. For them, it was easier for Lee to keep her maiden name.
Student remains in serious condition
Reasons for jumping off bridge stay unclear
By Scott J. Anderson Kansan staff writer
A KU student remained in serious but stable condition yesterday at Truman Medical Center in Kansas City, Mo., after she wrecked her roommate's car and then jumped about 25 feet from a county road overpass onto Interstate 70 on Tuesday.
Cindi Johnico, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, was injured in the accident. Douglas County Sheriff Loren Anderson said his department was still investigating.
The department found no indication that drugs or alcohol were involved in the accident. Anderson also said he could not determine why Johnico jumped off the overpass.
"We won't know that until we talk to her," Anderson said. "We will try to do that in the next couple of days, depending on her condition."
"She was northbound on Kasold when she hit the steel guard rail, then she hit the concrete bridge on the west side," Pringle said. "When I got there, I only got within a few feet of her before she jumped. I never got close enough to reach out to her."
Sgt. Betty Pringle was the first officer on the scene at Douglas County Road 438, an extension of Kasold Avenue, and I-70.
Katie Logsdon, Beardstown, Ill., freshman, is Johnico's roommate at Hashinger Hall. Logsdon said the damage to her car made her think the crash was intentional.
"The way my car is, it was no little bitty accident," Logsdon said. "The passenger's side front end was smashed in, and the driver's side front wheel was ripped off. One of the back tires was blown. The engine still works, though. It was mainly body damage."
Logsdon said that Johnico was a stable person but that she had been having some emotional problems.
"She'd been really depressed," Logsdon said. "She was not herself."
Johnico had been having trouble with her classes, Logsdon said. She had been under a lot of stress and was falling behind in school. Johnico had been sick and did not go to class for a week before the accident. Logsdon said Johnico had seen a doctor and was taking medication for strep throat.
Logsdon said Johnico also had a big fight with her parents last weekend when she went home.
Logsdon filed a stolen car report with KU police after the accident. She said she had mixed feelings about her roommate's actions.
"I am very bitter that she took my car, but she didn't deserve to die," Logsdon said. "I am glad she's alive. She just needs to get some help soon."
INSIDE
Egg-ceptional engineering
About 100 high school students race egg carrying vehicles in an annual School of Engineering competition.
Page 12.
Comedy Central replaces Fox on Sunflower
Sunflower will run new network for one month on a trial basis. Monthly rates will not be subject to change.
By Tracl Carl Kansan staff writer
Sunflower Cablevision Inc. has found a new station to fill the void where the Fox network affiliate, KSHB-TV, Channel 41, and the casts of shows such as Beverly Hills 90210 and Star Trek used to live.
Comedy Central, a channel that features stand-up comedy and shows such as Mystery Science Theater 3000, aired for the first time today on Sunflower's Channel 12.
Dennis Knipfer, manager of Sunflower, said Sunflower would carry the network for at least a month and it would not raise customers' monthly rates.
"It's a preview situation," he said.
Knipfer said Sunflower decided to carry Comedy Central yesterday.
"It aims at some of the same demographics that Fox did," he said. "It was highly requested."
Sunflower discontinued broadcasting KSHB-TV Oct. 6 after price negotiations with the station failed. The channel has been blank since they discontinued KSHB-TV.
KSHB-TV wanted Sunflower to promise to carry the FX Network, a new Fox network.
During that time, cable stations cannot change the networks they offer. Sunflower had tried to reach an agreement with KSHB-TV before the ratings period began, Knipfer said, but the network and Sunflower were not able to reach an agreement.
Under the Cable Act of 1992, KSHBTV also wanted Sunflower to pay 25 cents each month per subscriber to carry the Channel 41 and the new FX network. Before the act, KSHB-TV
Knipfer said he did not know when KSHB-TV would be back on the air.
Today is the first day of November sweeps, which is one of two television rating periods.
could not charge Sunflower for its services.
Sunflower had not received many complaints from customers about discontinuing KSHB-TV, Knipfer said.
Ryan Ramos. Leavenworth freshman, said he used to watch Star Trek almost every night before KSHB-TV went off the air.
He tried to set up an antennae in his dorm room, but it did not work, he said.
"My dad's taping the new episodes for me," he said.
Brian Wilhite, Olathe freshman, said he was excited for the new channel because he was a fan of Mystery Science Theatre 3000, which features an unusual movie critic.
"He watches crappy old movies in space with these two androids he created," he said. "It's sort of a precursor of Beavis and Buthead, but it's more funny."
2
Thursday, November 4, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SHEEPS
DAZED & CONFUSED (R)
TODAY(5:00),7:15,9:30
The Wedding Banquet Returns Fri
Available for
Parties!
Bowling, Billiards
& Video Games
Not just for
bowling
any more!
Jaybowl
SCHOOL OF HARLEM
864-3545
Jaybowl
State Radiator
Student Friendly
We require
anti-freeze, freon,
and metals.
842-3333
radiators-heaters
& center pumps
DICKINSON
GEAR
Dickinson 6
144 8760
2325 South Main St
Nighlights Before Christmas **P4.40**; 7:00; 9:30
The Favorite **P4.10**; 7:00; 9:30
Searching for Bobby Fischer **P4.35**; 7:26; 9:45
The Good Son **P4.25**; 7:00; 9:30
Severity Hillillies **P4.30**; 7:10; 9:35
Maliate **P4.15**; 7:10; 9:50
3 Formatting shows (1) Keeping Dots
(2) Specific Colors Away! Improved Styles
Crown Cinema
BEFORE & PM ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO 10 LATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
HILLCREST
9251OWA 841 5191
Age of Innocence PG 8:00,8:00
Cool Runnings PG 8:15
Judgment Night R 5:00
Fatal Instinct PG-13 7:30,9:45
Rudy PG 7:20,9:40
CINEMA TWIN
1110 IOWA 841 519
$1.25
Rising Son R⁷ 5:00
7:25, 9:45
Hocus Pocus PG 5:00
Needful Things R⁸ 7:20, 9:45
Daily Showino Times
The Student Friendly Store
A
HARVEST THE HUSKERS!
Mom and Pop's Graham's Retail Liquor 1906 MASS. 843-8186
ON CAMPUS
Hillel Presents: A POETRY SLAM
November 10,7:30 p.m. at the Glass Onion.
Cash Prizes!
POETS and amateurs invited.
Open Mike to follow.
For more information or to participate call 864-3948
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor an information and registration table from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. today on the fourth floor in the Kansas Union.
Canterbury House will celebrate Holy Eucharist at noon today in Danforth Chapel.
Spencer Museum of Art will sponsor "Tour du jour" from 12:15 to 12:45 p.m. today at the White Gallery in the museum. For more information, call Lori Ecklund at 864-4710.
Anthropology Club will meet at 5 p.m. today in 631 Fraser Hall. For more information, call Destiny Crider at 832-1469.
KU NOW will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at the Regional Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call the WSU office at 864-7337.
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.
Society of Women Engineers will meet at 6 p.m. today in 2022 Learned Hall. For more information, call Charity Hastings at 832-8994.
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.
Spencer Museum of Art will sponsor a film, "Daughters of the
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.
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in Robinson Center. For more information, call Sean Ralou at 865-2731.
Dust," at 7 tonight in the museum. For more information, call Lori Ecklund at 864-4710.
LeeBIGaySOK will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Frontier Room in the Kansas Union.
Amnesty International will meet at 8 tonight in the Glass Onion, 624 W. 12th St.
Jayhawker Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call John Dale at 864-1115.
KU Libertarians will meet at 8 tonight at Alcove D in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Allen Tiffany at 842-2411.
KU Young Democrats will meet at 8 tonight in the Kansas Union.
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 Neel Storey at 749-5848.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 9 tonight in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119
Stauffer-FlintHall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
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.
M
WEATHER
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 72°/57'
Chicago: 50°/38'
Houston: 83°/49'
Miami: 83°/65'
Minneapolis: 50°/28'
Phoenix: 83°/57'
Salt Lake City: 56°/33'
Seattle: 52°/30'
Omaha: 60°/23'
LAWRENCE: 62°/30'
Kansas City: 62°/31'
St. Louis: 67°/39'
Wichita: 67°/32'
Tulsa: 69°/40'
TODAY
Tomorrow Saturday
Partly cloudy with SW winds.
High: 62°
Low: 30°
Overcast with NW winds at 5-10 mph
High: 40°
Low: 25°
Partly cloudy with northerly winds
High: 53°
Low: 37°
Source: Gregg Potter, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
HATS, HEADBANDS,
GLOVES, SOCKS.
Wigwam
WHATEVER YOUR STYLE OR PREFERENCE MAY BE SUNFLOWER HAS' SOMETHING TO KEEP YOU WARM. BE IT COTTON. BE IT WOOL. BE IT POLY. BE IT CONSERVATIVE. BE IT RADICAL. BE IT BRILLIANT. BE IT SUBDUED. BE IT HYPER. BE IT SEDATED. FIND IT AT SUNFLOWER.
SUNFLOWER
Moisture
Cloud
Cloudy
804 MASSACHUSETTS
841-5000
ON THE RECORD
A student's parking permit valued at $35 was taken from a car in parking lot No. 122 between Oct. 23 and Monday, KU police reported.
A student's tool box and tools, valued together at $150, were taken from a car in the 2000 block of Heatherwood Drive on Friday or Saturday. Lawrence police reported.
A student's parking permit valued at $53 was taken from a car in parking lot No. 104 on Saturday, KU police report.
A student's diamond tennis bracelet valued at $1,150 was taken in the 700 block of New Hampshire Street on Saturday, Lawrence police reported.
Rentals
We buy & sell used sports equipment
A student's bicycle valued at $250 was taken in the 1000 block of Highland Drive on Tuesday or yesterday. Lawrence police reported
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
1029 Massachusetts phone 841-7529
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
TWO-FERS
2-PIZZAS
2-TOPPINGS
2-COKES
$900
842-1212
1601 W.23rd
Southern Hills Center
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SPECIALS EVERYDAY
843-5000
PRIMETIME
3-PIZZAS
1-TOPPING
4-COKES
$11^{50}
PARTY "10"
10-PIZZAS
1-TOPPING
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CARRY OUT
1-PIZZA
1-TOPPING
1-COKE
$350
DELIVERY HOURS
MON-THURS
The Etc. Shop
11 AM-2 AM
11 AM-3 AM
11 AM-1 AM
SERENGETI.
DRIVERS
928 Mass.
Downtown
Park in the rear
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
MEETING JAYTALK NETWORK
A smart, easy way to meet people in a sophisticated, safe and confidential manner.
Classifications available:
1-Men Seeking Women 5-Friends Seeking Friends
2-Women Seeking Men 6-Seeking Sports Interest
3-Men Seeking Men 7-Mutual Hobbies
4-Women Seeking Women 8-Shared Religion.
G LINES for G DAYS ABSOLUTELY FREE! CALL 864-4358 TODAY TO PLACE AN AD
2. You'll place an ad in the Jaytak 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 place an ad:
1. Call or come by the Kansan
at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
Here's how it works...
To place an ad:
3. After your ad runs in the Kansan, you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages you receive.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and set up a time and place.
To check out an ad:
1. Read the ads in the Jaytalk Meeting Network on the back page of the Kansan
2. Call 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.
PRE-SEASON NIT STUDENT TICKET SALES
Tickets on sale at KU Ticket Office (East Lobby/Allen Field House)
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1 THROUGH
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10th
8:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
TICKET PRICE: $6 for two game package (Cash or check only)
Wednesday, November 17th 8:30 p.m.- KU vs. Western Michigan Friday, November 19th 8:30 p.m.- KU- Western Michigan
Cal-Santa Clara winner
LIMIT: One Two Game Package Per Student (with valid KUID)
NOTE: Refunds will be made if KU does not play on November 19th.
1
CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 4, 1993
3
Students criticize new minority post
Office lacks power group leaders say
By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer
Less than a month after its creation, the position of assistant executive vice chancellor has come under criticism for being too weak to help minority students.
Maurice Bryan, assistant executive vice chancellor, does not have the budget, staff, or administrative authority to address minority issues, said Terry Bell, president of the Black Student Union.
"Because of the circumstances, the title might not mean that much," said Bell, Tampa, Fla., senior. "It can be viewed as just a title."
plan of action on multicultural issues.
The assistant executive vice chancellor — a position created by Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, on Oct. 7 — assists in addressing multiculturalism, diversity and minority groups on campus. The assistant executive vice chancellor also is responsible for compiling the Blueprint for Diversity, which will be the University's official
But Bell said the position was ill-equipped to handle such issues as recruitment and retention of minority students. Without the authority or the budget of other vice chancellors, he said, the position would be unable to create meaningful change.
“It's a position that I'm looking for great things from,” Bell said. “Whether that position is suited to make that occur is another matter.”
Bryan, who is also director of the Office of Affirmative Action, has a staff of three in that office and access to the office's budget.
Bryan's lack of tenure is also a concern, Bell said. He said that because Bryan did not have tenure, his position could be dissolved at will by the University.
Bell said Bryan's role as a direct link between students and the executive vice chancellor was important, but Meyen — not Bryan — still would make decisions.
Carlos Fleming, Shaker Heights, Ohio, senior and member of the African American Student Concerns Task Force, said the position fell short of expectations. He said that other task forces in the past had recommended such a position but that they had thought it would have more authority. The current position falls short, Fleming said.
The assistant executive vice chancellor is supposed to aid minority students. Some complain that he is not given the authority to do his job.
"They've made this half-hearted effort that keeps the ball from rolling, and then progress is stopped," he said.
Fleming said the argument was not against Bryan himself, but the weakness of his position.
But Meyen said the position was made in good faith. He said Bryan would make the administration more aware of minority issues.
"He has more access than deans do, as far
as who he meets with," Meyen said. "He has a significant amount of access."
The administration does not have the money to provide the position with resources comparable to other vice chancellors, he said.
Concerning tenure, Meyen said faculty tenure had no bearing on administrative positions. A fired administrator with tenure would remain at KU as a professor but still would be out of the administration.
He said David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, also did not have tenure.
Meyen said the new position and the blueprint would have an impact at KU.
"It will allow us to fulfill their expectations," he said. "It's not going to happen overnight, but we're in a better position."
Bryan, who came to KU in August as the new director of Affirmative Action, said he currently had the resources to fulfill his duties. He said he understood his role at KU.
"I have responsibility for coordinating many of the aspects of the University's diversity efforts," he said.
K-State wins again; KU gives less blood
After last month's blood-drive competition between KU and K-State, K-State retained its bragging rights for more blood donors than KU. The final tally — K-State, 913 pints, KU, 842 pints.
CAMPUS BRIEFS
"This is the second victory for K-State since the two Big Eight schools revived the blood-drive competition last spring," said Jeff Sneed, regional coordinator for the American Red Cross, in a released statement.
Sneed said the two schools increased the number of volunteer blood donations this semester by nearly 100 units.
The schools will compete again next spring, with the KU blood drive set to begin March 7.
Iowa Street will be rid of bumps
Iowa Street should be smooth sailing today. Terese Gorman, city engineer, said construction crews paved the road yesterday, covering the rough section north of Iowa and 23rd streets that had plagued motorists.
The entire $400,000 project should be completely done by Nov. 15, she said.
Construction crews had been working on adding left turn lanes to the road for about two months.
The extra turn lanes are supposed to help eliminate the number of accidents at the intersection, Gorman said.
Law enforcer to discuss jobs
Representatives of local, state and federal law enforcement and correction agencies will talk to students interested in careers in law enforcement from 4 to 6:30 p.m. today at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union.
Speakers include members of the KU and Lawrence police departments, the Douglas County Prosecutor's Office, the Kansas Highway Patrol, the Douglas County Sheriff's Office, the Johnson County Juvenile Court Services, the Federal Bureau of Prisons, the Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms, the Federal Bureau of Investigations, the Drug Enforcement Association and the Secret Service.
Forum to focus on legal rights
The Rho Eta chapter of Omega Psi Phil fraternity will sponsor a forum to discuss the legal rights of students with city, court and police officials.
Clifford Wiley, staff attorney for Legal Services for Students; Mark Knight, Douglas County assistant district attorney; Sgt. Schuyler Bailey, KU police; Detective Catherine Kelley and Officer Brian Marsh, Lawrence police; Rod Bremby, assistant city manager, and Kevin Johnson, chief court service officer for Douglas County, are scheduled to attend.
The forum will begin at 7:30 tonight at Ellsworth Hall.
Compiled from Kansan staff reports
DIOVEN
"Sex is not the key to love. Sex makes you feel closer than you actually are."
Richard Devinki/ KANSAN
A. H.
Janusz Jaworski, Prairie Village junior, draws a mural with colored chalk on the wall between Malott Hall and Wescoe Hall. Jaworski chose the wall because he could see it from his physics class in Malott.
Michael Horner
Sketching a view
"I think youths, well informed, are capable of making reasonable judgments."
judgments..."
Dennis Dallev
...
Debaters: Sex is great, but one says 'wait'
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
Most people do not like to speak about sex in public.
But last night, Michael Horner, a visiting speaker for Campus Crusade for Christ, and Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare, debated in front of about 1,000 people whether it was healthy to save sex for a permanent relationship.
"I like sex," Horner said. "I really like sex. I think sex is a really fantastic idea, don't you?"
"Everyone in this room is a sexual human being," he said. "You're born sexual, you'll die sexual."
The debate lasted about two hours in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Both Horner and Dalley gave 25-minutes opening statements, then each had two chances for rebuttals before making closing remarks.
Horse said people should wait for a permanent commitment before having sex.
During his speech, Horner presented 19 reasons, covering physical, psychological, social, sexual and relational aspects, for waiting before having sex.
"Sex is not the key to love," he said. "Sex makes you feel closer than you actually are."
cited the possibility of getting a sexually transmitted disease such as AIDS or Herpes, and having flashbacks to previous relationships during sex as negative aspects of having sex before making a permanent commitment.
"If you even think your partner is comparing you to a previous lover, that can be a cold bucket of water on a relationship." Horner said.
Dalley said people could make reasonable judgments if they were informed correctly about sexual relationships.
Despite Horner's claim that waiting would make sex better, Dailley said that the first time, whenever that time might be, could still be special.
"I would like that experience to be off the ground, unbelievably, memorably, phantasmagorically, really, really good," he said.
Although Dailey did not agree with Horner about waiting, he said he did not want people to think he promoted promiscuity.
On the pure health aspect of having sex before making a permanent commitment, Dailey said that abstinence was the only sure way of staying healthy but that then people would be deprived of the pleasure of having sex.
"I think youths, well-informed, are capable of making reasonable judgments that allow them to be in relationships without all the scary statistics," he said.
Khoa Pham, Overland Park sophomore, said he came to the debate because he was curious.
decade because he "would parents would have a fit if asked about sex," he said.
Fraternity to have food drive
The Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity is sponsoring a North American food drive this weekend to collect a targeted 100,000 pounds of food for local food banks.
The University of Kansas chapter of Lambda Chi Alpha will be collecting food from today until Saturday, said Todd Davis, Lambda Chi philanthropy chair.
Anyone who wants to donate food can leave it at the fraternity house, 918 Stewart Ave. The food will be delivered to the Ballard Community Center, 708 Elm St., on Monday.
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Our previous correspondence regarding CCN/EPIQual may have caused some confusion regarding insurance coverage for services offered at Watkins Health Center and its Pharmacy. Our insurance plan was designed with the intent that Watkins Health Center would be the main or primary site for health coverage for covered students. Under this plan the use of Watkins Health Center and its Pharmacy will result in the lowest out-of-pocket expenses for enrolled students.
The listing of CCN/EPIqual participants and the explanation of Express Scripts in our recent mailing is intended to give you information about the lowest cost alternatives when the use of Watkins Health Center is not possible.
A detailed explanation of this coverage can be found on page 12 of the University of Kansas Student Health Plan brochure or you can call us directly at 1-800-521-2623 to make specific inquiries.
4
Thursday, November 4, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Gays in military issue should go to court
Congress is not currently prepared to debate the issue of gays in the military. At the start, the issue was clouded by misguided campaign
Issue was clouded by misguided campaign promises that have not been fulfilled. Since then, Congress has debated the issue and determined a policy. They have also debated more and reversed that policy. Currently, they are debating, no doubt preparing to reverse previous decisions and debate some more.
The problem comes in defining the constitutionality of a ban prohibiting gays in the military. Congress needs to stop trying to find a definition; their job is to create the policy based on the current definition. The definition should be left up to that body that is chosen to decide on such issues, the Supreme Court.
As with other moralistic and ethical cases in history, the Supreme Court should be given the topic upon which to decide constitutionality. With that decision, Clinton and Congress would be ready to decide the policy, which could then stand resolute with the backing of the Supreme Court.
The appropriate action for Congress to wait until the issue is sent to Supreme Court and stop wasting time and money drafting and reversing policies. It is now necessary to allow both bodies to do the jobs they were created to do.
DAVID BURGETT FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Raise grazing fees to cut subsidies for ranchers
raising grazing fees for Western ranchers on federal lands would be a step to eliminate the substantial subsidies they now receive.
A proposal in Congress, backed by President Clinton, would raise the fee ranchers pay to graze a cow and calf for a month from $1.86 to $3.45. The current rate is far below what ranchers would pay if they grazed their cattle on private lands. This means that the federal government is getting the short end of the deal, and ranchers receive a subsidy by being able to graze at such a low rate.
Opponents of the increase in grazing fees say that family-size operations would suffer under the new plan. Government surveys show that only 10 percent of the people who graze on federal lands control more than half of that land. This means that large corporations receive benefits that most companies cannot have.
Right now, the increase is being filibustered by Western senators and their allies. Last Thursday, supporters tried for a third time to kill the filibuster but failed. If this effort fails. it would not be the first time.
Increasing fees would bring in more revenue for the federal government and encourage those ranchers who use federal lands to be more competitive.
TOM GRELINGER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS ARE :
DAVID BURGETT, JR CLAIRBORNE, CHRISTINA CORNISH, CARSON ELROD, TOM GRELINGER, MANNY LOPEZ, COLLEEN McCAIN, TERRILYN MCORMICK, MUNEERA NASEER, NATHAN NASSIF, KIRK REDMOND, CHRIS REEDY, RANDALL REITZ, 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 McCormick
Campus Ben Grove
Sports Kristi Fogler
Photo Kip Chin, Renee Kneeer
Features Ezra Wolfe
Graphics John Paul Foal
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 Perrier
National sales mgr ... Jennifer Evanson
Co-op sales mgr ... Blythe Footh
Production mgrs ... Jennifer Elowey
Kate Burgese
Marketing director ... Shelly McConnell
Sales manager ... Caroline Wittel
Cleared sellers mgr.. Gretchen Kottenkeldtch
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 Wisconsin are encouraged to send their letters.
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 Staunfer-Flint Hall.
Game instructions should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
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CONGRESS
Muppets, gay or not, shouldn't be part of the political agenda
and
By Da
Kansas
I'm sure you can understand my amazement when, while driving down the street, the news broke over the radio.
At first I thought my tiny-sounding AM radio had been infiltrated by alien space beings intent on wreaking havoc on American culture. But no. A little blurb syllabed inserted in last week's Pitch confirmed the story.
Bert and Ernie are not gay.
I immediately called a local PBS affiliate.
It seems that the saga of Bert and Ernie's questionable sexuality was first brought into question last summer by God knows who.
COLUMNIST.
The rumor mongers claimed that, well, the guys have been living alone for a long time, sharing (gasp) a bedroom. And well, two guys ... alone every night, know a girlfriend in sight. Yay, nary what I knew.
(These kids eventually learn the truth when they share a dorm room at
VAL HUBER
The statement issued by the Children's Television Workshop basically said that Bert and Ernie are not gay and have never been gay in any past episodes. They lived together to show children that people with differing opinions and habits can live together and be friends.
college with the all-night drummer who insists on burning strawberry incense.)
"The Children's Television Workshop was absolutely right to issue the statement," said a conservative friend. "Just think how all of us could have been subliminally affected if the two were gay, not to mention all the legal ramifications."
all. Why, when I think I may never have grandchildren because of them (sniff) ... I'm sure you agree that $1.5 million is a reasonable amount to ask for."
I polled friends on all sides of the political spectrum. I wanted to see how a homosexual Muppet would effect the cultural consciousness.
Picture, if you will, a mommy standing before a judge and jury, a little five- or six-year-old in tow.
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Not a pretty picture.
“Your honor,” she pleads, “I just knew there was something wrong with Johnny when he traded all his G.I. Joes for Malibu Barbies. Those two sexual deviants are the root of it.
My liberal friend painted a different scenario.
"How dare the Children's Television Workshop kowtow to those knee-jerk homophobes," he cried. "Bert and Ernie could have been the greatest role models for young gay America."
I thought I would check with a gay friend of mine.
"Big deal," he said. "They're Muppets. What about gays in the military?"
I thanked him for reminding me that there was at least one same person in this town. He hit the nail squarely on the head. Ernie and Bert have been, are, and will be for all eternity, Muppets. They are made from felt and various manmade fibers. Where human beings have genitalia, Muppets have a hole in which a puppetette inserts his hand in order to bring life to an otherwise inanimate object.
But I can't say that the Children's Television Workshop was wrong in issuing its statement. It was simply dealing with the politics of the matter.
And politics controls a great deal of the money it receives.
I can just imagine the Honorable Senator Jesse Helms testifying before the Senate Appropriations committee.
"Give money to a bunch of commie loving, left-wing radicals who are now trying to usurp God-fearing Americans by promoting a couple of sodomites as role models for children? I think not! In fact, I think this is a good time to pull the plug on the whole organization!"
Yeah, it could get rough. But thankfully PBS, the only channel honestly devoted to providing quality, educational television for children has been preserved, for a little while, at least.
With make-believe characters starring in more television programs every season, I wonder what will come up next. Maybe Actors' Equity will sue, since a two-dimensional character can't carry a union card. Or Barney will marry a 50-year-old divorce from Topека. Or somebody will claim that a couple of cartoons were responsible for the fires in southern California.
Val Huber is a Lawrence graduate student in journalism.
Double standard for students denies real world experiences
People all over this country have been clamoring for improvements in education.
We need more teachers. They need better pay. Students need to be motivated to learn. Our students need to catch up with those who are surpassing them.
My purpose in being in Washington, D.C. is to get "real world" experience. I am corresponding for two newspapers, which together reach more than 100,000 people every day. Yet I am treated like a second-class citizen once people discover I am a student.
I recently attended a news conference given by the National Education Goals Panel. It cited a dropout rate of 12 percent and a staggering adult literacy rate of about 50 percent. Members of the panel said that students' needs are not being met.
My friend and I wanted to attend President Clinton's "unveiling" of his health care plan, and when we called
I agree. Everywhere I go, I find a double standard of treatment for students.
Katie Greenwald Washington report
VESTIBULA
to see if we could get tickets, we were told to go to the House of Representatives press gallery to pick them up. When we got there, one of the staff members sneered at our temporary press passes.
It did not matter that my friend and I were working for newspapers that would have been interested in the story. We were not considered fullfledged members of the press because we were students.
"Oh, you're students," he said. "You'll have to come back at 8:30 p.m. to see if we have any seats left."
Last week, I wrote a story on the North American Free Trade Agreement for one of my newspapers. It was only then that I was allowed to meet and talk with the congressman
"I've already talked to a student at the Kansan for a column and that's enough," she said . "I just don't have the time."
For the Topeka Capital-Journal, I wrote a story last week on the abuses of the Pell grant program. I did so without the comment of KU's financial aid director. The directors for Kansas State University, Emporia State University and Washburn all agreed to speak with me. But Diane Del Buono refused, and she admitted that it was because I was a student.
from my paper's district. I continually had been put off all semester even when other members of Congress actually had given me the time of day. Believe me, I realize that senators and congresspersons are busy, but in this case, I suspect that my status as a student was part of the problem.
I even found prejudice at my own university.
Even when I tried to protest, she said she realized that I was working for a different paper, but it did not matter.
I made the mistake of admitting to her that I was a student. I do not deny that.
But if employees of the University refuse to talk to students, whatever the reason, what gives students the right to expect that they will be treated any differently when they are working as interns or completing professional projects in the real world?
The primary reason for any university's existence should be the students Vice President Al Gore recently said that students and their parents should be thought of as customers and schools as businesses.
In business, isn't the customer always right?
University officials who think that they don't have time to talk to students had better re-examine why they are at a learning institution. If employees have no interest in helping students, what are they doing at a university?
Katie Greenwaid is a Denver graduate
student in Journalism.
---
Health care plan steals freedom from citizens
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The Clinton health care plan is a perfect example of what is most wrong with America today. It is perhaps the greatest single transfer of private responsibility to government in American history.
The plan gives the government the ability to tell businesses and individuals where they will obtain coverage. It takes money from private citizens and business owners and redistributes this wealth elsewhere.
The Clintons know their plan violates classic principles of freedom. Members of the House and Senate also know what national health care means.
The plan tells health care providers how much they may charge for various services. All the above measures clearly violate life, liberty and property.
Our University and our country should take a look at the values of individual freedom and responsibility that built the United States into an envised and respected power. The socialist dogma and twisted rhetoric
that supporters of the Clinton health care plan have spotted should be exposed as the destructive force that it is.
Joseph Suber
Topeka sophomore
E-mail communication should benefit all users
I am pleased to see e-mail addresses being published in the University Directory that came out recently. Electronic access facilitates communication and collegiate information-sharing. But apparently you have to be in administration or work at the computer center for your electronic address to be important enough to be published there. Why weren't the rest of us who are active on-line included? Who made this decision? The hierarchical implications go against the democratic, fair and open-access principles that are causing the exploding popularity of this medium for communicating in on-line academic communities. Ellen Kaler
Lawrence graduate student
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 4, 1993
5
Project aims to cultivate minorities for teaching kids
By Kathleen Stoile Kansan staff writer
Preparing at-risk minority students for careers in early childhood development is the focus of a new $4.5 million project at KU.
The ultimate goal of the project is to provide minority children with more minority teachers and care-givers, said Wayne Sailor, director of the Kansas University Affiliated Program of the Institute for Life Soan Studies.
"All too often the people working with the children represent one ethnic group — mainly the ones who can afford to make it through college," Sailor said.
The Kansas Early Childhood Personnel Preparation Project is supported by a five-year grant from the U.S. Department of Education. KU and six other schools were chosen froma pool of about 50. The School of Education, the department of psychology and the department of human development and family life will participate in the project.
The project targets minority students who are at risk of dropping out of school, developing substance-abuse problems, becoming pregnant or developing other social problems, Sailor said. The 10 students accepted into the project each year are assigned mentors who help prepare them for college.
The project has targeted students from Lawrence High School, Harmon High School in Kansas City, Kan., and Topeka High School. Students from Haskell Indian Nations University, Kansas City Community College in Kansas City, Kan., and Penn Valley Community College in Kansas City, Mo., also may come to KU as part of the project.
The first set of students will be receive next year, Sailor said. They will receive $11,000 a year for the next
four years at KU. Those who begin their studies at a community college will receive $5,000 a year until they transfer. The students must complete their studies at KU.
As graduates, they will be required to work for four years in low-income communities with large minority populations. Sailor said.
Wilma Holt is an instructor in the HDFLearly childhood teacher education training program. She said a child's self-esteem could be influenced by seeing others with similar ethnic backgrounds in positions of authority.
"That's important because children need to have leaders so they can feel they can aspire to another level," she said.
She said the exposure could produce long-term effects.
"They can set life goals that would be very meaningful and would allow them to be productive," she said.
Minority groups struggle for funds
Senators give them 'hard time,' they say
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
One minority student group achieved a bittersweet victory, and another was left to rewrite its proposal after Student Senate voted it out of order last night.
17 After waiting for more than a month to get its funding request approved by Senate, the National Organization of Minority Architecture Students received $329. The bill passed after a half-hour debate on whether the architecture group duplicated services that another group already provided.
1Cal Jones, Kansas City, Mo., senior and head of the architecture group, said he was disturbed by the amount of work his organization had to go through for funding.
"The University of Kansas says we're supposed to be a diverse institution, but we have to go through so much trouble to get funded," Jones said.
STUDENT SENATE
Jones said the National Organization of Minority Architecture Students'purpose was to introduce students to the architecture of different cultures. He said the group met to discuss the work of African-American, Asian-American and female architects rather than focusing on the European architects favored by the School of Architecture.
Travis Harrod, head of the Student Executive Committee, said he was concerned that Senate's financing of the architecture group could mean an increased effort by other minority groups to get funding.
"This bill is definitely opening the gate of specialized endeavors," Harrod said. "How specific do we want to get for professional or cultural pursuits? This bill would set the precedent for smaller and smaller groups to try to get money."
Senate did not even vote on the Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers' request for $1,424. The Senators voted that the bill was out of order because it duplicated services.
Pedro Echeverria, Lawrence junior and president of the Hispanic engineering group, said he hoped to reintroduce the bill at the next Senate meeting after he and Octavio Hinojosa, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, reworded it.
"Our argument wasn't strong enough to pass the bill," Echeverria said. "But I don't see why it is that we're having such a hard time."
in other business, Senate voted to finance a banquet in the Kansas Union Ballroom that would be sponsored by the Indonesian Student Association.
It approved the transfer of $20,000 from Senate's excess account to its general fund that would be used to finance student groups.
In its final action, Senate resolved to extend hours at Watson, Anschutz and the Law libraries until 2 a.m. between Nov. 29 and Dec. 16.
H. O.P.E.AWARD
Honorary Outstanding Progressive Educator
Each year this award is given to an educator by the Senior Class.
On Thursday and Friday Ballots for this OUTSTANDING EDUCATOR will be available at every school's Main Office.
This is the start of nominations for the selections of the H.O.P.E.AWARD.
B.O.C.O.
For any questions call Ben Schwartz at 864-3710.
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Always There: The African-American Presence in American Quilts
Sunday, November 7 2:00-5:00 p.m.
Spencer Museum of Art The University of Kansas
Tours of the exhibition at 2:30, 3:00, 3:30, and 4:00. Music by the Inspirational Gospel Voices and Lynda Canaday. Food and fun for the whole family!
THE GARDEN OF THE MONSTERS
Everyone is invited to be a guest of the Friends of the Art Museum!
Support for Always There at the Spencer Museum comes from Halmahk Cardi, Inc.; it includes a special Commission, a state agency; and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency. The exhibition was produced by the Kentucky Children's Kunkem, Cuesta Bentney, curator.
Carolyn Mazloom, The Family Quilt from 'Solid Like a Rock' series, 1989, cotton, fabric paint, piece. Collection of the artist.
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Atan Oval Office ceremony, Clinton conceded that the administration did not yet have the votes to pass the trade agreement linking the United States, Mexico and Canada. But he insisted the administration was picking up support.
WASHINGTON - President Clinton yesterday sent Congress legislation to create the world's largest free trade zone, a package of provisions that the administration hopes will attract enough votes to pass the North American Free Trade Agreement.
Congress receives final NAFTA draft
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"We have had real movement in the last 10 days. We are going to win it." Clinton said.
The legislation contains a variety of provisions inserted by the administration in an effort to attract votes. Those provisions cover a variety of products and attempt to deal with concerns raised by various lawmakers.
question, the disagreement between Democrats and Republicans was deep.
But Democratic consultant David Axelrod was willing to draw one conclusion: "There is no question that there is a sentiment for change astride the country."
"I don't think you can draw too much conclusion from this," countered Clinton, saying the high-profile Democratic losses had everything to do with local vagaries and nothing with his standing.
"It's a big, big defeat for the White House," Senate Republican leader Bob Dole said.
Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
"It brought Clinton to office," he said, "and it is still very much at play. It is a tough time to be an officeholder."
Officials said that the administration had reached agreement with Mexico on limiting exports of
Republican strategist Kevin Phillips concurred, saying voters were demonstrating "a remarkable level of contempt, and the burden of their contempt swings against whoever is in office."
sugar and citrus. They said this agreement, reached Tuesday night, should pick up a number of congressional votes.
Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole said he hoped that NAFTA would be able to attract more than 110 Republican votes in the House. But he warned that some Republican House members might defect from the NAFTA agreement because of unhappiness over unrelated proposals being pushed for Western land management by Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt.
The legislation Clinton sent to Congress makes thousands of changes in existing laws to reflect the trade agreement.
The House is scheduled to vote on the trade agreement Nov. 17. Opponents have claimed they have 208 votes against the pact, only 10 short of the majority needed to kill the pact.
The package reflects proposals put forward by the House Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Finance Committee.
The Associated Press
Republicans celebrate after election victories
Republicans rejoiced yesterday over victories in New Jersey, where Christie Whitman unseated Gov. Jim Florio; New York City, where former prosecutor Rudolf Giuliani ousted Mayor David Dinkins, and Virginia, where George Allen won an open governor's race to end 12 years of Democratic control.
The GOP sweep in this year's top elections signals trouble ahead for Democrats, the party in power that is suddenly on the receiving end of voter demand for change. Yet there is evidence aptly that politicians of all stripes should beware.
A throw-the-rascals-out mentality is especially sobering news for Democrats, who control 34 Senate seats, 36 governorships, and a majority of the 435 House seats up for grabs in 1994.
But voters showed they could be nonpartisan in their anti-incumbent mood as well, endorsing termlimits in Maine and New York City and giving themselves the power to recall state officials in New Jersey.
Immediately, the results were analyzed for what, if anything, they said about President Clinton. And on that
Tuesday's returns also showed fresh signs of a conservative tilt in urban politics, as anxiety about crime and declining quality of city life dominated mayoral contests.
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Can We Talk?
An Interracial and Intercultural Experiment
Are you a KU student interested in having open and honest dialogue sharing your life and culture with others who are different from you? If so, "Can We Talk?" might be an exciting learning experience for you!
WOO THINK FUNNY
Twenty students of different cultural and racial heritage will be selected through application and interview. Participants will commit to an orientation and ten weekly dialogue sessions designed to increase understanding.
Orientation: Saturday, January 22, 1994
Ten weekly sessions: Tuesdays, 6:30 - 8:00 p.m. January 25-April 5,1994
Call for information and application: Rick Clock: 841-8001 Brian Johnson: 843-4948
Sponsored by:
by:
Baptist Student Union
United Methodist Campus Ministry
Lutheran Campus Ministry
Canterbury House (Episcopal)
Lutheran Student Fellowship
Ecumenical Christian Ministries (Presbyterian Church of Christ, Church of the Brethren)
Lawrence Mennonite Fellowship
St. Lawrence Catholic Center
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 4, 1993
7
90s Marriage
now old... Divorce rates have been higher among younger age groups since 1976. This trend continued in 1986
Age Under 20
20-24
25-29
30-34
35-39
40-44
45-49
50-55
55-59
60-64 Women
Over Men
64
Duke and Jennifer Naipohn share a kiss in Danfort Chapel northeast of Fraser Hall, while Barry Frank, their wedding photographer, straightens the train. The couple was married Oct. 23 after dating for seven months.
Source: Statistical Abstract of the US, 1992
Dave Cambel / KANAN
...
[Image] Two individuals are kneeling on a grassy path in a park, with trees visible in the background. The person on the left is wearing a white dress and veil, while the person on the right has darker skin and appears to be adjusting or holding up the dress.
AHAPPYHOME
Continued from Page 1.
She had received her law degree in 1991 and wanted to keep the name that was associated with her previous accomplishments, she said.
Gregoire said he did not mind.
"I was somewhat concerned because the Midwest has traditional values when it comes to marriage," she said.
"I feel at our age, I've got my life established and she's got her life established, and it's just easier for her," he said. Both are 30.
Sandra Albrecht, director of women's studies and associate professor of sociology, said women had returned to the tradition of taking their husbands' names after using hyphenated names more in the 1970s.
She said she thought that women hesitated to hyphenate their names because it was seen as feministic, and that feminism often had a negative connotation.
But a name is part of a person's identity, she said, and want to keep it is understandable. It is hard enough to form an adult relationship, she said. It is even harder to kiss your name goodbye at the altar.
Inflation has forced many women to go to work, and that has translated into greater economic independence, Albrecht said.
But the notion that women are in charge of keeping house still persists.
"There are better ways to deal with this than a reactive "Throw the women back in the home," Albrecht said. "Men who share in the child rearing will never regret it."
Two different careers can often create conflicting lives. Jobs cannot always be found in the same area. Women are less likely to follow a man wherever his job takes him and give up their own opportunities.
Until death (or divorce) do us part
"I don't think the answer is that the career always comes first," Albrecht said. "In the resolution, both people ought to be valued."
The vows, the rings and the celebration are still a part of the marriage ritual. But the fact that about 50 percent of all marriages today end in divorce has many wedding guests knocking on the wooden pews while the couple says "Do."
Leslie Jones, Miami graduate student,
was divorced the one week ago.
Jennifer Naiphol sign the marriage license during the reception, making the marriage official as her uncle, Les Suderman, left, and husband Duke watch.
1982
Jones, 32, said he believed his marriage was forever when he said his vows in 1991.
"I was planning on not getting divorced," he said. "That was the whole idea."
Compromise and commitment did not guarantee a happy home life, he said. Marriage was a gamble.
Jones said he bet that he and his wife could have worked through the problems that arose in the marriage. He lost.
Jones said he lived happily with his girlfriend for three years before they were married. But the rings spoiled it for them.
Marriage changed the way they viewed themselves and the way others viewed them.
"If you're living together, you are just a couple of young kids shacking up together," he said. "As soon as you go through the ceremony, you're a young couple beginning life together."
Jones said his behavior began to remind him of his father.
He did not like his new role as a husband. It was more serious than he had expected.
"It's very difficult not to fall into household roles because all you have for that is your parents," he said.
"I found myself composting and being concerned with my lawn mower," he said. "I really hit me harder than I thought it would."
Philip Khoury, Leawood senior, grew up with only one parent, so he thought he lacked a role model for his own relationship.
Maintaining his relationship with Julie Munjak, Lenexa senior, has been a learning process. They have been dating for about four years and are not ready for marriage.
His parents were divorced when he was young. He grew up with his mother, who was a physician.
Geoffrey Steere, associate professor of American studies, said economic independence, increasing religious tolerance, easier divorce laws and the fact that people were living longer had contributed to the increased number of divorces.
"As far as marriage goes, I don't really have any experience with it," he said. "Everything is kind of a new experience when Julie and I have disagreements and stuff."
"If you say 'until death do us part,' death may not pat you," he said.
More women have jobs and can afford to live on their own, he said. The stigma that used to accompany divorced women in the 1950s is gone.
That makes divorce easier, but no less emotionally draining, Steere said.
But few seem to be discouraged. Steere said 83 percent of divorced women remarry while 80 percent of divorced men remarry.
"While adults have a good likelihood of being divorced, they won't necessarily forgo marriage." Steere said.
Are the Cleavers dead?
The "Leave it to Beaver" image of the family, complete with two children, a mother who dedicates her life to her family and a husband who spends his days earning their keep, is still part of the American dream.
Steere said that image did not represent today's reality.
"It's simply a creature of nostalgia," he said. "It was the middle-class ideal after World War II."
In a country that prides itself on change and progress, the United States has worried that the family has been in decline since the country's beginnings.
"You can trac it all the way back to the Puritans," Steere said. "It's a paradox because Americans always tend to think things are getting better. But there's always this haunting statement that the family isn't getting better."
The family as an institution is alive and well and doing what it does best. Changing.
"Families have always been in the midst of change," Steere said. "The tradition of the American family is responsiveness, adaptation, flexibility and diversity in response to historical change. This is seen as declining rather than adapting."
Changes in the economy and standard of living during the past two decades forced many families to have two full-time incomes and fewer children, he said.
But just as Cold War-era problems did not stop the Cleavers from marching down the aisle, present-day couples are not tripping on the possibility of divorce or changing roles.
"Despite what young people know about the challenges and complexities of family life, they still want to be a part of their family and establish their own family," he said.
The institution through the ages Marriage and divorce rates have increased since 1960 but leveled off in the 1980s. In 1946, marriages and divorces also rose dramatically with the end of World War II.
Number of marriages and divorces (in millions)
1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990
Marriages
Divorces
Source: Statistical Abstract of the U.S. 1992
Julie Munjak has been dating Philip Khoury for more than four years. In May they will both graduate and possibly go their separate ways, depending on where she attends graduate school and where he attends medical school.
Her parents have been married 23 years. She appreciates the level of her parents' companionship, but she wants something different.
She wants to share her career and family responsibilities equally with her husband.
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
"Sometimes I feel like my father takes advantage of the work my mother does, but it seems like they are genuinely happy with it," she said.
When she gets married, Julie said, she wants it to last as long as her parents' marriage.
"I've always felt like my house was kind of secure," she said.
She plans on becoming a professor of English, she said, so she does not agree with her mother's philosophy that only women are meant to mother.
"She really believes in instinct and I'm not sure how much I believe in instinct," she said.
Teresa Munjak, Julie Munjak's mother, said she and her husband decided she would make raising the two children her full-time job.
"So many kids are left by themselves," she said. "And their parents try to compensate by buying them things. It's more important to be able to be there and make sure they are doing good in school."
Women who want to stay home
often are pressured to have a career, she said.
"Most women today feel like they have to put themselves first instead of their children," she said.
Teresa Munjak said she thought people did not spend enough time or thought searching for the right mate.
"People don't work hard at it," she said. "They need to make a commitment and stick with it."
Today, she said, there are too many expectations and too many priorities.
"Times are different," she said.
"More people are working and people are more concerned with trying to get ahead."
Her husband, John Munjak, said marriage required a lot of give and take.
"Later on down the line, when Duke is done with school, things will be more like the Cleavers," Jennifer Naipohn said.
"Everybody's busy making a buck and they don't have time for each other." he said.
Duke and Jennifer Naiphon agree that the Cleavers are not all bad.
Although she wants to continue working part-time as a nurse to keep her license, she also wants to stay home with the children they expect to have.
And he wants to play an active role in raising them.
Together, they want to make love a priority.
"It's a secure feeling." he said. "I feel stronger when she's around."
At Parkway 6000, a restaurant on the Country Club Plaza in Kansas City, Mo., Duke Naipohn, Lawrence sophomore, and his groomsmen participate in an old wedding tradition.
Bachelor party sparks inward look at traditions
Naipohn's wedding ends a long-standing bet on who would get married first. All five men agree that they thought Naipohn would be the last to commit.
The bachelor party.
But as he sings savy love songs into his drink and toasts to wild days long past, he does not act like a man who is unhappy to lose his independence.
Nalpohn said that although he supported Jennifer Franz, then his fiancée, and her career, there were some traditions that he wanted to unbold.
Did I tell you that I love Jennifer?" he asks with a wide grin.
ing roles of men and women in marriage.
And, after a few drinks, the revelers begin to speak frankly about their views on the chang-
Before he asked her to marry him, Naipohn approached Jennifer's father and asked his permission.
Naipohn said that he wanted Jennifer to stay home and take care of their children.
His friend and groomsman, Steve Miller, agreed.
"The woman is the center of the family and the man is the center of the household," he said. "The man is the figurehead."
Miller said the fact that more women were entering the work force had given them more
"Men are becoming wimps because they are saying, 'Why should I go to work when she is working?' " he said.
ownership in the marriage, but that he thought men were not living up to their responsibilities.
Miller said he would like to have four or five children. But he knew that he needed to find a secure job first.
"Most women want the financial security of not having to work," he said.
Today's society, with its focus on self-fulfillment and not family values, makes the sacrifice that marriage requires harder, he said.
Miller is Catholic. His girlfriend, who does not come from a strong religious background, is not convinced that marriage is necessary.
"She says if you're committed to a relationship 100 percent, then what difference does marriage make," he said. "But I say, if you're already committed to it, then marriage shouldn't be that big of a hurdle."
But Miller, a 27-year-old African American, is fighting a tradition that he rejects. His girlfriend's parents, who are white, are hesitant to let him marry her.
But Miller thought he could change that.
Miller and his girlfriend have lived together for less than two years, dated a little longer than that and have only discussed marriage. Do Miller touch the world's hearts?
He said he hoped a trip to Napohn's wedding would inspire her to follow in their friend's footsteps.
8
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Thursday, November 3,1993
9
Option concerns Kansas defense
Play helped 'Huskers beat Jayhawks in 1991
By Matt Doyle
Kansas sportswriter
Nebraska sophomore quarterback Tomnie Frazier is expected to start against Kansas Saturday, and his presence brings an added dimension to the Cornhusker offense.
Nebraska coach Tom Osborne said Frazier, who injured his right shoulder against Colorado last week, ran the option play better than sophomore Brook Berringer and freshman Ben Rutz, the team's reserve quarterbacks.
Kansas coach Glen Mason said that he remembered the success Nebraska had with the option in 1901 and that he was concerned about it this year.
INDIANA
"We had a lot of trouble with the option two years ago," Mason said. "If you're not on top with your option responsibilities then that translates into big plays."
Junior Don Davis and sophomore Ronnie Ward, Kansas outside linebackers, will play important roles in attempting to defend any option plays that Nebraska will run.
To defend the option play, the two outside linebackers have to play a more containing type of defense rather than rushing the quarterback.
"We have to be able to contain the quarterback and his speed to stop the option," Ward said. "If we can't, it will be tough to make plays."
However, containing the option play does not mean placing full concentration on the quarterback. Davis said defenders must knock off as many offensive players — offensive linemen, the tight end and backfellow — to get in position to make a play on the quarterback.
Davis said that if there were any breakdowns in defending those aspects, big running plays could occur. Nebraska junior I-back Calvin Jones broke touchdown runs of 47 and 68 yards off the option play against Kansas two years ago.
But even that may not be enough, Davis said.
"It takes a team effort to contain the play," he said. "You need somebody on the pitchman, somebody on the quarterback and somebody on the fullback."
"Of the teams that run the option, Nebraska runs it the best," Ward said. "They have the best personnel. It's personnel that beats you, not schemes."
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
Both players said that Frazier's speed coupled with the presence of Jones would make it difficult for the Jayhawks to defend the option.
Davis said the change in defensive formations from the 4-3 to the 3-4 for Kansas could make it easier to defend the option.
"It's easier for them to run it on a four-man line," Davis said. "But now we have extra men up front which helps to defend it."
Kansas junior linebacker Don Davis, left, and sophomore linebacker Ronnie Ward run drills during football practice. The two are expected to play an important role against Nebraska's option offense when the teams play Saturday.
Cornhuskers ignore speculation about bowls
The Associated Press
LINCOLN, Neb. — Don't ask Nebraska coach Tom Osborne about bowl games, possible matchups, the rankings, win streaks or nine-win seasons.
games. He's never failed to win at least nine.
"I see the annual speculation has started on bowls and all this kind of thing," he said Tuesday. "I guess it's interesting to you guys, and maybe it's necessary. To me it's a pain in the neck, just totally meaningless at this point."
Osborne is one win away from his 21st consecutive season of winning at least nine
But he hasn't been happy with national rankings for many years. Nebraska was No. 5 a few weeks ago, but Miami jumped ahead of the now-04.6 Huskers again after the Hurricanes' impressive win at Syracuse.
The No. 5 ranking was Nebraska's highest since holding No. 3 before a 27-12 loss to No. 9 Colorado on Nov. 3, 1990.
Despite his continuing string of winning seasons and appearances in New Year's Day bowl games, Osborne doesn't believe his teams receive the respect he thinks
they deserve nationally.
A string of bowl losses to the likes of Nos. 1, 2 or 3 Florida State, Miami or Georgia Tech in the last half-dozen years doesn't help. But Osborne has said there aren't many other Top 10 teams that would do well against those clubs, either.
And there are few teams with records that would put them in the running for a national championship as regularly as Nebraska has been.
ority. The rest, he said, will take care of itself.
Osborne has tried to downplay the polls and said that winning a Big Eight Conference championship is his teams' No.1 pri-
With three games remaining in the season, Nebraska holds the inside track to the Big Eight championship and a third straight Orange Bowl appearance. The Cornhuskers already beaten Colorado and Kansas State.
Nebraska meets Kansas this week, then comes back home to play an Iowa State team that upset the Huskers in Ames, Iowa, a year ago. Then comes the traditional dayafter-Thanksgiving battle against Oklahoma, in Lincoln this year.
Crew to compete in 3 $ \frac{1}{2} $ -mile Atlanta regatta
Team will face different different club opponents
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
Rowing 3½ miles down the Chattahoochee River will be the longest race this season for the Kansas varsity crew team.
The team travels to Atlanta today for the Head of the Chattahoochee Regatta on Saturday.
Teri Staudacher, Topea senior, has been on the crew club for two years but has never competed in the Atlanta regatta. She
Georgia Tech, which won the lightweight eight men's national championship last year, will be competing as well as the Florida Institute of Technology, another highly rated team, said Michael Amick, Lawrence senior and crew president.
said the magnitude of the regatta was spectacular because of the high level of competition.
Staudacker said the team would have to work harder in this regatta because it was unfamiliar with the competition.
"We get used to rowing against Wichita and Texas," she said. "We get comfortable with how we row, but now we have to row our hardest."
Coxswain Mary Beth Kurzak, Omaha, Neb., sophomore, said that a meeting with the coaches and coxswains usually was held before the launching of the first race so that maps of the river could be dispersed. The coxswains also learn of any hazards such as submerged trees or unusually narrow spots in the river.
because the boats do not compete side by side, but single file down the river. This places a greater challenge on the coxswain, who must devise strategy for passing boats and navigating down the winding river.
River regattas are called "head races"
Kurzak said she would scope out the river itself to see the curves as they actually are and not how they are depicted on the
map.
Another challenging part of her job as guide of the boat is passing. The passing boat has the right of way on the river, and the slower boat must yield, giving the faster boat the easiest route. If a coxswain does not command the boat to yield, the team can be penalized by having its final time lengthened.
Amick said that the longer length of the race would be physically challenging for the team but that it would not change the team's strategy. So far this season, the team's races have been 2 1/2 miles in length. good physical condi-
"We are in pretty good physical condition, so we will focus on our technique in the races," he said.
Women golfers to head to Texas for season finale
By Kent Hohlfeld Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas women's golf team will conclude its fall season this weekend at the Texas A&M Book- store/Welsh Memorial Golf Tournament in College Station, Texas.
"There are a number of good programs competing this weekend." Kansas coach jerry Waugh said.
The team will compete with 16 others, including Florida, which was ranked Nowe 12 in *Golfweaver*/Taylor Made magazine. The tournament also will feature Kansas' Big Eight rivals Kansas State and Missouri.
"The weather hampered our play in that tournament." Waugh said of the home meet.
He said he had been disappointed with the team's last performance in the Marilyn Smith/Jayhawk Invitational, Oct. 18 and 19. He said his players were capable of more than their fourth-place showing behind conference rivals Oklahoma State, Nebraska and Missouri.
"It's really hard to keep that high level of play every week." Waugh said.
It had been played on a rain-soaked course at the Alvamar Golf and Country Club. He said a recurring problem for the Jayhawks, consistency, also tortured the players during the competition.
Senior golfer Holly Reynolds said the high level of concentration necessary during competition made it hard to have consistent performances in each tournament.
An earlier tournament, the Hawkeye Invitational, held Sept. 24-26 in Iowa City, Iowa, was shortened from three to two rounds because of rain.
Reynolds said the team had improved since its first tournament in Las Cruces, N.M., where it finished 11th out of 16 teams in the Roadrunner Invitational.
"Our first tournament was really quite shaky," Reynolds said.
She said the team had stepped up its level of play during its last three tournaments. The improvements have boosted the team's confidence, she said.
"My mind set is the best it has been all year, Reynolds said.
Freshman Missy Russell also was optimistic and said her success had proved to her that a freshman could compete in collegiate golf.
"Coming in, I didn't know what I could do as a freshman," Russell said. "I saw that on a lot of teams, the gap between the freshmen and the seniors wasn't as huge as I thought."
Russell said she thought a good performance at the Texas A&M tournament could give the players a boost as they start their spring schedule.
Waugh said his team had the ability to shoot between 315 and 325 in any round of a tournament. He said he hoped to see that kind of performance at the tournament this weekend.
"I want to see the players gain some confidence', Waugh said. "I think they'll play really well."
SPORTS BRIEF Kansas forward in hospital
Kansan staffreport
Kansas freshman forward Nick Proud spent Sunday night in Lawrence Memorial Hospital because of an infamed spleen.
Proud, a 6-foot-10, Sydney, Australia native, had been recovering from mononucleosis, which inflames the spleen, when he was elbowed in the spleen during practice on Saturday.
Although Proud's spleen had returned to its normal size as of Saturday, the impact aggravated it.
I
Nick Proud
Proud will be re-evaluated by
team doctors today to see when he will be able to return to practice. Kansas coach Roy Williams said before the freshman caught the stray elbow that Proud probably wouldn't be able to play until mid-December.
ARTS AND CRAFTS BAZAAR
Froud hasn't played in a game since the third game of his senior year at Alta High School in Sandy, Utah. In that game, he was undercut and injured his knee. He underwent arthroscopic surgery and sat out the rest of the season.
Applications now Available For Students and Non-Students To Sell Handmade Arts and Crafts Apply at SUA Office. Level 4. Kansas Union Applications Due Friday. Nov. 12 by 5 PM For More Info. Call SUA at 864-3477
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PYRAMID
We Pizza is Our
clip me
14th & OHIO (UNDER THE WHEEL)
BLOW BOMB!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
Trades,free agency mark off season
Mariners' Hanson, Boone sent to Reds
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — In the first big trade of the off-season, Seattle sent pitcher Eric Hanson and infielder Bret Boone to Cincinnati for a pair of young players. And in another big contract, Detroit gave Travis Fryman a $25 million, five-year deal.
Seattle, 15th in payroll this season at $33.2 million, got pitcher Bobby Ayala and catcher Dan Wilson from the Reds Tuesday night in a deal partly influenced by dollars. Hanson made $1.25 million in 1993.
"Our main reasoning is we were looking for a catcher," Mariners general manager Woody Woodward said from the general managers' meetings at Naples, Fla. "It was a chance to move some dollars and pick up a couple of young players."
Seattle is attempting to sign a multiyear deal with left-hander Randy Johnson, who made $2,625,000 and is eligible for free agency following the 1994 season. Johnson led the major leagues in strikeouts with
"Right now our main thrust is to try to sign Randy," Woodward said. "We'll know better where that stands hopefully by the end of the week or next week."
308 and was 19-8 this season.
Hanson, a 28-year-old right-hander who is also eligible for free agency after next season, was 11-12 with a 3-47 ERA in 1993. Boone, 24, split the 1993 season between Seattle and its Class AAA team at Calgary, Alberta, hitting 251 with 12 home runs, 12 doubles and 38 RBIs in 76 games for the Mariners.
"Two of our top priorities for the off season have been acquiring a starting pitcher and a second baseman," said Reds general manager Jim Bowden, whose team was sixth in payroll at $41.6 million. "Erik Hinson is a proven starter who is capable of pitching 200 innings per season. Bret Boone is a tough, hardnosed player with the potential to hit 15 to 20 home runs a year and drive in a lot of runs."
In a minor deal, Cleveland traded pitcher Heatchelff Slocumb to Philadelphia for outfielder Ruben Amaro.
There were three signings, including Fryman's big deal.
ond-highest paid player on the Tigers behind Cecil Fielder, and the 23rd-highest in the majors with the $5 million-a-year average salary. The deal followed last week's $29 million, four-year extension between the Chicago White Sox and first baseman Frank Thomas.
Fryman, who made $675,000 in 1993, has less than four seasons in the majors and could not have become a free agent until after the 1996 season.
The 24-year-old became the sec-
"I'm excited that the Tigers had confidence in me to give me such a contract," Fryman said. "Now I can concentrate on nothing but baseball and do my job right."
"In Travis Fryman, we feel we have one of the game's legitimate young superstars," Tigers general manager Jerry Walker said.
Only two players filed for free agency Tuesday, Baltimore third baseman Mike Pagliarulo and Minnesota catcher Brian Harper, raising the total to 86. Another 18 are potentially eligible to file by Sunday's deadline.
Fryman gets a $2 million signing bonus payable Dec. 15, $2 million in 1994, $3.75 million in 1995, $4.75 million in 1996, $6 million in 1997 and $6.5 million in 1998.
Maddux wins second NLCy Young Award
The Associated Press
NEWYORK — Greg Maddux won his second straight Cy Young Award yesterday, joining Sandy Koufax as the only National League pitchers to win it in successive seasons.
Maddus in 2010 with a major league-leading 2.36 ERA in his first season for Atlanta and became the first pitcher to win the award in consecutive years with different teams. He went 20-10 with a 2.18 ERA in 1992 for the Chicago Cubs, then signed a five-year, $28-million free-agent contract with the Braves.
Maddux got 22 of the 28 first-place votes in balloting by the Baseball Writers Association of America. He easily outdistanced San Francisco's Bill Swift and John Burkett, and Braves teammate Tom Glavine, who all won more games than Maddux but had higher ERAs.
Jack McDowell became the AL's Cy Young winner Tuesday.
Meddux, 27, Is the top winner in the majors with 107 victories in the last six seasons. He also won three straight Gold Gloves and is one of the best-hitting pitches in baseball.
Do you have a sore throat or fever?
receive up to $ 50 - 75
for participating in a medical research study at IMTCI To qualify you must:
- be 18 years of age or older and
* be able to attend 2 short visits at our clinic
* Call IMTCI for more info: Mon-Fri from 8am-5pm
1-800-669-4682
IMTCI International Medical Technical Consultants Inc. 16300 College Boulevard - Lenexa, Kansas
For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and talk with you.
FREE PREGNANCY TESTING
Birthright
FREE PREGNANCY TES Birthright 1246 Kentucky • 843-4821
Commerce Bank
"If you're considering a personal loan - for a car, a boat, college education, a computer, even a vacation - Commerce Bank can help. There's just one catch you'll have to pay less for your loan.
Right now, you can save up to 1/2% interest on a personal loan from Commerce. Here's how it works.
With a Commerce checking or moneymarket account, you'll receive a 1/4% discount on personal loan interest rates and an additional 1/4% discount if you automatically debit your payment from your Commerce Bank checking account.
You can choose from both fixed and variable rate loans to suit your needs. You'll pay interest only on your outstanding balance, and you can pay off the entire balance anytime, without prepayment penalties.
Call me or stop by today to get a 1/2% interest rate break on your next major purchase. And see why so many people are counting on Commerce to pay less for their loans."
RENTAL HOSPITAL
LENDER
MIKE ROTHFUSS BRANCH MANAGER 6TH STREET
Lawrence
865-4700
955 Iowa
23rd Street (In Dillons)
6th Street (In Dillons)
Michael Rottenstein
"Our personal loans are every thing you've always wanted in a loan. And less."
36
世界贸易中心
Count on Commerce
Commerce Bank
Martha FNC
(Formerly The Bank of Kansas)
9145B
Make a SOUND Investment in Your Future.
Apple
14" A
Ext
Apple Macintosh Quadra 660 AV with 14" Audio Vision Display and Extended Keyboard. 3615 $^{(0)}$
udio. It's what makes the new Quadra 660 AV something truly unique. It actually responds to your voice. Now you can work with documents without even
touching the keyboard. Or you can use it as a speakerphone, an answering machine, or a fax. See one today at the Union Technology Center.
Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU.
union
technology
center
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VISA
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Academic Computer Supplies & Equipment
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DISCOVER
---
.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Bluebird
11.
Thursday, November 4, 1993
- Burgers
- Great Breakfasts
- Fresh Pasta
Classified Directory
814 Massachusetts
Fresh Pasta
100s
- Espresso Bar
Announcements
108 Personal
110 Business
Personal
Personal
128 Announcements
139 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s Employment
2025 Help Wanted
2025 Professional
Services
235 Typing Services
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
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are non-discriminatory.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1988 which makes it illegal to advertise any "affrayable" race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to such preference, limitation or discrimination.
I
100s Announcements
105 Personals
1980
110 Bus. Personals
Happy 21st Birthday, Kiersten
Love, your friends and family.
Rebreathionary Alkyno Hydroxy Acid skin treat-
ment is an antimicrobial skin treatment
in damaged skin. Free power supply 845-239
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8:4pm-4:30pm
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
Pharmacy Hour
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8am-9pm
Sunday 11am-11pm
Call Today!
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
Hoops, Pendants & more!
For Guys and Gals
928 Mass. Downown
928 Mass. Downown
for Thanksgiving and Christmas AIRLINE TICKETS
Don't Wait
We'll find the lowest fares and best schedules.
On Campus Location In the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
749-0700
120 Announcements
*“CAN WE TALK?” An interracial and intercultural Small Group Experiment starting in January 1994. This experiment could change your life! Carrie Clark at 81-901-800 or Brian Johnson at 83-498-483.
300s Merchandise
205 For Sale
240 Auto Sales
360 Macallaneous
370 Want to Buy
-Kansan Classified; 864-4358
*SPRING BREAK*
Early Booking Special
WD Shipage
LOWEST PRICES GUARANTEED!
Joan at 865-5611
Found: The best pizza buffet in Lawrence. Locat
2.99夸�币 - $1.99 Mon-Fri
11:30 am - 12:30 pm
FREE MONEY
Availability
Guaranteed results
Collegiate Scholarship Services
Call 1-800-265-8000 for info
e-mail: mike@tulane.edu
RAISE UP $1,000 in JUST ONE WEEK! For your fraternity, sorority, & club. Plus $1,000 for yourself! And a FREE T SHIRT just for calling: 1-800-823-6288, ext. 75.
Problems are not punishment! Giving thanks for them opens my eyes my inner strength and the good possibilities my work to solve them can bring. Unity and Unity at Law, of Lawrence, 411 Lincoln 814-1447.
St. John's Pizza Bake Sale Sun. Nov 7 @ 8:00am,
cookin' pots, tortillas, hot dogs, 1234. Kentucky 1234.
Sudden systemic mutation happened to animals that were exposed to a genetic asset; assist from an egg-processing cof. fed animals, produced sudden, lasting, benign, nuclear, physiological behavior change. If interested please contact us.
CHRISTMAS
SKI BREAKS
LODGING • LIFTS • PARTIES • PICNICS • TAXES
JANUARY 2-16, 1994 * 5, 6 or 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT $199
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
TELLURIDE
LAST CHANCE
INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
JOAN
865 - 5611
SUNSHINE BEACH BREAKFAST
1·800·SUNCHASE
130 Entertainment
Free Party Room Available at Johnny's Tavern
Up & Under @ 842-637-0073 for details.
NOW OPEN!
BRANDING IRON
SALOON
806 W. 24th • 843-2000
Thurs., Nov. 4
Elite
C
Formerly Just A Playhouse Behind McDonalds
*Only $3 cover charge*
*Dores Open at 4 p.m.*
*Showtime 8-10 pm*
*Men admitted at 10.*
Last yellow and grey cocktail. 8th and Highland area Hat headened. Answers to "Rocky" Reward.
Found black Fiberlar watch with gold trim and bottle of whit out of the front of snow. call to identify
-5 Dancers
Lost cat. Siamese mix, long-haired, 3 years old.
To Gray. Gravy is offered. Call Poppy
620-974-6781.
140 Lost & Found
男女同厕
205 Help Wanted
Cater Caskaters, Thursday, Friday, Saturday,
November 4, 6, 1983, 4.25 per hour. Will pay cash
on day preload employment. Must follow dress
code and prefer previous food service experience.
Apply Kansas and Burge Unions' Personnel
Department. Work shifts and dress code listed in
office EOE.
200s Employment
AA Cruise & Travel jobs. Earn $2500/mo. + travel the world free! (Caribbean, Europe, Hawaii, Asia!) Cruise Lines now hire for busy holiday, cruise vacations. Employed employment Call (919) 423-8988 ext. 131
CHEMISTRY LABORATORY ASSISTANT Requires good academic record in chemistry, pharmacy or related science; laboratory experience desirable. 12-30 hrs/wk. Submit application to INTERX Research, 2021 West 21st Street. AnEqual Opportunity Employer. M/F/H/V.
Adams Alumni Center is looking for part-time host servers. Must have some am/day availability, very flexible hours. Nice working environment at 1386 Eurec. Across from Kansas Union.
ADMINISTRATIVE USER SERVICES. Student Monthly. Deadline: 11/12/93. $855-8650/month depending on experience. Duties include providing application, design, documentation and deliver software training sessions for end users, provide LAN installation and problem solutions support, and other duties. Required qualifications: Demonstrated knowledge of computerized databases and their uses, experience using microcomputers, currently enrolled at KU and continuing education, knowledge about computerized description available. To apply, submit a letter of application and a current resume Ami Riat. Personnel assistant, Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 69045. EO/AEM JOYEMPLOY
Afteeronight your aide for infant room 1 to 5:45 Monday through Friday. Experience with infants preferred apply at Children's Learning Center 205 N. Michigan, E.O.E.
Supervisor now - Manager later! Learn the business from the ground up and advance according to your performance. If you are an aggressive customer, you can learn that you need to intensify your pace, an opportunity to put these skills to work and develop as a leader is available. Relocata will help you benefit plus benefit apply at new: amj. 1819 W. 2xrd.
AMIGOS Supervisor/Assist Mgr
Clerk, KU Bookstore, Shipping/Receiving Dept., $4.25 per hour, 20-25 hours per week, Monday through Friday. Must work through December holiday break. Requires previous experience in bookkeeping or computer science key calculator. Majority of time will be spent on paper work, but could require some lifting up to 50 pound boxes on occasion. Apply at Kansas and University Office, ELE, Level 5, Kansas Union Building.
CNA's need to work with clients in their homes. Reliabil transport necessary. Call Saaron at 413-560-7988.
DOCUMENTATION INTEGRATION. Student Monthly.
Deadline: 11/11/93. Salary: $4850-$6500/month.
Duties include organizing, maintaining, and
managing the school's IT system.
in on-line help files, manuals and presentation
of user-education seminars and workshops.
Required qualifications: must be enrolled at KU,
clear and effective speaking skills, Good com-
mputer literacy, and a strong understanding
com microcomputer, mainframes and/or supercom-
pouses. Complete job description available.
To apply, submit a letter of application and a current
resume to Ann Rutl, Personnel Assistant, Compu-
sure Technologies, Lawrence, Kansas
68505. EOA EMployER
Cotton comic strip刊, off-bear, entrepreneur. Send 3 samples box #85, 119 Stuart Flint, Lawrence.
MAKE MONEY PLAYING NINTENDO VIDEO
GAMES ANYWHERE IN THE NATION IF YOU
ARE AVAILABLE VARIOUS DAYS AND HOURS
BETWEEN NOV. 20 AND DEC. 26, CALL
GRETCHEN HOMINY AT 1-800-229-5260 FOR
MORE INFORMATION.
Raise $500 in % days, Groups, Clubts, motivated individuals 1-800-775-3851, ext. 101
NEED MONEY?
Not time?
Earn $500-$2000 a month from your own residence
Form more info, call 1-800-942-9304 ext.
22033. Thencall
Joe at 1-800-867-5919.
Leave message.
RECEPTIONISTS (2): West campus book publisher seeks two students, one to work mornings and one to work afternoons, to answer phones, process incoming outgoing mail, handle walk-in sales, etc. must be able to work 4 h/day/sr, M-F. 8-42.5-74 hr./day based on experience. Come by 2501 East 9th Street, to complete application Deadline for applications is m.p. Friday. 11:30 AM. ANEO/AA employee
RESUME SERVICES Professional Business
Training Training
Free initial interview 832-410
http://www.resumework.com
Research assistant: Excellent writing skills; basic research and office skills; some public relations experience. English senior, grad, preferred. $6/hr. Contact Lori Witken 864-4520.
STUDENT HOURLY CUSTODIAL WORKER Two (2) students at Watkins Student Health Center 15-20 hrs. a week evening and some Saturdays. Star immediately and continue through the workday. Work schedules will vary according to hours the facility is open. Apply in person to Personnel Office, Watkins Health Center Monday through Friday between 4:00-5:00. Additional information
Stop to shop is looking for part time clerk must be able to work 2p.m. to 10p.m. shift, some weekends and holidays. If interested apply in person at 1010 N.3rd.
Mass. Street Dell or Buffalo Bob's a Smokebase,
the restaurant and weekend weekends. Previous food service and
supervisory experience mandatory. Start at $25 for
1 hour, up to $30 per hour, up to $45 per hour, 20-30 hours per week. Apply at Schumm Food Company, 719 Massachusetts, Monday through Friday, 9am-4pm. (Uptairs above
**STUDENT RECEPTIONISTS (2)** West camp book publisher seeks two students, one to work mornings and one to work afternoons, to answer phones, process incoming/outgoing mail, handle walk-in sales, etc. Must be able to work 4-5 hours a week for campus. Required experience. Come by 2601 W. St., (ph 844-154), to complete application. Deadline for applications is p. Friday, 11/5/93. An EEO/AO employer.
Anyone who donates their blood plasma 8 times between Oct. 30 and Dec. 17 is eligible to win a cash drawing.
Voleball Coach wanted- for women'SUVSA
Volleyball Coach wanted- Experience preferred
@ 611-958-7422
www.suvsa.org
EARN CASH
Earn $15 today
Earn $30 this week
$1000 CASH
GIVEAWAY!
"Help pay your tuition by entering our cash giveaway and help save a life today."
1st Prize: $450
2nd Prize: $150
3rd Price: $100
4th Prize: $100
5th Prize: $75
6th Price: $50
7th Prize: $25
8th Price: $25
9th Price: $25
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NABI
Now hire delivery drivers, all shifts. Must be jr.
was, old, w/o good driving record. App at Pizza
Hut, 1440 Iowa, Suite Q, 843-3000.
Office assistant needed 25 hrs/wk M-F 3-7 p.m.
Hours:
M-F 9-6
Sat. 10-3
Feminities and Sororites call
for more information about
fund-raising
Office assistance needed 25 hrs wk M/F 3-7 p.m. & Sat.
12:4, 14:30. Seed # 749-0130.
Part-time Supervisor Wanted
Buffalo Bob's Snackhouse
$
experience mandatory. Start at $35 per hour.
$35 per hour for a shift, $25 per hour
$35 per hour for 20-30 hours per week, mostly
weekends.
Co. at 179 Massachusetts, M-F, 9am-4pm.
(United States the blackhawk)
Buffalo Bob's smoketown Previous food service and supervisory
Freshman Director. Large established community preschool and child care program looking for acting director while present director is on学术 leave. Must have degree in education with early childhood hours and minimum one year as assistant director. Good personal, positive competence required. Job location is ongoing position is available now. Mail letters with a resume to 4211 W 13 St. Lawrence, KS 60940.
790-5750
816 W.23rd
Behind Laird
Noller Ford
NABI Biomedical
Center
$15 Today $30 This week
experience mandatory. Start at $2.50 per hour.
Future pay raises based on performance.
By donating your life saving blood plasm
FAST CASH
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
225 Professional Services
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
ATTORNEY
Traffic tickets, misdemeanors, landlord/ tenant, brant A. Broun, Conv. 748-5333.
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
Spherical Defense
Forces consult call
J
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
Birthright 463-821. Free pregnancy testing.
Undergoes abortion and contraceptive services. Dale L.
Clinton.
L. Clinton M.D. D-841-5716
Research Assistance - MS/MLS information specialist to assist with term papers, theses, dissertations, research projects. M-842-290
TUTORING SERVICE; 832-0625
Scribble World, LLC
TUTORING SERVICE; 852-692-403
Spec. in English. Will help with any paper.
I'll help you make an "A". Word process, too.
TRAFFIC.DUI'S
TRAPHIC-BURNS
Fake D&I & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The Law offices of
DONALDG.STROLE
Donald G. Strobe Sally G. Kelsey
16 E.13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
A Word Perfect word processing service. Laser printer. Near campus. 842-6955.
AA Word Processing: Any size, under 30 pp,
overview service: $1.25/page. Call Rath after
selection.
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your TYPING needs call
the WORD PROCESSING CO.
Makin' the Grade at 865-2855.
Beacon Publication Quality-word pro
Expert typing IBM Correcting Selectric
$1.50(double spaced page). Call Mrs. Mattila 841-121-
369
X
Fast, accurate word processing; term paper, dissertation, research paper; computer printing, Engineering and Law Research experience. Call Farm at 841-1977 anytime.
Pro-Type, fast, reliable, professional.
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
Beds, deks, and bookcases Everything But Ice. 906 Mass.
Clearance: All addt tools on sale $12.50
Video Too: 910 Hlackett, 841-7500, or Miraq
Video Too: 910 Hlackett, 841-7500
COMPUTERS: Looking for a high quality PC at low cost! C P Call S P OURCE 832-1136
Large inventory of classic old Playboy Magazines
1900's, 60's, 70's and 80'. Most in good condition.
Must be purchased in package. Call 843-0540
evenings and weekends.
DP 2500 weight lifting machine, leg curls, etc.
Great feature. DP Body - Tone 300 Rowing Machine. $250 for both. Call 843-0540 evenings and weekends.
FITNESS EQUIPMENT
Macintosh Quadra, new in box. Must sell. 1-800-240-
2441.
NEAT STUFF, NEW STUFF at Simple Goods:
solar flashlights/key chains; recycled inertube
purses/wallets. 753 Mass M-Sat-10 5-30 Thill t.
MS500 Cannondale M.Bike. 19k. $39 old $20 in
MS500
400s Real Estate
BM500 Cannondale MT:Bike. 19" 3 yrs old $300 Inge
large. 749-969.
405 For Rent
Great for energy for late-night studying, stamina, and fat loss.
of the new all-natural Herbal Energizer with Chromium Picolinate.
For more info, call 1-800-942-9344 ext. 20233.
Then call Joe at 1-800-687-5919.
Then call Joe at 1-800-687-5919.
1 roommate to share spaces, funn. 4 B 2HB on campus; on campus w/privating parking. Lrg. wl/rg. wl/housekeeping.
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
very nice! Available Spring sem. Interest? Call
us
Avail. Dec. 18th. Very large, new remodeled one
room. On bus route, water and cable paid,
890-483-8635
Available Jan. 1st, 3 Dbm unfurried apc
jaxci, nice firm, near bus route. Only
bus route.
For lease 4 bedroom, Sundnesse neap, near occupancy date negotiable, 970 + utilitie
AVIARC Facer; maroon; low mileage;
AVIARC Facer; in good condition. Call
832-014- leave a message.
Parked room for rent with shared kitchen and
unused room at KU- off-street parking.
No calls. Kit 811-5600.
1978 Bush Leasebrio-306 v8 PS, PB, AT, AC $800 821.
1日ley-D安
*93 Merc. Tracer & kmi, 5 spd, pw, pl, ac. $8857 749-
1060 John
Sub-lease affordable townhome Jan May bl-lev.
Sub-lease Rental, on bus route. Call Mi-
4800, Gravy Acre, on bus route.
Office/Storefront/Workspace near downtown
Ultility rates $15 per month. Uptime
Phone: 866-345-2789
Large room with nice view in newer home 3 mi.
large room with nice view in new home 3 mi.
200 Prefer female, non-smoker,
789-010
789-010
WANTED: Studio or one bedroom apartment to rent; any location. Call now and leave a message.
Sublease: 2 bdt apt. available Dec. to July. Call 843-711-9028; Birchwood Gardens.
WANTED: Studio or one bedroom apartment to
Sub-lease fully furnished 1dbm ap. All utilities
mo. available in January. Please call
835-491-2700.
1980 Honda Accord LX coupe, white, spiller,
spirit wagon, all power. Super condition.
For details, call (617) 254-3242.
360 Miscellaneous
Sculptured Nails $29 reg. $42. Reflections West
$232 Ridge Court. 81-942. Ask for Pam.
1 female needed to share 3 BR, 2 Bath Campus Place Apt. Smoker, reasonable rent; close to campus Call Campa Place Office 814-1699
1 female needed to share a bedroom house. Close
430 Roommate Wanted
How to schedule an ad:
1 I or F needed to 3 bedroom house. On bus run. Smoker or no. Artistic minded. Old West Lawrence. ASAP. Private room. Call 841-5088. 2 dbls available in 3. Bedroom 3 bath town
I female needed to 3 n bedroom room. Close
to campus available Nov. 1 or Dec. 1. $255 +
$100 deposit required.
- By phone: 864-4358
home, garage, cable, washer & dryer. Responsible,
nominal smokers only. 843-118-117 Leave message.
2 females needed to share a bdrm townhouse. $190
+ utilities Laura/Donna 865-371-
Female N/S to share very nice 3 krm. 2 baitf.
house w/hardwood floors in Old West Lawrence.
Responsible grad-student/froff, only. Avail Jan. 1.
spring semester. $825/mo + 1/4 tilt. Call 832-765-
867.
2NSP need NSF to share farm. 3bdm. townhouse. $300; no all included. ALL utl. & pd. cable. on bus route, near 23rd & fows, avail for spring sem. Call Gina 714-1997.
One female needed to sublease on campus Apt. **180**
$120 m/m + still. Kit Call: 862-1696
Male or female needed to share new 4 bedroom duplex in W. Lawrence starting Jan. 1. Washer/dryer, 2 car garage. Fully furnished (except for room). Call Cameron at 865-8269 for information onbedded for nursing semester BAp Apt on Bus Route $135/mo + /½ tilt. Call Kelly 799-6290.
ROOMMATE NEEDED. Close to campus
$14/mo & 1/4 unit. Jr. Sr. or Grad student pre-
ferred. Non smoker. 2 full baths. 841-6542
One female to two bedrooms apartment for
one adult, dogs like dogs, very close to an
embroidery. Call Lisa 749-5877.
Two 5thyr Sr's. seeking a roommate for 3 bdr. apt, beginning Dec 1. Call Carrie or Cath at 865-258-308.
Calculatine Rates:
Roommate wanted: Nov. 1st Female preferred *-
26+ years old, with two plus yrs of utility. Cap.
Kristi or Cathie 841-573-711
Stop by the Kasan office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or Visa.
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. Ada 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 will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled ads that were pre-paid by 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.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of aple 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.
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
118 business persons
139 announcements
138 entertainment
128 travel services
140 host & found
295 help wanted
223 professional services
295 travel services
385 for sale
348 arts sales
386 miscellaneous
Cost per line per day
1X 2X 3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30+X
1.25 1.65 1.95 .85 .75 .50
1.90 1.15 1.05 .70 .65 .45
1.85 1.05 .75 .65 .60 .40
1.75 .60 .75 .60 .60 .25
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379 want to buy
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1993 farWorks, Inc./Dist. by Universal Press Syndicate
11. 4 Jason
POLICE JUSTICE
"Well, sir, my client says he wasn't having any fun, and that you just kept chasing him and chasing him around this little bush—and that's when he decided to pop you one."
12
Thursday, November 4, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
new THE
HARBOUR LIGHTS
Now a full service bar after 57 years
of downtown tradition
1031 Massachusetts
Downtown
Rings Fixed Fast!
Kitz Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
AMERICAN BISTRO
AMERICAN BISTRO
701 MASS.
In the Eldridge Hotel
841-8349
Breakfast-Lunch-Dinner
We do Banquets tool
Jayhawk Bookstore
"Your Book Protestations!" At the top of Nathan Hill's
Hrs: 8-7 M-T. 8-9 a.m.-5 p.m., 12-4 Sat, 12-6 Sun,
+43-220-3130
Camera America
ONE HOUR PHOTO
We Process
E-6 Slide Film
In Only 3 Hours!!!
1610 West 23rd Street
841-7205
Moving?
Let
Lawrence Paper Company
Solve your moving hassles
Sturdy boxes for moving and storage. Boxes with handles for easier moving. Large quantities at discount prices. Small quantities walk-in's welcome
Call 843-8111
Ask for sales/service dept.
The Etc. Shop
Ray Ban
BOUTIQUE & LUXE
Sunglasses for DRIVING
Ask for sales/service dept.
There's no place like home...
There's no place like home...
There's no place like home.
...for weekends/holidays/
birthdays/weddings or just
mom's home cooking.
Call us for special USA fares.
Great international fares
are also available.
Council Travel
1634 Ortington Ave.
Everston, IL 60201
1-800-475-5070
America's oldest and largest
student travel organization
MUSIC4LESS
MUSIC 4 LESS
CASSETTES, COMPACT DISCS & ACCESSORIES
Lawrence Riverfront Plaza Factory Outlet 841-2662
4
4 LESS
Right Music
CONCRETE BLONDE
Mexican Moon
melting
Heat II Uo • Mexican Moon • Jonestown
MUTHA'S DAY OUT
MY SOUL IS WET
Fonturing: Locked
Green • Ugly
Music for the Right Price
At West...the Best of Boy George and Culture Club
19 HITS IN ALL:
includes Do You Really Want To Kurt Me •
Church of The Polson Mind • Karma Chamleon •
The Crying Game and the NEW HIT Everything I Own
On Sale
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Cocteau Twins
Four-Calendar Cafe
At Worst...the Best of Boy George and Culture Club
19 HITS IN ALL!
Includes Do You Really Want To Hurt Me •
Church of The Poison Mind • Karma Chamleoon •
The Crying Game and the NEW HIT Everything I Own
ASK ABOUT
OUR ONE YEAR TAPE GUARANTEE!!
Mellissa Lacey / KAN$AN
A University of Kansas School of Engineering student measures the distance between a high school student's egg vehicle and the stopping point. The school sponsored a contest yesterday that required participants to construct a vehicle that could carry an egg 7.5 meters without breaking it.
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
Kneeling on the floor and looking past raw-egg hood ornaments on vehicles they designed and constructed, high school students listened for a signal to start their engines.
The engines of the vehicles were
About 100 high school students competed yesterday in the seventh annual KU School of Engineering miniature vehicle competition, which tests the students' skills in physics and math.
The objective of the competition was to design a vehicle that could safelytransport an uncooked chicken egg 7.5 meters, across the Kansas Union Ballroom floor, in the least amount of time without running into a table.
powered by batteries, mouse traps and rubber bands.
Cars with simple designs performed as well as the complex models.
"It takes a lot of experimenting and trial and error to come up with one that works," said Joseph Fingenot, Manhattan high school sophomore.
"You try to get something that will go the distance in the least amount of time," he said. "But it doesn't hurt if it looks cool either."
Pingenot, who plans to become an engineering major, said that he helped his friends design and build some of their vehicles.
This year's competition, the Humpty Dumpty Handicap Vehicle Propulsion Design Competition, drew more entries than ever before, said Tom Mulinazzi, associate dean and professor of civil engineering.
"I think the title of the contest got their attention this year," he said. "If you have a cuties name it gets their interest."
The scholastic tournament and design competition began seven years ago to introduce engineering concepts to high school students, Mulinazi said.
"The competition teaches how to think and apply principles learned in math and physics to practical application," he said.
Leavenworth High School brought 48 students to the contest.
"Students enjoy the design competition," said John Pretz, Leavenworth physics teacher. "It's not as much the competition but the satisfaction of building. There's something primitive in our brains that teaches us to say 'build something.'"
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
is now accepting applications from students with previous Kansan experience for positions of Business Manager and Editor for the Spring 1994 semester.
Applications may be obtained at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall,
Applications may be obtained at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. Return the completed application and a current resumé to the Dean's office, 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall, by noon on the appropriate deadline indicated below.
Business Manager Schedule
Editor Schedule
*Friday, Nov. 12:
Application deadline, Interview sign-up
*Monday, Nov. 15:
Application deadline, Interview sign-up
*Monday, Nov.15:
Selection Interviews, 3:30 p.m.
- Tuesday, Nov. 16:
Selection interviews, 3:30 p.m.
Interviews will take place in the conference room, 120 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Applicants will be notified of the successful candidate after everyone has interviewed. Any information you wish to be considered in your interview may be attached to your application.
Real World experience
CEE
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
8
MEN SEEKING WOMEN
5" 6" Dark, handsome? laid back, old fashioned,
romantic, teddy bear type, smoker seeks short
attractive, open minded caring SW w/ mainstream
looks and a cosmic sense of life. Must enjoy com-
fortable bedding and living room, dining and
watching T.V., drinking and just partying once in a while. #7339
SWM 30 yrs. $15, 16 lbs. long brown hair, I love
Henry Rollin. Tom Waite, Social Distortion. I own
a dress, don't have job and probably drink to much.
Couldn't afford clothing wearing eco-fresh need not apply. #45226
M Male A Asian
F Female J Jewish
D Divorced G Christian
S Single G Gay
W White G Gay
B Black L Lesbian
H Hispanic N/S Non-Smoker
Common abbreviations
Are you an attractive woman who is sick of being treated poorly by your man? If so, I'm a handsome man who would like to cut in. Let me show you how a woman should be treated. #40238
To check out these ads call 1-900-285-4560 You will be charged $1.95 per minute
PLACE AN AD FREE! Call 864-4358
SWM 40, locks 39, 6'170 Smart, athletica-
cace race. Seeks SAF-SWF with similar inter-
faces. Canoeing, camping, nature, bicycling,
running, gardening for possible friendship or beyond.
3712
SWIM 9'8", Bikini, Blue eyes, brown hair. Good-looking, earthy type, looking for quirky girl who you love. We'll go with someone you're looking for someone to share fun times with, and you won't ever happen! Sat night, no sun!
SWM Graduate Student seeking athletic, sweet SWM for possible serious relationship. I am honest, kind, humorous, generous, and intelligent. I am 6'2" with an athletic build, brown hair, green eyes, blue eyes. I love to cook, eat food and good conversation. If you want to be treated as a special friend, I'm the one. #4316
Look into my crystal ball and see a *dark eye* Geminian in your future. He will have many Taurean qualities, be a definite air person. He is me; if you call I will respond #47133.
*Very attractive male, muscular build, who is like
to meet a woman his 29" or 40" who is slim and
he looks like a man.*
Very good-looking SWM wants to talk *full-fill* well, with the right SWF(s) please call if you're serious.
&&
WOMEN
SEEKING
MEN
SWF, 19, S6, with light brown hair. Seeking single white male who likes to party but also a serious skin tone. Enjoy romantic evenings and knows how to treat a girl right. #48375
SWF, 18, 5' S Brown hair & eyes looking for a SWM
18-25 who enjoys long walks talking for hours see-
ing any kind of movie and into classic rock and
alternative music. Must be honest hard working
and like to get crazy and have a lot of fun. Shy guys
can apply too. Hope you call. Call #46892.
WHO: Two outgoing, intelligent, hansom males
(age 20-25). WHAT: A fun evening dancing and
being crazy at our Christmas Formal. WHEN:
Tru. Dec. 9th (stop day). WHY: Because two outgo-
ing, intelligent, good looking females want to
save a blast w/ you. #454088
88
MEN SEEKING MEN
BIWM, 6', 178, Good looking, Health/Gym, Quality, Travel, Beach, Fly, Bi-Coastal, Seeks College Guy, 18-26 only, Sharr Great Looks, Intelligent, Specialized, Masculine, Mature, Calls. 6a15
GWM Welcome guys to Kansas! It's hard to make new friends. Can't seem to do a good job, so give me a help hand! #44391
WOMEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
DWBWE, 25.5'7", long borg hair, lipstick, femme,
seeks friendship, hang out in bars, potential
relationship. I am feminist, talkative beautiful
woman, I am a compassionate person. I am
no virgin or nurses. I am 46+.
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1. Call or come into the Kansan at 119 Stauffer-Print Hall, 864-4358.
2. You'll place an ad in the Jaytak 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.
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS To place an ad (must be 18 yrs old)
3. After your ad runs in the Mon., Tues., & Thurs. editions of the Kansan, you call a free 800-number (every 3rd day from the day that you initially place your voice message), to listen to the messages people leave for you. Any other day, you may call the 900-number to retrieve your messages at a cost of $1.95 per minute. The average call is 3 mins in length.
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.
.
---
SPORTS: A loss to Kansas would sour No. 6 Nebraska's Orange Bowl hopes. Page 11.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL. 103, NO. 55
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5.1993
(USPS 650-640)
A PROFILE OF
BOB DAVIS
NEWS:864-4810
BOB DAVIS
JAYHANK NETWARNER
While some might recognize his face, thousands recognize his voice. Bob Davis gets in touch on the action down on the football field through binoculars. This year marks the 10th year Davis has worked for the Jayhawk Network.
The Man Behind the Mic
MARINO CUP
10
Davis and ball spotter Norm Stopple, who has been with the Jayhawk Network for more than 25 years, team up for another football game.
When they aren't playing them together, Davis and his 12-year-old Steven love to watch sports on television.
A steady rain starts to fall on Memorial Stadium at 10:30 on a Saturday morning. The weather has slowed the usual activity before the Kansas football game, despite the excitement of homecoming against Iowa State.
Nevertheless, preparations continue through the precipitation as two men across from the stadium, clad in crimson and blue, continue to piece together a grill for a tailgate party.
It is college game day in Lawrence.
GAME DAY
For one sports fan, preparations started in the Jayhawk Network radio booth at 9:30 a.m. In three hours, Bob Davis, also known as "the Voice of the Jayhawks," will project to all of Kansas. Supermarket managers, bar owners and Kansas fans throughout the state faithfully tune him in every Saturday.
"I don't use that, but some people do," Davis says of his nickname, "I think anybody that does ball games for a team gets that tag eventually, but I don't have a business card that has on that it."
Story by Gerry Fey
He might as well.
He walks down to the Kansas locker room at 11 a.m., people he has associated with throughout the years greet him. He does a pregame show with Coach Glen Mason, but there is still enough time to tell a couple of jokes with friends and coworkers.
Making friends is one of his perks.
After his interview with Mason, it is time to head back to the booth. Waiting for him is his partner, Max Falkenstein. This year marks the 10th season the two have worked together, and the relationship couldn't be better, on and off the field.
"I'really like getting to know the athletes and the coaches," Davis said. "I've got a lot of good friends now, whose games I did in college or high school. That's kind of neat."
"It's great," Falkenstien said. "He's just a fun guy to be around. We get along great together. He is a caring and a considerate person."
Photographs by Melissa Lacey
As the 1 p.m. kickoff time approaches, the radio booth becomes cramped, as a familiar crew fills the four chairs facing the field. From left to right are retired salesman Norm Stopel, the spotter; Davis, doing play-by-play; Topea attorney John Wachter, the statistician; and Falkenstien, the color commentator.
Stoppel's job includes telling Davis what players made a tackle and who is on the field for the next play. Stoppel points to the player's number on a sheet of paper, and Davis immediately says his name on the air.
Stoppel, a former high school football coach, began working with Davis in 1985 but has spotted in the press box since 1956.
"I've reached the point where I almost anticipate what he's going to say," Stoppel said. "He's easy to work with."
One thing that is not easy for Stoppel and Davis is controlling their cheers. Cheering of any kind is discouraged in the press box.
Early in the Iowa State game, a penalty is called against Kansas. Davis shows his disgust by
See MICROPHONE, Page 9.
Six degrees on chopping block
Committee proposes saving one program, restructuring others
By Christoph Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
The Academic Policies and Procedures Committee recommended the elimination of six degrees yesterday to the University Senate Executive Committee.
The academic committee made the recommendations based on interviews and information from open debate hearings, said Bob Anderson, associate professor of French and Italian and head of the committee.
The hearings allowed students and faculty to speak for or against the proposed degree eliminations.
The University originally had recommended during program review that seven degrees be eliminated.
The committee recommended that the B.A. in comparative literature be eliminated and instead be offered as a concentration in English.
Anderson said that although the program had been first rate, its lack of finances and dependence on other faculty had been the deciding factors in the committee's decision.
The committee recommended that the B.A. in Italian be renamed the B.A. in French and Italian. Anderson said that students would still be able to get a French or an Italian degree but that both degrees would be under the
What was decided
The Academic Policies and Procedures Committee recommended the elimination of:
B.A. in comparative literature;
B.A. in Italian;
B.A. and B.G.S. in computer science;
B.A. and M.S. in atmospheric sol-
The committee recommended that the University keep the B.A. in humanities, University Council will review the committee's recommendations and make its own decisions.
Then, Council will send its recommendations to David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs. Chancellor Gene Budig will make the final decision about the eliminations.
KANSAN
same name.
To maintain the high academic quality of the Italian program at the University, the committee recommended that Jan Kozma, the only full-time professor in the program and the head of the department of French and Italian, devote her time to teaching and research. The committee also recommended hiring another faculty member to teach in the department.
Because of the merger of the department of computer science into the School of Engineering, the committee recommended the elimination of the B.A. and B.G.S. in computer science.
The committee said that the B.S. in computer science sufficiently served
See DEGREES, Page 3.
By Shan Schwartz Kansan staff writer
Parking Board plan limits campus access
A committee of the KU Parking Board has developed a recommendation that would further restrict campus traffic next year.
The recommendation by the Parking Board rules committee would lengthen the amount of time Jayhawk Boulevard is closed next year to 7 a.m. until 6 p.m.
The committee met three times in the last two weeks and will make its proposal to the full Parking Board at its Nov. 16 meeting.
This year, Jayhawk Boulevard is closed to most traffic from 7:45 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. Monday through Friday.
The traffic on campus is limited to buses, service vehicles and faculty and staff holding blue campus entry permits. Those permits are sold to faculty and staff members whose age plus years of service is more than 60 and whose offices are located near Jayhawk Boulevard. The blue permits cost $80 and campus entry passes cost an additional $40.
However, parking and traffic problems still have existed since that change. Hultine said.
Until 1991, the restricted hours on campus were 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Those hours were changed due to concerns for students getting out of class at 4:20 p.m. and faculty parking in the morning, said Donna Hultine, assistant director of parking.
"The morning concern is the ability of faculty and staff to find parking places at 8 in the morning." Hultine said. "If a student has a 7:30 class, they can get on campus and risk getting out at 8:20 before they're ticketed.
The proposed evening restriction was developed because of heavy traffic after campus opens at 4:45.
"Apparently at 8:30, the faculty and staff don't have a problem, but if they want a parking spot at 8:00, they can't always find one."
"The traffic on campus after it opens is horrendous," said Susanne Shaw, associate professor of journalism and head of the rules committee. "The streets just can't handle that much traffic."
The automobiles are dangerous to pedestrians, bicyclists and bus traffic, which is also heavy at that time of day. Shaw said.
Along with the extended hours, the rules committee will propose increasing the blue campus entry pass price to $45 and creating a new $10 campus entry pass for those who drop off and pick up campus employees before 8 a.m. and after 5 p.m.
The money from both those passes would pay for parking staff to work in the booths during the extended hours. Shaw said.
Hultine said the parking department was planning to conduct a traffic count to see how much traffic went through campus from 4:45 to 6 p.m. to examine the need for the extension.
INSIDE
Chalk it up
Page 3.
Student groups scramble to get their final production presentations together for the Rock Chalk Revue committee.
1234567890
Ideas sought for vacant cafeterias
Housing officials asking students about new uses
The opening of the Ekdahl Dining Commons in Lewis Hall in August shut down three dining halls on Daisy Hill.
By Brian James
Kansan staff writer
Housing officials and student representatives agree that the extra space in Templin, Hashinger and McCollum halls is valuable. But what remains unclear is how the large, vacant dining halls will be used.
Karen Shindler, St. Louis sophomore, is the head of an Association of University Residence Halls committee that is taking suggestions from KU students and faculty about what to do with the space.
"We're just in the brainstorming stage and nothing has been seriously discussed yet," Shindler said. "We're taking all those suggestions that might be useful or even those
that may be a little off the wall."
Students have some interesting ideas, she said.
"We've had suggestions for putting in a gym, a bowling alley, swimming pool and I think at one point someone suggested bumper cars," she said.
More reasonable ideas, like a large laundromat or study room, have been proposed also. Shindler said.
AURH and the student housing department will be posting signs next week encouraging students to submit ideas, Shindler said.
Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said he would not speculate on future use of the space until he had seen the committee's proposals.
He said the final decision would be based on a consensus agreement between AURH representatives and housing officials.
"Whatever goes in those three dining halls has to benefit the broader segment of the student population residing in the
halls." Stoner said.
Stoner said installing another computer lab was a reasonable idea, but funding the lab would be difficult.
After its dining hall closed in 1991, Ellsworth Hall installed a $120,000-computer lab in its place in January 1993.
"The Ellsworth lab has been popular, and if another lab is something students think they need, we would consider it," he said.
He said other residents had suggested ideas to him.
But Mike Owens, Shawnee sophomore and president of Templin Hall, said some residents were frustrated that the student housing department had not decided on a plan before the new dining hall opened.
Stoner said he hoped that the student housing department would have "some concrete plans in the works" by the beginning of next semester.
"One guy told me that an ice-skating rink would fit nicely in McColm, "Owens said.
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
Jim Hughes, Chesterfield, Mo., freshman,
sends a message using electronic mail in
Ellsworth Hall's computer lab, which was
once the dining hall. The lab has 30 computers and is open to residents of the hall.
2
Friday, November 5, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
London School of Music
Red Lyon Tavern
944 Mass.
832-8228
Waiters
-on-
Wheels
99¢ Six Pack
Coke, Diet Coke,
Sprite or Mr. Pibb
With any food delivery order.
One per customer.
Expires 11/23/93
842-2662
THE NEW 7-LAYER BURRITO
(IT'S ACTUALLY 8 LAYERS IF YOU COUNT THE TORTILLA.)
99¢
It's a huge burrito filled with rice, beans,
cheese, lettuce, tomato, sour cream,
and guacamole. And, for a limited time,
all you have to do to get one is...
Cross The Border.
TACO BELL.
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
842-1212 1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center
"NO COUPON"
SPECIALS EVERYDAY
ON CAMPUS
KU Fencing Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445.
Chi Alpha Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge
Federalist Society will meet at 12:30 p.m. today in 201 Green Hall. For more information, call John Dejong at 843-6579.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel.
Astronomy Associates of Lawrence will gather to stargate at 9 p.m. Sunday on top of Lindley Hall. For more information, call Jennifer Clinton at 865-0569.
KU Baha'i Club will sponsor a lecture on women's issues at 7:30 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mehdi Khoshahegheh at 841-7581.
- Women's Student Union will meet at 5 p.m. today at Alcove D in the Kansas Union.
TWO-FERS
2-PIZZAS
2-TOPPINGS
2-COKES
$900
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a supper and lecture at 6 p.m. Sunday at the Center, 1631 Crescent Row. For more information, call 843-0357.
Union. For more information, call Stephen Swanson at 843-7198.
A story with the headline "Bachelor party sparks inward look at traditions" on Page 7 of yesterday's Kansan misidentified a Kansas City, Mo., business. Parkway 600 is a restaurant on the Country Club Plaza.
A graphic with the headline "Foreign Track and Field Athletes" on Page 9 of Wednesday's
PRIMETIME
3-PIZZAS
1-TOPPING
4-COKES
A campus brief with the headline "Forum to focus on legal rights" on Page 3 of yesterday's Kansan contained an incorrect name. Lawrence police Officer Bryan Martin was a member of the forum.
PARTY "10"
10-PIZZAS
1-TOPPING
$11^{50}
Kansan contained a missspelled name. Afton Moxey is a Nassau, Bahamas, sophomore.
CORRECTIONS
AMERICAN BISTRO
11 AM-2 AM
11 AM-3 AM
11 AM-1 AM
CARRY OUT
1-PIZZA
1-TOPPING
1-COKE
$350
914 Massachusetts 841-6966
DELIVERY HOURS
$30^00
The Athlete's Foot.
701 MASS.
In the Eldridge Hotel
841-8349
Breakfast-Lunch-Dinner
We do Banquets too!
MON-THURS
FRI-SAT
SUN
WEATHER
Omaha: 30°/13°
LAWRENCE: 36°/20°
Kansas City: 35°/18°
St. Louis: 47°/24°
Wichita: 45°/19°
Tulsa: 47°/28°
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 65°/48°
Chicago: 43°/26°
Houston: 74°/43°
Miami: 85°/70°
Minneapolis: 27°/14°
Phoenix: 79°/53°
Salt Lake City: 45°/26°
Seattle: 52°/37°
TODAY
Partly cloudy with NW winds at 15-25 mph.
High: 36°
Low: 20°
Tomorrow
NW winds at 10-20 mph.
High: 39°
Low: 26°
Sunday
NW winds at 5-10 mph.
High: 43°
Low: 27°
WEATHER
Omaha: 30'/13'
LAWRENCE: 36'/20'
Kansas City: 35'/18'
St. Louis: 47'/24'
Wichita: 45'/19'
Tulsa: 47'/25'
Tomorrow Sunday
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts
Lled Center Presents
A Swarthout Chamber Music Series Event
Sunny
"Listening to the King's Singers is just about the most fun you can have in public." The Seattle Times
Co-sponsored by the W. T. Kemper Foundation, Commerce Bank Trustee
4
THE HISTORY OF TECHNOLOGY
K STUDENTS
SENATE
From the Beatles and the Beach Boys to madrigals and operas, the King's Singers can do it all And, KU students can have it all at the Lied Center at half price!
Sunny
King's Singers
SINATARA
3:30 p.m. Sunday. November 14, 1993 Lied Center
ON THE RECORD
A student's car was damaged in the 2300 block of Ridge Court on Monday, Lawrence police reported. Damage was estimated at $80.
A student's wallet and its contents, valued together at $81, were taken from the fifth floor of the Art and Design building Tuesday, KU police reported.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60405, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 6044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
BLUEBIRD DONER
A student's bicycle and lock, valued together at $1,210, were taken from the northeast bicycle rack at Robinson Center on Wednesday, KU police reported.
THE LEAF WALTER BY ALEXANDER
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KA 68045.
A student's car was damaged in the 500 block of Wisconsin Street on Wednesday, Lawrence police reported. Damage was estimated at $400.
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS); Murphy Hall Box Office (864-3982); or any ticketmaster outlet (816) 913-3300 or (913) 24545; all seats reserved; $18 and $16, Haskell and K-17 students & $8 and senior students ($16 and $18) UU student tickets available through the SUA office, Kansas University; phone orders can be made using VISA or MasterCard.
814 Massachusetts
Dine in or Carry-Out
843-BIRD
Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission, KU Student Senate Activity Fee, Friends of the Lied Series and the Kansas University Endowment Association. Special thanks to this year's Vary Media Group for providing audio and video, Payless SheCourse, and the W.T. Kemper Foundation, Commerce Bank Trustee.
SUNFLOWER CHECK US OUT
WE'RE EXPERTS ON WINTER WARMTH
A.
BICYCLES
CONVERSE
WINTER FUN.
BICYCLES
BICYCLE CLOTHING
BINOCULARS
BLANKETS
BARN JACKETS
DOWN BOOTIES
CAMPING EQUIPMENT
CAR RACKS
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 5, 1993
3
Police forces team up for game day
By Scott J. Anderson Kansan staff writer
Amid the sea of KU crimson and Cornhusker red at tomorrow's Kansas-Nebraska football game, people are likely to find the men in blue.
Lawrence Police officers, Douglas County Sheriff's deputies and Kansas Highway Patrol troopers will be in the stands to assist KU police with game security.
KU Police have jurisdiction on the Campus, and Lawrence police have jurisdiction in the city. In the following highlighted areas, KU and Lawrence police share jurisdiction.
Shared jurisdiction
70
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KU
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Game-day security for football and basketball is one example of mutual aid between Douglas County law enforcement agencies, Lt. Vic Strand of KU police said. A state law allows any law enforcement agency to request assistance from any other agen-
When one agency requests assistance from another, it shares its jurisdictional power with that outside agency. Strnad said.
Strad said KU police officers also served on the Capital Area Major Case Squad and the Douglas County Fire Investigation Squid.
KU officers are involved in some mutual-aid agreements with agencies outside Douglas County as well, Strnad said.
Patrolling the lines
"Last year, Riley County police came down here for the NCAA," he said. "And for the past four years we have gone to Aggieville to assist their officers (with the Kansas-Kansas State football game)."
But home football games are not the only time KU police work with other law enforcement officers. KU officers share jurisdiction in the area around the campus with the Lawrence police department.
Source: Lt. Vic Strnad, KU Police
For example, A KU officer recently helped a Lawrence officer catch a prisoner who did not return from a work release program. Nickell said KU police also were called to assist with large crowds, train wrecks and other unusual circumstances.
"On a day-to-day basis, we try to assist each other as much as possible," said Sgt. Rick Nickell of Lawrence police. "It provides great assistance to both of us."
"In those situations where a large incident has occurred, we call KU to assist with emergency calls and other things when we don't have enough cars to
resnond " he said
Stradq said some students were confused about where to report incidents that occur along the dividing line between the two jurisdictions. One of those areas is West Campus Road, the street that separates several fraternities and sororites from Carruth-O'Leary Hall, where KU police are head-quartered.
For nonemergency cases, Lawrence police respond to the greek houses.
"West Campus Road is the dividing line," Stradl said. "The east side is ours, and the west side is theirs. By law we can have jurisdiction there, but it's just an agreement we've worked out."
Stradl said one reason Lawrence police responded to incidents at the Greek houses was because the houses pay property taxes to the city.
Nickell and Strnad agreed that the shared jurisdiction agreement helped each department do its job better.
Nina Karpovich
Jennifer Fortney, Wichita sophomore and member of Gamma Phi Beta sorority, assembles the sorority's notebooks for Rock Chalk Revue. The notebook, due a 5 p.m. day, contains the lyrics, scores and soundtrack of the musical the sorority is putting together with Sigma Nu fraternity.
Rock Chalk entrants cram for notebook deadline
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
For 14 groups entering Rock Chalk Revue, a notebook will decide if their show goes on.
Groups from greek houses, residence halls and scholarship halls have until 5 p.m. today to turn in notebooks that describe their group's proposed performance in the Revue. Only five of the 14 groups will be selected.
The Rock Chalk Revue is an annual charity event that generates thousands of dollars and community service hours for the United Way.
Most groups' notebooks, she said, consisted of a script, lyrics, pictures of the set, character sketches, choreography descriptions and a tape of the music.
"They've been working on these for a long time, and I'm sure they'll want everything perfect," she said. "They may be a little nervous — this has been their baby for the last two weeks."
Julie Thies, executive director of Rock Chalk Revue, said many of the groups would work up to the last minute on their notebooks.
Thies said 12 judges, many of whom are KU alumni, would examine the notebooks in the next two weeks.
On Nov. 20 and 21, the judges will interview directors from each group and discuss their show with them, said Erich Starrett, Cleveland senior and assistant director of the Revue.
"The five shows that get in are really high quality shows," Starrett said. With the show being moved to the Lied Center, the acts will be even better, he said.
The final decision will be made on Nov. 22, he said.
Carrie Neiner, Chesterfield, Mo., senior, is one of the directors of Gamma Phi Beta's and Sigma Nu's show.
She said about 20 people from her sorority and the fraternity had been working on the two groups' notebooks for several weeks.
"Lately, it's kind of been a 24-hours-a-day thing," she said.
Rock Chalk Revue will run Feb. 24.
Neiner said she was anxious — but not nervous.
"It's my senior year. We've been doing this every year and it's all coming to a climax now," she said.
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Collier said that Clinton had replaced improving the economy with other issues, including homosexuals in the military, health care and pre-existing foreignpolicyissues.
"I think the only true success he's had so far was his budget, and that was only by one vote of the vice president," Holloway said.
Because of his inexperience with the executive branch, Clinton became overwhelmed by his responsibilities. Holloway said.
Russell Holloway, Burlington sophomore and vice president of the KU College Republicans, said that Clinton's election to office had not been a vote for Clinton but a vote against George Bush.
The presidential election last November signaled the arrival of President Bill Clinton and the Democratic Party's capture of the White House for the first time since 1976.
"It's hard to deny that Clinton is a very good campaigner," Holloway said. "At the same time, it doesn't mean he's going to be an effective leader."
"The new administration didn't have much experience in foreign policy in regard to Somalia or Bosnia," Collier said. "Clinton had a lot of learning to do."
Although the Democrats hold the White House, Holloway said, results from recent gubernatorial and mayoral elections demonstrate the renewed strength of the Republican party.
And KU organizations and faculty say that Clinton has made some progress — but not enough.
"Gridlock is easier to talk about than to get rid of," Collier said. "Congress hasn't run away and gone crazy passing bills like the American people thought they would."
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"Overall, I think he's done a remarkable job for the tasks that have been handed to him," Shindler said. "Clinton is willing to compromise. He is willing to bring a solution to the table that will please all people."
In the 12 months after Clinton's victory, the congressional gridlock that Clinton expected to end has hampered government change, said Ken Collier, associate professor of political science and government.
"We now have Republicans elected mayor in New York and Los Angeles," Holloway said.
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
Collier said that the administration had wanted to focus on domestic concerns.
Public finds chief inching to goals
ONE YEAR OF CLINTON
Though Clinton had difficulties explaining his proposals, Shindler said, he handled himself well in domestic issues while dealing with conflicts in Somalia, Bosnia and Haiti.
Shauna Shindler, Boulder, Colo., junior and president of KU Young Democrats, said that Clinton had shown leadership in starting a national service program, which would allow college students to perform community service in exchange for a portion of tuition. But in other areas, Shindler said, Clinton has not met expectations.
"A lot of people who voted for Clinton had never voted before and expected a lot out of him," Shindler said. "But because there was so much call for change, people are impatient for that change to happen."
Continued from Page 1.
Because of the similarity of the B.A. and B.S. in atmospheric science, the committee recommended the elimination of the B.A. degree.
DEGREES: Panel suggests eliminating six programs
the requirements of computer science majors who intended to have careers in computers.
The M.S. in atmospheric science was recommended for elimination because the program lacked high quality faculty and research projects, the committee said.
Bob Friauf, professor of physics and astronomy and head of University Council, said the elimination of the M.S. degree would hurt the University.
"There's little incentive for new faculty to come and build a research program," he said.
The only degree the committee recommended to keep was the B.A. in humanities.
Anderson said, "The humanities program is one of the prizes of the University in many ways. It's not a major expense."
The committee said the program should be strengthened with an
increased budget and a meeting room for faculty.
Besides recommending the degree eliminations, the academic committee also presented to SenEx two recommendations about how degrees should be selected for elimination.
The committee said that Council should include the entire KU community when considering the addition or elimination of degrees.
"Ifwe are an outstanding University, then ultimately doing away with some of these small programs is not wise," Anderson said.
The committee also said that the Board of Regents should re-examine its rules that require three faculty members for undergraduate degree programs and six faculty members for graduate programs. The committee said these rules were hard to maintain for smaller degree programs.
If the eliminations are approved by Chancellor Gene Budig, each program will be phased out within three years. During that time, new students would not be accepted into the program, but enrolled students would be able to complete degree requirements.
McCollum fire forces residents to evacuate
A trash chute fire in McColum Hall last night forced residents from the warmth of their rooms.
age or injuries were reported.
Sgt. Gary Wieden of the KU police said the fire was started accidentally, probably by a cigarette. No dam-
The hall was evacuated at 9:25 p.m. Wieden said. Residents were allowed in 15 minutes later.
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OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Head Start program should be expanded
The Head Start program needs to be expanded to include more and younger children if its goals of better preschool preparation are to be met for the nation's atrisk children. Today, it serves 721,000 of the nation's atrisk four-year-olds in programs across the nation, including the Head Start center in Lawrence.
Supporters of the program say that the best way to break the cycle of poverty is through education and that one of the most successful and cost-effective ways to improve education is to start the learning process at a young age, even before the start of kindergarten. While the Head Start program cannot substitute for the involvement, caring, and stimulation needed from parents for proper development of the child, it can provide a valuable aid for children whose families are unwilling or unable to provide the kind of preschool care children need.
Last week, a government task force said that Head Start's goals require that it be expanded to reach more and younger children. Only half the eligible children participate now because of lack of funding, and it is undeniable that the earlier a child's mind is stimulated, the better student the child will be in kindergarten and throughout school.
While the need for expansion is clear, it also is clear that mindless expansion and funding increases for social programs conflict with budgetary needs and domestic policy experience. The Head Start program has been a success, though, and a thoughtful expansion would eventually reduce the need for other social programs that might reach children with too little help too late. The Clinton Administration should work with leaders from both parties in formulating a comprehensive plan for the expansion of Head Start.
CHRIS REEDY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Red Cross relieves victims of disasters
When disaster strikes, America counts on the Red Cross to help the hurt and lost get on with their lives. In the past few years, nature has dealt one deadly blow after another in America. Fires, floods, hurricanes and other such disasters leave thousands of people hurt or without resources each year. Recently, Red Cross volunteers have provided invaluable assistance to the victims of the fires in California.
The Red Cross is a non-profit organization devoted to giving its time to people in need. The design of the organization is to help those who cannot help themselves as a result of events beyond their control. Types of relief include clothing, food, and medical care.
Nationwide, the Red Cross has thousands of volunteers who are ready at a moment's notice to help where calamity strikes. In the last few years, the most notable disasters have included Hurricane Andrew and the Great Flood of '93. For example, the money that was raised for the flood alone was in excess of $21.5 million.
Today there are the victims of the tragic series of fires that have swept across southern California. Now more than ever people are depending on the Red Cross to help them cope.
The Red Cross is the country's largest volunteer organization to help disaster relief efforts. Its quick and precise response to disaster has earned it credit as an organization to be praised. The Red Cross is a beneficial organization that deserves our recognition and support.
CARSON ELROD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
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JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE Managing editors
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
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Assistant to the editor ..J.R. Claiborne
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Editorial ..Terrifyn McCormick
Campus ..Ben Grove
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Graphics ..John Paul Fogel
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Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the name of the person whose name is in the letter, with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
The Kanan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
HOOD UDK '93
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PACKWOOD
DIARIES
NIXON
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
A little sacrifice now will prevent loss in the future
The budget deficit is like a cancer that threatens to overwhelm the patient.
When the government borrows hundreds of billions of dollars, it takes money that could be used for private investment.
This investment could go into new factories, laboratories, roads and bridges, schools and future technologies that create jobs, increase productivity, raise wages and improve the standard of living.
The biggest waste in the federal budget is interest on the federal debt
Under the Clinton budget plan narrowly approved this year, that interest is projected at $278 billion in the year 2000.
It will purchase no health care, weapons, flood relief or space stations.
The Concord Coalition, a bipartisan grass-roots organization chaired by former senators Paul Tsongas, D-Mass, and Warren Rudman, R-N.H., issued in September "The Zero Deficit Plan: A Plan for Eliminating the Federal Budget Deficit by the Year 2000."
To cut $251 billion a year by the year 2000, the plan proposes a gradual phase-out of portions of Social Security, Medicare and other entitlement programs for people with incomes of more than $40,000.
This would save $68 billion.
Reductions in 50 domestic spending programs would save another $29 billion, and defense spending cuts above current plans would save $7 billion more.
Revenue would be increased by phasing in a 50 cent-per-gallon increase in gasoline taxes and big increases in "in" taxes.
Another proposal, from the bipartisan Strengthening of America
Commission, chaired by Sens. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., and Pete Domenici, R-N.M., suggests a combination of domestic and military spending cuts and a new kind of income tax that would tax income used for consumption but exempt income that flowed into personal savings.
The lesson from these ideas is that the deficit is not going to go away just by "re-inventing government" and eliminating expenses such as $600 toilet seats in military aircraft.
It will take real short-term sacrifices to do the job.
But the longer we delay, the more tragic the consequences and the more painful those sacrifices will be.
The Sheboygan Press Sheboygan, Wis.
Cloning research must stay despite concerns
Such an uproar erupted after a report about the cloning of a few human embryo cells that one would have thought infants were being manufactured on an assembly line.
The Vatican branded the relatively modest experiment as "perverse."
Reacting to the controversy, the scientists who conducted the experiment assured a worried public that successful cloning is very "species-specife." That is, it works in some animals but does not seem to work in others.
Such Orwellian manipulation of human reproduction seems unlikely in the near future and might well be impossible.
Suspending related research entirely until a national policy is agreed upon—as has been suggested by some ethicists—would be an overreaction.
Shutting down valuable research
while the medical and academic communities engage in what promises to be a lengthy debate would not be smart.
Instead, institutions involved in that research must work on reaching consensus on what procedures are acceptable and which are not.
Florida Today
Clinton inconsistent by supporting gay ban
Melbourne, Fla.
By taking to the nation's highest court his case against gays and lesbians in the military, President Clinton has dragged his credibility as a leader of conviction that much lower.
The administration, battling a lower court ruling that the military ban on homosexuality is unconstitutional, successfully petitioned the Supreme Court to delay that ruling until the Justice Department can make a formal appeal.
While such aplea might be consistent with the administration's recent efforts to undo the work of a Los Angeles district judge, it doesn't square with the values ... Clinton espoused last fall when he talked boldly of abolishing the 50-year-old policy.
It is troubling to watch him gird to battle for it in the chambers of the Supreme Court. ... His position today is as inexcusable as it is inconsistent.
At its optimistic best, that position recalls the political waffling that characterized the first days of ... Clinton's presidency. At its sinister worst, it betrays the deception that has come to characterize much of American politics.
The Times-Picayune
New Orleans, La.
TISHA
HEYKA
Nicholas A.
COLUMNIST
Tolerance has a place in bathroom graffiti, too
I read an interesting thing on the bathroom wall the other day that pertained to tolerance. In a nutshell, it said everyone had a right to his or her own beliefs. I thought this was very refreshing, since bathroom walls usually are covered with comments berating others' opinions.
During the last few weeks, I have seen stalls splashed with comments about abortion, religion, government and sexual orientation. After the comments, hateful conversations on the stall usually followed among people with opposing views. The majority of the remarks were not about the subjects but about the people voicing the opinions. People who do this demonstrate their ignorance about the topics or about people in general. People are always going to disagree about certain issues. It's a fact of life, and it allows us to be individuals.
To respect people, you have to respect their right to choose their own opinions. I would prefer to know an individual rather than a copy of myself. Whether our opinions agree or clash doesn't matter as long as they're not stated in an offensive manner. In a generation in which "political correctness" is of concern, everyone is touchy about how people express themselves. Whether scribbled on a bathroom wall or spoken, opinions should be stated with sensitivity.
I am not saying people should fold on their beliefs, but that they should not associate a difference of opinion with hate. Sometimes hate and opinions can be confused when dealing with such sensitive topics as sexual orientation. Homosexuals often deal with prejudice and discrimination, which are forms of hate. Hate should not be seen as an opinion but as a character flaw.
Our right to free speech allows everyone the opportunity to express his or her own views. It gives us the chance to see both sides of an issue Through this expression we are allowed to form our own opinions How we choose to express those opinions is our decision. To do it constructively, in most cases, is to avoid alienating those who oppose us.
If I offended bathroom-wall debaters, I apologize. Some of the things I've read in stalls were intelligent, whether I agreed with them or not. Tolerance is the key to being sensitive to others' views and beliefs. So, if you are going to express an opinion, have something intelligent to say about the issue and not something hateful to say about the person.
Tiaha Heyka is a Leeward senior majoring in psychology and creative writing.
"But it's so unfair for those without insurance!"
Limbaugh is correct; government is bad
I and almost everyone I know are not bent on dividing the population into various groups and subgroups as you say. All we want is to live our lives and be responsible for our own actions. I should be able to live my life how I see fit, as long as I do not infringe upon the rights of others.
What exactly is this dangerous trend you are talking about? Is it this perceived selfishness of looking out for ourselves, or should it be the new administration's holier-than-thou attitude which feels only it can solve our nation's problems?
No, Mr. Kimmel, Rush is right, at least to a substantial degree.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
All you do throughout your column is arm-wave. I have no quarrel with wanting a decent job, good education or affordable health care. When did Limbaugh ever say any of these qualities of life were bad? It's the implementation that is unconscionable. My father owns a small business. The budget bill alone is going to make it much more difficult for him to expand and turn a profit, but now you want to force him to pay up to $4,000 per employee for a mandated health insurance plan, which may not even be the type of plan his employees want? Two people have left since the start of the year, and with Billary's tax and health care plans, he cannot afford to hire anyone new. Taxable revenues and wages have thus gone down. What happens if because of this health care bill he or others like him go out of business? People go out of work.
More government involvement in our lives restricts our personal freedoms. And now you want to allow the government to command 14 percent of the U.S.GNP?
No, what is unfair is that the government comes up to me, points a gun at my head and says that I will pay Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and subsidize health insurance with my hard-earned wages, all for people whom I have never met before, or I will go to jail.
Armen Kurdish
Wichita graduate student
Columnist is immature lacks understanding
Poor Anne Bailey, you are truly an fortunate writer. You simply lack the qualifications to write about the issues you choose to write about.
Perhaps in the future, when you have matured,
you can truly accept the challenge of dealing with
racial issues. For now, I suggest you keep your
ideas to yourself.
Why do you persist in writing about things you know nothing about? It seems you are trying to derive conclusions from a void, the void being your mind and the experiences it lacks. Maybe you should spend your time writing fairy tales rather than editorials. It seems you may already have a sizable source of fictitious ideas you can draw from.
I understand it may not be entirely your fault you are growing up not fully comprehending the things that are happening around you. Perhaps too often your ideas and perceptions of life are supplied for you from others. Maybe you should invest a little time trying to understand why you see the world as you do. Perhaps if you were willing to be more objective your perceptions of reality could become clearer.
Todd Kindred
Overland Park sophomore
Television not required for a person's survival
I agree with Anne Bailey's Oct. 28' editorial that television should not be censored — but there is one part that bothered me. There are, in fact, other alternatives for sheltering children from the "harsh realities of television" than locking them in the closet.
Ms. Bailey also puts forth the idea that we could teach kids the difference between right and wrong (what happens when all things wrong become fashionable, Anne?) although she dismisses the idea before it even has a chance to sound reasonable.
Television is not one of the basic needs for survival. Anyone who reads the newspaper regularly — even just the comics and the "Dear Abby" crap — is more up to date on the world and culture than an average TV addict. I can think of several instances where an interesting, even free-thinking individual was buried deep inside a four-hours-of-TV-a-day couch potato, which was only discovered after they pretty much quit watching the damned thing.
There is one more alternative, and it happens to be the simplest and the most effective: not owning a TV.
Television is not a requirement for citizenship in this country—yet.
That's right! With my own money, and my own mind, I can choose not to buy a TV!
It's great to be alive, isn't it?
Jess Truesdale
Las Vegas freshman
V
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Fridav. November 5.1993
5
Fewer African Americans enrolling out of high school
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Numbers are not always what they seem to be.
this fall's enrollment data showed an increase of 0.9 percent in the number of African-American undergraduate students at the University of Kansas.
But a count of the number of African-American freshmen showed a continuing trend: Since 1985, African-American freshman enrollment has decreased by 30 percent.
The numbers, from the Office of Institutional Research and Planning, show that while the actual number of African Americans at KU is increasing, fewer new African-American students are enrolling each year.
Transfer students partially contribute to the overall increase. However, the increasing number of students who spend more than four years to earn a degree make the total number of African Americans at KU appear to be climbing.
The numbers may be part of state and national trends. Gary Watson, research analyst for the Kansas Board of Education, said the dropping number might be caused by the decreasing number of African-Americans who graduate from high school. He said 1,533 African Americans graduated from Kansas high schools last year, a drop from 1,841 in 1989. Such a drop, he said, would almost certainly lead to a drop in the number of African
Americans in Kansas who attend college.
The decrease also may have something to do with KU, said Joe Van Zandt, director of the advising support center. He said that KU did not always present a hospitable atmosphere for African-American students. He also said athletic programs
which bring in a significant number of African-American students might be bringing in fewer athletes because of NCAA academic eligibility rules.
But Van Zandt said neither he nor many others in higher education knew the answer for sure.
"This is a question that every admissions official in the country is trying to answer," he said.
Van Zandt said KU needed to try more aggressive recruiting practices to bring in African-American students.
Terry Bell, president of the Black Student Union, said the discrepancy between the increasing number of African-American students and the decreasing number of African-American freshmen showed that students were staying longer. Rather than bringing in more students, he said, the University was keeping them longer.
In fact, some students stay at KU for six years or more, said Bell, Tampa, Fla., senior.
Wes Williams, dean of educational services, said the numbers might be misleading. He said some of the freshmen might be second-year freshmen
Going down
The number of African-American freshmen has decreased 30 percent since 1985.
Number of Freshmen
267
286
235
224
221
198
198
192
187
1985 1987 1989 1991 1993
Source: Office of Institutional Research and Planning
who did not have enough credit hours to become sophomores the year before. He said the number of true freshmen had risen slightly this year.
But Williams said the numbers did show a trend. He said high school did not prepare many African-American student for college-level work.
Van Zandt said the University was committed to solving the problem, but the obstacles were difficult to overcome.
Group aims to alleviate funding nightmare
By Carlos Tejad
Kansanstaffwriter
For international students, asking for money from Student Senate can be an intimidating experience.
"They feel like they're begging," said Nesli Isgoren, secretary-general of the International Council. "There are some who are very embarrassed about asking for money."
That discomfort is part of the larger problem of Senate funding for international groups, said Isgoren, Izmir, Turkey, sonhomore.
While group presidents feel uncomfortable asking for Senate money every year, senators see bill after bill from clubs that may all look alike to them.
"It's a big problem for the Senate," she said. "You see three or four clubs coming in every week asking for money."
In response, Igoren said the International Council was considering becoming the representative for international groups in the Senate. The Council, a four-year-old body that represents international students in University and legal matters, would accept all Senate funds for international groups. The money then would be divided by the members of the Council and the presidents of the international groups.
"We want to be under the Student Senate and to be the umbrella organization for the rest of the organizations," Isgoren said.
Rashed Haque, president of the Bangladesh Club, said he approved of the idea.
"It's hard for us to convince those people in the Senate," said Haque, Dhaka, Bangladesh, senior. "It's easier for us to discuss our problems with the council and then go to the Senate."
But Munish Malik, president of the KU Cultural India Club, said he had doubts. He said members of the council might be biased against a group and allot less money to it.
"I may not be as neutral as the Student Senate would be," said Malik, New Delhi, India, graduate student.
Last year, some senators suggested that all international clubs of Asian descent be grouped together. The idea was criticized and dropped, but this year some senators have expressed concern that the Senate might not have enough money to finance all the groups.
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would like to recognize the following professors for their contributions to the students of the University of Kansas
Mortar Board
Outstanding Educators 1993
Dr. Sally Frost-Mason
Biological Sciences
Dr. Helmut Hvelsbergen
Germanic Languages& Literature
Dr. James Rowland
Electrical Computer Engineering
Dr. David Smith
Sociology
Dr. J. Michael Young
Philosophy
Scholars...chosen for leadership...united to serve
MOTHER NATURE IS CALLING.
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Melissa P4:15* ; 7:10, 9:50
Nightmare Before Christmas P4:40* ; 7:00, 9:34
Flesh and Bone R P4:15* ; 7:00, 9:45
Fearless R P4:30* ; 7:10, 9:50
3 Promptive Showcase of Fishing Daisy
Sensitive Culinary Awareness Impaired State
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
Fri. Nov. 5 — Sun. Nov. 7
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
FRI. NOV. 5 — SUN. NOV. 7
SOMMERSBY
FRI. & SAT. 7:00PM
FRI. & SAT. 9:30PM
SUN. 2:00PM
STRANGE BREW
FRI. & SAT. MIDNIGHT
ALL SHOWS IN WOODRUFF AUD.
TICKETS $2.50. MIDNIGHTS $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MOVE CARD
CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE INFO.
Crown Cinema
© Visa U.S.A. Inc. 1993
BEFORE P.M. ADULTS $3.00
(LIMIT 15% RATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
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Demolition Man R¹
7.15, 8.39
Cool Runnings PG®
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The Joy Luck Club R⁺
8.90, 8.90
Rudy PG®
7.20, 8.40
CINEMA TWIN ALTIMAX
3110 IOWA 841 5191 $1.25
The Firm $^R$ 5:30,8:00
Sleepless in Seattle PG 5:15
7:30,9:30
Daily Showing Times
The University of Kansas
School of Fine Arts
Lied Center Presents
A Concert Series Event
Co-Sponsored by
Kief's Audio and Video
8:00 p.m.
Tuesday, November 9, 1993
Lied Center
San Francisco
Symphony
STUDENT
SENATE
acces on site at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS); Murphy Hall Box Office (864-3923); and any ticketmaster outlet (816) 933-0330 or (813) 324-4545; all access reserves; all tests provided; KU, Bakham K and K-12 students $12.50 and $10, senior college and other students $24 and $19; KU student tickets available through the SUA office, Kansas Union phone orders can be made using VISA or MasterCard. Tickets for All concert Series events are held exclusively for KU and Haskell students until 14 workdays before each concert. Tickets for all concerts may be purchased by calling the University Endowment Association. Special thanks to this year's Very Important Partners: Hallmark Cards, Inc., Kief's Audio and Video, Payhoe ShawSource and W.T. Wemper Foundation, Commerce Bank Trustees.
NEW LEO CENTER
1940-1959
KU Students! Hear the world-class San Francisco Symphony for half price in the new Lied Center!
---
6
Friday, November 5, 1993
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phone 841-7529
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Congratulations Alpha Gamma Delta New Initiates
Amy Huff
Alison Mann
Julianne Smultz
Alarcen began college right after graduation from high school in 1983. But when her financial aid ran out, she was forced to quit school.
She returned to the University of Texas-El Paso in 1989, balancing work and studies.
JenniferMurrill
AmyKramer
SaraBurgard
MichelleRemar
JenniferRay
HollyHanson
WendyJewell
StacieCole
EricaNeal
CarriePeterson
HeatherJoyce
KatieGlorvick
JulieWidener
HeatherCrabb
JenniferLawren
rate for the U.S. population as a whole was 79 percent in 1991.
Now, Alarcon is looking toward a spring 1995 graduation with a degree in social work and further studies toward a doctorate.
Andrea Krietmeyer
Alison Shoup
Christina Dankenbring
Jennifer Addington
Kacie Slabaugh
Monica Miller
Elizabeth Ochs
Erin Colwell
Whitney Lucas
Renee Henry
Kerstin Siley
Heather Gaeddert
Heather Wilson
Monica Bier
Carolyn Heinen
Michelle Cadmus
Kristen Kennedy
Katherine Lonergan
Melissa Hoffman
Kristi Erhart
Amy Vallow
Adrienne Tobias
Jennifer Young
The fact that it will take Alaron so long to get her degree is not that unusual. The ACE study found that more than half of all Hispanic students fail to earn a bachelor's degree in six years.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WASHINGTON — Like many Hispanic students, Magda Alarcon had to drop out of college when her money ran out. But at 28, she is back in school, one of a steadily growing number of Hispanics in U.S. colleges and universities.
Other minorities still outnumber them,report says
NATION/WORLD
Hispanic enrollment in higher education grew 84 percent in the past decade, from 472,000 in 1980 to
The Associated Press
Hispanic enrollment at colleges up
867,000 in 1991. But it's still the lowest among all minority groups, the American Council on Education said in a report being released yesterday.
In 1990,28 percent of Hispanics 25 and older had attended college,and 6 percent had received degrees, according to the report based on statistics from the Census Bureau, the Education Department and other agencies. Among non-Hispanic minorities,47 percent had some college education and 14 percent had graduated.
The report said the gains recorded by Hispanics were "disproportionately low compared to the sharp increases in their overall population growth." The 1990 Census counted nearly 22.4
million Hispanics, and they are expected to surpass African Americans as the largest minority group in the United States by 2020.
"Historically, Hispanic students have not had the kinds of opportunities more traditional college students have had in terms of their precollege preparation," said Diana Natalicio, president of the University of Texas-El Paso. "The challenges they face as working-class people often require that they discontinue their education if they do graduate from high school."
The report found that in 1991, Hispanics, at 51 percent, had the lowest level of high school completion among all races and ethnic groups. The overall high school graduation
The Associated Press
An expanded agreement between the two nations was released yesterday by the Clinton administration.
WASHINGTON — The United States plans to send 10 shuttle flights to the Russian space station Mir as the two countries work jointly to build an international space station.
United States, Russia plan joint space station
"This plan describes a new relationship between the U.S. and Russian space agencies which will advance their national space programs and benefit their respective national aerospace industries," the document stated.
Daniel Goldin, administrator of the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration, and Yuri N. Koptev, general director of the Russian Space Agency signed the document Monday.
Goldin went to Capitol Hill yesterday to explain the plan to Congress, which must approve any radical changes in U.S. space activities.
The joint activities will go far beyond anything done previously by the two countries. The shuttle will carry new solar arrays to replace the existing ones on Mir. Russia will add two laboratory modules outfitted with U.S. and Russian hardware to the space station.
In the second phase, planned for 1997, U.S. and Russian hardware will be put into space "to create a totally new, advanced orbital research facility."
capable of being serviced by visiting space crews.
Assembly flights to complete the space station will come in a third phase, from January 1998 through October 2001. The station will be built to last 10 years.
The European Space Agency, which represents 13 countries, and Japan have already spent about $2 billion each on the laboratory modules they plan to hang on the space station's truss.
The first station-building flight will put in orbit a Russian space tug that will provide steering and altitude control for the station. The Russians also will supply two Soyuz spacecrafts to be attached to the station as emergency return vehicles.
Jennifer Galbraith
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ATTN: STUDENTS REDEMPTION PERIOD
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NOVEMBER 1- NOVEMBER 10 (EXCEPT SATURDAY AND SUNDAY)
8:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
GAMES:
NOV.16 - MARATHON AAU
NOV.29 - AUSTRALIA NATIONALS
DEC. 1 - TEMPLE
Athletic Ticket Office East Lobby Allen Fieldhouse 8:00 a.m. 5:00 p.m.
*YOU MAY ONLY REDEEM ONE COUPON PER PERSON.
**YOU MUST HAVE A BLUE FALL 1993 FEE STICKER ON YOUR KUID TO RECEIVE YOUR TICKETS
TO RECEIVE YOUR TICKETS.
***WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR LOST OR STOLEN COUPONS.
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 5, 1993
7
19
THE NEWS in brief
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti Rightists call strike protest government holding of gasoline
Pro-military rightists demonstrated their clout yesterday on the eve of a meeting aimed at solving the political stand-off, calling a strike that brought the capital to a near-stand-still.
Most businesses were closed and traffic was reduced to a trickle.
Traffic had been light anyway because of a worsening gasoline shortage caused by a U.N. oil and arms embargo imposed Oct. 19 to pressure the military to allow the return of exiled President Jean-Bertard Aristide.
U. N. and Haitian officials said they would meet today, with or without the military, to search for a solution to the country's political standoff.
The two-day strike was called by the pro-military Front for the Advancement and Progress of Haiti, or FRAPH, to protest the government's refusal to order that gasoline stored on the island be released for distribution.
A Haitian civil court was to have ruled yesterday on a lawsuit by gasoline dealers against Shell, Texaco and Esso, Haiti's three gasoline distributors, to free the supplies. But the court, like other public buildings, was closed by the strike.
"It is a crying shame that we have to go along with a strike called by such a group as the FRAPH, but they are the only ones protesting the U.N. gasoline embargo," said Jean-Claude Roy, a conservative businessman and political commentator.
A similar strike was called last week by FRAPH and an independent drivers' union. In the past, the organization had used intimidation to force businesses to comply with strikes, so most stores and offices do not even try to open. No violent incidents were reported yesterday.
The army has not said whether it will take part in today's talks. U.N. special envoy Dante Caputo said Aristide and the president of Haiti's Senate had agreed to participate.
Yesterday, the head of the Chamber of Deputies, Antoine Joseph, said he would attend the talks only if all other parties, including the military, did so.
BONN, Germany Protests target Turkish properties
Kurdish militants unleashed an assault on Turkish property in dozens of European cities today, hurling firebombs and smashing windows and office equipment, police said.
The attacks against consulates, travel bureaus, airlines and banks in Germany, Switzerland, Austria and Britain
apparently were to protest the Turkish army's operations against Kurds in southeastern Turkey.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attacks, many of which occurred simultaneously at 4:30 a.m. CDT. Police said they found a leaflet protesting Turkish genocide at the site of a firebombing outside Bonn.
In the worst attack, at Wiesbaden, west of Frankfurt, one person died when a Turkish restaurant was firebombed, police said. Eight people were injured, one of them seriously, a spokesman said.
Many of the attacks hit installations in downtown areas. After assailants smashed windows at two banks and the Turkish Airlines office in Frankfurt, police with automatic rifles patrolled the central train station checking identification papers.
In Stuttgart, the capital of Baden-Wuerttemberg state, masked men ran through the downtown pedestrian zone, hurling firebombs into the Turkish consulate and the office of the Turkish Airlines.
The Kurds, the world's largest ethnic group without a state, live mostly in Turkey, Iran, Iraq and Syria. Many of the 400,000 Kurds living in Germany are Turkish citizens who say they fled their homeland to escape persecution.
Hundreds of people have died during a Turkish counterinsurgency operation in southeast Turkey against the Kurdish Workers' Party, a Marxist guerrilla group.
WASHINGTON
Study savs bad moods common
Feel depressed? Lonely? Restless? Bored? Upset? You're not alone.
Almost 40 million American adults frequently fall into such negative moods, government health researchers reported yesterday.
Those susceptible to foul moods were more likely to be smokers, and the moodiest men also tended to be heavy drinkers, said Charlotte A. Schoenborn and John Horm of the National Center for Health Statistics.
"These findings suggest that emotional well-being may play a role in cigarette smoking and heavy drinking," their study said.
They defined heavy drinking as three or more drinks a day for men and two, or more for women.
Some 43,782 adults were asked in an extensive 1991 health survey if they had felt such negative moods in the previous two weeks.
Overall, the survey indicated that 22.5 million women and 17 million men often experienced at least one of these negative moods during the two weeks before being interviewed.
More than eight million had frequent bouts of three or more of the bad feelings.
Because of the large size of the survey, its standard margin of error was just one to two percentage points.
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The University of Kansas
School of Fine Arts
Department of
Music and Dance
University Symphony Orchestra Brian Priestman, Conductor
3:30 p.m.
Sunday, November 7, 1993
Lied Center
Compiled from The Associated Press.
Overture to Don Giovanni Mozart
Presents the
Petite Suite Gounod
Holberg Suite Grieg
THE LIVE VENTURE OF CINEMAS
Symphony No. 6 Tchaikovsky
V
For general admission tickets, call the box office (Murphy) 913/864-3982. Lied: 913/864-ARTS);
public $6, students $3, senior citizens $5; VISA/
MasterCard accepted for phone orders.
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Friday, November 5, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
DON'S AUTO CENTER
"For All Your Repair Needs"
*Complete Auto Repair
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841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
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Lawrence, KS (books)
66044 841-nova (cafe)
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M-W 10-6 Th-Sat. 10-8 Sun. 12-5
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receive up to $50 - 75
for participating in a medical research study at IMTCI
To qualify you must:
• be 18 years of age or older and
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• Call IMTCI for more info: Mon-Fri from 8am-5pm
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IMTCI International Medical Technical Consultants,
Inc. 16300 College Boulevard - Lenexa, Kansas
receive upto $50-75
Do you have a sore throat or fever?
receive up to
$ 50 - 75
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To qualify you must:
• be 18 years of age or older and
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receive up to
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for participating in a medical research study at IMTCI
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School of Law has come far during its 100-year history
What a difference a century can make. From one room and 13 men in 1878 to Green Hall and a diverse enrollment of 527 in 1993, the KU School of Law has evolved.
By Kathleen Stolle Kansan staff writer
In celebration of its centennial, the School of Law is having a banquet and programs tonight and an open house and receptions tomorrow.
Although law has been taught at KU since 1878, the Board of Regents did not formally recognize the law school until 1893.
Robert Jerry, dean of the school since 1989, said the biggest change in the past two decades has been the growing emphasis on practical skills education. Rather than just analyzing laws, students apply their knowledge in simulation programs and study areas such as client relations and negotiations.
In the 1960s, two programs of practical application were founded. The Kansas Defender Project, established in 1965, allows law students to get practical experience and course credit while offering legal assistance to inmates of state and federal prisons. The Douglas County Legal Aid Society, Inc., founded in 1969, also engages students' legal knowledge while providing low-income individuals with a legal resource.
In turn, the volume of documents in the law library has grown at a much more rapid pace than in earlier years.
Another significant change since the days of James "Uncle Jimmy" Green, the first law dean, is the growing number of societal issues in law and, consequently, in the classroom. Students now study laws about health, gender, discrimination and intellectual property.
"It is a reflection that our society is more complex than it was 25 years ago," Jerry said.
Students have changed as well.
Paul Wilson, a KU professor of law from 1957 to 1981 and founder of the Defender Project, said students today seem more casual in their relationships with professors.
"They were somewhat more uptight when I was a student," he said. "I think maybe now students are less committed to tradition."
One tradition Wilson said he was sorry to see go was the carrying of canes by senior law students.
The practice died out soon after World War II, Wilson said.
“It’s kind of silly, but I think it’s kind of nice,” he said. Canees are not the only tradition lost to the school.
Before Green Hall was built in 1977, the school was located in Lippincott Hall, formerly called Green Hall. Wilson said the students, most all of whom were male, would gather on the front steps and whistle and call to female students as they passed.
"Their conduct would be quite unacceptable now," Wilson said.
Women have come a long way in terms of law school enrollment. Although women were in the school from the start, their numbers did not grow significantly until the 1960s, Wilson said.
Last year, the school experienced its highest female enrollment ever, with 233 women, compared with 315 men. This year, 44 percent of the school's students are female, the highest proportion in its history.
Another change in the school is the cost of tuition, up from the $25 in 1878 to today's $1,200 or $3,400 for nonessidents. Admission requirements evolved too, from nothing — not even a high school diploma — to a bachelor's degree, competitive grade point averages and scores on the Law School Admission Test.
Juicers gets license,plans to reopen
By Tracl Carl
Kansan staffwrite
Juicers, a non-alcoholic club with nude female dancers, will reopen Wednesday with a new business license.
Pat McAllister, the club's owner,
purchased Juicers from Jeff Wallace
on Sept. 3. Juicers was Lawrence's
first juice bar with nude dancing.
In August, the City Commission passed an ordinance that regulated zoning, building and licensing requirements for sexually oriented businesses within the city limits. McAllister had until Sept. 8 to meet the new requirements.
McAllister voluntarily closed the club Sept. 8 after Lawrence police issued McAllister a citation for not having a valid adult-entertainment license.
Eric Moore, manager of Juicers,
said he and McAlister remodeled the
club to meet licensing requirements. Improvements include building a drink counter, installing handrails in the bathrooms and improving the stage's height and distance from patrons so they could not touch or interact with the dancers.
The ordinance also prohibits sexually oriented clubs like Juicers from operating within 1,000 feet of a business that sells liquor. Wehner Retail Liquor, 923 N. Second St., is across the street from the club, but it did not affect Juicers because it was operating before the ordinance was passed.
Moore, who also worked for Wallace under his formal ownership, said the club was nicer than it was before. Wallace was not interested in owning the club for a long time, he said.
"He was just in it to pretty much make money real fast," he said.
The club, which serves juice, coffee,
cappuccino, bottled water, soda and non-alcoholic daiquirr, will be open
from 7 p.m. to 2 a.m. every night except Sunday.
Commissioner Doug Compton said he had mixed emotions about Juicers opening.
"I hope if they are allowed to open by the law, then they operate it by the law," he said.
He said the commission passed the ordinance to prevent more clubs similar to Juicers from opening.
Justin Walker, Olata junior, said Juicers was full almost every time he went there this summer.
There was not a barrier between the patrons and the dancers, he said, and dancers often made contact with customers.
Ben Berenson, Salina sophomore, said the club should be allowed to open since it met all the requirements, but he did not like the idea of nude dancing.
"It's degrading to both sexes," he said.
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molly mcgees grill & bar
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Monday Special Priced Burgers $1 Off Any Of Our Great Burgers!
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 5,1993
9.
A PROFILE OF BOB DAVIS
JAYHANK NETWORK
Oct. 24, 1992
Oklahoma at Kansas
A crowd of 43,500 sees the Jayhawks defeat the Sooners 27-10.
Bob Davis' favorite football moments
Dec. 25, 1992
The Alaho Bowl
Kansas defeats Brigham Young
23-20 on a 48-yard Dan
Eichlott field goal.
Nov. 23, 1991
Missouri at Kansas
Tony Sands rushes for 396 yards; setting an NCAA record for a single game. The Jayhawks won 53-29.
Oct.27,1984
Oklahoma at Kansas
One of the biggest upsets in Kansas football history. KU defeats the No. 2 Sooners 28-11.
Nov. 18, 1969
Kansas at Missouri
In an offensive shootout, Kansas defeats the Tigers' 46-44. The victory was the last game of a 4-7 season.
Dan Schauer/KANSAN
ALEXANDRIA BECKMAN
During the football season, Davis hosts weekly radio interviews with coach Glen Mason, live from Applebee's restaurant. 2520 Iowa St..
The Man Behind the MICROPHONE
Continued from Page 1.
throwing his arms above his head, but he says nothing on the air.
Davis can and does get excited during an important play, though. His voice gets louder, he grabs onto the table and sometimes even starts shaking. The listener can almost feel the energy shoot through the airwaves.
20
A typical Davis display comes with 13 minutes and 21 seconds in the game. Iowa State kicks off after closing the score to 21-14, and Kansas takes over on its own 23-yard line. On first down, Kansas junior quarterback Ashelih Preston hands the ball to freshman running back June Henley:
May Roy indeed it is
Bob: This is a big possession now.
Bob: Not too long ago KU was looking for just some insurance. Now they lead by only seven and better than 13 minutes to play.
Max: And it is really raining hard, and you've got to be careful with that football.
Bob: Toss play. Henley getting to the 25 ...
up to the 30. He breaks to the 40. He's at mid-field. He may go the distance! Down to
the 30 ... down to the 20, to the 10.
Touchdown!
Bob: Holy Smoke!
Max: Wowwee!
Max: Wowwee!
Bob: Man, when he got to that sideline that was all she wrote.
A little humor, description and a lot of enthusiasm. That is how Davis announces games.
Davis gets fans atingle when he calls a play.
Troy Gallagher, Topeka junior, said Davis always got him involved in the game.
PETER TAYLOR
Basketball
Davis takes a shot during an evening basketball match with his son. Davis' favorite time isn't calling a game — it's playing one with his son.
Davis gives Steven a high five after a basket in their backyard hoop. Steven works as a balloon for some of the home Jayhawk basketball games.
"I think he is good because Bob goes off whenever they make a big play," Gallagher said. "He's kind of biased but not that bad. It's fine with me."
The duo of Davis and Falkenstien is a good one, Gallagher said.
"We pretty much learned to work together and not talk over each other," Falkenstien said. "He leaves it open for me to add something after each play."
Kent Pavelka, known throughout Nebraska as the voice of the Cornhuskers, said Davis' style was similar to his. Pavelka does football and basketball play-by-play for the Nebraska Cornhuskers and sees Davis four times a year.
"Max is a little more mellow." Gallagher said. "He kind of offsets Bob."
Falkenstien said it was easy to work with Davis, and it was not something they work on.
"You can take a written transcript of one of our play-by-plays, and by themselves they are pretty accurate," Pavelka said. "But when you add the enthusiasm and voice inflection, it becomes pretty obvious that Bob is a Jayhawk announcer."
"I hope you don't misunderstand this, but
you can be a bit of a fan and a reporter," Davis said. "I think we kind of have the best of both worlds."
The best part for Davis is that it is his job to be a Jayhawk fan. Objectivity is not the most important thing. Atmosphere is.
But to capture the total atmosphere, one cannot be completely biased, Falkenstien said. In that way, Falkenstien likened Davis' style to his.
"I've always had the philosophy that you need to honor the opponent on a great play," Falkenstien said. "He doesn't go right down the middle, but he's fair about calling the game."
With two minutes and 30 seconds left in the game, Fallensten leaves for the locker room to talk with Coach Mason. The crowd is leaving, as the Marching Jayhawks and Davis wrap up a coming victory against Iowa State.
Davis isn't just the voice of the Jayhawks. He is also sports director for KMBZ radio in Kansas City, Mo.
Davis tells the listeners when the next broadcast will be, closes out the show and picks up his game notes. Chalk up another game for the voice of the Jayhawks.
DAVIS' HISTORY
Each game Davis calls is fun for him, and it always has been. And he never found it hard to adjust from covering high school games to college games.
Before joining the Jayhawk Network in 1884, he filled in for broadcasters on stations across the Midwest region. He started doing western Kansas high school football games in Hays. During that time, he also called college games for Fort Hays State. He has been a broadcaster for 26 years.
Davis was hired by the Jefferson City, Mo., company Learfield Communications, a large syndicator of television sporting events such as the Jayhawk Network. Davis then was approved by Monte Johnson, Kansas' athletic director at the time. Johnson said many commentators applied for the job.
"He was probably the best one, and he was available." Johnson said. "I wanted someone who had a good reputation in broadcast and already had a strong following. He was so well known in western Kansas."
His first Kansas football game working with the network and Falkenstien was against Wichita State in 1984. It was a lopsided Kansas victory, and that is all Davis remembers.
"I had done college football for enough years where it was not a new experience," Davis said. "The games are the same whether you're doing a small high school game. It's still a football game. Your approach to it is the same."
Davis is not only a play-by-play amouncer for Kansas football and basketball, he also is the sports director at KMBZ radio in Kansas City, Mo. He does the morning sports reports twice an hour starting at 5.
Even though the network is statewide, it didn't faze Davis when he started covering Kansas games.
"You don't even think about that," he said. "What's the difference between doing it on 30 stations or one station? It's the same."
Other jobs for Davis include being a host for talk shows with Mason and Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams. Davis said he thought the coaches enjoyed the shows.
But his job as the Jayhawks voice is something Davis has wanted to do since the eighth grade. He said covering basketball games and football games were not the same.
"Football is farther away, and the weather can be a factor," Davis said. "In basketball, you're closer to the play, and there is constant action. They both have their ingredients that make them fun to do. You don't get as cold at basketball games as you do at a late-season football game."
Like many Kansas students, Gallagher listens to Davis during basketball games even though many are televised.
"I watch basketball games on TV and turn down the volume," Gallagher said. "Announcers on TV suck."
"I remember my first basketball game here. I had a bad cold and could hardly talk," Davis said. "The field house, it's still one of the great places in the United States to watch a game."
Davis' first Kansas basketball game was in the Great Alaskan Shootout against Maryland.
He practiced play-by-play while watching a game as a child.
Growing up, he had a cousin in radio, and his dad had been a sportswriter. He lived in Independence, Mo., but his family moved to Manhattan, where they stayed for about two years. The summer before he started junior high. Davis' family moved to Topeka.
"I have trouble sitting down watching a game on TV and doing play-by-play," Davis said. "But I guess you'd think of that when you're a youngster."
"I had the sports interest, and I developed the interest in radio, too," Davis said. "I thought it seemed like a logical combination. It was kind of what I wanted to do."
Davis' interest in both grew as he went to college at Washburn. He majored in history and took speech classes because there wasn't a broadcast program at the time. In his first year after graduation, Davis followed his broadcast goal by covering games in Hays.
Bob Davis' favorite basketball seasons
---
1985-1986 (35-4)
Final Four, No. 2 in Associated Press final poll
1987-1988 (27-11)
National champions
1989-1990 [30-5]
Lost in 2nd round of NCAA tournament. No. 5 in final poll.
1990-1991 (27-8)
00 40 80
1992-1993 (29-7)
Final Four, No. 9
in final poll.
Lost in NCAA championship game. No.12 in final poll
ku
Dan Schauer/KANSAN
"I had an interest in it, but I had to do it on my own," Davis said. "Just because your dad did it doesn't mean that, A, you'll like it, or B, you'll be good at it. Not everybody does what their dad does."
That's what they say, but another Davis also wants to be a sports journalist.
DAVIS: FAMILY MAN
"He goes to all the games," Davis said. "He's got media guides and press releases that I give him in his room."
Davis' 12-year-old son, Steven, is primed and ready for a successful writing career.
Steven is almost as busy as his father. He takes piano lessons, and he is a member of his church choir. He plays sports, mostly basketball, baseball and golf.
Under street lights on Chisholm Drive father and son can be found throwing a Nerf football around on some nights. Davis will throw it, and the sixth grader will run under it for a catch.
As the football gets harder and harder to see, it is time to go inside. If Steven doesn't have homework, or even if he does, the two are downstairs watching TV. There are two recliners, one for dad and the other for his son.
"It's a good time for us to be together," Davis said. "The TV gets a lot of work on ESPN and Prime Sports, but if Mom gets in here it might be on AMC."
Homework is always something Steven must do, especially mathematics.
"Math is my favorite subject," Steven said. "I'm in seventh grade math. I think I like it, because I kind of have to work extra hard. I usually do my homework when I'm sitting watching TV."
Steven agreed with his dad, saying, "Yeah,
she likes to watch old movies."
Davis said his son learned to add and subtract before he attended kindergarten.
"As a baby, he sat on somebody's lap and actually watched the games," Davis said. "He kept score in the program when he was 5 years old."
Davis, second from left, becomes the Jayhawk's biggest fan on a Saturday afternoon.
He started keeping score during Jayhawk basketball games two years ago. However, sometimes his job as a Jayhawk ballboy interferes with this.
"People are saying, 'Are you going to follow in your dad's footsteps?' he said. "At first I didn't know, but I decided I wanted to write sports a couple years ago. Broadcast is my second choice."
The early decision to be a sportswriter came about two years ago, Steven said.
"The Christmas of '91 was when I got my first score book," Steven said. "I used up all the pages when we went to the Final Four."
Even though Davis is an announcer, his son's decision is all his own.
"He knows the negatives," Davis said. "Working late at night and waking up early in the morning. He has to make up his mind himself, but I think he has a chance to be a writer."
For Davis the decision came a bit later, but he has planned to have this job all his life. He is now the voice of the Jayhawks.
"I don't have any other marketable skills," he said. "It's what I've always wanted to do somewhere."
1
10
Friday, November 5, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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To check out an ad:
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Students prefer skits over school
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
Students Group says comedy no laughing matter
Eight KU students are spending almost $9,000 a year on an education — but their dream is to become comedians.
With majors varying from law to premed, the students organized an improvisational comedy group, Single White Males, this fall. They will debut at 7 tomorrow night at the Renegade Theater, 518 E. 8th St. Another performance will follow at 10 p.m.
Six of the aspiring young comedians impersonated, improvised and acted in Murphy Hall last night to polish their routine.
Matthew Reiss, Columbus, Ga, second-year law student, is considered the leader of the group. He graduated from Emory University in Atlanta with a degree in history but he said he
"I'm studying in the law school, but some of my friends would tell you that law is not my first priority," he said. "I want to do the theater, but I want to do theater on my own terms."
smelled money and came to Kansas to study law.
Reiss did some acting in Georgia, but when he came to the University last year he decided to get together a group of comedians. His efforts yielded the foursome "Waiters to Be," which performed last year in Lawrence.
"Walters to Be" is back on stage again this year, but through auditions they have added four more students to their act.
"We're all pretty much hams," he said. "We do some off-beat comedy, so it isn't all your usual stuff. We make fun of science, religion and politics, but we're no real fans of smut humor."
Michael Taylor, Coffeyville senior, is an experienced comedian who does magic and improvisation in Kansas City, Mo., clubdoms. His
major is English, but he said his dream was to become a stand-up comedian.
"People will come up to me and say 'What are you going to do (with your major)?' " he said. "Hey, I'm going to school for four years to be a clown and make people laugh."
They have been practicing improvisation since September when they organized their group. The comedy group started as eight men and three women, but Frank Delrosario, St. Louis senior, said the women came to one rehearsal and were never heard of again.
"We've always said that if we met 'Saturday Night Live' in a dark alley we'd kick their butts and have their wallets," Reiss said.
"The women just vanished. They must've got scared of us," he said; "We're eight white males not by choice but by design."
Forum questions relationship policy
The improvisational group does a variety of comedy, sketch skits and some juggling acts. But the group said their specialty was improvism.
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
Despite the uproar caused by the consensual relationships policy, only 11 people attended last night's open forum about it.
The meeting, in 303 Bailey Hall, was sponsored by the University Council policy task force to allow students and faculty members to express opinions and raise questions about the policy.
Bezaleel Benjamin, professor of architectural engineering and architecture and urban design, said the low attendance proved the students' and faculty members' apathetic view about the policy.
"You're trying to regulate falling in love," he said.
He said because of human nature,
Don Marquis, professor of philosophy, said there had not been enough discussion between administration officials, students and faculty before the plan was approved.
"If we're really serious about conflicts of interest, we'll ban them all," he said.
Marquis said the policy did not consider relationships where sex was not involved, such as professors who were friends with students.
Bob Friauf, professor of physics and astronomy and head of University Council, said that because professors were professionals, they had a certain amount of responsibility toward students.
The task force will use the information from the meeting to help in reviewing its eight goals.
Some of the task force's goals are:
whether the University should have a consensual relationships policy;
quate, and if not, what can be done to change it;
$\textcircled{1}$ whether the policy should be limited to a sexual or romantic relationship, or if the policy should be amended to include other conflicts of interest, such as professors teaching their children;
whether the existing policy is ade-
- whether the policy should be renamed "The conflictual relationships policy";
whether the policy should clearly explain what types of relationships are allowed and prohibited.
The task force has until Nov. 24 to present its recommendations to the University Senate Executive Committee.
Kim Wilcox, associate professor of speech, language and hearing and head of the task force, said that people who did not attend the meeting could submit a written statement to the task force within the next few weeks.
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SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 5,1993
14
Game 10
Kansas Jayhawks
(KU)
4-5-0
Head Coach: Glen Mason
Offense:
WR 83 Greg Ballard 6-3 195 Sr.
TE 1 Dwayne Chandler 6-2 235 Sr.
LT 54 Rod Jones 6-4 285 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 62 Chris Banks 6-2 270 So.
WR 7 Robert Reed 6-1 185 Jr.
QB 9 Asheki Preston 5-11 180 Jr.
TB 20 June Henley 5-11 190 Jr.
RB 32 Chris Powell 5-9 220 Jr.
Defense:
OLB 39 Don Davis 6-1 212 Jr.
RT 72 Chris Maumalanga 6-3 286 Sr.
LT 61 Mike Steele 5-11 180 Jr.
RE 90 Guy Howard 6-4 245 Sr.
OLB 46 Ronnie Ward 6-0 212 So.
ILB 35 Larry Thiel 5-3 223 Sr.
ILB 52 Steve Harvey 6-8 234 Jr.
CB 28 Tony Blevins 6-0 470 Sr.
CS 4 Marlin Blakeney 5-11 192 So.
FS 4 Clint Bowen 5-11 190 Sr.
CB 3 Gerald McCurbrows 5-11 188 Jr.
1 p.m., Saturday Memorial Stadium KLZR, KLWN
Nebraska Cornkuskers
(8-0-0)
Head Coach: Tom Osborne
Offense:
WR 2 Corey Dixon 5-8 160 Sr.
LT 77 Lance Llandberg 6-4 300 Sr.
LG 56 Rob Zatechka 6-5 300 Sr.
C 63 Aaron Graham 6-3 280 So.
RD 69 RG Elliott 6-0 275 Sr.
RT 72 Zach Wiegert 6-5 300 Jr.
TE 95 Gerald Armstrong 6-2 225 Sr.
WB 27 Abdul Muhammad 5-9 160 Jr.
QB 15 Tommy Frazier 6-9 200 So.
FB 40 Cory Schlesinger 6-0 225 Jr.
IB 44 Calvin Jones 5-11 215 Jr.
Defense:
OLB 84 Denta Jones 6-2 220 Jr.
DT 67 Kevin Ramaekers 6-4 270 Sr.
NT 99 Terry Connelly 6-5 275 Jr.
OLB 34 Trey Alberts 6-4 240 Sr.
SLB 24 Emile Beler 6-5 105 Sr.
MLB 48 Mike Anderson 6-2 230 Sr.
WLB 32 Ed Stewart 6-1 215 Jr.
OBV 14 Barron Miles 5-8 160 Sr.
DBV 3 Toby Wright 6-1 200 Sr.
PS 6 John Reece 6-0 190 Sr.
CB 8 Tyone Williams 6-0 185 So.
KU
Micah Laaker/KANSAN
Source: KANSAN Staff Reports
Nebraska guards against letdown
15 80
KinChin/KANSAN
Nebraska's sophomore quarterback Tommie Frazier tosses the football during a game against Colorado State. Frazier is expected to start against the Jayhawks tomorrow despite a shoulder injury.
Orange Bowl berth at stake for 'Huskers
Nebraska's goal for this season is to have the opportunity to play for the national championship in the Orange Bowl on New Year's night. But a loss in any of the final three regular season games could ruin the No. 6 Cornhuskers national championship dreams.
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
'Husker players remember an occurrence last year in which their national championship dreams were ruined.
Nebraska was 7-1 and had a No. 5 ranking as they prepared to play Iowa State. The 'Huskers left Ames 19-10 losers, and that memory remains with 'Husker players as they prepare to play Kansas tomorrow.
"There are signs posted in the locker room that say 'Remember Iowa State.' Nebraska senior linebacker Trev Alberts said. "The coaches have done a great job of keeping us focused this week."
Nebraska coach Tom Osborne said it was imperative for his team to keep their focus this week at Kansas and in the final two games at home against Iowa State and Oklahoma.
"Every team we play will certainly have a lot to gain by beating Nebraska," Osborne said. "Their upside gain is great and their downside risk is not so great. We have to be able to play at a top level for all three games."
If Nebraska wins its last three games, they will go to the Orange Bowl and probably play the winner of next week's game between No. 1 Florida State and No. 2 Notre Dame for the national championship.
A Kansas upset of Nebraska would end a lot of frustration for the Jayhawks, and the 'Huskers' hopes for a
national championship. Kansas has not defeated Nebraska in 24 years.
Senior defensive tackle Chris Maumalanga would like to end his three years of frustration against the Huskers tomorrow.
Osborne said he would expect the Jayhawks to attack the 'Husker defense with freshman tailback June
"A win would make up for a lot of bad things that have happened this season," Maumalanga said. "I know we are a better team than our record says we are."
"Their tailback is an excellent player, actually they have two that are interchangeable," Osborne said. "I'm sure that they'll attempt to run the ball right at us and keep the ball from our offense."
Henley and sophomore tailback L.T.
Levine.
Still, Osborne said he did not foresee a letdown by his team against the Jayhawks.
"The good thing about our football team is that they are focused," he said. "They tend to play well together and they do want to win."
Women's swim team puts dual-meet record on line
(20)
Holly McQueen / KANSAN
Swimmers ready for Colorado State
Freshman Rebecca Andrew practices the butterfly stroke in preparation for the women's swim meet at 5 p.m. today. Kansas will compete against Colorado State at Robinson Natatorium.
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
Two days. Two meets. That is the challenge facing the Kansas women's swimming and diving team.
The team will compete against Colorado State at 5 p.m. today at Robinson Natatorium in its only home meet of the fall season for either the men's or women's teams. The women's team will join the men's for a dual meet tomorrow against Missouri.
The Rams were 11-2 last year and finished second in the Western Athletic Conference. Colorado State won its annual Early Bird Invitational in Fort Collins, Colo., Oct. 31, defeating Washington State by 335 points in the eight-tteam meet. The team won 16 of 20 events at the invitational.
Junior Amy Van Dyken won the 100-yard freestyle, 100-yard butterfly and the 50-yard freestyle. Her time in the 50-yard freestyle of 23.08 seconds qualified her for the NCAA championships in March.
Sophomore Kristin Elliott won the 50-yard freestyle and set pool
and meet records in both the 100- and 200-meter backstroke.
Kansas coach Gary Kempf said he planned to match junior Kristen Carlson and freshman Katie Chapeau against Ellott. He said that junior Ronda Lusty and freshman J.J. Bontrager would be matched up against Van Dyken.
The women's team will be putting a 22 dual-meet winning streak on the line this weekend. It has not lost a dual meet since 1991 when it lost at home to Arkansas.
Carlson said she thought this team had the potential to continue its streak.
Tomorrow, both the men's and women's teams will travel to Columbia, Mo., to open the conference season against Missouri.
The Tigers look to rebuild a team that had only 26 athletes last year. Second-year coach Brian Hoffar will have a team composed of 20 freshmen out of 37 athletes.
"This year we were looking to build up the numbers more than anything." Hoffar said.
The Tigers men's and women's teams both have 1-0 records after defeating the University of Cincinnati last weekend in St. Louis.
Junior Marc Bontrager said he thought that this year's Big Eight race would come down to Kansas and Nebraska. He said teams such as Missouri would be looking to catch up to Kansas this year.
SPORTS BRIEF
Toronto shoots, scores NBA franchise; Vancouver still in running
The Associated Press
nesota over a two-year period in the late 1880s.
NEW YORK — The NBA yesterday welcomed Toronto as an expansion team for $125 million and delayed a decision on awarding a franchise to Vancouver, Canada.
Completing two days of meetings, the Board of Governors unantimously approved the NBA Expansion Committee's Sept. 30 recommendation that a Toronto group led by John Bitove Jr. be accepted as owners of the league's 28th team in the 1995-96 season. The franchise fee of $125 million is nearly four times the $32.5 million it cost expansion teams in Miami, Orlando, Fla, Charlotte, N.C., and Min-
The board postponed for up to two months a decision on whether to award a franchise to the Vancouver group led by Arthur Griffiths, but Expansion Committee chairman Jerry Colangelo termed the city's chance as excellent. Vancouver also would enter the NBA in 1995.
The NBA said the Toronto and Vancouver teams would get the sixth and seventh picks in the first round of the 1965 draft, and if Toronto comes in alone, it would get the sixth pick.
An expansion draft will be conducted for the new teams, with each existing club losing one player after being allowed to protect eight players.
Kansas in tight race for tournament
By Gerrv Fev
Kansan sportswrite
It's crunch time for the Kansas volleyball team.
VOLLEYBALL
The Jayhawks have only four matches left in the season, and each match will count toward a berth in the Big Eight postseason tournament Nov. 26-27.
Kansas is fourth in the conference, 4-4 and 15-9 overall, but Iowa State is a close fifth with a 3-5 conference record. Only four teams advance to the tournament in Omaha. Neb.
Colorado, 8-1 and 19-5 overall, is Kansas' next opponent tomorrow in Boulder, Colo. The Buffalooes defeated the Jayhawks in three games Oct. 22 at Allen Field House.
Kansas sophomore setter Lesli Steinert said that playing in Boulder always was tough but that Kansas could pull out a victory against what was arguably the best team in the Big Eight.
"The altitude makes a big difference," Steinert said. "This year they
also have a new court and we don't know what that's like. Colorado's crowd is always obnoxious. I know we can do it. We just need to play on emotions."
Kansas coach Frankie Albitz said the Jayhawks had improved since their last meeting with Colorado.
"We've corrected a lot of errors that we made at that time," Albitz said.
"My team said, 'Oh, it's a one-man block,' and just hit it hard," Albizt said. "We need to hit the angles and not just use power."
The single-blocker defense used by the Buffaloes seemed to give Kansas trouble in the first meeting, Albiz said.
Sophomore rightside player Jenny Larson agreed that spiking at angles was the best way to defeat a single-blocker defense.
"They follow you wherever you go," Larson said. "One blocker follows your middle blocker and
leaves single blockers on the out sides."
Steinert said good passing was another key if Kansas was to defeat Colorado.
"Each match we've been getting better," she said. "I think we need to pass consistently, which we've been doing."
The Jayhawks passed better in the second game of their last match against Colorado. It showed in the scoring as Kansas came back in game three despite the 15-13 loss.
"You're going to need to have most of the things going your way to beat Colorado, Albizt said. "They are a pretty steady team."
Kansas doesn't have to win this weekend's match, but it cannot afford to lose in three straight games, Steinert said.
The Big Eight uses a system that divides games won by games played to determining postseason participants. That formula would be used if Kansas and fifth-place Iowa State tie at the end of the regular season.
TEMPLE OF GODS
This image is a monochromatic relief sculpture depicting the Holy Temple of Gods. It features intricate details of architectural elements such as domes, columns, and arches, along with decorative motifs like stars and spirals. The temple is surrounded by a series of trees and buildings, creating a serene and spiritual atmosphere. The use of bold black lines contrasts with the white background, emphasizing the temple's grandeur and the surrounding nature.
Always There:
American Presence in American Quilts
Sunday, November 7 ■ 2:00–5:00 p.m.
Spencer Museum of Art ■ The University of Kansas
Tours of the exhibition at 2:30, 3:00, 3:30, and 4:00.
Music by the Inspirational Gospel Voices and Lynda Canaday.
Food and fun for the whole family!
Everyone is invited to be a guest of the Friends of the Art Museum!
Support for Always There at the Spencer Museum comes from Hallmark Cards, Inc.; Payless ShoeSource; the Kansas Arts Commission, a state agency; and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency. The exhibition was produced by the Kentucky Quilt Project, Louisiana, Kentucky, Quebec Benberry, curator.
SPENCER MUSEUM OF ART
The University of Kansas
Carolyn Mazboom. The Family Quilt from *Solid Like a Rock* series, 1889, cotton, fabric paint, pieced. Collection of the artist.
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(Across from Dillon's on 6th) * excluding key purchases
LOW-RIDER
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
CAFE
TRY US AGAIN!
WALK-RIVER
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
CAFE
943 Massachusetts 842-1414
Lawrence's Unique & Authentic
Mexican Restaurant
• Dinner & Lunch Specials Everyday
• 2 for 1 Margaritas on
Fridays
LIVE MUSIC!
November 6
Double Seconds
& Grupo Huayra
XII
Edmondson-Berger
Liquor
Home Game Special!
Show us your KUID on home
game days and get
10% off
any purchase!*
Beak 'em, Hawks!
600 Lawrence Ave.
(Across from Dillon's on 6th) * excluding keg purchases
》
12
Friday, November 5, 1993
BENCHWARMERS
THE WAKE TONIGHT!
2 FOR 1 WELLS!
NEED CASH
If your car has even slight hail damage, HAILMASTERS can repair it AND give you up to $1000 CASH back!
LIE AWAKE
SATURDAY
NOV.6
2 FOR 1 WELLS!
***
Satisfaction
Guaranteed
***
Written
Warranty
FREE RENTAL CAR
NATURAL WAY
Natural Fiber Clothing & Body Care
820-822 Mass. St., Lawrence, Kansas 66044
(913) 841-0100
Call or come by!
HAILMASTERS
PAINTLERS MAR DAMAGE REPAIR
939 IOWA
COFFEE COFFEE
Call or come by!
HAIL MASTERS
PANTLESS HAIL DAMAGE REPAIR
939 IOWA
843-1800
HAIL
DAMAGE
REPAIR
843-1800
HAIL
DAMAGE
REPAIR
Auto Loans 5.9% Apr Fixed Rate
100% Financing
Take advantage of low rates at KU Credit Union. Don't miss your opportunity for 100% financing of a new auto at the low fixed rate of 5.9% for 36 or 48 months and 60 month financing at the fixed rate of 6.75%.
KU
CREDIT UNION
An Affiliate of 66 Federal Credit Union
Learn by Doing
At Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism, you learn the media business hands-on. Editorial students report alongside big-city journalists. Magazine students produce a magazine and broadcast students a weekly newcast. Integrated marketing communications students do internships and campaigns. And when you're in the classroom, you learn from faculty with professional experience as well as academic credentials.
Ask for more information about our graduate programs:
O Reporting and Writing
O Magazine Publishing
O Broadcast Journalism
O Newspaper Management
Integrated Marketing Communications
Medill
Medill School of Journalism
Northwestern University
Evanston, Illinois 60208-2101
708/491-5228
A Medill representative will be at University of Kansas November 12,1993
Our previous correspondence regarding CCN/EPIQual may have caused some confusion regarding insurance coverage for services offered at Watkins Health Center and its Pharmacy. Our Insurance plan was designed with the intent that Watkins Health Center would be the main or primary site for health coverage for covered students. Under this plan the use of Watkins Health Center and its Pharmacy will result in the lowest out-of-pocket expenses for enrolled students.
The listing of CCN/EPIQual participants and the explanation of Express Scripts In our recent mailing is intended to give you information about the lowest cost alternatives when the use of Watkins Health Center is not possible.
A detailed explanation of this coverage can be found on page 12 of the University of Kansas Student Health Plan brochure or you can call us directly at 1-800-521-2623 to make specific inquiries.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
accepting applications from students with previous Kansan experience for positions of Business Manager and Editor for the Spring 1994 semester.
Applications may be obtained at 119 Summit Print Hall. 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. Return the completed application and a current resume to the Dean's office, 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall, by noon on the appropriate deadline indicated below.
Applications may be obtained at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall,
Editor Schedule
Business Manager Schedule
- Friday, Nov. 12:
Application deadline, Interview sign-up
*Monday, Nov.15:
Application deadline, Interview sign-up
*Monday, Nov.15:
Selection Interviews, 3:30 p.m.
*Tuesday, Nov. 16:
Selection interviews, 3:30 p.m.
Interviews will take place in the conference room, 120 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Applicants will be notified of the successful candidate after everyone has interviewed. Any information you wish to be considered in your interview may be attached to your application.
Real World experience
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WESTERN CAPITAL MUSEUM
Writers pick Oklahoma State to lead Big Eight basketball
Defending champ Kansas runner-up
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
The Cowboys received 46 of a possible 60 first-place votes and 455 total votes in the annual conference preseason polls.
Big Eight Conference sportswriters say Oklahoma State should run away with the men's basketball conference title this season.
ing Kansas senior guard Steve Woodberry.
Kansas, three-time defending conference champion, finished a distant second, collecting seven first-place votes and 401 votes overall. Missouri placed third with two first-place votes.
Last season, only the preseason predictions of Kansas, first place, and Nebraska, fifth place, were correct. Oklahoma State junior center Bryant Reeves, last year's conference player of the year, was a unanimous favorite to earn the honor again, claiming 51 of the 59 votes. Three players tied for second place, includ-
Woodberry and Reeves also made the first-team all-conference squad. Nebraska forward Eric Piatkowski, Colorado guard Donnie Boyce and Oklahoma forward Jeff Webster rounded out the list.
Kansas senior forward Richard Scott was a second-team all-conference selection, and freshman point guard Jacque Vaughn was named the preseason newcomer of the year.
In other Kansas basketball news:
Kansas freshman Nick Proud, who spent Sunday night in the hospital after being bumped with an elbow near his spleen in Saturday's practice, has been released by doctors for practice. Proud is taking part in light workouts, but it is uncertain when he will be at full strength.
Former Kansas guard Adonis Jordan and forward Mark Randall have been released from their NBA teams. Jordan was released by the Seattle Super Sonics on Tuesday, and Randall was cut by the Miami Heat on Saturday
Former Kansas guard Rex Wal
Preseason Poll
Big Eight sportswriters recently picked their preseason favorites. First-place votes are in parentheses.
Team Points
Oklahoma State (46) 455
Kansas (7) **401**
Missouri(2) 332
Nebraska(2) 282
Oklahoma(1) 240
Iowa State(1) 196
Kansas State 180
Colorado(1) 76
First-Team All-Big Eight
C Bryant Reeves, Oklahoma State
G Steve Woodberry, Kansas
G Eric Plattowski, Nebraska
G Donnie Boyce, Colorado
F Jeff Webster, Oklahoma
Source: Kansan staff reports KANSAN
ters, who signed a multi-million dollar contract last month with the New Jersey Nets, will start the NBA season today playing second-string point guard behind former Georgia Tech standout Kenny Anderson. Walters, in seven preseason games, averaged five points, made all nine free-throw attempts and dished out 11 assists.
Team tournament ends fall season
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas men's tennis team wraps up its fall season this weekend in its only team tournament until spring.
MEN'S TENNIS
The team will compete in the Regional Team Playoffs at Drake in Des Moines, Iowa.
A tennis match always pits one player against another, or two against two during a doubles match. But the tournament will follow the same format as spring tournaments — points will be awarded to the team and not to the individual.
Kansas is seeded No. 1 for the regional eight-team tournament. The winner of the tournament qualifies for the National Team Playoffs Feb. 23-27. Only 20 teams in the nation compete in the national playoffs.
Sophomore Reid Slattery advanced to the National Indoor Championships last weekend as an individual performer. That tournament is Feb. 3-6.
The other regional teams competing are Wichita State, Oldahoma, Nebraska, Colorado, Iowa State, Southwest Missouri State, Tulsa and Drake.
Tennis coach Michael Center said that Kansas could be ranked in the top 25 depending on how it performs at Drake.
Sophomore J.P. Vissepo, who holds an 8-3 record, the second-best on the team, said that the whole team was looking forward to the tournament.
"We are very solid all around," he said. "Our practices are going real well and everyone is real positive."
Visspeo advanced to the qualifying round of the Intercollegiate Tennis Association All-American tournament in Texas. He said that the pressure from that tournament made him too tense to play well at the individual tournament in Wichita. But he said he was relaxed for this weekend's tournament.
Sophomore Michael Isroff, 4-3, said he preferred to play in team tournaments.
He said that if the team won the regional tournament, it would be in position to play higher caliber teams. However, winning or losing will not affect how hard the team works during its off season, he said.
Individuals participating at Drake will be Slattery, Visepso, Isroff and freshmen Tim Radogna and Trent Tucker. The doubles positions have not been finalized yet.
---
The Tradition Continues...
CAFE JAYHAWK CAFE
Brewers
Come Join Us at the All New Hawk.
Reopening, Under New Management Tonight (Nov.5th) at 7:00pm.
THE HAWK
Lawrence, KS
Since 1919
1340 Ohio
(913)843-9273
3pm-2am Mon.-Sun.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Fridav. November 5, 1993
13
HARBOUR LIGHTS
a full service harbour after 67 years of downtown tradition
1803 Massachusetts Downtown
BLUE BIRD
DINER
814 Massachusetts,
7 a.m. 10 p.m. Mon, Sat.
8 a.m. 2 p.m. Sun.
Dine in or Carry Out
843-BIRD
BUY SELL TRADE CD'S • TAPES LP's 7 days/week
Interviewing?
Come view our 10 minute video: "Job Interview: Maximize your impression through appearance."
YOU ARE A PROTECTOR
710 Mass.
Classified Directory
100s
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
由小200s
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
Classified Policy
2025 Employment
2025 Help Wanted
2025 Professional Services
2025 Tying Services
235 Typing Services
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against people with disabilities, race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes certain advertising limitations on basis 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 subject to a 10% tax.
100s Announcements
105 Personals
JEN & HEATIER Friday we will arrive so you better be ready to HAVE. Pin strips on hair, slicked in the arm, to read, to attack, we will party with GDD's right on track. Your untouchable $1,495.
110 Bus. Personals
Revolutionary Alpha Hydroxyl Acid skin treatment system with sun protection. Skin free information. 98% success rate. Free information.
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO Really Listen Call or drop by Headquarters We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. We're always open
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
Hoops, Pendants & more!
For Guys and Gals
292 Mast Designs
292 Mast, Downtown
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10p
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-1:30am
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 11am-3pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
120 Announcements
*"CAN WE TALK?" An Interracial and Intercultural Small Group Experiment startling in January 1994. This experiment could change your life! Curious? Call Rick Clock at 841-901 or Brian Johnson
*SPRING BREAK*
Early Booking Special
32 Desk
LOWEST PAYMENT GUARANTEED
JAHRE UNTER 841-5611
Bahama = Cruise, 5 days, 4 nights; $289/couple.
Boat under 10m., Cabin 6m., Mon. thru Sat.
Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday,
Friday, Saturday, Sunday.
Found: The best pizza buffet in Lawrence. Located
11 a.m.-11 p.m. $9.99; buffet Mon.-Sun.
11 a.m.-11 p.m.
FREE MONEY
Available for your education!
Guaranteed results
College Transfer
Call 1-800-298-8866 for free info.
Leisha gav, m. - or unarue? You're not alone!
Group call: Georgette
Headquarters or Info for more info
St. John's Flesta Make Sale. Sun. Nov 7 8:00am-
St. John's Flesta Make Sale. Sun. Nov 7 8:00am-
cotties, tortillas, hot dogs. 1244 Kentwood. 1244 Kentwood.
St. John's Tamale Sale. Orders for Authentic
Tamales are being taken now thru Nov. 24
$1.50 each or $15.00 per dozen. Order pick-up
in Dec. 11. Call 842-5602.
300s
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
3003 Merchandise
305 For Sale
306 Auto Sales
309 Miscellaneous
310 Want to Buy
- Kansan Classified: 864-4358-
Sender strong message!
Sudden systemic mutation happened to animals metabolically similar to humans. Substrate (nature assist) from an egg-processing co, fed animals, produced sudden, losing, benign, nuclear, physiological, behavioral change. If interested in discovery call farmer 845-3498.
130 Entertainment
Free Party Room Available at Johnny's Tav
urn/Up & Under. Call 843-0877 for details.
SKI
Steamboat
- JAN 2-8
- SIX NIGHTS
- 4/5 DAY LIFT
- FREE PARTIES
- $259
BILL 832-2277 & 841-9111 presented by
Benchwarmers
NOW OPEN!
BRANDING IRON SALOON
806 W. 24th • 843-2000
Weekly Drink Specials
Tues: 50¢ Draws (NO COVER)
Wed:$1 Well Drinks
Thur:$3 Pitchers
Fri:$1 Kamikaze Shots
Formerly Just A Playhouse Behind McDonalds
Four black Pulsar watch with gold trim and bobble of white out in front of snow hall, call to identify
140 Lost & Found
AA Cruise & Travel jobs. Earn $250/mo. + travel the world free! (Caribbean, Europe, Hawaii)
An Air Cruise line now hiring for busy holiday.
Call 919) 639-4288 for employment.
Call 919) 639-4288 ext. 131.
205 Help Wanted
Male Female
200s Employment
Adams Alumna Center is looking for part-time bane-
t servers. Must have some am/daytime availi-
ability, very flexible hour. Nice working environ-
ment. Apply at 1286 Oread. Access from Kansas
University.
ADMINISTRATIVE USER SERVICES. Student Monthly. Deadline: 11/12/93, $850/$600 month depending on experience. Duties include providing microcomputer LAN, SCO UNIX support, provide application, design, documentation and deliver software training sessions for end users, provide user training to new users, assist with other duties. Required qualifications: Demonstrated excellent oral and written skills.
Afternoon teacher's side for infant room 1 to 8-45 Monday through Friday, Experience with infants preferred apply at Children's Learning Center 205 N. Michigan, E.O.E.
skills, knowledgeable about computerized databases and their uses, experience using microcomputers, currently enrolled at KU and continued enrollment through spring 1995. Complete job description available. To apply, submit a letter of application and a current resume to Ami Riat, Personal Assistant, Computer Center, University of Lawrence, Lawrence K6048. EO/AA EMPLOYER
visor/Assist Mgr.
Cater Catchers, Thursday, Friday, Saturday,
November 4, 5, 6, 1993.$4.25 per hour. Will pay cash
on day following employment. Must follow dress
code and prefer previous food service experience.
Work at Kansas City State Office, Level 5, Kansas Union Building. Work
shifts and dress code listed in office. EOE
Supervisor now: Manager later! Learn the business from the ground up and advance according to your needs. Be prepared to cater oriented person and like to work at a fast intense pace, an opportunity to put these skills to work and develop as a leader is available. Relaunch this position with bonus benefits. Apply now: At amios, 1819 W. 2rd.
Clerk, KU Bookstore, Shipping/Receiving Dept., $4.25 per hour, 20-25 hours per week, Monday through Friday. Must work through December holiday break requires previous experience in accounting and bookkeeping. Key calculator. Majority of time will be spent on paper work, but could require some lifting up to 50 pound boxes on occasion. Apply at Kansas and Burge Union's Personal Office, Level 5, Kansas
CHEMISTRY LABORATORY ASSISTANT Requires good academic record in chemistry, pharmacy or related science; laboratory experience desirable, 12-20 wk/wk. Submit application to INTEK Research, 2001 West 218 street. AnEqual Opportunity Employer, M/F/H/V.
CNA's needed to work with clients in their homes.
Provides care for children and teens in a sharon at
Rogers City, Vigilant Nursing 845-373-7201.
Director of Development: Duties include researching and soliciting grants, directing donor activities and maintaining accurate donor files. Ideal candidate will possess college degree, strong writing skills, grant writing experience and knowledge about or willingness to become educated in areas relevant to philanthropy. Send resume to: Topeka Performing Arts Center, 214 S 8th, Topkea KS 66003.
Comic strip artist, off-bat, entrepreneur. Send 3 sami box to bz $19, 119 Stuffer fl. Lawrence, FL.
DOCUMENTATION INTERN. Student Monthly.
Deadline: 11/19. Salary: $550-$650/month.
Duties include organizing, maintaining, and
documenting information in the student's documentation,
assist in on-line help files, manage a
computer of user-education seminars and workshops.
Required qualifications: must be enrolled at KU,
clear and effective speaking skills, good com-
mputer literacy, ability to work with a com-
microcomputer, mainframes and/or supercomputers.
Complete job description available. To
apply, submit a letter of application and a current
resume to Ann Rai, Personnel Assistant, Comput-
puter Services, Anissa, Lawrence, KS
60045 EOA EMPLOYER
NEED MONEY?
Not time?
Earn $500-$2000 a month from
your own residence.
For more info, call 1-800-942-9304 ext.
22033. Then call
Joe at 1-800-867-5919.
Leave message.
Raise $500 in % days. Groups, Clubs, motivated individuals 1-100 787-7553 ext 101
FUND RAISER
MAKE MONEY PLAYING NINTENDO VIDEO
ARE AVAILABLE VARIOS DAYS AND HOURS
BETWEEN NOV. 20 AND DEC. 26, CALL
MONEY PLAYING 1-800-2529-5260 FOR
MORE INFORMATION
Office assistant needed 25 hrs/wk M-F 3-p m. & t.
Sat. 12-4: 30. call 749-0130.
Free rent to student or single parent family in
exchange for help w/ work, lt. house work, lt.
cooking. Limited pets welcome. Call 597-5771 after
3 p.m.
Older Farm Couple Seeks Assistance:
Fees not to student or junior college.
Part-time Supervisor Wanted Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse
(Upgrades above the campus)
RECEPTIONISTS (2): West campus book publisher and one to work afternoons, to answer phones, process incoming/outgoing mail, handle walk-in sales, etc. Must be able to work 45 hrs/day, M-F 4:25-7:45 hr./based on experience. Come by 250 IPS or complete application. To complete application for applications is $p. Friday, 11/9/8.
An EOE/AAA employer.
Previous food service and supervisory experience mandatory. Start at 0.25 per hour. Future pay raises based on performance up to $6.50 per hour, 30 hours per month, monthly
Research assistant: Excellent writing skills;
basic research and office skills; some public relations experience. English senior, grad, preferred.
$8$/hr. Contact Lori Whiten 864-4520.
veeings and Weekens. Apply @ Schmum 0mm
co. at 719 Massachusetts, mast 8-4pm, 9am-
RESUME SERVICES Professional Business
Training. Free initial interview. 821-6100.
Free initial interview. 821-6100.
The Principine Review is looking for outstanding candidates to teach courses part time. The ideal candidate should have experience in the MCAT and fantastic communication skills. We offer excellent pay, a relaxed classroom atmosphere, and paid training. We are also seeking a Bachelor's degree in education from Rebecca at 1-800-875-7737 for more information.
mexican restaurant and waitstaff.
Apply in person, lower level, Riverfront Plaza.
Secretary/Receptionist. Terraez Construction Inc. located at 1014 Trial Road (back entrance)
of New York City. Req. exp as secretary receptionist. Typing skills of 60 wpm required; Macintosh experienced preferred;
10 key accuracy; organization and writing skills a must. Send resumes to P. O. Box 3008, Lawrence,
M-F. Applications and resumes must be in no later than 11-12-93.
River Cly Market Restaurants are now hiring extra help for the X-mas season!
Anyone who donates their blood plasma 8 times between Oct. 30 and Dec. 17 is eligible to win a cash drawing.
Stop to Shop is looking for part time clerk must be able to work 2 p.m. to 10 p.m. shift, some weekends and holidays. If interested apply in person at 1010 N. 3rd.
$
"Help pay your tuition by entering our cash giveaway and help save a life today."
Mass. Street Dell or Bobo Bald's Smokehouse, must have daytime availability M-F, also some evenings and weekends. Previous food service and supervisory experience mandatory. Start at $2.50 per hour. Future pay raises based on performance with supervisors 30 hours per week. Apply at Schmid Food Company or Massachusetts Monday through Friday, 9am-4pm. (Upwards are smokehouse.)
EARN CASH
Earn $15 today
Earn $30 this week
$1000 CASH
GIVEAWAY!
$15 Today $30 This week
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
NABI The Quality Source
1st Prize: $450
2nd Prize: $150
3rd Prize: $100
4th Prize: $100
5th Prize: $75
6th Prize: $50
7th Prize: $25
8th Prize: $25
9th Prize: $25
FASTCASH
By donating your life saving blood plasma.
225 Professional Services
WALK-IMS WELCOME!
Traffic tickets, misdemeanors, landlord/ tenant,
Braxton B. Copley 794-3339
axrton B. Copley 749-5333
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
Hours:
M-F 9-6
Sat. 10-3
Fraternities and Sororities call for more information about fund-raising
Experienced organist will play for weddings at Chapel. Call Carol at 841-3537 and leave message
Lebasian, gay or -blu? If you need to link to FIDENIENT, Call KU info or Headmasters
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Prompt abortion and contraceptive services. Dale L.
Clinton M.D. 841-5716.
Research Assistance - MS/ML information speci-
fication projects, theses, these,
dissertations, research projects.
$
TOTORING SERVICE: 832-6925
in English. Help with any paper.
I'll help you with anything.
235 Typing Services
1-der Woman Word Processing, 843-2063.
A Word Perfect word processing service. Laser
printer. Near campus. 842-6955.
AA Word Processing: Any size, under 30 pp,
service. $1.25/page, Call Ruth after
8pm, 9am-5pm.
749-5750
816 W.25 Bnd
Behind Laird
Noller Ford
NABI Biomedical
Center
Beacon Publication Services-Quality word processing, laser printing, $2.00/page (including types, grammar, proofing), call Mary, #83-2674.
Expert typing. IBM Correcting Selectric.
$1.50/double spaced page. Call Mrs. Mattila 841-1219
Fast, accurate word processing; term paper,
dissertation, thesis and graphics services available.
Laser printing. Engineering and Law Review
experience. Call Pam at 841-1977 anytime.
Pro-Type - fast, reliable, service, professional
quality. Any kind of typing. Call today at 841-6242.
Are you Makin' the grade?
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your TYPING needs call
Makin' the grade at 865-2855.
TRAFFIC CUST
Fake ID & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The Law offices of
THE LAWRENCE OF DONALDG. STROLE
X
Donald G, Strobe
16 E.13th Sally G, Kesley
842-1133
305 For Sale
300s Merchandise
Computer Discounts, Guaranteed Quality and
Support. All 832-794 or 842-544 phone: 2201
W 23rd St. B1.
Beds, desks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
936 Mass.
COMPUTERS: Looking for a high quality PC at low cost? Call C P Source 823-1126
DP 2500 weight lifting machine, leg curls, etc.
Great condition. DP Body - Tone 300 Rowing Machine. $250 for both. Call 843-0540 evenings and weekends.
Macintosh Quadra, new in box. Must sell. 1-800-240-
2441.
Macintosh Memory 8-1MB 8s 32 PIN SIMMES, 4
Macintosh Memory 8-1MB 8s will sell in two forask of two
ARC 865-7001
NEAT STUFF, NEW $STUFF at Simple Goods:
solar flashlights/eye chains; recycled innertube
lamps; solar chargers; 9.0-9.9 oz
$MORE Cannondale ML.Bike 9.9 yrs old $300 Ing
great shape. 749-969.
FREESAMPLES
Want to sell complete set of basketball tickets.
Best offer. Leave message on machine, 823-0003
of the new all-natural Herbal Energizer with Chromium Picolinate.
Great for energy for late-night studying,
atamina, and fat loss.
For more info, call 1-800-943-9344 ext.22033
Tell contact Joo at 1-800-867-5919
www.joo.com
Available Jan. 1st, 2 bdm unfurnished api.
Near bus stop, near bus route. Only
896/mm/phone 649-4333.
For leases: 4 bedroom, Standence apts, pear-can-
occupancy data negotiable, $790 + utilities.
1975 AMC Pacer, maroon; low mileage;
830-1035, in good condition. Call
830-1035, leave a message.
340 Auto Sales
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
very nice! Available Spring sem. Interest? Call
us
1978 Built Leisure 350 v8 PS, PB, AT, AC, $604 821-
11 days. Andy-Day
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and two bedroom house KU. Off-street parking 2 no shuttle. Parking all -5000
Aval. Dec. 18th. Very large, new remodeled one
room apartment on bus route, water and cable paid,
$395.
Furished apartment 2 short blocks from
Water paid. Off street parking. No pets.
845-350-6147
Office/Storefront/Workspace near downtown
Office/Storefront/Workspace $210 per month. Ullities
include. Phone 843-1568.
Large room with nice walls in new home 3 ml.
Large room with nice walls in new home 3 ml.
Dec 30 Prefer 20er, non-smoker,
748-1086
Sublease: 2 bpt abr. available Dec. to July. Call 845-7110 or 845-9029. Birdwood Gardens.
One bbm apt. for sublease Jan. 1. Across from sta-
tion, $38 per month with water paid.
Call B282 654-7030.
2 br. available in house-clean, quiet
440 mtrs
1900 Honda Accord LX460, 8 speed, white, spoil-
tail, all power. All super condition. For
condition: 855-0139
Unique 2 bedroom/1 bath apt. hardwood floors,
520 sq ft. downtown townhouse $450/month.
Available Jan 8, 2016 @ 9:59am
Sub-lease fully furnished 1bdm apr All utilizes
availability. No available in January. Please call
821-9295
WANTED: Studio or one bedroom apartment to
any location. Call now and leave a message
at 843-265-1900.
360 Miscellaneous
430 Roommate Wanted
Sculptured Nails $29 reg. #2. Reflections West,
$23 Ridgecount. 841-696. Aak for Pain.
1 female needed to share 3 BR, 2 bath Campus
Campsite. Call Campus Place Office 941-1698
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
1 roommate to share spacious, furn. 4 BR 2 bath
apt. on campus to w/partner furn. rw. m/g.
kitchen w/partner furn. rw. m/g.
living area w/partner furn. rw. m/g.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
I m or F needed to share 3 bedroom house. on bus route. Smoker or no, artistic minded. Old West room. Coffee available. 2 bdma available in Jan. 3 bedroom, b iath房 home, garage cable, washer & dryer. Respomi-
2 NSP need NSP to share form 3 bdmr. lowhouse.
$300; no mounts include ALL utl. & pd. cable. on bus
route, near 23rd & Iowa, avail for spring sem. Call
Gina 749-1987.
Female N/S to share very nice 2 bdmr, 2 bdh
house w/hardwood floors in Old West Lawrence.
Responsible grad-student/prof. qlfy. Avail Jam 1
spring semester $20/mo +/- 3/avail. Call 8517
415-679-3148
1 females, n/s needed for spacious 3 bdrm duplex on bus route. Lg. bath, living area & bdy CA, DW, hardwood floors. 841-7238, leave mess.
Male or female needed to share 4 bedrooms duplex in W. Lawrence starting Jan.-t. Washer/dryer, 2 car garage. fully furnished (except for room 1). Call Cameron e 685-2730.
- By phone: 864-4358
ROMGOMATE NEEDED. Close to campus.
Tried to find the police officer
farned. No smoker, 2 full baths. 841-6542.
N/S female needed for spring semester. Shard 2
BR Apt on Bus Route. $135/mo + 1/suit. Call Kiely
749-9280.
One female needed to siblease on campus App. 180a $180 and + tull Cell Suzy 639-1686
Older Farm Couple Seeks Assistance:
Free rent to student or single parent family in exchange for help w/ yard work, l. house work, l. job.
Predicts welcome pets. Call 537-5771 at 3 p.m.
One Female to share two bedroom apartment for next semester. Must like dogs, very close to camp.
Open minibase 3-Hemden needed to share two bedroom house close to campus January thru May. Call any member of staff.
Roommate needed immediately for 4 bdrm.
Call John at 842-326.
- By Mail! 11' Staffor Flint, Lawrence, KS. 68044
Roommate wanted: Now 1st female preferred + 3rd bdm.培假 $180 per month plus 1/4 utilities.
Ads phone may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
a in 14400 Elliott Street
Two 2b yr Sr.' s seeking a roommate for 54
months of beginning Dee G. | Call Carryl or Cathy
86-233-1091
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| Num. of insertions: | Cost per line per day |
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Classifications
105 personal
111 business persons
129 announcements
130 entertainment
305 for sale
340 auto sales
360 miscellaneous
370 want to buy
405 for rent
439 roommate wanted
Address:
Name:_
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Hey! You guys are the card cheats!... May death stalk you both in the inky blackness of the night!
"
It had started off as a pleasant evening, but, as the Caldwells soon discovered (too late, regrettably), it was best not to try and trump the old gypsy woman.
14
Fridav. November 5, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Announcing the Lawrence Grand Opening of
A New Kind of Drug Store
Walgreens means... Pharmacy Cosmetics
Convenience Foods Photofinishing Hallmark and More
39¢ County Fair Bread,
Big 16-oz. Loaf
Fresh and delicious. Sale! Limit 2
99¢ Stove Top Stuffing or Uncle Ben's
Stove Top assorted
6-oz. Long C
Coca-Cola
CLASSIC
diet
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diet Coke
WONDER
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WALGREENS CASH VALUE COUPON EXPIRES 11/13/93
$2 Off 24 Cans Coke Products
Stove Top
Suffolk Stove Top Tables
CUSTOMER: Redeem this coupon for $2.00 of the purchase price of one case of 24, 12-oz. cans. One coupon per purchase. Customer pays any sales tax. Cash value is 1.99.
STORE MANAGER: You will be reimbursed for the face value of this coupon plus 8r handling at time of coupon redemption. Good only on purchase of products indicated. Void where prohibited. Include with other cash receipt material for proper credit.
Proudly at Lawrence Walgreens GO/COKE
COUNTRY RECIPES
LIGHT ROAST RICE AND
UNCLE BENHYS
LONG GRAIN & WILD RICE
ORIGINAL RECIPE
NEW THIS MONTH ONLY AT COTTON COUNTY
Redeemable only at Lawrence Walgreens GO/COKE
Stove Top
Southern Mix Jumbo
COUNTRY RECIPES
LONDRA
Broccoli Rice Au Jus
Uncle Ben's
LONG GRAIN &
WILD RICE
ORIGINAL
RECIPE
NO OTHER INFORMATION
99¢ Stove Top Stuffing or Uncle Ben's Rice
Stove Top assorted varieties or Uncle Ben's 6-oz. Long Grain & Wild Rice. Sale! Limit 2
99c Stove Top Stuffing or Uncle Ben's Rice Stove Top assorted varieties or Uncle Ben's 6-oz. Long Grain & Wild Rice. Sale! Limit 2
2. 99 24 Cans of Coke After Instant Coupon Above
Choose 12-oz. cans of Coca-Cola Classic, Diet Coke (regular or caffeine-free) or Sprite. Plus deposit where required.
Sale Price 24/4.99 Less Instant Coupon 2.00 After Coupon 24/2.99
WARRIOR
907261 400
GOODBREAD
907261 400
PANADONUT
907261 400
29¢
29C Otis Spunkmeyer Muffins, Your Choice Moist, rich and full of your favorite ingredients. Sale! Reg. 69c Limit 4
1. 69
One Gallon
2% Milk
Dairy fresh and delicious.
Sale! Reg. $1.99 Limit 2
Drive-Thru Pharmacy
6th Street, Hwy 40
Kasold
24 HOUR STORE!
3421 W. 6th St. at Kasold
24 HOUR STORE!
Store and Pharmacy Open 24-Hours a Day, 7 Days A Week Phone: 841-5400 Rx Phone: 841-9000
Two New Lawrence Walgreens To Serve You!
Both locations have: Drive-Thru Pharmacy Window
- Convenient Food Center
- Brand Name Cosmetics
- Hallmark Greeting Cards
- And More!
MEDICAL CENTER
Drive Thru Pharmacy
24 HOUR STORE!
24 HOUR STORE!
Louisiana Street
23rd Street
Ohio Street
Walgreens DRUG STORES
400 W. 23rd St.at Louisiana St.
Store and Pharmacy Open 24-Hours a Day, 7 Days A Week
Phone: 832-8188 Rx Phone: 832-8388
Exclusive Satellite Network Links over 1,800 Walgreens across the U.S.A. and Puerto Rico making your prescription records available instantly whenever and wherever you need them.
1
4.
Cybercampus
The high-tech revolution is changing the way you live and learn
PLUS: ON A SCHWING SET WITH WAYNE AND GARTH PAGE 16
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U The National College Magazine
$U_{+}$, with an audience of 6.5 million, is the most widely read and interactive lifestyle and entertainment magazine among 18- to 34-year-old college-educated young adults. Editorial content focuses on the diverse interests, activities, attitudes and concerns of students attending four-year colleges and universities. $U_{+}$'s editorial fellows, selected each year from top graduating seniors, read campus newspapers, commission articles and photography by the best student journalists, and maintain an ongoing dialogue via the Internet and U.-Views line with students at hundreds of campuses nationwide.
Publisher and Editorial Director
GAYLE MORRIS SWEETLAND
Managing Editor ARI CHEREN
Associate Editor KELLEY TUTHILL
Advisory Editor JACKI HAMPTON VAUGHAN
Editors on Fellowship
GAYLE COHEN James Madison U.
PAUL HELTZEL Virginia Tech
ELIZABETH LEE William and Mary
Advisory Council
DR. DAVID L. ADAMS Indiana U.
ROBERT BULLARD Michigan State U.
W.B. CASEY U. of Iowa
DR.JAN T. CHILDRESS Texas Tech U.
MONA CRAVENS U. of Southern California
MARK GOODMAN Student Press Law Ctr.
DR. LES HYDER Southern Methodist U.
KATHY LAWRENCE U. of Alabama
RICHARD C. LYTLE U. of Texas
LESLEY MARCELLO Nichols State U.
FRANK RAGULSKY Oregon State U.
DR.J. DAVID REED Eastern Illinois U.
TOM ROLNICKI Associated Collegiate Press
RICHARD SUBLETTE Past President, C.M.A.
LAURA WIDMER Northwest Missouri St. U.
Production and Operations
Vice President THOMAS J. MITCHELL
Operations Director KEVALEEN RYAN
Circulation Manager TRACY MATTHEWS-HOLBERT
Marketing Research and Promotion
Marketing Services Mgr. MELISSA E. ALGAZE
Marketing Assistant MICHELLE GILASON
Marketing Consultant GREGORY L. DICKSON
Administrative Asst. MARIETE MERCADO
Main Office
1800 Century Park East #820, Los Angeles, CA 90067
Tel. (310) 551-1381 FAX (310) 551-1659 or 552-0836
Publisher GAYLE MORRIS SWEETLAND
V.P. - General Manager THOMAS J. MITCHELL
Entertainment Ad Dir. GENE MARGOLUIS
Classified Ad Sales Asst. MICHELLE GILSLASON
Advertising Sales Offices New York
U. VIEWS The Campus Dialogue
U. Magazine, 170 E. 61st St, New York, NY 10021
Tel. (212) 980-2800 FAX(212) 980-2811
Eastern Advertising Manager JOHN D. NUZI
Marketing Services CAROLE RYNSTON
Chicago
JOE GUENTHER, PETER GUENTHER, MIKE SHIELDS
The Guenther Company
Tel. (312) 670-6800 FAX(312) 670-0056
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CHRIS GUENTHER, The Guenther Company
(Tel. (313) 647-7490 FAX(313) 647-7492
MICHELLE ZIEGEL, SUSAN TIERNEY, Tierney & Co.
Tel. (214) 960-2883 FAX(214) 960-2886
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American Collegiate Network, Inc.
Chairman A President GAYLE MORRIS SWEETLAND
Finance and Administration MARIA SPIRTOS
Accounting Manager ROSALIND WINZEY
$U®$ is published nine times a year and printed in the U.S.A. on recyclable paper. Subscriptions $18$. Copyright© $1993$. $U$ and $U$. Magazine are registered trademarks of American Collegiate Network, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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Gallery
Gerard Hoiguin, The State News, Michigan State U.
WELCOME STUDENTS.
THIS IS INTRO TO PHILOSOPHY...
WELCOME STUDENTS.
THIS IS INTRO TO PHILOSOPHY...
PROFESSOR IN YOUR
PARENT'S DAYS
WELCOME STUDENTS.
THIS IS INTRO TO PHILOSOPHY...
YOUR PROFESSOR.
WELCOME STUDENTS!
THIS IS INTRO TO PHILOSOPHY...
YOUR PROFESSOR.
U-Mail
About last issue...
I really enjoyed your article "Awareness Overdose" [U. Magazine, Oct. 1993]. It said a lot. I wish you [would] publish more awareness articles in the future. After all, college is for awareness! Steve Shahin, Oklahoma State U.
I just got done reading your latest issue of U. Magazine. I was extremely disappointed and outraged that you did not publish any information about the upcoming album from Rush! You may not consider Rush to be in the "college rock" arena; however, most Rush fans are attending a university! If you can mention Pearl Jam and Guns N' Roses you could have at least mentioned Rush. Brad Simonin, class of '89, New Mexico State U.
I was reading your article titled, "U.'s Got the Look!" [U. Magazine, Oct. 1993] and found myself somewhat offended. It was not the article itself with which I am displeased, but rather
COVER PHOTO ILLUSTRATION: BRIAN LEACH, ART CENTER COLLEGE OF DESIGN
one of the picture captions. I found myself questioning the common stereotype among non-Midwesterners that the central section of our country, especially Iowa, is exclusively comprised of cornfields. I wonder if uneducated, liberally biased, amoral Californians could possibly educate themselves regarding civilization outside of their own state? David Grandy, freshman, Western Michigan U.
I'm here at Duke U. and am speaking on behalf of the Trent 3 Hall. We are enthralled with your magazine and feel that you were right on target when you said the preppy look is alive and well, because we are just a bunch of Ralph Lauren-wearing fools and we love it. Why don't you guys come over to Durham and research an in-depth article on the best university on the face of the planet? Andrew M. Dries, freshman, Duke U.
Other blasts from the past...
In "Dixie strikes sour note with members of marching band," [U. Magazine, Aug./Sept. 1993] band member Tim Jones makes a ludicrous statement that "Dixie" was played in the Civil War during the killing of his people and that it's shouted by the Ku Klux Klan when they march. It is news to me about the Klan shouting "Dixie" when they march.
The song "Dixie" is a song of pride in the hearts and minds of many Southerners who do not hold racial views, for the region in which they were born and raised and which they love. Such charges by people like Mr. Jones are offensive to many Southern whites. Steve Pickett, senior, U. of South Alabama
I was shocked...no, too simpleton. I was appalled at what a half-assed ignorant article you published in your Aug./Sept. 1993 issue about the "exhibitionist" CD sale. These haps in Florida are just another example of the blantar rip-off of an established UC Santa Barbara, icon. In November '91, Isla Vista's own CD and tape store held America's no baloney, original nude day. My question... Where the hell were you, U.? Loud & Proud... John Hasdovic, senior, U. of California, Santa Barbara
Write to us on the INTERNET: umag@well.sf.ca.us
U-MAIL: Address your correspondence to Letters to the Editor, U. Magazine, 1800 Century Park East, Suite 820, Los Angeles, CA 90067; fax it to (310) 551-1659 or E-mail to uamg@well.sf.ca.us. All Senders: Include your name, year, school and phone number for verification. Internet users should also include permission to reprint their submission. Letters should be 200 words or less. *U.* reserves the right to edit submissions for length and clarity.
RESULTS FROM LAST MONTH
Opinion Poll
Do you suffer from information overload?
YES 72%
NO
28%
No. I don't suffer from information overload. There's no such thing.The more information, the better. John Cline, junior, U. of Illinois
Yes. I think Bill Watterson was correct in Calvin and Hobbes when he said, "The average 15-second commercial overextends the attention span of the average American by a good 14 seconds." Dan Kifer, senior, U. of Colorado
TELEO A. WARREN, THE DAILY TEXAN,
U OF TEXAS
THIS MONTH'S QUESTION Do you think Clinton is doing a good job? (800)6 U-VIEWS
I definitely don't think we suffer from information overload. I think information is a great weapon against ignorance. The more info the better. Randy McNees, junior, State University of New York, Buffalo
Yes. I definitely suffer from information overload. I'm a freshman and I didn't expect this much learning in one month. Thomas Pryde, freshman, U. of Mississippi
I think I know too damn much already. I think this world has too much information floating around it. I think they should just give me my degree and let me go home. Chris Johnson, junior, U. of Wisconsin
Yes. Sometimes when I'm doing calculu- I freak out and can't do it anymore. I throw down my books and lay there and laugh myself to sleep. Bill Beaton, sophomore, U. of Nebraska
*The U. Student Opinion Poll is a sampling of comments from college students across the country. The toll-free number invites responses to questions posed to students each month in the pages of U. The National College Magazine. The poll is not scientific, and percentages are figured on verbal responses received each month.
Short Takes & Updates
FOR HIRE — ONE WHITE,
MALE MASCOT:
BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Joining the ranks of other politically incorrect school mascots is "Blaze." This whitebread, mustached warrior who cheered on the U. of Alabama, Birmingham, last semester, has entered the unemployment line.
Buzzword
The school ditched the somewhat goofy-looking Blaze this fall because of complaints that he did not represent a diverse student population.
"Some people were complaining that he was too white or too male and was not representative of anybody else," says Sports Information Director Grant Shingleton. "There were also complaints that he was too aggressive and mean-looking and frightening to children... He didn't look like Attila the Hun or anything. But apparently they just didn't feel it was right for the school."
The school spent more than two years and $20,000 to develop Blaze and has not yet begun researching another mascot. (Last year's mascot, a yellow chicken named "Beauregard," was nixed because he was not masculine enough.)
EVERY SHOE MUST GO:
WASHINGTON, D.C. George Washington U.'s bookstore would really like students to buy its custom-made university tennis shoes. All 2,200 pairs of them.
It seems the school bookstore has an excess of the beige and blue sneakers after ordering a whopping 3,700 pairs for this past summer's freshman orientation.
"I think they're fine for publicity purposes, but it would be a lot cheaper just to stamp 'freshman' on my forehead," says freshman Bernadette Pitts.
DAZED AND CONFUSED:
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. As if finding their way around wasn't hard enough, freshmen at the U. of North Carolina were doubly confused this fall by phony campus maps posted by pranksters on the first day of class.
Displayed in prominent locations, the maps resembled official university maps exactly except the labels of each building had been switched.
Of course, no freshmen admitted to being duped.
"I didn't get lost," says one astute fshr. "I used an official campus-issue map."
Hey dude, we know where you can get some cool shoes.
continued on next page
U.NEWS From campuses nationwide
National service plan gets off the ground
Bill Clinton the candidate promised to reinvent government. Clinton the president took what he called the first step in September by signing the National and Community Service Trust Act.
JOHNSON
SCHNEIDER
Dubbed Americorps, the $1.5 billion program is slated to begin next fall with 20,000 members during its first year. Overall, the three-year program will give about 100,000 students the chance to finance their education through service work.
Nearly 1,500 high school and college students got that chance last summer by volunteering for the Summer of Service, a pilot program held in 16 cities, from Los Angeles to Boston. Students helped tens of thousands of inner-city kids through tutoring, health education, mentor programs, conflict-resolution workshops, and immunization and disease prevention services.
Nearly 1,500 students participated in the Summer of Service program.
"This national attention is letting people know the importance of volunteering," says Sean Madison, a graduate student at Boston U. who volunteered at the College Park, Ga., Summer of Service program. "It is more or less reminding people of an obligation to their community."
According to Bill Spadea, the national chairman of the College Republicans, the problem is that Americorps will help less than 1 percent of students while creating an enormous bureaucracy. "I see it as just another political maneuver to expand government," he says.
In exchange for a year of community service, the newly created Americorps will offer students $4,725 in tuition assistance for college or vocational training. The program also will provide $7,400 each year for living expenses during service, as well as health care and any necessary child care services. Students are limited to two years of service.
Participants rejected higher-paying jobs for minimum wage, early morning physical training and the troubles and turmoil of America's inner cities. When the summer ended, they also received $1,000 to be used for college.
But Secretary of Education Richard Riley says, "The program is not going to be the answer for a lot of students, but it will be a partial answer. It means a difference. It offers an option that students do not have."
Unlike existing financial aid options, selection for the program will not be need-based. Corps members will be chosen from a variety of lifestyles, experience and financial backgrounds. Participants must be U.S. citizens, at least 17 years old and have a high school diploma or GED.
The National Service Office plans a massive recruiting campaign by mid-winter. Anyone interested in getting a head start should send a post card with their name and address to: The National Service Office, 752 St.NW Washington, D.C. 20010. Tracie Liguid, The Breeze James Madison U., and Matt Hennie, The Paladin, Furman U.
Give me a home where students roam
Loud music blaring all night. A bathroom that you have to share with two dozen strangers. The rank odor of burnt microwave popcorn. After four years, most college students have had enough of dorm life.
But Harold Brumbaugh, better known to Juniata College in Pennsylvania as "H.B."has called a dormitory home for 61 of his 82 years.
Brumbaugh moved out of his dorm room this fall into a nearby retirement community, having earned a place as one of the longest dorm-dwellers of the 20th century.
While few students remain in a dorm through a single presidential term, Brumbaugh has witnessed 17 presidential elections, six papal coronations and four U.S. wars from his college digs.
Brumbaugh first came to Juniata as a freshman in 1929, graduated in 1933 and moved away to become a high
BROOK COURTENY COLLEGE COMMUNICATIONS. JUNIATA CO.
Juniata's "H.B." raps with students on campus.
school teacher/administrator. Less than three years later, he came back to work in alumni relations and has been at Juniata ever since.
In the 1930s, Juniata offered free room and board to unmarried employees, explains Brumbaugh. "I was spoiled and didn't want to move," he says.
And Brumbaugh didn't stay in your average dorm room. For 32 years he stayed in a suite equipped for entertaining alumni, and in 1968, Juniata built a soundproof two-bedroom apartment for him in a new residence hall.
Brumbaugh says that he will still work every day at Juniata as curator of the college museum, a post he's held since his retirement in 1976.
For dorm residents like junior Holly Alexander, memories of Brumbaugh remain: "I'll always remember the sight of him in the hall lounge riding his exercise bike, watching the morning news every day when I woke up." Rob Carson, The Juniatian, Juniata College
4
U.Magazine
NOVEMBER 1993
Let's talk about sex,baby at Antioch it's mandatory
May I please nibble on your ear?
It might not seem natural asking, but at Antioch College, no permission means no deal. Those are the rules.
Antioch's Sexual Offense Policy, initiated by students last year, has gained nationwide attention for its strict definition of consent.
Dubbed "checklist love" by syndicated columnist Clarence Page, the policy requires students to get "the verbal consent of the other individual[s] involved" whenever sexual contact is not "mutually and simultaneously initiated." The policy also states that consent must be specific to each act.
Three years ago, after a growing problem of sexual assault came to light on campus, a group called the "Womyn of Antioch" demanded that the college develop a comprehensive sexual assault policy.
Although many have interpreted the code as another example of suppressing student rights, few at Antioch say they oppose the measure which students helped to draft. "I think [the policy] is really effective," says Randy Reiss, a senior. "The goal here is preventative measures."
CHECK LIST
HOLLOWING WAGES
WAGES
Alison Clark, also a senior, agrees. "It's very clear and
Oberlin College in Ohio has offered a three-year undergraduate program since 1986-87, and the number of students opting to graduate in three years has quadrupled since then, according to President Frederick Starr.
Albertus Magnus College in Connecticut offers a similar program, and schools from Stanford U. to the 64-school State U. of New York system are exploring the possibility of a three-year plan.
RON NELSON THE MINNESOTA DAILY U. OF MINNESOTA
Burgeoning tuition costs and an increase in the number of students transferring credits from high school have brought about the concept.
concise, and it's also easy to follow. What is really important is that the policy says that you can't assume."
David Yagobian, a senior, has been the most vocal opponent. "My biggest concern is, how does one prove oneself innocent?" Yagobian says. "These offenses occur for the most part in private. This policy does not concern itself with the rights of the accused." Andrew Levy, The Michigan Daily, U. of Michigan
Are you broke or a brainiac? Try the three-year plan
Just when you were getting comfy on that five-year couch, some Doogie Howser comes along and makes everybody look bad.
Many of today's students are finding that they can't even afford to stay in school for four years, and universities are starting to take notice with the three-year plan.
Michael Bastedo, a history major in his third and final year at Oberlin, says, "For people like me who want to save money, it's great. But it's not for everybody."
Overall, the goal of a three-year degree could be termed "learning efficiency," particularly in light of tough economic times. Bastedo estimates that his family saved $11,000 because he cut his college career short. He says there are drawbacks, however. "You miss things. I wasn't able to do foreign study," he says. "All my friends are graduating after me. I'd like to be here with them."
"It's a matter of looking at the product. What outcomes do you want? Can they be achieved in three years?" asks John Weisenfeld, vice president for planning at Cornell U., and head of a task force for examining undergraduate education. "There's a big difference in offering a three-year curriculum and a three-year experience." Jon VanZile, The State News, Michigan State U.
Ex-Con goes for law degree amid furor
COLLEGE OF LAW
ARIZONA
LAW
STATE
He's mild-mannered, wears glasses and dresses casually — in fact, he looks pretty much like any first-year law student.
But James Hamm, 45 is a convicted murderer. And the decision by Arizona State U.'s College of Law to accept him even though he served nearly 18 years in state prison for a 1974 drug-related murder has
At ASU, the debate continues: Should an ex-con be at law school?
sparked a statewide controversy.
BAN FTZ26REALD STATE PRESS, ARIZONA STATE U.
Some state legislators are angry at the university for accepting Hamm.
"I just think it was an irrational thing for the [admissions] committee to do," says State Senate President John Greene, R-Phoenix. "Hiding behind academic freedom and diversity and all that stuff is like being on another planet, as far as I'm concerned."
College of Law Dean Richard
Morgan disagrees.
"When [Hamm] was convicted, he forfeited a number of his rights, but he didn't forfeit the right to apply to a state university or law school for an education." Morgan says.
While in prison, Hamm graduated summa cum laude from a special Northern Arizona U. program for prisoners. He scored in the 96th percentile on his LSAT exam and his supporters describe him as a successfully rehabilitated criminal. Others, however, maintain that Hamm fills the spot of a more deserving, law-abiding student and that his presence hurts the credibility of the law school.
U. News
Although Hamm says his critics are stereotyping him, he's not taking the situation personally. "These people don't know James Hamm," he says. "They're just looking at the category — he's a felon, it was a capital crime, he's been in prison for a long period of time."
The Arizona Board of Regents has directed the state's universities to review policies regarding admissions for convicted felons.
Greene has suggested that the state legislature pull funding from the law school if the admissions policy were not re-evaluated.
Hamm says such drastic action would be a mistake. "[State legislators] have the right to express their opinion. But I think that to go beyond that and to threaten one of the major institutions in the state — I honestly believe that is very injudicious." Jake Batsell, State Press, Arizona State U.
More Short Takes
continued from previous page
PO'D PROFS:
BOWLING GREEN, KY. At Western Kentucky U., students may not be the only ones filling out teacher evaluation forms. A former physics and astronomy department chairman allegedly has been doing a little evaluating himself.
Thomas Coohill resigned last spring as a result of allegations that he filled out evaluation forms for three professors he didn't like.
Now he is being sued by the professors for "oppressive, fraudulent and malicious conduct," according to Reginald Ayers, the professors' attorney. Coohill allegedly filled out blank evaluations during a five-year period. He was finally accused after officials thought they recognized his handwriting on the forms.
Coahill originally admitted to filling out the forms, but has filed a counterclaim denying the allegations of the suit. He refuses to comment.
KITTIES LITTER GAMPUS:
ROHNERT PARK, CALIF.—Sonoma State U. was under siege this fall, and the culprit wasn't Steven Seagal but more than 100 unattached cats. The cat population had burgeoned since last year, when a local animal rights group trapped, neutered and immunized 25 strays and re-released them on campus.
Three people were bitten, and one of the victims filed a lawsuit against the university for medical expenses and damages.
Upon the advice of the National Humane Society but against the wishes of many students and a local animal rights group the school trapped the errant felines and put them into a local animal shelter.
even shorter takes
RECUPERATING: More than 200 participants in a melee that followed a September football game between Pierce College and Harbor College, two California community colleges. The brawl started after Pierce beat Harbor 23-0. Both players and fans participated, and an offensive line coach for Pierce was rendered unconscious when a Harbor player hit him with a crutch.
REINSTATED: Texas Southern U.'s Ocean of Soul marching band. The band was dissolved in December 1992 after some 30 members allegedly stole $22,000 worth of electronics during a field trip to Tokyo [U.Magazine, March 1993].
TEACHING: Junk bond salesman Michael Milken, at UCLA. The class? What else — "Special Topics in Management."
Briefs compiled from the U. network and The Chronicle of Higher Education.
MOVEMBER 1993
U. Magazine
5
U. News
A small change in vending machines
DAH BAKER
Chips and drinks, tampons and condoms all are readily available in the vending machines
DAN BAKER,
ORACLE, U. OF
SOUTH FLORIDA
college students rely on. Now you can find items you'd never expect to see in those change-eating monsters, including art, aphrodisiacs and beer.
A machine at the U. of South Florida offers the creations of campus artists. Jewelry, black-and-white photographs and blocks of wood with designs can be purchased for $1 each from the formerly standard-issue machine, which was redesigned to include Andy Warholesque tinted Xeroxes on the display panel.
The machine was originally part of an art exhibit by 1993 USF graduate Mark Satterthwait.
Kim Kessler, a graduate student, owns several pieces from the machine. "It makes art more accessible to people who might be afraid to go into a gallery."
WILL EASTER
Katy Hernandez, a 1993 fine arts graduate of USF, has sold nearly 80 of her photographs through the machine. "It's fun stuff — the things are small enough to tack on the fridge or a bulletin board," she says.
Strap on your knuckle-baring Evel Knievel gloves and some Ambervision shades and you'll be cruisin'.
A Road Tripper's Guide
The machine requires you to pay $2.50 and prove to the attendant monitoring the machine by video camera that you are 21 and reasonably sober.
In a less highbrow vein, VendAmerica of Lake Bluff, Ill., mass-markets machines which offer racy "novelty items." Seventy-five cents will get you a heart or rose temporary tattoo or a "love kit" containing items such as love drops and a novelty condom.
Although no American company has yet announced plans to sell meat through vending dispensers, U.S.A. Entertainment is currently testing a beer machine on golf courses in Florida.
Pack lots o' tapes and Dramamine, then hit the highway
Glad Cleveland, of U.S.A. Entertainment Center, says the company has no plans to put its machines on college campuses. "We're interested in more upscale markets," she says. Taylor Ward, Oracle, U. of South Florida
Co-owner Rick Merner says the company already has machines on college campuses which sell condoms, but he's not sure that the company's full product line will be made available. "I don't think the other stuff is appropriate in a college environment," he says.
Perhaps your student center's machines will one day offer the products found in Japan's vending machines which include beef and beer.
MATT SCHWABEL. THE BREEZE, JAMES MADISON U.
By Chris Leitner and Sabrina Rubin, 34th Street Magazine, U. of Pennsylvania
So you wanna go out on the road, huh? Go exploring the great outdoors like you were Jack Kerouac or something? Well, it's not as simple as you think. For you ambitious, but shortsighted troopers, here's a handy guide for your adventures.
First of all, let's talk cash flow. The best way to handle this touchy subject is for all the members of your trip to pool their money.
Of course, you could try more innovative fund raising. Christopher O'Brien, a junior at the U. of Illinois, remembers a group of friends who financed a road trip with a little imagination and a lot of chutzpah. They took full advantage of roadside rest areas, making sure to stop at each one. And they robbed them.
["They'd] go up to the outdoor soda machines... and crack them open and take all the change," recounts O'Brien. "They'd usually get about 15 or 20 bucks at a shot." (A note to all of you opportunistic readers: this is illegal. There are easier and more honest ways to collect money for your trip — giving blood, perhaps.)
Unless you're Berkeley's naked guy, you will need some sort of clothing. Pack appropriately, and keep in mind the changing weather conditions. This may seem fairly obvious, but consider the sad tale of two sophomores from Morehead College in
Kentucky. Being true bohemians, Stephen Murry and Alan Lawrence chose to bring little else on their journey but the short-sleeved shirts on their backs... completely forgetting that they were headed to New Jersey in the dead of winter. They drove into a blizzard en route, spun out on a patch of ice and crashed into a tree.
"After a half-hour went by, we had no choice. It was getting really cold, and no one was coming by," says Murry. "We had to hike it and find some help." Twenty chilly minutes later, the sandaled pair crawled half-frozen into a police station.
"I never appreciated cops so much in my life," Lawrence remembers.
The music you play will all but determine the course of your trip. So if you hate classic rock, let everyone else know before they start blasting "Born to be Wild." Bring lots o' tapes, because God knows what yee-hawing hoopla your favorite station will turn into a few hundred miles down the road.
And make sure to bring a variety of
McCracken, a senior from the WELCOME TO BROOKING, U.S.A. ROUTE 100, BROOKING, MASS. 02465
U. of Pennsylvania, learned this lesson the hard way after taking a trip to Boston with nothing to listen to but the Spin Doctors. "I'm emotionally scarred for life," she moans. "I sang 'Two Princes' for weeks afterwards."
"So there I was, trapped in between my two vomiting brothers. It was worse for the guy driving behind us, though. He was swerving out of the way and turning on his wipers... Never puke out of a moving car, especially when there are cars following close behind you."
If you get motion sickness, you should definitely, certainly, absolutely bring some Dramamine or something. Or don't go. Reva Patel, a student at Queens College, remembers one hellish journey down the winding roads of Skyline Drive in the Smoky Mountains. "I was sitting in the back seat between my two brothers, and the road was really curvy," she says. "All of a sudden, Sammy rolled down his window and puked up the possum scrapple he'd eaten for breakfast. Ezra took one look and puked out the other window.
So now that you know the rules to play by, go out and have fun. Make tracks. Strap on your knuckle-baring, leather Evel Knievel driving gloves and a pair of Ambervision shades. Hang a strawberry-scented air freshener from your rearview mirror and you'll be cruisin' in high style with Best of the
Seventies: Infernal Disco Classics blaring on your eight track. Oh, how they will stare.
6
U.Magazine
NOVEMBER 1993
Mother Gert Boyle, Chairman,
Columbia Sportswear
"MOTHER ALWAYS HAS A HAND IN DESIGN."
-Tim Boyle, President, Columbia Sportswear
My mother may not be a goddess, but it appears that she has eight arms. Otherw how do you explain the fact that while creating this Hoodoo Parka she sealed seams, finessed the pull-out hood and checked the Radial Sleeves: Simultaneously. And she still managed to add a draw-cord waist with an internal powder skirt. In fact, Mother always tackles the task of building the world's most technical parkas head-on. Her search for maximum waterproof/breathability led to the Mini-Oxford Omni-Tech" outershell in this Hoodoo Parka. So why should you care that Mother is a hands-on person? The answer will become obvious the next time you're out in a storm. Columbia Sportswear Company
PLEASE NOTE
Hoodoo Parka,™ with mesh fleece-lined, zip-out HydroPlus™ liner.
6600 N. Baltimore, Portland, Oregon 97203. For the dealer nearest you in the U.S. and Canada, call 1-800-MA BOYLE.
ERIK WATERMAN COLLEGIATE TIMES VIRGINIA TECH
Campbell
Memorial Gym
West
Too
Drillfield
Memorial Chapel
Drillfield
Patton
Narre
Holden Street
Turn Smith House
PARK
Memory
Price House
Stanger
ELLIOTT GORDON COLLEGIATE TIMES.
Surfing The Information Superhighway
Students connect tomorrow's technology with the campus of today
The first time I remember feeling old, really old was during high school after a friend's microwave broke
down. I remember his 8-year-old brother looking distressed."What are we going to do without a microwave?" he asked, visibly shaken.
He acted like Columbus discovered the microwave. I remember a time when it took 10 minutes to boil a hot dog and we roasted popcorn over an open flame.
I'm feeling even older now. The way he felt about that oven is the way our kids will feel about e-mail. The most sophisticated piece of AV equipment at my school was the overhead projector. But all that is changing.
America's campuses are at the forefront of a technological revolution, and lest you think the changes taking place won't affect your soon-to-graduate behind, think again. The information superhighway — running through our schools, homes and offices will affect us all.
Thankfully, universities around the country are jumping on the high-tech bandwagon, and with good reason. If universities are going to train us how to operate anything more advanced than a deep-fat fryer, they had better take notice. The technology on today's campuses will become the tools of tomorrow's work place.
CYBERADMISSIONS OFFICE: THE REVOLUTION BEGINS
future
The campus of the future starts at the admissions office. Some universities, including the U. of Southern California, are moving to a paperless application process. And before you say "Ha! My SAT days are over," keep in mind the pastime displacing alcohol as everybody's favorite form of escapism: grad school.
A new version of the Graduate Record Exams will be administered this month: Called computerized adaptive tests (CATs), they adjust to the test taker's ability.
Answer easy questions correctly and you get more difficult ones. Answer easy questions incorrectly and the computer feeds you less difficult ones. If two GRE
takers have the same number of correct answers, the person with the more challenging questions gets a higher score.
"We are going to phase out paper and pencil [GREs] completely in the next four or five years, as we will SATs eventually," says Kevin Gonzalez of the Educational Testing Service, which administers both tests.
Graduate school hopefuls who take the CAT can receive their scores immediately. Graduate school not-so-hopefuls can choose to delete the CAT before seeing their scores.
Someday you'll tell your grandkids how your hand ached from painstakingly filling out scantrons.
By Paul Heltzel, Editor on Fellowship
They'll yawn as you tell them how you had to walk to class, in the middle of winter, two, sometimes three times a day. And it was uphill both ways.
CONNECTING TO THE INFORMATION SUPERHIGHWAY Where were you when you first beard 'Rock Lobster?' How was your hair day? Chicken McNuggets: What kind of sauce? Let's talk Madonna
is
If you're surfing the Internet, an electronic computer network subsidized by — surprise — the National Science Foundation, you too can be privy to meaningful discussions like those listed above. You can also discuss camel research with a Finnish scientist, converse with a best-selling author or engage Billy Idol in a rousing disputation.
Take your pick. With the recent explosion of electronic communication, the possibilities for students are unlimited.
Anyone with a phone line can tap into the Internet and communicate for little or no cost with other users from around the world.
Students can share software, "talk" in real time by collitting the screen, or access the
time by spitting the screen, or access the Library of Congress or the libraries at Harvard U. and Johns Hopkins U.
"The Internet is the best resource I've found at school," says Racheline Maltese, a senior at The George Washington U. "I have learned more on the net than I have in a lot of classes."
Electronic communication isn't a new technology the Internet started with ties to the Department of
• U. Magazine
MOVEMBER 1993
Defense during the 1960s — but because of the proliferation of newer, more powerful computers and software, the construction of the information superhighway is off and running.
"People are just starting to see the usefulness of e-mail because the personal computer is a common item in the household," says Chester Bullock, a senior at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U. in Arizona. "E-mail
GINIA TECH
allows me to communicate with friends all over the country and
friends all over the country and
If universities world for free are going to the waiting time that the train us how standard mail system has." to operate The increase in anything on-line computing isn't confined to more schools. The Electronic advanced Mail Assn., a trade group based in than a deep Arlington, Va., estimates that fat fryer, 30 to 50 million they had Americans of all walks of life use better take electronic mail. About 3 million notice computers are hooked to the Internet alone.
- computers are hooked to the Internet alone.
But the Internet is by no means the only form of electronic communication used on campus.
Many universities are installing digital hookups that connect every dorm room and administrative office on their campuses.
Some students at Northwest Missouri State U. failed classes because they spent so much time on their campuswide e-mail network. And at Dartmouth College, the university's e-mail system, called Blitzmail, is taking over as the way to keep in touch on campus.
"It's pretty much replaced the telephone in terms of use," says Chris Johnson, a senior at Dartmouth. "Anything that would have been sent through the campus mail system is now done electronically. It's basically the easiest thing in the world to use."
At the U. of Colorado, students use their Macintosh computer network to see if they've fulfilled course requirements. And students at Cornell U. have access to a computerized counseling service.
"People have this habit of opening up on-line," says GWU's Maltese. "The [Internet] is a very informal place, and it's a place where we share a lot. People post pictures of their weddings to bulletin boards, announce the birth of children, everything. These people become your family. It's like the biggest secret clique in America."
WELCOME TO THE CLASSROOM OF THE 21ST CENTURY
Has the boredom of studying 15th century women's literature got you down?
Well, at Pace U. in New York they're introducing multimedia (integrated text, video and music) to their course on women in the Middle Ages in an attempt to make the subject more lively. (Good luck.)
The classroom of the next century may seem like an odd place for a 500-year-old woman, but the technological revolution doesn't discriminate by age or gender. Relatively inexpensive equipment has allowed
now
more instructors to teach with computer-driven visual images and sound. Through
continued on next page
infotainment - Toys for the 21st century
Dorm rooms often rival computer labs for sheer number of high-tech equipment items. Between the TV, VCR, CD player, Nintendo, Sega (maybe both), computer with CD-ROM and digital phone hookups, a lot of dorm rooms keep the power company scrambling to produce the juice. Here's a list of what's here and what's coming on the technology/infotainment front.
SONY
Data Discman
Digital Compact Cassette
PURPOSE: Digital sound without the fuss, muss and fits of psychotic rage that would accompany throwing out all your conventional cassettes. The sound is almost as good as a CD, and you can play your Pat Benatar tapes, too.
USEFULNESS TO STUDENTS: DCCs are still expensive even though they've been out for about a year. Being able to record your CDs is a bonus, but the minidisc does that too. Hmmm. See the WORTH ITP section.
AVAILABILITY: You can find a DCC at most any well-equipped stereo store. Locating a good selection of your favorite artists on DCC is a bit of a problem though. On a recent visit to a record store, several of the employees didn't even know where they kept the DCCs.
COST: About $550 for the portable version and $1,000 for the home model. Blank DCCs cost $8 or $9 and pre-recorded cassettes are as expensive as CDs.
WORTH ITP Minidisc is really the only competition, since digital audio tape (DAT), which actually provides better sound than minidisc or DCC, is used mainly by professionals. A word of caution: Minidisc and DCC are going to fight it out and it's likely only one will survive. DCC is the best bet for people with who can't cut the cord with their conventional cassettes.
Recordable Mini-CD
PURPOSE: The minidisc allows digital audio recording on a disc that is a little more than half the size of conventional CDs. The MD's sound range is more limited than a CD, but the minidisc doesn't skip like a regular CD, because it stores 10 seconds of music in its memory. So if you bump the player, it will continue to play while correcting itself. Also, it's enclosed in a plastic case that resembles a computer disk for protection.
CD-ROM player
more al and plots Sony MiniDisc MD on.
WORDM TIP The minidisc has basically corrected all the shortcomings of the CD. Most listeners won't be able to
8007: MD portable and home players are priced to move at $550 and $1,000, respectively. The blank discs run between $14 and $17.
USEFULNESS TO STUDENTS: The minidisc should serve you well under casual listening conditions. It's also portable and the sound is far superior to the Walkman you've been taking to class. And as far as recording goes, each copy will sound as good as the first. MDs can be recorded over a million times without any loss of quality.
AVAILABILITY: Like the DCC, most stereo store chains are carrying them. The selection of prerecorded titles isn't huge, but Sony makes the MD, so a lot of Sony/Columbia artists can be found on the format.
CD-ROM
notice the difference between CD and mini disc, and conventional CDs are temperamental on bumpy roads and jogging paths. Just being able to record digitally is enough to dig this.
CD-ROM
audio entries of a small encyclopedia can all fit on one disc. CD-ROM offers multimedia capabilities, so when you're reading about JFK, you can actually hear a digital reproduction of one of his speeches. You can also
PURPOSE: CD-ROMs (Read Only Memory) look just like regular CDs but can hold an amazing amount of information: The text, video and
listen to conventional CDs and get bitchin' games on CD-ROM.
USEFULNESS TO STUDENTS: CD-ROM really is the format of the future. No one other device offers so much in the way of education and entertainment for students. You can read Newsweek and the King James Bible on portable CD-ROM players or listen
to the Butthole Surfers. For academic slackers,
the entire line of Monarch Notes is available.
AVAILABILITY: The players are already everywhere and the software is exploding. You can get everything from the latest bestsellers to thesauruses, from how-to-
books to Berlitz Spanish lessons on CD. And in almost every case the text is accompanied by audio narrative. Bueno, mis amigos!
COST: Bookplayers as well as CD-ROMs you hook to your computer are about $300 and up. Books on CD-ROM range from $49 to $69; some of the other titles such as Monarch Notes are cheaper ($40 for Monarch, $30 for a CD on how to write term papers). You can get books for your computer CD-ROM for about $20.
WORTH IT? It's hard to imagine anyone reading a CD-ROM player on the beach, but the format offers amazing entertainment capabilities. Already you can hook a CD-I (Interactive) player into your television for multimedia programs. In the future, CD-I movies will be interactive, and Viola!, you become the director and can change plots at your capricious whim. If you have the cash, CD-
ROM is a worthwhile investment that is going to grow by leaps and bounds. Yes, buy one, OK?
High-Definition Television
PURPOSE: HDTV will offer a wider image than traditional tube televisions and five channels of digital surround sound. The picture will double the quality of standard idiot boxes and the sound will rival that of CDs.
USEFULNESS TO STUDENTS: Very and scary. Incredible clarity + 500 cable channels + sound as good as your Pearl Jam CD = a lot more empty seats in your Elizabethan Poetry class.
AVAILABILITY: Word on the street is HDTV may be available as soon as the 1996 Olympics.
COST: Yikes — an HDTV will cost about $2,000. But you'll be able to receive high-definition broadcasts on that old, beat-up TV you stole from your brother.
WORTH IT? Sure, it's pricey, but the sound and quality will kick butt and the picture ratio will be more similar to that of the theater. You've got until '96 to raise the funds, so start saving.
continued on next page
NOVEMBER 1983
U.Magazine
9
Surfing the information highway continued from previous page
powerful computers, students are able to dissect a cadaver, become immersed in a foreign language, or compose and play back music on a laptop.
"We'll use the multimedia PC technology to create new types of learning environments that make you, the student, more the center of things, that create for you microworlds or that immerse you in learning environments," says William Graves, associate provost for information technology at the U. of North Carolina. Graves is also a fellow at EDUCOM, a consortium of nearly 600 colleges in Washington, D.C., that promotes technology in higher education.
At James Madison U. in Virginia, students can take Psychology 160 in the Blackwell Auditorium, a $200,000 attempt at creating the classroom of the 21st century. The auditorium has two large screens, which the professor controls with computers to provide a visual representation of the lecture. Students use keyboards, located at each seat, to answer questions and the results are tallied Love Connection-style and displayed on screen.
"It was a little bit awkward when I first went, but I got used to it," says JMU junior Cheyenne Surber. "I wouldn't describe the class as more personal, but you had more interaction."
Interactive programs are used to study foreign languages at Georgetown U., Cornell U. and UNC, physics at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and the U. of Maryland, medicine at the U. of Iowa and UCLA, and chemistry at the U. of Illinois.
"We can now capture, store, retrieve and analyze more and more of the human experience in digital form," Graves says. "You can use that technology to submerge yourself in a learning context where you have control. Instead of teaching at you, it puts you in a learning environment and it gives faculty more ways of being effective with you."
WHO'S FOOTING THE BILL?
When the state builds a highway, somebody gets the shaft. Whether they pave some poor sap's front yard or hike your taxes, the ax comes down. The construction of the information superhighway is no different, and the costs are human as well as financial.
Currently, many students get free access to the Internet through their universities, which receive subsidies indirectly from the National Science Foundation.
But the NSF has proposed privatization of the Internet within four years. Access to the network would then be provided by the private sector — most likely the phone companies — which are salivating at the thought of getting in on the action.
Bob Wade, a graduate student at Purdue U., says he is concerned about the future of the Internet. "Companies will try to gain control and limit access in order to gain profit and wield control." he says.
But GWU's Maltese would rather see private interests running the network. "Technology's not something the government is very comfortable with," she says. "I don't like the idea of somebody who doesn't like the Internet running the Internet."
The computer lab is another area where your pocket connects with the information superhighway. Only about 20 percent of college students own computers, so many schools are charging for access.
At the U. of Arizona an increase in tuition covered institutional computing costs, and the U. of Utah recently charged a $50 computing fee per quarter. The fee hike has helped improve a dismally low computer/student ratio; Utah now has one computer for every 20 students.
THE HUMAN COSTS
Any discussion over the price of technology must examine the human costs. Some have speculated that high technology will make our society more divisive. Will the information superhighway be open to everyone? Or will these advances only create a wider gap between those who can afford access and those who cannot?
"There are many social issues that are difficult to overcome," Graves says. "There's still an equity issue, that technology does not separate us. It's the obligation of our institutions that those questions are addressed."
And, in the end, the greatest danger is that multimedia presentations and electronic communication will completely remove human interaction from the college experience.
"Sometimes it's cool to have the huge screens and keypads, but sometimes it kind of dehumanizes the whole process," says JMU sophomore
Cyberglossary
- Electronic mail (e-mail): E-mail allows users to send messages across their office or across the country. Correspondence can be sent through local area networks (LANs), such as connected computers in one office, or through a modem to other computers around the world.
- Internet: An electronic network that provides users around the world with e-mail, news, file trading, games and other services.
- Multimedia: Computer generated text, audio and video. Multimedia has unlimited possibilities for education, especially for presentations which allow students to interact with the subject matter.
Information Superhighway: The Clinton administration has proposed the construction of an electronic communication network as the key to global competitiveness.
Andrew Miller, about the classroom of the 21st century. "You walk into the class and plug into a keypad."
But Graves argues that the relationship between student and professor will be improved by introducing high technology.
"We want to protect a very basic component of higher education, which is human interaction," Graves says. "There's no replacement for that. [Professors] provide the glue that ties together subject matter. That's what faculty do that you can't get from a box."
Ultimately, Graves says, colleges must answer these questions to give students what they paid for. "I think students will be entering a work place that is already technology-dependent," he says. "The obligation for universities is to include technology so students won't be entering the work place blind."
INFOTAINMENT continued from previous page
Laserdisc (12" Video CD)
PURPOSE: Laserdiscs offer a picture 60 percent sharper than VHS and the same sound quality as CDs. Plus, when you watch Young Guns 20 years from now it will look as good as the first time you savored it.
USEFULNESS TO STUDENTS: This one is mostly for the hard-core movie fans, but you can't argue with the picture quality and sound. And you won't have to screw around with that "tracking" button anymore. Laserdiscs also play conventional CDs, so it won't be the next 8-track, but proceed with caution. Remember Beta? Me either.
AVAILABILITY: Last time you were at Blockbuster, did you see a lot of movies on laserdisc? There you go.
COST: Players range from $400 to $1000 and the discs range from $25 to $70.
WORTH IT? A good CD player costs more than $200, so if you rationalize enough, you might be able to swallow the laserdisc. Wait until your local video store starts carrying them. If they don't, pass.
Personal Organizers/Newton
PURPOSE: Most personal organizers, up until recently, were little more than computerized address books. Apple's Newton is the first handheld computer to at least try to translate your handwriting. You can send faxes (with an add-on modem) of anything you scribble on its screen with a stylus
or communicate without wires by "beaming information to another Newton up to a meter away. It also has the capacity to receive wireless paging messages.
USEFULNESS TO STUDENTS: The Newton is really better suited to the tasks and expense accounts of corporate America. The organizer is a lot of fun to play with, but are you prepared to skip your next two spring breaks to pay for it?
AVAILABILITY: About 2,000 computer and electronic stores have carried the Newton since September.
Apple Newton
meter
re-
COST: Ouch. Apple sells Newton organizers for $699 to $949 based on the number of bells and whistles you add.
WRITE OFF You're better off with a laptop. The ability to write with a pen is attractive, but you can type a lot faster and, for now, the Newton is basically a computerized Day Runner.
High-Tech Potpourri
The Recordable CD is available but used mainly for commercial purposes and is out of the price range of the deepest student pocket. Buy a Honda instead.
3D0 promises to be to Nintendo what Nintendo was to Atari. (Remember Asteroids?) 3DO is a CD-ROM format that provides video games with richer colors, better graphics and blinding speed. The multimedia player may also play movies in the future. Panasonic has a model out now and they're selling briskly — at about $700.
Interactive TV: Cable operators and phone companies are racing to be the first with a TV that you can bond with. You'll be able to select movies, shows or educational programs from an extensive video library. Some day, you may even be able to go shopping in a way that's more interactive and less annoying than the Home Shopping Network. You can also expect an increase in channels, from the paltry 50 or so you're receiving now to 500.
Virtual reality: Hey! Is that me beating up
elves and saving the fiefdom? Put on
a virtual reality helmet and it is VR games can already be found at video arcades (for about $4 a shot) and Sega will release a VR headset for their Genesis system by spring for under $200.
3DO player
ut on
is.
d
a
10
U.Magazine
NOVEMBER 1963
What to use when your term paper's still not finished but your printer is.
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WHEN'S THIS GUY
GONNA PUT IN
A LOADING DOCK?
For a taste that won't fill you up and never lets you down,
BUD LIGHT
BATH
HOTEL
For a taste that won't fill you up and never lets you down, BUD LIGHT DELIVERS.
BUD LIGHT
THE COLLEGE GUIDE
WAYNE'S WORLD
ENTERTA
On A Schwing Set
A day in the life of Wayne and Garth as they film Wayne's World II
INSIDE: COOL IS REBORN, PEARL JAM JAMS, BREEDERS REIGN - PLUS THE LATEST IN FILM
infilm
on screen this month
FREDERICK WILSON
Robin Williams revives the year of the woman, playing a nanny in Mrs. Doubtfire.
This month's star vehicles are crashing into theaters with everyone from Eastwood to Pacino to Huston on board. Look for grand-scale, pretentious vanity projects, scenery-chewing performances, a couple o' sequels and a few gems here and there.
Mrs. Doubtfire (Fox)
Over the years, Robin Williams has played everything from a Russian circus performer to a singing genie. Now, tired of stifling his feminine side, he disguises himself as a British nanny in Mrs. Doubtfire, the latest from Home Alone director Chris Columbus. Caught on the heels of a nasty divorce from his wife Miranda (Sally Field), Daniel (Williams) will go to any extreme to take care of his children. Why aren't there any good female roles in movies today? They're all being taken by men.
A Perfect World (Warner Bros.)
Actor-director Clint Eastwood follows up his epic anti-Western Unforgiven with A Perfect World, directing
TOMMY MILLER
develops a friendship with his 8-year-old hostage. Eastwood plays the Texas lawman on his trail who must reconcile his sympathy for him and his responsibilities as an officer. Is there a screen big enough to hold the egos of these two cultural icons?
The Piano (Miramax)
and starring in this affecting drama about an escaped convict (Kevin Costner) who
In the Cannes Film Festival, this Victorian-era romance from New Zealand director Jane Campion won the coveted Palme d'Or for best picture. Holly Hunter (who also won best actress at Cannes) stars as Ada, a mute whose only means of self-expression is her piano. She travels with it into the New Zealand bush for an arranged marriage with the distant Stewart (Sam Neill), but finds herself falling for his neighbor (Harvey Keitel) instead.
Flesh and Bone (Paramount)
Proving there's life after D.O.A., real-life couple Dennis Quaid and Meg Ryan
F
Carlito's Way (Universal)
Technical wizard Brian De Palma, director of deliciously trashy thrillers like Carrie and Dressed To Kill, teams up with Al Pacino in this tale of the New York underworld. Pacino stars as Carlito Brigante, a mobster trying to go clean after serving time. Even with the help of a streetwise attorney (Sean Penn) and a young dancer (Penelope Ann Miller), Brigante finds reforming difficult. Just when you thought it was safe to go back to the barrios.
are together again in this drama from Steve Kloves, director of the acclaimed Fabulous Baker Boys. The past is catching up with Arlis Sweeney (Quaid), a vending machine repairman who falls for the lovely and talented Kay Davies (Ryan). But their romance is threatened by Sweeney's sinister father (James Caan).
The Three Musketeers (Disney)
Alexandre Dumas' classic story meets the MTV generation in this dubiously conceived adaptation from the director of Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure. Young Guns Charlie Sheen and Kiefer Sutherland team up with Oliver Platt (Indecent Proposal) as the Musketeers who are trying to stop the king's adviser, Cardinal Richelieu (Tim Curry, Loaded Weapon I), from pulling a coup d'état. Promises to be the best Disney live-action film since Gus, the Field-Goal Kicking Mule.
PIONEER
Robocop III (Orion)
Robocop, the metallic product of a bleak futuristic world, is back, hoping to milk
.
a few more dollars from bloodthirsty American audiences. Oh yeah, and he fights crime too. Newcomer Robert Burke squeezes into the title role of the slain-officer-turned-cyborg who, in this sequel, must track down vicious youth gangs called Splatterpunks and armed commandos from the Amazon War. Remember: "Stay out of trouble."
The Saint of Fort Washington (Warner Bros.)
Matt Dillon and Danny Glover star in what should be a moving drama from River's Edge director Tim Hunter. In the Fort Washington Armory, a homeless shelter, two men develop an unlikely friendship. Jerry (Glover) is a Vietnam veteran cast out of the comforts of middle-class life. Matthew (Dillon) is a schizophrenic who takes pictures of the city with a camera that has no film in it. Director Hunter should give a potentially sappy story a much-needed edge.
No, they're not out to launch a political platform just to cash their hefty
paychecks. Anjelica Huston and Raul Julia reprise their roles as Morticia and Gomez Addams, the masochistic heads of this post-nuclear clan. But this time, they've spawned an addition to the family, a grisly child named Pubert. Expect heartwarming moments mixed with torture. Scott Tobias, The Red and Black, U. of Georgia
Addams Family Values (Paramount)
DRAKE
MORRIS
FRIENDS
WHERE THEY COME TO LOVE
on the set
You're nearing college graduation without a job or love and you feel doomed to obscurity. But you have company, at least on the screen, in Universal Pictures' upcoming comedy/drama Reality Bites.
Written by 23-year-old Helen Childress, Reality Bites stars Winona Ryder (Age of Innocence), Ethan Hawke (Alive!) and comedian Ben Stiller (The Ben Stiller Show). Slated for release in February, Reality Bites is the story of three college seniors caught in a love triangle.
A
Stiller pulls double duty in front of and behind the camera in his directorial debut. "In a lot of ways, it's like surfing — you just ride the wave and hope you don't wipe out," Stiller says. "You keep control where you can, but when you have such talented people to work with, you ride it as far as you can."
Big Kuhuna Bon Stiller
Ryder, who also starred in Dracula, gives her reasons for choosing the movie: "I wanted to do a film that reflected people my age and the problems they go through," she says. "Plus in this film I wasn't being chained down and tortured -- at least in the conventional sense." Frank San Miguel, The Daily Cougar, U. of Houston
video calendar November releases
The Muppet Christmas Carol (Buena Vista) 11/2; Detonator (New Line) 11/3;
Silver (Paramount) 11/10; Bluo Ice (HBO) 11/10; Cliffhanger (Columbia) 11/17;
Free Willy (Warner Bros.) 11/17; Lost in Yonkers (Columbia) 11/17; The Last Days of Chez Nous (New Line) 11/17; American Heart (LIVE) 11/17; The Plague (LIVE) 11/17; Elvis in Hollywood (BMG) 11/23; Made in America (Warner Bros.)
11/24; Splitting Heirs (MCA) 11/24; Adventures of Huck Finn (Disney) 11/24; Life With Mikey (Touchstone) 11/24; Return of the Musketeers (MCA) 11/24; Rising Sun (Fox) 12/1
quotable
"I keep remembering I was a busboy in Belmont, Calif. I was mostly stoned, and mostly playing Risk."
14
—Dana Carvey, star of Wayne's World II, on his roots
- U. Magazine
NOVEMBER 1803
in ENTERTAINMENT
The World According To Garth
LAUREN GARDNER
PHOTOGRAPHY
BROADWAY
Red Rope Licorice. Aerosmith. Headbangers. All in a day's work for Mike Myers and Dana Carvey on the set of Wayne's World II.
By Jim Radosta, The Graphic, Pepperdine U.
U. goes on the set with Dana Carvey, Aerosmith and the cast of Wayne's World II
Welcome to Aurora... not just a place, but a state of mind. We've gotten word that there's some bad Red Rope Licorice circulating in the crowd. Repeat, please stay away from the Red Rope Licorice. Do not bite any off and chew it. It could cause a dental emergency."
Welcome to Waynestock.
Garth Algar, looking as insecure as ever, gets booed off the stage. The crowd is getting restless. Out comes Wayne Campbell to save the day.
"Check, check, sibilance, check, check. LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, I GIVE YOU... AEROSMITH!"
This is the set of Wayne's World II, the Mike Myers/Dana Carvey sequel to be released in December by
Paramount. Adapted from the Saturday Night Live skit that made "as if,""schwing" and "not" household words, Wayne's World II boasts a bigger budget, a bigger cast and bigger expectations than last year's blockbuster.
Also new is director Stephen Surjik (Kids in the Hall) who makes his motion picture debut. And while the cameos in the first movie included SNL co-star Chris Farley and Married... with Children's Ed Q'Neill, the sequel features the likes of Charlton Heston, Christopher Walken, Kim Basinger, Drew Barrymore and, of course, Aerosmith.
This time out the boys have moved their cable access show from the depths of Wayne's basement to a hipster loft-studio in downtown Aurora, Ill. Wayne feels angst about his future and faces a record producer (Walken) who has eyes for Cassandra (Tia Carrere). Also, Garth hooks up at the laundromat.
Today the cast and crew are filming Waynestock, a sort of Woodstock revival a la Wayne. About 2,000 hippy extras are on location at the Calamigos Ranch in Malibu, Calif., and they're getting just as antsy as the audience they're portraying. The extras have been standing in the oppressive heat for hours - without the stimulants that benefited the original Woodstock crowd - and even though they've got several hours of shooting to go, fatigue is setting in.
A crew member yells at a group of loiterers who
have escaped to the shade: "They want people to just work for a little while." This seems to go against the nature of the extras. "You haven't been here that long," he scolds. Sunscreen is distributed to keep them in line.
It's a virtual lovefest, this Waynestock business.
Backstage, Carvey — the veteran of seven years and 125 episodes of Saturday Night Live - is doing his part to keep other troubled youth in line. Myers is on the other side of the set, filming scenes with Carrere and Aerosmith, and Carvey seems to have been appointed master of off-stage ceremonies by popular decree.
Chris Farley, who returns as a roadie instead of the security guard he played in the first flick, is trying to get Carvey's attention. "Lady!" Farley calls out, referring to Carvey's Churchlady character. "Lady!" he whines, much like a child crying for his mother at the supermarket. But Carvey will have none of it — he snaps his fingers and Farley freezes.
Other cast members and roadies join in. They jokingly defer to Carvey's comedic dominance over their lesser fame. "These are my merry men," Carvey says with authority. "They love it."
Plenty of ribbing is taking place backstage, as the cast feels the comic moment of the shoot. But there's also a lot of modesty and mutual admiration going on. It's a virtual lovefest, this Waynestock business.
"I just feel pretty grateful to be a part of it all," says Farley.
In fact, Carvey says his own success shocks him. "I always think I'm going to be out of this business as of next week," he says. "I keep remembering I was a busboy in Belmont, Calif. I was mostly stoned, and mostly playing Risk."
As to how funny the finished product will be, Carvey is hesitant to predict. "You write it, you rehearse it and then you shoot it 50 times," he says. "I think the film's turning out funny, but you never know."
In Wayne's World II, Carvey/Garth gets to hook up with Basinger, who plays "the seductress," as well as Olivia D'Abo, who plays "Garthette" Betty Jo. Will Garth finally get to take that "big step" into manhood? Carvey won't say.
plaintiff? "Jaw pain," which he says comes from extended periods of chin-mangling Garthspeak.
Finally, it's time for the big show. Aerosmith performs "Shut Up and Dance" several times for the grand finale while Farley and the other roadies do the White Man's Overbite. The audience is instructed to remain silent while moving their heads in unison like Wayne and Garth did during the infamous "Bohemian Rhapsody" scene in the Mirthmobile.
"Do you remember in the first Wayne's World when they were sitting in the car doing a lot of this?" says a headbanging assistant director. "Now it's your turn."
Apparently some of the extras never saw Wayne's World, as they are raising their arms in the air while banging their heads.
"This time no arms, no banging," says the assistant director before the second take. "Just heads up-and-down, heads up-and-down."
The sun's going down on Waynestock and it's time for extras and onlookers to head home.
But Myers is still recording the scene where he welcomes Aerosmith to the festival. Once again, the band exits Garth's modified Pacer, which is now limousine length, chauffeured and emblazoned with flames on the side. Wayne musters up another hearty "Welcome to Waynestock!"
Thanks, but it's time to split. Party on guys. And Garthspeed.
10
U. Magazine
NOVEMBER 1983
ROBIN WILLIAMS
SALLY FIELD
She makes dinner.
She does windows.
She reads bedtime stories.
She's a blessing...
in disguise.
ROBIN WILLIAMS
SALLY FIELD
MRS. DOUBTFIRE
WENNER-CINEMATRON OF
BLUEWOX
CHRIS COLLEARCS
ROBIN WILLIAMS SALLY FIELD
MRS. DOUBTFIRE
PHRAE BROSNAH
HARVEY HERSHEY
ROBERT PRONKY
HOWARD SHORE
KATHLEEN RALA GOSNELL
ANGELO GRAHAW
DONALD MACADAMI
JOAN BRADSHAW
MATT LHAW RUSHTON
RANDI MAYER SINGER
TESSE DIXON
ANNELINE
MARSHALL ARCIS WILLIAMS ROBIN WILLIAMS
MARK COLLUMBIA
FOX
She makes dinner.
She does windows.
She reads bedtime stories.
She’s a blessing...
in disguise.
FIG. 13.2 PARENTS' STRONGLY CAUTIONED COMING NOVEMBER 24TH TO A THEATRE NEAR YOU
in Poll Question
in
ENTERTAINMENT
60s 70s 80s
THIS MONTH'S IN QUESTION What's the most annoying retro movement? '60s,'70s or'80s? (800) 61VIEWS
(800)6U-VIEWS
RESULTS FROM LAST MONTH
¿Quién Es Más Macho?
Van Damme Arnold
37% 26%
Stallone Seagal
20% 17%
My vote this month is for Jean-Claude Van Damme. He's all around action-oriented. He's got martial arts,
fighting, guns, knives, all sorts of different action. He also does movies where he actually acts. He can be macho and sensitive and down to earth. T.J.Hagen, junior, Arizona State U.
I think that machoness requires more than who has the most testosterone, I think it's who's the most sensitive and who's the most caring, and I think Sylvester Stallone falls into that role, especially when he played Rocky. Malcolm Yeung, junior, Duke U.
Classified Advertisement DO SOMETHING DIFFERENT MAKE A GREAT IMPRESSION BE A HIT...
I'd like to say that Steven Seagal is mas macho. He really melts my butter. Crissy Wesson, freshman, U.of New Hampshire
Arnold is the most macho because he's a family man and politically responsible. Sharon Briggs, senior, New Mexico State U.
I want to say it's Van Damme. The reason is he's just a badass. That's all there is to it. Todd Sandoval, sophomore, Fort Hays State U.
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U. Photo Contest: Win up to $1,000 Cash!
U. needs lots of color photos of the faces and facets of college life. For every entry published (at least one per issue), we'll pay you S25 and your name and campus will be credited.
PLUS, we're offering four S1,000 scholarships and runner-up prizes for the best ones submitted in four categories: Campus Life & Lifestyles Sports, Entertainment and News/Events (politics, personalities, demonstrations & events).
Photos can be of anyone or any activity on or off campus from the normal to the outrageous, from the serious to the funny — orientation, lost frush, moving day, dorm life, political and pep rallies, bands, spring break.
ENTRY BY AMYTIMME WITH SUN 18C1 A
Reflections of a Brain football game in a tube
concerts, latest fashions and fads, funny signs, alternative sports... you name it. For best results, keep the faces in focus and the background as light as possible.
All photos are automatically entered in U.'s College Photo Contest. U.'s May 1994 issue will feature a special College Year in Review section showing student photo entries and winners. Four first-place Grand Prize winners will receive S1,000 cash scholarships. Runner-up prizes will also be awarded.
Send your entries on color print or slide film labeled on the back (gently) with your name, school, address, phone number (school and permanent) and detailed info. on who, what, why, when and where the photo was taken. Include names and phone numbers of the people in the picture, if possible. Entries
Mail entries to U. Magazine Photo Contest, 1800 Century Park Ease, Suite 820, Los Angeles, CA 90067-1503.
cannot be returned and become the property of *U*.
U. Capture the Nike Spirit Contest Win $1,000 AND have your entry published with a national Nike ad!
You still have time to grab your camera and capture those outstanding Nike moments in sports and everyday life. Deadline for entries is now December 1.
The Grand Prize winner will receive a $1,000 scholarship from U. Plus the winning entry will be published with a national Nike ad in the February issue of U.
Send your entries on color
print or slide film, labeled with your name, school, address and phone (school and home), along with a brief description of the Nike spirit you've captured — who, when,
NIKE
ENTRY BY HEIDI HALECK, SYRACUSE U.
Syracuse's marching band showing their spirit in full formation
where, doing what, etc. Mail to U. Magazine CAPTURE THE NIKE SPIRIT CONTEST, 1800 Century Park East, Suite 820, Los Angeles, CA 90067. Entries cannot be returned and become the property of U.
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Students Needed!
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Make up to $2,000-$4,000+ per month teaching basic conversational English abroad. Japan & Taiwan. Many provide room & board + other benefits. No prior training or teaching certificate required! For info. call: (260) 632-1146 ext. J3871
NATIONAL PREMEDICAL ADVISORY RESOURCE Info/advice tailored to your situation. Goals TARGETED to give your MEDICINE career planning the edge. (313) 741-4133, Speak with a physician & prepare NOW. Freshmen: NEVER too early; Seniors. Never too late!
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COLLEGE FINANCIAL AID. Millions of $$ go unclaimed. Get your fair share. Scholarships, grants and loans. Results GUARANTEED. Call for brochure. (800) 457-0089 ext 126.
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U. THE NATIONAL COLLEGE MAGAZINE does not accept classified ads for term paper sales, editing services, research assistance services, research papers, take I.D. kits or ads promoting cheating, drugs (including drug-related publications and paraphermalia), pornographic materials and other products and services available only to adults over the age of 21. We reserve the right to refuse advertising that, in the opinion of management, is in poor taste or judgment. We reserve the right to edit ad copy to eliminate language and/or graphics deemed inappropriate for this publication. We also refuse, after investigation, advertising that is ambiguously or deceptively worded or portrayed so as to make the product or service unclear or open to misrepresentations. U. does not accept advertising for organizations or activities that malign races or religions, is not accurate and truthful, or is otherwise determined unacceptable by management. Acceptance of classified ads does not constitute an endorsement, expressed or implied, by U. of the products and services offered. Publisher is not liable for errors in key numbers.
18
18 • U. Magazine
NOVEMBER 1983
in music
U. COLLEGE RADIO CHART
on disc this month
SPONSORED BY SONY
1. The Breeders, Last Splash (4-AD)
2. Smashing Pumpkins,
Siamese Dream (Virgin)
3. Nirvana, In Utero (Geffen)
4. Unrest, Perfect Teeth (4-AD)
7. Curve, Cuckoo (Anxious)
5. Archers of Loaf, Icky Mettle (Alias)
8. Juliana Hatfield Three, Become What You Are (Mammoth)
9. Various Artists, Judgment Night Soundtrack (Immortal/Epic)
10. Various Artists, In Defense of Animals (Restless)
6. Cracker, Kerosene Hat (Virgin)
Chart solely on college radio airplay. Contributing radio stations: ACRN, Ohio U.; WIDB, Southern Illinois U.; WTUL, Tulane U.; KUCB, U of Colorado; WVUD, U of Delaware; WUOG, U of Georgia; WRFL, U of Kentucky; WVUM, U of Miami; KRNU, U of Nebraska; WXYC, U of North Carolina; KWVA, U of Oregon; WUSC, U of South Carolina; WUTK, U of Tennessee; WUVT, Virginia Tech
Kev to Ratinas: ★★★★= Janet ★★★★= Michael ★★★= Jermaine ★= LaToya ★= Tito
Various Artists The Rebirth of Cool (Island)
★★★★★
Since the revolutionary advent of new jazz, the genre is no longer confined to staccato samples or gauzy background music. Rebirth of
COOL
Cool's 10 infectious tracks are the latest and most exciting samples of jazz-rap fusion.
In the richly textured composition of Freestyle Fellowship's "Inner City Boundaries," everything from scat to Jamaican two-tone rap is spoken over a cool landscape of sax and vibraphone. Jazz Warriors do a mellow cover of the Herbie Hancock standard "Chameleon," and Outlaw flavors traditional hip-hop bravado with a laid-back sax line from jazz great Pharoah Sanders.
With contributions from Tokyo's United Future Organization, the UK's Stereo MCs and French rapper MC Solaar, The Rebirth of Cool celebrates a global renaissance of jazz. It's already a classic of our time. - Yosha Bourgea, The Bradley Scout, Bradley U.
Various Artists No Alternative (Arista)
★★★
The third in the Red Hot + Blue AIDS benefit series, No Alternative just may rival the Singles soundtrack as the definitive grunge compilation.
NO ALTERNATE
With bands ranging from Patti Smith to the Goo Goo Dolls, the CD never stays at one speed long enough for the listener to get bored.
Soul Asylum pulls off the biggest feat with a catchy rendition of Marvin Gaye's "Sexual Healing." And Uncle Tupelo's powerful interpretation of Creedence Clearwater Revival's "Effigy" takes on a whole new meaning in light of the AIDS epidemic. No Alternative offers this spectrum of music while avoiding the corniness that plagues most compilations.
Also making strong showings are The Breeders, Sonic Youth and Soundgarden. Plus Nirvana, in a secretive mode, snuck in a last-minute mystery song not available at press time. Jim Radosta, The Graphic, Pepperdine U.
★★★★
The Red Shoes (Columbia)
Kate Bush
Kate Bush made a bold statement of vocal and lyrical style with her 1978 debut, The Kick Inside, and remains triumphantly unique eight albums
later. The Red Shoes is more proof that this woman loves her work.
Songs of inspired passion and intimate storytelling will delight long-time Bush fans as the disc flirts with disco, soul, progressive-rock and Caribbean sounds, all of it dramatically colored by Bush's boisterous, gleeful, sometimes painfully expressive voice.
In "Rubberband Girl" and "Eat the Music," Bush sings with youthful abandon and frivolity, then moves defiantly into sophisticated introspection in "Moments of Pleasure" and "Lily." This mixture of open femininity and internal reflection is Bush's specialty, and previously unfamiliar American listeners should find The Red Shoes a good introduction. Erik Lyons, The Daily Vanguard, Portland State U.
Cocteau Twins Four Calendar Cafe (Capitol)
★★★
The Cocteau Twins almost single-handedly founded the dream pop sound in the early '80s. On their latest CD, Four Calendar Cafe, they
Cocteau Twins
THE MUSICAL BY THEATRE DE LA FONTAINE
LITTLE BOOKS FOR KIDS
attempt to cling to their ethereal origins with mixed results.
Nowadays, jangly guitars and spacey synths aren't enough to qualify as innovative — and on that premise, some of Cafe sinks under trite musical structures
and disposable melodies.
But all is not boring. When they get organic on "Oil of Angels" and "My Truth," time and life get warped into a sensual mix of slow, cool images. These songs prove vocalist Elizabeth Fraser is better off flirting with otherwordly high notes than playing the straight role of pop singer.
For fans, Four Calendar Cafe is a dose of standard Cocteau atmosphere. For newcomers, it's a sonic Quaalude that, unfortunately, buries its best songs in mediocre musical fog. Joe Warminsky, The Daily Collegian, Pennsylvania State U.
Pearl Jam
Vs. (Epic)
★★
Pearl Jam struck a chord last year with the darkly toned bombast of Ten and the CD sold a jillion copies, but this year the masses may think twice and steer clear o
pearl jam
The CD contains a few strong.cuts, like the pounding, fist-pumping "Go," with extra-sharp rhythms and bursts of guitar fury. But tracks like these exceptions to the rule. Other tunes, like "Daughter" and "Dissident," are plain old rock — and ordinary rock at that.
As for Pearl Jam's lyrics, they often sink under their own self-conscious social awareness. "Rats" attempts to address society's ills by comparing rodents with humans ("They don't take what's not theirs/They don't compare"); while "Leash" is a lame call-to-arms for twentysomething youth ("Drop the leash/We are young/Get out of my fucking face.") In the end, these guys just take themselves too seriously to be taken seriously. Rod O'Connor, The Daily Illini, U. of Illinois
in the studio
For your future music-purchasing plans, we have our in the-studio acts conveniently grouped by genre:
- The Angry Hair Genre: Motley Crue is working on their first album since the departure of Vince Neil, titled 'Till Death Do Us Apart, due on Elektra by March. Proving they have friends in low places, KISS is overseeing the produc
103785
tion of their tribute album which includes covers by the likes of Garth Brooks and Dinosaur Jr. They embark on their next CD after the tribute is released on Mercury in January.
The Grie, sans Vince
The Junior High School Dance Genre: Brian Setzer will give fans his own big-band versions of classics and Stray Cats favorites early next year, when he and his 17-piece Brian Setzer Orchestra make their Hollywood Records debut. Other unexpected revivals include a solo album by Huey Lewis, Back in Blue, and a new one from Violent Femmes, both on Elektra.
- The Progressive/Folk/Rock 'n': Roll Genre: After the success of Bang!, World Party will release its latest next spring. The Proclaimers are finishing a third album, coming in January. Timothee Verrecchia, The Columbia Daily Spectator, Columbia U.
CDs on parade
More releases we didn't have room to review
BoDeans (Reprise/Slash) 10/12; George Clinton (Paisley Park) 10/12; Eleven (Hollywood) 10/19; Rush (Atlantic) 10/19; Buzzcocks (Caroline) 10/21; KMFDM (Wax Trax) 10/21; Cure (Elektra) 10/22; Bob Dylan (Columbia) 10/26; Zapp (Reprise) 10/26; Boy George & Culture Club (EMI) 11/2; Deafening Divinities with Aural Affinities (Beggars Banquet Collection) 11/2; INXS (Atlantic) 11/2; Frank Sinatra (Capitol) 11/2; Alice in Chains EP (Columbia) 11/9; Cowboy Junkies (RCA) 11/9; Smiths re-issue (Reprise/Sire) 11/9; Michael Bolton (Columbia) 11/16; Brian Eno box set (Virgin) 11/16; Greenpeace Compilation (Hollywood) 11/16; Metallica (Elektra) 11/19; Torn Petty (MCA) 11/19; Elton John (MCA) 11/23; Blur (EMI) 11/30
"Check out my f**king record, because it's really good."
— Iggy Pop on his new Virgin release, American Caesar
quotable
NOVEMBER 1983
19 • U. Magazine
LIFE WITH OUT IT BITES.
Here's something to chew on.
No annual fee. Now that's something you can sink your teeth into.
IF YOU DON'T GOT IT, GET IT
SPORTS: The Kansas volleyball team was defeated by Colorado but says the match was not a total loss. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103.NO.56
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8,1993
21 NEBRASKA 20 KANSAS KU
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It wasn't a victory
Kip Chen/KANSAN
BLEVINS 28
Kansas' defensive back Tony Blevins and defensive end Guy Howard just miss Nebraska's running back Calvin Jones. Despite a 21-20 loss Saturday, the margin of defeat was the closest between the two rivals since 1973.
But who would have thought the possibility was within Kansas' grasp?
Nebraska's winning streak against Kansas is still alive. Barely.
The Jayhawks could not score on a two-point conversion with 52 seconds remaining in the game and fell to the Huskers 21-20 on Saturday at Memorial Stadium.
Kansas has lost 25 consecutive games to Nebraska. Saturday's margin of defeat was the closest in the 100-game series since 1973, when Kansas lost 10-9 in Lincoln. Neb.
In 1968, Kansas last defeated Nebraska 23-13 in Lincoln.
The close game was no consolation to Coach Glen Mason, who was clearly heartbroken after the game.
"Be proud of the effort,but don't
accept playing them close," Mason said. "This is the mostlopsided series probably in the history of college football. All I know is I'd been outscored 263-63 going into this game."
See stories. page 9.
NAFTA debate on jobs is overblown, economists say
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Ross Perot predicts a "giant sucking sound" will put 5.9 million American jobs at risk. Bill Clinton says free trade with Mexico will create 200,00 new jobs by 1995.
As the battle over the North American Free Trade Agreement nears its climax, no issue has been more hotly contested than whether jobs will be gained or lost. It will be at the center of tomorrow night's televised debate between Perot and Vice President Al Gore.
The trouble, in the view of many economists who have studied the
agreement, is that both sides are overstating N A F T A 's impact.
They view Perot's claim of 5.9 million jobs "at risk" as absurd on its face. The United States would have to run a $100 billion trade deficit with Mexico — equal to its total deficit with the world this year
— to produce a loss of even 2 million jobs, they contend.
NAFTA DEBATE:
Vice President Al Gore and NAFTA foe Ross Perot are to debate the trade agreement at 8 p.m. tomorrow on "Larry King Live," channel 21 (CNN).
LABOR CRITICIZED:
President Clinton yesterday denounced organized labor for its tactics to underline passage of NAFTA.
Page 7.
While the administration is much more modest in its claim that 200,000 new jobs will be created by 1995 from NAFTA, economists say that figure is also being fudged.
They say the administration in its calculations is only totaling up the jobs gained from increased U.S. exports to Mexico while not taking into account any jobs lost from increased Mexican imports into this country.
So what is the right number?
Most analysts say the operative answer is "small."
Some say the United States would gain jobs from the pact because the phase-out of Mexican tariffs — $2\frac{1}{2}$ times as high as U.S. tariffs—and the removal of other barriers would allow U.S. companies to sell more in Mexico.
One of the most often cited studies in this camp was done by Gary Huffbauer and Jeffrey Schott, two economists at the Institute for International Economics, a Washington think tank.
Using 1990 as a base year, Hufbauer and Schott forecast that NAFTA and other trade liberalization measures already undertaken by Mexico will increase U.S. exports enough to create 316,000 new U.S. jobs by 1995. At the same time, 145,000 U.S. jobs will be lost as a result of rising Mexican imports — a net gain of 171,000 jobs.
They arrive at that conclusion by tracking the United States' trade balance with Mexico and using the government's estimate that each $1 billion gain in U.S. export sales supports 19,600 jobs.
NAFTA opponents say that by this reasoning, Mexico's trade liberalization has already provided America with 148,000 of the jobs forecast by Hufbauer and Schott, leaving only 23,000 that could be credited to NAFTA.
While outnumbered by the studies forecasting positive results, there are economic studies that show the United States will lose more jobs than it gains under NAFTA.
The pessimists generally base their forecasts on expectations of a greatly increased flow of U.S. investment dollars into Mexico to build new factories, capital they believe will come at the expense of American workers — Perot's giant sucking sound.
The Economic Strategy Institute put net job losses between 32,000 and 220,000 over the next decade, based on an assumption that foreign investment in Mexico would increase by $63 billion during this period, much of it coming from the United States.
The ESI study, however, illustrates the difficulty of using economic models, no matter how complex, to predict the real world.
ESI President Clyde Prestowitz, a former top trade official in the Reagan administration, came out in support of NAFTA last month and said his think tank's earlier forecast was too pessimistic.
Prestowitz said that after talking with many manufacturers, he came to believe that more American companies will shut down their Mexican facilities and move those jobs back to the United States because of the reduced tariff barriers.
Whether economists are predicting net job losses or net job gains, there is general agreement on one point — NAFTA will not have much impact on an American labor market of 128 million people.
Chancellor's guest house home to many over years
Kansan staff writer
By David Stewart
Kenyon staff writer
Even without room service or valet parking, the chancellor's guest house has lodged many of the University's notable guests for 30 years.
; A two-story stone structure just north of the chancellor's Lilac Lane residence, the guest house has served as a temporary residence for guests of the University since at least the mid-1960s, said James Scally, assistant to the chancellor.
Elizabeth Watkins gave the house to the University in 1939 as part of her estate, Sally said. The upstairs five-room apartment, including two small bedrooms, a living room and walk-in kitchen, now is used
only to lodge University guests, Scally said.
"Any unit in the University can reserve the guest house, not just the chancellor," Scully said. "Any academic or research unit or administrative office would get first priority. Second priority would be any registered student organization, but very few student groups would bring in outside speakers."
For visiting performers and entertainers, the guest house provides a no-cost, convenient location on campus, said Sue Morrell, director of the Student Union Programs. She said she estimated that SUA reserved the house about five times a year.
dential aide David Gergen.
Scally said two married graduate students cleaned the guest house in exchange for a rent-free apartment on the first floor, free tuition and a stipend. When available, students can apply for the guest house fellowship through the graduate school.
Past guests in the house include comic Adam Sandler, associate Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor and presi-
As a graduate student living in the guest house from 1983 to 1987, Tom Berger, associate director of the office of affirmative action, said he met many of the guests, including politicians, artists and lecturers.
Berger said one drawback of living in the guest house was increased security required for some guests. When Jihan Sadat, wife of former Egyptian president Anwar Sadat, was a guest, the security was especially rigid.
"Every time she left the building, it had to be searched before they let her back in," Berger said. "It's hard at times to have security go through your place when your studying for a final or trying to write a paper."
Frank Doden, Lawrence graduate student, said he had lived in the house since 1988 with his wife Lori Askeland, Lawrence graduate student. As part of the housing arrangement, Doden and Askeland make breakfasts for the visiting tenants. Doden said.
"Sometimes, the guests want to join us for breakfast on the first-floor, but most eat it alone," Doden said. "But all in all, they keep to themselves. We just don't see them that much."
The Lodge
William Alix / KANSAN
This small stone house, just north of the chancellor's residence, has been housing University guests for more than 30 years. The five-room apartment was originally used as organized servants' quarters.
INSIDE
[Image of a group of people sitting in a room]
A regional conference of the National Society of Black Engineers brought 300 students to the University of Kansas this weekend.
Engineering a future
Page 3.
Council wants rules for advertising on campus
Officials say the guidelines aim to prevent ads deemed inappropriate for a college campus. The policy would include commercial ads posted in classrooms and hallways.
By Brian James
Kansan staff writer
KU officials want to make sure that the University's name and reputation are not harmed by "inappropriate" commercial messages on campus.
The guidelines were developed in response to companies' growing interest in advertising on campus, said T.P. Srinivasan, professor of mathematics and head of SenEx.
So members of the University Senate Executive Committee have proposed guidelines to regulate the kinds of advertisements that appear on campus and in University publications.
"Communication and corporate sponsorship have been a way of life on this campus," he said. "This policy is not meant to restrict sponsorship but to have the advertisers work within the framework of the University's mission.
"What we are trying to do is set down guidelines with which we can define the kinds of ads that appear on campus. We want to make sure there are no explicit or implicit endorsements by the University in those ads."
The proposal was distributed Thursday to SenEx members. The guidelines will be reviewed by SenEx and members will make final recommendations, he said.
Under the guidelines, ads that a University group deems questionable or inappropriate would be submitted to a Standards Review Council, made up of members of 10 KU groups, including faculty, administration and Student Senate.
The council then would review any questionable ads and decide whether the ads were appropriate to appear on campus or in a publication owned or associated with the University.
The guidelines suggested include:
- Restricting commercialism or advertising "which is inconsistent with the mission of the University."
- Restricting all commercial signs and banners to inside the buildings used for University-sponsored events.
- Prohibiting commercial sponsorship or advertising that conveys a University endorsement of a service or a product.
Carefully reviewing commercial sponsorship
or advertising by any campus organization or unit of the University that encourages "the use or consumption of alcohol, cereal malt beverages, tobacco or firearms."
Banning advertisements that are discriminatory of any person or group based on race, gender, sexual orientation, age, color, creed, religion, nationality or disability.
Restricting the use of bulletin boards in campus classrooms to instructional information, as defined by instructors.
Srinivasan said that under the guidelines, any company interested in advertising on campus would have to check with the standards council as well as the University Events Committee. He said that any unapproved commercial ads appearing in hallways and classrooms could be taken down.
Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, said the guidelines were important in maintaining "a certain campus environment."
1
5
"If a major commercial sign goes up outside of Allen Field House, for example, it is important that we ask questions about that sign's appropriateness," he said.
2
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 8,1993
Healthy Men Needed Receive up to $375
IMTCI, a pharmaceutical research company, is now seeking volunteers to participate in a medical research study To qualify you must: be age 18-40 be able to attend three 29 hour visits at our clinic
Call IMTCI for more info: Mon-Fri from 8am-5pm
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ON CAMPUS
Veteran GTA Panel will have a brown bag lunch at noon today at Alcove H in the Kansas Union. For more information, call the Graduate Student Council at 864-4914.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a Catholic law student discussion group at 12:30 p.m. today in 109 Green Hall. For more information, call 843-0357.
Clan na daghda ValFather (Clans of the Good God all Father) will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove F in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Debra or Michael Terry at 841-2696.
■ KU Kempo will meet at 6 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana
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 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 865-1682.
Ershadi at 842-4713
Undergraduate Philosophy Club will sponsor a lecture at 8 tonight in Terra Nova Books, 920 Massachusetts St. For more information, call Amy Coplan at 841-5405.
Black Student Union will meet at 7 tonight in Alderson Auditorium. For more information, call Terry Bell at 864-3984.
ON THE RECORD
A student's parking permit valued at $60 was taken from a car in parked lot No. 91 between Oct. 29 and Nov. 1, KU police reported.
room Tuesday, KU police reported.
A student's miscellaneous clothing valued at $330 was taken from the McCollum Hall laundry
A student's license plate valued at $10 was taken from a car in the 2400 block of Alabama Street on Wednesday, Lawrence police reported.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60405, 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. 60404. 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.
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Remind your parents over the holidays that our Gift Certificates will fit in your stocking
Our previous correspondence regarding CCN/EPIQual may have caused some confusion regarding insurance coverage for services offered at Watkins Health Center and its Pharmacy. Our insurance plan was designed with the intent that Watkins Health Center would be the main or primary site for health coverage for covered students. Under this plan the use of Watkins Health Center and its Pharmacy will result in the lowest out-of-pocket expenses for enrolled students.
814 Massachusetts Dine in or Carry-Out 843-BIRD
A detailed explanation of this coverage can be found on page 12 of the University of Kansas Student Health Plan brochure or you can call us directly at 1-800-521-2623 to make specific inquiries.
The listing of CCN/EPIQual participants and the explanation of Express Scripts in our recent malling is intended to give you information about the lowest cost alternatives when the use of Watkins Health Center is not possible.
Tickets on sale at KU Ticket Office (East Lobby/Allen Field House)
PRE-SEASON NIT STUDENT TICKET SALES
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1 THROUGH WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10th (Excluding Nov.6 and 7) 8:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. TICKET PRICE: $6 for two game package (Cash or check only)
DRIVER
Wednesday, November 17th 8:30 p.m.- KU vs. Western Michigan Friday, November 19th 8:30 p.m.- KU -Western Michigan winner
LIMIT: One Two Game Package Per Student (with valid KUID)
Cal-Santa Clara winner
NOTE: Refunds will be made if KU does not play on November 19th.
Palestine Heritage Week
Tuesday, November 9 The Women Next Door
Movie
8:00 PM
Alderson Auditorium
Thursday, November 11 Arab-American Women and the Media
Leila Diab
8:00 PM
Kansas Room
Friday, November 12 Manufacturing Consent: Noam Chomsky and the Media
Noam Chomsky
8:00 PM
Kansas Ballroom
Sponsored by: General Union of Palestine Students Anthropology Department, Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, Middle-East Club, Coalition of Arab-American Students, Political Science Department, Student Senate SUA, Women's Student Union
STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SENATE
1
1
CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 8, 1993
3
Views vary about losing degrees
By Christoph Fuhrmans
Kansanstaffwriter
Robyn Weeks, Overland Park senior, plans to graduate from the University of Kansas in Spring 1995 with a bachelor of science degree in atmospheric science.
She said that she wanted to stay at KU and get a master's. But after the Academic Policies and Procedures Committee officially recommended Thursday the elimination of the B.A. and M.S. degrees in atmospheric science, Weeks said she had no reason to stay at KU.
Weeks is one of the students who is being affected by the committee's recommendation that six degrees be eliminated. The proposals, part of the University's ongoing program review, must be approved by Chancellor Gene Budig before they are enacted.
The atmospheric science degrees
PROGRAM review
were two of six degrees the committee recommended for elimination to the University Senate Executive Committee. The committee also recommended eliminating the B.A. in comparative literature, B.A. in Italian and B.A. and B.G.S. in computer science. The committee recommended that the University keep the B.A. in humanities.
Some students were not as upset with the committee's recommendations.
"They're not going to stay here unless they have graduate students to help with research," she said.
Weeks said that not having a graduate program would drive quality professors from KU.
Nicolas Shump, Lawrence senior, said he was pleased with the committee's choice of saving the humanities degree but disappointed that the comparative literature degree was recommended to be a concentration in the English degree.
"Hope it is still of the same caliber," he said.
Elizabeth Schultz, professor of humanities and comparative literature, said she was disappointed with the committee's recommendation to cut the comparative literature degree, but she was pleased that the humanities degree was spared.
"I think the committee acted very responsibly, courageously and thoughtfully," she said.
Jan Kozma, head of the department of French and Italian, said she was
satisfied with the committee's recommendation just to rename the Italian degree the French and Italian degree.
"Essentially, I think the committee made a sensible decision to make the degrees cohere," she said. "The committee recognized correctly that we need help in the Italian department."
Earl Schweppe, professor of computer science, said losing the B.A. in computer science would hurt students' interest in computer science degrees. He said students with double majors usually took the B.A. degree because it was more flexible than the B.S.
Elizabeth Banks, associate professor of classics, said she thought the administration only chose the degrees for elimination for cosmetic reasons.
"It just seemed to me they were apparently charged with the task of getting rid of things," she said.
1995
William Alix/ KANSAN
Alyssia Parris, representative for the National Consortium for Graduate Degrees for Minorities in Engineering and Science, spoke to a crowd of 40 about the importance of going to graduate school. The National Society of Black Engineers national fall conference was Saturday at the Kansas Union.
Black engineers face challenging future
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Alyssia Parris told the crowd of young engineers that the road ahead would not be easy.
"You're going to have to be the rookie, and you're going to have to pay the price," said Parris, a representative of the National Consortium for Graduate Degrees for Minorities in Engineering and Science.
Parris was one of many speakers at this weekend's fall regional conference of the National Society of Black Engineers. About 300 undergraduate African-American students from 10 states attended workshops and speeches in the Kansas and Burge Unions aimed at motivating them for a future in engineering.
Alicia Young, Kansas City, Mo., senior and registration chairwoman, said times had changed since the 1970s, when aggressive recruiting programs in the engineering field allowed easier access for minorities.
"If you were Black and had an engineering degree, you could get in," said Young, a member of the KU chapter of the National Society of Black Engineers, or NSBE. "But being Black and having an engineering degree isn't enough. You have to be more prepared to enter the workplace."
The conference, which also was attended by representatives from companies such as Amoco and 3M, stressed career goals, study habits and graduate school. Company representatives also held a career fair in the Burge Intended to give students a chance to make contacts within the field.
"Their main mission is to make us better people, to make us better in the workplace," said TyWaunne Hill, a freshman from Iowa State University. "We have connections instead of being left out in the cold."
science fields.
Ali McHenry, adjunior from Prairie View A&M University in Texas, said NSB served a larger function. He said the conference gave African Americans the chance to increase their presence in
"The numbers are very low," McHenry said. "This can give African Americans awareness of the problem. It can also give the opportunity to alleviate the problem."
William Hogan, former associate executive vice chancellor and electrical engineering professor at KU, was the keynote speaker. Before his speech, he said the conference would give students a foot in the door when they left school to look for employment.
"This is a fairly important function," said Hogan, who worked for Honeywell and now owns a business in Minnesota. "They need a support base they can go to over the years that they can trust."
Then Hogan smiled and indicated the crowd waiting for his speech.
"The next president of Westinghouse may be here," he said.
College Assembly votes to keep limit on principal courses
By Kathleen Stolle Kansan staff writer
The number of principal courses a department can offer will remain the same, a count of College Assembly votes determined Friday.
At issue was whether departments in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences were restricted by a rule limiting principal courses to four.
Principal courses are introductory courses that provide basic knowledge in an academic area. Students in the college choose from among principal courses to help fulfill basic requirements for bachelor of arts and bachelor of general science degrees.
For example, a student who wants to take a philosophy course to help fulfill a humanities requirement has only four from which to choose.
The vote to lift the limit failed, 159 to 208, said Jim Carothers, associate dean, speaking for James Muyskens, dean of the college and chair of College Assembly.
"It would appear that many people believe that the present system is working effectively." Carothers said.
The assembly, which includes elected students and tenured faculty in the college, votes on suggested policy and curricular changes in the college.
The College Assembly decided at its Oct. 4 meeting to settle the issue by mail ballots, which were due Oct. 29.
Don Marquis, professor of philosophy, was a key supporter of lifting the limit.
He first introduced the issue at last December's assembly meeting, then again in May. At the October meeting he argued that some departments could not adequately tap their faculty
resources under the four-course limit. In turn, underclassmen had fewer opportunities for exposure to professors.
On Friday, Marquis said the issue would have had a better chance of passing last spring. The vote was delayed because the assembly did not have a quorum.
"Last spring it seemed like most everybody there was speaking in favor of it; only one person was opposed," he said.
At the October meeting, Richard DeGeorge, professor of philosophy and Russian and East European studies, expressed opposition to the change. He said that before the limit was imposed in 1986, advising had been difficult because of an overwhelming number of principal courses offered. Lifting the limit also would result in upper-level students with widely-varied educational backgrounds, he said.
After the final tally on Friday, DeGeorge said he thought that the issue might have received more support if a ceiling had been suggested, rather than the total elimination of the four-course limit.
"I thought the opening up of the number of principal courses without restriction was excessive," he said.
DeGeorge suggested the mail ballot at the October meeting because not all members of the assembly were present and because many members were new to the college or unfamiliar with both sides of the issue.
"My biggest concern was that the College Assembly vote on it and it not be decided on by a small number of people," he said.
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Exhibit on Garden City opens today
The traveling exhibition "I Born Again in America: Observations on a More Diverse Nation" opens today at KU's anthropology museum.
The exhibition is the result of a study on relationships among recent immigrants and long-term residents in six U.S. communities.
Garden City, Kansas' fastest-growing community in the past decade, is the focus of the exhibition. Garden City's population grew more than 30 percent from 1980 to 1985, said Donald Stull, KU professor of anthropology and principal investigator of the study.
Photographs and oral histories of Southeast Asians, Hispanics and longtime residents of Garden City are included in the exhibit.
Other cities examined in the study but not included in the
exhibit are: Houston, Miami Chicago, Philadelphia and Monterey Park, Calif. A multidisciplinary team of scholars conducted the study through a 1987 Ford Foundation grant.
The exhibition will be on display until Dec. 8. Museum hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday.
Water to be shut off in 3 campus buildings
The water will be turned off from 6:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. tomorrow in the Military Science building, the Military Science annex, Summerfield and Murphy halls.
The water also will be turned off from 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the Parking Facility.
Bob Porter, facilities operations, said the water would be shut off to clean the water lines.
The buildings will remain open and classes will not be canceled.
Compiled from Kansan staff reports.
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Monday, November 8, 1993
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1
VIEWPOINT
City's South Trafficway should be constructed
The South Lawrence Trafficway project is vital to the future of Lawrence and should be built
as planned. The trafficway would allow through traffic on Kansas Highway 10 to bypass 23rd Street by traveling south of Lawrence. The project is necessary because projections indicate that 23rd Street, with a daily volume of 35,000 cars, will become highly congested in seven years.
hugely congested in seven years. The trafficway has been planned for almost a decade and construction is due to start soon. However, many Native Americans at Haskell are upset, claiming that the new road will be too close to wetlands that are used for spiritual purposes. These wetlands are not owned by Haskell and have already been bought by the county. It is unfortunate that the land will have to be disturbed, but the project is necessary.
Whole cemeteries have been moved in the past to make way for roads. Some churches are located right next to highways. Native Americans' use of land for worship purposes doesn't warrant them receiving special treatment. If possible, the county should erect noise barriers or a tree line to minimize the traffic noise on the wetlands, but they should not delay or alter the construction of the trafficway itself.
Hopefully, those objecting to the trafficway's construction will not be successful in blocking this muchneeded project, which would benefit everyone in Lawrence. Without construction of the new road, parts of Lawrence will become gridlocked, jeopardizing economic development and the quality of life for students and residents. The South Lawrence Trafficway is vital to the future of our city and should be constructed as planned.
MIKE SILVERMAN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Umbrella organizations would simplify financing
Student Senate should simplify and improve the way multicultural organizations are financed. Currently, each minority group submits financing requests to Senate. Resulting are endless Senate debates about the importance of numerous groups' activities.
Forming umbrella organizations grouping similar cultures would benefit both Senate and minority groups.
An umbrella organization could be composed of several minority groups. Senate could allocate funds to the umbrella organizations, and each umbrella organization then could divide the money among the groups the organization covers. Forming umbrella organizations would grant individual minority groups increased control over financing.
Under the current system, Senate is forced to determine financing for numerous minority groups that many senators know little or nothing about. Forming umbrella organizations would allow minority groups to work together to allocate funds fairly.
The financial needs of all multicultural organizations are important and deserve careful consideration. When smaller minority organizations are forced to compete with larger organizations for Senate funds, smaller groups often are overlooked.
Umbrella organizations also would eliminate duplication of services. Often, minority groups of related cultures plan similar activities and events.
The minority groups themselves are better qualified to decide how funds should be divided among them. Umbrella organizations would confer power to multicultural organizations and would better serve Senate and minority groups.
COLLEEN McCAIN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
KC TRAUER, Editor
k Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
Editors
Assistant to the editor ... J.R. Cialiborne
News ... Stacy Friedman
Editorial ... Terrlyn McCormick
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Kristi Fogler
Photo ... Kip Chin, Renee Knoser
Features ... Ernz Roel
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 Perrler
National sales mgr ... Jennifer Evanson
Co-op sales mgr ... Blythe Focht
Production mgrs ... Blythe Blowey
Kate Burgess
Marketing director ... Shelly McConnell
Creative director ... Brian Fusco
Classified mgr ... Gretchen Koetterleinch
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 homeotem, or faculty or staff position.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
I'M AFRAID WE
NO LONGER HAVE A
"NON-SMOKING"
SECTION
CAFE
SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA
HOOD UDK '95
Frogs and cheese vital to knowledge of world
What's wrong with this country, aside from "light" beer, is that Americans don't know anything about foreign affairs. Your average American can't answer basic questions about geography, such as:
1. In which direction does the Nile River flow?
2. What can the letters in "Great Britain" be rearranged to spell?
(Answers: 1. Downhill; 2. "Big Titan
Rear.")
Tragically, we Americans are too busy sitting around watching worthless, juvenile, mind-rotting TV situation comedies such as "Dave's World" (Monday nights, CBS, check your local listings) to learn about foreign affairs. This is bad, because what happens abroad can greatly affect our lives. For example, ifensions were to mount again in the Middle East, fighting could break out, and it could escalate to, God forbid, nuclear war. This almost definitely would affect our TV reception.
This is why today I'm going to present a Foreign News Update, starting with an important story from the Sept. 2, 1993, Times of India, sent in by alert reader Tapash Chakraborty. This article, which I am not making up, states: "Villagers of Khajuria in Ganjam district worshiped a frog on Monday to please the rain god Indra, as the dry spell continued to delay cultivation." The article further states that "a big live frogtied with a bamboo stick was carried by villagers who roamed in and around the village chanting couplets in honor of the wife of Lord Indra."
COLUMNIST
DAVE
BARRY
The article does not give the exact wording of the couplets. Probably they went something like:
We need rain; your wife is great Here's a frog; let's cultivate!
The article also doesn't state whether this effort resulted in rain, but I'm sure it did. If you're a rain god and you have people waving a frog around and chanting about your wife, you're definitely going to dump something on them.
Speaking of frogs, many alert readers sent in an Associated Press report concerning an incident in Manchester, N.H., which is not technically a foreign country, but you'll want to know about this incident anyway, because it involves a woman who opened a bag of pretzels and pulled out a pretzel with a one-inch frog baked onto it. The Associated Press sent out a photograph showing the actual pretzel, and sure enough, there's a frog sort of welded onto it looking ready to hop away.
My first thought when I saw this article, was that maybe the frog had been put there on purpose. We live in an era of increasingly complex snack-food variations, such as Japaleno Cheddar n' Onion Graham Crackers ("Now With Avocado"). It's entirely possible that marketing experts at the pretzel company were enhancing their product line "Now With Frogs!"). But
apparently that was not the case with these pretzels, so the woman took them back to the food store, which gave her a handsome baked prince.
No, seriously, the store gave her a refund, so all's well that ends well. But that does not mean we should relax, not with the alarming cheese-related developments that are taking place in England. I refer to a May 26, 1993, United Press International report, sent in by alert reader Clyde E. Morgan, which begins: "Fourteen people were injured taking part in the annual Double Gloucester cheese-rolling race." I still am not making this up. The article states that this race takes place every year, and it involves "rolling large round slabs of cheese down a hill," with individual cheeses "reaching speeds of up to 50 kilometers per hour." Last year, 27 people were injured.
The question is: What if this kind of semi-deadly activity catches on in this country? I, personally, am not worried, because I live in south Florida, which is extremely flat; plus, even if you could get a large cheese rolling down here, passed armed motorists would blow it to smithereens. But what if people start rolling cheeses in, say, Colorado? What if you get one of those big babies hurtling down a Rocky mountain, straight toward — to pick the worst-case scenario — a John Denver concert?
Is that the kind of nation you want your children to grow up in? Me too.
.. friends around the campfire, and everybody's hiliEEE (SPLAT).
Dave Barry is a syndicated columnist with the Miami Herald.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Analysis should come after, not before debate
The Kansan's Nov. 3 editorial disappointed me greatly. The Kansan editorial board should know better than to report the conclusions of a debate before it begins. The statement "Sex before marriage should not be considered unethical or immoral based solely on the preaminal status of the couple" assumed this would be the conclusion of Wednesday night's debate.
The Kansan fears Campus Crusade will judge others, yet it is critic.
cal. I suggest the editorial board familiarize itself with the motives and opinions of this Christian organization before it condemns them.
The article states: "Some religious profess that sex is sinful unless the couple is legally married. We disagree with this belief ..."
My question to you is this: Why does the idea that someone else thinks that sex outside of marriage is sinful bother you?
Health concerns, both physical and emotional, are integral to a sexual relationship. isn't spiritual health also a vital element of sex?
have been subject to time-honored debate and are not exclusively Christian. I applaud Campus Crusade for bringing this debate into the public forum.
Limitations on sexual behavior
Elizabeth Morrow
Lawrence graduate student
The editor replies. The Kansan editorial board respects your opinion, and we reserve the right to state ours on anything at anytime. The editorial was not intended to represent "the conclusions" of the debate between Michael Horner and Dennis Dailey. The editorial represented our viewpoint on the issue. — KC Trauer
GUEST COLUMNIST
JUNE LEAHY
Inaccurate facts about Ireland add to confusion
Patrick Dilley's column on Ireland in Wednesday the Kansan was fraught with inaccuracies. As an Irish born person, with many years exposure to Irish history in both Irish and British schools, I feel duty-bound to respond and attempt to set the record straight on those points raised by Mr. Dilley. In the interest of clarity, I will confine my critique of his article to short, factual responses.
1. Ireland is not engulfed by blood-shed nor is there a war going on between the north and south sections of the country. During the worst week of violence in many years, Oct. 24-30, 1993, 14 people were killed in Northern Ireland. By contrast, any one of several U.S. cities exceed that toll of violence every weekend. The current conflict is confined to the six northeastern counties of the province of Ulster. The remaining three counties of Ulster and the other 23 counties of the provinces are enjoying peace and good will.
2. There are thousands of books and manuscripts that trace the introduction of Norman adventurers, not English troops, from England to Ireland in the 12th century to the present struggle for equal rights in the sixcounty section of Ulster. For anyone who may be interested, a good place to start research on this subject is the O'Hegarty collection in KU's Spencer Library.
3. Ireland was converted to Christianity in the fifth century by St. Patrick. This was long before the 12th century conversion stated in the Bible column.
4. English rule over all of Ireland did not take place until the 17th century. Up to this point, the English only had partial, but never full control of the country. Full English control of Ireland was not achieved until after the Tudor conquest in about 1603.
5. There is no such being as an Englishman born in Ireland. Under English rule, those born in Ireland are considered Irish subjects. ♂
7. The Protestant-Catholic conflict is but one dimension of the historical struggle for Irish independence. A more compelling dimension of this struggle was the colonial nature of the relationship between the Irish peasants and the Anglo-Irish governing elite. The Dilley column never mentioned this.
6. The Irish population never was split in the four ways identified by Mr. Dilley. For example, "... the royal government and the British parliament" named as two segments of the split, are not independent governing entities, but rather, two elements of the one political body.
Readers beware. Not all information is enlightening. There is enough misinformation about Ireland already in circulation to guarantee frustration in the ongoing efforts for a solution to her struggles. Those struggles are aimed at social and political freedom for the Irish people of the six northeastern counties of Ireland. The success of these struggles will be enhanced greatly by dissemination of accurate information that is clearly articulated for public consumption.
June Leahy is a Limerick, Ireland, graduate student in sociology.
University of Mars
I'll say one thing there are so many of beings from across about U. or Mars, different kinds the universe.
by Joel Francke
But... I wonder where those guys behind us are from?
But... I wonder where those guys behind us are from?
Obviously, they're from a less-advanced civilization than our own.
Franke 11.8
Obviously, the jire from a less-advanced civilization than our own.
4
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 8, 1993
5
Palestine Heritage Week aims to dispel stereotypes
PREFACE
y Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
When most Americans read about Palestinians in their morning newspapers, they read about bombs and rock throwing.
Jamal Saeh, president of the General Union of Palestinian Students, wants to change that.
"Palestinians are a violent group of people?" said Saeh, graduate student from Bethlehem, occupied West Bank. "It's a stereotype."
Such stereotypes are part of the drive behind Palestine Heritage Week, which begins today. During the week, GUPS and supporters from the University of Kansas will put up displays and hold events to expose students to the culture behind the embattled group from the Middle East.
"We want to keep our culture alive," Saeh said. "There are a lot of factors working on usurping our culture, our light to our land, and our right to be free."
Speakers include Leila Diab, a Palestinian journalist who will speak on Arab-American women in the media, and Noam Chomsky, a controversial linguist and professor.
Baeh said Diab was invited because the media harshly stereotypes Palestinian women.
They don't identify Arab-American women as independent," he said. "They're stereotyped as barefoot and pregnant. It's the regular sexist thing, but it's worse for Arab-American women.
"We want to overcome the myths about Palestinians. Through celebrating the culture through the eyes of the woman, we will dispel stereotypes."
Michaela Hayes, Dallas senior and member of the Women's Student Union, said Diab's message needed to
Thisweek
Pajestine Heritage Week
Tomorrow, B.p.m., Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union Movie: "The Women Next Door" Directed by two women, one Israeli and one Palestinian, the movie explores the roles for women on both sides of the conflict.
Thursday, 8 p.m., Kansas Room, Kansas Union
Speaker Lela Diab, a member of the United Nations Coordinating Committee, will present "Arab-American Women and the Media."
KANSAN
Friday, 8.p.m., Kansas Ballroom, Kansas Union
Speaker Noam Chomsky will present "Manufacturing Consent: Noam Chomsky and the Media."
be heard.
"The purpose of the Women's Student Union is to represent all women's concerns," she said. "This is an opportunity to help bring women's concerns, especially Arab-American women's concerns, out in the open."
The union is co-sponsoring the week's events.
Chomsky will speak on the use of language in the media. Saeh said Chomsky believed the media used words when referring to Middle-Eastern conflicts that slanted American perceptions.
it's very poignant for the Middle East because the whole idea of a conquest and a terroristic act is a linguistic thing," he said.
Saeh said he had heard no further protest about Chomsky, who was accused by some members of the Student Senate of being anti-Semitic when funding for his speech came up for discussion. The Senate passed the bill.
Bouled Morna
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John Gamble/KANSAN
Tiffany Crawford, Scottsdale, Ariz., sophomore, tries on a sweater at AIESEC's stand in front of Wescoe Hall. The group said Friday was the best day of sales because the weather was cold and most people waited until the last minute to buy. The fund-raiser, which has been on campus for the past four years, will return the first week of December.
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Are you a KU student interested in having open and honest dialogue sharing your life and culture with others who are different from you? If so, "Can We Talk?" might be an exciting learning experience for you!
YOU THINK FUNNY
Twenty students of different cultural and racial heritage will be selected through application and interview. Participants will commit to an orientation and ten weekly dialogue sessions designed to increase understanding.
Ten weekly sessions: Tuesdays, 6:30 - 8:00 p.m. January 25-April 5,1994
Orientation: Saturday, January 22, 1994
Call for information and application: Rick Clock: 841-8001 Brian Johnson: 843-4948
Sponsored by:
Baptist Student Union
United Methodist Campus Ministry
Lutheran Campus Ministry
Canterbury House (Episcopal)
Lutheran Student Fellowship
Ecumenical Christian Ministries (Presbyterian Church of Christ, Church of the Brethren)
Lawrence Mennonite Fellowship
St. Lawrence Catholic Center
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is now accepting applications from students with previous Kansan experiences for positions of
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Applications may be obtained at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall,
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Business Manager Schedule
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Aidid says U.S. troops threaten peace in Somalia
MOGADISHU, Somalia — Gen Mohamed Farrah Aidid warned U.S. troops not to return to the streets of Mogadishu, saying yesterday that their presence could violate a four-week-old cease-fire with foreign troops.
The Associated Press
"There is no need to deploy U.S. troops on the streets of Mogadishu. That may be provocative," Aidid said. "I cannot see any reason for the massive deployment. Mogadishu is calm."
"Painful memories of U.S. massacres are still fresh in the Somali people."
"The U.S. government will bear the full responsibility" for any trouble that may break out, he said.
U. S. reinforcements — Army troops on the ground, Marines still at sea — poured into Somalia after an Oct. 3 firefight killed 18 American soldiers. Their main mission is to protect U.S. and foreign troops, but officials said they also would keep roads open and put pressure on bandits.
Aidid told the United Nations to get out of Somalia, saying the humanitarian
"There are no negotiations, and I don't expect any in the future," said the man who controls south Mogadishu.
He dashed the U.N.'s hopes that a newly formed Mogadishu Security Advisory Committee could be a forum for improving the dangerous streets and setting up more substantive talks on the country's future. He said his faction, which attended the second meeting last week, would not show up any more.
In holding a news conference for about 15 foreign news organizations and local media, Aidid was making his most public appearance since late May.
Officials of his faction led a convoy of journalists on a winding trip through the city's dusty back streets, stopping once to make sure they were not being followed.
The destination was a compound where anyone entering was frisked.
Sixteen detainees were freed overnight Saturday. One appeared at Aidid's news conference, claiming he was beaten while under interrogation and hit in the head with a rifle butt. Other than marks on his wrists from plastic handcuffs, he showed no sign of injuries.
He urged the U.N. to release 43 remaining Somali detainees, including three of his top aides, who were captured Oct. 3.
hour late, he once again was dressed as the politician he wants to be, in a freshly pressed white shirt and dark paisley tie.
When Aidid finally arrived, about an
9145B
Aidid alleged that the detainees were getting sick and staging a five-day fast to protest their treatment, including alleged lack of access to doctors. U.N. officials were not immediately available for comment but have said the detainees have been treated well.
Aidid denied speculation that if the multinational contingent pulls out, the country will fall back into the civil war and anarchy that killed an estimated 350,000 people last year from conflict, starvation and disease.
Jordan set for legislature elections
Peace supporters expected to win
The Associated Press
AMMAN, Jordan — Candidates made last-minute appeals yesterday for votes in Jordan's first multiparty elections since 1956, in which proponents of peace with Israel were expected to retain a majority in parliament.
Today's elections come after Israeli officials confirmed over the weekend that Jordan and Israel are close to reaching a peace agreement. King Hussein has not yet made any public comment.
While Muslim fundamentalists are expected to win the single largest bloc in the 80-seat lower house of par-
liamment, conservative and tribal members who support Hussein's propeace policy are expected to keep a majority of seats.
The bicameral legislature must ratify any peace agreement, although Hussein retains ultimate authority with the power to dissolve parliament and rule by decree. The 40-seat upper house is appointed by Hussein and normally backs him.
Jordan and Israel signed an agenda for peace talks Sept. 14, a day after Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization reached a peace accord that provides for Palestinian self-rule in the occupied territories.
But while peace has played a role in campaigns, Jordanians appear more concerned with poverty and unemployment. The country is straining under a $4.5 billion foreign debt and
$4 billion in losses stemming from 1990-91 Persian Gulf crisis, when trade with Iraq, Jordan's biggest trading partner, was blocked.
For the most part, the campaign ended peacefully. Police briefly detained a Muslim fundamentalist candidate after he and supporters roughed up two members of a moderate Islamic party, the state-run Petra news agency said.
Candidates held rallies, passed out fliers and pounded the pavement to win support in this nation of 3.9 million people. They placed hundreds of advertisements in the mass circulation Al-Rai daily promising a better future.
Thousands of banners remained draped over streets, and tens of thousands of posters have been plastered on lampposts and shop windows.
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NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday. November 8.1993
7
Clinton criticizes unions for NAFTA disapproval
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Using harsh language against an old ally, President Clinton said organized labor was strong-arming lawmakers with
scuttle the North American Free Trade Agreement.
In a rare and sweeping morning television interview, yesterday. Clyster
A top AFL-CIO official called the assertion "a cheap shot" and "simply not true."
Vision interview yesterday, Camph also insisted that North Korea could not be allowed to develop a nuclear bomb.
"We have to be firm about it," he said, but he refused to discuss the possibility of a pre-emptive strike against the communist nation's nuclear facilities.
Clinton, appearing for an hour on NBC's "Meet the Press," reiterated his support for Russian President B
Yeltsin and exiled Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
The president also issued a sharp defense of his first year in office, say
ing historians will "be hard-pressed to find many first years of presidencies that match ours."
In a personal moment, the former Arkansas governor said he still found living in the White House "pretty confining."
AFL-CIO secretary-treasurer Thomas Donahue, interviewed on "CNN Late Edition," said he had been angry when he heard Clinton's characterization.
"I don't know whether it's the finest public housing in America or the crown jewel of the prison system," he joked.
"I thought it was a cheap shot," the labor federation's No. 2 official said.
"No need for it. It is simply not true."
Clinton said he now understood how a president could become "out of touch and maybe out of harmony with the American people."
Aides said his attack on labor had not been scripted, but the remarks were astonishing for a Democratic president, even on a free-trade issue that has spawned an odd menagerie of political coalitions.
He said unions were privately threatening to cut financial support and field opponents if lawmakers supported the free-trade deal with Mexico and Canada.
"At least for the undecided Democrats, our big problem is the raw muscle, the sort of naked pressure that the labor forces have put on," Clinton said.
"We've tried to make it very clear that this is one issue on which we disagree with Bill Clinton," he said.
During a commercial break in the show, senior White House adviser David Gergen slipped Clinton a piece of paper telling him that wire service stories were trumpeting his criticism of labor. Clinton called the situation an example of how a president's words could be twisted.
Donahue said the labor federation would get over the rift with Clinton concerning the trade agreement.
"It's perfectly true that some of our affiliates have taken the position that
"Those guys are my friends," he said of the unions. "I just don't agree with them on NAFTA."
The free-trade deal, which comes to a vote Nov. 17, is about 30 votes short of the majority needed to pass it in the House, Clinton said.
they will not support people who cause job loss to their members."
"I think we'll make it, however," he said.
Opponents, most visibly former presidential candidate Ross Perot, think that the pact will cost thousands of jobs. Clinton said Vice President Al Gore would fare well tomorrow night in his debate with Perot, although the Texas billionaire "is the master of the one-liner and the emotional retort."
Presidents support college merger
Plan would link Fort Hays State Great Bend college
The Associated Press
GREAT BEND — A proposal to merge Barton County Community College and Fort Hays State University has the support of both institutions' presidents.
Officials say the move would cut county property taxes, ease transfers between schools and put the community college under control of the Kansas Board of Regents.
"The primary advantage is the merged institutions would be in a better position to meet the educational
needs of central and western Kansas," Fort Hays State President Edward Hammond said.
Officials from both schools plan to take the proposal before the Regents and eventually the Legislature.
The move would merge operations such as admissions and libraries, but each school would retain its own government.
Hammond said such a merger had never been done in Kansas, and it might be difficult to build trust between the two faculties.
Hammond said the bulk of community college funding — perhaps $3.5 million — would be transferred from county property taxes to the state general fund.
Discussion of the merger began about a year ago, and Barton County
trustees voted recently to pursue the idea.
Hammond said the merger would cut Barton County's college mille levy in half over a five-year period, from 28.6 mills to 14.3 mills.
Community colleges come under the authority of the Kansas State Board of Education.
Community college President Jimnie Downing said about 95 percent of the education board's funding went to public elementary and secondary schools, with community colleges and vocational-technical schools dividing the rest.
"The Regents have the responsibility of higher education," he said. "I consider us to be part of that realm."
The University of Kansas
School of Fine Arts
Lied Center Presents
A Concert Series Event
Co-Sponsored by
Kief's Audio and Video
8:00 p.m.
Tuesday, November 9, 1993
Lied Center
San Francisco
Symphony
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS); Murphy Hall Box Office (864-3982); and any Ticketmaster outlet (016) 931-3330 or (913) 234-4545; all seats reserved public $25 and $20, KU, Haskell and K-12 students $12.50 and $10, senior citizens and other students $24 and $19; KU student tickets available through the SUA office, Kansas Union; phone orders can be made using VISA or MasterCard. Tickets for all Concert Series events are held exclusively for KU and Haskell students until 24 overtime days before each performance. Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission, KU Student Senate Activity Fund, Friends of the Lied Series and the Kansas University Endowment Association. Special thanks to this year's Very Important Partner: Hallmark Cards, Inc., Kief's Audio and Video, Poyless ShoeSource and W.T. Kemper Foundation, Commerce Bank Trusts.
KU Student Hear the world class San Francisco
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IN-BETWEEN ACTS AUDITIONS FOR THE 44TH ANNUAL ROCK CHALK REVUE
IN THE NEW LIED CENTER OF KANSAS
Sign up for Auditions in 400 Kansas Union (OAC) starting November 10 through November 30.
Open to all KU students interested in singing, dancing, acting, comedy, or other interests.
Auditions are December 1 and 2 in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union.
For more information concerning IBA's call ROCK·CHALK Scott McPhail @ 832-8274 or 864-4033.
LAST WEEKEND
R·F·V·U·F
R L V U E
8
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 8, 1993
THE
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Hrs: 8-7 M-F Th.. 8-5 Fri.. 9-6 Sat. 12-4 Sun.
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Sunglasses
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The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts
Education
A Swordhout Chamber Music Series Event
Co-sponsored by the W. T. Kemper Foundation, Commerce Bank Trustee
King's Singers
"Listen King's just most fun have
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"Listening to the King's Singers is just about the most fun you can have in public."
- The Seattle Times
3:30 p.m. Sunday, November 14, 1993 Lied Center
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (664-ARTS); Murphy Hall Box Office (864-3982); or any ticketmaster outlet (816) 931-3300 or (913) 234545; all seats reserved; $18 and $16, KU, student staff and students at SUA; ku student tickets and other students at $17 and $15; KU student tickets available through the SUA office, Kansas City; phone orders can be made using VISA or MasterCard.
Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission, KU Student Senate Activity Fee, Friends of the Lied Series and the Kansas University Endowment Association. Special thanks to this year's Very Short Film Program. Audio and Video, Payless ShoeSource, and the WT. Kempeter Foundation, Commerce Bank Trustee.
From the Beatles and the Beach Boys to madrigals and operas, the King's Singers can do it all And, KU students can have it all at the Lied Center at half price!
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SUA travel board matches riders, drivers for long haul
By Traci Carl
Kansan staff writer
- Free Facial Beds
Amanda Izard, Norman, Okla., freshman, does not have a car, but she does have a ride home for Thanksgiving.
She still flips through the cards at the travel board in the Kansas Union to see who is planning to travel to Oklahoma in the near future.
"I just like to have back-ups and see if there's anyone I know here," she said.
And they are easier to use after being redesigned during Union renovations, said Sue Morrell, SUA manager. The regions on the boards are clearly marked. The number of students from a certain area of the country determines the size of the region. Students file request cards in the region they want to visit.
Combining the concepts of car pooling and hitchhiking, the travel and commuter boards across from the Student Union Activities office at the Union for years have introduced KU students with similar travel and commuter plans.
Morrell said she never had received any complaints from travel and commuter board users, but when she was researching travel boards at other universities she found that many schools discontinued the service because they were afraid of lawsuits.
Lawsuits could stem from a variety of arguments between riders and drivers and result in the university being sued.
The KU travel boards display a disclaimer stating that the University and the Union are not responsible for any problems associated with the board.
About 1,000 request cards are filled out each year, Morrell said.
"It is used more than I ever thought it would be," she said.
Lorna Zimmer, director of the student assistance center, said that residents of Overland Park were the most frequent users of the commuter board, which was started in 1981.
Maiser said she met with people before the trip to make sure she was comfortable with them. She has never turned anyone down.
Maiser said she did not follow any set requirements when screening possible riders.
Kansas City, Mo., and Kansas City, Kan., residents tie for second, and Prairie Village and Shawne residents tie for third. Most commuters travel to KU every weekday and are on campus before 10 a.m., she said.
"It was hellacious, but it was interesting," she said.
Another trip in a Honda Civic with three other people was a different experience.
Bill Towns, operations supervisor for the Union, said he remembered the KU travel board from when he was a student.
"He was the most interesting guy I ever met," she said.
"It predates me, and that's old," he said.
and the driving to Massachusetts. Last year she drove across country with a man from Africa.
"I have learned to trust my gut feeling," she said. "I just don't feel that a student looking for a ride is dangerous."
Katya Maiser, Worcester, Mass., graduate student, said she had used the travel board three times to find people who would help split the cost
She said she usually had her riders pay what she thought was fair before the trip. But money is not the hard part, she said.
The only problems she has encountered were people backing out at the last minute or driving too fast on a rainy night. She solves them by taking a small, non-refundable deposit from each rider before the trip and asking them to drive more carefully.
"Make sure you feel comfortable enough to spend two very long days together," she said.
Save a stamp with campus mail
Facilities operations service delivers twice daily, no charge
By Shan Schwartz Kansan staff writer
If you have a University bill to pay or need to send a letter to a professor, don't go digging for a postage stamp.
Do not letter in common mail. Use of change
The campus mail service is a department of facilities operations and operates from a large, inconspicuous office in the basement of Strong Hall.
Three full-time employees and four part-time student employees sort and deliver campus mail five days a week. They deliver thousands of pieces of mail each day, and
The only rule is that it must be University business, said Terri Thornton, supervisor of campus mail operations.
Campus mail can be delivered to all buildings on campus, the Regents Center in Overland Park and the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., Thornton said.
In many cases, Thornton said, a letter picked up in the morning can be delivered that same day to its destination. She said a delivery could be delayed because of an improper address on the envelope. Campus mail is delivered to offices and departments, not to specific rooms or
Thornton said campus mail was picked up and delivered twice a day in most campus buildings.
Campus mail
Some mailbox locations:
■ Kansas Union, Level 4 (by information counter)
■ Strong Hall, basement
■ Wescoe Hall, first floor
■ Dole Human Development Center, first floor (inside front door)
■ Learned Hall, first floor
■ Haworth Hall, Level 2 (east end, back door)
KANSAN
individuals, Thornton said.
"A letter can't just have, 'Sue, 1029 Wescoe,' on it," Thornton said. "Our only address requirement is that it has the department name on it."
At one time, campus mail even returned library books. That service ended several years ago because students tried to hold campus mail responsible for late fines, Thornton said. Now, books are about the only thing campus mail will not accept.
Thornton estimated that between 8,000 and 12,000 items went through campus mail each day. With that high volume, she said, workers occasionally notice mail that is out of the ordinary.
"We get a lot of weird stuff," Thornton said. "We catch some chain letters and intercept them."
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KANSAS VS.
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Wednesday, Nov. 10th
at 8:00 pm
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For tickets call 864-3141
VOLLEYBALL
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 8, 1993
9
Three yards keep Jayhawks from victory
Cornhuskers' streak alive, now at 25
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
One play could have ended many season-long frustrations for Kansas and 25 years of frustrations against Nebraska.
Saturday, all that stood in the way of Kansas' first victory against Nebraska since 1968 was 3 yards. It did not happen.
Junior quarterback Asheiki Preston's two-point conversion pass, intended for sophomore wide receiver Ashaudai Smith, was incomplete with 52 seconds left in the game, and
No. 6 Nebraska escaped with a 21-20 victory.
Freshman tailback June Henley had pulled the Jayhawks within one, to 21-20 with a 3-yard touchdown run. The decision to go for the two-point conversion and a victory was easy, said Kansas coach Glen Mason.
"Sometimes you lead with your heart rather than your head, but I don't think there was any decision to make," Mason said. "I would have gone for two if all we needed was a tie for the Big Eight Championship."
The two-point play was designed for Preston — a straight drop back and a quick pass to Smith. The Cornhuskers expected a running play with Henley. When they noticed that Henley was not on the field, they looked confused and quickly adjusted their defense.
The confusion paid off for Nebraska.
Husker senior linebacker Lorenzo Brinkley pressured Preston from
blind side. Preston was forced to roll to his right and throw on the run to Smith, who was covered by defensive backs senior Toby Wright and junior Barron Miles.
Preston said of the Cornhuskers, "Their confusion on that play probably helped them."
Mason said that the two-point play had been added Tuesday.
"Obviously, it was not the right play because it didn't work," Mason said. "That's the way it goes."
Kansas needed a lot of things to work to upset Nebraska. The Jayhawks started well, scoring their first first-quarter touchdown of the season. Preston connected with senior tight end Dwayne Chandler for a 30-yard touchdown pass on a fourth-down play with 11:38 left in the first quarter.
down reception in the second quarter by Gerald Armstrong for a 14-7 lead. The Huskers were ready to add to their lead late in the second quarter, but senior free safety Clint Bowen intercepted Husker sophomore reserve quarterback Brook Berringer in the end zone with 27 seconds left before halftime.
Nebraska countered with a 4-yard touchdown run in the first quarter by Calvin Jones and an 8-yard touch-
Bowen said, "You could feel at halftime, we had a lot of momentum. We got out of a jam on that play. It really picked us up."
The Jayhawks controlled the third quarter. The defense kept Nebraska from a first down on its first two possessions of the quarter and forced Nebraska to punt each time.
The offense moved the ball behind Henley, who finished with 148 yards. Senior Dan Eichloff missed a 47-yard field goal on Kansas' first drive of the second half. But the Jayhawks cashed in on their next possession when Preston completed a 65-yard drive with a
5-yard scoring run, tying the score at 14.
Nebraska regained the lead at 21-14 with 8:20 left in the game. Sophomore quarterback Tomnie Frazier completed a 10-yard touchdown pass to senior tight end Trumane Bell.
Kansas could have folded at that point, but it did not. The Jayhawks gained 80 yards in 17 plays, which set up Henley's touchdown. Henley had 13 carries for 56 yards on that final drive.
But Mason did not have Henley in for the two-point conversion play despite the success he had on that drive.
"You have to accept his decision because he's the coach," Henley said. "It's his decision."
Henley could have been the difference on that play — the difference between celebration and frustration for the Jayhawks.
By the numbers
| | NU | KU |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| First Downs | 19 | 19 |
| Rushes-yards | 52-297 | 50-179 |
| Passing yards | 71 | 118 |
| Return yards | 1 | 15 |
| Comp-Att | 7-12-1 | 13-19-0 |
| Sacked-Yards lost | 0-0 | 0-0 |
| Punts | 3-40 | 3-36 |
| Fumbles-lost | 1-0 | 0-0 |
| Penalties-Yards | 3-39 | 3-19 |
| Time of Possession | 29-41 | 30-19 |
NBRESAK 7 7 0 7 -21-
KANSAS 7 0 7 6 -20-
NU — Jones 4 run (Bennett kick)
KU — Chandler 30 pass from Preston (Flichhorn kick)
NU — Jonas 4 turn (Bennett kick)
NU — Armstrong 8 pass from Frazier (Bennett kick)
(Bennett kick)
schnittchen
KU — Preston 5 run (Eichloff kick)
NU — Pressman's run (Bennett kick)
NU — Bell 10 pass from Frazier (Bennett kick)
KU — Henley 3 run (pass failed)
H. HARRIS 29
Source: The Associated Press KANBAN
Valene Bontrager /KANSAN
Kansas junior outside linebacker Harold Harris tackles Nebraska junior running back Calvin Jones as the Cornhuskers drive towards the goal. Nebraska defeated Kansas 21-20 Saturday at Memorial Stadium.
Colorado defeats Kansas in four games
But team benefits from game victory
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
A victory against Colorado on Saturday would have been great for the Kansas vol
leyball team, but winning games was most important, win or lose.
Kansas lost 10-15, 15-10.9-15.6-15 in
WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL
Boulder, Colo. The defeat dropped the Jayhawks to 15-10 and 4-5 in the Big Eight, while the league-leading Buffaloes improved to 20-5 and 9-1.
Winning a game on the road will help the
Jayhawks as they attempt to qualify for the Big Eight tournament Nov. 26-27 in Omaha, Neb., Kansas coach Frankie Albitz said.
"If we're going to lose, I'd like to lose in five, but my team played well," Albiz said. "It could have been worse. At least we did win a game."
Kansas got a taste of what to expect in the tournament Saturday against Colorado, but Albitz said Colorado had to work hard for the victory. She said sophomore setter Lesli Steinert and senior outside hitter Shelby Lard had played a good defensive match.
That one game may go a long way as Kansas battles Iowa State for fourth in the Big Eight. Only the top four teams advance to the postseason tournament.
"The defenses for both teams were really
Alizit said. "I think Shelby and Lesli
were in a position to get a lot of digs. Everyone played well defensively."
Albizt said Kansas did not start well against the No. 11 team in the nation. Kansas was behind 2-11 in the first game and came back, only to lose the game [0-15].
"The first game we had a thousand errors," Albitz said. "It might have been nerves. I called a timeout and told them. 'We've got to find the court with our hits.' In the second game, I saw them improve."
"I thought we did a good job hitting around the one-man block," Lard said. "We didn't do that last time. And when they did block us, we recovered."
Colorado used a one-player block scheme on the front line, but Kansas handled it well. Lard said. Colorado ran the same play against Kansas on Oct. 22, when the Jayhawks lost in three games at Allen Field House.
What may have finished off Kansas was a play Colorado used frequently in the match. The Buffaloes set to two hitters in the center of the front line, and Kansas could not move in for the block, Lard said.
"We didn't adjust well to their two in the middle," Lard said. "The left side is supposed to block it, and we couldn't. Eventually we adjusted, but it was too late."
As the season closes out, Kansas could benefit from winning game two at Colorado, Lard said. Iowa State still must play the Buffalooes, and one consideration to qualify for the tournament is winning percentage in Big Eight games, not matches.
"On the bus ride home we were figuring out who was ahead in games," she said.
"In games, they were ahead by .003 percent. It's going to come down to the last match."
Team one play short when football drops
...
"I'm just sick," Mason said. "Everybody feels sick. There's some tremendous hurt in that locker room."
He answered questions in short, rapid-fire bursts with a blank look in his red eyes. He continually paused, slumped back in his chair, sighed and shook his head.
Mason quickly dismissed any notion that Kansas' one point loss was a moral victory.
"I'm proud of the effort," he said. "That was the gutsiest performance from a bunch of guys I've ever been around." "But we just don't accent playing close."
"That's my play," he said. "I can't make a tackle or score, but when you're talking about a one-point game, it's my responsibility to make the right call."
There also was no doubt about whom Mason blamed for the defeat.
Mason was referring to his decision to pass the ball on a two-point conversion play with 50 seconds left that could have given the Jayhawks a 22-21 victory. Mason said he decided on Tuesday that the pass was going to be Kansas' two-point play if they needed it.
The disappointment covered the players' faces as well. But they did not question Mason's decision.
"Obviously it wasn't the right play," he said. "I probably wouldn't call that play again looking back."
"We'd have been disappointed if he didn't go for the win," said junior quarterback Asheikh Preston. Preston then hung his head and softly described the play.
"When I threw the ball I thought we had a little shot to win," he said.
"I was devastated. We had the opportunity of a lifetime, and we didn't do it," he said.
Nebraska brought its heralded combination of running back junior Calvin Jones and sophomore quarterback Tommie Frazier, but Preston and freshman running back Charles Henley provided Kansas with a one-two punch of its own.
Henley, who rushed for 148 yards, did not let his own accomplishments brighten his mood, saying that the defeat put a "big dent" in an otherwise brilliant afternoon. But he was proud of his team's showing against the Nd. 6 Nebraska队.
"We stood up to 'em," he said. "You never know what can happen."
Other players, like senior strong safety Clint Bowen, took this defeat harder than Nebraska's 49-7 manhandling of Kansas last year in Lincoln.
"We were one play short," Bowen said. "At the half we realized that they are not supermen. This definitely hurts worse."
Senior defensive end Chris Maumalanga looked to next week in Boulder.
Maumalanga also looked further to the future.
"We're going to use this as motivation to beat Colorado," he said.
"We're just one step away," he said. "I hope the younger guys see that."
When the final seconds had ticked away, Maumalanga, head down, shuffled into the Kansas locker room. Just before he went through the doors, a boy yelled out, "Hey, Christ!"
Mmaulalana turned his head.
"Good game today," the boy said. "Don't feel bad."
"Good game today," the boy said. "Don't feel bad."
Maunalanga rose his fist and gave a little grin. He then bowed his head, as if he realized that his goals of defeating Nebraska and going to a bowl game his senior year had fallen short.
One plays short.
JACQUE'S
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Come Watch Kansas City vs. Green Bay! (Best Atmosphere in Lawrence to Watch the Game) 15c Wings after 7 p.m.
$3.75 Pitchers
Don't Forgot Our 2 for 1 Burges Every Wednesday
Club Ken Available-Over $50, Won Last Week
Westridge Shopping Center 6th & Kasold·865-4040
Open Daily 11 a.m. 'tl 2 a.m.
WINTER BREAK IN ISRAEL!
Spend two weeks as a student volunteer working and living on an army base.
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10
Monday, November 8, 1993
Interviewing? Don't go into that Cold Cruel world Unprepared. SPECTATORS 710 Mass. 843-1771
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Waiters on Wheels
99¢ Six Pack
Coke, Diet Coke,
Sprite or Mr. Pibb
With any food delivery order.
One per customer.
Expires 11/23/93
842-2662
The University of Kansas
The University Theatre presents
the BOYS NEXT DOOR
By Tom Griffin Directed by Jack B. Wright
8:00 p.m.
November 12, 13, 18, 19, 20, 1993
2:30 p.m.
November 14, 1993
Crafton-Preyer Theatre/Murphy Hall
American College Theatre Festival Entry
For reserved seat tickets, call the box office (Murphy:
913/864-3982, Lied: 913/864-ARTS); KU student tickets are also available at the SUA Office, Kansas Union; VISA/MasterCard accepted for phone orders.
Partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activity Fee. STUDENT SENATE
"Audacious, compassionate, funny, and fresh!"
Newsday
Teams win meets defeat Rams, Tigers
The Kansas swimming and diving teams got off to a quick start this weekend as both Colorado State and Missouri fell to Jayhawk teams.
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
Friday, the women's team used strong performances in the 100- and 200-vard
the 100- and 200-yard breaststroke and the distance events to defeat the Rams 188-112.
MEN'S & WOMEN'S SWIMMING
Saturday, the men's team defeated Missouri 143-95, and the women won 125-95.
and the women's team won 141-93 in Columbia, Mo.
Coach Gary Kempf said that although he liked what he saw in the Colorado State meet, he saw room for improvement as the season progressed.
Colorado State had good performances, winning both the freestyle and medley relays, but faltered in the individual and distance competitions.
Kansas freshman Emily Peters helped in both the distance and individual events, winning the 200-yard freestyle after placing third behind junior teammates Heather Switzer and Frankie Hanson in the 1650-yard freestyle only a minute and a half earlier.
"That was the first time I've done that," Peters said. "I learned I can go fast even when I'm tired."
Kansas' performance in the distance events was not a surprise to Colorado State coach John Mattos.
"We anticipated Kansas going 1,2,3 in the 1650 so we basically gave those up," Mattos said. "What really hurt us was our performance in the 100 and 200 breaststroke."
The 100 breaststroke was won by Kansas senior Krista Cordsen, and senior Marsha Trachi won the 200 breaststroke.
The following day the women's team joined the men's team in Columbia to open its Big Eight season against the Tigers. The men's team won 10 of 13 events in the meet.
Senior Dan Querciagrossa said the team did well but seemed unfocused at times.
"You don't get the adrenaline rush you do against teams like SMU," he said.
Kempf said the team was less consistent than he would have liked.
He said the women's team was a little flat going into the Missouri meet. The team had less than 24 hours to rest after competing against Colorado State.
Trachi said she thought the back-to-back meets would help the team later in the season.
"At the Big Eight meet you have to go with little rest," Trachi said.
She said the team could perform better than it did in Missouri. The team will have to next weekend when it faces perennial power Southern Methodist University.
V
"This weekend served as a wake-up call for our team," Kempf said.
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
Pass interception
NAVY
Senior John Sparks makes an intercepting catch during a flag-football game between ROTC members from Kansas and Nebraska. The annual flag-football game, played at Shenk Complex, the playing fields at 23rd and Iowa streets, was started last year. For the second year, the Kansas ROTC is keeping the traveling trophy.
MEN'S TENNIS
The men's tennis team qualified for the USTA-TA National Team Indoors Championships yesterday. The championships will be held Feb. 23-27, 1994.
Kansan staff report
Team wins regionals, bid to indoor national championships
Kansas won the bid after claiming the Region V Championship this weekend in Des Moines, Iowa.
0 and Oklahoma 4-2 on Saturday. Yesterday, Kansas defeated Wichita State 4-3 to claim the regional championship.
This is the second time in three years that the Jayhawks have won regionalists. In 1991, Kansas defeated Drake 5-4 in the finals to go to the indoor championships.
The Jayhawks defeated Tulsa University 4-
Kansas coach Michael Center said that the Region V championship may give the Jayhawks a national ranking
CLIP A COUPON!
The African Affairs Student Association Presents AN EVENING FOR CULTURAL EXCHANGE
FEATURING
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DATE: NOVEMBER13,1993
DATE: NOVEMBER 13, 1993
PLACE: ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES
(ECM) 12th & Oread
TIME: 6:00 p.m. (SEMI-FORMALEVENT)
TICKETS : STUDENTS-$6.00
NON-STUDENTS-$8.00 (ADVANCE PURCHASE)
$10.00 (DOOR)
CHILDREN-$3.00 (12 AND UNDER)
TICKETS ARE AVAILABLE ATSUA
AFRICAN AFFAIRS BLACK STUDENT
STUDENT ASSOCIATION UNION
AFRICAN AND
AFRICAN-AMERICAN
STUDIES DEPT.
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
STUDENT
SENATE
ANTHROPOLOGY ENGLISH
DEPARTMENT DEPARTMENT
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.
Classifications available
1-Men Seeking Women
2-Men Seeking Women
3-Men Seeking Men
4-Women Seeking Women
5-Friends Seeking Friends
6-Seeking Sports Interest
7-Mutual Hobbies
8-Shared Religion.
2. You'll place an ad in the Jaytak Meeting Network section of the Kansan and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people to listen to your ad.
3. After your ad runs in the Kansan, you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages you receive:
4. You choose the people you want to meet and set up a time and place.
To check out an ad:
1. Read the ads in the Jaytalk Meeting Network on the back page of the Kansan.
2. Call 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.
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The Yacht Club 5 Year Celebration eck-Out Our All New Food and Drink Specials!
Check-Out Our AllNewFood and Drink Specials!
Monday: 2 Chicken Sandwiches $ 6^{00} $ (dinner)
Tuesday: 2 Pitchers $5^{50}
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Wednesday: 50¢ Draws $1^{50} Big Beers
Thursday: 2 Pitchers $5 $50 Steak Dinner-12oz KC strip $6 $50
Friday: 5 Yacht Shots $5^{00}$
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Chicken Queso $3^{25}$(lunch)
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---
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Mcnday, November 8, 1993
11
Where the Jayhawk goes for Homestyle Mexican Food
Pancho's
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
Margaritas and the largest variety of Mexican beers
MasterCard
VISA
843-4044
Call in for take out orders
711 W 123rd
in the Mall Shopping
Free soft drinks with KUID offer expires Nov. 30,1993
Classified Directory
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
100s
Announcements
108 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcement
120 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
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
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and all commercial real estate endorsement, 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-
400s Real Estate
408 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertising in this newspaper are suspended.
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
P
100s Announcements
110 Bus. Personals
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358
Rvolutionary Alpa Hydroxy Acid skin treat-
ment damaged skin. Free information 984-5210.
www.apla.com
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
Hoops, Penndts & more!
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass. Downtown
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO Really Listen Call or drop by Headquarters We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. We're always open
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
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
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Tuesday 8am-9pm
Saturday 8am-12pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
FREEDOM
120 Announcements
*SPRING BREAK*
Early Booking Special
Dates
LOWEST PRICES GUARANTEED!
Joan at 865-5611
COALITION
ACTION EQUALS LIFE
Town Hall Meeting
Tuesday, November 9
7:30 p.m.
Lawrence Public Library
Auditorium
"Uniting for Civil Rights: Nothing More, Nothing Less"
Charlene Muehlenhard
co-chair Freedom Coalition Education Committee,
KU assoc. prof. psychology & women's studies
Jay Johnson
director of client services.
National Native American AIDS Prevention Center
Stephanie Coleman
co-founder of ISIS (integral States in Society)
Pat O'Brien
spokeperson for Equality Kansas
Program will include viewing of "Secured Lice,
Civil Truths", a video outline of strategies for countering stereotypes and misconceptions about LesBIG people in their struggle for civil rights
Bahama - Cruise, 5 days, 4 nights $28/couple.
Under book 10a. to m.p. to m. night thru Sat,
Sunday. $39 per person.
**Found:** The pizzeria blixp in Lawrence. Locat-
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11m. a.m. 13:09 p.m.
FREE MONEY
Available for your education!
Guaranteed results
College Training
Call: 1-800-896-8866 for free info.
Leshian, gay, bi - or unure? You're not alone!
Group Call Headquarters or KU info for more...
SKI BREAKS
S
JANUARY 2-16, 1994 • 5, 6 or 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT $199
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TELLURIDE
LAST CHANCE!
SUNRISE BEACH BREWS
INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
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130 Entertainment
1·800·SUNCHASE
Free Party Room Available at Johnny's Tavern/
Up/Up @ Under. Call 842-0377 for details.
Steamboat
- JAN 2-8
- SIX NIGHTS
- 4/5 DAY LIFT
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- $259
BILL 832-2277 & 841-9111 presented by
AMIGOS
lunervisor/Aasist Mgr
Found black Palusar watch with gold trim and bale of whale out of front of Snow hall, call to identify
140 Lost & Found
205 Help Wanted
AA Cuisine & Travel jobs. Earn $2500/mo. + travel the world free! (Caribbean, Europe, Hawaii,
USA) Travel to New York or bury holiday,
spring, and summer tours. guaranteed employment.
Call [919] 929-4388 ext. 131.
Benchwarmers
Bv donatina your life saving blood plasma
200s Employment
Afternoon teacher's side for infant room I to 5:48 Monday through Friday. Experience with infants preferred apply at Children's Learning Center 205 N. Michigan, E.O.E.
computers, currently enrolled at KU and continued enrollment through spring 1995. Complete job description available. To apply, submit a letter of application and a current resume to AmHRI, Perth, Australia, Computer Science Department, Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60045. EO/A/ AMPLOYER
Supervisor now - Manager later! Learn the business from the ground up and advance according to what you are an aggressive customer oriented person. Be aware of the intense pace, an opportunity to put these skills to work and develop as a leader is available. Relocation will begin soon. Benefits apply now at: Am仔, 1819 W. 23rd.
MANAGINATIVE USER SERVICES. Student Monthly. December 11/12/13. $550-$650/month depending on experience. Duties include providing application, design, documentation and deliver software training sessions for end users, provide LAN installation and problem solutians support, and other duties. Required qualifications: Demonstrated knowledge of computerized skills, knowledgeable about computerized databases and their uses, experience using microcomputers currently enrolled at KU and contin-
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
FAST CASH
$15 Today $30 This week
Clerk, RU Bookstore, Shipping/Receiving Dept., 8.25 per hour, 20-28 hours per week, Monday through Friday. Must work through December in office filing, invoice verification, data entry, 10 key calculator. Majority of time will be spent on paper work, but could require some lift up to 50 pounds. Must have a Burge Union's Personnel Office, Level 5, Kansas Union Building. EOE
CNA's needed to work with clients in their homes.
Sharon at Glass Canyon, Vista Nursing 863-389-7241.
Raise $200 in 5 days. Groups, Clube, motivated
groups. 785-778-3851 ext. 101
MAKE MONEY PLAYING NINTENDO VIDEO GAMES ANYWHERE IN THE NATION. IF YOU ARE AVAILABLE VARIOUS DAYS AND HOURS BETWEEN NOV. 20 AND DEC. 26, CALL GRECHTEN HOMINY AT 1-800-229-5380 FOR MORE INFORMATION.
Office assistant needed 25 brs wak wk M-3-F 7-pm m. &
Sat. 12:40. 3:40 Please call 749-6130.
Free rent to student or single parent family in
exchange for help w/ yard work, it. house work, it.
cooking. Limited pets welcome. Call 597-5771 after
3 p.m.
Previous food service and supervision experience. Mandatory. Start at 25 per hour on weekdays.
Co. at 719 Massachusetts, N.-M., 5am-9pm.
(Insteas above the smokehouse.)
Buffalo Bob's Smoketown
Previous food service and supervisory
$2.50 per hour - 20-30 hours per week, mostly
evenings and weekends. Apply at Schumm Food
Earn $15 today
Earn $30 this week
Thanks for giving
this Thanksgiving season
Anyone who donates their blood plasma 8 times between Oct. 30 and Dec. 17 is eligible to win a cash drawing.
EARN CASH
$1000 CASH
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"Help pay your tuition by entering our cash giveaway and help save a life today."
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The Garden Source
Hours:
M-F 9-6
O-S 10-4
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The Quality School
Pretentions and Soronies call
for more information about
fundraising
Custodian, Burge Union, Tuesday 7p.m.-midnight,
Saturday 6a.m.-11m. $4.25 per hour. Previous custodial experience preferred, able to lift 50 pounds.
Prairie Room Walters/Waltzer. $3.00 plus hr. plsn.
Monday-Wednesday-Friday) 10am to 4pm. $3.50 plus hr.
Monday-Wednesday-Friday) 10am to 4pm.
Line server, Union Square, Monday-Wednesday-Friday, 10:00a.m.1:00p.m.$4.25 per hour. Able to stand for long periods, prefer previous food service experience.
749-5750
816 W. 23rd
Behind Laird
Noller Ford
$
other listings available. See Job Board-Level 5 Kansas Union Building Personnel Office.
225 Professional Services
The Resident Assistant (RA) holds a 10-month, 40% life in position with the KU Department of Nursing, 30% life in position with grammining, and paraprofessional advising/facilitating functions for the approximately 40-80 residents with whom the RA lives on the floor and for the residence hall in general, working under supervision. The RA is responsible to ensure care of residential group living experience, 30 or more credit hours, and KU enrollment for 1994-95. Compensation: A single room and meals are provided when the hall is officially open. The RA is eligible for staff tuition/fees rates. In addition, a Master's degree from an accredited school How to Apply: For complete job description and application materials, contact the Department of Student Housing, 427 West 11th, 913-834-4560 by Friday, January 14, 1994. EEO/AA Employer RESUME SCHOOL Professionals
Apply Kansas and Burge Unions' Personnel Office, Level 5. EOE.
in person, lower level, Riverfront Plaza.
Apply in person, lower level, Riverfront Plaza.
Secretary/Receptionist. Terrazz Construction
Secretary/Receptionist. Terrazz Construction
an immediate full time opening for an experienced
secretary receptionist. Typing skills of 60 wpm
required; Macintosh experienced preferred; 10
key accuracy; organizational and writing skills a
must. Send resumes to P. Box 3008, Lawrence,
M-F. Applications and resumes must be in no laik
than 11-12.85.
Line Server, Hawk's Nest, Monday thru Thursday
419 line, second stand for long periods,
previous 419 line, first stand for
Stop to Shop is looking for part time clerk must be able to work 29 p.m. to 10 p.m. shift, some weekends and holidays. If interested apply in person at 1010 N.3rd.
River City Market Restaurants are now hiring extra help for the X-mas season!
RESUME SERVICES Professional Business
Training Interview.
Free initial interview. N-910-
312-768-2656.
Mass. Street Dell or Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse.
evenings and weekends. Previous food service and
supervisory experience mandatory. Start at $2.55
up to $2.52 per hour, 29-30 hours per week. Apply at
Schumm Food Company, 718 Massachusetts, Monday through Friday, 9am-4pm. (Upwards are
The Princeton Review is looking for outstanding candidates to teach course part time. The ideal candidate should have an MCAT scores and fantastic communication skills. We offer excellent pay, a relaxed classroom atmosphere, and paid training. We also seeking positional candidates. Rebecca at 1-800-865-7737 for more information.
Front counter, utility, grill cooks,
mexican restaurant and waitstaff
Experienced organist will play for weddings at Diablo Chapel. Call Carol at 841-1738 and leave a message.
Drive education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
Valley View Care Home is currently seeking motive and leadership to take on the TRN. We offer flexible scheduling which is great for students, competitive hourly wages & benefits. You will apply in person at 2818 Ridge Court Lawn.
Traffic tickets, misdemeanors, landlord/tenant,
Brantxon B. Convey 748-5333
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
Rick Frydman, Attorney
843 Missouri
843-4023
For a confidential, caring Friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Lebanian, gag. B-1; or unsevere? If you need to link to information, gag FI. NONFIDEN- IF confidentially FI. job or Hardware.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
DONALDG.STROLE
Donald G Strobe Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Prompt initiation and contraceptive services. Dale L. Clinton MD, 841-8716
Research Assistance = MSMILE information specialist available to assist with term paper, books, and other materials.
Dissertations
Hardbinding and Gold Stamping
3 Day Turnaround
Lawrence Printing Service, Inc.
512 E. 9th Street 843-4600
TUOTING SERVICE: 832-6925
Spec. in English. Will help with any paper.
I'll help you make an *ao*, Word process, too.
235 Typing Services
A Word Perfect word processing service: Laser printer. Near campus. 642-895.
A1W Processing: Any site, under 30 pp.
Access rate: $12/pp. Call Rath after
5pm, 6am-9am.
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your TYPING needs call
www.lasercpu.com
Beacon Publication Services-Quality word process, laser printing, $2.00/page (includes typing, grammar, proofing), call Mary. B43-2674
Expert typing. IBM Correcting Selectric. $1.50 space spaced. Call Mrs. Mattila 841-1219.
Fast, accurate word processing; paper term, dissertation, thesis and graphics services available. Laser printing. Engineering and Law Review experience. Call Pam at 841-1977 anytime.
Pro-Type - fast, reliable, service, professional quality. Any kind of typing. Call today at 841-6324.
Wanted: Someone to edit my thesis according to AP A and KU Grad. School specifications. Must be knowledgeable about both and Word Perfect 5.1.
David 1-839-5434.
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
4, 4 meg sims for Macintosh never used, sealed
cables 0.00 BO, call 892-9787.
Beds, desks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
908 Mass.
Computer Discounts, Guaranteed Quality and Low Price Call 832-7494-8524-5421 (home), 2021
**CALL FOR QUOTATIONS**
www.ibm.com
COMPUTERS: Looking for a high quality PC at low cost? Call P C Source 832-1126
DP 2500 weight lifting machine, leg curls, etc.
Great condition. DP Body - Tone 300 Rowing
Machine. $250 for both. Call 843-0540 evenings and
weekends.
FITNESS EQUIPMENT
Macintosh SE/306 8 meg of ram, 80 meg hard disk
Keyboard 24 MB Player and speaker
speakers 925.00 OBO. call 943-7971
Macintosh Memory 8-1 MB 80m 32 PIN SIMMS,
SIMMS will sell in two of ask for
Hex 86-2570-781
NEAT STUFF, NEW STUFF at Simple Goods:
NEAT STUFF, NEW STUFF at Simple Goods:
purses/wallets, 755 Mass M-Sat 10:30 30 thill t.
*
$350.9 Camdenfield $42.9. 19 x 3 yrs old $400 in
great shape. 799-6980
Styler Writer II Printer. New-only 2 months old.
$225.00 BOA, 642-8798-737
340 Auto Sales
Want to sell complete set of basketball tickets
*98 offer. Leave message on machine. 823-0090
93 Merc. Tracer kd mli., 5apd, pw, pl; acc. $9395749-
1065 John
1978 Buick Lesabre-350 v8 PS, PB, AT, AC $604 823.
11 days. Andy-Days
1890 Honda Accord LX coupe, 5 speed, white, spoil-
ing kit. Power super. Condition for
details. #86-0320
www.honda.com
Red Hot Pimenta Fero, sunproof, AC, new paint,
excellent condition. $3,000 BOY 749-3899.
Sculptured Nails $23 reg. $24. Reflections West,
$232 Ridgecrest 841-962. Ank for Kam.
Avail. Desc. 158. Very large, newly remodeled one bedroom appl. on bus route, bus and cable paired.
Office/Storefront/Workspace near downtown
Phone 848-7250 $16 per month. Ullagee
included. Phone 848-7250
400s Real Estate
360 Miscellaneous
Born abpl. amr for sublease Jan. 1. Access from atm.
Card no. $385 per month with water call. Call 823-216-35.
For rent brand new 3 bmrd 3 btph. On the bus
for 4 people 10/25/16 + v/15/16 Call 888-741-9800
10/25/16 + v/15/16 Call 888-741-9800
For lease 4 bedroom, Sundace aaa, near campground occupancy date not available, #790 + utilities.
Bdil Bbun灵敏 apt w/W/D bookups aval Jan
big place to campus. To campus on my outa-great
place!
2 br. available in house-clean, quiet 842-7206
Available Jan. 1st, 2 bdm unfurished api.
Call: 560-378-7924 near bus route. Only
call:月月.com/Call5603787924
Sublease Needed! 2832 Iowa 0-1. Nice neighborhood.
$400/mo. Wanted to negotiate? 831-915 or
608-724.
Sublime subroutine for 3 persons. 2 drm/h, 1 bath,
480/sqft, $90/mo.
util A1/11/1946-84, 84-88-392.
util B1/11/1946-84, 84-88-392.
05 For Rent
Sulbase studios $600/mo. including cable. Available immediately. 749-3605.
1 roommate to share spacious, furn. 4 BR 2 bath
1 roommate to share spacious, furn. 4 BR 2 bath
1 roommate to share spacious, furn. 4 BR 2 bath
Full spring Swap墙. Call Alaa 839-6165.
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished
very nice! Available Spring sem. Interested? Call
718-532-9010
430 Roommate Wanted
1 Bedroom apt, available Jan. 1 Orenad neighbor/
house, very nice, very $240 a month. Call
823-293-2933
One female needed to sublease on campus Apst. $180 a month + will. Call Sury 943-1686
Apt. for rent, 1 bdr. *Great location* 113th Indiana
Suite, Plats, $550 including cable. Call 892-761-3000
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
l female needed to share 3 BH, 2 bth Campus
l female needed to share 3 BH, 2 bth Campus
Call Campus Place Office 814-765-2620
bl. non-smoker only. 942-1118 Leave message.
females, n/ needed for spacious 38dpi dripum on bus route. lg. bath, living area & dby CA, DW,
hardwood floors. 841-7258, leave mess.
2 NFS need NSF to share furn. b 3km, townhouse,
$300; no include ALL utl. & pd. cable, on bus
route, near 28rd & Iowa, avail for spring sem. Call
Gah 746-1987.
A or F needed to 3 bedroom houses. On bus
mile. Smoker or no. Artistic minded. Old West
Lawrence. ASAP. Private room. Call 941-3086.
bdrmals available in 3 Bedroom. 3 bath town
**Female N/S to have very nice 2 bdrm., 2 bath house w/h hardwood floors in Old West Lawrence.**
**Responsible grad-student/prl only. Avail Jan-1 spring semester $250/mo +1/uil. Call 832-9677.**
Need male roommate for 3 Morns Apt to close the
door. Send resume to:
Nom: 84-86-200, leave message.
Mail: 84-86-200.
NST female neede for *spring semester*. Share 2
sales on the Route. $15/m to +1/unit. Call 749-760-
899.
- By phone: 864-4358
How to schedule an ad:
Need mature, N/C MS to share 2 br bpi
Some uncle, p. Avail. Jan. 1, 740-859
Some uncle, p. Avail. Jan. 1, 740-859
One Female to share two bedrooms apartment for
dogs. Call 749-7877. Call to room:
749-7877
Very close to campus, behind Yellow Sub. Need 4-female roommate to share 3 bdrms. 2 baths per room. Fee $800/week.
P. rent to student or single parent family in exchange for help w/ yard work, l house work, n cooking. Limited pets welcome. Call 977-5771 after 3 p.m.
Two yth rb 's; seeking a female roommate for me
because Deci 1. Call carriage or Cathay at
965-2548.
ROOMMATE NEEDED. Close to campus.
Wash hands before entry. Ensure dentist-refereed. Non smoker. 2 full bathe. 84-64-424.
Open-minded female needed to share two bedroom house close to campus annually. Call us at (314) 262-8000.
Adobe phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. • In an agreement: **119 Stuart Flint**
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105 personal 148 host & friend 306 for sale
125 business persons 205 help wanted 304 auto sales
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130 entertainment 235 join services
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66445
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1984 RavWorks, Inc./Out by Universal Press Syndicate
"Oh, man! The coffee's cold! They thought of everything!"
.
12
Monday, November 8, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Top 25 teams
The Associated Press 1993 college football poll: first-place votes in parentheses, records through Nov. 6, 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.
Others receiving votes: Michigan State 42, Southern Cal 40,
Illinois 37, North Carolina State 19, Virginia Tech 13, Syracuse
10, Bowling Green 6, Fresno State 5, Michigan 5, Kentucky 3, Nevada
2, Arizona State 1, Cincinnati 1.
| | Record | Points | Previous |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1. Florida State (62) | 9-0-0 | 1,550 | 1 |
| 2. Notre Dame | 9-0-0 | 1,485 | 2 |
| 3. Miami | 7-1-0 | 1,386 | 4 |
| 4. Nebraska | 9-0-0 | 1,305 | 6 |
| 5. Ohio State | 8-0-1 | 1,249 | 3 |
| 6. Tennessee | 7-1-1 | 1,241 | 7 |
| 7. Auburn | 9-0-0 | 1,197 | 8 |
| 8. Florida | 7-1-0 | 1,133 | 9 |
| 9. West Virginia | 8-0-0 | 1,029 | 11 |
| 10. UCLA | 7-2-0 | 953 | 12 |
| 11. Texas A&M | 7-1-0 | 948 | 10 |
| 12. Alabama | 7-1-1 | 902 | 5 |
| 13. Arizona | 8-1-0 | 796 | 14 |
| 14. Wisconsin | 7-1-1 | 773 | 15 |
| 15. North Carolina | 8-2-0 | 704 | 16 |
| 16. Penn State | 6-2-0 | 623 | 19 |
| 17. Oklahoma | 7-2-0 | 477 | 20 |
| 18. Virginia | 7-2-0 | 451 | 21 |
| 19. Indiana | 7-2-0 | 380 | 17 |
| 20. Louisville | 7-2-0 | 367 | 13 |
| 21. Colorado | 5-3-1 | 297 | 23 |
| 22. Boston College | 6-2-0 | 264 | — |
| 23. Wyoming | 7-1-0 | 246 | 24 |
| 24. Kansas State | 6-2-1 | 138 | 18 |
| 25. Washington | 6-3-0 | 72 | — |
SPORTS BRIEFS
MEN'S RUBY Kansas tops Wichita, Whiteman
MEN'S RUGBY
The home field advantage did not help Wichita State on Saturday when the Kansas men's collegiate rugby team defeated the Shockers 20-12.
Junior Jeff Schmidt and seniors Mark Sosse and Larry Smith all made a try for the Jayhawks. Sosse also kicked a two-point conversion and a three-point penalty kick.
The club-side team defeated Whitman Air Force Base 25-0 at the base, located near Warrensburg, Mo. The teams complete the season this weekend at a tournament in Little Rock, Ark.
WOMEN'S RUGBY
Jayhawks defeated in final game
The women's rugby team wrapped up its season Saturday at Broken Arrow Park in a game against Missouri. The Tigers defeated the Jayhawks 10-3.
Graduate student Chris Miskec made the three-point penalty kick for Kansas.
nansas improved its record from 1-5 last year to 4-3 this year under the coaching of Norm Chase, a former Kansas State rudby player.
She said the team would be recruiting in the spring for new players. The team also will be getting a new coach because Chase is moving.
Jackie Vogel, faculty team member, said the team had improved because of Chase, the addition of good players such as Miskec and improvements in returning players.
Vogel said that anyone interested in the team should call Recreation Services for information.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Dave Krieg brings out the diplomat in every opponent.
The Associated Press
Chiefs look to Krieg to lead
"Dave's a very smart quarterback," Green Bay quarterback Brett Favre said. "He can beat you at any time."
"I've always thought Dave Krieg was a fine quarterback," Packers coach Mike Holmgren said.
Statistics say Kansas City's offense operates in one gear when Krieg is in control and quite another when the quarterback is Joe Montana.
Counting two possessions Montana started but Krieg finished, each quarterback in seven games has engineered 39 drives.
Behind Krieg, who makes his third start in relief of Montana tonight against the Packers, the Chiefs have 54 first downs, 804 total yards and four touchdowns.
Behind Montana, who can't seem to heal a pulled left hamstring, it is 75 first downs, 1,311 yards and seven touchdowns. The Montana Chiefs have run 129 pass plays, the Krieg Chiefs 91. The Montana Chiefs have kicked seven field goals. The Krieg Chiefs have kicked four.
The comparisons with Montana are not entirely fair since the offenses being used by the Chiefs and the
West
AFC
NFL
East
Kansas City W L T D V
LA. Raiders 5 3.0 2.20
Denver 5 3.0 2.20
Seattle 4 5.0 1.50
Seattle 4 5.0 1.50
NFC
Buffalo 7 1.0 3.0
Miami 7 1.0 3.0
Cincinnati 4.5 1.0 1.0
Indianapolis 4.4 1.0 1.0
New England 4.8 1.0 0.40
West
Central
Buffalo 13, New England 10,07
Denver 24, Cleveland 18
Chicago 25, Pittsburgh 24, Cincinnati 24, San Diego 30, Minnesota 17
Oklahoma City 29, Detroit 28, Tampa Bay 0
L.A. Raiders 16, Chicago 14
N.Y. Jets 11, Miami 10
Indianapolis 24, Washington 3
East
W L T D V
New Orleans 6 2 0 3-10
California 6 2 0 3-10
Atlanta 5 8 0 2-9
L.A. Rams 2 6 0 2-9
Central
Packers trace their ancestry to the San Francisco 49ers of the 1980s. It was designed for and built around Montana, who has helped tutor Chiefs coaches as well as players.
Detroit 7 2 0 2-10
Green Bay 4 2 0 2-10
Minnesota 4 2 0 2-10
Tampa Bay 3 5 0 1-30
However, Krieg is beginning to feel comfortable in the new attack. Although the Chiefs lost by 20 points at Miami, Krieg said he felt more at ease than he had all season.
Dallas 6 2 O 3-1.0
N.Y. Giants 5 4 O 3-1.0
Washington 4 6 O 3-1.0
Phoenix 3 6 O 3-2.0
Washington 3 6 O 3-2.0
"The longer you're around it, the more opportunities you get to practice it, the more comfortable you feel." Krieg said. "You can practice anything as much as possible, but it's not like getting game experience with it."
Krieg may get plenty of game experience this month. The hamstring Montana first injured Oct. 3 may require a rest of three or four weeks.
BLUE BIRD
DINER
814 Mass. • 843-BIRD
642 LIBERTY HALL 549
Mass 1912
DAZED & CONFUSED (R)
TODAY(5:00),7:15,9:30
THE WEDDING BANQUET (PG-13)
TODAY(5:30),8:30
DICKINSON
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Dickinson 6
Look Who's Talking Now **P**13 *4:35*; 7:05; 9:30
Beverly Hillbillies **P**4:30*; 7:10; 9:35
Macaulay **P**1:5*; 7:10; 9:50
Nightmare Before Christmas **P**4:40*; 7:00; 9:30
Flesh and Bone **R**4:15*; 7:00; 9:45
Fearless R **4:30*; 7:10; 9:50
$3 Premium Shoes - Heating Baby
Straps, Crutches & Supports Stars
Crown Cinema
Robo Cop III PG-13 5:00 7:20,9:30
BEFORE 6 PM ADULTS $1.00
(UMED TO CITIES)
SENIOR CITIZENS $8.00
VARSITY
4015 MASSAC RUSETS 841-5191
Demolition Man R 5,90,
7,15,8,39
Cool Runnings PG 6,19,
7,25,8,39
Fatal Instinct PG-13 5,10,
7,30,8,45
The Joy Luck Club R 5,90,8,90
Rudy PG 5,90,
7,25,9,40
CINEMA TWIN $1.25
1110/OWA 847-5197
The Firm $ ^{R} $ 5:00,8:30
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Textbook Pre-order form
Return this form to the KU Bookstore in either the Kansas or Burge Unions by December 27,1993. Books will be ready to pick up between January 6th & 12th. Orders may be picked up at eiither student union store.
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Spring 1994 Semester Form
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
♀
MEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
30 year old male seeks attractive, slim, female in her 29'-30" for possible relationship and to spend Christmas together. #46079
BMW 20 yrs, $10, 150 lb. long brown hair, I love Henry Rollins, Torn Waina, Social Distortion. J own a motorcycle, don't have job and probably drink to much. Come我洗脸。Birkentstock wearing eco-freak need not apply. #45226
Common abbreviations
M Male A Asian
F Female J Jewish
D Divorced C Christian
S Single C Christian
W White G Gay
B Black L Lesbian
H Hispanic N/S Non-Smoker
To check out these ads call 1-900-285-4560 You will be charged $1.95 per minute
SWM 40, looks race 6, 170. Handome, smart, athletics racer. Seeks SAP-SWF with similar interpersonal skills. Gardening, mounting, gardening for possible friendship or beyond. #8712.
PLACE AN AD FREE!
Call 864-4358
SWM" 5^8", 1983. Blue eyes, brown hair. Good-looking, earthy type, looking for quick and/or girl who likes to be noticed. You're looking for someone to share fun times with, and you wonder whatever happened to Sat. night.
SWM Graduate Student seeking athletic, sweet SWF for possible serious relationship. I am honest, kind, humorous, generous, and intelligent. I am patient, polite, kind, thoughtful, and on a clear out. Like ipping, boltieball, good food, and good conversation. If you want to be treated as a special friend, I'm the one. #3816
Very attractive male, muscular build, would like to meet a woman in her 30's or 40's who is slim and
Very good looking SWM wants it to "whitelist"
within the system. SWMP (a) please call if you are
in trouble. n, 458278, n, 458279
Very attractive male, muscular build, would like to meet a woman in her 30's or 40's who is slim and has a strong body.
WHO: Two outgoing, intelligent, handsome males (age 20-25). WHAT: A fun evening dancing and being crazy at our Christmas Formal. WHEN: Thur. Dec. 6th (stop day). WHY: Because two outgoing, intelligent, good looking females want to have a blast w/ you. #45898
♂
∞
MEN
SEEKING
MEN
WOMEN SEEKING MEN
SWF 30 Years old. "5S" w/ blonde hair. Seeking
Middle Eastern male, N/N in position. Must be
can't spend more time w/ each other. Must be able to play
guitar and sing to me. #44408
BIWM, 6', 178, Good looking, Health/Gym, Quality, Travel, Beach, FI, Bi-Costal, Seeks College, 18-36 only, Sharp, Great Looks, Intelligent, Sophisticated, Masculine, Mature, Goals, Call
GWM Welcome guys to Kansas! It's hard to make new friends. Can't seem to do a good job, so give me a help! handing @44391
WOMEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
♀♀
DWBIF, 35. "57'", long bnr hair, lipstick, femme,
seeks friendship, hanging out in bars, potential
relationship, going to college, slightly intellectual, I am
out-no virgines or tourists. # 65648
To place an ad (must be 18 yrs old)
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
1. Call or come into the *Kansanat* 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 (every 3rd day from the day that you initially place your voice message), to listen to the messages people leave for you. Any other day, you may call the 900-number to retrieve your messages at a cost of $1.95 per minute. The average call is 3 mins in length.
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.
SPORTS: Kansas City remains alone in first place in the AFC West with a victory against Green Bay. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103,NO.57
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
Survey: men more likely to drink to overcome social inhibitions
Data disputes theory of women's drinking
NEWS:864-4810
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
The survey of University of New Orleans freshman also indicated that men are more likely than women to use condoms and other forms of sexual protection after they have been drinking, said Peter Anderson, University of New Orleans professor of health education and head of the study.
Breaking a common myth about alcohol use and sexual habits among college students, men may be more likely than women to drink in order to overcome sexual inhibitions, according to a recent survey.
Before conducting the study, Anderson and his assistant Debbie Mathieu expected that more women than men would drink to overcome sexual anxieties such as fear of rejection, Anderson said. At the same time,
Anderson said, the researchers anticipated women as more likely than men to use sexual protection after drinking.
But the results from the survey of 491 students in the human sexuality class stunned Anderson.
"It was a surprise," Anderson said. "The results seem very counter-intuitive."
Anderson said he had no clear explanation for the survey's results, only a few theories.
Anderson said he thought that women who drink may get more intoxicated than men and therefore may not remember to use protection when having sex.
"Men have to overcome the fear of rejection when it comes to sex," Anderson said. "In order to approach the fear of rejection, they may use alcohol more often than women."
Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare, said the results of the survey also surprised him, but said the connection between alcohol and sexual activity
among college students remained strong.
"We've known for a longtime that alcohol does reduce the inhibitions people have for sexuality," Dailey said. "There are cases where people are unable to have any sex at all unless they have been drinking."
Dailey said such people drink to overcome other anxieties, including guilt and shame about having sex, memories of sexual abuse, and fear about sexual performance, also called performance anxiety.
Julie Francis, public health educator at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said she agreed some students drink alcohol to overcome their fears about sex but excessive drinking can be detrimental to sex.
"Alcohol enhances whatever mood you're feeling before you start drinking," Francis said. "It makes it easier for a student to drink when looking for a man or a woman. It just feels better at that moment."
Tim Marks, Salma senior and president of Greeks Advocating the Mature Management of Alcohol, said he was surprised at the survey's result showing increased alcohol use by men.
Liberating brew
Of 493 University of New Orleans freshmen
sureved!
120 students — 72 males and 48 females — or about 25 percent said they had drunk more than normal at least once to make it easier to have sex.
Of those 72 males, 37 percent said they regularly drank more to make it easier to have sex. Of those 48 females, 18 percent said they regularly drank more to make it easier to have sex.
About 60 percent of the males who drank for sex used protection after drinking compared to 33 percent of the females who drank for sex.
KANSAN
"I think there is a common belief that some guys, if not most, use alcohol to make their dates uninhibited," Marks said.
Angela Tira, Overland Park senior, said she did not think students would drink just for the purpose of having sex.
"They do a lot of things after they've been drinking," Tira said. "But they don't necessarily drink just to do those things."
A PLACE OF MEDITATION
At nearly 50, Danforth Chapel provides a serene atmosphere for more than just weddings
By Shan Schwartz
Kansan staff writer
Although it is the smallest building on campus and nearly 50 years old, several student organizations continue to use the Danforth Chapel religiously.
Since its completion in 1946, the chapel has served the University as a nondenominational place of meditation and worship.
Large wedding parties can be seen outside the chapel on weekends throughout the year, but during the week the chapel is used by several KU religious groups for Bible study, prayer or communion services.
"I think the facility lends itself to a spiritual, reverent atmosphere on campus," said Ann Eversole, director of the Organizations and Activities Center.
The use of Danforth Chapel is free, Eversole said. All maintenance and cleaning is done by facilities operations.
Student organizations can reserve Danforth for up an hour at a time three times a week during designated hours, Eversole said. Reservations can be made at the OAC office, 400 Kansas Union.
Eversole said that some nonreligious groups, such as organized living groups and honorary organizations, used the chapel for some sacred ceremonies.
When the chapel is not reserved for use, it is open daily from 7:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. for individual prayer and meditation. Individual use was the original reason for the chapel's construction, Eversole said.
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
Jolinda Matthews, Garden City sophomore and member of Canterbury House, said that although the group's own chapel at 1116 Louisiana is only a block away from campus, the weekly service at Danforth was "something different" and something the group had done for years.
But with an increasing number of religious organizations at KU, Eversole said, guidelines were set for student groups to use it as well.
"It's just a tradition, and it's such a neat chapel," Matthews said. "A lot of students go to our Thursday services because they work on the weekends and can't make it on Sunday."
Canterbury House, a KU Episcopal organization, uses Danforth chapel for Thursday Eucharist celebrations.
Berkshire Church, Northampton, England
Father Jerry Volz, right, a priest at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, celebrates Mass with about 20 people at Danforth Chapel. The center celebrates Mass here every Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 12:30 p.m. The chapel is nondenominational and is also used for nonreligious functions.
Mark Winton, Montgomery, Ala., sophomore and a leader of Icthus Christian Outreach, said Icthus reserved Danforth chapel three times a week for morning prayer services. Winton said the chapel's location and interior atmosphere made Danforth ideal for their gatherings.
"You can have a group of people in there and be secluded," Winton said. "If we were somewhere else on campus, like the (Kansas) Union, there'd be a lot of other people just hanging around."
Winton said he also used the chapel for a group Bible study on Wednesday evenings and during the day for personal prayer.
"I call it my haven on campus." Winton said. "It's really quiet, it's really peaceful, and you can't hear anything that's going on outside when you're in there.
After being built in 1946, the smallest building on campus has been home to many weddings and religious events.
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
"I love the place."
Yeltsin sets out design for new-age Russia plan
Constitution maintains high presidential power
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Boris Yeltsin set out his design for the new post-Soviet Russia yesterday, with a draft constitution that bolsters his presidency and keeps a tight rein on Russia's restive regions.
the shorter terms and Yeltis's retreat from a promise to hold early presidential elections in June have fed criticism that he is strengthening his own power at the expense of the legislative branch. Since disbanding parliament and crushing resisters in early October, Yeltis has wielded virtually absolute power.
The constitution, which is to go before voters next month, lets Yeltsin serve out his five-year term until 1996 but sets lawmakers' terms at two years — half the length proposed earlier.
Parliament will be chosen in national elections on Dec. 12. the same day as the referendum on the constitution.
There is some anxiety that the new parliament's legitimacy may be compromised by a short campaign, the recent political violence, and Yeltsin's banning of several hard-line parties and publications.
The old Supreme Soviet legislature had five-year terms, and Yeltsin stepped outside the constitution and disbanded it to stop it from blocking his free-market reforms and eroding his authority.
A constitutional convention Yeltsin handpicked in June has been drafting the charter.
He has long sought a new constitution to reflect the changes Russia has undergone since the 1991 Soviet collapse and provide a framework for more.
Yeltsin presented regional leaders with a working draft of the constitution last week and said he was determined to hold the Russian Federation together.
A newfoundation
**President:** Elected to a four-year term and cannot serve more than two terms in a row. A special provision allows current president Boris Yeltsin to serve out his term, which expires in 1996.
**Parliament:** Consists of two houses, the State Duma and the Federal Council. Duma has 450 members, half elected in head-to头 race and the other half by proportional representation of parties. Duma members serve two-year terms. Federal Council consists of 176 members, two elected from each Russia's republics and regions.
Key provisions of Russia a draft Constitution, which would replace 1977 document adopted under Soviet leader Leonid Kuchinin
Replaces the Soviet Congress of People's Deputies and Supreme Soviet
Private property and land: Right to private ownership of land and other property is guaranteed. Yeltsin has already lifted restrictions on free sale and purchase of land. In Soviet times, almost all land was state-owned and farming was by collective. Free enterprise: Freedom of trade, competition and economic activity was guaranteed and owned by the state.
activity was controlled and owed by the state and telegrams are guaranteed. Private telephone calls, letters and telegrams were the old constitution also guaranteed privacy, but in Soviet times, much private correspondence was monitored. Freedom of movement: People can freely leave and return to Russia, and no citizen can be expelled involuntarily. Travel outside Russia was forbidden for most Russians during Soviet times, and exile was used to punish dissent.
Censorship: Forbidden. The old constitution also guaranteed freedom of the press, but "In accordance with the aims of building Communism."
Source: The Associated Press
INSIDE
KANSAN
INSIDE
SHEPHERD HALLER
After spending the last two summers playing the spotlight on some of the hottest acts in Branson, Mo., Dusty Workman, Topekas senior, is looking for his next career move.
Making the big time
Page 5.
Horizon 2020 forum to discuss Lawrence, county land
By Tracl Carl
Amy Isaac graduated from the University of Kansas last May. Now she works in the loan department at Emprise Bank, 2435 Iowa St.
Kansan staff writer
Lawrence and Douglas County residents have put together goals and strategies for Horizon 2020, a comprehensive land-use plan for Lawrence and Douglas County until the year 2020. These goals include expanding and improving the job market available to KU students like Isaac who want to stay and live in Lawrence after graduation.
"It's a lot prettier than western Kansas," she said.
Isaac, who is from Newton, said she liked the size and feel of Lawrence.
A community forum will be held at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Lawrence High School cafeteria, Louisiana and 19th streets, to discuss the goals and strategies of the proposed plan.
Jean Milstead, chair of the Horizon 2020 steering committee, said the plan would provide guidelines for the rapid growth that Lawrence had experienced during the last 10 years. In 1980, Lawrence had about 67,400 residents. In 1990, there were 81,700, almost a 20 percent increase.
By the year 2000, Lawrence's population is projected to be about 90,700. Milstead said the residential and business growth that would accompany that increase should continue Lawrence's tradition of planned community development.
"As we continue to grow, I hope we can maintain a certain quality of life," Milstead said.
"That's how we sell ourselves, by encouraging manufacturers to do a better job," Milstead said.
The plan also encourages manufacturers to work for a high-quality product and to preserve nature with development.
The plan stresses developing several different types of job opportunities, especially for residents with higher educations.
Bike paths, public transportation and the development of vocational and technical schools are three of the suggestions that citizens have recommended the plan include.
"They don't have time to participate in the community," she said.
"We have a lot of people in Lawrence who are working below their skill level," Milstead said.
The final plan will go before the county commission and the city commission for a
The plan states that new jobs can be created by actively pursuing business growth, especially for businesses that would utilize and work with the University.
Lawrence should attract jobs that would help sustain the high quality of life that exists in Lawrence today, Milstead said. New jobs may persuade commuters who live in Lawrence and work in Topeka or Kansas City to find a job in Lawrence. Commuters spend their time driving and not as much time concerned about their hometown. Milstead said.
Strategies of Horizon 2020 include:
* expanding international trade and cultural
Strategies of Horizon 2020 include:
On the Horizon
developing public and private partnerships with education, government, business, agr
- the pursuit of a balanced land-use plan that includes open, natural spaces with industrial, retail and residential land development.
- aggressively pursuing business growth to decrease the number of workers who commute to Topeka and Kansas City, and develop businesses that work closely with KU.
KANSAS
vote in March of 1995.
Milstead said she hoped to see KU students involved at the forum tomorrow night.
"This is an opportunity to have those things they enjoy about Lawrence continue in the future," she said.
7
2
Tuesday, November 9, 1993
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OAKS — Non-traditional Students will have a brown bag lunch from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. today in the Burge Union. For more information, call Gerry Vernon at 864-7317.
LesBiGayS OK encourages anyone who is lesbian, gay, bisexual or unsure to call the organization or KU info about a confidential meeting.
Amnesty International will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Danelle Myron at 842-5407.
Graduate Student Council will have a panel discussion at 3:30 p.m. today at the Jawahk Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call William Dobak at 864-4110.
AURH will have a general assembly meeting at 6:30 today at the AURH office, Suite 101 in McColum Hall. For more information, call 864-4041.
- Inspirational Gospel Voices will meet at 6 p.m. today in 328 Murphy Hall. For more information, call Kim at 749-3819.
Hispanic-American Leadership Organization 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.
International Students Association will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
Minority Business Student Council will meet at 7 tonight in
Native American Student Association will meet at 7 tonight in 3012 Haworth Hall. For more information, call Johnnie Young at 864-4351.
426 Summerfield Hall. For more information, call Antoine Montgomery at 842-5276 or Jacinta Carter at 749-3083.
PRSSA will meet at 7 onnight at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kevin Grace at 865-3744.
KU College Republicans will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge_Union. For more information, call Leigh Smith at 832-8565.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445.
Middle East Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at Alcove D in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Betsy Erickson at 864-6499.
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in Robin-son Center. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
Original Klub of KU Looney Tunes (OKKULT) will meet at 7:30 tonight at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Julie Dublski at 864-1233.
KU-General Union of Palestine Students will sponsor a movie, "The Women Next Door," at 8 tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the kansas Union. Call Jamal Saeh, 841-3407.
WEATHER
Omaha: 55°/29°
Kansas City: 54°/34°
St. Louis: 55°/38°
LAWRENCE: 58°/30°
Wichita: 58°/32°
Tulsa: 55°/38°
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 59°/42°
Chicago: 39°/25°
Houston: 75°/49°
Miami: 84°/65°
Minneapolis: 33°/19°
Phoenix: 90°/59°
Salt Lake City: 56°/36°
Seattle: 51°/35°
TODAY
Tomorrow Thursday
Partly cloudy with SW winds at 10-15 mph.
High: 58°
Low: 30°
Partly cloudy with SW winds
High: 61°
Low: 32°
Partly cloudy
High: 64°
Low: 36°
Source: Gregg Potter, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
WEATHER
Sunny
Sunny
A student's bicycle and lock, valued together at $297, were taken from the bicycle rack at Templin hall on Oct. 31 or Nov. 1, KU police reported.
A student's bicycle and lock, valued together at $1,120, were taken from the bicycle rack at the Art and Design building on Thursday, KU police reported.
ON THE RECORD
Rentals
A student's coat, purse and its contents, valued together at $235, were taken from a car in the 600 block of West 13th Street on Saturday or Sunday, KU police reported.
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A student's parking permit and radar detector, valued together at $120, were taken from a car in parking lot No. 110 on Saturday or Sunday, KU police reported.
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7
CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 9, 1993
3
Suicide attempts common to campuses
Pain, emotions lead to despair
By Liz Kiinger
Kansan staff writer
Like any other college, KU is not immune to the pain associated with suicide.
About 5,000 suicides in the United States each year are committed by people aged 15 to 24 and for every suicide, there are between one and 200 attempts, said Marcia Epstein, Headquarters director.
Headquarters, 1419 Massachusetts, is one of a number of agencies in Lawrence that help people contemplating suicide or friends and family of someone they feel may try to kill themselves. Last year 600 of Headquarter's 16,000 visits and phone calls were suicide-related.
"It's not unusual for someone to have thought about taking their own life at one point," said Frank DeSalvo, KU's Counseling and Psychological Services director. DeSalvo said suicide was most often associated with relief from pain, whether mental for physical.
"I think if you've ever been in extreme emotional or physical pain the idea of wanting that pain to end is easy to understand," DeSalvo said. "Considering any means to bring that pain to an end is also pretty easy to understand."
Epstein said it was easier for some people to understand why people in physical pain would consider ending their lives rather than someone who was suffering emotionally.
"The people that I'm most familiar with are people who are thinking about suicide because there's a lot of emotional pain going on," Epstein said. "I thinkwe forget emotional pain
is at least as devastating as physical pain."
Epstein said there were four groups of teenagers and young adults considered high-risk for attempting suicide: perfectionists, who put lots of pressure on themselves and are unlikely to let people know they are having problems, people in a psychotic state, who confuse what reality is, those who suffer from long term depression and the severely abused.
DeSalvo said the pressures of college may deeply trouble some students.
"College is a real transition time for
folks," DeSalvo said. "Besides learning about yourself, it's a time to make decisions that may have lifelong implications. It's a real challenging time both academically and socially and in terms of identity."
The pain of the person's family and friends can match the pain of the person contemplating suicide, Epstein said.
"One of the things people say is they don't know what to do," Epstein said. "They're afraid they're going to do the wrong thing. In general people don't know what to do to help someone who's having a hard time."
What to do if you think that someone may be suicidal
Prevention
Listen to what the person says.
Don't leave her or him alone.
Don't leave her or finish the.
Headquarters. 4-1.5 M. for help.
Heartquarters.
KU Psychological Clinic in Fraser Hall
Psychological Clinics 7.3m, 7.0m, 7.0m
sachusetts. 841-2345. 24 hours a day, Free and confidential.
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at Watkins — 864-227/8,74.
b. to, to, to, Thursday and Fri-
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and Wednesday.
- 864-4121. 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Thursday, and 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday.
Chinese student group aims for communication
Source: Marcia Epstein, Headquarters director
Organization seeks to erase barriers
KANSAN
By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer
Shaohu Huang, Guangzhou, China graduate student, said he had a hard time writing his poetry in English instead of Chinese.
"I can only write a few sentences, but I think English is a pretty good language for poetry," said Huang, president of the Chinese Student and Scholar Friendship Association.
"Traditionally, we're not a socially active people," he said. "This way we can keep in touch, and we don't feel so lonely here."
Language problems are not the least of the troubles students from the People's Republic of China encounter, Huang said. But he said the association gave Chinese students a sense of their culture in a faraway land.
Huang said the group included the 240 Chinese students at the University of Kansas, as well as any members
UNITING TO BE HEARD
of their families who live with them in Lawrence. He said the association helped keep the total membership of 300 to 400 together.
"Our group is so big, it's hard to keep in touch with everybody," Huang said. "It changes so much every semester."
Most members want to meet Americans, he said, but language and cultural differences form a barrier.
Huang said the association would join the Chinese Student Association made of students from Taiwan
and the Hong Kong and Macau Student Association in holding a Chinese New Year celebration in February.
Ying Chen, Guangzhou, China, graduate student and treasurer of the association, said bringing the groups
"More and more, we cooperate with other groups," Huang said. "If this continues, then we'll probably have a stronger voice in the student body."
together helped them keep a common heritage.
"We just have fun together and celebrate our culture," she said. "We're not all Americanized. We try to present the traditional ways of our culture."
Chen said Americans often participated in the association's activities, but students still found communication difficult.
"I'm always willing to learn about the United States and American people, but it's still hard to relate," she said.
Huang said both groups needed to communicate more with each other. He said on the individual level, the differences in cultures would disappear when the similarities of human beings showed through.
"We're not the students you see in your classroom or lab every day," Huang said. "We're not just the students who don't speak English well and get good scores on tests. If you take the opportunity, you'll find that we're all different."
KO
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
Building a place of space
Jose Fernandez, Argentina senior, holds a wood frame while his partner tightens a bolt. Fernandez and his partner were "defining space" around midnight Sunday night with their architectural project and providing a creative outlet to relieve stress. About 10 projects were made for an architectural studio class and will remain in the courtyard between the Art and Design building and Lindley Hall until the end of the week.
Student reports man entered car and stole money
A man took $60 from a KU student and forced him to drive around town Friday night before the suspect got out of the car and ran away, said Sgt. Rick Nickell of Lawrence police.
Jonathan Martin, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, told police he was sitting in his car at the Dillons store at 1740 Massachusetts St. about 11:20 p.m. Friday, waiting for some friends who were inside. The suspect got into the car and told Martin he had a gun.
The suspect told Martin to drive him to a bank, the report said. Martin went to the automated machine maker at the Mercantile Bank at 23rd Street and Ridge Court. Martin withdrew $50 from his account and gave it to the suspect.
The suspect then asked Martin for more money, and Martin gave him $10 more, according to the report. The suspect ordered Martin to drop him off in the area of Murphy Drive in Southwest Lawrence. He told Martin
he would return the money if Martin gave him his name and address. Martin gave the suspect a false address before the suspect ran away.
Martin described the suspect as a black male in his early 20s, 5 feet 8 inches tall and 170 to 190 pounds. No arrests have been made, and police continue to investigate.
Crime Stoppers award nets information on false alarm
KU Crime Stoppers has awarded $100 to an anonymous caller who gave information about a false alarm at Templin Hall on Oct. 12.
CAMPUS BRIEFS
The award was announced yesterday by Danny Kaiser, chair of KU Crime Stoppers and assistant dean of student life.
The caller's information led police to question two unidentified suspects. They were ordered to appear in Lawrence Municipal Court on Nov. 2 to face charges of setting the false alarm that forced the temporary evacuation of Templin.
Anyone with information about false alarms or other campus crimes should call Crime Stoppers at 864-8888. Callers remain
anonymous and may be eligible for cash awards if their information leads to an arrest.
Students report assault at Mississippi Street lot
Four KU students claim they were assaulted by a man with a gun Oct. 30 in a parking lot off of Mississippi Street near the Kansas Union, Sgt. Rose Rozmairek of KU police said yesterday.
Patricia Walesheck, White Bear Lake, Minn., sophomore; Jennifer Dillon, Lawrence sophomore; William Mohl, Lawrence sophomore; and Lori Murphy, Lawrence sophomore, stopped their car in the parking lot after they thought they were being followed, Rozmairek said.
The person who appeared to be following them stopped his vehicle in the lot. He then got out of his car and started an argument with the students.
At one point, the suspect pulled out a small caliber handgun, according to the police report. He left without firing the handgun.
The suspect was described as a black male 20 to 22 years old. He was 5 feet, 1 inch tall
weighed 145 pounds, with short hair that was shaved on the sides.
Student tickets available for basketball tournament
Thousands of student tickets are still available for the preseason National Invitational Tournament basketball games at Allen Field House next week.
Student tickets cost $6 for two games and can be purchased at the Allen Field House ticket office, said Bernie Kish, ticket office manager.
Only 900 student tickets for the tournament had been sold as of late Tuesday, Kish said. About 6,300 tickets are still available. Kish said unsold student tickets would be sold to the public beginning on Thursday.
The Jayhawks play Western Michigan at 8:30 p.m. next Wednesday in Allen Field House. Also on Wednesday Santa Clara and California will play in San Jose, Calif. The
winners of each each game will meet at 8:30 p.m. next Friday in Allen Field House.
Ticket holders can receive a $3 refund for their Friday game tickets if KU loses on Wednesday, Kish said.
Alliance donates $300 to clean neo-Nazi graffiti
A Lawrence anti-racism group will try to heal wounds inflicted on the city's Jewish community.
The Lawrence Alliance will present the Jewish Community Center with a $300 check at 9 a.m. today. Lisa Blair, coordinator of the Alliance, said the money would pay for cleaning up neo-Nazi graffiti that was sprayed on the center's building on Sept. 5. She said the money would also help pay to make the walls of the center easier to clean in case of future attacks.
The money came from donations from the community, Blair said.
Briefs compiled from Kansan staff reports
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4
Tuesday, November 9, 1993
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Pentagon response late in veteran health issue
VIEWPOINT
Pentagon's response to veteran health concerns is too slow. The Pentagon's response to Gulf War veterans' health concerns about their exposure to harmful chemicals was too slow.
Even more disturbing was the Pentagon's acknowledgement of claims by the Czechoslovakian army that it had detected low levels of chemical agents during the 1991 war. This information alone may be inconclusive, but the Pentagon's announcement is belated nonetheless.
Gulf War veterans have had to wait too long for the Pentagon to start a formal investigation. Even if this study points to causes other than exposure to chemical weapons for Gulf War Syndrome, it will be a valuable study for affected veterans and the doctors who have been trying to treat their symptoms.
Before Nov.1, there had been no formal investigations into the veterans' claims of chemical exposure. The Pentagon continued to maintain that there were no chemical weapons attacks or significant exposures to chemicals during the war, even though the health of many veterans had not supported the claim.
Jury selection process does not need alteration
exposure to harmful chemicals was too low. The Pentagon announced Nov. 1 that it would launch an investigation into the possibility that veterans had been exposed to harmful chemicals during the war.
CHRIS REEDY BOT THE EDITORIAL BOARD
The process of jury selection should not be further complicated by sex-based exemptions. Last week, the Supreme Court heard arguments regarding the legality of sexual discrimination in jury selection.
The announcement came two and a half years after the war ended and the veterans' claims first surfaced. Since then, hundreds of veterans have complained about illnesses that they believe are related to their service in the Gulf War. Some veterans have used the term "Gulf War Syndrome" to describe their problems because nobody has discovered what caused them.
Although it may be possible that there is no one cause, the number of complaints has long warranted a more thorough investigation. In one Army company, 85 of the 110 members have reported similar symptoms typical of Gulf War Syndrome.
In 1986, the Supreme Court banned race-based exclusions of potential jurors. This precedent should help dictate the Court's decision. Also, peremptory challenges to remove jurors already allow lawyers some flexibility in jury selection.
The case being reviewed is about an Alabama man who said his rights were violated when an all-female jury decided that he fathered a baby out of wedlock. The jury ruled that the defendant, James E. Bowman, was the child's father, and the judge ordered him to pay child support.
KC TRAUER, Editor
Despite the unusual circumstances in this case, the process of jury selection does not need to be altered unnecessarily. The Supreme Court should not waste any time in ruling that jurors cannot be excluded because of their sex.
Barring jury selection based on sex would slow and complicate an already lengthy process. A tidal wave of appeals and troubles would occur if the Supreme Court rules that jurors can be excluded based on their sex. The last thing the legal system needs is a reason to discriminate in jury selection.
MANNY LOPEZ FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE Managing editors
KANSAN STAFF
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 ... Grove
Sports ... Kristi Fogler
Photo ... Klp Chin, Renze Kneeber
Features ... Erza Wolfe
Graphics ... John Paul Fogel
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Campus sales mgr ... Ed Schager
Regional Sales mgr ... Jennifer Perrier
National sales mgr ... Jennifer Evenson
Co-op sales mgr ... Blythe Focht
Production mgr ... Jennifer Blowey
Kate Burgese
Marketing director .. Sheilly McConnell
Creative director .. Brian Fusco
Classified mgr. Gretchen Kotterleinich
Business Staff
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of 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 Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and never than 200 words. The writer will be photographed.
MKANIY Chicago Tribune
WELCOME HOME
ARISTIDE
HAITI
THE RED CARPET TREATMENT
Like it or not, pornography is a protected form of speech
One of my Shakespeare professor's favorite lines, which occurs in "Love's Labour's Lost," is, "We arrest your word." Though literally meaning that a promise is binding, the words also carry many connotations, especially in today's society. One connotation can be found in a recently published book by University of Michigan law professor Catharine MacKinnon. The book, "Only Words," argues that pornography should be illegal. In other words, MacKinnon would like to arrest the "word" of pornography.
MacKinnon argues that not all forms of speech are protected. Sexual harassment, for example, is often verbal (e.g., "Sleep with me and you'll get an 'A'") and is discriminatory. Pornography sets up an oppressor/opressed relationship similar to sexual harassment. Through pornography, MacKinnon claims, men subjugate and eventually rape women. Pornographers' free speech leads to the inequality of the women portrayed in the pornography and to women in general. Thus, the freedom granted in the First Amendment is on a collision course with the equal protection granted in the 14th Amendment. In MacKinnon's opinion, the 14th should prevail.
COLUMNIST
COLUMNIST
NATHAN
OLSON
There are at least two major problems with MacKinnon's thesis. The first can be broadly termed "causation." MacKinnon is extremely tentative on whether pornography causes increased violence when she writes, "There is no evidence that pornography does no harm." In fact, studies have been inconclusive. Even the much-criticized Meese Report could not find a definite link. More recent studies have suggested that pornography has a cathartic effect because it releases sexual tension. The rapists MacKinnon tirelessly cites, who were led to their crimes by pornography, have little to do with the millions of people who view or read pornography without raping. MacKinnon's
"blame game" reminds me a bit of the idiotic Beavis and Butt-head controversy.
The second problem lies in definition and application. MacKinnon briefly defines pornography as "graphic sexually explicit materials that subordinate women through pictures or words." In her otherwise problematic book "The Morning After," Katie Roiphe includes a perceptive chapter about MacKinnon. In it, Roiphe recalls asking what MacKinnon would do with "Lolita." MacKinnon said that the novel was about "the tragedy of child abuse" and that if a man committed pedophilia because of the book, it would be because the man misread "Lolita."
Which is exactly the point. Who is to define reading and misreading? What exactly is material that subordinates women? Here MacKinnon makes the same mistake that the Meesee Report did — she goes after easy targets. By focusing on child pornography and "snuff films" (films that show the victim being raped and murdered), MacKinnon misses an important problem: subordinating images in the mainstream media. The covers of Teen and Seventeen feature adolescent girls in sometimes arguably sexual poses. But MacKinnon is not going to win a battle against the media, so why not pick on something easier?
MacKinnon seems to think that pornography is the cause of inequality. If it is not around, women will become equal. But pornography isn't the cause. In Holland, where both pornography and prostitution are legal, the earnings of women are greater compared to men than in this country. In addition, the rape rate is lower than it is here. So does this mean that pornography is a good thing?
Though she overdoes the point, Roiphe rightly portrays MacKinnon in mock deified terms. Ultimately, MacKinnon does seem to want to be God. Her interpretation of a written work is the only correct one; all others are misreads. Her definition of pornography, which is hopelessly vague and nearly impossible to apply, is the only correct one. Such singularity, such a desire to arrest the words of others, is a very scary concept.
Nathan Olsen is a Chicago graduate student in English.
College students must use credit cards responsibly now to avert problems later
"Cash. check or charge?"
Picture this:
The answer for John Doe college student is obvious: charge. As Doe happily purchases a $200 item, he promises himself that he will pay off the bill in a couple of months, even though he knows he doesn't have the money to do so.
Mistake No.1.
COLUMNIST
Despite his financial situation, Doe keeps charging items and pays the credit-card company the minimum payment of $10 a month.
Mistake No.2.
Doe has three credit cards, each one with an annual fee: $20, $30 and $55.
Mistake No. 3.
COLUMNIST TIFFANY HURT
Mistake No. 3.
By the end of the year, John Doe owes about $260 for the $200 item he purchased, because his credit card has an annual fee of $20 and an annual interest rate of 19.8 percent. And
although Doe had paid a monthly minimum payment of $10, he continued to charge items, which obviously increased his bill instead of decreasing it.
The cycle of long-term debt that credit cards can cause is detrimental to everyone, particularly college students. Upon graduation, John Doe will need a car or housing loan. But if he has a history of bad credit, he will be unable to obtain one.
However, it is possible to use credit
cards responsibly and remain debt-free.
First, don't charge it if you can't pay for it when the bill comes in a month. All credit cards charge their members an annual interest rate for the items that they charge. The most common rate is 19.8 percent. The trick is this: If you don't pay off your bill by the end of the year, you'll owe what you charged, plus 19.8 percent of the purchases. But if the bill is paid off in a month, no interest is added.
Second, if you charge an item and you can't pay it off in a month, don't charge anything else. You can't decrease your bill with minimum monthly payments if you continue to charge other items. Instead, you are falling further and further into debt.
Third, never subscribe to a credit card that has an annual fee. Some credit cards charge their members $20, $30 or even $55 a year. Thus, at the end of the year, you owe what you
charged, plus the annual fee. But why pay someone else $20 to $55 so you can spend your own money?
If you truly have an extra $20 a month to spend, put the money in the bank, let it collect interest, and then buy the items that you want. You'll remain in good credit standing, and you'll be at least $20 richer because you will not owe a credit-card company an annual fee or an annual interest rate. Instead, you will be able to apply the interest your money makes toward your purchases, and you will not have to make monthly payments on them.
Make your money work for you by making your money make money. Then spend it as you wish. Don't make yourself work to spend Visa or MasterCard money.
Tiffany Hurt is a Overland Park senior majoring in English and Journalism.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
76ers don't have a shot at NBA championship
I am writing in regard to Lance Hamby's "Philadelphia will compete for the NBA championship" column. Throughout this particular column, Hamby tried to convince readers that the Philadelphia 76ers have a legitimate chance of winning the NBA championship this year. You've got to be kidding me! The 76ers were the laughing stock of the NBA last season, and I bet nobody was chuckling louder than Charles Barkley. Sir Charles was part of a boneheaded trade that sent him to the Phoenix Suns prior to last season, and he led his Suns to the NBA finals while the 76ers floundered to a 26 and 56 record. Hamby had ridiculously
respectful praise for the 76ers top pick, 7-foot-6 center Shawn Bradley. This weak and feeble 21-year-old has shown throughout this preseason that he will get pushed around all season long by the brushes of the league like Shaq, Alonzo Mourning and Patrick Ewing. In more great off-season moves, the 76ers traded away their best guard Hersey Hawkens and signed center Moses Malone, who is about 10 years past his prime. I guess what I'm trying to say is that out of the 26 other teams in the NBA, at least 20 of them will have better records than the 76ers. As for Mr. Hamby, the next time you have a joke for us, save it for April 1st instead of November 1st.
Jeff Rehfeldt Roselle, Ill., senior
InterVarsity Christians are not oppressors
Last Tuesday, I opened up my Kansan and turned to the editorial page. I was surprised to find out that a column talked about my student organization — InterVarsity Christian Fellowship — and our meeting the previous Thursday on the Christian perspective on homosexuality.
As I read the article I found that I, as a member of InterVarsity, was a fundamentalist oppressor who rejects everyone besides myself (all his words). These are some very harsh words - with very bad connotations — which would be hard for Nathan to justify.
First, when Nathan called us fundamentalists, he categorized us with other stereotypical fundamentalists
(like Phelps, Swaggart and Baker) whom we do not necessarily agree with. We are fundamentalists, so far as we believe in the fundamental ideas of Christianity, but not in the connotations and theology that this term encompasses.
Second, calling InterVarsity members oppressors who reject their dissenters seems to imply that we are fascists. If this is the impression he got from our meeting, I must apologize. He is saying this just because we think we are right, then he is being unfair. I assume Nathan thinks he's right — does that make him an oppressor too?
David Zimmerman
President, InterVarsity Christian Fellowship
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Tuesday. November 9. 1993
5
Dusty Workman
STARTED AS A theater usher and spotlight man AND NOW
he wants to be
Wanted: by the Stars
The Topeka senior is designing the life he wants to lead as a part of the entertainment world
Dusty Workman would have died rather than listen to country music two years ago. Put to duty, country music in his blood.
"I would've laughed at the thought of putting on a pair of cowboy boots and a hat," the Topeka senior said. "But now, it's just a part of my life."
During his summer job two years ago, the country music Workman disliked quickly became a central part of his career. In only four weeks, Workman went from an ushering job in Branson, Mo., to working the spotlight on some of the country music industry's top recording stars - Garth Brooks, Reba McEntire, Clint Black, Vince Gill and others.
It was a week of laid-back life in the Ozarks that hooked Workman on country music.
The neon lights, the country shows, the restaurants and the shops in the Las Vegas-like countrymusic boom town flabbergasted Workman during his 1991 spring break trip. While walking down the famous theater-crammed 76 Country Boulevard, Workman took a particular interest in the "help wanted" signs in the windows of the concert halls.
On a whim, he applied for a summer job at the Willie Nelson Theater.
"I ended up being an usher in the theater, which wasn't exactly glamorous." Workman said.
But, after four weeks of taking tickets, a storybook opportunity came up.
Right before a Willie Nelson performance, word came that the spotlight operator could not make it to the show.
Ten minutes later, with butterflies in his stomach and sweat pouring from his brow, Workman was up in the spotlight booth about ready to get fired.
Or so he thought.
"Ijust took the chance," he said. "They asked me if I had any experience running a spotlight. I said 'sure,' and the next thing I knew I was up there running the spotlight on Willie in front of a whole crowd — without any idea as to what I was doing."
After the show, Workman was promoted to spotlight operator and stagehand.
Workman liked his job because he was right in the middle of the action. He also liked the perks that came with it.
Before long, he was out with Nelson and crew members on a plush, green golf course in Branson, driving, putting and talking with the country music legend.
Nelson characterized Workman as one of the most dependable and qualified crew members he knew during the summer of 1992.
"Dusty has some real initiative and leadership qualities," Nelson said. "I'd recommend him to anyone—but I'd gladly take him back."
Workman said he never would forget those 18 holes of golf.
"Willie was my first real interaction with a star," Workman said. "The one thing I noticed was he someone like you and me. Celebrities don't want to be treated any different than anyone."
Susan McSpadden / KANSAN
So began Workman's introduction to life in the professional entertainment industry.
20 YEARS OF ENTERTAINING
Dusty Workman had no trouble fitting in with Branson's entertainment atmosphere. He already had almost 20 years of experience in entertainment and public relations.
As a child, the blond-haired, blue-eyed neighborhood terror could have been the prototype for Calvin, in Bill Watterson's Calvin and Hobbes cartoon.
CLERM
Photo courtesy Dusty Workmar
Workman got his first job in the Willie Nelson Theater as an usher but advanced to spotlight operator within a month.
I don't see now my mom and dad put up with me," Workman said. "I mean I had all of this energy, and I never knew what to do with all of it."
Linda Grill, Workman's mother, said their Topeka home was the hub of neighborhood activity.
"I didn't want to limit his creativity in any way," she said. "Our house was open for all kinds of things. We had a haunted house every year until he graduated from high school."
MELANIE
David Uhler, a 21-year-old theater director in Denver, Colo., and a childhood friend of Workman's, said the best years of his life were spent creating magic shows, baseball diamonds and haunted houses with Workman.
"I know I wouldn't be as extroverted as I am if it weren't for Dusty," Uhler said. "My older brother would have waited for someone to come outside to play — but Dusty taught me how to go up and knock on doors. He's a credit to my success."
Steve Workman, Dusty Workman's father and an avid golfer, recalled that his personal collection of golf tronhies began disappearing.
Uhler remembers best the three-hole golf course his friend created. For neighborhood tournaments, it had to be played six times to complete 18 holes.
As a 10-year-old, Workman started playing the drums and waking up the neighborhood. He would go into his room, open the window, blare Top-40 tunes and try to copy the pro's lightning quick precision moves, hoping that one day he would turn professional.
Dusty Workman, Topeka senior, displays drumsticks autographed by various country stars. When Workman finishes his communications studies, he plans to become a professional drummer or an entertainment agent.
"Dusty would give out my trophies to the neighborhood kids," he said. "I can't say I was amused by it, but I knew he always felt like he had to make everyone happy."
In the sixth grade, Workman tagged along with the members of a Topeka band, Code 22. He set up equipment and ran errands for the band members. The group saw his interest, and before long Workman had his own Code 22 jacket that said "Roadie."
Throughout junior high and high school, Workman made it a point to practice every day. He was playing drums in Topeka bars and high schools his junior year when he organized a rock band, Sanctuary.
His girlfriend, Jennifer Hodges, Topeka senior, was the lead singer.
"They let me go places with them, and when they would take breaks, they would hand the drumsticks over to me. So there I was in front of the crowd, this sixth grader beating away at 'Wipeout,'" he said, failing his arms on an imaginary drum set.
"Dusty's happy, and he's constant energy — always," Hodges said. "He encourages me to pursue my singing career, and I encourage him to do his school work."
Workman, a communications major, juggles his school work at the University of Kansas with his ambition to entertain. Two to three times a week he finds the time to disc jockey Karaoke in Topeka, Kansas City and Lawrence.
But his ambitions run further than Karaoke and spotlighting.
WORKING WITH THE STARS
He used the experience he gained at Branson to get a job last fall at Kemper Arena and Arrowhead Stadium, in Kansas City, Mo., where he ran the spotlight and did stage work for professional acts such as Metallica, Ice-T, Guns 'N Roses and U-2. His favorite experience was meeting Garth Brooks.
Workman wasn't satisfied with aiming a spotlight at Willie Nelson.
"He said he was busy but he'd be back in 15 minutes to hook me up," Workman said. "I'd have never believed it, but there he was. Now how many stars are going to take the time to find a peon floor boy again? I was amazed."
He was disappointed when Brooks denied him an autograph. But he felt a tap on his shoulder 15 minutes later.
When Brooks stepped off his charter bus at Kemper Arena, Workman decided that was a good time to ask for an autograph
Workman used the work experience at Kemper Arena and the Willie Nelson Theater to build a resume, which he used to apply for a 1993 summer job at Branson's Grand Palace.
"I think it's one of my most-prized possessions, just because of the circumstances it was given to me," he said.
The $13 million Grand Palace theater resembles a great white antebellum-style mansion taken out of "Gone with the Wind." The marble and velvet theater, with its $14,000 chandelier, is Branson's largest theater, seating 4,000.
Kenny Rogers, Barbara Mandrell, Glen Campbell, Kathy Mattea, Vince Gill and The Oak Ridge Boys performed regularly at the Grand Palace.
Two weeks before Mandrell's show opened, Workman spent up to 15 hours a day helping Mandrell coordinate the lighting and spotlight affects. Mandrell designed her show with the input of the Grand Palace crew members.
Workman got to know Mandrell and her sisters, Louise and Irlene, better than other country musicians. Mandrell designed the show for her 80 Branson performances.
"She would talk to each of us and ask for suggestions or tell us what she wanted differently," he said. "It was a good experience because it was a group effort when we put all together."
During Workman's last show of the summer, Mandrell looked up at him and wished him success at KU in front of a crowd of 3,500 people.
"Barbara is the most laid back, down to earth star I know," Workman said. "She's genuine, and friendly to everyone."
Whether shining the spotlight on Mandrell or another country star, Workman said he sometimes still felt a rush sitting 250 feet up in the spotlight booth, head phones on, waiting for cues and looking down at the velvet seats filled with spectators craning their necks to get a better view of the stars.
"It's just a feeling you get that's hard to describe," Workman said. "You have to love entertainment, performing and music. And they've all been a part of my life for a long time."
DESIGNING HIS FUTURE
"Hated it," Workman said. "I'd always ask him how in the world he could stand listening to it, because it
When he was a young and aspiring drummer with a sincere interest in rock music and rock music only, he remembers his dad listening to country music.
At KU, Workman is designing a job proposal to present to Ron Jet, Grand Palace general manager, this summer. If accepted, the proposal would make Workman a liaison between professional entertainers and Branson agents. The entertainers then would have someone to address their concerns and problems to when they were in Branson.
was all honky-tonk and twang."
Jet said that Workman's proposal was a real possibility because Workman was just the kind of person the stars would enjoy working with. Workman has the characteristics that make him a commodity in the entertainment industry, Jet said.
"If Dusty maintains this level of professionalism, I see him in a management position after he gets his college education," Jet said. "Dusty is one of those young, ambitious college kids you love to work with. He's one of the few people we have working for us that the stars have commented on. He's smart, sincere, dependable, and he catches on fast."
But working in Branson with country entertainers changed his perspective. And he said that he now had arespect for the new era in country music called "young country."
"Now I hear songs on the radio, and I can say, 'Hey, I saw that performer play that song in Branson, or I know that performer.'" he said. "It makes the music that much more enjoyable."
Workman travels to Branson one weekend a month to stay on as a crew member at the Grand Palace.
story by Chesley Dohl
What Branson means to Workman is invaluable experience and a career direction. The 21-year-old knows he has the means to become an entertainment agent or a professional drummer. He said that now it was just a matter of getting there.
"All my life I've been designing the life I want to lead," Workman said. "Someday I want people to look back and say, 'I read about him in the Kansan when he was a light boy — just look at him now.'"
00:06 1F4000:300:8mud7-nsoM
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Gaza Strip killing fuels settler riots
The Associated Press
JERUSALEM — Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin urged Jewish settlers to refrain from acts of vengeance after thousands rioted throughout the occupied lands yesterday to protest a wave of killings.
Settlers paralyzed morning rush-hour traffic in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip with flaming tires and stone barricades. Near one West Bank roadblock, two Palestinian were shot, apparently by settlers.
This latest rampage was set off by Sunday's shooting death of a Gaza Strip settler, the seventh Israeli killed by Arab militants since Sept. 13 when Israel signed a peace accord with the Palestine Liberation Organization.
Hamas, a Muslim fundamentalist group committed to Israel's destruction, claimed responsibility for Sunday's attack.
The attacks appear to have weakened support for Rabin, whose Labor Party performed poorly in municipal elections last week, and emboldened right-wing politicians opposed to the accord.
Rabin told Parliament that security services were doing everything they could to fight Arab militants, but
warned that they would also take action against Jewish vigilantism.
"I call on the settlers to stop those who want revenge and create disturbances," he said. "Despite the question marks, we will reach peace, we will reach agreements, and the blood-shed will stop."
Israeli and PLO teams were said to be meeting at an unknown location in Cairo, resuming talks the PLO broke off last week to protest Israel's plans for a troop withdrawal in Gaza.
Opposition leaders demanded that Rabin call off the talks on Palestinian autonomy and ridiculed his claim that the recent attacks were carried out by Hamas and other Islamic groups instead of the PLO.
Extreme nationalist legislator Rehavam Zeevi caused a stir by comparing Rabin's government to the French Vichy regime that collaborated with the Nazis during World War II.
Earlier in the day, barricades in 49 spots blocked highways in the West Bank and Gaza, confining most Palestinians to their towns and villages.
An army statement reported that troops had removed several roadblocks, and one soldier had fired into the air to prevent settlers from stoning an Arab driver.
Heavy voter turnout in Jordan threatens fundamentalists' hold
The Associated Press
AMMAN, Jordan — Lines of voters spilled into the streets yesterday in Jordan's first multiparty elections since 1956, giving King Hussein the heavy turnout he sought to thwart Muslim fundamentalists opposed to the Mideast peace process.
Early returns showed fundamentalists trailing by wide margins in districts that had been their strongholds. Nearly complete results released by the Interior
Ministry indicated they could lose six of the 22 seats that had made them the largest voting bloc in Parliament.
Hussein's secular, pro-Western government had feared a low turnout would favor the well-organized fundamentalists and possibly deny the king a free hand in negotiating with Israel.
Somali aid-agency chief shot as peace dissolves
But the Interior Ministry said 68 percent of the country's 1.2 million registered voters cast ballots.
The Associated Press
MOGADISHU, Somalia — The Somali security chief for the CARE aid agency was killed Monday when U.N. peacekeepers fired on gunmen who attacked them in territory controlled by Mohamed Fararh Aidid.
The attack was the fourth on foreign troops in as many days and suggested that Aidid's monthlong truce with U.N. forces seemed to be crumbling.
Aidid vowed not to negotiate with the U.N., and his Somali National Alliance boycotted two U.N.-sponsored meetings; one to discuss how to improve the city's security, the other to meet with the faction, headed by Ali Mahdi Mohamed, that controls Mogadishu's northern half.
A. U.S. spokesman in Somalia said the United States was sticking by plans to put American forces back on Mogadishu's streets.
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Tuesdav. November 9,1993
9
Defense holds back Packers
Chiefs nose tackle scores touchdown, forces key fumble
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — With no Joe Montana, the Kansas City Chiefs needed the defense to provide some offense. So nose tackle Dan Saleamua took over where the injured Montana left off.
Saleaumu ran 16 yards for a touchdown early in the third quarter with a fumble stripped by Derrick Thomas from Brett Favre to set the Chiefs on a 17-point run that gave them a 23-16 victory against Green Bay last night.
Later in the game the 6-foot, 300-pounder forced a fumble by Darrell Thompson that Tracy Rogers recovered in the end zone just as the Pack
KC CHIEFS
ers threatened to go ahead with just under six minutes left. An interception by Martin Bayless, Kansas City's third of the game, ended Green Bay's final threat with 1:40 left.
The victory kept the Chiefs, 6-2, in first place in the AFC West and ended a three-game winning streak for the Packers, 4-4.
But it wasn't easy.
The Kansas City offense was limited to just 60 yards in the first half and could have gone off trailing by more than the 9-3 score by which the Packers led. In fact, the defense produced those points, a 23-yard field goal by Nick Lowery set up by Kevin Ross'
interception and 48-yard return.
Green Bay, meanwhile, failed on a first and goal from the 2-yard line when Thomas forced a third down fumble, so the Packers chose to kick a field goal on fourth down from the Kansas City 1-yard line in the final minute of the half. Green Bay's only points came from Chris Jacke's field goals of 23, 51 and 19 yards.
Then, on Green Bay's first offensive play after intermission, Thomas broke behind Favre and swiped at the ball, knocking it straight at the feet of Saleaumua. He grabbed it like a shortstop and rambled 16 yards into the end zone to give the Chiefs the lead.
Green Bay went three and out and the Chiefs drove 46 yards in 10 plays to make it 13-9 on a 34-yard field goal by Lowery.
The Chiefs made it 20-9-10:66 into the fourth quarter after a 76-yard drive, their only sustained offensive sorte of the night. The key play was a 32
yard pass from Dave Krieg to J. Bjernen that put the ball at the Green Bay 4-yard line. Krieg, subbing while Montana rested his pulled hamburger, was 17 of 30 for 170 yards and was sacked four times, three by Bryce Paup.
But 55 seconds after the Chiefs touchdown, Green Bay cut their lead to 20-16.
Marcus Wilson returned the Chiefs kickoff 37 yards to the 45. Then Favre found Sterling Sharpe for 21 yards, then found Jackie Harris all alone for a 35-yard pass.
Seven minutes later it looked like it would be 23-20 Packers as Green Bay, aided by a 30-yard pass interference call against Dale Carter moved to a first down at the Chiefs' 3.
But on second down, as Thompson charged toward the end zone, Saleaumau stripped the ball and Rogers fell on it. Then Todd McNair's 48-yard run set up a 40-yard field goal by Lowery that made it 23-16 with 3:26 left.
12
Soccer club lacks money for nationals trip
Senior goaltender Joel Cox attempts to block a shot during practice at Robinson Field East. The men's soccer club practiced Saturday in preparation for nationals, Nov. 18-20 in Tempe, Ariz.
Bv Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
The men's soccer club is off to nationals Nov. 18-20 on one condition — that it can afford to go.
The team is ranked No. 1 in the region by the National Collegiate Club Soccer Association after compiling a 9-1-1 season.
Holly McQueen / KANSAN
Going to nationals is not a first for the Jayhawk soccer team, but the location of the tournament has provided a road block.
Originally the tournament was scheduled to be played in Austin, Texas. But late in the season, because of complications with the tournament director, the tournament was moved to Tempel, Ariz.
Coach Mark Salisbury said the team was invited to the tournament by the NCCSA Wednesday night, and since then he has been trying to find a way to get the team there.
Chartering a bus would cost the team about $4,000 and a week's worth of missed school. Salisbury said the drive takes about 30 hours—one way.
Salisbury said that team members could not afford to miss that much school and would not attend the tournament if they had to drive.
"The football team would be laughed at if they would have taken a bus to New Jersey for that first game," he said of the Kickoff Classic. "We just have more trouble financing our trips since we're a club sport."
The team did budget its money to drive to the national tournament in Austin, but it is not enough to cover the cost of flying 21 people to Arizona.
Salisbury said he hoped to take 18 players, himself, a manager and a trainer. The team does not have a regular trainer, but for the tournament Salisbury is looking into taking a physical education major who is trained to take care of injuries.
With 21 people flying, the team qualifies for an airfare discount.
Team captain senior Trey Thompson, said the team was looking into getting sponsors to help defy the costs of attending the tournament.
With only two weeks left and two-a-day practices, the team does not have much time for fund raising. However, the team is looking at traditional fund-raising campaigns such as bake sales, car washes and selling T-shirts, Thompson said.
"Half of us can afford to pay our own way," Thompson said. "The other half can't. So, we are trying to raise money to give it to those who can't afford go to the tournament."
Former coach and current player
senior Kipper Hesse said the team had a good chance of placing in the tournament because of the team's leadership.
"Mark is a real coach, and the team has a lot more discipline," he said. The soccer team has attended nationals the last four years, but it has not performed well. To make itself more competitive this year, the team will practice at 8 a.m. and again at 4 p.m. every day until the tournament.
Cleveland releases starting quarterback
The Associated Press
BEREA, Ohio — The Cleveland Browns cut Bernie Kosar today, ending a short and stormy relationship between the longtime starter quarterback and coach Bill Belichick.
Kosar, who agreed to a nonguaranteed, seven-year, $26 million extension of his contract five weeks ago, had been benched by Bellichick in favor of backup Vinny Testaverde, who was signed as a free agent during the summer.
Belichick said the team would sign another quarterback this week. Todd Philcox, who has started only one game in four years, will start Sunday in Seattle, backed up by recently-re-signed Brad Goebel.
When Testaverde separated his shoulder last month, Kosar returned to the starting lineup for one game, but Belichick still wasn't happy with him, saying it was apparent that Kosar's physical skills had diminished over the years.
"It was unanimous (among the coaching staff) that we should go in a different direction," owner Art Modell said. "It was a painful experience for Bernie and myself. Bernie Kosar has been like a son to me. He contributed to this organization the likes of which haven't been seen since the 1960s."
Kosar completed 79 of 183 passes with five touchdowns and three interceptions this year.
Under terms of the NFL's collective bargaining agreement, any veteran player waived after eight games is entitled to one game check of up to $20,000. Although Kosar's contract paid considerably more than that, the $20,000 will serve as his termination pay.
Kosar has become increasingly outspoken about the Brown's sluggish offense in recent weeks, and it became apparent that he and Belichick disagreed on the types of plays the team should run.
Until this season, he had started all but two games since coming to Cleveland. He led the team into the playoffs in each of his first five seasons, winning four division titles, and went into this season with the Browns highest all-time completion mark of 58.9 and the NFL's all-time lowest interception percentage of 2.58. He was ranked seventh among active quarterbacks in passer ratings with 81.84, 13th on the NFL's all-time list.
Maumalanga named defensive player of the week
Kansan staff report
Kansas senior defensive tackle Chris Maumalanga was named Big Eight Conference defensive player of the week yesterday by sportswriters who cover the conference.
A. N. Ramanuja
Maualanga had 10 tackles, two of which went for losses of yards, in Kansas' 20-21
Iowa State junior center Tony Booth was named offensive player of the week. Behind Booth's blocking, the Cyclones ran for 177 of their 222 rushing yards in the fourth quarter in their 27-23 victory against Kansas State.
Chris Maumalanga
defeat against Nebraska on Saturday. Kansas coach Glen Mason said the performance was Maumalan-
mance was Matthiarga's best of the season.
FATHOMS MAYER
Tony Booth
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Kansas game hurt Huskers standing
Miami overtakes Nebraska in poll
Nebraska left Lawrence on Saturday with a 21-20 victory against Kansas. But they possibly left their national championship aspirations in Lawrence as well.
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
Nebraska coach Tom Osborne said that he was not comfortable with the idea of polls and their influence in deciding bowl match ups and national championships.
Due in pair to their close call against the Jayhawks, the Cornhuskers were overtaken in the bowl coalition top 25 poll by Miami. The Hurricanes, 7-1, are ranked No. 3 in the poll. Nebraska, 9-0, is No. 4 in that poll, 44 points behind Miami.
The bowl coalition poll is the combination of the Associated Press media and the CNN/USA Today coaches top 25 polls, and is used to determine the four New Year's Day coalition bowl matchups.
Nebraska ranked ahead of Miami in the coaches poll, but trailed the Hurricanes in the media poll this week.
If Miami, a member of the Big East, wins its remaining three games and stays ahead of Nebraska in the coalition poll, it probably would play the winner of this Saturday's game between No.1 Florida State and No.2 Notre Dame in the Fiesta Bowl.
The four New Year's Day coalition bowls are the Fiesta in Tempe, Ariz.; Orange in Miami; Sugar in New Orleans; and Cotton in Dallas. The coalition will consist of Notre Dame, the champions of the Atlantic Coast, Big East, Big Eight, Southeastern and Southwest conferences.
Osborne votes in the coaches poll, but he said in yesterday's Big Eight Coaches teleconference that he would not reveal his vote. He said that coaches probably watch more teams than the media because of film exchanges, and have a good understanding of who the top teams are.
"I can't do anything about it since I don't control the voters," Osborne said. "I'm bothered by the lobbying and commentary on television and in print. That could have some impact on the voters."
"Because of film exchange, I've probably seen 40 to 50 teams this season, many of which are in the top 25," he said. "The (media) voters have a limited view of college football and can't see all the teams that we see."
"I listened to the commentary by those so-called experts on television saying that the game was a tie, but the coach went for the two points and failed," Mason said. "Hey, Nebraska still won the game. If you're unbeaten and untied, you should be up there in the poll."
Colorado coach Bill McCartney said voting in the polls was all guess work and that voters were usually influenced by comparative scores. He said he could not tell who was better between Miami and Nebraska.
Colorado has played both Nebraska and Miami this season and has been defeated by both teams. Miami beat Colorado 35-29 on Sept. 25 in Boulder, and Nebraska won 21-17 on Oct. 30 in Boulder.
Kansas coach Glen Mason said he did not think Nebraska deserved to drop behind Miami in the coalition poll because of the close call against his Jayhawks.
"I'd rather see that decided on the field, but I'm pulling for Nebraska," he said.
Men's tennis ends fall season on top
Men's tenni Team now seeking to add Big Eight title
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas men's tennis team wrapped up its fall season with the top spot in the fifth region and winning records for all its singles players
Competing until 2 a.m. and coming back to compete again at noon the next day may have slowed the Kansas players down, but it did not stop them. Kansas slipped by Wichita State on Sunday afternoon after its five-hour match against Oklahoma the night before.
Kansas defeated Tulsa 4-0, Oklahoma 4-2 and Wichita State 4-3 in the Regional Team tournament last weekend in Des Moines, Iowa, qualifying for the USTA-ITA National Team Indoors Championships Feb. 23-27.
"Wichita was not a better team than Oklahoma," said junior Manny Ortiz. "We were just tired from playing so late
He said that the team had accomplished its first goal, which was to win the regional team tournament. Now the team will try to fulfill its second goal of winning the Big Eight title.
Coach Michael Center said the victory capped the fall season for the young tennis team.
the night before."
"They were all so determined to win," he said. "I am really pleased with their effort."
He said the winning records of all the players showed the team's depth. Last fall, only sophomores Reid Slattery and Michael Isroff had winning seasons.
In December, the national rankings will be published and Center said Kansas could be in the top 25 as a team and Slattery could be one of the top 50 individual players. He won the regional individual tournament Oct. 22-25.
Sophomore Martin Ericksson was the only Kansas player to post victories in all three matches. Slattery, Isroff and freshman Trent Tucker won two matches each and had another match suspended.
team tournament, all the doubles players from a school compete at the same time and then the singles players compete. Once a team wins four points, the match is over and any match still going is suspended.
Kansas won a point in its doubles matches against Tulsa and Oklahoma but not against Wichita State. All four of its points came in the singles matches against the Shockers.
Ortiz said winning the tournament was a motivational factor for the team going into the off season.
"We are all satisfied with how the fall season went." Erickson said.
He said the key to the off season was for everyone to stay healthy and in shape. But it is not always easy to practice without being forced to.
Ortiz said that everyone ultimately wanted to win the Big Eight title, and that continued hard work would pay off in the end.
Center cannot attend practice during the off season, but he can oversee strength training.
"There's no letting down now," he said.
JOHN CABOT
KANRAN FILE PHOTO
Junior tennis player Manny Ortiz practices his forehand shot. The men's tennis team qualified for the USTA-ITA National Team Indoors Championships last weekend.
10
Tuesday, November 9, 1993
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Team finishes in 12th place; focus now is spring training
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas women's golf team ended a somewhat inconsistent fall season this weekend in College Station, Texas, at the Texas A&M Bookstore/Welsh Memorial Invitational.
The team came in 12th in the 17-team tournament, with senior Holly Reynolds leading the way. She ended her season in a five-way tie for ninth place. Conference rivals Missouri and Kansas State took third and 14th place respectively.
"It's hard to say we play well when you come in 12th." said Kansas coach Jerry Waugh.
He said that his players did not turn in the consistent performance he wanted, which had been a problem all season.
"Some players turned in one good round, but most players did not have consistently good rounds," Waugh said.
The trip to College Station ended what Waugh called a learning season for his inexperienced sucd.
"We're not a senior-dominated team," Waugh said. "This has been a learning experience for a lot of our players."
One player who did perform consistently during the fall was Reynolds. She posted a top-10 finish in each of the team's five fall tournaments. That
included second-place finishes in both the Oregon State Invitational and the Marilyn Smith/Jayhawk Invitational.
"After this season, she is entitled to have one bad round," Waugh said.
Waugh said that Reynolds had one bad round last weekend that cost her a better finish.
Waugh said that the team needed to find more players to fill in when one member had a bad round.
He said that some bright spots had developed throughout the season. He said that he was pleased by the play of some of the team's younger golfers, such as sophomore Tara Donnelly, who came in third in the first team tournament of her college career.
Freshman Missy Russell found the fall schedule helpful in adjusting to the rigors of college athletics.
"I was really scared the first couple weeks of the season," she said. "Later on I realized that we're all good enough to play here."
Russell posted two top-20 finishes in the three tournaments she competed in for the Jayhawks. She said that last week's performance was not indicative of the kind of talent the team had.
"We didn't play well at all," she said. "I know we have much better players than what we showed there."
WWW.GOLF.NYSPORTS.COM
Sophomore Lynn Williamson said the team would put more emphasis on preparing for the spring season and Big Eight competition.
The FISH has Landed
Williamson and Russell both said they planned to work on their swing during the off season. Russell also wanted to get in some work on her putting as
KANSAN FILE PHOTO
Senior golfer Holly Reynolds studies the putt of one of her competitors during a recent tournament at the Alamar golf course. The women's golf team finished 12th this weekend in a 17-team tournament in College Station, Texas.
well.
"If we work hard during the fall we should get more consistent," Russell said. "We should do better by spring."
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Fast, accurate word processing; term paper, dissertation, thesis and graphics services available. Laser printing. Engineering and Law Review Call. Cam Pam at 841-1977 anytime.
Pro-Type: fast, reliable, professional quality. Any kind of typing. Call today at 814-6242.
Wanted: to edit my thesis according to APA and KU Grad. School specifications. Must be knowledgeable about both and Word Perfect 5.1. David 1-893-5434.
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
4, 4 mg simms for Macintosh never used, sealed bags $250.00 OBO. call 847-9877.
Beds, decks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice. 908 Mass.
Computer Discounts, Guaranteed Quality and
Lowest Price. Call 822-7842 or 892-5431. (200)
822-7842 892-5431
COMPUTERS: Looking for a high quality PC at low costs! Call P | C Source 832-1186
DP 2500 weight lifting machine, leg curls, etc.
Great condition. DP Body - Tone 300 Rowing
Machine. $250 for both. Call 843-0540 evenings and
weekends.
KU STUDENT BASKETBALL COUPONS FOR
SALE, ASK FOR KRIS 823-4299.
Large inventory of classic old playboy Magazines 1950's, 60's, 70's and 80's. Most in good condition. Must be purchased in package. Call 843-0540 evenings and weekends.
Macintosh Memory 6-1MB 803n 32P SIMM5,
Macintosh Memory 6-1MB 803n 32P SIMM5, will sell in sets two ask for
Chip#865470
Macintosh SE/30 75% of meg of ram; 80 meg hard disk
Memory; 16 MB of RAM; Player and
mechanics $125 00 OBO. OBO: 94 2-9778.
NEAT STUFF, NEW STUFF at Simple Goods:
solar flashlights/key chains; recycled innertube
purses/wallets. 735 Mass M-Sat 10-5-30 T'llh 8
S500 Mandela Cannon B.M.I. Mke 19.3 old $30 in He
SM500 Cannondale MT. bike. 19" 3 yrs old $300 In great shape. 749-969.
Style Writer II Printer. New-only 2 months old.
$225.00 OBO,包号 842-9787.
Want to sell complete set of basketball tickets
Best offer. Leave message on machine. 823-0009
340 Auto.Sales
1978 Buke L录篡-350 vB PS, PB, AT, AC, $600 842.
11days. Andy-Days
1990 Honda Accord LX coupe, 5-speed, spool-deli
condition, 685-0139. Power condition for details.
85' Red Pontica Fiero, sunroof, AC, new paint,
excellent condition. 3000 BOY 749-3899.
360 Miscellaneous
Sculptured Nails $23 reg. $42. Reflections West, $23 Ridgeway $81-946. Ask for Pam.
THE CHAPMAN
Used & Curious Goods
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
Noon · 6:00 Tues · Sat.
Buy • Sell • Trade
Short walk to campus!
2 br. available in house-clean, quiet
370 Want to Buy
Oiden nlm apt, for sublease Jan. 1. From aftmaid
nlm apt, for sublease Jan. 1. $85 per month, with water
Call 624-293-4021
Departed severely or 2 indiana BB tickets. Paying big $11 (Call-758-0253 (KCMO).
400s Real Estate
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
Spring nabassee for 3 persons. 5 drums, 1 bath, onah,
2 beds, 4/8 rooms, $90/mo.
Availability 1/14/1944-11/4/94, 84-98-3924.
- Close to campus
- Spacious 2 bedroom
- Laundry facility
- Swimming Pool
- Waterbed allowed
405 For Rent
9th& Avalon 842-3040
VILLAGE SQUARE
Sublease studio $900/mo. including cable. Available immediately. Call 749-9065.
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
very nice! Available Spring sem. Interested? Call
(866) 555-1234.
1 roommate to share spacious, fun. 4 BR 3 Bath
1 bedroom. 2 bedrooms. Apt. 9/10. Avail Spring, Clavil Env. Call Alan 845-168-168.
Sublease begin Jan. 11. Great studio app in, old
school. Email info@newschool.edu. Old duplex at
downtown campus. $200 up! call U44 8206 5000
twown at wmw. $200-tull. Call 49-2200.
Sublease needed? 2833 Iowa G-1. Nice neighborhood.
$400-mo. Willing to negotiate? 833-9115 or
841-5533
1 Bedroom apt, available Jan. 1 Oread neighbor-
ship, very nice, very nice, a month call. Month-
ly 829-263-250
Unique 2 bedroom / 1 bath apt. hard wood floors, 3
bedrooms in downtown .1458/month.
Available Jan. 20, 2021.
Apt. for rent, 123 Breat location 1135 Indiana
Cheetah Flies, $350.00 including cable. Call 842-7481
430 Roommate Wanted
Avail. Dec. 19th. Very large, newly remodeled dome
airbnb. On bus route, water and cable paid,
phone number.
One female needed to sublease on campus ApL $180 a month + unit. Call Suzy 839-1866
Available Jan. 1st, 2 bdrm unfurnished apt,
jacuzzi, nice outdoor, near bus routes. Only
payments due on time.
For lease: 4 bedroom, Sundance apts, near campus, occupancy date not applicable, $700 + utility
Office/Store/Workspace near downtown
& included. Prices $10 per unit. Utilities
included. Phone 944-836-2755
For rent brand new 3 birm 2 bath apt. On the bus
$120/room +/- $1/day. Call 864-7127
$110/room +/- $1/day. Call 864-7127
Furnished studio apartment. 2 short beds from
KU. Water fed. Off street parking. No pets.
800 sq ft.
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and dining room from KU-Off-street parking. No calls. Cali-814-500-6322
1 female needed to share 3 BBS, 2 both Campus
Cases. Call Campus Place Office 614-891-5700.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
N3S need NMS to share nfs 3. bdm. townhouse,
$300/ mo) include ALL lt, ul & pd. cable, on bm
route, near 3rd rd & Iowa, avail for spring sem. Call
Gina 794-1997.
Female N/S to share very nice bdrm. 2 bath.
house w//hardwood floors in Old West Lawrence.
Responsible grad-student/prof, only. Avail 1 Jan.
for spring semester. $20/mo + 1/vit. Call 833-764-1234.
2 females, t/2 uses for spacious 3k-3d duplex
room. Sewing machine, 4x4 bay; CA, DW,
hardwood floors, 841-729-2280.
M or P needed to share 3 bedroom house. On bus route, smoker or non smoker must be West Coast traveler. Call 841-2050. Hotel code 841-2067.
Male or female needed to share new 4 bedroom duplex in W. Lawrence starting Jan. 1. Washer/dryer, 2 car garage, Fully furnished (except for room). Call Campagne 853-6529
need male or female to sublease 1 bdmr 2 dbmr
Need very clean. Ultra close campus. Water and
Very clean.
N/S female needle for spring semester. Share 2
key to keypad. Rate $135/u +1/ull Call 780-2980.
Keypad rate: 780-2980.
Need male rommate for 2 Bdrm apt close to camp.
Need female rommate for 188/m² and /u^. non-
公用. Need male rommate for 188/m² and /u^. non-
公用.
- Byphone: 864-4358
How to schedule an ad:
One Female to share two bedroom apartment for
one person, like dogs, very close to campus.
Call Lina 748-987-2911
open minded female need to share two bedroom house close to campus January thru May. Call any of our friends.
Need mature, clean, N/5 male to share 2 br api
w/male grade. Student. Close to campus. $193/mo
Some util. pd. Avail. Jan 1. 749-4369.
ROOMMATE NEEDED. Close to campus.
Preferred. Smoker. 2 full baths. 841-642-943
preferred. Smoker. 2 full baths. 841-642-943
**Help desk service Assistance**
Protect your home from property damage. Instruct family in exchange for help w/ work, lift, house work, it. cooking.
Limited pet welcome. Call 997-5771 after 3 p.m.
Two sr yr Sr.'s is calling a female roommate for 3 months. Doing the Begin. 1. Call Carry or Catyre at 800-722-5500.
Very close to campus, behind Yellow Rose. Need 1 aphid.
2 baphid. Need 2 aphid.
284/m4 - Call 285-906
284/m4 - Call 285-906
Ada phoned in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
119 Staffer Filed
Classified Information and order form
Stop by the Kansas Office for between 8 a. m. and 5 p. m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on masterCard or VISA.
Refunds:
Calculating Rates:
**by my man:** I shouldlar Fint, LawnFarer, K.Bailey.
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with mail 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.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00
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 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 agate lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to onhiatus.
1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30+X
2.65 1.55 1.05 .95 .75 .55
1.90 1.15 1.00 .70 .65 .45
1.65 1.05 .75 .65 .65 .45
1.75 .00 .65 .65 .65 .35
140 hotel a fleet
285 highway wanted
225 professional services
225 business services
395 for sale
340 auto sales
360 miscellaneous
Classifications
105 personal
110 business personas
120 announcements
130 entertainment
370 want to buy
485 for rent
438 rooomsta wanted
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Half, Lawrence, KS. 68445
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1993 ForWorks, Inc./Dist. by Universal Press Syndicate
Zoon
Douglas is ejected from the spoon band.
12
Tuesday. November 9,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
---
The Etc. Shop
928 Mass. 843-0611
Ray-Ban
BROADWAY
GUARDIAN & LONG
WESTERN SHORE
Rey-Born ENTERPRISE IN
MANAGEMENT OF THE
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For All Your Glass Needs
kennedy GLASS
car windshields, desk top glass,
picture frame glass.
730 New Jersey 843-4416
AMERICAN BISTRO
701 MASS.
In the Eldridge Hotel
841-8349
Breakfast-Lunch-Dinner
We do Banquets too!
Rings Fixed Fast!
Kizen Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
THE
HARBOUR LIGHTS
1 mile service last month 9 years
of Downtown Bouldon
100 m of Meadowhills
Downtown
90¢ Bowling
3:30-6:00 p.m.
Mon - Thur
Not just for bowling any more!
Jaybowl
PARK AVE. NORTH
864-3545
State Radiator
Student Friendly
We recycle
and reuse, freon,
and metals.
842-3333
radiators-heaters
& water pumps
VISA
Stephan: student fees may finance political groups
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Attorney General Bob Stephan said in a legal opinion made public yesterday that Kansas universities may collect mandatory fees and give some of the money to political organizations.
However, he cautioned that activities of the organizations must relate to the university's educational mission and that the fee money could not be used for lobbying or off-campus activities.
Stephan said that a university's mission is to provide a broad educational experience for its students, including forums that provide a broad spectrum of ideas such as political organizations.
Organizations must fulfill school mission
The attorney general answered a
Shallenburger noted that the California Supreme Court recently held that students must be allowed to choose whether they donate for such purposes.
"The university may not allow use of mandatory fees to fund lobbying efforts, other off-campus activities, or organizations that are too far removed from the university's education mission," Stephan said.
"A mandatory fee to fund various groups providing such (educational) opportunities and to avoid 'free rides' is justified by this important state interest.
question posed by Rep. Tim Shallen-burger, R-Baxter Springs.
"The fee may be used to support political and ideological speech if such expenditures are nondiscriminatory and are necessarily or reasonably incurred for the purpose of providing such educational experiences and opportunities."
ALEXANDRA PADWICK
Melissa Lacey / KANSAN
Making a point
Cynthia Evans, portraying Edna in "Waiting for Lefty," argues with Jon Stafford, who plays her husband, Joe. Last night's performance, which was in Smith Hall, was set in the Depression era of the 1930s and was sponsored by the English Alternative Theater.
-
The Etc. Shop
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The Etc. Shop
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Watches and
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New Styles in Now!
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B
Hair Experts Design Team
$5 Off
Hair Design
Not valid with any other offer
EXPIRES 11/30/93
Discover Our Difference
Holiday Plaza • 25th & Iowa
841-6886
Let the KU Bookstore staff find your books for you!
Textbook Pre-order form
Return this form to the KU Bookstore in either the Kansas or Burge Unions by December 27, 1993. Books will be ready to pick up between January 6th and 12th. Orders may be picked up at either student union store.
| Course | Instructor (if known) | Line Number | Preference New or Used? |
|---|
| Examples PSYC 104 | Parker | 12345 | USED |
| Please Print | | | |
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TEXTBOOK REFUND POLICY: All textbooks purchased during the first 3 weeks of the semester can be returned for a full refund anytime through February 2, 1994. All returned books must be accompanied by a cash register receipt and be in new condition (except books purchased used).
KU
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Kansas Union 913-864-5285
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Address
Phone
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(circle one) Kansas Union Burge Union
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form to:
KU Bookstore, Kansas Union University of Kansas Lawrence KS 60045
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with our exclusive rebate program and the largest selection of used textbooks in the region!
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3Book out of stock
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Spring 1994 Semester Form
ADVERTISE IN THE DAILY KANSAN FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
A smart, easy way to meet people in a sophisticated, safe and confidential manner.
1-Men Seeking Women
2-Women Seeking Men
3-Men Seeking Men
4-Women Seeking Women
Classifications available:
Here's how it works...
5-Friends Seeking Friends
6-Seeking Sports Interest
7-Mutual Hobbies
8-Shared Religion.
To place an ad:
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.
6
3. After your ad runs in the Kansan, you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages you receive.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and set up a time and place.
To check out an ad:
1. Read the ads in the Jaytalk Meeting Network on the back page of the Kansan.
2. Call 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 rmessage 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
1
1
CAMPUS/AREA: KU is entering the final stages in its application for the 10-year accreditation status. Page 3.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103.NO.58
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10.1993
(USPS 650-640)
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
NEWS:864-4810
In a constant state of motion
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Bob Friauf
KU professor of physics and astronomy Bob Friauf balances classroom time with his duties as head of University Council and his quest for quality hiking time with his dog, Tessie.
I
a paper-packed office in Malott Hall,
Bob Friauf sits at his desk and prepares
a lecture for his thermal physics class.
Manila folders and physics literature
surround him in ubiquitous stacks. Yet
not a scrap of stray paper lies on his
desk.
"It turns out I must be a confirmed pack rat, because I tend to save everything," the physics and astronomy professor says. "I'm somewhat notorious in the department for how tall my stacks are and how organized they are. Most things I can lay my hands on in five to 10 minutes."
When someone enters the office, Friau fauf almost has to crane his neck to see over the stacks. On the wall to his right is a chalkboard covered with month-old and even year-old physics equations. The numerous cream-colored manila files brighten the dull gray-green concrete walls.
The bookshelves to his right and to the office's front are crammed with physics literature, and on the table and floor are more stacks 2 to 3 feet high, leaving little room to move.
Despite the numerous stacks, Friau's office is orderly and organized, just like his demanding schedule. At age 67, Friau finds time to teach thermal physics and honors Western civilization
and to serve as head of University Council.
"He seems to be a perfect fit to be a professor," says Friau's brother, Walter Friauf, an electrical engineer for the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md.
"He is the classic mental image of a professor." Walter Frieuak said.
Classic image of a professor
This classic image of a professor tries to go skiing alone twice a year, after New Year's Day and during Spring Break. However, Friauf does not make the trip alone.
"Some of my colleagues would sound horrified when I said I'd go out with a busload of students, but most of the time I've enjoyed that," Friaufsaid.
Friauf, a member of the Kansas City Ski Club,
said he enjoyed skiing the back bowls of Vail,
Breckenridge and Kevstone resort in Colorado.
In March, Friauf and other members of the ski club went to Copper Mountain in Colorado. Friauf had the seventh-fastest time of all Kansas skiers in the 60-69 age group in the National Standard Race, a public recreational ski race sponsored by Anheuser-Busch, Inc.
By Christoph Fuhrmans
Besides skiing, Friauf also enjoys camping and hiking. During the first two weeks of August this year, he camped in Colorado Gunnison National Forest. Friauf's only companion was his 7-year-old Shetland sheepdog, Tessie, who always wore a leash.
"She's a little bit like some people," he said. "She'd be fine if she didn't use her mouth so much."
While Friau enjoys the outdoors, he draws the line at foraging for his own food.
"I'd be pretty hungry if I tried to live off the land, and I haven't really been interested in fishing, so I don't worry about that," he said.
Friauf said he ate freeze-dried food, which despite a lack of taste, was better than nothing.
During his camping trips, Friiauf carries his own tent, sleeping bag, foam rubber pad and a small gas stove. His backpack weighs about 40 pounds. Even Tessie carries her own food in a special pack.
Besides going to Gunnison National Forest in August, Friauf also has been camping in Kings Canyon, Sequoia and Yosemite national parks in
NAFTA debate gets heated
See PROFESSOR, Page 7.
Gore, Perot swap barrage of charges on deal's effects
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON—In a contentious, fingerpointing debate, Vice President Al Gore said yesterday that Ross Perot will profit from the defeat of the North American Free Trade Agreement. Perot dismissed the charge as "propaganda."
The prime-time showdown was combative from the outset, reflecting the high stakes in a fight in which the Clinton administration is about 25 votes short with the pivotal House vote just a week away.
House Speaker Thomas Foley rated NAFTA's chances of passing at "50-60."
Perot traded a barrage of charges, some of them substantive, others more personal
Hours before the debate, the White House got a much-needed boost — NAFTA endorsements from five House Democrats who had been undecided. A sixth, Rep. Jim Bacchus of Florida, announced his support just as the debate started.
The debate on CNN's "Larry King Live" was but a minute old when Perot accused Gore of interrupting him. Tension crackled throughout the 90-minute program as Gore and
Gore said Perot supported the trade deal in
1991 but then flipflopped as a presidential candidate last year "to bring out the politics of fear." Later, he upped the ante, saying a Perot family business in Texas stood to make huge gains as a trade center should NAFTA be defeated.
"If NAFTA is defeated, then this free-trade zone that he is still
WILLIAM H. HUNTER
Ross Pero
in business," Gore said. "If it's good enough for him, why isn't it good enough for the rest of the country?"
Perot was quick to fire back, denying his opposition to the agreement was motivated by any personal or family financial stake.
1 am putting my country's interests far ahead of my personal business," Perot retorted. He said his gain would be "something like a tricle of water."
Perot accused the Clinton administration of putting up a smokescreen to hide what he said are the deal's many faults.
The debate was the climax of a frenzied day of NAFTA jockeying in the capital, led by President Clinton.
In a role reversal, Clinton served as warmup act for Gore, fiercely disputing arguments that dropping tariffs and other
trade barriers with Mexico and Canada would send U.S. manufacturing jobs rushing south to low-wage Mexico.
And, in a line Gore would echo hours later, Clinton said the United States would be stripped of its credibility in stalled trade talks with Europe and Japan should NAFTA be defeated
THE BANKER.
Al Gore
"So the stakes here are very large, indeed," Clinton said. "If we don't do this with our closest neighbor, it's going to be hard for us to have the credibility to make the case for the world."
Perot scoffed at such an argument, saying it was part of the administration's "sky-isfalling routine." Every time Clinton falls behind, he claims "the presidency is at stake," Perot said.
On that front, Perot got a boost from one of his odd allies in the anti-NAFTA coalition, House Majority Leader Richard Gephardt. "We can do better," Gephardt said in urging Clinton to renegotiate the agreement.
Governance questions policy process
By Donella Hearne and David Stewart
Kansan staff writers
The University's new consensual relationship policy has put the concept of "shared governance" along with student and faculty representation in policy making to the test.
The normal process for developing and enacting University policy remains the same. Students and faculty bring up proposed changes or amendments in policy. Task forces and committees review the issues. After receiving the task force's report, University governance — the combined faculty and student senates — makes its own recommendations. Finally the proposed changes go to the administration for Chancellor Gene Budig's signature, or in rare cases, rejection.
PULLING the strings
A look at decision-making at KU
"Governance is consulted on virtually all matters of University wide importance." Budig said. "We believe in shared governance."
Though often a tedious and drawn out process, deciding policy at the University usually involves extensive discussion and debate. But not always.
The issue of consensual relationships has raised concerns about how the administration controls the power to make policies that affect all of KU.
Without going through the expected procedures of University governance and campus debate, the administration started a policy on Aug. 20, forbidding romantic relationships between faculty members and students over whom they have direct power, including assigning grades or awarding scholarships.
The most recent example came about this summer when the administration handed down its policy on consensual relationships between faculty and their students.
Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, said the Board of Regents and the University had not determined specifically when the admin-
See LEADERS,Page 14.
John Gamble / KANBAN
Opening the pipes
Facilities operations employee Mike Miller opens a hydrant behind the Military Science Building. Facilities operations flushes the pipes yesterday to remove mineral builds-up.
INSIDE
Quilted culture
The Spencer Museum of Art highlights the craft of African American quilt-making with its new exhibit.
Page 9.
High Court harassment ruling encouraging
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court strengthened workers' protection against sexual harassment Tuesday, ruling unanimously that employers can be forced to pay monetary damages even when employees suffer no psychological harm.
The Associated Press
Decision increases protection against unwanted advances
"So long as the environment would reasonably be perceived, and is perceived, as hostile or abusive, there is no need for it also to be psychologically injurious," Justice Sandra Day O'Connor wrote as the court revived a Tennessee woman's lawsuit against her ex-boss.
Teresa Harris sued Charles Hardy, after resigning in 1987 from her job as a manager at Forklift Systems in Nashville.
Harris said that Hardy, among other things, had asked her to retrieve coins from his front pants pocket, suggested they go to a local motel to negotiate her pay raise and asked if she gained a sales contract by providing sexual favors.
Tuesday's ruling sends Harris' lawsuit back to the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which had ruled that she could not sue Hardy because she couldn't prove psychological harm.
Betty Campbell, assistant professor of English who studies harassment issues, said Tuesday's ruling might encourage more people to stand up against sexual harassment.
"I think more women are reporting harassment because they are being believed," Campbell said. "After today's
That ruling banned "hostile" or "abusive" workplace environments caused by various discriminatory motives.
Tuesday's decision reaffirmed and clarified the 1986 ruling.
decision, I think it will be easier for women to go ahead and feel they do have some redress."
The high court ruled in 1986 that on-the-job sexual harassment is illegal — a violation of the anti-bias law known as Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964—if it is "sufficiently severe or pervasive to alter the conditions of the victim's employment."
Campbell said any case of harassment
"When the workplace is permeated with discriminatory intimidation, ridicule and insult that is sufficiently severe or pervasive to alter the conditions of the victim's employment and create an abusive working environment, Title VII is violated," O'Connor said.
would involve some degree of psychological harm.
"The woman in that case did suffer psychological harm," Campbell said. "Maybe not to a clinical extent, but she was harmed. Anything that makes one uncomfortable at work, or even afraid to go to work, is psychological harm."
Campbell said sexual harassment included sexist comments made by someone in a position of power over those to whom the comments are being made, unwanted flirtatious behavior after one is asked to stop, solicitation for sexual behavior in exchange for a reward, threats of punishment unless one engages in sexual behavior, or any other comments, kissing or touching that is inappropriate in a working relationship.
1.
Kansan staff writer Shan Schwartz contributed information to this story
2
Wednesday, November 10, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE HARBOUR LIGHTS
of service bar after 57 years of downtown tradition
1031 Massachusetts Downtown
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!
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Forthe Best Values in Town Visit
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At your branch office, we really feel good when we can help make you look better. Even with a tight deadline, we'll help you bring together a professional presentation that says great things about you.
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Bring this coupon into the Kinko's listed and receive one free 8/12" x 11"
full-color transparency. Offer does not include frame. One coupon per
customer. Not valid with other offers. Good through 12/31/93.
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Student cases of flu trigger early shots
Two possible cases of influenza were treated at Watkins Memorial Health Center yesterday and another on Monday. Normally, influenza cases are not seen at Watkins until January, said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins.
The afflicted students are running high fevers with severe muscle aches. If seen within 48 hours of experiencing flu symptoms, students can be treated with with amantadine, which reduces Type A flu symptoms and lessens the duration of the illness.
A limited supply of fm shots are available at Watkins for $4.50. To
be effective, flu shots must be administered before Thanksgiving break so the body has a chance to work with the immunization.
The Salvation Army Church, 946 New Hampshire St., is looking for organizations and individuals to adopt families for the Thanksgiving or Christmas holidays.
Holiday help needed
Thanksgiving adoption involves providing a holiday meal for a needy family. Christmas sponsorship involves providing a holiday meal and a gift for each family member.
Donations can be accepted until the holiday.
Those interested should call Betsy Anderson, holiday assistance coordinator for the Salvation Army, at 843-4188.
CORRECTION
A photograph caption on Page 10 in Monday's Kansan misidentified the participants in a flag-football
game. The game was between Naval ROTC members from Kansas and Nebraska.
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.
Sexual Boundary Violations
- Between therapists and patients
- Between faculty and staff
Patti Butterfield, Ph.D. John B. Greene, Ph.D. Licensed Psychologists in Lawrence
Granada Theater, 1020 Massachusetts
Tuesday, November 16, 1993 7:00-9:00 p.m.
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The University Daily Kansan would like to apologize for a misspelling that occurred in a Mortar Board ad for the Outstanding Educators 1993 that appeared on Friday, November 5, 1993. Dr. Helmut Huelsbergen, Germanic Languages & Literature, was recognized for his contribution to the students at The University of Kansas.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 10. 1993
3
KU nears accreditation process
Decision would verify University activities
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
The academic crunch is about over for students, but the University still has yet to make the grade.
KU is in its final year of a two-year process of applying for accreditation. A committee is now writing a report for the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools, a regional accreditation body for secondary and post-secondary educational institutions.
Universities are accredited every 10 years, and KU received its last accreditation in 1984.
the accreditation process certifies institutions and programs after they meet a specified set of standards.
Andrew Debicki, dean of graduate studies and head of the accreditation steering committee, said accreditation validated university activities.
"If any given university was not accredited, it would lose standing," he said. "Any respectable university needs to be accredited."
Debicki said not being accredited could affect everything at KU from financing to enrollment.
The report will contain a brief history about KU, what special programs or other projects KU is doing now, a response to the 1984 accreditation review and a list of changes at KU since 1984.
Debicki said the described changes would focus on developments in KU's academic departments.
The report contains five criteria that each university must meet to be accredited.
The university must have:
stated goals that are clear and consistent with an institution of higher learning.
■ continued efforts to accomplish its goals and improve its educational practices.
■ demonstrated integrity in its activities
accomplished its educational mission and other goals.
- arranged the financial, physical and human resources to accomplish its goals effectively.
After reading KU's report, the accreditation board's Site Visitation Committee will also review additional material when the committee comes to Lawrence in Fall 1994.
The final version of the report will be submitted to the accreditation board during the summer of 1994.
BENELLIE S. REMINGTON
John Gamble/KANSAN
Warren Corman, (left), interim executive director of the Board of Regents, John Montgomery, Regents chair, and John Shoemaker, (right), student body president, discuss increasing student tuition to raise faculty salaries.
The image shows a person leaning forward with their head down, focused on writing or reading. They are wearing a thick sweater and appear to be in a study room or office environment. The background is blurry but seems to contain various papers and documents.
Valerie Bontrager/ KANSAN
Samantha Goodman, Overland Park senior, signs up as a Peace Corps prospect. A table will be set up at the Kansas Union from 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. The Peace Corps will show a movie at 3:30 p.m. at the Governor's room in the Union.
Peaceful prospects
ON CAMPUS
The Office of Study Abroad will hold an information fair from 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. today on the fourth floor lobby of the Kansas Union. For more information, call Debra Brodsky at 864-3742.
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 Gerri Vernon at 864-7317.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor a lunch and lecture, "U.S. Immigration: Is It Totally Out of Control Today?" at 11:30 a.m. today at the Center, 1204 Oread. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 843-4933.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a Catholic student discussion group at 1:10 p.m. today (following 12:30 Mass) at Alcove B in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 843-0357.
The Office of Study Abroad will have 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 864-3742.
Regent head, students discuss tuition issues
KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 5:30 p.m. today on the third floor in the Burge Union. For more information, call 864-7316.
Environs will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Amy Trainer at 841-4484.
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 Anishanslin at 843-3009
Literary Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Julie Muniak at 864-2586.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will hold a House/Hall Contacts meeting at 6:30 p.m. today at the Center, 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call Wendy at 843-0357.
KU Kempo will meet at 7 tonight in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Ershadi at 842-4713.
KU Sailing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
AASU will meet at 7:30 tonight in 208 Smith Hall. For more information, call Arghin Atchiu at 832-8332.
Watkins Memorial Health Center will sponsor an eating disorders support group from 7:30 to 8:30 tonight at the second floor conference room in Watkins. For more information, call Karish Kirk at 864-412-1
Le Cercle Francais will meet at 9:30 tonight at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Alice Yeo at 865-1907.
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
KU students, faculty and administrators shared their concerns directly with the Board of Regents yesterday morning on an on-campus visit by John Montgomery, Regents chair, and Warren Corman, Regents interim executive director.
Montgomery said that among the topics he had discussed with John Shoemaker, student body president, and other student leaders was convincing the Legislature to enact the Partnership for Excellence program.
"Maybe students could come along with us when the Board meets with the governor and Legislature to discuss the Partnership for Excellence program," Montgomery said.
The Partnership for Excellence would increase student tuition at Regents institutions to pay for faculty salary raises. The Regents institutions are: KU, Emporia State University, Fort Hays State University, Kansas State University, Pittsburgh State University and Wichita State University.
In discussing the Partnership for Excellence program, Montgomery said student leaders had not been forced to agree to tuition increases.
"We've had a precedent for increasing tuition," Montgomery said. "When we look at what happened in the last three years, we've funded two-thirds of our budget increases with increased tuition. We're not keeping our share of the general revenue."
Shoemaker said the student leaders also discussed waiving tuition for graduate research assistants and lobbying the legislature next year for increased funds to the University's budget.
"Hopefully, we won't just get student leaders," Shoemaker said. "I would hope to see more students take some time out of their schedules to lobby the Legislature on this matter." Montgomery and Cormen met with
Regents announce 3 director finalists
The Board of Regents announced yesterday three finalists for the executive director position vacated by Stanley Koplik.
The finalists are:
Richard Crofts, assistant to the chancellor and former vice president for academic affairs at Mankato State University at Mankato, Minn.
Edward Jakubauskas, higher education consultant and former president of Central Michigan University at Mount Pleasant, Mich.
Stephen Jordan, deputy executive director for finance and planning at the Arizona Board of Regents.
Selected from more than 40 initial applicants, the finalists will be interviewed on Nov. 18 and 19 after the Regents monthly meeting, said John Montgomery, chair of the Board of Regents and the search committee.
Montgomery and Corman met with
faculty leaders Robert Friauf, professor of physics and astronomy and head of University Council, and T.P. Srinivasan, professor of mathematics and head of the University Senate Executive Committee.
Friauf said his discussion with Montgomery focused on maintaining high-quality departments and faculty while working with the program discontinuance policy.
"Having quality, but small, programs is one of the distinctive features of the University of Kansas," Frieda said. "John Montgomery didn't seem to have any problem with this idea."
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Wednesday, November 10, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Perot's homegrown logic overshadow NAFTA facts
Ross Perot is wrong. He claims it only takes a minute to kill a snake. Yet instead of fading away, he continues to gain support for his anti- North American Free Trade Agreement campaign
Unfortunately, Gore's success might be too late.
With only seven days left until the House votes on the trade agreement, Clinton unfortunately is 30 votes short of passing NAFTA. And Perot's fear campaign is mostly to blame.
Throughout his anti-NAFTA campaign he has gained support by manipulating the American people. His campaign of fear only works because he is smart enough to target what scares Americans most — the threat of lost jobs. This threat is unsubstantiated by all Nobel Prize-winning economists, all living presidents and all living secretaries of state.
But facts don't matter to Perot, homegrown rhetoric is his specialty.
Last night, he managed to evade most questions asked by Gore, Larry King and callers by sidetracking the debate with nonrelated issues and ludicrous coinages like "guerrilla (gorilla?) dust."
Gore proved throughout the open conversation that NAFTA was not a job killer, environmental threat or human rights abuser. He was able to address the issue and remain on target in answering questions.
Perot may excel at delivering his down-home quips and put downs. He might be successful at scaring people about losing jobs. And he may be able to personally finance his million-dollar anti-NAFTA campaign. But he has not been able to successfully refute the facts of NAFTA.
NAFTA is good for the American people. Perot, "It's just that simple."
And to quote Perot, "It's just that simple."
TERRILYN McCORMICK FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Restricted road access will limit congestion
A proposal by the Parking Department rules committee to extend restricted access on Jayhawk Boulevard is an excellent proposal that would help eliminate congestion and illegal parking.
Currently, service vehicles, buses and faculty with blue parking permits have access to campus between 7:45 a.m.and 4:45 p.m., Monday through Friday. The new recommendation would lengthen those hours to begin at 7 a.m. and end at 6 p.m. This would eliminate the traffic bottleneck that results when campus is opened at 4:45 p.m.
Opening campus to unrestricted traffic at a later hour would help solve congestion problems. Traffic jams after 4:45 p.m. cause safety problems when faculty and staff are trying to get off campus, and other people are trying to enter campus on Jayhawk Boulevard. There are still many students on campus who are walking or riding bicycles among this traffic.
The other problem this proposal would solve is the illegal parking by some students who have 7:30 a.m. classes. These students often park in blue lots and inconvenience faculty who have paid to have access to campus. Under the new proposal, the only way these students could park on campus would be if they entered campus a half-hour before their classes began. The parking department then would have more time to ticket and possibly tow these offenders.
Implementing this recommendation next semester as planned is the best way to improve traffic safety on Jayhawk Boulevard.
TOM GRELINGER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
MKNEY
GO FORTH AND SOAK THE RICH!...
(PRESENT COMPANY EXCEPTED, OF COURSE.)
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BILL
Supernatural events are common for some
Today, class, we shall talk about the "scary" supernatural. This is timely in that we had Halloween two weeks ago, and we are just now getting around to writing our column.
As we all know, Halloween is a very important federal holiday. Most federal holidays are not nearly as fruitful as Halloween, such as National Stamp Appreciation Day or Get Rid of Your Favorite Unethical Senator Week. And most federal holidays have nothing to do with the supernatural, except, of course, the Day Before Taxes Are Due Day. This is when most Americans would eagerly perform the supernatural ritual of "sacrificing your kids" rather than pay the IRS.
We all have come into contact with the supernatural, especially during finals when "weird" and "strange" things happen, such as "studying." Some of us, however, because of some twist of fate, are more prone toward supernatural experiences.
There is this friend of ours, you see, who suffers from a serious supernatural disease known as "We Get All The Mail The Post Office Loses When People Move."
Most people have, at one time, received mail from people they do not know. No matter, because we have all had mail delivered to that belongs to someone else. This, of course, sends us in a panic shrieking such things as "What if this is important?" or "What if this letter is from a dying grandmother?"," or "Can I get in trouble if I open this?" (ANSWERS. (1. If it's important, why do you it?; 2. A follow-up question would be, "Do you think she sent money"?; 3. Only if you get caught.)
But my friend, whose supernatural code name is Winchell, gets a lot of
COLUMNIST
TODD
PUNTNEY
mail. For some reason, the hardy, proud, we-wehave-a-natural-tendency to-go-berserk postal workers think Winchell is some sort of collecting agency for lost mail. Just ask him. The friendly postal worker drops off bags every day at Winchell's apartment. Winchell protests that these people don't live here and, for all he knows, might not even be members of this planet. The postal worker says, "Sorry bub, but this is where it goes. And don't give me any grief, because I have semiautomatic weapons tucked underneath my dashboard. I'm not afraid to use them. Just try me. Also, can I interest you in some lovely Sally Struthers stamps? They're really quite nice and depict her at the height of her career when she was still an embryo."
Winchell's tribulations do not end there, however. The phone company has decided that his number is the one you reach when you dial the 555 prefix. Really. Befuddled people call all the time, asking for — and we're not kidding about this — such names as Spoon, Peaches, Sunshine, Jamie, Louise's West, Roy, Bong-ho Kim, Ismael Yusavi and Harry Brunell. This sounds like the cast of a Broadway show entitled "Winchell Wants To Know Who The Hell You Are."
Another important supernatural experience most humans have in
common is called Alarm Snoozing, wherein law-abiding citizens prefer the peaceful, sleepy world of "coma" instead of the boring, tedious world of "classes."
Where we get this habit from we do not know. One scientific hypothesis is that it has evolved from the hibernation tendencies of our animal ancestors, namely Polar Bears.
But why is this supernatural? you might ask. To which we would respond, "Because this is our column and we say so, and if you don't like it, we are sure there are some interesting 1-900 numbers on the back page."
At any rate, there are various levels of Alarm Snoozing as measured by the Dukakis & Gore Snuz-o-meter. Two of the snooze levels are meticulously described below:
Snoooze Level 0: This is for abnormal people who shoot right out of bed once their alarm sounds. People who fit this category are usually overachievers and are commonly known as "morning breath" people who follow the clever motto, "The early bird gets worm."
Snooze Level 1-10: (Insert your own creative ideas here.)
Snooze Level Get Hacked at Alarm and Throw It Across Room, Hitting Roommate Squarely In The Genitals: These people tend not to have many roommates.
So as you can see, there are many inexplicable facets of the supernatural, most of which we have not covered, especially Mentos commercials. If you would like to tell us of any supernatural events you might have experienced, please call Winchell.
Todd Puntney is a Manhattan senior majoring in Journalism.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Difference of opinion not the same as hate
Scan down to the fourth paragraph of Tisha Heyka's Nov. 5 column about tolerance. In the first sentence she says that people should not associate a difference of opinion with hate. Then, just one sentence later, she says that homosexuals often deal with prejudice
and discrimination, "which are forms of hate." It would appear that she's contradicting herself, but maybe I can clear up the confusion.
If two people have a difference of opinion about what to do on a Sunday afternoon, then that's just a difference of opinion. These two people can say to each other, "I respect your right to have a differing opinion." However, if I believe that government funding of AIDS research
is disproportionately high, then that's more than a difference of opinion. That's prejudicial and discriminatory, which is the same thing as hate. And since "hate should not be seen as an opinion but as a character flaw," I am therefore flawed and excluded from the debate.
David Wilson Kansas City, Mo.,
David Wilson
Overcrowded Field House may be lost for students
Well, it's almost the start of another basketball season. Once, again, expectations are high after yet another Final Four season. As I was walking through Allen Field House to pick up my first set of basketball tickets, thanks to our new and improved ticket distribution system, I couldn't help but wonder how much longer the students will call the old building home.
The demand for basketball has become so great that any seats that become available are auctioned off to the highest bidder in the Williams Fund. Those not lucky enough to have several thousand dollars to donate are just out of luck.
I'm sure this causes members of the Athletic Department and the Williams Fund to visualize two things: how much money the 7,064 seats reserved for the students would be worth on the open market, and how nice a new 20,000-plus seat basketball-only arena with plenty of parking would look on West Campus.
Adding the facts that the state fire marshal is attempting to reduce the seating capacity and that Allen is one of the older basketball arenas in the nation, it is clear that its days are probably numbered, although no one is admitting it yet.
It will be a bad day when the last game is played in Allen. It will be sadder still if a great basketball building is replaced with a mediocre one. That's what happened at Kansas State. Most of you probably never got to see a game at Ahearn Field House. I was lucky enough to see five KU — K-State games there.
JIM KIMMEL
It was an odd-shaped building. Most of the seats were temporarily built over the track. In fact, it seemed that most of the seats were along the baselines. The building was built too long and too narrow for basketball.
Ahearn was closed after the 1988 season. The state fire marshal had declared it a fire trap. He was right: it took at least 30 minutes to get out after a game. K-State's new building, Bramlage Coliseum, is no comparison. It has no character.
The secret was its volume. They packed 11,000 students into a building that must have been half the size of Allen. The noise when K-State was playing was incredible. As much as I hate to admit it, Ahearn at its best was louder than Allen. No wonder that K-State's record there was 378-87, including 10 Big Eight championships and four Final Fours.
Forty-five years ago, when Allen was planned and built, most of the mistakes that were made in the construction of Ahearn Field House were corrected. That's why Allen is still useful and Ahearn is mothballed. Let's hope that lesson is repeated when a new Allen Field House is built.
The building is not very loud, the aisles are wide as the seating sections, and it seems as though you're a mile away from the court. It is an average building that has been occupied by average teams. But maybe that's no coincidence.
Jim Kimmel is a McLouth junior majoring in history and sociology.
COLUMNIST
KANSAN STAFF
Reporters
KC TRAUER
Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET
Technology coordinator
Editors
Assistant to the editor ... J.R. Clairborne
News ... Stacy Friedman
Editorial ... Terrilyn McCormick
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Kirsten Fogler
Photo to ... Klip Chin, Renee Knoober
Features ... Ezra Wolfe
Graphics ... John Paul Fogel
Wire ... Alexander Bloemhof, Vicki Bode, Kevin Butler
Assistant Editors
Associate editorial ... Colleen McCain
Associate campus ... Dan England
Associate companies/planning ... Jess DeHaven
Associate sports ... Todd Selfart
Associate features ... Almee Estrada
Copy Chiefs
Alexander Bloemhof ... Allison Lippert
... Tracy Ritchie
News Clerk ... Teresa Veazey
Coov Editors
Elizabeta Beath ... Craig Boxx
Kevin Butter ... Dan Carver
Jane Coulson ... Jesse McNeil
Dan England ... Jack Fisher
Matt Hydeman ... Stephen Martino
Stacy Morford ... Sarah Nagl
Munera Naseer ... Beena Schultz
Todd Smith
Scott Anderson...Sara Bennett
Mark Button...Trol Carl
Chesley Dohl...Matt Doyle
Anne Felatel...Gerry Fey
Christoph Führman...Donella Haime
Kristi Hoffhold...Karla Haima
Liz Klinger...Shan Schwartz
David Stewart...Kathleen Stolle
Carlos Tejada...JL Watson
William Alix ... Valerie Bontner
Julia Clarke ... Richard Davidh
Juan Garcia ... Donnell Reagan
Paul Kotz ... Mellissa Lacey
Tom Leininger ... Holly McQuenon
Saman McKean
Jave Campbell James Frederick
Micah Leaker Dan Schauer
John Paul Fogel...Stacy Friedman
...Will Lewis
AMY CASEY Business manager
AMY STUMBO Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
PAT BOYLE
Business coordinator
BILL THOMAS Production
Business Staff
Campus sales manager...Ed Schager
Regional sales manager...Jennifer Perrier
National sales manager...Jennifer Evenson
Co-op sales manager...Blythe Focht
Production managers...Jennifer Blowey
...Kate Burgees
Marketing director...Shelly McConnell
Creative director...Brian Fusco
Regional marketing...Gretchen Kautzman
Special sections manager...Judith Standley
Teamsheet manager...Jacquelyn Pang
Retail assistant...Triole Bumpa
Creative assistant (photographer)...Andrew Amone
Zone Managers
Zone Managers
John Carlton...Jason Eberly
Justin Garberg...Josh Heln
...Robin Kring
Retail Account Executives
Mindy Blum...Chris Bulgren
Chris Butler...Kelly Ceftrey
Jennifer Carr...Jennil Goorke
Laura Guth...Jill Hogan
Allison Kaplan...Jason Kort
Syandra Kunto...Mark Mastro
Chris Morrissey...Frank Muller
Pugla Ostrowski...Heather Richetto
Jenny Schwab...Andrew Shriver
Dave Smith...Stacey Stricklin
Campus Account Executives
Keri Kimmel...Beth Pois
Shannon Reilly...Troy Tarwater
...Jeanne Toohey
Regional Account Executive
ARville Crawford...Alex Kolb
Brian Platt...Paulus Probomo
Interns
Shelly Falevits...Bradley Felnberg
Dean Houndd...Lyn Hul
...Matt Spett
---
♠
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 10, 1993
5
Yeltsin says strongarm rule not constitution goal
Document gives President power over parliament
The Associated Press
MOSCOW. — Denying he wants to rule with an "iron hand," President Boris Yeltsin went on nationwide television last night to defend his new draft constitution as a guarantor of stability and post-Soviet freedoms.
The proposed constitution unveiled yesterday endows the presidency with stronger powers. It goes before voters Dec. 12, the same day they elect a new parliament.
The charter would give the president right, under certain circumstances, to issue decrees with the force of law, dissolve parliament, declare a state of emergency and temporarily curb civil rights.
It also would bar many Soviet-era abuses, give Russians new freedoms and codify key elements of Yeltsin's
market reforms, such as the right to own, buy and sell land and other property.
"We need order, but not the horrible, repressive order of Stalinist camps," Veltsin said in his television address.
In his address, Yeltsin said he did not regard his draft constitution as a mandate for strong-arm rule.
Russians get a chance to see for themselves today, when newspapers nationwide publish the 137-article document. The Moscow evening newspaper Izvestia printed the draft yesterday
"All those who want neither dictators nor dictators, nor arbitriness, nor violence, are for this constitution," he said.
Some critics have said the new constitution gives the federal government too much power.
Among other breaks from the Soviet past, his draft forbids "forced labor," under which millions of people were sent to camps — and often their deaths. It also says family members cannot be forced to testify against
The document says the government may not strip people of their citizenship or force them to leave Russia, as Soviet authorities did to dissidents like author Alexander Solzhenitsyn and poet Josef Brodsky.
each other.
By prohibiting medical or scientific experiments without consent, the new charter seeks to prevent the Soviet practice of locking up dissidents in mental hospitals and giving them debilitating drugs.
It also gives Russians the right "to secret correspondence, telephone calls, postal, telegraphic and other communications" — a right also guaranteed in the Soviet era but frequently violated.
The draft guarantees freedom of the press. Yeltsin banned some hard-line newspapers and briefly even some friendly ones after last month's political upheavals.
It guarantees the right to travel abroad and inside Russia — something routinely denied in Soviet times.
King Hussein wins Jordan elections despite disputed peace plan actions
The Associated Press
AMMAN, Jordan — Candidates made last-minute appeals yesterday for votes in Jordan's first multiparty elections since 1956, in which proponents of peace with Israel were expected to retain a majority in parliament.
Today's elections come after Israeli officials confirmed over the weekend that Jordan and Israel are close to reaching a peace agreement. King Hussein has not yet made any public comment.
While Muslim fundamentalists are expected to win the single largest bloc in the 80-sat lower house of parliament, conservative and tribal members who support Hussein's propeace policy are expected to keep a
majority of seats.
The bicameral legislature must ratify any peace agreement, although Hussein retains ultimate authority with the power to dissolve parliament and rule by decree. The 40-seat upper house is appointed by Hussein and normally backs him.
Jordan and Israel signed an agenda for peace talks Sept. 14, a day after Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization reached a peace accord that provides for Palestinian self-rule in the occupied territories.
For the most part, the campaign ended peacefully. Police briefly detained a Muslim fundamentalist candidate after he and supporters rouged up two members of a moderate Islamic party, the state-run Petra news agency said.
trade with Iraq, Jordan's biggest trading partner, was blocked.
But while peace has played a role in campaigns, Jordanians appear more concerned with poverty and unemployment. The country is straining under a $6.5 billion foreign debt and $4 billion in losses stemming from 1990-91 Persian Gulf crisis, when
Candidates held rallies, passed out fliers and pounded the pavement to win support in this nation of 3.9 million people. They placed hundreds of advertisements in the mass circulation Al-Rai daily promising a better future.
Thousands of banners remained draped over streets, and tens of thousands of posters have been plastered on lampposts and shop windows.
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The H.OP.E Award stands for Honorary Outstanding Progressive Educator and is awarded each year to an educator by the Senior class.
Nominations will be taken on Thursday and Friday from 10:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. at Wescoe Beach.
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The Board of Class Officers would like to thank you for taking time to recognize KU's outstanding educators.
---
6
Wednesday, November 10, 1993
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Grazing fee bill chewed to pieces
Clinton to continue push for increment
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Stymied by Western lawmakers, the Senate abandoned its effort yesterday to increase grazing fees and tighten other rules for using federal land lands. But the Clinton administration announced it will implement some changes itself.
ing the revisions from being written into law.
The administration's setback in the Senate left it up to Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt to proceed on his own with revised regulations, and western senators declared victory in prevent-
"The effort to force these changes upon the ranchers and the people of the rural West has been defeated. This is a big victory for the ranchers and all the people of America's rural west," said Pen, Pete Domenici, R-N.M., leader of the Senate filibuster that blocked the legislation.
Babbitt's original proposals were more stringent that those killed by the western senators' filibuster, but he and his representative both spoke in terms yesterday that left the door open to softening those plans in light of the Senate jabate.
After lobbying by Babbitt and other
administration officials failed to break Domenici's filibuster, Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., withdrew the range revisions that he had developed with House Democrats. It had passed the House on a 3-1 vote.
THE NEWS in brief
"We have listened, and we have learned a great deal. And that fact will have a significant impact as we move forward," Babbitt said in announcing he would proceed in the coming weeks to put his original proposals into federal regulations.
"We remain committed to the principles of range reform, and we retain our focus on the need to restore and protect the great, productive American range lands."
WASHINGTON
Flood states to receive student financial aid
Africa
Students from Midwest, states devastated by summer flooding will get $20.9 million in additional financial aid, including funds for work-study programs on flood cleanup and recovery, the Education Department announced.
The department said Perkins loans and Supplemental Education Opportunity Grants would go to students from nine flood states—Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wisconsin—whose families suffered financial loss because of the floods.
"As part of the flood assistance effort, we are working with schools and the states to involve students in community service, which offers an education in itself," Education Secretary Richard Riley said Tuesday.
The supplemental aid is in addition to $30 million in emergency Pell Grants made available to needy post-secondary students in August. The department estimated 32,000 students would benefit from the total funding.
SIDON, Lebanon Arafat aide wounded by gunman
A gunman using a silencer-equipped pistol wounded Yasser Arafat's top political aide in southern Lebanon today, police said.
Zeid Wehbe, the PLO chairman's personal envoy, was the fifth high-ranking PLO loyalist targeted by assassins since Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization signed a peace accord Sept. 13.
Police said Wehbe was waiting for his driver in the front passenger seat of his Mercedes-Benz when a dark blue BMW screeched to a halt near his car and two men jumped out. One called out Wehbe's name and when he turned his head, the other fired rounds from a 9mm pistol.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 10, 1993
7
FRED SCHMITZ
John Gamble / KANSAN
Real men don't play raquetball."
-Bob Friauf
Professor maintains constant state of motion
Continued from Page 1
"I really don't need a lot of coaxing to get the camping equipment out," he said.
California and his favorite, Glacier National Park in northern Montana.
At KU, Fräufen enjoys playing handball, which he considers a real sport.
When asked if he played racquetball, Friauf snorted and dismissed the idea with a toss of his hand.
"I try not to be disparaging or discriminating against anybody or anything, but the one luxury is that real men don't play racquetball." he said.
Friauf tries to play twice a week with friends Del Shankel, professor of microbiology and special counsel to the chancellor, and Richard Himes, professor of biochemistry and biological sciences.
"We're all pretty even, and so sometimes we have good days and sometimes bad days," he said.
Shankel is not as modest when describing Frioul's game.
"He is a very cagey player. A good player, probably a little better than I am, but I beat him occasionally," he said. "He has a great shot into the corner, and he gets this funny little smile on his face after he makes a really good shot."
When Shankel and Friauf played one Friday, Friauf constantly scored points with his shot into the corner leaving Shankel muttering, "good shot."
Bob Friau, professor of physics and astronomy, sits behind the stacks of papers in his warehouse-like office. Friau's collection of periodicals fills two desks and several ceiling-bigh bookshelves.
Bob Friauf, KU professor of physics and astronomy, sits with his dog, Tessie, behind his house. Friauf and Tessie, who wears her own backpack, often go camping and hiking together.
HENRY WILLIAMS
John Gamble / KANSAN
When Friauf served, he looked as if he was winding up for a pitch. He knocked the ball against the wall with a resounding smack. He constantly darted from side to side, hitting the ball, and when he erred, the stoic professor cried, "Ooh." in frustration.
"You'll find that lots of outstanding people have a wide variety of tastes, all the way from the Nobel Prize winners on down," he said.
Handball, hiking, skiing and sailing have helped Friauf in all areas, said Gorden Wiseman, a retired KU professor of physics and astronomy who sails with Friauf. Wiseman said people with varied interests were more effective in everything they did.
A hen and her ducklings
Friauf, born in 1926 in Pittsburgh, is a second-generation German-American. His family moved to Milwaukee when he was 4 and then to Arlington, Va., when he was in the 10th grade. He graduated from high school in 1944 and headed to Duke University, where he enlisted in the Navy V-12 program, which is like today's ROTC. During World War II, Duke had a trimester academic program, which allowed Friauf to finish six semesters in two years.
"It was a lot of work, but I wasn't complaining because I wasn't on the front line getting shot at." he said.
Friau's interest in physics had begun in Milwaukee, where his father, James, had worked as a physicist for the A.O. Smith Company, which made metal products.
Friauf said that although he enjoyed talking about physics with his brother and father, his mother, Helen, was not crazy about it.
"When we got off to talking about physics, she felt ... like a hen that's raised ducks and sees the ducks swimming off into the water," he said
Friauf graduated from Duke in 1947 with a bachelor's degree in physics. He then went to the University of Chicago, where he earned a master's degree in 1951 and a doctorate in 1953, both in physics. During his stay in Chicago, Friauf met Betty Schroer; the two were married on Sept. 10, 1949.
After getting his doctorate in 1953, Friauf became an assistant professor of physics and astronomy at KU. He also became a father on June 3 of that year.
After the birth of their first child, Ann, the Friaufs had two more children during the next four years. Barbara was born on March 10, 1955, and Nancy was born on Nov. 7, 1957.
In 1987 Friauf and his wife got a divorce; she now lives in Olathe.
Governance run amok
As a physics professor teaching Western civilization, Friauf knows he is a minority.
"That's one of the interesting perquisites of being a university professor. I like physics, and I like to do it, and at times on research projects when I've done it, it seems like 14 hours a day. But there're other times when it's nice to get into more general discussions."
James Woelfel, professor of philosophy and director of the Western civilization program, said there was a long-standing tradition in Western civilization of having other professors teach honors Western civilization.
Friauf first became involved with governance during the '60s, when the University Senate was still the main governance body. In 1969, the governance system changed from the Senate, which included associate and full professors, to the system in use today of the University Council, and its executive group, the University Senate Executive Committee. There are now 39 elected members of University Council, with a representative from each school, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and the libraries.
While the governance change probably was inevitable, Friauf said he was disappointed that faculty members were not as active as during the previous governance system.
"There's lots of demands on faculty time," Friauf said. "The actual amount of time devoted to University committees is usually not fully recognized or rewarded, and most of the people in governance are aware of that, but that's a partial discouragement. It's really the pressure and the other demands that seem to keep quite a few faculty members from becoming much involved."
Although other professors might enjoy teaching honors Western civilization, not many want to serve on governance committees.
"What I realized, fairly soon, is that for the three years you're on University Council you know more about University affairs than you did with the full University Senate," he said. "But the years you're not on, it's just hard to keep up the interest. You're just not really involved very much."
Friauf said faculty members needed more encouragement from people heading departments to serve on governance committees.
"They don't feel that it's very effective, and there are times when I share their opinion," he said. "There are other times though, when I think that if nobody were interested in discussing these affairs, then the administration really would run things and would sometimes run amok."
Friauf said the governance system complemented his teaching duties.
"I've often felt that one of the chief benefits of being a university professor is that you get to do so many different things," he said. "If I had to do nothing but teaching, I'd get tired of it after a while. But having a change of pace often makes all of your activities
more enjoyable."
T. P. Srinivasan, head of SenEx and professor of mathematics, said Friauf's contributions to governance and KU were irreplaceable.
The time for recognition is coming soon. Friauf expects to retire when he finishes his three-year term on University Council in the spring.
"I wish, when he leaves governance, there will be some way to recognize his contributions formally," he said.
Friauf said he had enjoyed every aspect of his time at KU, both teaching courses and working on governance.
"I really think the best part of it is getting to meet the variety of people, and that includes many of the students," he said. "I expect to continue to live in Lawrence, because I enjoy the association with the University and the town."
After he retires, Frieda will have many more opportunities to go skiing, sailing and camping. But he has an even more pressing issue at hand:
Like his crowded office, his living room is stacked with 40 years' worth of magazines that his busy schedule has kept him from reading.
"I keep telling myself there will be a chance to read the National Geographics," he said.
The University of Kansas
School of Fine Arts
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Fall Vocal Jazz Concert
7:30 p.m.
Thursday, November 11, 1993
Lied Center
with special guest Don Shelton, vocalist/instrumentalist, formerly with The Hi-Lo's and The Singers Unlimited
KU Jazz Singers Dan Gailey, director
KU Jazz Choir
THE LAST BARNET ******
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Julie Yount, director
Dick Wright, Master of Ceremonies
For general admission tickets, call the box office (Murphy) 913/644-3982 Lied: 913/644-ARTS); public $3, students $2, senior citizens $2; VISA/MasterCard accepted for phone orders; call about group rates. Tickets will also be available at the door
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Israeli consulate counsel to visit KU,share future
Aim is to deliver Israel-Palestine peace message
"I feel as if I have the privilege of talking about a better future," she said. "Not do what we used to do which is talk about history."
Ben-Yaacov, counsel to the consulate general of Israel in Chicago, said she visited the University of Kansas two years ago to interest students in the people and culture of her country. But on this visit, she said she had an additional purpose: to spread the new message of peace between Israel and the Palestinian people.
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
75 years of ensuring the future for those who shape it$ ^{m}$
Ben-Yaacov, who will visit Hebrew and journalism classes today and tomorrow, said the peace accords had changed the traditional relationship between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization.
"Israel always refused to talk to the PLO," she said. "We always said it was a terrorist organization. They said we were going to demolish the state
Ofra Ben-Yaacov does not want to talk about history these days.
TIAA CREF
16
A. M. A. G. H.
Ofra Ben-Yaacov
of the Jews because they wanted their own state on their own land."
"What is important here is that after so many years of fighting, they're getting together and talking about the future," she said.
The accords between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization have brought about anewattitude between
the two groups, Ben-Yaacov said.
Although talks between the two groups have faltered this week, Ben Yaacov said peace was still probable.
"Although we're working toward peace, we haven't got the peace yet," she said. "There's still a long way to go."
Ben-Yacov agreed with Jacobson. She said that Jewish Americans should feel kinship with Israel and that they had a lot of culture to share.
Yaacov for another purpose.
"They have to contact with the state," she said. "Culturally and spiritually we have a lot in common. We have the same history. A lot of our customs are the same. It's important we have contact with each other."
Steve Jacobson, director of KU HIL, said the group had brought Ben
"There are several students on campus, Jewish students primarily, who enjoy learning about Israeli history," he said. "There's no better way except by meeting a person of that country."
Most Americans read about Israel in newspapers, Ben-Yaacov said. She said the nation of five million people seemed much larger to Americans because of its frequency in the news. But Israel is a small country with a vibrant culture, she said.
"Because of the conflict, people don't think Israel has a lot of culture," Ben-Yaacov said. "But it has good literature, good books and good plays."
She said the Palestinian culture also was overshadowed by the conflict.
"I know because we're neighbors," she said.
Vaccination, prevention offer safeguard against hepatitis B
By Liz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
Most KU students asked to name the top 10 sexually transmitted diseases probably would not mention hepatitis B.
But there are approximately 250,000 new cases of the virus each year in the United States, said Charles Loveland, Lawrence physician.
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said that hepatitis B was transmitted through sex, blood transfusions and shared needles.
The virus also can be acquired by sharing a soft drink or toothbrush, he said.
Hepatitis B is the most common cause of liver cancer and liver failure in the country, Yockey said. Ten percent of people with the virus will contract chronic liver disease, and 1 percent will die. After experiencing initial symptoms of hepatitis B, 90 percent of people with the virus will not be physically ill but will be carriers.
"You can't tell who has hepatitis by looking at them," Yockey said. "The biggest problem we have here is to convince students that they're at risk for getting STDs and that they should use condoms."
Yockey said most students developed symptoms of the virus one to six months after exposure. Symptoms, which usually disappear after two weeks, include fever, nausea, vomiting and abdominal pain.
Prevention and immunization are two ways students can safeguard themselves against hepatitis B.
When two KU students were hospitalized with hepatitis B this semester, 50 students who had associated with
them visited Watkins for vaccinations. Yockey said the cost of the hepatitis B vaccine often prevented people from seeking immunization against the virus.
The vaccination, given in three shots during a six-month period, costs $133.50. Another vaccination, which can be administered to a student who has been exposed to hepatitis B in the past five days, costs from $70 to $106.
Loveland said that although few hepatitis B cases had been reported in Kansas compared with other states, the virus was a national problem that could be reduced significantly by immunization.
"In the long run, I think it's going to be a big health measure to prevent problems down the road," Loveland said.
NOAM CHOMSKY
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A
legacy of quilts
A new exhibit at the Spencer Museum of Art highlights the African-American quilt-making tradition as no different in influence and craft than that of European-Americans.
SUNSHINE
Caroyn Mazloiil's "The Family Quilt" is featured at Spencer Museum of Art's "Always There: The African-American Presence in American Quilts." The exhibit will run through Dec. 19.
By Sara Bennett
Kansan staff writer
A new exhibition at the Spencer Art Museum proves that a myth.
Historians thought for a long time that African-American quilts were special or different from quilts made by European-Americans.
"Always There: The African-American Presence in American Quilts," on display Nov. 7 through Dec. 19, shows that the African-American quilt-making tradition is no different in influence and craft than that of European-American quilt making.
"For too many years too many people have looked at African-American quilts as being different, special or idiosyncratic," said Pat Villeneuve, curator for education at the museum. "African-American quilt making is as diverse as traditional European-American quilt making."
"Always There: The African-American Presence in American Quilts," was inspired by research done by Cuesta Benberry, a quilt scholar from St. Louis. Benberry researched African-American quilters both slave and free, male and female,
from all economic classes, geographic areas and levels of artistic training.
The result is a collection of quilts dating from 1844 to 1990 that vary in craftsmanship, purpose and theme. One quilt is a tribute to Frederick Douglass. "The Four Churches Commemorative Signature Quilt Top" is a memorial to the pastors and members of four churches in Emporia. Some quilts are traditional with intricate designs and bright colors. Others are purely functional. Photos, African textiles and other paraphernalia document the histories and influences for the quilts.
"Always There: The African-American Presence in American Quilts," demonstrates that there is no single aesthetic orientation among Black quilt makers. In the past, predominately white curators focused on quilts with obvious African-American themes and ignored more traditional quilts made by African-Americans.
"This acknowledged the lengthy and ongoing involvement of Black artists in American quilt making is overdue," said museum curator Nancy Corwin in a press release. "Cuesta Benberry's work and the 'Always There' exhibition offer a splendid
introduction to these long-ignored African-American quilters."
Several events are planned in conjunction with the exhibition. African-American women from the community will be available to give tours during the exhibition, and Corolyn Mazalooi, whose quilt "Solid Like a Rock" appears in the exhibition, will give a lecture Sunday, Nov. 14.
Quilt events
All events will be held at the Spencer Museum of Art
Teacher inservice, participants will become familiar with social, cultural and aesthetic issues relating to the exhibition.
B:30 a.m.-noon. Nov. 13, $5
Lecture, "Spirit of the Cloth"
2 p.m., Nov. 14, free
Tour, by NedRa Bonds, Kansas Arts Commissioner
12:15 12:45 p.m. Nov. 18, free
12:15 12:45 p.m. Nov. 18, informed
Hindu, 7 m., Nov. 18, 2013
Flim, "The Learning Tree"
2 p.m. Nov. 21, free
Source: The Spencer Museum of Art
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NOVEMBER 10, 1993
PAGE 9
KULife
People and places at the University of Kansas.
calendar
EXHIBITIONS AND LECTURES
Exhibition—"Abstract Expressionist Works from the Spencer Museum Collection" will be on display through Jan. 9, 1994 in the Spencer Museum of Art, free
Exhibition—"Aspects of Modern Life: 19th century French Prints and Drawings" will be on display through Jan. 9, 1994 in the Spencer Museum of Art, free
Exhibition—"A Survey of the History of Photography from the Collection" will be on display through Jan. 9, 1994, in the Spencer Museum of Art, free
Exhibition—"Always There: The African-American Presence in American Quilts" will be on display through Dec. 19 in the Kress Gallery of the Spencer Museum of Art, free
Design Department Faculty will have its works on display through Thursday in the gallery of the Art and Design building,free
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10
Wednesday, November 10, 1993
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Continued from Page 9.
Lecture—"Miscegenation, law, court cases and the definition of race in the 20th century West" by Peggy Pascoe, professor of history from the University of Utah 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union, free
CALENDAR: Entertainment listings
OFF CAMPUS
1907
Exhibit—"Hand, Mind and Spirit: An Art Experience of the Sense" will be on display for individuals with and without disabilities through Dec. 2 at the Raymond Eastwood Gallery in the Lawrence Arts Center, 200 West Ninth, free Hours: Mon-Fri, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Doctoral Recital:
Hio-Ming Leung,
piano 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at
Swarthout
Recital Hall, free
B
"We Care For KU"
PERFORMANCES
African Affairs Student Association - cultural exchange party with traditional dances, songs and drumming from the African Student's Union of Kansas State University and ethnic dinner 6 p.m. Saturday at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, students $6, children 12 and under $3, public $10
and Sat., 9 a.m.-3 p.m.
University Theatre Series: "The Boys Next Door" by Tom Griggin 8 p.m. Friday, Saturday, with a 2:30 p.m. on Sunday at Crafton-Preyer Theatre, public $8; KU students $4; other students and senior citizens $7
Doctoral Recital: Randel Wolfe,
organ 7:30 p.m. Friday at Trinity
Lutheran Church-ELCA, 1245 New
Hampshire St., free
vocal group from England, 3:30 p.m. Sunday at the Lied Center, public $16, $18; senior citizens, $15, $17; faculty
San Francisco Symphony directed by Herbert Holmstedt 8 p.m. Tuesday at the Lied Center, sold out
Vocal Jazz Concert—KU Jazz Singers and Jazz Choir: Dan Gailey and Julie Yount, directors, Don Shelton, guest soloist 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Lied Center, public $3, students and senior citizens $2
WATKINS
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and staff, $14, $15; KU students $8,$9
The King's Singers, a six-man
Amanda Miller and the Pretty Ugly Dance Co. 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Lied Center, public,$14,
$16; senior citizens $15,$17;
faculty and staff $14,$15; KU students $8,$9
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This program is sponsored by The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 115 Strong Hall. For more information, contact Rene Speicher at 864-3552.
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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
Wednesday, November 10, 1993
11
Stopping Cornhuskers could be a tall order
Conference tournament still team goal
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
"Kill by number 18, Allieeee West on!"
Kansas volleyball players heard that throughout the Oct. 22 match against Nebraska at the UNL Coliseum — 17 times to be exact.
This time the match is at 8 tonight in Allen' Field House, pitting the Jayhawks, 15-10 and 4-5 in the Big Eight, against the No. 9 Cornhuskers, 18-4 and 6-2 in the conference
Nebraska sophomore middle blocker Allison Weston finished the previous match with a match-high 17 kills, most of them set by senior setter Nikki Stricker. However, Nebraska assistant coach Val Novak said the Cornhuskers did not depend on just one player.
"It's not only Allison," Novak said.
"It's us passing the ball and Nikki giving good sets to her. She's one of our
better players, but it's the whole team."
Kansas coach Frankie Albitz confirmed Nebraska's team effort. She said Weston was not Nebraska's main hitter when the teams met previously.
"When I watched them play against Georgia, they went to her a lot," Albiz said of Weston. "When they played us, they had a lot of outside sets. She put some balls down, but they didn't go to her exclusively."
Weston, at 6 feet, and the outside hitters for Nebraska, ranging from 5-10 to 6-0, make up a tall front line that Kansas will have to hit around, Albiz said.
"We actually did fairly well against them last time," Albizt said. "But we were intimidated by the block. The way to negate a big block is to pass well, move it around and hit around the block."
It will be a tall order for the Jayhawks to hit through the Cornhusker block, but Albitz has a plan for her team's preparation. Kansas players, posing as the Nebraska front line, will stand on chairs in practice so the Jayhawks can work on hitting around a block to get the kill.
Although Kansas' last match was a 3-1 defeat against Colorado in Boulder, Colo, the one game the Jayhawks won was a confidence builder, freshman outside hitter Katie Walsh said.
"I think beating Colorado, just that one game, gave our seniors a lot of confidence," Walsh said. "Every game helps us, since we are tied with Iowa State."
Currently, Kansas and Iowa State are jostling for fourth place in the conference. If Kansas can finish fourth, it will advance to the postseason tournament in Omaha, Neb., Nov. 26-27.
A weekday match on the road is difficult for Nebraska, but Novak says every match for both teams is crucial as the season winds down.
"The more games Kansas wins, the better seed they have in the tournament," Novak said. "We need to go down there, win in three and get out as fast as we can. As far as travel is concerned, it makes a difference whether you get home at 1 or 3."
Kansas does not want to lose 3-0 like it did in Lincoln, Neb. Walsh said the Jayhawks were a different team than they were three weeks ago.
"I think we have more confidence," Walsh said. "We're a better team than we were before. I think we have to pass better and run the middle more."
KU
SPORTS in brief
Bonds made good on his $43,75 million deal, doing everything but taking the San Francisco Giants into the playoffs. As it was, Bonds kept the Giants in the pennant chase until the last day of the season.
SAN FRANCISCO - Given the challenge of living up to the richest baseball contract ever, Barry Bonds delivered.
Yesterday, he was rewarded with the National League's MVP award, making him the first player to win the award three times in four years. He joined seven others as a three-time honoree, and the 29-year-old slugger easily could become baseball's first four-time Most Valuable Player.
Bonds hit. 336 with a league-leading 128 RBI and 46 home runs and scored 129 runs — all career highs — while leading the Giants to a franchise-record 103 wins. He also led the NL in slugging percentage and on-base percentage.
Bonds proves giant salary deserved, wins MVP distinction again
He received 24 of 28 first-place votes in balloting by the Baseball Writers Association of America. Bonds also received four second-place votes for 372 points, far ahead of Philadelphia centerfielder Len Dykstra.
Finishing a season he called the most fun of his career, Bonds said his third MVP is the best but knows his career won't be complete until he plays in the World Series.
The next three finishers were Atlanta Braves: David Justice, McGriff and Ron Gant.
"In a way you have control of this, and in another way you don't," Dykstra said. "There were a lot of guys to look at this season. Look what Fred McGriff did."
never won. You hear more about Reggie Jackson and his home runs in the World Series.
PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL
MICHELLE JENNINGS
"I look at it as I still have unfinished business. I still need to win. I'd like to go home with a win and lose one of those MVPs."
Bonds won the award in 1900 and again last year with the Pittsburgh Pirates, becoming the premier player on last year's free-agent market. The Giants, whose new ownership group was not even in place yet, stunned all by giving him a six-year deal that made him the richest player ever.
Bonds began earning his pay right away, homering in his first at-bat at Candlestick Park and catapulting the Giants into first place by May 10.
When his team became locked in a pennant race with the Atlanta Braves down the stretch, Bonds proved his MVP status without a doubt, although the Braves claimed the title on the last day of the season. In his final 16 games, Bonds hit .333 with six homers, seven doubles, 21 RBI and an.860 slugging percentage.
"You're never going to get into the elite class until you win," he said. "You hear about Ernie Banks, but the Cubs
Dykstra got the other four first-place ballots, along with 20 second-place votes, three for third and one for fourth.
Julia Clarke/KANSAN
Junior Kristen Carlson sits poolside after the swim team met to discuss its upcoming meet with the Southern Methodist Mustangs. Carlson swims the butterfly and backstroke and will compete with the team on Saturday in Oklahoma City, Okla.
By Kent Hohlfeld Kansan sportswriter
Junior battles back after back problems
Kansas junior swimmer Kristen Carlson started this season a lot better than last year's fall season.
rebounded during the spring to take in the first 100-yard butterfly and second in the 100- and 200-yard backstroke at last year's Big Eight Championship meet. She also was part of both
WOMEN'S SWIMMING
Last season Carlson, who is from Topelka, struggled to overcome a stress fracture in her back during the fall. She
the 200 and 400 medley relay teams that took first and second respectively at the Big Eight meet.
Carlson did not stop swimming. With the help of doctors exercise program she was able to overcome the injury by the spring season.
Kansas coach Gary Kempf said that the type of injury Carlson suffered was serious, but that with hard work and persistence. Carlson was able to get better.
"They told me for it to heal completely I'd have to stop swimming for three to four months," Carlson said. "You can't stop for that long at the Division level."
"She has a tremendous work ethic and understands what she can do," Kempf said.
He said that work ethic was one of the major qualities that she brought to the team and that it had helped her become an NCAA All-American in the 200- and 400 medley relays.
"She is a very hard worker," Hanson said. "You can see it in her school work."
Junior teammate Frankie Hanson has seen that work ethic in Carlson since the age of 12. She competed against Carlson when both swam for competing United States Swimming Clubs teams.
Carlson is majoring in medical technology and microbiology.
Carlson said that she liked the atmosphere of swimming at home.
"We're more familiar with the surroundings and don't have to go through the travel," Carlson said. "We know that we have to be ready no matter where we swim."
Carlson said that her individual success at the Big Eight meet last year was tempered somewhat by the fact that the team as a whole struggled.
She said that the fact that the team struggled at the end of last year was a motivating factor for the team this year. The team as a whole did not qualify for the NCAA Championship meet last spring, despite some member's expectations.
She said that last year's role as an underdog helped motivate the team to an upset victory against Southern Methodist University.
The team will have the chance repeat last year's performance Saturday as the team travels to Oklahoma City to take on the Southern Methodist Mustangs.
Hanson said that Southern Methodist would always be intimidating because it was usually a top-10 team. She said the underdog role might help the team going into the meet.
MEN'S BASKETBALL
"It's more fun to chase someone down than it is to be chased." Hanson said.
MEN'S BASKETBALL Public, students can get NIT tickets
Students left out in the cold without Kansas basketball tickets need not worry about missing the first-round game of the Preseason NIT Nov. 17.
Approximately 4,500 general admission tickets for the Kansas-Western Michigan game and the second-round game go on sale tomorrow in the Kansas ticket office.
Kansas will compete against either California or Santa Clara Nov. 19 in the second round if it defeats Western Michigan.
The first and second-round games will be held in Allen Field House and begin at 8:30 p.m.
The two-game package will cost $6 for Kansas students.
Adult general admission tickets are $12 a game.
The ticket office is located in the east lobby of the field house. Call 864-3141 or 1-800-34-HAWKS for more information.
Compiled by Kansan sportswriter Anne Felstet and The Associated Press.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN READERS' POLL
WHO IS NO. 1 IN COLLEGE BASKETBALL?
Tell us what team you think is the top team in college basketball and why.
HERE IS WHAT TO DO:
---
In 200 words or less — printed or typed — over all or some of the following:
What is the top team and why?
— What is the top team and why?
— What team is overrated and why?
phone number (so we can verify your letter).
Submit the letter by 5 p.m. Friday to the Kansan business office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, or the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint.
— What team will surprise everyone and why?
Include your name, class, hometown and
WE WILL PUBLISH THE LETTERS IN THE KANSAN'S NOV. 17 KANSAS BASKETBALL PREVIEW.
SPACE RESTRICTIONS MAY PREVENT SOME LETTERS FROM BEING PUBLISHED.
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Drainage could cause problems
Nancy Shontz, a former City Commissioner, is worried that houses are being built where streams and drainage used to be, and that could cause unexpected flooding.
By Tracl Carl
Kansan staff writer
Shontz advised the commission to pay close attention to the problems drainage may create as the commission considered three development plans. The commission accepted the three plans.
"Drainage ways exist and they are not being studied with adequate reference to what problems are going to occur," she said at last night's commission meeting.
The residential development plans were a 19-acre subdivision north of Peterson Road and west of North Iowa Street; a 22-acre subdivision south of Clinton Parkway and west of Inverness Drive; and an almost 19-acre subdivision south of Clinton
Parkway and east of Wakarusa Drive Mike Stultz was the developer who owned the properties.
Shontz said that development plans do not usually make drainage a priority, and that developers often passed the cost of drainage on to taxpayers instead of paying the cost themselves.
"You can make developers pay for improvements," she told the commission.
Policy creation lacks involvement
Many in the University community have expressed disappointment and even anger about the administration's method of creating the policy.
Nancy Dahl, professor of biology and last year's
Continued from Page 1.
In September University Council formed a committee of students and faculty to examine controversial aspects of the policy, including its scope and the effectiveness.
itation could act alone or make policy.
"The administration goes to a lot of different groups to receive recommendations on policy," Meyen said. "There are not many occasions that a recommendation comes from governance that the chancellor does not recommend."
istration could act alone on making policy.
"I was appalled on how cavalier they were on deciding what was a faculty code violation," Dahl said. "The chancellor doesn't initiate these things. The faculty does."
chair of the Senate Executive Committee, said she objected to the administrations revisions of the faculty code of conduct.
"It probably would have been better if the administration had announced this as a preliminary policy," Friauf said. "With the policy that's presently been announced by the administration, it doesn't necessarily have faculty and student support."
Bob Friedau, professor of astronomy and physics and chair of University Council, said Council members had felt frustration for not being consulted on the policy.
---
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
A smart, easy way meet people in a sophisticated, safe and confidential manner.
Here's how it works...
Classification:
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2-Men Seeking Men
3-Men Seeking Men
4-Women Seeking Women
To place an ad:
5-Friends Seeking Friends
6-Seeking Sports Interest
7-Mutual Hobbies
8-Shared Religion.
1. Call or come by the Kansan at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
2. You'll place an ad in the Jaytait 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.
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.
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
Wednesday, November 10. 1993
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130 Entertainment
134 Found and Lost
Classified Directory
200s Employment
204 Help Wanted
205 Professional Services
206 Typing Services
Classified Policy
The Kanase will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates based on race, sex, age, color, creed, religion, sexism, nationality or disability. Further, the Kanase will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University Kansas regulation or law.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which prohibits discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, family status or national origin, or an intention to such preference, limitation or discrimination.
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs
are here located in this newspaper are
available on an equal basis.
I
100s Announcements
110 Bus. Personals
Revolutionary Alpha Hydroxy Acid skin treatment system proven to reduce lines, repair damaged skin. Free information 843-4280.
Unlimited Silver Jewelry & Hoops, Pumps & Gais! For Guys and Girls
The Etsc Shop, 928 Main Downtown
WATKINS
HEALTH CENTER
864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
120 Announcements
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8:40am-7:30pm
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Tuesday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-9pm
Saturday 10am-12pm
Sunday 1.1am-3pm
Found: The best pizza buffet in Lawrence. Located
in Maxiolio $20 Iowa. $2.99 buffet Mon.-Sun.
$10 Buffet Mon.-Wed.
GREEKS & CLUB
"SPRING BREAK*
Early Booking Special
Discounts
LOWEST PRICES GUARANTEED
Joan at 865-5611
YAIR UP TO $1,000 one WEEK! Fo. you fraternity, sorority, or club. Plus $1,000 for yourself! And a FREE T-HISHP just for calling. 1-800-932-6581, ext. 75.
læbian, gay, biy - or unurny? You're not alone!
Gallup numbers are KU Info for many groups.
Gallup numbers are KU Info for many groups.
Spirit's grace sustains me if it were the purest air I could breathe, the clearest water I could drink, the most nourishing food I could eat. From K-Unity and Law of Lawrence,
13th YEAR!
SPRING BREAK94
Hot!
400s Real Estate
408 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
NORTH PADRE/MUSTANG ISLAND
F-L, L-O-R-I-D-A
ORLANDO/WALT DISNEY WORLD
EVENTS
CREAMING/WALT DISNEY
C-O-L-O-R-A-D-O
STEAMBOAT
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
BRECKENRIDGE/KEYSTONE
RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW
CALL TOLL FREE FOR FULL
1•800•SUNCHASE
--construction laborer, $5.00 an hour, no experience
constructed, flexible hours, Jim 832-1548.
Free Party Room Available at Johnny's Tav
up/Up Online. Call 843-0377 for details.
1. 30 Entertainment
300s
Marchane
300s
Merchandise
308 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
-Kansan Classified; 864-4358-
Beach Condo-South Padre Island, Texas-steeps eight-20 yards from beach, pool & jetuzz-consigle 20-20-27 miles from Bayport by Current Affairs and 20-20-27 miles from Bayport at 4300 acrely. 1-800-253-1699 deposit required.
GHOST OF AN AMERICAN AIRMAN ON TOUR
WED. NOV. 10th
18 & over
tickets available
at
BENCHWARMERS
&
charge by phone
(913)841-0505
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
AA Cruise & Travel jobs. Earn $250/mo. + travel the world free! (Caribbean, Europe, Hawaii)
AA Cruise lines now hire for busy holiday, springtime. Need an excellent emplemt employment.
Call (919) 829-4388 ext. 131.
Supervisor now - Manager later! Learn the business from the ground up and advance according to your skills. Apply to an MBA or a former oriented person and like to work at a fast intense pace, an opportunity to put these skills to work and develop a leader is available. Relocation benefits apply. Benefit now: At amios. 1819 W. 32rd
AMIGOS Supervisor/Assist Mgr
Micro Tech Computers is looking for rur- or pa-t-
tutor to teach Microsoft Office 2013 and
utility, digital-directed and have excel experience.
IBM, PC knowledge and alexa experience pre-
ferred. Submit resume to M2-M SJW, Lawrence,
KS 80047 EOE
APPLY NOW! International Chain filling part-fall positions. Training provided. Work locally now (flexible schedules around classes) May come to one of our 300 locations nationwide during weekends.
BEACH or SKI Promoter.
Small or larger groups.
Your's FREE, discounted or CASH.
CALL (CM 1) 429-824-584
CNA's need to work with clients in their homes. Reliable transport necessary. Call Sharon at Douglas Ct. Visiting Nurses 843-3738 Construction laborer. $5.00 an hour. no experience
Custodian, Burge Union, Tuesday 4p.m.-midnight,
Saturday 6a.m.-11a.m., $4.25 per hour. Previous custodial experience preferred, able to lift 50 pounds.
Prirair Room Watter/Waitress, $8.50 per, plus tips,
Monday-Wednesday-Friday 10:30m, m-2:30p.m.
Previous waiter/waitress table service required.
Marketing Assistant position available at Naiam Hall for the spring semester. Applicant must have excellent people skills, good computer skills (desktop publishing experience a plus), and have a strong interest in learning, assisting, customer service, or sales. Position will time with compensation of room and board plus stipend. Potential for full time effective July, 1994. Great resume and portfolio builder to help you get your dream job. Apply to Naiam Hall 1800 Naiam Drive, Lawrence KS, 60044 O.E.E/M.F.H/A.A.
Mice assistant should 25 brw/mk W M 3-P 7-pm. & m.
12: 14: 30. Please call 729-0130.
Line server, Union Square, Monday-Wednesday,
Friday, 10:08 m.-1:09 p.m., $4.25 per hour. Able to
stand for long periods, prefect previous food service
experience.
Line Server, Hawk's nest, Monday thru Thursday
4pm, 8pm, 10pm, in periods, periods,
periods, periods of service experiments.
Olive Farm Couple Seeks Assistance:
Free rent to student or single parent family in
Olive Farm / john c/ / h. house work, h.
cooking. Limited pet welcome. Call 589-5771
at 3 p.m.
The Resident Assistant (RA) holds a 10-month, 40% live-in position with the KU Department of Student Housing performing administrative, pro-ferment and paraprofessional advising/facilitation training. The RA provides students with whom the RA lives on the floor and for the residence hall in general, working under superintendent, Complex Director, Required; At least one year of experience or more credit hours, and KU enrollment for 1994-98. Compensation: A single room and meals are provided when the hall is officially open. The RA is responsible for all staff monthly stipend of $2.50 paid from June 1, 1986. How to Apply: For complete job description and application materials, contact the Department of Student Housing, January 14, 1994, EAO/UA Employee Friday, January 14, 1994.
Other listings available. See Job Board-Level 5-
Kansas Union Building Personnel Office.
Apply Kansas and Burge Unions' Personnel
Level, Office 5, EOE.
RESUME SERVICES Professional Business
Resumes Cover Letters, SPJ, 1974. Interview
Materials.
mexican restaurant and waitsaff. Apply in person, lower level. Riverfront Plaza
are now hiring extra help for the winter seasons.
Front counter, utility, grill cooks.
Secretary/Receptionist Construction Inc.
Terravert Construction located at 4101 Trail Road
(back entrance) has an immediate full time open
office. Employees must possess typing skills of 60 wpm required; Macintosh experienced preferred; 10 key accuracy; organizational and writing skills a must. Send resumes to above address between MIS, NS 60989, or apply at above address between MIS, NS 60989, or apply and resumes must be in no later than 11-12-93.
Secretary/Receptionist. Terravers Construction inc. located at 4104 Trail Road (back entrance) has an immediate full time opening for a experienced secretary receptionist. Typing skills of 80 wpm, excellent typing ability, accuracy, organizational and writing skills a must. Send resumes to P. Box 3008, Lawrence or 60064, or apply at above address between 9843, St. Petersburg and resumes must be in no later than 11-12-85.
Stop to Shop is looking for part time clerk must be to work 30.p.m. to 19.p.m. shift, some weekends and holidays. If interested apply in person at 1010 N. 3rd.
Want to work w/kids?
Youth Basketball Gym Supr. & Officials Needed.
$7 per hour. 843-4188
must have daytime availability M-F, also some evenings and weekends. Previous food service and supervised experience mandatory. Start at $2.55 per hour up to $4.25 per hour up to $6.25 per hour. 29-30 times per week. Per住 at Schumann Food Company, 710 Massachusetts, Monterey, Friday, 5am-4pm. (Upsets air smokehouse.)
Mass. Street Dell or Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse:
The Princeton Review is looking for outstanding candidates to teach courses part time. The ideal candidate should have a bachelor's in MCAT scores and fantastic communication skills. We offer excellent pay, a relaxed classroom atmosphere, and paid training. We are also seeking pervious students who are interested in applying to Baccalaureum at 180-865-7573 for more information.
Wanted 400 or more people 21 over to participate in group study immediately following the football game at sidewinders Saloon. 729 New Hampshire Worth Cheshire
Valley View Care Home is currently seeking motion camera training for TN. We offer flexible scheduling which is great for students, competitive hourly wages & benefits. Apply in person at 2318 Bishop Court, Lawrencetown.
Executive assistant part-time live in work for rent
bore tissue and tying help. Resume to
telephone 1-800-735-9256.
FAST CASH
By donating your life saving blood plasma.
$15 Today $30 This week
WALKING WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W24th 749-5750
225 Professional Services
Driver education offered through Midway Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
Traffic tickets, misdemeanors, landlord/ tenant,
Braxton B. Convoy 749-3333
Computer Discounts, Guaranteed Quality and
Service. Call 682-793 or 682-543 (home). 2201
W. 25th St. Ft.
For a confidential, caring friend, call us:
Brightfire 862-861. Free pregnancy testing.
Brightfire 862-861. Free pregnancy testing.
Lebian, gay, biy, or unsure? If you need to talk to someone, call a Peer Counselor. CONFIDENTIAL. Call KU Info or Headquarters. Prompt abortion and contraception services.
Donald G Strobe Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Research Assistance - MS-MSL information prepa-
rents to assist with term paper, theses, dissertations.
www.ms-lab.org
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters the lawoffices of
TRAFFIC.DUI'S
I'll help you make an "A". Word process, too.
Word processing; papers, dissertations and resumes. Fast and cheap. MSW/ U.C Berkeley.
Call 845-3482.
Beds, dresss, and bookcases. Everything But Ice
998 Press
PCL out房产; Call P C Source 833-1126
Fall Clearance: All adult tapes on sale and up, Miracle Video, 910 N.2n, 841-8930, or Miracle Video Too, 1019 Hankell, 841-7504.
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
EQUIPMENT
DP 2500 weight lifters, leg curbs, etc.
Great condition. DP Body: Tone 300 Rowing Machine. $250 for both. Call 843-9050 evenings and weekends.
235 Typing Services
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 943-4023
COMPUTERS. Looking for a high quality PC.
TUTORING SERVICE : 839-0925
Spee. in English. Will help with any paper.
Fast, accurate word processing; term paper, dissertation, thesis and graphics services available. Laser printing. Engineering and Law Review experience. Call帕安 at 841-1977 anvime
JVC13C2I change for car. Pull out cassette unit TOLL. New $120.00, just $450.00. AOI 1.388
Pro-Type - fast, reliable, service, professional quality. Any kind of typing. Call today at 81-624-532.
Wanted: Someone to edit my thesis according to APA and KU Grad. School specifications. Must be knowledgeable about both and Word Perfect 3.1. David 1-624-534.
Beacon Publication Services-Quality word processing, laser printing, $2.00/page (including types, grammar, proofing), call Mary, 843-2674.
Expert typing, IBM Correcting Selectric.
$1.50/double spaced page. Call Mary, Matilla 941-1219.
KU STUDENT BASKETBALL COUPONS FOR SALE. KEAR FOR KRIS 832-6299.
$$\Delta$$
AA Word Processing: Any size, under 30 pp.
Word processor price: $1.25/page. Call Ruth after
8pm. 849-6363.
Are you Makin' the grade?
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your TYPING needs call
Makin' the grade at 855.2955
A Word press word processing service. Laser printer. New campus. 642-8955.
Macintosh Memory 6-1MB 32M 39P SIMMs,
48M 8mm SIMms, will sell in sets of two ask for
Macintosh 320/640, 80 or ram, 10 mg hard disk
Macintosh 320/640, 80 or ram, 10 mg hard disk
speakers & 925.0 OBO, call 843-767-9777
Style Writer II Printer. New-only 2 months old.
$225.00 BOO, b424.879879
340 Auto Sales
X
Want to sell complete set of basketball tickets
Best offer. Lease message on machine, 873-456-2900.
4, 4 meg sims for Macintosh never used, sealed
cables 0.00 BGD, call 928-9787.
300s Merchandise
*90 B1 Skizer. Excellent condition. Tahoe package.
2-wheel drive. $8,00 miles. $7500. 841-7888.
1978 Buick LeSabre 350 v8 PS, PB, AT, AC, $500 842-113
davis+Andy
1811 Datsu Wagon. Huns okay. Body rough. $200
Call 1-888-5880. (K. City Number)
1900 Honda Accord LX coupe, 3 speed, white, spell-
ing, leather. All power. Super condition. For
details, 885-0139
305 For Sale
370 Want to Buy
1978 Buckl Lesareb 350 v8 PS, PB, AT, AC, $500 842-111
days-and-Day5
Sculpured Nails $29. reg $42. Reflections West, W 232 Ridge Court, 81-942. A6n For Pain.
Desperately need 2 or 1 inland BB tickets. Paying big $Call! Call - 735-0875 (KCMO).
Needed. Tickets to KU vs. IU basketball at
December 2nd. Will pay $$$. Call 822-0933.
Recycled Sounds
12th & Oread
841-9475
Dangerously we must live but we don't have to be poor
TRADEBUYSELL Cd'sLp's&Tapes
Science
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1 roommate to share spacious, furn. 4 BR 2 Bath, app. canteen, laundry, w/g/lg. and kitchen. Call 658-9243. Email cksmith@us.edu. Call 658-9243.
EFFERSON PLACE
Stocked fishing lake, courtyards w/fountain, sand volleyball, pool, acuzzi & exercise facility
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
The Best Place to Live at KU is in K.C.!
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
very nice! Available Spring sem. Interested? Call
764-1471
119th&1-35
Apt. for rent, 1 bdr., Great Location 123 Indian
Apartments, $550 including cab. Call 847-690-3248
Avail Dec. 18th 158k Very large, newly remodeled one-
房. On bus route, on water and cable paid.
Now leasing for Spring
JUST PRESENT
Available 1 Jan, studio Apt. close to campus &
download 800-364-8270 Landlord 841 1907
Campus Place. 3 bdm 2 ba furnished apt. for rent.
Reasonable rent, 3 minute walk to campus. Avail-
less parking.
Available Jan. 1st, 2 bdrm unfurnished apt,
jazebus; more rooms, near bus route 895.
980-323-8955
3 Big B3rm unfurpa api w/ W/ D bookups avail an
let you do campus to. Unsend out on a great
website!
For instance 4 bedroom, Sundance uptime, near cam-
lor, or date negotiable, 970 + utilities.
Call; 800-235-7012.
For rent brand new 3 nlckm 5 bsp apt. On the bus
from Auckland to Wellington for $219/㎡.
210%/month + utilities. Call 841-7317
Furnished studio apartment. 3 short blocks from KC. Water paid. Off street parking. No pets. M41-82
UGV 2 bedroom apartment available Christmas through by cabins. Cable and water connection.
we're making life easier!
Nice N 38 i 2 bath 2 floor, with Pf. camera, DW,Wi
grabcode, WGD, hotpoint, K2010, Call #84261
18F, BP, WD/ hookups, garage, all apples, Extra
ampliences, Avlaar location, 855-786-0900.
- Weekly Maid Service
•Front Door Bus Service
•"Dine Anytime" with Unlimited Seconds
•Laundry and Vending Facilities
•Fees Utilities
WVF, MVF, Garage, DW,
microware, WD bookcase, 790 mm, Calc 748-6583
Office/Store/Floor Office near downtown
Available Jan. 1. 1 $215 to price. Utilities
included Phones 845-1854
One bdmpr e1m for sublease Jan. 1. Across from sta-
tion 2, bdmpr e1m $85 per month with water
call. Call 823-2163.
2 br. available in house-clean, quiet 842.7208
Sublease begin Jan. 1. Great studio apt. in old building to dunnaua campus. Call 842-906-5000. Call 842-906-5000.
Sublease Needed !2833 fwd G-1. Nice neighbor-
4400 /mo. Willize to negotiate !6213-9115 or
4400 /mo. Willize to negotiate !6213-9115
Sublease studio $300/no. include cable. Available immediately. Call 749-8605.
Free Utilities
NAISMITH Hall
1800 Naismith Drive (913) 843-8559
430 Roommate Wanted
1 female needed to share 3 BR; 2 bath Campus
Place Ace, Smoker, reasonable rent close to cam-
sar.
1 male or female needed to share 3 Br 2 br
duplex. near busa route, close to campus, spacious,
fire place, nice, avail spring semester. Call Tim
042-8000.
3 females, n/s needed for spacespan 3-bdm sbrm on bus route. Lg, bath. living area & kiyro. CA, DW, hardwood floors. 841-7236, leave mess.
Male or female needed to share new 4 bedroom duplex in W. Lawrence starting Jan. 1. Wainker/driver, 2 car garage. Fully furnished (except for room). Call Cameron at 865-6293
Need roommate (male or female) ASAP for a
roommate at math park. For more information
845-7240 www.mathpark.org
Need male roommate for 3 Mths Apt clean to cam, pwd, WD in complex. $182/mo and /u! non-Use: $15/mo. Please reapply.
Need mature, clean, N/S male to share 2 br brag
w/ mature hair/care; visit croupier $195.
w/ mature hair/care; visit croupier $195.
Older Farm Couple Seeks Assistance:
Free rent to student or single parent family in
the neighborhood w/ h/ward work, it house work,
it cooking. Limited pet welcome. Call 547-1773
at 3 p.m.
open minded female need to share two bedroom house close to campus January thru May. Call any
How to schedule an ad:
One female needed to sublease on campus Appl. $180 mth + use. Call SUI 843-1806
NSF */w small dog needs a responsible NSF to
install. Call `nsf +m springer`. $198/mo. +
Call `Ull. Call 7624` (212) 530-2211.
Two 5th yr Sr. s.seeking a roommate for 3 bdt apt begin December 1. Call Carryl or Cathy at
One female to share two bedrooms apartment for one. Call Lisa 768-9572 or dogs, very close to campus. Call Lisa 768-9572
As phone in may be bitted to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* in person: 119 Stuart Flipper *
Very close to campus, behind Yellow Yellb. Need 1 female roommate to share 3 bdmr. 2 bpmult 4 bpmult 5 bpmult 6 bpmult 7 bpmult 8 bpmult 9 bpmult 10 bpmult 11 bpmult 12 bpmult 13 bpmult 14 bpmult 15 bpmult 16 bpmult 17 bpmult 18 bpmult 19 bpmult 20 bpmult 21 bpmult 22 bpmult 23 bpmult 24 bpmult 25 bpmult 26 bpmult 27 bpmult 28 bpmult 29 bpmult 30 bpmult 31 bpmult 32 bpmult 33 bpmult 34 bpmult 35 bpmult 36 bpmult 37 bpmult 38 bpmult 39 bpmult 40 bpmult 41 bpmult 42 bpmult 43 bpmult 44 bpmult 45 bpmult 46 bpmult 47 bpmult 48 bpmult 49 bpmult 50 bpmult 51 bpmult 52 bpmult 53 bpmult 54 bpmult 55 bpmult 56 bpmult 57 bpmult 58 bpmult 59 bpmult 60 bpmult 61 bpmult 62 bpmult 63 bpmult 64 bpmult 65 bpmult 66 bpmult 67 bpmult 68 bpmult 69 bpmult 70 bpmult 71 bpmult 72 bpmult 73 bpmult 74 bpmult 75 bpmult 76 bpmult 77 bpmult 78 bpmult 79 bpmult 80 bpmult 81 bpmult 82 bpmult 83 bpmult 84 bpmult 85 bpmult 86 bpmult 87 bpmult 88 bpmult 89 bpmult 90 bpmult 91 bpmult 92 bpmult 93 bpmult 94 bpmult 95 bpmult 96 bpmult 97 bpmult 98 bpmult 99 bpmult 100
ROOMMATE NEEDED.追 to campus.
Beehive. Bee hive. Bee hive. de-
renewed. Non smoke. 2 full baths. 841-842-6.
24 hours.
Calculating Rates:
stop by the Kaisan offices between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ad may be prepaid, cash or check, or charged on MasterCard or VISA.
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 if cancelled before their expiration date.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of agate lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of 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.
Refunds
When canceling a card 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.
Postcards
Rates
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
| Num. of insertions: | Cost per line per day |
|---|
| 1X | 2-XX | 4-7X | 8-14X | 15-29X | 30+X |
|---|
| 3 lines | | 2.05 | 1.55 | 1.65 | .95 | .75 | .52 |
| 4 lines | | 1.90 | 1.18 | .80 | .70 | .65 | .48 |
| 5-7 lines | | 1.65 | 1.85 | .75 | .65 | .60 | .40 |
| 8+ lines | | 1.75 | .90 | .65 | .60 | .55 | .35 |
105 personal 104 lost & found 395 for sale
110 business personals 205 help wanted 344 auto sales
120 announcements 225 professional services 386 microfashion
130 entertainment 235 point services
Classifications
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
1
2
3
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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:
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The University Dataly Kauan, 191 Squaffer Flint Hall, Larkince, KS. 60945
$ \mathbf{K} $
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1980 Springer, Inc. All rights reserved.
"This is it, son—my old chompin' grounds. ... Gosh, the memories."
Wednesday, November 10, 1993
DICKINSON
611-8000
2339 South 51st St
Dickinson 6
51th Street, 51st St
Lock Who's Talking Now **P**10 **3.55**; 7:05, 9:30
Beverly Hillbillies **P**4:30**; 7:10, 9:35
Miape **A**1:50**; 7:10, 9:50
Nightmare Before Christmas **P**4:40**; 7:00, 9:30
Flesh and Bone **A**1:50**; 7:00, 9:45
Fearless R **4.30**; 7:10, 9:50
3 Premium Show All! Meeting Debby
Senior Client Appreciation Interested
Crown Cinema
BEFORE & PM ADULTS $3.00
(UNITED LEAGUE)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
Robo Cop III PG-13 5:00
7:20, 8:30
VARSITY
HUB MASSIVE INDUSTRY 851 5191
HILLCREST
9251OWA 841-5191
Demolition Man R⁺ 5.00,
7.15,9.35
Cool Runnings PG 7.15,
7.30,9.39
Fatal Instinct PG-13 7.30,9.45
The Joy Luck Club R⁺ 5.00,9.00
Rudy PG 5.00,
7.20,9.40
The Firm $ ^{R} $ 5.99,8.99
Sleepless in Seattle PG 6.15,
7.30,9.30
CINEMA TWIN
LINDON AUSTRALIA $1.25
Daily Showing Times
Billiards
$2.40 per hour
until 6:00 p.m.
TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD
WED. 7:00PM
THUR. 9:30PM
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA FILMS
WED., Nov. 10 — SUN., Nov. 14
JESUS OF MONTREAL
WED. 9:30PM
THUR. 7:00PM
JFK
FRI. & SAT.
7:00PM
FRI. & SAT.
9:30PM
SUN.
2:00PM
WILD AT HEART
FRI. & SAT. MIDNIGHT
ALL SHOWS IN KANSAS UNION.
TICKETS $2.50, MIDNIGHTS $3.00
FREE WITH SUA MOVIE CARD.
CALL 864-SHOW FOR MORE INFO.
864-3545
GHOST OF AN AMERICAN AIRMAN WED. Nov.10
BENCHWARMERS
FRANK ALLISON and the ODD SOX Thur. NOV.11 25¢ DRAWS!
DAZED & CONFUSED (R)
TODAY(5:00),7:15,9:30
Jawbone
MAXIMA INSTITUTE
LEFTOVER SALMON Fri. Nov. 12 2for1 Wells!
Advertise in the Kansan!
Jayboul
bowling
Not just for bowling any more!
864-3545
S.D.I.
worldbeat
Sat. Nov. 13
2 for 1 Wells!
THE WEDDING BANQUET(PG-13)
TODAY(5:30),8:30
BEEF HALL
ABORTION ASSISTANCE
Low Cost Early Abortion Services Wichita Women's Center BC/BS Mastercard Visa Toll Free Dial "1" & then...800 467 4340
Alvin's IGA Buy One- Get One FREE!
$448 Limit 1 with $10purchase
Prices good Nov. 10 to Nov. 16.
We accept MUNITY WAY CAREERS VISA
Sprite
Coca-Cola
24pk.
Coke, Sprite & Diets
BEEF
T. V. Turkeys
Buy One
Get Same
Size Turkey
FREE!
10 lb to 26 lb
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Carnation Hot Cocoa
Carnation
PREMIUM CARAMELS
For the love of caramel
Carnation
PREMIUM CARAMELS
Buy One FREE!
Get One 10ct. box
MID AM
MITLER
MID AM
MITLER
Mid Am Butter
Buy One GET ONE FREE! 8oz.pkg.
RED BARON
BARON'S CHEESE
RED BARON
Red Baron Pizza
Buy One
Get One
FREE!
22 oz. box
Keg Beer $4299 +Deposit
16gal Keg
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PROUD
No.1 seed, two previous titles do not assure junior of victory
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
Junior Rebecca Jensen is seeded No.1 going into the Central Regional Rolex Championships this weekend in Salt Lake City and could be the first Kansas tennis player to win the tournament three consecutive years.
"I am supposed to win, but not supposed to," Jensen said.
"I am seeded No. 1, but my results this year are nothing to write home about."
in two tournaments, Jensen has a 3-4 singing record. Men's coach Michael Center, who coached the women's team last fall, said it was too early to dwell on Jensen's record.
He said Jensen had not competed in enough matches yet to get into her groove of playing. She still has the opportunity to play well, he said.
RACKS
Jensen said she was not under a lot of pressure to win the tournament. Although she would love to win it, Jensen said, her goal was to play two good sets.
Women's coach Chuck MBerzbach, who left for the tournament yesterday afternoon with freshmen Bianca Kirchhof and Chessa Bieri, said Jensen was a good player because she had a lot of talent, strength and experience.
Jensen was No. 17 in the nation after the season last spring, with an overall 28-6 single record. She had a 6-0 doubles Big Eight record with partner junior Nora Koves.
At the beginning of the fall season, Jensen's singles ranking moved up to No.9 in the Intercollegiate Tennis Association's preseason poll.
Melissa Lacey/KANSAP
Jensen said it would be a challenge to win. She said that she had been ahead in her matches this fall, but that she had lost her concentration and the match.
Although she may not win the tournament, which advances the top two singles and top two doubles teams to the national indoor championships in February. Jensen said that she thought Kansas players would dominate the tournament.
"It could be an all-KU semi or at least quarterfinal tournament," she said.
Merkzbach said Koves was playing the best tennis on
Junior tennis player Rebecca Jensen takes a practice swing at Alvamar Golf & Country Club. Jensen was practicing yesterday for this weekend's Central Regional Rolex Championships in Salt Lake City.
the team, and he expected her to place high in the tournament, along with Jensen.
Since Jensen has won the tournament two years in a row. Center said he expected to do well again.
Center said that Jensen was a great fighter on the court and that when she played with enthusiasm she would be tough to beat.
"She has had a great two years, and she will continue to improve," he said. "She knows what it takes to succeed, and she will be ready to go."
Chicago Bears pull the plug on the 'Fridge
The Associated Press
LAKE FOREST, III. — The Chicago Bears cleaned out the refrigerator yesterday by releasing William "Refrigerator" Perry.
Perry — the 300-plus pound defensive tackle who made his fame as a blocking and sometimes running back when the Bears were an NFL power in the mid-1980s — had played in seven of the team's eight games this season, making eight tackles, four solo.
A first-round pick out of Clemson in 1985, Perry played in 114 games, 94 as a starter.
back. He scored three touchdowns rushing, including one in the Suner Bowl, and had one touchdown reception.
Perry gained fame in his rookie season for both his considerable gith and his touchdowns as a goal-line running
The spectacle of a 330-plus pound lineman cavorting in the backfield captivated football fans' imagination, but Perry never carried the ball much after his rookie season.
Perry is currently co-owner of the 6-foot-2 Perry frequently feuded with the Bears' coaching staff over his weight, which was listed as 335 pounds in this season's team media guide.
Perry ballooned to 300 pounds at the end of the 1991 season, when he was criticized for lackluster play, and former Chicago coach Mike Ditka vowed Perry would not play for the team again until he got down to 320 pounds.
Perry's place on the roster is being taken by former Atlanta Falcons defensive tackle Tory Epps.
The African Affairs Student Association Presents AN EVENING FOR CULTURAL EXCHANGE
FEATURING
TRADITIONAL AFRICAN DRUMMING & TRADITIONAL AFRICAN DANCERS
A ONE ACTPLAY: "JEWELOFTHE NILE" POETRY&DINNER
DATE: NOVEMBER13,1993
AFRICA
DATE: NOVEMBER 13, 1998
PLACE: ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES*
(ECM) 12th & Oread
TIME: 6:00 p.m. (SEMI-FORMALEVENT)
TICKETS: STUDENTS-$6.00
NON-STUDENTS-$8.00 (ADVANCE PURCHASE)
$10.00 (DOOR)
CHILDREN-$3.00 (12 AND UNDER)
TICKETS ARE AVAILABLE SU
AFRICANAFFAIRS BLACKSTUDENT
STUDENT ASSOCIATION UNION
TICKETS ARE AVAILABLE AT SUA
AFRICAN AND
AFRICAN-AMERICAN
STUDIES DEPT.
ANTHROPOLOGY DEPARTMENT
ENGLISH DEPARTMENT
KJHX 90.7 IS NOWTAKING APPLICATIONS
Applications are available in 2051 Dole for the following KJHK positions this spring semester:
- Student Station Manager
- ExecutiveStaff
Applications are due Friday, Nov.19 at 5pm in 2051 Dole.
- Special Programs Announcing
- Staff Directors
- Jazz Announcing Staff
- Rock Announcing Staff
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
is now accepting applications from students with previous Kansan
Business Manager and Editor
for the Spring 1994 semester.
Applications may be obtained at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall,
8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. Return the completed application and a current resume to the Dean's office, 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall, by noon on the appropriate deadline indicated below.
Business Manager Schedule
*Friday, Nov. 12:
Editor Schedule
*Friday, Nov. 12:
Application deadline, Interview sign-up
- Monday,Nov.15:
Monday, NOV. 19
Application deadline, Interview sign-up
- Monday, Nov.15:
Selection Interviews, 3:30 p.m.
*Tuesday, Nov. 16:
Selection interviews, 3:30 p.m.
Interviews will take place in the conference room, 120 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Applicants will be notified of the successful candidate after everyone has interviewed. Any information you wish to be considered in your interview may be attached to your application.
Real World experience
WESTERN EASTERN CENTER FOR WILDLIFE SCIENCE
SPORTS: Will Kansas be ready for Colorado after its crushing defeat against Nebraska? Page 11.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL. 103, NO.59
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Sticky issues
Relationships policy poses tough questions to KU
By Christoph Fuhrmans and KC Trauer
Kansan staff writers
After a hectic week, a student goes to a bar on a Friday night with the professor of one of her classes.
A professor invites a student to eat lunch with her at the Union after a class.
A graduate teaching assistant meets a student at his home to review a test.
Are these consensual relationships? Are they conflicts of interest in violation of the University of Kansas' consensual relationships policy?
"It's not a very simple question," said Kim Wilcox, associate professor of speech, language and hearing and head of the task force on consensual relationships, a term roughly defined as mutually agreed-to relationships.
Where to draw the boundaries of acceptable consensual relationships is one of several issues that concern the members of the task force and others at KU.
It is the difficult task of defining those boundaries that fell to Wilcox's committee, which is gathering feedback from the University community in preparing its recommendations for clarifying the policy.
So what is not acceptable under the existing policy? It's not always clear when interpreting it.
The policy states that a faculty member cannot initiate or accept a romantic or sexual relationship with a student over whom the faculty member has academic power, such as assigning grades or evaluating dissertations.
ANALYSIS
I TOMORROW: The University Daily Kansan looks at how similar policies have been received at other universities.
FORUM INFO: Instructions on how to use the UseD Forum, Page 6.
But an instructor and a student can have a romantic or sexual relationship if that academic power does not exist — for example, if an economics instructor dates an engineering student who is not in her class.
But what if that student is scheduled to take a class from that instructor next semester? The current policy says that such pre-existing relationships may continue as long as the conflict of interest is made known to department officials and is removed. If a professor has a relationship with a student in his or her class, then assigning a grade to the student must be delegated to another faculty member in the department.
The goal of the policy, which went into effect Aug. 20, is to remove conflicts of interest that invite abuses of power, such as harassment.
What Wilcox's committee has found is that other types of relationships also create conflicts of interest, such as when a professor and a relative find themselves in the same class.
Wilcox said that he thought the policy should set certain guidelines as to what types of relationships were conflicts of interest, including what types of conduct were acceptable.
But the stickiness of defining unacceptable conduct, Wilcox concedes, is that everybody's perception of what's unacceptable differs.
Enforcing the policy
Creating a policy prohibiting sexual and romantic relationships is one thing, enforcing that policy creates another problem.
Students and University officials have joked about having a "sex police force." But for now, the policy relies on the honor system of having both the student and professor inform the head of the respective academic department about the relationship.
David Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs, says that the consensual relationships policy is no different than any other University policy and does not need to be enforced in any special way.
O R E A D
F O R U M
8 6 4 - 9 0 4 0
In Today's Forum
See POLICY. Page 6
The University Daily Kansan wants to know what you think about the University's policy on faculty-student relationships. Some of the issues are:
What types of conduct outside the classroom between an instructor and his or her student should be considered acceptable or unacceptable?
Should conduct considered unacceptable be banned or merely discouraged? Why? Should there be any policy on consensual relationships at all? Why?
What would be the best way to publicize what is considered acceptable conduct so that everybody knows the ground rules?
- See Page 6 for Instructions on using Oread Forum.
Kansan opens forum for exchange of ideas
Kim Wilcox did not know what to expect from the open forum last week on the University's consensual relationships policy.
Three people showed up, if you don't count reporters and the students, faculty and staff on the committee. One person spoke on the policy, and it's the only response, spoken or written, the committee has received.
It's good that Wilcox, chair of a University committee that sponsored the meeting and examined the policy, didn't have his hopes too high.
In essence, the University, a place exalted for a free flow of ideas, failed to live up to that image.
Who knows why so few people showed up that day? Perhaps people just didn't care. It seems the issue has not resonated in this University community as it has at other big universities.
Perhaps that particular forum was not publicized adequately. Or maybe people aren't interested in attending forums — especially on policies.
EDITOR
AUER
A new Forum
Despite the apparent lack of interest, I'm not so sure a lot of us don't have opinions about the issue of faculty-student relationships. There must be a better way to invite discussion on the issue.
Today, the University Daily Kansan introduces a new feature, the Oread Forum. The Forum is a
meeting place of ideas, the door to which is a phone call or a letter.
Through a special phone line on which you can record your opinions, we hope to bring the forum of discussion closer to you.
The Oread Forum is not a poll.
We're not interested in upinning up opinions. We're interested in the content of your opinions.
All this, of course, requires your participation. We've taken a step closer to you, and we hope you take a step closer to the Kansan and the University community to resolve issues that affect us all.
Today, we've laid out some of the issues to be resolved on the faculty-student relationships policy. Next week, we'll report back to you on what has been discussed in the Forum. We'll also pass along all the responses to the faculty and student committee looking at the policy.
Who knows? All of this may make Kim Wilcox's job — working to make KU a better place — a little bit easier.
The image shows a large, intricately designed horn instrument being played by an individual standing on a ladder. The background is blurred with indistinct shapes and colors, suggesting an outdoor setting.
Robert Foster, director of KU bands, conducts the Marching Jayhawks at the practice field behind Oliver Hall. The band has been invited to participate in the 1995 St. Patrick's Day Parade in Dublin, Ireland.
Holly McQueen / KANSAN
Marching Jayhawks to parade in Ireland
By Kathleen Stolle Kansan staff writer
More than luck is taking the KU Marching Jayhawks band to Ireland.
The Marching Jayhawks received an invitation last spring to participate in the 1995 St. Patrick's Day parade in Dublin. Late last month, the invitation was announced publicly at the KU marching festival at Memorial Stadium. Patti Ann Schmidt, who coordinates U.S. band talent for the parade, made the announcement.
Schmidt said both Americans and university bands were popular with Irish people.
"When you bring a band like the Marching Jayhawks over, they're going to be treated like royalty," she said. "If the band members had egos before, watch out when they come home."
This will be the third time an American university band has been asked to appear in the parade. Parade coordinators have been inviting international bands for 30 years. Marching bands from the University of Nebraska and the University of Illinois will play in the 1995 parade as well, marking the first time three U.S. bands have performed in the same parade.
The band was invited based on a recommendation from another university band director, Schmidt said
Other bands in the parade will come from France, the Netherlands, Great Britain, Canada and Ireland, Schmidt said.
"It's definitely an international parade," she said.
This is the fourth time the Marching Jayhawks have gone to western Europe since Bob Foster, director of bands, came to KU in 1971. The band has never been to Ireland, he said.
The amount each student will have to pay has not been determined because travel and lodging details have not been confirmed. Students may sponsor fund-raisers to help pay for the week-long stay, Foster said.
Although such a trip is inherently demanding for its planners — getting passports, making reservations, estimating costs — Foster said the trouble was worth it.
"The payoff is the kids have a fabulous experience," he said.
Matt Smith, Lenexajunior, said he was excited about the chance to see the people and culture of Ireland. He said that he did not think the band's performance would be affected by the trip but that relations among the members might benefit.
"It's good to hang out with a lot of people you ordinarily wouldn't hang out together with," he said. "The band'll spend a lot of time together, so in that sense, it'll help."
Drum major Jason George said he thought the atmosphere would give the band members an edge.
"It more of an adrenaline rush when it's a new situation with new stimuli," he said. "It gets them all pumped up."
However, George said the band had a lot of other things on its mind right now, including Saturday's performance at the KU-Colorado University game in Boulder and an appearance at the Denver Broncos and Minnesota Vikings game on Sunday.
INSIDE
FAN
House approves handgun-control measure
A glaring spotlight
Student athletes face intense pressure and public scrutiny every day. For some it can be destructive. Others thrive on the hectic life.
Page 9.
The Brady bill would impose a five-day wait and a background check on would-be handgun buyers.
WASHINGTON — Responding to public fear of street crime, the House approved the Brady bill yesterday that would require a five-day wait and a background check on people who want to buy handguns.
The Associated Press
The House approved the bill last year only to see it fail after being attached to a larger crime bill blocked by Senate Republicans. This time, it is being kept separate in the hope that the Senate will send it to President Clinton, who has promised to sign it.
The House voted 238-199 for the bill and sent it to the Senate.
During the debate, Rep. Lucien Blackwell, D-Pa., noted that his West Philadelphia neighborhood had hundreds of deaths each year from pistols.
"We need to stop these thugs from getting these guns rapidly, and if we pass the Brady bill, we will do that." Blackwell said. "What is wrong with waiting five days to get a pistol? What is wrong with that?"
The Brady bill, named for press secretary James Brady, who was shot during a 1981 assassination attempt on President Reagan, would impose a five-day waiting period before a handgun purchase could be completed and would require a background check during that time on prospective buyers.
On the other side, Rep. Sanford Bishop, D-Ga., supporting a successful amendment that sets a deadline of five years for developing a computerized, nationwide system of instant background checks and a phaseout of the waiting period, said:
"If we can check credit card purchases instantaneously, if we can have our policemen check driving records instantaneously, then certainly we can check criminal histories instantaneously."
The amendment, backed by the National Rifle Association and proposed by Rep. George Gekas, R-Pa., was approved by a 235-198 vote. Gun control proponents characterized it as an attempt to gut the bill's effectiveness.
Rep. Mike Synar, D-Okla., said the amendment was a clever attempt to derail the five-day waiting period.
The House rejected by a 175-257 vote another NRA-backed amendment offered by Rep. Bill McCollum, R-Fla. It would have pre-empted all state or local laws that require waiting periods when the instant checks took effect.
The five-year deadline was imposed on a provision in this year's Brady bill that said that when background information was sufficiently computerized and instant checks were possible, the waiting period would end and instant checks would be required on purchases of both handguns and long guns.
"Using this amendment's common sense," Synar said, "one would quit giving CPR to a heart attack victim after five minutes."
The Brady bill has been separated from far-reaching crime bills in the House and Senate in an effort to get it to Clinton this year.
Last year, the Brady bill died with a larger crime bill of which it was only a small part. Then, Senate Republicans threatened to filibuster about changes in rules governing appeals to federal courts by state inmates, particularly those on death row.
The Senate, meanwhile, continued slogging through its crime bill — temporarily stalled on an amendment to ban assault-style weapons. Late Tuesday, Republicans threatened to filibuster the amendment.
The Senate planned to take up the Brady bill after completing work on the crime bill.
Brady, who with his wife, Sarah, has been pushing the bill for a decade, was in the House chamber during the debate.
The House overwhelmingly approved a Brady bill amendment that would require police to provide within 20 days the reason for a denial of a right to purchase a handgun, if the person denied seeks it.
2
Thursday, November 11, 1993
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A KU employee's bicycle, valued at $800, was taken in the 1900 block of Alabama Street on Oct. 30, Lawrence police reported.
reported.
A student's backpack and its contents, valued at $425, were taken from the Ekdhal Dining Complex on Nov. 3 or 4, KU police
A student's parking permit and radar detector, valued together at $120, were taken from a car in the parking lot east of Jayhawker Towers on Nov. 6 or 7, KU police reported.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 11, 1993
3
New horizon looms for Lawrence
City, county goals through year 2020 opened for debate
By Tracl Carl Kansan staff writer
About 200 people gathered last night in Lawrence High School's cafeteria to discuss the Horizon 2020 plan, which is Lawrence and Douglas County's comprehensive development plan for 1995 through 2020.
Graham Toft, consultant for Horizon 2020, said the community needed to focus on the goals and strategies of the plan. The plan is based on reports from members of the community who served on different task forces.
Toft said one goal of the plan was for the community to have a self-sufficient economy while maintaining disciplined growth.
"You have to have lots of commercial and industrial and urban growth to sustain quality of life," he said.
Toft said one strategy of the plan included expanding international trade and cultural activities.
One of the points of the plan was that there were too many Lawrence residents commuting to work in other cities and that those commuters needed more jobs in Lawrence.
"You have the opportunity to become international in your outlook, economically, socially and politically," he said.
The strategy that produced the most discussion was pursuing business growth aggressively while pursuing a
balanced land-use pattern.
Toft said that he was surprised that Douglas County and Lawrence would want economic development and that he supported the plan to strengthen Lawrence's tourism industry.
"There has got to be competition," she said.
Jo Barnes, a Lawrence realtor who served on the Horizon 2020 land-use task force, said the plan did not represent the task force's recommendation for free enterprise. The plan stated that downtown would remain the primary commercial center, but Barnes said the task force did not state that.
One part of the plan stressed more vocational training opportunities and lifelong learning opportunities.
Barb Smith, director of United Way of Douglas County and member of the economic development task force,
said there should be more education al opportunities for people who cannot attend college. She suggested the University of Kansas develop evening and weekend degree programs..
Tracy Karner, Pocatello, Idaho, graduate student who served on the environmental and natural resource task force, said she thought the forum focused too much on improving the community by improving job opportunities. There is more to a community than economics, she said.
"To me, quality of life means I have a nice downtown area that I can walk through and my kids can run around and be safe," she said. "No one has raised any issues of social needs."
The City Commission and the Douglas County Commission will pass the completed plan in March 1995 after the two groups revise it.
Second case of robbery at Dillons store
By Scott J. Anderson
kansan staffwriter
Lawrence police are looking for information about two similar robberies at the Dillons store at 1740 Massachusetts St.
In the most recent case, a KU student told police he was robbed by a man he picked up at the store on Tuesday.
The victim was leaving the store at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday when a man asked him for a ride to the KU campus, said Sgt. Rick Nickell of the Lawrence police. The victim agreed to give the man a ride. The man then told the victim he wanted to go to 23rd Street and Haskell Avenue.
The suspect asked the victim about his bank, and the victim told him he did not have one, Nickell said. The suspect told the victim he was from the Kansas City area and had lost his money in a fight.
The suspect then pulled out what the victim said he thought was a handgun and demanded money, police reports said. The victim gave him $25. The suspect then told the victim to take him back to Dillons. The victim dropped the suspect off at Dillons and later called police.
On Friday, a man got into a student's car while the student was waiting for friends who were inside the store. The suspect said he had a gun and told the victim to take him to a bank, police reports said.
The suspect in both cases is described as an African-American male in his early 20s, between 5 feet 8 inches and 6 feet tall and 160 to 190 pounds.
The victim went to an automated teller machine, withdrew $50 and gave it to the suspect, the report said. The suspect took $10 more from the victim before getting out of the car in southwest Lawrence.
Detective Lt. Kevin Harmon of the Lawrence police said that these two cases were considered related.
"Both happened at the same place with a similar method of operation." Harmon said. "Both victims were asked to drive to their bank and withdraw money, and the description of the suspect is very close. They are too similar not to be considered related."
Harmon said the two incidents might be related to a third incident at an ATM machine Tuesday night. Harmon did not have any information on the third report.
Anyone with information about these incidents should call the Lawrence police at 841-7210.
75 YEARS LATER...
THE EIGHTH BATTLEFIELD GUARD IN THE WINTER WAR
KU AND WORLD WAR I
Photo courtesy of University Archives
Soldiers in a World War I University military training program gather in 1917 in front of Fowler Shops, the former shop building, now Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Students pulled together to fight disease and war
By David Stewart
Kansas staff writer
Kansan staff writer
The country realized early that World War I was going to be bloody and difficult, said Norman Saul, professor of history.
Memories of World War I may have faded since the war's end 75 years ago today, but the University still honors those who died in the war to end all wars.
VOLKOVIC
One of the war's first effects was a sharp decrease of enrollment with the enlisting and drafting of KU students, Robert Taft, former professor of chemistry, writes in his book "The Years on Mount Oread."
"The goals of the war were vague," Saul said. "What we wanted to do was try to create a situation where there weren't going to be any more wars like that."
The Kansas Union and Memorial Stadium serve as reminders of the sacrifice students and faculty made. But the memorials cannot tell the whole story of how the University contributed to the war or how the war changed it.
During the war that ended on Armistice Day, Nov. 11, 1993, the University saw a loss in enrollment, military barracks on campus and an influenza outbreak that shut down the University.
Lt. William Fitzsimmons, of KU, was the first U.S. officer in killed World War I.
According to the book, "The fall of 1917 opened with a greatly decreased enrollment. The previous year it had reached a high water mark of over 3,400 students, but the following fall it was 600 smaller."
As explained in the 1918 Jayhawk- yearbook, students served in many capacities. In May 1917, a month after the United States entered the war, the University gave academic credit to the 500 KU students who left to enter officers' training camp or work on farms.
According to the 1918 yearbook, "The past year has been marked by a spirit of restlessness which has pervaded the entire University atmosphere, making faculty members and undergraduates alike a lit
little more serious, a little more intent,
a little more impatient to be doing
more to help win the Great Victory."
Students who had not gone immediately overseas could join the University's Student Army Training Corps, or SATC, established by the War Department in August 1918 to prepare students for the war, according to Clifford Griffin in his book "The University of Kansas — A History."
The University's SATC had about 1,700 recruits. Housed in a dozen barracks at the University, members of the SATC practiced and took classes in their military speciality, according to Griffin's book.
Just a week after the SATC recruits pledged their oath of allegiance on Oct. 1, 1918, an outbreak of Spanish influenza hit Lawrence, shutting down the University until Oct. 15, 1918. Cramped conditions forced the University officials to keep the school closed until Nov. 11, 1918, the last day of the war.
"32 students — 10 of them from the SATC — had died and as many as 750 had been ill at once," according to Griffin's book.
Frank Strong, chancellor during World War I, said in 1921 that the University had suffered in many ways during the war.
"I saw what I hope no other university administrator will ever be obliged to see," Strong said, "A partial paralysis of the activities of the University and draining of its best blood onto the battlefields of Europe."
ON CAMPUS
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will have an information and registration table from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. today on the fourth floor of the Kansas Union. For more information, call Wendy or Meg at 843-0357.
Canterbury House will celebrate Holy Eucharist at noon today in Danforth Chapel.
The Anthropology Club will meet at 5 p.m. today in 633 Fraser Hall. For more information, call Destiny Crider at 832-1496.
Associated General Contractors will meet at 6 p.m. today at Room 232 in the Art and Design Building. For more information, call Charlie at 832-2170.
Center for Community Outreach will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Julie Harris or Shanda Vangas at the Student Senate office, 864-3710.
Latin American Solidarity will sponsor a rice and bamboo dinner and video, "Panama Deception," at 6 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Kenny Kincaid at 749-0789.
KU Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in Parlors A, B and C in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Erik Lindsley at 841-4585.
Circle K Club will hold an organizational meeting at 7 tonight at the Multi-Purpose Room in McCollum Hall. For more information, call Jim Rowland at 864-4620 or 842-5959.
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.
KU Pre-Law Society will meet
at 7 tonight at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call John Wasylenko at 843-6585.
Le Cercle Francais will meet at 7 tonight at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Alice Yeo at 865-1907.
Students in Communication Studies will meet at 7 tonight at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mid Johnson at 842-9713.
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in Robin-
son Center. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
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.
LesBiGaySOK will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Frontier Room in the Kansas Union.
Amnesty International will meet at 8 tonight in the Glass Onion, 624 W.12th St.
KU General Union of Palestine Students will meet at 8 tonight at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Jamal Jach at 841-3407.
Jayhawker Campus Fellowship will sponsor a lecture at 8 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call John Dale at 864-1115.
Iethus Christian Outreach will meet at 8:30 tonight at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Mark Winton at 843-2260 or Noel Storey at 749-5848.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 9 tonight in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445.
CAMPUS BRIEFS
School of Social Welfare creates jobs fair for students
internship opportunities.
Representatives from about 60 Kansas social welfare agencies will discuss employment and
A career fair for students interested in jobs in social welfare will be held from 1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Ballroom of the Kansas Union.
Social welfare careers include working with victims of sexual abuse and the homeless, or in correctional facilities, public housing offices and public schools.
The School of Social Welfare is sponsoring the event.
ROTC will celebrate its 50th year in building
The KU ROTC programs will celebrate their 50th year in the Military Science Building with an open house from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. today.
A display of items for the event will include photos of the building, which cost just more than $200,000 to construct and was dedicated in 1943. Models of Navy vessels and weapons also will be on display.
The building serves as home to the Army, Navy and Air Force ROTC programs.
More than 270 students are involved in ROTC.
Fire at Anschutz library prompts evacuation
Library staff evacuated about 150 students last night from Anschutz Science Library after a trash-can fire in the second-floor men's room set off the fire alarm.
Firefighters extinguished the fire in the men's room at 10:40 p.m. and searched the building for any other
fires, said Bill Stark, battalion chief for the Lawrence Fire Department.
Anthony Case, St. Louis, Mo., junior and employee at the Anschutz circulation desk, said the library closed for the rest of the night.
Briefs compiled from Kansan staff reports.
WALT DISNEY PICTURES
PRESENTS
THE THREE
MUSKETEERS
ALL FOR ONE... AND ONE FOR ALL.
WALT DISNEY PICTURES CHARLIE SHEEN KIEFER SUTHERLAND CHRIS O'DONNELL OLIVER PLAFT TIM CURRY REBECCA DE MORNAY "THE THREE MUSKETEERS" CARAVAN PICTURES
STEPHEN HEREK GABRIELLE ANWAR MICHAEL KAMEN JOHN E. LINK WOLF KROEGER DEAN SEMLER, A.C.S. NED DOWD WILLIAM W. WILSON III
JORDAN KERNER JON AVNET DAVID LOUGHERY JOE ROTH ROGER BIRNBAUM STEPHEN HEREK
NOVEMBER 12
4
Thursday, November 11, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
U.N. Population Fund deserves U.S. support
President Clinton should proceed with plans to restore U.S. aid to the U.N. Population Fund. Controlling population growth, especially in underdeveloped countries, demands careful attention as we move into the 21st century.
Financial support for the U.N. Population Fund was withdrawn under the Reagan administration. This fund dispersed aid to less developed countries for voluntary family planning services, which provided birth control, education, women's basic health services and pre and postnatal care.
The damaging effects of uncontrolled population growth include strain on the environment and natural resources, significant economic barriers to further developing the Third World and mass migrations when resources are depleted. If nothing is done to stabilize population growth, the world's population could reach an estimated 15 billion people by the end of the next century, tripling the current level.
Even more frightening is the fact that as many as 300 million couples worldwide have the desire to control their family size but do not have access to family planning services. Poverty is perpetuated by the lack of concern for the far-reaching effects of population growth.
The United States must signal its support for controlling this threat to world stability. It should restore financing to help provide these services universally. One of the repercussions of population growth, the flow of immigrants from poverty-stricken Haiti and Central America, affects us already.
It is time to look beyond our own narrow lifestyles and reach out to those in need in other areas of the world. We currently contribute to "peacekeeping" forces, medical relief, food aid, etc. Family planning goes to the crux of one of the causes of poverty and offers a solution that is cheaper and more lasting than armed forces.
We should encourage our legislators to restore U.S. financial contributions to the U.N.Population Fund. These family planning services should be voluntary, accompanied by education and focused on helping those most in need. These efforts can make an enormous impact in controlling population growth and moving underdeveloped countries to self-sufficiency.
EISHA TIERNEY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
MAGNEEL Chicago Tribune
IT'S A BIG ONE, ALL RIGHT. I'LL PREHEAT THE OVEN.
HEALTH CARE BILL
CONGRESS
The Ice Sculpture
Americans' political discontent revealed in Republican victories
Rejection. This was the feeling of most Democrats when Republicans swept key races on election night. Republicans were elected governors in Virginia and New Jersey and won the mayor's office in New York. The fact that Republicans won these positions, which had been dominated by liberal politicians, is a testament to the growing animosity most Americans have with their ineffective political representatives. And because the Democratic Party is in control in both the White House and Congress, the American voters will continue to take their failed expectations to the voting booth and displace Democrat ideology with Republican leaders.
COLUMNIST
LANCE
HAMBY
A closer look at the New York and New Jersey political races reveals both the ineptitude of incumbent Democrats' ideology and the potential ramifications the Clinton administration could face in 1996 if it continues to defend passing-the-buck attitudes, high tax rates and big-government policies. Some or all were espoused by David Dinkins and James Florio and defended by Clinton.
In New York, voters elected Republican candidate Rudolph Giuliani, replacing the Democratic incumbent, Dinkins. Dinkins used his African-American heritage in an attempt to pin discrimination on white voters who supported his white opponent, Giuliani. However, this shifting-the blame strategy didn't work for Dinkins, who obviously forgot about New York's $3 billion budget gap; his lethargic reaction to the African-American uprisings against Jews in 1991; the bureaucratic mess of his city's public schools; the ineffectiveness of the tough gun control policy; exorbitant tax rates; and crime levels that are high in comparison to national levels. I wonder if the white voters in New York, unlike the mayor, remembered those factors on election night.
With no help from Clinton, Christine Todd Whitman was elected New Jersey's first woman governor, defeating Clinton-backed Democrat Florio, a white male. I guess that Clinton thinks that people should vote for people who are different from them only if they are registered voters in New York.
Clinton only added to Dinkins' racial overtones when he said that we should vote for people who are different from us. I wonder why Clinton, a white male, didn't say that during last year's presidential elections or, more importantly, to the New Jersey voters who elected a female governor.
Whitman's election to the governorship in New Jersey signifies upcoming troubles for Clinton if he seeks reelection in 1996. Clinton, the first lady and Clinton's campaign strategist, James Carville, campaigned heavily for Florio, thereby defending the Democrats' ineffective big government and high tax rates. To Clinton's
chagrin, those same inept policies make up the bulk of his domestic agenda. If Clinton doesn't learn from the obvious policy mistakes of his fellow Democrats, then Clinton's future as the leader of the free undoubtedly will end in 1997.
The defeats of Dinkins and Florio follow a distinct pattern of big Democratic losses in key political races this year. Republicans also have won the mayor's office in Los Angeles, special Senate elections in Georgia and Texas, and the lieutenant governorship in Arkansas.
There is no question that some of these votes are anti-incumbent and not necessarily anti-Democrat. But the rejection of Democratic leaders in historically liberal states proves that Americans' discontent with liberal ideology can't be underestimated. If Clinton doesn't figure this out before the 1996 presidential campaign, his party will be removed from the White House — just like it was after the Carter administration.
Lance Hamby is a Wichita junior majoring in political science and Journalism.
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
Ambassador is taking right approach in Cuba
In choosing the Cuban-American National Foundation as the forum for his first major statement on Cuba, Assistant Secretary of State Alexander Watson showed the diplomatic skills to be expected of a veteran career foreign service officer.
Watson won over the foundation, the most powerful and most conservative of the Miami-based exile groups, and its leader, Jorge Mans Canosa, by stressing that the Clinton administration intends to maintain policy toward Fidel Castro.
The State Department's top policy-maker on Latin American affairs thus gave President Clinton's support to the tough anti-Castro line pursued by the foundation and its president, whom many exiles see as a future president of Cuba. It also was an official rebuff to recent efforts by the Castro regime to improve relations with Washington.
sador Watson to do. What was difficult was to secure the support of Mas Canosa and his powerful lobby, which has traditionally supported the Republican Party, for the subtle change that the Clinton administration has introduced in dealing with Cuba.
The change is to encourage humanitarian contacts with the people of Cuba, bypassing as much as possible the government. Instead of isolating the Cuban people, Washington is now encouraging improved communications while maintaining a strict boycott of the government.
We agree with this approach. Both extreme right-wing and extreme left-wing policies have failed to either depose Castro or get him to liberalize one of the last Marxist-Leninist totalitarian regimes in the world. This is a good way to demonstrate to the Cuban people that Castro and his government are their enemies, not Washington and the American people.
THE POST AND COURIER CHARLESTON, S.C
In time, sibling rivalry replaced by brotherly conspiracies, love
I've been bouncing around old sayings in my head trying to think of one that I could philosophize on, and I've stumbled on to a derivative of "Like father like son," this being the very popular "Like brother like brother." This phrase bears special meaning to me because as I've aged, I've realized that my brother, Cary, and I are becoming more and more alike. This should send everyone scurrying out of the country because two like me is two too many—try saying that 20 times.
I never really thought Cary and I would have similar characteristics. We never got along when we were younger, probably because of the six-year age difference, but probably also because I beat the hell out of him when we fought. Also, on a regular basis I blamed him for things he didn't do.
I was 9 years old that year and Cary
COLUMNIST
CHRIS
RONAN
and I shared a room. One night we were being "mischievous" and I did something bad, although I honestly can't remember what it was — probably broke a lamp or something. It must have been pretty heinous, because when Mom came into our room, she had "KILL!" in her eyes. Before she could say a word, I yelled, "Cary did it!" He got the spanking of the century, and while this was happening, I was laughing uncontrollably in the corner — OK, so I was a really
BIG jerk. Somehow, Cary managed to peep out, "But I didn't do it. WAAAAMI!" Well, needless to say, my laughing gave me away. Mom didn’t even spank me, which is almost worse than being spanked. She just left the room with an ice gryle. Imagine she didn’t spank me because of the last time she tried. I think you’ll all agree that there comes an age when spanking a kid who has jeans on is more comical than anything else. I took it as such and had a hearty chuckle when she did it. I think she was offended.
Anyway, like I said, recently Cary and I are looking more and more interchangeable — which is genuinely frightening. He's as sarcastic as me, if not more. He's also the coolest guy at his school and has girls on each arm
— OK, the resemblance only runs so deep. We even share the joy of making fun of our sister. This is a pastime that
goes back to the first days that we could communicate with one another, and we've had many thought-provoking exchanges involving the three of us.
One day, Candice was distraught over breaking up with the love of her life. Cary said, "Jeez Candice, that's all you care about — GUYS." After much thought and looking for just the right words, I contributed "Yeah." Boy, that's the kind of brotherly solidarity you just live for. It just makes it all worthwhile.
Anyway, Cary and I have a lot of years to develop even more common interests, along with further expanding our close relationship. Hope we'll own a hugely successful picate sauce company together some day. Well, we all have dreams, right?
KANSAN STAFF
Chris Ronan is an Overland Park appo-
meal majoring in broadcast journalism.
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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 Kansas must include class and homestown, or faculty or staff position. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be pleased. The Kanan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Student seeks clarity for pregnancy policy
I guess I'd better get ready for class. Let's see. Books, pens, paper, diapers ... wait a minute! Diapers? Yes, diapers. I had my baby on Oct. 2, right in the middle of the semester as most students are thinking about the all-nighter they will have to pull for the mid-term tomorrow.
My mid-term was a 6 lb., 3 oz. boy, Matthew, delivered by Caesarean section after 28 hours of labor. I kept up with my homework and papers while I was recuperating and returned to class, with baby in tow, Oct. 13. I was exhausted. I have missed some of my other classes because I was just too tired or in too much pain, but I'm feeling stronger now and don't plan on missing any more classes this semester. My husband and I will graduate in 1994, and
since we plan to move out of state, we must finish our classes on time.
I was surprised that KU has no policy on pregnant students. In the "real world," job sites have policies governing their pregnant employees including the amount of time that can be taken off, health and pay benefits and their classification as a temporarily-disabled employee. This is the 1990s, and I know this is not the first time KU has encountered a pregnant student.
Since I've been back, most of the people I encounter daily have been supportive and commend me for continuing my education.
As for timing, I tried for 18 years and suffered through four miscarriages to have both of my sons. I don't regret the timing for Matthew one bit.
Marcia Kelley Fredonia senior
Rush wrongly attacked by Kansar columnist
Liberals also must accept responsibility for the use of fear in politics.
it is the liberal construct of hyphenating our nationality that is "Balkanizing" these United States, dividing "ourselves into ever smaller subgroups," and contributing to the breakdown of our national identity.
In his vilification of Rush Limbaugh, Jim Kimmel ("Rush is Wrong", Oct. 29) has managed to demonstrate his gnat-like grasp of conservative opinions. Had his attention span been longer, perhaps he would have seen beyond Rush's delivery and noted his conservative ideals: self-reliance, personal excellence, hard work and sacrifice. Rush provides a much-needed balance in today's liberal-dominated media.
The health-care "Crisis" of today is a classic example. Conservatives do not "ignore" those who do not have adequate health care. Neither are we "unwilling" to reform the present system. What we oppose is a socialized system that projections show will put 600,000 to 3 million out of work, adding up to $300 billion a year to the national debt. This system, without market competition or incentives, will ration care through a huge federal bureaucracy, costing 25 percent of Americans the same, or more, for less coverage.
If you disagree with our opinion — fine. Provide us with thoughtful counter-argument. Do not insult us with your pseudo-intellectual rantings.
David Kaminska
David Kaminska Bronxville, N.Y., graduate student
40
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 11, 1993
5
NAFTA debate doesn't sway House
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The blythehooed Gore-Petro debate on NAFTA had little impact on undecided House members who will vote on the free-trade agreement, the lawmakers said yesterday. With a week to go, supporters said they were 25-30 votes short; opponents said the gap was larger.
WASHINGTON — An imbalance of certain nutrients may accelerate the collapse of the immune system in patients infected with the AIDS virus, scientists said yesterday at the National Institutes of Health.
AIDS study finds that imbalance in nutrients helps speed breakdown of immune system
Backers of the North American Free Trade Agreement crowed that the televised face-off between Vice President Al Gore and Ross Perot had given them momentum.
Studies presented at an institute sponsored conference suggested that after being infected by the AIDS virus, the body slowly loses its ability to process oxygen-free radicals, a naturally occurring molecule that can be highly destructive if not controlled in the bloodstream.
Oxygen-free radicals are normal-
But several undeclared lawmakers said they were more concerned with the trade agreement's expected impact on their districts — or with swinging deals in exchange for their votes — than with Gore and Perot.
The Associated Press
"It's nothing new," Rep. Jay Kim, R-
by neutralized in the body by the so-called antioxidant nutrients, such as a betacarotene and vitamins A, C and E. But the AIDS virus has been found to destroy the body's absorption and use of these nutrients, said Dr. Howard C. Greenspan, chairman of the conference.
Opponents of the trade agreement, who have said they have the 217 House votes they will need to kill the pact, said they detected no defections caused by the debate.
"The virus has some mechanism that shuts down the body's defense against the overproduction of these free radicals," Greenspan said yesterday at a news conference.
An overabundance of oxygen-free radical molecules creates what is called "oxidative stress" in the body, Greenspan said. That has been shown to destroy some of the
key cells of the immune system, which amplifies the destructive effect of the virus, he said.
Calif., said of the debate as he emerged from a morning White House meeting with the pact's chief champion, President Clinton. "I have read NAFTA. I studied it thoroughly."
"This may be a major factor in killing off the immune system," Greenspan said.
With both sides keeping their vote lists secret, it was impossible to know with certainty how many undecided House members there were. Estimates ranged from 30 to 70.
Kim said he told Clinton his main concern was negotiating a prisoner exchange treaty to send criminal illegal aliens back to Mexico. He said he might consider backing NAFTA if Clinton voiced support for such an agreement, which would be popular in his Southern California district.
Lawmakers and aides said in many cases, legislators who had made up their minds were remaining publicly
Oxygen free radicals are naturally created during normal metabolism in the body. The molecules are used by the body to defend against some viruses. But an overabundance of the radicals is destructive of cells. Oxidative stress has been associated with the aging process and with cancer, heart disease, muscular dystrophy and other diseases, said Greenspan.
"Most people, even the ones saying they are undecided, have either made up their minds already or will vote their constituents," said Rep. Dale Kildee, D-Mich., a leading NAFTAfoe.
undecided to avoid recriminations from the side they had abandoned.
They said lawmakers' votes could be influenced by early, positive public opinion polls of debate reaction.
Supporters of the agreement were buoyed by Gore's debate performance defending the pact that would eliminate tariffs and other trade barriers among the United States, Mexico and Canada during the next 15 years.
Event: Meeting November 11th
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JENNIFER MACDONALD-PRESIDENT MELISSA GAAL-VP FOR ADMINISTRATIVE AFFAIRS CARRIE NEINER-VP FOR MEMBERSHIP Judiciary Committee: CHARA DILLON-VP FOR EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS Rachel Rose LESLIE ROBERTSON-VP FOR PHILANTHROPY AND Amy McCoach Holly Heckathorn COMMUNITY SERVICE Keri Kish JENNIFER SCHERZER-VP FOR PUBLIC RELATIONS SARAH BYRAM-VP FOR INTERFRATERNAL RELATIONS
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Crown Cinema
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 11, 1993
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O R E A D
F O R U M
8 6 4 - 9 0 4 0
POLICY: KU faces tough questions
HOW TO USE OREAD FORUM:
1) Call 864-9040 and wait for the tone at the end of the greeting.
2) Record your message with the following information:
**your name** (if you spell it out, that helps us)
your class status and major (if you're a student), or your Job at the University (if you're at a faculty or staff member);
**your phone number (so we can verify your message);**
a concise message (try to keep it less than two minutes). We suggest outlining your ideas on paper first.
3) Hang up immediately when finished.
4) If you prefer, you may respond in a typewritten or printed letter to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer Flint Hall. Clearly mark "Oread Forum" on the letter or envelope.
WHAT WE'LL DO:
1) The Kansan will report the content of Oread Forum discussions in subsequent issues. The Kansan reserves the right to use all, part or none of each recorded message and letter.
2) We will forward all Oread Forum phone messages and letters to the task force on consensual relationships, the faculty and student committee analyzing the policy.
Continued from Page 1.
However, critics of the policy say the honor system is weak, which cripples any attempt at having an effective policy. A professor and a student can have a relationship without anybody knowing the difference.
But a more aggressive enforcement policy creates its own set of problems. If the University took a more active role in looking for violations, then it could intrude on the privacy of its employees and students.
Does the difficulty in enforcing such a policy make it not worth having?
Some say the value of having a policy is that it sets ethical standards for how faculty members should conduct themselves where clear guidelines did not exist before.
If a faculty member is found to have violated the policy by not removing the conflict of interest from a romantic or sexual relationship with a student, the policy states a faculty member could be dismissed from all teaching duties. Other penalties range from a written warning to suspension without pay.
Getting the word out
These are just some of the issues
What'snext
KANSAN
The task force on consensual relationships must turn in its recommendations to the Senate Executive Committee by Nov. 24.
After SenEx has reviewed them, the recommendations will be sent through University Governance to the administration for authorization.
that have to be resolved before a clear policy is established.
Even after the policy is revised and authorized by Chancellor Gene Budig, the University still has to find a way to inform everyone of the new standards.
Few people read policies, Wilcox says, so the University may have to find alternative ways to publicize the policy, such as explaining the policy in the undergraduate catalog or discussing the issue at orientation seminars.
It's just another challenge for Wilcox's committee, the administration and the University community to resolve in order to create an effective relationships policy.
The African Affairs Student Association Presents AN EVENING FOR CULTURAL EXCHANGE
Now a full service bar after 57 years of downtown tradition
1031 Massachusetts, Downtown
FEATURING
TRADITIONALAFRICANDRUMMING & TRADITIONALAFRICANDANCERS
A ONE ACTPLAY: "JEWEL OF THE NILE" POETRY&DINNER
Africa
DATE: NOVEMBER 13,1993
(ECM) 12th & Oread
PLACE: ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES
TICKETS: STUDENTS-$6.00
TIME: 6:00 p.m. (SEMIFORMALEVENT)
TICKETS: STUDENTS $6.00
NON-STUDENTS.$8.00 (ADVANCE PURCHASE)
$10.00 (DOOR)
CHILDREN-$3.00 (12 AND UNDER)
TICKETS ARE AVAILABLE ATSUA
AFRICANAFFAIRS STUDENTASSOCIATION
BLACKSTUDENT
UNION
AFRICAN AND
AFRICAN-AMERICAN
STUDIES DEPT.
STUDENT
SENATE
ANTHROPOLOGY DEPARTMENT
ENGLISH
DEPARTMENT
Dr. Cardenas-Ramirez is a member of the U.S. Civil Rights Commission and the Director of the Southwest Center on Values, Achievement and Community at Southwest Texas State University's Lyndon B. Johnson Institute for the Improvement of Teaching and Learning.
C. E. H.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
The Department of Student Housing Blueprints Student Leadership Conference The School of Education Office of Minority Affairs Hispanic American Leadership Organization The Division of Student Affairs TheMACURH Conference
sponsored by:
Thursday,November11,1993 Big8 Room, Kansas Union 8pm, Admission Free
BEYOND DIVERSITY BUILDING COMMUNITY ON MULTICULTURAL CAMPUSES
DR.BLANDINA CARDENAS- RAMIREZ
Boots For Men & Women
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Open evenings M-F till 8:30 Open Sunday 12:00 to 5:00
One step ahead since 1958
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NOAM CHOMSKY
MANUFACTURING CONSENT MEDIA MANIPULATION IN MODERN AMERICA
KANSAS UNION BALLROOM FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12th 8:00 PM
Limited seating available
for more information call:
864-3477
STUDENT
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SENATE
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
MARATHON CITY
MILWAUKEE
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITY
SUA
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NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 11, 1993
7
U.S. soldier opens fire on Somalis, shoots two
The Associated Press
MOGADISHU, Somalia — An American soldier shot two Somalis who were loading a grenade launcher and a machine gun into a van yesterday, military officials said. Somali witnesses said two were killed and four wounded.
The incident came a day before 400 Marines were to make an amphibious landing to conduct four days of training maneuvers with Moroccan soldiers and hold medical and dental clinics for Somalis.
The landing will occur 50 miles south of Mogadishu to avoid any confrontation with Mohamed Farrah Aidid, who controls the southern half of the capital. The landing originally had been planned for Mogadishu and was to have involved more of the 1,950 Marines offshore.
U. S. officials, wary of another showdown with Aidid, already have delayed the planned return of American troops to the lawless streets of Mogadishu, where they are to work with United Nations peacekeepers. Aidid said Sunday that the "massive"
An American sharpshooter atop a former soap factory spotted two men loading a rocket-propelled grenade launcher and a heavy machine gun into a van, said U.S. Army Col. Steve Rausch. The Somalis did not shoot.
denlovment "may be provocative."
Yesterday's shootings occurred near the Kilometer Four traffic circle shortly before 5 p.m.
Under the rules of engagement in Mogadishu, the soldier was allowed to fire because of the heavy weaponry involved, according to Rausch, the American military representative in Mogadishu.
U. S. reinforcements poured into Somalia after an Oct. 3 firefire that killed 18 Americans. Their main mission is to protect U.S. and foreign troops, but officials have said they also are charged with keeping roads open and outting pressure on bandits.
Omar Haji Dhafe, who lives near the area, said he saw an American fire a gun mounted with a telescopic sight. He said two people were killed and four wounded, two seriously, although he said two of the casualties may have been from a clan dispute.
9 Americans die on bus tour in England
FAVERSHAM, England — A bus carrying American tourists to Canterbury Cathedral careened off a rain-slicked highway yesterday, killing 10 people and injuring more than 30 when it plunged down an embankment.
The Associated Press
Nine Americans and the British driver were killed, the State Department said in Washington. Two sisters from Louisiana and Texas were among the dead.
The coach carrying 46 people clipped the back of a van on the M2 highway in Kent County in southeastern England, police said. It spun around, plunged through a crash barrier and landed on its side 20 feet down the embankment.
The accident happened at about 9:40 a.m., some two hours after the coach, operated by the British company Travellers International, left London with 42 Americans, two Canadians, the driver and a British guide on board.
Take Control of Your FUTURE Come to the Fair!
1993 SOCIAL WORK CAREER FAIR
Learn about a career and educational opportunities in Social Work. Check your fit for a life in human services.
Friday, November 12,
1:30 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom
For All Your Glass Needs
car windshields, desk top glass,
picture frame glass.
730 New Jersey 843-4416
fifi's
925 IOWA
841-7226
Lunch & Dinner
Great Food
LIVE AT BENCHWARMER'S 1601 W.23rd St.-
WATERDOG RECORDING ARTISTS FRANK ALLISON and the ODD SOX It's Wizarde of Warped PoP Are In Your Neighborhood!
THIS THURSDAY
"Allison is a long-healed rock矿师who has an atoner savoir-faire onstage. He doesn't mind being called Ann Arbor's slacker rock star. The music, especially live, is mostly danceable pop with collage-rock, country, yodeling and Ara
Ann Arbor News
THEIR THIRD ALBUM, "PIG OUT," IS AVAILABLE ON WATERDOG RECORDS.
820-822 Mass.
841-0100
Red Lyon Tavern
944 Mass.
832-8228
NATURAL WAY
Natural Fiber Clothing
SALE PAPERBACK BOOKS
97¢ each
Selected titles only Now Thru Nov.17th
家
ayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Road·843-3826
Mon-Thur 8:00-7:00●Fri 8:00-5:00●Sat 9:00-5:00●Sun 12:00-4:00
PACINO
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UNIVERSAL PRODUCTIONS INC. BREAKDOWN ACADEMIC FILM PRESENTED BY
1993-1994 H.O.P.E.Award
The H.OP.E Award stands for Honorary Outstanding Progressive Educator and is awarded each year to an educator by the Senior class.
Nominations will be taken on Thursday and Friday from 10:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.at Wescoe Beach.
B.O.C.O.
The Board of Class Officers would like to thank you for taking time to recognize KU's outstanding educators.
KU's outstanding educators.
8
Thursday, November 11. 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Stressed students get worry warts
By Liz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
Warts are ugly, annoying and a source of embarrassment for many students.
That's why each semester about 350 KU students afflicted with warts seek relief at Watkins Memorial Health Center's wart clinic. The clinic is open every Wednesday and Thursday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. and has been treating students for free since 1987.
Any student may check in at Watkins and go directly to the clinic for treatment. Before the clinic opened, students waited in the lobby with others for the next available physician.
Warts are a virus commonly found in college students, said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins. Warts usually are contracted when someone with a break in the skin comes into contact with the virus. The body does not recognize the virus as foreign, thus allowing the wart to grow.
Students who put stress on their immune systems by not getting enough sleep, eating poorly and consuming a lot of alcohol are more susceptible to warts. Yockey said.
Warts usually are on a person's hands or feet and painless. The social stigma attached to warts often is more painful than the warts themselves.
"They're just a social embarrassment and nuisance." Yockey said.
The appearance of warts often causes students to want to hide them.
Jody Woods, Watkins director of nurses, said, "Students will do anything in the world to get rid of warts. They come in and have cut them off with every size nail clipper in the world."
Woods said that students also had used scissors, razor blades and pocket knives to remove their warts. One student went so far as to hook up a needle to a nine-volt battery to rid himself of the pesky growths.
A former KU student nicked a wart on her ankle while shaving and continued to shave, which resulted in 300 warts covering her leg. Yockey said.
Woods said that slicing, pinching, cutting and picking at warts only spread them.
Vockey said that warts could be removed in a variety of ways but that the most common and successful method involved freezing the wart
War on warts
Warts are viruses that grow beneath the skin. The body does not reject them as foreign and allows them to grow.
virus blood vessel new wart forming
Source: Kansan staff reports
They spread when blood
injuries or ureas is
spread to other
openings in the skin.
John Paul Fogel/KANSAN
with a brass rod dipped in liquid nitrogen. Other methods include applying a glue-like acid or acid tape, injecting the wart with irritating agents, removing the wart through surgery and burning the wart with an electric current, he said.
The purpose of such treatments is to decrease the viral count of the wart until the immune system kills it.
Factors such as stress may prevent warts from disappearing. A student who had warts near her fingernails went to the wart clinic for a year, and not until 10 days after graduation did the warts finally disappear, Yockey said.
Overdue books and unpaid bills return to haunt KU students during enrollment
By Brian James
Kansan staff writer
Students who have holds placed on their enrollments may have to dig deep into their wallets to clear their records.
Unpaid library fines account for holds on many students' enrollments and grades, said library and enrollment officials.
Gary Samuelson, fines and circulation director for Watson Library, said many students procrastinated paying overdue book fines that had been assessed earlier in the semester.
"It picks up during this time because students realize they might have a fine that is not getting any smaller," he said. "Or they may put it off until they have to enroll or pay fees. That's when they are really shocked to see a huge fine."
Kathe Shinham, director of the
comptrollers office, said an increasing number of students now are paying their bills.
"I suppose they think now is a good time to clean up their bills and get things straightened out," Shimhan said.
Holds prevent students from enrolling and receiving grades. Unpaid parking tickets, housing bills and health bills from Watkins Memorial Health Center also can cause holds.
Samuelson said that the library made a list of lost and stolen books and that about 25 titles appeared on it every week.
Samuelson said the phrase "I forgot I had them" was the most common excuse students gave for returning their books late. Lost or stolen books often turn up years later, he said.
"People might find some books at a garage sale or flea markets, see
the university name on them and return them to us," he said.
He said some fines have gone unpaid for years.
"I wouldn't doubt if there were some from 1977 or earlier," he said.
In the last fiscal year, University libraries collected $87,588 in fines from overdue, lost or stolen books.
Mary Hawkins, assistant dean of libraries, said that if a fine was not paid in 30 days, a $6 set rate was assessed for each overdue item.
After 60 days, the overdue book is declared lost, and $15 plus the cost of the book is assessed.
Most materials placed on reserve and periodicals carry a $10 maximum fine.
Hawkins said students or faculty who had been assessed fines could mail the bill or come to the library and pay it. After 60 days, the library turns over all unpaid bills to the comptrollers office.
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people
Athletes under pressure students under scrutiny
The life of student athletes
LARS
Kansan file photo
A KU football coach yells at team members during a practice several years ago. Football players and other athletes are not only under intense pressure to win, but also are asked to maintain a 2.15 GPA and be a role model for other students.
athletic performance academic worries career hopes
By Sara Bennett Kansan staff writer
KU fans rushing headlong into the annual basketball frenzy may forget that the student athletes they admire so much are just that — students.
Student athletes face pressures and choices that their nonathletic peers cannot imagine. They are under constant pressure to win. They are expected to be role models. They have to keep up their grades while maintaining grueling schedules.
Yet student athletes often are expected to be above the failings of their fellow students.
"Athletics represents the ideals of good character, hard work, fair play and integrity, so athletes tend to be held higher than the rest of society, and I'm not sure it's fair," said Dan Gerdes, staff consultant at the Peak Performance Clinic at Robinson Gymnasium. The clinic, which opened this year, offers counseling and career development services to student athletes.
"Athletes are still people who function in society." he said.
ATHLETE
THE STUDENT IN STUDENT STUDENT
"Sometimes we have games on the road, and we'll get home at 2 or 3 in the morning," he said. "Then you'll have an 8 o'clock class and afternoon practice."
Stereotypical student athlete could be considered a contradiction in terms. Richard Scott, Little Rock, Ark., senior, and starting forward on the basketball team, said 20 hours a week of practice, road games and appearances often leave little time for classes.
But the time management required of athletes may keep them from becoming stereotypical "dumb locks."
Richard Lapchick, author of the 1989 book, "The Rules of the Game, Ethics in College Sports," said the typical student athlete performs academically as well as, or better than his or her fellow students.
Greg Gurley, Leawood senior and a reserve guard on the basketball team, said his busy schedule gave him the discipline to do well in school. Gurley, a business administration major, was on the 1993 Big Eight Academic Honor Roll.
"I get more accomplished by having less time than if I got out of class and had nothing to do," he said. "Having a structured life is helpful."
Lapchick said athletes in sports like basketball and football are most likely to do poorly in school because dreams of professional glory often take precedence over academics.
"Millions of America's youth surrender their opportunities for meaningful education because they have bought into the dream that they will beat the 10,000-to-1 odds of becoming pros," he said. "Too many waste their shots at education by pursuing eligibility and not educational skills."
William Arnold, assistant professor of sociology, said athletic scholarships often give students from lower socioeconomic classes educational opportunities that they might not be able to afford otherwise. But those athletes sometimes are less prepared for college than their peers. If they don't take responsibility for getting good educations, they will be unable to play professionally and risk ending up where they started, he said.
"If they're not good enough for pro sports, they're having to look for jobs, and some haven't really taken care of their job-related skills." Arnold said.
In "Rules of the Game," Charles Farrell, 1869 president of Sports Perspective International,
said that these issues came to light in the 1960s and 1970s when the exposure and money offered by television stations hurtled football and basketball into the spotlight. Many schools allowed athletes to cheat to remain eligible, he said.
In 1981, the NCAA adopted rules requiring athletes to make progress toward degrees and tightening requirements for academic eligibility. In 1983, it adopted Proposition 48, which required minimum graduation requirements of high school athletes. The NCAA also forced its member institutions to be more accountable for their sports programs.
Two years ago, the NCAA passed a rule requiring athletes to meet the minimum graduation GPA of 90 percent of its member institutions by their third year of school. That average is around 1.8.
At KU, athletes are asked to maintain a 2.5 GPA, said Paul Buskirk, assistant athletic director for Student Support Services. Buskirk said most athletes meet this standard, and academic assistance is available to those who have trouble.
Men's basketball coach Roy Williams said he expected his players to be as committed to success in the classroom as they were to success on the court.
"When I go to homes to recruit, I tell them I'm concerned with two factors," he said. "The first is academics, the second is basketball."
THE WHITE-HOT SPOTLIGHT
Whether paid or not, when an athlete steps onto a court, track or playing field, he or she steps into the spotlight.
"For an 18 to 20-year-old, that can be a lot of pressure." Buskirk said.
"You can't do some of the things other students can do," he said. "We can't be seen drinking, so most players prefer to stay at home and not go out."
Being in the spotlight means extra responsibility. Students athletes often find they are expected to be role models whether or not they feel qualified for the job.
Scott said that athletes often don't have the freedom that other students have.
"It's not all glamorous and being on TV," Gurley said. "I'm in a fraternity, and I'd like to just go to parties and sit around and talk to my friends
The student athlete's performance also is under constant scrutiny.
10.
The pressure to win can be a healthy part of sports, driving athletes to push their limits. But, taken too far, that pressure can lead to problems like drug abuse and eating disorders.
without everyone and 'their brother coming up to me and asking, 'Why did you lose tonight?'
From the perspective of the Peak Performance Clinic, Gerdes said the key to dealing with competitive pressure was helping athletes cultivate identities separate from sports.
"The athletes that have a clear sense of who they are will probably be able to withstand those pressures," he said. "But if my performance equals my worth as a person, I'll also do everything I can to maximize my performance whether it's ethical, legal or whatever."
Former KU basketball player Scooter Barry is overcome with shyness during Media Day activities in October, 1987.
Gerdes said the Peak Performance Clinic helped athletes explore avenues for success other than sports.
"The particularly gifted athletes, the superstars, have been so reinforced that sometimes their identities get wrapped up in sports," he said. "It's very difficult to take advantage of other opportunities. We try to show them other things they may also be good at. We create greater degrees of freedom so they can grow in other areas."
BIG EIGHT BEHIND BARS?
Occasionally, athletes err and get in trouble with the law. While such cases are far from the norm, the media has made it seem that the Big Eight is plagued by athletes gone bad. Kenny Drayton, a former KU football player who was convicted of 13 crimes including sexual assault, rape, armed robbery and sodomy, caused alarm on campus when it was announced he had escaped from prison and might be headed toward Kansas. Former KU basketball players Terry Brown and Sean Tunstall have had brushes with the law. Athletes from other Big Eight schools like Missouri and Colorado also have been in trouble.
Do athletic pressures make some athletes more susceptible to crime, or is more attention given to those who get in trouble?
"As a society, we seem to revere athletes or people who participate in athletics, be it professional or collegiate," Buskirk said. "When something happens in those people's lives, it gets more publicity and gives the impression that these events are more frequent. Personally, I don't believe there is something inherent in athletics which causes people to get in trouble with the law."
MAKING EVERY EFFORT
Buskirk said coping and adjustment skills are key to dealing with the pressures of college athletics. To help student athletes develop those skills, Student Support Services started a program called CHAMPS, A Life Skills Program. CHAMPS stands for Challenge Athletes' Minds to Promote Success. The program is held in seven weekly sessions at the beginning of the school year. New athletes are divided into discussion sections led by fifth-year student athletes who address issues ranging from sportsmanship to drug abuse to personal relationships.
Although student athletes face challenges that are different from those faced by nonathletic students, they are still students. Like other students, they are responsible for handling the pressures of their chosen academic fields.
"KU is a course in life in four years that can take on many pictures," Gerdes said. "We try to teach self-responsibility without holding their hands, but some students grasp that self-responsibility better than others. When it comes to making appropriate choices, choices and decision making are the athletes' responsibility."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NOVEMBER 11, 1993 PAGE 9
KULife
People and places at the University of Kansas.
calendar
NIGHTLIFE
Benchwarmers Sports Bar & Grill
1601 W. 23rd St.
Frank Allison and The Odd Socks, 9 p.m.
Thursday
Left Over Salmon, 9 p.m. Friday
S.T.I., 9 p.m. Saturday
12th and Oread
Extrovert, 9 p.m. Thursday
Crap Supper, 9 p.m. Friday
Deb Girnius and The Merge, 9 p.m. Saturday
The Crossing
Dos Hombres
803 Massachusetts St.
Full Moon Cafe
814 New Hampshire
Eight Men Out, 10 p.m. Friday, free
BU3 Massachusetts St.
Tim Cross, 8:30 p.m. Thursday, free
Daryl Lea, 8:30 p.m. Friday, free
Las Cuatro, 8:30 p.m. Saturday, free
The Jazzhaus
926 1/2 Massachusetts St.
Dah-Veed, 9:30 p.m. Thursday
Dah-Veed 9:30 p.m. Friday
5-8, 9:30 p.m. Saturday
Rick's Neighborhood Bar & Grill
623 Vermont
Chubby Smith and His Orchestra, 9:30 p.m.
Saturday, $3
The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire
137 New Hampshire
Rev. Horton Heat with Hell Cat Trio, 10 p.m.
Thursday, $6—advance tickets
Young Johnny Carson Story with Room Full of
Walters, 10 p.m Friday, $4
Billy Goat with John Brown's Underground, 10
p.m. Saturday, $6
Granada Theater
1020 Massachusetts St.
1020 Massachusetts St.
Dance Night, 8 p.m. every Thursday
Lawrence DJ Jam, 8 p.m. Saturday
'80s Night with D.J., 8 p.m. every Wednesday
Hockenbury's Tavern
1016 Massachusetts St.
Water from Boulder, Colo., 10 p.m. Thursday
$3
The Presidents, 10 p.m. Friday, $4
New Riddim, 10 p.m. Saturday, $4
Acoustic open mike, 10 p.m. Sunday, free
Flint Gray, 10 p.m. Wednesday, $3
Free State Brewing Co.
636 Massachusetts St.
Free State Jazz Quartet, 7-9 p.m. Friday, free
See CALENDAR,Page 14
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SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 11, 1993
11
White Sox player named 8th unanimous AL MVP
By Ronald Blum The Associated Press
NEW YORK — This time, Frank Thomas was pleasantly surprised.
Slighted in the past in the Most Valuable Player voting, the Chicago White Sox first baseman yesterday became the eighth unanimous pick since the AL MVP award was first given in 1931.
"I was really shocked I got all 28 votes," he said. "There was no better way to win it."
Thomas hit .317, was second in the major leagues with 128 RBI and set a club record with 41 homers. He easily beat out Toronto's Paul Molitor, who received 13 second-place votes from the Baseball Writers Association of America.
other unanimous winners of the AL MVP were Hank Greenberg, (1935), Al Rosen (1959), Mickey Mantle (1956), Frank Robinson (1966), Denny McLain (1968), Reggie Jackson (1973) and Jose Canseco (1988).
Thomas said the White Sox had to concentrate on reaching the next level. Toronto defeated Chicago in six games in the AL playoffs.
"This was the longest day of my life," Thomas said of the award. "There was a lot of anticipation going on, and when the call finally came, I got it on the first ring."
Kansas loses out to Nebraska
"We might need to go out and get another hitting threat," said Thomas, who last month agreed to a $29 million, four-year contract extension that runs through 1998.
Thomas' victory gave the White Sox three of the four AL postseason awards. Jack McDowell won the Cy Young Award and Gene Lamont was voted Manager of the Year. The last team to have three different people capture those awards in the same season was the National League's Atlanta in 1991, when Terry Pendleton was the MVP, Tom Glavine was the Cy Young winner and Bobby Cox was the top manager.
But game three victory helps volleyball team
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
0-50.
That number, Kansas' series record against Nebraska, stood between the Jayhawks and a volleyball victory last night. Kansas coach Frankie Albitz said the Jayhawks were playing against the Nebraska players and the Cornhusker mystique.
Nebraska defeated Kansas 15-6, 15-9, 10-15, 15-5 at Allen Field House. Although the Jayhawks are now 0-51 in this series, the game they did win in the match was a milestone. It was the first time Kansas had won a game against the Cornhuskers since a five-game defeat Nov. 23, 1990.
"Tradition is a lot of it," Albitz said. "It's difficult to beat a team you have never beat before. It was a great match. We made some errors that might have hurt us, but we were mentally into it."
The defeat dropped Kansas to 15-11 overall and 4-6 in the Big Eight, while No. 9 Nebraska improved to 19-4 and 7-2 in the conference. Kansas is now fifth in the conference behind Iowa State. Only four teams advance to the postseason conference tournament, and Kansas has only two matches left.
The Jayhawks won another game, keeping their tournament hopes alive. If two teams are tied at sea.
Kansas outside hitter Shelby Lard said that the crowd in game three—the game Kansas did win—was possibly the loudest it had been all season. Lard ended the match with 7 kills and 11 digs. She said that freshman outside hitter Katie Walsh was a key in game three.
son's end, as Kansas and Iowa State may be, the conference game-winning percentage will be the deciding factor for qualification.
"The momentum was going for us," Lard said. "I was impressed with the crowd. We really needed it. Katie played great and her intensity flowed through the whole team."
Kansas scored first in each game of the match, but the Jayhawks were tangled with the Cornhuskers throughout game three.
At 8-8 in the third game, senior middle blocker Cyndee Kanabel dug a Nebraska spike and passed to sophomore settler Lesli Steinert. Walsh took Steinert's set and hit it across the court into the back corner for a point. Kansas then scored three unanswered points and won the game 15-10 as Walsh contributed three kills and two service aces to the effort. She had 15 kills and 3 aces for the match, both team-highs.
Nebraska coach Terry Pettit said that Nebraska did not play well in game three.
"I think when you're playing on someone's home turf, there's potential for it to be a close match," he said. "I was frustrated with my team's performance in game three. But we came back in game four and raised our level of play."
2
Sophomore settler Leesl Steinert, left, and senior middle blocker Cindyne Kanabel stretch to block a Nebraska spike. Nebraska defeated Kansas 3-1 last night in Allen Field House.
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
Cross country needs big finish at district meet
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said that this weekend's meet was the last chance for his team to qualify for the NCAA Championships on Nov. 22.
Each of the eight districts get an allotment of teams that automatically qualify for the NCAA Championships. The larger districts get three to four automatic bids. Kansas competes in District V, which gets two men's and two women's automatic team bids.
The Kansas cross country season comes full circle this weekend when the Jayhawks travel to Southern Illinois to compete in the District V Championships in Carbondale, Ill. The Jayhawk's first meet of the season was at Southern Illinois, where the women's team won and the men's team finished second out of three teams.
"We've got to be one of the top two teams to go on from districts," Schwartz said. "There is absolutely no doubt in my mind about that."
"We know that we have to be in the top two," Saul said. "We still haven't shown our true ability."
District V also has six at-large bids for women and three for men. At large bids from district competition are determined by five criteria. One criterion is a team's head-to-head record against other district teams.
The importance of this meet is well known by senior Julia Saul. She said the team knew what it needed to do.
Schwartz said that a poor performance at its Oct. 17 meet at Michigan against some of the top teams in the district hurt the Jayhawks' chances of obtaining an at-large bid. The women's team came in a disappointing ninth out of 10 teams. The men's team finished 12th out of 13 teams.
She said that a poor effort in the Big Eight Championships on Nov. 13 helped give the team added motivation for this weekend's meet. Six of the eight Big Eight teams will compete against the Jayhawks in the district competition. Colorado competes in another district.
"We don't want those teams to beat us again," Saul said.
We don't want those teams to beat us again, said Saul.
The district meet also serves as motivation for the men's team, which came in last at the Big Eight meet. Senior Bobby Palmer said that defeating Missouri and Kansas State was one of the team's goals.
Schwartz said that the season had been a learning experience for the men's team. He said that the team was not strong enough to battle for the district championship this year.
"On the men's side, we're not strong enough to have that as a goal," Schwartz said.
Palmer said that the team knew its chances of getting an NCAA berth were slim but that knowing that took some of the pressure off.
"We've improved a lot during the season," Palmer said. "We want to put K-State and Missouri back in their place—behind us."
K.U.
X.C.
Kansas cross country runner Amy Cook warms up before practice. On Saturday, the cross country team will participate in the District V Championship in Carbondale, Ill.
Jayhawks ready to face Buffaloes
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas could be emotionally spent this weekend in Colorado after last week's tough defeat against Nebraska.
But senior free safety Clint Bowen said he would be surprised if the Jayhawks suffered a letdown in performance and emotion against the Buffaloes.
"You could tell in Monday's practice and Tuesday's practice that everyone was ready to get back on the field," Bowen said. "We really have a good feeling about the way we played against Nebraska. It gave everyone a feeling that we are a better team than even we gave ourselves credit for."
For Kansas coach Glen Mason, the pain of the 21-20 defeat to the Cornhuskers went away a few hours after the game ended.
"I was ready to go late Saturday night," Mason said at his weekly press conference yesterday. "The players took a little longer to come back emotionally than I did. But they practiced well ... and I think we're ready to go."
Mason said after the Nebraska game that he could not have been any prouder of the players and coaches after a game than he was at that time. However, he said that even though his team played well last week against Nebraska, that performance did not
guarantee a good performance this week against Colorado.
"I don't think what you do one week has much effect on what you do the next week at all," he said. "Just because you played well one week you can't assume you'll play well the next. Hopefully we'll be able to regroup and play well this week."
The Jayhawks have not had much luck this season. Injuries have forced Mason to start 42 different players this season, the most in his six seasons at Kansas. The Jayhawks have also lost two games by a single point
— last week's game against Nebraska and a 10-9 defeat against K-State Oct. 9.
Bowen said those little points had made the difference in Kansas' 4-6 record.
But, Bowen added, the close defeat against Nebraska gave the team confidence preparing for Colorado.
"It makes you wonder where we would be if we had not lost those close games," Bowen said. "A few breaks here and there and we could have been more successful."
"We've never felt like we're in awe of any team we've played, that's never been the case," Bowen said. "We're confident that we can play with anybody in our conference, and we're confident we can play with Colorado."
WHO IS NO.1 IN COLLEGE BASKETBALL?
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN READERS' POLL
O
Tell us what team you think is the top team in college basketball and why.
Here in what to do:
In 200 words or less — printed or typed — answer all or some of the following:
— What is the top team and why?
— What team is overrated and why?
What team is overrated and why?
What team will surprise everyone
and why?
— what team will surprise everyone and why?
Include your name, class, hometown
Submit the letter by 5 p.m. Friday to
the Kansan business office, 119 Staufer-Flint Hall, or the Kansan newsroom,
111 Staufer-Flint.
We will publish the letters in the Kansan's Nov. 17 Kansas Basketball Preview.
Space restrictions may prevent some letters from being published.
"THRIFTY THURSDAY!" SAVE BIG BUCKS!
From Your Friends at Pyramid Pizza (of course!)
Fast & Friendly Delivery (limited area)
and phone number (so we can verify your letter).
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806 Massachusetts
featuring I.a. Eyeworks
Hockenbury Tavern 1016 Massachusetts
Thurs.-Water (Funk)
Jayhawk Bookstore
"Your Book Professionals" At the top of Nassim Hill
Hrs: 8-7 M-Th, 5-6 Fri, 9-5 Sat, 12-4-Sun.
Fri..The Presidents (World Rhythms)
Sat.-Hell Cat Trio
865-4055
ARTS AND CRAFTS BAZAAR
Applications now Available For Students and Non-Students To Sell Handmade Arts and Crafts Apply at SUA Office. Level 4. Kansas Union Applications Due Friday, Nov. 12 by 5 PM For More Info.Call SUA at 864-3477 Bazaar Will Be Held Nov. 29-Dec. 3 9 AM to 5PM Kansas Union Gallery. Level 4. Kansas Union
SUA
12
Thursday, November 11, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
HARBOUR LIGHTS 1051 Massachusetts
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APARTMENTS • TOWNHOMES • RESIDENCES
We also have 2 & 3 bedrooms for 2nd semester & are close to campus.
So...how about those roommates?! Like 'em but can't live with them?
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
is now accepting applications from students with previous Kansan experience for positions of Business Manager and Editor for the Spring 1994 semester.
Applications may be obtained at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall,
Applications may be obtained at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. Return the completed application and a current resume to the Dean's office, 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall, by noon on the appropriate deadline indicated below.
Editor Schedule
Business Manager Schedule
- Friday, Nov. 12:
Application deadline, Interview sign-up
*Monday, Nov. 15:
Application deadline, Interview sign-up
*Monday, Nov.15:
Selection Interviews, 3:30 p.m.
*Tuesday, Nov. 16:
Selection interviews ,3:30 p.m.
Interviews will take place in the conference room, 120 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Applicants will be notified of the successful candidate after everyone has interviewed. Any information you wish to be considered in your interview may be attached to your application.
Real World experience
Kosar signs with Cowboys as backup to injured Aikman
The Associated Press
IRVING, Texas — Jimmy Johnson got one of his "Miami boys" as insurance for another Dallas Cowboys' Super Bowl run. He signed Bernie Kosar to a one-year deal yesterday as a backup in injured Troy Allman.
Kosar, who was cut unexpectedly on Monday by the Cleveland Brown's made it clear he's not after Alkman's job and just wants a chance at a Super Bowl ring. Three times he led the Brown's to the AFC title game, only to lose.
"There's no question Troy Aikman is one of the most brilliant quarterbacks in the league, and no way am I here competing for his job," Kosar said. "The shot at a Super Bowl ring was a big factor why I came to Dallas."
Miami, Kansas City and Philadelph
phia tried to woo Kosar, but his loyalty to Johnson, his old college coach, was too strong.
Aikman, who is trying to overcome a pulled left hamstring, took the arrival of the veteran Kosar in stride and said he did not see him as a threat.
"I think it's good," Alkman said. "I think it's good for the team."
The Cowboys signed Kosar to a one-eye deal in the $500,000 range. Kosar got a check for more than $2 million when he was paid off by the Browns.
"We jumped at a chance to get someone the quality of Bernie," said Cowboy owner Jerry Jones. "To have him on this team is a tremendous luxury."
Kosar immediately checked out a uniform with the No. 18 (punter John Jett has No. 19) and was on the field for the afternoon practice.
Johnson said he would decide Sur-
day 30 minutes before kickoff against the Phoenix Cardinals whether to start Aikman, Jason Garrett or Kosar.
Dallas players were happy to see Kosar.
The Cowboys released backup Hugh Millen to make room for Kosar, who will become a free agent after the season. Millen had not played in a game this year.
Aikman pulled a hamstring Sunday in the third quarter of Dallas' 31-9 victory against the New York Giants that propelled the Cowboys into sole possession of first place in the NFC East with a 6-2 record.
Wide receiver Michael Irvin, who played with Kosar at Miami, said, "He can play the game. It's nice to have someone like Bernie. Coach Johnson will do anything it takes to win another ballgame."
'Fridge' to chill Eagles' foes
The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA — The Philadelphia Eagles claimed tackle William "Refrigerator" Perry yesterday in an effort to bolster their leaky run defense.
The Chicago Bears waived the 335-pound lineman Tuesday after nine years with the team. He was fourth among active Bears with 456 tackles, including eight this year. He trailed only Richard Dent in sacks with 28%. He has had none this year.
Eagles coach Rich Kotte said Perry would play Sunday against the Miami
Dolphins when the 4-4 Eagles attempt to snap a four-game losing streak.
The Eagles, who have given up more rushing yardage in eight games this season than they did in all of the 1990 and '91 seasons, have been stung for 826 yards in the last four games.
Perry, who on occasion has played fullback in short-yard goal-line situations, was selected by the Bears on the first round of the 1985 NFL draft. He said from Chicago that he didn't know why he wasn't playing with the Bears
and on special teams. The Eagles are giving me a chance to prove myself again."
"They didn't explain nothing to me," Perry said. "My role was as a backup
He said he was familiar with the Eagles' problems at tackle.
"We played them this year, and I was looking across the field, and I said, 'Boy, if I had a chance to come in there, things would be looking up for me. Now, I got my chance," he said.
Perry said a change of scenery might help him
"It will boost me tremendously, get me all fired up about playing all over again," he said.
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PLUS the KapCast—a short test of your LSAT skills that gives you a taste of the LSAT question types, with a thorough computer analysis of your results.
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Kaplan's test exports reveal:
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 11, 1993
Optical Dispensary VISIONS 841-7421
100s
Announcements
108 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
120 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
Classified Directory
20ths Employment
Help Wanted
Professional Services
Typing Services
Classified Policy
10
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates race, sex, age, color, creed, ethnicity 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 which requires, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to such preference, limitation or discrimination.
100s Announcements
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are paid.
110 Bus. Personals
Revolutionary Alpha Hydroxy Acid skin treatment system proven to reduce lines, repainment and wrinkles.
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-6pm
Saturday 8am-3pm
Sunday 11am-1am
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
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
Hoops, Pendants & more!
For Guys and Gals
292 Master Downstown
928 Mass, Downtown
Call Today!
A
for Thanksgiving and Christmas AIRLINE TICKETS Don't Wait
We'll find the lowest fares and best schedules.
Maupintour
400s Real Estate
408 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
On Campus Location In the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
749-0700
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY PRESENTS ALEXIS
JANUARY 2, 1994 - 6 EIGHTS 7 AM
120 Announcements
300s
Merchandise
CHRISTMAS SKI BREAKS
JANUARY 2-16, 1994 • 5, 6 or 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT $199
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
TELLURIDE
LAST CHANCE!
INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
JOAN
865 - 5611
308 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
346 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358
LAST CHANCE!
Sinclair
1. 800·SUNCHASE
*SPRING BREAK*
Early Booking Special
Discounts at Hotels
LOWEST PRICES GUARANTEED!
Joan at 865-6611
Found: The best pizza buffet in Lawrence. Located at Marzell 106 Iowa. £2.99. buffet Mon.-Sun.
FREE MONEY
Applicant Information
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Available Scholarship Services
Call for Info.
GreERs & CLUB
RAISE UP TO $1,000 in JUST ONE WEEK. For your fraternity, sorority, & club. Plus $1,000 for yourself! And a Free T-SHIRT just for calling. 1-800-933-0528, ext. 75.
130 Entertainment
Free Party Room Available at Johnny's Tavern/
U/Up & Under. Call #8-037-097 for details.
140 Lost & Found
Found: set of keys near 15th & Engel. call 864+1212.
Men and Women
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
*** BUS DRIVERS ***
The Lawrence Bus Company is accepting applications for part time bus drivers. Morning and afternoon shifts available. Must be 21 with clean driving record. Call 842-0544.
AA Cruise & Travel jobs. Earn $2500/mo. + travel the world free! (Caribbean, Europe, Hawaii, Asia!) Cruise Lines now hiring for busy holiday, employment. Call (919) 929-3880.提取 employment. Call (919) 929-3880.
AMIGOS
AMIGOS Supervisor/Assist Mer
Supervisor now - Manager later! Learn the business from the ground up and advance according to your goals. You will learn to oriented person and like to work at a fast intense pace, an opportunity to put these skills to work and develop as a leader is available. Relaocate yourself with benefits plus benefit. Apply now: amJ.1819.W.23rd
APPLY NOW! International Chain filling part-fill new lines. Training provided. Work locally on training modules for all levels of transition to one of our 900 locations nationwide during winter break. $890 plus starting call #84-835.
BEACH or SKI Group Promoter.
Small or larger groups.
Small or larger groups.
Your's FREer. discounted or CASH.
Call CM1 1-800-423-5264
CITY OF LAWRENCE
CNA's needed to work with clients in their home
douglas county sharon at Sharon at Dougly. Visit Nursing 943-738-3788
Part-time, weeks & evenings, 15-25 brs. per week, Supervise recreational programs & use of equipment HS grad/1 and 2nd exp in recreation or physics at USG, 3rd exp in recreation 16th admin at Serv, 2nd service, City Hall, 6 East Fountain.
Construction laborer, $5.00 an hour, no experience needed, flexible hours, Jim 832-1548
Marketing Assistant position available at Naismh Hall for the spring semester. Applicant must have excellent people skills, good computer skills and strong communication background experience in marketing, advertising, customer service, or sales. Position will be part time with compensation of room and board plus stipend. Potential for full time effective July, 1994. Great resume and portfolio builder to help you get started in the field. Please apply at Naismh Hall 100, Naismh Drive, LawrenceKS 66044, K60048 E.O.E/M.F/H.A/A.
Micro Tech Computers is looking for full- or part-time positions. Send resumes to Micro Tech, detail-oriented and have excellent skills. IBM, FC knowledge & sales experience pre-requisite, detailed orientation to 8239-M SA, Lawrence St. 8604 EOE
Office assistant needed 25 hrs w/hr M-3-7 p.m. &
Sat. 14-20. Please call 749-0130.
Free rent to student or single family in
exchange for help w/ yard, lt. work, lt. house work,
lt. cooking. Limited pet welcome. Call 597-5771 after
3 p.m.
Prairie Room Wairler/Wilmar $3.00 hr, plus tips,
1.5 hr, wine, dinner, 30 min of previous
Waterfront/waitable room
Custodian, Burge Union, Tuesday 49 m.midnight,
Saturday 8 a.m.-11 a.m., $4.25 per hour, Previous custodial experience preferred, able to lift 50 pounds.
Line server, Union Square, Monday-Wednesday-Friday, 10:08 am.m-1:09 pm.m, $4.25 per hour. Able to stand for long periods, prefer previous food service experience.
Line Server, Hawk's hast. Monday thru Thursday
6:59 p.m.-8:09 p.m., a able to stand for long period
periods.
Other listings available. See Job Board Level-5 Kansas Union Building Personnel Office.
Apply Kansas and Burge Unions' Personnel
Office, Level 5, EOE.
RESUME SERVICES Professional Business
Training. Interview for Internship.
Training. Free initial interview. 823-8100.
Carpenter/Construction Inc
Terraver Construction Inc
(back entrance) has an immediate full time opening for an experienced secretary/receptionist.
Typing skills of 60 wpm required; Macintosh experienced preferred; 10 key accuracy; organiza-
tion skills are necessary. A must. Send resumes to P. Box 300, Lawrence, KS 65214,
above address between 98 3 M-F, Applications and resumes must be in no later than 11-12-93.
The Princeton Review is looking for outstanding candidates to teach courses part time. The ideal candidate should have a Master's in MGT scores and fantastic communication skills. We offer excellent pay, a relaxed classroom atmosphere, and paid training. We are also seeking people with background in human resources. Rebecca at 1-866-752-7727 for more information.
are now hiring extra staff for the X-mas season!
Front Office
mexican restaurant and waitstaff
Apply in person, lower level. Riverfront Plaza
FAST CASH
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Stop to Shop is looking for part time clerk must be able to work 29.m. to 19pm, shift, some weekends and holidays. If interested apply in person at 1010 N. 3rd.
By donating your life saving blood plasma
Taco Bell now hire day and night help. Apply in
through Saturday. 1048, W 32rd and
1229, W 8th.
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
WALK-INS WELCOME!
The Lawrence Bus Company is now taking applications for SAFERIDE drivers. Must be 21, have a clean driving record, and be familiar with the school. School Holidays off. If intended call 842-0544.
Valley Care Home Care is currently seeking molluscan reef stonemason and coral technician TN. We offer flexible scheduling which is great for students, competitive hourly wage & benefits TAB2, Apply in person at 2818 Ridge Court, Cincinnati, OH 45230.
Want to work w/kids?
Youth Basketball Gym Supr. & Officials Needed.
$7 per hour. 843-4188
Executive assistant part-time live in work for rent years flexible and typing helpful. Resumes to info@executiveservices.com
Wanted 400 or more people 21 or over to participate in group study Friday and Saturday starting at Sidewinder Saloon. 728 New Hampshire
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There's still time-don't delay,come in today.
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Fraternities and Sororities call for more information about fundraising
225 Professional Services
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Behind Laird-
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Braxton B. Copley 749-5333
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Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
DONALDG. STROLE
Prompt ablation and contraceptive services. Dale L. Clinton M.D. 841-5716.
Research Assistance - MSMLS information specialist available to assist with term paper, theses, etc.
Donald G Stroie Sally G Ketsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
3-year-old Macintosh with 40 mb hard drive
with 150GB of software. $600 firm
cash only. 841-140, leave me in touch.
Thesis & Dissertations
Drive education offered through Midwest Driving School, service KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
Dissertations
Hardbinding and Gold Stamping
3 Day Turnaround
Lawrence Printing Service, Inc.
512 E. 9th Street 843-4600
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
Birthright 845-8212. Free pregnancy education.
235 Typing Services
DP 2500 weight lifting machine, leg curls, etc.
Great condition. DP Body - Tone 300 Rower
Machine. $250 for both. Call 843-0540 evenings
and weekends.
I'm graduating and need to sell my - Beautiful wood bed room set, 1 queen size bed with cherry wood head board, matching night stand with 2 drawers, cherry wood chest with vanity mirror, Paid $330 a year ago but it's got to go. $175. You can't get a tutor for that. Call me at 865-0729.
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
4. meg simsim for Macintosh never used, sealed
bags $200.00 UBO, call 842-9787.
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
PC at low costs? Looking for a high quality
计算机了. P C叫C P Source 832-1126
bags $200.00 OBQ. Call 647-9872.
Beds, dinks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
Delivery is free.
For free consultation call
JVC DISC jode for car. Pull out cassette head
$129.00 Now $1,200.00 just $400.00 1-388-
602 JOB
Are you Makin' the grade?
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING.
For all your TYPING needs call
Makin' the grade at 885-2855.
A Word Perfect word processing service. Laser printer. Near campus. 842-6955.
AA Word Processing: Any size, under 30 mm
AA Word Processing: Any size; under 30 pp.
Book price: $1.25/page. Call Ruth after
8pm, p.85-8683.
J
Beacon Publication Services-Quality word processing, laser printing, $2.00/page (including typescript, grammar, proofing), call Mary, 843-2674.
Expert typing, IBM Correcting Selectric,
$1.50/double spaced page. Call Mrs. Mattila 841-1219
KU STUDENT BASKETBALL COUPONS FOR SALE
AKS FOR KRICK 832-6239
Macintosh Memory 1- MB inss 33 PIN SIMMS,
42 MB MIMS inss, will sell in six of two ask for
16MB MIMS.
Fall Clearance: All adult tapes on sale $1.35 and
$1.80 for 24 hours or more or Miracle
Video Too, 1910 Haskell, 841-7940.
Large inventory of classic CD Playbill Magazines
1980's, 60's, 70's and 80'. Most in good condition.
Must be purchased in package. Call 843-0540
evenings and weekends.
Macintosh N26/36 80/m of ram, 80 mg hard disk
hardware, 80 MB flash memory, and speaker
speakers 982.00 OD, call 84-797-877.
1-der Woman Word Processing, 843-2063
Fast, accurate word processing; term paper, fast, thesis, and graphics services available. Laser printing. Engineering and Law review experience. Call Pam at 841-977 anytime.
340 Auto Sales
Pro-Type - fast, reliable, service, professional quality. Any kind of typing. Call today at 641-8342.
Wanted: Someone to edit my thesis according to AP and KU Grad. School specifications. Must be knowledgeable about both and Word Perfect 5.1.
David 1-639-5434.
X
Want to sell complete set of basketball tickets
Best offer. Leave message on bm3-8200 6309
89-150 Blazer. Excellent condition. Tabco pack
2-wheel drive. 58,000 miles. $7,650/4,918-788.
Style Writer II Printer. New-only 2 months old.
$225 00 BOO, call 842-987-987
1986 Dodge Charger 2-d hatchback, AM/FM cassette.
Body in body shape. HD 843-3842.
1990 Honda Accord LX coupe, 3-speed, white, spiller,
spoiler, power super. Power condition. For
ownership. Box 86-2339.
300s Merchandise
360 Miscellaneous
Lista Dilson Wagon. Runs okay. Body rough. $200
Call 1-888-4580 (K. City Number)
Scuptured Nails $29 req. #42. Reflections West,
232 Ridge Court 81-942. Ask for Pam.
305 For Sale
370 Want to Buy
CALENDARIES; mature, environment, women,
indiana, peace, gardening, walking at Hiqohee Goals.
CALENDARIES; mature, environment, women,
indiana, peace, gardening, walking at Hiqohee Goals.
D desperately need 2 or i2man4 BB tickets. Paying big $11 Call $753-0285 (KCMO).
Needed. Tickets to KU vs. IU basketball game on December 2nd. Will pay $95. Call 842-0683.
A HOME FOR THE RIVERS
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1 Bdrm apt . just blocks from campus available for 2nd stem sublease. washer/dryer, dishwasher, ceiling fan... the works. $220 per mo./per- Kentucky 6857-072. Call now.
I Bedroom apt. available Jan. 1 I Oweigh neighbor,
friend, very nice, very nice a month. Call
2063-2903
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished.
842-4455 Available Spring inter. Interest? Call
842-4455
Apt. for rent, bldg. Great location 1123 Indiana
Flatlands Flats, $500 including cable Call 842-9767
Avail. Dec. 18th. Very large, newly remodeled one bedroom apt. On bus route, water and cable paid,
Available Jan. 1st, 2 3dmr unfinished apt,
800MHz, near bus route. Only $98/mm.
Cell Phone: 614-755-5434
Big b $b$卑 funf unurn apt w?/W d/hookus avall Javl
Big b $b$卑 campus. Don't miss on a great place
749-1083
Available Jan 1, 1 studio Apt. close to campus &
postcard town 865-9361 Landlord 841 126
Available Jan 1, 3 bdm. apt. on bus route. Call
749-1565-2-5m Mon.-Fri.
Campus Place. 3 bform 2 ba furnished apt. for rent.
Reasonable rent: 3 min walk to campus. Avail-
ing parking.
rent brand new 3 bdm 2 bpth. On the bus route at 8th EH Entrance, Call 614-750-9999 with 4 people
Firmabled room for rent with shared kitchen and
balcony on KU. Off-street parking.
No pets. KU-841-5600.
For lease: 4 bedroom, Sundance apts, near campus, occupancy, date negotiable, $700 + utilities
Dear December unfurnished apartment available as early as Dec. 15 $320 "mom", Water paid, off street parking, on bus route, off 6th street, clean and quiet. If interested, call 841-6019.
Furished room apartment. 2 short blocks from Water paid. Off street parking. No pets. 841-550-6178
HUGUE 3 bedroom apartment available Christmas
and water and water paid. Receipts priced. Call 822-569-7101
3 NB 2 KR, 2 bath, 2 bath; P&p, garage, DW,
microwave, W/ dhook $750/mo. /$750. Call 789-8371.
Workspace near downtown
Available Jan. 1. 12x14 $10 per month. Utilities
Phones: 6433 12x14
Lg 1 Bedroom apt. on bus route. Leave message
749-0751.
Now leasing for Spring
One bbm apt. for sublease Jan. 1. Access from sta-
tor space $380 per month with water paid.
Call 850-279-4600.
IBR, FP, W/D jockets, garage, all apples, Extra
animals, Alamur location, 875, 965-6600.
short walk to campus!
br. available in house-clean, quiet
442-7208
Spring subbase for 2 persons. 2 bdrm, 1 bath, on-
ly requires 2 facilities. $36/mo. plus
1/8 share/1/8 share/1/8 share.
Sub-lase 2dmm, 3 bath 2dms e/mo. Water, gas-
trash pn, dish pad, leave phone hook-up.
Sink drain.
Sub-lease: **bdt. apt. at Boardwalk alps. from Jan. to May,** 8309, on bus route 1 **Cali 641-8640**.
Sublease begin Jan 1. I. Great studio apt. in old house & campus. $200 - call. Call 894-365-1211.
Sub-lease: 8bdr; Just inches from campus) 138l &
238l; Fee charged: $79.00; Deed, rent paid:
$40/month; Call #-571-839-2121
SUBLEASE immed. after X-Mas, copy I bkmr
conner aet. close to campus. A maxn ments,
lots of room for roommates.
Sublease studio $300/mo. including cable. Available immediately. Call 749-6055.
Sublease needed! 2831 fow g-1 G.1. Nice neighbor.
m0o. Willing n=1672 n态mate? 891-915 or
841-955.
430 Roommate Wanted
we're making life easier!
Weekly Main Service
•Front Door Bus Service
"Dine Anytime" with
Unlimited Seconds
•Laundry and Vending
Facilities
- Weekly Maid Service
1 female needed to share 3 br. 2/3 bath spacious townhouse. Will get own room on bus route. No smoking or pets. $230/m + tui. Lease up in May. Shannon Chambron 8255, Remove leases.
1 male or female needed to share 3 Br 2 bath
duplex. near bus route, close to campus, pres-
fice place, nice, avail spring semester, call Tm
849-0809.
1 roommate to share furn. $8.25/bp on,客
room/roommate to share furn. $9.75/bp on,Avc Dec
Doc $7/mp /+/-1 call Alain Doc $10/mp /+/-1 call Alain Doc
- Free Utilities
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Male or female couchmate wanted for 3 bdm.
male apartment to share 1/4 rent and utilities for 2 bdm.
david at 86-9836. Lr msg
Need a roommate (David at 86-9836) XNAP for a bedroom, 2 bdm*.
semester. Call David at 842-8683. Lv mgr.
Need a roommate (male or female) ASAP for a
bedroom, 2 bath apartment. For more information
call 843-2770.
3 females, n/a/need for spacious 3-drm dapm on boards on baskets. 841-7236, lederbach CA, DW. MATERIALS: plastic, 841-7236, lederbach CA, DW.
Male or female needed to share new 4 bedroom duplex in W. Lawrence January 1, . Washen/dryer, 2 car garage. Fully furnished (except for room). Call Cameron at 186-5629
NAISMITH Hall
- By phone: 864-4358
One female needed to unlease on campus April 18$10 am + until. Call Suzy 833-1866
Need male roommate for 3 Bdrm apt to cloem to
smoking. Need 180/240 mm² and 1/16 tn. Non-
smoker. Call 89-600-800.
Need mature, clean, N/M male to share 2 br app
/male graduate student. Class to campus. $195/hr
1800 Naismith Drive
(913) 843-8559
One Female to share two bedrooms apartment for 2 people, like dogs, very close to campus. Call Laila 748-9677
50 bh syr 97, a seaking a female roommate for 52 bdi beg after December 1. Call Carrie or Cath at
How to schedule an ad:
Open minded female needed to pair two bedroom house closet to campus January third May. Call any enquiries at 800-564-2111.
Very close to campus, behind Yellow Sub. Need 2 baitpads.
480/m+ / vol.1 Call 855-692-7325
NSF w/ small dog needs a responsible NSF to
share 2 aphids. apt for spring semester. $198/mb.
+/-½ Utl. Call 749-1887.
Older Farm Couple Seeks Assistance.
Free rent to student or single parent family in exchange for help w/ yard work, it house work, it lawn care. Little permitted welcome. Pat 397-7717 9 am.
ROOMMATE NEEDED. Close to campus.
Dedicated roommate. All guests pre-
ferred. Non smoke. 2 full baths. 84-642-6100
Ads phone in may be held to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
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105 personal
110 business persons
123 announcements
128 entertainment
140 lost & found
265 help needed
225 professional services
235 inquiries services
365 for sale
340 auto sales
360 miscellaneous
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378 want to buy
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The University of California, Daly Kaufman, 119 Stauffer Fllr Hall, Lawrence, KS. 60045
$ \mathbf{K} $ $ \mathbf{60045} $
THE FAR SIDE
Bv GARY LARSON
© 1993 TopWorks, Inc./Aust by Universal Press Syndicate
"Ooo! You're right, Sir Dwayne! If I knock right here, I can make him start buzzing...Ooo, and he's angry!"
14
Thursday, November 11, 1993
$$\left( \begin{array}{l l l l l} 1 & 0 & 0 & 0 & 0 \\ 0 & 1 & 0 & 0 & 0 \\ 0 & 0 & 1 & 0 & 0 \\ 0 & 0 & 0 & 1 & 0 \end{array} \right) = \left( \begin{array}{l l l l l} 1 & 0 & 0 & 0 & 0 \\ 0 & 1 & 0 & 0 & 0 \\ 0 & 0 & 1 & 0 & 0 \\ 0 & 0 & 0 & 1 & 0 \end{array} \right).$$
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
AMERICAN BISTRO
701 MASS.
In the Eldridge Hotel
841-8349
Breakfast>Lunch>Dinner
We do Banquets too!
INTERNATIONAL K
WE ARE ORGANIZING A KU CIRCLE KCLUB 7:00 PM,THURSDAY,NOVEMBER 11. MC COLLOM HALL,MULTI-PURPOSERCOM
Circle K, the largest collegiate service organization in North America is an organization which combines social activities with service activities that help the school and community. Circle K is affiliated with Key Club (high school) and Kiwanis (community).
COME JOIN US ANDBRING A FRIEND!
4LESS®
MUSIC 4 LESS
4
Cassettes, Compact Discs & Accessories One River Front Plaza
841-2662
Buy it, Try it!
SOUND ADVICE
the following music is guaranteed to expand your musical horizons. If you're not completely satisfied, bring it back (with your receipt) within 2 weeks and you can exchange it for another Cassette or CD of equal value.
SOUND ADVICE
DRS
Gansta Lean
DRS
JOE - EVERYTHING MAJORITY
FAITH HILL
TAKE ME
AS
I AM
Featuring Wild One • Just About Now • Piece Of My Heart
JACKSON BROWNE
I'M ALIVE
Elektra
mint condition
FROM THE MINT FACTORY
Larry Coryell Feillen Angel
C1
ASK ABOUT
OUR ONE YEAR TAPE GUARANTEE!!!
DAILY KANSAN CLASSIFIED GET RESULTS
Women's tennis ready for Rolex
Six members of the Kansas women's tennis team traveled to Salt Lake City yesterday, hoping to win the Central Regional Rolex Championships this weekend.
By Anne Felstot
Kansan sportwriter
Coach Chuck Merzbacher and two freshmen players left Tuesday for the tournament's qualifying draw before the main draw today.
Joining Merzbacher and the two freshmen yesterday were juniors No. 1-seeed Rebecca Jensen and No. 5 Nora Koves, seniors Abye Woods, Mindy Weiner and Kim Rogers and freshman Amy Trytek.
Freshmen Bianca Kirchhof and Chessa Bieri each qualified for the singles main draw. The two teamed up for doubles matches, winning one. They will play again today in an attempt to qualify for the doubles main draw.
The top two singles and doubles teams will advance to the Rolex National Indoor Championships Feb. 3-6. The location has not been named.
Alyse Jensen and Koves are the No. 1 seed in doubles and Woods and Rogers are No.4.
Jensen has won the tournament the last two years. Merzbacher said that Koves had been playing the best tennis on the team lately and that Weiner and Rogers also had good chances of winning the tournament.
Jensen said the team had gotten off to a better start this year than last year.
"Last year we had a lot of new faces, and we didn't know what to expect from each other," she said. "This year the returning players knew what to do to help out the new players."
The team has a good chance of having four players in the semifinal matches. Woods said.
Kansas team members have been in the position to play each other in tournaments earlier this year, but the matches were never played.
Woods said the team hoped to end the fall season on a good note.
At the Indiana Fall Invitational Oct. 15-17, Kansas' doubles teams of Jensen/Koves and Rogers/Woods made it to the final round but did not play because they did not want to hurt the loser's standings.
In Uttah, the teams would have to play such a match because the results would affect the standings in the national tournament.
"It's a good feeling to go out with a good tournament to carry on the momentum to the spring," she said.
CALENDAR:
Continued from Page 9.
Junior's Farm Records
Junior's Farm Records
914/2 1/2 Massachusetts St.
Freedy Johnston, time to be
announced, Wednesday, free
Movies
Liberty Hall
642 Massachusetts St.
Dazed and Confused (R), 5, 7:15,
9:30 p.m. with a 2:45 p.m. Sat., Sun.
Urge Overkill, 9 p.m. Sunday, $11 in
advance, $12 at the door
Dickinson 6
2339 South Iowa St.
Look Who's Talking Now (PG-13),
4:25, 7:05, 9:30 p.m. with a 2 p.m.
sat., Sun.; Flesh and Bone (R), 4:15,
7, 9:45 p.m. with a 1:15 Sat., Sun.
Fearless (R), 4:30, 7:10, 9:50 p.m.;
Nightmare Before Christmas (PG),
4:35, 7:10, 9:35 p.m. with a 1, 2:45
p.m. Sat., Sun.; Beverly Hillbills
(PG), 4:20, 7:15, 9:35 p.m. with a 2
p.m. Sat., Sun.; Malice (R), 4:15,
7:10, 9:50 p.m. Thursday only
My Life (PG-13), 4:10, 7:20, 9:55
p.m. with a 1:35 p.m. Sat., Sun.
Venity Theatre
24
1015 Massachusetts St.
Earnest Rides Again (PG), 5:15, 7:30
p.m.; Robo Cop III (PG-13), 9:30 p.m.
Hillcrest Theater
The Etc. Shop
Ninth and Iowa streets
1015 Massachusetts St.
Ray-Ban
UNICORSES BY
BAUSCH & LOMB
THE WORKS WE BUILD
928 Mass. 843-0611
Cool Runnings (PG), 5:15, 7:30, 9:30 p.m.; Rudy (PG), 5, 7:20, 9:40 p.m. Caricto's Way (R), 5, 8 p.m. Joy Luck Club (R), 5:15, 8 p.m. The Three Musketeers (PG), 5, 7:15, 9:30 p.m.
Cinema Twin 31st and Iowa St.
Cinema Twin
SUA Movies
The Firm (R), 5, 8 p.m.; Sieepless in Seattle (PG), 5:15, 7:30 p.m.
All movies are at Woodruff Auditorium,
level 5 in the Kansas Union
JFK (R), 7, 9:30 p.m. Friday, Saturday,
with a 2 p.m. Sunday
Wild at Heart (R), midnight Friday, Satur day
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD
Call Ron
PERSONAL HEALTH CARE FOR WOMEN CONFIDENTIAL ABORTION SERVICES
- Complete GYN Care • Pregnancy Testing
• Depo Provera & Norplant • Tubal Ligation
- Licensed Physicians/Caring Staff - Modern State-Licensed Facility
or Skip at 842-9293
PROVIDING QUALITY HEALTH CARE TO WOMEN SINCE 1974
Kansan!
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
A SMART,EASY WAY TO MEET PEOPLE IN A SOPHISTICATED, SAFE AND CONFIDENTIAL MANNER.
We will award the 5 most active mailboxes in November 2 FREE dinner passes good for a very special evening for two compliments of the
OFFER GOOD THROUGH NOVEMBER 30, 1993. FIRST COME, FIRST SERVE WHILE SUPPLIERS LAST. This is a $25 value.
Rentco USA
1749-1605
25% Student Discount
Now Carrying Computers
1741 Massachusetts
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
IT'S THE TALK OF THE TOWN...
P
Call 864-4358 TODAY to place your FREE 6 line Jaytalk Meeting Network ad in any category. The most romantic, descriptive and original print ads usually get the best results. Then, check your mailbox for messages throughout the month or browse through a category yourself!
Laser Logic
Sales-Supplies-Rentals
One Stop Source for All Laser Printer Needs
865-0505
R
FREE DINNER PASSES FOR TWO TO A LAWRENCE AREA RESTAURANT!
Here's how YOU win...
Seeking Dinner Companion
Classifications available:
1-Men Seeking Women
2-Women Seeking Men
3-Men Seeking Men
4-Women Seeking Women
6- Friends seeking Friends
6- Seeking Sports Interest
7- Mutual Hobbies
8- Shared Religion
SPORTS: The Kansas football team will try to control Colorado's potent passing offense in tomorrow's game. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103,NO.60
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
GLEN JOHNSU
RICHARD WILLIAM
WILLIAM JOSEPH THO
JOHN MARK TIDERMA
CHARLES BUTNER WAL
PAUL EDWARD WEST
MICHAEL LUND WILSON
LEST WE F
NOR AND SACRIF
LOW STUDENTS...
John Gamble / KANSAN
In memory
Air force ROTC cadets Brenda Keemer, Little Rock, Ark., junior, and David Evans, Osawatomi senior, guard the University's Vietnam Memorial. The two stood guard for an hour by the memorial yesterday during a 24-hour vigil in honor of Veteran's Day and POW/MIA Awareness Week.
Eventstoday
An informal discussion on linguistics and philosophy of language — 3 p.m. at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union Tickets are free and available through the departments of linguistics and philosophy. Those without departmental tickets will be admitted at 3 p.m. until the room is filled.
Manufacturing Consent: Media Manipulation in
P. B. G.
Noam Chomsky
p. m. at the Kansas Union Ballroom Tickets are free and will be available on the Kansas Union 's fifth floor beginning at 7 p.m.
KANSAN
Chomsky to speak on linguistics, media
By Donella Hearne Kansan staff writer
Kansanstaffwriter
Noam Chomsky, considered one of the most distinguished contemporary scholars, will speak today on linguistics and media manipulation in America.
Chomsky is a world-renowned scholar in linguistics, philosophy and history and the author of numerous books on topics ranging from linguistics to politics. As a speaker, Chomsky has addressed audiences across the United States and around the world.
Sara Rosen, professor of linguistics, said Chomsky's presentation was important for the linguistics department.
"Chomsky is clearly the most influential figure in the field of linguistics," she said. "He is solely responsible for the modern theory of linguistics as we know it today."
Rosen said Chomsky's speech tonight also would be beneficial for people outside of the linguistics department.
"People who know nothing about language will have a chance to get a feel for what language is," she said.
The cost of bringing Chomsky to KU, including his fee, is $8,205, according to figures from Student Union Activities. David Stevens, SUA forums coordinator, said that SUA would not have been able to bring a speaker of Chomsky's magnitude to KU without the help of many co-sponsors, which include Student Senate and nine university departments.
"Ironically, it's his magnitude that allows us to bring him here," Stevens said "Most departments I spoke with jumped to help us out."
INSIDE
Misunderstandings
The line of culture Arab-American women draw because of their unwillingness to integrate with American society is the root of the discrimination they face,Lelia Diab,a
P
Muslim journalist, said last night.
Page 3.
Open bidding can fill houses
KU Panhellenic assists sororities with rush process
By Shan Schwartz
Kansan staff writer
The KU Panhellenic Association wants students to know that there is more than one way to join a sorority.
Besides fall formal rush in August each year, students can join throughout the year by participating in continuous open bidding, said Carrie Neiner, St. Louis senior and vice president for membership in Panhellenic.
The Panhellenic Association sets each chapter's membership total at 140. Neiner said. Chapters with less than 140 members after rush can participate in continuous open bidding throughout the year.
In past years, the open bidding was left up to the individual chapters, Neiner said. The only role Panhelenic played was to take names from
Six chapters are participating in open bidding this year. Neiner said.
those students interested in joining and pass them on to the chapters.
The chapters then contact the interested students and invite them to chapter events, such as meals or social functions, to get acquainted with the students, Neiner said. The chapter may then choose to make a bid if the student wants one.
"There's really no regulation over it." Neiner said. "Basically, when a chapter decides to make a bid to a member, they just let us know."
This year, Neiner said, Panhellenic created a new officer position, assistant for membership, that will work primarily to coordinate, publicize and assist chapters with continuous open bidding.
"It is kind of difficult for chapters to do their bidding during the year," Neiner said. "It takes a lot of time and energy that they could be spending on something else."
graduate student and Panhellenic adviser, said the open bidding helped make up for difficulties chapters encountered during fall formal rush.
Neiner said that Panhellenic could also assist those who may join by answering questions about the chapters in a nonbased manner, similar to what rush counselors do for participants in fall formal rush.
"There's a negative connotation that if a chapter has to open bid, they must be a bad chapter, and that's not the case," Degner said. "With the number of participants in rush, it's hard for all the chapters to reach quota."
This year, Degner said, more than 800 students participated in formal rush but only about 650 completed rush and pledged to a chapter. That left some chapters with less than the total 140 members allowed.
Randy Degner, San Marcos, Texas.
Although continuous open bidding did not offer as much choice as formal rush did, Degner said, it was still a good way for someone to join a sorority.
"There's pros and cons," Degner said. "A disadvantage is that you don't get to see all the chapters. But on the upside, you don't have to go through all the stress of formal rush."
Degner said so far this fall, more than 30 students had pledged sororities through continuous open bidding and more could pledge throughout the year.
Council vote asks to save two degrees
Decision may spare computer atmospheric science degrees
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
The University Council voted to save two degrees from elimination but unanimously decided to discontinue two others at yesterday's Council meeting.
Only two of the seven degrees under consideration for elimination received extensive debate from the Council: the B.A. in computer science and the M.S. in atmospheric science.
University Council is a governing body of students and
University Coun faculty who make recommendations on policy and academic changes that are eventually considered by Chancellor Gene Budig.
The council followed the recommendations from the Academic Policies and Procedures Committee and the Senate Executive Committee and unanimously voted to change the B.A. in comparative literature to a concentration in the English department as well as make the
What happened
Of the seven degrees under consideration for elimination, University Council voted:
B.G.S. in computer science
B.A. in atmospheric science
To make into a concentration:
B.A. in comparative literature
Tokeep:
B.A. in computer science
B.A. in humanities
M.S. in atmospheric science
KANSAN
B. A. in Italian a concentration in the Department of Italian and French.
When the Council considered the computer science degrees, Earl Schweppe, professor of computer science, said that he agreed with eliminating the bachelor of general studies but wanted to maintain the B.A. in the department.
Schweppe said many students combine the B.A. in computer science with other concentrations or degrees, including biology or foreign languages.
"The B.A. is a nice, clean way of giving recognition to students who have done something significant," Schwepe said. "Computer science is a discipline that mixes well with everything, and that's much easier to do with a B.A. than a B.S."
The Council decided by a split vote to keep the B.A. in computer science in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences but to move advising for the degree to the School of Engineering, where computer science courses are taught.
Joe Eagleman, professor of meteorology, said that he wanted to keep both the B.A. and the M.S. but that he had stronger arguments for keeping the master's program than the bachelor's program.
"We have the only graduate program in the state," Eagleman said. "If we eliminate the master's degree, we would be one of the few states to not have something going for atmospheric science."
Eliminating the degree would also eliminate training in a growing career field, he said.
"The field of meteorology has been chosen as the number-one career opportunity in science careers for the next few years," Eagleman said. "For us to pull back from a program that is thriving is a big mistake."
That voice.
A rich, warm baritone cutting through the darkness, into the minds and souls of students.
Professor Tim Mitchell breathed life into the history of art with his wit, knowledge and his engaging style and that melodic, entrancing voice.
A week before the fall semester began, Mitchell, 49.
of his students — lives on.
died. But his legacy — the enlightenment
Jay Van Buren sat dazed, stung by the graded blue book before him. Leering at
By Kathleen Stolle
mal score crawled in red ink. After two semesters at the University of Kansas, including an honors art history course, Van Buren had just received his first D, compli-
man Expressionism and a professor named Tim Mitchell.
"I remember when he handed those tests back, and everybody was just groaning and
master of his
talking about dropping the course," said Van Buren, Topeka senior.
"Then he explained his policy, and everybody was like, 'Oh, OK,' because there was hope then." The policy, characteristic of Mitchell himself, rewarded those who worked increasingly harder, adapting to the cumulative nature of an art history course.
See ART, Page 7.
a profile of Tim Mitchell
rt
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 12, 1993
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ON CAMPUS
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445.
Chi Alpha Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call Stephen Swanson at 843-7189.
KU Baha'i Club will sponsor a lecture, "The Honduras Project." at 7:30 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mehdi Khoshahegheh at 841-7585.
facturing Consent: Media Manipulation in Modern America," by Noam Chomsky at 8 tonight at the Kansas Union Ballroom. For more information, call SUA at 864-3477.
KU General Union of Palestine Students and Student Union Activities will sponsor a lecture, "Manu-
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will host Thanksgiving Dinner at 6 p.m. Sunday at the Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
K-Unity will sponsor a guitar concert and informational meeting at 8 p.m. Sunday in Danforth Chapel. For more information, call Nicole Dolci at 864-7134 or Scott MacWilliams at 843-8247.
Astronomy Associates of Lawrence will gather to stargate at 9 p.m. Sunday on top of Lindley Hall. For more information, call Jennifer Clinton at 865-0569.
WEATHER
Omaha: 58'/36'
Kansas City: 60'/43'
St. Louis: 57'/52'
LAWRENCE: 58'/45'
Wichita: 60'/41'
Tulsa: 63'/52'
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 69°/53°
Chicago: 46°/43°
Houston: 81°/70°
Miami: 84°/77°
Minneapolis: 38°/35°
Phoenix: 66°/51°
Salt Lake City: 52°/35°
Seattle: 52°/39°
TODAY
Tomorrow Sunday
75% chance for rain and a few T-storms with SE winds at 5-15 mph.
High: 58°
Low: 45°
50% chance for rain with SW winds at 10-20 mph.
High: 56°
Low: 39°
20% chance for rain with NW wind at 5-15 mph
High: 43°
Low: 36°
Source: Mark Akin, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
Rainy day.
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ON THE RECORD
A student's bicycle valued at $300 was taken in the 1300 block of West 23rd Street from Oct. 29 to Oct. 31, Lawrence police reported.
police reported.
A student's bicycle and lock, valued together at $65, were taken from the bicycle rack west of Smith Hall between Nov. 5 and Monday, KU
in the 1000 block of Emery Road on Tuesday or Wednesday, Lawrence police reported.
A student's wallet and its contents, valued together at $197, were taken from a car in the 1700 block of West 24th Street on Tuesday or Wednesday, Lawrence police reported.
A student's backpack and its contents, valued together at $180, were taken from Watson Library on Wednesday, KU police reported.
A student's bicycle valued at $850 was taken
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 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 12, 1993
3
O R E A D
F O R U M
8 6 4 - 9 0 4 0
In Today's Forum
The University Daily Kansan wants to know what you think about the University's policy on faculty-student relationships. Some of the issues are:
What types of conduct outside the classroom between an instructor and his or her student should be considered acceptable or unacceptable?
Should conduct considered unacceptable be banned or merely discouraged? Why? Should there be any policy on consensual relationships at all? Why?
What would be the best way to publicize what is considered acceptable conduct so that everybody knows the ground rules?
How To Use
OREAD FORUM:
1) Call 864-9040 and wait for the tone at the end of the greeting.
2) Record your message with the following information:
**your name** (if you spell it out, that helps us):
- your class status and major (if you're a student), or your job at the University (if you're a faculty or staff member);
■ your phone number (so we can verify your message);
a concise message (try to keep it less than two minutes). We suggest outlining your ideas on paper first.
3) Hang up immediately when finished.
4) If you prefer, you may respond in a typewritten or printed letter to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staufer-Flint Hall. Clearly mark "Oread Forum" on the letter or envelope.
WHAT WE'LL DO:
1) The Kansan will report the content of Oread Forum discussions in subsequent issues if there's a significant response. The Kansan reserves the right to use all, part or none of each recorded message and letter.
KU joins other schools in relationship debate
2) We will forward all Oread Forum phone messages and letters to the task force on consensual relationships, the faculty and student committee analyzing the policy.
By Christoph Fuhrmans
Kenyan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
When the University of Kansas announced its consensual relationships policy Aug. 20, the University joined a national trend of setting guidelines for student and professor Relationships.
The questions and issues about the policy KU now is facing were the same raised at other universities with relationships policies.
When KU formed the policy, it used the policies at the University of Minnesota and the University of Iowa as reference points, said Sandra Wick, assistant director of the honors program and head of last year's sexual harassment task force that recommended that KU have a policy.
At Minnesota, a consensual relationships policy was developed after a review of the university's temporary sexual harassment policy, said Anne Truax, assistant to the director of the office of equal opportunity and affirmative action at Minnesota.
Minnesota's consensual relationships policy, which was formed in 1984, considers a sexual relationship between a student and professor inappropriate but does not prohibit it.
Truax, who served on the sexual harassment task force that formed the temporary policy, said that during the re-examination period it became clear that a consensual relationships policy had to be added to the policy.
Before the policy review, Truax said the committee had held several open forums and received lots of input from faculty and students.
"The entire process of reviewing the consensual relationships policy took about one academic year," she said.
Punishment for violating the policy is different for every case. Truax said
"We have suspended and fined people and even forced the resignation of tenured faculty," she said.
Truax said she knew of at least two tenured faculty members who were forced to resign.
At Iowa, the university's consensual relationships and sexual harassment
policy were formed in 1986, said Ann Rhodes, vice president of university relations at Iowa.
KU follows Iowa's policy in that it prohibits any sexual or romantic relationship between a student and a professor when the student is in one of the professor's classes. Relationships where a student is not in the professor's class are discouraged but not prohibited.
Rhodes, who served on the sexual harassment task force that formed the policy, said the task force spent about two years collecting student and faculty responses before announcing the policy.
"The consensual relationships review was the most controversial part about the policy," she said.
Conference will unite Midwest student leaders
Punishment for violating the policy would be determined on a case by case basis. Rhodes said.
Rhodes said the task force did not worry about the policy ending relationships.
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
"If it's true love, it will wait until the end of the semester," she said.
More than 500 student leaders from Midwest colleges and universities will meet at the University of Kansas this weekend to discuss a host of issues facing today's campuses.
Leaders of KU's chapter of the Midwest Affiliation of College and University Residence Halls, or MACURH, are set to begin the conference tonight at the Lied Center.
Jamie Cutburth, Hillsboro, Ore, senior and co-director of the conference, said KU had not hosted the conference since 1988.
14 It is a positive way for all of the delegates to showcase their schools and share some of their ideas," Cuturbth said.
Campus and residence hall leaders from 36 universities in seven states were expected to attend the conference. Cutburth said.
About 20 members of MACURH and the KU Association of University Residence Halls and more than 50 KU student volunteers will help at the conference, titled "Somewhere Over the Rainbow."
The student delegates will attend seminars on developing communication and leadership
skills, Cutburth said. Seminars will address personal issues such as stress, eating disorders, homophobia, sexual violence and harassment.
Advisers and university staff members will attend seminars on training student leaders and organizing activities on a limited budget.
Tonight's opening ceremony will include performances by the student vocal group Eight Men Out and the Haskell Indian Nations University Pow Wow Dancers and Singers.
The keynote speaker for the opening ceremony will be Blandina Cardenas-Ramirez, director of the Southwest Center on Values, Achievement and Community at Southwest Texas State University. Cardenas-Ramirez, who also serves on the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, will present a speech titled, "Beyond Diversity: Building Community on Multicultural Campuses."
Cutubirth said Cardenas-Ramírez's topic was an important theme of the conference.
"I hope some of the things she has to say about diversity will foster even more leadership and will help the delegates apply some of the things back on their own campus," Cutburth said.
MACURH conference events are not open to the public, Cutburth said.
Rick Zikes, Overland Park graduate student and director of ceremonies for the conference, said the months of planning were paying off.
"It should be a busy weekend," Zikes said. "But we're looking forward to it."
THEY DID IT.
William Alix / KANSAN
Crawly things
Amy Lathrop, Omaha graduate student, left, and Christine Dwyer, Vacaville, Calif., graduate student, examine local amphibians and reptiles at the Natural History Museum. The specimens were collected at Fort Riley at the request of the military.
Arab women live with discrimination
Kansan staff writer
By Carlos Telada
Leila Diab said she had been told she looked "too sophisticated" to be Muslim.
"Iam western," said Diab, indicating her blue suit. "People aren't going to listen to me if I have the hijab — or scarf — on."
Diab, a Palestinian and Muslim journalist, presented her study of Arab-American women at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union last night. About 50 people attended as Diab spoke on the portrayal of Muslim Arab-American women in the American media.
The lecture was part of Palestine Heritage Week.
Arab-American women, especially Muslim Arab-American women, find American culture hostile to their heritage, Diab said. She said her study of 30 Arab-American women between 15 and 50 years of age showed women embrace their Muslim culture to the point that they do not integrate with American society.
Therefore, the women become involved in community mosques and wear traditional Muslim dress — pointing themselves out as Muslims, Diab said.
"The Arab-American woman has chosen a different path," she said. "She has chosen to be visible."
The consequences are discrimination, even at a young age. Diab said.
"When I was in school, many of my teachers discriminated against me as an Arab," she said. "I couldn't understand it. I wasn't brought up to discriminate."
Diab, who grew up in Chicago but also attended school in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, is a member of the United Nations North American Coordinating Committee Representing the People of Palestine. She said she had seen the hate and conflict in the Middle East.
18031762457984
But such emotions were not restricted to the Middle East, Diab said. She said when she was a child the FBI would watch her Chicago neighborhood, an Arab-American community.
"That's what makes this country so unique," she said. "We're able to speak out. On the other hand, Big Brother is watching for the wrong reasons."
"We should be above that," Diab said. "We should be sensitized to other people's suffering as human beings."
Paul Kotz/KANSAN
Rolande Hodel, Potsdam, Germany, graduate student, said she approved of Diab's views. She said all women, not just Arab-American women, felt discrimination by the media.
Leila Diab, a journalist and United Nations official, spoke to about 50 people last night at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union about the portrayal of Arab-American women in the media.
"We're left out of the media for the most part," Hodel said. "It doesn't matter which country you're from."
CAMPUS BRIEFS
ATM robbery may be third by same suspect
AKU student told police a man with a knife robbed him after he made a withdrawal at an automated teller machine Tuesday night.
The victim was using the ATM at 10:22 p.m. Tuesday at Bank IV, 900 Ohio St., when the suspect approached him and demanded money, said Sgt. Rick Nickell of the Lawrence police. The victim said the man possibly was armed with a kitchen knife.
The victim gave the man the $30 he had withdrawn, the report said.
Police think this is related to two similar incidents that took place in the past seven days that began at Dillons, 1740 Massachusetts St. Nickell said.
Anyone with information about any of the cases should call Lawrence police at 841-7210.
The KU chapter of Alpha Omicron Pi celebrates its 75th anniversary this weekend.
KU sorority marks 75th birthday
attracts for current members and alumnae begin tomorrow with a dinner and reception in Overland Park, said Corryn Flahaven, Schaumburg, Ill., senior and chapter public relations chair.
The chapter will have a special ceremony Sunday conducted by KU and Alpha Omicron Pi alumna Mary Williams, who also is the international president of Alpha Omicron Pi.
The Alpha Omicron Pi chapter at KU was installed on May 4, 1918, and was the 21st Alpha Omicron Pi chapter
in the United States. Today, Alpha Omicron Pi is the largest international sorority with over 170 chapters in the United States and Canada, Flahaven said.
University responds to appeal
Twenty days after Emil Tonkovik, former professor of law, filed his appeal to the Board of Regents, the University General Counsel submitted its response yesterday to the Board. Tonkovik was dismissed in July.
Rose Marino, associate general counsel and University representative during the Tonkovich hearing, said she would not disclose the statement's contents.
Ted Ayers, Board general counsel, said the Board had no plans to release Tonkovik's 300-page appeal or the University's statement for dismissal until the Board resolved the matter.
Tonkovich has until Dec. 1 to submit a response to the University's statement, Ayers said.
Great Turkey fun run tomorrow
The KU chapter of Public Relations Student Society of America and Jayhawk Promotions will sponsor the Great Turkey 8Krace and one-mile fun run tomorrow to benefit the Big Brothers/Big Sisters of Douglas County.
Students can register for the race today by picking up an application at Organizations and Activities in the Kansas Union and leaving it in the PRSSA office. Registration, which costs $15 and includes a t-shirt, will be held tomorrow from 6 to 7:45 a.m. in the north parking lot of Shenk Complex, the playing fields at 23rd and Iowa streets. The race begins at 8 a.m. and turkeys will be awarded to winners.
Briefs compiled from Kansan staff reports.
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4
Friday, November 12, 1993
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Harassment decision by court long overdue
The Supreme Court recently ruled that psychological damage is not required to prove on-the-job sexual harassment. The Justices created more precise guidelines for such cases.
This decision is long overdue and will be beneficial to many women who have been victims of sexual harassment. The Supreme Court should be applauded for reaching this decision both quickly and unanimously.
Sexual harassment is, by its nature, psychologically damaging, but this can be difficult to prove, clinically speaking. The victim may not be visibly depressed; however, she may be affected by the experience. She should be allowed to take her case to court without being required to prove this one facet.
On-the-job sexual harassment is a serious and far too common occurrence. This decision will enable more women to take the perpetrators of this crime to court and win their cases. The guidelines will make sexual harassers aware of the price they will pay. In the past, the ambiguous nature of the laws was the excuse Hopefully this will change in the future.
MICHELLE SMITH FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Slattery, Meyers voting against public opinion
Despite popular support and solid reasons to support the North American Free Trade agreement, two U.S. representatives from Kansas are not planning to vote for its passage.
Second district Rep. Jim Slattery has stated he would vote against NAFTA, despite his early support of the idea of a free trade agreement. He says he is dissatisfied with the agreement as it is written and will vote against it in hopes that the pact will be renegotiated.
Slattery's decision to wait until after Mexican elections next year is flawed because the NAFTA debate should be resolved soon. While the magnitude of NAFTA's benefits can be debated, even Slattery admits that it will help Kansas farmers by opening new export markets.
U. S. Rep. Jan Meyers from Lawrence has stated that she is leaning toward voting against the treaty.
Concerned students and Lawrence residents should contact Slattery and Meyers to express their support for the agreement before the vote on the agreement next week. Slattery's phone number is (202) 225-6601 and Meyers' number is (202) 225-2865. A strong message from their constituents could sway their votes and help the economic future of Kansas and the nation.
CHRIS REEDY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
Clinton must work to control population
A new U.S. Department of State bureau says massive population growth and accompanying environmental degradation have replaced the Cold War as the United States' biggest global challenge.
It is encouraging to see the Clinton administration recognizing the seriousness of a problem that underlies much of the world's social and political unrest.
That is a welcome change from former Presidents Reagan and Bush, who de-emphasized birth-control efforts and cut off U.S. aid to the United Nations Population Fund and other population-control programs.
Shortly after taking office, Clinton restored population-control funding.
Department of State's new Bureau of Global Issues, says an even more aggressive effort is needed to make voluntary family planning universally available by the year 2000.
But Tim Wirth, counselor for the
The gravity of the problem is illustrated by the fact that the world's population of 5.5 billion people could double in 40 years.
Each year, the world adds 100 million more mouths to feed. and 92 million of them are in Third World countries.
The U.N. World Food Council reports that 41 developing countries are unable to provide enough food for their populations.
The United States should do what it takes, ideally working with the United Nations and other international bodies, to ensure that people everywhere have access to family planning information and birth control devices.
The Sheboygan Press Sheboygan, Wis.
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FACTS PEROT'S WHINING ACCUSATIONS HOOD UDK '93
This week's column full of drivel deals with the second portion of the bus-riding experience, The Ride, and the rules that should govern it. For those of you who were not the faithful readers you should have been and missed the first portion, Embarking Do's and Don'ts From An Expert, a few reprints are still available, although most have been snapped up by teachers eager to make this world a better place by brainwashing, er, teaching our youth how to ride the bus properly. You may request a reprint by sending $10 or more in small, unmarked bills and a self-addressed, stamped envelope to me, care of this paper. I will consider your request and probably not give you one but will keep your money.
Bus survival part two: How to ride properly
One of the most important things to know when riding the bus is who exactly is deaf, and who is not. It may seem like a complicated and confusing issue, which I guess is why no one seems to have bothered trying to master it. But it is really quite simple. Only the deaf people on the bus are deaf. Since it is generally not possible to tell who these people are simply by looking at them, one should assume, just to be on the safe side, that no one on the bus is deaf. This means that one should not yell to one's friends while riding the bus and then be surprised when nearly being burned to little crispy bits by the looks from the rest of the passengers that say, "What are you, sohe kind of moron?" This also means that one should not sing out loud to the tune on one's Walkman
COLUMNIST
RYAN
McGEE
and expect to be treated as a normal passenger, or even as a human, by the rest of the world.
Last and most important, this means that one should not talk about any blind passengers as if they cannot hear. Blind people are not necessarily deaf. I see this at least once a day. It goes something like this:
Dumb Person 1: "I admire her so much! How does she do it? I wouldn't even have come to school. I would just be so scared."
Dumb Person 2: "And look at her dog! Don't he just the cuteest with his little harness on, just lying there on the floor? I wonder what his name is."
Blind (but not deaf) Person: "Her name's Jodine."
The second Riding Rule pertains to a very important activity while riding the bus: sitting. As absurd as it may seem, many people do not know how to sit properly. In order not to become one of these, please follow a few simple guidelines. Do not put your bag on the seat next to you, especially when the bus is near capacity, and every seat will be needed. There is nothing
more childish on the bus than doing your best to make sure that no one sits next to you, which I assume is the purpose of this type of activity. Each person is allotted one half of one seat, as dictated by the butt-shaped indentations in them, and each person should take no more than one half of one seat. Nothing should be filling the other half of your seat. Not even you or parts of you.
In order to make your standing ride more enjoyable for everyone, simply remember two things. First, move to the back. Second, the bus is going to move. Again, this is a seemingly elementary notion, but one which is constantly forgotten. The bus moves away from a stop and at least half the standees are caught off-guard, their faces displaying this sentiment: "Holy diesel fumes, Batman, this thing's moving! EARTHQUAKE! Man, what have I gotten myself into? Did I accidentally get on the space shuttle? I thought this was just a little building you could come stand in to get out of the cold for a minute."
The last of this series of rules deals with the second-most important activity while riding the bus: standing. This is an important activity because one often must ride while standing, either because there are more people on the bus than there are seats, or because there are a selfish few using all the seat space with their bags and feet.
Ryan McGee Is a Worland, Wyo.
soophomore.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Regents should hear Tonkovich's appeal
The writer's opinion is based on the fact that "five impartial faculty members" have "spent nine months (at lower hearing) listening to 49 witnesses and observing 96 pieces of evidence on the 20 allegations."
The editorial in the Oct. 27 *Kansan* that the Board of Regents should not hear Emil Tonkovich's appeal is rabble-rouser.
Their "hearing, all 8,176 pages of it" must be "a fair evaluation" of Tonkovic his guilt. Suit are the tactics used to appeal to popular imagination.
1) The campus mood surrounding this case is such that the cost to put Tonkovich back in the classroom is too high, even if justice calls for it.
Disturbing elements beset this case:
2) Prosecutors build cases hoping for the synergy or combined effect of multiple allegations. This is a kind of appeal to the masses or jury emotions. To counter, a serious judicial principle holds, "a series of misdemeanors, however long the list, do not add up to a felony." The
question: Is any of the 20 allegations, taken singly, enough to revoke tenure?
Only the Regents, removed from the campus mood, can decide.
Finally, the editorial says,
"Tonkovich (will) draw out this case as only a lawyer can do." That is an aspersion on the lawyers' profession. This is not necessary.
Lawrence graduate student
Katie Greenwald Washington report
ST. PETE'S BUDAPEST
Police power squandered on infamous cookie crooks
Unless you have been hibernating for the last decade, you know that crime is a big problem in Washington. But the worst offenders the police seem to be able to catch are the cookie criminals.
Yes, cookie criminals. While the mayor of Washington, Sharon Pratt Kelly, has requested that the National Guard be called in to search for real criminals, the undercover Metro Transit Police busted a couple of my friends for eating cookies on the bus.
Granted, it is posted on buses and the metro that passengers may not eat or drink while riding. Claudia and Allison knew this, and they risked "fines or jail" for the pleasure of Pepperidge Farm cookies. But shouldn't some of the cops relegated to cookie patrol and Metro Transit duty be assigned to another division, at least temporarily, and hunt down real criminals?
Claudia was livid about the $10 tickets she and Alison received, and everyone else got a good laugh out of it. But is it really that funny?
police officer and the shadown.
According to *The Washington Post*, Kelly plans to assign Guard members to "accompany police officers on patrol in crime-plagued neighborhoods."
Situations that require the Guard must be serious. I wonder why the police cannot handle the situation. ::
President Clinton said he could not grant Kelly's request to "act on her own to call out the Guard" because "his authority as commander-in-chief of the D.C. National Guard cannot be delegated to the mayor or anyone else outside the executive branch."
Clinton has indicated that he will support a change in legislation that would make the Washington mayor commander-in-chief of the city's Guard. Currently, about two dozen Guard members provide technical and administrative aid to the police. It seems, though, that Washington did not exhaust all other possibilities before it called the Guard.
Claudia's and Alison's ordeal did not end with the issuance of tickets. The police would not accept Claudia's out-of-state check, and they told her that Alison must be present when the ticket was paid.
So, I drove them to the police station at 11 p.m. We figured that there would be no line. We were right. But still, we waited for more than half an hour. The cops had to make sure that Claudia and Alison had no priors. And it took three cops to do this.
Through all of this, my car was in a 30-minute parking zone, and we were at the station for more than half an hour. We took turns going outside to see if I had been ticketed. For some reason, with all the cops hanging out at the station, I did not get one.
But I want to know what all those cops were doing at the station. I could tell that at least a few of them were wearing bulletproof vests, so I thought that they still might be on duty. But what do I know?
Apparently, citizens have asked the mayor to call out the Guard. I cannot blame them. I worry about walking after dark in safe parts of Washington,
I still think the Guard would be unnecessary if the police were doing their jobs. Or, in the case of the cookie patrol and the administration, if they were not doing their jobs and doing something of consequence, the Guard would not be needed.
Katie Greenwald is a Denver graduate student in Journalism.
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NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 12, 1993
5
United Nations tightens penalties against Libya
Refusal to give up bombing suspects prompts action
The Associated Press
UNITED NATIONS — Despite complaints that it was doing too little too late, the Security Council voted yesterday to tighten sanctions against Libya for refusing to turn over suspects in the 1988 bombing of a Pan Am jetliner.
The Security Council shied away from hitting Libya where it would hurt most; its oil exports. And U.S. Ambassador Madeleine Albright was noncommittal about whether Washington would try again for an oil embargo.
Libya's economy relies on its oil exports of 1.5 million barrels a day, generating $9 billion a year in revenue.
Pan Am Flight 103 exploded over Lockerbie, Scotland, on Dec. 21, 1988. Six relatives of victims witnessed the vote to expand the air and arms embargo in effect since April 1992 into a freeze of Libya's foreign bank accounts and a ban on its import of some oil equipment. The vote was 11-0 with four abstentions.
Susan Cohen, whose daughter was among the bombing's 270 victims, complained the sanctions are inadequate and unlikely to force Libyan leader Moammar Gadhaf to surrender the suspects to the United States and Britain, where they are charged.
Despite initial U.S. support, European nations heavily dependent on Libyan oil blocked adoption of a petroleum embargo. A group called Families of Pan Am 103/Lockerbie said in a statement an oil embargo would be necessary.
"The only thing likely to do the job is a full oil embargo. This endless diplomatic game at the U.N. is nothing but an avoidance of action." Cohen said.
The limited sanctions are scheduled to take effect Dec. 1 unless Libya cooperates.
Libya says it has urged the suspects — Abdul Basset Ali al-Megrahi and Lamen Khalifa Fhimah — to surrender but cannot legally force them to do so.
The suspects say they want assurances of a fair trial in a neutral country. The Libyan ambassador, Ali Elhouderi, suggested that the United States would not be appropriate because of "areas of deficiency in the American judicial system, which were revealed by the Rodney King trial in Los Angeles."
Four white policemen were acquitted in the beating of King, a black motorist, in Los Angeles in 1991.
It took a tussle with the Russians, weeks of ardous negotiations and intervention by President Clinton to expand the sanctions. The United States, Britain and France let an Oct. 1 deadline pass in an effort to win Russian support and give Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali more time to press the Libyans.
The Russians at one point threatened a veto because of concern the North African country wouldn't repay a $4 billion debt to Moscow for military and commercial trade. Moscow voted in favor of the resolution after it was revised to say the sanctions do not remove Libya's duty to repay its foreign debt.
Although the sanctions include a freeze on Libya's financial assets in foreign bank accounts, diplomats believe Tripoli already has withdrawn its liquid assets in the four months it has known the penalties were coming.
Besides handing over the suspects in the Pan Am bombing, France wants Libya to cooperate in its investigation of four suspects, including Gadhafii's brother-in-law, in a 1989 attack on a French DC-10 airliner over Niger that killed 171 people.
THE NEWS in brief
Eurasia
CANTERBURY, England
Officials insist that seat belts should be mandatory on buses
The crash Wednesday, which also killed the British driver, has focused attention on a dispute within the European Community about safety belts.
A doctor who treated Americans injured in a tourist bus crash said yesterday that nine passengers might not have died if they had been wearing safety belts.
"It is apparent that those who died were thrown out of the side of the coach, which landed on top of them," said Susan Brooks, director of accident and emergency services at the Kent and Canterbury Hospital. "Had they been restrained within the coach, they would have been protected."
Police said the coach clipped a van, then careened off the M2 highway in southeastern England and shot down a 20-foot embankment.
Robert Key, the government minister responsible for roads, said Britain had been pressing for European Community rules requiring seat belts on buses.
Officials at EC headquarters in Brussels said coach manufacturers are required to attach safety belts only to "exposed seats" — those in the front of the bus and along the aisle.
Britain, Denmark and Germany have joined the community's executive agency in pushing for tougher regulations that would require all seats to be equipped with seat belts.
Although Britain could require British manufacturers to install belts throughout, it could not bar buses from other EC nations.
"They are being very well cared for," said U.S. Consul- General Elizabeth Ann Swift. "In terms of morale they're bearing up very well."
LONDON Study; Alcohol doesn't kill brain cells
LONDON
Contrary to popular belief, chronic drinking does not kill nerve cells in the brain — it just disconnects them, a new Danish study shows.
The findings, based on detailed examinations of the brains of alcoholics who died, suggest it may be easier than previously thought to restore brain function damaged by heavy drinking.
Dead nerve cells do not regenerate and are not replaced in the brain, but the fibers that link them will sometimes regrow after being damaged.
"It gives some hope in the sense that it might be possible to restore at least some function" of the brain, Dr. Bente Pakkenberg said yesterday. She is director of the Neurological Research Laboratory at the Bartholin Institute in Copenhagen, Denmark.
The study appears in the Nov. 13 issue of the British medical journal Lancet.
MINNEAPOLIS
Girl wins sexual harassment case
The state Department of Human Rights ruled in favor of a elementary school girl who complained that boys as young as 6 years old made lewd remarks and sexual taunts at her on the school bus.
The agency found probable cause that the Eden Prairie School District discriminated against Cheltzie Hentz and other girls because the boys were not handled as violators of the district's sexual harassment policy.
Cheltzie was 6 during the 1991-92 school year, when she complained to her mother about "naughty" language and behavior on the bus, including comments about girls' sex organs and explicit suggestions about oral sex.
In April, the district agreed to crack down on sexual harassment, after the U.S. Education Department said it mishandled Celtzite's complaints.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
is now accepting applications from students with previous Kansan experience for positions of Business Manager and Editor
Business Manager and Editor for the Spring 1994 semester.
Applications may be obtained at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. Return the completed application and a current resumé to the Dean's office, 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall, by noon on the appropriate deadline indicated below.
Applications may be obtained at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall,
Business Manager Schedule
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- Friday, Nov. 12:
Application deadline, Interview sign-up
*Monday, Nov. 15:
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Selection Interviews, 3;30 p.m.
- Monday,Nov.15:
- Tuesday, Nov. 16:
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Interviews will take place in the conference room, 120 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Applicants will be notified of the successful candidate after everyone has interviewed. Any information you wish to be considered in your interview may be attached to your application.
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Kansas Expocentre
November 12 - 14, 1993
Friday 12 - 9 pm,
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SPECIAL EVENTS - DILLARDS FASHION STAGE - COOKING & BEAUTY DEMOS
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Register to win 2 free tickets anywhere Delta Air Lines flies in the Continental U.S.
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Friday, November 12, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Fliers around campus displayed a picture of an ape and a simple question:
Speech puts evolution theory on trial
By Traci Carl
Kansan staff writer
According to Ricky Walters, campus minister for Jayhawker Campus Fellowship, it is not.
"Is this your daddy?"
The fliers urged those interested to hear the evidence against evolution at 8 p.m. Just night in the Burge Union. About 25 people decided to listen to what Walters had to say.
Evolution was an excuse not to believe in God, and evidence supported creation, not evolution, Walters said.
There is no evidence in the present
Evolution also goes against the laws of nature, Walters said. The second law of thermodynamics states that the universe goes from a higher to a lower level of organization. But evolution says that life is becoming more organized. Walters said.
The law actually supports the theory of creation and the Bible, he said.
"The Bible says things are running down," he said. "The world is becoming more morally corrupted."
Scientists may be able to create organic materials from gases, water and electricity — which supports the big bang theory — but they cannot
create life, Walters said. Life requires organization and design, something only creation had, while evolution is dependent on too many variables, he said.
Walters said many evolutionists supported his theory including Steven J. Gould, a professor of geology at Harvard University who came up with the theory of punctuated equilibrium. The theory states that there are rapid periods of evolution because there was not evidence that evolution happened gradually.
"Evolution has to have a lot of things come together," he said. "It's a big chain reaction of what-ifs."
"It's saying because there is lack of evidence, we have to come up with a different theory," he said.
Mike Weiser, St. Joseph, Mo., senior, said he thought Walters' evidence was incomplete and inconclusive. Walters' quotes from evolutionists seemed to support his theory, but they were taken out of context, Weiser said.
world or the fossil record that evolution is occurring, he said, and natural selection is simply an adaptation of species to their environment.
"It's like saying Billy Graham doesn't believe in God," he said.
Gould is a strong supporter of evolution, he said, and it was not fair to misrepresent him or his theory.
"Either there is an evolutionary linkage, or God was not very creative in the creation," he said.
Walters did not look at specific evolutionary examples in the general world, Weiser said.
Brady bill backers look to secure Senate vote
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Cheered by a 49-vote victory in the House, backers of the Brady bill are redoubling efforts to secure Senate passage of the five-day waiting period and criminal background check it would require for handgun buyers.
Prospects appeared to brighten as the Senate reached agreement Wednesday on how to deal with a separate but far-reaching crime-control bill.
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and said he was intrigued with the idea promoted by Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y., to tax certain forms of ammunition and use the money to help pay for national health care reforms. But he said a better idea might be an outright ban on the most deadly bullets.
Clinton predicted passage of the Brady bill and said he was intrigued with the idea promoted by New York Democratic Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan to tax certain forms of ammunition and use the money to help pay for national health care reforms. The proposal is not part of the crime bill.
But he said a better idea might be an outright ban on the most deadly bullets.
Clinton predicted that the Brady bill would pass
eliminate a provision, added at the suggestion of the National Rifle Association, to cancel the waiting period if a national computerized system to permit instant background checks hasn't been perfected in five years time.
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States that have waiting periods longer than five days could keep them. States that have none or have waiting periods of less than five days would have to abide by a five-day minimum, assuming the federal Brady requirement becomes law.
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Partially funded by the National Endowment for the Arts, Mid-America Arts Alliance, KU Student Senate Activity Fee, Friends of the Lied Series, and the Kansas University Endowment Association. Special thanks to this year's Very Important Partners: Hallmark Cards, Inc., Kie's Audio and Video, Payless ShoeSource and W.T. Kemper Foundation, Commerce Bank Trustee.
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TUESDAY, November 16th 8pm
THURSDAY, November 18th - 7:30pm National Homeless Coalition Speaker Michael Stoops and multimedia slide show
THURSDAY, November 18th 7-8:30pm
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 12, 1993
7
"That was the crowning achievement of his scholarly career," said his brother and best friend, Breon Mitchell. "He considered it the summation of a lot of important work he had done. He was proud of the book coming out and justifiably so." because he didn't want to give it up.
Physically, the final 18 months of Mitchell's life punished him.
as a professor of art history, Mitchell inspired his students to consider the ideas and influences behind a work of art. He used his knowledge, wit and engaging style to involve them in
As a professor of
Maxine Mitchell, artist and writer, was a strong influence on her three sons Breon, John and Tim, shown here in the mid-1980s.
Continued from Page 1.
To Van Buren, who finished the course with an A, Mitchell's dedication to the history of art was a nalable.
"It infected people," he said. "He was really intense about this stuff. And so everybody else would listen, and there'd be kind of an animated atmosphere, which was really cool."
Classroom atmosphere was Mitchell's sally. Seeming taller than his 6-foot frame and most always dressed sharply in crisp shirts and dazzling ties, Mitchell had a commanding presence.
"Any questions? Any questions at all?" he would begin each class, standing center stage. If there were none, he would step behind the podium, dim the lights and click the slide tray into motion. As brilliant images of art flashed upon the wall, his voice would resonate through the darkened classroom, drawing the students' undivided attention.
He spoke extemporaneously, not.
confined to a written script. With his dynamism, Mitchell could make even an auditorium feel like an intimate setting.
Coupled with his presentation style, Mitchell's depth of knowledge in modern art also engaged students, including Randy Griffey, a Norton graduate student in the department.
One of Mitchell's trademarks was his approach to teaching students to recognize an unidentified work by its elements and apparent influences. He would begin class with two unknown slides and invite discussion about their telling characteristics.
For Van Buren, himself a painter,
Mitchell's emphasis on issues beyond
dates, time periods and artists was
"He had an amazing command of the material, and so as a listener, you never felt like he was just giving you the surface level of the material," Griffey said. "That's also not to say he was talking over your head. He was able to give you the information in many different ways if you didn't get it the first time."
MILLIAN ROSS
Memorial gathering honors late professor
An informal gathering in memory of the late Tim Mitchell, professor of art history, will be held at 4 p.m. today on the third floor reception room in the Spencer Museum of Art. The department of art history will be host of the event.
James Muyksens, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said the gathering would give those who knew Mitchell a chance to reflect on his contributions.
"He was one of those people, as soon as you talked with him a short time, you knew he was a dedicated teacher," Muyssenkens said. "Before his passing and certainly since then, many of the students have made clear how much of an impression he made on them."
Laurie Ward, director of the Greater University Fund, will announce a fund established in
Muyksens and Ed Eglinski, head of the department, will speak briefly at the gathering.
rewarding.
Mitchell's memory. The Timothy Mitchell Undergraduate Art History Award will annually recognize a student showing outstanding accomplishment. The fund, initiated by Mitchell's two brothers, Breon and John, will include all previous donations made in the professor's memory. Those wishing to contribute to the fund may contact the Endowment Association.
"That's what was really exciting, that paintings embody ideas and that he talked about it on that level," he said.
"I think it's a very fitting memorai," Ward said. "It's very thoughtful of them to match this award to the type of student Tim was when he went here."
Mitchell graduated from KU in 1965 with bachelor degrees in art history and German.
On display at the gathering will be the book jacket for Mitchell's book, "Art and Science in German Landscape Painting, 1770-1840." Published by Oxford University Press, the book is due to be released shortly.
Mitchell was effective because he was popular, because he treated students as adults. And they appreciated that.
Likewise, Mitchell appreciated his students. Almost every semester he volunteered to teach an introductory course. The motive? Mitchell's comments from a 1989 interview provide a clue.
"The most immediate satisfaction of teaching is seeing students excited about what you have taught," he said. But Mitchell's appeal was not limited to his students.
A COLLEAGUE AND A FRIEND
When Linda Stone-Ferrier joined the department of art history along with Mitchell in 1980, she discovered a colleague who offered support beyond common collegiality.
"He would share his own stories about past rejection letters he had gotten from editors, and we would just laugh about it," she said, recalling conversations about submitting articles for publication. "I think it's pretty unusual in academia, or even in the business world, that you have a colleague you can share your disappointments and your triumphs with and know that person will sincerely understand."
Throughout the years, the two professors and their spouses became close friends, meeting for lunch on campus, celebrating births and birthdays and visiting on the weekends.
At age 48, Mitchell was promoted from associate to full professor. By this time, dozens of his book reviews and about 20 of his major scholarly articles had been published. He had presented nearly 30 public lectures here and abroad. And he was well-liked by students, as evidenced by his nomination for the Honor for the Outstanding Progressive Educator Award or HOPE Award in 1989.
"You finally feel like you have a certain command of your material, and you're ready to go on and do something on the next level." Stone-Ferrier said. "You're not at that gathering stage so much anymore. You can go on and do something seminal."
In Stone-Ferrier's view, Mitchell had reached a peak in his career.
YEARS OF THOUGHT
That he did.
In 1962, as an undergraduate at KU, Mitchell spent the summer in Holzkirchen, Germany, as part of the KU Summer Language Program. It marked the beginning of a lifelong love for the German language and culture.
In 1979, the year he was to begin teaching at KU, Mitchell learned he had won a yearlong Fulbright senior research scholarship to West Berlin. Throughout his life, he would make about a dozen trips to Germany, most for the purpose of studying the works of 19th-century German landscape artist Caspar David Friedrich and German theories of geology.
Although he admired other artists, such as Pablo Picasso and Vasily Kandinsky, Mitchell narrowed his scholarly focus on Friedrich, whose works reflected a synthesis of romanticism and geology.
Representing more than a decade of thought and scholarship was Mitchell's first and only book, "Art and Science in German Landscape Painting, 1770-1840," published by Oxford University Press. The book is due to be released later this fall.
In Mitchell's own estimation, the book was his greatest scholarly accomplishment. No one would disagree.
THE MAKING OF A MASTER
Mitchell's interest in science and art reflected influences from a time long before KU.
Born Oct. 22, 1943, Timothy Frank Mitchell was the youngest son of John and Maxine Mitchell. The Mitchell boys — as Tim, Breon and John were known — were the product of parents who fostered love and laughter and sowed the seeds of intellectual curiosity.
Encouraged by their mother, an artist and writer, the boys took private art lessons, working with oils, pastels, and charcoal. Years later, Mitchell would pursue painting briefly but abandon it in favor of teaching.
Books surrounded the boys, from the classics to westerns, a favorite of their father, a surgeon. As an adult, Mitchell read and collected science fiction literature and art, with a penchant for works by author and illustrator Mervyn Peake.
Mitchell's flushy neckties, a trademark of sorts, were another product of the Mitchell home. Handmade by Maxine Mitchell, the ties featured brilliant, wild, floral patterns. Mitchell wore the 15 or so he owned not only for their artistic flare but also in memory of his mother, who died in 1989, a few years after her husband
After graduating from Salina High School in 1961, Mitchell followed his brothers' footsteps to KU. John Mitchell, now a doctor at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., graduated in 1962 from KU's School of Medicine. Breon Mitchell, now director of the Wells Scholars Program at Indiana University at Bloomington, graduated from KU in 1964 with four undergraduate degrees, including one in art history. Later, as a Rhodes Scholar, he received a doctorate in comparative literature from Oxford University.
After a brief foray into mathematics, Mitchell pursued German and art history degrees, which he completed in the spring of 1965.
A year later he married Nancy Fink, a French major at KU and a hometown girl he had been too shy to approach in high school. Today, their two daughters, Kristina, a graduate student, and Sarah, a junior, continue the Jayhawk tradition.
In 1967, Mitchell completed a master's degree in art history at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.
But before he could move on to his doctorate, which he would receive from Indiana University at Bloomington, Uncle Sam intervened. In 1869, Mitchell was drafted into the U.S. Army as the Vietnam War raged on. His superior performance in basic training, advanced infantry training and marksmanship earned him the dubious distinction of being prime combat material. Twice he received orders to Southeast Asia. But by error, he never was sent. He was honorably discharged in 1971.
The luck that spared him from war would fail him in a personal battle 22 years later.
THE NEWS
It began with a nagging cold in the fall of 1991. In February 1992, the diagnosis came: leukemia. Slowly word spread —in the department and on campus.
Some he told personally. Others heard, or overheard. Although he never avoided the topic when mentioned, initiating conversation about his illness made him uneasy.
That spring, with his energy level sapped from chemotherapy treatments, Mitchell handed the reins of his class, Concepts in Modernism, over to Kate Battles, a graduate teaching assistant.
"It was a difficult thing for the students. It was a difficult thing for me," Battles said. "I think it was really hard for Tim. He didn't really want to relinquish that. I think he taught a little longer than he really should have
SOARING
Physically, the final 18 months of Mitchell's life were punishing. Loss of energy, weight and nearly all his halp, including his thick, short, peppered white beard, gave him an appearance of frailty.
But spiritually, some say, he soared.
(1)
In the summer of 1992, Mitchell submitted the final draft of his book. Ideas already were churning for a second book, to be based on modernism.
That fall, he resumed teaching. Three hours a week he lectured on ancient and medieval art to 188
undergraduates and met by appointment with one honor and five doctoral students.
Pat Fairchild was among the five. She had begun her doctoral studies in 1984, the first of four years during which Mitchell served as director of graduate studies in the department. She would be the last doctoral student to finish under Mitchell's direction and the only one to go through the traditional graduation-day doctoral hooding ceremony with him.
"It seemed like he was pushing harder, like maybe he was trying to get things tied up; I don't know, being more aware of his mortality," Fairchild said.
That spring, Carol Masterson, a graduate student in Mitchell's signature 20th Century Modern Art class, rediscovered a professor who, frankly, had made little impression on her as an undergraduate 10 years earlier.
Marching down the Hill, Tim Mitchell serves as a commencement marshal in 1991. Twenty-six years earlier he took the same path as student, graduating with bachelor degrees in German and art history.
Certainly his wit didn't faded. Masterson recalled not just laughing but, as she put it, guffawing heartily, at Mitchell's humor.
"I wasn't alone. A lot of students in my class thought he was very, very funny," she said. "He just had a real gift for humor, and he poked fun at himself lot."
Earlier that spring, Mitchell treated himself to a new toy: a royal blue convertible 1983 Mazda Miata.
Kate Battles, the GTA who assumed his class the previous spring, said the car was a source of pride for Mitchell and on one occasion, a source of jest.
"I asked him how he liked it and he said, 'Oh, I just love it.' Battles recalled. "By this time he had lost all of his hair, and he said, 'There's nothing like getting in a convertible and having the wind in your hair."
HIS INFLUENCE CONTINUES
The laughter stopped Aug. 17, 1993, the day Tim Mitchell died.
For most, word of his death brought shock and sadness. For Mitchell's former student Randy Griffey, the news sparked anger.
And revelation.
The next morning, Griffey sat among a roomful of graduate students waiting to take their master's exam. Rumors of Mitchell's death had circulated earlier that morning. Then came confirmation.
"As soon as I heard that he had died, I got really angry, and I felt really stupid that I had spent three months of my life worrying about this exam." Griffey said. "Everything immediately fell into perspective for me, and all of a sudden the exam wasn't as big of a thing."
Even in death, Mitchell had inspired.
8
Friday. November 12, 1993
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Students play major role in Special Olympics games
Scott Davis, Dallas graduate student, is one of many KU students assisting 1,177 individuals with disabilities in the Kansas Special Olympics Winter Indoor East Games in Lawrence this weekend.
By Liz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
"I get satisfaction out of taking a little time out of each year and helping the community," said Davis, who will referee volleyball games today.
Although this is Davis' first year volunteering for the Special Olympics in Lawrence, he helped out with the event for four years as an undergraduate at Seton Hall University in New Jersey. Davis said that he enjoyed the work but did not know if he agreed with the title of the program.
"I can see how hard it is to be in that position," Davis said. "Sometimes I don't like the word 'special.' I just feel like that word connotes a lesser person. In some aspects they're not a lesser person. They're the same as you and they. They're just a little different."
Senior citizens to children from Eastern Kansas, considered east of Interstate 35, will compete in volleyball at Robinson Center and bowling at Royal Crest Lanes, Ninth and Iowa.
There are 25 volleyball teams and 1,115 bowlers, said Mike Miller. assistant games and competition director.
Other events include a banquet at Lawrence High School, 1901 Louisiana, a dance at Holcom Sports Complex, 2700 W. 27th St., and a dance and movie at Hillcrest Theatres, Ninth and Iowa
The Olympians prepared for the event by undergoing an
eight-week training session involving 267 coaches. Each competitor will receive a medal or ribbon for their participation.
"It's an avenue to put people who are mentally retarded into a forum where they can fit right into the community as active participants," Miller said. "It helps build their self-esteem and self worth. It gives the community a real respect for the mentally retarded."
The East Games are primarily supported by the sponsorship of local businesses and volunteers, the majority of which are college students, Miller said.
"Almost every student walks away feeling like they have done something wonderful," said Pam Young, assistant human resources director for the East Games.
Dealing with the mentally retarded is a new and positive way of relating to people, said Vered Hankin, Overland Park junior.
"I think a lot of the mentally handicapped people I've met before are a lot more affectionate because they don't adhere to societal norms," Hankin said. "They're more willing to express an emotion they have."
"I think that it's very easy to get caught up in a lot of self-furthering kinds of things and it's important to give back to the community. I know I'll walk away knowing it was worthwhile."
The event gives the community a real respect for the mentally retarded, Miller said.
"You get a real special feeling out of volunteering for this sort of thing," Miller said. "It's just a real positive experience to work with Special Olympics and the athletes."
Career fair not exclusively for social welfare majors
By Kathleen Stone
Kansan staff writer
The School of Social Welfare is sponsoring a career fair today, but social welfare students are not the only ones invited.
Because the field of social work is so broad, many other majors, such as psychology or sociology, also may find career opportunities.
"A lot of students come into the field not recognizing the breadth of opportunity they have," Jess said. "This way, they can talk face to face with people working in the field."
Ann Hartley, assistant director of the University Placement Center, spent the past month compiling survey statistics about last spring's social welfare graduates from KU.
That variety translates into more jobs. And the number is increasing.
Social workers deal with a variety of groups, including the elderly, abused children and the homeless. They work in the public sector, including the military and schools, and in the private sector, including hospitals and in-home care services.
Hartley said she could not compare the statistics to other years because the center just began conducting the surveys for the school. But she said she thought that the market was as good if not better than in the past.
According to her findings, 96 percent of the students with master's degrees had jobs or were not looking. For students with bachelor's degrees, 70 percent were employed, in graduate school or not looking. The survey had about a 76 percent response rate from the master's recipients and about 57 percent from the bachelor's recipients.
A growing elderly population along with increasing social problems are two factors which may be creating more jobs in social welfare, Hartley said. But while such conditions may increase job security in the private sector, it could strain funding for public institutions, she said.
According to the U.S. Department of Labor, the number of social welfare jobs is expected to increase faster than the overall average of other occupations through 2005.
Today's career fair also gives students a chance to prepare for future employment through internships, which can benefit both students and employers, Hartley said.
What you can do
Students interested in careers in or related to social welfare can attend the School of Social Welfare's career fair tomorrow. The fair, which features about 60 social welfare agencies, is from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. at the Kansas Union Ballroom.
KANSAN
"It benefits the students because they get learning experience and it benefits the employer because they get to see how you work before they hire you," she said.
Angela Holoubek, Hutchinson senior, said her internship at the SRS office in Wyandotte County was good preparation.
"If I would go into the real world without it, I would be totally lost," she said. "It'd be really scary."
KANSAS
KANSAS
VS.
OKLAHOMA
Sunday, Nov, 14th
1:00pm
Allen Fieldhouse
•Senior Recognition•
•Students Free with KUID•
VOLLEYBALL
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 12, 1993
Fans flock to matchup between top teams
3.
The Associated Press
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — It was a quiet morning on the Notre Dame campus yesterday. Then the Florida State fans showed up.
Driving motor homes and minivans, dripping garnet and gold and doing the chop, the brash Seminoles faithful awoke the sleepy campus where college football's game of the year was just two days away.
"I don't think they understand that we're not intimidated," said Jim Stripling of Hartford, Ala. "Heck, we go to Miami."
The rumble of anticipation spread $ ^{a} $quickly around 64-year-old Notre Dame Stadium, where No.1 Florida $ ^{b} $State and the second-ranked Fighting Irish play tomorrow.
Even before the first wave of out-of-town fans arrived, Notre Dame students were beginning to warm to the occasion. Conversations about the game could be heard all across campus, and banners adorned many residence hall windows that had been bare just a day earlier.
"I think the academics sort of over Shadowed the hoopla, until today," told Todd Aldrich, a Notre Dame student from Newport Beach, Calif.
While the campus has warmed slowly to the hype surrounding the first No.1 vs. No.2 matchup at Notre Dame in 25 years, the nation has salivated over the game for weeks.
The university's sports information department has issued nearly 800 media credentials, far surpassing the previous Notre Dame record of 650
for the 1988 Miami game. Notre Dame
won that game, 31-30 on the way to its
last national championship.
15 Nearly 50 media members will sit in the stands tomorrow, an unprecedented move.
Ticket agents say seats to the game are among the most coveted of any regular-season college football game. Solomon season dukes commanded
Holly McQueen / KANSAN
Freshman cornerback Tony Blevins makes a tackle during a game against Utah. The Jayhawk defense has been preparing to stop the Buffalooes' wide receiver Charles Johnson, who leads the Big Eight Conference in receptions.
better than $1,000 per ticket, with
rumors of prices of $10,000 and
above.
Dan McHugh, an Air Force staff sergeant from Grissom Air Force Kuwait, paid $450 apiece
Base near Kokomo, paid $450 apiece
for two tickets. A Notre Dame fan,
says.
McHugh used the Florida State weekend for a reunion with an Air Force buddy.
Notre Dame security were preparing for as many as 10,000 more fans than for a normal game.
Notre Dame fans from as far away as eastern Pennsylvania and New Jersey cozied up to Florida State fans from Alabama and Florida in the parking lots throughout the day.
Parking lots across from the stadium began to fill with vans and mobile homes late yesterday morning.
Game 11
Kansas Jayhawks (4-5-0)
Head Coach: Glen Mason
Offense:
WR 83 Greg Ballard 6-3 195 Sr.
TE 1 Dwane Chandler 6-2 235 Sr.
LT 54 Rod Jones 6-4 285 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 62 Chris Banks 6-2 270 So.
WR 7 Robert Reed 6-1 185 Jr.
QB 9 Asheki Preston 6-1 190 Jr.
RB 20 June Henley 6-1 190 Jr.
FB 32 Chris Powell 5-9 220 Jr.
Defense:
OLB 39 Don Davis 6-1 212 Jr.
RT 7 Chris Maumalanga 6-3 266 Sr.
LT 61 Mike Steele 6-3 176 Jr.
LE 90 Guy Howard 6-4 245 Sr.
OLB 46 Ronnie Ward 6-0 212 So.
ILB 35 Larry Thiel 6-3 223 Sr.
ILB 52 Steve Harvey 6-3 234 Sr.
CB 28 Tony Blevins 6-0 170 Fr.
SS 4 Marlin Blakeney 5-11 192 So.
FS 47 Clint Bowen 5-11 190 Sr.
CB 3 Gerald McCurrows 5-11 188 Jr.
Colorado Buffaloes (8-0-0)
Head Coach: Bill McCartney
Offense:
WR 9 Charles Johnson 6-1 185 Sr.
TE 86 Christian Faurie 6-4 235 Jr.
LT 60 Tony Barti 6-6 270 Jr.
LG 63 Heath Irwin 6-5 280 So.
C 64 Bryan Stoltenberg 6-2 260 So.
RG 70 Craig Anderson 6-4 275 Sr.
RT 72 Delak West 6-8 285 Jr.
WR 86 Brian Embrace 6-4 284 Sr.
QB 9 Michael Westbrook 6-4 210 Jr.
RB 20 Kordell Stewart 6-3 210 Jr.
FB 19 Rashaan Salaam 6-1 210 So.
Defense:
OLB 58 Ron Woolfork 6-4 240 Sr.
RT 92 Shawen Glavelle 6-4 270 Sr.
LT 92 Kerry Nicks 6-6 260 So.
LE 93 Darius Holland 6-5 285 Jr.
OLB 90 Sam Rogers 6-3 245 Sr.
ILB 16 Matt Russell 6-2 240 Fr.
ILB 48 Ted Johnson 6-4 235 Jr.
CB 7 Dalton Simmons 6-1 180 So.
SS 21 Dwayne Davis 6-1 210 Sr.
FS 47 Chris Hudson 5-11 190 Jr.
CB 22 Dennis Collier 6-9 190 Sr.
KU
BLEVINS
Micah Laaker/KANSAN
Source: KANSAN Staff Reports
Kansas must stop gifted Colorado receivers to win
Johnson poses threat for Jayhawk defense
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas has faced many fine wide receivers this season. But none of the receivers that the Jayhawks have faced may be as good as Colorado senior Charles Johnson.
Johnson leads the Big Eight Conference in receptions with 47 and yardage with 889. He and junior wide receiver Michael Westbrook will present the Kansas secondary a formidable challenge in the contest between the Buffalooes and Jayhawks at 1 p.m. tomorrow at Folsom Field in Boulder.
"Charles Johnson, there's none better than that guy," said Kansas coach Glen Mason. "Besides being a heck of an athlete, he's a heck of a football player. He's awfully good, as is Westbrook."
Westbrook has 29 receptions for 430 yards this season, but the Buffaloes look for Johnson when they are in need of a big play. Big plays have become routine for Johnson this season.
Examples of Johnson's big play potential were demonstrated in Colorado's 31-14 victory at Oklahoma State last week. Johnson had touchdowns receptions of 26 and 54 yards and six catches for 121 yards.
However, the biggest play Johnson made that day was not on a reception but rather on an interception. Johnson stole the ball away from Oklahoma State strong safety Charles Verner. Verner intercepted a pass from Colorado quarterback Kordell Stewart at the Colorado 15-yard line with the Buffaloes leading 17-7 in the third quarter.
Colorado then drove 88 yards for a touchdown, which was the 54-yard reception from Johnson, and a 24-7 lead.
"C.J.'s performance was remarkable," said Colorado coach Bill McCartney. "The pass in which they intercepted it and he stole the ball back was the biggest play of the game. That really settled the game."
Coaches from other Big Eight schools have been amazed by the performances that Johnson has turned in this season.
"He's a tremendous receiver and athlete," said Oklahoma coach Gary Gibbs. "He honestly thinks when the ball is in the air that it is his."
That type of attitude and determination will be another concern for Kansas defensive backs in defending the talented Johnson. Junior cornerback Gerald McBurrows said that Johnson would be one of the top receivers the Jayhawks have faced and that it would be difficult to stop him.
"He's a superb receiver and I give him a lot of credit for his success," McBurrows said. "We'll have to keep our focus, stay with what we have in the game plan and just play the ball. We have the athletes in the defensive backfield that can play with him."
...
William Alix / KANSAN
Freshman swimmer Eric Singer practices with the Kansas swimming and diving team at Robinson Natatorium. The team will face Southern Methodist University in Oklahoma City this weekend.
Swimmers set for rival SMU
Last year's victory sparks motivation
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas women's swimming and diving team hopes that history will repeat itself when it travels with the men's team to the Oklahoma City Community College Natoratolium to face Southern Methodist University on Saturday.
The women's team defeated Southern Methodist 152-148 last year in Lawrence. The women's meet last year was decided by the final race, the 400-yard freestyle relay. The then No. 11 Kansas women's team won the relay by less than one-tenth of a second, upsetting the then No. 5 Mustangs.
"It's definitely a big meet," senior swimmer Krista Cordsen said. "We can't go in with a laidback attitude and expect to win. It'll take a 100-percent effort from everyone."
The women's team is expecting another tough meet this year.
She said that being the underdog helped motivate the team to prove itself against the Mustangs.
"We know we have the strength and personnel to beat them," Cordsen said.
Kansas coach Gary Kempf said that Southern Methodist had a historically strong program. The Mustangs could add to that reputation this year.
The Mustangs were dominant in their first meet of the year, with both the men's and women's teams winning 11 of 13 events against Texas A&M. The Kansas women's team will enter the meet with a 24-dual-meet winning streak that was extended with victories against Colorado State and Missouri last weekend.
MEN'S AND WOMEN'S SWIMMING
Kempf said that this was a big early season meet. He said that the Southern Methodist women's team was solid throughout its line up.
"They have good people at every event," Kempf said. "I don't think they're as deep as we are, though."
The Southern Methodist men's team appeared as dominant as the women's team, defeating Texas A&M 143.5-99.5.
The Mustangs defeated the Kansas men's team in a closely contested meet last year in Oklahoma City. The Jayhawks led the Mustangs throughout the morning session but fell in the afternoon session, losing the meet 181-157.
"We're really geared up to beat these guys," senior diver Tim Davison said. "We feel we have the talent to beat these guys."
He said that he expected a tight race between the two teams and that both clubs appeared to be equally talented.
"There is no question that it will be tight head-to-head competition," Davidson said.
He said he thought that competing against a strong team like Southern Methodist would give the team extra motivation.
"We were a little flat against Missouri," Davidson said. "We know we have to be ready at SMU."
Kansas last swam at Oklahoma City in lastyear's Big Eight Championships. Kansas won the women's meet and placed second in the men's meet. The Big Eight meet will be held there again this year.
"It's a great facility," Kempf said.
"It also gives our swimmers a chance to see the conference pool before the Big Eights."
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN READERS' POLL
Who is No.1 in college basketball?
The pollsters have had their chance. The coaches have had their say. The sportswriters think they know. Now it is your turn to tell the University Daily Kansan who you think is the top team in college basketball and why.
HERE IS WHAT TO DO:
In 200 words or less — printed or typed —answer all or some of the following:
— Who will surprise everyone and why?
■ Include your name, class, hometown and phone number (so we can verify your letter).
— Who is the top team and why?
- Who is overrated and why?
Submit the letter by 5 p.m. today to the Kansan business office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, or the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint.
WE WILL PUBLISH THE LETTERS IN THE KANSAN'S NOV.17 KANSAD BASKETBALL PREVIEW. SPACE RESTRICTIONS MAY PREVENT SOME LETTERS FROM BEING PUBLISHED.
Kansas seeks revenge against Oklahoma
Bigger Sooners routed 'Hawks in first meeting
Rv Gerry Fav
By Gerry Fey Kansan sportswriter
Two matches remain for the Jayhawks, one against Oklahoma and one against Kansas State. Victories against both teams would help in obtaining a berth in the Big Eight tournament Nov. 26-27 in Omaha, Neb.
Kansas coach Frankie Albitz called the Oklahoma players possibly the tallest team in the nation. She said the Sooners had always been tall, but this year they were also good.
It comes down to this for the Kansas volleyball team:
Kansas plays Oklahoma at 1 p.m. Sunday at Allen Field House. The Sooners defeated Kansas 3-0 when the teams played earlier this season in Norman, Okla.
"They've definitely got the biggest team in the Big Eight," Albizt said. "This year, they're doing a little better job on digs and ball handling. They are more focused. Before, you didn't know what to expect when you played them."
Kansas is 15-11 overall and 4-6 in the conference, and Oklahoma is third in the conference with a 14-12 overall record and a 5-3 conference record.
Kansas is fifth in the conference, behind Iowa State. The Cyclones play Colorado and Nebraska, the top teams in the Big Eight. If both teams defeat Iowa State as they did earlier this season, Kansas would be alone in fourth place in the conference providing it defeats both Oldahoma and Kansas State.
Only the top four teams advance to the conference tournament, but all is not lost
VOLLEYBALL
if Oklahoma defeats Kansas. As long as the Jayhawks defeat Kansas State, they would be tied with Iowa State. Kansas freshman outside hitter Katie Walsh said she would like a victory against Oklahoma to avoid tying the Cyclones.
"Beating OU would help tremendously," she said. "It would take a lot of the pressure off. Every game helps us since we are tied with Iowa State."
Each game Kansas wins in a match will help because in a tie, the total winning percentage in all conference games determines who advances to the tournament. That makes the match important for both Oklahoma and Kansas, Oklahoma assistant coach Amy Farber said.
"Any match from here on out is important," she said. "We're going to be either second or third. If we lose to Kansas, it's going to put us in third place. You want to win and build momentum going into the tournament. It probably is more important to Kansas than us."
A bright spot that Kansas can focus on is Oklahoma's five-game defeat against seventh-place Missouri on Oct. 30. Looking at the records, Oklahoma should have defeated Missouri, Albizt said.
"Oklahoma may have a tendency to be hot and cold," Albiz said. "Either that or they have a let-down. Last match we tried some things that hurt us. We're not going to do that this time."
Walsh said Sunday's match would be nothing like what happened at Norman, Okla., earlier in the season.
"We can't do any worse than we did last match," she said. "We played terrible. I don't even want to compare that team then to our team now."
2
Melissa Lacey / KANBAN
Senior middle blocker Cyndee Kanabel watches as sophomore outside hitter Tracie Walt spikes a ball. Kansas will play Oklahoma at 1 p.m.
Sunday at Allen Field House.
10
Friday, November 12, 1993
The Athlete's Foot.
914 Massachusetts
841-6966
...
Renta Lane
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864-3545
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toys ✓ books
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much more!
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Mon-Sat 10-5 and Sun 1-5 / 864-4454 to the Union
NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM the university of cannes
Tonight Room Full of Walters The Young Johnny Carson Show
Saturday Billy Goat
John Brown's Underground New Live CD Recording!
Monday The Ocean Blue
BENCHWARMERS CATERING
*FULLSERVICE CATERING FOR ANY AND ALL OF YOUR PARTY NEEDS.
*Rock Chalk*X-Mas Parties*Formals* (Call Jake or Clay at 841-0505) *12 days in advance.
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Lied Center Presents A Swarthout Chamber Music Series Event
Co-sponsored by the W. T. Kemper Foundation, Commerce Bank Trustee
King's Singers
THE BAND
"Listening to the King's Singers is just about the most fun you can have in public." -- The Seattle Times
3:30 p.m. Sunday. November 14, 1993 Lied Center
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS); Murphy Hall Box Office (864-3982); or any ticketmaster outlet (816) 931-3330 or (913) 23454; all seats reserved; $18 and $16, KU, Haskell and K-12 students $9 and $15, KU and K-12 students $15 and $16, KU student tickets available through the SLA office, Kansas University; phone order can be made using VISA or MasterCard.
Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission, KU Student Senate Activity Fee, Friends of the Lied Series and the Kansas University Endowment Association. Special thanks to this year's Very Successful Endowment Association for Audio and Video, Payless Sheourse, and the W.T. Kemper Foundation, Commerce Bank Trustee.
THE LION CENTER FOR ARTS
PROFESSOR MASTERSTUDIO
K STUDENTS
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PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
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NFL FOOTBALL
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Krieg to stand in as quarterback
KC CHIEFS
Raiders coach glad to avoid Montana
The Associated Press
EL SEGUNDO, Calif. — When the Los Angeles Raiders face Kansas City on Sunday, they will see David Krieg at quarterback, not Joe Montana. And that pleases Raiders coach Art Shell.
Before leaving, Montana was 7-for-9 for 68 yards and two touchdowns, Krieg finished up, completing five or nine passes for 77 yards.
The Raiders have won three of their four games since Oct. 3, giving them their 5-3 record halfway through the season.
"Sure, that's good news," Shell said. "You don't like to see anybody get injured, but he won't be out for the season. We've had guys sit out, too. I have no sympathy.
"You're retaking about a future Hall of Famer, not to take anything away from David Krieg. He's had a pretty good career. It's a little different."
Montana is out of the game between the Chiefs, 6-2, and Raiders, 5-3, at the Los Angeles Coliseum because of a lingering hamstring injury.
Krieg went all the way Monday night in Kansas City's 23-16 victory over the Green Bay Packers, completing 17 of 30 passes for 170 yards.
"He's done pretty well against us," Shell said. "Krieg will go downtown maybe a little bit more than Joe would. He's a hot and cold guy—once he starts hitting some, he can hurt you."
"We let a couple get away," he said.
"I'm sure some people say we won a couple we shouldn't have won. It all balances out."
Kriegplayed 12 seasons for the Seattle Seahawks before joining the Chiefs last season. Since the Seahawks and Raiders are AFC West rivals of the Raiders, Krieg has spent his entire career on teams that play
Krieg has started 18 games against the Raiders with a 10-8 record.
the Raiders twice a season.
Not only will Sunday's game be a battle for first in the AFC West, it will mark the return of former Raiders running back Marcus Allen to Los Angeles.
There's a good possibility that Sun day's game will be the first home sell out of the season for the Raiders. As of Wednesday afternoon, less than 1,000 tickets remained unsold.
Allen, a star at Southern Cal before joining the Raiders in 1982, will be playing his first game ever at the Coliseum as a member of the visiting team.
"Life goes on," Shell said when asked about Allen. "He's the enemy now; he's trying to beat us. We've got to be prepared for that."
The Chiefs have won eight of their last 10 games against the Raiders, including a 24-9 victory at Arrowhead Stadium on Oct. 3 when Allen scored his 100th career touchdown and Montana injured his hamstring in the second quarter.
Bernie Kosar was the first to go, which was the most shocking.
Then William Perry and Sean Landeta were let go, two more big names and big salaries dispatched at midseason.
Capacity under the new seating configuration at the Coliseum is 67,800. The Raiders last sold out a home game a year ago last month when they drew 92,488 for a game against the Dallas Cowboys.
Cutbacks on NFL team rosters worry players
By Dave Goldberg The Associated Press
Call it the wave of the future. For when the salary cap takes effect next season, any big salary earning veteran who is not producing will be gone — or at least forced to take a huge salary cut.
This year, the coaches who made the cuts said that the cuts were made for non-financial reasons. George Young of the Giants, who cut Landeta, their $1.25 million-a-year punter, "It's a new world out there."
The Giants replaced Landeta with Mike Horan, who will probably make $1 million less in his half season.
The cuts — along with the release of some less-renowned veterans — come as the result of the new collective bargaining agreement.
The agreement guarantees a player who makes the roster at the start of the season 50 percent of his annual salary. But after half a season, a player is paid on a per-game basis, meaning a high-salaried guy who is not producing can be cut in favor of a guy who will cost a lot less.
People should also be remembered that in the NFL, unlike major-league baseball, most contracts are not guaranteed.
There will only be a certain amount of money left for the 40 or so remaining players after teams finish paying their stars. That is something a lot of prospective free agents don't realize when they look forward to seeking big bucks in the next few years — although the last few days may have been a wakeup call.
But a few see the future.
Defensive end Jim Jeffcoat of the Cowboys said, "We got a crummy deal, and I've told that to Gene. You'll have guys making $150,000 or so blocking for quarterbacks making $5 million. I'm not saying it will happen, but at some point, some offensive lineman who's underpaid may just decide to take it out one of his stars."
Jeffcoat, 32, is a free agent after this season and will be in demand. He is a good pass-rusher, and pass-rushers never go out of style. Players with other skills, however, will find themselves signing for less than they now make. No punter will get the $1.25 million that Landeta was drawing.
Kosar, who had just agreed to a $26 million, seven-year deal when he was cut by the Browns, got $2 million of his $4 million salary from Cleveland this year. But he turned down a reported $1 million from Miami to join the Cowboys for about half that so he could get the best shot he may ever have to earn a Super Bowling.
Perry was picked up by the Eagles, who can use his 350 immobile pounds to fill holes on a defensive line that's given up 200-plus yards in its last three games. And Landeta will probably find work.
But next year, they'll be looking for it again.
KU CULTURAL INDIA CLUB
Along with a lot of other guys.
KU CULTURAL INDIA CLUB
PRESENTS
DIWALI NITE '93
A NIGHT OF INDIAN CULTURAL SHOW AND AUTHENTIC INDIAN CUISINE
7 PM, NOVEMBER 20TH 1993
AT Ecumenical Christian Ministries (E.C.M)
1204 Oread, near Kansas Union.
TICKETS : 56.00(ADVANCE PURCHASE)
$7.00(DOOR)
FOR MORE INFORMATION OR TICKET PURCHASE
CONTACT: PRIYESH7-749-1491, MALKI841-8738
8 P.M. MONDAY NOVEMBER 15, 1993 ALDERSON AUDITORIUM KANSAS UNION
TOM PETTY
A PUBLIC RECEPTION IN THE SUMMERFIELD ROOM ADAMS ALUMNI CENTER WILL FOLLOW THE LECTURE
- Children's Menu
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
The MAD GREEK Has It All!
---
- Greek, Italian, American
AKIRA Y. YAMAMOTO
PROFESSOR OF ANTHROPOLOGY AND LINGUISTICS
RECIPIENT OF THE THIRTEENTH
BYRON T. SCHULTZ AWARD FOR DISTINGUISHED TEACHING
- Cocktails & Desserts
THE THIRTEENTH BYRON T. SHUTZ AWARD LECTURE
LANGUAGE MAINTENANCE IN NATIVE AMERICAN COMMUNITIES
- Sunday Buffet 11am-2pm
THE THIRTEENTH BYRON T. SHUTZ AWARD LECTURE
Open 7 Days A Week 11-10 Carry out available
WHEN LANGUAGE DIES, CULTURE DIES,
907 Mass 843-2441
Bottleneck
PRESENTS
FRI. Nov. 12
room
full of
walters
W/Young Johnny
Carson Story
SAT. Nov. 13
Billy Goat
W/ JOHN BROWN'S
UNDERGROUND
Hollywood Recording Artists
Sun. Nov. 14
URGE TO OVERKILL
W/ ZOOM
AT LIBERTY HALL
Geffen Recording Artists
Mon. Nov. 15
THE OCEAN BLUE
W/ ACID TEST
Nire Reprise Recording Artists
COMING: Freddy Jones, PAW, Jack-O-Pierce, Best Kissers
All Shows 18 & Over
Call 841-LIVE For More Information.
Advanced Tickets at All Ticketmaster Outlets and The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire • Lawrence • (913) 841-LIVE
VANCOUVER
Sire Reprise Recording Artists
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 12, 1993
50c off any small sandwich OR 75c off
any regular or large sandwich Not valid in combination with any other coupons Offer good at participating stores only offer good thru 11-28-93
Schlotzsky's
Sandwiches • Soups • Salads
23rd&Louisiana
842-7002
Classified Directory
11
100s Announcements
108 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
120 Employment
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
228 Professional Services
231 Typing Systems
Classified Policy
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs
are offered by our newspaper are available on equal opportunity basis.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
产
100s Announcements
110 Bus. Personals
Rebellionary Alpha Hydroxyd Acid skin treat-
ment. Can be applied to sun-damaged skin. Free information 843-8543.
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO Really Listen
Call or drop by Headquarters We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. We're always open
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
Hoops, Pendants & more!
For Guys and Gals
292 Mass. Downstream
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8:40am-4:30pm
Kansan Classified: 864-4358
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
300s
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120 Announcements
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**Sound:** The small pizza buzzer in Lawrence, Locat-
tion 108 - a.m. $2.99 p.m. Mon-Sun
11:30 - 1:30 p.m.
FREE MONEY
Available for your education!
Collegiate Scholarship Services
Call 800-289-4680 for free info.
Lehani, gay, bl- or unsure? You're not alone!
Come to a safe and confidential group. Call
us.
call, can headquarters or KU info more info.
St. John's Tamesale Sales. Orders for Authentic Xt-
motequaters orKU information taken now thru Nov. 24,
15.40 each or $15.00 per order. Order pick-up in
Dec. 11. Call #82-6421.
Free Party Room Available at Johnny's Tavrúv
Up&Under. Call 842-0377 for details.
140 Lost & Found
sound: set of keys near 15th & Engel. call 864-1212.
女卫生间
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Guest for part time bus driver. Morning and afternoon bus driver. Must be 21 with clean driving License. Call 643-804-7661.
*** BUSDRIVERS***
AMIGOS
supervisor now - Manager later! Learn the business from the ground up and advance according to industry trends. Apply for a job offered by oriented person and like it work at a fast intense pace, an opportunity to put these skills to work well in a leader available. Relocation may be required as a benefit. Apply now at: Amigos, 1419 W. 2xrd.
Supervisor/Assist Mgr.
AA Cruise & Travel jobs. Earn $2500/mo. + travel the world free! (Caribbean, Europe, Hawaii, Asia!) Cruise Lines now hire for busy holiday. Get guaranteed employment. Gal (919) 829-3681. txt.
APPLY NOW! international Chain filling part-fall line positions. Training provided. Work locally with our teachers on our 300 location nationwide during winter break. $830 plus starting fee #42-803.
BEACH or SKI Group Promoter
BEACH or SR Group Promoter. Small or larger groups.
Small or larger groups.
Yours FREE, discounted or CASH.
Call CMI 1-800-423-5264
Stop to Shop is looking for part time clerk must be able to work 20 m. to 190 m. shift, some weekends and holidays. If interested apply in person at 1010 N. 3rd.
CREATION CENTER LEADER
RECENTION OF ENVIRONMENT
CNA's need to work with clients in their homes. CNA's need to work with clients in their homes at Dongsi, City Visits, Nurses 843-728.
Construction laborer, $5.00 an hour, no experience needed, flexible hours, Jim 823-1548
Part-time, weekends & evenings, 15-25 hrs. per week. Supervise recreational programs & use of equipment for activities or phys ed. programs. $4.25/h. Apply by Nov. 17, 6th, Lawrence KS 60044, M. East 6th, Lawrence KS 60044, EOE/M F/D
Local business seeks qualified individuals to provide a variety of services to community residents. Good income. For an interview call 843-2696 or 842-9149
Director of Development: Duties include researching and soliciting grants, directing donor activities and maintaining accurate donor files. Ideal candidate will possess college degree, strong writing skills, grant writing experience and knowl- edge of legal requirements to become educated in planned giving and education. Req. responsibility to: Topека Performing Arena Center, 214 SE 8th Suite, TKSA, KS 6603.
Marketing Assistant position available at Natsiah Hall for the spring semester. Applicant must have excellent people skills, good computer skills (desktop publishing experience a plus), and have a background experience in marketing, advertising, and/or web design. You should also have time with compensation of room and board plus stipend. Potential for full time effective July, 1994. Great resume and portfolio builder to help you an edge on the job market. These interested can apply online by calling the HR Director, Drive, Lawrence KS. 60444 E.O.M/F.H.A/U.
Taco Bell now hiring day and night Appli.
Taco Bell Tuesday through Saturday 1408 W. 123rd
St.
Micro Tech Computers is looking for full or- part-time sales persons. Applicants should be assertive, detail-oriented and have excellent sales skills. IBM, PC knowledge & sales experience preferred. Send resume to 2329-M Iowa St. Lawrence, KS 66047 EOE
The premier agency - 9 yrs experience. Families
and Sunny FF, Call. Ft. called tomorrow!
Older Farm Couple Seeks Assistance:
Free rent to student or single parent family in exchange for help w/ work, l. house work, l. work.
Limited pets welcome. Call 987-5771 after 3 p.m.
Want to work w/kids?
Youth Basketball Gym Supr. &
Officials Needed.
$7 per hour. 843-4188
Opening Soon in the Tanger Factory Outlet Center…Stone Mountain Handbag Factory Store! Looking for assistant managers and sales associates to assist with customer service, competitive wages and benefits and excellent upward mobility. Please apply Saturday, November 13, 2018 at Kansas Union, Alceve A, Level 3. Ask for Michaela.
The Lawrence Bus Company is now taking applications for SAFERID drivers. Must be 21, have a clean driving record, and be familiar with school rules. School Holidays off. if interested call 824-0644.
Custodian, Burge Union, Tuesday 49.m.-midnight,
Saturday a.m.-11.m., *$4.25* per hour, Previous custodial experience preferred, able to lift 50 pounds.
Valley View Care Home is currently seeking motivated CNA's to work full-time 7am-3pm shift & TRN. We offer flexible scheduling which is great for students, competitive hourly wages & benefits. EOE. Apply in person at 2518 Ridge Court, Lawrence.
Prairie Room Waiter/Waitress, 80 kd hr, plus tips
Monday-Wednesday-Friday 10; 30a.m. m-2:30p.m.
Previous waiter/waitress table service required
Line server, Union Square, Monday-Wednesday-Friday, 10.00a.m.-1.00p.m., $4.25 per hour. Able to stand for long periods, prefer previous food service experience.
Line Server, Hawk's nest, Monday thru Thursday
previously to make it to state for long periods,
previously to have meals with friends.
Secretary/Receptionist Construction Inc.
Terraverst Construction located at 4104 Trail Road
(back entrance) has an immediate full time open
work space. Training of the staff and Typing skills of 60 wpm required; Macintosh experienced preferred; 10 key accuracy; organizational and writing skills a must. Send resumes to P.O. Box 3008, Lawrence, KS 60540, or apply at www.po.com/resumes. Accredited and resumes must be in no later than 11-19-83.
other listings available. See Job Board-Level 5
Kansas Union Building Personnel Office.
Apply Kansas and Burge Unions' Personnel Office, Level 5, EOE.
RESUME SERVICES Professional Business Resumes, Cover Letters & Interviews
Hire for any position with MS Office 2007 or later.
Wanted 600 or more players at 81 to participate in group activities at the starting at Salon, 729 New Hampshire.
WORK STUDY POSITION AVAIL. at East Asian Languages and Cultures Dept. Apply at 2118 Wescoe or call 841-3100
River City Market Restaurants are now open every season!
Front counter, wait area, and cooks.
are now hiring extra help for the X-mas season!
Front counter, utility grill cooks,
staffing kitchen staff.
Executive assistant part-time live in work for rent
Executive assistant and typing helpes. Send resume
LIM L P O, F.
In next lesson leave all lab wars armed!
Apply in person, lower level, Riverfront Plaza.
FAST CASH
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Anyone who donates their blood plasma 8 times between Oct. 30 and Dec. 17 is eligible to win a cash drawing.
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WALK-INB WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
There's still time-don't delay,comic in today.
By donating your life saving blood plasma
"Help pay your tuition by entering our cash giveaway and help save a life today."
NABI
DE OUVERS ISRAEL
Fraternities and Sororites call for more information about fund-raising.
225 Professional Services
749-5750
816 W. 23rd
Behind Lard-
Noller Ford
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
Traffic tickets, misdemeanors, landlord/ tenant,
Braxton B. Conley 749-3333
ATTORNEY
For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and talk with you.
Leshian, gay, blu ~ or unsure! If you need to talk to
Katie, Call KU in or Headquarters.
TALK, Call KU in or Headquarters.
340 Auto Sales
Prompt abduction and contraceptive services. Dale L. Clinton M.D. 841-5716
Research Assistance - MS/ML information spe-
cification, research projects, these
dissertations, research projects, 943-250.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Macintosh SD/30 8 mg of mug 60 mg hard disk
Macintosh SD/20 8 mg of mug 60 mg hard disk
Player and desk
$925.00 OBO, CD 824-7877
fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce,criminal & civil matters The law offices of
Donald G Stroie Sally G Kesley
16 East 13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
A Word Perfect word processing service. Laser printer. Near campus 842-6953.
DONALDG.STROLE
Pro-Type - fast, reliable, service, professional quality. Any kind of typing. Call today at 841-6242.
Wanted. Someone to edit my thesis according to APA and KU Grad. School specifications. Must be knowledgeable about both and Word Perfect 5.1.
David I 829-834.
Beacon Publication Services-Quality word processing, laser printing, $0.20/page (includes typing, grammar, proofing), call Mary 843-3674.
Expert typing, IBM Correcting Selectric.
$1.50/double spaced page. Call Mrs. Mattila 841-1219.
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your TYPING needs call
www.wrox.com/products/word-processing
AA Word Processing: Any size, under 30 p,
overnight service: $1.25/page; Call Ruth after
me.
Fast, accurate word processing; term paper, dissertation, thesis and graphics services available. Laser printing. Engineering and Law Review experience. Call Pam at 841-1877 anytime.
X
1994 CALENDARS: nature, environment, women,
indians, peace, gardening. Buy at Simpli Grows.
www.simpligrow.com
Computer Discounts Guaranteed Quality and
Durability 832-744 or 842-844 (home)
2201 W. 35th St, B-1.
Washington, DC 20036
300s Merchandise
Two single Chiefs vs. Bills ticket for Nov 28. Best offer. Call and leave a message 865-3236
Bads, desks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
988 Mass.
3-yr-old Macintosh Classic with 40 mb hard drive,
Keyboard and mouse, some software. $900 firm.
(www.macbook.com)
I'm graduating and need to sell my - Beautiful wood bed room set, 1 queen size with cherry drawers, cherry chest with vanity mirror, drawer, cherry wood chest with vanity mirror. Paid $350 a year ago but it'll be $175. You $250 a year ago.
BLESSING EQUIPMENT
DP 250 weighted machine, leg curts, etc.
Great condition. DP Body - Tone 300 Rowing
Machine. $250 for both. Call 844-300 evenings and
weekends.
COMPUTER: Looking for a high quality PC at low costs? Call P C Source 832-1126
Scutured Nails $23 reg. $2. Reflections West
$23 Ridgeway. 81-492. Ask for. Pam.
"89 Blazer. Excellent condition. Tahoe package.
2-wheel drive. $8,000 miles. $7960. 841-7988.
1981 Datsum Runner. Runs okay. Body rough. $200
Cali 1-888-8580. (K City Number)
Dodge Charge 2-dr hatchback AM/PM cassest-
tle. $369. $362. $342.
1990 Honda Accord LX coupe. white, spileter,
speler wheel, all power. Super condition. For
details. 865-0139
JWC12 Dice changer for Car. Pull out cassette handle
New TU $200.00, just $400.00 OBE 1,438-8
389-800
370 Want to Buy
VERA
THE CHAPMAN
Used & Curious Goods
731 New Hampshire
841-0550
Noon: 6:00 Tues. Sat.
Buy • Sell • Trade
Desperately need 1 or 2 inland BB tickets. Paying big $1 Call (851)-753-8255 (KCMO).
Large inventory of classic old playboy Magazines 1900's, 60's, 70's and 80's. Most in good condition. Musk be purchased in package. Call 843-0540 evenings and weekends.
Needed: Tickets to KU vs. IU basketball game on December 22nd. Will pay $$$. Call 842-9833.
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
1 Bdrm api, just blocks from campus available for 2nd semester sublease. washer/dryer, dishwasher, ceiling fan... the works $220 per mo./person. 1138 Kentucky 8657-029 Calton
1 Bedroom apt. available Jan. 1 Anode neighbor-
ship, very nice; $290 call. Call today!
822-525-3934
1 Bedroom unfurnished apartment available as early as Dec. 15337? month, Water paid off street parking, on bus route, off 6th street, clean and quiet. If interested call 841-6019
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
very nice! Available Spring sem. Interested? Call
Apt. for rent, 1 bd. Great Location 1123 Indiana
Apt. for rent, Flats, 5bd. Including cable. Call 892-242-7600
Avail Dec. 15th Very large, new remodelled one
On bus route, water and cable pad
$350, $482, $694, $796
Available Jan. 1, studio Apt close to campus &
available Nov. 24, studio B apt close to campus
tenant 856-9100, Landlord 841 107 206
Available Jan. 1st, 2 bbm unfurnished apl.
800/356/2798 bus route. Bike only.
$69/month/Cal 844-183489.
Available Jan. 1, 3 berm. on bus route. Call
749-1526-5-25 Mon.-Fri.
Big 2 Ddrm unfurn apt w/ W/D bookups avl and
Big 2 Ddrm unfurn apt w/ W/D bookups avl and
Campus Place 3 bdm 2 bfa furnished apt. for rent.
Campus Place 1 bdm 2 bfa visited w to walk to campus. Available inc. idc. 104-8917.
For rent best new 3 bdm 2 at apl. On the bus route at it al Emmery. Available now. With 4 people. Rates $50.00 per person.
For lease. 4 bedroom, Sundance apt. near campground occupation date negotiable #708 + utilities
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and
naps. Call 815-456-3072 to KU off-street parking.
Napkins Call 815-456-3072
HELP! We're graduating! Need 2 rent two bdmr, baby, huge kit; & living room, avail. of Dec and thru July. Jan rent FREE - as in payl for! Call Quickenloe campus, in a cool call: Quickenloe campus, in a cool
HUGE J bedroom apartment available Christmas
and holiday rental. Call 823-8144,
passioned. Reasonably priced. Call 823-8144.
Furnished apartment 2 short blocks from Water paid. Off street parking. bots 441, 845-710.
*Sub-lease* 2 bdmrs. *3 ltbs* 2 aa /mo. Water, gasen.
trad pdt. Neh stop lapse book. phone up-book.
*Floor lease* 1 bdmrs. *2 ltbs* 1 mo. Water, gasen.
Rent 1 bdm apl. Dec. 1st. Nice and big, close to campus. $35. Water paid. Call 749-2098.
Lg 1 Bedroom apt. on bus route. Leave message
749-0751.
Spring sublease for 3 persona $ 8dm, $ 1bn, $ bath, on
the ground. Availability $ 950, $ 295, $ 395, $ 495.
Avaliability (JAX) $ 850, $ 850, $ 850, $ 850.
39" X 24" X 24" bath, $100, with PY, garage, DW,
DWX, storage room, /750/mo. Call 748-6578.
Office/Store/Floor/Worpose near downtown
Available Jan. 1, 2 x15$ 120 per unit. Utilities
Phone: 843-1356
1 BR, FP, W/D bookings, garage, all appls. Extra amenities, Alavar location $75, 855-650-690
One bbm api for sublease Jan 1. Across from
the building, $85 per month with water paid.
Call 622-219-1204.
LUXURY TOWN HOMES
PR. JR. HARPAE
Sub-lase: bdt. abp at Boardwalk apts. from Jan.
to May, 3898 on bus route! Bkt 411-8440
Sub-lease: $360. Just inches from campus 13th &
24th floor, $750. -31/31 Dec.租床 18th &
400th/month, Cust 841-929-3298
Sublease needed! 2033 fow G-1. Nice neighbor-
hold, 440/m. Willing negotiate! 891-815 or
681-815.
Subleane begin Jan. 1. Great studio ap. in old house. Lots of windows, newly renovated bathrooms.
Sublease studies $300/mo, including cable. Available immediately. Tel 748-9655.
**Sublease:** Naimith Hall, Pool, Rec, Room, Maid Service Ready for Spring School. Call Andy
430 Roommate Wanted
we're making life easier!
2 females, n/s needed for spacious 3-bdrm bdxm on busro tion, b&c, bath living area & bxcd. CA, DW.
D. PARKER, BREATHFIELD.
1 female need to share 3 br, 2/2 bath spacious townhouse. Will get own room. On bus route. No smoking or pets. $230/m + util. Lease up in May. Call Shannon 8488.5367. Leave mess.
1 male or female needed to share 3 Br 2 brats, duplex near bus route, close to campus, spacious, fire place, nice. avail spring semester. call Tim 842-0800.
Female N/S/ to share very nice 2 bdm, 2 bath house w/ hardwood floors in Old West Lawrence.
Responsible grad-student prof./prol. only. Avail. Jan. 1 spring semester $250/mo./1. util call $826-2697.
*Front Door Bus Service
*"Dine Anytime" with
Unlimited Seconds
*Laundry and Vending
Facilities
roommate to share turn. 28 a.pct, on camp-
ing day. 30 a.pct, on Avg De: 91.
$870/mo + 1/4 upl. Call Alan 643-418-618.
Female non-smoker needed to share three bottle/
five bottles / $9.95 per bottle / Dryen.
$16/mo瓶 / $9.95 per bottle / All in stock.
NAISMITH Hall
Male or female needed to share new 4 bedroom duplex in W. Lawrence starting Jan. L. Washer/father, 2 car garage. Fully furnished (except for room). Call Cameron at 655-8292.
Male or female roommate wanted for 3 bdrm,
apartment to share /a/ rent and use for second
semester. Call David at 804-8853. Lv mag.
Need a roommate (male or female) ASAP for a
bedroom, b2 apartments. For more information
open minded female needed to share two bedroom house close to campus January thru May Call and email
1800 Naismith Drive (913) 843-8559
Need male roommate for Bdrm Apt close to camp,
pwd, WD in complex. $625/mo and 1/2 use. Non-
occupied rooms.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Older Farm Couple Seeks Assistance:
- Byphone: 864-4358
NSP /w small dog needs a responsible NSP to
be charged for a spring semester. $180/mo.
/u/L Call 769-1458
How to schedule an ad:
Free rent to student and single parent family in exchange for help w/ yard work, louse work, it. cooking. Limited pets welcome. Call 597-5771 after 3 p.m.
One female needed to sublease on campus Appt.
$180 mmo + util. Call Suzie 843-1606
Roommate needed. Start Dec 1, $150/mo /u/ lily
roommate. Send me a message or 6 min from campa. Call 845-7831 for details.
One Female to share two bedroom apartment for next semester, that like dogs, very close to camelot.
Ads phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
1190 Starflar Films Inc.
Very close to campus. behind Yellow Sub. Need 1
bath appl. 2 bath appl. 3 bath appl.
8$4/mo +1. Call: 850-792-6458
call: 850-792-6458
Two twh Sr. Sr.'s seeking a roommate for 3 bdr ap1 begin Decing 1. Call Carrli or Cathy at
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.
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The University Daisy Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS: 68045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1993 FarWorks, Inc./Dust by Universal Press Syndicate
Backing out of the driveway, Mr. Peabody suddenly brought his car to a stop. He had already heard a peculiar "thump," and now these flattened but familiar-looking glasses further intrigued him.
12
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Job at stake for Missouri football coach
Stull takes the blame defensive about record
The Associated Press
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Coach Bob Stull said he had fulfilled his main responsibility even though he hadn't produced a winning football program at Missouri.
And, Stull said, winning the last two games this season at Kansas State, Kansas and evening his record at 5-1. I would make it easier to keep his job for a sixth season.
"Winning the last two and being tied for third in the league, third or fourth, there is a lot of difference than the alternatives," said Stull, who is 15-36-2 in his fifth season at Missouri.
"There are a lot of people pulling for us. But we've got to help ourselves out. We can make it easy for
them if we can win those games," he said Wednesday after releasing a self-evaluation to reporters.
Athletic director Dan Devine said last week that five victories would not be enough to save Stull's job, but he retreated from that statement Tuesday.
"I'm sorry I said that," Devine said. "I don't weasel out of my mistakes. But that was a mistake on my part. I don't know that that's true about our alumni."
M.
Stull acknowledged some concerns about his job status but said that the combination of a tough football schedule, high academic standards and facilities that needed improvement were factors.
Bob Stull
"We're definitely at risk of losing our job," he said.
"I really feel like we're doing everything we're supposed to be doing. When people start throwing out
"How come (K-State is) 6-2-1 and how come they're doing this?" Let's be realistic about where we are here."
Stull said Kansas State had spent $8 million to upgrade facilities and had worked hard to get an easier schedule.
"Their academic situation is different from ours. Stull said, "But they'ye done all those things to give them the best possible chance.
"But we're not going to go $4 million in the red in the operating budget to make this go here. We're closing down programs on campus."
Stull said he felt his primary responsibility was "to represent the University of Missouri in a manner that reflects the integrity and prestige of this great university and to make a positive contribution to our student athletes, the university and to our community."
He said he felt he and his wife, Kim, had done that. Stull said his second responsibility was to "restore the winning tradition in football at the University of Missouri.
Oklahoma may install grass playing surface
The Associated Press
NORMAN, Okla. — A recommendation to install a grass playing surface for the 1994 football season will be made next week to the University of Oklahoma Board of Regents, school officials announced yesterday.
Athletic director Donnie Duncan said the decision was made after consulting players, coach Gary Gibbs, medical staff, training staff and the band.
In a survey of current players, 86 percent said they preferred grass to artificial turf.
"The overall clear preference was for a grass surface." Duncan said. "Also, our fans have strongly expressed a preference for grass. This will be an exciting project for all of us."
Oklahoma first went to artificial turf in 1970. The carpet now on Owen Field has been there 12 years and is badly worn.
The condition of the turf was magnified earlier this season when quarterback Cale Gundy was knocked unconscious when his head slammed against the turf while he was being tackled.
Duncan said the Touchdown Club would help pay for the installation of the grass, which is estimated to cost less than $750.000. according to the recommendation.
"While the studies are not conclusive, the perception among many players, trainers, medical professionals and coaches is that a high-quality natural surface is safer," the report continues.
"Recent studies indicate that play and practice on a highquality natural surface may reduce the relative risk of injuries which result in loss of playing time or performance ability," the recommendation states.
The recommendation will be made to the regents at their Monday meeting.
Father, son are finalists for coach of year award
By Michael A. Lutz The Associated Press
HOUSTON — Florida State's Bobby Bowden and his son Terry Bowden of Auburn became the first father and son to be named finalists for the Football Writers Association of America's college coach of the year award yesterday.
Ohio State coach John Cooper, whose Buckeyes are 8-0-1 and ranked No. 5 in the nation, and Kansas State's Bill Snyder, who has guided the Wildcats, 6-2-1, to a No. 24 ranking, also are finalists.
The Bowdens bantered over a telephone conference call hookup announcing the four finalists for the award, named for former Alabama coach Bear Brvant.
Terry Bowden said of his father, "He's forgotten more about coaching than I'll ever know."
Bobby Bowden said he had thought that Terry would have become a lawyer.
"He went off to law school, and I thought he was going to use his head," Boby Bowden said. "But I guess his mind was set. I guess it got in his blood and he had to go that way."
Florida State, 9-0-0, was the unanimous No. 1 pick in the most recent Associated Press college poll, and Auburn, 9-0-0, was ranked No. 7.
Terry Bowden has guided Auburn to its unbeaten record in his first season as head coach, after spending three years as head coach at Salem College in Massachusetts and six seasons at Samford in Birmingham, Ala.
Bobby Bowden said, "It's almost overwhelming to be considered for this award. I've been in coaching for 10 years, but my biggest game before this year was against Millsaps."
Kansas State was ranked No. 18 a week ago, prior to Saturday's 27-23 loss to Iowa State. The Wildcats started the season with five straight victories for the first time since 1934.
Since that start, Kansas State has lost to Nebraska, tied Colorado and defeated Oklahoma.
Cooper led Ohio State to an 8-3-1 record last year, the school's best record since 1986. The Buckeyes are on pace to at least equal that record, following Saturday's 14-14 tie with Wisconsin.
Cooper said, "We played an excellent football team in Wisconsin and we played at their place. But we control our destiny. With two more wins, we can go to the Rose Bowl."
Ohio State, 8-04, has been to four consecutive bowl games under Cooper.
NOAM CHOMSKY
MANUFACTURING CONSENT:
MEDIA MANIPULATION IN MODERN AMERICA
KANSAS UNION BALLROOM
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12th
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Limited seating available for more information call: 864-3477
STUDENT
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
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SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
CAMPUS: A multiculturalism speaker warns students about jumping on the "diversity bandwagon." Page 5.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103.NO.61
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15.1993
(USPS 650-640)
Statehood rejected in Puerto Rican vote
Citizens prefer commonwealth
NEWS:864-4810
The Associated Press
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Supporters of continued commonwealth status for Puerto Rico defeated those who wanted statehood in a vote yesterday that turned back the strongest movement this century for full union with Washington.
"The people spoke and I will obey them," said Gov. Pedro Rosello, who spearheaded the statehood campaign, in acknowledging defeat in a speech to thousands of supporters.
But he added, "This is a struggle that will go on."
With votes counted from 99.7 percent of the precincts, official results showed continuing commonwealth status receiving 821,235 votes, or 48.4 percent; statehood 783,843, or 46.2 percent; and independence 75,034, or 4.4 percent.
The remaining ballots either were left blank or were disqualified.
might be lost if they remained a commonwealth.
Ethnic pride and economic concerns were among the main issues in the nonbinding referendum. Statehood supporters said it would bring billions of additional dollars in federal aid and played to Puerto Ricans' fears by saying their U.S. citizenship
But commonwealth supporters contended that the island's culture and language might be lost in statehood and noted that it would also mean paying federal taxes.
Political status has been hotly debated in Puerto Rico since the moment U.S. troops captured the
Although the margin of victory for commonwealth status was less than 3 percentage points, "this was a clear repudiation of statehood," said Miguel Hernandez Agosto, leader of the pro-commonwealth Popular Democratic Party, at a celebration following the vote.
Caribbean island from Spain in 1888. Despite heavy rains, about 75 percent of the 2.3 million eligible voters turned out.
Although the referendum was not binding, President Clinton said he would respect whatever position the voters favored.
The race was closely watched by District of Columbia residents, also in line for statehood, as well as the U.S. mainland's 22 million Hispanics, 2.6 million of them Puerto Rican.
Currently, Puerto Rico elects a nonvoting representative to Congress and has no vote for president. Statehood would have given it at least six Congressmen and two senators.
MAKING FRIENDS
MILAN, IL - ALEXANDRIA SMITH AND JASON DAVIS PUT ON THE HEADBAND OF BROTHER ALEXANDRA SMITH.
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
Mike Bault, Sailt Ste. Marie, Mich., junior, checks the head size of Nick Fritts, 14, Lawrence, to fit him for an Indian-style head band. The Kipappa Alpha fraternity, 2000 Stewart Ave., invited Fritts and other youths involved with Big Brothers/Big Sisters to the fraternity's annual fall carnival yesterday.
Organization matches adults, youths for serious fun
Kansan staff writer
By Liz Klinger
"Usually, we go play basketball or something," Kinnamen said. "But it was just kind of a gross day."
Mike Kinnamen, Overland Park senior, spent yesterday morning eating doughnuts and playing video games in his apartment with 11-year-old Blake Danner.
The two were brought together about a year ago by the Douglas County chapter of Big Brothers/Big Sisters, a program that pairs adults with children needing role models.
About 70 percent of all adult sponsors in Douglas County are students, said Mary Beth Karlin, program case manager.
Each week, Kinnamen and Danner, who are both the only child in their families, enjoy going to the movies, running errands and grocery shopping together.
"We have fun everywhere we go," Kinnamen said. "I like the perspective. I like looking at thing's through Blake's eyes."
The KU chapter of Public Relations Student
Society of America and Jayhawk Promotions are sponsoring Big Brothers/Big Sisters Awareness Week. The event began Saturday with the Great Turkey 8K and a one-mile fun run, which awarded turkeys to top finishers.
"We're trying to really draw on the University community to help the kids of Lawrence and Douglas County," said Kevin Grace, president of PRSSA.
Grace said Kinnamen, a PRSSA member, suggested they organize an event sponsoring Big Brothers/Big Sisters.
Most KU students are involved with a division of the program called First Friends, in which they spend from six to nine months with the child for three to four hours a week.
Big Brothers/Big Sisters of Douglas County, 982 Massachusetts St., opened two years ago this month and made its first match in January 1991, Karlin said.
"He knew they needed all the help they could get," Grace said. "They have a real hard time finding guys to be big brothers."
"First Friends is more geared toward KU students," Karlin said. "They do a real good job for
us.
Big Brother/Big Sister applicants must attend an informational meeting, fill out an application, take a psychological test, provide three references, undergo three background checks and a home visit and be interviewed about their lives and interests. The application process is not intended to intimidate applicants but to ensure the needy child of a well-matched and appropriate role model, she said.
"We've got a waiting list right now of about 35 children and most of those are boys."
Jodi SMIT, Lenexa senior, was paired with 10-year-old McKenzie McElhannay, whose mother, a firefighter, is raising McKenzie and her sister alone.
Smith said she and McKenzie went bowling, grocery shopping and share an interest in gymnastics. Smith said celebrating McKenzie's birthday in July with a cake Smith made with her roommates is a favorite memory of their time together.
"I think they did a good job pairing us up," Smith said. "She has a lot of the same hobbies as I do."
SUA regrets speech goers turned away
Massive turnout at Chomsky lecture surprises planners
By Donella Hearne Kansan staff writer
David Stevens, Student Union Activities forums coordinator, said he learned a valuable lesson Friday night at Noam Chomsky's speech, where hopeful audience members grew angry when they were turned away.
"We had no earthy idea the crowd would be so large until today," Stevens said. "I am very sorry that we had to turn people away. One thing I've learned is that we need a bigger facility."
Chomsky's lecture was in the Kansas Union ballroom, which seats 900. An adjacent room was set up for viewing on video screens. Both rooms were filled to capacity.
The event was free, but tickets were distributed in order to keep the number of people in the ballroom at fire code limits.
SUA began distributing tickets at 7
p. m. for the 8 p.m. speech. By 6:45 p.m., the line for tickets snaked through the Union lobby and out the doors.
In the future, SUA will try to improve planning to avoid a repeat of Friday night, Stevens said. In the meantime, SUA will give those who could not attend the lecture a chance to see the video tape of the speech.
Stevens said that when tickets were distributed in advance some people with tickets would not attend and some seats in the auditorium would not be taken.
Many of those who were not admitted asked Stevens and other SUA members why tickets were not distributed in advance.
"The various departments will have access to the video tapes and we will try to televise it," Stevens said.
Stevens said he would ask a local television station to broadcast the speech.
Chomsky gave SUA his permission to use the tape as it wished.
Question answers given by media, Chomsky says
By Donella Hearne
Kansan staff writer
Some students left scholar and philosopher Noam Chomsky's lecture Friday night with a different perspective on society and a different definition of democracy.
Michaela Haves. Dallas senior, said
Chomsky's speech made her think about the demise of democracy.
"He gives a whole different perspective than what the media gives you," she said. "I am orig-
Chomsky origi-
nally had
planned to
Noam Chornsky
"Ask who rules. Why? How do they get their power? What interests do they serve?" he said.
speak on how big business and government manipulate the public through the media but spoke instead on society as a whole. He said a discussion about society would lead to questions about the media.
People often forget to ask the questions that any rational 9-year-old child would ask, Chomsky said.
One of Chomsky's main points was that people seem to accept the information they are given without questioning the source or the reasons.
Chomsky said big business and government formulate answers to those questions through propaganda, a tool that has been effectively used to control Western society since World War I.
Chomsky used his calm reason and subtle sarcasm to deliver his message of the evils of pronaganda.
He used the example of Adolf Hitler's use of nationalistic propaganda and control of the media to create the fanatical Nazi regime.
The danger, Chomsky said, lies in the fact that alternative views of society are suppressed.
Kelly Fallon, Overland Park senior, said Chomsky's exposure of the great power of propaganda was enlightening.
"I was impressed by the way he had of debunking popular myths about the way society works," Fallon said.
Rick Johnson, Kansas State University freshman, said that he thought the most important part of Chomsky's speech was the description of the way society works.
"It's important to know what's going on," he said. "Without people like him I would not hear it."
Johnson and Brandon Fitzsimons, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, both said they read underground publications that contained some of the same information that Chomsky shared in his speech.
Fitzsimons said that he first learned of Chomsky from one of the underground magazines he read.
Chomsky encouraged people in the audience to question what they read and to look for the answers to the obvious questions about who controls society.
INSIDE
After the flames
Professors Cal and Alice Downs are rebuilding their lives after a fire destroyed much of their home last month.
PETER R. BECKER
Page 3.
Students watch Notre Dame game, ignore Kansas
But Jayhawk fans are getting pumped up for the coming basketball season and tomorrow's exhibition game.
game.
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
Many KU students knew more about the Notre Dame-Florida State game Saturday than they did about the Colorado-Kansas game.
The Kansas game was not televised in Lawrence on Saturday, and some students seemed oblivious to the fact that Kansas was even playing against the No. 21 Buffaloes.
Lauren Schmidt, Austin, Texas,
sophomore, said she did not find out if
Kansas had won or lost until yesterday
morning when she read about it in
the paper.
"Everyone was watching the Notre Dame game," she said. "It was supposed to be a really good game."
Students said they followed the Kansas game by watching halftime scores and game updates. Some said they did not know who had won until
SHOT DOWN: The Jayhawks lose the game and five players against Colorado on Saturday. Page 11.
NO. 9: The Kansas men's basketball team breaks the top 10 in the Associated Press' preseason poll. Page 12.
Saturday night when the game was over.
Dylan Mahoney, Boulder, Colo., sophomore, said he did not even think about the Kansas game Saturday.
"They were playing my hometown team, and I didn't even know the score," he said. "I like football, but I haven't been much into the KU season this year. It's nothing against the team, but it's hard to get excited when it doesn't seem like there's much to get excited about."
James Grau, Leavenworth junior, said he spent Saturday relaxing at
Grau said he did not think that this year's dismal season would negatively affect fan enthusiasm next year.
"I'd rather read comic books or play Legos than watch college football." Grau said. "I like NFL football, but I don't like college football that much," he said.
home without thinking about the outcome of the Kansas game. He said he heard about the 38-14 Kansas loss from a roommate.
Although some KU sports fans still are interested in the outcome of the final Kansas football game at home against Missouri Saturday, other KU students are looking forward to seeing ninth-ranked Kansas begin its basketball season tomorrow with an exhibition game against Marathon AAU.
"I think everyone just thinks it's been an off year," he said. "We've had some injuries and some things not go our way, but each year we've been improving. KU has a name in football and basketball."
"I'd rather read comic books or play Legos than watch college football."
James Grau
Leavenworth junior
Seth Buxton, Overland Park senior, said he always looks forward to basketball.
"Even if KU was having their best (football) season ever, I'd still be glad basketball season was just a week away," he said. "I can't wait for basketball to start. I don't really like football anyway."
2
Monday, November 15, 1993
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HEIGHT 711 W.23rd • 832-8555
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts
Lied Center Presents A New Directions Series Event
and the
Amanda Miller and the Pretty Ugly Dance Company
ON.CAMPUS
One of the season's greatest choreographer Amanda Mill John Zorn and sculptor Catherine
8:00 p.m.
8:00 p.m.
Wednesday,
November 17, 1
Lied Center
New Directions Series events half price for KU and Haskell students!
Tickets on sale at the Lied Theater Office (864-ASK) Murphy Hall Box Office (864-
3982); or any ticketmaster.com (813) 234-4545 or (816) 931-3330; public $16 and $14,
KU, Haskell and K-12 students $8 and $7, senior citizens and other students $15 and $13;
KU student tickets available through the SUA office, Kansas Union; phone orders can be made using MasterCard or VISA; all seats reserved.
Partially funded by the National Endowment for the Arts, Mid-America Arts Alliance, KU Student Senate Activity Fee, Friends of the Lied Series, and the Kansas University Endowment Association. Special thanks to this year's Very Import Partners: Hallnark University, Payton, Pageant, Videos ShoeSource and W.T. Kemper Foundation, Commerce Bank Trustee.
STUDENT
SENATE
ПОКУБТАН
TICKET MASTER
V
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 748-0753.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a Catholic law student discussion group at 12:30 p.m. today in 109 Green Hall. For more info, call 843-0357.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel.
K
XXL
Clan na Daghda ValFather (Clans of the Good God all Father) will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove F in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Debra or Michael Terry at 841-2096.
KU Kempo will meet at 6 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Ershadi at 842-4713.
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 Anishaslin at 843-3099.
Japanese Student Association will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in 100 Smith Hall. For more information, call Azusa at 841-6473, Kuniko at 841-5927 or Kei at 864-5726.
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 865-1682.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a "Fundamentals of Catholicism" class at 7 tonight at the Center, 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call 843-0357.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will show a video, "Exploring the Faith," at 8 onight at the Center, 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call 843-0357.
Muslim Students' Association will sponsor a lecture, "Islam in my life, sixteen years as an American Muslim woman," by Aminah Asilmy at 7:30 tonight at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Ahmad Hadi at 844-2642.
ON THE RECORD
A student's bicycle valued at $750 was taken in the 900 block of West 22nd Terrace on Wednesday or Thursday, Lawrence police reported.
A student's wallet and its contents, valued together at $35, were taken from a car in the 300 block of Elm Street on Wednesday or Thursday, Lawrence police reported.
28th Street on Thursday, Lawrence police reported. Damage was estimated at $250.
A student's car window was broken in the 800 block of West
A student's coat, wallet and its contents, valued together at $283, were taken from the second floor of Fraser Hall on Thursday, KU police reported.
A student's backpack and its contents, valued together at $63, were taken from Crafton-Preyer Theatre on Thursday, KU police reported.
WEATHER
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Tuesday, November 16, 1993
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Granada Theater, 1020 Massachusetts
Patti Butterfield, Ph.D. John B. Greene, Ph.D. Licensed Psychologists in Lawrence
THE LION GARDEN
THE HARVESTER
Sexual Boundary Violations
Special Senior Rates Available!
A Public Presentation in the Public Interest
7:00-9:00 p.m.
- Between faculty and students
and
Omaha: 42°/28°
LAWRENCE: 43°/32°
Kansas City: 40°/29°
St. Louis: 48°/33°
Wichita: 44°/32°
Tulsa: 47°/37°
TODAY
Tomorrow Wednesday
For showers
High: 43'
Low: 32'
Partly cloudy
High: 52'
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10tansfor $20
*Wolffbeds
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BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility
Omaha: 42°/28°
LAWRENCE: 43°/32°
Kansas City: 40°/29°
St. Louis: 48°/33°
Wichita: 44°/32°
Tulsa: 47°/37°
Tomorrow Wednesday
Omaha: 42'/28'
Sunny
KANSAN
Sunny
FirstWorkoutFree!
Source: Mark Akin, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KC Trauer, Editor or
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*FULL SERVICE CATERING FOR ANY AND ALL OF YOUR PARTY NEEDS.
*Rock Chalk*X-Man Parties*Formula* (Call Jake or Clay at 841-0505) *12 days in advance.*
The University Daily 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 finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119. Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
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New Student Orientation !!
OAR
to New HEIGHTS with
The Office of New Student Orientation is currently accepting applications for the position of:
ORIENTATION ASSISTANT
for Summer Orientation 1994
Interested candidates are strongly encouraged to attend one of the following information sessions.
Thursday, November 18=7 p.m. *Pioneer Room*. Burge Union - OR-
Wednesday, December 17=7 p.m. *Jayhawk Room*. Kansas Union
Application and job information is available in 45 Strong Hall • Deadline is December 22,1993
---
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CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 15, 1993
3
Task force frustrated with lack of input
By Christoph Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
When Kim Wilcox, associate professor of speech, language and hearing, was named head of the consensual relationships task force, he said he expected the task force would receive some input from students and faculty members.
But since the task force was formed by University Governance on Sept. 16, it has not received any input from the University, Wilcox said.
Despite the lack of student and faculty input, Wilcox said the task force still would be able to accomplish its goals.
The task force was charged with collecting input from students, staff and faculty members that would help the task force clarify the policy. The task force will make recommendations to the University Senate
Executive Committee by Nov. 24.
Wilcox said the task force represented the University because the task force members were students, staff and faculty members.
Wilcox said he expected the task force would get some input from the University Daily Kansan's Oread Forum, which on Thursday asked people to phone in their opinions about the policy. The Kansan asked for opinions about what types of conduct between a professor and student were acceptable outside of the classroom, whether the University should have a policy and what would be the best way to publicize such a policy.
"I thought this was a promising option on getting some student input," he said.
for discussing the policy. Eleven people attended the meeting, nine of whom were task force members.
Wilcox said he was disappointed because he thought the forum would generate more input than the task force's open meeting
"I expected something," he said. "I was rather frustrated we didn't get any calls."
"It might actually mean that no one is terribly outraged by the policy," he said.
Bob Friauf, professor of physics and astronomy, head of University Council and member of the task force, said the lack of input might represent the University's attitude about the policy.
Wilcox said there would be no more open meetings for students and faculty to discuss the policy. But he said people still could submit material about the policy to his office in 3031 Dole Human Development Center or contact other members of the task force.
O R E A D
F O R U M
8 6 4 - 9 0 4 0
Because of the lack of significant response to the Kansan's Oread Forum about the consensual relationships policy, there will be no story today about responses to the forum's questions.
Students, staff and faculty members who still want to submit information about their views on the policy can send a written response to Kim Wilcox in 3031 Dole Human Development Center
KANSAN
No more flu shots available at Watkins
There are no more flu vaccines available at Watkins Memorial Health Center or the Douglas County Health Department. About 6,250 vaccines have been administered between the two organizations since the beginning of October.
Vaccines are still available at First Med, 2323 Ridge Court and cost $12.1. First Med is open Monday through Saturday from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. and Sunday from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Vaccines must be administered before Thanksgiving break to allow the body a chance to adjust to the immunization, said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins. Ideally, the vaccine should be administered in October, he said.
Yockey said a flu vaccine would only protect people from the flu and not the common cold.
Life goes on Fire in house gives professors new perspective
By Jav Lisondra
M. B. Sternberg
Special to the Kansan
Cal Downs, professor of communications studies, and his wife, Alice, live in an apartment with few of the possessions that once surrounded them in their house at 1515 W.21 St. A fire that gutted their home has changed their lives in many ways.
In the past five weeks their schedules have been a lot busier. Dealing with the utility company, the insurance company and contractors has taken more time than they expected.
They've had fewer clothes — the smell of smoke could not be washed out, they said.
And Alice Downs, associate professor of piano, lost her $36,000 Steinway grand piano.
The emotion is over, it's just work now. "Cal Downs said."
"Downs immediately called his wife. He rushed out of the building and sprinted to his car, which was parked behind Murphy Hall. His wife, who also had parked behind Murphy, got there first. She got in her car and peeled off toward home, not noticing her husband trying to flag her down.
Cal Downs, professor of communications studies, looks out a window from inside his home, which was gutted by fire last month. Downs and his wife, Alice, associate professor of piano, installed new windows just weeks before the fire as part of a remodeling project. A recently constructed sun room and a Steinway grand piano also were destroyed.
It all began the afternoon of Oct. 4 when a phone call disturbed the quiet of Cal Downs' Wescoe office. It was a neighbor who told him that his house was ablaze.
react.
So Downs jumped in his car and raced home alone, trying to imagine how much of his house was burning. He listened to the sirens of fire trucks walling in the distance. Downs knew where they were going. He hoped that they would get there in time.
He arrived and first noticed all the fire trucks. He then saw flames leaping into the air from the south side of his house. He was not sure how to
"When I got there, people were suggesting the inside was gone, and then there was this sadness that set in," Downs said. "I was sort of numbed. People wanted me to make decisions when I wasn't ready to grapple with them."
Alice Downs felt the same way.
"I was in disbelief and in shock," she said.
When the fire was out, their house of 26 years had been gutted. Firefighters found that a living-room lamp with a broken electrical cord had started the fire.
Even the afternoon of the fire, when Cal Downs' torment peaked, the healing process had begun. Many of his friends came to offer their support after a friend, Paula Phillips, called and told them what had happened. Phillips had heard about the fire on her dispatch scanner.
Phillips, the Douglas County Emergency Preparedness coordinator, immediately listed what needed to be done.
"I don't think they realized the extent of the fire," Phillips said. "I made a few lists of things they should do, like contact the utility companies, and also a list of items they would need to get by for a few days, like toiletries and underwear."
The fire department also helped ease the pain.
Holly McQueen / KANSAN
"I have a great respect for the Lawrence Fire Department," Downs said. "The people we met were very professional and very considerate."
streets. all had been very sundortive.
Downs and his wife said that their relatives, their neighbors, various organizations, such as Sigma Alpha Iota, and their church, the First Christian Church at 10th and Kentucky
"We even received notes from people we didn't even know," Downs said. "I learned when people are going through bad times, it's important to get in and offer to help and share whatever you can."
But Downs and his wife learned more than the importance of helping others. The destruction of their most valuable possession, Alice Downs' Steinway grand piano, taught them how temporary material objects can be.
"What this does is that it tells you that you can't get too attached to things that can easily be destroyed," Cal Downs said.
Now, life is just a lot busier for Downs and his wife.
His wife agreed. The piano was the first piece of furniture she and her husband bought for the house.
"The greatest impact is the sheer work to make all the decisions about the house and get everything done for insurance purposes," Downs said, holding up a 52-page list of items destroyed by the fire. They lost irreplaceable photographs and mementos, such as a German nutcracker doll, an Austrian vase and souvenirs from Italy, Australia and Turkey. The fire claimed a sun room that was built earlier this year.
Cal Downs has dealt with the trauma of the fire well, said Darren Lawson, Greenville, S.C., graduate student.
"What really struck me was that just six hours after the fire occurred, Professor Downs came and conducted our three-hour, Monday night class," Lawson said.
Lawson also said that Cal Downs was reacting a lot better than he thought he would under the circumstances.
laughs about it now.
Since the fire, Downs' car window was kicked in by vandals. But he
"He has a genuine maturity in his emotions that someone as young as I am would not handle very well," said Lawson, 29.
"When I saw the car, I said to myself,
'I don't need this. When is this
destruction going to stop?' Downs
said.
The Downs say that because they like their neighborhood, they do not
plan to move. Their house will be rebuilt in two or three months, they said.
"We regret the loss, but nothing can really be done." Downs said. "We have a faith in the future that we'll rebuild the house and continue on with our lives."
Recruiter touts college to minority students in high school
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Dawn Kovats said she had learned an important lesson while recruiting minority high school students throughout Kansas; the blank looks on students' faces do not indicate blank intellects.
"They look at you with this blank face, then they ask really penetrating questions when you get through," Kovats said with a laugh.
admissions, Kovats travels to high schools throughout Kansas and neighboring states talking with students.
As associate director of undergraduate
Kovats also has been in charge of minority recruitment, an issue of concern both at the University of Kansas and in the rest of the nation.
"Minority recruitment is a huge title to give a person," said Pearl Rovaris, an admissions representative who works with Kovats to bring minority students to KU. "What we have done is to find, in our minds, our capabilities and what's best
Kovats said the responsibility kept her busy. She said that she tried to interest African-American, Hispanic-American and American-Indian students in KU at the beginning of their senior years. A lack of a tradition of higher education in their families can keep them from preparing earlier, she said.
for the students."
"Minority students — and students whose parents have not been to college — start this process later in the year," Kovats said. "Consequently, they don't gather as
much information as other students."
To reinforce the idea of college, Kovats said she tried to bring students to the KU campus. She said minority student organizations helped her bring the students.
One of Kovats' projects is the Inter-Institutional Task Force, which fosters communication between KU and Haskell Indian Nations University.
She said she tried to recruit graduates from Haskell to come to KU for their bachelor's degrees, but the extreme
Kovats said appointing one person to oversee minority recruitment kept KU's efforts centralized. But she said other segments of the University should not become complacent.
poverty and the distance from home discouraged many American-Indian students.
"Minority recruitment has to be everybody's job," she said. "Having one person in charge of it shouldn't absolve other people of responsibility."
PETER SMITH
Dawn Kovats
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Applications are due Wednesday November 17, by 5:00 p.m. In 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Please sign up for an interview at that time.
is now accepting applications for Spring 1994 Business staff. An informational meeting will be held on Tuesday November 16, at 7:45 am, in Room 100 Stauffer-Flint Hall. All applicants are strongly encouraged to attend.
ALL MAJORS ENCOURAGED TO APPLY.
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Thursday, Nov. 18 Level4-KS Union
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&
The Division of Student Affairs
4
Monday, November 15, 1993
...
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Chomsky speech shows failure of SUA planning
Student Union Activities' presentation of Noam Chomsky was a success for the 900 people who actually heard the speech. But for those who were turned away, SUA's poor planning literally left them out in the cold.
SUA failed the students it serves on several levels.
First, admission to Friday's event was free with a ticket. Tickets were distributed at 7:15 p.m.on a first come, first serve basis. There was no requirement of a faculty or student identification. Therefore, anyone who came early enough to get in line, and was one of the first 900 people, was admitted into the speech whether or not they were a student or faculty member. The students who were turned away and who pay the activity fee that brought Chomsky to the University should have had priority over others.
Second, an estimated several hundred students stood in line unnecessarily waiting for tickets. Advance tickets would have kept those students at home. In the past, when big-name speakers have come to KU, tickets have been given out before the night of the event. SUA should have followed this plan for Chomsky's speech.
Third, the high turnout for the technical lecture on linguistics and philosophy should have signaled the interest in hearing Chomsky. SUA also should have started the planning for accommodating the people who would not be able to hear the speech. SUA did have a live, closed viewing in a room adjacent to the ballroom. But that room's capacity was only 50. The broadcast should have been moved to the Big Eight Room, which has a larger seating capacity.
As one professor said, "The chance to see Noam Chomsky speak is a chance of a lifetime." For several hundred people, that opportunity was not realized because of poor planning. In the future, SUA should take this lesson and ensure that students don't miss another opportunity of that magnitude.
TERRILYN MCCORMICK FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
Packwood should resign
give diaries, 'fade away
It was a year ago that the largest newspaper in his home state editorially told Bob Packwood to resign. The embattled U.S. senator from Oregon should have heeded his hometown newspaper's advice.
Similarly, Packwood's plea for privacy rings hollow because he sought to use selected pages of his diaries to bolster his defense.
We may all admire fighters and sneer at quitters, and we may agree with those who argue that the privacy of the senator's diaries should be respected. But there comes a time when to keep up the good fight is not only an exercise in futility, it is downright harmful.
Also, given Packwood's demeanor during the Senate Ethics Committee's inquiry into his behavior, we're not sure if his campaign to keep the committee's hands off his diaries qualifies as a "good" fight, especially in the minds of his colleagues, who resented his dramatic
warning that disclosure could cause some of them grave embarrassment.
Even after the (the) Senate vote of 94-6 to require him to comply with a subpoena that would force him to turn over the now-notorious diaries to the committee, Packwood and his lawyer were vowing to take his fight to keep the documents private into the courts.
"I believe he has lost the grasp of what it means to be a U.S. senator," Sen. Robert C. Byrd, the former majority leader, commented. ... "None of us is without flaws, but when those flaws damage the institution of the Senate it, is time to have the grace to go." ...
Packwood should spare the Senate any further agony. He needs to wrap up his political career with a thoughtful farewell speech and then, like an old general, just fade away.
Tampa Tribune Tampa, Fla.
KANSANSTAFF
KC TRAUER, Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE Managing editors
General manager, news adviser
TOM EBLEN
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator Editors
Assistant to the editor ..J.R. Clairborne
News ..Stacy Friedman
Editorial ..Territty McCormick
Campus ..Ben Grove
Sports ..Klati Foger
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
AMYSTUMBO
JEANNE HINES
Business Staff
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 Burgese
Marketing director ... Shelly McConnell
Administrative mgr ... Clare Seedfod mgr ... John David
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
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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.
A THANKSGIVING TIME REALITY
THE CLASSES YOU WANTED
ENROLLMENT CENTER
HOOD UDK 93
Parent-teen relations shouldn't be attempted
Now that my son has turned 13, I'm thinking about writing a self-help book for parents of teen-agers. It would be a sensitive, insightful book that would explain the complex, emotionally charged relationship between the parent and the adolescent child. The title would be: "I'm a Jerk: You're a Jerk."
The underlying philosophy of this book would be that, contrary to what you hear from the "experts," it's a bad idea for parents and teen-agers to attempt to communicate with each other because there's always the risk that one of you will actually find out what the other one in thinking.
For example, my son thinks it's a fine idea to stay up until 3 a.m. on school nights reading what are called "suspense novels," defined as "novels wherein the most positive thing that can happen to a character is that the Evil Ones will kill him BEFORE they eat his brain." My son sees NO connection between the fact that he stays up reading these books and the fact that he doesn't feel like going to school the next day.
"Rob," I tell him, as he is eating his breakfast in extreme slow motion with his eyes completely closed so that he accidentally puts food into his ear, "I want you to go to sleep earlier."
COLUMNIST
Of course, psychologists would tell us that falling asleep in cereal is normal for young teen-agers, who need to become independent of their parents
"DAD," he says, using the tone you might use when attempting to explain an abstract intellectual concept to an oyster, "you DON'T UNDERSTAND. I am NOT tired. I am SPLOOSH (sound of my son passing out face-down in his Cracklin' Oat Bran)."
DAVE
BARRY
and make their own life decisions.
That is fine, except that if my son made his own life decisions, his ideal daily schedule would be:
Midnight to 3 a.m. — read suspense novels.
It takes 80 p.m.
3:15 p.m. — Order hearty breakfast from Domino's Pizza and put on loud,
hideous music recorded live in hell.
3 a.m. to 3 p.m. — Sleep.
4 p.m. to midnight — Blow stuff up.
Unfortunately this schedule would leave little room for, say, school, so we have to supply parental guidance, the result being that our relationship with our son currently involves a certain amount of conflict.
At least he doesn't wear giant pants. I keep seeing young teen-eagles wearing ENORMOUS pants; pants that two or three teen-agers could occupy simultaneously and still have room in there for a picnic basket. The young men wear these pants really low, so that the waist is about knee level and the pants' butt drags on the ground. You could not be an effective criminal wearing pants like these because you'd be unable to flee on foot with any velocity.
POLICE OFFICER: We tracked the alleged perpetrator from the crime scene by following the trail of his dragging pants' butt.
PROSECUTOR: And what was he doing when you caught up with him? POLICE OFFICER: He was hobbling in a suspicious manner.
What I want to know is, how do young people buy these pants? Do they try them on to make sure they DON'T fit?
I asked my son about these pants, and he told me that mainly "bassers" wear them. "Bassers" are people who like a lot of bass in their music.
My son also told me that there are also people called "posers" who DRESS like "bassers", but are in fact secretly "preppies." He said that some "posers" also pose as "headbangers," who are people who like heavy-metal music, which is performed by skinny men with huge hair who stomp around the stage.
I realize I've mainly been giving my side of the parent-teen-ager relationship, and I promise to give my son's side, if he ever comes out of his room. Remember how the news media made a big deal about it when those people came out after spending two years inside Biosphere? Well, two years is NOTHING. Veteran parents assure me that teen-agers routinely spend that long in the BATHROOM. In fact, veteran parents assure me that I haven't seen ANYTHING yet.
"Wait till he gets his driver's license," they say. "That's when Fred and I turned to heroin."
Yes, the next few years are going to be exciting and challenging. But I'm sure that, with love and trust and understanding, my family will get through them OK.
Dave Barry is a syndicated columnist with the Miami Herald.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Not all Asian groups represent same ideas
I want to respond to Donella Hearne's article on Nov. 2. The article deals with how Student Senate is finding ways to finance minority groups so that it would not finance duplicate services. I agree that the Senate should not duplicate services, but John Shoemaker's suggestion for solving this problem shows great ignorance. He once again grouped Asian Americans with
international students from Asia. Shoemaker suggests that the Asian American Student Union could be an umbrella organization for international student groups such as the Chinese Student Union because we are more aware of the issues and concerns of these groups. He fails to recognize the distinction between Asians and Asian Americans.
One of the reasons AASU formed three years ago was to debunk myths about Asian Americans. While Asian Americans and Asians share many phenotypic features, we come from
different backgrounds and have vastly different concerns. We have experienced racism since the beginning of Asian immigration into the U.S. We face racism because we are perceived by the majority to be foreigners and not Americans because of our appearance. When we are grouped with Asians we are denied of our place in American society.
Shoemaker's comment is a slap in the face because his campaign theme was "cultural diversity."
Quoc Trinh
Wichita senior
Debaters CNN analysts impersonate comedians
I thought I was watching the Comedy Channel.
After the debate, CNN provided commentary. one pro-NAFTA, one anti-NAFTA and one "private citizen" tried to sound intellectual. It would have been easier to analyze the outcome of a beer-below contest.
But no. The little yellow logo in the bottom portion of the screen confirmed my suspicion. I was watching CNN. In living rooms all across the United States, Vice President Al Gore and billionaire gadfly H. Ross — oops, make that just Ross — Perot were beginning their great debate on the North American Free Trade Agreement with a little help from Larry King. Lincoln-Douglas it sure wasn't.
Debate Commentary Part I:
Appearance Both Gore and Perot looked dapper in dark gray, wool suit. Perot added a little flash with pin stripes. On the down side, you can't help but notice that when Perot addresses the camera directly, his ears are lopsided. This might imply some other, internal imbalance. I would suggest either growing his hair long and brushing it over one side of his face à la Veronica Lake or simply tilting his head to compensate.
So, I thought I would offer my own analysis. I decided not to bother with silly things like how well debaters took on the issues. Any spin doctor worth his salt will tell you nobody cares about that.
Gore, on the other hand, is a good-looking man. But what his hairdresser won't tell, those bright studio lights will. Al, you're going bald. If Rogame can't help, try a can of that spray hair the Home Shopping Network hawks a few channels down the dial.
COLUMNIST
Part II: Presentation Both Gore and Perot tried to style their presentations to the ear of the average citizen. Perot peppered his speech with frequent "ol boy" expressions, such as "by golly," and compared his interest in a Texas airport as "gorilla dust."
Gore took the role of a third-grade teacher. He talked so far down to me that I considered taking notes with crayons. Despite Perot's obnoxious attacks, Gore held his own. The two even continued to bicker between station breaks. I swear I could hear "Did not!" "Did too" while Larry King was announcing a commercial.
COLUMNIST
VAL
HUBER
Both parties made abundant use of charts, graphs and photos. I'm not sure if they had anything to do with NAFTA, but they sure were pretty.
Part III: Special Awards For Perot: the "I Am Not A Politician, But Can Dance A Little Sidestep Just Like One" award, for claiming. "Conceptually, I am for free trade." Perot also wins the "I Have Nothing To Say, So I Will Just Preface Everything With: 'Could I finish?'" award. He spent roughly two-thirds of his time complaaining that he didn't have time. Good strategy, Ross.
Gore wins only the "Debater Most In Need Of An Acting Coach" award. He was more wooden than David Hasselhoff on "Baywatch."
For those of you who missed the debate, CNN is selling the video for only $19.98. I'd wait and just rent it. Look for it in the "screwball comedy" category.
Val Huber is a Lawrence graduate student in Journalism.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 15, 1993
5
Diversity is not a 'fashion,' speaker says
Speaker says building multiculturalism on campuses important
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
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
Blandina Cardenas-Ramirez thinks the word "diversity" is one of the most overused in the United States.
"Lots of times people go out to get on the diversity bandwagon simply because it is fashionable," she said.
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
Milton Scott, assistant director of student housing, gets a hug from MACURH conference co-director Ken Martin, Bloomington, Minn., sophomore, and a pat on the back from co-director Jamie Cutburth, Hillsboro, Ore., senior. Scott received the Mabel Strong Outstanding MACURH Advisor award at the annual MACURH banquet Saturday evening in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Cardenas-Ramirez presented a speech titled "Beyond Diversity: Building Community on Multicultural Campuses" on Friday at the Midwest Affiliate of College and University Residence Halls Conference. She presented the same speech Thursday evening at the Kansas Union.
About 550 student delegates from 36
Midwest universities attended the speech Friday.
Cardenas-Ramirez said building a truly diverse university required more than a trendy word.
7
"When we talk about diversity, multiculturalism and building of community on college campuses, it is critically important that we all understand that we are not doing something because it is in fashion," she said. "We have a fundamental responsibility to students to prepare them to live with, work with and contribute to individuals and groups unlike themselves."
Southwest Texas State University and serves on the U.S. Civil Rights Commission.
Cardenas-Ramirez is director of the Southwest Center on Values, Achievement and Community at
Cardenas-Ramirez challenged the audiences to find new ways for campus groups to interact.
"If you are spending all of your time just with people who are like you, you are ill-preparing yourself for the future," she said.
Cardenas-Ramirez said universities could improve diversity on campus by using five methods:
- Have administrators must work with groups to ensure they are interacting with other groups.
Provide extra help for campus groups that do not have as many participants or as much funding as other groups.
Slykas said she thought KU had a diversity of students, but often those groups were segregated.
Educate all students and faculty, regardless of ethnicity, in multiculturalism.
students, who are the future of this country," she said.
Educate students on the background of American society and historical patterns of diversity.
"We must engage in the kind of learning that will enable us to solve the problems that have arrived out of the historic inequality in this society," she said.
n Encourage cooperation between campus groups.
"We must understand that we have a common stake and a common future," Cardenas-Ramirez said. "We are in this together."
communication and leadership skills, and personal issues such as stress, sex, eating disorders and homophobia.
Delegates at the conference attended seminars that were held on Saturday at Wescoe Hall and the Kansas Union. They addressed such issues as
Jennifer Slykas, Chicago freshman and one of the MACURH national communications coordinators, said Cardenas-Ramirez's speech was inspirational and could be applied to KU's campus.
"She seems to have a lot of faith in
"Dr. Ramirez was very informative and optimistic that campus groups could get to know other groups' cultures and educate each other," she said.
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NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Israel seeks more Dead Sea scrolls
The Associated Press
Palestinians
Palestinians charge that the latest hunt for artifacts is a last-minute plunder before Israeli withdrawal.
WADI MAKUK, Occupied West Bank — Amid charges of last-minute plundering, Israel sent 16 teams of archaeologists fanning out across the occupied West Bank in a massive search for more Dead Sea scrolls yesterday.
Ancient documents, including poetry, legal texts and the earliest known sections of the Bible, were found in Judean desert caves near the Dead Sea over a 10-year period starting in 1947.
"We hope that there are other scrolls, and if there are none, then our consciences will be clear. No one can say we never looked for them," said Efrat Orbach, representative for Israel's AntiTensions Authority.
Scholars believe further scrolls could shed light on ancient Jewish sects and groups that may have influenced early Christian thought.
But "Operation Scroll" has prompted criticism from both Palestinian and Israeli archaeologists, who say Israel shouldn't launch an artifact hunt before the antiquities issue was discussed in Palestinian-Israeli peace talks.
Israel signed a U.N. convention in 1954 that forbids excavation and removal of "cultural assets" by foreign occupiers.
Palestinians have demanded the return of all artifacts already taken by Israel from the occupied territories. They called the latest hunt a last-minute plunder.
"The Israelis know they are leaving, and that is why they are taking this last chance of discovering finds," said Nazmi Joubi, a Palestinian archaeologist and adviser to the peace negotiations.
Much of the West Bank area being searched will be in a Palestinian self-rule zone soon after Israel starts its withdrawal Dec. 13.
Archaeologists say the chances of finding any scrolls are slim since most caves have already been either looted or explored by archaeologists during excavations dating back to the 1950s.
Nevertheless, dozens of government archaeologists and surveyors were taking part in what is the most extensive hunt for antiquities in the Dead Sea area since Israel captured the West Bank from Jordan in 1967.
In this dry river bed near the town of Jericho, a two-man team sifted through desert dust, goat droppings and 5,000-year-old human bones in a cave halfway up a 1,000-foot cliff.
They collected pottery and some cloth, which they took for dating. They were certain they had been the first to enter the cave
since it was used for burials in the Stone
Bronze, or Chalcolithic age, about 3500 B.C.
"Professionally, I am looking for anything, but in my soul I would like to find scrolls," said archaeologist Idan Shaked, gray dust caked to his face.
"It's not a treasure hunt," he said handing a metal detector to his colleague, a chrome 9mm pistol dangling on his hip. "But it has a small touch of Indiana Jones."
At Qumran, home of the ancient sect that stashed the scrolls in the caves for safekeeping more than 2,000 years ago, Antiquities Authority chief Amir Drori set up base to command the operation.
Driori denied the operation was politically motivated.
"We've been planning this for over four years. We are doing it now because we finally got the funds and all the permits we needed," Dori said.
But Aharon Kempinski, professor of archaeology at Tel Aviv University, said the effort was political because Dori wanted to ensure nothing remained for the Palestinians.
Archaeologist Dan Bahat said the operation was inconsistent with the peace effort.
"On the one side, we talk to the Palestinians, and on the other side, we take things which belong to them," he said.
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NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
7
THE NEWS in brief
PARKFIELD, Calif.
This week's forecast: 37 percent chance of a 6.0 earthquake
State officials issued a rare earthquake warning yesterday after a swarm of quakes struck Parkfield, Calif., at town on the San Andreas Fault.
Mondav. November 15. 1993
The largest quake struck at 4:25 a.m., measuring 4.8 on the Richter scale, said John Minsch, a seismologist for the U.S. Geological Survey. There were no reports of damage or injury.
The state Office of Emergency Services warned there was a "significant likelihood" that an earthquake at least magnitude 6 could occur within 72 hours. The "level A" 'alert means there is 37 percent chance the predicted quake would occur within three days.
The office advised emergency agencies in seven counties to activate short-term quake response plans.
The U.S. Geological Survey predicted that an earthquake measuring about 6 would rock the Parkfield segment of the San Andreas Fault by 1993.
The Parkfield segment stretches for nearly 20 miles through the oak-dotted Cholame Valley, a sparsely populated area between San Francisco and Los Angeles.
The expected earthquake could trigger the rupture of a 25-mile section of the fault southeast of the Parkfield segment. That in turn could produce a quake between magnitude 7 and 7.5, experts said.
A quake of magnitude 5 on the Richter scale can cause considerable damage.
VATICAN CITY
Cardinal charged with sex abuse
Steven Cook, 34, filed a $10 million lawsuit Friday in Cincinnati that he was sexually abused in his teens by Cardinal Joseph Bernardin, who was archbishop of Cincinnati from 1972 to 1982.
Bernardin, now head of the Chicago archdiocese, has denied the allegations. He is the highest-ranking Roman Catholic clergy member in the United States to face such charges.
Although Pope John Paul II has not mentioned the accusations against the prominent U.S. cardinal, Vatican Radio, a voice of the Holy See, called the charges "fithy, worth of disdain." A commentary broadcast Saturday described Bernadin as "well-balanced and a man of prayer" and said charges of abuse are often made for money.
Also Saturday; the Vatican's secretary of state. Cardinal
Angelo Sodano, criticized the mass media for having "no respect for the person" and for not respecting "the private life and intimacy."
Sodano did not cite Bernardin by name but said, "True communication does not consist in showing all and telling all, which harms the person."
MOGADISHU, Somalia Bandits kill 15, escape with trucks
Bandits held up a truck convoy and shot dead 15 Somalis and wounded 13 before escaping with 10 of the trucks, U.N. officials said yesterday.
Italian troops recovered four trucks and handed over four of the bandits to Somali police, said U.N. representative Farouk Mawlawi.
The convoy of 14 trucks was returning to Mogadishu after unloading at an Italian base Friday. The Somalis were believed to be carrying cargo under contract for the United Nations. Mawlawi said.
On Saturday, armed bandits hijacked a U.N. vehicle, killing an American civilian and wounding two other U.N. employees before fleeing with the car. A memorial service was held yesterday for Kai Lincoln, 24, of Hoboken, N.J.
"There appears to be an increased possibility of banditry within Mogadishu," U.N. military representative Capt. Tim McDavitt said. "A lot of the militia, a lot of the people out there fighting for the militia, are presently inactive. Perhaps they don't have anything better to do."
U.S. war games worry North Korea
North Korea declared yesterday that planned U.S.-South Korean military exercises threaten peace and could bring a "miserable end" to South Korea's government.
TOKYO
The Communist state's warning came amid efforts by South Korea and the West to have North Korea accept international inspections of its nuclear facilities. North Korea denies it is building a nuclear arsenal.
The United States and South Korea plan to begin war games today involving most of the 36,000 American troops based in South Korea plus 650,000 South Korean troops.
The North's official Korean Central News Agency quoted an unnamed official spokesman as saying the exercises show that Washington and Seoul have no intention of trying to solve the nuclear issue through dialogue.
The statement said South Korea and the United States would be "held responsible" for the "provocative war exercises."
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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Monday, November 15, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 15, 1993
9
DAILY SPECIAL DIRECTORY
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10
Monday, November 15, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Drug overdose cause of death of young actor
LOS ANGELES — The image of River Phoenix as a quiet, clean-cut Hollywood actor shattered with autopsy results that revealed he died from a potent mix of cocaine and heroin.
The Associated Press
Toxicological tests conducted on Phoenix showed extremely high levels of the drugs, coroner's spokesman Scott Carrier said Friday. Phoenix, 23, died outside a Sunset Boulevard nightclub on Oct. 31.
The tests on Phoenix also showed marijuana, the prescription sedative Valium and an over-the-counter cold medication, Carrier said.
Comedian John Belushi died 11 years ago from the same lethal mix. Unlike Belushi, who died in 1982, Phoenix did not inject heroin and cocaine in a mixture referred to as a "speed ball."
"There were no needle marks," Carrier said. "Maybe it was ingested, maybe it was inhaled. How it was introduced into his body is unknown at this time."
The coroner's office ruled the death accidental.
Phoenix spokeswoman Susan Patricola said she hoped the overdose would send a message.
"If any good can come from this death, it can come from saving someone's life," she said.
Patricola said the actor's reputation as a clean-living vegetarian belied his drug use.
The Sheriff's Department said Friday that it had closed its investigation into the death outside the Viper Room, a trendy West Hollywood music club co-owned by actor Johnny Depp.
Viper Room patrons said the actor had been weaving and acting strangely before he went into convulsions at the club and was led outside, where he collapsed on the sidewalk.
Phoenix starred in such films as "Stand By Me," "Running On Empty," for which he received an Oscar nomination, and "My Own Private Idaho."
S
A Special congratulations
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
Amanda Hostetler, Prairie Village sophomore, congratulates John Binney, Topeka, for a job well done at the Special Olympics bowling tournament. The tournament was Saturday at Royal Crest Lanes at Ninth and Iowa streets. The tournament provided volunteer opportunities for KU students.
Anguished Jackson avoiding media
But there were no sighs of the elusive singer or his entourage.
Singer cancels tour cites drug addiction
LONDON — The Sunday Mirror's headline read, "Jacko: You can't hide!"
Jackson dropped out of sight Friday after announcing he was cutting short his "Dangerous" world concert tour to obtain treatment for an addiction to painkillers.
Photographers and camera crews staked out the exclusive Charter Clinic in London's Chelsea district for a second day yesterday. But the clinic, which provides drug rehabilitation treatment and guarantees privacy, refused to say whether the star was there.
But superstar Michael Jackson appeared to be winning his hide-and-seek game with the world's media yesterday.
The Associated Press
In a recorded message, Jackson said
News reports said he left Mexico City for London and, possibly, Switzerland, where his friend, actress Elizabeth Taylor, owns a chalet.
"I cannot confirm or deny that Michael Jackson is here," duty manager Jane Pitcaitha said. "We sign an oath of confidentiality."
his painkiller addiction was caused by anguish over the investigation into a 13-year-old boy's claims that Jackson sexually molested him. The allegations are being investigated by Los Angeles police.
Jackson spokesman have said the abuse claims emerged after Jackson rejected a $20 million extortion attempt by the teen-ager's father.
The pop superstar was to have performed yesterday in San Juan, Puerto Rico, his first appearance on U.S. soil since the molestation investigation began.
Britain's tabloids speculated that Jackson was fleeing from possible arrest.
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 15, 1993
11
Colorado blows past Kansas 38-14
98
FAURIA
16
D. DAVIS
19
Paul Kotz/KANSAN
Colorado junior tight end Christian Fauria attempts to break through Kansas outside linebackers sophomore Ronnie Ward, left, and junior Don Davis. Kansas lost the game in Boulder 38-14.
Five Jayhawks sustain injuries
The Buffaloes offense totaled 598 yards, which was the most Colorado has gained and Kansas has allowed this season.
But the most telling statistic for the Jayhawks was the five players they lost during the contest due to injury: freshman defensive end Jason Brown, knee; senior defensive end Guy Howard, ankle; senior tight end Dwayne Dainley, ankle; junior guard Hessley Hempstead, ankle and sophomore reserve guard Brian Rodeno, knee. All five left the game because of their injuries.
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas coach Glen Mason said after the game that he was not sure if any of those players would play against Missouri on Saturday.
BOULDER, Colo. — Colorado inflicted more pain on Kansas' football season Saturday in its 38-14 victory against the Jawhaws.
Injuries have been a reoccurring problem that Mason said he wished he did not have to address.
"This sure wasn't the year of the Jayhawk; it was the year of the injuries as far as we've been concerned," Mason said. "It is part of the game, but we've sure had more than our fair share."
Colorado was able to take advantage of Kansas' health problems and put together what coach Bill McCarthy said might have been Colorado's best game of the season.
"They had some guys go out, so they're more than nicked up." McCartney said. "But they just caught us at a time when we're healthy and improving."
Colorado's offense struggled in the first half but was able to gain a 10-0 lead at halftime. Senior Mitch Berger's 24-yard field goal and junior Lamont Warren's 15-yard touchdown run late in the second quarter gave Colorado its halftime lead.
The third quarter turned out to be the Rashaan Salaam-June Henley show. Salaam, Colorado's sophomore tailback, punctured two 80-yard touchdown drives with scoring runs of 7 and 2 yards. Salaam had 108 of his 130 rushing yards in the third quarter alone.
But Kansas' Henley responded after each of Salaam's touchdowns. The Jayhawk freshman tailback scored on a 17-yard run to cut the Colorado margin to 17-7 and returned a kickoff 100 yards for a touchdown to make the score 24-14 with 4-45 left in the quarter.
Henley's kickoff return was a big play for Kansas, but it did not do any favors for the defense. Because of the injury situation and Colorado's offensive success, the Jayhawk defense wore down throughout the second half.
"I don't know whether it was the atmosphere or what, but there were a lot of tired guys out there on defense," said junior linebacker Don Davis. "This was one of the most tiring games I've ever been involved in."
Tired defenses often will not stop an offense as potent as Colorado's. The Buffaloes held the ball for 22 of the 30 minute second half.
Colorado added two touchdowns in the fourth quarter to close out Kansas. Junior quarterback Kordell Stewart scored on a 1-yard run, and senior reserve tailback James Hill added a 7-yard touchdown run.
"I can't say enough about the guys I've had the privilege to coach right now," Mason said. "Their attitude has been superb."
Mason said his team would hang in there for one more week as they prepare to finish the season Saturday at home against Missouri.
NOTE: June Henley's 100-yard kickoff return for a touchdown was the first by a Jayhawk since Vince O'Neil returned one for a 96-yard
touchdown in 1970 against Nebraska.
Henley's return also surpassed John Haldi's 97-yard touchdown return in 1959 against Syracuse as the longest in Jayhawk history.
Henley said that he did not have many opportunities to return kickoffs in his career.
"I had one return in high school, but usually they would never kick it to me," Henley said.
It was Henley's second return for Kansas.
Henley finished with 63 yards rushing, which gave him 1,009 yards for the season. He will need 106 yards against Missouri to set a new Big Eight Conference freshman rushing record, which was set by former Jayhawk Kevin Bell in 1980.
By the numbers
KU
First Downs 14 14
Rushes-yards 344-109 61-38
Passing yards 126 220
Running yards 30 57
Comp-Att 10-22.1 16-23.0
Sacked-yards lost 2-11 3-33
Punts 8-46.6 5-50
Fumbles-lost 1-1 2-1
Penalties-lost 3-16 5-46
Time of Possession 23.29 36.31
CU-FGBerger24
KANSAS 0 0 14 0 — 14
COLORADO 0 10 14 14—38
UU — Warren 15 run (Berger kick)
CU — Salam a 7 run (Berger kick)
KU — Henley 17 run (Eichloff kick)
KU — Salam a 2 run (Berger kick)
KU — Henley 100 kickoff return (Eichloff kick)
CU—Stewart 1 run (Berger kick)
CU—Hill 7 run (Berger kick)
KANSAN
Women's tennis players finished first, second at Rolex, get berths to national tournament
Kansan staff report
Kansas women's tennis dominated the courts this weekend at the Central Regional Rolex Championships in Salt Lake City.
Senior Mindy Weiner won the singles title, defeating teammate junior Kim Rogers in straight sets, 6-2, 6-3. The team of Rogers and senior Abby Woods claimed the doubles title by defeating Karina Kuregan and Marsha Meidell from Kansas State in three sets. This is the second consecutive year that Kansas has won the singles and doubles titles at this tournament.
The tournament, in which the top two singles players and doubles teams qualify for the national tournament in February, marks the end of the fall season.
Before the tournament, coach Chuck Merzbacher said that Kansas could occupy all four spots in the semifinal matches. He predicted correctly.
Weiner defeated junior Nora Koves in three sets, 7-5, 0-6, 3-1, and Rogers defeated No. 1 seeded junior Rebecca Jensen in two sets 6-3, 6-4, to advance to the final round. Jensen teamed up with Weiner last year to take the doubles title but could not repeat the victory with partner Koves this year. Nicole Kennelye and Jenny Del Valley from Oklahoma defeated them 7-6, 2-6, 6-2.
All of the competitors representing the central region in the national tournament are from Kansas schools. The top two singles players are Kansas' Weiner and Rogers and the top two doubles teams consist of Rogers/Woods and Kuregan/Meilld of K-State.
Women's cross country team lands first, qualifies for NCAAs
Kansan staff report
The Kansas women's cross country team qualified for the NCAA Championships this weekend for the first time in its history. The men's and women's teams competed in the District V Championships at Southern Illinois.
The women — led by senior Julia Saul's fourth place finish — won the 17-team meet, scoring a meet-low 77 points. Saul was followed by junior Kristi Kloster, senior Daniela Daggy and freshman Colleen McClimon, finished 11th, 14th and 15th respectively. The low score wins in cross country.
Conference rival No. 13 Nebraska was the district's other automatic qualifier for the NCAA Championships with a score of 89.
While the women's season continues, the men's season ended as the team placed eighth out of 21 teams with a score of 217.
The top two Kansas finishers were freshman Bryan Schultz, who placed 23rd, and senior Bobby Palmer, who placed 26th in his last collegiate cross country meet.
The Big Eight won both automatic bids to the men's NCAAs, Iowa State won the district, scoring 35 points, followed by Oklahoma State with 64.
Men win, women fall to Mustangs
By Kent Hohlfeld Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas swimming and diving teams competed in what Kansas coach Gary Kempf called an "all out"
The women's team was defeat-
MEN'S & WOMEN'S SWIMMING
brawl! Saturday with Southern Methodist University in Oklahoma City.
ed by the Mustangs 129-114, breaking a string of 24 dual-meet victories. The Kansas men's team defeated Southern Methodist 130-111 for the first time since the series started in the late 1960s.
Southern Methodist started the meet strongly by defeating the Kansas men's team in the 400-yard medley relay, taking an early 13-14 lead. Kansas responded by winning five of the next six events to take an 83-48 lead into the second half of the meet.
The Mustangs countered by taking four of the next six events but could pull no closer than 14 points as the Jayhawks won by 19 points.
Sophomore Ryan Lowe said that winning the top two positions in the 200-yard butterfly event was a crucial point in the meet. Lowe finished first and Kansas won the event with senior Dan Querciagrosza coming in second, less than one-tenth of a second ahead of Mustang Gav Johansson.
"When Dan out placed SMU, it got everyone realy numped." Lowe said
Lowe said that not allowing a Mustang second-half comeback as it did last year was on the minds of team members as they entered the second half of the meet. The Mustangs defeated the Jayhawks 181-157 in Oklahoma City.
Lowe said that once Kansas took the top three spots in the 500-yard freestyle, the team knew it had won the meet. He said the victory proved that Kansas could win close meets.
"We won the close races all the way through the meet," Lowe said.
The women's team suffered from a case of deja vu as for the second straight year its meet came down to the last relay of the meet. But last year Kansas won that relay defeating Southern Methodist 152-148.
The meet started well for the Jayhawks as they won the 400 relay to take an early 13-4 lead. The lead was short lived, however, as the Mustangs won the next three events and took a 66-46 lead.
Kansas battled back to within one point by taking two of the top three places in each of the last six events. That set the stage for the final relay, first place worth 13 points, with Kansas trailing 116-110. Southern Methodist defeated Kansas by just more than half a second to win the meet 129-114.
"We didn't roll over, we fought for it," junior Amy Graham said. "We have nothing to be ashamed of."
Graham said that that the entire team swam well and that it was a great competition for the team. She said that she thought the team proved that it could compete with teams the caliber of Southern Methodist, traditionally a top-20 team.
"You couldn't ask for a better dual meet." Graham said.
Top 25 teams
The Associated Press 1993 college football poll: first-place votes in parentheses, records through Nov. 13, 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. Notre Dame (62) | 10-0-0 | 1,550 | 2 |
| 2. Florida State | 9-1-0 | 1,467 | 1 |
| **3. Nebraska** | **10-0-0** | **1,390** | **4** |
| 4. Miami | 8-1-0 | 1,351 | 3 |
| 5. Ohio State | 9-0-1 | 1,273 | 5 |
| 6. Auburn | 10-0-0 | 1,227 | 7 |
| 7. Tennessee | 7-1-1 | 1,195 | 6 |
| 8. Florida | 8-1-0 | 1,124 | 8 |
| 9. West Virginia | 9-0-0 | 1,066 | 9 |
| 10. Texas & M | 8-1-0 | 1,009 | 11 |
| 11. Alabama | 8-1-1 | 934 | 12 |
| 12. Wisconsin | 7-1-1 | 852 | 14 |
| 13. North Carolina | 9-2-0 | 821 | 15 |
| 14. Penn State | 7-2-0 | 737 | 16 |
| **15. Oklahoma** | **8-2-0** | **629** | **17** |
| 16. UCLA | 7-3-0 | 607 | 10 |
| 17. Boston College | 7-2-0 | 513 | 22 |
| **18. Colorado** | **6-3-1** | **482** | **21** |
| 19. Arizona | 8-2-0 | 478 | 13 |
| **20. Kansas State** | **7-2-1** | **324** | **24** |
| 21. Indiana | 7-3-0 | 268 | 19 |
| 22. Southern Cal | 7-4-0 | 203 | — |
| 23. Virginia | 7-3-0 | 144 | 18 |
| 24. Clemson | 7-3-0 | 110 | — |
| 25. Virginia Tech | 7-3-0 | 90 | — |
Other receiving states: Michigan State 82, Louisville 71, North Carolina State 34, Arizona State 32, Michigan 28, Wyoming 27, Cincinnati 12, Washington 7, Freno State 6, Washington State 4, Ball State 1, California 1, Nevada 1.
Kansas volleyball team defeated by Oklahoma
Sooner victory means Jayhawks may miss Big Eight Tournament
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Source: The Associated Press
Kansas found out Friday that if it were tied with IowaState at season's end, the tiebreaker would be games won in head-to-head competition instead of games won in the conference. Previously the team thought that conference game winning percentage was the deciding factor.
Not only did Kansas lose in three games 10-15,7-15,12-15 against the Sooners in Allen Field House, but the Jayhawks also may have lost the chance to qualify for the Big Eight tournament.
Oklahoma's victory against the Kansas volleyball team yesterday was disappointing for two reasons for the Jawhaws.
Now, if Iowa State defeats Kansas State on Nov. 20, the Cyclones will go to the tournament instead of the Jayhawks.
The match yesterday was the last in the field house for the seniors, setter/outside hitter Shelby Lard, middle blocker Cyndee Kanabel and middle blocker/rightside player Erin Kramer. Lard said the defeat was a disappointment for her as a senior.
OKLAHOMA
10
OKLAHOMA
1
Knowing that they had to defeat Oklahoma, the Jayhawks had to prepare for a tall Oklahoma front line. Earlier in the week, Kansas coach Frankie Albiz called Oklahoma the biggest team in the Big Eight and possibly the nation. Oklahoma has 10 players 5-foot-11 or taller, and Kansas has only two.
"We've been thinking all this time that if we take games off these better teams we'd have a shot at the tournament," Lard said. "We found out Friday that we had to beat Oklahoma to go. It's disappointing because the Big Eight tournament is a fun tournament to go to."
Kansas sophomore outside hitter Tracie Walt hits the ball past Oklahoma middle blocker freshman Laura Rappard and senior Gloria Holcomb. The Jayhawks lost to the Sooners yesterday at Allen Field House and will unlikely give a bid to the Big Eight tournament.
William Alix / KANSAN
Throughout the match, Oklahoma's size took its toll on the Kansas offense. The Sooners ended with 13.5 team blocks compared to three for Kansas.
Oklahoma senior middle blocker Gloria Holcomb dominated the match with 16 kills to lead both teams. Oklahoma coach Miles Pabst said good passing contributed to Holcomb's success.
"We have excellent hitters and passers." Pabst said. "Holcomb in the middle is as good as any middle blocker in the country. Teams have a tough rime with her."
able to improve their blocking up front. Oklahoma recovered and won 15-12.
Pabst said the Sooners had a let-down in game three, when Kansas came back from a 8-9 deficit to tie the score at 10-10. Twice during the Kansas rally, the Jayhawks were
"They started settling down more," Albitz said of her players' comeback. "The timing on the block was a little better."
Although Kansas might not go to the Big Eight tournament, the team does have an automatic invitation as the host team in the
National Invitational Volleyball Championship tournament Dec. 3-5 in Kansas City, Mo.
"There won't be much pressure on us since it's not the NCAAs," Lard said. "It's good because you get to play teams you don't normally play against."
12
Monday, November 15, 1993
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
* 标准规范性附录 B-105A
Notre Dame victory provides new chapter to Irish mystique
The Associated Press
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Florida State didn't believe in the magic and mystique of Notre Dame. It didn't believe that the specter of the past could get in the way of its perfect season. Now it does.
On the same field where Knute Rockne coached, Paul Hormun ran and Joe Montana threw, the No. 2 Fighting Irish added another chapter to their football lore by defeating a team many considered undefeatable.
Powered by a rugged rushing attack, Notre Dame ran out to a 17-point lead and hung on to defeat No.1 Florida State 31-24 Saturday, when Charlie Ward's desperation pass was knocked down on the goal line as time expired.
In winning, the Irish became a favorite for a ninth national championship.
"The mystique didn't hurt us; it helped them. Their kids play like they're possessed," Florida State coach Bobby Bowden said.
"I just like to be Lou Holtz for one night — tonight," he said. "We have no excuses. Notre Dame ran the football on us. They deserve to win. They did the things I was afraid they would."
In the last six years, Bowden's teams have never finished lower than fourth in the poll. But they have never finished No.1, frustrated in the past by intrastate rival Miami. This year it was the Irish.
But Bowden could still get another shot at the title in a bowl rematch against Notre Dame.
Lee Becton rushed for 122 yards and a touchdown, and JeffBurris ran for two more scores as the Irish won the 28th meeting between the top two teams in The Associated Press poll.
"I was afraid with all the hype, the game might not live up to it," Notre Dame coach Lou Holtz said. "I don't know how it looked from the press
box or the stands, but I don't want to see anything more exciting than that from the sideline.
"The last couple days I said we were going to play pretty well, and we felt we belonged here. Florida State is every bit as good as I thought," he said.
Both teams entered the game with 9-0 records and 16-game winning streaks, tied for longest in the nation. The Seminoles were favored by a touchdown because they had been more dominant, outscoring their opponents by an average of 44-6.
But after falling behind 7-0, the Irish scored 24 straight points and dominated the smaller Semi-noles before a freized crowd of 59,075 at Notre Dame Stadium.
In pregame interviews, several Seminoles said they weren't worried about Notre Dame's history and tradition, and two referred to Rockne as "Rock Kuteny."
After the Irish took a 24-7 lead on Kevin Pendergast's career-best 47-yard field goal in the third quarter, Florida State pulled to 24-17 on Ward's 6-yard touchdown pass to Warrick Dunn and a 24-yard field goal by Scott Bentley, who turned down a scholarship offer from Irish coach Lou Holtz.
But Notre Dame built a cushion when Burris, a defensive back who is used as a runner in goal-line situations, scored on an 11-yard run with 6:53 remaining.
Florida State made it 31-24 on a tipped, 20-yard touchdown catch by Kez McCorvey with 2:26 left. Notre Dame recovered the Seminoles' onside kick, but Florida State got the ball back with 51 seconds remaining.
Operating with no timeouts, the Seminoles drove from their 37 line to the Notre Dame 14 in the closing seconds. But Ward's final pass was knocked down at the goal line by cornerback Shawn Wooden as time expired.
By Jim O'Connell The Associated Press
Tar Heels No.1 in basketball poll
North Carolina will open defense of the national championship as the No.1 team in The Associated Press' preseason college basketball poll.
The Tar Heels received 61 of 65 first-place votes from a nationwide panel of writers and broadcasters Saturday for their fourth No.1 ranking in the 13 presseason polls conducted.
Kentucky, which was listed No. 1 on three ballots, was second and was followed by Arkansas and Duke, last year's preseason No. 1, giving the Atlantic Coast Conference and Southeastern Conference the top four teams.
No team has ever been a unanimous preseason No. 1, and the three first-place votes for Kentucky and one for Kansas kept the Tar Heels from doing it. They also were preseason No. 1 for 1981-82, the first season such a poll was taken, and again before 1983-84 and 1986-87.
Michigan, the NCAA championship game loser the last two years, was No. 5, followed by California, Louisville, Temple, Kansas and Minnesota.
Three preseason No. 15 have gone on to win the national title: North Carolina in 1982, UNLV in 1990 and Duke in 1992.
"Seldom does a team finish No. 1 who starts there." Tar Hearl coach Dean Smith said. "We hope we can be one of a select few to accomplish such an unbelievable goal. The very fact that college basketball is such an unpredictable game and a champion is decided by a tournament, the polls
UNLv in 1990-91 and Duke the next season are the only preseason No. Is to hold the top spot through the final poll.
lose the meaning they enjoy in football."
North Carolina has four starters back from last season's 34-4 team that gave Smith his second national title and has added yet another stellar recruiting class.
"Generally, anyone who is returning key people from the Final Four is selected at the top," Smith said. "If Arkansas had beaten us in the regional semifinals, they would have been preseason No. 1, in my opinion."
Kentucky, which lost to Michigan in the Final Four, lost Jamal Mashburn to the NBA but still figures to win its conference, as does Arkansas.
Kansas was the other team in the Final Four last season, and the Jayhawks still made the top 10 despite losing four starters.
Oklahoma State led the second 10 and was followed by Indiana, the No. 1 team in last season's final poll, UCLA, Georgia Tech, Georgetown, Virginia, Illinois, Arizona, Cincinnati and Syracuse.
Purdue led the final five and was followed by Massachusetts, Vanderbilt, George Washington and Florida State.
California, which ended Duke's run at a third straight title in the second round of last year's tournament, was the highest-ranked of the nine teams that made the preseason poll after not being in last year's final poll. The No. 6 Golden Bears will rely on sophomore point guard Jason Kidd in their first full season under Todd Bozeman.
North Carolina opens the season Wednesday night at home against Western Kentucky in the Preseason NIT, with California, Kansas, Minnesota, Cincinnati and Massachusetts also in the 16-team field.
Proseason top 25
The top 25 teams in the Associated Press' pre-season college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, 1992-93 record, total points based on 25 points for a first place vote through one point for a 25th place vote and last season's final ranking.
| State | Record | Points | Last Year |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1. North Carolina (61) | 34-4 | 1,820 | 4 |
| 2. Kentucky (3) | 30-4 | 1,434 | 2 |
| 3. Arkansas | 22-9 | 1,420 | 12 |
| 4. Duke | 24-8 | 1,305 | 10 |
| 5. Michigan | 31-5 | 1,295 | 3 |
| 6. Califomia | 21-9 | 1,141 | — |
| 7. Louisville | 21-9 | 1,125 | 15 |
| 8. Temple | 20-13 | 1,095 | — |
| 9. Kansas (1) | 29-7 | 987 | 9 |
| 10. Minnesota | 22-10 | 902 | — |
| 13. Oklahoma St. | 20-9 | 889 | 23 |
| 12. Indiana | 31-4 | 854 | 1 |
| 13. UCLA | 21-11 | 725 | — |
| 14. Georgia Tech | 19-11 | 691 | 18 |
| 14. Georgetown | 19-13 | 690 | — |
| 16. Virginia | 21-10 | 648 | — |
| 17. Illinois | 19-13 | 567 | — |
| 18. Arizona | 24-4 | 410 | 5 |
| 19. Cincinnati | 27-6 | 379 | 7 |
| 20. Syracuse | 20-9 | 378 | — |
| 21. Purdue | 18-10 | 314 | 22 |
| 22. Massachusetts | 24-7 | 300 | 14 |
| 23. Vanderbilt | 28-6 | 237 | 8 |
| 24. George Washington | 21-9 | 205 | — |
| 25. Florida St. | 25-10 | 192 | 11 |
Other receiving votes: Wisconsin 187, Manitoba 174,
Xavier, Ohio 125, Ohio State 110, Tennessee 104, Connecticut
89, Boston College 81, Georgia 67, Missouri 64,
LU 74, Esteton Hall 41, Michigan 77, Memphis State 68,
Nebraska 23, Alabama 15, Perpense 15, Arizona State
14, New Mexico State 14, Virginia Commonwealth
13, Bright Young 12, Southern Cal 12, St. John's
12, New Orleans, West Kentucky 9, North East Louisiana 12, Penn 5, Western Michigan 16, West Virginia 5, Copper State 4, South Carolina 4, UNV 4,
Utah 4, Iowa State 3, Michigan State 2, Oldhamia 2,
Ohio U. 1, U.S. Tennessee State 1.
Source: The Associated Press
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Elections for positions: President, Vice President Treasurer, Secretary To be held on Nov.19th 1993 at Kansas Union,4th floor lobby between 2:30 P.M. to 5:30 P.M.
Nominations will be accepted until 5:00 P.M. on Nov.17th 1993 at Organizations and Activities Box #42 in the Kansas Union
When You Really Have To Go
For further information, contact: Syed Ali Rizui (President, Pakistan Club).at 864-1304.
42 in the Kansas Union.
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13
Classified Directory
Monday, November 15, 1993
100s
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
120 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
228 Professional Services
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for房 rent or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, race, nationality, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
300s
Merchandise
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes legal adoptions by prevailing party race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
I
- Kansan Classified; 864-4358 -
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
340 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are subject to the conditions set forth below.
100s Announcements
105 Personals
KU student population who have placed or responded to Jayaik or other personal skills. This will o be a class project with possibility for coursework on the same gay or gay. I'd really like to hear your story. #40
110 Bus. Personals
FREE! FREE! FREE! Unclaimed Government
FREE! FREE! FREE! 300 sources. Call
for free information @829-1871.
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO Really Listen Call or drop by Headquarters We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. We're always open
*Revolutionary Alpha Hydroxyl Acid skin treatment system proven to reduce lines, repair damaged skin.* Free information 943-4289.
*Unisex Golden Silver Jewelry Hoop, Pendant and Gauges For Girls and Gals*. The Etc. Shop 928 Mass. Downown
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-4:30pm
*SPRING BREAK*
Early Booking Special
$25 Donation
LOWEST QUARETED TEACHER
Joan at 865-5611
Pharmacy Hour
Monday-Tuesday 8am-9pm
Friday 8am-5pm
Saturday 10am-9pm
Sunday 1:3am-9am
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
120 Announcements
Lebian, gay, bie, or unure? You're not alone!
Call handorders or UK info for more.
Handquarters or UK info for more.
130 Entertainment
Free Party Room Available at Johnny's Tav
ur/Ub & Under, Call 843-6779 for details.
Systemic Mutation Achieved: Macro-change of the immune system, the body temperature regulation mechanism of animals, suggests animals sharing physical attributes of Biblical Adam, Moses, Christ; Comfort at all temperatures; immunity to diseases & ailments.
140 Lost & Found
Found: set of keys near 15th & Engel: call 864=1214
男 女
200s Employment
The Lawrence Bus Company is accepting applications for part time bus drivers. Morning and afternoon shifts available. Must be 21 with clean driving record. Call 842-0544.
AA Cruise & Travel Jobs Earn $290/mo. + travel the world free! (Caribbean, Europe, Hawaii, Australia) Cruise Line now hiring for bus holiday, cruise vacations. Qualified employees employment Call (919) 845-9384 ext. 131.
APPLY NOW! international Chain filling part-fall line positions. Training provided. Work locally now (flexible schedules around classes). May extend on weekends. Visit our website on winter break. $300 plus starting call 842-8035.
Available Jan 15, 94. Invoicing. Customer Services.
Bookkeeping work. Working hrs 3-6 M-F. C-Pur-
nential Business major preferred. Training begins in
Dec. Send letter of application, list of 3 references.
Send resume to Employee Portfolio KS. Lawrence,
KS. 60044. Deadline Nov. 22, 89. Transportation required.
SEE THE CLASSIFIEDS
Supervisor now - Manager later! later! Learn the business from the ground up and advance according to your performance. If you are an aggressive customer, you will be able to meet their intense pace, an opportunity to put these skills to use, and a leader is available. Relocation can be realised by applying benefits. Apply at: amigua.W19.8.23rd.
AMIGOS Supervise/Assist May
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Hours:
M-F 9-6
Sr. 10-4
NABI
749-5750
816 W. 23rd
Behind Laird
Noller Ford
Fairemties and Sororities call for more information about fund-raising
BASS PLAYER AVAILABLE
Experienced bass player playing for serious audiences, he has been an instructor including Lawrence bars. I own professional equipment and play both freetell and five string guitars. He plays for blue notes on funk guitar. I don't have any metal, hardcore, or cheese. Dedicated band members a must. If you've been looking for that hard find instrument, you're welcome.
REACH or SKI Group Promoter
BEACH or SKI Club Promoter.
Small or larger groups.
Yours FREE, discounted or CASH
CAM1 CMI 1-802-423-5248
CITY OF LAWRENCE RECREATION CENTER LEADER
Part-time, weekends & evenings, 15-25 hr per
week. Required to be a full-time employee,
core. HR has GED and gpa in recreation or
phys. ed. programs. $42.28 Apply by Nov. 19,
@ m3t Admin at HESL Hall, East H. East
H. EAST FOAM FOUR (FOM) FS4228
CNA needed to work with clients in their homes CNA needed to work with clients in their homes Sharon at Douglas CVA. Visiting Nurses 844-378-387
Construction laborer, $5.00 an hour no experience needed. fixed hours. JI28-1548.
Henry T's Bar and Grill is now hiring experienced wait staff. Must be able to work days, some evenings available. Apply from 24 m-F, M-F. No phone calls. 130 W. th
Local business seeks qualified individuals to provide a variety of services to community residents. Good income. For an interview call 843-3696 or 842-0149.
Marketing Assistant position available at Naismith Hall for the spring semester. Applicant must have excellent people skills, good computer skills (desktop publishing experience a plus), and have an office environment suitable for customer service, or sales. Position will be part time with compensation of room and board plus stipend. Potential for full time effective July, 1994. Great resume and portfolio builder to help you get the job. Req's Bachelor's degree in Business or apply at Naismith Hall, 1800 Naismith Drive, LAWSK 66044, E.O.M/F.H.A./A.
Want to work w/kids?
Youth Basketball Gym Supr. & Officials Needed.
$7 per hour. 843-4188
Micro Tech Computers is looking for full- or part-
time internships in NYC to provide asser-
tive, detail-oriented and have excellent sales
skills. IBM, PC knowledge & mails experience pre-
mediate to 2329-M aSales Ltd. St. Lawrence
K504 8007 FOI
Old Farm Couple Seeks Assistance:
Free rent to student or single parent family in exchange for help w/ yard work, l. house work, m. housework, little pets welcome. Call 897-5771 after 3 p.m.
Secretary/Receptionist Construction Inc.
Terraverst Location located at 4104 Trail Road (Des Moines, IA) for construction training for an experienced secretary/receptionist.
Typing skills of 60 wpm required; Macadam nontouch experienced preferred; 10 key accuracy; organization and writing skills a must. Send resumes to Terraverst Attn: John H. Kerr, Receptionist, above address between 9& 3& M-F. Applications and resumes must be in no later than 11-12-93.
Part-time apt. maintenance person wanted to work week day morning. call 641-8689 to apply.
RESUME SERVICES Professional Business Training. Interview Interview Training. Free initial interview. 823-8100.
If you are available for all home basketball games and would be interested in assisting at parking lot attendant please contact Manpower Temporary Services at 748-290-EOE.
River City Market Restaurants
mexican restaurant and waitsfait.
Apply in person, lower level, Riverfront Plaza.
are now hiring extra help for the X-mas season!
Front counter, utility oil cooks.
Taco Bell now hire day and night help. Apply in
through Saturday, 1408 W. 232nd and 1220 W. 6th
**办公室 assistant part-time live in work for rent**
**holes flexible and typing help** Send resume to
resume@job.com
WORK STUDY POSITION AVAIL. at East Asian Languages and Cultures Dept. Apply at 2118 Wescoe or call 864-3100
The Lawrence Bus Company is now taking applications for SAFERIDE drivers. Must be 21, have a clean drive record, and be familiar with the school. School Holidays off. If interested call 694-0543.
225 Professional Services
FAST CASH
Traffic tickets, misdemeans, landlord/ tenant,
Braxton B. Coxley 749-3333
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749.
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
For a confidential, caring friend, call us
Birthright 843-8211. Free pregnancy care.
Birthright 843-8211. Free pregnancy care.
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal civil matters the law of offices of
Donald G. Strobe Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
The Witnesses of DONALD G. STROLE
Lesbian, gay, bi- or unisex? If you need to talk to someone about your sexual orientation, CONFIDENCE KUI info or Heartfelters. Prompt陪你 and contraceptive services. Dale L. Clinton M.D. 841-5716.
Thesis &
Hardbinding and Gold Stamping
3 Day Turnaround
Lawrence Printing Service, Inc.
512 E. 9th Street 843-4600
Unique resume, cover letters, laser prints Fast,
easy updates, affordable graphic ideas, Inclus-
ivity.
235 Typing Services
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
A Word Perfect processing service. Laser
writer. Near campus 842-6955.
-der Woman Word Processing, 843-2063
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your TYPING needs call
WWW.TYPRINTING.COM
AX Word Processing: Any size, under 30 pp.
Long service price $12/page. Call Ruth errat.
Phone: (408) 657-9060. Email: ruth.errat@noble.com
Beacon Publication Services-Quality word processing, laser printing, $2.00/page (includes typewriter, grammar, proofing), call Mary. 843-2674.
Expert typing. IBM Correcting Selectric. $1.50/double spaced page. Call Mrs. Mattila 841-1219.
For all you PTY/FI needs call
Makin' the Grade at 865-2855.
Fast, accurate word processing; term paper, dissertation, thesis and graphics services available. Laser printing. Engineering and Law Review experience. Call Pam at 841-1977 anytime.
Word processing, applications, term papers, dis-
sign, resume writing, rush job availability, rush job availability, Masters Degree 841-6543
Pro-Type - fast, reliable, service, professional quality. Any kind of typing. Call today at 814-6242.
Wanted. Someone to edit my thesis according to APA and KU Grad. School specifications. Must be knowledgeable about both and Word Perfect 5.1.
David 1-823-9543.
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
CALENDARBS; nature, environment, women,
Indians, gardening, painting. Now at Simpson Goods.
INDIANS GARDENING
Computer Discounts Guaranteed Quality and
Lowest Price Bits 827-5424-864-5421/(home)
(2013) 827-5424-864-5421/(home)
Beds, desks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
934 Mass.
3-yr-old Macintosh Classic with 40 mb hard drive,
Keyboard and mouse; some software. $800 firm;
$150 per month.
Fall Clearance. All adult tapes on sale B1 26 and
B3 28, M5 29, M7 30, M9 31, or Miracle
Video Too. 190 Hailstorm, 841-750-750
DP 250 weight lifting machine, leg curls, etc.
Great condition. DB Power - Body T300 Rowing Machine. $250 for both. Call 843-0540 evenings and weekends.
QUANTITY RATES/MICR small rates $1.35 mice
$0.15, 25 cents per small order, will be deliver-
ed on time.
- Beautiful wood bedroom set. i queen size bed with cherry wood head board, match night stand and warmers. cherry wood chest with vanity mirror. Patio chair. You can get a futon for that. Call me at 855-0720.
VAC12 Disc changer for car. Pull out cassette back to UTL. New TU2 $200.00, just $450.00 IU-358.
IRI Internal Range Backpack, big iAnd Carboun 260 for both Excellent Condition. Call 832-9173.
Large inventory of classic old Playboy Magazines 1960 s, 60's, 70's and 80'. Most in good condition. Must be purchased in package. Call 843-0540 evenings and weekends
Two single Clients vs. Bill tickets for Nov 28. Best offer. Call and leave a message 865-296-356
370 Want to Buy
Desperately need you 1 or 2 Indiana BBickets. Paying big $`Call `753-765-8257 (KCMO).
Neded. Ticket to KU vs. IU basketball game on December 10. Will it work? **Call 400-0927**
Floppy Discs Guaranteed Quality and Low Price. Call 832-2744 (o) 842-5421 (h) Visit our office behind Food & Less at 2201 W. 25th St. B-1.
340 Auto Sales
MICHELLE ANGELO'S
RUBBER STAMPAREASISSANCE
Classes Weekly *10% off with mention of this ad*
17 W 9th 843-4767
Designer Stamps * Art Stamp
Custom Stamps
Improves Creativity Fun
405 For Rent
1 Bedroom unfurnished apartment available as early As Dec 15 $330/month. Water paid off, street parking, on bus route, off 6th street, clean and quiet if interested call 841-409
400s Real Estate
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
Available Spring sent interest. **Call**
865-485-3081
Available Jan 1, studio Apt. close to campus &
postgraduate students 809-7540, Landrader 64127, 1207
age. 2 wheel drive. 58,000 miles $790.00.
Dagon Dwagon. Run okay. Hightough. Rody rough. 299.00
1893 WR Rabbit GT1 = speed, 56,000 miles, sporty
81-400 (call 841-2130)
Cell 1-858-7500, (K. City Number)
1983 Honda Civic, dr. 3-spd, 124,000 ml, AC, runs
89 Stu Blaser. Excellent condition. Tahoe pack-
ice. Zoo drive belt. $8.00 million. #7560 -41-7988.
1 Bdrm apl, just blocks from campus available for 2nd semester subase, washer/dryer, dishwasher, ceiling fan, the $220 per mo./per-133 Kentucky bks 855-079, Call now.
Available Jan. 1, 1 t.bdm. apt. on bus route. Call
749-1525-6-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri.
1986 Dodge Charger 2-dr chassis, AM/FM cassette. Body in good shape. Call 842-3842.
1990 Honda Accord LX coupe, speed white, spilt-
powder, all power. Super condition. For
delivery 862-0338.
360 Miscellaneous
Campus Place 3 bdm 2 ba furnished apt. for rent.
Reasonable rent. min walk to campus. Avail-
nance of laundry facilities.
Sculptured Nails $29 reg. 42 Reflections West, West
232 Ridge Court, 841-846. Akn for Pam.
For leases 4 bedroom, Sundance upsets, near cam-
paign, negotiate negotiation, UPs + utilities.
Call 800-690-0292.
1988 Ford Lidt. Excellent tires and body Runs great.
75 miles. $4,000.00. Call 612-831-0011
For rent brand new 3 bdm 2 hap tp. On the bus
for rent brand new 3 bdm 2 hap tp. On the bus
$140/month + /s tshirt. Call 8647-7327
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and
nursery for room to KU. Off-street parking.
Pets call: 841-854-5600
Drop Into Our Place to ask about our Mid Term Leases
Colony Woods Apartments
$365-$435
- 3 Hot Tubs
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Basketball Court
- Microwave
- 1&2 Bedroom Apts.
842-5111 1301 W.24th
Wishing You The Best This Holiday Season!
ELF) We're graduating! Need 2 rent two bbm, i,
sah, huge kit, & living room. avid, end of Dec
and hru July. can rent FREE - as in paid for! in a
cool campup in campus, in a cool
UGEJ 2 bedroom room available Christmas
and waltz. Said. reasonably priced, Call 821-8114.
Lg 1 Bedroom apt. on bus route. Leave message
749-0751.
1 BR, FP, W/D hookups, garage, all appls. Extra
amplifiers, Alavar location, $755, 865-860-8
amities, Availment location, $75. 863-0000.
Male needed for spacious townhouse on golf
course. Jan.- may. $197/mon. + 1/4 util. Call Colby
623-8791 and leave a message.
New Four Bdrs New Available
Best in Lawrence, signing up for next year.
$240/person, 1500 sq ft, all amenities, car ports
Available. For more info call 847-7843.
3 BR, 2 bath, 2 floor with FP, garage, DW
microwave, WD 750/logo $750, Call 749-5357
Furnished studio apartment 2 short blocks from Water paid. Off street parking. Beta 841-5058
Office/Storefront/Workplace near downtown
Phone/Email: 810-219-4500, Uptimes
Phone, Phone #: 810-219-4500
Bri nt b婴 l amb. Dec: iSt. Nce and big, close to
Share large nice home, neighborhood or nu-
Share nice large home, neighborhood or nu-
Share nice large home, neighborhood or stu-
pace, apt, a block KU. References:
841-654 or 720-904.
Spring wunite for 2 persons. 3 bdmr. 1 bath, on
bath. 1 set of mattresses $95/mo. +4 utility.
Avl. @/8-31/4 $86-362-3
Sub-lease 2 bdmr, 2 bdh, 2 bss /a mo, Water, gaa,
drive, "run"车 step, 25aa sea, phone hook-up,
phone number
Ship-less: 2 bdr. apt; at Boardwalk apts. from Jan.
to May, 4989, on bus route 1. Call 641-8404.
Sub-fase: bfr. hbr. Just inches from campus! 13B&
and 82B. Month 1-6: 91-391; Dec. rent,付
40/ month,Call 81-391-2393
Sublease studio $300/mo. including cable. Avail-
imately. Call 749-6955.
Sublease Needed! 2013 Farm Tow. G-1. Nice neighbor.
446 #mo. Wishing to negotiate? B91-915 or
B91-918.
Sublease: Naimish Hall, Pool. Rec, Room, Maid Ses,
*"115* Ready for Spring Semester. Call Andy
*"115*
unique needed to share 3 br. 2/2 *bath spacious townhouse*. Will get own room. On bus route. No smoking or meals. $230/m + util. Leave up in May. Shannon Shannon 884-3557. Leave mess.
1 female needed to share 2 Br. 1 hair apc Close to
3.5 inches of hair (Bathroom). Other util it free. Avail Jan 1st call Roya 832-0445.
Available for resale.
Unique 2 bedroom / bath apt. hard wood floors
Unique 2 bedroom / bath apt. hard wood floors
$450/month
Available Jan. 1 - 911-986-396
430 Roommate Wanted
One F female to share two bedroom apartment for
one or more dogs, like dogs, very close to campus.
Call Liax 758-9792
Now leasing for Spring
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1 male or female needed to share 3 Br 2 bath duplex, near bus route, close to campus, spacious, fire place, nice, avail spring semester, call Tim 842-8090.
- By phone: 864-4358
How to schedule an ad:
Looking for a female roommate to 4 bdrm. 2 bd apartment. On bus route, fully furnished & very INEXPENSIVE!! Call Holly or Beth at 865-148.
I roommate to share furn. a B/2 BR 1p on cam.
A/C furn. a B/2 BR 1p on cam. A/C Dee '06/
700/m² + /u/ call Call Alan 84-61-48.
Male or female roommate need for 3 bdrm,
apartment to share /½ rent and utilities for second.
roommate need for 1 bdrm.
Female non-smoker needed to supply three bedrid-
ment, two bathrooms, one bedroom/18' dry-room/
Bathroom 5' Width / Utilize Call Manager
Female N/S to share very nice 2 bdm, 2 bath
house w/ hardwood floors in Old West Lawrence.
Responsible grad-student prof./only. Avail. Jill.
for spring semester. $25/mo. + 1/4 visit. call 838-
Need male roommate for 2 Bdrm Apt to close carpets, WD/I in complex, IBM182/mo and u/it. Non-UNSPECIFIED.
Need a roommate (male or female) ASAP for 547-8270 with apartment. For more information call 843-2770.
Older Farm Couple Seeks Assistance:
Free rent to student or single parent family in exchange for h/ward w/ work. lt. house work, lt.
Limited fees welcome. Call 697-577 at 3 p.m.
Roommate needed. Start Dec 1, $150/m `% uutil`
Roommate needed. Start Dec 1, $30/m `min from`
Call Cam 648-2731 for details
NSF `w/` small dog needs a responsible NSF money.
NSF `w/` for spring semester `NSF/mo-
`u/` Call 865-217-2940
Open minded female needles needed two bedroom house close to campus and temporary thru May. Call any 800-254-3671.
*Front Door Bus Service
*"Dine Anytime" with Unlimited Seconds
*Laundry and Vending
Calculating Rates:
we're making life easier!
phone number.
Ads shown in mail may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
Very close to campus, behind Yellow Sub. Need 3.
bath. 2 bath. 2 bath. 2 bath.
Need mature, clean, N/5 male to share 3 br apt
for a room in the City $195/mo.
Some unit. Avail Jan. 14th - May 12th.
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.
Classified Information and order form
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 or check with us are not available.
by my name. I should print, LaTeX, and mail it to you. 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.
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Bring box numbers.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kannan office for a fee of $4.00.
---
105 personal
110 business personals
120 announcements
130 entertainment
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Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper_
Facilities
1 | | | | | |
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4 | | | | | |
5 | | | | | |
Deadline for classified advertising is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
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Num. of insertions:
lines 2.05 1.55 1.05 .85 .75 .50
lines 1.90 1.15 .60 .70 .65 .45
lines 1.85 1.05 .75 .65 .60 .40
lines 1.75 .90 .65 .65 .55 .35
1800 Naismith Drive (913) 843-8559
- Free Utilities
148 lst & Bond 368 lst sale
262 hw helped 340 auto sales
225 professional services 360 miscellaneous
275 yties services
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The University Daliv Kansas. 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1993 Faworths Inc./AOL by Universal Press Syndicate
"And then one of the little kids shined his flashlight into the corner of the basement, and there they saw these strange jars. ... Some said 'creamy,' some said 'crunchy' ... "
14
Monday, November 15, 1993
NEW HARBOUR LIGHTS
1851 Massachusetts
Raventown
Optical Dispensary
Ray-Ban
SUNGLASSES BY
BAUSCH & LOMB
The world's finest sunglasses™
Ray-Ban
SUNGLASSES BY
BAUSCH & LOMB
The world's finest sunglasses™
928 Mass.
Downtown
The
Etc.
Shop
TM Parking in the rear
VISIONS 841-7421
SPORTS
928 Mass.
Downtown
The
Etc.
Shop
™
Parking in the re
uncho's
Where the Jayhawk goes for Homestyle Mexican Food
PANCHO'S
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
Margaritas and the largest variety of Mexican beers
843-4044
Call in for take out orders
711 W 23rd
In the Mall's Shopping Center
Free soft drinks with KUID
offer expires Nov. 30, 1993
MasterCard VISA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wrap Up a Job
UPS United Parcel Service part time jobs
$8 hour
Sign up in the placement center
110 Burge Union
Nov. 17 10A.M-2P.M
E/O/E m/f
ups
ups
$8
E/O/E m/f
Chiefs defeat Raiders in Allen's first appearance in Los Angeles
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Marcus Allen made his first game as a visitor to the Los Angeles Coliseum as successful as most of his homestands — he won.
Allen received a polite ovation from the sellout crowd of 66,553 in pregame introductions, then helped the Kansas City Chiefs, 7-2, rally from a 14-0 deficit to defeat the Los Angeles Raiders 31-20 yesterday. Allen, who played four years for Southern California before his outstanding 11-year career with the Raiders, gained 85 yards on 17 carries and caught one pass for 4 yards.
The victory was the ninth for the Chiefs in their last 11 games with the Raiders and kept them in first place in the AFC West. They prevailed despite the absence of quarterback Joe Montana, who missed his second straight game with a hamstring injury.
AFC
Replacing Montana, Dave Krieg passed for 178 yards and three touchdowns. Krieg, who completed 12 of 27 passes without being intercepted, became the 17th quarterback in NFL history to surpass the 30,000-yard mark in passing.
Allen, the leading rusher and touchdown scorer in Raiders history, signed with the Chiefs as a free agent June 9.
Allen scored his seventh touchdown this season and the 105th of his career on a 4-yard run in the third quarter, two plays after he gained 39 yards, to cut the Raiders' lead to 17-14.
West
Kansas City W L T Div.
Denver 5 4 17 230
L.A. Raiders 5 4 10 230
San Diego 5 4 10 230
Central
NFL
Pittsburgh 5.3 0 2.1-0
Cleveland 5.4 0 3.0-0
Houston 5.4 0 2.0-0
Cincinnati 0.9 0 0.0-0
East
Buffalo 7 1 0 31.0
Miami 7 1 0 31.0
San Diego 7 1 0 41.0
Indianapolis 6 1 0 41.0
New England 1 8 0 40.0
Green Bay 19, New Orleans 17
Houston 38, Cincinnati 1
San Fran 45, Tampa Bay 21
Miami 19, Philadelphia 14
N.Y. Gliants 20, Washington 6
Dallas 20, Phoenix 15
K.C. 31, L.A. Raiders 20
Atlanta 13, L.A. Rams 2
Seattle 22, Cleveland 5
Minnesota 26, Denver 23
N.Y. Jets 31, Indianapolis 17
Chicago 16, San Diego 13
NFC
West
W L T W DIV. 1
New Orleans 6 3 0 3-10
South Carolina 6 3 0 3-10
Atlanta 3 6 0 3-20
L.A. Rams 2 7 0 3-40
Central
East
Dallas 7 2 0 4-3-0
N.Y. Giants 6 3 0 4-3-0
Philadelphia 4 5 0 2-3-0
Washington 2 7 0 1-5-0
Washington 2 7 0 1-5-0
Detroit 7 2 0 2-10
Green Bay 5 4 0 1-10
Minnesota 5 4 0 1-10
Chicago 4 5 0 1-30
Tampa Bay 2 7 0 1-40
The Chiefs took the lead for good on a 66-yard pass from Krieg to a wide-open Willie Davis late in the quarter.
As they have done recently, the Raiders, 5-4, struggled in the second half after playing well early in the game. They led 17-7 at halftime, but their only scoring in the second half was a 30-yard field goal by Jeff Jaeger, making it 20-21.
The Chiefs used the next 6 minutes 18 seconds to position themselves for a 29-yard field goal by Nick Lowery for a four-point lead.
Then, on the next play, Lonnie Marts intercepted Jeff Hostetler's pass and returned it 20 yards to the Raiders' 10-yard line. That set up a 4-yard pass from Krieg to Keith Cash that completed the scoring.
Aaron Wallace recovered a fumble by Allen early in the second quarter at the Kansas City 33, setting up an 8-yard touchdown pass from Hostetler to Ethan Horton
Napoleon McCallum's 4-yard run gave the Raiders a 7-0 lead on their first possession.
A seminar for mothers and daughters
You'll always be my baby.
Whether you're a mother, a daughter, or both, the bond between a mother and a daughter can be one of the most fulfilling and cherished relationships of a lifetime. However, we also may, at times, wish we could trade our mother or daughter in for a "new and improved" model. But because we can't, we must learn to cope.
explore the mother/daughter relationship
Mothers and Daughters: Growing Together, a seminar for mothers and daughters sponsored by The Women's Program at Menninger, will:
- provide ways to communicate effectively with your mother/daughter
- suggest strategies for initiating change in your relationship
Meredith Titus, PhD, and Ellen Safier, MSW, are the featured presenters.
Wednesday, November 17 7-9 pm $5 at the door
Seeley Conference Center 5800 SW Sixth Avenue, Topeka, KS
For more information, please call 913-273-7500, ext. 6100.
M
Menninger
Directions
To reach Menninger from eastbound or westbound I-70, exit I-70 at Wanamaker Road and turn north onto Wanamaker.
Wanamaker will curve right (east) onto Sixth Avenue. Turn left (north) at the light, the main campus entrance.
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
♂
35 year old male seeks attractive, alim; female
30 year old male seeks attentive and to spend
Christmas together ... 46079
MEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
DWM, 3%, 178 lbs, attractive professional, KU grad. I’m new in town and looking for an intelligent, attractive SWF 21-30 for dating, great conversation and possible relationship. Let’s not get too excited about the details, and if you like what you hear, leave a message. #46432
To check out these ads call 1-900-285-4560 You will be charged $1.95 per minute
Latin lookin. 5'", SWM, 21, seeks SP with long hair, decorate figure, wacky sense of humor and carr hair. Show off your skill. Shop has a appreciation for Rock, easy to wear. Are you "Hooked on Phonics?" Hey! So am I!
Latin lookin. 5'", SWM, 21, seeks SP with long hair, decorate figure, wacky sense of humor and carr hair. Shop has a appreciation for Rock, easy to wear. Are you "Hooked on Phonics?" Hey! So am I!
SWM 20yrs, #51,150s. long brown hair, I love
Henry Rollin, Tom Wate, Social Distortion. I own
a new pair of black wink shoes much. Come save my
brown. Birkentock wearing eco-freak need not apply. #45236
Single white male in mid-20's, grad. student seeks single female intellectual/genius/artist type with an extremely silly sense of humor and weird taste in music, movies, books etc.
SWM, 20, 8'T, 170. WORKOUT HUNK seeks spot
looking for blonde hair, blue or green eyes,
conditioned room and willing to take it to the weight
room and anywhere else our meeting may lead us.
SWIM 21 yrs, 6'5", 165 lb, dark brown hair, icey eyes, muscular bod, looking for a sincere lady who likes to be pampered in all the right ways. Give me care and attention, talk and special care sounds good. Box # A3773
SWM, 5.10; med, build, attractive, brn, hair & eyes,
who likes keeping kitten from racquetball, weight lifting,
mt, biking, running, snow skiing & dancing.
Would like to meet attractive, athletic woman 21-
30. Looking friends 1st, then maybe who knows?
No heavyweights. #46538
SWM 21 yrs, blue eyes, looking for a "小童小孩" who likes the finer things in life such as long walks, Kool-air, and eating cereal by candlelight. I need someone to call my "Chicky-Monkey" and to stay with me. I like tall and lean SWM with razor-sharp blue eyes, hypoxic smile and vampire charmise seems beautiful girl to share old-world romance with rain and illies, laughter and blush.
Very good-looking SWM wants to talk "wish-fulfillment" with the right SWF(s) please call if your serious. I am. 458587.
♂
WOMEN SEEKING MEN
GWM, 18, *8*⁴, 190, 180 Blue green eyes, good-looking model type, sky, intelligent and philosophical seeking 12-13 GWM jocks, rap lovers, or soccer players who are butch, closedet, have all male friends, tall,好 body, cute boy looks. for possible relationship #44071
SWE 20, brown hair, slender body, seductive hazel eyes in search of the ultimate experience while I'm still young and innocent. I'm looking for sincerity, not for a lie, and I'm ready to me this and a whole lot more then call #B79277
Common abbreviations
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
SWF 20 Years old. old' $5^*$ w/ blonde hair. Seeking Middle Eastern male. N/S in power position. Must be able to play more time w/ each other). Must be able to play guitar and sing to me. #44008
88
MEN
SEEKING
MEN
Gay white male. Well guys you have only a few weeks of classes left and still haven't made many new friends, still looking and hoping to make some. 45372
MSM "I'm about 6m, tall and 190lb." I'm good-looking and like GG looking men who like to travel and listen to alternative music that long walks on the beach or I am not afraid to let loose and have a good time.
PLACE AN AD FREE!
Call 864-4358
To place an ad (must be 18 yrs old)
1. Call or come into the Kansan at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS
2. You'll place an ad in the 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 (every 3rd day from the day that you initially place your voice message), to listen to the messages people leave for you. Any other day, you may call the 900-number to retrieve your messages at a cost of $1.95 per minute. The average call is 3 mins in length.
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.
A
SPORTS: Top high school recruit Raef LaFrentz announces he will play at Kansas next year. Page 11.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103,NO.62
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1993
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
Law changes Chinese students' residency
NEWS:864-4810
Human-rights violence in China sparks act to protect protesters
By Sanaka Samaras Special to the Kansan
Thanks to a controversial act signed by former President George Bush last fall, KU may see a significant increase in minority enrollment next semester.
An expected 6 percent increase in minority enrollment is the direct result of the Chinese Student Protection Act, or CSPA.
The CSPA, instituted as a response to the 1989 Tianamen Square massacre, has enabled more than 42,000 Chinese students in the United States to become permanent residents.
Between 100 and 150 Chinese KU students may be eligible for permanent residency.
"So when they enroll next semester they will all be classified as minority students and not international students," said Gerald Harris, director of International Student Services.
According to the CSPA, all Chinese nationals who entered the United States before April 11, 1990, and have remained in this country since then, automatically became eligible for permanent residency in July of this year as long as they applied for it.
An official at the Immigration and Naturalization Service in Kansas City, Mo., said some applicants already had been notified, and the rest would receive notice of their status change in the next few weeks.
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
REACTION: Though many KU Chinese students support the Chinese Student Protection Act, concerns have been raised by China's government and students left
According to the Independent Federation of Chinese Students and Scholars, or IFCSS, the primary jobbving group in Washington for the act, about 54,000 Chinese nationals have requested permanent residency under the CSPA. More than 42,000 have been approved so far.
unprotected by it. Page 5.
Songun Huang, chief of staff of the IFCSS, said 90 percent of those who were eligible for permanent residency under this act were working on their master's, doctorate or already have completed their studies.
Huang said the IFCSS lobbed aggressively for the act because of "the blatant human rights abuses in China."
Huang said that he went back to China last July and did not have any trouble with the authorities. But he said he knew of other students returning from the United States who had been harassed during their stay.
He said that protesting human rights violations was not permitted by the Chinese government.
HONG KONG
The Chinese government vehemently denied these charges.
"We've never targeted students as a group," said Xialong Wu, consul at the Chinese Consulate in Chicago. "We prosecute people who break the law, just like the United States prosecutes criminals."
Wu said the Chinese government was opposed to the CSPA.
He said that the act had been established because some Chinese were not satisfied with their government. However, he said dissatisfaction with governments was common around the world, even in the United States.
"Does that mean that the United States is going to protect everybody who says they don't like the Chinese government?" he asked.
Shaohui Huang, Lawrence graduate student and president of the Chinese Student and Scholar Friendship Association, sits in his office in Haworth Hall. Huang says that there are many sides to the issues raised in the Chinese Student Protection Act.
Wu said the United States should not interfere in China's internal affairs.
"You shouldn't be telling your neighbor how to arrange their furniture or what color their curtains should be or which vegetables to grow," he said.
The Chinese government introduced several measures last August aimed at encouraging students to return home.
Document No. 44 of the Chinese State Council promises government assistance in finding jobs, increased financing for research projects and allowing returning students to leave China without having go through the normal bureaucratic channels. It also declares a general amnesty to participants in the democratic movement re-entering the country.
However, most Chinese students view Document No. 44 as a gimmick and do not see any evidence of a significant change in government policy, according to the ICFSS.
THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY WILL PAY THE RECOVERY CAMPAIGN.
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Lawn maintenance?
russe roust, Topeka freshman and Phi Kappa Psi fraternity pledge, destroys a television set in front of his fraternity house. Foust and other members of his fraternity were destroying various junkyard items in the front yard yesterday for an upcoming party.
Dragonfly exhibit shows off work of entomologist
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
A chance to highlight the work of researchers and students in the KU Museum of Entomology does not come along very often, said Byron Alexander, assistant professor of entomology and assistant curator of the museum.
So when Karla Segequist, Topeka graduate student, thought of constructing a 6-foot by 4-foot display of dragonflies in their environment, Alexander was delighted.
The table, titled "Dragonflies at Potter's Lake," looks at the insects' environment and why they live at the lake. Segelquist hand painted the exhibit, which is on display inside Snow Hall's east entrance.
"This entomology museum is funded primarily for research," he said. "We just can't create the huge displays such as the ones in the museum at Dyche Hall," he said.
The display features nine preserved dragonflies of six different species that were
"There is a lot of research done here and there aren't a lot of visible exhibits," she said. "This is one of the best entomology museums in the nation, and I wanted to do it on a subject that would be interesting."
Segelquist said she was glad she could show other students what kind of research was done at the museum.
caught by Segelquist at Potter Lake. The entire exhibit took 150 to 200 hours to complete, she said.
Segelquist said she chose Potter Lake because it was a subject that students
would recognize.
"It's an area of personal interest, and students know it as a campus landmark," she said. "I've seen a lot of them come by and look at the exhibit, and they always seem interested in the pond area."
Alexander said the display, along with drawers of insect specimens, educated younger students from area schools who visited the museum.
Segelquist said dragonflies were commonly found in marshy areas and eat other insects by the lake for food.
Cuomo is top choice for speaker
Problem with location delays speech planning
By Donella Hearne
Kansan staff writer
This spring KU students could have the opportunity to hear New York Gov. Mario Cuomo speak.
The KU Lecture Series committee has chosen Cuomo as its first choice to speak at KU next spring. But nothing is final because a definite location for the lecture has not been found.
The field house is the only facility at KU that is large enough to accommodate the crowd that the lecture series draws. The committee is planning to meet with the KU Athletic Department to discuss a possible delay in the renovations, which would allow the speech to take place at the field house.
Last year Attallah Shabazz, daughter of Malcolm X, and Yolanda King, daughter of Martin Luther King, Jr., attracted more than 4,000 people to the lecture.
David Stevens, lecture series committee co-chair, said that if Cuomo came the crowd would probably be that large or even larger.
If the field house is unavailable, he said, the only alternative would be the Lied Center, which only seats about 2,000. If the Lied Center were used, students would have to be turned away, just like Friday's scenario with Noam Chomsky's speech, Stevens said.
Kathryn Price, co-chair of the committee and Student Senate representative, said she thought Senate would rather see the lecture at the field house.
"That's what Student Senate wants, to be able to draw the biggest crowd," she said.
The committee already has formulated a letter to invite Cuomo, but the date cannot be confirmed until a location is reserved.
Space is one factor in finalizing plans for the lecture. Other factors include the speakers' availability and the their fees.
If Cuomo is booked and cannot attend, the committee has drawn up a list of alternatives.
The committees selections are based in part on the results of a poll taken at last year's lecture series presentation, Stevens said.
"Everyone got a poll sheet as they came into the speech," he said. "Of 30 possibilities we chose the 10 with the most votes and decided from there."
The decision has been difficult, Stevens said, because of the diverse interests represented by the committee members. They have tried to settle on a speaker who is known for personal achievements, will bring the most people and carries the deepest message.
"We think Mario Cuomo meets almost all of those criteria," he said.
Price said that candidates had to be approved by Student Union Activities and Student Senate, the main sponsors of the bill, and their fees had to fall within the series' budget.
"I think he's a really good choice and a lot of people will turn out to see him," she said.
Stevens said Cuomo's speaking fee of $20,000 was within the range the lecture series could afford.
"Twenty thousand is pretty average for a speaker with that kind of name recognition," he said. "Jerry Seinfeld charges $80,000, and Bill Cosby's fee is over $100,000."
Stevens said he thought the committee had made a good choice.
"There has been a lot of debate in the committee," he said. "There are a lot of people with broad interests. It's a diverse group and I think a good representation."
INSIDE
Rockabilly rage
Bands such as the Rev. Horton Heat and Hellcat Trio are taking the once underground music and feeding it to the masses.
THE BEST OF BOWEN MURPHY
Page 9.
Critic unimpressed with Lied Center sound
Auditorium acoustics still require tuning
Since the Lied Center opening, the University of Kansas previously had heard nothing but praise for its acoustics reverberating through the walls of the auditorium.
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
But Sunday, Scott Cantrell, classical music editor for The Kansas City Star, made that praise resonate no more.
In Sunday's edition of the Star, Cantrell criticized the acoustics of the Center, saying the auditorium lacked resonance and clarity for symphony music.
Cantrell attended the San Francisco Symphony's performance at the Lied Center
last night. He said the sound of the San Francisco Symphony projected out into the 2,024-seat auditorium, with an "in your face 'hi-fi' sound" that quickly died.
The problem with the Lied Center acoustics, he said, is the space between the exterior grillwork on the sides of the auditorium and the sound-absorptive curtains within.
"The technology has been around for some time to design music halls to adjust to any type of performance in auditoriums," Cantrell said. "They had the opportunity with this new facility to tailor the acoustics — but somewhere they failed."
But Peter Thompson, dean of the School of Fine Arts, said he was not upset with Cantrell's criticism. He also said there were still adjustments to be made with the Center's acoustics.
"Technically I don't believe he was wrong
in his criticisms," Thompson said. "But I believe he may have overstated his opinions."
Cantrell may have had a problem with the center's acoustics, but members of the symphony praised its sound quality.
"This was our first experience with a full house and large orchestra," he said. "I don't want to make apologies for the Center but I do hope we can make adjustments in the direction of his criticisms."
Herbert Blomstedt, conductor for the San Francisco Symphony, said the tuning of the acoustics was in fine hands with Kirkgaard and Associates, the acoustical
Thompson said the San Francisco Symphony was the first one to use the Lied Center. But he said that during the symphony intermission, the curtains were adjusted and it had made a noticeable difference in sound quality.
consulting firm in charge of the Lied Center's sound dynamics.
it's a wonderful hall and a wonderful building," Blomstedt said. "It's nice to play in, and it has very clear acoustics."
Lynn Bretz, University relations, said Cantrell also compared the Lied Center's acousties to some of the nation's well-known concert halls.
"You have to understand the Lied Center is a multi-purpose facility." Bretz said. "It's flattering he's comparing it to the other halls of the world."
Nancy Kaiser-Caplan, director of development and public relations at the Lied Center, said KU was still in the process of tuning the hall.
Cantrell drew some attention to the Lied Center. Kaiser-Canlan said.
"We've encouraged him to do a follow-up story." she said.
2
Tuesday, November 16, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
CAUTION:
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IMPERIAL
GARDEN
CHINESE RESTAURANT
CAMPUS BRIEFS
With this Coupon
One Order of Fried Chicken
Wings with any Two Entrees
Mon. - Thur: 11:30AM-10:00PM
FRI & SAT: 11:30AM-10:30PM
SUN: 11:30AM-9:00PM
841-1688
2907 WEST 6TH
Coupon not good with buffet or any other offer
Expires 11/23/93
Andrew Goodson, Lawrence senior, was outside Johnny's Tavern, 410 N. Second St., when he got into a fight with another customer at the bar around 1:30 Saturday morning, according to police reports. A third person then threw a rock to try to break up the fight, the report said.
The rock struck Goodson in the head. He was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital and later transported to the Med Center for head injuries.
A KU student was in fair condition yesterday at University of Kansas Medical Center after he was struck by a rock during a fight early Saturday morning.
Framewoods
Bernie Kish, director of ticket operations and sales, said his office received the tickets in the mail yesterday afternoon. They arrived in a plain brown envelope with a note that read "We found them in Shawnee Mission Park."
Mike Wellman, facility manager at the center, said he learned that the tickets were recovered yesterday.
Police have identified a suspect who may have thrown the rock but no arrests have been made.
"We've reported it to KU police and pretty much left it up to them right now," he said.
---
Kish said two tickets were taken last year from a lawyer's office in Topeka. When people sat in those seats, police asked them where they got the tickets. They said they bought them. Police traced them back to the person that stole them and an arrest was made.
The tickets, valued together at $536, were taken from an alumni center employee's mailbox on the third floor of the center between Tuesday and Friday, according to police reports. The employee told police the tickets were in an envelope in the mailbox when they were taken.
KU police had no more information yesterday, Officer Burdel Welsh said.
"It's dangerous business to think that you're going to get away with that," Kish said.
Compiled from Kansan staff reports
Student hurt in bar fight, hospitalized
Gallery 819 Mass. 842-4900
Hot season tickets returned to police
15% off any purchase
The KU Athletic ticket office recovered two season basketball tickets yesterday that were taken last week from the Adams Alumni Center, 1260 Oread Ave.
This holusion and many others available now at Framewoods.
Must be presented at time of purchase.
Sale items may be excluded.
Limit 1 coupon per purchase.
EXPIRES 12/15/93
Do A Double Take.
Just Order Your Next Set Of Color Prints On KODAK
EKTACOLOR ROYAL Paper. Bring in your next roll
of film for developing on KODAK
ROYAL Paper and take home
a double set of sharp, rich
color prints.
Stop in today.
Leadtime
ONE HOUR
Only Drive Thru In Town
*2340 S. Iowa
(913)842-8564
We Use Royal PAPER
60c
Bowling
(Exp.11/29/93)
This coupon entitles the bearer to one 60¢ game during open bowling.
Limit two coupons per person per visit.
60¢
Bowling
(Exp.11/29/93)
Kansas Union
Level One
864-3545
Jaybowl
BOWLING COMPANY
Jaybour
BROADWAY
FREE
2 tans
w/purchase
10 tans $25
15 tans $35
(we will beat any
local special)
EUROPEAN
TAN HEALTH & HAIR SALON
23rd st. & Ousdahl
(below Perkin s)
841-6232
HOT TUB
$7 PERPERSON
(includes cable 1V stereo)
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Chromium one w/
Chromium
Makes you thinner
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energy
100% NATURAL
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NATURALWAY Natural Fiber Clothing
NATURALWAY
Natural Fiber Clothing
15% Off Jewelry
(Excludes items already on sale.)
Expires November 30, 1993
820-822 Mass. Downtown Lawrence
THE HUNTING PARK
WESTERN MOUNTAIN
SUNSHINE CITY
HOT SPOT
Valentino's
Ristorante
Student Special
Large Single Topping Pizza
$7.99
Good for Lawrence area only
Limited to dine-in
Expires 11-5-93
50c ICan't BelieveIt's Yogurt! 50c
100% Financing
Save 50¢ on any size cup or conel!
Louisiana Purchase•23rd & Louisiana•843-5500
Orchards Coners•15th & Kasold•749-0440
Expires 11/5/93
Take advantage of low rates at KU Credit Union. Don't miss your opportunity for 100% financing of a new auto at the low fixed rate of 5.9% for 36 or 48 months and 60 month financing at the fixed rate of 6.75%.
KU
CREDIT UNION
Expires 11/5/93
An Affiliate of 66 Federal Credit Union
Auto Loans 5.9% Apr Fixed Rate 100% Financing
WEATHER
Omaha: 56'/33'
LAWRENCE: 40'/32'
Kansas City: 51'/33'
St. Louis: 53'/43'
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 72'/54'
Chicago: 48'/35'
Houston: 67'/54'
Miami: 84'/72'
Minneapolis: 47'/29'
Phoenix: 65'/49'
Salt Lake City: 50'/32'
Seattle: 44'/35'
Wichita: 47'/34'
Tulsa: 49'/35'
TODAY
WEATHER
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 72°/54°
Chicago: 48°/35°
Houston: 67°/54°
Miami: 84°/72°
Minneapolis: 47°/29°
Phoenix: 65°/49°
Salt Lake City: 50°/32°
Seattle: 44°/35°
LAWRENCE: 40°/32°
Kansas City: 51°/33°
St. Louis: 53°/43°
Wichita: 47°/34°
Tulsa: 49°/35°
TODAY
Mostly cloudy.
High: 40°
Low: 32°
Tomorrow
Cloudy and rainy.
High: 39°
Low: 32°
Thursday
Cloudy and cold.
High: 38°
Low: 30°
Source: Gregg Potter, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
CORRECTIONS
A letter to the editor on Page 4 of Monday's Kansan contained incorrect information. John Shoemaker said that similar interest groups should consider uniting under umbrella organizations. He did not cite any specific examples.
The editorial on Page 4 of Monday's Kansan contained incorrect information. An estimated 1,000 people were able to hear Noam Chomsky speak. Tickets were distributed at 7:00 p.m. The room adjacent to the Kansas Union Ballroom has a capacity of 100.
806 VISIONS 841-7421 Massachusetts
Rentals
Rentals We buy & sell used sports equipment
Rentals We buy & sell used sports equipment PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS 1029 Massachusetts phone 841-7529
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
1029 Massachusetts
phone 841-7529
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60645, 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. 60644. 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.
TERRIFIC
TUESDAY
ONLY GARDEN WALLS OUTDOOR
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PYRAMID PIZZA
With two toppings
for only $7.99
and get
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no buck$ no buck$ no buck$
TERRIFIC
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842-3232
CARRY OUT DELIVERY OF
EAT AT THE WHEEL
NLY GOOD WITH THIS COUPON
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
A TRIBE
GALLED
QUEST
THURSDAY DEC 9 8:30 pm
DELASUL
KANSAS UNION BALLROOM
$14.00 WITH KUID $15.00 GENERAL ADMISSION
ADVANCE TICKETS TO STUDENTS NOV. 15-18. GENERAL PUBLIC
SALES NOV. 19. TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE SUA BOX OFFICE,
$14.00 WITH KUID $15.00 GENERAL ADMISSION
ADVANCE TICKETS TO STUDENTS NOV. 15-18. GENERAL PUBLIC
SALES NOV. 19. TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE SUA BOX OFFICE,
STREETSIDE RECORDS (LAW), & RECYCLED SOUNDS (KC).
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL SUA at (913) 864-3477.
VI ⊕ LEN + FEMMES
with FreedyJohnston
8:00 pm
Tickets on sale now! $13 w/KUID $14 General Public Tickets available at SUA Box office, Streetside Records in Lawrence, and Recycled Sounds in Kansas City.
Wed, Nov. 17 8:00 pm
Call Sua Box Office for more info: (913) 864-3477
Silence! The Court Is In Session
Performed by
The State University of New York
Stony Brook Theatre Company
Presented by
The University Theatre
The University of Kansas
2:30 p.m.
Saturday - Sunday
November 20 - 21, 1993
Swarthout Recital Hall/Murphy Hall
For general admission tickets, call the box
office (Murphy: 913/864-3982, Lied: 913/
864-ARTS); public $6, KU students $3,
senior citizens and other students $5; VISA/
MasterCard accepted for phone orders.
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 16, 1993
3
(The image is black and white) Two people are lying on the floor, one holding a basketball. They appear to be in a playful or competitive situation, with another person sitting behind them who seems to be observing or participating in the activity. In the background, several other individuals are seated, watching the scene.
Help from the heart
Susan McSpadden/ KANSAN
Denise Junkerman, Quincy, III, freshman, looks to Nick Voth, chief CPR instructor for Watkins Memorial Health Center, for guidance while practicing CPR techniques. Junkerman and other KU students participated in the three-hour class at Watkins last night. Students can sign up for the class, which is offered throughout each semester, at the health education office in Watkins.
KU students involved in weekend drug cases
Police stumble across marijuana paraphernalia
By Scott J. Anderson Kansan staff writer
Three KU students and a Lawrence resident were arrested in three separate possession-of-marjuana cases during the weekend, KU police reported.
In the first case, KU police officers were called at 2:16 a.m. Saturday to Oliver Hall on a reported smell of marijuana, according to police reports. The officers went to room 225. Through the door, they heard two people talking about a bong.
Jason Kang, Creve Coeur. Mo..
freshman, then opened the door, the report said. The officers asked to see the bong they had heard mentioned. Judson Shapiin, Ballwin, Mo., freshman, showed the officers a 2-foot long bong with four hoses and a small blue pine.
Kang and Shaplin were issued notices to appear Dec. 1 in Douglas County District Court, according to the report.
In the second case, a KU officer stopped Melissa Sieloff, St. Paul, Minn., freshman, for speeding at 1:26 a.m. Sunday, the report said. While questioning Sieloff, the officer smelled alcohol on her breath. Sieloff failed a field sobriety test and was taken to the Douglas County Jail. Jailers then searched Sieloff and found a possible marijuana pipe.
Sieloff paid a $1,250 bond, according to court documents. She is scheduled to appear Nov. 18 in Douglas County District Court, facing charges of drunken driving and possession of drug paraphernalia.
In the third case, a KU officer stopped David Brower, Lawrence resident, at 2:56 a.m. yesterday at Clinton Parkway and Crestline Drive for driving left of the center lane and having an expired license plate.
The officer smelled alcohol on Brower's breath and gave him a field sobriety test, which he failed. When the officer searched Brower, he found a possible drug pipe.
Brower was arrested and taken to the county jail. He paid a $611 bond and is scheduled to appear Nov. 24 in court, facing charges of drunken driving, driving left of the center lane, driving with an expired registration and possession of drug paraphernalia, court documents said.
Group brings a touch of Africa to KU
Showing the continent's 'bright colors' is a goal for student association
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Members of the African Affairs Student Association speak Swahili, Zulu, Hausa, English, French and others as their first language.
But Enid-Mai Jones Frost, Monrovia, Liberia, graduate student and president of the association, said African students had much in common.
"It's just an awareness of we and
Frost, said it. "A love of our land
UNITING TO BE HEARD
and its bright colors."
The association, which began again in 1986 after a period of inaction, provides a meeting place for students from African nations. But it also offers a way for African students to stay in touch with their homeland, Frost said.
"By losing your sense of identity you lose your sense of self, and you become vulnerable," she said.
The association, which has about 80 active members, tries to keep the cultures of Africa alive in Lawrence, Frost said. However, she said, Africa's diversity and large number of
countries make representing each region somewhat difficult. Group activities try to emphasize a different culture each month.
Frost said the association provided a sense of self to individuals in a world where others outnumbered them.
"Every group needs a support," she said. "It's not to promote separatism, but it helps us keep ahold of ourselves."
Last weekend, the association held its first African Culture Night, featuring dancing, clothing and tradition African drumming, Frost said. Next spring, it will hold African Awareness Week. Frost said such functions helped dispel the stereotypes surrounding Africans.
"A lot of people have come a long
way, but some people still consider us savages, running around naked with spears," she said. "But we have our cities and culture as well."
Sandrine Lisk-Anani, Freetown, Sierra Leone, second-year law student, said she joined the association to feel close to people of her culture.
"I feel very much at home when we're around friends with similar cultural experiences," said Lisk-Anani, treasurer of the association.
Lisk-Anani said joining the association was the best way to bring the culture of her faraway land to Kansas.
"I felt it was a good way to promote an awareness of Africa and Sierra Leone," she said. "I felt the purpose was positive, and I wanted to be a part of it."
LesBiGayS OK encourage anyone who is lesbian, gay, bisexual or unsure to call the organization or KU Info about a confidential meeting.
OAKS - Nontraditional Students will have a brown bag lunch at 1 a.m. to 1 p.m. today in the Burge Union. For more information, call Gerry Vernon at 864-7317.
International Studies, African Affairs Students Association, and African and African-American Studies will sponsor a lecture, "The Ancient Christian Kingdom in Africa: A Historical Perspective of Ethiopia," at noon today at Alcev Ain the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kathy McClure at 864-4141.
International Studies, African Affairs Students Association, and African and African-American Studies will sponsor a panel discussion, "Profile of Ethiopia: Culture, Politics and Society," at 4 p.m. today at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kathy McClure
ON CAMPUS
Graduate Association of Students of History will sponsor a lecture, "Miscegation Law, Court Cases, and the Definition of Race in the 20th Century West," at 3:30 p.m. today at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Heinz Kattenfeld at 749-1186.
at 864-4141.
Amnesty International will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Danelie Myron at 842-5407.
Inspirational Gospel Voices will meet at 6 p.m. today in 328 Murphy Hall. For more information, call Kim at 749-3819.
International Students Association will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Pro-Choice Coalition will meet at 6 p.m. today in Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread. For more information, call Stephanie Gabriel at 842-6894.
Latin American Solidarity will sponsor "Commemoration of El Salvadoran martyrs" and a video, "Anatomia de un Asesinato," at 6 p.m. today in Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread. For more information, call Kenny Kincaid at 749-0789.
Hispanic-American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Octavio Hinoria at 864-4256.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will
have a House/Hall Contacts meeting at 6:30 p.m. today at the Center, 1631 Crescent Rd. For more information, call Wendy at 843-0357.
KUAD Club will meet at 7 p.m. tonight in 100 Stauffer-Flint. For more information, call Ed Schager at 865-0720
Native American Student Association will meet at 7 tonight in 3012 Haworth For more information, call Johnnie Young at 864-4351.
KU Dr. Seuss Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Jessica Perinchik at 841-2558.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445.
Society for East Asian Studies will sponsor a panel discussion at 7:30 tonight in 100 Smith Hall. For more information, call Ken Ellis at 865-0998.
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in Robinson Center. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
Le Cercle Francais will meet at 9 tonight in the Free State Brewing Co., 634 Massachusetts. For more information, call Alice Yeo at 865-1907.
Better find your mittens: winter's moving this way
By Shan Schwartz Kansan staff writer
It could be another long, harsh winter.
Although the season does not offi-
cally begin until Dec. 21, frosty air and snow flurries in Lawrence make one wonder what this winter will have in store.
A 90-day computer-generated forecast from the National Meteorological Center in Washington, D.C., predicts above-normal precipitation and below-normal temperatures in Kansas from now through January.
"In summary, it could be a cold, snowy period," said Larry Schultz, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Toneka.
Schultz said below-normal temperatures were likely because the Canadian jet stream, a high-altitude air current that drives storm systems, was farther south than normal. The jet
stream's position is pushing cold Canadian air into Kansas
The jet stream usually passes through the Northern United States during the summer and shifts to the Southern United States during the winter. The jet stream also was farther south than usual this summer, which resulted in heavy precipitation in the Midwest.
Above-average precipitation forecasts also are because of a phenomenon known as El Niño, Schultz said.
El Niño is a periodical weather pattern caused by unusually warm waters in the southern Pacific Ocean that pushes moisture northward and into the United States. El Niño was a factor in Lawrence's heavy snowfall last winter.
"It appeared that El Niño had tapered off in July and August, but there are signs now that it's getting stronger again," Schultz said.
Winterizing your life A few tips on powering through the winter.
For home
Garage
For car
-
Replace the air filter in the furnace.
Use foam tape or weather-stripping to seal gaps around doors, windows, outlets or other holes in walls.
Change antifreeze every two years.
+
+
Check to see if battery terminals are clean.
Make sure that at least half of original tread remains for adverse weather conditions.
Wax car body to protect from salt and sand.
For you
Source: Steve Tawarer, Westake Ace Hardware; Pete Nourot,
Westauto;艾能 Den Demo, D.M., Watkins Health Center
Get flu shots.
Wash hands often to prevent the spread of bacteria
Maintain adequate rest, diet and exercise.
Wear hats, gloves and boots to avoid frostbite.
Avoid alcohol when exposed to cold for a long time.
ohn Paul Fogel/KANSAN
A seminar for mothers and daughters
You'll always be my baby.
Whether you're a mother, a daughter, or both, the bond between a mother and a daughter can be one of the most fulfilling and cherished relationships of a lifetime. However, we also may, at times, wish we could trade our mother or daughter in for a "new and improved" model. But because we can't, we must learn to cope.
Mothers and Daughters: Growing Together, a seminar for mothers and daughters sponsored by The Women's Program at Menninger, will: explore the mother/daughter relationship
- provide ways to communicate effectively with your mother/daughter
- suggest strategies for initiating change in your relationship
Meredith Titus, PhD, and Ellen Safier, MSW, are the featured presenters
explore the mother/daughter relationship
Wednesday, November 17 7-9 pm $5 at the door
Seeley Conference Center 5800 SW Sixth Avenue, Topeka, KS
M
Menninger
For more information, please call 913-273-7500, ext.6100.
Directions
To reach Menninger from eastbound or westbound I-70, exit I-70 at Wanamaker Road and turn north onto Wanamaker.
Wanamaker will curve right (east) onto Sixth Avenue. Turn left (north) at the light, the main campus entrance.
RING IN THE HOLIDAY SEASON
Order Your Herff Jones College Ring Now And Receive In Time To Wear During The Holidays!
N
5
---
Our entire collection of Herff Jones KU Ring Styles will be reduced $30 to $100 on Friday, November 19th and Saturday, November 20th! A Herff Jones representative will be available to assist you from 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. both days.
S
Jayhawk Bookstore
only at the top of Neismith Hill!
1420 Crescent RoadLawrence,KS 66044
843-3826 HERFF JONES
4
Tuesday, November 16, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSA
VIEWPOINT
一
Respect your pups; do not tie them up
Campus is a wonderful place for walking your dog,but tying up a dog during class is inhumane and inconsiderate. Dogs and their owners are
fixtures on this campus. Many people bring their animals to campus to exercise them on the Hill, but others bring their dogs to campus only to tie them to a tree outside their classrooms.
This practice is inhumane to the animal, it disturbs the surrounding classes, and most important, it is dangerous to the animal, especially during cold weather. What purpose does tying a pet to a tree or post serve? It has absolutely no benefit to the animal. Dogs love to be outside when they can run around and play, not when they are chained up.
The strongest argument against leaving dogs chained up outside is the risk to their health in extreme weather. Some dogs can handle cold weather if they are used to being outside for extended periods of time, but it becomes unhealthy when you take a dog out of its home environment and force it to remain outside. Also, most dogs tied up on campus are without water. The amount of water a dog needs varies, depending on its age. Puppies and older dogs generally require more water.
Often, the most popular place for tying up dogs is beside Wescoe Hall. On most days, more than one dog is tied up in this vicinity. When two or more dogs are tied up in close proximity and are not free to "socialize" with each other, both start barking. This creates a situation that not only bothers passersby, but also disturbs classes in progress.
If you really care for your dog, take it for a walk on campus or any of the other beautiful places Lawrence has to offer, but please don't bring it to campus just to tie it up.
DAVID WANEK FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Crime bill tackles gangs; Senate must vote for it
Passing the anti-gang amendment offered by Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., and Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, to the crime bill was a necessary and beneficial addition that will help curb violence in our streets. The entire crime bill has yet to be voted upon.
Recent gang-related activities in Topeka and Wichita illustrate how widespread and universal gang violence has become. The amendment, which passed 60-38 in the Senate, would provide $100 million for the prosecution of gang members engaged in criminal activity.
The money will be distributed over five years. An equal amount of money would be set aside for states and local organizations to offer after-school activities and sports programs. The amendment requires mandatory sentences for recruiting individuals into crime-related gangs and would increase the penalties for federal crimes committed by gang members.
This amendment is good because it would provide money for prosecution, and it also recognizes the need for prevention. This proactive measure by Dole and Hatch clearly addresses the source of the problem. Innocent bystanders are too often caught in the crossfire of gang violence. If the crime bill passes this week, gang-related violence will decrease, and the streets will be safer.
MANNY LOPEZ FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSANSTAFF
KC TRAUER, Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE Managing editors
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
Assistant to the editor ... J.R. Clairborne
News ... Stacey Friedman
Editorial ... Terrilyn McComick
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Kristi Fogler
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 Perrler
National sales mgr...Jennifer Evanson
Co-op sales mgr...Blythe Focht
Production mgrs...Kate Burgesea
Marketing director...Shelly McConnell
Creative director...Brian Fusco
G Classified mgr..Gretchen Kootterholchin
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 followed by a reference to the letter. 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.
HEY, I'M FOR CHANGE, TOO!
WHY, JUST THE OTHER DAY
I WAS THINKING, 'GEE!
THERE'S A GREAT PLACE
FOR A DOOR!"
GOP WINS
Infomercial typhoon wipes out tired late night channel surfers
mime da milla or
It's late at night when I realize how beautiful our capitalistic system is. The reason? Late night television.
At around 2 a.m. on Lifetime, I see a guy named Tony Robbins talking to former pro quarterback Fran Tarkenton. They're discussing Robbins' program to ensure success in life. The program seems to combine a healthy dose of self-esteem mixed with an even healthier dose of secular religion, with Robbins as God/Aalh/Buddha/Whatever. When Tarkenton assures me that had he known Robbins before he retired from football, he would have won a Super Bowl, I know I need to sign up. (Hmm ... Maybe John Elway or Jim Kelly should think about it.)
COLUMNIST
But I hold off because the night's still young. The next infomercial, on the Discovery Channel, is for a program that helps you understand the Great Works of Literature so that you can incorporate their valuable and timeless messages into your daily life.
NATHAN
OLSON
The plan goes like this: you study a synopsis of the work (the example given was "Moby Dick"), listen to a 45 minute tape and review the synopsis. It's that simple and that quick. Think of all the money you can save by not having to buy the long and boring original texts.
Somewhere around 3 a.m. (time begins to blur at this point), hundreds of infomercials appear, all touting their workout machine as the ultimate workout machine. All feature well-muscled men and women working out on the revolutionary machine
(NordicTrack/SoloFlex/NordicFlex/
Whatever), achieving their perfect
physiques in no longer than eight
weeks. And, no, you don't have to live
at the gym. You only have to workout
on [insert machine] for 30 minutes a
day, three times a week. But where
will it fit in my apartment?
My next stop, QVC, displays a huge ring and an unreasonably low price. Cubic zirconia. I sit up, thinking it would be the perfect gift for my girlfriend. But then I see Cher plugging some hair care products. Cher's got great hair, I think — maybe I should get that instead of the ring. Or maybe the workout machine? The deluxe pasta maker? Something else?
My problem is that I want at least one of them to be honest. I want that one to say, "Hey, you out there. I know you're tired, and I want to reach out to you in your moment of weakness and take your money. I want to make you feel guilty because you're overweight or because you don't make $300,000 a
year or because you don't have great hair. I want to make you feel so guilty you'll buy my product. It's all about money." But I know that that's asking too much.
And so, finally, gratefully, I turn to CNN, where I hear about how last summer Mrs. Bobbitt allegedly cut off Mr. Bobbitt's penis as he slept because he allegedly raped her. CNN reports that Mr. Bobbitt has just been acquitted on charges of marital rape; Mrs. Bobbitt will be brought to trial soon. (John Leonard, in the Nov. 22 issue of *The Nation*, writes that a current joke involves the type of dog used to find the penis: a cocker spaniel.) But I feel better when I find out that Mrs. Bobbitt already has a media adviser. I can't wait for the next late night infeminal. Cutting off a man's penis can be profitable, you know.
Nathan Oson is a Chicago graduate student In English.
Delinquency, blandness, immaturity all tag residence halls with their identities
Each residence hall here at the University of Kansas comes with its very own stereotype. I know it's not acceptable these days to acknowledge stereotypes for fear of perpetuating them, but I'm going to do it anyway.
Templin Hall is known as the boys' dorm. Not a men's dorm, as is purported in the official literature from the department of student housing, but the boys' dorm. Why? Because you'll more likely see a football being tossed around on the front lawn, hear of vandalism being committed, see a souped-up '60s muscle car in the parking lot or see some childish female-degrading message displayed in a window at Templin than at any other hall.
Gertrude Sellards Pearson, or GSP, Hall is known as the sorority dorm, simply because the majority of sorority members in student housing are found there. Or is that pledges? Or do I care? At GSP, one can never have too many message boards on one's door, especially if they have lace around the edges.
COLUMNIST
RYAN McGEE
McCollum is known for its international student population and size. It has also been known as the Trash Chute Capital of the World, but its claim to this title is sporadic. This year, incidentally, is shaping up to be mediocre for McCollum in this respect, as there has been only one trash chute fire thus far.
Ellsworth Hall, also known as Ellsworthless, is known for its blandness. Not participation, as Student Housing claims, but blandness. Plain people, plain activities, plain dorm.
Lewis Hall's reputation similarly is bland, but only because it has lost all its identity to its new addition, the
Lenoir D. Ekkdahl dining commons.
Oliver is known for its delinquents — people who pull the fire alarm for kicks, have neon Budweiser signs in their windows and cover their fake ID manufacturing apparatus when it's not in use with a poster of a scantily clad woman under the slogan "Stroh's Spoken Here." They are famous the world over for their sheer genius when it comes to sneaking a keg into the building.
Just across the street is Naismith, the privately-owned dorm, with its pool and reportedly luxurious accommodations. It is notorious for being filled with the children of rich suburban Chicagoans seeking asylum from the higher tuition of an Illinois school.
Hashinger Hall, home sweet home,
located at the crest vetch of Davis Hill
— "Residence Center for the Creative Arts," the lobby window reads — is known for its freaks. Freaks, you say? Surely not. What's freakish about us? Is it our hair? Couldn't be. We have hair that transcends judgment. More styles and shapes than anyone could count, much less criticize. Our clothing, too, is transcendental in nature. The only other component of our public image is the way we act. These we display with seeming pride each element day of the school year on the front steps of good ol' "Hash." There are certain requisite personalities for each of these displays, people whose presence is mandatory for any proper showing of the Hash colors. These include the Guitar Man, whose job it is to look and act extremely musical, whether he is or not is immaterial, and The Groovers, who stand or sit around and move rhythmically while smoking cigarettes. Without these people, the scene is not complete. Add several more cigarette-smoking bystanders, a few generic loiterers and a loud person or two climbing the walls, and the scene is complete and ready for inspection.
This ends today's Lesson Full O' Worthlessness.
Ryan McGee Is a Worland, Wyo., sophomore.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Faculty reputation hurt by a careless mistake
I was appalled by the erroneous and careless journalism displayed by Kansan staff writer Christoph Fuhrmans in his Nov. 5 article on the Faculty Committee recommendation to eliminate six degree programs.
As a faculty member in the Atmospheric Science Program, I feel compelled to respond to a statement made in this article because it is not true, and the statement insults my reputation as a faculty member and research scientist.
Mr. Führmans writes in his article that "the M.S. in atmospheric science was recommended for elimination because the program lacked high quality faculty and research
projects ... " In fact, the committee report said no such thing, and the truth is I personally have several ongoing research projects. One is an experiment funded by the National Science Foundation investigating ice sheet growth processes, which I will be setting up in Antarctica this coming January. I also have an active wind tunnel laboratory, and discoveries that have been made in this facility have been published in several scientific journals.
On the statement that the Atmospheric Science Program lacks high quality faculty, IT only say that lately the overall success rate of research proposals submitted to the National Science Foundation is about one out of ten funded. In other words, if you're not a good scientist with a good research
record, you can essentially forget about getting any money from the National Science Foundation.
David Braaten Assistant professor, physics and astronomy
I would like to invite Mr. Fuhrmans and/or other Kansan staff members to visit my laboratory (B075 Malott Hall) to see firsthand the experimental research I'm involved in. I would hope that in the future, "Kansan" reporters check their facts before running a story which questions the reputation of a faculty member at this university either by association or name.
The editor responds: The faculty Academic Policies and Procedures Committee, which made the discontinuance recommendations, stated that the atmospheric science master's degree program did not have "a critical mass of faculty members who are active, creative and productive scholars, working on important, 'forefront' problems."
In other words, there aren't enough high-quality faculty to retain the program, the committee said. If Mr. Braaten or anyone else read "lacked high-quality faculty" as meaning "no high quality faculty," the Kansan apologizes for the miscommunication. — KC Trauer
---
.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 16. 1993
By Sanaka Samarasinha
Views on Chinese student act vary at KU
Special to the Kansan
On campus, emotions run high about issues related to the Chinese Student Protection Act.
Several Chinese students refused to voice their opinions publicly for fear of creating divisions among the 232 Chinese students at the University.
"If we quarrel over this, it will do more damage than benefit us," said Shaohui Huang, president of the Chinese Student and Scholar Friendship Association.
Huang said that many of those students who were eligible for permanent residency under the act liked it, and many of those who came to the United States after the April 11, 1990, deadline did not.
Huang said one of the issues was the advantage Chinese students with permanent residency had in the job market.
"Most companies now require permanent residency before hiring," Huang said. "Some who didn't get residency feel that people who have got their residency will take all the jobs."
Huang, who came to the United States in August 1991, will not be eligible for permanent residency under the CSPA. A university student in China during the 1989 Tiananmen Square demonstrations, Huang said he was not aware of any persecution of students returning from abroad thus far.
However, he said that he supported the act.
"Not because of the threat of persecution," he said. "But because everyone should have the right to come here if they work hard."
graduate student, said some students who were actively involved in the democratic movement need protection. But, he said, most benefit because they would be able to seek employment in the United States.
He said one of the problems with the act was the April 11, 1990, cut-off date.
"Several of those students who participated in the democracy movement came after that date," he said. "They won't get anything."
Quin Song, Chengdu, China, graduate student, said the CSPA might even help establish democracy in China.
"Students who go back to visit will talk about what they see over here without fear, because if they are arrested their friends in America will know," he said.
cution was very real among Chinese students.
Song also said that the fear of perse
"If you don't protest openly, you won't be arrested," he said. "But you must realize that Chinese society is governed by fear and not by law."
Amid the international furor over the CSPA, KU officials are concentrating on making the transition from international to minority student status as smooth as possible for Chinese students on campus.
Representatives of the Office of Minority Affairs and the Registrar's office have already met with officials from International Student Services to discuss potential challenges. Gerald Harris, director of International Student Services, said Chinese students, as permanent residents, would automatically be serviced by the Office of Minority Affairs.
Retirement plans could start now
By Llz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
Shana Gorsky, Ft. Collins, Colo., senior, saved some of her salary from working at her parent's baseball card store, at a miniature golf course and as a tour guide for Anheuser Busch this summer.
"I always try to set some money aside so I will have some savings some day," Gorsky said. "I just know I have to do it."
After graduating next December, Gorsky plans on working full time and immediately to begin saving and investing some of her earnings. People in their 20s, like Gorsky, are encouraged by financial planners like Jim Strobl to begin taking measures now to ensure a financially secure retirement in the future.
"The thing that distresses me is that the average 50-year-old has only
saved $2,300," said Strobl, who is director of Watkins Memorial Health Center.
While the average American saves 4 percent of his or her earnings a year, the average Japanese saves 16 percent, Strobel said.
"You get so wrapped up in your day-to-day living, you don't think far enough ahead," Strobel said.
Students entering the job market should keep their savings separate from living expenses and should also save salary raises, Strobl said. Although considered risky by some, students should also consider investing in stocks, which offer a much higher rate of return, Strobl said.
Before investing, students should turn to such financial resources as Beating the Street by Peter Lynch, and Money Magazine, Strobl said. Looking at stocks in the newspaper and keeping an eye on companies producing products with potential for high sales also is helpful.
A no-load mutual fund, in which a company purchases stocks with an investor's money for a minimum fee, is an easy way for students to invest in stocks, said Maurice Joy, professor of business.
Placing money in a tax shelter like an Individual Retirement Account is an option for students who are uneasy about investing in stocks, said Dick Holzmeister, vice president of Capitol Federal Savings and Loan Association. 1025 Iowa St.
Dave Bennett, Overland Park sophomore, is not concerned about saving or investing for his future.
"I don't think I'll plan on it until I'm about to retire," Bennett said. "I just prefer to have money accessible and prefer not to put it in anything that might fail."
Start saving earlv
Investing with 9 percent interest makes more savings available when contributions start at an early age. The head start means more compounded interest, which explains how a lower investment becomes a larger total savings.
savings:
$579,471
early start
savings:
$470,279
late start
S2,000 a year invested from age 31 to 65
S2,000 a year invested from age 22 to 30
invested:
$18,900
invested:
$79,060
Source: Jim Strobel, director of Watkins KANBAN
$2,000 a year invested from age 22 to 30
invested:
$10,000
invested:
$18,000
EVERYONE INVITED
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
INFORMATION OF KANSAS
THURSDAY
MUSICIANS
POETRY READING
PERFORMANCE ART
HAWK'S NEST ATRIUM
8:00 PM
SHORT STORIES
NOV.17
Jayhawk Spirit SALE
FINAL FOUR TSHIRTS
All GEAR Final Four shirts
are on sale now!
$5.99 each
2 for $10.00
or
935 Mass
Monday 0:30-5:30
Thursday 'til 8:00
Sunday 12:5
Our primary goal is to educate the campus community about the effects of cancer and its prevalence. As a result of the EPA study on second hand smoke, we advocated that KU should become a smoke-free campus.
This summer, the University implemented a campuswide non smoking policy. We commend KU for addressing the health concerns of everyone affected in an environment where smoking is allowed and adopting a policy which seeks to safeguard the health of the community as a whole.
Sunday12-5
Thank you to the entire campus community for your cooperation and support!
We would also like to encourage your participation in the American Cancer Society's Great American Smokeout Thursday, November 18. We will sponsor the following events: Tuesday, adopting a smoker; Wednesday, cessation programs, and Thursday, a cigarette drive.
Forming Awareness of Cancer Through Students
HOMELESS AWARENESS WEEK
FACTS
Suspendidity WEARHOUSE
KU HOMELESS COALITION For more information, call 864-2583
STUDENT
SENATE
Panel Discussion on Homelessness by Civic Leaders
Kansas Room, Kansas Union
WEBSPOT November 17th 10AM, 4PM
WEDNESDAY, November 17th 10AM-4PM
Open Letter to the Campus Community:
Brother Can You Spare A Dime Fundraiser
Brother Can You Spare a Dime Fundraiser?
Wescoe Beach, if inclement weather, Kansas Union
National Homeless Coalition Speaker Michael Stoops and multimedia slide presentation
THURSDAY November 18th 7-8:30PM
Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union
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NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Change comes slowly in Puerto Rico
Voters turned down statehood Sunday, but vote was close
The Associated Press
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Puertorican voters voted to reject the prospect of statehood Sunday, showing reluctance to risk losing economic benefits they had reaped for 41 years as a commonwealth.
Statehood advocates, rebuffed in Sunday's narrow vote, said the island's inhabitants never had been quick to embrace change — not during four centuries of Spanish colonial rule. nor in 95 years as a U.S. territory.
"When all the colonies of Spain were fighting for independence, we received all the loyalists to Spain from all the other places," said Charlie Rodriguez, the island Senate's majority leader.
"We became a very docile, loyal people," he said. "We did not fight the Americans when they landed here" in 1898.
Rodriguez backed Gov. Pedro Rossello in his attempt to alter Puerto Rico's ambiguous relationship with the United States and take the first step toward making the island the 51st state.
About three-quarters of the 2.3 million registered voters turned out Sunday. No violence or tampering was reported, and the loser graciously bowed to the will of the people.
Commonwealth received 823,258 votes, about 48.4 percent; statehood had 785,859 votes, or 46.2 percent, and Independence had 75,253 votes, or 4.4 percent.
"People in Puerto Rico take too much time to change," Rodriguez complained. "You have to educate, take away misperceptions that people have had all their lives."
Commonwealth supporters acknowledged that the tenor of their campaign was to present change as a
potential threat to the island's Spanish language, its separate Olympic teams, and the commonwealth tax breaks that have helped transform a poor, sugar-farming land into an industrial, middle-class society.
"People are content with their relationship with the United States," commonwealth campaign adviser Jose M. Berrocal said from his home in colonial Old San Juan. "It's as our slogan says, 'The best of both worlds.' People have seen the broad changes that commonwealth has made in their lives."
Berrocal noted that the U.S. government had not been eager to change the status of its biggest overseas territory either.
"In Washington, they see this as a godsend in many places," Berrocal said. "If the federal government supports any relationship, it's commonwealth. There's no interest in facilitating statehood."
A formal petition for statehood would have met heavy opposition in
Congress.
The Clinton administration and Congress would have been forced to consider an appeal for equal status by 3.7 million American citizens and an additional federal payout to Puerto Rico estimated at $3 billion under statehood. The island already receives more than $7 billion a year in federal transfer payments.
In Washington, President Clinton said he supported the Puerto Ricans' vote for commonwealth and looked forward "to maintaining the relationship of friendship and mutual respect."
But Rodriguez warned that Sunday's vote left Puerto Rico vulnerable to congressional moves to push it toward independence, a status Puerto Ricans have repeatedly rejected.
"If the U.S. Congress did something like that, you wouldn't have enough boats and planes to take away all the Puerto Ricans who would want to leave," he said.
WASHINGTON
Mississippi abortion law requiring consent OK'd by High Court
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A Mississippi abortion law requiring unmarried girls to get both parents' consent or a judge's permission before ending their pregnancies survived a Supreme Court challenge yesterday.
Yesterday's action was not a ruling but an unexplained refusal to review the law. Nevertheless, both sides in the national debate over abortion were quick to react.
"The justices have denied young women their day in court," said Catherine Albisa of the Center for Reproductive Law and Policy.
THE NEWS in brief
Burke Balch of National Right to Life Committee said yesterday's action was "not surprising."
permission. The law requires that the court proceedings be speedy and confidential.
"What is surprising is how successful abortion advocates have been in tying up these laws in court after the Supreme Court strongly indicated that two-parent consent laws with (judicial) bypass would be constitutional." Balch said.
The law requires doctors to obtain written permission from both parents before performing an abortion on a girl who is unmarried, under 18 and not supporting herself.
The law also requires judges to grant permission if a girl shows she is mature enough to make the abortion decision on her own or proves an abortion is in her best interest.
A judicial-bypass provision allows such a girl to avoid telling either parent if the girl gets a judge's
EAST AMERICA
MINNEOLA. N.Y.
Buttafuoco gets six months
MINEOLA, N.Y. — The saga that began in a Long Island auto body shop ended yesterday in a courtroom where a handcuffed, smirking Joey Buttafuco was led away to the same fate that befell his former lover. Anny Fisher — tail time.
The Associated Press
Buttafuoco's expression never changed as he was sentenced to the maximum six months in prison, $5,000 fine and five years' probation for statutory rape.
Only minutes earlier, Fisher, now 19, faced Buttafuco for the first time since she shot his wife, Mary Jo, on May 19, 1992. In a nervous, barely audible voice, she spoke of the ill-fated relationship that began "when I was a 16-year-old with braces."
"This man took me to expensive restaurants and cheap motels," she said softly. "I am sad to say that he taught me well. He taught me to disrespect myself and to deceive my parents. Unfortunately, these were lessons that I learned too quickly."
The midday drama provided a certain closure to the case that has provided grist for countless talkshow jokes and three made-for-TV movies.
A year ago in the same courthouse, Fisher had been sentenced to five to 15 years for shooting Mrs. Buttafuco, who still has a bullet lodged next to her brain.
Then, Buttafuoco wanted justice. On Monday, it was Amy's turn.
Buttafucoo's attorney, Dominic Barbara, argued for probation instead of jail, saying his client "is a devoted and loving father. A devoted and loving son."
Nassau County Court Judge Jack Mackston delivered the sentence without comment. In a final slap, he told Buttafuco he also had to pay a $5 "victim's assistance" fee.
Buttafuoco could be released from the county jail in four months.
Compiled from The Associated Press
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NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 16, 1993
7
Seattle meeting set for Clinton, Chinese leader
The Associated Press
BEJING — When Chinese President Jiang Zenlin meets U.S. President Clinton on Friday, it will be the first meeting after nearly five years marred by emotional debate over human rights, arms sales and political systems.
Much is riding on the one-hour meeting in Seattle, where the leaders of 14 nations will gather for the largest ever Asian-Pacific summit under the auspices of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation group.
The last time the presidents of China and the United States met formally was in early 1989, before the start of student pro-democracy demonstrations that China violently repressed, pushing U.S.-Chinese relations into a decline.
Mutual trust reached another low in August when the United States, rejecting private Chinese assurances, tailed a Chinese freighter it suspected of carrying banned chemicals and forced a search that proved the ship clean.
Now, both sides are hoping for a breakthrough in attitudes and a commitment to frequent, high-level contacts.
"Their coming meeting will not be a negotiating session," Chinese Foreign Minister Qian Qichen told a news conference last week. He instead emphasized intangible achievements, such as better understanding and trust.
Under an agreement signed last year, China is supposed to dismantle a set of import barriers by Dec. 31. A textile agreement also expires then, and the United States is threatening to impose quotas on Chinese textiles if a new agreement isn't reached.
Clinton is under pressure from U.S. companies to ease sanctions imposed in September that restrict high-technology exports to China, including satellites. He imposed the sanctions because intelligence indicated China exported missile technology to Pakistan in violation of an agreement. Washington wants China to either prove that the findings are wrong or promise that the sales won't be repeated.
China, meanwhile, wants an end to the new sanctions and some left over from 1989, such as restrictions on sales to its military and police. It also wants its low-tariff trade status assured, rather than subject to wrenching annual debate.
Clinton and Jiang are unlikely to get into detailed discussions on these issues. That will be left to Cabinet-level officials who also will be meeting in Seattle tomorrow through Saturday.
China, not wanting to be seen as making concessions during the summit, has already offered a goodwill gift by opening the door to prison visits by the International Committee of the Red Cross. This is something that the United States long sought but China rejected as a violation of its sovereignty.
Arafat aide assassinated
Unclear whether killing is linked to peace accord
The Associated Press
SIDON, Lebanon — Assassins firing submachine guns killed a senior aide of Yasser Arafat yesterday, the fifth PLO official slain since the Israeli-Palestinian peace accord was signed.
It was unclear, however, whether the shooting was linked to the accord or to infighting between Palestinian factions.
Police said Lt. Col. Moeen Shabalaita, a Fatah militia commander and outspoken advocate of the Sept. 13 accord, died about two hours after the attack in Sidon.
Fatah is the core organization in Arafat's Palestine Liberation Organization.
Two assailants in a car, firing submachine guns equipped with silencers, first shot out the fires on Shabata's Volkswagen as he was being driven from his office in the city's Palestinian refugee camp of Ein el-Hilwah to the southern suburb of Ghazieh, police said.
One gunman climbed out and fired at Shabata through the front seat window, hitting him six times. Shabata's driver and bodyguard escaped harm, police said.
Sabahata, 50, was second-in-command of Fatah's 3,000 strong militia in Ein el-Hilweh. He
No group claimed responsibility for Shabalta's assassination. But Fatath's chief of security at the refugee camp, Aby Hussein Farhoud, blamed Abu Nidal's breakaway Fatath-Revolutionary Council, which has long been engaged in a war with Arafat loyalists.
is survived by his wife and six children, aged 11 to 25.
A late-night Fatah statement in Sidon accused "agents of Israel's Mossad" secret service of killing Shabatta. Fatah has long labeled Abu Nidal's people Mossad operatives.
Abu Nidal — whose real name is Sabri al-Banna — broke with Fatah in 1973. Since then, his group has been blamed for scores of assassinations and other terrorist acts around the world.
At least 26 activists from Arafat's and Abu Nidal's factions have been killed since their latest confrontation erupted in June 1992.
At the PLO's headquarters in Tunis, Tunisia, Fatah accord on Palestinian foes of the peace accord yesterday to open a national dialogue on implementing the deal it called the nucleus for a Palestinian state.
In a political communique issued by the movement's powerful, 105-member Revolutionary Council, Fatah said the dialogue should be in line with its efforts to set up a Palestinian autonomous authority in the occupied lands.
Christopher to aid Middle East peace
WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Warren Christopher will travel to the Middle East next month to mediate a fragile agreement to launch Palestinian self-rule in Gaza and Jericho.
The celebrated accord between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization is in peril of unraveling because of recent Palestinian attacks on Jewish residents of the West Bank.
Christopher also will try to finalize a separate accord between Israel and Jordan and break an impasse between Israel and Syria over the Golan Heights.
The Associated Press
The complex mission could determine the course of Middle East peacemaking and test the Clinton administration's skill with foreign policy.
Officials said the trip probably would be scheduled for early December, just before the Dec. 13 deadline for Israel and the PLO to complete arrangements for Palestinian self-rule in Gaza and Jericho.
The Israel-PLO agreement was designed to turn over administrative control of Gaza and the West
Bank town of Jericho to Palestinians as an experiment in coexistence with the Jewish state.
It was worked out in secret, with the assistance of Norway, and then seized on by Clinton and Christopher as an accomplishment that could be extended to other fronts in the Arab-Israeli conflict.
However, peace talks have not resumed in Washington, and Israeli and PLO negotiators are squabbling over the boundaries of Jericho.
Polls show that for the first time, a majority of Israelis oppose the deal with the PLO, which included Israeli recognition of Arafat's organization and support for worldwide assistance that has mounted to pledges of nearly $2 billion.
Christopher may stop in Tunis, Tunisia, to meet with Arafat. Meanwhile, Palestinian officials said in Cairo that Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin would meet with Arafat in December.
Israel's negotiations with Jordan remain on a positive level. The two countries already have concluded a framework for a peace treaty, and recent setbacks to Muslim fundamentalists in elections to Jordan's parliament could improve chances for a final accord.
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Harvard professor critical of Waco complex gassing
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The FBI's impulse to act and its disregard of advice from its own negotiators led to the Waco cult disaster that killed up 85 people, including 25 children, an outside expert concluded Monday.
Alan Stone, a dissenter on a panel that looked into the April 19 tragedy, stated that "the gut instinct that prevailed at Waco was the law enforcement mind-set, the action-control imperative."
The FBI ended negotiations with the religious cult by firing tear gas into the Branch Davidian compound.
law and psychiatry.
A view within the FBI and in official reports "suggests the tragedy was unavoidable," but "this report is a disenting opinion from that view," wrote Stone, a Harvard professor of
It's unclear, Stone wrote, whether the FBI told Attorney General Janet Remo that bureau officials "had rejected the advice of their own experts in behavioral science and negotiation, or whether the AG was told that FBI negotiators believed they could get more people out of the compound by negotiation.
"By the time the AG made her decision, the noose was closed and, as one agent told me, the FBI believed they had 'three options — gas, gas and gas,' Stone said.
Stone criticized the firing of CS gas into the Branch Davidian complex — pointing to evidence that it is extremely harmful to children.
The Justice Department, an outside evaluator and nine other experts issued their findings five weeks ago.
Stone said he reviewed their work and conducted additional studies. The department hired him and other consultants to recommend how to deal with similar cases in the future.
Given what he has learned about CS gas, Stone wrote, "It is difficult to understand why a person whose primary concern was the safety of the children would agree to the FBI's plan."
He said the information Reno received on CS gas "seems to minimize the potential harmful consequences for infants and children."
Although Stone raised the possibility that some of the children who suffocated in the complex's bunker could have been felled by the gas, Justice Department spokesman Carl Stern said there was no evidence of that.
Two blocs hold key to NAFTA vote
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON—As President Clinton lobbies feverishly for the North American Free Trade Agreement, two blocks have emerged as crucial: the maverick House freshman class and a group of Democratic veterans torn between their president and longtime labor allies.
Also being aggressively courted by Clinton and other administration officials were a half-dozen members of the Congressional Black Caucus whose votes were still in play as today's NAFTA vote drew near.
Clinton's calendar for Sunday and yesterday was loaded with NAFTA lobbying: White House meetings with undecided lawmakers as well as phone calls to House members who are opposed or leaning against the pact but considered "persuadable" by the White House.
Clinton called in a bipartisan group of governors yesterday in hopes that they could sway wavering House members from their states.
With that in mind, here is a look at some of the critical blocs:
An Associated Press count showed NAFTA opponents with the edge, but victory not beyond Clinton's reach. White House aides said privately they expected the undecided bloc to break in Clinton's favor.
Should that occur, putting Clinton closer to the 218 votes needed for victory, veteran House Democrats would be the group to watch. A handful have told the White House they would prefer to vote against NAFTA but would help Clinton if their votes were essential.
Even with those pledges Clinton aides said they were still roughly 10 votes short.
—HOUSE FRESHMEN: Democratic Rep. Martin Meehan of Massachusetts endorsed NAFTA yesterday, leaving 10 freshmen undecided; three Democrats and seven Republicans. Six more, five of them Democrats, said they were "learning against" NAFTA but not certain.
—BLAKC CAUCUS: Two members of the caucus, freshman Rep. Mel Reynolds of Chicago and Rep. Floyd Flake of New York, remained publicly undecided as of yesterday. Both are Clinton loyalists, but both are from districts where organized labor is powerful.
Reynolds had a meeting with Clinton scheduled for today, and he sounded as if he was leaning in favor.
Beyond Reynolds and Flake, five other Black Caucus members said they were leaning against NAFTA were considered "persuadables" by the White House.
"The guys at the Chicago Federation of Labor have been trying to intimidate me, and that's not the way to go with me," Reynolds said.
—DEMOCRATIC VETERANS: The importance of this group was evident yesterday as senior Clinton adviser David Gergen showed up for lunch with Missouri Rep. Ike Skelton moments after he announced his support. two other Clinton targets in this group, Norman Mineta of California and Romano Mazzoli of Kentucky, also endorsed NAFTA yesterday.
But another, New Jersey Rep. Robert Torricelli, announced he would oppose the treaty.
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The Rockabilly Rhythm
---
Slim Hanson, guitarist and vocalist of Hellcat Trio, grooves to blues rock rhythms during a recent gig at Hockenbury's Tavern, 1016 Massachusetts St.
Inset; Chubby Smith, vocalist for his self-titled band, sings with rockyblend style at Rick's Neighborhood Bar and Grill. 632 Vermont St.
.4
By JL Watson
Kansan staff writer
Slicky Leisureman has always been torn between the urban nightclub scene and life-threatening outdoor adventure. It's only fitting, then, that he hosts "The Rockabilly Express" on KJHK
It's rebellious
From the small sound booth, amid dozens of old
rockability LPs, to his private collection, Leisureman spins the likes of Johnny Cash, Southern Culture on the Skids and Social Distortion for anyone who will listen to his 12-3 p.m. Saturday show. The music that is once tagged with an alternative label is growing in popularity.
"Most of the time I just slap stuff on and go," Leisureman said. "That includes country swing, early rock, blues, hillbilly rock and that sort of thing."
Leisureman said that rockabilly was not just a blend of country and rock.
"There's a lot more to it than that," he said. "It's about psychabilty, cowboy punk, surfabilly and all that stuff. You might wonder, 'Why would I be interested in the Dead Kennedy,' the Butthole Surfers and evolutionary blue grass like Arkansas White Trash?' It's because it's real rock n' roll. It got the same soul."
Leisureman doesn't play an instrument but contributes to the rockabilly lifestyle just the same.
"I feel fortunate I can bring some of this to the world," Leisureman said of his program. "I have all these friends who are musicians, writers, poets, this or that, and I feel fortunate to do this instead of just being a tag-along. I'm just a messenger."
Bringing the gospel of rockabilly rhythms to the public includes sporting a greaser haircut, a black leather jacket and booking live acts for the show.
Most Saturdays, while Leisureman prepares the fishing report and sings along with the tunes, a local band warms up in the room next door, preparing for an in-studio performance.
Kansas City's Hellcak Trio was a recent guest. The three members, guitarist Slim Hanson, drummer Sean McEniry and bassist Al Trout, don't tout their sound as rockabilly but serve up generous portions of swing tempos in minor keys and jump blues just the same.
"A lot of the music we listen to at home is prehistoric by most people's standards," McEniry said. McEniry said musicians from the 1940s influenced the Hellcat's sound.
"We haven't rehearsed in months." Trout said.
"We learn it in one session, then play it. We train wreck it a couple of times, and eventually it works out."
The Hellcat's play their own brand of music and attribute their success to their ability to improvise onstage.
Hellcat Trio has influenced local bands, such as the Spam Skinners. The members of the two bands are friends and share the same attitude about the music they play.
"I remember seeing Reverend Horton Heat when there were 15 people in the bar," he said. "Now, it's pickin' up everywhere. I never thought there'd be a lot of people diggin' this stuff."
Trout said he remembered when forms of rockability weren't as popular as they are now.
"We're not into bein' popular. We're not into makein' money," said Spam Skinners bassist John Cutler. "For us, it's a way of life. If there wasn't a music scene, we'd play on the back porch."
porch.
For Cutler and Spam Skinner members Jef.
frey Lee Wrighteous,
Bill Colburn and Kory
Willis, there is no definite description of the music they play.
"It's sensabilly, irresponsably, flexibility and insensability. Wrighteous said. All the members of the Spam Skinners have, at one
time or another, hung up their wingtips and retired.
All eventually came back to the rockabilly scene.
"I figure if I wasn't out playing guitar then I'd be at home playing guitar, so I might as well be out playing guitar," Willis said.
"Yeah, we do what we do for the art," Wrightone said.
"Actually, we do it for the beer," Colburn said.
Actually, we don't for the beer. Conduit isn't said.
Whether it's the music or the atmosphere, local rockabilly fans embody a lifestyle that includes as much fun as possible.
"Most of the true fans are gun shootin', meat eatin', beer drinkin' folks who want to have a good time," Leisureman said. "We're basically just good 'ol boys and girls at heart."
Good 'ol rockabilly boy Chubby Smith leads his eight-piece orchestral through a variety of rockabilly styles.
"We started out as rockkability and stretched into other genres," Smith said. Smith has been leading his orchestra for over two years and has no plans to give up the music.
"Ihope to suck it 'it ill bleeds," Smith said. For Smith, satisfaction comes from audience response.
"Ilike seein' a gob of people at the show," he said. For local rockabilly musicians, the concurrent theme is variety, ranging from bluesy harmonica to hard-rockin', heart-pounding stand-up bass. If black boots, byrcleam and an attitude go along with the image, then it's all part of the fun.
"We have to do our own stuff," said Hellcat's Hanson. "If everybody was still playin' Elvis, where would we be?"
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NOVEMBER 16. 1993 PAGE 9
KULife
People and places at the University of Kansas.
Dash from court costs defendant nine more months
In a Redmond, Wash., courtroom in September, defendant Larry Michael Key broke free and dashed out the door upon being sentenced to 60 days in jail for violating previous drunken driving sentences, but Judge Will O'Roarty leaped from the judge's bench in hot pursuit, his judicial robe flapping behind him. The judge pursued Key out of the building, down the street and into a supermarket, where a clerk and police captured him. After bringing Key back to the courtroom, Judge O'Roarty tacked on nine more months.
In October in Austin, Texas, landlord John Mattingly Jr., 26, served an eviction notice in court on his grandmother, Dorothy Webb, 85, for non-payment of rent. Said she, in court, "I guess I'm not dying fast enough (for him)."
The Cleveland Plain Dealer reported in October that the mummified remains of an Australian aborigne who died in 1884 would soon be sent home. The body had been forgotten — stored in the basement of a Cleveland funeral home, which closed in August. The man, Tambo Tambo, came to Cleveland to appear in a show, throwing boomerangs, but died of pneumonia and none of his colleagues claimed the body.
Familial law
Sounds cruel and unusual
California Attorney General Dan Lungren proposed in October that the state measure the pain-killing attributes of cyanide gas in order to demonstrate that the gas chamber is not "cruel and unusual" punishment, as contended by the American Civil Liberties Union in a recent lawsuit. Lungren proposed that the state put rats in pain by "colon balloons distension" — inserting them until the rats squeal — and then administer cyanide at different doses to see if the pain subsides.
The Los Angeles Times reported that the Novel Cafe in Santa Monica, Calif., recently featured Kopi Luwak, the Sumatran coffee reputed to be the most expensive in the world, at $130 per pound. According to the cafe's owners, a certain kangaroo-like Sumatran animal eats only the "riptest, best" coffee cherries, then digests and excretes them, after which natives pick, wash and process the beans into Kopi Luwak.
Whatever happened to Tambo
Now that's a filter
Invasion of the toilet squirrels
In February, a squirrel apparently fell into a small vent on the roof of Kim Richardson's home in Lawrenceville, Ga., and got into the plumbing pipes. Richardson reported that she discovered the animal when she sat down on the toilet and felt a scratching on her derriere. She "almost died," she said later. The squirrel had drowned by the time help arrived.
---
10
Tuesday, November 16, 1993
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But Rick Harman, a member of the Board of Regents, has an idea for incoming college students to graduate on time, if not sooner.
Many college students have a difficult time graduating after four years, let alone three.
Harman said high school students should earn as much college credit as they could during their senior year.
Regent suggests 3-year graduation
Harman said high school students could take as many as 30 credit hours. He recommended a student should have somewhere around 24 credit hours by their first year in college, if the student wanted to graduate within three years.
MasterCard
Carole Ross, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said KU accepted up to 64 hours of credit from any community college.
"It depends on the person." she said.
"Some of them really get bored in high school, and they need harder curriculum." he said.
Harman said students could earn their degrees even faster if they took summer courses.
This would allow college students to earn their degrees quicker and save money on college, about $8,000 according to Regents studies, he said.
But she said some college students might not want to go through college faster.
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
"The three-year deal is not for everybody," he said. "You're talking about the top 15 percent. They're going to be dedicated to going from point A to point B."
Harman said students who would take the extra courses in high school would be the ones who were dedicated to earning a degree and getting a job after graduating from college.
Except for the top students who graduated from college early, Harman said, most students needed the full four years of college to grow and mature as adults.
Tricia Amberg, Overland Park sophomore, said high school students needed to look at their academic careers in high school before thinking of college.
"I think it depends on their grades in high school," she said.
"If it doesn't hurt them, then I'm all for it."
Amberg said students would be mature enough to enter the work force even after three years of college.
You really can't stop the growing experience, she said. Angela Clayton, Lawrence sophomore, said high school students who earned college credit would be better prepared for the academic and social changes of college.
"They'll know what to expect when they get up here because it's a whole different world," she said.
Mellissa Lacey/ KANSAN
Joe Meyer and James Cohen
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St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center member Scott Shulte, left, and Kevin Koehler, Wellington senior, dish up vegetable soup for a dinner at the center promoting Homeless Awareness Week. Last night's dinner was organized by the center and the KU Homeless Coalition.
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 16, 1993
11
Three players advance to national tournament
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas women's tennis team has reason to smile as it moves into its season. It won both the singles and doubles titles last weekend at the Central Regional Rolex Championships in Salt Lake City.
Seniors Mindy Weiner, Kim Rogers and Abbey Woods will represent Kansas at the national tournament in February.
Weiner defeated Rogers to win the singles title. Woods won the singles consolation round by defeating Kelly Press of Oklahoma State 6-4, 6-1. Rogers advanced because the top two players qualify for the national tournament.
Rogers and Woods pulled away from a 4-0 deficit in the third set to win the doubles title. They defeated Karina Kuregan and Masha Meidell of Kansas State 6-1, 3-6, 6-4.
Weiner said she was happy the seniors would get a chance at the national tournament.
She has won the regional tournament both of her two years at Clemson but fell out of the national rankings last year when she transferred to Kansas. She was recovering from shoulder surgery at the time.
WOMEN'S TENNIS
"I am kind of relieved," she said. "This is the spot I was in two years ago. Last year was a big disappointment."
"It was a pleasure to be there," he said.
Coach Chuck Merzbacher said all eight players who competed in the tournament played hard and well.
Other Kansas players competing were juniors Rebecca Jensen and Nora Koves and freshmen Bianca Kirchhof, Chessa Bieri and Amy Trytek.
Woods said the team seemed to improve each day of the tournament. She had to defeat five opponents to win the consolation round.
Merzbacher said the players would take time off until after Thanksgiving to recuperate from the tournament and to get caught up on school work.
He said the team had some small injuries such as bruises, blisters and shin splints, but nothing that would interfere with the spring season.
After Thanksgiving, the team will begin its winter conditioning workouts in preparation for the spring season.
Four cities still in running for NFL expansion team
NEW YORK—St. Louis; Baltimore; Jacksonville, Fla.; and Memphis, Tenn. renewed their applications for an NFL expansion franchise yesterday, with the Baltimore group adding a third ownership group to the mix.
The new Baltimore bid has the hacking of Maryland Gov. William Donald Schaefer and gives the league six applications from four cities for the new franchise.
The Associated Press
The latest entry is headed by Alfred Lerner, part owner of the Cleveland Browns. The group must provide a $20 million letter of credit and a financing plan for the $140 million franchise fee.
One Baltimore group is headed by Leonard "Boogie" Weinglass and includes movie director Barry Levinson. The other is headed by Malcolm Glazer, a Florida corporate investor. However, only Lerner has the backing of the city's expansion committee.
franchise to Charlotte, N.C., three weeks ago. The second team will be announced outside Chicago on Nov. 30.
The league awarded an expansion
The new team, the Carolina Panthers, will begin play in 1995 and will be run by a group led by former Baltimore Colts receiver Jerry Richardson, owner of a franchise food consortium that runs Denny's and Hardees.
The owners held off awarding the second franchise partly because of a change in the ownership of the St. Louis group, which brought in shopping mall developer Stan Kroenke the day before the owners met.
Kroenke's group added John Wallace, chairman of an investment firm, and Marilyn Schnuck, a member of a St. Louis grocery chain, as limited investors over the weekend.
Fran Murray, a part owner of the New England Patriots, did not submit the material. Murray had been trying over the weekend to arrange for the $20 million letter of credit that was necessary to continue his application.
Kansas lands lauded recruit
Basketball squad gains one of three prospects
Some say, "Two out of three ain't bad." But for the Kansas men's basketball program, one out of three will work.
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
Yesterday afternoon, Raef LaFrentz signed a national letter of intent to attend Kansas. The 6-foot-10 center from Monona, Iowa, is considered by some to be one of the top high school prospects in the nation. He announced on a radio program that he had chosen Kansas instead of Iowa. LaFrentz had kept everyone in suspense, not telling anyone his decision until the final moment.
Williams is unable to comment on recruits until he has received the letter from the player. The news about LaFrentz quickly spread to the television medium, and Williams hinted that he knew about the signing at yesterday's news conference.
Under NCAA regulations, Kansas coach Roy
"I did watch TV a moment ago," he said. "I saw what happened there, and that made me feel good."
LaFrentz did not give any interviews yesterday after his announcement and was unavailable for comment last night.
Williams said that he had strenuously recruited three players and was disappointed by the decisions of two. But he was pleased with the news out of Iowa. The two that got away were Ricky Price, a 6-foot-5 guard from Long Beach, Calif., and Jahidi White, a 6-foot-9 power forward from St. Louis. White announced yesterday that he would send a letter to Georgetown, and Price has made no secret about his intentions of attending Duke next
fall.
Many factors play into the recruiting game, and Williams said one possible reason for only one signing was because of the talent in this year's freshman class.
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
"The most difficult thing in recruiting is to back up a really good year with another really good year," Williams said. "Kids still see those people right in front of them. I think very few programs can do that, and some of those can't do it all the time."
Williams said that his first love in basketball was the practices, second was the games, and way down the list, at 99th, was recruiting.
"There's going to be people more interested in recruiting than how the teams are doing," he said. "Recruiting is a little bit of a sickness. It's frustrating. It's demeaning, and it's everything else, but the bottom line is it's whether you stay a good coach or all of sudden you turn into a bad coach."
KANSAS
BASTETT
KANSAS
BASTETT
Freshman forward B.J. Williams, left, and senior center Patrick Richey work on drills during practice. Kansas opens its season tonight in an exhibition game at 7 p.m. in Allen Field House.
First preseason exhibition tonight
By Mark Button Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas men's basketball team, ranked 9.9 in the Associated Press' preseason poll, will play its first game at 7 tonight in Allen Field House as it plays host to Marathon AAU.
The game is an exhibition, but Kansas coach Roy Williams said it would serve as a test for the entire team.
With Kansas playing in the National Invitational Tournament this year, the Jayhawks had only two weeks of practice before it started the season. This shortened practice time especially hurts the four freshmen on this year's team.
"Today will be our 15th practice," Williams said yesterday at a news conference. "Jacque, Scot and B.J. are much better off than Nick because Nick's just missed so much time. But those other three, though, have gotten quality time in practice and have improved."
Marathon AAU boasts a collection of players from across the country. Their roster includes Mark Wade, the 6 foot guard from Nevada-Las Vegas, guard Dave Miller, 6-4 from Drake and center Tom Elliot, 6-8 from Virginia Tech.
Williams said the Marathon game was scheduled for several reasons.
"I think the biggest thing is letting the young kids get in front of the crowd," he said. "To see how they react to playing against someone other than ourselves."
"We had a scrimmage last night with Big Eight officials and 15 or 20 people in the stands," Williams said. "It was amazing how much we slipped compared to just going out there [by] ourselves."
Junior center Greg Ostertag he thought the team has progressed nicely in a short time.
“It’s been great, as a matter of fact,” Osteragt said. “The process for the older guys is just getting reacquainted with everything — it’s pretty much old hat by now. The new guys have come along real well, and I think this exhibition game will help them get prepared for what they’re going to have to face.”
SPORTS BRIEFS
CLUB SPORTS
Winter training starts for crew
Men's captain, junior Michael Amick, said the conditioning practices could now begin since the last regatta of the fall was last weekend in Wichita.
Crew finished rowing on the chilly waters of Clinton Lake. Team members will begin running stairs and stationary rowing to condition for the spring season, which starts as soon as the water warms.
The novice and varsity crews participated in a 1.5 mile race in the Frosthite Regatta on the Little Arkansas River.
The varsity men's lightweight four-person boat won as did the varsity women's open-class four-person boat.
Coach Rob Catloh said the team had progressed nicely during the fall season, and it could qualify for the national regatta, which is held in the spring. "We have some depth to work with," he said.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas State's Andre Coleman, who caught two touchdown passes and returned five punts in a 31-21 come-from-behind victory against Missouri, was the unanimous choice for Big Eight offensive player-of-the-week.
Wildcat. Sooner take awards
Linebacker Mario Freeman of Oklahoma won defensive honors in a split vote yesterday.
Coleman, a senior wide receiver from Hermitage, Pa., had 270 yards against Missouri. He had three pass receptions for 112 yards, two for touchdowns on plays covering 27 and 66 yards, as the Wildcats erased a 12-10 deficit in the fourth quarter.
Coleman had 122 yards on his five punt returns, including one for 52 yards.
Negotiations will decide future for Big Eight at Orange Bowl
Briefs compiled by Kansan sportswriter Anne Felstet and
The Associated Press
v Matt Doyle
ansan sportswriter
The current contract between the Big Eight and the Orange Bowl Committee expires following the Jan. 2, 1995, game.
The Big Eight Conference has sent a football team to the Orange Bowl a total of 40 times. But there is some doubt whether the conference will send any member institutions to the annual New Year's Day contest in New York after 1995.
Orange Bowl Executive Director
Keith Tribble said no timetable had been set to start negotiations with the conference for a contract extension.
"We have not had any discussions with them yet," Tribble said yesterday in a conference call with media members who cover the Big Eight. "We need to set a time with them after this year's game to start negotiations. I hope we'll be able to come to some conclusion."
BIG EIGHT COACHES BRIEFING
Reports said that the Orange Bowl wanted an agreement with the champion of the Atlantic Coast and/or Big East Conference in place of the Big Eight champion. Tribble did not respond to that report.
"We will look at the interest of both parties in the long run in negotiating a new contract," Tribble said.
Another Achievement for Johnson
Johnson, who overcame a difficult childhood and survived a suicide attempt, will receive the Amateur Division award. The ARETE Awards were established in 1989 to honor exceptional athletes who have exhibited great courage in pursuit of their goals.
Colorado senior wide receiver Charles Johnson will be one of four athletes who will be honored at the fourth annual ARETE Awards for Courage in Sport. The ceremony will be Dec. 14 in Chicago, and will be televised by ESPN.
Oklahoma State's offense was nonexistent in its 31-0 loss at Oklahoma. The Cowboys managed only 31 yards of total offense against the Sooners and one first down because of a penalty. The Cowboys never crossed the 50-yard line.
Johnson leads the Big Eight in receptions with 51 and receiving yardage with 959.
Obsolete Offense for Cowboys
"Everything we attempted to do they just stuffed," said Oklahoma State coach Pat Jones. "Basically we just got whipped."
This was the fewest first downs made by a Big Eight team since 1961 when Colorado did not record a first down in its game against Nebraska.
Women's basketball adds two walk-ons to roster
Division I opportunity drives walk-on players
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Rochyle Harrison is a Kansas women's basketball player. She doesn't have a scholarship, and Kansas did not recruit her out of high school. Harrison is a walk-on, and that is just fine with her.
Kansas coach Marian Washington announced yesterday that sophomore guards Harrison and Kristel Thalmann were the newest Jayhawks on a team that has only 10 scholarship players.
"As long as I've been playing, people have told me I can't play Division I." Harrison said. "I was surprised."
Although she played basketball at Salina South High School and Brown Mackie Community College, Harrison, at 5-foot-5 initially did not intend to try out for the team.
"When I first came to Kansas, I told the coach that I wanted to be a part of the women's basketball team," Harrison said. "I wanted to be a manager at first, but I started playing with the team when they needed players. Then, people said I should walk on."
"Any time we have a walk-on, we need to play players who are strong enough to get up and down the floor," Washington said. "We're looking primarily at fundamentals and then physical strength."
Harrison talked to Washington about the possibility, and then she started practicing with the team.
Washington said picking a player to walk on with the team was a good way to get the student body involved in women's basketball.
"Every year we are always hopeful that we can have a walk on," Washington said. "We have two this year, and there might be another one."
Washington said Harrison's counterpart, 5-6 Thalmann, was a knowledgeable player on the court. Thalmann played high school basketball at Linn High School in Barnes.
"She's just like any first-year athlete," Washington said. "She needs to work on her physical strength. They are both hard workers."
Both players said they knew what roles they would play on the team.
"If any of the guards get injured, then I'll fill in," Thalmann said. "I don't want anyone to get injured, I just want to push them to be the best they can be."
Washington told Harrison that she wouldn't play much if she was on the team.
Lady
Dayhawks
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Sophomore guard Kristal Thalmann shoots a jump shot dur ing women's basketball practice. Thalmann and another sophomore guard, Rochyle Harrison, are the newest Jayhawks on the team.
"She told me I would be a back-up point guard," Harrison said of her talk with Washington. "She already had two or three point guards, so my playing time would be limited. I'm just happy I'm getting the opportunity."
Thalmann said practicing with high-quality players like preseason All-American Angela Aycock made her a better player, which helped her chances of obtaining a future scholarship.
"They're all really good players," Thalmann said of her teammates. "It's helping me a lot, and I'm improving. I'd hope to be able to get a scholarship next year."
12
Tuesday, November 16, 1993
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The team won its district with 77 points, the lowest it had scored since the first meet of the season, which was run on the same Carbondale course. Low scores win in cross country meets.
The Kansas women's cross country team rebounded from adisappointing fifth-place finish at the Big Eight Championships to win the District V Championships last weekend in Carbondale, III., and qualify for its firstever NCAA Championships.
By Kent Hohlfeld Kansan sportswriter
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said his runners were comfortable with the course and that helped the team bounce back from a poor performance in the conference meet Oct. 30.
"It's been frustrating because we hadn't put everything together in a race," Schwartz said.
He said the fact that three Kansas seniors were running in their last college cross country meet gave the team motivation.
One of those seniors, Julia Saul, will be looked to as a leader in the NCAA meet this weekend in Bethlehem, Pa. Saul was Kansas' top runner, placing fourth overall in the district meet. She was an individual qualifier the 1991 and 1992 championships.
CROSS COUNTRY
"I've already had some people ask me 'What's it like at nationals?'" Saul said.
Schwartz said the that team had a strong performance at the district meet, but that he believed its members could run better at nationals.
She said she expected the competition to be tough among the 22 teams competing, but did not believe intimidation would be a factor because the team had a tough regular season schedule with opponents like No. 1 Arkansas and No. 13 Nebraska.
"We're going to set what we think are some realistic goals for the team this week," Schwartz said. "I've seen
teams without clear goals, and they don't usually do well."
The men's team came in eighth in the District V championships.
Chief among its goals was catching Oklahoma, Kansas State and Missouri, all of which defeated the Jayhawks in the Big Eight meet where Kansas placed last. Missouri came in sixth ahead of Kansas, and Oklahoma and Kansas State didn't run full teams.
Freshman Bryan Schultz, the Jayhawks top runner this season, said he thought the team's experiences this season would help it next season when it returned to full strength.
The team competed without seniors Michael Cox and David Johnston and sophomore Chris Ronan. Cox and Johnson were redshirted, and Ronan had injured his knee.
Schwartz said he expected to have a strong team next week when Cox, Johnston and Ronan all are expected to return.
The Associated Press
Montross joins Hill Golden Bears' Kidd
Tar Heel tops preseason All-Americans
Eric Montross was one vote shy of being a unanimous selection and Grant Hill was the lone repeater yesterday on The Associated Press' preseason All-America college basketball team.
Jason Kidd, California's 6-4 sophomore point guard, had 56 votes, and 6-4 shooting guard Billy McCaffrey of Vanderbilt rounded out the team with 38 votes.
Montross, North Carolina's 7-foot center, was named on 64 of the 65 ballots from a nationwide panel, while Hill, Duke's 6-8 swingman, received 61 votes, the same as 6-8 Purdue junior forward Glenn Robinson.
Montross averaged 15.8 points and 7.6 rebounds for the Tar Heels last season and led the team to a national championship. He shot 62 percent from the field and was named second-team All-America last season.
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Hill was named to the preseason team last year with Chris Webber of Michigan, Jamal Mashburn of Kentucky and Anfernee Hardaway of Memphis State — all underclassmen who joined the NBA — and teammate Bobby Hurley. All received first-team postseason honors except Hill, who was replaced by Indiana's Calbert Cheaney, the national player of the year.
Hill averaged 18 points and 6.4 rebounds and was voted third team All-America despite ankle and toe injuries. He had off-season surgery on his foot and is expected to play both
Kidd came to the country's attention last season as a freshman when he led the Golden Bears to a second-round victory over Duke in the NCAA tournament. His had a school-record 222 assists and an NCAA-best 110 steals, while averaging 13 points and 4.9 rebounds a game.
backcourt positions for the Blue Devils this season.
Robinson had an impressive rookie year last season, averaging 24.1 points and 9.2 rebounds and was named second-team All-America.
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McCaffrey had been a teammate of Hill's at Duke, but moved to Vanderbilt last season where he was Southeastern Conference co-player of the year with Mashburn. He was voted third team All-America and averaged 20.4 points and 3.6 assists while shooting 52 percent from 3-point range.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Tuesday, November 16, 1993
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Must be purchased in package. Call 843-0540
evenings and weekends.
COMPUTERS: Look for a high quality PC at low costs? Call P C Source 832-1196
QUANTITY RATS/MICE small rats 1.83 mice
will be delivered. Visa/Mastercard 888-0034, Jlm.
Visa/Mastercard 888-0034, Jlm.
DP 2500 weight lifting machine, leg curls, etc.
Great condition. DP Body - Tone 300 Rowing
Machine. $250 for both. Call 843-0540 evenings and
weekends.
Jackets: leather bomber #75. Leather biker $100.
Obermeyer skipper $1508. Call 835-7483
IRI Internal Refresh Backpack, big. And Caribou $16 for both or $250 for both.
EVERLING Condition Call 843-795-2631
Two single Chiefs v. Bills tickets for Nov. 28 Best.
Call and leave a message 855-2366
340 Auto Sales
Floppy Discs
**89 S10 Blazer. Excellent condition. Tahoe package. Z-wheel drive, 88,000 miles. $750.84-788.88.**
Guaranteed Quality and Low Price.
Call 832-2744 (c) 842-5421 (h)
Visit our office behind Food 4 less at
2201 R. 25th St. B-1.
1983 VW Kabbib CPT 4-speed, 18,000 miles,牌价
$1.49 Call B11-2419.
MICHELLE ANGELO S
RUBBER STAMP RENAISSANCE
1983 Honda Civic, sdr, 5-spd, 124,000 ml, AC, runs
1812 Dusan Wagon. Kills run-sk. Body rough. $200
Call 1-888-8500. (K. City Number)
1985 Ford Ld. Excellent tires and body. Runns great. 75km miles, $1,985 obc. Call 844-6816.
1988 Dodge Charger 2-dr hatchback AM/FM cassette. In body good in shape. Call 842-3842.
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Needed. Tickets to KU vs. IU.篮球比赛 on December 2nd. Will pay $48. Call 842-0833.
Sculptured Nails $29 req. 423. Reflections West, 232 Ridge Court, 841-962. Ank for Am.
Classes Weekly × 10% of total attendance of this class
17 W9th 843-4767
Designer Stamps • Art Stamp Custom Stamps
H
1 Bdrm apl, aerit from campus available for 2nd semester sublease. waher/dryer, dishwasher. ceiling fan. the $220 per mo./person. 1133 Kentucky 885-0729. Call on.
400s Real Estate
1 Bedroom unfurnished apartment available as earlyDec. 15 $330/month, Water paid off, street parking, on bus route, off 6th street, clean and quiet. If interrupted, call 841-4019
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
very nice! Available Spring袭 Interest! Cabled
405 For Rent
Available at semester break, apta, in new secrest of West Hill 1000 Emery rd. bdm. apm. 425, Palm Beach 3200 E. Baird dr. hookups, dw, microwave, fan, mini blinds, balcony, energy efficient, great location near campus & on bus rn. No pets. Call 814-3800 or 84-3884. Available Jan. 1 to 3 dbm. on bus route. Call
Available Jan 1, 3 bdm. apt. on bus route. Call
749-1585-2 6 month-Fri.-Mon.
Available: Spring semester Room at Nalshim
Hall. Quiet floor, meal plan. Call 801-907-1007
Campus Place. 3 bldm 2 bfa furnished apt. for rent.
Reasonable rent. 1 minute visit to campus. Avail.
$70 per night.
For lease: a bedroom, Sundance apt. near campus, occupancy date negotiable, $750 + utilities
Now leasing for Spring!
we're making life easier!
Weekly Maid Service
*Front Door Bus Service
- "Dine Anytime" with
- Unlimited Seconds
- Laundry and Vending
- Free Utilities
NAISMITH Hall
1800
Naismith Drive
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and
room on KU. Off-street parking.
No pet CALL 841-7500.
Furnished studio apartment. 2 short blocks from Water paid. Off street parking. No. bets 3,150.
HELP! We're graduating! Need 2 rent two bdm.1, bath, kihute play & living room. avail. dew of Dee and thru July. Jan rent FREE - as in paid for! Call MICHAEL for details. in a cool house, Call #565-484-6377, at campus.
HUGE 8 bedroom apartment available Christmas bedroom. 2 bedrooms and water and water room. reasonably vce. Call 831-8141.
Lg 1 Bedroom apt. on bus route. Leave message
749-0751.
1BR, FP, W/D hooks, JWN lots all appl. Extra amenities. Alarm location. $255 965-6800.
Male needed for spacious townhouse on college course. Jan- may, $97/mo /+ us. Call Colby Coffey
New Four Bdrs Now Available
Best in Lawrence, signing up for next year.
$240/person, 1500 sq ft, all amenities, car ports available. For more info call 841-7849.
Drop Into Our Place to ask about our Mid Term Leases
Colony Woods Apartments
Spring sublease for 2 persons. 3 bdrm, 1 bath, on the bus route, recreational facilities. $30/mo. + lo-
Sub-lenade Bdrm. 1, bath. 235 ea./m². Water gas,
water tank. voe/phone hook-up.
Available Jan. 1. Call 649-4812.
Sub-lease: 2bd. bpt. at boardwalk apts. from Jan.
to May, 838, on bus route 614 - 841-604
Sublease Neded! 3253 Iowa G-1. Nice neighbor-
hold 400/mi. Willing negotiate! 8312-9115 or
9115-8312.
Nice 3 B, 2 bath, BF, pp. Garage, DW,
microwave, W/D hookup, $750/mo. Call 748-6537.
Office/Stoneform Workspace near downtown
Office/Stoneform R10 per month. Utilities
included. Phone 848-1386
Sub-lease: 2bdr. Just inches from campus at 131b &
480/month. Call 844-323-8931. Dec rent.
Share nine large home, nice neighborhood or stu-
der residence. apn, a pnk to RU. References:
861-854 or 864-854.
Sublease studios $300/mo, including cable, Available immediately. Call 749-380-600.
Unique 3 bedroom/bath apt. hard wood floors, 2
bedrooms, downtown, 450/room/month.
Jan. 1st, 1981-86
For rent brand new 3 bdm 8 bpt aph. On the bus
for $10/month / $15/month for $20/month
$14/month / $17/month, Call 864-7137
$365-$435
**Sublease:** Naismith Hall, Pool, Rec. Room, Maid
**Service Ready for Spring Calling** Cassel Ann
430 Roommate Wanted
5 Hot Tubs
- 3 Hot Tubs
- Sand Volleyball Court .
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
1 female need to share 2 Br, 1 hr. apte. Close to campus, on bus. or walk to hospital. Birth call Jan 1st call Rya 835-024-9700.
One Female to share two bedroom apartment for next semester. Must like dogs, very close to camper
- Basketball Court
- Microwave
Open minded female needed to both bedroom house close to campus January then May. Call any info.
842-5111 1301W.24th
Roommate needed. Start Dec. 1, $150/m² utiliz.
Free gas house, cardboard 124 room, 3 min from
roommate.
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts.
I female needed to share 3 br., 2/4' bath spacious townhouse. Will get own room. On bus route. No smoking or pets. $230/m +/- utility. Lease up in May. Call Shannon 888-2356. Leave mess.
Wishing You The Best This Holiday Season!
1 male or female needed to share 3 Br 2 brule duplex. near bus route, close to campus, spacious, fire place, nice. avail spring semester. call Tim 845-0890.
Froaminate to share furn. a BRE / B app; on台pln w/ pre frac in furn. A值班 Avc Dae (Ji); Cali Call Acal; Calf Call Acal
Female/h/M to share审美 nice 3 bdmh, 5 bath house/w hardwood floors in Old West Lawrence.
Responsible grad-student/prof. only. Avail Jan 1)
Responsible grad/student: $200/mo + /- tui. Avail 268-7967.
Female non-smoker needed to share three bedrooms on KKV bus lines. Washer/Dryer washer/dryer on KV bus lines.
Looking for a female roommate to share a bdmr. bd apartment. On bus route, fully furnished & very INEXPENSIVE!! Call Holly or Beth at 854-188
Male or female roommate wanted for 3 bdm,
second semester, Graduate. Call David Dellavallis, lrm.
N/S Female needed for 4dbr. duples with W/Z,
Female needles, $170/m + v/Llv. On bus route.
D/Z needles, $170/m + v/Llv. On bus route.
Male or female needed to share 4 bedroom duplex in W. Lawrence starting Jan. 1. Washer/dryer, 2 car garage. Fully furnished (excellent for room). Call Cameron at 865-5829.
NSF w/ small dog needs a responsible NSF tp
share 1kd tcpd. for spring semester. $10/mo.
$20/mo.
Need a roommate (male or female) ASAP for a
youth apartment. For more information
电话 852-310-4600
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
- By phone: 864-4358
Need male roommate for 2 Bdrm Aip close to cam;
Can be anywhere, not in hotel. Url: no1. No呜
Caller: cook699, leave message
Free rent to student or single parent family — exchange for help w/ yard, work, it work, house, work. it cooking. Limited pets welcome. Call 597-5771 after 3 p.m.
Very close campus, behind Yellow Sub. Need a female roommate to 3 barm 2. bath apm 1. roommate to 2 barm 2. bath apm 1.
How to schedule an ad:
Ad phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
In an annex 1890 Specified Fee
Stop by the Kasaan 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.
Classified Information and Other form
Calculating Rates:
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind Lox at the Kansas office for a fee of $4.00.
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.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of gaps 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.
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: | Cost per line per day | | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| | | 1X | 2-3X | 4-7X | 9-14X | 15-29X | 30+X |
| 3 lines | | 2.65 | 1.85 | 1.95 | .65 | .75 | .59 |
| 4 lines | | 1.90 | 1.18 | .80 | .70 | .65 | .45 |
| 5-7 lines | | 1.85 | 1.95 | .75 | .65 | .60 | .40 |
| 9+ lines | | 1.76 | .90 | .65 | .60 | .55 | .35 |
Classifications
305 for sale
340 auto sales
105 personal
114 business persons
120 announcements
130 entertainment
140 host & found
285 help unset
225 professional services
235 typing services
Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper.
1
2
3
4
5
378 want to buy
405 for rent
438 roommate wanted
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
**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:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
_Expiration Date;
MasterCard
Signature:
The University of Dallas Kannan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 69044-8645
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
OFF ON
Sorry, Lamarr. Down and up real fast is incorrect...
Okay, Douglas -- what is the correct answer?
At Electric Chair Operators Night School
14
Tuesday, November 16, 1993
ARMY Call Ron or Skip at NATIONAL GUARD 842-9293
ARMY Call Ron or Skip at National Guard 842-9293
fifty's 925 IOWA 841-7226 Lunch & Dinner Great Food
THE HARBOURLIGHTS a half serves bar after 57 years of downtown tradition 1051 Massachusetts Downtown
The Etc. Shop REVO Sunglasses 928 Mass. Downtown
fifi's 925 IOWA 841-7226 Lunch & Dinner Great Food
V
REVO Sunglasses
You Always Get The Best Available Fares
Affordable flights for the holidays
Creative Spring Break solutions for individuals or groups
Discounted ski lift tickets for Colorado Summit slopes
HOLIDAY TRAVEL INCORPORATED
Amtrak ski packages for New Mexico
2112 West 25th Street
Lawrence, KS 66047
(913)841-8100 (800)846-4387
Remind your parents over the holidays that our Gift Certificates will fit in your stocking
Wrap Up
a
Job
UPS United Parcel Service
part time jobs
$8 hour
Sign up in the
placement center
110 Burge Union
Nov. 17 10A.M-2P.M
E/O/E m/f
ups®
E/O/E m/f
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Steelers defeat Bills extend division lead
Loss drops Buffalo into tie with Miami
PITTSBURGH — The Pittsburgh Steelers' one glaring weakness in coach Bill Cowher's 1½-year rejuvenation program was their inability to beat the Buffalo Bills. A night of big hits and big plays took care of that.
The Steelers knocked out Jim Kelly, then Andre Reed, then Don Beeber with injuries before finishing off the Bills, shrugging off Barry Foster's own injury departure to dominate the defending AFC champions 23-0 last night.
The Steelers, 6-3, stuffed the NFL's top-rated rushing offense with the league's top rushing defense, and got big games from quarterback Neil O'Donnell, 16 of 27, 212 yards, and replacement rusher Leroy Thompson, ending a five-game losing streak
Thompson had a career high 108 yards and a touchdown and now has consecutive 100-yard rushing games at home following Foster injuries.
against Buffalo, 7-2.
The Bills, who beat the Steelers twice last season en route to their third super Bowl, hadn't lost to Pittsburgh since 1985. Buffalo, last shut out 28-0 by Miami on Dec. 22, 1985, lost for the first time in six games and fell back into a first-place tie with Miami in the AFC East.
The Steelers' fifth victory in six games put them a game up over sliding Cleveland and surging Houston in the AFC Central.
The Bills seemed to get a huge break midway through an 81-yard Steelers' drive in the first quarter when Foster, who had 199 yards in two career starts against them, badly sprained his left ankle while landing awkwardly on an overthrown pass.
But Thompson, who gained 101 yards in the second half against New Orleans on Oct. 17 after Foster bruised a shoulder, again proved the Steelers' most valuable reserve.
He ripped off 9 yards on his first two carries to take the ball to the Bills' 9, then sidedestep an on-rushing Bruce Smith to score on third-and-1 to put Pittsburgh up 7-0 with 5:36 left in the first quarter.
The Steelers converted all four of their third-down plays on the 15-play drive, including O'Donnell's 9-yarders to Dwight Stone and Eric Green on third-and-long and a 12-yarder to Ernie Mills.
O'Donnell later crossed up the Bills' defense with a 1-yard touchdown pass to tight end Eric Green on Pittsburgh's opening drive of the third quarter, and Gary Anderson — 18 of 19 on field goals this season — hit from 37, 19 and 31 yards.
Mizzou needs more time to pick AD
Several considered to replace Devine
The Associated Press
COLUMBIA, Mo. — The finalists for the job as Missouri athletic director may be determined this week, but Dan Devine says his successor probably will not be chosen for several more weeks.
Devine, who plans to step down Feb. 1, said last month that he hoped to have a new athletic director chosen by Dec. 1. That date could still be met but is highly unlikely, Devine said Sunday night.
"Probably this week we will meet, and we will reduce that list to, we'll say, three, but might give or take one or two there," he said.
He said the search committee conducted formal interviews last week with "approximately 10" candidates.
Devine will send the names of the finalists to Chancellor
Charles Kiesler, possibly as soon as Friday. Reaching a decision will depend on the chancellor's schedule, he said.
"He hasn't told me this, but I'm sure he's not going to hire an AD sight unseen." Devine said. "And I know him well enough to know he'll want to
Dan Devine
spend more than a half hour" with each candidate. "He would probably want to spend an hour. So freeing up an hour on the chancellor's schedule might take some time."
Among those who have interviewed are Joe Castiglione, associate athletic director at Missouri; former Missouri and San Diego Chargers football star Kellen Winslow; Al Eberhug, a Missouri fund-raiser and former basketball letterman; Jerry Hughes, Central Missouri State athletic director; Barbara Walker, associate athletic director at Oregon; Herman Frazier, associate athletic director at Arizona State; Jim Hart, former St. Louis Cardinals quarterback and current athletic director at Southern Illinois; and Lee Moon, Marshall athletic director.
Mattingly takes eighth Gold Glove
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Don Mattingly of the New York Yankees caught up with George Scott for the most Gold Gloves by an American League first baseman and won for the eighth time in awards announced yesterday.
Second baseman Roberto Alomar and outfielder Devon White of the World Series champion Toronto Blue Jays, outfielder Ken Griffey Jr. of Seattle and pitcher Mark Langston of California were in a group of seven of last year's winners to repeat the Gold Gloves award.
Only Seattle shortstop Omar Vizquel, who replaced Baltimore's Cal Ripken, and Cleveland outfielder Kenny Lofton, who took the place of Minnesota's Kirby Puckett, were first-time winners.
Oakland's Mark McGwire won the award.
Texas catcher Ivan Rodriguez and Chicago third baseman Robin Ventura filled out this year's team.
The National League winners will be announced Tuesday. The Gold Gloves are presented by Rawlings to the best fielders in baseball as chosen in a vote by major league managers and coaches late in the regular season.
Mattingly matched Scott as the top winner at first base in the AL with his eighth award in nine years. The only time Mattingly missed out was 1900 when he was injured, and
Rawlings began the Gold Gloves in 1957 with one combined team. Winners in both leagues were started the next season.
Mattingly, known for his quick throws, led major league first basemen with a .998 fielding percentage this year. He made only three errors in 1,345 total chances, including 84 assists.
Scotw won in 1967-68 with Boston and won again from 1971-76 while with the Red Sox and Milwaukee. Keith Hernandez holds the record for the most Gold Gloves by a first baseman. He won 11 straight times from 1978-88 with the New York Mets and St. Louis.
White and Langston each won their fifth Gold Gloves. White made only three errors in center field and Langston led AL pitchers with 47 assists.
Griffey, also a centerfielder, became the first AL outfielder to win four straight Gold Gloves since Puckett in 1986-89. The acrobatic Alomar, who showed off his abilities in the World Series, and Ventura each won for the third year in a row.
Rodriguez became the first Texas catcher to win two straight Gold Gloves since Jim Sundberg won from 1976-81.
Vizquel ended Ripken's two-year streak at stopstop. Vizquel had a .980 percentage and became the first Seattle shortstop to win the award. Lofton, another centerfielder, was the first Cleveland outfielder to win a Gold Glove since Rick Manning in 1976.
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
♂
Single white male in mid-20's, grad. student seeks single female intellectual/genius/artist type with an extremely silly sense of humor and weird taste in music, movies, books etc.
DWM, 31, 6' I7 leap, attractive professional, KU grad. I'm new in town and looking for an intelligent, attractive SWF 21-30 for dating, great conversation and possible relationship. Let's not spend time cold winter alone. Call me more message: 440852
To check out these ads call 1-900-285-4560 You will be charged $1.95 per minute
SWK 30, 6T' 170, WORKOUT KUNK seeks spotter. Broused and loned and ready to pump iron. Looking for blonde hair, blue or green eyes, conditioned muscles and willing to take it to the weight room and anywhere else our meeting may lead us. Call Box#43801
Latin lookin. "S'8", SWM, 21, seeks SP with long hair, decent figure, wacky sense of humor and caricature for hopping and partying with. Should have apprehension with your feelings. Are you "Hooked on Phones?" Hey so am I!
30 year old male seeks attraction, alim, female in
their relationship and spend
Christmas together #46079
SWAW 5,10; med. build, attractive, brn. hair & eyes,
who keeps liking him from racecourt, weight lift-
ing, mt. biking, running, snow skiing & dancing.
Would like to meet attractive, athletic woman 21-
30. Seeking friends 1st, then maybe who know?
No hayweights. #4638
SWM 20 yrs, $10, 150 lb, long brown hair, I love Henry Rollins, Torn Waite, Social Distortion. I own a motorcycle, don’t have job and probably drink to much. Come save my breath. Birkentock wearing eco-freak need not apply. #45226
SWIM 21 yrs 19,6" 485, dark brown hair, icey eyes, muscular bod, looking for a sincerice lady who likes to be pampered in all the right ways. Give me care sounds, box 4733 and special care sounds good. Box 4733
SWM 21 yrs, blue eyes, looking for a " little Chihuahua , who the liker in things in life such as long walks, Kool-aid, and eating cereal by candlelight. I someone to call my " Chicky-Monkey ." and to just hang with and have a good time. Box #43743
Tall, athletic SWM, 23, *6*, who likes being enchanting under street wet lawns seeks companion for fun, fricole and warm fuzzy. Romance is key and looks are unimportant. Be prepared for anything except pain. Not a god, but worth it.
Tall and lean SWM with razo-rango blue eyes, hypnotic smile and vampire charisma seek "beau-
Tall and lean SWM with razor-sharp blue eyes, hypnotic smile and vampire charisma seeks beautiful girl to share old-world romance with rain and lilies, laughter and blush. Call Box #465438
♂
WOMEN
SEEKING
MEN
GWM, 18, *8*", 100, blond Blue - green eyes, good-lookup model type, shy, intelligent and philosophical seeking 18-21 GWM jocks, raplayers, or soccer players who are buchset, closed, have all male friends, tall, good body, cute boy looks. for possible relationship #44071
SWF 20, brown hair, slender body, seductive hazel eyes in search of the ultimate experience while I am still young and innocent. I'm looking for sincere connection to you, and I'm going to see me this and a whole lot more then call Box #4728.
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
SWF 20 Years old. *old* 5' w/ blonde hair. Seeking
MWC Eastern male, N/N in power position. Must not work with me, N/N in power position. We can work with you or we each other). Must be able to play guitar and sing to me #4406
MEN SEEKING MEN
Gay white males. Well guys you have only a few weeks of classes left and still haven't made many new friends, still looking and hoping to make some. 44572
MSK I'm about 6', tall and 19lbs. I'm good looking and like GQ looking men who like to travel and listen to alternative music. I long walk on the beach and I am not afraid to let loose and have a fun.
PLACE AN AD FREE! Call 864-4358
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS To place an ad (must be 18 yrs old)
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 (every 3rd day from the day that you initially place your voice message), to listen to the messages people leave for you. Any other day, you may call the 900-number to retrieve your messages at a cost of $1.95 per minute. The average call is 3 mins in length.
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
K
A
KANSAS BASKETBALL PREVIEW
A WINNING HAND: A fourth consecutive conference title just might be in the cards. Special section inside
VOL.103,NO.63
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KING
KING
KING
KING
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1993
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Outlet mall set to open shop Friday
By Traci Carl
Kansan staff writer
Construction bobcats raced around the parking lot shoveling dirt yesterday as construction continued in preparation for Friday's opening of three stores at the new Tanger Outlet Mall.
Kacy Childs, property and marketing manager, said 10 more stores should open by Christmas. When the mail is complete, there will be 22 stores, she said.
But it is not company policy to release names of stores.
"We try to keep excitement in the community," she said.
Three stores, one of which displayed a Liz Claiborne sign and another, S & K Menswear, had merchandise in the store yesterday.
There are about 20 Tanger outlet malls around the country. The outlet malls often attract customers from out-of-town or from the nearest highway. Childs said.
"We try to make the mall a destination," she said. "We bring people into Lawrence for a day."
Tanger outlet malls usually are built between two large cities in areas with other attractions. Childs, a 1991 KU graduate, said she knew firsthand about the other attractions Lawrence had to offer, from the downtown and Riverfront Outlet Mall to University museums.
Paul Schumaker, professor of political science and government, said he studied the Riverfront Outlet Mall, 1 Riverfront Plaza, and determined that it was what Lawrence residents wanted.
It did not take business away from downtown, but added to it, he said. Tanger Outlet Mall probably will do the same.
"It brings new wealth into the community," he said. "Traditional malls take away from downtown."
Stores that directly compete with brand name outlet stores, like shoe stores or sporting goods stores, may suffer, he said. This may change the style of downtown, but it will not destroy it, he said.
"Downtown may become more entertainment oriented," he said.
"I wouldn't be surprised to see North Lawrence boom," he said.
The Tanger Outlet Mall is also in the best location to help North Lawrence develop economically.
New mall in North Lawrence
The Tanger Factory Outlet Mall is on North Second Street.
KANSAS RIVER
I-70
New factory outlet mail site
Lawrence
U.S. 89
River front Plaza
B6H 52
outlet mall
Dan Schauer / KANSAN
OUI UNDER EXAMINATION
By JL Watson
It's a free ride, complete with a chauffeured car, high-tech equipment and wrap around sound. It also includes handcuffs, breath tests and an arrest.
Destination: the Lawrence police station. For people who choose to drink and drive, the joyride sometimes turns into a sobering experience.
Often, when the blood alcohol concentration increases, the level of good judgment decreases.
The legal limit for blood alcohol content in the state of Kansas is .08. Drivers with a blood alcohol content reading .08 or higher are considered legally intoxicated and can be charged with an OUI. OUI is an acronym for Operating a vehicle under the influence of alcohol and/or drugs.
"Even someone who shows a reading of under .08 can be charged with an OUI," said Tony Augusto, a KU police officer. "If we can show that you're impaired and not safe on the street, we can arrest you for being over the limit."
See OUI, Page 7.
OUI UNDER EXAMINATION
I
Clinton gains support for NAFTA
Rep.Jan Myers, R-Kan.,is now among those who are pushing for the agreement
Finisia Medrano rolled through Lawrence yesterday in a covered wagon on her way to Florida.
Page 3.
Pulling for Christ
A
"NAFTA is something the United States must do to retain economic leadership in the world, and I am concerned that if we reject NAFTA, this country will not have another opportunity," said Rep. Jan Meyers, R-Kan., one of four lawmakers who switched from opposition to support during the day.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Seizing the momentum on the eve of a U.S. House showdown, President Clinton won a rush of converts yesterday for the North American Free Trade Agreement. Opponents accused the White House of doling out billions of dollars to line up support.
An Associated Press survey showed 217 House members supported, or were likely to support, the pact — a one-day gain of 24. In contrast, opponents' numbers dwindled by five, and stood at 197.
Clinton's lobbying campaign was prodigious, from one-on-one meetings and phone calls with Democrats to soothing words for Republicans nervous about backing the agreement.
INSIDE
"Tomorrow, the Congress has simply got to vote for hope over fear, for the future over the past. They've got to vote for confidence in the ability of the American people
- DIVISION: The battle over NAFTA has split the Democratic party just a year after it won control of the White House. Page 5.
to compete and win," he told the nation's governors, who were summoned to the White House to provide evidence of widespread support for the pact.
— Mickey Kantor, the administration's trade representative, worked with Florida lawmakers on terms to shield the state's tomato growers from damage in the event Mexico violated export standards. His harvest included support from one Florida lawmaker who had been opposed and one who had been undecided. There were widespread predictions of additional support from the 23-member delegation.
Among yesterday's events:
- Clinton met at the White House with Rep. Floyd Flake, D-N.Y., who announced his support. Flake said the president had pledged to support new Small Business Administration pilot programs to provide funds for urban areas.
An administration official, speaking on the administration of anonymity, said all the deal-making hadn't cost the Treasury any money. But Ross Perot, the pact's most vocal critic, called it the "biggest purchase of votes in our country's history with taxpayer money."
The White House assured Rep. Bill Hefner, D-N.C., that it would beef up enforcement of NAFTA provisions relating to the textile and apparel industries, including a pledge to hire new Customs Service personnel. Hefner announced his
Rep. David Bonior, the House Democratic whip and most active opponent said , "I shudder to think what it will take to get votes to pass a decent health care bill next year."
Opponents were critical of the tactics. Rep. Gerald Solomon, R-N.Y., distributed a two-page list of deals that the administration was said to have made, ranging from protection for the textile and asaparagus industries to a new center for Western Hemisheric Trade in Texas.
Democrats and Republicans are working to overcome stiff opposition from laborbacked Democrats.
The House vote is set for today, and a majority of 218 votes is needed for approval. The agreement would be sent to the Senate, where Democratic and Republican leaders issued fresh predictions of passage yesterday.
support for the pact.
Several members of United We Stand, a Perot-backed organization that opposes the pact, complained after being denied admission to a closed-door session where Florida lawmakers met with the state's major agriculture interests.
"Let me make it clear and unmistakable: The Senate will pass the North American Free Trade Agreement," said Majority Leader George Mitchell.
Opponents say thousands of jobs will be lost as American firms move factories to Mexico to take advantage of lower wages and less stringent environmental standards.
trade zone for Mexico, Canada and the United States by reducing tariffs over 15 years. Supporters say the pact would open a vast Mexican market for American industries and serve as a linchpin for broader agreements involving other countries in the Western Hemisphere, Asia and Eurone.
Patience was wearing thin at the end of the grueling lobbying struggle.
The AP survey showed 208 firm votes in favor of the agreement and another nine leaning that way. There were 183 lawmakers counted as firmly opposed with another 14 leaning against the agreement. The remaining 20 were undecided in the House.
The accord is designed to create a free
Smokers have to kick the habit on their own
By Liz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
While 10 percent of college students smoke regularly, about another 10 to 15 percent of students are social smokers, said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins.
Mike McMillen, Lawrence sophomore, is one of many students considered a social smoker — someone who smokes less than six cigarettes a day. He usually smokes when he is under stress, driving or partying.
"I smoke mostly when I go out and start drinking at the bars." McMillan said.
"Social smokers smoke for pleasure and because of the setting," Yockey said. "We see a lot of students who just smoke on weekends or at parties."
Social smoking involves smoking occasionally but smoking a lot of cigarettes, which can cause respiratory infections
such as strep throat and sinus infections, Yockey said. The problem with social smoking is that it leads to continual smoking, he said.
"It's kind of like doing a little heroin," Yockey said. "You really can't do a little heroin."
What started out as a social gesture in the seventh grade became a three to four pack a week habit for Angie Weir, Halstead freshman.
"I need it now," Weir said. "It's like a necessity."
Excuses all smokers give for not quitting are weak. Yockev said:
People only feel relaxed by smoking cigarettes because they are addicted to the nicotine.
Quitting smoking does not cause weight gain. Smokers who quit smoking eat more because food tastes better and satisfies the oral fixation associated with smoking.
Smoking cigarettes, which are a stimulant, while consuming alcohol, which is a relaxant, does not allow students to drink more without feeling the effects of the alcohol. Instead, smoking delays the effects caused by alcohol.
It is easy to become addicted to smoking, Yockey said. In an experiment, rats that were addicted to nicotine would tolerate electric shocks for more nicotine, Yockey said. When denied water, food and nicotine for three days, the first thing addicted rats wanted was nicotine.
"What drives me the most nuts is when someone says, 'I've tried to stop smoking,'
Students do not quit smoking because of the potential health threats or for their friends and family, Yockey said. Students only stop smoking because they do not want to smoke anymore.
The way to break the habit of smoking is simply to stop smoking and start thinking like a non-smoker. Yockey said.
Smokeout success
Results of last year's Smokeout:
The Great American Smokeout, sponsored by the American Cancer Society since 1977, is today. The event encourages all smokers to stop smoking for 24 hours.
About 10.8 million U.S. smokers often refrained from smoking or reduced their smoking.
About 1.5 million U.S. smokers quit smoking for three to five days after the Smokeout.
About 9.7 million packs of cigarettes were not smoked that would have been smoked normally on that day. As a result, $17.8 million were not spent on cigarettes.
Source: Kansas Department of Health and Environment KANSAN
but I can't," Yockey said. "The correct statement is 'I won't.' My advice is give your cigarettes to someone you don't like and stop smoking. The best thing to do is just bite the bullet and make up your mind you're not going to smoke."
2
2
Wednesday, November 17, 1993
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A window was broken in the laundry room at Jayhawk Tower B on Friday, Saturday or Sunday, KU police reported. Damage was estimated at $35.
Homeless Coalition creating awareness
The KU Homeless Coalition has organized Homeless Awareness Week events to inform students about the homeless problem and to help homeless people in Lawrence.
The coalition will be "arresting" people in front of Wescoe today during a Jail-a-thon. Students who are picked up will be asked to call friends to bail them out. "Ball" will be a donation to support the Emergency Services Council.
A student's truck was damaged at Gate 40 of Memorial Stadium on Monday, KU police reported. Damage was estimated at $75.
Michael Stoops of the National Homeless Coalition and member of the president's task force on the homeless will be speaking at 7 p.m. tomorrow at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
The coalition is looking for a place downtown where it can provide a free meal for the homeless on Saturday. Gabriel Caunt, vice president of the KU coalition, said the coalition would like to find a place to provide free meals every Saturday.
KU GAMMA chapter wins national award
KU Greeks Advocating Mature Management of Alcohol, or GAMMA, defeated 131 other national GAMMA chapters last weekend and was awarded one of nine $400 prizes for being an outstanding chapter.
The award was presented to GAMMA members at the Boosting Alcohol Consciousness Concerning Health in University Students Peer Education Network general assembly in Orlando, Fla.
GAMMA president Tim Marks said the award was a great honor because the KU chapter was the only Greek branch of BACCHUS to be recognized.
The $400 award will be used for the activities of Safe Break Week, which is held before Spring Break, and possibly to bring a national speaker to campus to speak on issues of alcohol responsibility, Marks said.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stuiver-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, KA, 66045.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 17, 1993
3
From cramming to cranberries
Students find tests piling up before holiday
By Chesley Dohl Kansan staff writer
Two theme papers, two tests and one oral exam — all in the same week. It is cram time again for students at KU.
"I think it seems unfair that they throw a test or a major paper at you right before you're supposed to be preparing for a final exam," said Caroline Ross, Olathe junior. "How can you study all new information for an exam when you're trying to review for a final? It's unrealistic."
The week before Thanksgiving break often means more test and assignment deadline pressures.
Still, Ross said there were ways to avoid last-minute cramming.
"Usually the tests are on the syllabus so it's a matter of trying to start early and looking ahead in the semester."
Some University professors say they do not sympathize with KU students who have several assignments due during the same week. But some say they empathize with students because deadlines were something they had to meet when they were in college.
"Professors have deadlines, too," said Jim Orr, professor of biological studies. "We have grant proposals and lectures that fall on the same week."
He said deadlines were a part of the
college experience.
"In the course of one's life we all have unfortunate deadlines," Orr said. "But it's all part of the growing process. It's part of what a college education is all about."
Stephen Hupp, Bridgelon, Mo., sophomore, approaches his deadlines with humor instead of becoming stressed-out by his studies.
"If you give an extension to one student and not another — that isn't right," Sharp said. "One student shouldn't be an exception to the rule."
Bill Sharp, graduate teaching assistant in Western civilization, said fairness had to be considered when granting extensions to students.
Many professors and students agree it is better to take exams before Thanksgiving so that test-taking anxiety does not ruin the vacation.
Alan Allsman, Colorado Springs,
Colo., sophomore, said that as much
as he hated studying before break, the
work was worth it.
"It's called a vacation — you're supposed to go home and relax," Allsman said. "Who wants to go home and study when you're supposed to be taking a break? It would defeat the whole purpose."
Melanie Walsh, Lawrence junior, said she did not harbor any grudges against professors who created a lot of work for her during certain weeks.
"It happens all the time, but it's more coincidence," Walsh said. "I don't think it's malicious."
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 8647317.
ON CAMPUS
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor a lunch and Tecture, "Recent Advances in Genetic Technology and Their Impact on Society," at 11:30 a.m. today at the ECM Center, 1204 Oread. For more information, call Thad Holcombe at 483-4933.
- Women's Studies Program will sponsor a lecture, "Spaces of Femininity: Spatial Metaphors in Feminist Texts," at noon today at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Sylvia at 864-4011.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting for students interested in studying in Great Britain at 4 p.m. today at Room 8 in Lippincott Hall. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell 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.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a Catholic student discussion group at 1:10 p.m. today (following 12:30 Mass) at Alcove B in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 843-0357.
KU Environs will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For
more information, call Amy Trainer at 841-4484.
John Gamble / KANSAN
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 Anishanslin at 843-3099.
Pre-Physical Therapy Club will sponsor an informational speaker and have elections at 6 p.m. today at the first floor conference room in Watkins Memorial Health Center. For more information, call Tamara Fifer at 749-1786.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will have a House/Hall Contacts meeting at 6:30 p.m. tonight at the Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call Wendy at 843-0357.
Amnesty International will sponsor a lecture at 7 tonight in Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread.
KU Kempo will meet at 7 tonight in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Ershadi at 842-4713.
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.
Watkins Memorial Health Center will sponsor an eating disorders support group from 7:30 to 8:30 tonight at the second floor conference room in Watkins. For more information, call Sarah Kirk at 864-4121.
Forming Awareness of Cancer Through Students (FACTS) will meet at 8 tonight at the first floor conference room in Watkins Memorial Health Center.
On the road to New York City.
Finisia Medrano drives her covered wagon along Highway 24 near Midland Junction, north of Lawrence. Medrano, who left Idaho in March and passed through Lawrence yesterday afternoon, has been traveling across country and hopes to reach Florida by January.
Traveler going cross country in wagon
By Brian James
Kansan staff writer
Finisia Medrano is cruising the nation's roads in a big rig, but it's no 18-wheeler.
Medrano's rig — a covered wagon pulled by three horses — rolled through Lawrence yesterday. Medrano has been traveling since March on a trip from Idaho to Florida and then back to the West coast.
She admits traveling 20 miles a day in a covered wagon is a little crazy, but the Idaho native said she had a reason.
"Some people might consider me nuts, but it gives me a chance to tell them I'm doing this for my Father in heaven," she said.
Medrano, who is in her late 30s, said she sold or gave away her house, car and most of her other belongings about eight or nine years ago. She bought the covered wagon and horses about three years ago.
Among other religious references on the canvas-covered wagon, a sign on the outside of the wagon cover reads, "Pulling for Christ."
"I have funny ideas about the way I do things," said Medrano, who does not affiliate herself with any denomination. "Lots of people try to beat
people over the head with their religious sticks, but by doing this, I can call attention to my beliefs and teach by example. I'm not chasing people down trying to convert them."
A small stack of religious literature laid on her mattress in her wagon. She said many church representatives tracked her down during her brief trip through Lawrence yesterday.
She said the wagon had all the modern conveniences she needed. An assortment of pots, harnesses and lanterns adorn the canvas wall of the wagon. A small handmade, wood-burning stove heats the wagon on cold days.
REVELATION 11:18 AND THE NATIONS WERE ANGRY, £ THY WRATH IS COME £ THE TIME OF THE DEAD, THAT THEY SHOULD BE DIDGED, £ THAT THOU SHOULDEST PRT WARD UNTO THY SERVANTS THE METES, £ TO THE SAINTS, £ THEM FEAR THY NAME, SMALL & GREAT; SOULDEST DESTROY THEM DESTROY THE EARTH.
The only possessions that were not reminiscent of the Old West were a small stereo and a small box of cassettes that hung from the ceiling.
She is making the trip across the country alone, not counting her three horses, Tammy, Shortcake and Katy, and her dog, Tank.
The people in the towns she rumbles through kept her company too, she said.
Most of the people on the trip had been receptive, but a few were not, she said.
"I like both groups," she said. "I appreciate most of the stuff they give me, but they tend to give me too many
Medrano began her nomadic lifestyle nine years ago after what she calls a personal experience with God. Along with this Bible verse from Revelation, Medrano has "Pulling for Christ" painted in large red letters across the side of her wagon.
sweets. They're going to kill me."
She said she stopped at grocery stores in the Midwest, but relied on wild roots and other vegetation when traveling through Western states.
The journey across America's heartland had been disheartening at times, Medrano said.
"I can get water for my horses in streams in the West, but here I was
told that it wouldn't be possible," she said. "It just breaks my heart."
She said she hoped to be in Florida by January, but she did not know when she would complete the trip back to the West coast.
"Not a whole lot of people get to travel like this," she said. "Then again, not many would probably want to."
Boulevard restrictions could be extended
Kansan staff writer
By Shan Schwartz
The KU Parking Board yesterday approved a recommendation to further restrict traffic on Jayhawk Boulevard next year.
The recommendation from the board's rules committee would close Jayhawk Boulevard from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. during the fall and spring semesters. This year, campus is closed from 7:45 a.m. to 4:45 p.m.
The changes were proposed to ease faculty and staff parking in the mornings and to reduce automobile traffic on campus in the late afternoon.
The proposal was approved by the board 5-2. It also must be approved in the spring by the University Senate Executive Committee, the University Council and the Executive Vice Chancellor to become effective for Fall 1994.
Student board member William Gist, Leawood senior, said that some students were against extending the restricted hours on campus.
"They feel campus access is already limited enough, and it shouldn't be restricted until 6." Gist said.
But Renee Speicher, Hutchinson graduate student and member of the board's rules committee, said that students would not mind more restricted hours if the change improved pedestrian safety.
"I think most students will compromise convenience for safety," she said.
Most of the board members agreed that campus traffic would continue to get worse regardless of the proposed change.
"We have 28,000 students and only 900 parking stalls (in the center of campus)," said board member Joseph Collins, a zoologist at the Museum of Natural History. "We are not going to get any more parking, but we will continue to get more students.
"It's an impossible situation where too many people with cars are trying to crowd on top of the Hill. We're fighting a losing battle."
The proposal also introduces a $10 annual loading
pass for faculty and staff who do not drive themselves to work. Drivers with passes could drop off and pick up faculty and staff from 7 to 8 a.m. and 5 to 6 p.m.
The board unanimously approved a separate proposal to charge parents of children at the Hilltop Child Development Center $10 a semester or $20 a year for a loading permit. Currently, parents pay Hilltop $1 a semester for a sticker, which allows them to be on campus for loading at Hilltop.
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The rules committee proposed the change to make parking at Hilltop consistent with loading passes issued for child development programs in Haworth Hall and the Dole Human Development Center.
"The parents will not be thrilled with this at all," said Andi Fishman, Hilltop director. "But we are right there by the Union at the heart of all the congestion, and I think we should follow the same rules as everyone else on campus."
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4
Wednesday, November 17, 1993
OPINION
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Capital punishment bill should be passed in '94
The death penalty in Kansas should be passed when it comes before the state early next year.
This country supports a system that allows the Supreme Court to decide moral issues in our society and allows the government to create policies upholding decisions made by the Supreme Court. The decision allowing capital punishment in this country has been made. Since the federal government has decided to leave the option open for each individual state government, it is important for Kansas citizens to urge their state representatives to pass legislation supporting the death penalty.
We support the death penalty in Kansas for several reasons. First, we believe that it could serve as a deterrent to violent crime if it were carried out more efficiently. Currently, inmates on death row are often allowed an endless number of appeals, sometimes delaying their execution until they die of natural causes while still in prison.
Another important reason to instate the death penalty is the cost of supporting a prisoner throughout a life sentence. With endless appeals available, a death sentence is often in reality a life imprisonment sentence. If the system were to be changed to limit appeals, the state could save a great deal of financing by not supporting criminals on death row throughout a life sentence.
This would also dramatically reduce the problem of prison overcrowding, allowing a higher percentage of incarceration for convicted criminals. The current life sentence allows eligibility for parole after only eight years, partially because of the high level of prison overcrowding. Passing the death penalty in Kansas will help reduce overcrowding in Kansas prisons, allowing better removal of dangerous criminals from Kansas streets.
The most persuasive reason for passing the death penalty in Kansas perhaps lies in the grisly crimes committed by many convicted criminals. We see the death penalty as the only sure way to prevent some criminals from committing their crimes again.
There are criminals like Charles Manson who many people fear would commit similar crimes upon his release from prison. Because of a lack of the death penalty when Manson was convicted, he is currently serving a life sentence that allows him to be periodically reviewed for parole. A death penalty would allow the families of murder victims the peace of mind that comes from knowing that the murderer can never kill again.
The benefits from instating the death penalty in Kansas are widespread, both economical and psychological. A bill proposing instating the death penalty in Kansas is scheduled to appear early next year. It is imperative that we, as Kansans, support it.
DAVID BURGETT FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS:DAVID BURGETT, JR CLAIRBORNE, CHRISTINA CORNISH, CARSON ELROD, TOM GRELINGER, MANNY LOPEZ, COLLEEN McCAIN, TERRILYN MCORMICK, MUNEERA NASEER, NATHAN NASSIF, KIRK REDMOND, CHRIS REEDY, RANDALL REITZ, MIKE SILVERMAN, MICHELLE SMITH, EISHA TIERNEY, KC TRAUER, DAVID WANEK
MKLEY Chicago Tribune
IT'S A HUGE DINOSAUR! TURN AROUND!
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Conferences provide romantic opportunities
I never went away to summer camp when I was growing up, nor did my family take trips with other families. When I was an undergraduate, I never went on traditional spring breaks or winter vacations. When I did travel away from home it was to work professionally, which left little time for socializing, let alone romance.
A Conference crush is the incredible rush of emotions you feel for another person whom you have just met, who is away from home and is attending the same event as you.
And so, I was in graduate school before I experienced what many teenagers experience every year. It has many names: spring fling, vacation flirtation. At this stage in my life I refer to it as the conference crush.
COLUMNIST
PATRICK
DILLEY
Conference crushes can be romantic or friendly. My first one was three years ago, in Minneapolis, for three guys. Ryan was from Oregon, Jay from Ohio, and Tyrone from Las Vegas. We became friends because we were close in age, all students and attending the same sessions at the conference. We stayed up late into the night, talking about college life, politics, growing up gay, and what we intended to do to change the world.
We spent four days together. By the time I had to leave, I thought the closeness we felt would be a constant in our lives, binding us together. When we were hugging goodbye, as cheesy it is sounds, I could not help but think that I was going back to Kansas after an incredible journey with three people who helped me find myself.
I told you it was cheesy.
As the days progressed and I tried to catch up on what I missed while I was away, the feelings drifted into the past, like colors fading from Polaroids. After a few postcards and a few months, all I had left were photographs and memories of a few hours and hushed laughter in a lecture hall.
Last week I attended another conference. At the first session I saw someone for whom I fell immediately. His eyes, his voice, everything about him made me feel, well, young and stupid. I tried not to take too much notice of him, but by the reception that evening he was sort of looking at me and I was trying not to get caught looking at him.
Finally, as I was talking to a friend of his I had met earlier, he came over and we started talking. His name is Jeff, and oddly enough his family lives about 40 miles from mine, back in our home state of Illinois. From that sprang two days filled with that rush to discover as much as I could about that person, really trying to discover what makes him unique in all the people of the world. And, of course, trying to make an indelible impression upon him.
Patrick Dilley is a Lawrence graduate student in higher education.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Noam Chomsky lecture poorly handled by SUA
We would like to express our intense dissatisfaction with the lack of foresight that surrounded the organization of Noam Chomsky's lecture on Friday.
We arrived at 7 p.m., when the tickets were to be issued, but within minutes they announced that there were no more tickets. However, then they told us that to 60 to 100 seats were available if sponsors of this lecture did not claim their tickets.
We waited for another hour, only to be turned away. We were disappointed, as were hundreds of other students, to have missed the opportunity to hear a speaker of this magnitude because of poor planning on the part of the SUA Forums Committee.
of ticket distribution was inexcus able. Student-financed organizations and university departments brought Noam Chomsky to the University of Kansas.
First of all, we feel that the choice of location was inappropriate considering the other possible venues, such as the Lied Center, Allen Field House or Crafton-Preyer Theater.
Yet KU students and faculty were not given seating priority because no identification was required. Firstcome first-serve seating would have been appropriate if extra seats had remained after KU students and faculty were admitted.
Furthermore, we think the method
Many students were deprived of an extraordinary opportunity to hear a world renowned scholar in linguistics, philosophy and history (Kansan, Friday, Nov. 12) because of poor organization and an underestimation of student interest. We sincerely hope that when another speaker of Chomsky's magnitude visits KU, SUA will be prepared.
Jaminda Bass, Topeka junior
Julie Munjak, Lenexa senior
Philip Khoury, Leawood senior
Janice McLean, Scammon junior
Jennifer Chang, Topeka freshman
It's a cold,cruel world out there for students
Katie Greenwald says that being treated like a second-class citizen simply because she is a student denies her "real world experiences?"
Welcome to the real world, Katie.
Darcie Callahan Boston graduate student
KU track teams have lost winning tradition
I had been wondering why the great KU track and field and cross country tradition had gone away. I saw in the Sunday papers the men's cross country team placed dead last in the conference meet held on Saturday. Why can't KU compete in track anymore? It is a crying shame and something needs to be done about it right away — don't you think?
Kaarl Kassell Lawrence resident
COLUMNIST
1985
CHRIS RONAN
Ed and Dick letters bear good news of a new life
Two Saturday's ago, my life changed in such a way that I can barely put it into words. One might think that it had something to do with our beloved Kansas football team almost beating Nebraska, but no — it's something bigger and oh so much better.
When I got home from trying to drive up to campus about one hour after the game — which was a futile effort because the entire population of Nebraska was making a mass exodus from Lawrence at the time — I opened my mailbox and found a glowing light. A light emitted by the smiling faces of Ed McMahon and Dick Clark. Their faces adorned the envelope of a letter from American Family Publishers. Now, hold onto your seats. Ladies and gentlemen, I, Chris Ronan, am a member of the FINALIST GROUP, eligible to win $10,000,000.
Because I know that this has never happened to any of you, let me explain how the process works. If I send in my entry, and one of my "exclusive" prize numbers is drawn on national television in January, I will win the grand prize of $10,000,000. I'm pretty sure that I'll win because it looks like there's only about five of us in the Finalist Group. When my name is announced as the winner, I'll have the very honorable distinction of joining a small group of new millionaires. Sounds pretty easy, doesn't it? Yeah, that's what I thought too, but when one looks closer at the literature enclosed in the magic envelope, one finds that winning $10,000,000 can take some effort. Let's glance at a few requirements:
1. I must promise to accept the prize on national television from Ed and Ageless Boy. They don't specify whether travel is included in the prize or whether I have to purchase a $9,999.99 plane ticket myself.
2. If I haven't recently subscribed to a magazine, then I may not "have enough points to qualify." However, if I purchase a magazine now, I will certainly have enough points to be eligible for the big winning. There are many magazines to choose from including the very popular Decorative Crochet — not to be confused with the blockbuster Decorative Croquet — and Bowhunter — 34 percent off the cover price! They make sure a future multi-millionaire like myself has plenty of choices.
3. I have to affix many stamps to my "official entry form." This requires serious effort because finding the stamps in the envelope is like a mini scavenger hunt. Failure to affix these stamps will result in immediate forfeiture of my money — and new life. The letter says, "Another finalist will step forward to claim your money." Now wouldn't that be a disaster?
When I come back for the spring semester, things will be much easier for me. I'll be able to afford to eat at McDonald's on a nightly basis and my diet of cookies and nachos will be a thing of the past. "THE RONAN FAMILY'S FINANCIAL SECURITY IS GUARANTEED TO THE TUNE OF TEN MILLION DOLLARS!" I will then immediately retire to a life of watching TV and playing video games. As the philosopher Homer (Simpson) would say, "WOO-HOO!"
KANSAN STAFF
Chris Ronan is an Overland Park sophomore majoring in broadcast journalism.
KCTRAUER, Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE Managing editors
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
Editors
Assistant to the editor ... J.R. Clairbone
News ... Stacy Friedman
Editorial ... Terrilyn McCormick
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Krist Fogler
Photo ... Klip Chin, Renée Kneeber
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 Star
Campus sales mgr ... Ed Schager
Regional sales mgr ... Jennifer Pierer
National sales mgr ... Jennifer Evanson
Co-op sales mgr ... Brythe Foch
Production mgr ... Briae Blowey
Kate Burgess
Marketing director ... Shelly McConnell
Creative director ... Brian Fusco
Classified mgr .. Gretchen Kotterleinch
Letters should be type, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Guest columns should be type, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be the Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
University of Mars
Beep.
Sorry,man...I don't speak that language.
Beep, beep?
Huh?
Beep.
Beep, beep beep
beep beep?
No speak-o
"Beep-of,
my friend"
by Joel Francke
Beep, beep beep beep!!
Beep, beep
A man is screaming.
Beeep.
Fender-Ko 193
Beep.
NATION/WORLD
Wednesdav. November 17. 1993
5
The Associated Press
Labor may forgive pact supporters
WASHINGTON — Whoever wins, the battle over NAFTA has bitterly divided the Democratic Party just a year after it united to capture the White House, opening wounds that soothing words alone won't quickly heal.
For there is more at stake in the vote than the North American Free Trade Agreement.
On Monday, AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland publicly challenged President Clinton's standing as leader
of the Democratic Party, a remarkal rebuke of the man praised just 10 months ago as labor's savior after 12 years in the cold under Republican presidents.
If there was an doubt about Kirk-
land's motivation, the shifting tide
ANALYSIS
"This fight exposed the fault lines between the old and the new Democratic Party," said Al From, president of the centrist Democratic Leadership Council. "This was a big deal for labor and they leveled their best blows. If the president can come back and win this, there is going to be a lot of anger."
Monday erased it; the undecided vote was cutting decidedly in Clinton's favor, and the president appeared poised to deal labor a humiliating defeat on its highest 1993 priority.
Not to mention a tilting of the party's power balance in Clinton's favor.
The Democratic divide runs deeper than the Clinton-labor split. The NAFTA fight also put Clinton at odds with two of the three House Democratic leaders.
the one between Clinton and Majority Leader Richard Gephardt of Missouri and Whip David Bonior of Michigan, the two Democrats leading the anti-NAFTA fight.
As for labor, many of the House rank-and-file — on both sides of the NAFTA fight — suddenly find themselves in grudge matches with the party's biggest financial and organizational benefactor.
As they assessed the party turnoil, a handful of senior Clinton advisers said the easiest rift to heal would be
"Unmitigated threats about your tenure in this job, as if you'll do anything as long as they tell you what to do. I thought that was out of line," Democratic Rep. Mel Reynolds of Illinois said.
Democratic National Committee Chairman David Wilhelm predicted labor would forget most of those threats when 1993 turns to 1994, even if it loses the NAFTA vote.
"I think most unions will tally congressional records fairly and not retaliate against some who made a tough choice in favor of NAFTA," Wilhelm said.
Refugees from Cuba, Haiti treated
The Associated Press
g9 MIAMI — Political crisis in Haiti and economic collapse in communist Cuba have added a twist to a longstanding immigration pattern: Cuban refugees talk of fleeing for
pation increasingly evident in the military standoff in that nation.
Meanwhile, the huge influx of refugees from both Caribbean nations this year has sharpened criticism of the different treatment that each group traditionally has received.
The contrast was stark on Monday. A group of 13 Cubans who stole a plane to get here because of what one described as "professional frustration" got a hero's welcome; a group of Haitians dropped from a ship into the seas off Florida were hustled away to a detention camp.
George Waldroup, a representative for the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service, said that Cubans are treated differently from every other nationality, not just Haitians.
Subject to the 1966 Cuban Adjustment Act, Cubans who reach the United States and live here for a year can become
members, rengisely requesting political asylum from their communist homeland receive it nearly automatically.
80 Haitians historically have been classified as economic refugees leaving the Western Hemisphere's poorest nation.
But the failure of a U.S.-backed effort to return exiled President Jean-Bertrand Aristide by an Oct. 30 deadline has underlined their claims of political persecution. Aristide was ousted more than two years ago in a military coup.
Most Haitians arriving in Miami in recent months have been paroled quickly to the community, as soon as relatives and sponsors are located.
Although no official change in U.S. policy has been announced, no Haitians have been deported to Haiti in about a month.
But whereas the Coast Guard is under orders to stop Haitian boat people leaving their homeland, in compliance with a longstanding policy, they help Cubans trying to reach the United States.
However, Haitian advocates say that policy isn't consistent — eight Haitians who arrived in 1992 remain in immigration custody in Orleans Parish, La., with bonds up to $5,000.
In the past, Cuban refugees have cited repression in their communist homeland when asking for asylum.
126 4 1 10 23 9
More than 3,000 Cubans have arrived in South Florida this year, the largest wave since the 1980 Mariel boatlift brought 125,000. More than 2,000 Haitians also have arrived.
"Your Book Professionals"
"At the top of Naismith Hill"
Hrs: 8-7 M-T, 8-Fri, 9-Sat, 12-4 Sun, 843-3826
Jayhawk Bookstore
Jayhawk Bookstore
Taiwanese Thanksgiving Dinner
Share with Thanks
Keynote Speech by Dr. Yu P.L.
Place: Burge Union, Pioneer Room
Time: Nov. 22, 1993 6:30p.m.
Fee: $4.00 for the public.
Reservation is required.
Please contact Sabine Lin 843-3472 or Linda Chen 841-2901
Thanks!!
Sponsored by the
Taiwanese Students Association
台灣同學會贊助.
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For more information about The Great American Smokeout and Smoking Cessation classes call Health Education at 864-9570.
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Legal Services for Students
148 Burge • 864-5665
STUDENT
SENATE
Hang in there! You can take ...
图
WC 204c Western Civilization I
COMS 310c Intro to Organizational Communications
and
125 other courses
through University of Kansas
Independent Study.
Stop by Independent Study Student Services, Continuing Education Building, Annex A, just north of the Student Union for a catalog or call 864-4440 for information.
CANCUN
SPRINGBREAK`94
From $559** per person March 18-25
- Roundrip airfare between Kansas City and Cancun International Airports
- 7 nights hotel accommodations at either the Kin Ha Cancun Hotel or comparable, or the first clas Calinda Beach Hotel or comparable based on 4 people sharing one room
* Roundtrip transportation between the Cancun International Airport and your hotel
- College Tours representatives on site in Cancun to see to the needs of tour members
- College tours representatives on site in Cancun to see the needs of our members
* Carlson Travel Network/Sunflower Travel Service travel packet including airline, ground transportation and hotel vouchers, luggage tags, and final instructions
*optional party package available!
**U.S. and Mexican departure taxes not included
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---
6
Wednesday, November 17, 1993
.
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--points of contention were the scope of Israel's pullout from the Gaza Strip and Jericho on the West Bank, and the fate of thousands of Palestinians held in Israeli jails.
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--points of contention were the scope of Israel's pullout from the Gaza Strip and Jericho on the West Bank, and the fate of thousands of Palestinians held in Israeli jails.
Just how well could a Jayhawk talk if a Jayhawk used Jaytalk? 864-4358
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
LSAT
KU Pre-Law Society presents:
a free Informational SEMINAR
SEMINAR
It could give you a valuable edge on test day. And it all happens:
Kaplan's test experts reveal:
•The structure of the LSAT
•What skills the LSAT is really testing
•How to focus your studies on the right areas
•Tips and strategies for testing your best
November 18,7:00pm Kansas Union Jayhawk Room
PLUS the KapCast—a short test of your LSAT skills that gives you a taste of the LSAT question types, with a thorough computer analysis of your results.
KAPLAN The answer to the test question
THE NEWS in brief
AFRICA
JERUSALEM
Withdrawal deadline unlikely to be reached with Israel, PLO pact
A手overd of authority in occupied lands appears unlikely by the Dec. 13 deadline set down in the Israel-PLO peace accord, Israeli and Palestinian officials said yesterday.
The accord between Israel and the Palestinian Liberation Organization has been weakened by failing public support and mounting bloodshed.
A holdup in the Palestinian autonomy plan would delay the start of Israeli troop withdrawals from the territories, further damaging the accord.
Hezbollah and Palestinian radicals have vowed to try to destroy the peace plan.
WASHINGTON Court orders gay sailor reinstated
destroy the peace plan.
A Palestinian source at the talks in Cairo said the major Compiled from The Associated Press.
For a fifth time this year, a court has ordered a homosexual in the military restored to service. Six years after midshipman Joseph Steffan was forced to leave the U.S. Naval Academy, a court ordered him graduated and commissioned as a naval officer.
The decision Tuesday suggested that the final word on gays in the military may be spoken by the courts — very likely the Supreme Court.
Steffan, whose stellar performance at the Naval Academy won him an appointment as a battalion commander his senior year, was forced to resign in 1987 — six weeks before his scheduled graduation in the top 10 percent of his class.
THE NEW HARBOURLIGHTS Now a full service bar after 57 years of downtown tradition
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UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Wednesday, November 17, 1993
7
OUI UNDER EXAMINATION
Continued from Page 1.
DUI is the acronym for Driving Under the Influence of alcohol and/or drugs. ADUI and an OUl are the same offense and carry the same penalties. OUIs are processed through municipal court, and DUIs are processed through district court.
No driver is stopped solely for driving while intoxicated.
"I'm not going to stop you for just one thing," Augusto said. "The initial violation will be something like bouncing off curbs or weaving."
Once a driver has been stopped for a traffic violation and the officer suspects impairment due to alcohol, the driver is asked to step out of the vehicle and take a series of sobriety tests.
The first tests involve hand-eye coordination, counting exercises and balancing skills. Drivers are given specific instructions and asked if they understand what they are to do.
"The test we use is a standard test used by all state agencies," Augusto said.
"They try to spin around and lose it," he said. "I've even had guys moon walk."
Most people who are impaired lose their balance on the turns and pivots. Augusto said.
A driver who fails the physical tests is asked to take a PBT, or Preliminary Breath Test or breathilyzer test. A driver has the option of refusing to take the test. However, refusal could result in a ticket and most likely a trip to the Lawrence Police Station.
Drivers who agree to take the test breathe into a small tube, triggering a red, yellow or green light. Green indicates that the driver has not been drinking; yellow indicates that a person may have been drinking but is not over the legal limit, and red shows that the driver is over the legal limit.
Drivers over the legal limit are placed under arrest, handeuffed and taken to the Lawrence police station. KU police do not operate jail facilities.
10000
OUI facts
About two in every five Kansans will be involved in an alcohol-related crash at sometime in their lives.
Going to the lock-up
One of every two people killed in alcohol-related crashes is not the drunken driver.
1000
1000
100
In 1992, there were 23,406 OUI arrests in Kansas.
Nationwide, more than 20,000 people die every year in alcohol-related accidents.
In 1992, 3,100 people in Kansas were injured in alcohol-related accidents.
Source: Kansas Office of Transportation
Once inside the police station, drivers are frisked and taken to a room with the Intoxilyzer 5000. The machine issues another test. Results are sent to the State Department of Revenue, where records of driver licenses are kept.
Refusal to take this test results in an automatic one-year suspension of the driver's license. Drivers who agree to take the test and show a blood-alcohol content of .08 or higher lose their licenses for at least 30 days.
Although the machine is used frequently, the arresting officer has the option of issuing a blood or urine test.
"It takes longer to get the results back from blood or urine tests," Augusto said. "This (machine) is accurate and faster."
Lora Hegeman, corrections officer with the Lawrence police, processes much of the paperwork required after an arrest. While Hegeman fills out a form with information about the driver, Augusto observes the driver for about 20 minutes.
"I ask them to open their mouth, just to make sure they haven't put anything in it," Augusto said. Drivers who think chewing gum or eating breath mints will alter the results of the breath tests are mistaken.
Augusto recalled the time he stopped a drunk driver, and the man immediately drank a bottle of Obsession cologne.
"He thought if he drank it we wouldn't be able to tell if he was drunk," he said.
"It registers the alcohol already consumed, not what you just drank," said Sgt. Rose Rozmairek of the KU police.
Hegeman said that most arrestees were cooperative but that some became angry. "Law students are the worst," Hegeman said. "They usually have an attitude and start naming laws."
"Some of them accuse male officers of doing inappropriate things to them." Hegeman said.
Hegeman said women were sometimes belligerent.
To avoid accusations, female officers process females who have been arrested, and all arresting officers record events as they happen. Officers radio time and mileage to the police station so that their whereabouts are always known.
"You never know what you're getting when you stop someone," Augusto said. "I really have to know my stuff, or the case could go out the window."
Once the paperwork is complete, the driver has three options: post a bail or bond of $500 and leave with a sober driver, pay a bonding company $75 and leave or spend 18 hours in jail.
"A lot of people have friends come get them out, but a lot choose to spend the night in jail," Rozmairek said.
Jail prisoners are issued jail clothing and appear in court for arraignment the following morning. Offenders who post bond appear in court at a later date. Offenses charged within city limits are prosecuted through municipal court. Offenses charged on county
and state property outside the city limits are prosecuted through district court.
Trial and punishment
Municipal Court Judge George Catt presides over municipal arraignments. He has been on the bench for 21 years.
"When someone who has been charged appears in court, I read the charges to them," he said. "I explain that they need to get an evaluation from an alcohol treatment center and that they need an attorney since it is a jailable offense."
At the time of arraignment, defendants must enter a plea of not guilty. Pleading guilty would mean they would go directly to jail, eliminating their constitutional right of a trial. At the arraignment, a trial date is set.
"For first-time offenders, there is the option of diversion," Catt said. Diversion allows offenders to perform community-service work, and the arrest is expunged from their records, providing there is not a second offense within five years.
"Not everyone qualifies for it but those who do pay a fee and go through alcohol school," Catt said. "It's a contract between the city and defendant."
Defendants who do not enter into diversion agreements must appear at their trial date. They are encouraged to have an attorney present.
"Sometimes people waive their right to counsel," Catt said. Defendants have the option of pleading guilty or no contest before the trial. In those cases, the judge issues the sentence without proceeding with the actual trial. If the defendant chooses to plead not guilty, the court proceeds with the trial, Catt said. Sentencing is handed down at the conclusion of the trial.
A plea of no contest is technically guilty, Catt said.
"No contest works best in civil cases," Catt said, "especially if there's been an accident. It's a term used in lawsuits."
First time offenders who are found guilty of driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs are required to pay a fine from $200 to $500 and spend from two to 180 days in jail. In some cases, 100 hours of community-service work takes the place of jail time, Catt said.
Second and third time offenders face stiffer penalties, including increased fines and longer jail time.
House arrest is becoming a common practice because of overcrowded conditions in area jails. Bracelets worn by persons under house arrest transmit signals that allow law enforcement officials to monitor them in their own homes. Prisoners must respond to calls at random. The devices are paid for by the offenders.
Offenders also pay attorney's fees if they use legal representation. David Berkowitz, a Lawrence attorney, deals with these clients. He said a lawyer's fee ranged from $300 to $1000 a case.
"There are fees for court costs, fines, specials and lawyers," Berkowitz said. "District court is more expensive, but none of it's inexpensive."
"When students come here, we are willing to help them with DUIs," Hardesty said. "But we also tell them that they don't need an attorney if they're not going to contest it."
Jo Hardesty, director of KU Legal Services, said first-time student offenders could use KU Legal Services at no charge.
Berkowitz said the costs increased with each offense. "In the end, it costs anywhere from $650 to $1500," he said.
Students who need to challenge their arrests in court cannot use KU Legal Services. Hardesty said.
"When that happens, we refer them to a private attorney," she said.
Costs for private attorneys are not covered by KU Legal Services.
Defendants awaiting trial must get a clinical evaluation from an approved alcohol and drug treatment center. Following the evaluation, the center sends a report to the court on the driver's drinking habits.
Getting professional help
Pat Green is the director of CrossBridge, 708 W. Ninth St. She is a licensed alcoholism counselor and evaluates clients and conducts treatment programs.
"Overall, most students who come here don't need intensive treatment," she said. "They just don't think getting an OUI will happen to them. A lot of them are surprised when they end up here."
Clients fill out a three-part questionnaire about their drinking habits. Afterward, Green interviews clients to determine the correct method of treatment based on individual needs.
"First time offenders often don't have real drinking problems." Green said. "Rather, they just made a poor judgment. Someone in that situation is not 'at risk,' so they go through the least intensive treatment on an outpatient basis."
These clients attend alcoholawareness classes one night a week for four weeks. Green has guest speakers address classes on issues such as increased insurance rates and a police officer who tells of possible offenses related to
"The idea of diversion is to separate the people needing only education in the hope that they will never do it again," Green said. "It also helps identify the disease of alcoholism, not to punish those people who have it but to begin treatment which includes lifelong abstinence."
excessive alcohol consumption. The issue of diversion also is discussed.
There is also an intermediate area for people who are more than first time offenders but not alcoholics.
"It's the middle-gray area for people at high risk," Green said. "One factor that determines whether someone is at high risk is family background. If the person comes from a family of strong drinkers, then we add group sessions for them and also have individual sessions."
The evaluation at CrossBridge is paid for by court costs. The cost is $110, and CrossBridge receives $99 of the fee. CrossBridge receives no state or federal money, Green said. Cost for the lowest level of the alcohol and drug school is $90. Clients can get a second opinion from another clinic but must pay full costs for both evaluations.
"The courts tend to trust the evaluator," Green said. "We do our best to work with the client, not against them."
Green said one of her main functions was education. "I want people to learn about alcohol, its functions and its effect on them," she said.
"The best advice I can give is if you've had anything to drink, even one drink, don't drive."
Paying a penalty with insurance
Insurance agent Gayland Lilienkamp writes policies for autos. He said that the overall rates for insurance were higher for males under the age of 25 and that the rates for everyone increased when they received an OUI.
"Generally, if a first-time offender gets a diversion, then no points are held against them," Lilienkamp said.
Insurance companies use a point system to determine the rates customers pay. Rates vary for individual customers.
"Their rates will still increase because their record will show that their license has been suspended." Lilienkamp said.
Lilienkamp said first time offenders who do not go through diversion received a six-point increase on their policy.
Second and third time offenders' rates increase 250 percent, Lilienkamp said.
"That equals a 200 percent increase in their rates," he said. "For example, if someone is paying $770 as a yearly rate and then gets an OUI, the rate becomes $1540 if that person does not get a diversion."
"Generally speaking, anyone who gets an OUI will be canceled from their current policy," Lilienkamp said. "If they are insured through a mutual company then that policy is canceled, and a new one is written up, possibly through the same insurance company but not on the mutual plan."
Thinking about the risk
"When I'm on patrol my goal is not to arrest anybody," Augusto said. "My job is to help make the streets as safe as possible. If a driver is impaired for any reason, even something non-substance related, such as fatigue, then I want them off the road, and I'll do my best to get them where they need to be."
Augusto said that arrest was not his first choice but that when a driver had exercised poor judgment by getting behind the wheel, then other factors came into play.
"They are endangering their own lives as well as the lives of innocent people," he said. "The best advice I can give about drinking and driving is just don't do it. It's not worth it."
Night in jail is wake-up call for man who drove drunk
Editor's Note: The sources' names in the following story have been changed because of the sensitive nature of the topic.
it started out as a date party and ended with a night in jail.
For John Skarducci, the party ended abruptly.
"When we left the bar I was so intoxicated I didn't even think about the driving," Skarducci said. "I'd been drinking and driving for two-and-a-half years. Never realized the consequences."
Skarducci was arrested and taken to jail, where he spent the rest of the night.
"A couple of friends tried to get me out, but by then it was so late I just decided to stay." he said.
"It wasn't until I woke up in jail the next morning that reality hit."
reality included a call to his family, a drain on his savings account and a change in his attitude.
"My mom was very disappointed," Skarducci "More than anything, they were mad at me for the
Skarduct and his parents came to a mutual agreement that he would lose his car for six months.
danger I put myself and the other people in the car in."
"I can't drive it anyway because I don't have a license," Skarducci said. He has paid for the costs involved with money from his own account, Skarducci said.
Since the arrest Skarducci has been through a program at Cross-Bridge and has attended a meeting of Alcoholics Anonymous. He also has applied for diversion, a legal option offering the offender community service instead of regular sentences. If offenders successfully complete the diversion program and commit no other offenses during the next five years, the OUI is expunged from their record.
"Going to AA made me look at my drinking habits and what I'm doing." Skarducci said. "I asked myself, 'Am I heading in the wrong direction or just doing normal college stuff'?"
Skarduco does not think his drinking is out of control and has changed
his outlook on drinking and driving.
"I think I'm more cautious now," he said. "If I go out with my friends I make sure I have a safe ride home. My friends try to watch out for me because they know I can't get in any trouble whatsoever."
Skarducci's roommate, Denny Randoni, said he had noticed the difference in Skarducci since the arrest.
"I don't think he gets as crazy when he goes out," Randoni said. "He wants to be with someone he knows isn't drinking. I think the DUI really slapped him in the face."
Despite observing Skarducci's mistake, Randoni said that he continued to drink and drive.
"I don't know why I do it," he said. Meanwhile, Skarducci is awaiting a verdict on his diversion.
"I might still be the same if this hadn't happened," he said. "If I hadn't gotten caught now, it might have gotten worse. Something bigger might have happened that would have ruined my life. Now I know I'll never do it again."
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--for the United Nations by American University professor Tom Farer found Aidid responsible for the Pakistani deaths. Following that investigation, the United Nations issued a warrant for Aidid's arrest and offered a $25,000 reward for his capture, and the Clinton administration sent 400 Rangers to Somalia to hunt for Aidid.
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U.N. Security Council votes to give up manhunt for Aidid
During November, the 5 most active Jaytalk mailboxes will be awarded 2 dinner passes to a Lawrence area restaurant.
The Associated Press
They sent the U.S. Army's elite Rangers to arrest him. They put a $25,000 price on his head. Now the United Nations is officially giving up the manhunt for Somali warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid.
The Clinton administration, stung by public anger over the deaths of U.S. soldiers in what was supposed to be a humanitarian relief mission, sees the move as part of the preparation for a complete U.S. troop withdrawal from Somalia by March 31.
The Security Council voted unanimously last night to call off the search and launch a new inquiry into attacks on U.N. peacekeepers in Somalia.
Aidid has been blamed for many of those attacks, but the Security Council is backing off its condemnation of him in hopes of including him in efforts to find a political solution for Somalia. Many observers believe that any settlement ultimately include Aidid.
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Washington hopes to ease tensions in Somalia so civil war, chaos and starvation don't return when the American troops leave.
The Security Council resolution also said the United Nations should "make appropriate provision" for people in detention — an oblique suggestion that Aidid's detained aides may be released.
The United Nations is holding 35 Somalis, including three of Aidid's top aides. Eight other detainees were released yesterday.
The United Nations has already moved away from hunting down Aidid in the past month.
The vote last night canceled a June 6 Security Council resolution that indirectly blamed Aidid for the killings of 24 Pakistani peacekeepers and said the perpetrators of the attack should be arrested and tried.
The new resolution asks Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali to "suspend arrest actions" in Somalia and begin a new investigation into that and other attacks.
An investigation conducted earlier
U. S. special envoy Robert Oakley arrived in Somalia late yesterday to continue pushing for political reconciliation. A State Department official said there are no plans for a meeting with Aidid but that Oakley will confer with Aidid's aides.
Aidid, a powerful force mainly in south Mogadishu and parts of central Somalia, has so far stayed away from efforts to set up local councils that would lead to a transitional government. Instead, he set up his own committees in some parts of the country.
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1
KU students are going High Tech
Affordable laptops, pagers, cellular phones help students make the grade
KU
L of L
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN Mark Epstein, Leawood third year law student, uses his hand-held cellular phone to call clients, friends and family. "The best thing is that there is no long-distance charge." Epstein said.
BENNETT COOPER
Jerry Wohletz, Kansas City, Kan. senior, uses his lap-top computer to discover the solution of a non-linear vibration. Wohletz got the computer so he could work on his aerospace projects.
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
Going to class made simple: grab a pen, a notebook and make an attempt to get there on time. Maybe throw on a hat.
But for some students, doing that just isn't good enough anymore.
They grab their cellular phones, pack away laptop computers, wear pagers and send electronic mail to their professors. They are not necessarily high-tech heads
— they just want to make their life and schoolwork easier.
High-tech help is great, they say. But one of the most important reasons they have electronic gizmos with all the bells and whistles is that high-tech is no longer high priced.
Markdowns on portable computers, for example, have convinced some students they need them for class, say retail computer store managers.
Jerry Wohletz, Kansas City, Kan., senior, takes his laptop to campus every day.
He uses it to type in notes and homework, he said. By toting his own computer to campus, he said he avoided long lines in the computer labs.
Wohletz said most professors did not mind laptops in class as long as the units were not overly distracting.
"It beats taking notes, running home and typing them in on a desktop computer," Wohletz said. "This way I can do everything on campus and get more done."
Some professors even think laptops would benefit students in their class.
"I wouldn't want to punish the students who don't have one, but it would be to everyone's benefit if they had a laptop by their junior year," said James Locke, assistant professor of aerospace engineering. "If everybody had to depend on one, I could teach the glass differently."
At the Burge Union Technology Center.
laptops sold to students make up about 20 percent of all computer sales. That number has increased in the past year, said Jim Dunin, one of the managers.
"What do they tell me they're going to do with them? Most often they'll say, 'I'm going to take it to the library,'" Duniven said. "They like to work on papers right there. You don't need to check out anything — the only thing you drag back home is the computer."
The laptops are compatible with normal desktop computers, but most do not have as clear a screen as normal desktop monitors, he said.
Dunliven said the usual battery charge for a laptop lasted three to four hours. If the laptop has a color screen, the charge lasts only 90 minutes.
He said most students knew the basics about computers and how to operate them.
"The 10 percent that don't know much or anything about them come in here and at least know what they want to use them
for." he said.
The laptop computer is not the only technology that makes students lives' a little easier.
Pat Warren, Overland Park graduate student, said a cellular phone helped him when he was in a hurry.
"It's polite to call ahead to meetings and tell the people you might be late," Warren said. "It's hands because my
More students are traveling around campus and town with cellular phones.
life runs about five minutes behind."
The professor did not mind,but Warren said that may have been the last time he had the phone on campus.
He said one of the few times he carried his phone to campus, it rang during a meeting with a professor.
Warren said he bought the cellular phone to save money on his phone bill. He said he easily had cut his phone bill by more than $30 each month by going cellular because cellular calls to Kansas City, Mo., are not considered long distance.
Mark Epstein, Leawood graduate student, said saving money was also one of the reasons he bought a cellular phone.
His phone had come in handy more than a few times, he said.
Once he used the cellular phone to help police track the driver of a large pickup truck that "literally drove all over" his small sports car.
"The driver was fleeing the scene of a crime and basically ran over the front of my car while trying to get away," he said.
Epstein also owns a remote pager. He said he liked having a pager because it made him aware of phone calls he otherwise might have missed.
Dan Murrow, Kansas City, Kan, freshman, said he liked having a pager because it allowed for more privacy. He said he gave his pager number to women instead of his normal telephone number.
"The truck went across a concrete median and into some oncoming traffic and then got away," he said. "That was the end of my pursuit."
Although police knew who the driver was, they never caught him, Epstein said.
Epstein said he called the police on his phone and followed the truck for about five minutes, keeping police informed on where the truck was going.
Also, more students are using electronic mail now to communicate with each other.
"That way, if you don't want to talk to them, you don't have to," he said.
And although students may not be handing out their E-mail addresses at parties or bars, they may find it helpful to get their professors' E-mail addresses.
Some KU professors recommend or even require that students turn in assignments by way of E-mail.
Jim Miller, professor of computer science, said he wanted students to get used to the process of sending mail electronically.
"So many times it's easier than trying to catch a person at home or in the office," he said.
E-mail correspondence between students and faculty is increasing, Miller said.
Miller thinks that technology has become an important part of many students lives.
"It's catching on," he said.
QUIPS AND QUOTES
Rush Limbaugh raises cash for liberal causes
SANTA CRUZ, Calif. — Mayor Neal Coonerty thinks Rush Limbaugh's "See, I Told You So" is worth its weight in baloney — about $8.40. So he’s donating part of the proceeds from the copies he sells at his bookstore to the liberal causes Limbaugh hates.
Coonerty, who owns Bookshop Santa Cruz, said he is fed up with the conservative radio commentator's attacks on Santa Cruz as a left-leaining city.
So he's selling the book for the regular price of $23 but donating the difference between that price and the $8.40 "value" to the National Organization for Women and the Santa Cruz AIDS Project. The book weighs 1.4 pounds.
In the past, Limbaugh has described Santa Cruz, home to a campus of the University of California, as a "true haven for fuzzy-thinking, ultra-left-wing liberals and arrogant politicians with absolutely no business sense."
"We wanted to turn him into a liberal fund-raiser," said Coonerty, who will lose $5.60 per book.
Paulina, Ric and baby make three
Jonathan Raven Ocasek, the couple's first child, was born Nov. 4 and weighed 8 pounds, 3 ounces, publicist Jeff Albright said.
NEW YORK — Model-actress Paulina Porikzova and Ric Ocase, former lead singer for The Cars, have an addition to their family — a son.
A representative for Limbaugh declined to comment Monday.
The Czechoslovakia-born Porikzova was the face that hawked Etea Leander cosmetics until recently when her contract expired. Ocasek, who now sings solo, has a new album titled, "Quick Change World."
Porikzova, 28, and Ocasek, 44, met in 1984 when she starred in the band's "Drive" music video. They have been married since 1989.
Buttafuoco ailed
MINEOLA, N.Y. — Joey Buttafuoco is in jail for having sex with Amy Fisher when she was 16 — a crime he
blames on lust.
The 37-year-old auto body mechanic was sentenced to the maximum, six months in prison, for statutory rape.
"We have to determine whether he's going to be a hero or whether the other inmates are going to be hostile to him," sheriff's lt. Robert Anderson said.
He was put in an 8-by-6-foot cell by himself while officials decide whether he can safely mix with the 1,700 other inmates at the Nassau County Jail.
Judge Jack Mackston handed down the sentence Monday after Fisher came before him and portrayed herself as a young innocent in braces who was swept away by a man with money and flash. A smirking Buttafuoco, dressed in a maroon suit and lizard skin booties, was led away in handcuffs.
In an interview with the TV program "A Current Affair" scheduled for broadcast last night, Buttafuoco described a casual affair driven by "strictly lustful sex. ... Sometimes lust takes me over. It's very painful."
Jackson strain-search?
LOS ANGELES—Police have a warrant to strip-search Michael Jackson to corroborate a 13-year-old boy's allegations he was molested, a source says.
Jackson's lawyers, meanwhile, said the pop superstar was not trying to duck the criminal investigation when he checked into a drug rehabilitation center overseas.
"If Michael Jackson wanted an excuse to stay out of the United States, all he had to do is stay on his tour," lawyer Bertram Fields said. "This is his home. He's coming back. He doesn't intend to desert the United States."
A source speaking on condition of anonymity said Los Angeles police had obtained a warrant to check the boy's description of spots on Jackson's genitals. In February, the singer revealed he had a skin condition known as vitiligo, which can produce white patches.
Compiled from the Associated Press
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NOVEMBER 17,1993 PAGE 9
NOVEMBER 17, 1993 PAGE 9
KULife
People and places at the University of Kansas.
calendar
Constance Jeanne Ehrlich, MFA thesis, and James Angus Holbrook, MFA thesis, will have their paintings on display through Nov. 23 in the gallery of the Art and Design building. Free.
Traveling Exhibit: Sacred Ground/Sacred Sky will be on display through Nov. 23 in the gallery on level four of the Kansas Union. Free.
Tour du Jour—"Always There: The African-American Presence in American Quilts" by Nedra Bonds. Kansas Arts Commissioner, quilt artist and historian 12:15 p.m.-12:45 p.m. Thursday at the Kress Gallery in the Spencer Museum of Art. Free.
Lecture—Marie Wilson, artist from Brooklyn, N.Y., will talk about her work in the exhibition "Always There: The African-American Presence in American Quilts 7 p.m. Sunday in the auditorium of Spencer Museum of Art. Free.
Film—"The Learning Tree"(PG), artist Gordon Parks directs a film about his childhood as an African-American boy in Fort Scott, Kan., 2 p.m. Sunday in the auditorium of the Spencer Museum of Art. Free.
Coffee House: comedy, musicians and poetry reading 8 p.m. Thursday at Hawk's Nest Atrium—sign up to perform at SUA box office by 5 p.m. Wed. Free
Hallmark Symposlum—Dan Auman from Line Advertising, Kansas City, Mo., and KU alumnus 6 p.m. Monday at the auditorium in Spencer Museum of Art. Free.
Pretty Ugly Dance Company & Amanda Miller 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Lied Center, public $14 and $16; KU, Haskell and K-12 students $7 and $8; senior citizens and other students $13 and $15.
Visiting Theatre Production: "Silence!" The Court is In Session" written by Vijay Tendulkar, with the State University of New York at Stony Brook 2:30 p.m. Saturday, Sunday at Swarthout Recital Hall, public $6; KU students $3; other students and senior citizens $5.
University Theatre Series: "The Boys Next Door" by Tom Griffin 8 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday at Crafton-Preyer Theatre, public $8; KU students $4; other students and senior citizens $7.
Fall Concert: KU Collegium Musicum "A Fantasy of 14th Century Music" directed by Daniel Politoske and Marian Wilson, 2 p.m. Sunday at the First United Methodist Church, 946 Vermont. Free.
Student Recital: University Camerata 7:30 p.m. Sunday at Swarthout Recital Hall. Free.
Fall Concert Wind Ensemble conducted by Robert Foster and James Barnes 7:30 p.m. Monday at the Lied Center, public $6; students $3; senior citizens $5.
/
1
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Wednesday, November 17, 1993
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People who operate child care centers in residential homes also should live in those homes, the City Commission said last night.
By Traci Carl Kansan staff writer
City ordinance puts restraints on child day-care operators
A controversy about child care centers operating in residential neighborhoods began recently when neighbors complained that Jorge and Rosemary Valverde were operating businesses on West 23rd Street Terrace, while not living in homes where they operated child care centers.
The Valverdes operate four day care homes, three of which are on West 23rd Street Terrace.
Although they own the homes, they do not live in them. They rent the houses out and run child care centers in them during the day.
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Mick Braa, a resident of West 23rd Street Terrace, said he did not think a compromise would be found by Feb. 1.
Peggy Scally, child care licensing coordinator for the Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department, said requiring the primary provider of child care homes to also live in the home or obtain special permission from the planning and city commissions would slow the growth of licensed day cares.
The commission last night passed an ordinance requiring day care operators to live in the home where services are provided unless the Lawrence/Douglas County Planning Commission and the City Commission give them special permission.
Commissioner Bob Schulte said he understood the need for day care, but he had to protect the rights of property owners.
"Parents tell us they do not have enough choices," she said.
"Closing all three day cares homes is not a compromise," he said.
The Valverdes and the neighbors have to come up with a compromise by Feb.1.
"People who live in a residential neighborhood have the right to be surrounded by residences," he said.
Wint Winter, an attorney representing the Valverdes, said he did not know what a compromise would look like.
She estimated that would affect about 100 children.
"The only compromise is downsizing to one house," he said.
If a compromise is not found and the Valverdes are not allowed to continue operating without commission approval, other child care homes similar to the Valverdes' would have to apply for approval from the commissions.
Scally said she did not know exactly how many child care homes would be affected, but she knew that there were at least five and possibly as many as 10.
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1. Call or come by the Kansan at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 17, 1993
11
Kansas outpaces Marathon AAU
Exhibition game serves purpose
It wasn't pretty, but it served its purpose.
By Mark Button Kansan sportswriter
After only 15 practices, the Kansas men's basketball team played its first exhibition game last night and defeated Marathon AAT 103-94 in front of a crowd of 14.500 at Allen Field House.
Kansas coach Roy Williams had said earlier in the week that he hoped the game would help the team get used to playing in front of a crowd. let the players react against an opponent and get out some of nervousness that accompanies a new season.
The Jayhawks accomplished all three, but with not much grace nor precision.
"We've looked pretty good defensively at times." Williams said. "Tonight was not one of those times, to save the least."
Offensively, Kansas was led by sophomore forward Sean Pearson, who scored a career-high 29 points on 11 of 18 shooting. His previous career high was 19 points against Missouri-Kansas City in last year's Golden Harvest Classic.
Pearson started in place of senior forward Richard Scott, who sprained an ankle in practice Monday. Pearson, LaGrange, III., is usually regarded as a three-point threat, but he scored 23 of his points last night inside the arch. Also, Pearson reported to school this year 12 pounds lighter than last year.
William Alix / KANSAN
"When I was heavier, I didn't feel comfortable," Pearson said. "I feel smoother. I think tonight will improve my confidence."
Overall, though, the game was sloppy.
"I wasn't pleased that we allowed them to do anything they wanted to do." Williams said. "I guess that
Williams said he wasn't happy with the team's performance, and the limited practice time showed.
WO 2
Marathon shot just 45 percent to Kansas' 49 percent, neither of which is great, and the Jayhawks out rebounded their foes 45-41.
means we've only been practicing 15 days."
Marathon guard LaKeith Humphrey, who played for Kansas State during the 1988-89 season. scored 36 points, including eight three-point haskets.
In particular, Williams was upset with the 'Hawks defensive play.
Williams said the team needed to improve—and in a hurry.
"Tomorrow night we we're playing a team that has had more time probably than Marathon has." Williams said of today's game against Western Michigan. The Broncos are the Jayhawks' opponents in the first-round of the National Invitational Tournament. If Kansas wins, it plays the winner of the California-Santa Clara game on Friday.
The Marathon team that Kansas faced had met each other only Sunday night at an airport. They had one practice together before last night's game.
"I think we could have executed better," Richey said. "We got out there in front of 15,000, and some of the people let the crowd interfere with what they were doing, including myself. I didn't execute as well as I could have."
"We've got to be better on the defensive side of the floor tomorrow night or all these people who are talking about Friday can forget about it." Williams said last night.
Senior forward Patrick Richey scored 18 points and led the team in rebounds with 10.
Freshman point guard Jacque Vaughn got the nod at the starting spot and scored nine points and dished out nine assists. But he turned the ball over four times in 23 minutes. Junior point guard Calvin Rayford scored two points, had four assists and no turnovers while playing 17 minutes.
Kansas junior center Greg Ostertag fouls Marathon AAU center Tom Elliott while Kansas guard Steve Woodbury attempts to block the shot. Ostertag scored six points and fouled out with 2:09 left in the game. The Jayhawks won 103-94 at Allen Field House last night.
Williams said if Kansas hoped to defeat Western Michigan, the team would have to play better defense.
"Anyone who knows anything about basketball and watched us on the defensive end tonight knows we didn't play very well," he said.
Williams to push freshmen in first NIT game
Kansan sportswriter
Finally
By Mark Button
The official 1993-94 basketball season starts today, and the Kansas men's team opens playing host to a veteran Western Michigan team.
After only 15 practices and one exhibition game, last night's 103-94 victory against Marathon AAU, the youthful Jayhawks begin their season with the Preseason National Inviational Tournament.
The field for this year's tournament is stacked with top 20 teams. Heading the list is No. 1-ranked North Carolina. Other ranked teams include No. 6 California, which possibly could face Kansas in the sec-
and round at Allen Field House Friday night, No. 10 Minnesota, No. 19 Cincinnati and No. 22 Massachusetts.
Kansas, which was ranked No. 9 in the Associated Press' preseason poll, received one first place vote. The only other schools to receive first place votes were North Carolina and No. 2-ranked Kentucky — and the Wildcats received only three.
"My mother passed away...she would have voted for us, but I don't know who else would have voted for us," said Kansas coach Roy Williams. "She still thinks I taught Dean Smith everything."
The Western Michigan Broncos
return four starters of last year's
team that finished 17-12, which was good for a third place finish in the Mid-American Conference.
The Bronco leader on the floor is senior guard Leon McGee. McGee averaged 14.3 points and 3.6 rebounds a game last season.
The Bronco leader on the sideline is fifth-year coach Bob Donewald, a disciple of Indiana's Bobby Knight. Donewald was an assistant coach under Knight from 1974-78. During his tenure to the Hoosiers, the team posted a 121-27 record, winning three Big Ten Conference titles, and won the 1976 NCAA national championship with an undefeated record.
"Bob's teams always play well on the defensive end of the floor."
Williams said. "They play motion game on the offensive, so it will be a challenge for our kids to try to find the guy they're guarding."
Williams said playing in the NIT would challenge the freshmen to learn the system in a hurry.
"We had a decision to make, to go at a slower pace so the freshmen could keep up or just try to push the freshmen to get up to the level of the other guys," Williams said. "I chose to push the freshmen."
Another aspect of participating in the NIT is that if the 'Hawks fare well in the first two games, they will be rewarded with a trip to New York and two more games. The teams that lose first or second round are eliminated; those that make it to New
York are guaranteed two more games.
"Our players love the fact that we're in it because that's two less weeks of practice before we start playing games," Williams said of the NIT. "But if we don't go out and play well Wednesday night, it doesn't make any difference. But we like playing in the preseason NIT because if you play well, you have the opportunity of getting four extra games that other people don't have."
Junior center Greg Ostertag said last night's exhibition game helped the team prepare for the NIT.
"As far as the NIT, I think the exhibition game will help us work out some cobwebs," he said.
Missouri receiver switches to QB job
By Matt Doyle Kansan sportswriter
Missouri junior wide receiver Brian Sallee may be on his way to reaching a mark that has only been accomplished once before in Big Eight history.
Sallee is near the 40 reception mark that would link him, with senior wide receiver Kenny Holly and junior tight end A.J. Ofodile as only the second group of three receivers from the same school in Big Eight history to each have more than 40 receptions in the same season. Holly has 51 receptions, Ofodile has 50 receptions and Sallee has 33.
The 1992 Tigers were the only team in conference history that had three players with 40 or more receptions.
However, it will be difficult now for Sallee to attain the seven receptions he needs. For Sallee will be the starting quarterback against Kansas in the 1 p.m. contest Saturday at Memorial Stadium.
Sallee replaced injured junior starter Jeff Handy during the second quarter of last Saturday's 31-21 defeat at Kansas State. Handy suffered torn ligaments in his right foot and underwent surgery Sunday.
Missouri coach Bob Stull said he did not have any choice but to use Sallee as quarterback when Handy went down. Freshmen reserves Brandon Corso and Mitch Alvarado are full-time quarterbacks. But Corso is still recovering from a shoulder injury suffered earlier this season, and Stull said he would rather redshirt Alvarado this season than play him against Kansas State and Kansas.
Stull said the Tigers would not change their offensive scheme to accommodate Sallee.
"We can't change a whole lot for Brian in just two practices," Stull said. "We need for Brian to get his timing down for the stuff we do offensively."
Quarterback is not an unfamiliar position for Sallee. He was recruited to Missouri as a quarterback, but was switched to wide receiver during his redshirt freshman season in 1991.
Sallee had seen limited action at quarterback in his three seasons before the K-State game by completing 17 of 26 passes for 251 yards. In three quarters against K-State, Sallee completed 16 of 28 passes for 191 yards with three touchdowns and two interceptions.
Stull said that the increased repetitions in practice this week would help Sallee in his preparations for the Jayhawks.
"Brian has a good grasp of the offense, but his timing is not on since he has not worked with those guys like Jeff," Stull said, comparing the two quarterbacks. "He's probably only had a third of the repetitions in practice at quarterback."
Kansas coach Glen Mason said the Jayhawks would not prepare a different defense to face Sallee.
"I'm not sure if they will have a new look on offense, but we'll prepare for what we've seen." Mason said.
Women's top 25 teams
The preseason top twenty five women's basketball teams as compiled by Mel Greenberg of the Philadelphia Inquirer. The Poll was based on the votes of 71 coaches, with first-place votes in parentheses, 1992-93 record, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and last year's final ranking.
| | Record | Points | Last Year |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1. Tennessee (34) | 29-3 | 1,728 | — |
| 2. Vanderbilt (34) | 30-3 | 1,715 | 1 |
| 3. Iowa (2) | 27-4 | 1,834 | 4 |
| 4. Louisiana Tech (1) | 26-6 | 1,452 | 14 |
| 5. Auburn | 26-4 | 1,401 | 7 |
| 6. Stanford | 26-6 | 1,379 | 6 |
| 7. Penn State | 22-6 | 1,170 | 8 |
| 8. Ohio State | 28-4 | 1,151 | 3 |
| 9. North Carolina | 23-7 | 1,040 | 17 |
| 10. Virginia | 26-6 | 1,029 | 9 |
| 11. Southern Cal | 22-7 | 913 | 15 |
| **12. Colorado** | **27-4** | **793** | **10** |
| **13. Western Kentucky** | 24-7 | 782 | 13 |
| **14. Texas Tech** | 31-3 | 743 | 5 |
| **15. Stephen F. Austin** | 28-5 | 707 | 12 |
| **16. Kansas** | **21-9** | **631** | **24** |
| 17. Georgia | 21-13 | 593 | 21 |
| 18. Connecticut | 18-11 | 505 | — |
| 19. Alabama | 22-9 | 499 | — |
| 20. SW Missouri St. | 23-9 | 463 | — |
| 21. George Washington | 20-11 | 449 | — |
| 22. Mississippi | 19-10 | 355 | — |
| 23. Maryland | 22-8 | 267 | 11 |
| **24. Oklahoma State** | **23-9** | **244** | **25** |
| 25. Purdue | 16-11 | 220 | — |
Others receiving votes: Northwestern 180, Texas 158, Washington 144, Clermont 93, Wailou 84, UCLA 49, Brigham Young 40, DePaul 17, Mississippi 43, Nebraska 40, San Diego St. 35, Northern Illinois 31, Providence 31, Creighton 21, UNLV 23, Miami 22, Boise State 12, Bowling Green 21, Rogers 12, Seton Hall 19, Florida International 18, Montana 18, Vermont 17, Old Dominion 16, Tolio 16, Arizona 13, Georgetown 12, Tennessee Tech 12, Long Beach State 11.
Tennessee tops preseason poll
Source: The Associated Press
The Associated Press
Tennessee, an NCAA semifinalist last season, edged Vanderbilt yesterday to land the No.1 spot in the Associated Press preseason women's basket.
The Volunteers received 34 first-place votes from a nationwide panel of 71 coaches. The Commodores also received 34 first-place votes, by points.
Press preseason women's basketball poll.
"It surprises me a bit because I don't think we're the best team in the country right now, although that's our goal," Tennessee coach Pat Summitt said. "Also, because Vanderbilt has been No. 1 in many of the preseason magazines."
WOMEN'S
BASKETBALL
Both teams start play in Jackson, Tenn., this weekend when Vanderbilt meets defending NCAA champion Texas Tech Saturday, and Tennessee plays Ohio State, last season's national runner-up, Sunday. Jackson is the site of the future Women's Basketball Hall of Fame.
also received 34 first-place votes, but fell short with 1,715 points.
The regular season begins Thanksgiving weekend, followed by the first weekly vote of 1983-94.
Iowa followed the Southeastern Conference rivals in the preseason balloting. The Hawkeyes were third with two first-place votes and 1,483 points. The Hawkeyes lost to Big Ten rival Ohio State in the NCAA semifinals last season.
Louisiana Tech, which advanced to the final eight in the NCAA tournament last season, was fourth with the remaining first-place vote and I.452 points.
The SEC, considered the strongest conference in women's basketball, placed three teams in the first five and six in the Top 25.
The Big Ten was represented by four teams, including three in the first 10, while the Atlantic Coast Conference placed three teams in the poll.
Jayhawks need last victory from Wildcat volleyball team
Team hopes to end conference play on a positive note
By Gerry Fey
The Wildcats are 7-23 overall and 0-10 in the Big Eight. They are looking for their first conference victory and will be playing on their home court. Those kind of things can get a team fired up.
Kansas State will have no problem getting pumped up for tonight's volleyball match against Kansas at 7:30 at Manhattan, but the Jayhawks may not be quite so excited.
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas coach Frankie Albizt said it might be hard for her team to look forward to this match. If Iowa State defeats K-State on Saturday, the Jayhaws will be eliminated from the Big Eight tournament, Nov. 26-27 in Omaha, Neb. Kansas enters its last regular season match 15-12 overall and 4-7 in the conference.
Albizta said it was important for the team to defeat K-State. Although
Kansas sophomore middle blocker/rightside player Jenny Larson said the team was emotionally down after last week. The team found out Iowa State, 3-6, would go to the Big Eight tournament if the Jayhawks were tied with the Cyclones in the conference standings.
"That could be difficult to do." Albitz said about defeating the Wildcats. "They have nothing to lose, and that can be hard to deal with sometimes. We need to keep on going. We still have the NIVC tournament coming up."
"I think we are a better team than Iowa State," Larson said. "It makes me mad to know that they're going and not us. I wish we could have that match back."
That match was a 3-0 defeat at Iowa State on Oct. 9. Because Iowa State won one game in its Oct. 30 defeat against Kansas at Allen Field House, Iowa State at the upper
the conference tournament may be out of reach, Kansas still has an invitation as the host team at the National Invitational Volleyball Championship tournament Dec. 3-5 in Kansas City, Mo.
Kansas senior outside hitter/setter Shelly Lard said she wanted to end the regular season with a victory tonight after losing three straight against Colorado, Nebraska and Oklahoma.
"We have to realize it could be tough to get excited for this match," Lard said. "Ending our Big Eight season on a good note is important, since it probably will end with this match and not at the Big Eights."
Despite this letdown, Kansas will try to focus on its match against K-State.
"None of us want to lose to Kansas State," Larson said. "Our pride has something to do with it. They haven't won a conference match yet, and we don't want to be their first."
hand in case of a tie.
Lard said the NIVC tournament was not as satisfying as going to the Big Eight tournament.
"The season wasn't totally successful," she said. "It would have been nice to play in the Big Eight tournament. The NIVC is good, but it's not like we qualified for it."
1
12
Wednesday, November 17, 1993
SPORTS NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sand volleyball courts to be built at Robinson
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas' recreation services is expanding its facilities to include four new sand volleyball courts for use this spring. Recreation services already supervise the use of 15 tennis courts, 15 racquetball courts, six basketball courts and 14 assorted playing fields around campus.
Allan Heinze, director of physical education and recreation services, said that adding the new volleyball courts had been a goal of the department for about a year. He said that it decided to delay the $8,500 construction on the new courts until now because of construction on a storm sewer pipe that runs directly under the new courts. The sewer pipe was finished Oct.1 allowing construction of the courts to begin.
"We wanted that pipe to go in first because the construction would tear up the old court anyway." Heinze said.
He said that the accessibility to the new storm sewer would also allow better drainage of the courts.
"We were able to hook up drainage from the courts straight into the sewer pipe," Heinze said.
He said that the department had received many requests from students over the years to expand and replace the lone sand court that was south of Robinson Center.
"That old court wasn't very good," Susan Ghate, president of the women's volleyball club, said.
She said that the team might try to schedule a tournament for the new courts this spring.
Dan Kopek, president of the men's volleyball
club, said that the new courts would be nice for individuals, but that he did not think the club would benefit as much from the courts.
"Most of our competitions are indoors," Kopek said. "Most of the guys who play outdoors do it as individuals rather than as a club."
Currently most volleyball games are played on one of the basketball courts in Robinson gymnasium.
Heinze said that construction crews would finish the new courts within the next two weeks. The courts were originally planned to be finished by last week but cold and wet weather hampered the construction crews.
He said that although construction of the new courts would be completed this semester the nets would not be put up until the spring semester.
Heinze said that individual students could play on the courts without scheduling a time with recreation services. Those wanting to schedule tournaments would need to schedule them in advance.
Scheduling those tournaments will become the responsibility of Gordon Kratz, associate director of recreation services.
Kratz said that he thought the new courts would create a larger demand than in the past.
"In the past most requests for volleyball tournaments were automatically turned down," Kratz said.
Heinze said that the courts would not only provide more space but also better courts to play on.
"With the new sand and drainage these courts should be good ones," Heinze said.
Thomas fractures hand on Laimbeer
The Associated Press
AUBURN HILLS, Mich.—Isiah Thomas, incensed at taking yet another ether in practice from Bill Laimbeer, broke his right hand Tuesday when he punched the Detroit Pistons center in the head.
Thomas will be sidelined three to eight weeks, with a break in the third metacarpal bone of his shooting hand.
During preseason practice, Thomas broke a rib when he was elbowed by Laimbeer on Oct. 30. Watitnesses said yesterday that Thomas became angered after absorbing another elbow from Laimbeer. He threw a punch that struck Laimbeer in the head.
Laimbeer's reputation for wayward elbows and well-placed forearms is unparalleled across the league. A number of players have scuffed with Laimber. That a player would take a punch at Laimbeer was not surprising. What was surprising was that it was a teammate.
Coach Don Chaney, presiding over a club where fights during practice are becoming standard fare, said fatigue from a recent road trip and frustration from a four-game losing streak probably contributed to the incident.
"When you have those things combined then you have a problem," Chaney told WWJ-AM. "That's what happened out here on the floor. If you're going to play aggressive, tempers will flare. You can't play soft at practice."
Thomas had been averaging 15.5 points and 10.3 assists a game this season. However, his shooting has been off, with a rate of iust .357.
The fight marks the second time in a month there has been a scuffle during a Pistons practice. On Nov. 4, Alvin Robertson fought with player personnel director Billy McKinney. Robertson became upset when McKinney told him he would be suspended for three games for missing practices and treatment for his injured back.
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Cowboy, gay, black or other Cowboy Group; HEQR
headquarters or KUF info more info.
RAISE UP TO $1,000 in JUST ONE WEEK! For your fraternity, security, & club. Plus $1,000 for yourself! And A free T-SHIRT just for calling 1-800-932-0528, ext. 75.
Systemic Mutation Achieved: Macro-change of cellular features. The mechanism of animals, suggests animals sharing physical attributes of Biblical Adam, Moses, Moshe and comfort at all temperatures; the diversity described in *Anatomy*.
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
NORTH PADRE/MUSTANG ISLAND
F•L-O•R•I-D•A
DAYTONA BEACH
PANAMA CITY BEACH
ORLANDO/WALT DISNEY WORLD
C•O•L•O•R•A•D•O
STEAMBOAT
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
BRECKENRIDGE/KEYSTONE
SPRING BREAK 94 Stijlt!
13th YEAR!
-N·E·V·A·D·A
LAS VEGAS
S.O.U.T.H C.A.R.O.L.I.N.A.
HILTON HEAD ISLAND
CALL TOLL FOR FULL DETAILS AND COLOR BROCHURE!
RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW
CALL TOLL FREE FOR FULL
DETAILS AND COLOR BROCHURE!
1·800·SUNCHASE
130 Entertainment
Free Party Room Available at Johnny's Tavern/Up & Under Call 842-3754 for details
SKI
STEAMBOAT
*JAN 2-8
*SIX NIGHTS
*4/5 DAY LIFT
*FREE PARTIES
*$259
BILL 832-2277 & 841-9111
BILL 832-2277 & 841-9111
BENCHWARMERS
NOWOPEN!
BRANDING IRON
SALOON
806 W.24th • 843-2000
ThursNov18
Elite
Male Dancers
- 5 Dancers
* Only $3 cover charge
* Show w/ 8-10pm
* Men admitted at 10am
- Men admitted at 10pm
Formerly Just A Playhouse Behind McDonald's
140 Lost & Found
Lost: cluster anniversary diamond ring, reward call 844-0431 or (913) 267-702.
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, November 17, 1993
13
Male and Female
- $3 burger baskets
* domestic longneck
special
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
*** BUS DRIVERS ****
The Lawrence Bus Company is accepting applications for part time bus drivers. Morning and afternoon shifts available. Must be 21 with clean driving record. Call 842-0544.
A local vacuum repair business needs part-time
work. A vacuum repair technician must work
mechanically-inclined person. Call 849-1387
A4 CAUlce & Travel jobs. Earn $2500/mo. + travel the world free! (Caribbean, Europe, Hawaii, Asia) C1 Cruise jobs now hiring for busy holiday, Listing Service, Call (919) 329-4388 ex 113.
Supervisor/Assist Mgr
Supervision now - Manager later! Learn the business from the ground up and advance according to your needs. Be able to orient someone oriented person and like to work at a fast intense pace, an opportunity to put these skills to work and develop a leader is available. Relocation benefits apply. Plus benefits. Apply now: amIoges, 1819 W. 23rd
APPLY NOW! International Chain filling part-fall line positions. Training provided. Work locally in New York City to transfer to one of our 300 locations nationwide during winter break. $300 plus starting call #84-8035.
BASS PLAYER AVAILABLE
severely emotionally disturbed children/adolescents. On-call, variable hours. Knowledge/experience with SED children preferred. Must be 18-18 years old. Job duties include job to J. Yancy, Bert CMH6. Missouri, Lawrence, KS 6504. Open until filled. EOE. January 15, 2014. Invoicing. Customer Service. Bookkeeping position. Working hrs 3-8-M-F. Current responsibilities include sending letter of application, list of references, and vita to Edge Enterprises P. O. Box 1304, Lawrence, KS 6504. Deadline Nov. 22, 2015. Transportation
Experienced bass player looking for serious Lawrence band. I have live playing experience including Lawrence bars. I own professional equipment and play both frettless and five string bass guitars. Looking for blues injected rock and jazz musicians, metal or hardcore, or cheese. Dedicated bass metal a must. If you've been looking for that hard to find bass player...I'm ready to go: 843-9958
Brandon Wood Retirement Community is currently hiring wait staff for the 1:am-8pm shift with possibility of onoccanal 5pm-7pm lifts. Irs are available at 10am and 1pm on Friday and Saturday. person 1501 Inverness Dr. Lawrence K.E.O. ELEVEN
Case manager, full-time: provide case management for severely emotionally disturbed children with special degree/experience working with SED children/adolescents. Masters degree preferred. Job to J. Yancy, Bert Nash CMHC, 338 Mercer Lawrence, KS 65048. Open until filled. EOE
FREE TRIPS AND MONEY!!!! Individuals and Student Organizations wanted to promote the Houtset Spring Break Destinations, call the Inter-Campus Leader - Inter-Campus Programs 1-800-327-6013.
Caterers, Kansas and Burge Union* Catering
2:30 p.m.; $35.00/hr. paid in cash. Must follow dress
code and prefer new service experience.
Personnel Office, Level 5, University Building, EOE
FUND RAISER
Raise $500 in 5 days. Groups,
Clubs, motivated individuals
1-800-775-3851 ext 101
Local business seeks qualified individuals to provide a variety of services to community residents. Good income. For an interview call 843-2696 or 842-9149
Henry T's Bar and Grill is now hiring experienced wait staff. Must be able to work days, some evenings available. Apply from 2-4 p.m. M-F. No phone calls please. 3520 W. eth.
Marketing Assistant position available at Nalshim Hall for the spring semester. Applicant must have excellent people skills, good computer skills (desktop publishing experience a plus), and have a background experience in marketing, advertising, media planning, event organization time with compensation of room and board plus stipend. Potential for full time effective July, 1994. Great resume and portfolio builder to help get you an edge in job market. Those interested can contact us via e-mail: john.martin@drive.lawrenceKS.66044 O.E.M/F.H/A
apply at Naismith Hall, 1801 Naismith Drive
Lawrence KS. 6644E. E.O.F.M.H.A.F. A.
Micro Tech Computers is looking for full or- part-time sales persons. Applicants should be assertive, detail-oriented and have excellent sales skills, IBM, PC knowledge & sales experience preferred. Send resume to 2329-M Iowa St., Lawrence, KS 68047 ROE
Older Farm Couple Seeks Assistance:
Flyer rent to student or single parent family in
school for help / not work; lt. house work, lt.
cloaking Limited pets welcome. Call 895-7771 at
3 p.m.
Part-time apt. maintenance person wanted to work weekday daymiles; call 841-8689 to apply.
Phone Work: Part Time, Flexible Hours. Paid Daily. Call 233-9283.
RESUME SERVICES Professional Business Resumes, Cover Letters, SF-171s, Interview Training. Free initial interview. 833-8100.
are now hiring extra help for the X-Mas season!
Front counter, utility, grill cooks.
mexican restaurant and waistaff. Apply in person, lower level, River Front Plaza.
Daycare provider needed, our house. For infant and toddler. M-F, 8-3pm, 12-5pm, w/kw. Call 824-5411.
By donating your life saving blood plasma
Secretary/Receptionist Construction Inco-
Terraverst Construction located at 4104 Trail Road
(terraverstr) has an immediate full time operating
phone number. Typing skills of 60 wpm required; Macintosh
experienced preferred; 10 key accuracy; organizational
and writing skills a must. Must resume to
apply in no later than 11-12-93.
And apply to above address between 9:43 M-F, Applications
and resumes must be in no later than 11-12-93.
$15 Today $30 This week
STUDENTS NEEDED
WALK-IN! WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
If you are available for all home basketball games and would be interested in assisting at parking lot attendant please contact Manpower Temporary Services at 748-2800 EOE.
Taco Bell now hiring day and night help in
person Tuesday through Saturday. 1488 W. 23rd
Street
The Lawrence BUS Company is now taking applications for SAFERIDI DRIVES. Must be 21, have clean driving record, and be familiar with school. School Holiday off. If interested call 842-0544.
MO CAN make a difference, Greenpeace K.C., MO is now hiring energetic and articulate students and others to help save the rain forests, stop toxic waste, and protect the ozone layer. PT/FT $190 to $300 a week, paid training, hours 2 to 10 p.m. Call 816-531-3894.
ASSISTANT MANAGER
Join forces with Banister Shoe, a premier shoe retailer and successful division of U.S. S. Shoe Corporation. W seek a career-oriented indi
vidual to contribute to our continuing growth.
The IDEAL candidate will possess a minimum of 1-3 years of retail experience (including sales and 1 year of
experience as a key holder or Assistant Manager). We will also consider a minimum of 1 year of retail management experience and
2-4 years college coursework.
Strong leadership and communica-
tion.
We offer competitive compensation and full benefit package.
travel and/or nubilant package,
including health/dental/life insurance,
paid vacations/holidays, mer-
chandise discounts and 401K plan.
Banister Shoe
Lawrence Riverfront Plaza
1 Lawrence Riverfront Plaza
2 Lawrence Riverfront Plaza
equal density contactovecvd
equal oppty employer mfdv
225 Professional Services
OPPORTUNITY IS KNOCKING!
have you hit damage. You can make money from it. We can save you hundreds of dollars or we don't, doesn't cost you one penny! Call or come by for details. Dent Pro of Lawrence 1120 E. 381; david_4513
Traffic tickets, misdemenages, landlord/ tenant,
Braxton B. Copley 749-3333
TRAFFIC·DUI'S
TRAP HIERCIFICATION Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters the law offices of
Donald G. Strobe Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We are here to help.
Burtingham 843-6821 Free pregnancy testing.
Lesbian, gay, bi - or unsure? If you need to talk to someone, call a Peer Counselor. CONFIDENTIAL. Call KU Info or Headquarters.
Prompt abortation and contraceptive services. Dale L. Clinton M.D. 841-5718.
Research Assistance - MS/ML information special available to assist with term papers, theses,teses.
Unique resumes, cover letters, laser prints. Fast.
Available on Graphite Display, Ideas, Inc.
927/854 - 841-1071
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
235 Typing Services
1-der Woman Word Processing. 843-2063
A Word Perfect word processing service. Laser printer. Near campus. 842-905.
AA Word Processing: Any size, under 40 pp.
word processing service. $1.25. Call Rush after
9pm, 8am-5pm.
Fast, accurate word processing; term paper, dis-
fast, thesis and graphics services available. La-
ser, print, copy, review and Review experience. Call Pam at 841-1977 anytime.
Pro-Type - fast, reliable, service, professional
Word processing, applications, term papers, dis-
tribution, search. Instructors must be rush job available. Masters Degree 641-844.
Expert typing. TBM Correcting Selectric.
$1.50 double space page. Call Mrs. Mauil 841-341
Are you Makin' the Grade?
WORD PROCESSING & LASER BRI
Full Clearance: All adult tapes used male $12.50 or
male $8.50, Mature adult tapes $8.50, or Miracle
Video Too, 1910 Haskell, 181-704.
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your "PURINED" needs call
WWW.PURINED.COM
Resumes
Professional Association of Resume Writers
1012 Mass 842-4619 Suite 201-upstairs
I'm graduating and need to sell my - Beautiful
immy! I'm the queen size bed with cherry
wood head board, marble drawers,
drawers, cherry wood chest with vanity mirror.
Paid $25 a year ago but it's got go. $175. You
can buy it at a discount.
- consultation
- cover letters
- writing
Jackete: Leather bomber #75. Leather biker $100
Obermeyer ski loader $110 Bike #843 -7857
QUANTITY RATS/MICE small rats $1.35 mice
$0.15 items minimum price per mouse will be deli
rate 20 items minimum price per mouse will be
deli rate
Large inventory of classic old playboy Magazines 1950's, 60', 70' and 80'. Most in good condition.
Must be purchased in package. Call 843-0540 weekends and weekends.
IRF Internal Frame Backpack, big. And Carlson 60 for bob
Excellent Condition. Bike #859 4714
305 For Sale
FITNESS EQUIPMENT
Spend New Year in Chicago! Leaves KC on Dec 29
& returns Jan. 3, Only 1月吧!Call 841-7849 now before
church on Sunday at 10am.
DP 2500 weight lifting machine, leg curls, etc.
Great condition. DP Body - Tone 300 Rowing
Machine, $250 for both. Call 843-0540 evenings
and weekends.
X
Beds, desks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
930 Mass.
PA RW
300s Merchandise
Floppy Discs
Guaranteed Quality
and Lowest Price.
Call 832-2744 (o) 842-5421 (h)
Visit our office behind Food 4 Less at
2201 W. 25th St. B-1.
Want to sell full set of RU basketball tickets. Best offer is immediate action! Call now and leave a note at 011-285-7399.
Two single Chiefs vs. Bill tickets for Nov. 28, Best offer. Call and leave a message 865-3236
340 Auto Sales
"88 Honda GV LX 4-d, i owner, exc. car w/ new
battery, only 20k mi., $175,000 / mile, % are
HW$ 5500 obo @ 934-871 or 834-619
1981 Datsu Wagon. Runs okay. Body rough. $200
Call: 1-888-8500. K (City Number)
1983 Honda Civic, 3rd, 5-140, 1240 mL, AC, runs good $1200 Call 748-7491
1983 VW Rabbit GT1, 5-speed, 96,000 miles, sporty,
$1,495 Call 641-2139.
1983 Black Jeep CJ-7, S-Speed. Hard top, hard
nose. 14,400 OBJ Call: 822-2560 and leave a message
1985 Ford Ltd. Excellent tires and body. Runs great. 75 kmiles. $1,995 obs. Call 844-6814.
Sculptured Nails $29 req. $42. Reflections West, West,
232 Ridge Center 81-9462. Ask for Pam.
360 Miscellaneous
1986 Dodge Charger 2-dr hatchback, AM/FM cassette. Body in good shape. Bq 484-3824.
MICHELLE ANGELO'S
SINCE 1985
Eingetragen Ätikrams
Designer Stamps • Art Stamp Custom Stamps
Custom St.
Innovative+Creative+Fun
Classes Weekly × 10% off with mention of this ad
17 W 9th 843-4767
370 Want to Buy
Inexpensive 35mm, adjustable focus camera. In good condition. 749-1908.
In all ages far back into pre-History,
Brownstone Records recycled to sell their CD's.
Recycled Sounds to sell their CD's.
A
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1 Bdrm api, just blocks from campus available for 2nd semester sublease, washer/dryer, dishwasher, ceiling fan, the works $220 per mo/person. 1139 Kentupy k85-6072. Call now.
1 Bedroom unfurnished apartment available- as earlyas Dec. 15 3307 month, Water paid off street parking, on bus route, off 6th street, clean and quiet. If interested call 841-6019.
Apt. for Rent. Beds, new carpet, unfurnished at
a discount. Availability. 12am to midnight on bus route.
Available Dec. 11. $75/month, $82/year.
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
Available Spring Interim. Interested? Call
843-455-6210
Available at semester break, apts, in new section of West Hill 1000 Erdmry rd. 1brd. apt. $380/mo. 2 bdrm apt. $55/mo. Cable pw. d/w hookups, dw.mirc, wcaling cell, min blinds, balcony energy efficient, great location near busplus & on bus rt. no pets. Call 641-7804 or 542-8844.
Available: Spring semester Room at Naimith Hall. Quit floor, meal call. Plan 691-907, leave
For rent brand new 3 bdm2 bath app. On the bus
4 people $120/month + 1/2 usage. Call 864-7127
For lease: 4 bedroom, Sundance apts, near campus, for lease date negotiated, $790 + utilities
Available Jan 1, LARGE 2 br near stadium. Heat.
Fresh air. Excellent maintenance. *440* phone. Call 850-639-7940.
Available Jan. 1, 3 bdm. apt. on bus route. Call
749-1558-2 5рmr. Mon-Pri.
HELP! We're graduating! Need 2 need two bdrm, b卫, huge kit, & living room. avail. end of Dee and Dee quick kill! Need FREE - as in paid for! Call quick killer locate! Campus, in a cool call? Call 865-0393 or 841-7079.
Farmed room for rent for with shared kitchen and
kitchen off KUF. Of street parking.
No pets. Call 841-7500.
Campus Place 3 berm 2 ba furnished apt. for rent
Campus Place walk to campus. Available
Dec. Is. 92-899 6291
Lg 1 Bedroom apt. on bus route. Leave message
749-0751.
Furished studio apartment. 2 short blocks from Water park. Off street parking. No pets. 841-550-8345
Seeking NSFp to sublease NBF p birmado con 9k
03-0645 + 4/- utilities. Available NOW! Call
03-0645
Nice 3 B, 2 bath, B/H with, PF, garage, DW, microwave, W/D, floor hook $750/mo. Call 748-0357-81
Rent 1 bdm ap. Dec. Ist. Nice and big, close to campus. $325. Water paid. Call 748-0305.
The Best Place to Live at KU is in K.C.!
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
Stocked fishing lake, courtyards w/fountain, sand volleyball, pool
Share nice large home, nice neighborhood or studio,
1, 2 bedroom apt, a block to KU. Reference
New Four Bdrs Now Available
Bast in Lawrence, signing up for next year,
$240 per month, annuities, car ports
available. For more info call 841-7849.
764-1471
jacuzzi & exercise facility
10 am - 6 pm Reserve your home today! MASTERCRAFT
offers furnished
119th&1-35
OPEN DAILY
JEFFERSON
PLACE
designed with you in mind!
Go to ...
CONTEMPORARY APARTMENT LIVING
1145 Louisiana
Hanover Place - 841-1212 14th & Mass.
Orchard Corners - 749-4226
15th & Kasold
Regents Court - 749-0445
Sundance - 841-5255
7th & Florida
Tanglewood - 749-2415
Tanglewood-749-2415 10th& Arkansas
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Spring subclass for 3 persons. 2 bdfrm, 1 bath, on
hardware. $30/mo+
Avail. 1/8/1974-8/31/84, 88-3642
Sub lease 2 b firm, 2 bath, 225 ea./mo. Water, gas,
trash pd, Near bus stop. Leave phone hook-up.
Available Jan. 1. Call 842-4289.
Sub-lease: 2 bdr. apt, at Boardwalk apt. from Jan.
to May, $398, on bus route 1. Cali 841-684
Now leasing for Spring!
we're making life easier!
-Weekly Maid Service
*Front Door Bus Service
*"Dina Anvtime" with
Bike Anytime with
- Laundry and Vending
- Free Utilities
NAISMITH
1800
Naismith Drive
S-base lee 2 bdr. Just inches from campus (3B&)
10/31 - 5/31. Dec rent pay
490/month (60/year) 841-3235
899/month (60/year) 841-3235
Sublease Needed! 2193 fowa G-1. Nice neighbor!
$400/month! Willing to negotiate! 8319-915 or
1-800-654-7300
Sublease studios $300/mo. including cable. Available immediately. Call 749-6850.
Sublease: Nalismith Hall (Hall, Rec. Room, Maid Service Ready for Spring Semester. Call Andy
Drop Into Our Place to ask about our Mid Term Leases Colony Woods Apartments
- Close to campus
Unique 2 bedroom/1 bathroom. hard wood floors. 2
bedrooms. downstairs. $450/month.
Available Jan. 1. 941-869-7888.
- Spacious 2 bedroom
- Laundry facility
- Laundry facility
- Swimming Pool
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
- Waterbed allowed
$365-$435
430 Roommate Wanted
I roommate to share fun `b 4R / B 2R @l b on-cam`
`b 4R / B 2R @l b Avail Des, 89/73/
$87/70 + / uaid Cul Ala Aan 481-669-2222`
9th& Avalon 842-3040
- 3 Hot Tubs
- Sand Volleyball Court .
l female needed to share 2 Br.1 bath apt Clos to campus, on bus rwr route 495a call 841 caml call 281 Bell Rys 833-0438
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Basketball Court
Female N/S to share very nice 2 bdrm, 2 bath house w/ hardwood floors in Old West Lawrence
Responsible grad-student/prof. only. Avail. Jan. 1
Spring semester $250/mo./u' call 832-267-667
Microwave
- Microwave
FEMALE NEeded TO SHARE 1 BR IN 3 BR
HOUSE. ALL WOOD FLOORS, NEW PAINT,
STREET PARKING,
CLOSE TO CAMPAUS. AVAILABLE DBC. 1st.
Call 832-4238 or 749-3058.
- On Bus Route
Female non-smoker needed to share three bedrooms.
Dryer 81/7pm. $/Use 5. Call 748-1491.
Bathroom 81/7pm. $/Use 5. Call 748-1491.
842-5111 1301 W.24 $ ^{th} $
- 1&2 Bedroom Apts.
Wishing You The Best This Holiday Season!
I female needed to share 3 br., 2/2 bath space,
townhouse. Will get own room. On bus route.
No smoking or cookies.$290/m + util. Lease up in May.
Shannon 888-4556. Leave mess.
Looking for a female roommate to share 4 bdm, 2 bth apartment. On bus route, fully furnished & very INEXPENSIVE! Call Holly or Bet at 865-181
Male needed for spacious townhouse on golf
course may pay $1,000 + $1/unit Call Cohle
825-879-1100
Male or female needed to share new 4 bedroom duplex in W. Lawrence starting Jan. 1. Washer/dryer, 2 car garage. Fully furnished (except for room). Call Cameron at 865-5629
N/S Female needed for 4 bd. lubricant with WD,
garage fireplace $19/mo. + /uplo. on WD route.
Male or female roommate wanted for 3 bdm.
Roommate needed to be first or second room.
Call David at 855-269-1472.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1. Need a roommate (male or female) ASAP for a
bath apartment. For more information
call B8-727.
Need F to share 3-bldr. townhome. W/D, dishware,
erage, garage. 8230 + /1 utilities. 885-6137
How to schedule an ad:
Open minded female needed to share two bedroom
open space to campuse a January Thru May Call any time.
For more details please contact us.
Adolescent Services Assistance!
Free rent to study in our community if family in exchange for help w/ yard work, lt house work, lt cooking. Limited pets welcome. Call 597-5771 after 3 p.m.
w/small dog n need a responsible NSF to
small dog n need a spring semester 1806/m
/3/Ul C497 169.189
Need male roommate for 3 Bdm rent to compare,
WD in complex. $828 ma+ v/s 1 unit.
Not needed.
Ads phoned in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. 118 Sniffer Flint
Responsible female to share nice, 3 bdm, furn-
ished. Available immediately. Call 799-1988.
included. Available immediately. Call 799-1988.
N需要 mature, N/C 小马到 share 2 br bpt
Some need mature, $19/hr. $19/hr.
Some use ptl. Pavil. Jan. 1. 1984
Roommate needed, Start Dec. 1, $1/60 / u/L
Free gas, water cab. 1:24/1 hour, 2 min from
room.
Very close to campus, behind Yellow Sub. Need a female nominee to share 3 barm. 2 bath amp. 1 bath. 1 room.
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 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.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansen office for a fee of $4.00.
Predators
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.
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
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Cost per line per day
1X 2× 3× 4×7 8-14X 15-29X 30+X
2.05 1.55 1.05 .65 .75 .50
1.90 1.15 .80 .70 .65 .45
1.65 1.05 .75 .65 .60 .40
1.75 .90 .65 .60 .55 .35
305 for sale
340 auto sales
360 miscellaneous
105 personal
110 business personals
120 anouncements
130 entertainment
148 lost a found
205 help was needed
225 professional services
235 typing services
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
1
2
3
4
5
379 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
Address:
Regno: Total days in paper
Total ad cost: Classification:
Name: Phone: -
Address:
_Expiration Date:
VISA
Method of Payment (Check one) ☐ Check enclosed ☐ MasterCard ☐ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan)
Furnish the following if your are charging your ad:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
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Signature:
The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS.66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
11-17
"Look. If you're so self-conscious about it, get yourself a gorilla mask."
14
Wednesday, November 17, 1993
120℃ 50% 80% 60% 70% 90% 110% 130% 150% 170% 200% 220% 240% 260% 280% 300%
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
CATCH THE B.U.S.
(Buckle Up Sober)
COMPETITIONS
CATEGORIES INCLUDE:
I. Billboards/Posters
II. VideoPublic Service Announcements
III. AudioPublic Service Announcements
IV. PrintMedia (advertisements or news articles)
V. Celebrity Endorsements
VI.T-shirt designs
VII. Biathlon (2interactive games)
VIII. Video Stage Production
CASH PRIZES for winning entries in each category!
All entries must promote safety belt use and alcohol abuse prevention messages.
Come by the Watkins Health Center,Health Education office for an information form on entering these STUDENT competitions or call Julie Francis at 864-9570. SENATE
Entries must be submitted no later than Dec.31, 1993
Gold Gloves string ends for Ozzie at 13
The Associated Press
NEW YORK—Pittsburgh shortstop Jay Belle broke Ozzie Smith's 13-year grip on the Gold Glove, winning the National League award in honors announced yesterday.
Not since Dave Concepcion of Cincinnati in 1979 had an NL shortstop other than Smith won the Gold Glove. Smith's 13-year streak started with San Diego and continued during his career with St. Louis.
Bell won after leading major league shortstops in fielding percentage (986) and total chances (793). He made 11 errors to Smith's 19.
"It's something I never expected to win, but always strived for," Bell said yesterday after a workout at Three Rivers Stadium. "Reputation means a lot, and Ozzie is definitely the greatest defensive player in my era and probably of all time."
NL MVP Barry Bonds of San Francisco and Cy Young winner Greg Maddux of Atlanta each won their fourth straight Gold Glove.
Bonds, an outfielder, third baseman Matt Williams, second baseman Robbie Thompson and catcher Kirt Manwaring all won from the Giants.
and Marquis Grissom and Chicago first baseman Mark Grace also made the NL team this season.
Montreal outfielders Larry Walker
Smith's 13 Gold Gloves ranked him third overall. Baltimore third baseman Brooks Robinson and pitcher Jim Kaat each won 16 straight.
Bell, who also made the All-Star team for the first time this season, cut his error total in half this year.
"Late in the season, I thought I had a chance to win," Bell said. "It was a matter of convincing the managers and coaches that I could play."
Williams won his second Gold Glove in a row. Manwaring, who led catchers with a .998 percentage, and Thompson, the first Giants second baseman to win the award, each were first-time winners. Grace and Walker won for the second straight year and Grissom for the first time.
The AL awards were announced Monday. The Gold Glove winners were: New York first baseman Don Mattingly, Toronto second baseman Roberto Alomar, Seattle shortstop Omar Vizquel, Chicago third baseman Robin Ventura, Texas catcher Ivan Rodriguez, California pitcher Mark Langston and outfielders Ken Griffey Jr. of Seattle, Kenny Lofton of Cleveland and Devon White of Toronto.
NCAA gives Panthers two years probation
The Associated Press
PITTSBURGH—The University of Pittsburgh was placed on two years' probation yesterday for serious violations of NCAA rules in the recruiting of former New York City basketball star Jamar Faulkner.
The sanctions were the first against the university in a major sport and resulted from former assistant coach John Sarandrea's recruiting of Faulkner in 1988 and 1989, according to a letter of inquiry sent to Pitt by the NCAA.
The NCAA also found several secondary violations occurred under former football coach Mike Gottfried, but ruled those 15 infractions reported by Pitt last year were minor and didn't warrant severe punishment.
The probation effects all Pitt athletic teams but does not bar the Panthers from postseason play or television appearances.
The basketball program will be limited to 12 scholarships in the 1994-95 and 1995-96 academic years, down from the normal 13, and expense-paid recruiting visits
will be cut from 15 to 12 next season.
The only sanctions imposed on football for violations such as furnishing recruits with limousines and hotel suites were a one-year reduction in on-campus recruiting visits from 70 to 60.
"We're happy this is over with," athletic director Oval Jaynes said. "The cloud's been lifted from our heads. When you go through an extended period of time not knowing what's going to happen, you feel better when you get it behind you."
NCAA infractions committee chairman David Swank said Pitt cooperated fully in the investigation — the school hired an attorney to probe the alleged violations
- and may have avoided more serious sanctions by its openness.
Allegations that Faulkner was improperly recruited were first made by the player's former AAU coach, Wayne Simone, in the 1990 book "Raw Recruits."
Faulkner never attended Pitt and was Arizona State's top scorer until he was kicked off the team. He later transferred to Alabama.
LASTFEWDAYS!
If you are interested in any of the following options for Spring 1994, forms will be available outside the Enrollment Center now through November 19. Wed. & Thurs.: 8 a.m.-5:00 p.m; Fri.: 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
- Board of Class Officers
- Freshman Class Dues $10.00
- Sophomore Class Dues $8.00
- Junior Class Dues $8.00
- Senior Class Dues $10.00
- Jayhawker Yearbook $30.00
- KU on Wheels Pass
- SUA Movie Card $25.00
You must be enrolled prior to selecting options. Class schedule for Spring 1994 and KUID must be shown. Options forms can be completed until November 19. Fee payment by mail is due by December 8 (postmarked by December3,1993).
---
/
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansas Basketball
Wednesday, November 17, 1993
1993-94 College Preview
Reshuffling the Deck
With four starters gone, Kansas hopes it's dealt a winning hand
By Mark Button Kansan sportswriter
Kansas coach Roy Williams sits quietly at the poker table and stares at the dealer across from him.
He peers at the five cards in his hand. Reluctantly, he places four of them face down on the table.
"I need four," Williams says.
The dealer frowns and pauses for a second.
"So, you have an ace?" the dealer asks.
"Excuse me?" Williams responds.
"You can only get four cards if you have an ace," the dealer says.
Williams smiles knowingly and says nothing. The dealer tosses him four new cards.
Discarded from last year's Final Four team are guards Rex Walters and Adonis Jordan, center Eric Pauley and forward Darrin Hancock. They were all starters. They are all gone. They took with them 55 percent of the scoring,40 percent of the rebounds and, in the case of Walters, Jordan and Pauley,100 percent of the leadership.
See JAYHAWKS, Page 17.
King
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The women's basketball team is a preseason favorite in the Big Eight. Page 16.
University Daily Kansan 1993-94 College Basketball Preview
SAS
BASKETBALL
Table of Contents
Fantastic freshmen Kansas Coach Roy Williams looks to the freshmen class to contribute right away. Page 9.
Amazing Aycock
Preseason All-American junior Angela Aycock says the individual honors are nice,but what matters is the team. Page 13.
11
ROOMER 15
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Big 8 Preview
A close-up look at the teams in the Big Eight, their strengths, weaknesses and key players. Pages 18-24.
Who's No.1?
the Kansan's basketball writer and KU students tell what team is No.1 and why. Pages 25-30.
Credits:
SPORTS EDITOR: Kristi Fogler
ASSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR: Todd Seifert
WRITERS: Mark Button, Gerry Fey, Anne Felstet, Brian James, Matt Doyle DESIGNER: KC Trauer
COVER DESIGN: KC Trauer, Bill Skeet, Renee Knoeber, John Paul Fogel PHOTO EDITORS: Renee Knoeber, Kip Chin
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Renee Knoebeber, Doug Hesse, Richard Devinki, KU Sports Information. Indianapolis Star
COPY CHIEF: Alexander Bloemhof
COPYEDITORS:Christine Laue, Stephen Martino,Sarah Nagl,Muneera Naseer, Barbara Schultz
MANAGING EDITOR FOR PLANNING AND DESIGN: Christine Laue
SPECIAL SECTIONS MANAGER: Judith Standley CREATIVE DIRECTOR: Brian Fusco TECHNOLOGY COORDINATOR: Bill Skeet
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COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW • University Daily Kansan • November 17, 1993
Kansas hopes to repeat success in national preseason tournament
By Brian James Kansan sportswriter
Kansas coach Roy Williams puts his undefeated Preseason National Invitational Tournament record on the line tonight at Allen Field House.
Kansas won all four of its games in the 1989 Preseason NIT, defeating top seeds St. John's, Louisiana State and Nevada-Las Vegas to win the tournament.
That was Williams' first and only experience with coaching the Jayhawks in the preseason tournament. It also marked the first time Kansas had played host to a firstround NIT game.
This year, two games of the Preseason NIT tournament will be played at the field house.
Williams said the field house was selected as one of the NIT sites because Kansas was one of the top eight seeds in the tournament.
"The fact that we can play at Allen Field House and have a lot of people in the stands and sell a lot of tickets for them
— yeah, that's important," he said. "But I don't think we're playing at home because its Allen Field House. I think we're playing at home because we've been pretty doggone good."
Kansas plays Western Michigan tonight. The winner will play either California or California-Santa Clara. The Preseason NIT semifinals and finals will be Nov. 24 and 26 in New York.
Williams said that although the tournament provided preseason game experience, he said the tournament took away from valuable practice time.
"I'd rather have the practices," he said. "I think you can gain so much more from practice times than in games."
Kansas had appeared only one other time since the Preseason NIT was created nine years ago, winning three of four games in 1985 under then coach Larry Brown.
In the 1989 Preseason NIT, Kansas beat teams with future
NBA players Shaquille O'Neal, Chris Jackson and Larry Johnson. Mark Randall, a forward on the Jayhawks, earned the tournament's Most Valuable Player Award.
Jeff Gueldner, a guard on Kansas' team that year, said playing against top-
Tonight's game
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rated teams helped build confidence.
"There was some indecision that year as to how good we would be," Gueldner said. "But we went out in the tournament and played in midseason form — and the season hadn't even started.
"It gave us the feeling that if we went out and executed the plays coach gave us, and if we played up to our potential, we could beat anybody," he said.
Gueldner said he thought that preseason games were helpful.
"The tournament starts so early that it's a chance to find out where the team is at and get things worked out," he said.
Gueldner said the field house had the type of atmosphere that NIT officials loved.
"The enthusiasm is so high," he said. "You can look at North Carolina's and Duke's places. But really, there's no better place than KU."
Most of the teams that appear in the Preseason NIT go on to play in the NCAA tournament at the end of the regular season, according to NIT statistics.
In the past five seasons, 11 of the 20 teams that were Preseason NIT semifinalists finished in the final Associated Press Top 10 poll.
40
CALIFORNIA
Renee Knoeber / KANSAN
California's Jason Kidd passes around Kansas' Adonis Jordan during the Sweet 16 round of the NCAA Tournament play. Kansas has the possibility of facing California again during the NIT tournament, which starts tonight.
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November 17, 1993 University Daily Kansan • COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW
3
Mutual respect exists between Tobacco Road NCAA champs
Coaches say conference deserves credit for success
By Jim O'Connell The Associated Press
Eight miles. Not even one-third of a marathon.
That is how far the national championship trophy has traveled the last two years. College basketball's most prized possession sat in Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., from March 1991 until last spring, when it moved to the Smith Center in Chapel Hill.
Eight miles. A decent jogger could cover it in an hour.
There is no rivalry like a neighborhood rivalry, and Duke and North Carolina have one of the best.
The best of coaches, players, tradition and those three straight national championships.
"In a way, the schools feed off each other, but I think the nice thing about that rivalry is that I think there's a mutual respect between the coaches and among the players on both teams," North Carolina coach Dean Smith said.
Smith and Duke's Mike Krzyzewski seem genuine in their admiration of the other's program, and the players do spend a lot of time going against each other during the summer in pickup games that would have NBA scouts drooling.
However, both coaches downplay the thought that it is only those two schools that created all that success. They both mention the entire Atlantic Coast Conference.
"If you had to point one finger at something as to why there are three national championships in a row in our conference, it's because of the conference," said Krzyzewski, the fifth coach ever to win consecutive titles and the first since UCLA's John Wooden 20 years ago. "The conference hardens you. You better be good. Once you get into postseason play, if you let up a little bit, you're out. You may not even let up and you're out. Our tough conference play puts you in a position to do that. That's the foundation on which the conference is built."
The foundation is so solid right now that most people feel the next national champion could very well be from the ACC, just as five of the last 12 have been.
The league has had at least one team in the Final Four for the last six seasons and 11 of the past 12. ACC teams have won 104 NCAA tournament games since the field expanded to 64 teams in 1985; the Big Ten is second, with 80.
"There isn't a team in our conference that can't beat either Duke or us," Smith said. "That's partly due to the nature of basketball, but also, there's so many good players out there, and a lot of them want to play in the ACC. So, if they don't go to Duke or Carolina, they go to some other school in the ACC."
Florida State, Virginia and Georgia Tech are all among the best two dozen teams in college basketball, yet for the last three seasons, they have wound up in the catch-all "best of the rest" in their own conference.
"When we came into the ACC, I told our people I wanted to compete with Duke and Carolina," Florida State coach Pat Kennedy said. "If we don't compete with them, we'll never be there. So for me to position our program on the heels of
those teams ... if you're not doing that as a head coach, you're not doing a good job with your program."
There's also the problem of competing with Duke and North Carolina off the court. Both schools are highly regarded academically and the fans have created niches all of their own: Carolina is for coming up with enough funds to build the palace-like Smith Center without the school paying a dime, and Duke's fervent student body that has become the standard by which all others are measured for dedication and sarcasm.
Pity, then, North Carolina State.
Less than 20 miles from both Duke and Carolina, its two national titles seem like ancient history, its Reynolds Coliseum an outdated facility that has seemed almost quiet recently because of last-place finishes in the ACC while the Wolfpack tries to rebound from NCAA sanctions in the 1980s.
Coach Les Robinson has come in second on such outstanding scholastic talent as Jerry Stackhouse and Jeff McInnis, who opted for North Carolina, and Jeff Capel, who decided on Duke.
"I think it's a challenge for the entire conference, where they are right now," Robinson said of Duke and Carolina. "For us right now, it's probably tougher than any of the other schools in the conference because that is the gauge for our fans, the guy at the grocery store, the guy at the bank, at the airport."
"You don't know how many times people say to me, and they're not talking about the overall season, 'Just beat Duke. Just beat Carolina.'
"Name somebody else."
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COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW • University Daily Kansan • November 17, 1993
Consensus says Tar Heels have edge on NCAA championship
By Tom Foreman Jr.
The Associated Press
Dean Smith majored in mathematics at Kansas, which explains his penchant for statistics. His current interest at North Carolina is chemistry.
The Tar Heels rode the rebounding and inside power of George Lynch to a national championship last season. Lynch graduated along with four other seniors, but the consensus gives the edge to North Carolina to repeat.
That would mean the NCAA championship would stay in the state for the fourth straight year and, for some additional incentive, the Final Four will be held in Charlotte, which for years has been the Tar Heels' home-away-from-home.
The Tar Heels culled another stellar recruiting class. Smith landed center Rasheed Wallace, forward Jerry Stackhouse and guard Jeff McInnis to help the four starters back from the 77-71 victory against Michigan at New Orleans. That is where Smith faces a dilemma, if there is one.
How is so much talent going to get sufficient playing time?
"Somebody's going to be unhappy," Smith said. "It's like alternating quarterbacks in football.
Smith says that by January, there might be no more than eight or nine players who get the majority of the minutes. It is an impressive rotation.
There is point guard Derrick Phelps, a defensive wizard, and Donald Williams, the shooting guard whose touch came back at the Final Four and earned him MVP honors. In the middle is center Eric Montross for muscle, and Brian Reese returns at one of the wing positions once he recovers from a sprained ankle. Pat Sullivan was a spot starter last year, but could take the other forward spot.
Wallace will have to fight with senior Kevin Salvadori and redshirt freshman Serge Zwikker to back up Montross. At 6-
SOUTH PREVIEW
foot-11. Wallace is the shortest of the three.
McInnis will learn from Phelps before he inherits the point guard position next season, but that doesn't rule out a challenge from sophomore Dante Calabria. Stackhouse is seen as the successor to Lynch this year, but he will have to crack Smith's seniority system if he is going to start.
Duke will lead the challenge to the Tar Heels for the top spot in the ACC. For the Blue Devils, it is the beginning of the post-Bobby Hurley age. During Hurley's four years, Duke went to three Final Fours and won twice. He left as the NCAA's all-time assist leader.
Although Grant Hill could play on the perimeter, his value to Coach Mike Krzyzewski is on the inside, and that could make freshman Jeff Capel the successor to Hurley as the offensive catalyst.
"One of the main things we have to do is not try to make anybody Bobby Hurley," Krzyzewski said. "But we've had that problem before. Who's going to be the next Danny Ferry? Who's going to be the next Christian Laettner?"
The Blue Devils will be building the team around Hill, Cherokee Parks and Antonio Lang.
Georgia Tech won the ACC title last year when it upset North Carolina in the tournament title game. James Forrest and Travis Best will have to take on bigger leadership roles for the Yellow Jackets. The team has escaped the spotlight associated with coach Bobby Cremins' decision to leave for South Carolina and subsequent reversal of that move.
Virginia is led by Cory Alexander as it bids to move up the list, but Florida State will have to wait until Charlie Ward puts down the shoulder pads and picks up the basketball.
In the Southeastern Conference, Kentucky may miss
Jamal Mashburn, but there is plenty of talent to take over. Travis Ford averaged 13 points a game, and was deadly from 3-point range. Coach Rick Pitino might consider a three-man rotation at center. While the Wildcats reign over the SEC's Eastern Division, Arkansas looks like the pick of the Western Division. Nolan Richardson landed key recruits to fill needs at shooting guard and center, making the Razorbacks the choice.
Louisville lost one-third of its scoring power and one-fourth of its rebounding, but could still win the Metro Conference title behind Clifford Rozier, Dwayne Morton and Greg Minor. North Carolina-Charlotte may be back for a challenge after struggling last year.
Three returning starters will help New Orleans overcome the loss of Ervin Johnson and make another run at the Sun Belt championship. Western Kentucky lost three starters, but a strong recruiting class might keep the Hilltopers in contention.
East Tennessee State might keep the Southern Conference title trophy in that state in 1994, but Tennessee-Chattanooga has 6-10 transfer Roger Smith and the Moccasins could repeat.
Tennessee State comes back with the Ohio Valley Conference player of the year in 6-11 center Carlos Rogers. A big front line and an experienced backcourt gives Old Dominion the nod in the Colonial Athletic Association, although East Carolina sneaked up on everyone last year and won the tournament title.
Coastal Carolina lost star performer Tony Dunkin, but four starters from last season can lead the Chanticleers to the front of the Big South Conference. Florida International is the top pick in the Trans America, and Coppin State has the same team in 1994 that went through the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference unbeaten.
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November 17, 1993 University Daily Kansan • COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW
5
Temple coach confident with five returning starters; bench is weak
By Jim O'Connell The Associated Press
It's about as close to gushing as John Chaney ever gets, and he was still quick with a qualifier.
"They're poised, confident and ready to play, and I know we've got some good ones," the Temple coach said in assessing his team. The "but" couldn't be far behind. "But obviously I'm concerned about the bench."
Chaney has all five starters back from the team that finished 20-11 and scared Michigan in the West Regional finals last year. Aaron McKie, Eddie Jones and Rick Brunson are about the best trio of perimeter players in the country and 6-foot-11 William Cunningham provides a presence in the middle.
"Aaron, Eddie and Rick have come along to play the game with their heads, realizing what is important as far as what to do with the ball and how to play the defenses we want," Chaney said. "William though hasn't shown that. We need him to rebound, stay in the game by avoiding fouls and be there for us at the end of the game with free throws. Our success will depend on him, and I really don't know if he's there vet."
McKie led the Atlantic 10 in scoring last season at 20.6 and Jones wasn't far behind at 17 a game. They combined for 13 rebounds per game, more than triple Cunningham's 3.8.
Brunson has learned to play the point after a scholastic career as a scorer, and he averaged 14 points and 4.5 assists last season.
The bench is a legitimate concern, even for a team that spends most of the game in Chaney's famous 3-2 zone.
The Atlantic 10 ended last season on its highest note ever with four teams making the field of 64 and all winning at
EAST PREVIEW
least one game in the tournament. It should match the same number of bids this season despite a large roster turnover for everybody but Temple.
Massachusetts, the league champion the last two seasons, adds freshman big man Marcus Camby and swingman Donta Bright, a Proposition 48 sophomore. Junior forward Lou Roe will be given the chance to make the Minutemen his team, and coach John Calipari needs him to take over.
George Washington lost three starters from last season's team that reached the regional semifinals, but the big man is back. Nigeria native Yinka Dare led the league in rebounds, 10.3 a game, and blocked shots, 2.8, last season as a freshman, and the 7-1, 265-pounder can be a national impact player if the guards can hit from the outside.
West Virginia has four starters back, led by Marsalis Basey who led the league at 5.5 assists a game last season.
The Big East was down last season when none of the three NCAA teams made it past the second round. The odds are better this year because Syracuse is off probation and eligible for post-season play.
The Orangemen won't have a lot of size, but the backcourt of Adrian Autry and Lawrence Moten is strong, and sophomore John Wallace leads a small, but solid frontline.
Georgetown has a top-notch center and no one to shoot the ball from the outside. Haven't we seen this before? Sophomore Othella Harrington led the Hoyas to the NIT championship game, and his success will depend on somebody making shots to break up collapsing defenses. It is point guard Joey Brown's last chance to run a well-mixed offense.
Boston College has all five starters back, but it seems the Eagles have been in that situation for the last few years. Connecticut and St. John's will both rely on new-comers for success. The Redmen will lean heavily on 6-6 swingman James Scott, the only two-time junior college All-American besides Larry Johnson. Connecticut needs 6-5 Israeli Doron Sheffer to get the offense moving so the Huskies can take advantage of forward Donyell Marshall.
Manhattan earned its first NCAA bid in 35 years last season, and the Jaspers could make it two straight Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference titles despite losing player of the year Keith Bullock.
The Ivy League plays a round-robin schedule to determine a champion and see who gets the right to scare a highly ranked team in the first round of the NCAA tournament. Penn went through the league unbeaten last year and then gave Massachusetts all it could handle. The Quakers have all five starters back, led by the backcourt of Jerome Alien and Matt Maloney.
Rider and Wagner had one of the best tournament championship games in the country last season, and Wagner should return behind guard Bobby Hopson, probably the league's best player.
If Fordham can vie for the Patriot League title, its chances are resting on the outside shooting of LSU transfer Dan Mascia.
The North Atlantic doesn't have Hartford's Vin Baker to grab national headlines anymore., but Drexel is the best team.
The East Coast Conference took a one-year hiatus last season and it's back with Troy State, the school that broke the 200-point mark last season, the favorite despite being in its first year in Division I.
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COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW • University Daily Kansan • November 17, 1993
Midwest conferences wide open Michigan could be upset winner
By Mike Nadel The Associated Press
Though four fairly fabulous fellows remain in Ann Arbor, Mich., Chris Webber's early departure to the NBA should let other programs challenge Michigan for the unofficial title of Best in the Midwest.
Upstarts such as Minnesota and Wisconsin of the Big Ten, Marquette of the Great Midwest and Oklahoma State of the Big Eight could emerge as the class of the nation's heartland.
But don't crv for Steve Fisher and the Wolverines.
With juniors Juwan Howard, Jalen Rose, Jimmy King and Ray Jackson left from the Fab Five, Michigan still has a shot at its third consecutive appearance in the NCAA championship game.
"Our last year's strengths are this year's liabilities," Fisher said. "We don't have the size. I'm not saying we're not going to have a pretty good team: I think we will. But we are far from a team that should be a prohibitive favorite."
Michigan will get pushed in the Big Ten by two schools that haven't won titles in years.
Minnesota, coming off an impressive run to the 1993 NIT title, has set its sights on its first conference championship since 1982. Voshon Lenard leads the Gophers, who return their entire starting lineup.
"I feel confident that we have the potential to be a Top-20 club," coach Clem Haskins said. "We have a chance to not only get into postseason play but also a chance to advance."
Wisconsin, with Michael Finley and Tracy Webster being joined by 6-foot-10 freshman Rashard Griffith, one of the nation's top recruits, is looking for its first Big Ten crown and NCAA tournament appearance since 1947.
Finley "is entering a different phase of his career," said
MIDWEST PREVIEW
Badgers coach Stu Jackson.
"He's going to be very much a marked man," Jackson said. "This year we'll be a little deeper and perhaps a little more talented, and that will relieve some of the pressure. But our freshmen are going to have to grow up quickly."
Though Indiana lost Calbert Cheaney and Greg Graham off its 31-4 team, it is never wise to count out a team coached by Bob Knight.
Several other Big Ten teams may be able to ride their top players into the NCAA tournament.
The brightest star is Purdue's 6-8 Glenn Robinson, already projected as the No.1 NBA draft pick if he leaves school after this season.
"When you have a player with Robinson's size who can play the perimeter, it's really hard to match up," Illinois coach Lou Henson said.
Henson has his own outstanding forward in Deon Thomas. Michigan State's Shawn Respert and Ohio State's Lawrence Funderburke also excel.
Marquette, in a constant rebuilding phase since Al McGuire retired after winning the 1977 NCAA title, looks like the best of the Great Midwest, one of the nation's emerging conferences.
Coach Kevin O'Neill has five of his top six players back from last season's 20-8 team, including 7-1 shot-blocker Jim McIlvaine, forward Damon Key and playmaker Tony Miller.
"It's nice to have more than one senior who's going to contribute." O'Neill said. "It's our deepest team."
Cincinnati, a 1992 Final Four team that almost derailed North Carolina's championship bid last season, should be good again. Memphis State lost Anfernee Hardaway to the
pros but gets outstanding forward David Vaughn back after his knee surgery.
DePaul has an outside chance at the title.
The biggest force in the Big Eight figures to be Oklahoma State and 7-footer Bryant Reeves. "Big Country" was the league's player of the year as a sophomore last season, averaging 19.5 points and 10 rebounds a game.
"I'm not sure he can improve at the rate that we've seen, but I think he has a chance to be better," said coach Eddie Sutton, who has three other starters returning from the 20-9 team. "On paper, we should be picked No. 1."
Two-time defending champions Kansas and Missouri will challenge in the Big Eight. Kansas must replace four starters. Missouri, with four starters back, can return to postseason play after a one-year ban because of NCAA sanctions.
Under Pete Gillen, who has coached Xavier to a 180-67 record in eight seasons, the Musketeers should continue to dominate the Midwestern Collegiate Conference.
Illinois State tries to defend its Missouri Valley Conference crown in what should be a wide-open race.
After losing the last two Mid-Continent Conference title games, Illinois-Chicago may be ready to take the next step.
Miami, Western Michigan, Ohio and Ball State are top contenders in the Mid-American Conference.
Texas was seventh in the Southwest Conference last season, and Tom Penders will rely on transfers Tremaine Wingfield and Rich McLver to get back to the top of the league.
Northeast Louisiana lost four starters, but there is still enough left for the Indians to have a good run at their fifth straight Southland Conference title.
A preview of the western conferences by The Associated Press was not available in time to be included in this issue.
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November 17, 1993 University Daily Kansan • COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW
7
NCAA rule changes frustrate Williams
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
This year's college basketball season has bred three rule changes, and Kansas coach Roy Williams is not pleased with them.
The first rule states that the shot clock will be shortened from 45 to 35 seconds.
Williams said that it was too early to tell what the actual effect of the rule change would be but that he did not anticipate a problem.
"It's not going to change our playing, and it won't change my coaching," Williams said. Senior guard Steve Woodberry said that, if anything, this rule could help on defense.
"If we pick up the guards and play full-court defense, it will make them rush," Woodberry said. "If we can take off close to 10 seconds when they're bringing up the ball, we could take them out of their offense."
Another new rule will stop the clock after a made basket in the final minute of the game.
Williams said this rule might help the game. He said that many coaches, including himself, called timeouts at the end of games with the sole intent of stopping the clock. But a price was is during the timeout. The television network broadcasting the game is obligated to go to a commercial.
"A lot of time you want to keep the players out there — you don't even want to talk to
them," Williams said. "But you can't becauseyou have to sell apiece of chicken."
The final rule, which overturned a previous rule, Williams detests. It states that when a player is dribbling, regardless of whether or not he is closely guarded, he can dribble for the entire 35-second possession. In previous years, a player had to pass after five seconds of closely guarded dribbling.
Williams said the rule penalized teams that played with a pressure defense, such as Williams' style of over-playing the passing lanes. He said teams that had a player with good size and good ball-handling skills could have that player dribble for 25 seconds then look to create a shot, similar to the style of play seen in the NBA. Williams also said he thought the reason for the change was because it was difficult for referees to make the call.
"I get tired of making the game easier for the officials," he said. "It's their hobby, and it's my life. It's a pretty simple thing. My kids learned how to count to five a long time ago, and if they want me to help, I'll help them count one, two, three, four, five."
Woodberry, a player with relatively good size and superb ball handling skills, sees pluses and minuses in the free-dribble rule.
"I think I will be able to create more and draw defenses to me," he said. "But I think they're trying to make college ball to much like the NBA. They should keep the college game the way it was, and if you're good enough, then you can go on."
Coaching changes bring hope to small universities
By Joe Macenka The Associated Press
RICHMOND, Va. — It was one of those moments that showed just how comfortable Paul Westhead was back in college basketball.
The new coach at George Mason was telling how he had duped his eager young players into believing they could fly.
Westhead recalled how, as an incentive, he told the players that if they were to run fast enough, it was even possible to be airborne for several seconds.
To prepare the Patriots for the physical demands of his all-out style of play, Westhead had them do sprinting drills with small parachutes attached to their backs during the preseason conditioning period.
It was the first step to introducing what the school had hyped in advertising campaigns as "Paul Ball": a dizzying tempo that produces eye-catching numbers.
Their eyes lit up, and, one by one, the players would try their best, only to return to their coach with a disappointed look and tell him they had been unable to achieve that elusive takeoff.
The Patriots are coming off back-toback 7-21 seasons. Attendance at the 10,000-seat Patriot Center averaged 2,740 last year.
Enter 54-year-old Westhead, who in
five seasons led Loyola Marymount to 105 victories and three NCAA tournament appearances. His final Loyola Marymount team in 1989-90 averaged 122.4 points and set an NCAA Division I scoring record with 181 points. That year's Lions also set a new NCAA tournament scoring mark with a 149-115 victory against Michigan.
The change at George Mason was just one of 31 at the Division I level, a 10 percent changeover at the head coaching position, just about the standard number for the past decade.
Eddie Fogler had the closest move as far conferences went, moving from Vanderbilt to South Carolina, schools which both play in the Southeastern Conference's Eastern Division.
The changes wiped out the staff of Xavier's Pete Gillen, who lost two assistants to head jobs: Dino Gaudio at Army and Skip Prosser at Loyola, Md.
And the move that truly crossed generational lines was at Stetson. Dan Hipsher moved from Division III Wittenberg to replace Glenn Wilkes, who retired after 36 years with the Hatters. Hipsher was 3 years old when Wilkes took over as head coach at Stetson.
Westhead left Loyola Marymount after the death of Hank Gathers and went back to the NBA, where he had coached previously with the Los Angeles Lakers and the Chicago Bulls.
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COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW • University Daily Kansan • November 17, 1993
SAS
BASKETBALL
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
Kansas freshman guard Jacque Vaughn prepares to shoot during practice. Vaughn is one of the freshmen that Coach Roy Williams expects to play early in the season.
Jayhawks' recruiting class features talent and variety
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
The future of Kansas basketball might have never looked so bright.
Kansas coach Roy Williams and his staff last season were responsible for bringing in, according to most recruiting experts, one of the five best recruiting classes in the nation.
The class of four freshmen is led by point guard Jacque Vaughn, 6-foot-1 and 180 pounds. The Pasadena, Calif., native was selected as the Big Eight Conference's preseason freshman of the year.
He averaged 21 points and 16 assists a game for John Muir High School, the same school of former Jayhawk Kirk Wagner and NBA standout Stacey Augmon. Vaughn, a pre-law major at Kansas, led his high school team to the Los Angeles city championship with a 29-5 record, while earning a 3.97 grade point average in the classroom.
Vaughn will battle junior point guard Calvin Rayford for the starting position, but Williams said that both men would be plenty of playing time.
"Jacque is truly an outstanding youngman who happens to be a very good basketball player," Williams said. "He will be a joy to watch."
Senior guard Steve Woodberry said that Vaughn impressed him the most of the newcomers.
"He has great leadership qualities," Woodberry said. "He knows the game and will help us a bunch."
B. J. Williams, 6-8, 200 pounds and still growing, played high school ball at Woodberry's alma mater, Wichita South High School. He plays the forward spot, but has the ability to roam the perimeter and he can shoot the three-point shot. Williams said that in time, B.J. Williams could play at the small forward spot, which usually gets to take some perimeter shots. As for now, Williams is playing behind senior forward Richard Scott at the big forward position.
"B.J. may seem to be a little quiet, then he will do something to really shock you," Williams said.
Scot Pollard, 6-11 and 240 pounds, will be called on to contribute early this season. He is junior Greg Ostertag's backup at center.
Pollard played with Vaughn last summer on the North team that won the gold medal at the United States Olympic Festival games.
"Scot has the desire to be a great player, and I think he will be," Williams said. "His ability to rebound, run the floor and play defense can get him a lot of minutes this year."
The last of the freshmen is Australian native Nick Proud. Proud has suffered from immensely bad fortune during the past year. He injured his knee after only the third game of his high school senior year at Sandy Alta High School in Sandy, Utah. His knee still hasn't rehabilitated 100 percent from the injury and, upon arriving at Kansas, he was struck with mononucleosis, a condition which inflames one's spleen. His spleen was then agitated when, in the second practice of the year, Proud was elbowed in the stomach.
Williams said that he didn't expect Proud to be completely healthy until mid-December at the earliest.
"Nick is really a skilled, big man," Williams said. "I hope his knee will allow him to show the KU fans what he can do."
With Kansas playing in the preseason National Invitational Tournament, the team had only 14 practices in which to prepare for the season. The freshmen, who aren't familiar with the Kansas system, are under particular pressure to learn things quickly.
However, despite Proud's problems with injuries, Williams said that he was pleased with the freshmen's progress.
"Scot, Jacque and B.J. are progressing nicely — because they have to," he said. "They're going to have to step in and play some minutes for us quickly."
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November 17, 1993 University Daily Kansan • COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW
9
Coach finds the perfect opportunity
Assistant By Matt Doyle basketball Kansas sportswriter
Assistant basketball coach Joe Holladay left home and family in Oklahoma to coach at Kansas
Joe Holladay could have stayed as basketball coach and athletic director at Jenks High School in suburban Tulsa, Okla., for the rest of his life and been happy.
But the opportunity to become an assistant coach at Kansas was the only way Holladay would leave Jenks High School.
"It is the University of Kansas, and Roy Williams is the coach," Holladay said. "Opportunity doesn't knock every year. It had to be for the right person at the right school."
Williams and Kansas certainly fit the specifics Holladay was looking for in a college program. And Holladay was certainly the person Williams was looking for to fill the vacancy on his staff created by Kevin Stallings' departure for the head coaching job at Illinois State.
"I've known him since 1981," Williams said. "We recruited Steve Hale, one of his high school players, to North Carolina. At that time I really felt he was an outstanding high school coach. In the 12 years since then, I've seen him work in camps at North Carolina, and he was the director of the camp here last summer. Over those 12 years I've gotten to not only respect him as a coach but to consider him a great friend."
Williams said that when he chooses a staff member, three criteria are necessary: expertise, work ethic and loyalty.
"I don't think there is any doubt that he has all three of those," Williams said. "He's working out wonderfully."
The transition from coaching on the high school level to the college level has been different, but good,
for Holladay. At Jenks, he said, he took two hours a day from his duties as athletic director to coach basketball.
"Now, I can focus all my time and energy to our basketball program here," he said.
Holladay had to make a big adjustment in making this transition. And that was being away from his family.
His wife of 25 years, Roi, and 18-year-old son, Matt remained in Jenks. Matt is a senior at Jenks High School and plays on the Trojan basketball team. Holliday's daughter, Heather, is a senior at the University of Oklahoma.
"It's not the best situation when your family is disrupted," Roi Holladay said. "But it was an opportunity for him to be involved in a quality program with Roy Williams."
Holladay said that he would not have accepted Williams' job offer if it was not for the encouragement that he received from his family.
"It was always his dream to coach on the college level and Kansas was always his favorite team," Matt Holladay said. "When he called home and said he had the job offer, I told him to take it."
Holladay had been able to see his family every other weekend before the start of practice. Roi and Matt were in Lawrence for Late Night on Oct. 29 and 30, and will try to make it to as many games in Lawrence this season as possible.
"We'll try to make the best of it, but my first priority is to watch my son play," Roi said.
Holladay said that he would miss not coaching Matt's senior season,but somehow there's a positive in that.
"I could have been traveling around the last 17 years, but I had 17 years at home with him," Holladay said. "I had the opportunity to coach him the last two
COLUMBIA
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
Kansas' new assistant coach, Joe Holladay, helps by returning a ball during a team practice at Allen Field House. Holladay replaces Kevin Stallings, who accepted a head coaching position at Illinois State.
years and see every game he ever played in. Thank goodness for VCRs, I'll still get to see him play this year."
Matt said it was different not having his father as his coach. But he knew that his father's decision was the correct one.
"When I turn on the television on a Saturday afternoon and see him, I know he made the right choice," Matt said. "It's a great opportunity for him."
An opportunity Holladay would leave home for.
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COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW • University Daily Kansan • November 17, 1993
Men's Basketball
Jayhawks 1993-94 Schedule
Nov. 16 Marathon AAU (Exh.) 7:05
Nov. 17 WESTERN MICHIGAN (NIT/J-TV) 8:30
Nov. 19 Preseason NIT (ESPN) 8:30
Nov. 24 #Preseason NIT (ESPN) TBA
Nov. 26 #Preseason NIT (ESPN) TBA
Nov. 29 Australia Nationals (Exh./J-TV) 7:05
Dec. 1 TEMPLE (ESPN) 8:30
Dec. 4 at DePaul (ESPN) 8:30
Dec. 6 WASHBURN (J-TV) 7:05
Dec. 8 at N.C. State (ESPN) 6:30
Dec. 11 ARKANSAS-LITTLE ROCK 7:05
Dec. 18 $at Georgia (ESPN) 4:00
Dec. 20 FURMAN (J-TV) 7:05
Dec. 22 INDIANA (Raycom) 7:05
Dec. 29 %Rhode Island (J-TV) 8:30
Dec. 30 %E. Tenn. St/SMU (J-TV) 6 or 8:30
Jan. 5 UNC-ASHEVILLE (J-TV) 7:05
Jan. 8 SMU (J-TV) 7:05
Jan. 10 OKLAHOMA (ESPN) 8:30
Jan. 17 KANSAS SATE (ESPN) 8:30
Jan. 22 at Iowa State (Raycom) 3:00
Jan. 26 OKLAHOMA STATE (Prime) 7:05
Jan. 29 at Colorado (Raycom) 1:00
Jan. 31 at Missouri (ESPN) 8:30
Feb. 6 NEBRASKA (ABC) 12:30
Feb. 12 at Kansas State (Raycom) 8:00
Feb. 16 at Oklahoma State (J-TV) 7:05
Feb. 19 MISSOURI (ABC) 2:30
Feb. 23 at Nebraska (J-TV) 7:05
Feb. 26 COLORADO (Raycom) 1:00
Mar. 3 IOWA STATE (ESPN) 8:30
Mar. 6 at Oklahoma (ABC) 12:30
Mar. 11-13 Big Eight Tournament at Kansas City, Mo.
Madison Square Garden, New York
$ Kuppenhiemer Classic in Atlanta
%Golden Harvest Classic in Kansas City, Mo.
(All times are p.m., Central and are subject to change)
Micah Laaker/KANSAN
Nov. 22 NEW ZEALAND (Exhibition) 7
Nov. 26 at Creighton 7:30
Dec. 1 at Wichita State 7:30
Dec. 3-4 DIAL SOAP BASKETBALL CLASSIC
Dec. 3 ORAL ROBERTS 6
Dec. 8 MORGAN STATE 7
Dec. 11 ATHLETES IN ACTION (Exhibition) 4:15
Dec. 19 at Lamar 5
Dec. 22 at UMKC 5
Dec. 28-29 at Rev. Joseph T. Cahil, C.M.
Invitational Jamaica, N.Y.
Dec. 28 vs. Georgia 6
Jan. 2 at West Virginia TBA
Jan. 5 TBA 4
Jan. 7 MISSOURI 7
Jan. 9 COLORADO 1
Jan. 14 at Nebraska 7
Jan. 16 at Iowa State 2
Jan. 21 OKLAHOMA 7
Jan. 23 OKLAHOMA STATE 2
Jan. 30 KANSAS STATE 5:30*
Feb. 4 at Colorado 7
Feb. 6 at Missouri 2
Feb. 11 IOWA STATE 7
Feb. 13 NEBRASKA 2
Feb. 18 at Oklahoma State 7
Feb. 20 at Oklahoma 2
Feb. 26 at Kansas State 7
Feb. 28 UNC-ASHEVILLE 7
Mar. 5-7 Big Eight Conference Tournament in Salina TBA
*Game is being televised Live on
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(All times are p.m., Central and are subject to change)
Jayhawks 1993-94 Schedule
Micah Lasker/KANSAN
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November 17, 1993 University Daily Kansan • COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW
11
Success increases women's crowds
Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
KANSAS
REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN
FOR KANSAS
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Moms, dads and siblings move over; women's basketball is catching on and more fans are watching from the bleachers.
Bernie Kish, director of ticket sales said the attendance at Kansas' women's basketball games had steadily increased during the last few years.
In August, the NCAA said that Southwest Missouri State lead the nation in its women's basketball attendance for the 1992-1993 season with an average 7,421 fans in its 8,858-seat John Q. Hammons Student Center.
Doug Hesse/KANSAN
Kansas junior forward Angela Aycock autographs programs after a game. The Jayhawks' attendance increased last year.
Kansas' estimated average for the 1992-93 season was 1, 042 in the 15,800 Allen Field House. That is 165 more a game than the previous year.
Kish said that great players such as junior Angela Aycock, and great recruiting generated the crowd increase.
Kansas coach Marian Washington has successfully recruited high school all-American players for the last three years.
Washington said the team responded well to crowd support.
"The more people that come out the better they play," she said of the team. "Any player will tell you that."
Kish said the Kansas fans were a good blend of people.
"It's not just student support," he said. "There's a solid core of faculty and staff too."
John Ripperger, who works in the sports information office at Southwest Missouri State, said fans were attracted to the university's program because of the team's NCAA Final Four appearance during the 1991-92 season.
The Bears record was not as good last year, but he said the excitement generated from the Final Four tournament led to the larger crowds.
"Fans in Springfield are well educated and excited about basketball," he said. "That makes it easy to market women's basketball to the people of the area."
Southwest Missouri State for the first time this year will have to reserve all the seats for the women's games because of the increase in the student tickets sold. Reserved seating for the men's games began during the 1985-86 season.
Kansas does not have to reserve seating for its women's
basketball games, but the crowds have increased during the last three years.
Aycock said attendance was low at home games during her freshman year, but this year, even before the season has begun, people were calling in and asking for programs.
Kansas was 9-5 in the Big Eight last year and 21-9 overall.
Washington said this year should be a good year for attracting fans.
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12 COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW • University Daily Kansan • November 17, 1993
"She should seriously be considered for the Kodak All-American team, possibly the 1996 Olympic team and definitely for the year 2000." Marion Washington on Angela Aycock
All-American forward assumes leadership role
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
For Kansas junior forward Angela Aycock, being named a preseason All-American selection is not a big deal.
"You've just got to take it in stride," Aycock said.
The only pressure from the early honor comes from herself, Aycock said, but the added incentive to perform is good.
"The pressure comes by worrying about what others are doing and comparing your statistics to theirs," Aycock said of other preseason All-American picks. "The best thing for me is to play hard. If our team is successful, then the individual accolades will come."
Kansas senior center Lisa Tate agreed that individual honors came second to the team.
individual honors came second to the team. "She's a great player," Tate said of Aycock. "It's good, but you can't let that overshadow your purpose at Kansas. You do what you have to do for the team."
It will be hard for Aycock to improve on last year's success. Last season, Aycock was a first team All-Big Eight selection after leading the Jayhawks to a 21-9 record. She led Kansas in scoring and steals, averaging 2.8 steals and 16.3 points a game.
Despite those numbers, Aycock said, she has to advance this year.
Kansas coach Marian Washington said Aycock's preseason award was well-deserved.
"I need to improve upon everything," Aycock said. "If I can do that, I'll have a successful season."
"Angela is one of the premier players in the country," Washington said. "She is a great athlete and a great person to be around. She should seriously be considered for the Kodak All-American team, possibly the 1996 Olympic team and definitely for the year 2000."
With success comes a call for leadership, and freshman guard Tamecka Dixon said Aycock answered that call. She said playing against Aycock in practice helped her.
"It's great because I know she's making me a better player," Dixon said. "You can see it on and off the court. You can see she's a leader."
Aycock said it was difficult to determine who was the leader on the team now.
"I consider myself an inspirational leader," Aycock said. "When we start playing, then we will know who the leader is. Right now, we're just trying to gel. We don't know who will be the leader on the court yet."
Helping freshmen in a leadership role also is Aycock's way of leaving her mark at Kansas.
"I just treat them normal," she said. "I try to keep their spirits up. As a freshman, sometimes your confidence can go down. You have to keep their confidence up, so when they are juniors and seniors they can keep this program topnotch."
51
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
Kansas junior forward Angela Aycock puts up a shot against Nebraska's Karen Jennings. Aycock, who led the team in scoring and steals a game last year, was recently named as a preseason All-American selection
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November 17, 1993 University Daily Kansan • COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW
13
All-American player picks Kansas, completes strong freshman class
By Gerry Fey Kansan sportswriter
A basketball team needs a good recruiting class each year to remain successful for an extended period of time.
Once again the Kansas women's team has gotten one.
This year marks the third straight season that Kansas coach Marian Washington has brought a high school All-American to Kansas. Guard Tamecka Dixon is the AllAmerican, who also was picked as the Big Eight's preseason newcomer of the year by NCAA magazine.
"This freshman class is one of the best in the nation," Washington said. "They work hard and learn quickly."
Quick learning may be necessary Because there are only 10 scholarship players on the team, Washington said, the freshmen might get more action than usual this season.
The other freshmen are forwards Jennifer Trapp and Shelly Canada and guard Angie Halbleib. The team also has two walk-ons, who made the team because of the lack of scholarship players. Their names have not been released yet.
Dixon sticks out as the best player in a strong freshman recruiting class for Kansas. Washington said Kansas was fortunate that Dixon chose Kansas. Despite Dixon's talent, seniors Michelle Leathers and Ericka Muncy will possibly play at the point guard position.
"Tamecka will be one of our point guards of the future," Washington said. "Leathers and Muncy will step up this year at guard. Anybody in the country would like to have a Tamecka Dixon on their team. That's a national consensus. She is one of the finest athletes I've ever seen."
Georgia, Houston, Iowa, Kansas and Michigan were Dixon's final five college choices. She said that those schools recruited her heavily but that her decision was made easy after a visit to Lawrence.
"After I came on my visit, I just knew this was the place for me," Dixon said. "I always wanted to play for a coach who had a good reputation, and Coach Washington has a reputation."
Canada said her Lawrence visit was also the clincher in her decision to come to Kansas.
"There was never anyone close," Canada said. "I hadn't seen anything I liked before Kansas."
Changing from a six-on-six game to five-on-five is something Canada had to adjust to, coming from Sapulpa, Okla. Oklahoma is the only state in the country that still plays girls basketball with three players on offense and three players on defense.
Since the three offensive players cannot cross the half-court line in that version of the game, Canada never ran full court in a game.
pretty good. The seniors are really helpful. Any questions I have, they've been really supportive."
"It's been a little bit of an adjustment running up and down the court and playing defense," Canada said. "I think it's going
Washington said Canada was making progress in her change to the college basketball game.
"She's a great offensive player," Washington said. "She's doing very well. It happens quickly sometimes, and sometimes it doesn't."
"It should be a lot of fun," she said. "I think we're going to be expected to contribute because of the numbers. We like the pressure."
A newcomer who Washington said was impressive was Trapp, a Lawrence native.
"I would really be shocked if she doesn't make it," Washington said. "She's not intimidated, which is rare."
This year's freshmen class will make an impact now and in the future, Washington said.
"Tamecka is going to help out," she said. "Our freshmen are going to see some time. I do expect Tamecka and Jennifer to jump right in."
John Gamble / KANSAN
Freshman forward Shelly Canada makes a basket during practice at Allen Field House. Canada is one of four freshman on the team this year.
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14
COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW • University Daily Kansan • November 17, 1993
Kansas favored in improved Big Eight
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Big Eight women's basketball and Rodney Dangerfield have something in common, they both get no respect. At least that is what one Big Eight coach thinks.
"I think it's the most underrated conference in the country," Oklahoma State coach Dick Halterman said.
But after four conference teams advanced to the NCAA tournament last year, times are a changing. Kansas, Colorado, Oklahoma State and Nebraska made the tournament. Colorado advanced furthest, to the regional finals.
"This conference is probably the most competitive in the nation," Kansas coach Marian Washington said. "It's great for women's basketball, but it's been tough for our record when trying to get a berth in the NCAA tournament."
Halterman said that respect for the conference was long overdue.
"A couple of the years when we went in the tournament, there were teams in the conference with 20 wins that got slighted," he said. "With Colorado getting to the final eight last year, people around the nation know the Big Eight is a good conference."
Six teams have a chance at the conference title, but Halterman said that Kansas, 21-9 last year, would be the favorite to win its second consecutive conference championship.
"When you just look at returning starters, Kansas has to be at the top in the Big Eight," Halterman said. "Ourselves and Colorado will be competitive and have a chance to knock off Kansas. Nebraska and Missouri are also good teams. It's the strongest I've seen this conference ever."
If returning starters are an indication of a team's strength, Kansas and Oklahoma State should do well. Both teams return four players, and Oklahoma State returns junior Stacy Coffey, a preseason candidate for first team All-Big Eight.
Halterman said Kansas junior Angela Aycock and Colorado junior Shelley Sheetz had deserved the preseason All-American honors they received.
One conference contender from last year has a hole to fill in its lineup. Nebraska made the second round of the NCAA tournament last year, but coach Angela Beck will be without two-time conference player of the year, forward Karen Jennings.
"We'll just have to produce another one," Beck said of Jennings' vacant spot. "We're going to try and be a more balanced team. We don't have an Aycock or a Sheetz, but we do have some good players."
Beck said she did not think that the Big Eight would be a close race.
"The team to beat is Kansas," she said. "I don't know if it will be as close as it was last year. Obviously, you've got to get out to a good start. This year you can have four or five losses and win the league."
The Big Eight conference is the most improved conference in attendance figures, Beck said, and the play on the court also has improved.
"It's improving so much every year it's scary," she said. "You don't know where your next win is going to come from."
The Big Eight is strong nationally, with four teams on NCAA Preview's preseason top-40 list. Colorado tops the conference at No. 10, whereas Kansas sits at No. 21.
Halterman said that future Big Eight recruiting would benefit from the improvement in the conference.
"Since the conference had four teams in the tournament last year, more and more people around realize the Big Eight conference is good. It gives us a chance to get the quality players," he said.
Gerry Fey's selections for women's Big Eight
1. Kansas
2. Oklahoma State
3. Colorado
4. Nebraska
5. Oklahoma
6. Kansas State
7. Missouri
8. Iowa State
All-Big Eight first team
F Angela Aycock, Kansas, Jr.
F Shanele Stires, Kansas State, Jr.
C Angi Guffy, Oklahoma, Jr.
G Shelley Sheetz, Colorado, Jr.
G Stacy Coffey, Oklahoma State, So.
Player of the Year Angela Aycock, Kansas
Newcomer of the Year Tamecka Dixon, Kansas, Fr.
KANSAN
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November 17, 1993 University Daily Kansan • COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW
15
1993-94 Women's Basketball Preview
Lofty expectations
Last year's Big Eight tournament champions deal with the pressure of defending a title
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
High expectations abound for the Kansas women's basketball team this season, especially from the media,the Big Eight coaches and the Jayhawk players.
Since last year's team won the Big Eight tournament and ended with a 21-9 record, the Jayhawks are expected to be No.1 in the conference again, according to NCAA magazine.
Kansas coach Marian Washington said the pressures that accompanied high expectations didn't worry her.
"I don't think there is any more pressure than what they put on themselves," Washington said of her players. "There are a lot of people on this team that really want to do well this year."
The expectations for the team should be high, since Kansas returns four starters to the team. That includes a preseason All-American, junior guard/forward Angela Aycock, and the Big Eight's leading shot blocker, senior Lisa Tate.
With those players returning, the outlook is good for Kansas, but Washington said injuries would be the key this season because only 10 players were on scholarship.
"I think our biggest challenge will begin with our ability to stay injury-free," Washington said. "It's not something you can control. If we are fortunate, we'll have an opportunity to get very close to what we did last year."
Another challenge will be replacing last year's three seniors. Gone are Shannon Kite, Stacy Truitt and Jo Jo Witherspoon. But Washington said she was confident that this year's seniors could pick up where last year's left off. This year's seniors are guards Michelle Leathers and Ericka Muncy and center Tate.
Adding to that combination is Aycock named the fourth-best small forward in the
nation by NCAA magazine. Washington said she would also have to be a leader on the team, like she was last year.
Aycock led last year's team to the Big Eight title, averaging 19.7 points and 9.0 rebounds in the conference tournament. She said the pressure would not be problematic for the team.
"I don't think as a whole there is much pressure," Aycock said. "We know what we're capable of doing. It's just a matter of getting out there and doing it."
The Jayhawks will not be underestimated this year as they were last year, Muncy said.
"Everybody will put us at the top," Muncy said. "All the Big Eight teams lost good players. We did too, but we have good depth."
Muncy said Kansas looked even better on paper than last year's team.
"As a senior, I just want to go all the way," Muncy said. "We have the best players. We are the quickest and the strongest, and we all play smart. We'll just have to prove it on the court."
Last year's team did prove equal to its abilities by receiving a berth in the NCAA tournament. The players expect to go farther than last season's first-round NCAA loss..
Forward Shelly Canada is one of four Kansas freshmen that make up one of the best recruiting classes in the country. She said the younger players also were ready for the season.
"Nothing should stop us," Canada said. "I'm looking for a Final Four appearance. I'm nervous, but also excited. I'll take advantage of every opportunity I have. I'll play the role that I can on the team."
Washington said the team had a good mix of experienced and inexperienced players.
"We're still relatively young, but its very nice to combine the older players with the risk-taking younger players," she said. "If we stay injury-free, we'll be an exciting team to watch."
Team roster
No. Name Pos. Ht. Class Hometown
3 Charisse Sampson G 5-10 So. Los Angeles
12 Angela Aycock G-F 6-2 Jr. Dallas
13 Alana Slatter F 6-0 Jr. Dallas
22 Erika Muncy G 5-6 Sr. Lexington, Ky.
24 Michelle Leathers G 5-6 Sr. Pantego, N.C.
30 Angie Halbeib G 5-10 Fr. Middleton, Wis.
33 Tamecka Dixon G 5-9 Fr. Linden, N.J.
44 Shelly Canada F 6-1 Fr. Sapulpa, Okla.
51 Jennifer Trapp F 6-1 Fr. Lawrence
55 Lisa Tate C 6-3 Sr. Kansas City, Mo.
50
Doug Hesse / KANSAN
Kansas senior center Lisa Tate goes up for a shot against Colorado center Abby Wirfs during a Big Eight tournament semifinal game. The Jayhawks won last year's semifinal 81-78 in double overtime, and Kansas defeated Nebraska 64-60 in the championship game.
16
KANSAN
COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW • University Daily Kansan • November 17, 1993
KANSAS
34
Photo courtesy of Indianapolis Star
Kansas senior forward Richard Scott raises the victory sign after a 74-69 Jayhawk victory against Indiana in the Hoosier Dome.
Team roster
No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt.
Class Hometown
00 Greg Ostertag C 7-2 275
Jr. Duncanville, Texas
10 Calvin Rayford G 5-6 155 So. Milwaukee, Wis.
11 JacqueVaughn G 6-1 180 Fr. Pasadena,Calif.
12 Patrick Richey F 6-8 200 Sr. Lee's Summit, Mo.
14 T.J.Whatley G 6-4 175 So. Benton, Ark.
20 Steve Woodberry G-F 6-4190 Sr. Wichita
21 Sean Pearson G-F6-4210 So. LaGrange, III.
22 B.J.Williams F 6-8200 Fr. Wichita
31 Scot Pollard F-C 6-1240 Fr. San Diego, Calif.
33 Greg Gurley G 6-5210 Jr. Leawood
34 Richard Scott F 6-7235 Sr. Little Rock, Ark.
J
J
35 Blake WeichbrodtG 6-2195 Sr. Norman, Okla.
44 NickProud C 6-1230 Fr. Sydney, Australia
KANSAN
Kansas guards Jacque Vaughn and Calvin Rayford will play important roles in a full-court defense this season.
Kansas
Last Year: 29-7
Big Eight Finish: 11-3, first place
Coach: Roy Williams
Record at Kansas: 132-37 (5 years)
Strength: Coaching, Williams' winning percentage of .781 is the best of any Kansas coach and the best of any active coach in the nation. Williams has taken teams to the NCAA Final Four twice in the last four years and has guided his Jayhawks to three consecutive conference titles.
Weakness: Experience. The Jayhawks lost four starters from last year's Final Four team, including the three top scorers, guards Rex Walters and Adonis Jordan and center Eric Pauley. Besides the senior class of forwards Richard Scott and Patrick Richey and guard Steve Woodberry, only three other players have seen minutes in big games.
KANSAN
JAYHAWKS: New season brings reshuffled deck
Continued from cover.
So, what is the ace in Williams' hand? He is. With a winning presentation
J
J
Junior center Greg Ostertag will be asked to play more minutes this season as a starter for the Jay-hawks.
highest of any active coach in the
nation, Williams has become one of the premier college coaches in the game. In his five years coaching the Jayhawks, Williams' 132 victories are second only to North Carolina State's Everett Case's 137 for the most victories in a coach's first five years.
Williams' knowledge of the game and his ability to pass this knowledge to kids less than half his age has translated into three consecutive Big Eight Conference championships, a string that is still intact, and two Final Four appearances
in the last three seasons.
These accomplishments, combined with his tremendous winning percentage, have translated into awards such as the 1992 national and conference Coach of the Year and 1989 Basketball Times National Rookie Coach of the Year.
So, just what knowledge does Williams have up his sleeve?
"I've got one rule," Williams said. "The easiest way to be successful is to do what I tell you to do."
What will he tell them to do?
First, he will tell everyone to forget about last year's team and the four starters who aren't returning.
He will tell the seniors, forwards Patrick Richey and Richard Scott and guard Steve Woodberry, to lead the team by example.
He also will tell specifically Scott and Woodberry that they must become the focal points of opposing teams and not remain role players.
"The biggest challenge for Richard and Steve is that they're going to have to score this year when the other team's defense is aimed at them," Williams said. "In the past, coaches would say, 'You've got to stop Jordan and Walters,' and they weren't concerned with everyone else. Now, the defense is going to be aimed at Richard Scott and Steve Woodberry."
So, how do they feel about it?
"I look forward to it," Woodberry said.
Scott said he felt the same way.
Williams also will tell guards Greg Gurley, junior, and Sean Pearson, sophomore, that they must step up from support players to legitimate scorers.
He will tell junior point guard Calvin Rayford and
"I really feel that the other team's point guard, at the end of the game, will have his tongue dragging," Williams said.
freshman point guard Jacque Vaughn, who are battling for the starting position, that they must defend their opponents for the entire length of the court in order to wear them down.
In what may be the most crucial part of the Jayhawks' game, Williams will tell junior center Greg Ostertag to have a big year.
"Greg is extremely important to our team," Williams said. "If he has an outstanding year, our team will certainly surprise a lot of people. And he is certainly capable of having an outstanding year."
Ostertag said he could handle the pressure and would work hard to meet Williams' expectations.
Probably as important as Ostertag's year will be the development of the four freshman on the team: besides Vaughn, forwards B.J. Williams and Nick Proud and center Scot Pollard. While Proud battles injures, Williams said, he hopes that the others will learn the system quickly and be ready to contribute.
"They better be good," he said. "Because we're going to need them to be."
Just do what I tell you to do. It sounds simple enough.
If the Jayhawks do what Williams says, a fourth consecutive conference title just might be in the cards.
November 17, 1993 University Daily Kansan • COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW
17
Big Eight Preview
Buffalo guard will stay with Big Eight
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
Colorado coach Joe Harrington can thank heaven for small favors.
For the past two years, it was rumored that Buffalo junior guard Donnie Boyce wanted to transfer out of Colorado. This summer he almost did.
"I decided not to go to Michigan because I have established myself in this conference," said Boyce, who was a first-team All-Big Eight Conference player last year. "And to start all over was kind of scary for me. You never know what can happen when you transfer."
Harrington knew that if Boyce did transfer, he would have lost arguably the best player he has had in his three years as the coach of the Buffaloes.
The Maywood, Ill., native averaged 19.2 points last season, second only to Bryant Reeves of Oklahoma State, last year's conference player of the year.
With the abandonment of the 5-second rule that now allows one player to dribble for the entire possession, Harrington has moved Boyce to the point guard position. This will allow him to look to create his own shot without having to pass.
"Last year I had to put up a lot of shots because the 5 seconds were almost up," Boyce said. "I think this rule will help us out offensively. I feel as long as I have the ball in my hands and can keep dribbling, I can do some better things offensively."
Inevitably though, Boyce will have to pass.
Harrington said he would need to get quality performances from junior forward Ted Allen and the lone senior, forward Mark Dean, if Colorado was to be successful this year and climb out of the conference cellar.
Colorado
As a sophomore, Allen led the team in field goal-
Last Year: 10-17
Big Eight Finish: 2-12, eighth place
Coach: Joe Harrington
Record at Colorado: 42-46 (3 years)
Strength: All-conference junior guard Donnie Boyce. At 19.2 points a game, Boyce ranked second in the conference in scoring last season. He was a consensus preseason All-Big Eight first teamer this year and will look to battle Oklahoma State's Bryant Reeves for player of the year honors. He decided not to transfer to Michigan after considering it during the off-season. He can shoot, put the ball on the floor and rebound — averaging 6.2 last year. After Boyce, strengths are tough to find.
Weaknesses: The other four positions. Boyce will be moving to point guard this year and has no proven supporting cast. The Buffaloes have seven freshmen this year, some of whom will have to play quality minutes. Last year, forward Randy Robinson scored 15.2 points a game and center Poncho Hodges helped with shotblocking and rebounding. Both are gone. Harrington needs someone to step up and help Boyce. The most likely candidate is junior forward Ted Allen, 6-foot-10. He prefers the perimeter but will need to move closer to the bucket this year.
KANSAN
percentage at 54.7 percent but failed to have enough shot attempts to qualify for a conference ranking. At 6-foot-10, he is one of the tallest members of the team. He will need to pick up the slack in rebounding with the loss of last year's center Poncho Hodges.
Dean spent most of last season recovering from an early knee injury and will be called on often for scoring and rebounding this year.
In the backcourt with Boyce will be either redshirt freshman Dameon Page or freshman Matt Tuck.
9
Doug Hesse/KANSAN
Colorado's Poncho Hodges, who has graduated, soars over Kansas senior forward Patrick Richey. Kansas defeated the Buffaloes 82-51 last year in Boulder, Colo. This year the Buffaloes are looking to junior guard Donnie Boyce to bring them out of the conference cellar.
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COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW • University Daily Kansan • November 17, 1993
Cyclones need new leadership after losing high-scoring guards
By Mark Button Kansan sportswriter
If there is anyone who will benefit from last summer's Midwest floods, it might be the visiting opponents of the Iowa State Cyclones this season.
The floods that brought destruction to a multitude of cities throughout Iowa, Missouri and Kansas, to name a few, also ruined the floor at Hilton Coliseum, where the Cyclones have dominated visiting teams for the past 17 seasons.
Iowa State coach Johnny Orr has seen his teams claim victories in 30 of the last 32 home games during the past two years, including a perfect 16-0 record there in 1992-93.
"It was devastating," Orr said. "The water rose to 14 feet high in there. It ruined the floor, it ruined locker rooms, training rooms, it ruined everything."
The floor has been replaced, but the one with 17 consecutive victories on it is gone forever.
"We'll have a different type of team this year," he said.
Gone from last year's Cyclone team are guards Justus Thigpen and Ron Bayless. The two guards accounted for nearly 40 percent of the scoring last season, and Orr admitted that many times, as Thigpen and Bayless went, so went the Cyclones.
However, the team's loss might be at least one Iowa State player's gain.
Orr said junior Fred Hoiberg, who led the team in rebounding last season with 6.3 a game despite standing just 6-foot-4, will move from forward to off-guard this season.
"Fred Hoiberg is one of the best players I've ever coached — ever," said Orr, who has coached major college basketball for 28 years.
Iowa State
Hoiberg will be the Cyclone captain this year, and Orr said
Last Year: 20-11
Big Eight Finish: 8-6, tied for second place
Coach: Johnny Orr
Record at Iowa State: 204-187 (13 years)
Strength: Hilton Coliseum. The Cyclones were 16-0 at home last year and are 30-2 during the last two seasons. They have posted a .500 record or better at home for 17 straight years. Their 17-game winning streak at home is the third best in the country.
Weaknesses: Any other gym. Iowa State has claimed just one victory in its last 16 conference road games. Also, Orr has to replace what was arguably one of the best backcourts in the nation last year. Gone are Ron Bayless and Justus Thigpen, who combined for 30.9 points a game last year.
KANSAN
that he expected Hoiberg to score more than his 11.6 average of last season.
"I think we have more weapons this year," Hoiberg said. "Last year we just had Ron and Justus and if they had bad games, we weren't going to be very good."
In addition to Hoiberg, Orr said that he would look to junior forward Julius Michalik, 6-11 and 215 pounds, and senior center Loren Myer, 6-11 and 255 pounds, for their leadership.
"Loren's a big, strong kid, and I think he runs as well as any big man," Orr said. "And he's a better shooter than most of them."
Michalik was third on the team in scoring last season, next to Thigpen and Bayless, with an average of 13.3 points a game. Orr said that he should score more this year because he would shoot more.
KU
.
Photo courtesy Sports information
Kansas senior forward Richard Scott defends Iowa State's Loren Meyer during a game at Kansas. Kansas won 78-71 last year.The Cyclones, who went undefeated last year against conference foes at home last year, hope to repeat that success this year.
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November 17, 1993 University Daily Kansan • COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW
19
---
Wildcats seek to growl despite low ranking
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas State Wildcats need to look no further than the Big Eight Conference's preseason predictions for motivation this year.
After coming on late last season, defeating Kansas in the second round of the conference tournament before ultimately losing to Missouri in the title game, the Wildcats are picked to finish seventh in the conference in 1993-94.
"The media has the right to their opinion, and it's our job to prove them wrong," said K-State coach Dana Altman. "It's going to be a very competitive league this year."
To prove the press wrong, Altman said, he would rely heavily on his core of four senior starters.
Seniors guards Anthony Beane and Askia Jones will provide leadership in the backcourt, while forwards Ron Lucas and Deryl Cunningham will be strong up front.
Beane, who has come to be known as a crunchtime player, scoring the game-winning or tying shot in six games last year, said he would continue to want the ball when the game is on the line.
Altman said Beane would definitely be the go-to man in the waning minutes of most contests.
"I've become real confident in myself," he said. "And if the players and coaches want me to, I'm more than willing to take the (last) shot."
"Our team, because of Anthony's work ethic, respects him," Altman said. "They want him to take the shot, hit or miss. I want him to take the last shot, too."
Jones will finally be 100-percent healthy this year after suffering from an ankle injury in 1990 that required three screws to be inserted into his foot. He led K-State in scoring last season with an average of 13.8 points a game and was third on the team in rebounds, with just under five a game.
Cunningham led the team in rebounds last year,
Kansas State
Last Year: 19-11
Big Eight Finish: 7-7, tied for fifth place
Coach: Dana Altman
Record at K-State: 48-40 (3years)
Strength: Experience. The Wildcats return senior starters Anthony Beane, point guard; Deryl Cunningham, forward; and Askia Jones, guard. Jones is finally 100 percent healthy after his 1990 ankle injury and will look to improve on his 13.2 scoring average of last year. Beane, who made several game-winning shots last year, said he wanted the ball at the end of the game. More importantly, his teammates and coach want the ball there, too.
KANSAN
Weakness: Size. At 6-10, freshman center Kevin Lewis is the biggest Wildcat. Altman says his team will hit the boards hard this year, but without a big man, it will be difficult to compete with players such as Oklahoma State's Reeves, 7-0, Kansas' Greg Ostertag, 7-1, and Iowa State's Loren Meyer, 6-11.
with an average of 8.3 boards a game, and should be expected to grab at least that many again in 1993-94.
Lucas, who was steady but not outstanding last year, will be called on to rebound more than ever this year.
With these four experienced seniors, why were they picked seventh?
One word: size.
At 6-foot-10, freshman Kevin Lewis is the tallest of Altman's troops. The starting five, inserting junior Brian Hensen at the off-guard, runs from Hensen at 6-foot-1 to Cunningham and Lucas at 6-foot-7.
"We'll be little again this year," Altman said. "We need to need to emphasis rebounding as a team."
KANSAS
52
STATE
Renee Knoeber/KANSAN
Junior center Greg Ostertag tips the ball over Kansas State's Aaron Collier. The Jayhawks defeated K-State 71-65 at Manhattan last year.The Wildcats, despite being small in size hope to be better than their No.7 Big Eight-preseason ranking.
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COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW • University Daily Kansan • November 17,
BOOKER
15
KANSAS
00
Doug Hesse/KANSAN
Missouri's Melvin Booker tries to steal the ball from Kansas' senior center Greg Ostertag. Kansas managed a 67-63 victory at Missouri last year. Booker is one of seven seniors whom coach Norm Stewart will looks to for leadership, but he is not ruling out the two sophomore and four freshman on the team.
Seven returning seniors give Tigers experience, leadership
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
The Missouri Tigers, defending Big Eight Conference tournament champions, have an apprenticeship program this season.
Coach Norm Stewart has seven seniors who will be teaching the way for two juniors, two sophomores — including junior college transfer Julian Winfield — and four freshmen who will eventually take their places.
In fact, if the seniors don't prove to be good mentors, the youngsters may move up sooner than expected.
"Our new guys are talented," Stewart said. "The seniors are going to have to work hard to hold their positions."
Senior center Chris Heller said that the seniors would be able to provide the leadership that Stewart talked about.
"We've been together a long time," Heller said. "We all know our strengths and weaknesses. We know if one guy is down, somebody will pick up the slack. We've come to rely on each other."
Speaking of relying, Stewart said that if he could get Heller to play consistently, he would rely heavily on him.
Heller had some big games last year, particularly in the conference tournament at Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Kan., where he was named the tournament's most valuable player. Specifically, in the semifinal game against Iowa State, he scored 20 points on nine of 13 shots, grabbing seven rebounds.
Stewart said jokingly that he was going to try to hypnotize Heller before each game.
"For every game I'm going to tell him, 'You're in Kansas City, you're in Kansas City — Kemper Arena.'"
Heller said he knew the seriousness that the joke represented.
"I need to work on staying consistent," he said. "I need to get where I consistently doing something every night."
In addition to Heller, the Tigers will need to receive senior
Missouri
Last Year: 1914
Big Eight Finish: 5-9, seventh place
Head Coach: Norm Stewart
Record At Missouri: 515-264 (26 years)
Strength: Experience. Seven seniors from last year's conference tournament champion team return to the Tigers, including four starters. Leading Missouri this year will be guards Melvin Booker and Mark Atkins and possibly forward Jevon Crudup. Expect contributions from guard Lamont Frazier and center Chris Heller, also seniors.
Weaknesses: Consistency and health. Heller and Frazier spent time injured last season, and sophomore transfer Julian Winfield hasn't fully recovered from his knee surgery in December.
KANSAN
leadership from guards Melvin Booker, Mark Atkins and Lamont Frazier.
Booker is the returning point guard, and Stewart said he wanted Booker to shoot more. Booker averaged 18 points when he played the off-guard spot, which shoots more, and only six points when he ran the point.
Senior forward Jevon Crudup, who had been suspended from the team for the semester because of criminal charges of driving under the influence of alcohol, may find his way back on the team after the season starts, pending the outcome of a trial today, Stewart said.
Stewart said that if Crudup is allowed to play and has improved his offensive game as much as he has his defense, he will be a true force in the league.
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November 17, 1993 University Daily Kansan • COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW
Cornhuskers will play without true center
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
Some say teams can't play in the Big Eight Conference without a center. Nebraska coach Danny Nee isn't one of them. *
"This will be the first year since I've been coaching that we'll play without a post man," Nee said. "We're basically going to play with four forwards and a point man."
Although this style of play is unproven, Nee said, at least he had experienced personnel at each position.
"The strength of this Nebraska team, I think, is experience," he said. "We've got four seniors back, and two of those men are five-year players."
Both Eric Piatkowski, 6-foot-7, All-Big Eight Conference forward, and forward Bruce Chubick, 6-7, were redshirt freshman. Nee said that both players' maturity would benefit the team.
Nebraska
Lastyear:20-11
Piatkowski scored 16.7 points a game last year, fifth-best in the league. Chubick added more than 8 points and at least 5 rebounds a game. Nee said he expected both men to improve in all categories this year.
Big Eight Finish: 8-6, tied for second place Coach: Danny Nee
Another senior returning is three-year starting point guard Jamar Johnson, who had a down season last year. Johnson slipped from scoring more than 11 points a game as a sophomore to 9.8 points a game last year. Nee said, however, he was confident that Johnson would improve this season.
At one of the other forward spots is Nebraska's fourth senior, Tom Best.
Record at Nebraska: 126-82 (seven years)
15 14:41
KANSA
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Strength: Senior leadership. Nebraska will start four seniors, including all-conference forward Eric Piatkowski. Pliatkowski, 6-foot 7, scored 16.7 points while grabbing 5.7 boards a game last year and looks to improve on both numbers this year. He will be the focus of opposing defenses, but guard Jamar Johnson, 6-0, and forwards Bruce Chubick and Tom Best will hurt teams.
Kansas junior center Greg Ostertag is caught on the perimeter against a Nebraska defender. Kansas defeated Nebraska 94-83 in Allen Field House last year. The Cornhuskers are without a center this year but think that the experience of the team will lead it to success.
KANSAN
Renee Knoeber/KANSAN
Weakness: Rebounding. Nee said his team would play this year without a true center, operating with four forwards and a point guard. Platkowski will be the tallest starter, and he usually roams the perimeter on offense, so offensive rebounds may be few and far between.
"These men are older, more mature and they're very focused," Nee said.
Four sophomores, all of whom played crucial minutes as freshmen, complement the four seniors.
Sophomore forward Terrance Badgett will start this year, and sophomore guards Jaron Boone and Erick Strickland played several minutes a game during the conference schedule last season. Also, guard Jason Glock, who played his freshman year and was redshirted last season, will add depth to the backcourt, playing behind Johnson.
Nee said that his team was talented
although it was down in numbers this year two junior-college transfers round out the 10-man roster. If it could steer clear of injuries, Nee said, he expected to be in the race for the conference title.
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COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW • University Daily Kansan • November 17, 1993
Lack of seasoned starters causes preseason worries for Sooners
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
Oklahoma coach Billy Tubbs has his work cut out for him this year, and he knows it.
"We have a long way to go and a lot of work to do." Tubbs said. "I think we're going to have a big struggle early because we have so many new players."
Seven new players to be exact. Also, two of the 16 Sooners sat out last year.
Of the five players with significant playing experience, junior forward Jeff Webster, 6-foot-9 and 225 pounds, and sophomore forward Ryan Minor, 6-7 and 215 pounds, are the standouts.
As a freshman in 1990, Webster took the Big Eight Conference by storm, scoring 18.8 points and grabbing 5.5 rebounds each game, becoming the league's newcomer of the year. His numbers dropped off a bit his sophomore season, but he remained a consistent force for the Sooners. Last season, he scored nearly 17 points and grabbed nearly 7 rebounds a game.
Webster is the only returning starter from last year's disappointing Sooner team, which tied for fifth in the conference and failed to reach the NCAA's postseason tournament for just the third time in Tubbs' 13 years with the team.
Oklahoma
Last Year: 20-12
Big Eight Finish: 7-7, tied for fifth place
Coach: Billy Tubbs
Record at Oklahoma: 318-119 (13 years)
Strength: Senior forward Jeff Webster. An outstanding shooter — 16.5 points a game last year — who must work on his defense and rebounding, Webster will be the team's undisputed leader. He is the lone retuming starter and must score even more if the Sooners are to be successful. Look for sophomore forward Ryan Minor to help out Webster.
Weakness: Take your pick. Tubbs has four unproven junior-college transfers and two freshmen on this year's team. Gone is solid point guard Terry Evans. Senior center Ken Conley underwent knee surgery during the summer and will not perform at 100 percent this season. Tubbs admitted that his team would struggle early.
KANSAN
The Sooners are predicted to finish fifth in the conference, but Webster said he was not concerned with predictions.
"Right now, that's all on paper," he said. "In the Big Eight, any team can win any night. I feel we have some talented people,
and we'll surprise some of those people who swept us to the side."
Minor, who Tubbs said was probably the most consistent player in practice so far, can score close to the hoop and from the perimeter. However, his best attributes are his abilities to rebound and defend against players bigger than he.
"Ryan will be one of the best players in the conference before he's through here," Tubbs said.
Of the new players, Tubbs said, he is most impressed with junior-college transfer point guard John Ontjes and redshirt sophomore guard Dion Barnes.
Ontjes dished out 15 assists, and Barnes scored 28 points on 12-of-16 shooting in the team's first scrimmage.
Only time will tell which of the nine new Sooners will fit into Tubbs' game plan this season.
"The only way to find the strengths and weaknesses of your players is to go to war with them," Tubbs said.
Renee Knoeber/KANSAN Kansas senior forward Patrick Richey finesses a reverse layup against Oklahoma's Ryan Minor. Kansas came up short as Oklahoma stole a victory in Allen Field House 80-77.
KANSAS
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November 17, 1993 University Daily Kansan • COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW
23
The doth more joy than none will Pin ?
Cowboys to rely on center to meet high expectations
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
At the onset of the 1993-94 basketball season, things look bright for the Oklahoma State Cowboys.
Not only do they return four senior starters, one of them happens to be the best player in the conference.
Junior center Bryant Reeves, 7-foot-0, was last year's Big Eight Conference player of the year. After his summer of playing on Team USA with North Carolina's mighty center Eric Montross, he might only get better. He said battling with the stronger Montross every day in practice improved his game.
"We would both be sore after practice," he said.
In the 1992-93 campaign, Reeves averaged 19.5 points and 10 rebounds each game.
Reeves' complements include a talented backcourt of senior Brooks Thompson, who averaged 14.6 points a game, and junior Randy Rutherford, who added 13.3 points each contest. Though both are suited for the off-guard position, Thompson will control the offense. Rutherford, after transferring to Oklahoma State from Bacone Junior College in Oklahoma, led the conference in three point field goal percentage, hitting on 55 of 126 attempts, or 44 percent.
Depth in the backcourt will be supplied by seniors Bryndon Manzer and Scott Sutton, Coach Eddie Sutton's son, as well as highly acclaimed freshman Chianti Roberts.
The fourth senior starter, forward Fred Burley, will need to be more consistent this season if Sutton's hopes of a conference title are to materialize.
The Cowboys were picked as the top team in the conference, but Sutton said the Big Eight was so good this year that anyone has a shot at the crown.
Oklahoma State
Last Year: 20-9,
Big Eight Finish: 8-6, tied for second place
Coach: Eddie Sutton
Record at Oklahoma State: 72-25 (3 years)
Weakness: Ball handling, Senior guard Brooks Thompson, a natural shooting guard, will handle the point guard position again this year, and if he hasn't improved, it could prove costly for the Cowboys. The Cowboys committed 95 more turnovers than their opponents last season.
Strength: Junior center Bryant Reeves. As last year's conference player of the year, Reeves led the conference in scoring with 19.5 points a game, rebounding with 10 rebounds a game and field goal percentage at 62 percent. He was the first to do this since Kansas' Wilt Chamberlain in 1958-57. If he continues to improve as he did between his freshman and sophomore years, the Cowboys will be difficult to stop. Sutton also will return three other starters this season.
KANSAN
"On paper, we probably should be picked No. 1," he said.
Thompson, on the other hand, said the preseason rankings would make the Cowboys work hard to give legitimacy to expectations.
"You can't help but look at the polls, and we're happy with them," Thompson said. "But you can't put all your emphasis on that, you have to concentrate on getting it done. If everyone is expecting you to do it, you have to work that much harder."
KANSAS
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OKLAHOMA
25
STATE
Renee Knoeber/KANSAN
Kansas senior foward Richard Scott and Oklahoma State's Von Bennet battle for a rebound. Kansas won the game 84-72 in Allen Field House last year.Many pick the Cowboys to be No.1 in the Big Eight conference.
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24
COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW • University Daily Kansan • November 17, 1993
What we say
Faith over logic: Kansas will win Big 8
For the past three weeks or so, my friends have been asking me, "So Mark, how are we going to be this year?"
I've been telling them that we'll be all right, but I've been holding back. Not anymore.
Despite Kansas coach Roy Williams' constant reminding of how expectations are too high for this team, I still believe that the Jayhawks will earn their fourth straight conference championship.
Why? First let me define some things. Things like "expectations" and "too high."
I think there is a line between "expecting" something and "believing" in something.
I think the line divides logic and faith.
I don't expect Kansas to win the conference title. Logic suggests that they won't, but I believe they will.
Now, just what is "too high"?
If too high means expecting to see the Jayhawks in Charlotte, N.C., in March, then I agree. Kansas fans have to be some of the most spoiled people in the world. The Jayhawks have the fourth-winningest program in the nation and have been to the Final Four four times since 1986. Only Duke has had more appearances, and only Duke fans are more spoiled.
SPORTSWRITER.
Kansas fans need to judge success based on the team's finish in the conference, not on whether it gets to the Final Four. Two years ago the Hawks won their second consecutive Big
PETER SMITH
Eight championship. Two weeks later, they lost to Texas-El Paso in the second round of the NCAA tournament. Many people said the year was an unsuccessful one.
However, if "too high" means giving up the conference hardware to Oklahoma State (predicted in the preseason polls to win the title), then sorry, Coach, I disagree.
Faith over logic.
Logic shows Oklahoma State is returning four starters, including last season's player of the year, center Bryant Reeves.
Logic shows Missouri has a squad of eight seniors and three returning starters.
Logic shows Kansas has lost four starters and has unproven players at point guard, center and small forward.
Faith over logic.
I believe Kansas will be successful because I believe in the players and the coach.
I believe Richard Scott when he tells
me that he has improved his outside game and will score more. I believe him when he tells me that he is going to pull down double-doubles in scoring and rebounding more than a few times this year.
I believe Steve Woodberry when he tells me that he is going to score more, rebound more and do more of the little things that will help the Jayhawks win games.
I believe Patrick Richey and Greg Gurley when they tell me that they have been able to put up big numbers all their lives, but until this year, they weren't needed to do so at Kansas.
I believe — honestly, I do — Greg Ostertag when he tells me that he looks forward to the weight that will be put on his shoulders to have a career-type year. I even believe him when he says he is going to perform like everyone wants him to.
Ibelieve, before the year is through, the spoiled Kansas fans will see Woodberry score 30 points in a game, Jacque Vaughn hand out 15 assists in a game, Patrick Richey register a triple-double, Kansas defeat Indiana in Allen Field House and Greg Ostertag be consistent and dominant.
I believe them,but what is much more important is that they believe in themselves.
That is why I believe Richard, Steve and Patrick will hoist the conference trophy above their heads at the end of the season.
Faith over logic.
Mark Button's Big Eight picks
1) Kansas
2) Oklahoma State
3) Iowa State
4) Kansas State
5) Missouri
6) Nebraska
7) Oklahoma
8) Colorado
Player of the Year:
Donnie Boyce, Colorado
Freshman of the Year: Jacque Vaughn, Kansas
All-Big Eight Team
Newcomer of the Year Jacque Vaughn, Kansas
Steve Woodberry, Kansas Bryant Reeves.
Oklahoma State Donnie Boyce, Colorado Eric Piatkowski, Nebraska Richard Scott, Kansas
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November 17, 1993 University Daily Kansan • COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW
What the experts say
NEW IN COLLEGE
800 FIGHT SOUTHWEST
IN DIRT COVEAGE
DICK VITALE'S
Basketball
FOR THE SERIOUS FANS
MEMBER VIVIAN
SCHLEIDER
REAL WOMEN
LEGACY
by Sylvia Baldock
NATIONAL CHAMPION
32,500 points
12,675 games
14,965 minutes
ORLANDIA STATE
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DICK VITALE'S BASKETBALL
1. North Carolina
Top10
2. Kentucky
3. Arkansas
5. California
2. Kansas
6. Duke
8. Temple
9. Michigan
10. Georgia Tech
The Big Eight
3. Missouri
1. Oklahoma State
4. Nebraska
12. Kansas
5. Kansas State
6. Oklahoma
7. Iowa State
8. Colorado
It is a testament to Roy Williams' program that Kansas, despite losing guards Rex Walters and Adonis Jordan, center Eric Pauley and forward Darrin Hancock, has not been buried.
That's not to say the Jayhawks will be favored in the Big Eight — they won't— or that Kansas fans should think about booking motel rooms in Charlotte, N.C., next year. The Jayhawks, while still among the nation's elite, don't figure to match recent Kansas teams that have Final Four rings for 1991 and 1993 and won at least 27 games each of the past four seasons, while never losing back-to-back games during that same span.
What Vitale says about Kansas:
Jet & Smith's
College Park
Basketball
SHOOTING FOR THE TOP!
Wide-Boor Race for NCAA Title
ALL-BIG EIGHT TEAM
Steve Woolberry
Bryant Reyes
Donna Beyce
Eric Pierkowski
Jeff Weiser
Top10
STREET & SMITH'S COLLEGE/PREP BASKETBALL
1. North Carolina
2 Arkansas
2. Arkansas
5. Duke
3. Louisville
4. Minnesota
6. California
7. Kentucky
8. Illinois
9. Virginia
13. Kansas
10. Michigan
The Big Eight
7. Kansas State
8. Colorado
6. Iowa State
Petersen's '93-94 SCHEDULES & STATISTICS
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
BUD 2: SOONERS, JAYHAWKS IN SHIELD HUNT,
RATING THE GUARDS; WHO'S BEST?
TOP 25 COUNTDOWN
PETERSEN'S
GLL AMERICA
TEAM
KANSAS
34
OKLAHOMA
32
3. Missouri
1. Kansas
5. Oklahoma
2. Oklahoma State
4. Nebraska
The key to the Jayhawks' hope of extending their string of unshared championships to three is 7-foot-2 junior Greg Ostertag. Specifically, the key is Ostertag's stamina. Handicapped by leg problems as a backup for two seasons, Ostertag averaged only 13 minutes, five points and four rebounds last year. If he increases his playing time to 30 minutes and becomes the center many envisioned, the Jayhawks will be difficult to dethrone.
What Street & Smith say about Kansas:
Top10
PETERSEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
1. Kentucky
2. Louisville
4. California
3. North Carolina
5. Michigan
6. Arkansas
7. Kansas
8. Temple
9. Cincinnati
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10. Duke
The Big Eight
1. Kansas
2. Oklahoma State
3. Missouri
4. Nebraska
5. Oklahoma
6. Iowa State
7. Kansas State
8. Colorado
Once again, the Jayhawks will be a dangerous NCAA Tournament team, although they may not have enough experience to return to the Final Four. Kansas will win the Big Eight regular-season title, falter in the conference tournament and make the Sweet 16. Those things are pretty certain. Beyond that, it's up to the youngsters.
What Petersen's says about Kansas:
NCAA PREVIEW*
Top10
1. North Carolina
9. Cincinnati
6. Kansas
2. Michigan
7. Arkansas
4. Duke
8. California
3. Kentucky
5. Indiana
10. Louisville
The Big Eight
1. Oklahoma State
2. Missouri
3. Kansas
4. Nebraska
5. Kansas State
6. Iowa State
7. Oklahoma
8. Colorado
- The NCAA Preview is compiled by sports writers from around the country. Because different sports writers picked the top 10 and Big Eight selections, teams may be ranked differently in the two polls.
What the NCAA Preview says about Kansas:
The Jayhawks lost four starters from its 29-7 team that fell to North Carolina in the NCAA championship semifinals, including the unexpected departure of forward Darrin Hancock. But Kansas, under Coach Roy Williams, has received more production from its reserves than any Big Eight team.
26
COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW • University Daily Kansan • November 17, 1993
What you say...
The University Daily Kansan asked its readers to submit letters citing what teams they thought were the best teams,the most overrated teams and the dark horses. The replies are printed on pages 27-30.
North Carolina has it all to be the best
Another big reason for Carolina's supremacy is a longtime characteristic: poise. Far too often in the college game, tight games are decided by mistakes. North Carolina does not beat itself. At Kansas we're used to that as well, but many talented teams shoot themselves in the foot in the clutch. It's quite possible to write 2,000 words
The best team this season was the best team last season. If North Carolina weren't in the Atlantic Coast Conference, there would be talk of an unbeaten season. Everyone knows how Eric Montross physically dominates inside for the Tar Heels, but what really puts this team in a class of its own are the guards. Derrick Phelps plays an Adonis Jordan-like point. Any team expecting greatness in the Carolina system must have a great point guard, as Kansas fans can surely appreciate. And alongside Phelps is Donald Williams, who emerged last year as a game-breaking three-point threat. His mere presence makes it impossible to focus too much on Montross.
on how excellent a team the Tar Heels are, but that's just not possible here. This team has it all. The Tar Heels play defense all over, they're big, they shoot well, they're deep, they have great on-court leadership and they have Coach Dean Smith and his staff. Watch them if you get the chance, they could be one of the all-time greats.
Aaron Rosenthal St. Louis senior
Temple will prevail Seton Hall underrated
No.1 — Temple. Not only do the Owls return all five starters that reached the West regional finals, but the trio of Rick Brunson, 14 points a game; Eddie Jones, 17 points a game; and Aaron McKie, 20.6 points a game, is perhaps the best in the nation. Temple's match-up zone defense baffles teams offensively and John Chaney's unorthodox 5 a.m. practices instill discipline and toughness in his players. A tough schedule and depth are concerns, but this team thrives on overcoming adversity. Chaney maximizes his talent, and his team's unselfish play should make the Owls national champions.
Overrated: Indiana. The Hoosiers lost All-American Calbert Cheaney and Greg Graham to the NBA, and Damon Bailey, although steady, isn't the world-bearer everyone made him out to be coming out of high school. Promising forward Alan Henderson is coming off a knee injury, and Indiana has a void at the center position. It all adds up to a down year in Hoosier land.
Surprise: Everyone knew that Seton Hall would lose Terry Dehere and Jerry Walker, two of its best players. Then sophomore Luther Wright, who was projected to be a force, declared himself available for the NBA. Experts are forecasting a rocky season for the Pirates. However, their demise has been grossly exaggerated. Bryan Caver and Arturas Karnishovas are solid returning starters. Add capable backups John Leahy and Danny Hurley to the mix, and suddenly things don't look so bleak. Also, keep your eye on sleeper Adrian Griffin, who played at Wichita East. As a freshman last season, Griffin was the Pirate's sixth man. The pressure and never count out team.
Overland Park sophomore
Tarheels are No.1 but could stumble
Houston in 1983. UNLV in 1987. UNLV in 1991. Should we add North Carolina in 1994?
How often have seeminglyinvincible teams lost championships because of one game? This season, everyone and his dog (like that dog that licks fire hydrants to pick winners for a Topeka news channel) knows that Carolina is the one to beat. Yet, chances are pretty good that they could stumble in a 40-minute game. Let's see, that leaves us 300 teams to choose from.
Michigan, last year's second-best team, split two close games with North Carolina, but despite saving some timeouts, the loss of Chris Webber may be too much for the Fab Five minus one.
Arkansas took North Carolina to overtime with "40 minutes of hell," and then realized 40 minutes weren't enough. Maybe a team with quickness could beat North Carolina, but Arkansas had to play flawlessly to compete. They'd have trouble doing that again or for the whole NCAA Tournament.
That leaves Kentucky, a team that lost Jamal Mashburn but seems to improve every year. They have the size, quickness and poise to stop the Tar Heels.
But basketball championships are determined on the court, not in preseason polls or fancy computers. Ijust hope Roy's Boys are cutting down the nets in Charlotte.
The most overrated team in the nation this year is Purdue. The Boilermakers have Glenn Robinson, a play-
Will North Carolina three-peat? That's the question college basketball fans will be asking after North Carolina repeats as national champions. The Heels will be returning four starters, including 7-foot terror Eric Montross. They have an army of reserves and newcomers to replace NBA first-round pick George Lynch, including high-flying freshman Jacky Stackhouse. Add the legendary Dean Smith to the mix, and everyone else will be singing the blues.
Ali Norbash Lawrence senior
Tar Heels will reign as national champs
See LETTERS,Page 28.
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November 17, 1993 University Daily Kansan • COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW
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Continued from Page 27
er-of-the-year candidate. Unfortunately, they have nobody else. Purdue always does poorly in the NCAA Tournament, and Coach Gene Keady's head may explode if he gets any madder. His antics hide the fact that he is a bad coach.
The Big Ten also will produce the most surprising team of the year. The Ohio State Buckeyes will rebound from a sub-par season. This year's team has more experience to surround senior Lawrence Funderburke, who should have a monster season. Coach Randy Ayers has set a fire under his players and will guide his team to a Sweet 16 surprise. John Silva Olathe junior
Without 5-second rule ball-handling teams win
Although none of them may be ranked No. 1 when the NCAA Tournament begins, one of these four teams will win it all: UCLA, California, Minnesota or Michigan. It's not the deciding factor, but with the abolishment of the 5-second closely guarded rule, teams with good ball handling, slashing and scoring guards whom they can isolate and feature will excel. All these teams have these guards and great supporting casts.
UCLA has Shon Tarver and Tyus Edney, and the O'Bannon brothers at forward give them a hellified team. They will be running and gunning, rolling through the tourney. Minnesota has megathreat Vashon Leonard and everyone from last year's National Invitational Tournament championship队. Cal has the best guard in the nation, Jason Kidd, and an awesome scorer and rebounder in forward Lamond Murray.
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Without Chris Webber, Michigan still has a tremendous team with buckets of tournament experience. If I have to pick one, I'll take UCLA to bring a banner back to Pauley Pavilion. Overrated teams: Kentucky. Without Mashburn, the Wildrats won't go anywhere; Pitino, you should have taken the 'Hawks' money. Kansas, too, is overrated, along with all Big Eight basketball. They say Big Eight teams are so good because they have such good non-conference records. But those nonconference games are against mediocre opponents. (Washburn, Furman, etc. — Are you kidding me?) We'll see what happens when Temple comes to town. Surprise team: Georgetown. If anyone on the team develops an outside shot, look out for the Hoyas. Othella is baaaad! Most improved team: Miami Hurricanes (who, by the way, have the best college football team, but the wrong quarterback playing when they met Florida State). Stevie Edwards and Popa, along with a batch of talented freshmen, might take Miami to the NIT Championship. Overall, it's gonna' be an awesome season, baby. Michael Langdon St. Petersburg, Fla., junior
North Carolian, Indiana have needed experience
As much as I would like to say it is Kansas, the best team in the nation is the North Carolina Tar Heels. Not only do they have all their starters coming back but one, they have two of the best freshmen in the country, Jerry Stackhouse and Rasheed Wallace. The Tar Heels have the experience and confidence to weather the early tests and gain momentum going into their conference season. Look for the Tar Heels to repeat as champions.
mess, mismanagement, misuse of
applicants, collusion with attackers
Most people pick Michigan to win the Big
Ten. In case you have not noticed, Chris Weber has left for the NBA. The Fab Five is history. Michigan could not win the Big Ten with the Fab Five, I don't know what makes people think Michigan will win without the Fab Five.
Indiana has the returning talent, not to mention a gifted group of freshmen, to ensure another productive season. They have three starters returning, and Brian Evans could emerge as a key player this year. Remember Damon Bailey. This is the year Bailey will live up to expectations. One last thing, the coach of the Hoosiers is Bob Knight. Enough said. Travis Pohlmeier
082 page 4 most beautiful
Buffalo Grove, Ill., freshman
Temple will be champs; Georgetown is overrated
Get out your road maps because the road to the national championship leads to Philadelphia, home of the Temple Owls. Eddie Jones and Aaron McKie will provide senior leadership while pumping in basket after basket to lead the Owls on another successful run in the tournament. Behind the coaching of John Chaney, they will only improve on the effort they displayed in their close loss to Michigan in the Final Eight last year. Give a hoot, this is definitely the year of the Owl.
It gives me great pleasure to say the most overrated team again will be the Georgetown Hoyas! They have not made a jump shot since Reggie Williams graduated, and John Thompson's insistence on playing the Morgan States will keep his team from winning in the tournament. One more team? UCLA sucks.
The surprise of the year will be the Idaho Vandals. Led by Orlando Lightfoot, the pride of Moscow, Idaho, the Big Sky
champs could make some noise early in the tournament. Finally, I guarantee that the Arizona Wildcats will somehow find a way to win a game in the postseason.
**Tom Tronsdal**
**Tucson, Ariz., law student**
Like it or not Jayhawks, Tar Heels will win it all
As much as fans around here may hate to admit it, it would be surprising if anyone stops North Carolina from winning its second-consecutive national championship. The Tar Heels lost only one starter from last year's team, forward George Lynch, and those returning include Eric Montross — far and away the best center in college basketball. Besides Montross, the Tar Heels have one of the best guard tandems in the country with Derrick Phelps and Donald Williams. To make matters worse, North Carolina's incoming class of freshmen is one of the two best in the nation, with the other belonging to Kansas. It features national high school player of the year Rasheed Wallace, versatile forward Jerry Stackhouse and sharp-shooting guard Jeff McInnis. Coach Dean Smith should win his third national championship with this incredible combination of talent and experience.
Greg Garhart Topeka junior
Tar Heels, Wolverines may play again for title
The 1993-94 NCAA basketball season should bring asecond-consecutive championship to the North Carolina Tar Heels.
See LETTERS, Page 29.
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COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW • University Daily Kansan • November 17, 1993
Continued from Page 28
With returning big man Eric Montross and long-range shooter Donald Williams, along with the top recruiting class in the nation, the Tar Heels are set to dominate the competition. Anything less than No.1 will be a disappointment.
The most overrated team this year is the Indiana Hoosiers. Although Indiana has returning stars Damon Bailey and Alan Henderson, it lost point guard Greg Graham and All-American Calbert Cheaney to the NBA. The young Hoosiers lack experienced players, which will hurt them in biggame situations.
The surprise team to watch this season is the Michigan Wolverines. The Wolverines may have lost their main man Chris Webber, but they return with four starters from their "Fab Five" team from a year ago. With strong play by Jalen Rose and Juwan Howard, complemented by the athleticism of Jimmy King and Ray Jackson, Michigan could find itself in a third straight NCAA final.
Marcus V. West Colwich freshman
All five starters return at Temple, Minnesota
I'm sure that it is going to be another great year for North Carolina, which returns four starters from its championship team and boasts the top recruiting class in the nation.
But what about Temple? It almost defeated Michigan in the West Regional final, and all five starters are back. It has one of the best small forwards in Eddie Jones, and guard Aaron McKie produced 21 points a game. Temple has its work cut out, though, with a schedule that includes Duke,
Louisville, Kansas, Cincinnati, Massachusetts and George Washington. All made the tournament last season.
Don't shed any tears about Michigan losing Chris Webbler. The Wolverines still will be formidable in the tournament without him. But, don't be surprised if Minnesota wins the Big Ten. All five starters return from the 22-10 team that won the National Invitational Tournament last year. Voshon Lenard contributed 17 points a game last year, and the Gophers never lose at home. I predict that Minnesota and Temple will stun everyone this year, even though their success should come as no surprise.
Cal Wilson
Council Grove freshman
Tar Heels have another championship roster
With four returning starters and coach Dean Smith, the defending national champions, the North Carolina Tar Heels, appear to be the solid choice as the No.1 team in college basketball this season.
Eric Montross, a 7-foot-0 giant, has blossomed into the best big man in the country after his outstanding performance in the NCAA Tournament last year. Teaming up with Montross will be Final Four MVP Donald Williams, a 6-foot-3 junior guard, and senior point guard Derrick Phelps. Add to this front court returne Brian Reese and the No.1 class of incoming freshmen. The Tar Heels look invincible. Even coach Smith, dean of college coaches, has to look for reasons why the Tar Heels won't return to the Final Four.
Look for the California Golden Bears to be the overrated team of the season. Even with the great Jason Kidd, they will not be able to repeat their end-of-the-season sen-
sationalplay. Expectations are for the Final Four, but with the loss of Kansas transfer Jerrad Haase, this won't happen.
The surprise team will be the Kansas Jayhawks. With only one returning starter, they appear destined for a down year. But with the excellent coaching from Roy Williams and the experience of returning seniors Richard Scott, Patrick Richey and Steve Woodberry, look for this team to get better as the season progresses. Another Big Eight championship?
Stefani Hamman
Osage City senior
North Carolina to repeat, Duke, Indiana do poorly
Dean Smith and the North Carolina Tar Heels are heavy favorites to repeat as NCAA champions this season. The addition of incoming freshmen Rasheed Wallace, Jeff McInnis and Jerry Stackhouse will more than offset the loss of George Lynch to the NBA. With starters Eric Montross, Brian Reese, Donald Williams and Derrick Phelps all back from the 34-4 team of a year ago, the Tar Heels need only travel down Tobacco Road to Charlotte, N.C., to lay claim to their second title in as many years.
Indiana and Duke are the two teams most likely to take a nose dive this season. Coach Bobby Knight and the Hoosiers must replace the scoring of NBA lottery selection Calbert Cheaney as well as two other starters. A fifth-place finish in the Big Ten is probable. Coach Mike Krzyzewski and the Blue Devils must look to sophomore Chris Collins, son of former NBA player and coach Doug Collins, to replace point guard Bobby Hurley. Duke will finish fourth in the rugged Atlantic Coast Conference.
Look for Louisiana State and Wisconsin for surprises this season. Freshmen Ronnie
Henderson and Randy Livingston for the Tigers and Rashard Griffith of the Badgers will make an immediate impact. David Watson Topeka sophomore
Four returning starters, recruiting key to Tar Heels
There is no question that the North Carolina Tar Heels will be the team to defeat in college basketball this year. Last year's national championship team returns four starters, including All-American candidate Eric Montross at center. The Tar Heels also boast the top recruiting class in the country, which adds even more depth to their bench. And with Dean Smith, one of the greatest coaches of all time, at the helm, North Carolina will coast to its second straight NCAA crown.
The Duke Blue Devils have been the biggest force in college basketball during the past several years. Despite losing key players, many analysts again have picked them to finish in the top five. Gone from last year's team is the outstanding backcourt combination of Bobby Hurley and Thomas Hill. Their experience and leadership won't be replaced easily, so look for Coach Mike Krzyzewski and the Blue Devils to have an average season.
The Arkansas Razorbacks could surprise a lot of people this season. Super sophomores Scotty Thurman and Corliss Williamson will emerge as the most potent 1-2 cast, and Nolan Richardson's "forty minutes of hell" defense will make Arkansas a dangerous team in the postseason.
Tom Rausch
Andale freshman
See LETTERS, Page 30.
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Big leaders guarantee Blue Devils third title
When John Wooden guided his UCLA Bruins to a series of national championships in the 1960s and 1970s, his team was led by a bevy of big men, such as Lew Alcindor and Bill Walton. When the Bruin dynasty began to crumble after Wooden's last title in 1975, college basketball was left without a dominant team. That began to change in 1986 when Mike Krzzyzewski's Duke Blue Devils stormed onto the scene with an NCAA record 36-victory season.
Duke, like UCLA, was led by big men when it charged into the Final Four in five of the last seven years. Danny Ferry and Christian Laettner were both All-Americans and consensus players of the year during their senior seasons. Laettner's marksmanship in the Kentucky game two years ago brought back visions of Bill Walton's 44-point performance against Memphis State in the 1973 National Finals.
Krzyzewski's successful recruitment of freshman Joey Beard gives Duke the next big man to lead it back to the title. His size, speed, shooting ability, defense and intelligence are the tools that make him college basketball's next great player. Teaming up with forward Grant Hill, the favorite for player of the year honors, guards Marty Clark and Chris Collins and tough-as-nails center Cherokee Parks, Beard is the final piece in the puzzle to help Duke ascend to its rightful place among the basketball elite.
Last season's loss to California in the second round of the NCAA tournament was a setback, but look for that to motivate Krzyzewski, possibly the finest college
coach since Wooden. When March draws to a close and only one team is left standing look for Duke to raise a third championship banner to the hallowed rafters of Cameron Indoor Stadium.
Bart Swartz,
Basehor graduate student
Tar Heels will win title, UCLA could be a surprise
If there's one thing I cannot understand, it's why the Kansan wants to see a hoard of letters telling them why North Carolina is going to be No. 1 this year. If there's another thing I cannot understand, it's why the Kansan would want to hear an opinion other than that North Carolina is going to be No. 1. It would take a person rather unstudied in the logic of college basketball or someone headed to the Western region of Larned to publicly claim another team as the favorite to the NCAA crown. It has coaching, talent, the big man, skillful youth, experienced role players and North Carolina tradition on their side. The only negative factor working against the Tar Heels is that they are the undisputed No. 1 team, and on any given day, the whole team could come down with influenza or be trapped in a Duke residence hall.
competent coach in Eddie Sutton. But let's face it, they're from Oklahoma State. Enough said.
Luckily for Oklahoma State, they don't play North Carolina this year. The Cowboys have to be the most overrated team in the country this year. Sure, Bryant Reeves may be the best center in the Big Eight, but his supporting cast is disappointing. Burley is a one-dimensional shooter. Thompson is the point guard, and he couldn't dribble his way out of a paper sack, let alone the hands of Vaughn and Rayford. Okay, they have a
If you're looking for a surprise team this year, look westward. It may be bandwagon to pick the groove California Golden Bears to claim the Pacific Ten title, but the team to watch this year is UCLA. The brother combination of Ed and Charles O'Bannon put Steve and Brian Henson in their place in the basketball pedigree department. Shon Tarver is the third flat-out scorer on the team. In typical Bruin fashion, this crew will falter against some easy opponents. Edward Crupper Garden City senior
North Carolina will be in hunt for NCAA title
After the Heels, there is a multitude of teams with the firepower, incentive and experience to contend for the title. Michigan has lost the two national championship games; Duke, led by the most versatile player in the land, Grant Hill, is tough again. Arkansas is poised for a title run, and Louisville and California both look very strong.
One team stands heads and shoulders above the rest this year in college basketball. Coach Dean Smith is in blue heaven with this year's North Carolina team. The defending national champions are not only the best college team in the land, they also are one of the best ever.
Other teams that have a chance include: Minnesota, Kentucky, Illinois, Temple, Oklahoma State, UCLA, Virginia, Kansas, Wisconsin and Florida State — a team that can beat any team on any given day. Minnesota and Texas are two strong dark horses that also have the talent to get hot at tournament time and give any team a scare.
Eric Bossi
Sabetha freshman
Tar Heels will repeat history;Bears overrated
The North Carolina Tar Heels will steal the show in the 1993-94 college basketball season. Although it isn't easy to repeat as national champs, the Tar Heels can do it with this team. Dean Smith comes in this season with four returning starters and the best recruiting class in the nation. This includes All-American candidates, center Eric Montross and guard Derrick Phelps. Also returning is a blossoming forward Brian Reese and Final Four MVP Donald Williams, who may be the pure best shooting guard in the nation. Along with shotblocking center Kevin Salvadori and forward Pat Sullivan, the Tar Heels also will have a deep bench. This team, by far, has the best frontcourt, backcourt and coaching in the nation. Translation — repeat.
The most overrated team is definitely California. California lost two of its centers and one of its best scorers in Jared Haase — We love him here — and considering that Kidd is inconsistent from the field the Bears will struggle against tough Pac-10 opponents like UCLA and Arizona.
Wisconsin is the best-kept secret in the polls this year. The Badgers will have great playmakers in forward Michael Finley and guard Tracy Webster. Along with sparkling freshman Jalil Roberts, Stu Roberts, Stu Jackson will be smiling come tournament time.
Jay Newland Iola freshman
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COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW • University Daily Kansan • November 17, 1993
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COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREVIEW • University Daily Kansan • November 17, 1993
CAMPUS/AREA: North Lawrence and downtown businesses prepare for the opening of the Tanger Outlet Mall. Page 3.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103, NO.64
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18. 1993
[USPS 650-640]
Give us a break; fall's just too long
NEWS:864-4810
Tracy Allery, Lawrence junior,
wants a break from classes.
"This is the worst time of the semester," she said. "You get stressed out."
Allery is just one of many students who have expressed interest in having a break earlier in the fall semester than Thanksgiving
Larry Maxey, professor of clarinet, music and dance and head of the calendar committee, said the committee was approached with the idea of a fall break last year by several students.
The calendar committee is a University governance body that creates the University's academic schedule each year for University Council.
What students do not realize, Maxey said, is that if the University of Kansas had a fall break, students would have to make up the lost class time.
Carol Prentice, assistant to the vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the Board of Regents required each Regents institution to have a minimum of 150 days of classes, not including the finals period.
Maxey said a fall break would be difficult to schedule because there was not a fixed midterm exam period.
He said that if KU were to have a fall break, it would have to be closer to the middle of the semester because of Thanksgiving.
Allery said the break should be during the third or fourth week in October.
"That's the longest haul," she said. "It's like Thanksgiving is never coming."
KU's Spring Break begins on March 20, the 11th week of the 18-week spring semester. If there was a fall break with the same schedule, the break would begin on Nov. 1.
David Amber, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the fall semester would have to begin earlier to compensate for the break because it would have to be finished by the end
Q R E A D
F Q R U M
864-9040
Should the University have a fall break?
How many days should the fall break be?
■ When should it be scheduled?
■ Would you be willing to have a longer semester in exchange for a fall break?
HOW TO USE OREAD FORUM:
1) Call 864-9040 and wait for the tone at the end of the greeting.
2) Record a concise message (try to keep it less than two minutes). We suggest outlining your ideas on paper first. Names are not required.
3) Hang up immediately when finished.
4) If you preter, you may respond in a typewritten or printed letter to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Clearly mark "Oread Forum" on the letter or envelope.
WHAT WE'LL DO:
1) The Kansan will report the content of Oread Forum discussions in subsequent issues. The Kansan reserves the right to use all, part or none of each recorded message and letter.
2) We will forward all responses to the University's Calendar Committee, which drafts the academic schedule.
3) The Forum will stop taking responses 6 p.m. on Friday.
of the calendar year.
He said that starting the fall semester earlier would be difficult because the summer semester ended in July and residence hall staff members started working on Aug. 1.
"You'd be talking about a continuous school year," he said. "Our calendar is a rather elongated one now."
Ambler said he thought students had enough time off with Thanksgiving vacation and did not need a fall break.
Kristy Eumont, Eudora junior, said she would like a break during the fall semester but would not want to prolong the semester.
earlier," she said. "I'd rather have a longer summer."
Jeff Steinhouse, Tulsa, Okla,
sophomore, said he would not mind
starting the fall semester earlier if KU
had a fall break.
"I wouldn't want to start school any
"I think everyone gets frazzled by
Thanksgiving," he said.
Steinhouse said the break only needed to be a couple of days and not a week.
"You need that one day in the middle of everything," he said.
Tim Bruck, Overland Park senior, said he did not want to prolong the semester with a break.
"School is long enough as it is," he said.
Five H.O.P.E.Award finalists recognized for teaching skills
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
Barbara Woods could not believe she had been named one of five finalists for the HOPE Award.
Woods, director of continuing education in pharmacy practice, said she thought the announcement was a joke.
"I was really surprised," she said, laughing "I think they better check the names again."
The Honor for Outstanding Progressive Educator award is given each fall to outstanding professors who use unique teaching styles. The Board of Class Officers and members of the senior class nominate professors for the annual award.
The five finalists are Woods; Jeff Aube, associate professor of medicinal chemistry; Timothy Bengtson, associate professor of journalism; Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare; and Greg Shepherd, assistant professor of communication studies.
"The award honors professors who are willing to make an extra effort and discuss anything with a student," said Ben Schwartz, Northbrook, Ill., senior, and president of the senior class. "They help you learn, and they're also your friends."
The winner will be announced today and recognized at the football game on Saturday. The winner's name will be engraved on a plaque to be displayed in the Kansas Union.
All of the professors nominated said that being a finalist for the award was special because it was decided by students.
Woods, who has taught at the University of Kansas for five years, said her nomination indicated that students
enjoyed her one-on-one style of teaching.
"I enjoy being there for them — being accessible," she said.
Aube said he thought students nominated him because he tried to incorporate humor and apply his class lessons to real life.
"He said teaching — interacting and meeting with students, getting to know them — was something that we emphasized." Bengtson said. "I think that's what I've enjoyed most."
"My impression is that they appreciate my classroom style." he said. "I'm an informal person."
Bengtson said that when he came to KU 15 years ago, Del Brinkman, then dean of journalism, asked him if he enjoyed teaching.
Bengtson said a professor's enthusiasm always was contagious.
"I encourage them to reach for the stars," he said. "I try to point students in the direction of attaining high aspirations."
Dailey, who has taught at KU since 1969, said students responded to his direct style of teaching. The fact that he teaches a class on sex and relationships helps, he said.
"I enjoy developing relationships with students, but it's a little more difficult," he said. "I try to make a big class feel as small in size as possible."
In his four and a half years as a professor at KU, Shepherd said, he had been both pleased and frustrated that his class size had more than tripled.
"The class is relevant to their lives," he said. "They will find that learning about relationships is important, not only while they are here at KU, but also in the future."
House passes NAFTA after daylong debate
34-vote victory margin larger than anticipated
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — In a hard-earned triumph for President Clinton, the House approved the North American Free Trade Agreement late yesterday to fuse the United States, Mexico and Canada into the world's largest trading bloc. Republicans provided a majority of the support.
The 234-200 vote sent the measure to the Senate, where leaders predicted approval within a few days. "NAFTA is a lock," predicted GOP Leader Bob Dole in a written statement.
Clinton, beaming, lauded the House within moments of the vote. NAFTA would "expand our exports, create new jobs and help us assert America's leadership in the global economy. ... We chose to compete, not retreat, to lead a new world economy, to lead as America has done so often in our past," said the president, who leaves today for a trade meeting in Seattle with leaders of 15 Asian nations.
The House rendered its verdict after a daylong debate that reflected high-minded disagreements over America's
role in the world economy and bare-knuckled politics. Scores of labor-backed Democrats abandoned their president to oppose the accord, but 132 Republicans signed on to assure passage.
Every representative from Kansas voted for the bill except Democrat Jim Slattery, a candidate for governor of Kansas.
The 34-vote margin was far wider than anticipated, the result of a furious last-minute lobbying blitz that blended presidential phone calls with concessions to key lawmakers concerned about the pact's impact on a variety of domestic industries.
A cheer went up in the chamber when the vote count passed the 218 needed to approve the pact. Opponents stood in clumps, shaking their heads and grimacing at the result.
"A vote for NAFTA is in the great tradition of our party." House GOP Leader Bob Michel of Illinois said in a ringing speech of support. "So let it be said on this crucial vote tonight, that we Republicans did not sacrifice the jobs of tomorrow to the fears of today."
Democratic Leader Richard Gephardt summed up for the opponents who fear the pact will throw thousands of Americans out of work. "Deficient and flawed," he said of NAFTA. "We cannot and must not expose our workers and our corporations to unfair competition."
0 3 3 0 21901
A welcoming fanfare
William Alix / KANSAN
Students throw shredded newspapers in the air as Kansas is introduced to the crowd of 13,100 before the opening season game against Western Michigan. The Jayhawks defeated the Broncos 69-50 last night at Allen Field House. See game story on Page 11.
INSIDE
With survivor's eyes
A new exhibit at Watson Library spotlights books written and illustrated by survivors of the Holocaust.
Page 9.
Regents to consider Watkins expansion
E
By Liz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
By Liz Klinger
Watkins Memorial Health Center will present a revised, $5,650,000 expansion proposal to the Board of Regents today in an attempt to get more use out of its growing organization. In addition to reducing the waiting time to see a physician, the expansion would expand areas designated for urgent care, examination rooms, Counseling and Psychological Services, or CAPS, and gynecology.
The expansion, proposed for the north side of the building, would increase the student health care fee of $69.50 by about $10 to $12, said Jim Strobl, director of Walkins. The student health care fee has not been raised since 1988, he said.
"The major problem we have in this building is we don't have the proper amount of space in the right areas," Strobi said. "We have excellent doctors. We just don't have the facilities for them to be able to turn out a high volume of patients."
In 1992, about 70 percent of students used Watkins, Strobi said. From 1983 to 1992, the number of physician visits has increased from 15,229 to 44,971. During that time, the total number of visits increased from 49,127 to 153,840, he said.
"One of the biggest problems we have at the health center is the wait." Strobi said.
The wait to see a physician at Watkins is lengthened by a lack of exam rooms, Strobl said. Physicians, who each have one exam room and one office, would get at least two exam rooms and an office in 13 three-room complexes.
The additional 40 exam rooms would move patients more quickly because nurses would have more space to ask patients confidential questions, Strobel said.
Another reason for the expansion would be to meet the needs of urgent care patients, who account for 25 percent of visits, Strobl said. The expansion would increase a 700-square foot area to as much as 2,800-square feet that would include up to nine beds, instead of three.
"This will clearly take us into the next 20 or 30 years," said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins.
The proposal will be presented to Student Senate in January of 1994. If passed by the Senate and the Board of Regents, construction will begin in July of 1995.
About 60 percent of Watkins' yearly income of $5 million comes from the student health fee, and the other 40 percent comes from services not covered under that fee. Strobli said.
The CAPS and gynecology departments would be increased by several thousand square feet and up to eight rooms would be added to each department, Strobli said.
"The majority of students know money goes hand in hand with progress," said John Shoemaker, student body president. "I think everyone's fairly comfortable with that."
Kansas staff writer Christophe Fuhmans contributed to this story.
Proposal's history
Spring 1990 — Waltkins discussed space problems with the Student Health Advisory Board and received approval for further study. The University initiated action through the state to hire a consultant architect to study the feasibility of an expansion.
Late Fall 1991 to late Fall 1992 First study by Lawrence R. Good & Associates, an architecture firm, goes to Board of Regents. The board rejected the study because it did not address all problems, such as a need for space for more record storage and patient service.
---
Early November 1993 — Architects revised study and presented it to Watkins.
↑
Today — Revised proposal goes to Board of Regents for consideration.
V
KANSAN
2
Thursday, November 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
(1) $x = \frac{2}{3}$ 证明:由 $y = \ln x$ 得 $y = \ln \frac{2}{3}$,则 $x = \frac{2}{3}$,即 $\ln \frac{2}{3} = \frac{2}{3}$,所以原等式成立。
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Mad for the mouse: Mickey turns 65
LOS ANGELES — Mickey Mouse may be forever young, but the cartoon, rodent's birth as an American icon occurred 65 years ago this week and his native city is celebrating.
The Associated Press
Walt Disney Co. on Tuesday kicked off its 65th global birthday party of parties with dozens of children singing "Happy Birthday" to a giant mouse at City Hall as Mayor Richard Riordan declared today "Mickey Mouse Day."
The mouse, who went from mischief-maker to corporate symbol, was silent during the ceremony, keeping his trademark frozen grin and
occasionally offering a three-fingered wave.
Riordan presented the character with a proclamation.
"So Mickey, thank you for your 65 years. I'd like to thank the person who you helped make famous, Walt Disney," said Riordan, who also thanked Disney chief Michael Eisner and the Disney family.
The late Walt Disney conceived the character on a train ride from New York to Los Angeles. Mickey Mouse became popular after the Nov. 18, 1928, release of his third cartoon, "Steamboat Willie," the first animated feature with synchronized sound.
ON THE RECORD
age was estimated at $300.
Astudent's car was damaged in the 500 block of New Hampshire Street on Saturday or Sunday, Lawrence police reported. Damage was estimated at $75.
A student's car was damaged in the 1000 block of Connecticut Street on Monday or Tuesday, Lawrence police reported. Dam-
A student's wallet and its contents, valued together at $34.50, were taken from the second-floor women's restroom in the Kansas Union on Tuesday, KU police reported.
CORRECTION
An information box on page 1 of yesterday's Kansan contained incorrect information. Today is the Great American Smokeout.
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B
Atlanta '65/'38'
Chicago '48/'37'
Houston '71/'54'
Miami '83/'64'
Minneapolis '37/'35'
Phoenix '77/'54'
Salt Lake City '44/'25'
Seattle '47/'35
St. Louis: 55'/43"
LAWRENCE: 62'/37" Kansas City: 63'/38"
Wichita: 62'/34'
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Tulsa: 64'/44'
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High: 62*
Low: 37*
Cloudy
Sunny
Partly cloudy
Mostly cloudy with northerly winds
High: 59'
Low: 35'
Sunny
Clouds increasing
Source: Gregg Potter, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
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AGE: 21
MANAGER OF THE MONTH JUDITH STANDLEY
RETAIL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE MONTH JENNIFER CARR
AGE: 21 MAJOR: Advertising HOMETOWN: Mulvane, KS "The Kansan has given me valuable leadership skills which I will need in the future."
AGE:20
MAJOR: Advertising
HOMETOWN: Mt. Prospect II
"My experience with the Kansan will be beneficial after graduation"
Vikrant Mishra
RETAIL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE MONTH
MARKMASTRO
AGE:20
MAJOR: Graphic Design
HOMETOWN: Olathe, KS
"Great experience, made me more organized and helped me develop better marketing skill."
CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE OF THE MONTH SHANNONREILLY
AGE:21
AGE: 21 MAJOR: Advertising HOMETOWN: Leavenworth, KS "I gained a lot of experience,and met great people."
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REGIONAL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE MONTH ALEX KOLB
ALEX KOLB
AGE: 22
MAJOR: Russian & Business COMMS
HOMETOWN: Overland Park, KS
"The Kansan has opened up a world of opportunities for me."
OUTSTANDING CREATIVE OF THE MONTH
JEAN HEGEL
MAJOR: Advertising
AGE:22
MAJOR: Advertising
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3
Thursday. November 18. 1993
New outlet mall may benefit downtown
Bv Tracl Carl
Kansan staff writer
The Tanger Outlet Mall is opening more than its doors tomorrow.
The outlet mall, which is scheduled to open three stores, also may open up development along North Second Street and bring more business to the downtown area.
And as those shoppers travel from I-70 to North Second Street and across the bridge into downtown Lawrence, they will add to the economic health and development of the downtown area and North Second Street, Lawrence business leaders said.
David Longhurst, manager of Lawrence's first outlet mall, the Lawrence Riverfront Plaza, 6th and New Hampshire streets, said the Tanger Outlet Mall would increase the number of the out-of-town shoppers the
Riverfront Plaza already attracts to Lawrence.
Tanger and the Riverfront Plaza have similar stores, Longhurst said. But he said he did not think that would hurt the Riverfront Plaza.
It has done well since it opened on April 6, 1990. he said.
Three additional stores, Villeroy & Boch, a fine china and gift store; Lily of France, a women's lingerie and sleepwear store; and Big Dog Sportswear recently opened in the Riverfront Plaza. Three more stores, Famous Footwear, Rocky Mountain Chocolate and Jones New York Executive Suite, which sells men's and women's suits, are scheduled to open between Thanksgiving and Dec. 4, he said.
Lisa Blair, downtown administrator, said that the Riverfront Plaza added to downtown business and that Tanger probably
"We're not expecting to see a great enhancement to the people coming into the downtown area," she said. "But people thought the Riverfront Plaza would hurt downtown and it became complementary."
would do the same.
The outlet malls do not compete directly with most of the businesses on Massachusetts Street, she said, because many of the businesses downtown are specialty shops.
Plan 95, the city's comprehensive development plan, states that the downtown should be the central business district of the city. The Riverfront Plaza worked to become part of the downtown area, Blair said. Tanger also is trying to extend business to Massachusetts Street.
But Leslie Johnson, owner of The Loft,
742 Massachusetts St., said the Riverfront
and Tanger outlet malls may not compete directly with a downtown store's market, but they do compete for a customer's paycheck.
Few customers from the Riverfront Plaza visit her women's clothing store, she said.
"It is a competition for dollars and people only have so much money to spend," she said.
She said she was skeptical that Tanger customer's would add to the downtown area's business.
The downtown area is not the only area that will benefit from Tanger.
Commissioner Bob Moody said he thought Tanger would change the business climate of North Second Street.
He said he thought the street would become more commercial and less industrial.
KU archivist retires after 43-year career
By Shan Schwartz Kansan staff writer
University Archives is losing its keeper. John Nugent, University Archivist, retires today after 43 years at the University. Nugent has been KU's chief archivist since the archives were created in 1969.
"He's going to be replaced, but he's irrepareable," said Ned Kehde, librarian at the archives. "This is his baby. It's all his baby. It's nobody else's."
The archives now house a wide variety of historical University documents most of which are open to the public dating back to the founding of the University in 1866.
A native of Kansas City, Kan., Nugent worked in Watson Library for 19 years before he was offered the job as archivist in 1969, when the archives opened with the Spencer Museum of Art.
Nugent said that he started the archives with several old yearbooks, newspapers, magazines and scrapbooks but that he quickly realized that the archives would need another full-time librarian. Kehde joined him the following year.
The archives also began acquiring correspondence and records from various offices. Nugent and Kehde had to organize it all.
"We just started from scratch," Nugent said. "Ned and I had to sit here and figure out what the hell we were doing. Everything we have now, we started out from the very beginning."
The archives now have newspapers, yearbooks and other University publications, building floor plans, scrapbooks, photographs and thousands of boxes of records from other campus offices.
Kehde credited Nugent with building up one of the best university archives in the
country
"He's the last of the self-educated archivists," Kehde said. "Anyone else who would come in here would have a seminar mentality. They'd talk everything to death instead of working it out."
Nugent enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1942 and served in Europe during World War II.
Kehde said, "John's a workhorse, and that comes from being a veteran from World War II. In the war, you never thought you'd get out of it alive, and John just kept going one step after another. We don't have anybody left like that."
Kehde said that Nugent also had an innate ability to remember things he saw or read.
Barry Bunch, a full-time archivist at the archives, said that Nugent was an expert on the University because of his exposure to many documents and his incredible reservoir of knowledge.
Bunch said, "We were looking through some sports photos recently and found an old basketball shot, and John said, 'Hmm, I think that was in the 1932 Jayhawk, 'and he went over, opened up the yearbook, and there it was."
"That just blew me away. If shows how John knows not just the facts but very specific knowledge."
Although Nugent no longer will be a University employee, he said, he still plans to spend time at the archives to work on research projects. He is planning a history of the KU Libraries and a history of student activities and events at the University.
"There will be no more staff evaluations or reports, no more sick-leave cards or committee assignments," Nugent said. "So, I can just wander in here, sit down and do my thing."
PETER B. MILTON
Doug Hesse/KANSAN
John Nugent, University Archives employee for 24 years, flips through some of the materials he has archived. Nugent celebrated his last day of work yesterday with cake from his co-workers.
Scientists say human cloning may be a future reality
Kansan staff writer
Bv Cheslev Dohl
In 2025, five-year-old Christopher may be the perfect child — healthy, congenial, inquisitive and brilliant. His parents may see no need to settle for anything less.
Sometime in the future — sooner than some might think — the wonders of science may allow Christopher's parents to make an exact copy of their son.
As quickly as scientists at KU and across the country are working, the days of human cloning may not be far away.
In mid-October, scientists from the East Coast successfully duplicated human embryos, producing 48 clones in all.
But cloning is a word that is misinterpreted by many people, said Dean Steer, head
of the KU genetics program.
"When we consider cloning we usually consider an exact duplicate," he said. "For example, taking a cell from your arm and making an individual like yourself."
Stetler said this type of cloning was far beyond the reach of today's science.
"There are around 30 genetic clonists on campus," he said. "We've cloned disease antigens at the DNA level and we teach students how to clone."
"We don't anticipate human cloning from cells to human beings for a good number of years," Stetler said. "But it might happen next year. Always expect the unexpected."
Some kinds of DNA cloning happen all the time at KU. Stetler said.
When a cell is taken from a person, it develops and differentiates itself, creating
different cells, such as those that make up the skin, liver and brain, Stetler said.
"What we need to determine is what turns these cells off and on to create these various kinds of cells," he said. "That is a long way off."
"There's nobody who's going to jump in and start doing it without first doing a great deal of research," he said. "Human experimentation is far off at this point. There's a quantum leap between cloning a gene and a whole organism."
Rob Weaver, professor and head of biochemistry, said that human cloning raised sensitive moral issues.
Don Marquis, professor of philosophy, said that it was too early to call cloning a serious ethical dilemma.
cloning," he said. "So far they've been unable to clone mammals. But things will get interesting when they can clone dogs."
"At this time I don't see any problem with
Marquis said intense research was needed before animals and humans could be cloned.
"It's such an unusual type of thing so it's hard to put in a moral framework we're accustomed to," he said.
Cloning is a very different kind of technology with advantages and disadvantages, Marquis said. Genetics can result in healthy children, but he said many people were concerned about whether cloned people could live a healthy life.
"If you were cloned genetically like Michael Jordan but you couldn't play like Michael Jordan — people would wonder what was wrong with you," he said.
ON CAMPUS
Canterbury House will celebrate Holy Eucharist at noon today in Danforth Chapel.
Spencer Museum will sponsor a Tour de Jour at 12:15 p.m. today in Spencer Museum Auditorium. For information, call Lori Ecklund at 864-4710.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting for students interested in studying in Great Britain at 4 p.m. today at Room 8 in Lippincott Hall. For information call Nancy Mitchell at 661-3742.
KU Judo Club will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in 207 Robinson Center. New members are welcome.
KU NOW will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For information, call the WSU office at 864-7337.
International Studies, African Affairs Students Association and African and African-American Studies will sponsor a dinner for Ethiopia Week at 6 p.m. today in Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. For information, call Kathy McClure at 864-4141.
PRSSA will sponsor a Big Brothers/Big Sisters Awareness Week lecture at 7 tonight in 208 Smith Hall. For information, call Jim Welsh at 843-2639.
InterVarsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For info. call David Zimmerman at 864-7117.
Latin American Solidarity will sponsor a rice and beans dinner and video, "El Salvador: La Verdad Desenmoscarada," at 6 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. For information, call Kenny Kincardy at 749-0789.
Spencer Museum of Art will sponsor a lecture, "Always There: The African-American Presence in American Quilts," at 7 tonight in Spencer Museum Auditorium. For information, call Lori Ecklund at 864-4710.
LesBiGayS OK will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union. For information, call Scott Manning at 841-8887.
KU Young Democrats will meet at 8 tonight in the Kansas Union.
Jayhawker Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For information, call John Dale at 864-1115.
KU Libertarians will meet at 8 tonight at Alcove D in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Allen Tiffany at 842-2411.
Iethus Christian Outreach will meet at 8:30 tonight at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union. For information, call Mark Winton at 843-2260 or Noel Storey at 749-5848.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 9 tonight in 130 Robinson Center. For information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445.
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Two injured in car collision
A 77-year-old Lawrence resident and a KU student were injured in a two-car collision on Clinton Parkway on Tuesday.
Archie Wolcott was driving west on Clinton Parkway near Crestline Drive at 3:10 p.m. Tuesday when he lost control of his vehicle because of an undetermined medical problem. Wolcott crossed the median and struck a car driven by Stephanie Munger, Anchorage, Alaska, sophomore, who was going east. Wolcott's car then left the road, struck a pole, ran into a fence and stopped.
Wolcott and Munger were taken from the scene to Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Munger was treated and released. Wolcott was transported by Life Star helicopter to St. Francis Regional Medical Center in Topeka, where he was in fair condition yesterday.
Business professors honored
The School of Business will honor four professors for being chosen as named and distinguished professors.
Those being recognized are: George E. Pinches, named the Wagon professor of finance; Allen Ford, named the Larry D. Horner/KPMG Peat Marwick distinguished teaching professor of professional accounting; Dennis F. Karney, named the Ned N. Fleming distinguished teaching professor; and Henry N. Butler, named the Koch distinguished teaching professor of law and economics.
The professors will be honored at a program and dinner at 6:30 p.m. today at the Eldridge Hotel, 701 Massachusetts St.
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4
Thursday, November 18, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
b=d=e
VIEWPOINT
Consensus for grading needed to discern GPA
The average grade point average at the University of Kansas increased from 2.69 in 1982 to 2.81 in 1992. Regardless of the rise in the GPA, the importance of grades in and of themselves is the real issue. Attributing the rise to an increase in overachievers, faculty fears of poor evaluations, or students having the option to withdraw from a class, mean nothing without a basic consensus on whether the current grading system accurately distinguishes an excellent student from a mediocre one.
Dave Shulenburger, vice chancellor for academic affairs, pointed out a disheartening fact when he said, "I suspect there will never be much anyone can do to affect grading practices of a school." This sentiment suggests that many inconsistencies do exist in the grading system, and in turn, an accurate evaluation of a student's performance is extremely difficult. Disparities in test difficulty within the same departments as well as the criterion used to grade subjective material vary widely and add to this pervading querulous attitude.
There should be some sort of consensus formed in order to establish what exactly an "A" means versus a "B" and so on. In clarifying the distinction between grades, class attendance may be one factor that should be considered, since many times students are able to score well on tests while attending a particular class infrequently. What kind of standard does this set, especially for students who faithfully attend their classes? An increase in the GPA means very little without a consensus about what grades actually measure.
NATHAN NASSIF FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
U.N. war tribunal seeks guilty, raises questions
Examine the war crimes in former Yugoslavia. This court of justice had its opening ceremony in The Hague, Netherlands, yesterday. It consists of a prosecutor and an international panel of judges. The only participants missing in this judicial process are the criminals, mainly the Serbs.
They are missing because they are hidden and unreachable as the war continues.
This U.N. action has been long awaited by the victims of such Serb-led crimes as mass murders, mass rapes and torture. Still, some questions do arise.
One question is whether Serb President Slobodon Milosevich and Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic will be held accountable for any of the war crimes. Former Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger once identified both these men as war criminals.
And just how long will the court keep up with this judicial process? Will victims and their families have to wait decades before justice is done? Will the criminals flee like those from the Holocaust of World War II did?
Perhaps the biggest question is how committed is the U.N. to this mission of justice? Is this an act to soothe the anger and pain of peoples, but one that will eventually lose momentum or a sincere effort for justice?
Only time will tell.
MUNEERA NASEER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
KCTRAUER, Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE Managing editors
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator Editors
AMY CASEY Business manager
AMY STUMBO Retail sales manager
Assistant to the editor ... J.R. Clairbom
News ... Stacy Friedman
Editorial ... Terrilyn McCormick
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Kristi Fogler
Photo ... Kip Chin, Renee Kneeber
Features ... Extra Wolfe
Graphics ... John Paul Fogel
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
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
Kats Burgess
Marketing director ... Shelly McConnell
Creative director ... Brian Fusco
Classified mgr .. Gustavan Kattaraldschuh
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and homework, or faculty or staff position.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
TheKansasnewsletterwillbeusedtowritetherighttorejectoreditletters,guestcolumnsandcartoons.Theycanbemarkedorbrushtowheaksnewroom.111StafferFlintHall.
MARNEY Chicago Public
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The Great Fishing Expedition
NAFTA debate became spectacle of pathetic politics, job paranoia
COLUMNIST
This week is moment-of-truth time for the North American Free Trade Agreement. So far the debate has been one of the worst examples of American politics in recent years. Each side has done its best to scare the American people on the issue of jobs. The pro-NAFTA forces, ted jointly by, believe it or not, President Clinton and Sen. Bob Dole, warn of long-term economic doom if the treaty fails. Since they believe that the benefits of the treaty are not obvious enough, they have resorted to playing on our economic fears of Japan by bringing up the sinister possibility of Japan making a similar treaty of NAFTA is defeated. Meanwhile, Ross Perot is flying all over the country imitating a Hoover vacuum in front of thousands of people who for some reason show up to watch him. A self-appointed demagogue on a scale that even Rush Limbaugh can't compare to, he is waging a campaign of fear that has been brutally effective. He has convinced nearly every factory worker that their employer can't wait to ditch them in favor of a $1-an-hour Mexican worker by New Year's Day.
JIM KIMMEL
Few people stand to benefit as much from NAFTA's passage as Perot. While he campaigns loudly against it, his companies are positioning themselves to take full advantage of it if passed.
Caught in the middle of course are the esteemed members of Congress. No one involved in the debate looks worse than they do. Their only concern about the effect of NAFTA is which vote will cost them their jobs. They have never looked so petty, transparent and self-serving as they have on this issue. They have never made the case for term limits stronger.
There are plenty of good arguments
against the treaty besides its effect on jobs. One of the best is environmental. A company is as likely to move to Mexico to escape the Environmental Protection Agency's regulations as high U.S. wages. An excellent example is a foundry. Foundries make metal objects by pouring molten iron or steel into molds. As you might guess, this process produces a lot of pollution. In recent years the EPA has cracked down on these types of businesses. U.S. foundries with union workers pay between $10 and $20 an hour while their Mexican counterparts pay around $2.50 an hour. That might seem like huge savings for a company relocating to Mexico, but much of these savings will be lost in transportation costs. What really makes the move cost-effective is the almost complete lack of enforcement in the Mexican environmental laws. Foundries moving to Mexico don't have to equip their smoke stacks with scrubbers or clean their waste water. The same can be said of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration's regulations. Despite the
promises made in the NAFTA side agreements, little can be expected to change with the current level of corruption in the Mexiican government. Do we really want companies to move a few hundred miles south and pollute as much as they want? What kind of long-term effect will that have on our economy when we are expected to pay for the clean up? How much pollution will find its way back north?
It is likely that NAFTA will be defeated this week and for all the wrong reasons — paranolia over job loss and politicians interested only in re-election. That makes a renegotiation treaty, with the flaws in this one removed, unlikely. The concept of free trade between the U.S., Canada and Mexico is important. If steps are taken to protect workers, the environment as well as corporate profits, free trade could benefit us all. Without these steps we may become more like Mexico instead of Mexico becoming more like us.
Jim Kimmel is a McLouth junior majoring in history and sociology.
Criticism of SUA's organization of Chomsky speech is misplaced
The Noam Chomsky lecture on Friday, Nov. 12, in the Kansas Union Ballroom and Jayhawk Room was criticized in a Kansan editorial printed Nov. 15. However, Student Union Activities takes issue with the assertion that the lecture's overcrowding problem occurred as a result of a "failure" in planning. It seems ironic that a lecture that dealt with media as an organ that repeatedly reports misinformation would be followed by an irresponsible editorial.
GUEST COLUMNIST
TIMELENS
There are many inaccuracies in the criticism of SUA's handling of the forum. Contrary to what was reported in the editorial, the tickets were distributed exactly at the announced time of 7 p.m. All general admission tickets were distributed by 7:20. Another inaccuracy was the editorialist's assertion that student activity fees directly funded the lecture. We recognize the service that SUA provides to the students of this campus, and we will continue our work to fulfill this responsibility.
The editorialist also suggested impossible improvements for handling the lecture. For example, the
editorialist's suggestion that SUA could have made adjustments to the lecture venue to accommodate the audience overflow was unrealistic.
When this lecture was secured, Nov. 12 was the only night that was possible for Chomsky. The Ballroom was the largest venue available on campus for this event. The Lied Center had been booked by a conference and Allen Field House also was unavailable. Both SUA and the Union worked overtime the day of the lecture to expand the seating capacity by purchasing the necessary equipment to have the simulcast in the Jayhawk Room. This would not have been technically possible to do in the Big
Eight Room, as was suggested in the editorial. Nothing more could be done to expand the number of seats available for that night.
Inappropriate suggestions for ticket adjustment were given by the editorialist as well. The editorialist asserted that releasing the tickets in advance would have solved the problem of students waiting in line for this lecture. While this has been done in the past, it was found to be ineffective because seats could be left empty by people who had tickets but chose not to attend the lecture. Fire code dictates the limited capacity of the ballroom, including standing room on the ballroom balcony.
Imagine students' reaction to being told they could not attend a lecture even if there were 100 empty seats remaining. By releasing tickets that evening, we guaranteed the maximum attendance possible, while insuring that fire codes would not be violated. Additionally, it was recommended that tickets be limited to students and faculty. However, SUA has never limited lecture attendance to a certain population because this
would prohibit the attendance of spouses and children of KU students, staff and faculty members.
Finally, students should become more involved in SUA if they believe that we are doing something wrong. Hundreds of student volunteer hours were invested into putting on a lecture of this magnitude. Despite the high costs of the lecture, it was made free through the co-sponsorships sought and secured by SUA. More than nine hundred people saw the lecture that night, and five hundred were able to see Chomsky's linguistics lecture that afternoon.
The fact the Chomsky came to the University of Kansas is directly attributable to the excellent planning of SUA and the Forums committee. This was not an opportunity to come by easily, because Chomsky usually books lectures two years in advance. Thanks to the efforts of SUA and its co-sponsors, this lecture became a reality.
David Stevens is the Student Union Association Forums Committee chair.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Public university needs to serve all its members
Having recently returned from a sabbatical year in a foreign country, I am struck by just how nonpublic this university is in some respects. The recent Noam Chomsky visit is a good example. It is not clear to me how a public university and the sponsoring units within that university could justify paying thousands of dollars (according to the press) to bring a well-known scholar to campus to speak to no more than 900 individuals in a public lecture. It is
true that every member of the university community had an equal opportunity to show up at 6 p.m. to wait in line for tickets to be given out at 7 p.m. for an 8 p.m. lecture. Ticket distribution method aside, the real point is that only 900 out of 26,000 students and countless faculty, staff and citizens could ultimately gain access. This seems particularly inexcusable when technology exists to use closed circuit TV to extend the availability of such events. It seems to me that it is incumbent upon sponsoring organizations to find the means to make such an
event open to as many people as possible.
For what purpose is the new Lied Center? Is it not for public events or is it yet another instance of a private domain within a public university? It is a truly beautiful building, but the ticket prices for events make the arts accessible to only certain segments of the public. Although I understand the benefits of the numerous "private" corporations that exist within the University of Kansas, it seems that their ultimate purpose is to support the mission of the University as a whole, which is,
at least in part, to serve the citizens of the state of Kansas in ways beyond just providing low tuition rates for students. Co-curricular events are one way in which the University attempts to do this. When this ceases to be the case, or when the university serves only certain segments of a state, perhaps it is time to critically re-examine what it means to be a public university.
Susan Twombly Associate Professor Educational Policy and Leadership
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 18, 1993
5
Free market perplexes East Europeans
The Associated Press
"How much does a bicycle cost in America anyway?" he asked.
NEW YORK — Alexander Nozdrachev came from Russia to sell bicycles, but he hadn't done his homework.
Like Nozdrachey, many of the hundreds of exhibitors at the East Central Europe Trade Expo this week showed the inexperience that comes with entering the free market for the first time.
Eager for buyers or investors with hard currency, they set up stands
inside a cavernous convention center to promote everything from embroidered Romanian blouses to lasers.
Madyarova never seemed to understand that the New Yorkers were interested in skins but wrote down $3,000 as the price of a mink coat on display.
president," said Burmakan Madiyarova from Kyrgyzstan, vice president of the Almeh fur company.
Exhibitors at the trade show came from former Soviet republics and East European countries. Proof of their new independence, many were eager to prove they could compete with the West.
A cosmonaut was promoting private airplanes, a young man from Belarus who spoke no English stood shyly by a rack of sweaters he designed, and a Russian coal executive begged for U.S. investment.
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Isaac Yadgarof of New York said,
"You can buy that here for $1,200.
They don't know the market."
"We have our own flag, our own
are adjusting under public or private ownership. Some of their representatives seemed suspicious of U.S. businesspeople with their probing questions and acted as if production capacity and cost were state secrets.
American businesspeople, naturally, were looking for deals and hoping to benefit from low labor costs.
Despite the difficulties, U.S. importers and manufacturers came prepared to do business. Some went home with contracts or samples of products for testing.
Show Manager Stephen Cox said about 3,000 U.S. and Canadian businesspeople had registered to attend the expo, which started Monday at Jacob K. Javis Convention Center.
Many of the companies at the trade show once state owned and still
sh o t o f
n e w s h o t o f
o n d l o c
-
Senate cuts Chinese bill; event may be canceled
By Donella Hearne
Kansan staff writer
The KU Chinese New Year celebration, originally planned for February, may be canceled because of lack of sponsorship.
The Student Senate cut out more than half of the bill for the event before passing it and said that the Chinese student organizations would have to charge more for admission to cover the expenses themselves.
The students requested $3,389 based on the cost of holding their banquet and cultural show in the Lied Center, which was the only place that was large enough for the 800 to 1,000 students who usually attend and available on the dates they preferred. Senate voted to allocate $1,604 for the event.
"This process is wrong," said Lynn Hui, Hong Kong senior and one of the organizers. "They come here, and they don't know anything about it." He said the organizer now has no idea how much
here and they don't show any sings吧
Hui said that senators also had no idea how much
planning the Chinese student organizations had done.
In other actions:
Two minority engineering groups were allocated $785 for office expenses and for projects for the Engineering Expo to be held next semester.
The groups presented a bill together to avoid questions of duplication of services, which have been used to kill many minority-group bills in Senate recently.
- He said that Senate gave less for the well-attended speech by Noam Chomsky.
John Shoemaker, student body president, has suggested that similar groups come to Senate together.
An umbrella organization is a group that receives money from Senate to be distributed among the groups under that umbrella.
Chad Browning, administrative assistant to the treasurer, said that he did not think there was enough interest in the symposium outside the law school. The group is expecting about 700 people.
Senate passed a bill to give the Kansas Journal of Law and Public Policy $5,000 to pay speakers to attend a symposium on the working poor. Twelve speakers, including gubernatorial candidate, Rep. Jim Slattery, D-Kan., and Kansas City mayor Emanuel Cleaver are being invited to the symposium.
Eric Mersmann, architecture senator, said that he was frustrated that minority professional organizations from the School of Engineering had been facing so much scrutiny in the Senate.
"They should play fair," he said. "All the law school minority organizations have been funded by Senate. They just all came in under an umbrella organization."
"All I have to say is this," Browning said. "Chomsky $2,000 — 900 plus people attend. Law symposium $5,000 — 700 people attend."
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Assault-style weapons have such features as pistol grips, which allow weapons to be spray-fired from the hip.
"Fear has escalated in this country to a level I never thought possible." said Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., the author of the gun ban.
Senate votes to outlaw assault-style weapons
The Associated Press
Attorney General Janet Reno endorsed the measure, saying that removing the weapons from the street was a first, big step and a sign that America's love affair with guns was coming to an end.
WASHINGTON — Heeding the nation's rising concern about street violence, the Senate voted yesterday to ban the manufacture or sale of 10 types of assault-style weapons — bullet-spraying firearms that mimic those intended for combat.
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Joseph R. Biden Jr., D-Ell, challenged the House, which has never voted for an assault-weapons ban, to "understand the power of the idea, the idea whose time has come."
Feinstein's proposal would stop the manufacture or sale and possession of 19 specified semiautomatic assault weapons and would bar production of copycat models. But more than 650 hunting weapons would be exempted by name. People already owning the assault weapons would not be required to give them up.
The ban, stifter than any previously passed by either house of Congress, was approved despite the opposition of the National Rifle Association. The action came as the Senate neared passage of a $22.3 billion anti-crime bill that would put more police on the streets and would build new prisons.
NRA representative William McIntyre said the 56-43 vote on the assault-style ban reflected the "misguided" view "that these sort of gun control measures, gun bans, will have an impact on violent crime."
"It will be an uphill fight in the House, but I believe the way it's moving, I believe this will pass," Biden told reporters.
Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell said that Congress probably would have to wait until early next year to send a final compromise bill to President Clinton. A recent poll showed that many Americans considered crime a more important problem
than unemployment or health care.
After the crime bill, the Senate was scheduled to move to the Brady bill, which would impose a five-day waiting period and a background check on all would-be handgun purchasers.
THE NEWS in brief
CHARLESTON, S.C.
Court lets woman study at all-male college until it rules on lawsuit
1
2
3
4
A woman may attend classes with cadets at The Citadel while her lawsuit challenging the military college's all-male admissions policy is heard, an appeals court ruled yesterday.
Shannon Faulkner's lawsuit says The Citadel's all-male corps is unconstitutional. She would be the first women to attend day classes with cadets in The Citadel's 151-year history. Women are currently allowed in night and summer classes.
U. S. District Judge C. Weston Houck ruled in August that Faulkner could attend day classes but not participate in the military program until her lawsuit was resolved.
The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld Houck's order yesterday, attorneys for Faulkner and The Citadel said.
The appeals court said it would release its decision today. Citadel attorney Dawes Cooke said the school
would decide whether to appeal after reviewing the decision.
Faulkner, who had references to her gender removed from her high school transcript, actually was briefly admitted to The Citadel earlier this year. The school kicked her out when she learned she is a woman. Her attorney said Faulkner would probably register next semester.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
NASA sets Hubble repair mission
NASA yesterday officially set Dec. 1 as the launch date for the Hubble Space Telescope repair mission.
Endeavour is due to lift off on the 11-day flight at 4:57 a.m. A record five space walks are planned to correct Hubble's vision and replace wobbly solar panels and other defective parts. Four astronauts will take turns going out in pairs.
Hubble was launched in April 1990 from the shuttle Discovery. Two months later, NASA discovered the telescope's primary mirror had been polished incorrectly.
The repair mission is to be the year's seventh and final shuttle flight.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
1993
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Thursday, November 18, 1993
7
Haiti forces open foreign gas pumps
The Associated Press
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Army-backed officials have forced foreign gasoline distributors to open their storage depots and turn their backs on a worldwide fuel embargo, diplomats and company officials said yesterday.
For the first time in weeks, gas flowed freely yesterday from most Esso and Texaco stations. Under pressure, Shell, the third major oil company servicing Haiti, began pumping fuel a day earlier.
A right-wing extremist called the flow of gas a "victory" for those who have resisted the international community's campaign to return exiled President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
A pro-Aristide senator, Rony Mondestin, acknowledged the release of the gasoline "could be perceived as a retreat by the international community."
The right-wing extremist, Carl Denis, and a leader of an army-backed political movement also threatened to shut down Parliament if lawmakers did not call a new presidential election and declare Aristide's position vacant.
The right-wing call reflects the confidence of the army and its supporters, who called the international community's bluff and ignored a U.N. agreement calling
for Aristide's return on Oct. 30.
Washington stationed warships off this Caribbean nation and backed U.N. economic sanctions on Haiti but in recent weeks has made the return of Aristide a lower priority.
Last week, U.S. Secretary of State Warren Christopher left Haiti off a list of six major foreign policy issues. The threat of foreign intervention has come under attack by some American conservative lawmakers, who have questioned Aristide's democratic credentials. Aristide was overthrown by the military in a bloody September 1991 coup.
Representatives for the oil companies, which had pledged to uphold the 4-week-old U.N. embargo, said their subsidiaries had no other choice but to release the fuel.
"Employees were compelled to begin distribution of fuel as a result of enforcement action taken by the Haitian justice authorities," Ed Burwell, an Exxon representative, said. He would not elaborate on the pressure placed on the employees of Esso, the Bahamas-based affiliate serving Haiti.
A Texaco representative, Jim Reisner, said he had no independent confirmation that the British-based subsidiary was providing fuel.
Court rejects deportation of suspected Nazi war criminal
CINCINNATI — John Demanjuk's fight to remain in the United States got a boost yesterday when a federal appeals panel threw out its order that allowed his extradition to Israel to face Nazi war crimes charges.
The Associated Press
The government said it remained convinced that the 73-year-old retired autoworker was a war criminal and promised to pursue his deportation.
The ruling overturned the appeals court's 1985 decision authorizing Demjanjuk's extradition. The ruling did not suggest whether sanctions against the lawyers should be pursued.
The three-judge panel of the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Justice Department lawyers had withheld information that Demanjuk could have used to fight extradition.
Justice Department representative John Russell said the department was reviewing its options but intended "to
effect Demjanjuk's prompt removal from the United States as soon as his legal status is resolved."
The department could ask the 6th Circuit to reconsider the ruling or could appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Denjanjuk spent seven years in an Israeli prison while he challenged charges that he was "Ivan the Terrible," a sadistic guard who tortured and killed Jews at the Treblinka camp in Poland. He was sentenced to death in 1988.
In July, the Israeli Supreme Court overturned the conviction, saying prosecutors hadn't proved Demjanjuk was Ivan.
He was released Sept. 21 and returned to the United States the next day.
The ruling could help Denjanjuk's fight to stay in the United States and regain his U.S. citizenship, which was revoked in 1881 for lying to gain entry to this country.
General takes control in Nigeria
The Associated Press
LAGOS, Nigeria — Nigeria's military-installed leader resigned yesterday, and a general who took part in two previous coups assumed control of the country, Nigerian radio and diplomats said.
Ernest Shonekan, who succeeded dictator Gen. Ibrahim Babangida on Aug. 26, stepped down and was replaced by Gen. Sani Abacha, the defense minister, state-run radio said.
Abacha, a key figure in the coup that ended the civilian government in 1983 and the coup that put Babangida in power two years later, had been considered to be the real power behind Shonekan.
Diplomats said Shonekan's departure was due to turmoil that resulted from Babangida's decision to void the June 12 presidential election that was to return the nation to an elected civilian government.
It also came in the midst of a general strike that has paralyzed major cities to protest last week's sevenfold increase in gasoline prices.
KU CULTURAL INDIA CLUB PRESENTS
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8
Thursday, November 18, 1993
CATCH THE B.U.S.
(Buckle Up Sober)
COMPETITIONS
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
COMPETITIONS
COMPETITIONS
CATEGORIES INCLUDE:
1. Billboards/Posters
I. Billboards/Posters
II. Video Public Service Announcements
III. Audio Public Service Announcements
IV. Print Media (advertisements or news articles)
V. Celebrity Endorsements
VI.T-shirt designs
VII. Biathion (2 interactive games)
VIII. Video Stage Production
All entries must promote safety belt use and alcohol abuse prevention messages.
Come by the Watkins Health Center, Health Education office for an information form on entering these STUDENT competitions or call Julie Francis at 864-9570. SENATE
CASH PRIZES for winning entries in each category!
Entries must be submitted no later than Dec.31, 1993
Paris museum marks bicentennial
The Associated Press
Abillion-
A billion dollar facelift doubles the size of the Louvre and adds 25 percent more artwork. PARIS — Remodeled throughout the centuries by royalty seeking immortality by leav ing a legacy in stone, the Louvre celebrates its bicentennial as a museum with the completion of a billion-dollar overhaul fit for a king. With the official inauguration of the new Richelieu wing by President Francois Mitterrand today, the Louvre doubles in size to 645,000 square feet and adds 25 percent more artwork to its galleries.
Journalists got a preview yesterday of the Richelieu wing, named after the powerful 17th-century cardinal and statesman who founded the Academie Francaise. The building was home to French finance ministries for a century.
two hundred years after France's first democratic leaders transformed Louis XVI's then 600-year-old royal abode into a museum, more than 30,000 treasures have been brought in to show off to the world.
The graceful Marly horses have moved from their precarious, polluted perch on the Champs-Elysees to the glass-roofed interior courtyard where bureaucrats once parked their cars.
Visitors who remember the old Louvre as a dusty maze of dark galleries crammed with paintings hung floor to ceiling will be delighted by the new one.
The floor plan is logical and clearly marked, so visitors no longer become lost so easily. Items are identified and explained with historical and biographical information on plastic sheets printed in several languages.
A subtle blend of natural and artificial light pioneered by Chinese-American architect LM. Pei combines with a feeling of spaciousness to enhance everything from the tiniest antique silver spoon to the largest Maximillien tapestry.
Yet, there's no losing sight of the royal palace.
Sweeping, chiselled staircases, vaulted ceilings, high cathedral windows and marble floors are constant reminders of the Louvre's colorful history that began in 1200 when King Philip Auguste, fearing invasion from his Norman enemies, built a fortress on the right bank of the Seine River.
Two centuries later and twice embellished, it housed Charles V's rare manuscripts, priceless jewels and tapestries. Francois I later added paintings by Titian, Raphael and
Da Vinci.
But it was Napoleon's demand for tribute in art from his far-flung conquests that made the Louvre the wonder it is.
Highlights include a new setting for the museum's priceless Islamic art collection.
Pei, whose controversial glass pyramid in the courtyard opened in 1898 as the museum's new entrance, recalled, "I came to the Louvre for the first time in 1951. But what I saw in those days is just a tiny fraction of what visitors will see today."
One floor up, the orate Salon Napoleon III opens to the public for the first time with an ensemble of plush, red-velvet Empire furniture in mint condition.
Also on display are 12 huge tapestries of hunting scenes so large they have not been hung together since they were created for the Luxembourg Palace nearly 200 years ago.
There is a 135-foot gallery for Rubens' portraits depicting the life of Marie de Medici, along with three hung for the first time.
It now may take weeks, even months, for the Louvre's 5 million yearly visitors to see everything.
LASTFEWDAYS!
If you are interested in any of the following options for Spring 1994, forms will be available outside the Enrollment Center now through November 19. Wed. & Thurs.: 8 a.m.-5:00 p.m; Fri.: 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
- Board of Class Officers
- Freshman Class Dues $10.00
- Sophomore Class Dues $8.00
- Junior Class Dues $8.00
- Senior Class Dues $10.00
- Jayhawker Yearbook $30.00
- KU on Wheels Pass
- SUAMovie Card $25.00
You must be enrolled prior to selecting options. Class schedule for Spring 1994 and KUID must be shown. Options forms can be completed until November 19. Fee payment by mail is due by December 8 (postmarked by December3,1993).
L
From the eyes survivors aust
From the eyes of survivors
An Holocaust exhibit of books
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The hell of Auschwitz
The exhibit was compiled by Rich Ring, collection development librarian. He says he chose the photographs and art to be displayed with an emphasis on people. Thus, he rejected his original idea to highlight the exhibit with a photograph of a mountain of shoes taken from corpse at a concentration camp.
The exhibit is highlighted by a painting called "Angst," by Lea Grundig, in which a figure cows while birds and planes merge overhead.
"I felt the pictures of people were probably better," Ring says. "The Holocaust is about people. Maybe we had better show people."
Each case contains a part of the exhibit. One case chronicles the ghetto of Warsaw and Lodz in Poland, where Nazi soldiers forced Jews to live.
Another case shows life in the concentration camps, where 6 million Jews and large numbers of Slavs, Poles, Catholics, communists and homosexuals lost their lives. Ring says that each camp functioned with devastating efficiency.
or sometimes on the walls of the camps themselves.
"It's almost disturbing to talk about efficiency, but they talked about it that way," he said.
Frydman says he was sent to eight different concentration camps after he was captured in 1944, when he was 12 years old. He says exhibits such as "Witnesses to the Holocaust" help address a history the world would rather forget.
"The fact is, the world allowed this to happen," Frydman says while he looks at the faces behind the glass. "They could have done something, but they didn't."
The last two cases show art that prisoners in the concentration camps drew or painted on paper supplied by guards
The exhibition
"Witnesses to the Holocaust" will be on display until mid-December in the lobby of Watson. Watson is open from 8 a.m. to midnight Mondays through Thursdays, from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., Fridays, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturdays and from noon to midday Sundays.
The illustrations
numbers are issued upon arrival to be worn on shirt and also on trousers
The illustrations on this page were done by Alfred Kantor, a survivor of Terezin and Auschwitz concentration camps. Some of his drawings survived the war, but most were redrawn from memory after his release.
310566
Source: Watson Library KANSAN
Play looks at political torture in South America
--for the National Student Playwrighting Award of the Kennedy Center American College Theater Festival. If the play wins, it will be performed at the Kennedy Center in Washington.
Caran
Snitz, Overland Park
junior, a shadow player at right, holds for interrogation
Stacey
MacFarlane
Lawrence graduate student, who plays Maria Gellina, in the play "Graf Spee."
PRESENTATION OF THE NEW MARRIAGE
Melissa Lacey / KANSAN
'Graf Spee,' written by a KU student, has been entered in a national contest
NOVEMBER 18,1993 PAGE 9
The Sunday evening news program inspired Ken Willard, Hays graduate student, to write "Graf Spee", a play about torture in South America. "Graf Spee" is being presented this week by the English Alternative Theater and has been entered in a national playwright competition.
By Sara Bennett Kansan staff writer
It isn't very often that "60 Minutes" inspires a play.
Willard, a theater major, was touched by a segment about the fall of a despotic regime in Argentina. In one scene, the mother of a woman whose remains had been excavated was left alone with the bones. Witnesses said the the mother was seen caressing and kissing the bones.
That scene was the inspiration for the play, written for associate professor Paul Stephen Lim's beginning playwrighting class. Lim was so impressed with Willard's script that he decided to produce it for the English Alternative Theater, a four-year-old English department program that produces works by KU playwrights.
"For me, this little act spoke volumes," Willard said. "It wasn't just the death of this woman's daughter, it was the death of her country. I thought this on stage, if handled right could be very moving."
"In my four years of teaching playwrighting at KU, this is probably the best script to show up," Lim said. "That's why EAT is backing it with a full production."
"Graf Spee" will play at 8 p.m. today through Saturday and at 2:30 p.m. Sunday at the Lawrence Arts Center. Admission is $5. Judges representing the Michael Kain Playwrighting Awards Program will view two of those performances to consider it
Lim said that although he hoped the play would do well in the competition, the real reward was having the script produced.
"The only way a playwright can grow is to see his or her work performed in front of an audience," he said. "The rest is just icing on the cake."
"Graf Spee", named after a World War II German battleship, follows the experiences of South Americans dealing with loss and picking up the pieces after the fall of a totalitarian regime. The play addresses such aspects of political tyranny as torture, denial and avoidance. Willard said the play's themes were universal.
"The nature of torture and how
See EAT,Page 10
KU Life
People and places at the University of Kansas.
calendar
NIGHTLIFE
Benchwarmers Sports Bar & Grill 1601 W. 23rd St.
The Thugs, 9 tonight
Baghdad Jones, 9 p.m. tomorrow
Mango Jam, 9 p.m. Saturday
closed Nov. 25
no bands during Thanksgiving break
The Crossing
The Crossing
12th and Oread
Deb Girnius and the Merge, 9 tonight
Lonesome Hound Dogs, 9 p.m. tomorrow
Arkansas White Trash Express, 9 p.m. Satur-
day
closed Nov. 25
Danger Bob, 9 p.m. Nov. 26
Dos Hombres
814 New Hampshire St.
Eight Men Out, 10 p.m. tomorrow, free
803 Massachusetts St.
Full Moon Cafe
David Hakan, 8:30 tonight, free
Acoustic Juice, 8:30 p.m. tomorrow, free
Gerald Tremble and Peter Stephenson:
Ashikar, 8:30 p.m. Saturday, free
closed Nov. 25
Einstein, 8:30 p.m. Nov. 26, free Jolly Ranchers, 8:30 p.m. Nov. 27, free Jazz with Tim Cross, noon-3 p.m. Nov. 28, free
The Jazzhaus
926 1/2 Massachusetts St.
'70s 1 Disco Party, 9:30 tonight
Motherwell, 9:30 p.m. tomorrow
Limbo Cafe, 9:30 p.m. Saturday
closed Nov. 25
Baghdad Jones, 9:30 p.m. Nov. 26
Baghdad Jones, 9:30 p.m. Nov. 27
Rick's Neighborhood Bar & Grill
623 Vermont St.
Arkansas White Trash Express, 9:30 p.m.
Saturday, $3
The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St.
New Hampshire
Paw with Salty Iguanas, 10 tonight, $5
Downside with Tenderloin, 10 p.m tomorrow,
$4
Mountain Clyde with Freddy Jones Band, 10 p.m. Saturday, $5
closed Nov. 24-25
Ditch Witch, Truck Stop Love, Killcreek, 10
p.m. Nov. 26, $4
Bart Market, Therapy ?, Tad, 10 p.m. Nova
27. $9
See CALENDAR, Page 10.
10
Thursday, November 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VISIONS
VISIONS
Optical Dispensary
806 Massachusetts
841-7421
NATURAL WAY
Natural Fiber
Clothing
820-822 Mass.
841-0100
--authority is wielded can fit into an American context," he said. "It can fit into abusive relationships and even the paranoia Americans are beginning to feel about walking their own streets."
Red Lyon Tavern
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
944 Mass. 832-8228
State Radiator
Student Friendly
We recycle
anti-freeze, freon,
and metals.
842-3333
radiators-heaters
a/c/water pumps
842-3333
radiators-heaters
a/c/water pumps
VISA
new
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HARBOUR
LIGHTS
Now a full service bar
after 57 years
of downtown tradition
1031 Massachusetts
Downtown
VISA
DINIC VISA
VISA
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"Your Book Professionals"
Jayhawk Bookstore
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Hrs: 8-7 M-Th., 8-5 Fri.
9-5 Sat. 12-4 Sun.
843-3826
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--authority is wielded can fit into an American context," he said. "It can fit into abusive relationships and even the paranoia Americans are beginning to feel about walking their own streets."
PIZZA SHUTTLE DELIVERS
842-1212
1601 W.23rd
Southern Hills Center
"NO COUPON SPECIALS EVERYDAY
TWO-FERS
2-PIZZAS
2-TOPPINGS
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PRIMETIME
3-PIZZAS
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CARRY OUT
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DELIVERY HOURS
MON-THURS 11 AM-2 AM
FRI-SAT 11 AM-3 AM
SUN 11 AM-1 AM
EAT:'Graf Spee' competes for national honors
Continued from Page 9.
participating. Robert Findlay, professor of theater, is making his first stage appearance in 23 years. Steven Grossman, Lawrence graduate student , is directing the production. He said the quality of the script drew him to the play.
Although EAT is part of the English department, students and faculty from the theater department are also
"This script is universal, striking, and has quality, profundity of thought and bold dramatic conception," he said. "It's better than 90 out of 100 student plays I've read. It needed to be performed, and it's been our privilege to put it together."
"There are times I'm watching it and I don't even recognize it — I still don't feel like I know how it ends," he said. "I'm just amazed at the actors. There are some riveting performances."
Willard said seeing his play come to life on stage was a rewarding experience.
If "Graf Spee" is chosen for the National Student Playwrighting Award and is performed at Kennedy Center, Willard said, he would be more excited for the English program than for himself.
"It's a great reflection on the program," he said. "Hopefully it will inspire others to do playwrighting. I'd love to see another Arthur Miller or Christopher Durang come from KU."
CALENDER: Lawrence music, film schedules
Continued from Page 9.
BARS
Granada Theater
1020 Massachusetts
$4
月星
Dance Night, 8 p.m. every Thursday
Lawrence DJ Jam, 8 p.m. tomorrow
C.D. Release Party: Love Squad with Grumpy,
8 p.m. Saturday
Reggae Night, 8 p.m. Sunday
'80s Night with DJ, 8 p.m. every Wednesday
Hockenbury's Tavern
closed Nov. 24-25
1016 Massachusetts St.
B
K
A
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
LeeRoy Shakespeare and His Ship 'O Vibes,
10 tonight, $3
Spamskinners with Starkweathers, 10 p.m.
tomorrow, $4
Soul Shaker, 10 p.m. Saturday, $4
Acoustic Open Mic, 10 p.m. Sunday, free
Love Squad, 10 p.m. Nov. 26, $4
Soul Fish, 10 p.m. Nov. 27, $4
Free State Brewing Co.
636 Massachusetts St.
Free State Jazz Quartet, 7-9 p.m. tomorrow,
free
FILMS
Liberty Hall 642 Massachusetts St. Dazed and Confused (R), 5.
Dickinson 6
7:15, p.m. toorrow and 2:45, 5, 7:15, 9:30 p.m. Saturday, Sunday.
Look Who's Talking Now (PG-13), 4:25 p.m.
Flesh and Bone (R), 4:15, 7:05, 9:45 p.m.
Fearless (R), 7:10, 9:50 p.m.
2339 South Iowa St.
Nightmare Before Christmas (PG), 4:35, 7:10,
9:35 a.m.
Varsity Theatre
Beverly Hillbillies (PG), 4:20, 7:15, 9:35 p.m.
Man's Best Friend (R), 4:20, 7:10, 9:40 p.m.
My Life (PG-13), 4:20, 7:05, 9:55 p.m.
1015 Massachusetts St.
Adams Family Values (PG-13), 5:15, 7:30,
9:30 p.m.
Ninth and Iowa streets
Hillcrest Theater
Cool Runnings, (PG), 5:15, 7:30, 9:30 p.m.
Rudy (PG), 7:15, 9:30 p.m.
Earnest Rides Again (PG), 5:15 p.m.
Carlito's Way (R), 5, 8 p.m.
The Three Musketeers (PG), 5, 7:15, 9:30 p.m.
The Joy Luck Club (R), 5:15, 8 p.m.
Cinema Twin
CD-RW
31st and Iowa St.
The Firm (R), 5, 8 p.m.
Sleepless in Seattle (PG), 5:15, 7:30, 9:30
p.m.
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1
B
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SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 18, 1993
11
Jayhawks claw past Wildcats in close match
By Gerry Fey Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas volleyball team escaped from being Kansas State's first conference victim last night, slipping by the Wildcats 16-14, 9-15, 11-15, 15-6, 15-9 at Manhattan.
The victory in its last regular-season
VOLLEYBALL
improved Kansas' record to 16-12 overall and 5-7 in the Big Eight. More important for Kansas players, K-State remains winless in the conference at 0-11 and 7-24 overall.
Kansas sophomore middle blocker/rightside player Jenny Larson said a defeat against K-State would have been a terrible way to end the regular season.
Kansas coach Frankie Albitz said she was thinking of using many players in the match if the Jayhawks were doing well. She played all her players, but not for the reason she intended.
"K-State came out tough against us," Larson said. "We kept getting behind and had to play catch-up."
"Everybody played and everybody played fairly well," Albitz said. "I planned to do that out of choice, not out of necessity. If we were having an easy time, I wanted to put some players in who haven't had much playing time. I didn't get that choice."
Albizt said she made lineup changes throughout the match. K-State's large leads against the Jayhawks gave Albizt a few gray hairs, she said.
KState had a 14-10 lead in the game one, but Kansas was able to come back and win 16-14. Larson said the Jayhawks came into the match a little shuggish.
"I couldn't find a lineup that worked," Albitz said. "I finally found one. That may have fired them up, knowing that K-State was going to play tough."
KANSAS
20
WESTERN
23
MICHIGAN
Larson said the change in the match came when Kansas jumped to an 11-2 lead in the fourth game. Kansas went on to win the game 15-6 and used that momentum to win the match, she said.
Although Albitz said sophomore outside hitter Tracie Walt played well for the Jayhawks, Walt said she was not happy with her performance. Walt ended the match with 16 kills and 12 digs, Kansas highs in both categories.
"I was pretty much up and down with the team," Walt said. "I had some good hits and some dumb hits."
Walt said the Jayhawks did not expect to play five games against K-State, a team they defeated 3-Oct. 6 in Allen Field House.
Melissa Lacey / KANSAM
Kansas' victory last night means that if K-State wins at fourth-place Iowa State on Saturday, the Jayhawks would play in the Big Eight Tournament Nov. 26-27 in Omaha, Neb. If Kansas, currently in fifth place, does not play in the conference tournament, it will play in the National Invitational Volleyball Championship tournament Dec. 3-5 in Kansas City, Mo. Only the top four teams advance to the conference tournament.
Senior guard Steve Woodberry shoots a lay-up over Western Michigan's Matt Van Abbema. Kansas defeated the Broncos during the first round of the Preseason National Invitational Tournament last night in Allen Field House.
'Hawks maul Broncos in defensive struggle
It was ugly, but it was Kansas coach Roy Williams' kind of ugly.
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
The Jayhawks defeated Western Michigan 69-50 last night in a turnover-ridden defensive battle.
Kansas played a stifling defense, creating 23 Bronco turnovers, 12 of which were Jawahra steals.
people will look at the game and say it's an ugly game," Williams said. "But I think you have an 'ugly game' when you have two teams that really try to work hard on the defensive end of the floor."
In Tuesday night's exhibition game against Marathon AAU, Williams took offense to his players' weak defensive efforts and, apparently, he told them about it.
Kansas freshman point guard Jacque Vaughn said the team had a higher concentration level last night than it did Tuesday.
But Williams said of last night's game: "For this time of year, that was a sensational defensive performance."
"We knew they were good coming in," Vaughn said. "Our emphasis was on defense foremost tonight. We were more focused."
Williams credited Western Michigan and coach Bob Donewald for the Broncos' defensive effort.
"They played very well and are a very well disciplined club," Williams said. "They really made it difficult for us to get the ball inside, and when we did get it in there, they clogged it up.
Neither team shot the ball well. After shooting 60 percent in the first half, the Jayhawks finished the
game shooting 42 percent. Western Michigan shot-
only 33 percent.
Two big reasons for the poor Bronco shooting, were the outstretched arms of Kansas' 7-foot-2 junior center Greg Ostertag. The big man in the middle tied a school record by blocking seven shots in his 22 minutes of play.
"In his first eight minutes he wasn't playing defense, so he blocked seven of them in about 12 minutes," Williams said. "If you have someone blocking seven shots, that's one reason the other team is going to shoot 33 percent."
Ostertag said he didn't know he was that effective. "I didn't realize I had that many until I was told after the game," Ostertag said. "But I'm real excited about it because I want that to be one of my main goals — to have a lot of blocked shots. So I started off in a good way."
Offensively, Kansas spread the wealth among its players, four of whom scored in double digits.
The Jayhawks were led by senior forward Richard Scott, who had 14 points. Senior guard Steve Woodberry, who played wearing a wrap around his left shin because of an injury he suffered Tuesday, added 13 and grabbed four steals. Sophomore forward Sean Pearson also dumped in 13, and freshman center Scot Pollard scored 12.
Donewald said he thought his team was outplayed in all aspects, and missing three of five first-half free throws didn't help.
"They were a much more aggressive and assertive team than we were," Donewald said. "We put ourselves in a hole, and they were too good for us to get out of it."
Kansas steps up defense with 12 steals
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
Just one night after registering only three steals and forcing 15 turnovers, Kansas stepped up its defensive effort in a 69-50 victory against Western Michigan.
The Jayhawks forced 23 turnovers and had 12 steals in its first-round game in the Preseason National Invitational Tournament.
Senior guard Steve Woodberry said that the team made a conscious effort to play a better defensive game. Kansas did not want a repeat of Tuesday's 94-point runaway score.
Coach Roy Williams said that the team could read what was written in the newspapers and hear his comments in his radio show, so it knew that he was not pleased with its defensive performance in the exhibition game.
Williams said that the team had a sensational defensive performance last night, emphasizing that it was early in the season.
Freshman guard Jacque Vaughn and junior guard
Calvin Rayford did good things defensively, which started the Jayhawks' transition game, Williams said.
with five minutes left in the second half, Rayford swiped the ball from behind an unsuspecting Western Michigan dribler. He controlled the ball even as he slid along the court in the opposite direction of the basket, creating one of his three steals.
Only Woodberry had more steals with four.
Western Michigan senior guard Leon McGee said, "We had to keep the fact that their guards could blow by us. It's hard to keep your concentration when you have to think about that."
Williams said that both teams played well defensively and that it was difficult for Kansas to get the ball inside.
Senior forward Richard Scott said Kansas would get better with time.
He said that the team could not change its game before tomorrow's game against California, but that it would work more on its defense.
"We did not scare anybody tonight," Williams said:
"We hope to have a chance to scare teams later on."
SPORTS BRIEF
Houston hires new manager
The Associated Press
HOUSTON — Pittsburgh Pirates bullpen coach Terry Collins, who managed in the minor leagues for more than a decade, was hired as manager of the Houston Astros yesterday.
Collins, one of seven known candidates to replace fired manager Art Howe, had been reported as one of two front-runners.
"They are looking for an aggressive guy that knows how to deal with people and get the most out of his players," Collins said. "That's one thing that's in my background with all my years spent in the minor leagues, dealing with those situations."
Owner Drayton McLane fired Howe and general manager Bill Wood on Oct. 5, following the Astros' third-place finish in the National League West.
Swimming team to face stiff competition at three-day meet
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas swimming and diving team will face three days of intense competition when it travels to Minneapolis for the Minnesota Invitational, which starts tomorrow.
The meet comes on the heels of a dual meet with perennial power Southern Methodist in Oklahoma City last weekend. The men's team won, while the women's team was defeated.
The team will be tested in Minnesota against national power Tennessee as well as conference rivals Iowa State and Nebraska. This meet will not affect the team's dual meet record however.
"I like to see as much good competition as I can. Kansas coach Gary Kempf said.
Kempf said that facing Nebraska was not his major concern at this point in the season.
"When I signed us up for the meet I didn't even know they were in it." Kempf said.
Sophomore Donna Christensen said that placing above Nebraska was one of the team's goals. She said that defeating Nebraska would help to rebound from a disappointing close loss to Southern Methodist. The loss dropped the women's team to 2-1 in dual meet competition and broke a string of 24 straight dual-meet victories.
Christensen said the fact that the meet was decided by the last event proved the team could compete with the best teams. She said that large meets like Minnesota sometimes lacked the excitement of dual competition.
Kempf said that he expected the women's competition to come down to Minnesota, Nebraska and Kansas. The field became a little easier when Florida, which finished second in the country last year, unexpectedly withdrew from the competition to participate in another meet.
The Kansas men's team, which is 2-0 in dual-eet competition after defeating Southern Methodist for the first time, will try to take that momentum into this weekend's invitational.
Kempf said that the men's side would feature stiff competition between Tennessee and Indiana.
"I definitely think our performance against Southern Methodist will help us some," Kempf said.
"You can't just focus on one team," Chris-tsen said. "You have to focus on more teams."
Sophomore Ryan Lowe said that being able to consistently beat big-name schools was a team goal this year.
"Last year, we came close but could never do it." Lowe said.
Lowe said that he enjoyed the larger meets more than the dual competitions. He said that fatigue could become more of a factor in an invitational but that he liked having extra time to prepare for each race.
"The duals only run a couple of hours, this meet runs three days," Lowe said. "You're definitely more tired by the end."
Kempf said that this type of meet would help the team later during the Big Eight meet and possibly in Nationals later in the year. Kempf said that his major goal at this point in the season was to see the team improve.
"I just want to see us continue to move forward." Kennf said.
Receiver excels in classroom as well as on the football field
Greg Ballard, senior wide receiver, runs a drill during practice. Ballard was honored on the first team Academic All-Big Eight Football Honor Roll and received a $5,000 post-graduate grant for his scholastic achievement.
Greg Ballard receives awards for academics
By Matt Doyle Kansan sportswriter
Kansas senior wide receiver Greg Ballard fits the definition of student athlete.
The Lawrence senior has helped improve the Jayhawks' passing game this season. He has 15 receptions for 240 yards.
However, Ballard takes the same amount of pride in his performance off the field.
83
PLANET
FOOTBALL
Ballard was honored on the first-team Academic All-Big Eight Football Honor Roll and was one of four student athletes nationwide to receive a $5,000 post-graduate grant from the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics.
"It is a reward for maintaining high academic level in addition to playing athletics," Ballard said. "Both of those always have been a big part of my life. I was fortunate to get both of those honors."
Ballard has a 3.22 grade point average in political science and premed, and he will graduate this year. He said he planned to enter the University of Kansas Medical Center in Fall 1995 after an attempt to continue his football career on the professional level in 1994.
Susan McSpadden / KANSAN
"That's why I have that year and decided not to go into med school until the fall of 1995," Ballard said. "I want to play out my chances and see if I can make it in the NFL."
Denver Broncos scout Jeff Smith said Ballard could have an opportunity to play in the National Football League because of his size, speed and good hands.
This season's performance has given Ballard the possibility of continuing his playing career. Ballard transferred from Southern Methodist University to Kansas in 1900 but did not join the Jayhawk football team until 1902. His 1902 season ended in the first quarter of the second game of that year against Ball State, when he broke his arm.
"That kind of ruined my season because it was a good year for KU football by going to the Aloha Bowl," he said. "But this year has pretty much made up for it. Even though we haven't enjoyed the same success we had last year, it still has been a great experience for me."
Kansas coach Glen Mason said that he was glad Ballard decided to transfer from SMU to
Kansas and that he had done a great job for the Jayhawks.
"Greg Ballard is really a good football player, outstanding young man and outstanding student," Mason said. "You talk about a class act, and he's it."
Ballard said his academic motivation would pay off if a career in professional football did not work out for him.
7
"My parents have always pushed to succeed academically as well as athletically," he said. "I've done it through high school and I'm doing it in college. Whether I make it in professional football is yet to be seen, but regardless I always will have my academics to fall back on. That's what is important."
12
Thursday, November 18, 1993
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
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Thursday, November 18. 1993
13
Soccer team makes it to nationals
Local businesses fund Phoenix trip
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas soccer players will be sprinting around the national soccer field in Phoenix this weekend, thanks to the help of a few sponsors.
Soccer captain Tray Thompson, senior, said the Lawrence businesses Red Lyon Tavern, River City Hair Co. and Quest for Value contributed enough money to send three players who could not afford to pay their own way to the National Collegiate Club Soccer Association tournament, which determines the club soccer
Kansas has been in the national tournament for the last four years but has been defeated in the first round each time. Senior Kipper Hesse said the team should be more competitive this season.
The team flew out yesterday morning and practiced in the afternoon to prepare for the tournament.
national champion.
Sponsors were sought to help defray unexpected travel costs. Late in the season, the team learned that the tournament was moved from Austin, Texas, to Phoenix. The longer distance made it necessary for the team to fly to cut down on the time the players would be absent from school. That increased the team's costs.
The 16 teams in the tournament are guaranteed to play three games each. The winners move into the singleelimination quarterfinals. Salisbury said the team would not know its opponents until the tournament started.
Kansas' three games are at 8 a.m. and 3 p.m. today and 11:30 a.m. tomorrow. If the team wins those, it will advance to the quarterfinals later in the afternoon.
Coach Mark Salisbury said the practice would help the team become acclimated to its surroundings.
He said that the team was never completely prepared for any tournament and that it had been hard for the team to find time to practice. Only eight people showed up for the last practice before the team left for Phoenix. Salisbury said many of the players were trying to finish homework before the five-day trip.
butions, the team sold long-sleeve T shirts for $15 each. Thompson.
Hesse estimated the cost of the trip at $209 for airfare, meal and hotel costs. The team received a discounted airfare price of $160 for each person.
To supplement the sponsors' contri-
Eighteen players will represent Kansas at the tournament. Salisbury and a manager will accompany the team.
Regardless of whether the team wins or loses, the team will stay in Phoenix until Sunday. Hesse said the team would do some sightseeing once it finished playing.
Salisbury said the teams that would do well in the tournament would be the ones that could put all the trivial things aside and concentrate on soccer.
Tyson ready for fighting chance
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Former heavyweight champion Mike Tyson will he resume his boxing career when he leaves prison because, "All I know how to do is fight."
"What else am I going to do,man, be a nuclear scientist?" he said in an interview published in today's New York Daily News.
"But it's not all I want," Tyson said. "I want a family. Fighting will give me the cash to live."
Tyson, who could be released as early as the spring of 1995 from the Indiana prison in which he is serving a six-year term on a rape conviction, believes he could defeat "what's out there," including WBC and WBA champion Evander Holyfield.
"I'm envious of him," Tyson said of Hollyfield during the interview at the Indiana Youth Center near Indianapolis. "He's got what I want ... he's classy ... he carries himself with dignity, but I can beat him."
Tyson, who appeared in shape and said he occupied his time by reading, said former champion Riddick Bowe wasn't serious enough. He said Holyfield, Bowe and the other top heavyweights, Razor Rudock and Lennox Lewis, didn't have to be fighters.
"They can do other things ... they're athletes ... not me," Tyson said. "I didn't play ball when I was a kid. All I know how to do is fight."
Tyson said a report in a Zimbabwe newspaper that quoted him as saying he was considering settling in Africa was erroneous.
"Where do they get that?" he asked. "I said I wanted to see the pyramids, to see where Alexander the Great was buried.
"But I couldn't live in Africa. In Africa, with African justice. I have had my head cut off."
Tyson also restated his contention that he is innocent of raping a teen-age beauty contestant.
"People wanted me to cry in court. Cry and beg," he said. "Why should I? I didn't do anything."
West Virginia to defend 9-0 record against No.4 Miami
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — Students camp out overnight in the rain for a chance at a handful of tickets left for West Virginia football games. It's a weird scene at a school with a 63,500-seat stadium and only 20,000 students.
Saddled by a coal miner's strike and high unemployment, the state of West Virginia has gone bonkers over its unbeaten team. And on Saturday, the No. 9 Mountaineers, 9-0, are preparing to host No. 4 Miami, 8-1.
"I think it's the biggest game of the whole program's history of 103 years" alumni director Steve Douglas said. "I've had calls this morning from Honolulu, Las Vegas, New York. I've been in the alumni business for 11 years, and this is the hardest ticket I've ever had to try and get for somebody."
Besides a chance at a big bowl game, Saturday brings an opportunity for true recognition.
"This place is going to go crazy on Saturday," Trey Eno, West Virginia sophomore, said. "Everybody's looking forward to it, to earn respect.
"Like this morning, I was watching ESPN. They did a rundown of all the college games and they started with the top 10, and they didn't even show highlights with our game last week."
Not since West Virginia beat Syracuse to finish 11-0 in 1988 has there been such excitement for a game in Morgantown. A statewide radio advertisement calls on Mountaineer fans, even those without tickets, to attend a Friday night pep rally at the university.
"We know when that big bad Hurricane hits the Mountain State, it's just a slight breeze out of the south," the ad savs.
Yesterday, callers jammed phone lines at a Charleston radio station that was giving away
two tickets. Even West Virginia football secretary Lori Rice is having trouble.
"I told my daughter I couldn't get her tickets for this game," Rice said. "She said, 'That's all right, I'll stand outside until halftime, then walk in.' I'm not sure I'd want my children in this crowd, especially if we win."
Police plan to be ready.
"I remember when they beat Oklahoma (in 1983) and that was an away game—they really parted downtown," campus police Capt. Bill Mathess said. "I think they took over and set fires in the streets.
"When they do that for an away game... if they beat Miami, I look for them to party." he said.
It's never too early to party at West Virginia because the Mountaineers know that even if they remain unbeaten, they might not be invited to the big party.
"It's kind of disappointing, especially when you see teams that have lost football games that can still compete for the national title," safety Mike Collins said. "Quite honestly, I don't think it's fair."
West Virginia senior receiver Mike Baker already is campaigning for a split championship.
"If you have a 12-0 team you voted No. 1, and you have another 12-0 team and you voted them No. 2, then that's not fair," he said.
First, however, West Virginia must beat Miami. Offensive coordinator Mike Jacobs recalls that the Mountaineers most-hyped game to date, against No. 1 Notre Dame in the 1988 Fiesta Bowl, ended in a 34-21 loss.
"We've had some darn big ones, when Boston College came in here undefended, and our Penn State home wins we've had," Jacobs said. "You notice I say those were wins. So this will be a big game for us if we win, the way I figure it. That's the most important thing."
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New Mexico State expected to repeat as Big West champ
Editor's note: The following preview of Western conferences was not received from The Associated Press in time to be included in yesterday's college basketball section.
By Pete Herrera The Associated Press
The hole card throughout Neil McCarthy's career at New Mexico State has been junior college recruits. This season, his hand is loaded.
No longer understudies to UNLV in the Big West Conference, the Aggies restocked so well with junior college talent that the loss of four starters, including Sam Crawford, the nation's assistant leader last season, won't keep the Aggies from a fifth straight NCAA tournament appearance.
"With that recruiting class, New Mexico State should clearly be the favorite," San Jose State coach Stan Morrison said. "I think it will have a chance to be Neil's best-ever team."
Better than the 1991-92 team that reached the NCAA tournament's round of 16 and finished 25-8. A step up for a program that in the last four seasons has won 100 games and last season ended UNLV's string of 11 straight Big West titles by going 26-8 overall and 15-3 in the conference.
Big West colleagues who cast a preseason vote of confidence for the Aggies can't forget UNLV, McCarthy said.
"Vegas had a recruiting class that was rated higher than ours," he said.
Eight junior college transfers and two redshirts join returners James Dockery, D.J. Jackson and Corey Rogers for the Aggies.
"Our strength will be in our numbers," McCarthy said. "Athletically we're deeper and quicker, and there are more of them."
Depth will be prevalent at the point guard spot, which Crawford owned for two seasons. Brilliant as a junior,
WEST PREVIEW
Crawford slumped as a senior and finished his career with 10 turnovers in the 92-55 second-round NCAA loss to Cincinnati.
McCarthy has four players capable of playing both the point and shooting guard spots. Skip McCoy, a 5-foot-10 transfer from Iowa State, had the inside track to replace Crawford until McCarthy recruited 6-4 Dwain Brackberry, one of California's top junior college players, who averaged 21 points and almost 12 assists a game at Mount San Jacinto College.
Rodney Walker averaged 25.7 points last season at Glen Oaks (Mich.) Community College, and Keith Johnson averaged 16 points and 7.5 assists at Lake Land (ill.) Community College.
Thomas had an assist-turnover ratio of 248-68 last season, and Manuel averaged more than 8 points a game.
McCarthy's run of NCAA tournament teams began with his recruitment in 1989 of Michael New, Reggie Jordan and current Sacramento Kings guard Randy Brown from the Chicago area. He tapped that well again this year to land Johnson and 6-6 forwards Johnny Selvie and Thomas Wyatt. Selvie went to Eastern Utah Junior College, where he led the nation with field-goal percentages of 74 and 77 the last two seasons. The 6-8 Dockery, the only returning starter, averaged 9.3 points and 5.6 rebounds last season.
UNLV won 16 of its first 18 games last season, then faded and wound up out of the NCAA tournament despite a 21-8 record. The Rebels lost their three top scorers, including NBA lottery pick J.R. Rider, but return a sterling backcourt of senior Dedan Thomas and junior Reggie Manuel.
UNLVCoach Rollie Massimino, who says the Rollies will return to the run
The Western Athletic Conference lost its marquee player, and Brigham Young University became just another contender when Shawn Bradley opted to skip his final three years of eligibility and entered the NBA draft.
with the 7-6 Bradley in the NBA, the league race figures to be a free-for-all among BYU, Utah and Colorado State. New Mexico and Texas-El Paso are the sleepers.
BVU's Russell Larson, a 6-10 junior, is tough enough to play inside and still has the versatility to shoot the 3-pointer.
Utah lost four senior starters, including Josh Grant, but has one of the league's best guards in Phil Dixon.
Colorado State returns three starters, including point guard Ryan Yoder, the league leader in assists and one of the nation's top free-throw shooters at 86.7 percent last season.
The PAC-10 has some of the nation's best guards with California's Jason Kidd, UCLA's combination of Tyus Edney and Shon Tarver and Arizona's Damon Stoudamire and Khalid Reeves.
California, led by the sophomore Kidd and junior forward Lamond Murray, may have just enough depth to beat out UCLA. Kidd had a sensational freshman season, averaging 12 points a game. Murray, who averaged 19 points, is the league's best offensive player.
UCLA has plenty of talent and few distractions now that coach Jim Harrick has signed a multi-year contract. With Edney, Tarver and the forward combination of brothers Ed and Charles O'Bannon, the Bruins are headed for another good year.
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922 Mass. Downwown
Advertise in the Kansan!
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 (FHA), which requires an evidence, 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 open to qualified residents.
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
Y
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
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
100s Announcements
FREE! FREE! FREE! Free! Unclaimed Government
free information. 823-1981. 200 sources. Call for
free information. 823-1981.
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Saturday 3:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
110 Bús. Personals
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
120 Announcements
*SPRING BREAK*
Early Booking Special
$25 Deposit
LOWEST PRICES GUARANTEED!
Joan at 865-581
GREEKS & CLUB
300s Merchandise
RAISE UP TO $1,000 IN JUST ONE WEEK! For your fraternity, sorority, & club. Pln $1,000 for yourself! And A free T-SHIRT just for calling 1-800-933-0588, ext. 75.
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358
CHRISTMAS
4UJS Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
JANUARY 2.16, 1994 • 5.6 or 7 NIGHTS
SKI BREAKS
LODGING • LIFTS • PARTIES • PICNICS • TAXES
s199 from
LAST CHANCE!
STEAMBOAT $199
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
TELLURIDE
SUNCARE BEACH
BREWERY
Systemic Mutation Achieved: Macro-change of the immune system, the body temperature regulation mechanism of animals, suggests animals sharing physical attributes of Biblical Adam, Moses, Christ; Comfort at all temperatures; immunity to diseases & alimenties.
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
1·800·SUNCHASE
13th YEAR!
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
SPRING BREAK 94
It's hot!
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
NORTH PADRE/USTANG ISLAND
F·L·O·R·I·D·A
DAYTONA BEACH
F-L-O-R-D-I-D-A
DAYTONA BEACH
BANANA CITY BEACH
ORLANDO/WALT DISNEY WORLD
C-O-L-O-R-A-D-O
STEAMBOT
VAIL/BEAVER CREEEK
BRECKENRIDGE/KEYSTONE
N-E-V;A-D-A
LAS VEGAS
S-O-U-T-H C-A-R-O-L-I-N-A MILTON HEAD ISLAND
RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW
CALL TOLL FREE FOR FULL
CONTRACTS
1
DETAILS AND COLOR BROCHURE!
1·800·SUNCHASE
3. See below.
130 Entertainment
Free Party Room Available
at Johnny's Tavern/Up & Under
Call 942-0377 for details.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, November 18. 1993
15
SKI
STEAMBOAT
*JAN 2-8*
*SIX NIGHTS*
*4/5 DAY LIFT*
*FREE PARTIES*
*$259*
BILL B33-2277 & 841-2111
BENCHWARMERS
BILL832-2277&841-9111 Presented by
NOWOPEN!
BRANDING IRON
SALOON
806 W.24th·843-2000
Thurs Nov18
Elite
Male Dancers
TROFEL BURKE
- 5 Dancers
* Only $3 per charge
* Showtime at 4pm
* Showtime 8-10pm
* Men admitted at 10am
Formerly Just A Playhouse Behind McDonald's
140 Lost & Found
Lost: Black Leather Jacket. 11/10 (W) or 11/17
Lost: In Haworth or Wesco. Rescue Call. 828 632
Lost: cluster diamond ring, reward
call 8541-0431 or (913) 879-7022
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
**** BUS DRIVERS****
*ATTENTION COLLEGE STUDENTS! Need financial help? School can be extremely expensive and loans sometimes don't cover those "hidden costs." We can help! Call Faith Marketing for details about making BIG MONEY. Free 24 hr. recorded message. Call (816) 383-7979.
The Lawrence Bus Company is accepting applications for part time bus drivers. Morning and afternoon shifts available. Must be 21 with clean driving record. Call 842-0544.
A local vacuum repair business needs part-time
technicians. Call 844-1297
in geometrically-included person. Call 844-1297
**Cruise & Travel jobs. Earn $2500/mo. + travel the world free!** (Caribbean, Europe, Hawaii, Anta!) Cruise Lines now hire for busy holiday, spring and summer lists. Listing Service. Call 800-742-9000.
AMIGOS Sunervisor/Assist Mgr
Supervisor now - Manager later! Learn the business from the ground up and advance according to the needs of the organization. Borer oriented person and like to work at a fast intense pace, an opportunity to put these skills to work and develop as a leader is available. Rochelle applies this skill plus benefits apply now: Amigos, 1819 W. 23rd.
old high school graduate. Send resume/cover letter to J. Yancey, Bert Nash CMH, 338 Missouri, Lawrence, KS 60044. Open until filled. EOE. Available Jan. 15 to 9:34. Invited. Customer Service.
BASS PLAYER AVAILABLE
APPLY NOW! International Chain filling part-fall line positions. Training provided. Work locally nbwf(fetable schedules around classes) May 23-25th, Fri-Sat, 10am-4pm, winter break 8:00 plus startline call 842-853-1762.
Attendance care, part-time: provide supervision of severely emotionally disturbed children/adolescents. On-call, variable hours. Knowledge/experience with SED children preferred. Must be 18.
Bookkeeping position. Working firsts K-4-F. Current
information. Contact information. Send letter of application, list of 3 references, and vita to Edge Enterprises P. O. Box 1348, Lawrence,
KS 6004 Delaware Nov. 22, 93. Transportation
Number: 133373.
Brandon Woods Retirement Community is currently hiring walt staff for the 11am-6pm shift with possibility of an occasional 5pm-7pm shift. Hrs are available on Monday to Friday in person 190 Inverness Dr. Lawrence K.S.E.O.
Experienced bass player looking for serious Lawrence band. I have live playing experience including Lawrence bars. I own professional equipment and play both freestyle and five string arrangements. I play strings funky, groovy staff, but I am flexible. No metal, hardcore, or cheese. Dedicated band members as must. If you've been looking for that hard to find bass player... I'm ready to go 84-925-8967
Case manager, full-time: provide case management for severely emotionally disturbed children and adults degree/experience working with SED children/adolescents. Masters degree preferred. Send resume/cover letter to J. Yancey, Bert Nash University, Lawrence, KS 6040. Open until filled. EOE
daycare provider needed, our house. For infant and toddler: M.-F., 8am-2pm, $150/wk. Call 842-5441.
Earn $1,000 per week at home filling orders! Free Information. Please send long self addressed stamped envelope to CJ Enterprises, Box 67068H, Uciyahoga Falls, OH 44222.
Caterers, Kansas and Burge Unions' Catering Department, Kansas, November 12-16. Please follow code and prefer previous service experience. Personnel Office Level 5. Union Building, EOE
Female, non-smoking. English speaking baby boy,
15 hrs old, 5'4" at 36 hrs.
Hours on call: Bedside M1-980
Telephone: (212) 748-5638
FREE TRIPS AND MONEY!!! Individuals and Student Organizations wanted to promote the Hottest Spring Break Destinations, call the nation's leader. Inter-Campus Programs 1-800-324-7696.
Herry's "S Bar & Grill is now hiring experienced kitchen staff. Must be able to work days, some evenings, and holidays. Apply from 2 to 4 p.m.
Mon - Wed. No phone calls. 3320 W. 9th St.
Harry T. To Bar and Grill is now hiring experienced工
staff. Must be able to work days, some evenings available. Apply from 24 pm, M-F. No phone calls please. W320. wth. H
Local business seeks qualified individuals to provide a variety of services to community residents. Good income. For an interview call 843-2696 or 842-9149
Marketing Assistant position available at Nailah Hall for the spring semester. Applicant must have excellent people skills, good computer skills (desktop publishing experience a plus), and have a background in customer service, or sales. Position will be part time with compensation of room and board plus stipend. Potential for full time effective July, 1994. Great resume and portfolio builder to help you get started. Job duties include apply at Nailah Hall, 1800 Nailah Drive, Lawrence KS 60044. E/O/M.F/H/A.
Part-time apt. maintenance person wanted to work weekday morning, call 641-8884 to apply.
Phone Work. Part Time, Flexible Hours. Paid Daily, Call 232-9283.
Micro Tech Computer is looking for full- or pari-
sitioned salesperson to work with a diverse
assertive, detailed-oriented and have excellent sale skills. IBM, PC knowledge & sales experience pre-
ferable. Send resume to 829-M Iowa St., Laurentville, NJ 07103.
Older Farm Couple Seeks Assistance:
Free rent to student or single parent family in exchange for help w/ yard work, it house work. It lends to pimped pet welcome. Call 897-5777, after 3 p.m.
FUND RAISER
Raise $500 in 5 days. Groups.
Clubs, motivated individuals
| -800-775-3851 | ext 101
RESUME SERVICES Professional Business Resumes Cover Letters, 6 WYTT Interview Questions, & More
are now hiring extra help for our seasonal season)
Front counter, utility, grill cooks,
dressers, cleaning staff.
mexican restaurant and waistaff. Apply in person, lower level, FrontRiver Plaza.
FAST CASH
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
STUDENTS NEEDED
If you are available for all home basketball games and would be interested in assisting at parking lot attendant please contact Manpower Temporary Services at 749-2800 EOE.
The Lawrence BUS Company is now taking applications for SAFERIE drivers. Must be 21, have a clean record, and be familiar with the 15 hrs work. School Holidays if. Intended call 824-0544.
You CAN make a difference. Greenpeace K.C.
You can help by donating to help others and to help save the rain forest, stop toxic waste, and protect the ozone layer. PT / FT 1910 to UB 38-364, paid training hours 2 to 10 m.ph. Call UB 38-364.
EARN CASH
Earn $15 today
Earn $30 this week
Thanks for giving
this Thanksgiving season
$1000 CASH
GIVEAWAY!
Anyone who donates their blood plasma 8 times between Oct. 30 and Dec. 17 is eligible to win a cash drawing.
There's still time-don't delay,come in today.
1st Prize: $450
2nd Prize: $150
3rd Prize: $100
4th Prize: $100
5th Prize: $75
6th Prize: $50
7th Prize: $25
8th Prize: $25
9th Prize: $25
$
$
"Help pay your tuition by entering our cash giveaway and help save a life today."
NABI
The Double Source
Fraternities and Sororites call for more information about fund-raising
749-5750
816 W. 23rd
Behind Laird-
Noller Ford
225 Professional Services
OPPORTUNITY IS KNOCKING!
If your vehicle has hail damage. You can make money from it. We can save you hundreds of dollars on repairs. This doesn't cost one penny! Mr. Demo Pro of Lawrence. 1120 E. briar, 841-4503
Thesis &
Traffic tickets, misdeemers, landlord/ tenant,
Braxon B. Copley 749-5333
Lawrence Printing Service, Inc.
512 E. 9th Street 843-4600
Dissertations Hardbinding and Gold Stamping 3 Day Turnaround
Driver education offered through Midwet Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
ATTORNEY
Rick Frydman,Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
we relate to latex manion with you:
Birthright 845-8421. Free pregnancy testing.
Prompt abortion and contraceptive services. Dale L.
Clinton M.D. 841-5716.
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here at ANI and we wish you.
NAILTIQUE
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
DUI's and criminal offenses
THE law offices OF
DONALD G. STROLE
Research Assistance - MS/MLS information specialist available to assist with paper tapes, papers, dissertations, research projects. 843-4290.
Unique resumes, cover letters, laprin pages. Fast, easy updates, affordable. Graphic Ideas, Inc. 927/2 Mass. 841-1071.
235 Typing Services
A Word Perfect word processing Laser
printer. Near campus. 842-6850.
$2.00 Off Manicures
$5.00 Off All Other Services
Call Heidi at 832-2900
Expert typing. IBM Correcting Selectric.
/double space page. Call Mr. Matti 861-3147.
战
GiftCertificates Available
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your TYPING needs call
www.w3.org/TR/typing-81.html
Are you Makin' the Grade?
X
Fast, accurate word processing: term paper, dissertation, thesis and graphics services available. Laser printing. Engineering and Law Review experience. Call Pam at 841-1977 anytime.
305 For Sale
Beds, desks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
938 Mass.
Fall Clearance: All adult tape on sale $12.80 and
Fall Clearance: All adult tape on sale $12.80,
or Mirror Video, Tioo, 190, Hakuso, 841-754.
Pro-Type - fast, reliable, service professional
Mavk. Anwild to tpall. Callnr at 814-6242
Wait, the prompt says "Preserve special characters exactly as they appear."
The text in line 3 has `T` and `P`.
I will just use `T` and `P`.
Word processing, applications, term papers, dis-
tribution of resources, competition, rush job available. Masters Degree.
300s Merchandise
*Beautiful wood bedroom set.* 1. queen size bed with cherry wood head board, matching night stand and dresser. 2. king-size bed with Paid $33 a year kit but it's go to.. $175. You can't get a tutor for that. Call me at 865-0725.
DP 2500 weight lifting machine, leg curls, etc.
Great condition. DP Body - Tone 300 Rowing Machine. $250 for both. Call 843-0540 evenings and weekends.
Fire walking/walk on water WALK ON TRASH!
Fire walking/walk on water GENERAL
General Store, 753 Mass. Mast 10-5-30, 5-10
QUANTITY RATES/MICE small rats $1.35 mice will be delivered. VISA/MasterCard #88-2000. Jim
Large inventory of classic old Playboy Magazines 1950's, 60's, 70's and 80's. Most in good condition.
Must be purchased in package. Call 843-0540 evenings and weekends
FITNESSEQUIPMENT
RElInternal Frame Backpack, big. And Carboun $20 for both.
Excellent Call, Call 891-9737
Sega Genesis with saga C.D. includes packing
with a drive that supports 400 roo
bike with look pedals, excellent car $500
Spend New Years in Chicago | Leave KC Dec 28
Spend New Years in Chicago | Call 1841-3981 now before it is sold (tales only)
Student basketball tickets-best offer. Call Ralph
at 728-4155
Thanksgiving
1 way ticket to Cleveland
From KC Nov. 22nd. 842-7208
Floppy Discs
and Lowest Price.
Cell: 832-7744 (61) 5621 (81)
CallB32-2744 (o)842-5421 (h)
Visit our office behind Food 4 Less at
2201 W. 25th St.B-1.
Want to sell full set of KU basketball tickets. Best offer. Don’t miss the action! Call now and leave a message at 842-1185.
340 Auto Sales
"B8 Honda CIV LX, 4-dr. 1 owner, ex car w/ new
parts."
"8500 Bmw 800i - 841-0738 or 864-5119"
"8500 Bmw 800i - 841-0738 or 864-5119"
1981 WJETA, 5.spd, 4.dr. Good Condition. AM-FM
cassette . $170.00. Call Mike 811-7795.
1983 Honda Civic, 3rd, s5p, 124,000 ml, AC, runs good,
$1200. Call 749-7421.
1983 Black Jeep CJ-7, 5-speed. Hard top, new engine, pull-on stroller. #4,400,000 Call: 832-654-2300
1983 WV Rabbit GTI, 5-speed, 95,000 miles, sporty,
$1,496 Call 841-2139.
1985 Ford Ltd. Excellent tires and body runs.
280 miles $4,600. Call 317-287-3555.
Sculptured Nails $23 reg. $4. Reflections West, West 232 Ridge Court 841-762. Ask for Pam.
Available Jan. 1, b 1bmr. ap on bus route. Call
749-1586 2-5 pm on M-Fri.
85 Red Pontic Fiero, sunroof, AC, new paint.
$3.000 BOD $194-3989.
360 Miscellaneous
Designer Stamps • Art Stamps
Custom Stamps
370 Want to Buy
Classes Weekly + 10% with mention of this date
17 W9th 841-4767
MICHELLE ANGELO'S
RUBBER STAMP RENAISSANCE
Innovative Creative Fun
Classes Work 10% off tuition prices of blind
400s Real Estate
Inexpensive $3mm, adjustable focus camera. In good condition. KU General Admission Basketball
Campus Place. 3 bimbs 2 be furnished apt, for rent.
Responsible work 3 minute walk to campus. Avail-
lance parking.
$dhar. townhouse available dan. 1.W/D, diahawar-
garh. On golf course and bus route. $600 Call
phone: 252-794-8314.
405 For Rent
1 BdRm **Bp**, just blocks from campus available for 2nd semester sublease, washer/dryer, dishwasher, ceiling washing the. works. $22 per mo./person. 1138 Kentburgh.855-607-0291. Call now.
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
Available Spring sem. Interested? Call
843-545-9200
Apt. for Rest. bldm. new carpet, unfurnished at
802-695-3144. Apt. for Rest. bldm. new carpet,
unfurnished at 802-695-3144. Available Dec.
1st. $75/month. 822-213.
Needed up to 14 KU General Admission Basketball
leaves. Message for Shane at 864-7004.
For least 4: bedroom, Sundance apts, near cam-
room. For least 5: negotiable, 70% + utilities.
Call: 899-620-9001.
stable at semenera break, apts. in newer sec-
trum (apt. 14280; apts. in newer sec-
trum $380/mo. 2 bprm apt. $650/ mo. Cab pwd, w/
hookups, dw, microwave, ceiling fan, min blinds,
shelves, windows, TV, computer, printer,
6 on bus arus. No pets. Cai 841-3800 or 54-3884.
10 am-6 pm
Available Jan LARGE 2 br near stadium, Heat,
Lakefront, 846/mi Call 61-7597/82-7881
846/mi Call 61-7597/82-7881
MASTERCRAFT
1, 2, 3, & 4 bdrm apts...
designed with you in mind!
Go to
OPEN DAILY
offers furnished
designed with you in mind!
Go to ...
Campus Place·841-1429
1145 Louisiana
Hanover Place - 841-1212
Orchard Corners - 749-4226
Regents Court - 749-0445
Sundance - 841-5255
7th & Florida
Tanglewood-749-241 10th & Arkansas
For rent brand new 3 bdm $ bap 1. On the bus
4 people $ 210/month + 1/2 utilities. Call 86-712-71
86-712-71
842-4455
MASTERCRAFT
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and
room on KU. Off-street parking
no pets. Cail 841-5500
Furnished studio apartment. 2 short blocks from Water paid. Off street parking. No pets. 841-500
HELP! We're graduating! Need 2 rent two bdm, h bike, huge kit & living room. Avail. end of Dec and Jan. Call quickkiller in to the bus, as in paid for! Call quickkiller location next to the bus, in a cool house! Call 853-6593 or 841-7597.
Best in Lawrence, signing up for next year.
Best in Lawrence, car ports available. For more info call 847-766-9058.
Drop Into Our Place to ask about our Mid Term Leases
Colony Woods Apartments
$365-$435
3 Hot Tubs
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Sand Vollevball Court
- Basketball Court
- Microwave
- On Bus Route
- 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts.
842-5111 1301 W.24 $ ^ {th} $
one bedroom apartment avail. $265 a month. 8th &
Louisiana no deposit. Call 855-743-9100
Wishing You The Best This Holiday Season!
1. Inst bdm apt. Dec. 1st. Nice and big, close to campus. $35. Water paid. Call 749-0205.
Seeking NSF to sublease NEW $3B condo on 9th & Emerry 2$5 +/- utilities. Available ONW! Call
Share nice large home, neighborhood or小区,
615-824 or 643-700. a block to KU. Reference
615-824 or 643-700. a block to KU. Reference
Spring sublease for 3 persons. 2 bdmr. 1 bath, on
mo. + 2 beds. 500 sq. ft. $79,000/mo.
Av. Aval. 82/51/14, 82-362-343
Sub-lease 8 bdmr. 2 baths 2.52 ea./mo. Water gas.
Sub-lease 10 bdmr. 2 baths 2.52 ea./mo. Voice phone hook-up.
Available Jan. 1. Call 644-7342.
Sublease I dbmpr i dbmpr, at Meadowbrook. Avail. Dec.
march or month of Dec. 1- May 31st. Call today
865-2901
Siblaean Needed! 2823 Iowa G.1. Nice neighborhood. $400/milling to negotiate! 8913-915 or
www.siblaean.com
Sublease studies $900/mo, including cable. Available immediately. Call 749-3605.
Sublease: Nalimih (hall) Hall, Rec. Room, Maid
Ready for Spring Semester. Call Andy
925-310-2910
Unique 2 bedroom / 7 bath apt. hardwood floors. 2
bedrooms. downtown. $480/month.
Available Jan. 1, 1941 - Sep. 31, 2015.
430 Roommate Wanted
N/S Female needed for 4bdr. duplex with W/D,
Broadband $170/m + \uutil On bus route:
Call 841-7683
Now leasing for Spring!
1 female needed to share 2 Br l bath apt. Close to
the house. Available in London. Other still free. Avail Jan call 829-4543.
Call now to make your booking.
I tomoteam to share furm 48R/2B ip on campus
I to moteam to share furm 48R/2B ip on Vac De19,
760/7/m +/- 1 call Call Anan 843-4188
1 roommate (m or f) needed for 3 bdmm apt.
$200/m + ½/u. Washer/dryer, dishwasher, on bus route, fully furnished (except for room). Avail.
Jin 1 for spring seminar. Call 749-1185.
1 Roommate needed to share beautiful, historic 3
W2D 8174 month. 943-3165.
we're making life easier!
- Weekly Maid Service
•Front Door Bus Service
•"Dine Anytime" with
Unlimited Seconds
•Laundry and Vending
Facilities
•Free Utilities
Female N/S /b serve very nice 2 bdm, 2 bath house w/hardwood floors in Old West Lawrence.
Responsible grad-student/prof. only. Avail. Jan. 1 for spring semester $250/mo./1 use. call 321-687-9454.
FEMALE NEEDED TO SHARE 1 BR IN 3 BR
HOUSE, ALL WOOD FLOORS, NEW PAINT,
STREET-PARKING,
CLOSE TO CAMPUS, AVAILABLE DBC 1st.
CALIF. 822-323-749 703-698.
Female roommate needed to share b/2rm bath Apt. on the corner of Jayhawk Bvd. & Louisiana. $240 mo. washer/dryer, call ASAP 832-2093. Ask for Jenn.
Female non-smoker needed to share three bedridden.
Female non-smoker needed to share three bedridden.
817/month. Pay / 1/2/month. Call 768-145.
Looking for a female roommate to share 4 bdmr &
bh apartment. On bus route, fully furnished &
very INEXPENSIVE!! Call Holly or Beth at 865-
1481.
Male or female roommates must for 3 bdm. apartment to share vs rent and utilise for two apartments per room.
NSF w/ small dog needs a responsible NSF no.
to keep him in a springer笼. $190/mo. +
Call 749-1689
NAISMITH
Male needed for spacious townhouse on golf course. Jan, may 1697m + /u call Giulia
- Byphone: 864-4358
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Need roommate (male or female) ASAP for a
bedroom, 2 bathspath. For more information.
How to schedule an ad:
Naismith Drive
Order Friarly Double Sleeve Assistance
rent to students or single person family in
care for kids or baby in house. lt. house work, it.
cooking. Little pets welcome. Call 597-5771 after
3 p. in.
Need male roommate for 3 Bdrm apt Acl to come
down. Call 846-489-000. 846/489/mo or use **null**. Call 846-489-000.
Open minded female needed to two bed room,
house close to campus January third May Call any
phone number 714-236-1880
Need mature, clean, N/5 male to teach 3 bpt al
campus. $193/mo.
Some unit, pd. Avail. Jan. 1-4.
- Dv Mail: 119 Staffer Flint. Lawrence. KS. 66045
Ada phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
**Revision:** 1189 Stuffier Livelier
Roommate needed, Start Dec. 1, $150/mo %u/ull.
Roommate required, Daytime, 2 min from
Campus. Call 843-7231 for details
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 to MasterCard or VISA.
Responsible (female to share nice. 3 bbm, furnished house on bus route k8)
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 agate lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
Num. of insertions:
3 lines
4 lines
5-7 lines
8-12 lines
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 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 Kansan office for a fee of $4.00.
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
110 business personals
120 announcements
130 entertainment
Cases per hour per day
1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-28X 30+X
2.06 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
305 for sale
340 auto sales
360 miscellaneous
140 lost & found
205 help wanted
225 professional services
225 typing services
ADS MUST FOLLOW KAMSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | | |
3 | | | | | |
4 | | | | | |
5 | | | | | |
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
Classification:
Address:
Total days in paper
**VISA**
Method of Payment (Check one) ☐ Check enclosed ☐ MasterCard ☐ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Expiration Date:
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The University Dairy Kanman, 1911 Sugar Trust Flint Hall, lattuce. KS. 800465
The University Dairy Kanman, 1911 Sugar Trust Flint Hall, lattuce. KS. 800465
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
11-18
It had been a wonderfully successful day, and the dugout was filled with the sound of laughter and the fruits of their hunting skills. Only Kimbu wore a scowl, returning home with just a single knucklehead.
1
16
Thursday, November 18, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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KANSAS
Playing the field
Susan McSpadden / KANSAN
Kathy Hill, Lawrence resident, takes aim while playing frisbee golf on Campanile Hill. Hill was playing yesterday with David Habiger, Lawrence resident, right.
O R E A D
F O R U M
8 6 4 - 9 0 4 0
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Look for the Oread Forum and your chance to discuss issues affecting KU students and the University.
RING IN THE HOLIDAY SEASON
Order Your Herff Jones College Ring Now And Receive In Time To Wear During The Holidays!
5
Our entire collection of Herff Jones KU Ring Styles will be reduced $30 to $100 on Friday, November 19th and Saturday, November 20th! A Herff Jones representative will be able to assist you from 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. both days.
Royal
Jayhawk Bookstore
only at the top of Naismith Hill!
1420 Crescent Road·Lawrence,KS 66044
843-3826 HERFF JONES
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
♂
30 year old male seeks attractive, slim, female in a loving relationship and spend Christmas together.
MEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
DWM, 31, 6' 17 lbs, attractive professional, KU grad. I’m new in town and looking for an intelligent, attractive SWF 21-30 for dating, great conversation and possible relationship. Let’s not wait too long to meet someone along. Can you move details, and if you like what you hear, leave me a message. #46452
SWM, 5,10; med, build, attractive, brn. hair & eyes,
who likes keeping him in raucquetball, weight lifting,
mt. biking, running, snow skiing & dancing.
Would like to meet attractive, athletic woman
21-30. Seeking friends 1st, then maybe who know?
No heavyweights. #4638
Latin lookin', 5%", SWM, 21, seeks SF with long hair, decent figure, wacky sense of humor and car to go bar banging and partying. Should have been a dancer? Are you "hooked on Phonics" He! So am 11
SWM, 20, 6" I, 170, WORKOUT HUNK seeks spotter. Bronzed and toned and ready to pump iron. Looking for blonde hair, blue or green eyes, conditioned muscles and willing to take it to the weight room and anywhere else our meeting may lead us. Call BORA34801
To check out these ads call 1-900-285-4560 You will be charged $1.95 per minute
PLACE AN AD FREE!
Call 864-4358
Common abbreviations
M Male A Asian
F Female J Jewish
D Divorced C Christian
S Single Gay
W White Gay
B Black L Lesbian
H Hispanic N/S Non-Smoker
Common abbreviations
SWM 20 yrs, $150, 110 sq. long brown hair, I love Henry Rollins, Tom Waite, Social Distortion. I love a motorcycle, don't have job and probably drink to stay cool in the winter, stock wearing eco-frank need not apply. #45226
SWM 21 yrs, 6'6", 185 lbs, dark brown hair, icey eyes, muscular bod, looking for a sincere lady who likes to be pampered in all the right ways. Give me a call if moonlit nights, nighttime talks, and special occasions.
SWM 21 yrs, blue eyes, looking for a "little Chilie" who likes the finer things in life such as long walks. Kool-aid, and eating candle by candlelight. I need someone to call my "Chicky-Monkey" and to just hang out with and have a good time. Box #443748
who takes being encanting under wet street lace seeks companion for her, follicle is the key and looks are unimportant. Be prepared for slight except pain. Not a god, but worth it. #48574
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OO
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Gay white male. Well guys you have only a few weeks of classes left and still haven't made many new friends, still looking and hoping to make some. 44372
GWM, 18, *8*°, 190, 19b Blue green eyes, good-looking model type, shy, intelligent and philosophical seeking 18-24 GWM jocks, rap lovers, or soccer players who are busted, closed, have all male friends, tall, good body, cute boy looks, for possible relationship #44071
MSM "I'm about 6 ft. tall and 179 lbs. I'm good looking and like GQ looking men who like to travel and listen to alternative music I will long walk on the grass I'm not am afraid to let lose and have a good time.
1. Call or come into the Kansan at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS To place an ad (must be 18 yrs old)
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 (every 3rd day from the day that you initially place your voice message), to listen to the messages people leave for you. Any other day, you may call the 900-number to retrieve your messages at a cost of $1.95 per minute. The average call is 3 mins in length.
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
VOLLEYBALL: The Big Eight clears up the controversy involving Kansas, Iowa State and postseason play. Page 14.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103,NO.65
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
Airline strike could ground KU travelers
"By Thanksgiving, we should know what type of schedule American can maintain." he said.
People flying today may not know if their flights were canceled until they were scheduled to leave, he said. But scheduling should improve, he said.
American Airlines flight attendants began an 11-day strike yesterday, which has many Thanksgiving travel plans up in the air while some KU students are on the ground.
Although Maupintour will be contacting ticket holders whose flights were changed, he said, ticket holders nevertheless should keep in contact with the travel agency and American to find out if their tickets were rescheduled.
John Novotny, manager of Maupin-tour Travel Service, said he did not know which flights had been canceled out of Kansas City International Airport because he did not know how many flight attendants would strike.
"If you're flying American in the next 10 days, it's very important to reconfirm now and the night before," Novotny said. "Other carriers are accepting tickets for no extra charge, but there are some restrictions."
American flights may be canceled
"Today and tomorrow are going to be kind of hit and miss," he said yesterday. "The majority of people who will be inconvenienced will be today and tomorrow."
By Tracl Carl
Kansan staff writer
Tickets also may be refunded.
Herecare may be required
Carol Khourv. travel consultant for
NEWS:864-4810
Getting off the ground
Students with American Airline tickets should:
■ contact their travel agents;
■ call American Airlines at 1-800-
433-7300;
■ arrive at the airport early.
FRIDAY NOVEMBER 19, 1993
KANSAN
Sharon Rieken, Barrington, Ill., senior, said that she was scheduled to fly home on American during Thanksgiving break but that she was not worried about a cancellation.
She also said she did not think she would reschedule her flight if it was canceled. She may stay in Lawrence and prepare for finals, she said.
GROUNDED: American Airlines
GROUNDED: American Airlines employees picket airports around the nation in one of the industry's biggest walkouts. Page 8.
Maupintour at the Kansas Union, said that she had not heard from many students who were worried about their tickets but that she expected to hear more concerns today because more people would know about the strike.
She said students should arrive at the airport early.
"For any student traveling, this is going to make the airport more congested," she said. "This will make it a little more chaotic than usual."
"I just went home a couple of weekends ago," she said.
kansan staff writer David Stewart contributed to this story.
Shoplifting charge will send running back Henley to court
By Scott J. Anderson Kansan staff writer
Kansas freshman running back June Henley has been ordered to appear in Lawrence Municipal Court in connection with a shoplifting incident at a Lawrence store, according to court records.
The security guard detained Henley until Lawrence police officers arrived. The officers issued Henley a notice to appear in court. He was not arrested.
Henley, 18, was stopped by a security guard at the 1/2 Price Store, 2727 Iowa St., at 4:40 p.m. Sunday, according to police reports. Henley was attempting to steal a black leather coat and a pair of Reebok basketball shoes, the report said. The total value of the items was $141.
The maximum penalty Henley faces for the misdemeanor is one year in jail and a $500 fine. Henley
PETER CROSSON
is scheduled to appear in court Nov.30.
Henley yesterday was listed on the team roster as a starter in tomorrow's home game against Missouri.
Henley leads the Big Eight in rushing with 1,009 yards. He needs 106 yards in tomorrow's game against Missouri to become the Big Eight's all-time leading freshman rusher.
June Henley
Henlev
In Saturday's game against Colorado, Henley scored a touchdown after a 100-yard kickoff return, a KU record.
Redshirt freshman Mark Sanders is listed as second on the depth chart behind Henley.
Students prefer last-minute shopping
RU students, constrain son near school weekend shopping before the pre-Christmas freeway begins.
Kansan staff writer
KU students, consider yourself forewarned.
The day after Thanksgiving, malls and department stores are flooded with shopers trying to cash in on the holiday sales.
Students might want to consider pulling out the credit cards and draining the checkbooks before the rush — while the shelves are full of the best merchandise and the shopping centers are not packed wall to wall with stressed-out people and whining children.
karen Blackwell, Chicago sophomore, said she always waited until the last minute to do her gift
But then again, that is part of what the Christmas shopping experience is all about. Isn't it?
"It's the most hectic time to go shopping, and it does get on my nerves — but that's all part of the Christmas spirit," she said. "Walking through the department stores, you get to see all the decorations and the people and little kids. It helps me get in the mood for the holidays."
buying.
She said ordering from a department store catalog was out of the question. But she said waiting until the last minute gave her an extra month to help her pay bills. Though many students say they wait until the last minute, one KU student really did last year.
Lynisha Thomas, Lawrence junior, said she went shopping last year on Christmas Eve to buy her mother a Christmas present.
After work, Thomas went to cash her paycheck, but she found out she had lost it somewhere between work and the bank.
"I had to go home and scrounge up enough money
to buy my mom a present," she said. "Waiting until the last minute really doesn't bother me."
Some students avoid the rush by shopping off and on throughout the year.
"I just figure if I see something that's on sale, or I know they'll like, I just buy it," said Nick Fulton, Wichita freshman. "I guess I try to avoid all the people, but really it doesn't bother me that much."
Besides a few KU students who buy presents throughout the year, many students fall into two categories: those who wait until the last minute and those who wait until the last second.
Trey Hamm, Overland Park freshman, said that even if the selection was better, he did not think it was worth it to go shopping early.
"My mom buys my gift for my dad, and my dad buys my gift for my mom," he said. "But when I have a girlfriend or I need to get something for my sister, I always go shopping the day before."
DIMO
John Gamble / KANSAN
Weird science
Daniel Swanson, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, freshman, checks the temperature of liquid nitrogen in his Chemistry 184 class. The class measured the heat of vaporization of liquid nitrogen yesterday in Malott hall.
Hall residents celebrate homemade holiday
Bv Brian James
Kansan staff writer
Cramming 140 people in one bedroom may be the Pearson Scholarship Hall record, but the men of this year's hall think it is a record made to be broken.
As part of the hall's annual "Synchronization Day" party, residents of Pearson and other scholarship halls will cram into a 12-by-12 room at midnight Saturday.
Kyle Thompson, Iola senior and president of the hall, said he was not sure why Pearson residents started the tradition almost nine years ago. This year's goal is to break last year's
"it's a pretty loopy idea," he said.
"Some guys were probably just sitting around late at night and made it up.
record-setting performance.
"But I'll probably get some angry letters from Pearsonites now because I'm really not sure how it all started."
The event is one in a series of parties that the scholarship halls have each year, Thompson said.
Pearson residents recognize Synchronization Day as the halfway between Columbus Day and Christmas, Thompson said. Residents also have put Christmas lights on the hall and have made T-shirts with different designs, such as Santa sailing on an
The party is open to every KU student, although Thompson said most of those in attendance last year were scholarship hall residents.
"It's a nice break, and everybody looks forward to it," he said.
ocean vessel, to celebrate the holiday.
Thompson said the 49 Pearson residents started moving party-goers into the room after the party was in full swing.
"We try to keep the party going 'til around midnight and then pack everybody into the room." he said.
Brian Lipscomb, Olathe senior, said the party made an otherwise stuffy situation fun for everyone.
"People start moving in, heading for the walls and eventually jumping on people's shoulders," he said. "They just smash themselves in there."
"It seems like forever until everyone goes back out. They're just so packed into a small area — it's a pretty wild feeling."
Lipschom said people shout out a number as they file out of the room, after the hall decides that the room is full enough.
He said he thought the tradition was a good excuse to have a mid-semester party.
"Eight or nine years ago, they probably thought, 'Why not?' he said.
INSIDE
CALIFORN
5
NIT battle
Page 11.
Guard Jason Kidd will star for California as the Jayhawks and the Bears meet in the second round of the Preseason National Invitational Tournament tonight.
New 'klub' shows th-th-that's not all, folks
Looney Toons not just kids stuff for new student charity group
Julie Dublinske, Madison, Neb., sophomore, remembers a time when she would curl in front of a TV on a Saturday morning and watch Bugs Bunny as a little girl.
By Shan Schwartz Kansan staff writer
But now that she is in college, she wants KU students to know they can still enjoy the Looney Toons while benefiting Lawrence.
The Original Klub of KU Looney Toons, a new KU student organization this year, is working to see that they do OKKULT is hoping to play on the appeal of the Warner Bros. cartoons, which also feature Daffy Duck, Porky Pig and Tweety Bird.
OKKULT's purpose, however, is more serious than the cartoons for which it is named.
"The purpose is to be kind of a charity organization, to do several things to help out other charity organizations like
the homeless shelter, Habitat for Humanity or Douglas County AIDS Project," said
Dublinske, OKKULTpresi
Dublinske said OKKULT was working to schedule screenings of Looney Toons cartoons at Dickinson Theaters in January. The group has gotten permission to rent the cartoons from Warner Bros., inc., but members have not decided which cartoons to show.
Viewers would donate money or canned food for charity organizations in Lawrence.
he
OKKULT members also work with the Center for Community Outreach, a service organization within Student Senate that places volunteers at other charities in Lawrence, Dublinske said.
OKKULT was a spin-off organization from the Dr. Seuss Club, an organization which encourages literacy through the use of Dr. Seuss books.
Members of OKKULT said although the Looney Toons usually were considered to be for children, the cartoons were good mechanisms to relieve stress and enjoy some of life's simpler pleasures.
Kevin Liu, Gardiner sophomore and OKKULT member,
said he had enjoyed Looney Toons from an early age. Liu
said he thought people of all ages could gain something
from the cartoons.
"Some of them were definitely written for children, like the Roadrunner and coyote, which are pretty straightforward," Luu said. "But those ACME products are pretty funny. And a lot of what Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck do appeals to children and also to older audiences."
"I like the club because it is a good way to take something I really enjoy, like the Looney Toons, and turn it into something good for the community."
2
Friday, November 19. 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Catt Shop
toys ▼ books
jewelry ▼ tee shirts
posters ▼ stones
earth music ▼ and
much more!
Mon-Sat 10-5 and
Sun 1-5 / 864-4450
next to the Union
NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM
the university of Kansas
Rings Fixed Fast!
Kizer Cummings
EWEN
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
Rentals
We buy
& sell used
sports equipment
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
1029 Massachusetts
phone 841-7529
GOOD FOR A
FREE
EXTRA LARGE
CHOCOLATE
CHIP
COOKIE
limit one cookie per coupon
(with sub or passa purchase)
expires 12/15/63
MR. GOODCENTS
15th & Kasold
Orchard Corners
Shopping Center
Lawrence, KS
841-8444
WE
DELIVER!
OPEN DAILY 10:30 a.m.-11:00 p.m.
Rings Fixed Fast!
Kiper Cummings
JEWELERS
749-4333
833 Mass • Lawrence, KS
Rentals
We buy & sell used sports equipment
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
1029 Massachusetts phone 841-7529
GOOD FOR A FREE EXTRA LARGE CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIE limit one cookie per coupon (with sub or pasta purchase) expires 12/15/93
15th & Kasold Orchard Corners Shopping Center Lawrence, KS
841-8444 WE DELIVER!
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OPEN DAILY 10:30 a.m.-11:00 p.m.
GOOD FOR A FREE
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limit one cookie per coupon
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expires 12/15/93
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Shopping Center
Lawrence, KS
841-8444
WE DELIVER!
OPENDAILY 10:30 a.m.-11:00 p.m.
HR ACCOUNTANTS
MERCY RECORDS & KJHK
PRESENT THE
LOVE
SQUAD
W/ GRUMPY
ALBUM RELEASE
TONITEV
TONITEL
THE GRANADA - DOWNTOWN
CHECK YOUR LOCAL RECORD STORE FOR THEIR NEW ALBUM
POSERTOWN
THE SOUND ALTERNATIVE
KJHX
90.7
18 & OVER
SMOKING JB ALLOWED
THE GRANADA - DOWNTOWN
CHECK YOUR LOCAL RECORD STORE FOR THEIR NEW ALBUM
POSERTOWN
18 & OVER
SMOKING IS ALLOWED
Silence!
The Court Is In Session
By Vijay Tendulkar
Performed by
The State University of New York
Stony Brook Theatre Company
Presented by
The University Theatre
The University of Kansas
2:30 p.m.
Saturday - Sunday
November 20 - 21, 1993
Swarthout Recital Hall/Murphy Hall
For general admission tickets, call the box office (Murphy: 913/864-3982, Lied: 913/864-ARTS); public $6, KU students $3, senior citizens and other students $5; VISA/MasterCard accepted for phone orders.
CHECK YOUR LOCAL RECORD STORE FOR THEIR NEW ALBUM
POSERTOWN
18 &
OVER
SMOKING IS ALLOWED
THE SOUND ALTERNATIVE
KJHX
90.7
MERCY RECORDS
18 &
OVER
WORKING IS ALLOWED
ON CAMPUS
Performed by
The State University of New York
Stony Brook Theatre Company
Presented by
The University Theatre
The University of Kansas
2:30 p.m.
Saturday - Sunday
November 20 - 21, 1993
Swarthout Recital Hall/Murphy Hall
For general admission tickets, call the box
office (Murphy; 913/864-3982, Lied: 913/
864-ARTS); public $6, KU students $3,
senior citizens and other students $5; VISA/
MasterCard accepted for phone orders.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel.
Lawrence Apple Users Group will meet at 4 p.m. today in the Computer Center Auditorium. For more information, call Jack Morgan at 832-2634.
Inspirational Gospel Voices will have a fall concert at 7 tonight in the Kansas Union Ballroom. For more information, call Kim at 749-3819.
KU Nippon Kempo Karate Club will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in 207 Robinson Center. New members are welcome.
E
International Students Association will sponsor "International Night" at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6446.
more information, call Stephen Swanson at 843-7189.
St. Lawrence Student Council and Choirs will sponsor a "TGIF Turkey Trot Dance" at 8 tonight at the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
KU Baha'l Club will sponsor a lecture, "The Baha'l Perspective on Evolution," at 730 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mehdi Khoshahegbeh at 841-7585.
- Women's Student Union will meet at 5 p.m. today at Alcove D in the Kansas Union.
African Affairs Student Association will meet at 7 tonight at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Sewite Negash at 749-0299.
Chi Alpha Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 onight at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union. For
The Astronomy Associates of Lawrence will gather to stargaze at 8 a.m. Sunday on top of Lindley Hall. Free coffee will be provided. For more information, call Corey Zirlin at 842-2225.
ON THE RECORD
A student's license plate was taken from a car in the 400 block of East 13th Street on Monday or Tuesday, Lawrence police reported.
A student's backpack and its contents, valued together at $154, were taken from Ekdahl Dining Commons on Nov. 8. KU police reported.
--in the Malls Shopping Center
Where the Jayhawk goes for Homestyle Mexican Food
Pancho's
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
Margaritas and the largest variety of Mexican beers
MasterCard
VISA
Free soft drinks with KUID offer expires Nov. 30,1993
Call infor takeout orders
843-4044 CellInfoSkins.udl
WEATHER
Omaha: 48'/37'
LAWRENCE: 62'/37
Kansas City: 52'/32'
St. Louis: 46'/39'
Wichita: 53'/34'
Tulsa: 46'/36'
WEather around the country:
Atlanta: 76'/44'
Chicago: 45'/27'
Houston: 68'/43'
Miami: 82'/75'
Minneapolis: 46'/27'
Phoenix: 72'/51'
Salt Lake City: 55'/36'
Seattle: 48'/35'
TODAY
Heated cold with a northerly wind 20 to 30 mph
High: 45°
Low: 30°
Tomorrow
Partly cloudy
High: 50°
Low: 30°
Sunday
Partly cloudy
High: 55°
Low: 30°
Sunny
Cloudy
Sunny Day
HOW TO REACH US
— KC Trauer. Editor or
Call 864-4810 for the newsroom:
■ News tips — Campus Desk
■ Comments/Complaints/Corrections
— KC Trauer, Editor or Joe Harder, Managing Editor for News
Come to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Filnt 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.
Kansan fax #---- 913-864-5261
KANSAN CLASSIFIED WORK
BENCHWARMERSCATERING
*FULLSERVICE CATERING FOR ANY AND ALLOF YOUR PARTY NEEDS.
*Rock Chalk*X-Mas Parties*Formals*(*Call Jake or Clay at 841-0505*) *12 days in advance.*
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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CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November 19, 1993
3
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Students asked to stop throwing candy at games
Eat the candy but do not throw it.
That is what Klissa Ruesschoff, better known as the "Candy Lady" at home basketball games, is warning Javhawk fans.
"I don't want to make a big deal out of this, but I just don't want to see anyone hurt," Ruesshoff said.
She said KU Athletic Department officials had told her that if students did not stop throwing the candy she tossed up in the stands during games, she could not continue with her sweet tradition.
"But I'm more concerned with students getting injured than with not being able to throw candy," she said. "I do it for fun and to entertain students — and I don't want to take any chances with kids getting hurt."
Study abroad positions open
The KU Western Civilization Program and the Office of Study Abroad will sponsor a Western Civilization Spring Semester Abroad in 1995. Between 20 and 30 KU students will spend the first half of the semester in Florence, Italy, and the second half in Paris, France, said Mary Elizabeth Debicki, director of KU study abroad.
"The purpose of the program is to enrich student's understanding of some of the history, ideas and art of Western Civilization, along with opportunities for travel to sites in Italy and France." Debbiki said.
Applications for the 1995 Spring Semester Abroad will be accepted beginning April 1994. Applicants must have sophomore standing by Spring 1995, have a 3.0 grade point average and have completed the equivalent of two semesters of Latin or a Romance language. Faculty recommendations, a statement of interest and an interview also will be required.
Interested persons should contact the Office of Study Abroad, 864-3742.
New scholarships available
The National Security Education Program has been awarded $2.5 million in scholarships for undergraduates and graduates who want to study languages and areas of the world outside Western Europe.
The government-funded program and tries to educate people about foreign cultures.
Students who are interested should contact Mary Elizabeth Debicki, director of KU's study abroad program, at the Office of Study Abroad, 203 Lippincott Hall, or Hodgie Bricke at the Office of International Studies, 108 Lippincott Hall.
Debicki said applications would be available by Dec.1.
Social work plays host to clinics
The deadline for applications is Jan. 15, 1994
The Kansas Chapter of the National Association of Social Workers is playing host to its Kansas Chapter conference from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. today at the Holiday Inn Holdome, 200 McDonald Drive.
A workshop by John Allen from the Menninger Foundation in Topeka will examine the controversial topic of "False Memory Syndrome," which some believe affects victims of alleged abuse by causing them to remember things differently than actually happened.
Another workshop will examine the impact of the "religious right" on upcoming legislation, according to Alice Lieberman, assistant professor of social welfare.
The conference will also feature John Wagnon, a Kansas gubernatorial candidate, Nancy Amidei, a well-known advocate for the impoverished, and a panel of local politicians discussing other upcoming legislative issues, Lieberman said.
Housing renovations win awards
Three KU Department of Student Housing renovations received national and regional honors this fall.
The Association of University Interior Designers placed the courtyard improvements at the Jayhawker Towers Apartments first. The courtyard project created a sun deck and an outdoor lounge area for the Tower residents.
The Ekdahl Dining Commons was a runner-up in the category consisting of renovation projects over $75,000. The project was recognized for its multlevel dining, food court area and view of the campus.
The Electric Association of Missouri and Kansas placed the Ekdahl Dining Commons lighting project first for its use of natural and fluorescent lighting.
Compiled from Kansan staff reports.
O R E A D
F O R U M
8 6 4 - 9 0 4 0
You can still register your opinion on yesterday's Forum question on establishing a fall break at KU.
Just call 864-9040 before 6 p.m. today.
We will make all messages available to the University Calendar Committee, which is in charge of drafting the academic calendar.
We'll report back Monday on some of the Oread Forum discussions.
Caring for the students
Watkins staff prefers young healthy crowd
By Liz Klinger Kansan staff writer
While some physicians dream of having their own practices and fat bank accounts, physicians at Watkins Memorial Health Center seem content with a smaller paycheck, more personal time and treating patients young enough to change their health habits.
Before he came to Watkins, Charles Yockey, chief of staff, was a pulmonary specialist working long hours in Wichita who grew tired of diagnosing older patients who could no longer change their health conditions. At Watkins, Yockey works about 40 hours a week and said he felt less stress and enjoyed dealing with students and a variety of health problems.
"In this job, I look forward to coming to work every day," Yockey said. "It's more gratifying for me professionally to get a student to stop smoking than
to tell someone they have lung.cancer.
"College students don't want to be sick. They want to be in class. They want to attend social functions."
Students' willingness to learn and youthfulness are appealing to Watkins physicians, many of whom are KU graduates, said Jim Strobl, director of Watkins.
"In general, college students are young and very, very healthy," Strobl said. "Tied in with that, I think working with younger people keeps you young. That's an important thing with life."
Strobli said Watkins physicians had their malpractice and mandatory continuing education requirements paid for, they are only on call for a 14-hour shift once every nine days and earn up to $80,000 a year. A physician in private practice would probably earn twice as much as a Watkins physician, but would have to pay for malpractice and mandatory education, which can cost a lot. Strobli said.
Like some other KU employees, Watkins physicians also receive reduced admissions to athletic and Lied Center events, Strobslaid.
Even though the number of hours spent working is fewer, the physicians' work load can be just as hectic.
Strobl said Watkins physicians see up to 25 patients a day.
"We're busy while we're here, but your personal time is a little more predictable," said Randall Rock, physician. "For my young family, that's important."
Randall said helping students learn to care for their health was a rewarding experience.
"In addition to the things that are learned in the classroom, students are receptive to learning about managing their own health care and taking responsibility for their own health care needs." Rock said.
r physician Myra Strother said that working at Watkins gave her and her family access to what the KU campus had to offer and an opportunity to practice preventive medicine, which encourages younger people to take care of their bodies to avoid future problems.
I've always liked preventive medicine, and this is a good place for that," Strother said. "The student population is really an enjoyable group of people to work with."
Watkins physicians usually remain at the center for 20 years or more, Stroblsaid.
"We regard ourselves here as the Watkins family," Strobl said.
B
John Gamble / KANSAN
Randall Rock, Watkins staff physician, listens to Marc Heinze's, Marcellus, N.Y., junior, breathing. Heinze injured a rib during lacrosse practice and was experiencing continuing pain, prompting a second visit.
THIRD LANE OF THE CENTER OF THIS TREE, FROM WHERE YOU MAY SEE A MARKED DOWN PASSAGE THROUGH THE TRAILS TO THE NORTH.
Photo courtesy of City of Lawrence
Douglas Coffin, KU alumnus and resident of Abiquiu, N.M., stands with his design of a contemporary totem pole. Coffin has been chosen as one of four finalists to display work on McDonald Drive between Sixth Street and the turnpike.
Sculptures may adorn roadways
Public helping choose art work near turnpike
By Tracl Carl
Kansan staff writer
Drivers coming off the Kansas Turnpike on the west Lawrence exit may be greeted by more than a tollbooth operator.
The city is receiving public comments on four sculptures, one of which will be selected by the city commission Dec. 14 to be displayed along McDonald Drive between Sixth Street and the turnip.
In 1897, the city began donating a small percentage of money from capital improvement projects for public art, which is called the Percent for Art Program. The chosen sculpture will be the city's fourth work paid for by the program. Past acquisitions include "Improvisation," a bronze sculpture at 23rd and Massachusetts streets., and "Confluence," an environmental work in Buford M. Watson Park, Sixth, Kentucky and Vermont streets.
Photos and project descriptions will be available for the public at the City Manager's Office from Monday until Dec. 10.
The four sculptures were chosen from 49 entries by 19 artists from 11 states.
Dan Reeder, head of the Lawrence Arts Commission, said in a statement made at the announcement of the finalists that he hoped the public would contribute their input on the project.
"Lawrence is fortunate to have attracted entries from so talented a group of sculptors," he said. "The four finalists have strong reputations and discrete approaches to their work."
Doug Warnock, a member of the panel that selected the finalists and an assistant professor of art, said the
panel chose the finalists because of the quality of their work.
Douglas Coffin, a KU graduate who now lives in Abiquiu, N.M., is one finalist. Coffin submitted a design for a contemporary totem pole. He also constructed a similar piece now displayed at Haskell Indian Nations University.
Among the themes he tries to portray is a balance of female and male energy. Warnock said.
"It signifies a concern for the preservation of the natural environment," he said.
Leah Jacobsen, a jersey City, N.J., artist, created a sculpture inspired by rock formations. The sculpture is titled "Weaver's Needle."
Tom Gibbs, a Dubuque, Iowa, artist,
did not want to mimic an object or
nature when constructing his painted
steel work entitled "Thrust."
"His content is concerned with abstract form that can be interpreted as confirmation of the strength of the will of individuals, in forms of perseverance and in having and holding ideals," Warnock said.
Deborah Ascheim, a Roswell, N.M., artist, submitted an unitled ceramic piece filled with concrete. Ascheim based her work on a biological form, but she did not chose a specific form, Warmock said. She leaves that up to the viewer.
"Some people think of them as claws or beaks of birds or even vertebrae," he said. "The viewers interpretation and subjectivity informs the meaning of the piece."
Unlike the other works, which can be exhibited from the road, Aschem wants the public to interact with her work, Warnock said.
The chosen sculpture should be displayed by this summer.
Regents approve KU remodeling projects
Watkins expansion nowmust be approved by Student Senate. Stairwells for Allen Field House will be built after the basketball season.
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — The Board of Regents yesterday approved the funding of two KU construction projects totaling $7.5 million.
The board approved the $5.6 million expansion and remodeling of Watkins Memorial Health Center and the $1.9 million remodeling of Allen Field House.
Watkins' interior will be remodeled to create more space for examination rooms, the emergency care area and Counseling and Psychological Services. The field house's exits and stairwells are being remodeled in
compliance with state fire codes.
compliance with state fire codes. Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins, said before anything else could be done, the expansion of Watkins had to be approved by Student Senate.
"If students don't approve this, it's dead in the water," Vocky said.
Jim Strobl, director of Watkins, said he was pleased with the Regents decision to approve the expansion.
If approved by Senate, the expansion would be paid for by the sale of revenue bonds that would be secured through an increase in the student health fee. The current fee of $69.50 would increase by about $10 to $12.
The biggest problem we have in the
health center is space, and this will help us," he said.
The lack of space in the field house's exits and stairwalls is what caused the State Fire Marshal's office to conclude last fall that "Allen Field House presents one of the most significant life-loss potentials in Kansas when fully occupied."
The Legislature has appropriated $923,731 for the remodeling of the stairwells in the field house. The University will pay for the additional $976,269 from the Repair and Rehabilitation fund, parking fees and University of Kansas Athletic Corporation funds.
Richard Mann, University director, said KU was waiting for the design plans from Gould Evans Associates, a Lawrence architectural firm.
"We need to get that finalized so we can proceed bidding for construction." he said.
Mann said KU should receive the plans in the next four weeks.
Because KU has not received the architectural plans, the cost of the remodeling could change, Mann said.
We hope it will be neat, he said. Mann said construction at the field house would begin after the season and be finished before the 1994-95 basketball season.
4
Friday. November 19, 1993
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Over-enrolling is selfish burdens other students
Intentionally over-enrolling harms class availability and the quality of KU students' education. Every semester, many students enroll in more classes than they will complete, and much of this over-enrollment is intentional. Students enroll in more classes than needed and do their "class shopping" after the term has started, dropping their least favorite or most difficult class. For example, a student might enroll in eighteen hours with the intention of dropping to fifteen within the first month of school. This kind of enrollment is selfish and short-sighted. It must be stopped because each instance limits class availability for students enrolling later.
This year, as always, many classes were closed by the time underclassmen enrolled. A reprehensible number of the spaces in these filled classes belong to students with no intentions of completing all of their enrolled courses. While dropping a class is quite effortless, adding one after the term has started is anything but painless. Often students cannot add some classes that they desperately want or need until a week or more has passed in the semester. These students start out behind and their instructors, in an effort to accommodate them, slow down the class. Also, many students who withdraw because of academic difficulties are the same ones who had to fight to get into the class late. These problems could be lessened if classes were not filled by students who over-enroll.
It is inexcusable for a quality university to send students away from the enrollment center with only a fraction of their desired schedules. While the University is not exempt from a role in solving the problem of class availability, students are also responsible. Over-enrolling has direct and detrimental effects on the academic career of other KU students. All students know or remember what a purgatory enrollment can be. Students who ignore the problems that they could cause for other students and over-enroll for their own convenience should stop. If the students cannot act responsibly and keep other students' concerns in mind when enrolling, the University will be forced to discourage over-enrolling by charging for add/drop transactions or charging full-time students by the credit hour. The whole of the student body should not suffer for some students' thoughtlessness or academic greed. Shop for classes before enrollment, not after.
CHRIS REEDY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
House deserves praise for approving NAFTA
The House of Representatives' vote to approve the North American Free Trade Agreement is to be applauded.
Through eight hours of long and protracted debate Wednesday, both sides put forth arguments that stressed the qualities and deficiencies of NAFTA.
The arguments for NAFTA were clearly stated by the leaders of the pro-NAFTA forces. The main idea of this radical trade agreement is to lower Mexican tariffs and allow the U.S. to export more of our goods to both Mexico and Canada. As one speaker phrased it, NAFTA will not create a sucking sound of jobs but of exported goods that create American jobs.
We are hopeful for the Senate's quick action to approve NAFTA and to have this revolutionary trade agreement implemented on January 1, 1994.
TOM GRELINGER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
NAFTA PASSES IN THE HOUSE
PEROT'S CHANCES OF EVER GETTING ELECTED
PEROT '96
HOOD UDK'93
WAIT! I HEAR THAT "GIANT SUCKING NOISE!"
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Kimmel is too liberal to realize Rush is right
In his vilification of Rush Limbaugh, Jim Kinnel ("Rush is Wrong," Oct. 29) managed to demonstrate his gnat-like grasp of conservative opinions. Had his attention span been longer, perhaps he would have seen beyond Rush's delivery and noted his conservative ideals; self-reliance, personal excellence, hard work and sacrifice. Rush provides a needed balance in today's liberal-dominated media.
The liberal construct of hyphenating our nationality is "Balkanizing" these United States, dividing "ourselves into ever smaller subgroups," and contributing to the breakdown of our national identity.
Liberals must also accept responsibility for the use of fear in politics. The health care "crisis" of today is a classic example. Conservatives do not "ignore" those who do not have adequate health care. We are not "unwilling" to reform the present system. What we oppose is a socialized system that projections show will put 600,000 to 3 million people out of work and add up to $300 billion a year to the national debt. This system, without market competition or incentives, will ration care through a huge federal bureaucracy while costing 25 percent of Americans the same amount or more for less coverage.
If you disagree with our opinion, fine, provide thoughtful counter-arguments; do not insult us with your pseudo-intellectual ranting.
David Kaminska
Bronxville, N.Y., graduate student
Population growth not only cause of poverty
A recent editorial stated that "[o]ne of the repercussions of population growth, the flow of immigrants from poverty-stricken Haiti and Central America, affects us already." There are many more important factors in producing poverty in these and other countries. One is the growing of cash crops for export instead of food for local consumption. Another is the debts of poor countries, which cost them $40 billion per year and lead directly to the deaths of half a million children per year, according to UNICEF. Although we preach free trade, protectionist measures by
industrialized countries cost poor countries twice the amount of official aid. The rich countries now want intellectual property rights protection, which will result in the transfer of another $61 billion per year from poor to rich countries.
There are reasons other than poverty for people to flee Haiti and Central America, such as political persecution. Harsh repression, frequently supported by the U.S., is necessary to maintain the vast inequality between the rich few and the poor majority. When this repression generates refugees, they are simply labeled economic refugees and returned to their persecutors. To attribute these refugees, or world poverty in general, to population growth ignores our responsibility.
Michael Barfield Lawrence graduate student
Michael Barfield
Extend health reforms to include auto insurance
Health care reform has become one of the hot topics of discussion overheard in coffee shops, bars and restaurants across the country. The president and Mrs. Clinton have told us about the travesty of millions of uninsured citizens and have expounded that every American has a right to health insurance.
With this argument, it seems that we should change the Declaration of Independence to read, "...certain inalienable rights: life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness and health insurance."
If this is the case and health insurance is an inalienable right, then I would like to propose another inalienable right.
It has been suggested over the past several decades that, without cars, Americans would cease to be American. We drive to school, to church, and most importantly, to work. In many major cities across the United States, more than half of the licensed drivers don't have auto insurance.
I don't need to tell you that most of these uninsured motorists are poor; they don't have insurance because they can't afford it. If they have accidents that disable their automobiles, they have no transportation and may lose their jobs because of their inability to get to work.
Therefore, I am proposing government-controlled universal auto insurance for all Americans so they don't have to risk losing their jobs because they drive uninsured.
Think about it!
Brian Orr
Overland Park senior
Editorial on trafficway full of holes, mistakes
I would like to recommend some insightful and informative reading material to your editorial board. It's called the Environmental Impact Statement concerning the South Lawrence Trafficway. What a shame your editorial board didn't read it before printing the editorial on Monday, Nov. 8.
To correct the misinformed picture the editorial painted, please note (again reading the EIS would have been helpful) that Haskell does indeed own the land upon which the trafficway is to be built. The county possesses only an easement. As for your statement concerning the terrible congestion on 23rd Street and the need for the trafficway, the EIS notes that, at maximum, traffic will be relieved by only 14 percent and that the original justification for building the trafficway was to facilitate growth and development in that area. Easing traffic problems became a justification only later in the development of the plans.
Finally, to fill in the gaps in your incomplete picture, it should be noted that the EIS itself is deficient and the 404 permit, allowing the filling-in of wetlands, is erroneous. The EIS states that Haskell property is not affected and fails to address the spiritual uses. The 404 permit does not list Haskell as either the owner of the land or owner of adjacent land. As things stand, both the EIS and the 404 permit are procedurally defective.
Considering the purpose behind an editorial persuasion of the reader, it was irresponsible of you to print an "official" opinion full of holes and misinformation.
Robin Webb
Robin Webb
President, Native American
Law Students Association
Reverdy Potter
Vice President, NALSA
Laura Palmer
Secretary/Treasurer, NALSA
Katie Greenwald Washington report
U.S. should take care of homeless,not rest of world
The streets of Washington tell a story that Capitol Hill lawmakers may not be hearing.
I do not remember ever having been in city where, at the beginning of an hour, I could be walking down the street and pass a person screaming about the world coming to an end, and at the end of the hour, be sitting in on a news conference with five governors and the Secretary of Education.
There is something different about Washington. It is not the size of the city or that every square inch is packed with people, buildings and cars.
It's the power. The city is humming with it. History is made here every day. 9
But Washington has another side. I was walking to Capitol Hill for an appropriations hearing one day when I saw a homeless man.
There are many homeless people here, and it is something I will never get used to no matter where I go. But this man, who wore a tattered cdat and a defeated expression, somehow was different from the others. As he stood on the corner in the pouring rain, he held out a cup with the hope that passersby would throw in spare change.
That's when the irony of the city hit me.
How could the Senate consider spending billions of dollars on missiles and jet fighters when so many remain homeless? Why does Congress continue to worry about U.S. involvement in Somalia and Bosnia when so many are going hungry?
I do not think of myself as an isolationist, but it seems to me that we should take care of our problems before we tackle the world's problems.
What about the U.S. citizens who go hungry? We have many people to provide for here.
But the military has not been called to save them.
We are well into autumn and, jin some places, the first snow has fallen. Many soon will be looking for shelter from the cold.
Granted, we have no civil war. Food is not kept from our homeless with weapons and warfare. Because the opposite was true for Somalia, the mission was called "humanitarian." But isn't it inhumane to let anyone starve, especially your neighbor?
I have heard the arguments many times that the homeless or those on welfare only are looking for a hardout. They should get jobs. They can help themselves.
The same people who argue about the "no good, lazy burns" in this country find it important that the United States play "Big Brother" to the rest of the world, which apparently cannot help itself. They suggest we feed that world's hungry and fix its social injustices while we allow the inequalities in this country to continue.
"Give us your poor, your tired, your huddled masses," it reads on the base of the Statue of Liberty. Nowhere does it say, "but only if we do not have to look out for you and provide for you."
As a child, I was taught that charity began at home. It seems, however, that many have forgotten that lesson.
KANSAN STAFF
Katie Greenwaila is a Denver graduate student in Journalism.
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 ...Kip Chin, Renee Knoeser
Features ...Ezra Wolfe
Graphics ...John Paul Foegl
Editors
AMY CASEY Business manager
AMY STUMBO Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ...Ed Schagner
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 Fucoe
Classified manager ..Gretchen Kotterlehnch
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.
Your resume should be短, 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-Flunt Hall.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
University of Mars
today at the marts, we'll demonstrate an 8 step process on how to avoid bodily harm when confronted.
Dreadful sign of a bad disposition.
Hey, you slepped on my boot
our heroes
(2) IF you don't say sorry I'm gonna pulverize you!
$\textcircled{3}$ This is ridiculous. I don't need to apologize ... it was an accident.
---
$\textcircled{2}$ If you don't say sorry,
I'm gonna
polymerize
you!
$\textcircled{3}$ This is ridiculous. I
don't need to apologize...
it was an accident.
$\textcircled{4}$ Maybe if I can
convince that big lug = don't know
anglais, hell
be merciful
on me.
A
maybe if I can convince that big lug = don't know english, hell be merciful on me
5 Watch our hero intimidate his opponent with a threatening share and a witty phrase.
I'm gonna scratch your eyes out...
you...
you...
poo-poo!
@#*!?
Expression of disappointment extreme self-hatred
$\textcircled{5}$ Watch our hero intimidate his opponent with a threatening share and a witty phrase.
I'm gonna scratch your eyes out...
you...
you...
poo- poo!
@#*!?
expression of disappointment
extreme self-hatred
by Joel Francke
Expression of confusion
Expression of confusion
As our hero renders his opponent helpless by (aham) less conventional means, he leaves the scene of the contamination unscatted.
Not a word, Hal. Not a word.
Anything you say. Just sound my eyes.
Not a word, Hal.
Not a word.
Anything you say.
Just sound my eyes.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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
(1)
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Randy Morris of Pleasant Grove puts a Santa Claus face on an arch that will stand over the driveway of his sister's house in Pleasant Grove. The arch is part of a large display that includes hundreds of figurines and 30,000 Christmas lights. The house is located two miles south of Lawrence on U.S. Highway 59 and will be turned on from Nov. 27 until New Year's Day.
Early Christmas
Friday, November 19, 1993
5
Jazz seminar showcases sounds
By Chesley Dohl Kansan staff writer
KU students with a love for jazz music are doing their best to give rhythm, blues and soul a permanent home on campus and in Lawrence.
Templin Hall will set the stage for a third consecutive year of informal jazz education and live music. The Marqueal Jordan Sextet will perform and showcase some of the popular
ind Richard Prince, this year's seminar organizer, said the clarinet, trumpet, saxophone, trombone, flugelhorn and other instruments associated with the jazz sound would be discussed.
but "It's not necessarily the instruments we want to credit, but the great jazz artists who gave the instruments their
character," he said. "The instruments take on the personalities of the greats who played them — they (the artists)
LIVE JAZZ: The jazz seminar will begin at 7:30 pm. Sunday night in the lower lobby of Templin Hall.
Prince said jazz had become popular in Lawrence this year, but he said it was important to keep the jazz infusion going.
control the moods and the emotions."
"We want to foster a deeper and longer lasting love for jazz in lawrence and with the students," he said. "If there's enough interest we might be able to bring more big jazz names into Lawrence."
Marqueal Jordan, Kansas City, Kan., senior, is a KU student who has established a future for himself, Prince said. He will play the saxophone Sunday night, but he also will talk about the individual instruments.
rarely develop a taste for the first time they hear it, Jordan said.
"Jazz music is something you have to be exposed to," he said. "You have to learn about it, and its history. Once it's in you, the love for jazz is there forever."
Jordan said he and members of his sexet would structure their music to feature the different jazz instruments. Jazz music is something that people
Brandon Sanders, Kansas City, Kan, senior, organized the first jazz seminar at KU in the fall of 1991. He developed the idea to have a jazz presentation with Richard Wright , professor of music history. The first seminar focused on historic jazz figures such as Louis Armstrong and Miles Davis because Sanders said the history of the music was what made it fun to listen to.
"Jazz music is improvising, and it's spontaneous. You play what you feel — it's a mood," Sanders said.
"Today lots of people think jazz is Kenny G, but that's more like elevator music," he said. "There's a real history behind jazz."
Rent a Lane
Weekends are
only $500 per hour
Fri, Sat, Sun
Not just for
bowling
any more!
Jaybowl
BOWLING SCHOOL
864-3545
Not just for bowling any more!
AMERICAN BISTRO
Renta Lane
Fri, Sat, Sun
Jaybow
Not just for bowling any more!
Jaybowl
SCHOOL OF BASKETBALL
701 MASS.
In the Eldridge Hotel
841-8349
Breakfast-Lunch-Dinner
We Do Banquets too!
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*To be used for the following 4-packs: 12-pack = $45.6, 24-pack = $9.80
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No peace in Palestine
Violence dominates Gaza Strip despite peace agreement
The Associated Press
KHAN YUNIS, Occupied Gaza Strip — Anwar Gidear has long kept a grenade hooked to his belt, just in case the Israeli army catches up with him. Now a pair of metal hand-cuffs hangs next to it.
Gideh is a wanted man, sought for planning attacks on the occupying Israelis. Today, he is also a senior figure in the self-appointed security forces stepping in to keep order until an official Palestinian body takes over next spring.
"We are the ones who rule the street and will protect the autonomy agreement," he said, alternating between long pulls on a cigarette and rolling three 9mm bullets between his hands.
In the Gaza Strip, the autumn of the occupation is giving way to a winter of confusion. With their withdrawal set to begin next month, fewer Israeli troops are patrolling the streets, but no Palestinian authority is yet permitted to replace them.
Since Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization signed their accord in Washington two months ago, three moderate PLO leaders have fallen victim to Palestinian assassins. Twenty-four Arabs have died in almost daily confrontations
between Palestinians and the Israeli army or settlers. Nine Israelis have been killed by Palestinian militants, most in stabbings or drive-by shootings.
What little order exists comes from underground cells. Gideh is among about 500 Fatah Hawks, the armed fighters loyal to PLO leader Yasser Arafat, who patrol whenever Israeli troops are out of sight. They intervene in everything from traffic jams to sex crimes.
Gideh pulls a tattered criminal report from an inside pocket. Handwriting fills two pages torn from a child's school notebook, each with a rose in the corner. The report is signed off "The Radar Brothers" because "we see everything," he said.
Israel agrees to settler security plan
CAIRO, Egypt — Israel and the PLO have agreed on security arrangements for Jewish settlers in the Gaza Strip, resolving one dispute that threatened to hold up Israel's withdrawal from occupied lands, the chief PLO negotiator said yesterday.
The Associated Press
Nabil Shaath said that three other major hurdles remained. The PLO demands that Israel free thousands of Palestinian prisoners.
"I feel the progress made so far ... gives me sufficient confidence to say that if it continues on this level, we shall be able to sign this agreement," Shaad said.
Negotiators met in Cairo this week to resume talks on how to implement the Sept. 13 peace agreement. The talks had been suspended for nearly two weeks, after the Palestine Liberation Organization accused Israel of trying to use the settlers' security as an excuse to merely redeploy troops in Gaza and Jericho instead of pulling them out.
The start of the withdrawal — and a mid-April deadline for completion — is outlined in the accord, which seeks to make Gaza and Jericho a model for a broader Palestinian-Iraeli peace.
Aidid emerges from hiding in Mogadishu
But he said he thought the problems would be resolved in time for Israel to start turning over security in Gaza and the West Bank town of Jericho to the Palestinians by Dec. 13, the deadline in the peace accord.
MOGADISHU, Somalia — Fresh from forcing a U.N. retreat on an order for his arrest, Gen. Mohamed Farrah Aidid emerged from hiding yesterday for a jubilant greeting from 4,000 shouting, dancing and drumming supporters.
The Associated Press
Militiamen with rocket-propelled grenades and automatic rifles guarded him when his van drove into a marketplace for his faction's weekly "peace" rally. Crowds pressed around the van, women danced to the sound of drums and people beat the sand with their hands.
"Insured since 1993"
The celebration came two days after the U.N. Security Council lifted an arrest warrant for Aidid that had put a $25,000 reward on his head. It was issued in June after militiamen of his clan faction were blamed for attacks that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers.
The search for Aidid in his southern Mogadishu stronghold had effectively stopped after a fierce battle in early October killed 18 U.S. soldiers and more than 300 Somalis.
In ordering a new inquiry into attacks on U.N. peacekeepers, the Security Council also suggested Tuesday that 35 of Aidid's men would be released soon. The vote recognized that a political solution required the participation of Aidid and his Somali National Alliance along with other factions.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
---
Friday, November 19, 1993
7
To protect and serve: Mark Warre
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0
Reflecting on his career, Warren recalled being in a few dangerous situations, but he never thought of them that way at the time.
Lawrence police Sgt. Mark Warren calls a dispatcher to confirm information about a helicopter landing at Haskell Stadium for a Lawrence High School football game. As shift supervisor, Warren patrols the entire city and assists other officers when necessary.
After two years of working in an office, Sgt. Mark Warren returns to the streets he loves.
It's 5:30 in the evening, and a Laurence police officer is leaving the station for his dinner break. He spots a man in the parking lot, apparently cutting tires on patrol cars. The officer radios for help, and a brief chase ensues. The suspect is caught and arrested a few blocks from the station.
Sgt. Mark Warren listens to the chase on the scanner in his car. As shift supervisor, he lets the officers under his command handle the situation. Later, he drives by the station to assess the damage: 14 police and sheriff's department vehicles and two private cars each lean on at least two flat tires. Warren drives by his red Mercur Tracer, which was unarmed
"Darn," Warren says. "I need a new set of ties."
Warren likes patrolling Lawrence's streets.
Warren has worked to provide that security since July 1979, when he joined the Lawrence police. With the exception of two years in the department's technical services division and a brief stint in investigations, he has spent his entire career as a patrol officer.
"To me, patrolling the streets is the main job of law enforcement," he said. "It's the greatest sense of security you can provide the public."
Warren said his philosophical reasons for joining the police force were not unique.
“Initially, we all enter law enforcement with a strong desire to help our fellow man,” he said. “As I have gone through my career, I have also gained a sense of worth to the community. And that's what it all goes back to, having a job that impacts the community.”
But his work in Lawrence was not his first experience with law enforcement. Two of his uncles were in law enforcement. Warren said they had some bearing on his career because he saw law enforcement in a positive light.
Economics also played a role in Warren's decision. He studied agricultural business for three semesters at Colby Community College. When he saw the agriculture economy falling, Warren decided to look for greener fields.
"I could tell he had a lot of bearing and presence," Harmon said. "He had been in a lot of the situations before in the Army, which prepared him to be a good patrol officer. And I know he enjoys the street work more than being inside."
Warren did come back. He joined the Lawrence police and began 18 weeks of training in the police academy. Lt. Kevin Harmon, a Lawrence police detective, was one of Warren's classmates in the academy.
The first officers to arrive have separated the four instigators from the crowd. Warren's job is to keep the environment safe for the officers gathering information. He directs the crowd around the corner and chats with them while the other officers interview the subjects.
From 1976 to 1979, Warren served as a military police officer in what was West Germany. Except for that experience and his time in Colby, Warren has spent his entire life in Douglas County.
"I joined the Army for military police experience," he said. "I just wanted to see if I liked it, and I did."
The call: A fight has broken out at The Sandbar. Warren is the fourth officer at the bar on East Eight h Street, but they are still outnumbered.
The most significant change Warren has noticed in his 14 years with the department has
"When I was finished in the Army, I really wanted to come back," he said.
The officers tell the troublemakers to leave and not return to the bar for the night. The rest of the crowd goes quietly back into the bar. With the situation firmly in hand, Warren returns to the streets.
been in the technological aspects of the iob.
"When I started, we had one computer terminal in the communications center," he said. "It gave access to NCIC, and only specially trained personnel were allowed to operate it.
"Now, every officer is able to use computers. It has definitely made our job more effective. We couldn't function without them."
NCIC is the National Crime Information Computer, a national data base that records and tracks stolen or missing property and people.
Warren has watched Lawrence grow during his career. As the town has grown, his job has become more demanding.
"Six to eight calls was a busy night when I started," Warren said. "Now, with twice as many officers we still get 10 to 20 calls a night."
Lawrence has not necessarily become more violent as it has grown, but violence has become more frequent, Warren said. He attributed the violence to Lawrence being situated between two large metropolitan areas, Kansas City and Topeka, connected by Interstate 70, which runs north of Lawrence.
Violent offenders also are becoming younger, Warren said.
"If they start young, they are capable of more violence as they get older," he said.
He fills out time cards to ensure that his officers get paid properly. He reviews reports and tickets written by his officers. He makes out assignment sheets and approves applications for vacation and overtime.
Reflecting on his career, Warren recalled being in a few dangerous situations, but he never thought of them that way at the time.
In one of those situations, he and other officers responded to a report of a domestic disturbance. When they arrived, they heard a man and a woman shouting. The officers learned from neighbors that the man was mentally disturbed and thought he was being possessed.
Patrolling the streets is not the only thing Warren has done. From August 1991 to September of this year, Warren served as the department's technical services sergeant. He was in charge of the department's communications center, records and evidence.
He also purchased equipment for the department a duty that became a lesson in city government.
"I had to find out how the department fits into the city government," Warren said. "When I first went inside, we were writing the specifications for the enhanced 911 system, and it was like they were speaking a foreign language with all their acronyms. It was hard in that it took a lot of self-education."
The officers then heard the woman shout "Don't shoot!" The man fired a high-caliber handgun out the back door of the house.
Another of Warren's duties in technical services was a daily briefing with the media. That was another duty that took some getting used to, Warren said.
"This shift turns in a lot of overtime," he says. "If you don't stay up with this stuff, it'll just bury you."
"The only thing that saved us was that we went through the front door instead of the back." Warren said. "But you can't rationalize or second guess in a situation like that. You just feel confident in yourself and the other officers around you."
When the officers stormed through the front door, the man was glad they were there to save him. The argument was resolved without any injuries.
It's 9:30 p.m. Warren heads to the station for one of the less glamorous but important aspects of his job as shift supervisor: paperwork.
Story and photos by Scott J. Anderson
"As a patrol officer, I didn't deal with the press," he said. "I learned that it was OK not to tell everything you knew but to tell the truth with what you did say. You need to be straight-forward and tell them you can't make statements that may hamper an investigation. And you need to tell them that as soon as you can say something it will be told to everyone fairly."
"I also learned that the police need the media if something needs to be told to ease the public's fear."
Once the shift is done, Warren puts the work behind him.
"Sometimes you just have to, but it takes years of learned behavior," he said. "You learn that there are some things you can't control. You do what you can, but you don't let it consume you."
But scheduling has been a problem for the Warrens ever since Mark decide to ask Linda to marry him.
"It's a special problem for parents when just one parent does shift work," Linda Warren said. "With both of us doing it, it's twice as hard."
At home, Warren enjoys spending time with his wife, Linda, and their two children: Todd, 12, and Molly, 7. Linda Warren works part time as a nursing supervisor at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Both parents work nights, so they arrange their schedules so they are not working at the same time.
.
"I am a very busy person, and so is he," she said. "He had it all set up to propose one night, and I couldn't do it because I had to work. The next night he tried again, and he called out on an emergency. The third time he asked me to
out I said I was too tired. He said 'Come on,
let's go for some coffee and pie.' I was clueless
as to why it was so important to him that we go
out that night."
That night was seven months after a blind date Linda Warren did not want to go on.
"I didn't want to go out with a police officer," she said. "But we just hit it off. Some other friends were going out and wanted us to go with them. I think it was a lot easier going out that way because we didn't have to play that game of trying to impress each other."
Linda Warren said that in the eight and a half years they had known each other, she had overcome her initial hesitation about being involved with a police officer.
"He's a smart policeman with a good head on his shoulders," she said. "I know that he is always as safe as he can be."
It's 1:15 in the morning, less than an hour before the shift ends. Officers are called to Johnny's Tavern. A man has been hit over the head with a beer bottle outside the bar on North Second Street.
Warren arrives shortly after the ambulance. Other officers are already on the scene interviewing witnesses. Warren crouches beside the victim lying face-up on the pavement with a pool of blood collecting behind his head.
The paramedics brace the victim's head and neck and tape him to a long spine board. Warren helps lift the victim onto a stretcher. The paramedics load the man into the ambulance and race from the scene.
Warren heads back to the station. It's time to go home.
RAIDR
TOS5
Sgt. Mark Warren operates a radar gun for the baseball throw at the Deerfield Elementary School carnival. Warren said such activity was a primary example of the police department's community involvement.
4
8
Friday, November 19, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE NEWS in brief
DALLAS
Flights disrupted as American Airlines workers stage strike
Hundreds of flights were disrupted and thousands of passengers delayed yesterday as flight attendants struck American Airlines, picking airports around the nation in the industry's biggest walkout in nearly five years.
Thousands of passengers at American's main hubs in Chicago and Dallas-Fort Worth were shuffled to other airlines, particularly United and Delta, or put on later American flights. United handled about 8,000 displaced American passengers in Chicago.
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
American wouldn't say how many flights it was able to operate, but said more than 60 percent of the flights at its home base and largest hub, Dallas-Fort Worth, had full crews by early afternoon.
Sources at another major carrier familiar with American's operation estimated 30 to 50 percent of American's flights were disrupted.
Other airlines were accepting American tickets and will be paid later by the airline under long-standing agreements.
WASHINGTON
Bill addresses violence at clinics
A bill cracking down on abortion clinic violence passed the House yesterday after lawmakers rejected a bid by anti-abortion lawmakers to soften penalties for protesters who stage peaceful blockades.
It was approved on a voice vote after the House voted, 246-182, to reject an effort to send the bill back to committee and strip out language opposed by abortion foes.
The bill creates new federal crimes for threats, use of force and obstruction at abortion clinics.
Counsel investigations re-enstated
The Senate voted yesterday to restore independent counsel investigations but warned future prosecutors to rein in costs and limit comments about those not indicted.
The seven-year, $40 million Iran-Contra probe was foremost in senators' minds when they voted, 76-21, to give the expired law a new five-year life.
The bill went to the House where a supporter, Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., predicted that the measure would be considered early next year.
MEETING
JAYTALK
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1. Call or come by the Kansan at 119 Stauffer-Fint HALL, 864-4358
2. You'll place an ad in the Jaytait 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 place an ad:
4. You choose the people you want to meet and set up a time and place.
To check out an ad:
1. Read the ads in the Jaytalk Meeting Network on the back page of the Kansan.
2. Call 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.
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COOL ME DOWN - Tiger CB493
I CAN SEE CLEARLY NOW - Jimmy Cliff
STIR IT UP - Diana King
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DATCOVER
THE FREE TRADE AGREEMENT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday. November 19. 1993
OUTLOOK
NAFTA small when compared to world trade
By Martin Crutsinger The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Clinton won't have long to savor his victory on the North American Free Trade Agreement because staring him in the face is an even bigger, but far more elusive prize — a trade agreement not just with two countries but the world.
Clinton wasted no time in hailing his 234-200 House victory Wednesday night as a "defining moment for our nation" that showed the United States was not turning inward but instead was willing to compete globally to create jobs at home.
The president, who was scheduled to leave today for a meeting in Seattle with top officials from 14 Asian and Pacific-rim nations, called NAFTA the "first step" in his administration's effort to increase jobs for Americans by removing foreign trade barriers. He said a key goal now is to complete the Uruguay Round of global trade talks involving 116 nations.
Those talks, being held under the auspices of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, have dragged on for seven years but are now facing what all sides insist is a final negotiating deadline of Dec. 15.
The stakes for the United States are enormous. Despite all the sound and fury over NAFTA, most economists believe it will have, at best, a modest impact on the United States because Mexico's economy is just one-twentieth the size of the American economy.
The GATT talks, on the other hand, hold out the promise of lowering trade barriers in markets that, combined, are three times the size of the U.S. economy. One estimate puts the gain for the world economy at $270 billion in increased output from a successful Uruguay Round over the next decade.
While Clinton escaped becoming the first president ever to lose a trade agreement in Congress, the NAFTA victory did not come without costs. It exposed deep divisions in the Democratic Party.
Though they lost Wednesday's vote, NAFTA opponents claimed a moral victory and vowed to fight even harder to defeat a GATT agreement.
"The NAFTA fight has locked into place a new grassroots movement that is educated, staffed and ready to mobilize on whatever defective deal comes next," declared Lori Wallach, director of Ralph Nader's Public Citizen Trade Program.
And then there is Ross Perot. No one expects him to disappear. His charge that the elite in America was getting together to bargain away the jobs of ordinary citizens struck a responsive cord and he is one he is sure to use again.
Administration officials blame the rising tide of protectionism on America's prolonged economic slump. They insist that as the economy starts to expand more quickly, those resentments will dissipate.
But private economists say don't bet on it.
Clinton deals his way through NAFTA victory
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — As President Clinton scribbed on his NAFTA call list, an arrow pointing left meant a "yes" vote, an arrow to the right a rejection. For weeks, arrows pointing left were hard to come by.
But by Monday, 60 hours before the House vote on the North American Free Trade Agreement, things were finally looking a little better for the White House: Clinton's list showed 100 solid and 13 likely NAFTA supporters. He was still more than a dozen votes short of victory but, finally, within striking distance.
At midday Tuesday, Clinton scrawled a pledge from Georgia Rep. Buddy Darden onto his notes, and it was over: the president would win a battle many thought he would run from, and even many of his closest advisers long thought he would lose.
What followed was a wild day of cajoling, dealing and arm-twisting. Not just for Clinton but for most of the Cabinet, allies on Capitol Hill and aides in the White House NAFTA "war room."
THE VOTE
Clinton's NAFTA triumph is a twisted tale of odd alliances, bareknuckle politics and old-fashioned pork-barreling. Allies say the main ingredient was simply Clinton's refusal to lose. But he didn't win alone. In all, his Cabinet made more than 1,000 phone calls to House members, and Republicans provided critical help.
The president's support of NAFTA was tepid at the outset. But his effort turned fierce by the end.
surprising even his allies.
"He was an extraordinarily aggressive and intense pursuer of votes," said House Republican Whip Newt Gingrich, a Clinton ally in the peculiar fight. "I don't know if we've ever had anybody much better."
Just before the 234-200 vote Wednesday night, while House Majority Leader Richard Gephardt was conceding defeat, Clinton called Gingrich and Minority Leader Robert Michel in the House cloakroom, thanking Republicans for giving a Democratic president a crucial triumph.
"Tonight's vote is a defining moment for our nation," Clinton said later in celebration. "At a time when many of our people are hurting from the strains of this tough global economy, we chose to compete, not to retreat."
Key dates so far in the North American Free Trade Agreement:
CHRONOLOGY
June 11, 1990: Then-President George Bush and Mexican President Carlos Salinas de Gortari announce they will open preliminary discussions toward negotiating a free trade agreement between the two nations.
Feb. 5, 1991: Bush announces that Canada, which already has a free trade agreement with the United States, will join the negotiations with Mexico, aiming for an agreement that would create the world's largest free trade zone.
May 1991: Congress gives Bush the authority to negotiate the free trade agreement under "fast track" procedures that will require an up-or-down vote on the completed deal without amendments.
Aug. 12, 1992: After 14 months of bargaining, the
United States, Mexico and Canada reach agreement on a2,000-page pact that would eliminate tariffs and other
barriers to trade during a 15-year period.
Oct. 4, 1992: Democratic presidential candidate Bill Clinton ends months of speculation by announcing his support for NFAFT but says if elected president he will demand that supplemental agreements be negotiated to provide greater protection for worker rights, the environment and sudden import surges.
Aug. 13, 1993: Negotiators complete work on three supplemental agreements sought by the United States.
supplemental agreements sought by the United States. Nov. 4, 1993: Clinton sends legislation to Congress' to implement NAFTA, conceding that because of strong opposition from labor groups and Ross Perot he is facing an uphill battle to win passage.
Nov.17, 1993: House approves bill 234-200.
THE TRADE PARTNERS
Mexico: Historic change, but greater U.S. role
Nations face new partnership
By John Rice The Associated Press
MEXICO CITY — Everybody here agrees that a free trade treaty with the United States is a historic change for Mexico. The country's monuments to martyrs of U.S. invasion testify to that.
But most don't believe major changes will come quickly. And increased U.S. interest may be uncomfortable for a country that has made independence from the United States a watchword for generations.
The North American Free Trade Agreement, which passed its major hurdle Wednesday night with passage by the U.S. House of Representatives, will mean a greater U.S. economic role in Mexico and by Mexico in the United States.
It will mean greater U.S. scrutiny and criticism of Mexico's oft-criticized version of democracy. No Mexican government has given up power after an election in more than 120 years.
Canada: Make changes to define limits of deal
By Jeffrey Ulbrich
The Associated Press
TORONTO — Prime Minister Jean Chretien, barely two weeks in office, already faces an unenviably tough foreign affairs challenge: getting Washington to renegotiate parts of NAFTA.
Sticking to an election campaign promise, Chretien said yesterday he would demand a new code in the trade deal defining subsidies and dumping and for the same protection for energy resources that Mexico won for its oil industry.
If he doesn't get it, the prime minister said, Ottawa will not proclaim the North American Free Trade Agreement as law, even though it was approved by Parliament in May.
The question now is just how tough Chretien wants to get. If Canada backs out of NAFTA, there is nothing to prevent the United States from simply transforming it into a bilateral deal with Mexico. That would leave Canada with its original bilateral Free Trade Agreement with the United States, in effect since 1989, but would force Ottawa to do a separate deal with Mexico.
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'Addams' film humor runs dry at end
By Hillel Italle
REVIEW
The Associated Press
The first "Addams Family" movie was a major success, but it seemed less a movie than an extended parody. Much of the excitement came in the first few minutes, just at watching how much the actors resembled the more famous TV and cartoon characters. Having assembled an ideal cast, no one seemed to know what to do with it.
"Addams Family Values," the sequel, also fails to live up to feature-length standards, but it is both a funnier and more confident film. Rather than trying to play off the expectations of television viewers, the filmmakers only concern themselves with the previous movie: Topping it was no problem.
In a film full of great one-liners, the best joke may be the title. Moriccia has given birth to a baby Addams, whose mustache and slick, black hair duplicate his dashing father's. He is named Pubert and placed in a very special nursery, vultures looming from the wallpaper and a snarling stuffed bear perched over his cradle.
Believing the myth that once a family has three children, one of them must die, Wednesday and Pugsley decide Pubert is the best candidate. Their methods, to give them credit, are in the family tradition: aiming an anvil over his head, placing his neck under a guillotine, trying to find out whether Pubert or a cannonball can fall faster to the ground.
Gomez and Morticia decide their kids need supervision and hire a nanny (Joan Cusack). She is a sexy blonde who at first seems innocently flaky, but is soon revealed (to the audience) that she is the murderer of richly, lonely rich. And by her bedside, and all over her walls, are newspaper clippings of Uncle Fester.
The "Addams" creative team — producer Scott Rudin, director Barry Sonnenfeld and writer Paul Rudnick
— clearly have improved on the first movie. The satire is sharper, and they wisely have expanded the role of Christina Ricci's unforgettable Wednesday.
The rest of the cast also works well: Raul Julia and Anjelica Huston as the ever-romantic Gomez and Morticia; Christopher Lloyd as the manic, ghollish Fester, his voice as raspy as
Jimmy Durante's, Jimmy Workman as Pugsley; Carel Struycken as Lurch and Carol Kane as the grandmother. Cusack, alternately plotting murder and begging for love, again proves herself a gifted screwball comic.
But after a great first half, jokes and special effects flying with the speed of Gomez flinging knives across the living room, "Addams Family Values" wears down and barely makes it to the finish. The filmmakers still don't know how to tell a story, straining too hard to tie all up loose ends. While "Addams Family Values" is a fun, off-beat "family film," its heart remains in the world of television.
"Addams Family Values" is a Paramount Pictures release, rated PG-13. Its running time is 94 minutes.
MUSIC
BESTSELLERS
Weekly chart for the nation's best-selling recorded music as it appears in next week's issue of Billboard magazine. Reprinted with permission. Platinum signifies more than 1 million copies sold. Gold signifies more than 500,000 copies sold.
TOP SINGLES
VIDEOS
Copyright 1993, Billboard-Soundscan Inc.
Broadcast Data Systems.
1. "I Told Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That)," Meatloaf (MCA) (Platinum)
2. *Ajain* *at* *tain* (10:00) *Ianah*
3. *Ajain*, *Janet Jackson* (*Virgin*)
3. "All That She Wants," Ace of Base (Arista)
(Gold)
4. "Gangsta Lean," DRS (Capitol)
6. "Just Kickit it," Xscape (So So Def) (Gold)
7. "Whoomp! (There It Is);" Tag Team (Life)
(Platinum)
Weekly chart for the nation's most popular videos as it appears in next week's issue of Billboard magazine. Reprinted with permission.
1. "Rise Forgive Me," Bryan Adams (A&M)
9. "Hero," Mariahe Carey (Columbia)
10. "Hey Mr. D.J.," Zhane (Flavor Unit) (Gold)
11. "Breathe Again," Toni Braxton (Laface)
12. "Can We Talk," Tevin Campbell (Qwest)
13. "Dreamlover," Mariah Carey (Columbia)
(Platinum)
14. "Said I Loved You ... But I Lied," Michael Bolton (Columbia)
15. "Keep Ya Head Up," 2Pac (Interscope)
VIDEO SALES
2. "Dennis the Menace," (Warner)
4. "Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey, (Disney)
3. "Tom and Jerry: The Movie," (Family Home Entertainment)
5. "The Muppet Christmas Carol," (Disney)
7. "Pinocchio." (Disney)
8. "Playboy Wet & Wild V," (Playboy)
9. "Ren & Stimpy: The Classics." (Nickelodeon)
10. The Last of the Mountains, (Fox
11. "Beauty and the Beast" (Disney)
12. "Under Siege," (Warner)
13. Once Upon a Forest, (Fox)
14. "Hannah Gets Afraid" (Fox)
15. "Playboy Playmate of the Year 1993." (Play-
16. "Prince: The Hits Collection," (Warner Reprise)
17. "Ren & Stimpy: The Stinktest Stories," (Nick- elodon).
18. "Gift," (Warner Reprise)
19. "Playboy Celebrity Centerfold: Jessica
Urbz" (Parker)
20. "Playboy's Secret Confessions," (Playboy)
BOOKS
Best-selling books as they appear in next week's issue of Publishers Weekly. Reprinted with permission.
HARDCOVER NONFICTION
1. "See, I Told You So," Rush Limbaugh (Pocket Books)
3. "SeinLanguage," Jerry Seinfeld (Bantam)
2. "PrIVATE Parts," Howard Stern (Simon and Schuster)
4. "The Hidden Life of Dogs," Elizabeth Marshall Thomas (HoughtonMifflin)
5. "Wouldn't Take Nothing for My Journey Now." Mava Angelou (RandomHouse)
6. "Stop The Insanity," Susan Powter (Simon and Schuster)
7. "Embraced By The Light," Betty J. Eadie (Goldel Press)
8. "Men Are From Mars, Women Are From Venus." John Gray (Harper Collins)
9. "The Downing Street Years," Margaret Thatcher (Harper Collins)
10. "A Marriage Made In Heaven ... Or, Too Tired For An Affair," Erma Bombeck (Harper Collins)
Compiled from The Associated Press
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, November, 1993
11
Game more than Kidd, 'new kid on block'
Kansas, California ready for rematch
By Mark Button Kansan sportswriter
The game: Kansas vs. California. The stakes: a trip to New York and a possible matchup with No.1 ranked North Carolina.
The second-round game in the Preseason National Invitational Tournament poses a rematch between the Jayhawks and the Golden Bears. Kansas defeated Cal 93-76 in the third round of last year's NCAA tournament.
Much of the hype in tonight's game suggests that it will be a battle between the Kidd and the "new kid."
The Kidd being Cal's sophomore preseason All-American point guard Jason Kidd, and the "new kid" being Jayhawk freshman point guard Jacue Vaughn.
However, Kansas players and coaches said the game's outcome would be determined by more than the two California youngsters. In fact, Kansas coach Roy Williams said that anyone who thought the game would come down to the two point guards would have to be "drinking bad water."
That is not to say that Vaughn isn't excited to play against Kidd. The two played each other during the summer between Vaughn's sophomore and junior years in high school.
"I learned a lot about his playing style," Vaughn said. "We're going to have to neutralize his ability to see the court by guarding him tightly and exploit his jumper."
One of the few criticisms of Kidd is his outside shooting. Last night, in the Golden Bear's first round 81-74 victory against Santa Clara, Kidd scored 27 points on 7 of 13 shooting, but he was one for six behind the three-point arch.
Vaughn said he respected Kidd as a player, but he didn't think Kidd was ready for legendary status vet.
"When I think of legends, I think of people like Magic, Oscar Robinson and Jordan," Vaughn said. "Kidd's not a legend, but he is a good player. It'a good challenge for me early on in the year and it kind of sets the standard for me later on down the line."
Vaughn was not the only one with high praise for the Cal point guard.
"If there's a bigger Jason Kidd fan in the world than Roy Williams," the Kansas coach said, "then it has to be his mother and father."
Although it is not a two-man game, there is a sense of revenge for Cal, and the Jayhawks know it.
Renee Knoeber / KANSAN
"I'm sure they're looking forward to it after last year," said senior guard Steve Woodberry. "But to me, it's just another a game."
The same goes for Williams. He said last year's game would have nothing to do with tonight's game.
In Kansas' defeat of Cal last March, four of the five players who scored in double digits for Kansas are gone. Only Woodberry, who scored 13, returns. Senior forward Richard Scott scored nine points.
However, more fuel is added to Cal's motivational fire with the transfer of sophomore guard Jerrod Haase. Haase left the team to come to Kansas during the off-season.
"Everyone here knows the rules," Haase said. "I feel like we're all on the same page."
Haas said he hoped to get time to talk with his old teammates, but he was definitely glad he came to Kansas.
Williams said for the Hawks to be successful, it would be important not only to be cautious of Kidd but to shut down junior forward Lamond Murray.
"We need to make sure we get back on Murray." Williams said, "I remember him shooting all the threes in."
CALIFORN
5
Murray scored 23 against Kansas in the game last March.
California's Jason Kidd maneuvers around Kansas 'Adonis Jordan. As a sophomore, Kidd has become a key player for the California offense.
Former Golden Bear guard now full-fledged Jayhawk
Kansas redshirt sophomore guard Jerod Haase wishes he could play tonight — but not as a Golden Bear.
Kansan sportswriter
By Mark Button
"I'm a full-fledged Kansan now," said Haase, who practices with the Jayhawks but must sit out this year because of NCAA transfer regulations.
"For this game, I'm 100 percent for Kansas. I would love to be playing."
Hannah has been hospitalized since a good reason.
After last season, Hase transferred to Kansas from California at Berkley. He said he was happy here and definitely had made the right decision.
"I feel like everyone's on the same page here," Haase said. "I fit in well. We're extremely team oriented. For example, take Steve Woodberry — he's basically unstoppable, but he'll set a quick as he'll take a jumper. It's whatever is best for the team."
One reason Haase came to Kansas, he said, was that in the Kansas "system," the team comes before individuals. But he doesn't hold anything against California standouts sophomore guard Kidd Kidd and junior forward Lamond Murray.
"Jason and Lamond earned their status," he said. "I have no problem with that."
Kansas coach Roy Williams said he was pleased with Haase and was glad he fit in
"Jeriod is an extremely hard working young man," Williams said. "I think he will use this year to work on his entire game."
Haase, a South Lake Tahoe, Calif, native, said he not only was happy with the team and coaching staff but also with Lawrence.
"I love Lawrence," Haase said. "It's a small town that's very focused around the University and especially basketball. It's kind of like that at Berkeley, but here it is at another level."
KANSAS
10
Melissa Lacey / KANSAN
Junior guard Calvin Rayford husties away from a Western Michigan defender during the first round of the Preseason National Invitational Tournament. Kansas will play California in the second round tonight at Allen Field House.
75
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
kansas senior center Dan Schmidt runs drills during practice at Memorial Stadium. The game against Missouri tomorrow will be Schmidt's last as a Jawhawk.
Game 12
Kansas Jayhawks
KU
Head Coach: Glen Mason
1 p.m., Saturday Memorial Stadium KLZR, KLWN
Offense:
Offense:
WR 83 Greg Ballard 6-3 195 Sr. WR 29 Mike Jadot 6-5 195 Sr.
TE 92 Pete Vang 6-3 235 Sr. TE 89 A.J. Ofidie 6-7 260 Sr.
LT 54 Rod Jones 6-4 285 So. LT 71 Tim Alvarado 6-7 267 Sr.
LG 66 Hessley Hopstead 6-1 295 Jr. LG 62 Matt Pearce 6-7 266 Sr.
C 75 Dan Schmidt 6-2 265 Sr. C 69 Matt Burgess 6-3 272 Sr.
RG 69 John Jones 6-1 285 Jr. RG 79 Mike Bedosky 6-6 288 Sr.
RT 58 Scott Whittaker 6-6 291 Fr. RT Trey O'Neil 6-6 69 Jr.
GR 6 6 Asaheli Smith 5-6 45 ISSm 81 Trae Y O'Neil 6-7 108 Jr.
QB 9 Asaheli Skelter 5-11 180 Jr. QB 7.2 Brian Sallee 6-3 208 Jr.
RB 20 June Henley 5-11 190 Fr. FB 35 Bryan Murray 5-10 215 Sr.
FB 32 Chris Powell 5-11 290 Jr. TB 1 Joe Freeman 5-10 175 Sr.
Defense:
Defense:
OLB 39 Don Davis 6-1 212 Jr. DE 59 Risk Lyle 6-6 281 Sr.
RT 72 Chris Maumalanga 6-3 286 Sr. DT 98 Steve Martin 6-5 291 So.
DT 61 Mike Steele 6-3 276 Sr. DT 72 George Hunt 6-3 288 So.
DE 57 Kevin Kopp 6-4 225 Fr. DE 92 Damon Simon 6-5 250 Jr.
OLB 46 Ronnie Ward 6-4 212 So. LE 55 Derry Major 6-2 238 Jr.
ROV 29 Harold Harris 5-11 206 LB 39 Travis McDonald 6-2 220 Jr.
ILB 52 Steve Harvey 6-3 234 Jr.WP 6 Javent Lenhertd 6-1 194 Jr.
CB 28 Tony Blevins 6-0 170 RV 40 Jerome Madison 6-0 183 Jr.
SS 4 Marlin Blakeney 5-11 192 So. CB 15 Kevin Mcintosh 6-0 175 Jr.
FS 47 Clint Bowen 5-11 188 PS 21 Andre White 6-1 198 Jr.
CB 3 Gerald McBurrows 5-11 188 Jr. CB 22 Jason Oliver 5-10 169 Sr.
Source: KANSAN Staff Reports
Seniors help lead way for injured Jayhawks
Micah Laaker/KAN$AN
v Matt Doyle
ansan sportswriter
Dan Schmidt's senior season started off with a bang. Unfortunately for the Jayhawks' starting center, it was not the type of bang that he wanted.
Schmidt sprained his ankle during the first week of preseason practice, and that turned out to be a painful sign of things to come for the Kansas football team in 1993. Schmidt missed three of the first four games because of the injury and was one of 28 Jayhawks who have been affected by injuries this season.
Schmidt has recovered from the ankle injury and will be one of 11 seniors making their final Jayhawk appearance in tomorrow's season finale against Missouri at
Memorial Stadium.
"This was my fifth year, and I wanted to go out with a bang — and I did during two-a-days," Schmidt said. "Emotionally it slows you down because you don't expect that at all."
Kansas entered this season with expectations of improving on last season's 8-4 record and trip to the Aloha Bowl. However, injuries were a problem throughout the season and will affect the Jayhawks against the Tigers.
The injury was frustrating for Schmidt, especially when he and the Jayhawks had high expectations entering this season.
Freshman defensive end Jason Brown and sophomore reserve guard Brian Rodeo will miss the contest with knee injuries. Senior defensive end Guy Howard's playing status is questionable because of a foot
"Everything that could possibly go wrong for us did," said junior fullback Chris Powell. "we had to face adversity a lot, and the seniors really helped us through it all."
injury. Sophomore tailback L.T. Levine's status is doubtful because of a groin injury, and senior tight end Dwayne Chandler's playing status is doubtful because of a sorained ankle.
Senior kicker/punter Dan Eichloff has had his own struggles this season. He has made only 13 of 21 field goal attempts, but three of his misses have been from 57 yards and beyond.
Eichloff said it could have been easy for the team to give up after early losses to Michigan State and Utah, but it did not.
Kansas coach Glen Mason said he had enjoyed coaching this team despite having a 4-7 record and the numerous injuries.
Mason added that his enjoyment was due in part to the leadership from his seniors
"There is no one that feels more frustration when you have a year that's not what you quite expected than your senior class." Mason said. "Those are the guys that have put the most into it. They have been tremendous."
Schmidt said there would be some sadness tomorrow when he walked off the artificial turf of Memorial Stadium for the final time as a member of the Jayhawk football team.
"I'll be leaving something that's been a big part of my life," Schmidt said. "There will be a little bit of sadness, especially with this season. The success we had the last couple years had us expecting to do just as well if not better. We fell short, but we'll be all right."
17
Jayhawks put little emphasis on hoops poll
Kansan sportswriter
By Gerry Fey
Preseason ratings are good for the universities and the Big Eight conference, but for the Kansas women's basketball team, polls are not a major concern.
The Jayhawks are ranked 16th in the Associated Press preseason poll, but Kansas coach Marian Washington said the poll was usually an inaccurate assessment of a team.
"I think it's nice, but it's just an initial assessment," Washington said. "We've got potential, but we've got a lot of work ahead."
Other Big Eight teams ranked in the poll were Colorado at No. 12 and Oklahoma State at No. 24. Nebraska also received votes for the top 25. Washington said it was good for the Big Eight's perception to have those teams ranked.
"The respect for the conference is better, which is good," Washington said. "I'm delighted. It carries over in a lot of different ways. It helps when we out there trying to recruit. It's a conference that the good and great players should look at."
"That's the problem with some polls," she said. "I don't know if they get all the information. We have 10 players on scholarship, and we can't have injuries. It's sort of like they just get the information they really need."
But when the focus is on Kansas, Washington doesn't get caught up in the polls.
Kansas is picked by the Big Eight coaches to finish first in the conference.
"We probably have the fewest players on scholarship than any team in the Big Eight," Washington said. "In our situation two years ago, we were picked No. 1 in the Big Eight. We lost three players to injuries down the stretch. We didn't get very far in the tournament, but that was one of our best teams."
Washington said she was happy that the Kansas players got recognition by being in the polls.
"It's good for them to know that people are aware," she said of her players. "But it's not something we focus on. It's great for the University, the players, our program and the Big Eight. But now it's time to go to work."
12
Friday, November 19, 1993
Go'Hawks
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KANSAS VS MISSOURI
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Former umpire to have surgery
He hopes to return to baseball diamond
The Associated Press
BOSTON — Steve Palermo's world has always centered on alternatives with an unambiguous outcome: ball or strike, fair or foul, safe or out.
But now, after making the toughest call of his life, the former umpire faces an uncertain future.
Palermo, partially paralyzed by a mugger's bullet two years ago, is scheduled for neurosurgery today on his spinal cord in an attempt to regain full use of his left leg and return to umpiring.
Surgeons won't know if they can repair damaged nerves until after they've begun the operation, which could last up to 10 hours. If they're
And if they renot successful, there's a chance of undoing Palermo's months of grueling rehabilitation and leaving him permanently crippled.
Palermo was shot outside Campisi's restaurant in Dallas on July 7, 1991, while trying to rescue two waitresses being attacked in the parking lot of the popular Italian restaurant. He had unpumped a Rangers game hours earlier.
Palermo, 43, who still has metal fragments in his body, has waged a relentless battle to regain full use of his legs. Through painful rehabilitation and sheer will power, he has recovered enough to walk — halting-
The mugger got a long prison sentence. Palermo got a bullet through the spine that left doctors saying he would never walk again.
But his left side remains weak and his progress has stalled in the last year. About six months ago, doctors suggested the highly unusual surgery, similar to that done on infants born with nerve abnormalities.
ly and clumsily, at times — with the aid of canes.
Palermo spent the past few weeks agonizing over the decision. He underwent countless tests — MRIs, CAT scans, bone scans — but doctors said they would only be able to fully assess his nerve damage with surgery.
He finally decided to have the surgery at the University of Massachusetts Medical Center in Worcester, and flew to his parents' home in Oxford, Mass., last weekend to prepare for the operation.
Arthur Pappas, an orthopedic surgeon and the team physician for the Boston Red Sox, will assist in the
operation.
"The nerves on the left side of the spinal cord at the lower part of his back are encased by scar tissue," he said. "What has to be determined is if they are intact or disrupted."
"If the nerves are disrupted, there is very little that can be done. If they are intact, it is a matter of removing the scar tissue around the nerves to provide for the impulses to be transmitted from the nerves and to the muscles in his left leg."
Pappas added, "I don't know if this exact operation has been done anywhere."
Paloermo knows the risks and the long odds. But he is intent on returning to baseball, and everything that goes with it.
"I'd like to be able to hear some boos directed at me," he said. "That would mean I'm back at work. That would be nice."
KU
The Battle
for the Indian War Drum
Kansas and Missouri will meet tomorrow for the 102nd time, making it the longest Division 1A rivalry west of the Mississippi. Missouri leads the series 48-44-9 including last year's 22-17 win in Columbia. Here are some more interesting stats on this great rivalry.
- Tomorrow marks the 39th time the two teams will square off in Lawrence.
- Since KU's Memorial Stadium opened up in 1921, Missouri leadsthe series here 18-14-3.
The last time the Jayhawks had border bragging rights was two years ago when Tony Sands rushed for 396 yards en route to the NCAA all-time singlegame rushing record and a 53-29 win in Lawrence.
- Missouri has scored 1,615 points to Kansas's 1,405.
- Neither team has won more than five consecutive games against the other. The last five-game win streak was Missouri's and it ended in 1942.
- The greatest margin of victory is 48 points which Missouri accomplished 4 times. The Jayhawks biggest win was 30-0 in 1930.
0
•Kar
sc
Here's who to watch for this year as the Hawks look to reclaim the Indian War Drum.
- Missouri receivers: Kenny Holly, Brian Sallee, and tight end A.J. Ofodile could be the best receivers in the conference. Colorado has a great pair of receivers, but Holly and Ofodile rank 1 and 2 in receptions, respectively. This could be a problem for KU's depleted secondary. Also,
Missouri ranks seventh in the Big Eight in rushing, so expect them to put it in the air.
- The narrowest margin of victory is 1 point, accomplished once by Missouri and three times by Kansas.
- The last tie was 3-3 in 1962 in Columbia.
- The Tigers all-time win-loss record is 509-422-51. The Jav Hawks are at 476-453-58.
- Kansas backs - Charles Henley could be the league's
best running back. This could be trouble for a Missouri defense that ranks seventh in the conference in rushing defense. Coupled with the fact, that no Jay-
hawk receiver has caught a pass for a touchdown this year, and one should expect the Hawksto
and one should expect the 'Hawks to
run and try to keep their
defense rested.
- Missouri has a 15 game road losing
---
streak.
Wishes the Jayhawks Good Luck!
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Cross country runs its way to national meet
Late-season victory sparks comeback
By Kent Hohlfeld Kansan sportswriter
Last weekend, the women's cross country team turned around what had been a frustrating season.
The team won the District V regional in Carbondale, Ill. The victory qualified the team for the NCAA Championships on Monday in Bethelhem, Pa. It will be the first appearance for the team in the national meet.
The performance was enough to propel the team to the No.17 ranking in the latest coaches poll. That marks the team's first ranking since Sept. 27, when it was ranked No.24.
The victory came just two weeks after the team put in a disappointing fifth-place performance in the Big Eight Championships in Columbia, Mo.
"We're a very good team," Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said. "We just hadn't put it together."
13
The Jahawks put together one of the strongest performances of their
season in scoring a meet low 77 points. The lowest score wins at cross country meets.
Schwartz said that he was not surprised by his team's performance during the district meet. The teams at the meet were the same Big Eight teams that defeated Kansas at the Big Eight meet as well as the Missouri Valley conference teams.
"A lot of times the people that have the biggest need to win, do,"Schwartz said.
Schwartz said that the team having three seniors competing in what could have been their last collegiate cross country meet was an added incentive.
One of those seniors was co-captain Julia Saul. She was the Jayhawks' top runner, finishing fourth overall.
"We were kind of tired of getting our hopes up every week only to be disappointed." Saul said.
She said that during the meet, the team put forth the extra effort it needed for the victory. Saul is now being looked to by team members for advice on how to deal with the team's trip to nationals. She is the only member of the team to have competed at the national championships as an
individual qualifier the last two years.
"I've told them not to settle behind large packs of runners and to be confident and not get discouraged," Saul said.
Confidence doesn't appear to be a problem for senior Abley Ace.
"I'm more excited than nervous right now," Ace said. "We won the right to be there."
She said she thought that she had been given a second chance to make up for what she called a poor performance at the district meet. She came in 40th with a time of 19 minutes, 50.8 seconds.
"I didn't have the race I'm capable of at district," Ace said. "I'm capable of running a lot faster."
Schwartz said that the schedule the team had would help the team in the national meet. The Jayhawks have competed against 10 of the 15 district qualifiers this season.
He said this team was capable of placing between 10th and 17th in the 22-team field.
Ace said that she was glad to see the team's season continue Monday.
"We're just excited to have one more meet." Ace said.
Gagne catches Player of Year award
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Greg Gagne was everything the Kansas City Royals hoped for and more.
The only disappointment for the Royals shortstop last season was not winning his first Gold Glove despite playing 159 games and making just 10 errors.
He left fans with a season full of memorable plays.
The glove went to Omar Vizquel of Seattle. Gagne, with terrific range and a strong throwing arm, got a measure of compensation when he was named Royals Player of the Year yesterday.
"He was a better player than we thought," manager Hal McRae said. "We knew he was good and solid, but he was better for us than he was with Minnesota. I was saddened he did not
win the Gold Glove. Vizquel is good, but Bagne was the best all-around defensive shortstop. There was no question in my mind. I was surprised he did not win it."
"I think I was hurt a little bit," Gagne said yesterday by telephone after the Royals award was announced. "I was disappointed a little bit. I thought 'Wow, I hit well and played good defense."
Gagne had played his entire eight-year career in Minnesota, but the relationship soured and he signed a three-year free-agent contract with the Royals in December after considering his hometown Boston Red Sox.
"I've really enjoyed playing in Kansas City," Gagne said. "Hal let me play every day. I had that challenge of playing every day. Not ever being pinch-hit for gave me confidence."
Gagne, who led the league with a .986 fielding percentage, was diplomatic in talking about a fellow player. But he was at a loss to explain the reasoning of the coaches and managers who vote for the Gold Glove.
Gagne said McRae's commitment to playing him every day probably led to his finest offensive season. He had career highs with a .280 average, 151 hits and 57 runs driven in.
"It was kind of discouraging," Gagne said. "But it's time for me to go on."
"I don't really know how they vote. If it was me, I would look at games played, innings played. Then you have to look at chances.
"It would be a tough choice between Omar and myself and (Cal) Ripken and whoever. Not getting it was a little tough to swallow at first."
Share with Thanks
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Fee: $4.00 for the public.
Reservation is required.
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Conference tie-breakers confuse all
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
The confusion has finally ended in Big Eight volleyball, and just in time for the conference tournament.
The NCAA service bureau has confirmed that if Iowa State defeats Kansas State on Saturday, the Cyclones would qualify for the Big Eight tournament on Oct. 26-27 in Omaha, Neb., instead of the Jayhawks.
Iowa State and Kansas would be tied for fourth in the conference at 5-7, but Iowa State would win the tie-breaker and take the final spot in the tournament.
The confusion developed because of the decisions made at a Big Eight coaches meeting five years ago. In that meeting, the coaches worked out a tie-breaking process to determine who would qualify for the tournament.
But some coaches had the wrong idea when the procedure passed. Kansas coach Frankie Albitz said she was one of the coaches who thought a different plan was put in place. Now Kansas is out of the tournament because of the ruling.
She said she didn't think what she proposed was interpreted correctly.
"The reason was that I suggested what had been decided on," Albitzsaid. "The wording got passed through different hands and got mixed around."
According to the service bureau report, "In breaking ties for determining the four qualifiers, the process is: 1) head-to-head competition; 2) games won divided by total games played in conference matches among tied teams; and 3) points won divided by points lost in conference matches among tied teams."
Earlier in the season when it looked like Kansas and Iowa State might end up tied, the second tie-breaker clause was interpreted to mean that total games won in the conference would determine the qualifier. However, now it means that only the games played between the two teams would be considered.
"It sounds like it means all conference games," Iowa State coach Jackie Nunez said. "But it says, 'among tied teams,' and that's the key. There was confusion for me as well. From my understanding, since we beat Kansas in three, and they beat us in four, we would go."
Iowa State has won four of seven games in the two matches against Kansas. Therefore, Iowa State will go if there was a tie.
That is not what Albizt had in mind five years ago. She said that the plan didn't please her.
"It's too critical to rely on just one match," Albizt said of the tie-breaker. "It thought it would be better to look at all conference matches. Then an injury or an illness in that one match would not hurt you. There are advantages to both ways."
Neither she had trouble deciding which plan she
Nunez said she had trouble deciding which plan she liked.
"I've gone back and forth with it," Nunez said. "I had a starting middle blocker who got injured in game two of our first match in the Big Eight. We lost game three and won game four when she came back in. The question is: Do we eliminate Iowa State because they lost a game in their first match that had nothing to do with the tied teams?"
Nebraska assistant coach Val Novak said she would like to see all conference matches considered in the case of a tie.
Novak said Kansas and Iowa State were comparable teams, just as their conference records would indicate. Kansas' overall record is 15-12 and Iowa State's is 8-17.
Kansas senior outside hitter/setter Shelby Lard said the bottom line was that the Big Eight tournament would include Iowa State and not Kansas.
FILE PHOTO
"I don't think they deserve to be there," she said of the Cyclones. "The rule makes me mad. Especially now, we're a much better team than they are."
6 10
Senior middle blocker Erin Kramer and sophomore right side blocker Jenny Larson attempt to block a spike. Because of new rules, Iowa State is expected to finish in fourth place and claim the final position in the Big Eight tournament.
Coaches say new tournament setup may hurt competitiveness
Kansan staff report
Kansas may be out of the Big Eight postseason volleyball tournament this season, but next season all teams will participate in post-season play.
The coaches in the Big Eight previously voted to include all teams in the tournament effective next year. Kansas coach Frankie Albizt said she wasn't sure if it was a good idea. She said the challenge of making the tournament was good for the conference.
"I always thought it would be good to have something to shoot for," Albitz said. "But right now, three teams don't get the experience. I voted to go with four teams. It made things a little more exciting."
Other teams also were against the new tournament arrangement. Nebraska assistant
coach Val Novak said the change would hurt teams like the Cornhuskers. Nebraska has won 15 of the 17 conference tournament championships.
Novak said teams had to play two extra matches before going into the NCAA postseason tournament.
"You would like to rest your team before that tournament," said Novak. "It's like a wasted match. It's the strongest teams in the conference try to get into the NCAAs. The other teams, based on their records and season performance, are not as strong."
This season, teams in place for the tournament are Nebraska, Colorado and Oklahoma. If Iowa State defeats Kansas State tomorrow, the Cyclones will be the last team that qualifies. The tournament will be held Nov. 26-27 in Omaha, Neb.
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call 864-0431 or (913) 862-7592.
男 女士
200s Employmen
Lost: Black Leather Jacket /11/10 (W) or 11/11 (H) In Haworth or Wescrew. Call 832 654-2722
205 Help Wanted
I ATTENTION COLLEGE STUDENTS! Need financial help? School can be extremely expensive and loans sometimes don't cover those "hidden costs." We can help! Call Faith Marketing for details about making BIG MONEY. Free 24 hr. recorded message. Call (816) 383-7979.
$250 SIGNING BONUS. We currently are accepting applications for full and part-time licensed cosmetologists or barbers. 2 weeks paid vacation.
Apply at Pro-Cuts, 2500 Iowa
*** BUSDRIVERS ***
The Lawrence Bus Company is accepting applications for part time bus drivers. Morning and afternoon shifts available. Must be 21 with clean driving record. Call 842-0544.
FUND RAISER
Raise $500 in 5 days. Groups.
Clubs, motivated individuals
1-800-775-3851 ext 101
A local vacum repair business needs part-time
work. They must be able to perform mechanically-inclined person. Call 843-1267
mechanically-included person. Call 893-120-
AA Cruise & Travel jobs. Earn $2500/mo. + travel
the world free! (Caribbean, Europe, Hawaii,
Asia!) Cruise Nails now hiring for busy holiday,
spring, and summer seasons. Listing Service. Call
(919) 929-4398 ext. 131.
AMIGOS
AMIGOS Supervisor/Assist Mgr
Supervisor now - Manager later! Learn the business from the ground up and advance according to your interests. Work with an oriented mentor and like to work at a fast intense pace, an opportunity to put these skills to work and develop as a leader is available. Relocation will be possible. Benefits apply. Now at: Amigie, 8159 W. 2xrd
APPLY NOW International Chain filling part-fall line positions, Training provided. Work locally now (flexible schedules around classes). May transfer to one of our 300 locations nationwide durand todder. M-F, 8am-2pm, $150/wk. Call 842-5441.
Earn $1,000 per week at home on learning days and send long self address stamped envelopes to Inquiries 670886, Cuyahoga Falls, OH 043222.
Midcareendant, part-time; provide supervision of severely emotionally disturbed children/adolescents. On-call, variable hours. Knowledge/experience with SED children preferred. Must be 18 years old prior to school. Appropriate letter to J. Yansey, Bert Nash CM38. Mhsei Lawrence, KS 86544. Open until filled EOE
FAST CASH
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
Available Jan 15, 94. Invoicing. Customer Service,
Bookkeeping work. Working burs 3-8-M-F. C-
trent Business major preferred. Training begins in
Dec. Send letter of application, list of 3 references,
invoice and proofs to HR. Booking form 194.
Lawrence, KS. 69044. Deadline Nov. 22, 93.
Lawrence required.
BASS PLAYER AVAILABLE
Experienced bass player looking for serious Lawrence band. I have live playing experience including Lawrence bars. I own professional equipment and play both frettles and five string bass guitars. Looking for blues injected rock and funky, groovy staff, but am I flexible. No metal, hardcore, or chained, but is looking for members a bass player. I'm ready to get $89-$99.
Brandon Woods Retirement Community is currently hiring wait staff for the 1st-8mph shift with possibility of an occupancy 9pm-7pm. His sr. is currently serving as a resident in person 1501 Drivens Dr. Lawrence KS, E.O. C
Case manager, full-time: provide case management for severely emotionally disturbed children/adolescents/families. Require undergraduate education. Send resume to Masters in children/adolescents. Masters degree preferred. Send resume/cover letter to J. Yancey, Bert Nash, CSU, 338 Johnson Lawrence, KS 60404. Open phone.
Daycare provider needed, our house. For infant and toddler M- F, 8am-2pm. $150/wk. CalRoll 842-6441.
EARN CASH
Earn $15 today
Earn $30 this week
Thanks for giving
this Thanksgiving season
EARN CASH
$1000 CASH GIVEAWAY!
Anyone who donates their blood plasma 8 times between Oct. 30 and Dec. 17 is eligible to win a cash drawing.
There's still time-don't delay,come in today.
$
A
1st Prize: $450
2nd Prize: $150
3rd Prize: $100
4th Prize: $100
5th Prize: $75
6th Prize: $50
7th Prize: $25
8th Prize: $25
9th Prize: $25
$
"Help pay your tuition by entering our cash giveaway and help save a life today."
NABI The Double Source
749-5750
816 W. 23rd
Behind Laird-
Noller Ford
o. 1959
Fritonities and Sororites call
for more information about
fund-rasing
Female, non-smoking. English speaking baby sister needed. Own transportation. 5 girls 3.50 hr.
FREE TRIPS AND MONEY!!! Individuals and Student Organizations wanted to promote the Hottest Spring Break Destinations, 1-800-372-6013. Inter-Campus Programs 1-800-372-6013
Help wanted: Hardware/Software manager. KU School of Architecture and Urban Design seeks qualified graduate student to begin work in early December. For position description contact Ursa Stamiller at 864-3244. Application deadline November 30, 1993
Marketing Assistant position available at NaimsHall Mall for the spring semester. Applicant must have excellent people skills, good computer skills (desktop publishing experience a plus), and have a master's degree in marketing or customer service, or sales. Position will be part time with compensation of room and board plus stipend. Potential for full time effective July, 1994. Great resume and portfolio builder to help you get started. Please contact us at NAIMSHALL MALL, apply at NaimsHall Hall, 1800 NaimsHall Drive, LawrenceKS 60400. E.O.F.M./M.H.A/F.
Henry 's I & Bar & Grill is now hiring experienced kitchen staff. Must be able to work days, some evenings, and holidays. Apply from 2 to 4 p.m. Local business seeks qualified individuals to provide a variety of services to community residents. Good income. For an interview call 842-3301.
NEED EXTRA CASH!? Work as a cashier/clerk during Spring生日聚会 held on January 7, 2013 at the University of Accounting, 20 Carruth O'Leary Hall from 8:04a.m.-11:04a.m., 1:00p.m-4:00p.m. M-F: Deadline for applying is November 30, 1993. Must obtain equal opportunity/affirmative action employer.
NANNIES/CHILD CARE
The premier agency - 9 yrs experience. Family
and Sunny FLL. Call told you tomorrow!
Part-time art. maintenance person wanted to work weekday mornings, call 841-4864 to apply.
Phone Work. Part Time, Flexible Hours. Paid Daily. Call 233-0293
RESUME SERVICES Professional Business Resumes, Cover Letters, SF-171s, Interview Training. Free initial interview. 832-8100.
The Lawrence Bus Company is now taking applications for SAFERID drivers. Must be 21, have a clean driving record, and be familiar with the school. School Holidays off. If interested call 824-9544.
Taco Bell now hiring day and night help. Apply in
and迎220 W, 621 E through Saturday. 1408 W, 32
and 1220 W, 621 E
If you are available for all home basketball games and would be interested in assisting as parking lot attendant please contact Mampow Temporary Services at 749-280-EOE.
You CAN make a difference, Greenpeace K.C., MO is now hiring energetic and articulate students and others to help save the rain forests, stop toxic waste, and protect the ozone layer. PT/FT $190 to $300 a week, paid training, hours 2 to 10 p.m. Call 816-513-3884.
225 Professional Services
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7740.
Traffic tickets, midmeeanders, landlord/ tenant,
Braxton R. Convey 748-5333
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law office
THE DOLE
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
Prompt abortion and contraceptive services. Dale L. Clinton M.D. 841-5716.
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Birthright 843-821. Free pregnancy testing.
Lesbian, gay, bis or unsure? If you need to talk to someone, call a Peer Counselor. CONFIDENTIAL. Call KU info or Headquarters.
Promotion abortive contraception.
Research Assistance - MS/ML information specialist available to assist with term paper, thesis, theses, etc.
Unique resumes, cover letters, laser prints. Fast.
10% Off on resumes, Graphic Images, ideas 972/ Mass B 841-1071.
235 Typing Services
A Worth Perfect word processing service. Laser printer. Near campus. 842-6853.
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your printing call
the Graphic Designer at 855-723-9066
How are Maki's Hon Grade?
fast, accurate word processing; term paper; dissertation, thesis and graphics services available. Laser printing. Engineering and Law Review experience. Call Pam at 841-1977 anytime.
Expert typing. IBM Correcting Seliracite
double space page Call Ms. Maitls 841-1219
X
305 For Sale
300s Merchandise
6 ft. bookcases for $39, full sized bed $182, coffee
sets for $3, piece dinner set $110. T.C. Furniture
Rental rents and sales new and used furniture, 601
Kasold 841-711.
Beds, desks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
908 Mass.
Fire walking, walk on water? WALK ON TRASH!
Deja recycled shoes at Simple Goods General Store 735 Mass. M-Sat 10-5:30. Till turl 8.
Weight lifting machine, leg curts, bench press,
light condition, $25 for both, BCH exercise and weekends.
I'm graduating and need to sell my
- Beautiful wood bedroom set. 1 queen size bed with cherry wood head board, matching night stand with 2 drawers, cherry wood chest with vanity mirror. You can get a gift for that. Call me at 865-0720. You can get a gift for that. Call me at 865-0720.
Jackets:刃越 bomber $75刃越 biker $100
Obermeyer ski升维 $150电话 831-7573
QUANTITY RATES/MICE small rats 1.35 mice
will be delivered.
Visa/Mastercard 880-9005, Jim.
Inventory of classic old playboy Magazines 1950's, 60's, 70's and 80's. Most in good condition.
Must be purchased in package. Call 843-0540 evenings and weekends.
Sega Genesis with sega CD includes pack-in-
ing 2 discs, jogging mode, good bike
look with pods, exc. cond. $641 901 740.
Spend $20 in Chicago (leaves RC on Dec 29
it's sold) (females only) call 841-3981 now before
Student basketball tickets-best offer.Call Ralph at 748-4155
Floppy Discs
Two airline tickets Thanksgiving weekend, cheap.
KCI to Calif. Call Amy 5:00 at 814-0279
Call 832-2744 (o) 842-5421 (h)
Hyperion Telecom Lines A
Visit our office behind Food 4 Less at 2201 W. 25th St.B-1.
Two single Chiefs vs. Bills tickets for Nov 28. Best offer. Call and leave message 865-236-3567
Offer call and leave a message 802-3500
Want to sell full set of KU basketball tickets. Best offer.
Don't miss the action! Call now and leave a message at 842-1185.
*18 Honda CLIv LX, 4-d, 1 owner, exp car w/ new
tireage, battery & power adapter, 1/2are
battery, 4-wheel drive, 814-0735 or
814-0736
340 Auto Sales
1983 Black Jeep CJ-3, 8-Speed. Hard op, pop
engine, pull out seatback. $4,000. HOB. Call 832-
565-3700.
1983 Honda Civic, 3rd, 56-pin, 124,000 ml, AC; runs
good. B2300. Call 748-7421
85 Red Pontic Fiero, sunroof, AC, new paint,
excellent condition. 600 BOY 749-3899.
Available at semester break, apts, in new section of West Hills 1000 Eryd Rd. 1 bdm apt. $380/mo. 2 bdm apt. $480/mo. Cable pdt. w/d bookups, dw microwave, ceiling fan, mini blinds, desk chair, office chair, car seat, car cup on bus no. Pet beds. Call 641-3000 or 543-3894.
Available Jan. 1, LARGE 2 for near stadium. Heat, water, cable paid. Call DW, AC, excellent maintenance. $446/mo. Call 814-5797, 843-7881.
Available Jan. 1, 5 bdm apt. on bus route. Call 181555.999.843.843.
1980 WJetta 5,spd,4dr. Good Condition AM-FM cassette $170.00 Call Mike 841-7795.
1985 Ford Ltd. Excellent tires and body Runs great.
24k miles, 919 obo, Call 844-6816.
1983 Honda Civic, 35 sp. 5pt, 124,000 mi, AC runs,
good, $200. Call 749-7421.
Sculpured Nails $29 reg. 42. Reflections West.
232 Ridgement City. 81-492. Ask for. Pam.
1986 Dodge Charger 2-dr hatchback, AM/FM can-
form. In body good and runs well Call 482-4320
$1,456 Call 841-239.
1985 Ford Lld. Excellent tires and b...
370 Want to Buy
Needed up to 4 KU General Admission Basketball tickets. Leave message for Shane at 864-704-503
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
I bedroom gak for rent. Furnished. On bus route.
Questions? "411-384-1944, steal, but I have to move."
Questions? "411-384-1944"
1 Bdrm api , just blocks from campus available for 2nd semester sublease, Washer/dryer, dishwasher, ceiling fan... the works. $320 per mo./per月. 11 Kentucky k865-0720. Call now.
3-bdr. townhouse available Jan. 1, W/D. dishwash-
ing. On golf course and bus route. $690 Call
855-234-2730.
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
very nice! Available Mobile sem. Intelligent! Call
312-867-9000
4 bv house for rent, 2 blocks from campus, clean, good condition, 2nd bedroom. Need help all leaving house.
MASTERCRAFT
Apt. for Rest. 1bldm, new carpet, unfurnished at
20th floor. New carpet and our room are
outside Dec. 1st.婴7/28/month; bedtime 8/31/mon-
day.
OPEN DAILY
designed with you in mind!
Go to ...
offers furnished
10 am - 6 pm
Campus Place·841-1429
1145 Louisiana
Hanover Place-841-1212
Orchard Corners - 749-4226
Regents Court·749-0445 1905 Mass.
Sundance - 841-5255 7th & Florida
Tanglewood-749-2415 10th & Arkansas
Available: Spring semester. Korn at Naimihot
quilt floor, meal call. Plan 801-667, leave
message.
WASTERCRAFT
For lease: 4 bedroom, Sundance apts, near cam-
lor, negotiate, $700 + utilities
Call: 1-800-900-0288
842-4455
For rent brand new 3 bldm 2 bath apt. On the bus
at 11am + /+ calls. Call 864-713-7281
$210/month + /+ calls. Call 864-713-7281
Furnished room for rent with rented kitchen and
room for rent from KU. Off-street parking
no. Pets. Cali 841-5590
Drop Into Our Place to ask about our Mid Term Leases
Colony Woods Apartments
$365-$435
- 3 Hot Tubs
Sekning NEP to sublease NEW EBW bmd condo on 8th
$250 + $9 - utilities. A汪营 ONL [now
03-0456]
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Sand Volleyball Court
- BasketballCourt
- Microwave
- On Bus Route
Share nice large home, neighborhood or stu-
dium with a mobile, a block to KU Reference
482-654 or 482-790
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts.
842-5111 1301 W.24th
Furnished studio apartment. 3 short blocks from KW. Water paid. Off street parking. Pets. 841-
Wishing You The Best This Holiday Season!
Spring sublease for 3 perons. 2 blem. 1 bath, on
8 foot. W/room. $390/mo. 330/mo. /
Avail. I/II-81/82-91/84-92-93
New Four Bdrs Now Available
Best in Lawrence, signing up for next year.
$240/person, 1500 sq ft, all amenities, car ports
Available. For more info call 841-789-81.
Stone college near campus available at semester
Station 1-34, $45/mo, no pets. Call 811-
34-92-54-84.
Rent 1 bdm app. Dec. 1st. Nice and big, close to campus. $25. Water paid. Call 749-0250.
Sub-lease D&bm; 3, bath 215 eb a/mo. Water, gas,
trash pile, phone hook-up, phone hook-up,
call 845-769-4041 call 845-769-4041
Sublane I bdpm lbrm at Meadowbrook. Avail. Dev.
1st form year or Dec. 1 - May 31st Call today
for more info
Subleave Needed! 325a Iowa G-1. Nice neighborhood; $400/millage! Willing to negotiate! 8391-915 or
7266-915
Sublease studios $300/mo including cable. Available immediately. Tel 749-6805.
Now leasing for Spring!
Unique 1 bedroom / 1 bath apt. hard wood floors. 2
bathrooms. 600 sq ft. downstreet. $450/month.
Available on 1, 841, 1984.
Sublease: Natalism Hall, Pool, Rec, Room, Maid
Ready for Spring Semester Call Andy
862-2515
430 Roommate Wanted
1 female needed to share 2 Br. 1 bath apt. Close to
the toilet. Other baths. Other toilet. Other
will free. Avail Jan tat call recyber R32-8453.
1 Roommate needed to share beautiful, historic 3
bedrooms. Wide. Wood floors & W/D
82174 mage. 943-3165
1 roommate (m or l) needed for 3dbm apt.
$200/m + ½/ul to wash/Dryer/dishwasher, on busroute, fully furnished (except for room). Avail. Jan 1 for spring semester. Call 749-1855.
we're making life easier!
duplication in KU bus system to share Waser/Wider-
duplicate in KU bus system to share Waser/Wider-
$17/month. $/Utilities. Call 749-814-145.
1 roommate to share furn. 4 B 8/2 BAp on camp.
3 roommate to share furn. 4 B 8/2 BAp on Dec '93,
'207/mp + /^1 uclat Call Alan 843-4168.
- Weekly Maid Service
•Front Door Bus Service
•"Dine Anytime" with Unlimited Seconds
•Laundry and Vending Facilities
•Free Utilities
Female needed to share townhouse. Will have own room available just for *Washer/dryer* $230/mo + **Cleaning** $180/mo.
FEMALE NEEDED TO SHARE I BR IN 3R HOME. ALL WOOD FLOORS, NEW PAINT, LAUNDRY IN BACK, OFF-STREET PARKING, COURT AREA, AVAILABLE DEC. 1st. CALL: 872-9732 OR 429-6382
NAISMITH
Naismith Drive
Female roommate needs to share 3 bdrm/2 bath Ap. on the corner of hjawk Bdv. & Louisiana $240, mo. washer/dryer. call ASAP 832-2093. Ask, for Jenn.
Female roommate needed to share large 2 BDR,
large kitchen, pet friendly. no pet.
6233rp.no, +.Call 896-7450
8663rp.no, +.Call 896-7450
Looking for a female roommate to share 4 bdmr. 2bh apartment. On bus route, fully furnished & very INEXPENSIVE!! Call Holly or Beth at 865-1481
Male needed for spacious townhouse on golf course. Jan - may $71/mo + 1/2 call Cushion.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Male or female roommate wanted for a 3bm
season. Call David at 848-6935. Lv mg
semester. Call David at 848-6935. Lv mg
open minded female needed to share two bedroom house close to campus January then May Call any
N/S Female needed for 4db. duplex with W/D,
N/S Female needed for $170/m + v+ call. On bus route.
Call 811-7603
Need male roommate for 3 Bdrm Apt close to cam-
puter. Call 822-699-8891, visit Usr. Not Sun-
nny. Call 822-699-8891, leave message
Need a roommate (male or female) ASAP for 3.6
need a roommate. For more information call
843-275-9700
How to schedule an ad:
Need mature, N/S male to share 2 bp apt.
Need mature, N/S female to share $193/mo
SomeUtil p. IDAvil. Jan 7, 1986
One room in spacious 4 BDR unit. Available mid-+
during school holidays. Balcony & color TV
+ color TV $194/month, + /util. Call us: 800-
723-5676.
Roommate needed, Start Dec. 1, $150/m/3 u/13
roommate needed, Start Dec. 1, 2 m/from campa.
campa. 485-743-731 for detail
NSF w/ small dog needs a responsible NSF to肩
provide for their spring semester. $180.
Use UCal 1419.1 or UCal 1419.2.
Roommate needed for beautiful two stocy ap. 3,
min. walk to campus, $212/mo. +1/2 usl. Available.
min. Dece, or Jan 1, lots of windows, patio & yard!
Call 865-3511
Ads phoned in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
110 Starfleet Flight
Classified Information and order form
Stop by the Kaisa 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.
by your signature. You may call print, Lawrence, AR, no longer.
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 Vica account. Ads that are billed to Vica or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days if the cancellation before their expiration date.
When canceling a classified card that was charged on MasterCard or VISA, the advertiser's will be credited for the unused days. Refunds on cancelled cards 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 gate lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
Demonstration
Name, of insortions:
3 lines
4 lines
6-7 lines
8-10 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.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00.
Rates per line per day
105 personal
110 business personalis
122 announcements
130 entertainment
Cost per mile per day
1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-29X 30+X
2.05 1.55 1.05 .95' .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 365 for sale
255 help wanted 440 auto acts
225 professional services 368 miscellaneous
275 taxi service
Classifications
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
1
2
3
4
5
Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper___
Name: PI
Address:
VISA
Method of Payment (Check on) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansan)
Furnish the following if you are charming your ad:
MasterCard
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
Signature:
The University Deakin Kansan, 119 Stauter Flint Hall, lawrence. KS. 66045
By GARY LARSON
THE FAR SIDE
© 1993 FarWorks, Inc./Dist. by Universal Press Syndicate
New Age construction workers
16
Friday, November 19, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FINALDAY!
If you are interested in any of the following options for Spring 1994, forms will be available outside the Enrollment Center today, November 19 from 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
- Board of Class Officers
- Freshman Class Dues $10.00
- Sophomore Class Dues $8.00
- Junior Class Dues $8.00
- Senior Class Dues $10.00
- Jayhawker Yearbook $30.00
- KUonWheelsPass
- SUAMovie Card $25.00
You must be enrolled prior to selecting options. Class schedule for Spring 1994 and KUID must be shown.
Today is the last day to fill out options forms.
Fee payment by mail is due by December 8 (postmarked by December 3,1993).
1
r
CAMPUS: Oread Forum callers say they want a fall break but not a longer semester. Page 3.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL. 103, NO.66
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22,1993
(USPS 650-640)
Kennedy shooting shocked University
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
Watson librarian Paulette Diflopp remembers a cool afternoon during her high school days in Long Beach Calif. 30 years ago today.
"It was right after gym class and we were all showering when we heard the news," Difilippo said. "People were running all over saying 'Kennedy's been shot.' We were shocked and saddened. It was really quite unbelievable."
Nov. 22, 1963 is a day that many people at KU remember like it was yesterday — the day that President John F. Kennedy was assassinated.
Donald McCoy, professor of history, was teaching at KU when he heard the news.
"Radios were going and people were trying to tear themselves away from their television sets," McCoy said. "We discussed it during the class that day and shock is the emotion that comes to my mind. Sorrow and shock. After all, people's aspirations were tied in with this man."
McCoy said the media had a huge impact on the exposure and publicity of the Kennedv assassination.
"It took a greater toll on much of the public because it was more of a personal situation," he said, comparing it to the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln. "People had their attention focused on this man daily."
It was a draining day and week that followed. McCov said.
"The radios and the televisions were saying 'The president is dead.' Everybody was affected and left wondering what this meant politically for the future of the country."
It was raining when Barbara Ballard and a friend went into Chandler's shoe store in St. Louis, 30 years ago, to buy a pair of black suede shoes.
"We walked in and everyone was huddled around the television set," said Ballard, dean of student life. "We asked what happened, and they told us the president had been shot.
"I only half hearted bought that pair of black suede pumps that day."
Hugh Conover, Lawrence senior,
was only a sixth grader in Venice, Fla.
in 1963. But he still remembers that
November day in science class.
"We were playing with a short wave radio that belonged to our teacher, an eccentric science buff," Conover said. "On the civil defense band, they said 'We've just received confirmation that the president has been shot.'"
School was let out after lunch, he said.
"We were shocked and terrified and there were lots of kids crying," he said. "I remember going home and being glued to the the TV. There was a lot of disbelief and then the sorrow and the fear set in."
RODE-QD
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Kyle Wegner, Wichita sophomore, bowls a frozen turkey in the lobby of Ellsworth Hall. The competition last night was put on by the All Hall Program Committee, which consists of resident assistants, hall government members and residents of the hall. The turkeys will be cooked and eaten at a later date.
Turkev bowl
Airline strike spurs scramble for flights
Many KU students may be celebrating holidays in Kansas
By Tracl Carl Kansan staff writer
Marnie Dodson, Amarillo, Texas, senior, had a flight home on American Airlines at 7:30 p.m. Friday.
But Dodson had to spend Friday night at a hotel near Kansas City International Airport and leave Saturday on a Delta Airlines flight to Dallas. She then took an American flight to Amarillo.
She is one of many KU students whose Thanksgiving travel plans have been changed due to an American Airline flight attendants strike that began Thursday.
But the hotel and flight on Delta did not cost her anything, she said, and she was not upset.
"The airline was trying the hardest it could to get everyone on flights," she said.
She now has another flight scheduled on Delta in case her flight home is canceled.
Linda Deal, spokesperson for American Airlines, said canceled flights were being rerouted on other flights.
"We are doing our best to accommodate all passengers whether it is on United or another airline," she said.
Passengers will have a choice between taking another flight or accepting a refund, Deal said. They also can receive credit for another flight within the next year.
She said passengers should call the airline or their travel agent before they left for the airport to check on last minute changes. American's telephone number for reservations is 1-800-433-7300.
They also should arrive at the airport two to three hours before the scheduled takeoff time, she said.
STRIKE CONTINUES: American Airlines turns down a proposal for a mediated board.
Page 7.
American should know more about which flights are canceled and which are rescheduled by today, she said.
"More and more flight attendants are crossing the picket lines every day," she said.
VICE Commons, a travel agent for the Travel Center, 1601 W. 23rd St., said Saturday that many students already had talked with her about how the strike would affect their plane tickets.
Rescheduling helped many students get home, but not always at their original times and days.
"Most of them I've been able to help so far, but many of them have to skip class and go early," she said.
Commons said she was making duplicate reservations on other airlines for students in case their original reservation was canceled. But for the large number of students flying to Chicago, making reservations with another airline will not be easy.
The two other airlines that fly to Chicago from Kansas City International Airport are taking American ticket holders, but there are not many seats available. Commons said. United Airlines, which flies to O'Hare International Airport, is confirming seats for American ticket holders whose flights were canceled. Southwest Airlines, which flies to Midway Airport, is accepting American ticket holders on standby only, Commons said.
Many students may have to return home next week.
"Forget coming home on Sunday the 28th," Commons said.
Students should keep in touch with their travel agent and American and be prepared for delays at the airport, Commons said.
"The lines are going to be incredible," she said.
Sexologist honored, wins H.O.P.E. award
Students appreciate Dailey's teaching style
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
After being presented with the H.O.P.E. award recognizing excellence in teaching. Dennis Dailey said he felt his 25 years of teaching had paid off.
"This is a neat opportunity to be recognized for that effort," said Dailey, professor of social welfare. "It makes it all feel worthwhile."
Kris Johnson, Nortonville senior and a student in Dailey's Human Sexuality and Everyday Life class, said she appreciated Dailey's knowledge of class material and the way he encouraged students to ask questions.
"I like his openness and the fact that he cares
for his students and what he's teaching," Johnson said. "He's genuine."
The Honor for the Outstanding Progressive Educator award was established by the KU class of 1959 and recognizes outstanding professors who use unique teaching styles. It is the only KU award for teaching excellence bestowed exclusively by students.
Dennis Dalley
Ben Schwartz, Northbrook, Ill., senior, and president of the senior class, said that although the other four finalists would have made excellent choices, Dalley deserved it most this year.
"Dennis Dailey has that enthusiasm of a H.O.P.E. winner and cares so much for his students." Schwartz said. "He had a great interview."
The Board of Class Officers and members of the senior class nominate professors for the annual award. Members of the Board and other campus groups then interview the five finalists. The names of H.O.P.E. award winners are engraved on a plaque inside the Kansas Union.
Dailey joined KU's social welfare faculty in 1969. His undergraduate class, Human Sexuality in Everyday Life, attracts about 500 students a semester. Dailey also teaches a graduate class in the same subject.
He said the class gave him the opportunity to work more closely with students than most professors.
"The subject matter of the class — sex and relationships — is prevalent in students' lives, and I try to translate some of the info from the class into their contemporary lives," he said. "I think they appreciate that."
Dailey joined the University's social wellfa^™
faculty in 1969. He received a Chancellor's Distinguished Teaching Professor award in November 1990 and the Outstanding KU Social Welfare Faculty Award in 1989.
Dailey is listed as "one of the most popular professors on campus" in the "Fiske Guide to College," edited by Edward Fiske, former education columnist for the New York Times. Dailey has a doctorate degree in social work from Washington University in St. Louis. His teaching, research and consulting specialties include sex therapy, family sexual abuse, sexual dysfunction, dynamics of aging, life cycles and sex roles.
Other finalists for the award were Jeff Aube, associate professor of medicinal chemistry; Timothy Bengtson, associate professor of journalism; Barbara Woods, director of continuing education in pharmacy practice; and Greg Shepherd, assistant professor of communication studies.
INSIDE Heading to the Big Apple
Kansas' 73-56 victory against California on Friday sends the Jayhawks to the NIT semifinal in New York for Thanksgiving break.
Page 12.
KANSAS 24
Season finale
The Jayhawks sent the Tigers home emptyhanded Saturday, shutting out Missouri in the last game of the season.
Page 11.
Ewing Kauffman's
1975
Monya Downey, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, is a graduate of Westport High School, which once had one of the highest dropout rates in Kansas City.
Monya Downey knew she had everything she needed to succeed at KU... except money. Ewing Kauffman's Project Choice offered the solution.
Stories by Carlos Tejada Photos by Holly McQueen
Monya Downey found her graduation momentos the day she received the news.
"That was my proudest memory. Not only was I graduating, but I was going to college."
She had ransacked her room on a whim to find the tassel, the robe, the video of the ceremony. But the phone call later that day from her aunt soured her discovery. Ewing Kauffman, the man behind her graduation, had died.
"It was a memory — a flash that all came back at once," she says of that moment.
On that first day of August, Downey slipped the rediscovered robe over her shoulders to relish what she says was the proudest moment of her life.
Today, Downey smiles at the memory. But on that morning, the irony was too painful for smiles.
"I was sad all over again," she
Except for her own personal drive — and the help of a kindly Kansas City billionaire — she might never have accomplished her childhood dream of attending KU.
She tells the story from an armchair in the Burge Union, her hands moving with each word. The gestures fill the space not occupied by her small body. Only the black book bag at her feet — the one with "Project Choice" lettered in gold on the side — gives an indication that she is different from most students at the University of Kansas.
says. "Mr. Kauffman was gone."
"Ive never seen somebody with so much generosity in his heart," Downey says, smiling. "When the Royals were losing, he still kept them. He helped people be aware of drugs.
"The man was outstanding."
See LEGACY, Page 10.
Legacy of Hope
1.
2
Monday, November 22,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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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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 748-0783
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a Catholic law student discussion group at 12:30 p.m. today in 109 Green Hall. For more information, call 843-0357.
Clan na daDagha ValFather (Clans of the Good God all Father) will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove F in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Debra or Michael Terry at 841-2696.
KU Kempo will meet at 6 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Ershadi at 842-4713.
KU Tae Tween Do Club will meet at 6 p.m. today in 207 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jacob Wright at 749-284 or
Jason Anishanslin at 843-3099
Harambe will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the American Baptist Center, 1629 W. 19th St. For more information, call Anthony Case at 865-1682.
Black Student Union will meet at 7 tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Terry Bell at 864-3984.
Japanese Student Association will meet at 7 onight at Parlor C in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kuniko at 841-5927, Azusa at 841-6473 or Keisuke at 864-5726.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a "Fundamentals of Catholicism" class at 7 tonight at the Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will show a video, "Exploring the Faith," at 8 atonight at the Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
Weather hot line offered for holiday travel
WEATHER
from 8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. both days for students concerned about holiday travel, said Robyn Weeks, president of the Kansas Chapter of the American Meteorological Society. The hot line number is 864-4329.
Weather around
Atlanta: 65°/48°
Chicago: 59°/38°
Houston: 67°/52°
Miami: 81°/68°
Minneapolis: 40°/22°
Phoenix: 76°/54°
Salt Lake City: 54°/37°
Seattle: 35°/25°
Omaha: 57°/27°
LAWRENCE: 60°/40°
Kansas City: 62°/43°
St. Louis: 63°/46°
Wichita: 61°/38°
Tulsa: 65°/38°
TODAY
Tomorrow Wednesday
Partly sunny and warm
High: 60°
Low: 40°
Mostly cloudy and cold
High: 30°
Low: 18°
Chance for light snow or flurries
High: 21°
Low: 5°
An up-to-the-minute weather hot line will be available today and tomorrow for students who need forecasts or travel conditions for major U.S. cities. The hot line will be available
Kansanstaffreport
Cloud
瘟疫
Source: Associated Press
For weather information for other U.S. cities, call 864-4329
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3
Monday, November 22, 1993
Callers say fall break would relieve stress
But students do not want longer semester
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
KU students want a fall break.
But the students do not want to extend the fall semester any longer than necessary.
Those were the most common responses of the 30 calls to the Oread Forum's topic of whether KU should have a fall break.
Students said relieving stress and catching up on homework were the best reasons for having a fall break.
The main reason students were against a fall break was that students did not want to have a longer semester. If they did not have to make up the missed days of class, the students said a fall break would be great.
Some said KU should have the entire week off before Thanksgiving because many students left early and did not go to classes on Monday or Tuesday.
Others said they should not have to make up the missed class time because the Board of Regents had lengthened the semesters. In 1992, the finals period was shortened from two weeks to one week.
Several students said the only problem with Thanksgiving vacation was that the break was too late in the semester. After Labor Day, there are 11 weeks of classes before Thanksgiving. Students said the best time for a fall break would be during the middle or toward the end of October, either on Columbus Day or Halloween.
The break did not have to be a full week, students said, only a day or two. A three-day or four-day weekend would be the best way.
Q P E A D
F Q P H M
8 6 4 - 9 0 4 0
Look for the Oread Forum and your chance to discuss issues affecting KU students and the University.
Instead of having the weekend begin on a Thursday
or Friday, some students said there should be no classes on Monday and Tuesday. This way, classes that were held one or two times during a week would not be canceled.
But for many students, the current academic schedule is fine.
If KU were to have a fall break, some said it would hurt them academically because during vacations students tend to forget what they had learned, but others said they would have to study during a break to catch up on homework.
Time was the biggest problem mentioned by students who did not want the break. Although they did not want to cut into their summer vacation, they also did not want to shorten their Christmas vacation any more than necessary.
A small number of students said KU did not need a fall break at all because Thanksgiving vacation was long enough.
University governance's calendar committee creates the University's academic schedule for approval by University Council. Students who are interested in discussing a fall break further should contact the University governance office in 308 StrongHall.
10
Melissa Lacey / KANSAN
Gospel voice
Shawn Derritt, Kansas City, Kan., senior, belts out a song during the Inspirational Gospel Voices fall concert. The group and two others sang gospel songs Saturday night in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Planning can prevent stressful family holiday
By Shan Schwartz
Kansan staff writer
Most KU students are heading home this week for Thanksgiving break.
For many freshmen, it will be the first trip home since leaving in August, but their stay at home may not be as pleasant as they or their parents expect.
Changes in the students and in the rest of the family can lead to conflicts and stress at home during the holidays.
Frank Desalvo, director of Counseling and Psychological Services, said students often changed in many ways after attending college and living away from home.
"Usually the student has developed different attitudes or feelings," Desalvo said. "Or perhaps they've engaged in behaviors they
couldn't do before, or have gotten away from things they previously had to do, like going to church every week."
The students are not necessarily the only ones who change after they leave for college.
"The families change, too, while the student is away," Desalvo said. "Maybe a younger sibling has moved into the student's bedroom, or Mom doesn't cook the same favorite meal like she used to."
Desalvo said students could preempt some conflicts if they prepared in advance.
door."
"They know what their parents are going to say or ask," he said. "They can practice what they're going to say, so they're ready to handle themselves in a mature, responsible way instead of pounding on the table or slamming the
Communication and openness are the keys to keeping conflicts under control, Desalvo said. Both parents and students need to identify the problems or disagreements and be willing to discuss them.
"It's not something that will go away after the weekend," Desalvo said. "It's the beginning of a long period of adjustment."
Desalvo said that students may try to avoid the conflicts by not going home during other vacations, but avoidance would not alleviate the conflicts.
And the students should not feel that they are the only ones under stress, Desalvo said. Parents feel stress, too.
"They see that the students are grown up and taking care of themselves, and that's what can make the parents stressful. It's a big transition for them."
"It's hard for parents to resign their job as caretakers," he said.
Kathryn Kretschmer, director of New Student Orientation, said she encouraged students to call home to discuss their visit ahead of time.
"We encourage them to discuss issues related to curfew, using the car, money, things that have changed since high school," Kretschmer said.
Kretschmer said students still may have to live under their parents' rules, but with advance discussion the students might reach a compromise.
"And the students should plan some time for themselves if they don't want to be with their family 24 hours a day," Kretschmer said.
BELLA JEAN
Alex Freij, Taylonville, Ill., freshman, packs his belongings in his McColum Hall room. Freij is going home today for Thanksgiving break.
William Alix / KANSAN
Regents choose executive director
By Christoph Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
The Board of Regents announce on Friday that Stephan Jordan, deputy director for finance and planning for the Arizona Board of Regents, had been selected as executive director of the Kansas Board of Regents.
Jordan, 45, will take over as executive director Jan. 10. He will replace interim executive director Warren Corman, who took over for Stanley Koplik when Koplik left in September to become the chancellor of the University of Massachusetts system.
Jordan was one of three finalists who were interviewed Thursday and Friday by the board. The other two finalists were Richard Crofts, assistant to the chancellor at Mankato State University in Minnesota, and Edward Jakubauskas, a higher education consultant.
Regents member Shirley Harman said choosing Jordan was difficult because all three finalists were exceptional.
Jordan said he was looking forward to working on Regents issues such as open admissions for Regents universities and whether Washburn University should be admitted to the Regents system.
"He had the more all around agenda we needed," she said. "He'll be a great asset to the Kansas system."
"I certainly hope I can make a contribution to those," he said.
Jordan said the quality of the Regents system was what drew him to consider the job after being approached by the Regents search committee.
As executive director of the board, Jordan will oversee the Regents staff and help regulate and formulate policies concerning the Regents system.
"I was looking for an opportunity where there would be a group of dedicated people," he said. "And it looks as if I found them here."
Regents member Rick Harman said Jordan's experience in the Arizona Regents system and as vice chancellor for budgets and facilities at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center made him the clear unanimous choice.
"He just came across as a very capable young man," he said. "I think he's a very fine choice."
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Monday, November 22,1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Blocking clinics illegal thanks to Congress vote
There is no need or reason for violence to permeate society in the name of any cause. Congress passed a bill that will
Congress passed a bill that will allow federal officials to stop abortion clinic blockades. This action by Congress is a clear message that people will not tolerate vigilante demonstrations at abortion clinics.
We are all aware of the continuing trouble at abortion clinics in Wichita. This year, physician George Tiller was shot in the arm by an abortion protester. In Florida, an abortion doctor was shot to death. This needless violence is about to be curbed. The use of force, threats and intimidation against women seeking abortions and doctors providing abortions have become federal offenses. Vandalism of family planning clinics also will render stricter penalties.
Critics of the bill claim infringement of First Amendment rights. This argument is false. Protesters still will be allowed to congregate, distribute leaflets and carry signs. But they will not be able to lock themselves to cars or create human chains in front of abortion clinic entrances — actions that not only create a dangerous atmosphere but also cost a lot of money in increased police and fire department manpower.
The Senate's strong vote was partially attributed to the increased presence of women in the Senate. Seven women now have seats, and the five Democratic women lobbied the floor the entire day. Some antiabortion senators also voted in favor of the bill.
As Sen. Dave Durenberger, R-Minn., said, "Violence is no response to the issue that divides us."
MANNY LOPEZ FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Students: take interest in health care questions
With the debate over NAFTA finished, the attention of Washington policy makers now is focused on health care. Students should
Attention of Washington policy makers now is focused on health care. Students should study and follow what is going on in Washington because health care, more than any other issue, will affect their lives in the future.
There are currently several bona fide health care plans on the table covering both ends of the political spectrum. Each one attempts to provide citizens the health care they are entitled to, but in vastly different ways. One liberal proposal is for the United States to adopt a single-payer system in which people can choose their own doctors, as they do now, but with the government picking up the tab. A conservative plan keeps the system much as it is, with only minor tuning. A compromise between the two is Clinton's middle-of-the-road plan involving a mixture of government and free market forces.
Examine the plans and ask yourself questions about each. The most basic question is whether the plan will guarantee everyone health care. If a plan does not, then what is the point? Another question to ask is where the money for the plan will come from — savings, taxes or both? Will the health care plan cover all health problems or just catastrophic ones? Of course, preventive medicine should be a part of any plan, because that will save money by eliminating many minor things that, left unchecked, will turn into big problems. Additionally, will the plan cover mental, as well as physical health?
Students should familiarize themselves with the various plans and decide which one is the best for the country. It is literally a matter of life and death.
MIKE SILVERMAN 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
Editor
Assistant to the editor ...J.R. Clairborne
News ...Stacy Friedman
Editorial ...Terllyn McCormick
Campus ...Ben Grove
Sports ...Kfleri Fogler
Photo ...Kip Chin, Renze Kneeber
Features ...Era Zwolfe
Graphics ...John Paul Wolf
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Editors
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 Fuaco
Classified mgr..Gretchen Ketterleinrich
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 photographed.
The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newroom, 111 Staffer-Flint Hall.
THE THANKSGIVING
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DAYS
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HOOD udk
93
THE THANKSGIVING FEAST:
JUST 11 CLASS DAYS LEFT
HOOD UDK 93
THE HEARTBURN:
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THE
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America loves lawyers; lawyers love America
I am sick and tired of all this lawyer-bashing. When I hear somebody say something bad about lawyers, it makes me want to walk up and spit in his face, thereby causing him to shove me, so I can fall down and file a $17 million personal-injury lawsuit against him.
Because I happen to think lawyers are great, I am darned grateful that I live in a country that has, pound for pound, more lawyers than any other country in the entire world. We NEED a lot of lawyers, to protect all these rights we have as Americans, including — but not limited to — the right to life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness, job security, decent housing, affordable health care, the capture of happiness, a non-smoking section, a joke-free work environment and a smoking section.
We have so many rights that we cannot possibly keep track of them all with our primitive non-legal minds.
Then a retired Philadelphia autosupplies dealer named Meyer E. Duboff, who used SmithKline denture products, contacted his lawyer, Jay S. Cohen.
From 1985 to 1990, a company named SmithKline Beecham manufactured denture adhesives sold under the names "Orafix Special" and "Brace." SmithKline recalled these products in 1990 after they were found to contain trace amounts of benzene, a carcinogen. There is no evidence anybody got cancer from using them.
A fine example of this, brought to my attention by alert reader Leon Rothman, is the Case of the Denture Adhesive Menace, as reported in a Miami Herald story by Bruce Taylor Seeman. Let me review the facts of the case:
COLUMNIST
DAVE
BARRY
"He called me and said, 'I've been using this stuff for years. Can you
check it out?" Cohen told the Miami Herald.
OK, is everybody following this so far? ONE GUY has called his lawyer. This guy does NOT have cancer. NOBODY has cancer. Nobody is claiming ANYBODY actually got hurt.
So the lawyer told the guy: "Gosh, Meyer, nothing really happened. Why don't you just forget about it?"
NO! Just kidding! That might happen in some backward, underlawyered nation like Japan, but not here in the U.S.A.! What happened here, of course, was that Cohen and some other lawyers filed a class action lawsuit against SmithKline on behalf of Duboff and all the other denture-adhesive users out there who had not yet noticed that they were victims.
And of course SmithKline, to avoid the hassle and publicity and legal expense of a trial, settled out of court. Three groups got money in the settlement:
1. MR. DUBOFF. He got $25,000.
Fair enough. It was his idea in the first place.
2. THE OTHER DENTURE-ADHESIVE VICTIMS. They were notified of their victimhood via newspaper advertisements and direct mailings, paid for by SmithKline. About 650 people sent in proof of purchase — each of these people received a package of discount coupons for SmithKline.
line products.
3. THE LAWYERS FOR THE PLAIN-TIF. If you are a fan of justice, American Style, you will be very excited when I tell you what the lawyers got, in expenses and legal fees.
"It's a lot of money," said Cohen. "But there's also a lot of money that goes into these cases."
Thev got $954.934.57.
I am sure there is! A lot of money! Also a lot of work! It cannot be easy, taking a case wherein it appears, to the naked untrained lay person's eye, that nobody has suffered any observable harm, and using legal skills, turning it into a financial transaction that involves thousands of people and a million dollars! Plus coupons!
So, the lawyers certainly deserved this money, although I'm certain that, for them, the really important thing was simply the satisfaction of knowing that all those victims are now finally able, at long last, to put this horrible denture-adhesive nightmare behind them and begin leading happier lives, possibly by applying their $7 settlements toward world cruises, vacation homes, etc.
Yes, we owe a tremendous debt of gratitude to these lawyers and the estimated 14.2 billion other members of the American legal community, many of whom, I am sure, will write to me on their official letterhead stationery to respond to this column. I look forward to reading these letters; I just hope that, in handling them, I do not suffer paper cuts, which could cause me, as a writer, to become incapacitated, not to mention pain and suffering.
And I'm not settling for any stinking coupons.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Packwood deserves protection as a citizen
In response to *Kansan*'s viewpoint, "Packwood's Diaries should be subpoenaed," I'd like to point out a few things.
dent that would be established would suggest that if one's motives and thoughts are not questionable and do not have illegal intentions then there is nothing to worry about." How many people are there whose motives and thoughts are about question? None come to my mind. Who would judge if you are beyond reproach? Will it be one of these mythical, perfect people?
What really is worrisome is what the Kansan believes is the answer to the personal dilemma of this loss of privacy. He states that "the prece-
Another Senator. perhaps?
Allother Senator, perhaps?
Whether or not Mr. Packwood broke any law, he has inalienable rights as a citizen of our country. If our government or the Kansan overlook these rights in a quest for justice, what rights do any of us have? Can there be any justice?
William Custard Olathe senior
GUEST COLUMNIST
Some facts and history about Rock Chalk Revue
During the past several weeks, many people have been asking me the same question: "So, Julie, have you picked the five shows for Rock Chalk Revue yet?"
PETER BERKMAN
They always seem a bit surprised when I tell them that I have nothing to do with that decision.
How we put on the show is what is most important.
The show has encountered changes in its format, its judging process and its location.
After interviewing each group's director, the judges have spent the last two weeks reading over the shows and finalizing their decisions.
An independent panel of judges has to select five Rock Chalk Revue finalists. This year there are 11 judges of varying ages and backgrounds. They do, however, have a few things in common: none are affiliated with any KU housing organization; none are KU students or faculty members; all have some knowledge of Rock Chalk Revue; and all have expertise in varied areas of in the theater.
Each show is identified by a random number to ensure that all groups (residence halls, scholarship halls, fraternities, sororites) remain anonymous.
After the judges vote for the shows they like, the ballots will be tabulated by our faculty advisor and an independent party.
One of the biggest misconceptions about Rock Chalk Revue is the show selection. Though the process may seem mysterious and complex, it really is quite simple. Please allow me to clear the air right here, but first I would like to give you a little bit of Rock Chalk's history.
The voting results will remain in our adviser's care until I announce tonight which shows will be in and which shows will be out.
Once again, this will be an exciting year for Rock Chalk Revue. "The Word is Out" will be performed February 24, 25 and 28.
The name Rock Chalk Revue came from a campus-wide contest in which the winner received $10.
University of Mars
In 1949, a highly motivated KU student by the name of Roy Wonder decided that the University of Kansas needed an all-campus variety show, similar to Kansas State's now defunct Y-Opheum.
We had 14 groups turn in shows of magnificent quality,but unfortunately only five will perform.
Since the first show opened on April 1, 1950 in Hoch Auditorium. For the youngsters out there, Hoch is the historic pile of ashes on Jayhawk Boulevard between Wescoe and Marvin halls.
Julie Thies is a Overland Park senior and the executive director of Rock Chalk Revue.
Can I interest you boys in our "Thanksgiving-Turkey Special"?
Sure.
Well, as you can imagine, this mouthly little Wildcat caused a stir on the Hill, and soon Wonder had a lot of campus support.
Wonder received a lukewarm response from fellow students. Also, a letter from Russ Miller, a Kansas State student appeared in the Kansas ridiculing Wonder and all of KU for stealing such a strong tradition.
Can I interest you boys in our Thanksgiving Turkey Special?
Sure.
Ya know, Hal, eating is the one thing you can do without worrying who you are offending.
By golly, no one's gonna tell me what I can or can't eat. And right now, I'm gonna eat some turkey.
---
Ya know, Hal, eating is the one thing you can do without worrying who you are offending.
turkey.
by Joel Francke
Daddy, what's that? Huh, Daddy?
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
R
Monday, November 22,1993
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TOMMY HAYES
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Helping hands
Matthew Brown, Overland Park junior, is treated after coilling with a car while riding his bicycle on Indiana Street. Brown was treated and released Friday at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
Fall graduates must file applications
Deadline for filing with dean's office is fast approaching
By Kathleen Stole Kansan staff writer
Students who plan to graduate in:
December have until Nov. 30 to file
applications for degrees.
Fonda Briles, a recorder in the Office of the Registrar, said students who plan to graduate after this semester could pick up applications in their dean's office. Students who meet their school or department's degree requirements will have their applications approved.
"If they've gone through a graduation check, they should know if they're set with everything," she said.
Diana Fox, coordinator of records and graduation for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said students in the college usually fill out their applications for degrees with a counselor during a graduation check the
However, December graduates may be at a disadvantage compared to May graduates because of the lower number of job recruiters who come to KU during the fall, Heuring said.
Although loans and departmental scholarships still may be available to those seeking a second undergraduate degree, most institutional scholarships are not, Cooper said. However, graduate students have a greater variety of financial supports from which to chose.
For that reason, students seeking double majors often do not file applications for degrees until the second major is complete, Cooper said.
For students who skip a graduation check and, upon applying for their degrees, unexpectedly find themselves just short of meeting graduation requirements, there are options such as correspondence courses, Fox said.
"We try to see them in time so they can make adjustments if they have to add a course or change a course that's incorrect," she said.
"There are probably fewer campus recruiters in the fall semester than in the spring," he said. "They still come this time of year, but the numbers aren't as high as they are the second
Students with undergraduate degrees are no longer eligible for federal grants for college, such as the Pell Grant, because of federal regulations, said Julie Cooper, associate director at the Office of Student Financial Aid.
semester preceding graduation
"They want to make access for students getting their first degree," she said.
Mike Heuring, assistant director of the University Placement Center, said graduating in December could mean less competition for jobs. Last year, 1,592 student graduated from KU in December, and 3,650 graduated in May.
Graduation also has at least one financial consequence.
semester. If they can only pick one, they'll come in the spring."
"Even though it's not free money, there are certain advantages to being a graduate," she said.
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Darin Taylor
David Treat
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Thank you from the women of Alpha Xi Delta.
You're supposed to get a lot out of college, but this is ridiculous.
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Self-study prepares University for 1994 NCAA recertification
Even as KU sports fans begin to look forward to a successful Jayhawk basketball season, faculty and administrators discussed Friday plans for similar success with the NCAA certification of KU's athletic programs.
Kansanstaffwriter
John Leavens, NCAA representative for certification, told members of a University certification committee that the University's year-long study would involve gathering and evaluating information about the KU athletic programs.
Under a program started nationally in September, each of the 300 Division I NCAA institutions must perform a self-study every five years to receive NCAA certification, Leavens said. The self-study gives the schools a chance to prepare for a certification review by the NCAA.
the mission and goals of the KU athletic program, including the amount of institutional control the University has over the program;
Leavens said the KU self-study would explore at least four areas of student-athlete concerns, including:
the academic standards of student-athletes, including comparisons
of the admissions and graduation rates between student-athletes and the rest of the KU students;
the financing of the KU intercollegiate athletic programs along with the raising and distribution of revenue for student-athletes; and
the fair and equal treatment of all female and minority athletes, including financial support, scholarship availability and number of women's teams.
"There's a lot of anxiety on some of the memberships' part that this is a make-work effort," Leavens said. "The process is intended to be lean and mean. It's not intended to shower the campus with paper."
To prepare for the NCAA representatives' review in November 1994, members of the four certification self-study committees needed to write a focused and comprehensive report, Leavens said. Instead of only looking for problems or highlights of the athletic program, the University should approach the self-study as an opportunity to look at how well KU athletic programs serve student athletes, Leavens said.
"It shouldn't be scary that you are going to identify concerns in your program," Leavens said. "It will help you move toward a higher level of excellence."
The KU athletic program would only lose complete NCAA certification if the University decided to totally ignore any recommendations from the self-study report or those of the NCAA certification representatives, Leavens said.
Bob Frederick, athletic director,
said he looked forward to the review
of the athletic programs.
"We feel we're in pretty good shape on the four issues," Frederick said. "What we think we're doing now conforms to standards of the institution and the NCAA. But now we have the University-wide community to help us validate this."
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs and chair of the NCAA athletics certification steering committee, said the study would attempt to involve all members of the University.
"We want to keep a good flow of information to the community about the process," Ambler said. "The keystone to the program will be full community involvement."
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Teens to be tried as adults in carjacking
Two Topeka youths who were arrested in the shooting of a Lawrence man will not stand trial as adults, a district court judge ruled Friday.
Courtney Crockett and James Wadley, both 17, will be tried as juveniles, Judge James Paddock said. Paddock's three-page ruling said that both would benefit from the court's juvenile counseling and rehabilitation programs.
Neither has performed well in school, and neither has a criminal record, the ruling said.
shot the victim and will stand trial as an adult. His trial is scheduled to begin Feb. 2.
Crockett and Wadley were arrested Sept. 18 in a murder and attempted carjacking in Riverfront Park in North Lawrence. A third Topeka teen, Abraham Orr, also was arrested. Orr was identified as the one who
Crockett comes from a single-parent family and suffers from low self-esteem, Paddock said. Wadley comes from a close-knit family but also suffers from low self-esteem, with a tendency to follow anyone who shows an interest in him.
raddock said that although the crime was violent, Crockett and Wadley were not principal actors and did not need to be tried as adults.
SUA adviser receives award
After four years as the program coordinator for Student Union Activities, Kent Kennedy has received some recognition from his peers.
The National Association for Campus Activities awarded Kennedy its Outstanding Advisor of the Year during its annual Heart of America regional conference this month. The Heart of America association consists of schools from Kansas, Colorado, Missouri and Nebraska. Kennedy said.
As SUA adviser since 1989, Kennedy has worked with students to help them prepare, produce and evaluate SUA programs and events. By advising SUA members on planning concerts and lectures, Kennedy has helped bring live music and comedy to the University.
Compiled from Kansan staff reports
Attention KU Students! Safe Ride
will run from 11p.m. to 3a.m.on Tuesday, November 23 and will resume on Sunday, November 30 at 11p.m.
Safe Ride will not operate during Thanksgiving break or any other school breaks.
K
Have a safe holiday &
Don't Drink and Drive!
STUDENT
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"I started with MCI in November 1991. I'm a full-time Commercial Sales Representative in addition to working on my communications degree. MCI has not only paid for my college through their tuition reimbursement program, but I also earn a gross salary plus commission of $22.00 an hour for life after the classroom. Plus with the growth of the telecommunications industry, MCI is a great way to get an edge in the corporate job market."
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NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November.22, 1993
7
Board may interrupt strike
200,000 lose flights daily on American
FORT WORTH, Texas — The chairman of American Airlines turned down a call yesterday from flight attendants for a presidential mediation board and announced that up to two-thirds of this week's flights could be canceled.
The Associated Press
On the fourth day of the planned 11-day strike by the Association of Professional Flight Attendants, chair Robert L. Crandall acknowledged that American fell short in notifying passengers about canceled flights because it is impossible to know which flight attendants would report for work and what flights would be affected.
Unused, non-refundable ticket
holders will get a refund and a $100 voucher toward an American ticket
The 21,000 striking flight attendants have cost the airline at least $10 million a day, Crandall said.
The airline plans to concentrate on flights at Dallas, Miami, New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and San Juan, Puerto Rico, said executive vice president Bob Baker.
Union president Denise Hedges said she wrote Crandall asking him to join her in requesting the emergency panel.
"With no settlement offer from you in sight and the heavy-traffic holiday period now upon us, we've decided to take the initiative and try to end the strike," she said.
Crandall rejected the offer, saying an emergency mediation board would put the airline's future in the hands of people with no long-term interest in the company.
The board had been overseeing contract negotiations between the airlines and the union about differences in pay, health benefits, staffing and scheduling. On Nov. 1, the airline offered a 7.8 percent pay raise for each of four years.
A Department of Transportation official was unsure if the strike would qualify for mediation board arbitration. The panel, an independent government agency, intervenes when there is a significant disruption to the economy.
Those of the average 200,000 passengers daily bumped by the strike have been competing for a dwindling number of seats on rival airlines. Other carriers were accepting American tickets, but empty seats are harder to find as Thanksgiving approaches.
If the board is created, the strikers would be ordered to work.
THE NEWS in brief
NORD
EAST
SOUTH
WEST
NORTH
SWEST
WASHINGTON
Senate passes gun bill imposing waiting limit on handgun purchases
After a day of tense, private negotiations, the Senate with a 63-36 vote Saturday night passed legislation to impose a five-day waiting period on handgun purchases.
The waiting period requirement would phase out as states develop a system allowing for instant background checks.
The bill is named for Jim Brady, former press secretary to President Reagan, who was shot in the head during the 1981 assassination attempt on the former president.
Brady has lobbied furiously for the handgun measure from his wheelchair for many years and had appealed to the Senate to remain in session until it passed the bill.
The bill's chief sponsor there, Rep. Charles Schumer, D.N.Y., said that he still was disturbed by some Senate provisions, including language that would allow dealers to cross state lines to sell guns.
But he was optimistic the differences could be worked out in a conference committee: "I think by the end of the conference we'll have a good Brady bill."
MEXICO CITY
Mexico's largest opposition party prepared to name its presidential candidate yesterday, and another opposition leader turned down a challenge to debate NAFTA as it goes before the Senate.
Senate could approve trade pact
Government approval of the free trade pact is assured. The governing Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, controls 61 of the 64 Senate seats. The vote, the only requirement to ratify the pact, is scheduled for today.
Federal congressman Diego Fernandez de Cevallos was the clear favorite to win the nomination of the National Action Party as its candidate for the August 1994 presidential election.
But Fernandez is given little chance to end the PRI's 64-year hold on power in the election. Within the coming weeks, President Carlos Salinas de Gortari will select the PRI candidate, who is practically assured victory.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
KEVIN
COSTNER
CLINT
EASTWOOD
a Perfect world
**WARNER BROS. MUSIC**
A MALPASO Production KEVIN COSTNER CLINT EASTWOOD "A PERSECT WORLD" Music by LENNIE NIEHAUS
Film Editor JOEL COX Production designed by HENRY BIMSTEAD Director of photography JACK N.GREEN WRITTEN by JOHNE LEE HANCOCK
Produced by MARK JOHNNON and DAVID VALDES Directed by CLINT EASTWOOD
Production Company: Brighton Productions (1-800-642-3591) For the Digital Version
WARNER BROS. Presents
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8
Monday, November 22, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Video game popularity continues
Video game cartridges are still available, but the industry is beginning to introduce CDs to the world of game playing.
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Video games are expected to be more popular than ever this holiday season, but consumers face tougher choices about which ones to buy.
It is the second Christmas for compact disc-based game systems but the first where it is clear that the industry is moving away from cartridge systems for good.
So shoppers must decide whether to buy a $50 to $100 cartridge system that will be outdated in a few years or pay considerably more — as much as $700 — for a CD-based system. Another complication is that there are hundreds of cartridge games currently available and only a few dozen on compact disc.
Analysts and industry executives believe most people will stick with cartridge games for another few years.
"The problem is when you look at the other stuff ... there is a very limited variety, and I think that most people are not convinced that what is new or not yet quite here is better," said Lee Igur, an analyst who follows the video game industry for Volpe, Welty & Co. in San Francisco.
"The compact disc revolution with respect to video games is just beginning," said Gary Jacobson, analyst at Kidder, Peabody & Co. "It is more of a 1995 issue."
The discs hold more data and make possible better sound and graphics, including full motion video. With higher-powered chips running the game systems, players also get faster interaction.
Personal computer makers also have started selling more machines that run compact disc-based programs, although a disc that runs on a PC won't work on a video game system.
Sega of America Inc. began selling a $230 CD player that supplemented its popular Genesis system 13 months ago. By the end of the holiday season, cumulative sales of the unit will have passed 1 million, said Bill White. Sega's vice president of marketing.
Newcomer 3DO Co.'s system, sold under Matsushita's Panasonic label, has gotten a lot of attention because it is also designed to become a gateway for more two-way video and communication services. It costs $700.
Philips, the company that developed CDs, sells an interactive game system that, with a $250 video accessory, also plays movies and music video titles. More are on the way. Atari's new $200 Jaguar system, on sale in just a few cities this Christmas, is to have a CD-player accessory, for another $200, early next year. Also in 1994, Commodore will bring the Amiga CD32 that is on sale in the United Kingdom to the United States.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 22,1993
9
Nontraditional students face challenges
Some find they need assistance balancing classes, kids and jobs
By Colleen Ryckert
Special to the Kansan
The world of a nontraditional student is filled with unique responsibilities. Many worry about child care, juggle full-time jobs with study time and often have difficulty building a social life.
One of their beacons in this tumultuous world is the Student Assistance Center.
More than just an information booth, the center offers direction in finding adequate child care options suggestions for improving time-management skills and help in building an academic social life around a tight schedule.
A nontraditional student is defined as anyone who is married, has children, commutes, is a veteran or who is more than four years older than other student peers.
Lorna Zimmer, director of the center, said the purpose of the center was
to improve the quality of life for all students.
"We try to look at the whole picture and see the problems the way real people see them, not the way a bureaucracy does," Zimmer said.
One of the concerns student parents have is finding reliable child care. Student parents often miss classes because they need to stay home with children.
Zimmer is a member of the vice chancellor's task force for child care. The task force was established this year to identify the most important child care needs and propose some affordable solutions.The task force is made up of students, faculty and administrators.
The task force is studying the child care programs of other comparable universities and is planning to conduct a phone survey of KU parents to find out their concerns. They hope to have a proposal within the next year.
Parents can get help by using a directory at the center. Several child care centers in the Lawrence area are listed with the center.
Even without children, nontraditional students can experience conflicts between their academic and social lives that are more demanding
Laura Morgan, assistant director of the center, said that busy lives away from campus could make it difficult to succeed academically.
than traditional students.
The center offers several workshops throughout the year on time-management, note-taking and study skills.
Rob Cook, a nontraditional Lawrence senior, took the note-taking and time-management workshops last fall. He still uses the skills he learned, he said.
"In note taking, you split your paper in half and write your notes on one side and questions about the notes on the other," he said. "That way, you can also play 'Jeopardy' while you study."
Busy lives away from campus can make the University seem impersonal, Morgan said.
Morgan is the adviser to OAKS — Non-Traditional Student Organization. She said the most beneficial thing the center could do for nontraditional students was to introduce them to OAKS.
But even with a successful academic life, many nontraditional students face other problems.
$ ^{b} $OAKS provides a social support
Non-traditional students are defined by several criteria. of 26,127 total graduate and undergraduate students at KU, the number of students who are:
The breakdown
older than 25 — 8,635
commuters — 2,459
veterans — 368
married, without children — 1,824
married, with children — 1,330
Source: University Relations
Gerry Vernon, Lawrence graduate student and president of OAKS, said OAKS sent out a newsletter to all nontraditional students, sponsored social events and worked closely with the Student Assistance Center to ensure all nontraditional student needs were being addressed.
that the center can't offer," she said.
Morgan said the University had a special interest in nontraditional students.
"Nontraditional students are a real benefit to the University," she said. "I don't know of any instructor on campus who does not appreciate the life experience and diversity these students bring to the classroom."
Poinsettia festival blooms in downtown
By Tracl Carl
Kansanstaffwriter
It is beginning to look a lot like ... a plant store.
Almost anywhere Lawrence residents go this week,poinsettia plants will greet them.
The festive red plant usually associated with the Christmas season is part of the Festival of Poinsettias, a promotion coordinated by the Lawrence Convention and Visitors Bureau. This is the first year for the festival.
Judy Billings, bureau director, said that more than 4,000 pointetias will
be placed in area businesses and public places, including the Kansas and Burge Unions, starting today. All the poinsettias should be in the 151 businesses that are participating in the festival by Wednesday. Each business paid $75 for 10 poinsettias and many bought more, Billings said.
The festival, along with making Lawrence more festive, is part of a promotion to attract people to Lawrence for the holidays.
"It's just a marketing hook," she said.
Advertising about the festival in magazines has snagged the interest of
quite a few people. More than 300 people have called the bureau for information about the festival, which was advertised in Kansas, Iowa, Nebraska and Missouri magazines, Billings said. Advertising in area newspapers will begin this week, she said.
Other new Lawrence holiday activities include a parade of horse-drawn carriages, wagons and buggies down Massachusetts Street. The Eldridge Hotel Old-Fashioned Christmas Parade will begin at 1 a.m. Dec. 4 at Bufford M. Watson Jr. Park.
The parade is not officially part of the festival, Billings said.
Both outlet malls and many downtown businesses will be participating in the festival.
So far the festival seems to be a success. Billings said.
"We have for years tried to promote Lawrence during the holidays," she said. "We just finally hit on a good one."
Greg Easter, manager of Eastons Ltd., 839 Massachusetts St., said the clothing store decided to be a part of the festival as part of the holiday season and not for more business.
"We'll probably give them away to customers right before Christmas," he said.
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1
10
Monday. November 22.1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Ewing Kauffman's
___
Monya Downey's mother, Cheryl Wallace, left. and her stepfather, Lorenzo Wallace, kept her away from the sometimes dangerous streets of Kansas City, Mo., when Monya was a child.
Continued from Page 1.
Downey likes to tell a story about an old violin sold at an auction. Cracked and dusty, the instrument looks as if it will never be of much use to anybody. A wise man buys it for a pittance and takes it home. He replaces the strings and polishes the wood until it shines. Then the wise man offers the violin for sale at another auction, where eager buyers try to outbid each other to buy the instrument.
---
Downey, a graduate of Westport High's class of 1992, says that she — or any of her classmates — easily could he that violin.
And the wise man could be Ewing Kauffman.
"Even though many of the kids in the Westport area are intelligent and capable, people thought they were hopeless," she says. "Mr.Kauffman saw something different. He saw kids with potential who needed help."
Downey was born and raised in Kansas City, Mo. She spent most of her youth in a house owned by her grandmother at 29th Street and Victor Avenue. Each house in the neighborhood has two stories and a front porch, from which parents watch their children play in the street.
"They could watch you outside," Downey says. "Just don't go around the other corner."
Around the other corner, and a few blocks down the street, lies Troost Avenue. There, storefront windows are covered with metal mesh. Some buildings have been left to vandals and the weather. And at night, prostitutes and drug dealers walk the streets.
"You just have to be frank with them and tell them what to watch out for," says Cheryl Wallace, Downey's mother.
Downey says she doesn't remember a lot of noise and crime.
But she remembers poverty.
Legacy of Hope
"The money wasn't there at that point in time," she says. "My mother didn't even have a high school education. There wasn't enough money to feed everybody in the house."
Wallace says times were hard then. After divorcing Downey's father, she worked long hours outside her house.
For the most part, Downey was raised by her grandmother, Minnie Randolph. Wallace says she regrets the lost time with her children, but economics forced her to work.
"I wish I could have been there to see the things you see as a parent," Wallace says. "But I knew everybody knew I had to work."
Closeness and love have kept the family together through hard times, Wallace says. She said a nurturing family kept Downey and her older sister out of trouble.
But they all credit Randolph, a quiet and religious woman who has lived in Kansas City for decades, with being the base of the family. Downey says Randolph gave her the strength to survive tough schools and a dangerous neighborhood.
Randolph says Downey has had that strength all along.
"She's independent, and a little stubborn when she thinks she's right," Randolph says. "She stands up for what she believes in."
Wallace says Downey would have found her way out of the inner city and into post-secondary school no matter what stood in
her way.
"She would have found a way," Wallace says. "It might not have been easy, but she would have found a way."
Downey found a way, but did not find it easy at all.
---
Downey's family moved to Ruskin Heights, a suburb of Kansas City, before her ninth grade year, and she discovered a different world. Ruskin Heights High School was nothing like the schools in the inner city. The school had equipment, facilities and well-trained teachers. After school activities such as athletics, debate and forensic could fill students' afternoons.
So when the lease to their house was pulled after one year, and the family was forced to move back to the same neighborhood, Downey transferred to the last place she wanted to go to high school.
Westport High School.
There, she found the class work unchallenging, the teachers unskilled and the hallways and bathrooms unsafe.
Wallace says she worried that Downey was not receiving a proper education at her new school.
"This really bothers me as a parent," Wallace says. "It would be nice to know they could come in to college without the extra struggle."
"I was depressed, I was crying, I felt as if I had been cheated," Downey says of Westport High. "But I knew I had it in me. I knew I could do it."
Downey says she breezed through Westport High School academically. The standards were lower than at Ruskin Heights. She did not write a thesis paper until her
senior year in high school, and most of her teachers were more interested in passing students than preparing them, she says.
At the end of the day when she left the classroom, she was surrounded by the problems of the day: teen-age friends getting pregnant, classmates on drugs and fear of violence in the hallways.
"In an inner-city school, you deal with more social problems," Downey says. "In the suburban schools, you don't have a lot of that."
She hated school so much that the lure of Project Choice was almost not enough.
In 1988, Ewing Marion Kauffman, founder and chair of the board of Marion Laboratories, Inc., and owner of the Kansas City Royals baseball team, began Project Choice. He announced the program as a personal challenge to the 1992 graduating class of Westport High School, the members of which were in eighth grade and almost out of junior high.
The challenge? Stay off drugs. Don't get pregnant. Maintain a 2.0 grade point average. Attend classes. Graduate from high school.
The payoff? If the students met all those conditions, Kauffman would pay for their education at the college of their choice. The offer covered tuition, housing, books and fees.
So Downey, who lives in Missouri, would not have to pay an estimated $5,970 a year in tuition, plus $3,175 for housing and $650 for books.
But Downey almost said no.
When Project Choice was offered to her as she began her freshman year, Downey originally declined. She says she felt signing the agreement would bind her to a school — and a way of life — she hated. But she and her mother finally signed.
Project Choice offers hope for community
Two shots.
Police said Jermaine Davis, a dropout from Westport High School in Kansas City, Mo., killed his manager, Marsha Kellogg, with two shots to the head as they closed Darryl's Restaurant and Bar on Sept. 6.
Those two shots continued a downward spiral for Davis. It began when he dropped out of school last year after a burglary conviction. It might end when he makes his first court appearance next Monday. He faces the possibility of a lifetime in prison without parole.
But Davis' life could have taken a different route. Instead of being held in Jackson County jail, Davis, a former Project Choice student, could have been on his way to college.
Kauffman Foundation.
"The quickest way and the best way to bring the students into education is higher education," said Tom Rhone, director of Project Choice for the Ewing Marion
Ewing Kauffman's Project Choice, which began in 1988, offered students at Westport High a lucrative deal: if they stayed off drugs, did not get pregnant, went to classes and graduated, Kauffman would pay for their college careers.
Project Choice was offered to a high school that reflected a variety of American social trends. More than 80 percent of the student body is African American, Asian or Hispanic. Most are from low-income families. Many come from single parent homes, where one parent does the job of two. Westport High had one of the highest dropout rates in the city, and only 20 percent of its graduating class ever went on to higher education.
The surrounding neighborhoods are riddled with problems. Drug use, alcoholism, poverty and a high crime rate have taken their toll on the neighborhood. In 1992, two Westport students died violent deaths.
The violence carries into the hallways of the school itself. Security guards keep watch over the students. In the mornings, students coming to school are greeted by newly-installed metal detectors.
But in 1988, Kauffman, who graduated from Westport High in 1934, injected money and hope into the Westport community.
In order to participate, students and parents had to sign an agreement in their
Today, Rhone said, Project Choice covers about 1,050 Kansas City area high school students and college students across the country. Kauffman extended the program to cover the class of 1992 through the class of 1995. Now, it also covers five high schools in United School District 500 in Kansas City, Kan.; Wandyotte, Washington, F.L. Schlagle and J.C. Harmon high schools and the Summer Academy of Arts and Sciences. Students in U.S.D. 500 also must show economic need. The last Project Choice class, the class of 1995, will graduate in two years.
And in the hallways of Westport High, the students have a better chance at success in the future. The dropout rate has been halved. Sixty percent of the 1992 graduates have passed on to post-secondary education.
ninth grade year, Rhone said. The students agreed to be bound by the conditions set by Kauffman. In return, the Kauffman Foundation agreed to pay for the students' undergraduate education. Students cannot enter the program after their ninth grade year, and if they move out of the district, they are dropped.
KU has 15 Project Choice students
But Project Choice has not been able to save everybody. Rhone said that three Project Choice students had been killed so far and that he would not be surprised if more died.
enrolled, six from the class of 1992 and nine from the class of 1993. Seven members of the class of 1993 are from Kansas City. Kan.
"One was killed in a drive-by, another was shot," he said. "They were killed in violent ways. They wanted to turn their lives around. It's tragic, but it happens."
While 14 percent move away from Westport, 6 percent simply disappear—as Jermaine Davis disappeared. Rhone said cases such as Davis' were tragic, but students must ultimately be responsible for their actions.
"If these young people choose their future and make their choice, we respect their choice and encourage them to do what they want." he said.
There lies the "choice" in Project Choice. he said.
Some, such as Monya Downey, choose college.
And some, such as Jermaine Davis,
choose otherwise.
The impetus was KU. Downey says she had known since she was eight years old that she wanted to attend KU. When she saw the campus on television or read about it in the newspaper, it seemed far away from Westport. However, she had heard that its law school was excellent. It was a dream destination she had never expected to fulfill.
"I saw from watching television that KU was big on law," Downey says. "I didn't know how I'd get here, but I knew I was coming."
Today, Downey laughs at the suggestion that she might be on drugs, pregnant or dead if it were not for Project Choice. She says she would have found her way out of Westport somehow.
Her stepfather, Lorenzo Wallace, says Downey may set a trend for the family in the future.
But Downey also represents a broken cycle. Her mother gave birth to her sister when her mother was 16. Her sister and two-step-sisters were also teen-age mothers. And Downey is the first in her family to attend a four-year university.
"I hope they follow the example she has set for them," he said.
---
In the living room of Douthart Scholarship Hall, about 20 members of the Inspirational Gospel Voices gather to perform. The bass guitar and drum set barely fit behind the performers, and the audience looks uncomfortable as it squeezes together on the floor.
The show begins with a prayer, then the choir breaks into song. The first one, "Take It Away," is received well. By the third song, the audience members are too busy clapping to realize how uncomfortable they are.
Downey, one of the sopranos, stays in the background until the fourth song, "How Can I Forget?" Then she sings a solo, following each verse with a phrase of her own.
Downey feels comfortable here as she sings, but she has not always been comfortable at KU. She says that at first the education levels of her fellow students, who attended suburban high schools, intimidated her. Sometimes, when she received a bad grade, she wondered whether she should go home.
But Downey also remembers the personal letters she used to get from Kauffman himself. He wrote to her in his own hand, as he wrote to other members of Project Choice. He encouraged her to stay in school and tough it out.
Now, she wants to stay. She says she likes her Spanish class, and she wants to use Spanish to aid her future career in international law.
And she wants — someday — to return to Westport and give back what the late Ewing Kauffman gave to her. She says the odds are against it — but the odds have been against her before.
"You know how you read about these sad people whose dreams don't come true?" Downey says with a smile. "Well, my dream came true. I came to KU."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 22,1993
11
Jayhawks blank Tigers 28-0
Kansas victory ends season
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas senior defensive tackle Chris Maumalanga said he wanted to shut out Missouri in his final appearance as a Jayhawk on Saturday at Memorial Stadium.
However, it appeared his goal of a shutout would be denied late in the fourth quarter as the Tigers lined up for a first-down play in the Jayhawk 7-yard line. But freshman cornerback Tony Blevins preserved the Kansas 28-0 shutout victory with an interception of Missouri junior quarterback Brian Sallee in the end zone with 4:44 left in the game.
"I almost stopped breathing," Maumalanga said of Blevins' interception. "It was a great play by a young player. That play out the icing on the cake."
The shutout left Kansas feeling positive about the 1993 season and helps the Jayhawks in preparation for the 1994 season. For seniors such as Maumalaang, the victory was a perfect
way to cap a difficult season, which saw Kansas finish with a 5-7 record.
Injuries plagued Maunalanga and many of his teammates on defense this season. Defensive coordinator Bob Fello was forced to use 22 different starters during the season. Fello's defense turned in the first shutout by a Kansas team since Nov. 2, 1991, when Kansas shutout Oklahoma State 31-0.
"We wanted to leave everything on the field today," Maumalanga said. "Whatever it took, we were willing as a group to do it in order to finish up with a shutout against Missouri."
The defense held Missouri to 214 yards of total offense, which was the second-lowest amount of yardage allowed by Kansas in 1993. The Jayhawks gave up only 187 yards in their 46-3 victory against Western Carolina on Sept. 4.
Offensively, the Jayhawks rode the running of freshman tailback June Henley and redshirt freshman reserve tailback Mark Sanders. Henley ran for 118 yards and two touchdowns in establishing a new Big Eight Conference freshman single-season record with 1,127 yards. The old record was set by Kansas' Kerwin Bell at 1,114 yards in 1980. Sanders ran for 119
yards on seven carries and a touchdown in about eight minutes of action in the fourth quarter.
The running game gained 312 of Kansas' 449 yards of total offense.
Junior quarterback Asheki Preston connected with sophomore wide receiver Ashaunai Smith for a 16-yard touchdown just five minutes into the contest to give the Jayhawks an early 7-0 lead. Henley finished drives early in the second and third quarters with touchdown runs of 1 and 6 yards.
Two plays after he replaced Henley for the afternoon, Sanders ran for a 19-yard touchdown with 7:37 remaining in the fourth quarter to finish the scoring.
"It was a great feeling," Schmidt said. "It shows respect for me and that they appreciate my help and effort."
Junior offensive guard John Jones said he and the offensive line took pride in the offensive performance against Missouri. Jones, offensive coordinator Pat Ruel and several other offensive linemen carried senior center Dan Schmidt off the field on their shoulders and into the dressing room to demonstrate their pride in him.
Kansas coach Glen Mason said after the game it was because of leadership
By the numbers
| | MU | KU |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| First Downs | 15 | 19 |
| Rushes-yards | 28-66 | 61-312 |
| Passing-yards | 148 | 137 |
| Return yards | 7 | 12 |
| CompAtt | 10-39.1 | 60-0 |
| Splendid-yardss lost | 3-34 | 2-13 |
| Punts | 8-43.8 | 6-35.2 |
| Fumbles-lost | 2-1 | 0-0 |
| Penalties-yards | 7-82 | 10-109 |
| Time of Possession | 24:16 | 35:14 |
Missouri 0 0 0 0—0
Kansas 7 7 7 7—28
KU Smith 7 7 7 from Praetor
Smith 16 pass from Preston (Eichloff kick)
KU—Henley 1 run (Eichloff kick)
KU—Henley 6 run (Eichloff kick)
KU—Sanders 19 run (Eichloff kick)
Source: The Associated Press KANSAN
from seniors such as Maumalanga and Schmidt that the Jayhawks were able to hang together as a team throughout the final half of the season. He added that his program was still a solid program despite finishing with a 5-7 record.
"The second half of this season said more about my program than winning last year and going to a bowl game," Mason said. "I'm more proud of this team than I was of that team"
82 83
Missouri senior cornerback Jason Oliver tackles Kansas senior wide receiver Greg Ballard last in the third quarter. The Jayhawks defeated the Tigers 28-0 Saturday at Memorial Stadium.
William Alix / KANSAN
Running back rushes past Big Eight record
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
It was to be a great opportunity for Kansas freshman tailback June Henley.
The Missouri game was his chance to break the Big Eight freshman rushing record of 1,114 yards held by Kansas' Kerwin Bell in 1980, something not even Nebraska junior Calvin Jones could do as a freshman.
It was to be a bright spot in an otherwise dismal 5-7 injury-plagued season.
Kansas coach Glen Mason said he decided to play Henley but deliberated on his decision.
But it was somewhat tainted by questions of his playing status after news spread Thursday of his notice to appear in Lawrence Municipal Court on Nov. 30. He is ordered to appear in connection with a shoplifting incident at a Lawrence store.
"He played, and I made the decision." Mason said after the game. "I handle all of the disciplinary problems. I've dealt with problems before. Maybe I don't always deal with them right, but I deal with them the way I see fit."
Henley broke away from the distractions and broke the record, rushing for 118 yards and two touchdowns in Kansas' 28-0 victory against Missouri. He is now the all-time leading Kansas and Big Eight freshman running back with 1,127 rushing this season. That also makes him this season's top rusher in the Big Eight.
Henley was unavailable for interviews following the game.
Kansas junior running back Chris
Powell said the offense was proud as a unit when Henley broke the record. Powell frequently provided blocks to open holes for Henley during the game.
"The whole offense feels they have a part in that record, and June knows it too." Powell said. "If it wasn't for the offensive line or his quarterback, his running backs or his wide receivers, he couldn't have that record."
In addition to the great blocking, Powell said that Henley was a unique type of running back, which made him good.
"He knows how to follow the block real well," Powell said. "He has that knack for making people miss. It's something you can't teach. It's something that just is natural."
The team stuck together as news of Henley's court date spread all the way to ESPN Sportscenter. Kansas senior center Dan Schmidt said he thought some of the coverage was unnecessary.
"I said that many of us have done things that were not right and some people, a lot worse," Schmidt said. "We're not all 1,000-yard rushers so it didn't get in the press. I told Henley that in my opinion, I thought he had more punishment than was necessary. When it gets on ESPN, national TV, I think it went too far."
The offensive line thought it owed something to Henley after the problems that surfaced before the game, Schmidt said.
"I told him that it was the team's responsibility to back him," Schmidt said. "He's worked hard for us, and it was our job to work hard for him on Saturday. I couldn't be happier for him or the whole team."
21 21
Kansas freshman tailback June Henley shoves past Missouri senior cornerback Jerry Wooden for a touchdown. Henley rushed for 118 yards against Missouri on Saturday, giving him a season total of 1,149 rushing yards and making him the all-time Kansas and Big Eight freshman running back.
Richard Devinki/KANSAN
Volleyball team not in Big 8 tournament
Kansan staff report
As Iowa State defeated Kansas State 3-0 Saturday, the Kansas volleyball team's Big Eight tournament hopes were dashed.
Nebraska, Colorado, Oklahoma and Iowa State advanced to the conference tournament in Omaha, Neb. Kansas will now prepare for the National Invitational Volleyball Championship tournament Dec. 3-5 in Kansas City, Mo.
Kansas is the host team of the tournament, and other teams playing will be announced Nov. 28 after NCAA tournament bids are made. The Jayhawks ended the regular season 16-12 overall.
一 二 三 四 五 六 七 八 九十 一百二十三
Although Kansas and Iowa State ended the season tied in the conference at 5-7, the Cyclones hold a 4-3 advantage in head-to-head games. Therefore, IowaState gets the final spot in the tournament, and the Jayhawks drop to fifth in the Big Eight.
The teams split the two matches played against each other, but Kansas sophomore middle blocker/rightside player Jenny Larson said that Iowa State, 9-17 overall, was not as good as Kansas.
"It makes me mad to know that they're going and not us," Larson said of Iowa State. "We still have the NIVC to try and prepare for."
Top 25 teams
The Associated Press 1993 college football poll: first-place votes in parentheses, records through Nov. 20, 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 State (33) | 10-1-0 | 1,471 | 2 |
| 2. **Nebraska** (20) | 10-0-0 | 1,455 | 3 |
| 3. Auburn (6) | 11-0-0 | 1,369 | 6 |
| 4. Notre Dame (1) | 10-1-0 | 1,334 | 1 |
| 5. West Virginia (1) | 10-0-0 | 1,320 | 9 |
| 6. Tennessee | 8-1-1 | 1,219 | 7 |
| 7. Florida | 9-1-0 | 1,201 | 8 |
| 8. Texas A&M | 9-1-0 | 1,071 | 10 |
| 9. Miami | 8-2-0 | 991 | 4 |
| 10. Wisconsin | 8-1-1 | 957 | 12 |
| 11. Boston College | 8-2-0 | 881 | 17 |
| 12. Ohio State | 9-1-1 | 818 | 5 |
| 13. North Carolina | 9-2-0 | 782 | 13 |
| 14. Penn State | 8-2-0 | 739 | 14 |
| 15. UCLA | 8-3-0 | 660 | 16 |
| 16. Oklahoma | 8-2-0 | 600 | 15 |
| 17. Alabama | 8-2-1 | 584 | 11 |
| 18. Colorado | 7-3-1 | 488 | 18 |
| 19. Arizona | 8-2-0 | 442 | 19 |
| 20. Kansas State | 8-2-1 | 345 | 20 |
| 21. Indiana | 9-3-0 | 313 | 21 |
| 22. Virginia Tech | 8-3-0 | 229 | 25 |
| 23. Michigan | 7-4-0 | 184 | — |
| 24. Clemson | 8-3-0 | 168 | 24 |
| 25. Michigan State | 8-3-0 | 81 | — |
Others receiving votes: Southern Cal 31, Arizona State 23,
Cincinnati 23, Fresno State 23, Louisville 22, Virginia 19,
Washington B, Bell State 2, California 2.
Source: The Associated Press
Focus of training changes with season
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
For college athletes in varsity sports, an off-season does not exist.
Kansas track coach Gary Schwartz described an athlete's year as a seesaw. At one end sits volume, or quantity, at the other intensity, or quality. The competition season begins with the volume end up and the intensity down. As the season progresses and moves into the championship meets, the athletes' intensity surpasses the volume. This stage of optimum ability is called the peak.
Wayne Osness, an exercise physiologist and head of Health, Physical Education and Recreation, said that athletes move into general conditioning when they are not competing. Depending on the sport, and even within a sport, an athlete will either focus on endurance or strength conditioning. For sports such as basketball and football, a combination of both types of training are used, he said.
However, it is November and most spring sports, if they had a fall season, have peaked. It is now time to lower the seesaw. Both the volume and the intensity are down, but the workouts are not over.
Head coaches make the decisions about the athletes' training, and sometimes that includes using a conditioning coach, Osness said. The conditioning coach works with the athlete to determine what training works and what does not.
In the case of an athlete building strength, weights are used to overload the muscle to make it lift or pull more than it is used to so that the muscle tissue becomes more defined and stronger.
Schwartz said his cross country athletes were in the resting stage. The men's team just finished its fall season, and the runners will take 10 days to two weeks off before regular practice before the indoor track season begins.
He called the season between fall and spring the maintenance period when the athletes could have a psychological resting period.
Senior softball pitcher Stephanie Williams said the softball team's winter season consisted of weight training and aerobic workouts to get the body in shape and strong enough for the spring.
"It prevents injuries, helps endurance and makes a stronger ball player," she said.
The team practices together, but most of the time Williams will practice on her own because her schedule conflicts with the practice time.
Weight lifting and aerobic workouts alone will not create a good pitcher, she said. A good pitcher has a focused mental game, which is perfected throughout the year.
Along with working on her mental game, Williams said she practiced throwing without a coach's supervision to keep her arm in shape.
Rugby team uses off-season to shape up
Anne Feistet
Kansan sportswriter
Just because men's rugby is a club sport, does not mean it takes a break between the fall and spring seasons.
Like a varsity sport, men's rugby uses the winter season to train. Unlike most varsity sports, trainers do not assist the athletes. The rugby players train on their own, anywhere they can, during the off season.
Before the Christmas break, the players must train completely on their own, but come January, the team begins practicing together again.
Senior Jael Foster said he used the weight equipment he and his brother have accumulated over the years. Freshman Dan Carl said he trained in Robinson, but it was always crowded.
Coach Dominic Barnao said graduate student Jeff Hoobler, a sports physiologist and member of the club side team, helped organize the rugby player's training during the off season.
Foster said Barnao and Hoobler organized the team workouts in January, which consist mostly of cardiovascular workouts such as running. Most players did train during the break between seasons, mostly lifting weights and running on their own, he said.
"We have a pretty good group who keeps up," he said.
Foster said the team tried to build muscle during the off season because the players concentrated on their cardiovascular strength during the season. He said nagging injuries made it difficult to lift weights during the season.
Carl, a first year rugby player, said he used his high school football training program when he worked out at Robinson. He said that program did not focus on just one muscle group, but on the whole body.
Foster said rugby was a physical sport that required an off season so the body could heal.
"You never look forward to not playing," he said.
"But the body needs a bit of a rest."
12
Monday, November 22, 1993
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Defense key to Kansas victory
Crowd serves as motivation for Jayhawks in NIT game
Doug Hesse/KANSAN
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
It is possible that 31,600 ears could still be ringing after Friday night's 73-66 Kansas defeat of California.
A capacity crowd of 15,800 roared thunderously throughout the 40 minute basketball game at Allen Field House.
nat was loudest it's been here since I can ever remember," said junior center Greg Ostertag. "It got so loud at one point that my ears hurt."
KANSAS
34
JOHNSON
22
If Ostaterg's ears still ring, it could be his own fault. When he stole the ball from CalJunior center Ryan Jamison at half-court three minutes into the game and ran the floor for a layup, the crowd burst into an ovation that set the decibel level for the game.
The No. 9 Jayhawks held the No. 6 Golden Bears to 36 percent shooting and produced 19 turnovers and blocked nine shots.
"Defensively I thought we played real well," Williams said. "I thought that was the key to the game."
Kansas used a three player rotation defensively on Cal's preseason All-American sophomore point guard Jason Kidd. Senior guard Steve Woodberry, sophomore guard Calvin Rayford and freshman guard Jacue Vaughn kept Kidd busy throughout the game.
Kidd, who turned the ball over seven times, said the plan worked.
Kansas senior forward Richard Scott goes for a basket while California's Stevie Johnson attempts to block. Kansas defeated California 73-56 Friday night in Allen Field House, with Scott scoring a team high 20 points and pulling down nine rebounds.
Another source of motivation for the crowd was Kidd himself. The Oakland, Calif, native almost signed with Kansas two years ago. He received "boos" upon his announcement in the Cal starting line-up and was heckled by Kansas fans throughout the game.
"Their three guards were keeping me tired," Kidd said.
"I get that everywhere I go," Kidd said. "It wasn't a big deal. The crowd doesn't play defense, it doesn't shoot the ball or anything else on the court."
However, as often is the case, the crowd's volume ran parallel to the Hawks performance.
The field house grew silent in the first eight minutes of the second half as the Jayhawks hit a hul. California outscored Kansas 17-5 in that time span. Not all the Kansas players disappeared, though. All five Jayhawk points during the Cal run came from Richard Scott.
"Richard Scott was a man," Williams said of senior forward, who scored a team-high 20 points and grabbed nine rebounds. "We were really struggling, and he was just dominating things inside."
Kansas withstood the Cal run. but with some unlikely help.
Jayhawk freshman center Nick Proud, who has dealt with both mononucleosis and knee surgery within the last year, stepped in and played possibly the best minute-for-minute basketball Kansas fans have ever seen. In just 5:22, the Sydney, Australia, native scored 12 points, including hitting of six of seven free-throws, and swiped four rebounds.
"He was in there three times. If you go more than a minute and a half with him, he looks like the dead Australian," Williams said. "But he does have very good touch. The biggest thing with Nick is getting his conditioning going and getting his stamina up."
Despite that early second half let-down, Williams said he was happy with the Jayhawks performance.
"I've told friends of mine that there are going to be times when we're fantastic, and there are going to be times were we're going to be as ugly as can be," he said. "And sometimes it's going to be in the same game. I think they saw that tonight."
With the victory, Kansas advances to the semifinals against No. 11 Minnesota in New York. Win or lose, the Jayhawks are guaranteed one more game.
"It'll give us confidence going into the season," Scott said. "It's keeping us out of practice, that's what the players like, but we're going to go up there and try to win the whole thing."
By the numbers
KANSAS (72)
Scott 4132-62 10, Woodbury 6132-14 14, Ostertag 593-4 13, Prod 34
67-12, Vaughn 11-4 12, Rayford 14-2 44, Richer 14-1 23, Pearson 14-
0.02, Pollard 0.11 21, Gurley 0.2 0.00, Williams 0.0 0.00, Totals 27-59
16-30 73.
CALIFORNIA(56)
Murray 10-31 3-324, Kidd 8-15 4-822, Jamison 2-30 2-24, Buckley 1-60 0-
2, Stewart 1-20 0-2, Duck 0-2 2-22, Jones 0-3 0-0, Johnson 0-2 0-0,
McQeuen 0-1 0-00, Totals 22 63-91 55-6.
Halftime — Kansas 41, Cal 22. Fouled out — Pollard (Kansas), Duck (Cal).
Rebounds — Kansas 48 (Ostertag 12), Cal 37 (Jamison 10). Three-point goals — Kansas 3 (Woodberry 2, Vaughn), Cal 3 (Kidd 2, Murray).
Assists — Kansas 15 (Woodberry 5) Cal 13 (Kidd 6). Total fouls — Kansas 17, Cal 27.
A-15, 800.
Ostertag's play shines in game
Kansas' junior center Greg Ostertag might be prophetic.
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
Prior to Friday night's game against California, which Kansas won 73-56, the 7-foot-2 big man from Duncanville, Texas, had a vision.
"I told Coach before the game that I was going to get out into the passing lane and get a steal," Ostertag said. "And I told him I would drive the floor for a dunk."
Three minutes into the game, Ostertag's vision materialized.
Kansas freshman point guard Jacque Vaughn had just nailed a threepointer giving the Jayhawks a 9-4 lead. The ensuing possession saw the Cal point guard, sophomore Jason Kidd, push the ball up court to Golden Bear junior center Ryan Jamison. Ostertag swiped the ball from Jamison, streaked down the right side of the court and softly laid the ball off the glass for two points and a thunderous ovation.
"I didn't dunk it," Oystert said. "But I think Coach was happy with it."
He was right—and wrong.
"I've always said that Greg could be a fantastic player," Kansas coach Roy Williams said. "But it upsets me because he should do it more than once."
In addition to his steal, drive and layup. He scored a total of 13 points, grabbed 12 rebounds and blocked four shots. Eight of his rebounds came in the first eight minutes.
"I think this was my best game as a Jayhawk," said Ostertag, who in the first two Kansas games has blocked 11 shots and grabbed 19 rebounds. "I'm getting my timing down to where I had it in high school when I did block a lot of shots. I think that'a big part of my game, blocking shots and having my presence felt in the middle."
KANSAN
His presence has definitely been felt thus far. He has the 11 blocked shots, but what doesn't show up in the statistics is the number of shots disrupted because of his attempt to block shots
Source: The Associated Press
No one knows this more than his teammates.
"I have to practice against him everyday," said senior forward Richard Scott, who swatted away two Cal shots himself. "It's no fun shooting over him. When he stands up straight, he's like 10 feet tall."
Williams said he was pleased with Ostegtas's work but not satisfied.
"He can be better than that," Williams said. "He's got to have some consistency and be able to do that for a long period of time."
Kansas ready for first game
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas women's basketball team does not know much about tonight's opponent, but the Jayhawks do know how important this game is against New Zealand.
"I'm going to take it serious," Kansas freshman guard Tamecka Dixon said. "It's just an exhibition game but
Kansas will play its first game this season against New Zealand at 7 tonight at Allen Field House.
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
we use it to see how good we really are.
"We know that they press, and they are a good team."
Even though the game is an exhibition, Dixon said it was good for Kansas to play a tough team in its first game.
"Being that we're playing a quality team, we can find out where we're at," she said. "If we played a team that wasn't really good and blew them out, we still wouldn't know how good we are."
Kansas coach Marian Washington repeatedly has said that the freshmen would get playing time this season because the team has only 10 scholarship players.
"Our freshman are going to see some time," Washington said. "Tamecka is going to help out at point guard. We're still relatively young, but it's very nice to combine the older players with the risk-taking younger players."
Dixon said she would be happy in any role that helped the team.
"I'm hoping to play," Dixon said. "It doesn't really matter, as long as I can contribute."
Kansas senior Lisa Tate said that winning was important but that it was not the most important thing.
"I think it's more important to get experience for our younger players," Tate said. "But even though this won't be on our record, we have to take it seriously."
Tate said the inexperienced players would probably make mistakes but that the team would support them. This year's freshmen are Dixon, forward Shelly Canada, guard Angie Halbleib and forward Jennifer Trapp.
"I think they have to get used to the crowds," Tate said of the freshmen. "The crowds away can be loud and obnoxious — like at Oklahoma, the crowd is really obnoxious."
I'll be a little nervous," Dixon said. "At my state championship game in high school, there were 3,000 people. I know I will be more relaxed as the game goes on."
Tate was the Big Eight leader in blocked shots last year, but she said she still had pregame jiggers.
"Yeah, I get nervous," she said. "But when the game starts, you kind of get used to it, and you're not nervous."
Although Kansas is the preseason pick to win the conference this year, Tate said the team must work on many things.
"Some days we have really good practices," she said. "Then other times we don't. We can't underestimate anybody."
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UCN to be aware of your needs.
130 Entertainment
Exclusive KU ALUM message area shared over Fidnet. Real time chat. Easy data menus! Lawrence on line/TBBS; 865-1440. Voice/help: 891-1400
Free Party Room Available at Johnny's Tavern/Up & Under Call 842-0377 for details.
140 Lost & Found
Lost: Black Leather Jackets 1/10 (W) or 11/11
in Haworth or Wesco. Call: 832-264-5299
Leet: cluster anniversary diamond ring, reward,
cell 8614031 or (913) 267-7502.
Male Female
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
*ATTENTION COLLEGE STUDENTS! Need financial help; school can extremely extensive costs. We will not provide "budget cues." We can help! Call Faith Marketing for more information. Free 24-hour message. Call 1-855-970-7670.
gss SIGNING BONUS. We currently are accepting applications for full and part-time licensed cosmetologists or barbers. 2 weeks paid vacation. Annv for Pro-Cuts, 2500 larvae
A local vacuum repair business needs part-time
mechanically-included person. Call 893-1877
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
- Kansan Classified: 864-4358-
AA Cruise & Travel jobs. Earn $2500/mo. + travel the world free! (Caribbean, Europe, Hawaii,
Mexico) pay now hiring for busy holiday,
spring, and summer classes. Listing Service, Call
(919) 929-4337 ext. 113.
ADMINISTRATIVE USER SERVICES
Student Monthly. Deadline: 12/3/98, $550
Include providing training on computer LAN, SOUNIX support, provide application design, documentation and deliver software training sessions for end users, provide LAN installation and problem-solving training, provide job qualifications: Demonstrated excellent oral and written communications skills, knowledgeable about computerized databases and their uses, using computer microcomputers, currently enrolled in a graduate school spring 1995. Complete job description available.
Apply, submit a letter of application and a current resume to Ann Rink, Personnel Assistant, Lawrence School, Lawrence, KS 6045, ROE/A EMPLOYER
AMIGOS
Supervisor now - Manager later! Learn the business from the ground up and advance according to your needs. Be an expert in a tempered oriented person and to work at a fast intense pace, an opportunity to put these skills to work and develop as a leader is available. Redocare your current benefits plan. Apply benefits. Now at: Amigs, 1819 W. Searc
APPLYNOW International Challin filling part-fall line positions. Training provided. Work locally now (flexible schedules around classes) May transfer one of our 300 locations nationally during the year.
AMIGOS Supervisor/Assist Mgr
BASS PLAYER AVAILABLE
Experienced bass player looking for serious Lawrence band. I have live playing experience including Lawrence bars. I own professional bass guitars and bass guitars. Looking for blues injected rock and funky, groovy stuff, but I am flexible. No metal, hardcore, or cheese. Dedicated band members a must. If you've been looking for that hard to find bass player. I'm ready to go! 822-8958
Willow woods Retirement Community is currently hiring wait staff for the 11am-8pm shift with possibility of an occasional 5pm-7pm shift. Are you ready to work in a retirement community in person 101 Inverness Dr, Lawrence K, E.O.E.
Earn $1,000 per week at home filling order! Free Information. Please send long self addressed stamped envelope to CJ Enterprises, Box 67068H, Cuyahoga Falls, OH 44222.
FREED TRIPS AND MONEY!!! Individuals and Student Organizations wanted to promote the Hottest Spring Break Destinations, call the Inter-Campus Programs 1-800-377-2013.
Full-time assistant manager needed immediately.
Must live on site. Call 841-6488.
Help wanted: Hardware/Software manager. KU helped students to qualify graduate student to work in early December. For position description contact Uralea Skamannie at 864-324-361. Application deadline: **5/17**.
ATTORNEY
Henry's *K* and a Grill is now hiring experienced kitchen staff. Must be able to work days, some evenings, and holidays. Apply from 2 to 4 p.m.
Mon.-Fri. No phone calls please. 3320 W. 8th St.
Local business seeks qualified individuals to provide a variety of services or community residents with the knowledge and skills needed.
United Child Dev. Center has openings for naps at $4.25/hr. Experience working with young children helpful. Apply at UCDC 946 Vermont St. Lawrence, KS. Emee.
FAST CASH
You CAN make a difference, Greenspace K.C. for now wring energy and asciate students to work hard, and protect the ozone layer FT/PT £10 to waste, and protect the ozone layer FT/PT £10 to waste, and provide training, hours 2 to 10 m.p. Call 813-384-3984.
Marketing Assistant position available at Naismith Hall for the spring semester. Applicant must have excellent people skills, good computer skills (desktop publishing experience a plus), and have a business acumen. Position will require customer service, or sales. Position will be part time with compensation of room and board plus stipend. Potential for full time effective July, 1994. Great resume and portfolio builder to help you get the job done. Applicants are required to apply at Naismith Hall, 100 Naismith Drive, Lawrence KS, 68044. E.O.E/M.F.H.A/A.
$15 Today $30 This week
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
SEMESTER BREAK POSITIONS! Inl. chain misha-
47-PT, FT entry level openings. Earn $9.00-
10.00 PT or interview no start after Dec. 25. Can
be overtaken in Lawntrend or Lawrence
842-8331 or Overland Park 831-9876.
Traffic tickets, misdemeanors, landlord/tenant,
Branton B. Copley 749-8333
Part-time apt. maintenance person wanted to work weekday mornings, call 641-8680 to apply.
Phone Work. Part Time. Flexible Hours. Pald Daily. Call 322-9283
RESUME SERVICES Professional Business
Interview Training. Free initial interview. 620-8100.
NEED EXTRA CASH?!! ??? work as a cashier/clerk during Spring Time fielded成功 on January 7th for Accounting, 26 Carruth O'Leary Hall from 8:00 am -11:04 am; 1:00 pm -4:00 pm. M-F. Deadline for applying is November 30, 1993. Must be current student and have an equal opportunity to apply. No employment exp needed.
By donating your life saving blood plasma WALKING WELCOME
Thesis & Dissertation
Tacell now hiring day and night ballet. Apply
to Tacell through Saturday, 14th W. 25th
and 129th W. 6th.
Lawrence Printing Service, Inc.
512 E. 9th Street 843-4600
WALK-INS WELCOME!
Hardbinding and Gold Stamping
Driver education offered by Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you. You'll bed 863-421. Free pregnancy testing.
Laubian, bailey. If you need to talk to someone a Caller Group or CONFIDENTIAL CALL Info or Headquarters.
Prompt abortion and contraceptive services. Dale L Clinton. MD. 841-9716.
LA JUSTICIA
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman,Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
Research Assistance - MSMLS information on
dissertation research, project studies, 932-763,
dissertations, research projects.
235 Typing Services
A Word Perfect word processing service. Laser printer. Near campus. 842-605-656.
1-der Woman Word Processing, 843-2063.
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your TYPING needs call the
Office of the Technology Director.
X
Expert typing. IBM Correcting Selectric.
Encourage double space page. Call Mr. Mattsi at 212-864-7000.
Fast, accurate word processing; term paper, dissertation, thesis and graphics services available. Laser printing. Engineering and Law Review experience. Call Pam at 841-1977 avntime.
Pro-Type - fast, reliable, service, professional quality. Any kind of typing. Call today at 841-6242. Word processing applications, term papers, discussing, writing, composition, rush job available. Masters Degree required.
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
table 6 f. bookcases for $30, full sized bed $12; coffee
tables f. 3, piece dinner set $10. T.C. Furniture
Rentals rents and sells new and used furniture. 801
Kascal 811-7111.
Beds, deks, and bookcases. Everything But ice.
909 Mass.
Drafting table 40x30" Adjustable chair, fluorescent and telecone pod drawing machine. Call 800-715-3230.
Fire walking, walk on water! WALK ON TRASH!
Fire walking, walk on water! WALK ON TRASH!
Fire walking, walk on water! WALK ON TRASH!
General Store
725 Mile Ave. 10-9 19-6 30-8
Store #242
Weight lifting machine, leg curts, bench press
$25 for both. Call 843-645-2000 and weekend
for both. Call 843-645-2000 and weekend
Floppy Discs
Guaranteed Quality and Lowest Price.
Call 832-7744 (o) 842-5421 (h)
Visit our office behind Food 4 Less at
2201 W. 25th St. B-1.
1 Bdm apt, just blocks from campus allow
for 2nd semester sublease. Washer/dryer,
dishwasher, ceiling fan... the works. $220 per mo./person.
133 Kentucky K879-0521. Call us.
Two airline tickets Thanksgiving weekend, cheap.
KCI to Detroit. Call Andy after 5:00 a.m. 841-821-079.
Want to sell full set of KU basketball tickets. Best
choice! Call action! Call now and leave a
message at 841-818-176
I'm graduating and need to sell my - Beautiful wood bed room set. 1 queen size床 with cherry wood head board, matching night stand with 2 drawers, cherry wood chest with vanity mirror. Paid $350 a year ago but it's got to go. $175. You can't get a fund for that. Call me at 855-0720.
Spend New Years in Chicago | Leaves KC Dec 29
Call 841-7841 now before it is sold! (females only)
Cannontalo SR 400 road like with Look pedals.
ecs. code 8951491706.
189 Buck Bicklet Coupe with 327 Chev. engine,
600 Consider monthly payments
Call 641-1297
1036 Black Jeep CJ-7, S-Pedal. Hard top, new.
1086 Jeep Compass 44, 84,000 Call. Ozil 8216
1086 and leave a message
Thanksgiving
1 way ticket to Cleveland
From KC Nov. 22nd. 942-7208
1698 Dodge Charger 3-d hatchback, AM/FM cass
body in good shape and run well. Call 625-470-3160.
Red Fontic Fiero, sumoof, AC, new paint,
excellent condition. $3,000 OBQ 129-3898.
340 Auto Sales
4 Bedroom home for sub lease. Cheap rent, low
down payment. GCLEASE Attention Marc
544. 696; for calling
1961 WV Jetta, 5-spd, 4 dr. Good Condition. AM-FM cassette. $170.00. Call Mike 817-796.
"88 Honda CIV LX, 4-d. - 1 ownw, exc car w/ w/
2 owners, extras / miles, $/are
8,900 BHP 8990 BHP
370 Want to Buy
Needed up to 1 KU General Admission Basketball
tickets. Leave message for Shane at 864-704-50.
400s Real Estate
Apt. for Rent. 1 bdm, new carpet, unfurnished at Colony House. Heated pool & a spa. On bus route. Available Dec. 1st. $375/month. $33-213.
OPEN DAILY
4 br house for rent. 3 blocks from campus, clean.
Need help all leaving. U. Call Eli. 780-265-9212.
MASTERCRAFT
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
405 Lor Rent
1, 2, 3, & 4 dorm apis...
designed with you in mind!
Go to...
4 bedroom apartment for fully furnished, very ideal Available Spring som. Interested Call
Campus Place - 841-1429
1145 Louisiana
1145 Louisiana
Hanover Place-841-1212 14th & Mass.
Regents Court 749-0445 1905 Mass.
Orchard Corners - 749-4226
15th & Kasold
Tanglewood - 749-2415 10th & Arkansas
842-4455
MASTERCRAFT
Available at semester break, apts. in new location of West Hills 1000 Emmery Rd. 1 bdm apt. $380/mo. 2 bdm apt. $565/mo. Cable pd. w/d hookw, dwmic wow, microwave fan, mini bulbs, balcony, energy efficient, great location near campus on busrt. no. Pets: DW48-3400 or 4D-3848.
Available Jan 1, LARGE 2 nr站 medium. Heat, water, cable paid. DW, AC, excellent maintenance.
Available Jan. 1, 3 t.bdm. apt. on bus route. Call
748-1558-2 6 p.m. Mon.-Fri.
Available: Spring semester Room at Naisimh
floor, floor, meal plan. Call 860-1687, leave
message
Now leasing for Spring!
we're making life easier!
*Weekly Maid Service
*Front Door Bus Service
*"Dine Anytime" with Unlimited Seconds
*Laundry and Vending Facilities
NAISMITH
- Free Utilities
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and
room from KU. Off-street parking.
No pets. Call 841-5800.
For lease 4 bedroom, Sundaise villa, near occupancy date negotiable, 7900 + utilities.
Drop Into Our Place to ask about our Mid Term Leases
1800
雪
Furnished studio apartment. 2 short blocks from KU. Water paid. off street parking. pets. 841-
Colony Woods Apartments
One bed room apartment avail. $250 a month. 8th &
Louisiana no deposit. Call 866-2938
New! Remodeled Studio on Campus. Call 841-743-9620
Best in Lawrence, signing up for next year.
$240/person, 1500 sqft, all amenities, car ports available. For more info call 841-7849.
Naismith Drive
Share nice large home, nice neighborhood or studio, 1,3,5 bedroom apt, a block to KU. Reference
New Four Bdrs Now Available
Lovely decor, up for no reason
Sublease sublease for 2 persons. 1 barmr. 1 bath, onh.
April 1/1984/85 $360/mo. /
April 1/1984/85 $462/mo. /
Stone cottage near campus available at semester
stone for unfurnished, $450/no, call Nokia 61-392-
2768.
Studio subleave, furnished, avail Jan. 1. Water
studios. Room #503. no pails; no paws. Days:
764-215 and Nights 841-668.
Sublease: Naimith Hall, Pool, Rec. Room, Maid
260-9215 Ready for Spring Semester. Call Andy
260-9215
Sublease I dkmr apd at Meadbrook. Avail. Decl.
for one month or Dec. 1st - May 1st. Call today
at (800) 259-3600.
$365-$435
- 3 Hot Tubs
t or 2 females needed for spacious bd apt. bmrt.
for example, go to campus, on bmrs. rte. 200 + 1. util. 842-768-769
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Sand Volleyball Court .
- Basketball Court
1 Roomsite needed to share beautiful, historic
landscapes. Wood floors 8 W/D/
8/17 month. 94-318-300
- Microwave
I roommate to share fund 4 B/B 28 ap b, on-cam
to share fund 1 B/B 30 ap b, on-cam Val dec '98/$79/np + / 6 Call Alan B-94-416
2 NSP Upperclassman 2 NSP to share clean,
furnished 4 bdmr, 2 bath apt. Bus Route. Nice
Nighborhood. Pool, Laundry rm. $196 + 1/4 ut.
Call Morgan 749-0213 or Rene Baiyang 845-1893
- On Bus Route
842-5111 1301 W.24th
- 1&2 Bedroom Apts.
Wishing You The Best This Holiday Season!
FEMALE NEEDED TO SHARE 1 BR IN 3 BR
HOUSE, ALL WOOD FLOORS, NEW PAINT,
LAUNDRY IN BACK, OFF-STREET PARKING,
ALL BASEMENTS, AVAILABLE DEC. 1st
CAT. 673-723 OR 249-708
Female needed to share townhouse. Will have two room available first. Waker/derby $225/mo + room rental fee.
Female non-smoker needed to share three bedrooms
duplex on KU bus route. Washer/Dryer/
$175/month. Pay ¼ Utilities. Call 749-4145.
Male needed for spacious townhouse on golf
concrete. Jax - man $75/mo. + 1/2 util Call Cohy.
$80/hour, incl taxes.
Male or female roommate wanted for 3 bdrm apartment to share a rent and utilities for second room.
Need a roommate (male or female) ASAP for 4
bathroom apartments. For more information
call 693-7275.
Indexed inbox. Fax code, NAME, mAIL, multifacility
email address. Usable for resumes.
Kwoon Willie: Female non-smoker for cute duplex
available Jan. 1. $183 no ao. +/uutilities.
Call 823-1098.
Need mature, clean, N/S male to share 2 br apt
and 3 br male. Please pay $180/mo.
Some utile, pd. Avail. Jan. 1, 748-6380
www.davishealth.com
One room in spacious 4 BDR apt. Available mid-
safety color TV *camera* + sound system.
色电视 **CUBE** / **TV 180** / + m/la + Call 8651-3926
Roommate needed, M/F to share a 2drm Apt and
util. cable, phone, else to bus route. $187 a
month.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Open minded female needed to share two bedroom
room on Monday, March 19. Call any
time, leave message 748-7503
How to schedule an ad:
NSF w/ small dog needs a responsible NSF to shallow
the ground for spring semester. 1980/mo.
Call: 742-536-5000
Email: nsf@nfs.org
Roommate needed, Start Dec. 1, $150/mo /u/ll
Roommate needed, Start Dec. 1, $200/mo /nin
campaign. Call 463-7831 for details.
Roommate needed for beautiful two story apt. 3,
min. walk to campus, $212/mo. + /u/til. Available
mid-Dec., or Jan. 1, lots of windows, patio & yard.
Call 865-3511
Roommate needed to live in large six bedroom house. Very close to campus. $160 mo. + utilities.
Seeking NSF to sublease NEW 3 blemond on 9th & Ember 25$ + /^ utilities. Available NO1W Call
Ads phone number may be limited to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
In person: *110 Staff Flat FIRE*
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.
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 if cancelled before your 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 prepaid by check with cash are not available.
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160 personal 140 lost & found 385 for sale
118 business persons 295 help wanted 340 auto sales
129 announcements 225 professional services 360 miscellaneous
129 entertainment. 235 jelly service.
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSHAM POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
Please print your ad one word per box:
1
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370 want to buy
405 for rent
438 roommate wanted
Date ad begins:___ Total days in paper
Address:
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
London
THE NOT FUN
WHATSOEVER
HOUSE
}
14
Monday, November 22, 1993
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Chiefs suffer first home loss of season, fall to Bears 19-17
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — After cradling the ball that Chiefs tight end Jonathan Hayes had bobbed into the air, Chicago Bears cornerback Jeremy Lincoln ran four yards to the Kansas City 4-yard line. Two plays later, Neal Anderson's 1-yard touchdown with 3:09 left made the Bears 19-17 victors over a stunned Kansas City team that didn't lost at home since Oct. 25, 1992.
The Bears, 5-5, erased a 14-0 lead and beat an AFC West team for the second time in three weeks.
West
The Chiefs, 7-3, had stopped a Chicago threat on Albert Lewis' interception on the 2-yard line. A moment later Dave Krieg, standing in the end zone, threw a low pass to Hayes that popped right into Lincoln's hands.
Marcus Allen, becoming the ninth man in NFL history to rush for more than 9,000 yards, scored on runs of 2 and 8 yards as the Chiefs seized a 14-0 lead with 10:52 left in the first half despite a rash of injuries to the defense.
Pro Bowl defensive end Neil Smith, after intercepting Jim Harbaugh's pass in the first quarter, hobble away with an ankle injury and did not return.
AFC
Kansas City 7 4 20 400
Denver 7 4 20 400
L.A. Raiders 6 4 40 330
San Diego 6 4 40 240
Central
Houston 6.4 0 3.0
Pittsburgh 6.4 0 2.0
Cleveland 5.5 0 3.1
Cincinnati 0.10 0 3.0
NFL
East
Buffalo 8 2.0 4.1-0
Miami 8 2.0 4.1-0
N.Y.Jets 6 4.0 3.1-0
Cleveland 6 4.0 3.1-0
New England 9 0.0 0.8-0
Chicago 19, Kansas City 17
N.Y. Jets 17, Cincinnati 12
Atlanta 27, Dallas 14
Miami 17, Houston 27, Cleveland 20
Buffalo 23, Indianapolis 9
Miami 17, New England 13
N.Y. Giants 7, Philadelphia 3
L.A. Raiders 6, San Diego 7
N.Y. Lakers 5, Washington 4
L.Rams 10, Washington 6
Tampa Bay 23, Minnesota 10
West
NFC
Tonight's Game
New Oriole of San Francisco
8 p.m.
W L W T DIV
New Orleans 6 3 0 3-10
San Francisco 4 6 0 3-10
L.A. Rams 3 7 0 3-20
Central
Detroit 7 3 0 2-20
Green Bay 6 4 0 1-10
Miami 6 4 0 1-10
Chicago 5 5 0 1-30
Tampa Bay 3 7 0 1-40
East
Dallas 7 3 0 4-1-0
N.Y. Giants 7 3 0 4-1-0
Indiana 7 4 0 4-1-0
Phoenix 3 7 0 3-1-0
Washington 3 7 0 1-8-0
Ailen's first touchdown was his 106th, making him No. 6 on the alltime list.
A 40-yard pass interference penalty on cornerback Donnell Woolford keyed the Chiefs' 9-play, 92-yard march for a 14-0 lead in the second period. Krieg hit Willie Davis for 10 yards to get Kansas City out of a deep hole. After the penalty, Allen scored from the 8.
Kevin Butler hit field goals of 32 and 45 yards later in the second quarter to slice the halftime lead to 14-6.
The Bears, who have struggled offensively all season, got the ball at the 50 midway through the fourth quarter, trailing only by five. But Dan Saleumua sacked Harbaugh for a big loss, Derrick Thomas threw Anderson for a 5-yard loss and Chicago then got only six yards on third-and-17.
Early in the third period, Tim Worley broke free on a 25-yard scoring run to make it 14-12, capping a 74-yard march. Dale Carter then blocked Butler's try for the extra point.
Weekend defeats cloud bowl games' outlook
The Associated Press
Instead of getting clearer, the bowl picture got more confusing Saturday.
instead of getting clearer, the bowl picture got more confusing Saturday. Losses by last week's top-ranked Notre Dame, No. 4 Miami and No. 5 Ohio State left the Jan. 1 bowl lineups unsettled and fans scratching their heads
"It's very hard to say anybody's in the driver's seat," Flesta Bowl official Mike Doherty said.
Who plays where on New Year's Day will depend on the polls and a few crucial games the next two weekends.
Only one bowl berth was nailed down Saturday. No. 15UCLA earned a spot in the Rose Bowl by defeating Southern Cal 27-21 for the Pac-10 title.
But who would they play?
Ohio State failed to clinch the Big Ten championship and the other Rose Bowl berth, losing to Michigan 28-0. No.10 Wisconsin, which defeated Illinois 35-10, can earn a trip to Pasadena by beating Michigan State on Dec. 4 at Tokyo.
would put the Cornhuskers in a position to play for the national championship in the Orange Bowl if they defeat Oklahoma.
This week's No. 2 Nebraska, which didn't play Saturday, already has clinched the Big Eight title and a spot in the Orange Bowl. But the Cornhuskers' game against Oklahoma on Friday will play a key role in determining the national championship. It
It could be Florida State if the No. 1 Seminoles, 10-1, defeat No. 7 Florida on Saturday. If the Seminoles and Cornhuskers occupy the top two spots in the combined polls at the end of the season, they would meet in Miami on Jan. 1. Florida State stayed in the title hunt Saturday night with a 62-3 rout of North Carolina State.
But Nebraska also could end up playing No. 5 West Virginia, 10-0, in the Orange Bowl if they both win their last regular-season games.
The Mountaineers should have an outside shot at playing Nebraska if they defeat Boston College on Friday.
Notre Dame, 10-1, also could go to the Orange Bowl if it finishes No. 2 behind Nebraska in the coalition poll.
And what about undefeated Auburn? The No. 3 Tigers, 11-0, defeated Alabama 22-14 Saturday, completing a perfect season. But they can't play in a bowl because of NCAA probation.
Florida, which defeated Vanderbilt 52-0, will represent the SEC in the Sugar Bowl.
Bevond that, little is clear.
Swim team second in Minnesota meet
Kansan staff report
The Kansas swimming and diving teams competed in the Minnesota Invitational last weekend in Minneapolis.
The men's team finished with 491 points, five points behind third-place Tennessee and 623 points behind invitational champion Minnesota, who scored 1,114 points. Second-place Indiana scored 905 points.
Conference rivals Nebraska and Iowa State finished fifth and sixth respectively in the men's competition.
The women's team finished second in the eight-team meet scoring 1,038 points. Minnesota won the women's competition with 1,201 points.
The women's team was bolstered by a first-place finish by freshman Rebecca Andrew in the 100-yard butterfly event. The victory was her first collegiate victory.
Conference rivals Nebraska and Iowa State finished in third and fourth respectively in the women's competition.
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
♂
MEN SEEKING WOMEN
DWM, 61, 7'15, lbs., attractive professional, KU grad. I'm new in town and looking for an intelligent, attractive SWF 21-30 for dating, great conversation and possible relationship. Let's not spend this long cold winter alone. Call for more details, and if you like what you hear, leave me a call.
Latin looking, *B*SWM 21, seeks SF with long hair, decent figure, fugacy of sensual and humor of car bar bopping and partying with. Should have been a bit more fun! Are you "Hooke on Phonics"? Hey! So am I!
Single white male in mid-20's, grad. student seeks
single female individual/genus/artist type with
an extremely silly sense of humor and weird taste
in music, movies, books etc. #45715.
SWM. 20, 6'1". WORKOUT HUNK sees spotter. Bromed and toned to pump iron. Looking for blonde hair, blue or green eyes, conditioned muscles and willing to take it to the weight room and anywhere else our meeting may lead us. Call Box43801
SWK 3'10; med. build, attractive, brn. hair & eyes,
brown hair, biting, hiking, snow skiing & dancing.
Would like to meet attractive, athletic woman 21-
39. Seeking friends 1st, then maybe who knows?
-
SWM 20 yrs, $10.150 lb. long brown hair, I love Henry Rollins, Tom Waite, Social Distortion. I own a motorcycle, don’t have job and probably drink to sleep. I wear stocking wear, ice-free need not apply. #65228
SWM 21 yrs, 7ce* , 8d 185, dark brown hair, icy blue
muddiness, bod肌, looking for a sincere who lady
to be with them in the right ways. Give me
a call if moonlit walk, nighttime talks, and special
things.
Tall and lean SWM with razor-sharp blue eyes, hypoxic smile and vampire charisma sees beautiful girl to share old-world romance with rain and lilies, laughter and blush. Call Box #46543
To check out these ads call 1-900-285-4560 You will be charged $1.95 per minute
PLACE AN AD FREE!
Call 864-4358
SWM 21 yrs, blue eyes, looks for a "小李Childo" who likes the finer things in life such as long walks, Kool-aid, and eating cereal by candlelight. I need someone to call my "Chick-Monkey" and to hang out with and have a good time. Box #48734
Tall, athletic SWM 23, 6, who is being enchanting under wet street lamps sees companion for fun, frolic and warm furcies. Romance is key and looks are unimportant. Be prepared for anything except pain. No a god, but worth it. #48574.
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
♂
WOMEN
SEEKING
MEN
2 attractive SWF"s a seeking 2 SWF's 23=—(Gad, students preferred). Must have a good personality, like intelligent conversations, and appreciate our bitterness sense of humor. Hint: We love romance
SWF 30, brown hair, slender body, seductive hazel eyes in search of the ultimate experience while I'm still young and innocent. I'm looking for sincerity, my kindness, and my love. I'm me this, and a whole lot more then call #87927
66
MEN SEEKING MEN
Gay white male. Well guys you have only a few weeks of classes left and still haven't made many new friends, still looking and hoping to make some. 44372
GWM, 18, *6*4, 190, blu green. eyes, good-looking model type, shy, intelligent and philosophical seeking 12-8 GWM jocks, clap lovers, or soccer players who are butch, clap lovers, have all male friends, tall, full body, cute boy looks. for possible relationship *44071*
Handshake
FRIENDS
SEEKING
FRIENDS
Looking for someone who enjoys the great outdoors and all seasons. Listen to all the different bird species in your yard.
MUTUAL
HOBBIES
EXPLORER'S CASE
This is the time of the gathering! Individuals interested in a meeting of the minds periodically to enhance our knowledge and abilities are encouraged to leave a message. #46434
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS To place an ad (must be 18 yrs old)
1. Call or come into the Kansan at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358
3. After your ad runs in the Mon., Tues., & Thurs. editions of the Kansan, you call a free 800-number (every 3rd day from the day that you initially place your voice message), to listen to the messages people leave for you. Any other day, you may call the 900-number to retrieve your messages at a cost of $1.95 per minute. The average call is 3 mins in length.
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.
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.
1
3. If you like what you hear, leave a message of your own. Include a phone number where you can be reached.
1
NATIONAL: President Clinton helps to end American Airlines strike, returning flight schedules to normal today. Page 8.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103, NO.67
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 23,1993
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Admission requirements for education to be stiffer
By Kathleen Stolle
Kansan staff writer
For students wanting to become teachers, making the grade just got a little tougher.
Last week the Board of Regents approved recommendations from a task force to raise admissions standards for teacher training programs at KU and other state universities.
Richard Whelan, interim dean of KU's School of Education, said the move was spawned by a statewide reform in education.
"The natural question was, 'Do we need to take a look at teacher education programs to make sure students will receive the best education possible?' he said. "We support that."
The new standards will be first implemented in 1995 and will be reviewed annually thereafter, Whelan said.
The changes will require applying students to have higher cumulative grade point averages, higher scores on the Pre-Professional Skills Test and to have completed 15 hours of specified basic skills courses. A student's previous experience working with children and youths will become a consideration.
Whelan said he thought the skills test was unnecessary because the other requirements would sufficiently prove a student's ability.
Nita Sundbye, head of the department of curriculum and instruction, agreed that the skills test was not a requirement everyone supported.
"I know that some of the people in the School of Education have pretty good data that the PPST test is not a good way of showing qualification," she said.
For the education programs with capped enrollment, such as secondary English and K12, the changes should have little effect because the admission goes to the top students now, Sundbye said.
Making the grade
The toucher admission standards include:
a 2.75 GPA after 35 hours of general course study, instead of a minimum 2.5 GPA after 50 hours.
KANSAN
45 hours of specified basic skills with a 2.0 GPA included in the 35 hours. The basics include six hours of written composition, three hours of oral communication and six hours of mathematics.
The PPST minimum scores in writing will remain at 172, but the minimum reading score will go from 172 to 173, and the minimum mathematics score will increase from 172 to 174.
"If there is greater rigor in this for us than what we already have in place, then it's the math requirements, which are a little stiffer," she said
The math requirement, which increased from three to six hours, is part of the basic skills courses. The other basic skills required for admission under the new standards are three hours of oral communication and six hours of written composition. Students must finish the 15 hours with a 2.0 GPA.
Amie Kuhn, Topeka senior majoring in elementary education, said she thought the focus on basic courses might be misleading because some basic courses have little to do with teaching.
"There might be some students out there who might be great teachers, but they might not have the grades to show it." she said.
Another recommendation from the task force included at least one mid-program review of students, after which their continuation in the program would be considered. The task force also recommended an annual meeting of educators and administrators to discuss teacher education concerns.
NASA
Copy Balsavias, Army ROTC sergeant,
stands at attention with her comrades
during the ROTC halftime show of
the Kansas-Nebraska football game.
One hundred-thirty Army cadets stand at attention on the lawn of Allen Field House. Geoffrey Athey, battalion commander, moves methodically through the ranks
Athye, Sherman, Texas, senior, steps in front of a cadet. The scrutiny begins.
Starting with the hat, Athey examines every detail of the cadet's class A dress uniform. Athey is on guard against nose hairs and dirty ears. His eyes are peeled for loose strings and smudges. Ribbons and name tags must be exactly one-
Facing the future, inspecting
eight of an inch above the breast pockets. Shirt buttons, belt buckle and trousers zipper must line up
zipper must line up exactly. Any imper-
action is called a "gig."
"How far above your
ribbons are your airborne wings supposed to be?" Athey asks the cadet.
---
"A quarter of an inch, sir," the cadet answers.
Welcome to Army ROTC inspection, an exercise that determines the readiness and morale of a military unit. These cadets, members of the Reserve Officers' Training Corps, are not playing soldier. They are training to become officers in the United States Armed Forces.
"His airborne wings are too high." Athey tells the company commander who records the gig. Athey turns and paces to the next cadet.
ROTC cadets and midshipmen are inspected one to four times a semester.
See ROTC, Page 7.
THE GRAND CHAMPION
After an announcement by their show directors, members of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity and Delta Delta Delta sorority celebrate at the fraternity. The acts chosen for Rock Chalk Revue were announced last night at the Lied Center.
Five for the show
120
By Shan Schwartz Kansan staff writer
Representatives from the 14 living groups that submitted show proposals for Rock Chalk Revie 1994 gathered at the Lied Center last night for the announcement of the five shows selected for this year's production.
Each group of directors held hands or stood with their arms wrapped around each other as Julie Thies, executive director of Rock Chalk Revue and Overland Park senior, announced the winning shows.
Directors of the selected shows jumped and screamed with excitement. Some were overwhelmed with the news.
"Wow. Wow," said Dave Eagan, Lawrence sophomore and member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity, after hearing that his group's show was selected. "We've been waiting for this for a long time. It's been a lot of work, and now it all starts again."
Groups will begin rehearsing their shows immediately and will begin formal rehearsals together on Jan. 12, Thies said. The shows will be performed Feb. 24-26 in the Lied Center.
Overcome with joy, Delta Delta delta sorority members Rebecca Ashbrook, Highland Ranch, Colo., freshman, left, and Anne McFarland, St. Louis sophomore, shed some tears after hearing their act had been chosen as one of the five to be performed during the Rock Chalk Revue in the spring.
Any group can still participate in Rock Chalk Revue by donating community service hours a competing for the Revue's "Most Charitable" award.
The groups submitted their final proposals on Nov. 5 with detailed descriptions of the shows, scripts, music, choreography, costumes, set descriptions and technical cues.
Groups that submitted show proposals have been working on them since the show's theme, "The Word is Out," was announced on Sept. 9. Each group's directors met with directors of Rock Chalk Revue every week to discuss progress on their shows.
The proposals were reviewed by a panel
of 11 judges who also interviewed the directors of each show Saturday and Sunday.
Rock Chalk Revue was performed in Hoch Auditorium from its creation in 1950 until the building was gutted by fire in 1991. The Revue played in Lawrence High School in 1992 and 1993. Now, the Revue has a permanent home in the Lied Center.
The directors said that in the new facility, Rock Chalk Revue will be bigger and better than ever.
"We're really, really excited." Thies said.
"It's going to be a lot of fun."
Rock Chalk Shows
"For whom the will toiled," Delta Gamma and Lambda Chla Alpha
"A play on word." Delta Delta Delta and Phi Delta Theta
"You are what you eat," Kappa Kappa
Command and Signa Chi.
*To bee or not to bee*, *Alpha Chi Omega*
and *Alpha ChiLambda*.
- "Does anybody know?" Kappa Alpha Theta
KANSAN
INSIDE
Season premiere
The Kansas women's basketball team defeated New Zealand in an exhibition game ravaged by turnovers.
Page 9
A. R. C.
Money for nothing is not popular among KU students
Many ask to borrow during holiday season
Kansan staffwriter
By Chesley Doh
It is close to Thanksgiving, the season for giving.
But there are people who take advantage of the holiday spirit and borrow money without intending to pay it back.
Many KU students say they do not mind borrowing, but mooching makes their skin crawl.
"There's something about that word moocher. I'd rather die than be called a moocher," Tiffany Poling said. "I don't even like to borrow money."
Poling, Wichita senior, said she had some close friends she would not mind lending
money. But she said she was assertive enough to tell people she did not want to lend them any money.
"A lot of people who know me and know my attitude know better than to even ask me," she said. "I guess I was just brought up to be independent."
There are reasons why certain people are more inclined to borrow than others.
It has a lot to do with the way you were raised, said William Arnold, associate professor of sociology.
"Those who borrow more grew up in a family where there was lots of borrowing going on," he said. "In that type of situation accounts aren't kept. There's the thinking that it will all even out in the end."
learned they had to fend for themselves and that usually happened in college.
In high school peer groups there is the philosophy that whatever you have you will share with the group, Arnold said.
But he said that with time people usually
"If you've been trained to borrow you'll keep it up until you're trained not to," he said.
"Generally, a moocher does not intend to pay back," Arnold said. "With borrowing there's the expectation of reciprocity."
Arnold said there was a difference between mooching and borrowing.
Some people are naturally more giving than others.
Mullaliv said that lending money to people sometimes had its good points.
Mullally said he was brought up in a family with lots of brothers and sisters, so he was used to sharing.
"I usually give money to people when they ask for it," said Jeff Mullally, Fremont, Neb., senior. "I guess I'm just a gullible sap."
"If I ever need a buck then I can use that against them," he said.
An only child, Eric Fellows,
Boulder,Colo., senior, said he had no problem lending money to or sharing food with his roommates. But he said he would be hesitant to lend money to someone he did not know well.
"In Boulder you see transient types walking around harassing you for money, and it's always the same people," Fellows said. "When you see that all the time it gets kind of old."
People who borrow and do not return are committing a major mistake, said Duane Spears, Great Bend, senior.
"I have no problem lending money to people," Spears said. "But if a person borrows money and thinks they're getting away with it once or twice, I won't do it again."
1
2
Tuesday, November 23, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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"Your Book Professionals"
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Hrs: 8-7 M-Th., 8-5 Fri.
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*10 tans for $20
* New classes & equipment
next semester!
BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility
749-2424
925 Iowa
Hillcrest Center
ON THE RECORD
A KU employee's bicycle valued at $50 was taken in the 2500 block of West Sixth Street between Nov. 14 and Saturday, Lawrence police reported.
A student's stereo, amplifier, speakers and 35 compact discs, valued together at $900, were taken from a car in the 700 block of West 12th Street on Thursday, Friday or Saturday, Lawrence police reported.
A student's wallet and its contents, valued together at $55, were taken from a car in the 2300 block of Iowa Street on Friday,
Lawrence police reported.
A student's guitar valued at $600 was taken from a residence in the 1200 block of Ohio Street on Friday or Saturday, Lawrence police reported.
A student's license plate valued at $45 was taken from a car in the 1400 block of West Seventh Street on Saturday or Sunday, Lawrence police reported.
A student's bicycle valued at $700 was taken in the 1000 block of Illinois Street on Saturday or Sunday, Lawrence police reported.
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 Comments/Complaints — Amy Casey, Business Manager
Come to the Kansan newsroom,
11.1 Staufer-Flint Hall for:
Staffer-Fint Hall for:
placing announcements of meetings or events of campus groups in the 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.
The UniversityDaily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-FlintHall, Lawrence, Kan. 60645, 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. 60644. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
University Daily Kansan fax number — 913-864-5261
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KAN. 68045
PERSONAL HEALTH CARE FOR WOMEN CONFIDENTIAL ABORTION SERVICES
- Complete GYN Care • Pregnancy Testing
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• Physicians/Caring Staff • Modern State-licensed Facility
PROVIDING QUALITY HEALTH CARE TO WOMEN SINCE 1974
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4401 W. 109th (1-435 & Roe)
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WEATHER
Omaha: 35°/20°
LAWRENCE: 50°/33°
Kansas City: 53°/34°
St. Louis: 62°/45°
Wichita: 60°/41°
Minneapolis: 23°/6°
Phoenix: 75°/53°
Salt Lake City: 39°/18°
Seattle: 37°/26°
TODAY
Tomorrow Thursday
Cloudy with southwest winds
High: 50°
Low: 33°
Cloudy
High: 45°
Low: 30°
Cloudy with northerly winds
High: 42°
Low: 30°
Cloudy
Cloudy
VS4 MasterCare
Cloudy
High: 45°
Low: 30°
4-3300
LOW: 35 LOW: 30
Source: Gregg Potter, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
KANSAN
A campus brief with the headline "Social work plays host to clinics" on Page 3 of Friday's Kansan contained an incorrect name. State Rep. Joan Wagnon, D-Topeka, is a Kansas gubernatorial candidate.
CORRECTION
Kansan contained an incorrect name. Shirley Palmer is a member of the Board of Regents.
A story with the headline "Regents choose executive director" on Page 3 of yesterday's
A headline on a brief on Page 6 of yesterday's Kansan was incorrect. Two Topeka teens arrested in the Sept. 18 shooting of a Lawrence man will be tried as juveniles.
Rentals
We buy & sell used sports equipment
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
1029 Massachusetts phone 841-7529
+
Cornerstone SBC
802W 22nd Terrace (behind KFC at dead end)
Sunday School9:30 Worship Service 11:00
Come join us in fellowship and Bible Study Need transportation-call 843-0442
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
To place an ad:
Here's how it works...
A smart, easy way to meet people in a sophisticated, safe and confidential manner.
+
Classifications available
1-Mer Seeking Women
2-Women Seeking Men
3-Men Seeking Men
4-Women Seeking Women
15-Friends Seeking Friends
-Seeking Sports Interest
-Mutual Hobbies
-Shared Religion.
1. Call or come by the Kansas at 119 Stauffer-Fint Halt, 864-4358
2. You'll place an ad in the Jaytak Meeting Network section of the Kansan and call a free 800-number to record a voice message for people to listen to your ad.
3. After your ad runs in the Kansan, you call a free 800-number to listen to the messages you receive.
4. You choose the people you want to meet and set up a time and place.
To check out an ad:
1. Read the ads in the Jaytalk Meeting Network on the back page of the Kansan.
2. Call 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.
G LINES for G DAYS ABSOLUTELY FREE!
CALL 894-4358 TODA TO PLACE AN AD
The Tradition Continues...
CAFE JAYHAWK CAFE
Wednesdays;
25¢ Draws
Tuesdays;
Light Night ; $150 Domestic Light Bottles,
Shot and Light draw Specials
Thursdays;
70's Disco Night:
The'Hawk is "Stayin' Alive" with your favorite disco tunes!
We Are Your 365 Days A Year Bar!
Will be Open at Opun on Thanksgiving, and Will be Open on Christmas
THE HAWK
Lawrence, KS
Since 1919
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(913)843-9273
3pm-2am, Mon.-Sun.
Call or come in to check our
daily specials.
KEVIN COSTNER CLINT EASTWOOD aPerfect world
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WARNER BRUSH PRESENTS
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**Page copyright** [Amalgamation Audio, Inc. www.Causes4A.TV] **For Digital Rights**
WBCA
OPENS NOVEMBER 24 EVERYWHERE
1
CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 23, 1993
3
20
Susan McSpadden / KANBAN
Playing singles
Taking advantage of an open court at Robinson Center, Chris Walters, McLouth senior, plays a singles match. Robinson will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday, will close Thursday through Saturday for the break, and will open again on Sunday at 1 p.m.
Students awarded for achievements on and off campus
Hilltopper honors given
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
Margaret Hu, Manhattan senior never expected to accomplish so much at KU.
"It was something I thought I would never receive," she said. "I was surprised, but flattered of course."
The other winners were Kathryn Price, Wichita senior; Kelly Dunkelberger, Woodland Park, Colo.; senior; Tim Dawson, Topeka senior; Brian Anderson, Wichita senior; and Trevor Thompson, Leawood senior.
Hu was one of six students who were named Hilltoper award winners by a selection committee made up of the editors of the last four Jayhawker yearbooks and KU students, staff and faculty members.
Hu is president of Student Union Activities and a member of the board of directors of the Kansas and Burge Unions memorial corporation.
The Hilltopter award began in 1937 as the Hill Headliners. The award was established by the Jayhawker yearbook for KU seniors who displayed excellence in academics and community service.
This year's winners first were nominated by fellow students, after which the nominees sent in an application. The selection committee reviewed each application before making a decision.
Price said she was glad the committee made a decision to select her because she always had looked up to Hiltopper winners.
"I'm really happy that the committee chose me," she said. "I think that it's an honor."
Price is a student senator, head of the student lecture series and a member of the board of directors of the unions corporation.
Sheila Immel, assistant to the dean
of student life, said the winners were chosen from 26 applicants.
"There were some really good candidates," she said. "It was tough."
"It's not just a grade point average," she said. "And it's not just doing a lot of work at KU."
Immel said the winners were selected because of their diverse activities, not just the ones concerning KU.
Ann Eversole, associate dean of student life and director of the organizations and activities center, said there would be a page in the yearbook about each winner.
She said the award demonstrated the academic and social qualities about each winner.
"It's not monetary, but it's recognition by the University community for their accomplishments," she said.
The award winners will be honored at a reception on Jan. 31, 1994, at the Adams Alumni Center. U.S. Circuit Judge Deanell Tacha, former Hilltopter award winner, will speak at the reception.
ON CAMPUS
LesBiGayS OK encourage anyone who is lesbian, gay, bisexual or unsure to call the organization or KU Info about a confidential meeting.
OAKS—Non-Traditional Students will have a brown bag lunch at 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. today in the Burge Union. For more information, call Gerry Vernon at 864-7317.
Graduate Association of Students of History will sponsor a lecture at 3:30 p.m. today at the Jawahk Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call heinz Kattenfeld at 749-1186.
KU Judo Club will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in 207 Robinson Center. New members are welcome.
Amnesty International will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Danelle Myron at 842-5407.
International Students Association will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Pro-Choice Coalition will meet at 6 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call Stephanie Gabriel at 842-6894.
Minority Business Student Council will meet at 7 tonight in 426 Summerfield Hall. For more information, call Antoine Montgomery at 842-5276 or Jacinta Carter at 749-3083.
AURH will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the AURH office in McCollum Hall. For more information, call 864-4041.
Native American Student Association will meet at 7 tonight in 3012 Haworth Hall. For more information, call Johnnie Young at 864-4351.
KU Dr. Seuss Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Jessica Perinchief at 841-2558.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445.
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in Robinson Center. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
Original Klub of KU Looney Tunes (OKKULT) will meet at 7:30 tonight at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For information, call Julie Dublinski at 864-1233.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries and St. Lawrence Center will sponsor "Taize," a celebration of Thanksgiving and Praise at 8:30 tonight in Danforth Chapel. For more information, call Leah Peck at 841-5424.
Leave the fat on the turkey, not you
Don't fast or binge,but enjoy with moderation
By Liz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
Chad Marting, St. Louis sophomore, is one of many KU students who might pick up a couple extra pounds eating home-cooked meals during Thanksgiving break.
But Marting is not worried. He just wants his mom's mashed potatoes
"I have to have mashed potatoes," Marting said. "They're real good the way my mom makes them. If they're not there, I will get mad."
For students concerned that they might take the shape of a turkey after break, Ann Chapman, Watkins dietitian, has some suggestions.
Exercising before the big meal is beneficial to a student's Thanksgiving day agenda, Chapman said. Exercise makes people feel better about their bodies, which in turn makes them more conscious of what they choose to eat, Chapman said.
Moderation is the key to enjoying a holiday meal without going overboard. Fat levels in foods should be used as a guide for
"It's pretty hard in the traditional American family to eat a low-fat Thanksgiving meal."
Ann Chapman
Watkins Memorial Health Center dietician
making selections, she said.
"It's pretty hard in the traditional American family to eat a low-fat Thanksgiving meal," Chapman said.
Eating larger servings of foods lower in fat, such as turkey without the skin or plain vegetables, and smaller servings of foods higher in fat, such as pumpkin pie, is a way to prevent weight gain without feeling deprived, Chapman said.
"Take a double serving of turkey and a half-serving of the dressing," she said.
Fasting all day before sitting down to a big Thanksgiving meal causes people to eat two meals instead of one, Chapman said.
"They eat a huge Thanksgiving meal and then collapse on the couch for three or four hours, and at that point, get up and start eating some of the leftovers," she said.
Instead of fasting, students should eat breakfast and a light lunch so they will be hungry rather than famished at dinner time, Chapman said.
Students should skip the foods they normally eat at school, such as rolls served in the residence halls, and enjoy something prepared especially for the occasion, such as mom's famous cherry pie, Chapman said.
Saving up for something homemade is no problem for Dallas O Brien, St. Francis junior.
"Just going from reheated microwave crap that college kids eat to something your mom made is a big change," O'Brien said. "It'll be real food."
After dinner, plates and food should be cleared away promptly so there is no temptation to eat everything in sight, Chapman said.
Students who do overeat should not be
Gobble but don't waddle
Moderation is the key to enjoying a Thanksgiving meal without gaining weight. Eat more of the items that are lower in fat, less of those higher in fat.
High in fat Lower in fat
stuffing sweet potatoes*
mashed potatoes*
turkey skin turkey without skin
gravy cranberries
pumpkin pie green beans*
dinner rolls*
- These foods are lower in fat, but adding butter, margarine or whole milk can add extra fat.
Source: Ann Chapman, dietitian KANSAN
overcome with guilt; one meal will not make them gain weight, Chapman said. It is important that a one-night eating binge does not become a six-week eating marathon, she said.
Natalie Bennett, Overland Park sophomore, said she would feel no guilt overeating at Thanksgiving.
"It's Thanksgiving." Bennett said. "You're supposed to eat."
Financial aid application tamed with shorter form
Renewal system would provide options for majority of students
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
Some federal financial aid recipients may think they have spent half their lives completing the 130 questions on the standard federal financial aid applications.
The federal government still would require student loan
"Basic information of the student's home address and assets tends not to change," Rademacher said. "The income and the student's outstanding debts each year does change."
But for the first time next year, students who already have applied for federal student loans may be able to cut that list of questions to 30, thanks to the new renewal application for federal aid for the 1994-1995 academic year.
Rachel Rademacher, assistant director for the office of student financial aid, said the renewal applications would give students the option of not having to fill out information that has not changed since their 1993-1994 loan application.
applicants to complete information each year on anticipated date of graduation, gross income and balances on current loans, Rademacher said.
While most of the University's current 13,000 federal aid applicants would qualify to use the new system, Demacherae said that students who have moved may not receive their renewal application.
If they have not notified the financial aid office of their new address, they will not receive the new application because of its confidential nature.
"If it goes to an old address, it does not get forwarded," Rademacher said. "The post office won't forward it, and it will get shredded."
The new application also will allow students to indicate what type of financial aid they want — work-study, student loans or parent loan.
"We're adding this back to the application after we took it off for a few years," Rademacher said. "We give priority consideration to work-study applicants because there are so few positions available."
Work-study aid allows students to pay off their tuition by working at KU. Parent loans, also called PLUS loans, are loans taken out and paid for by the student's parents.
Scrapping that paper work
Students will not receive a duplicate renewal application if they lose their original and should instead complete the standard Free Application for Federal Student Aid.
While the loan renewal application is intended to make applying for federal aid easier, it will still take four to six weeks for the government to review applications and assign loan amounts.
KANSAN
For limited sources of funds such as work-study, Rademacher said she encouraged students to apply for financial aid by March 1, 1994, for aid for the 1994-95 academic year.
But even with the new renewal application, students cannot submit their application until Jan. 1.
After training her staff about the renewal process, Rademacher said she was curious about how the process would work for the students.
"We're interested in how the renewals are going to work," she said. "We're as new to it as the students are."
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Tuesday, November 23,1993
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
'Don't ask, don't tell policy best solution
President Clinton and Congress' compromise of "don't ask, don't tell" is the best proposal for allowing gays in the military.
While this policy permits gays to enter the military and prohibits exclusion merely because of sexual preference, most critics argue that these people are forced to live a lie. However, those complaining of this loss of First Amendment rights forget one thing about the U.S.military: those in the military have very restricted freedoms of expression.
Just as gays are forced to suppress their lifestyle while in uniform, so are other personnel. The military prohibits participation in demonstrations and frowns on what is called "fraternization," the friendly afterhours mixing between supervisors and their subordinates. This frowning even prohibits public displays of affection between, for example, a colonel or captain married to a lieutenant or ensign. They must leave their married lives away from the base.
In other words, homosexuals are not the only ones that must suppress something about themselves.
One aspect that is wrong with the compromise, however, is that it provides no abandonment for investigations of homosexual activity.
While any allegation of misconduct warrants investigation, no one should be subject to unfair scrutiny because of what they do on their own time, out of uniform and away from their official posts—as long as it doesn't hurt others. The present policy offers no protection from these continual investigations which have been likened to the Salem witch hunts of the 1600s.
Until the Clinton administration, gays have served proudly in uniform despite the ban against them. Rather than complain about the lack of freedom of expression, these people decided that the suppression of their lifestyle was an inferior sacrifice compared to serving their country. This decision allowed them to contribute in support of the United States and allowed the military to benefit from the technical talent and skills those people had to offer.
Gay personnel continue to serve in uniform today and will continue to enter and serve in the military regardless of policy. The policy of "don't ask, don't tell" avoids conflicts of homophobia and sustains morale.
For those who believe the commitment to serving their country is greater than a lifestyle, "don't ask, don't tell" is the best policy.
J. R. CLAIRBORNE FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
U.S. can't play favorites in Mideast peace plans
The United States is giving Israel almost everything it wants to encourage it to cooperate in the Middle East peace process.
One shudders to think what other goodies Rabin will reap.
Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin went to Washington the other day with a political, economic and military shopping list and was quite successful in finding — and getting — everything he wanted and more. On his second day of a 10-day visit to North America, Rabin was given pledges by President Bill Clinton for advanced U.S. warplanes and previously restricted computer technology to be sent to Israel, no cuts in America's $3 billion annual aid package to Israel and a renewed vow from Clinton to maintain and enhance Israel's qualitative security edge.
It is truly amazing how the U.S. is bending over backward to try to please the Israelis. A case in point is the access the U.S. is willing to give Israel to intelligence and satellite material. Until recently, it had been banned for export to Israel because of its military applications and use in building ballistic missiles. That America has barred this kind of information from going even to top allies says only too well how dangerous and sensitive it must be.
What is even more amazing is America's seeming unwillingness to acknowledge that for a peace deal to be struck there must be two parties, not one. In this particular instance, the second party — the Arab side — is getting nothing compared to what Tel Aviv has and will continue to get.
ARAB NEWS
ARAB NEWS
JIDDAH, SAUDI ARABIA
KANSAN STAFF
KC TRAUER, Editor
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
Editors
Assistant to the editor ... J.R. Clairborne
News ... Stacy Friedman
Editorial ... Terrilyn McConnell
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Kristi Fogler
Photo ... Klip Chin, Renoe Kneeber
Features ... Ezra Wolfe
Graphics ... John Paul Wolfe
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
AMY CASEY
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ..Ed Schager
Regional Sales mgr ..Jennifer Perlier
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
Glazed larder ..Gretchen Kotterleinrich
**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 photographed.
The Kansas university reserves the right to edit or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newarow, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
PEPSI
OH. SHUT UP!
THE NEXT STOP ON OUR CURRENT TOUR IS THAT LITTLE 7-11 OUT BY THE AIRPORT!
Reasons for the death penalty do not support its reinstitution
COLUMNIST
Wednesday the Kansan ran an editorial calling for the reinstitution of capital punishment in Kansas in 1994. I completely disagree with the editorial. The death penalty is a barbaric and overly final solution to difficult problems.
On the applied side, the death penalty has been favored by some for its potential in deterring future crimes. But crime, especially violent crime, continues to rise along with the number of executions. Criminals do not generally think about the death penalty when they commit murders. In fact, as Kent Miller and Michael Radelet write in their 1993 book "Executing the Mentally Ill," a 1989 Gallup poll shows that supporters of the death penalty are using deterrence less and less as an argument for their support.
Second, as it is applied today, the death penalty borders on being racist. In 1887, the Supreme Court narrowly rejected the appeal of a Georgia man on death row even though the man's lawyers had found compelling evidence that black men were four times more likely to receive the death sentence than white men.
COLUMNIST
NATHAN
OLSON
years ago, a man in Virginia was denied an appeal because his court-appointed lawyer filed the appeal an hour late. It was the lawyer's first case.
A final note about the application of the death penalty concerns appeals. Death penalty proponents often complain about convicts' seemingly endless appeals. But recent Supreme Court rulings now make the appeals process more rigid than ever. A few
Third, Hugh Bedau and Radelet reported in a 1987 issue of the Stanford Law Review that at least 23 innocent people had been executed in the United States in the 20th century. A system that is biased against blacks and occasionally makes mistakes, resulting in the death of innocent people, is a failed system.
On the theoretical side, the death penalty merely uses violence to solve violence, thus eliminating any traces of compassion. Death penalty proponents don't, for example, care about Johnny Frank Garrett, who in 1992 was executed for the rape and murder of a 76-year-old nun in Texas. As a child, Garrett had been beaten and sexually abused, and he was only 17 when he murdered the nun. Having grown up without learning the difference between right and wrong, Garrett merely acted out what he had learned.
all but a few exempt minors.
Of course, there is no turning back. Garrett cannot be rehabilitated, nor can he be brought back from the dead. His execution was a finality: a life for a life. Although that type of ancient system of justice may be arguable for the woman in California who killed the man who allegedly raped her daughter, it's quite a different matter for the government to get involved in the revenge business. The central question here is, "Should the government have the right to kill its citizens?"
I am not arguing that he should have been put back on the streets. But surely his past had something to do with the murder, and executing him said, "We don't care about his past." More important, the fact that he was a minor when he committed the murder made no difference. Even in countries that still use the death penalty,
Ironically, in most other countries the answer is no. We are the only nation in the developed world to continue executing its citizens. Amnesty International continues to include the United States in its list of countries with human rights' abuses, placing us on equal footing with such countries as China, Iraq, Turkey and Yugoslavia. It's not a worthy list.
Nathan Olson is a Chicago graduate student in English.
Thanksgiving — a time to eat, wrestle and to give thanks for your television
It has become the time of the year that I long for. Yes, soon Thanksgiving Day will be here. This is a day that we should all celebrate. For me, this holiday not only provides a much needed break from school, but it also gives me the chance to partake in much food. This food is not only plentiful, but most importantly, it's free. However, even though eating turkey is now the officially recognized reason for this special day, it wasn't always this way. Believe it or not, there was once a time when eating free food was but a minuscule part of Turkey Day.
Although I haven't researched this subject, if I did, I would probably see that the origins of Thanksgiving go back to the days of the pilgrims who came to the New World (Los Angeles). When they arrived, they met the American Indians, and after promising not to ever lie to them, decided to celebrate their meeting with turkey and Stove Top Stuffing. Then they probably decided to give thanks
COLUMNIST CHRIS RONAN
(hence the name Thanksgiving.) So based on this information (which is probably true), I think maybe we should relive those days by giving thanks for the good fortune in our lives. Before any further reading, you should probably dress in proper attire (choose between pilgrim and American Indian) for maximum benefit. I have been very fortunate in my life and am especially grateful for these things:
1) My television set. I hold my TV very close to my heart because I
spend 90 percent of my life in front of it. Many people will claim that television is actually evil and can decrease your intelligence. I argue that if you watch quality shows, such as soap operas, you can learn quite a bit about human interaction. Therefore, television is actually teaching people how to better survive in this tough world. Also, I wouldn't be able to watch Detroit play in their traditional Thanksgiving game, and wouldn't that just ruin the day? (HA-HA, chuckle, chuckle.)
2) As the cowboys, I mean the pilgrims and American Indians, almost certainly gave thanks for their food, so will I. If things work out right, my Thanksgiving food will be very tasty. I love just about everything, except those little purple things that look like Jello. YUCK! One of the disadvantages of this day is that it takes turkeys almost three weeks to cook. I can start smelling it at about nine in the morning. Then I try to sneak a
taste, but my Dad says, "Don't spoil your appetite. Save room for turkey."
3) The wishbone. This turkey bone has provided many fond memories for my family. To be selected for the "Wishbone Wrestle-Off" is quite an honor. My competition record is unscathed. There's a certain method to it that one either has or doesn't have. The whole theory about making a wish and having it come true is a joke though — the Buccaneers still haven't won a Super Bowl.
Well, I wish you and yours (whatever that means) all the best for Thanksgiving. May the pumpkin pie be plentiful and may you not get into some never-ending argument with an older relative about how messed up the government is. GOBBLE, GOBBLE, GOBBLE!
Chris Ronan is a Overland Park sophomore major in broadcast journalism.
Death penalty is revenge,
will not solve problem
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The Nov. 17 editorial, "Capital Punishment Bill Should Be Passed in '94," makes pseudo-facts out of urban legends derived from romanticized cowboy myths. In the myth, it takes a lone-wolf, pure-hearted, hawk-eyed, good-guy cowboy to clean up the town. In the myth, violence is commonly a force for good, and you can tell good guys by the color of the hat.
I believe that reality is much different; it usually takes concerted and non-violent civic action to clean up crime.
The myth of immanent purity or perfection is hidden but central in the Kansan's argument. That is, the cowboy-government is seen as a distorted Christ figure. Since the gov-
emment's heart is pure, we should trust it with life and death decisions. Since the government's vision is perfect, we should empower it to tell bad guys from good guys "efficiently," without an expensive system of trial and appeal. Since we rightfully seek a "sure way" to prevent recidivism, the government must kill the killers. Since the court system is perfect, we need not think about such messy unfairness as executing innocent persons.
In reality, the following facts are well documented: 1. A fair trial in a capital case in the United States costs much more than the cost of lifetime imprisonment. 2. Alaw law has cited more than 300 persons convicted and punished in the United States for potentially capital crimes on inadequate and often false evidence. 3. Murder rates are higher
If you really want to reduce murder, forget the cowboy myth and ban firearms.
in states with than without a death penalty. 4. The death penalty in the United States is almost entirely reserved for low-income males who murder white people.
David Burress, research economist
Institute for Public Policy and Business Research
Capital punishment is myth in crime control
First, the death penalty is racist. Minorities receive this sentence at a higher rate than whites.
The Editorial Board's call for capital punishment in Kansas (Nov. 17) is insubstantial for three reasons:
Second, capital punishment is not a deterrent to violent crime. Neither
psychopaths nor "common" serious criminals worry much about the consequences of their crimes before they commit them. A more "efficient" system will not prevent a police officer from being shot when responding to an armed robbery, yet it would increase the chances of executing an innocent person.
Finally, capital punishment will not "dramatically reduce the problem of prison overcrowding." Only a small percentage of Kansas' criminals have been convicted of a crime that would be punishable by death; capital punishment could not ease prison overcrowding unless applied to a wider variety of crimes. Furthermore, the idea of justifying executions because taxpayers do not want to provide for criminals is appalling.
Matt Shellenbergar
Leeward lunar
---
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 23,1993
5
FEMA agents heed to the call of disaster, Midwest flooding
By Traci Carl Kansan staff writer
But for George Kremer, a public assistance inspector for the Federal Emergency Management Association, they are a living.
Bombs and floods are disasters for most people.
Today Kremer is leaving his latest job, which was helping the city of Lawrence assess the damage from this summer's flooding.
In that job, he inspected sewer pipes and public parks. The federal government uses his recommendations to measure how much money Lawrence should receive for flood damage.
Those sewer systems will be fixed, Kremer said, but not everything can be repaired.
The biggest problems he found were dirt and sand in the sewer collection system and flooded city parks.
"Unfortunately, we're not in the position to replace a 100-year-old tree," he said.
Before he came to Lawrence, Kremer was in New York doing follow-up
Working on the flooding was hard because people were tired of dealing with it.
But Congress mandated that all flood damage must have taken place from June 26 to Oct. 5, so not all damage will be repaired.
Damage like the large hole in front of Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. Second St., may not qualify for federal funds because it happened at the beginning of June.
"They were worn out before I got here," he said. "The process of helping them find some of these things takes longer because the people are tired of living with this from day to day."
He also had a sense of humor and a funny way of saying certain words.
work on the World Trade Center bombing. He examined how the bombing affected the city's subway system.
Rod Bremby, assistant city manager, said the amount of money Kremer recommended for Lawrence had not been totaled. Original damage estimates by the city were about $5 million.
Bremby said Kremer was always professional and meticulous.
"He had a heavy, northeastern accent," he said.
Kremer's wife, Susan Sohni, who also works for the association, already was in Kansas assessing individual damage from the flood when Kremer arrived in Lawrence. She flew out to Malibu, Calif., about two weeks ago when the fires started.
She said the fires were the worst disaster she had worked with.
"They are so final," she said. "These were beautiful homes, but fire does not discriminate."
Saturday she returned to their home near Walker Valley, N.Y. a small community in the Catskill Mountains with few disasters.
"Since our lives have been disrupted as they have this year, we're hoping to have a little time together," she said.
Kremer will be home tonight. He said he was looking forward to a life that was a little calmer.
"Let's just put it this way," he said. "I have a trout stream that runs through my front yard."
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Extra funds will allow committee to continue lighting improvement
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
3
A touch of Irish in downtown Lawrence
Two years ago, Student Senate voted to help students see the light.
With this vote in November 1991 to increase the student campus fee by $2 per semester for five years, the Senate decided to work with the University to help improve lighting on campus.
Students can see the results of that decision every time they walk around the University at night, said David Amber, vice chancellor for student affairs and head of the campus lighting advisory committee.
Under the 1991 Senate plan, the University will match the $2 increase in student campus fees with money from the KU repair and improvement fund, Ambler said. The student fees have raised $225,000.
At last week's committee meeting, which is held once per semester, members received updates on what the newest phases of the campus lighting improvement would be for the current fiscal year. Ambler said.
"A lot of factors go into the decision of which lighting projects to do first," Ambler said. "But we're very cautious not to say we're going to make it safe for students when we put in additional lighting."
The University has spent about $1.6 million since 1986, when the University allocated improvements of lighting
"It was a sensitizing experience for us to get out and walk around," Ambler said. "You don't really notice how dark it is until you're touring about the area."
Ambler said some scheduled improvements came from suggestions from students who had found dark areas while walking home at night. The lighting committee also discovered dark areas by walking on campus together at night.
Ambler said among the new areas selected for lighting improvement for this academic year are:
The sidewall leading south from Anschutz Science Library to Murphy Hall.
The path leading from Mississippi Street to Jayhawk Boulevard between Lippincott and Dyche hills.
Eric Mersmann, Chesterfield, Mo., senior and lighting committee member, said the money students spent on the lighting project was well worth it.
along Jayhawk Boulevard from the intersection at Sunflower Road to the Chi Omega fountain. Ambler said.
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"The increase is only a temporary deal, and I think the overall effect will be beneficial," Mersmann said. "There will be many projects that light up campus and make it safer."
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Serbians stall U.N. aid convoys
The Associated Press
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — Serbian forces blocked all U.N. aid convoy headed for eastern Bosnia yesterday, while U.N. officials reported starvation in the battle-scarred, southwestern city of Mostar.
in Sarajevo, a mortar shell exploded among children sledding near a U.N. base, wounding five, two seriously.
Lyndall Sachs, a U.N. representative in Berlgrade, said Serbian officials had begun demanding special authorization for aid convoys to cross into Bosnia yesterday. They cited a law passed by Yugoslavia last year requiring such permission for the passage of goods.
to return to Belgrade yesterday. U.N. attempts to resupply its own operations in Bosnia also foundered.
"This has created a bureaucratic nightmare for us," Sachs said.
A 46 truck convoy carrying supplies for a Nordic peacekeeper battalion in Tuzla returned to Belggrade after Bosnian Serb soldiers threatened to shoot. Lt. Col. B艾ikman, U.N. military representative, said.
As a result of the blockade, U.N. convoys headed for the Bosnian cities of Tuzla, Srebrenica and Sarajevo had
Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic personally approved the convoy, Alkman said, but local soldiers claimed that paperwork was not in order and threatened to fire on the convoy unless the trucks turned away from the bridge at the border town of Zvornik.
Aid for western and central Bosnia originates in Croatia, but fighting between ethnic Croats and Bosnia's Muslim-led government has hindered shipments for weeks.
Leaders of Bosnia's Muslim, Serb and Croat factions pledged last week
to ensure free and safe passage for aid convoy. That prompted U.N. officials to try to resume aid shipments in central Bosnia, which were halted Oct. 26 after a driver was killed.
In Mostar, health officials in the Muslim sector of the city reported that an unspecified number of residents had died from lack of food, said Peter Kessler, a U.N. representative in Sarajevo. Many of the 50,000 Muslims there are living in basements because most buildings have been destroyed by Croat artillery.
Aikman said nine residents in east Mostar were wounded Sunday while walking through a minefield to retrieve air-lifted food packages.
On Sunday, only one U.N. convoy delivered its load — 78 tons of food to Tuzla. In better times, 20 or more convoys would drop off up to 1,500 tons of food daily in Bosnia.
"Failure to get these convoys going
again will mean the loss of a great many lives," Kessler said.
In other developments:
More than 2.7 million Bosnians are depending on aid to survive this winter because of disruptions from the 19-month-old war over Bosnia's secession from Yugoslavia. Bosnia's government estimated more than 200,000 people died during the war. In other developments.
■ Fighting between Croats and government forces intensified around the central town of Gornji Vakuf, the news agency Tanjug said. It quoted Bosnian Serbs saying troops from Croatia were fighting alongside Bosnian Croats, but government forces had repulsed the offensive.
Bosnian radio said Serb forces continued a 2-week-old attack on the town of Olovo, northeast of Sarajevo, but said government defenders had killed 50 Serb soldiers and destroyed four tanks.
Suspects in Biehl killing released to cheers
The Associated Press
CAPE TOWN, South Africa — Jubilant Black militants celebrated Monday's release of the three men charged in the murder of U.S. student Amy Bieleh after a witness refused to testify against the suspects.
Ecstatic supporters shouted anti-white slogans and carried the three on their shoulders from the courthouse. The crowd prevented journalists from speaking to the three men, who were among seven Blacks charged in the murder that illustrated the anger of militant Blacks toward whites.
Biehl, 27, a white Fulbright scholar from Newport Beach, Calif., was driving friends home to the Black township of Guguletu on Aug. 25 when a mob of youths stoned her car. When the car was forced to stop and Biehl ran for help, she was stabbed to death.
1961hl had been in South Africa several months working on voter education for Blacks and other political projects.
Prosecutor Nollie Niehaus said he had to withdraw charges against the three because witness Charles Benjamin said he would not testify. Niehaus said Benjamin had given a sworn statement linking the three freed defendants to the crime but changed his mind about testifying for political reasons.
Later, Benjamin told reporters he was a member of the African National Congress and feared the group would be unable to protect him if he testified against the men.
He said he would have testified if the ANC would have promised protection, but also said no one had threatened him or tried to intimidate him.
Most of the defendants are members of the youth league of the Pan African Congress, a Black group
far more militant than the ANC. It refers to members of the white minority as "settlers," and opposes the ANC's negotiations with the white government.
PAC supporters in the courtroom's public gallery gave the group's openhanded salute when charges of murder, robbery and public violence against Mungisl Ngxaza, Mzukisi MXoli and Mankenke Lumilisa were dropped.
Outside the courthouse, about 20 PAC supporters sang and danced, chanting "One settler, one bullet" and harassing journalists. "If you don't stop taking pictures, we'll make you a settler too," some told a Black television camaman.
Niehaus said that under South African law, those freed could be charged again. Court adjourned after his announcement, and the trial was scheduled to resume Tuesday.
LUXEMBOURG
Sanctions may end following approval of Serb peace plan
THE NEWS in brief
---
Sanctions against Yugoslavia should be suspended if persuaded Serbs in breakaway Bosnia-Herzegovina to accept an international peace plan, the European Community said yesterday.
ened the suffering of people across Bosnia as the war among Muslim, Serbs and Croats enters its second winter.
The EC plan must be approved by the U.N. Security Council but already has the conditional backing of the United States, EC sources said.
The obstruction of humanitarian aid has deep-
The foreign ministers of the 12-nation trading bloc also urged the United States and Russia to meet with Bosnia's warring factions in Geneva next week to seek guarantees for the safe passage of aid convoy.
PALENCIA, Guatemala
tion about 185 miles north of the capital.
PALENCIA, Guatemala Americans killed in plane crash
Aplane carrying American sightseers crashed into a mountain near Guatemala's capital, killing all 13 people on board.
The Civil Aeronautics Board said two U.S. citizens were killed in Sunday's crash.
Julio Roberto Godoy, an official with Guatemala's Civil Aeronautics Board, said the crash occurred in stormy weather.
The Aerovias aircraft, a twin-engine Beechcraft plane, was returning from Flores, a tourist attract-
U. S. Embassy spokesman Lee McClenny said the plane last made radio contact with the Guatemala City control tower Sunday afternoon, about one hour after taking off, then crashed in the mountainous area near this small hamlet.
Compiled from The Associated Press
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 23, 1993
7
"On the one hand, there's a real desire to increase diversity. On the other hand, there's an undercurrent to get ROTC off campus. These are diametrically opposed goals."
Col. Cadric Hunter Commanding officer, Air Force ROTC
UNITED STATES ARMY
The Army ROTC Corps of Cadets stand at attention in Memorial Stadium. About 300 KU students participate in the ROTC program, where they receive military training and a liberal arts education, a combination that has raised difficult questions.
R.O.T.C.: The wonder years?
August 1918 the federal government establishes the Student Army Training Corps (S.A.T.C.) at 500 universities throughout the country under provisions of the National Defense Act of 1916. The corps trains young men to defend the country in World War I. KU makes a course on the S.A.T.C. unit.
October
1, 1918,
the S.A.T.C. is formally inducted when 2,500 men take the oath of service at McCook Field.
November 11, 1918 armistice ends SATC
1919- KU establishes a voluntary army A special appeal is made to secure 150 cadets.
CLASSIFIED
EXCELLENCE
Facing the future, inspecting the past
1935-Tom Page, a senior army cadet, resigns from the unit saying ROTC taught propaganda and anti-war War. Proponents are sparked by students who accuse ROTC of trying to militize the
1941- World War II liabilities opposition to ROTC, but critical discussion resumes soon
1946-
a Navy
ROTC
unit is
established
at KU.
MIDDLEBORN MUNICIPAL COUNCIL
1949-
an Air
Force
ROTC unit
established
st KU.
1952- The Kansan report that more than half of Ku's male enrollment is participating in ROTC during
1960s- The Vietnam War sparks violent protests against ROTC by students and faculty who oppose the war. The military science units are bombed and set on fire
BEST BUILT IN FLORIDA
studies investigate the role of ROTC on campus and consider arguments to abolish the program.
1968 University Senate and College of
1969- the University Senate votes to retain ROTC with modifications.
1971- CLAS votes to remove credit for ROTC courses. Credit is reinstated in 1975
1990-
ROTC
comes
under attack
by gay and
lesbian
organizations
because it
follows the
department of defense
policy excluding
homosexuals. Some
students call for the
abolishment of the program.
They delegate to
Washington to lobby for
changes in the Department of
Defense's policy.
1991 - A CLAS assembly vote to abolish CLAS credit for ROTC courses falls on a tie vote.
Micah Laaker/KANSAN
Continued from Page 1.
The ROTC program and its role on campus has been under inspection since ROTC came to the University of Kansas 75 years ago.
James Muyksen, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said ROTC's role on a liberal arts campus like KU raised difficult questions.
"It's not cut and dried by any means," he said. "I don't think we can have a semester when people aren't thinking of that issue. It's one of the issues of our times."
The experiment fusing military training with liberal arts education has taken many gigs over the years. From gays in the military to questions of academic freedom, controversial questions have followed ROTC since its founding.
Is military training compatible with a liberal arts education? Can a university that values diversity exclude a section of the U.S. population like the military? What if the military excludes homosexuals? How can a program that provides scholarship and career opportunities so often come under fire? Where would the military and the University be without ROTC? Answers to these questions are, at best, elusive.
SCHOLARSHIP, LEADERSHIP AND OPPORTUNITY
The Reserve Officer Training Corps provides more officers for the military than both the military academies and officer training schools. Because ROTC is the least expensive method of training officers, the military can supply itself with leaders at a lesser cost to tax payers.
ROTC came to KU on the heels of a Student Army Training Corps that trained young men to fight in World War I. The cold war and modern weapon systems increased the need for professional military officers, and ROTC units have expanded over the years. Today, about 300 students participate in ROTC.
ROTC is not a major. Students can choose Army, Air Force, Navy or Navy with a Marine option in addition to any University major. Cadets and midshipmen take up to four hours a semester of military science courses and lab drills. They must maintain a 2.5 GPA and pass physical readiness tests to remain in the program. Each service sponsors active-duty summer training where cadets and midshipmen put their skills to work.
When students graduate from Navy or Air Force ROTC, they are commissioned as active duty officers. Sixty percent of graduating Army cadets go active duty, and 40 percent enter the National Guard Reserves. Young officers can receive additional training in their service field. They also can continue their education in fields like medicine. ROTC graduates repay their educations usually in four to eight years of military service.
Students canjoin ROTC through their sophomore year with no commitment to the military. At the end of the sophomore year, cadets and midshipmen compete with other ROTC students nationwide for permission to complete the program and commit to the military.
top 30 percent of their summer training regiments with Athey chosen as the honor graduate from his regiment. At a New Orleans competition last year, the Air Force drill team beat the Air Force Academy.
KU'S ROTC programs are competitive both with the military academies and ROTC programs nationwide. KU's Naval ROTC is the only program in the nation that offers training in petroleum management. Ku offers both engineering and nursing, two of the Army's most valued majors. Last summer, 50 percent of KU's Army cadets scored in the
ROTC is also an important contributor to the University. Its scholarships are some of the best on campus. A fouryear scholarship consists of tuition, fees and books, plus a $100 a month stipend. These scholarships attract quality students who might not be able to afford KU otherwise.
Kari Van Hoof, Seattle senior, said she would not have been able to attend KU without an Army ROTC scholarship.
"If I hadn't received a scholarship, I would have had to stay home and go to a community college," she said. "I certainly wouldn't have come half way across the country if it weren't for ROTC."
ROTC also offers leadership training. All ROTC units have a hierarchy paralleling the active duty military. Student leaders run the units, planning events and drills. Each cadet or midshipmen holds a billet, or leadership position, at some time during his or her ROTC career.
Todd Puntney, Manhattan senior, said that his experience as the battalion commanding officer of Naval ROTC had made him a better leader.
"I think I've gained a certain maturity a lot of college students wouldn't have," he said. "I'm responsible for 110 people. I know how to run things. I know how to delegate. The program is designed so people are given the chance to be a leader."
Van Hoof said ROTC had helped her self esteem.
Ced. Coled Hunter, commanding officer of Air Force ROTC, said ROTC training was attractive to future employers.
"The military is renowned for its young people assuming more responsibility," he said. "When they get out, they've demonstrated the ability to shoulder lots of responsibility over extended periods of time and the ability to work with a complete cross section of people in a variety of surroundings."
"I have more confidence now than I ever have," she said. "The whole point of ROTC is being a leader. I feel like it's made me a better person—definitely."
Recent military cutbacks have forced the armed forces to be more selective and increase their competitiveness. According to CNET, Chief of Naval Education and Training in Pensacola, Florida, ROTC in the future will commission fewer midshipmen, grant fewer scholarships, and select fewer sophomores for advanced standing. This decrease in entrance opportunities has made ROTC programs more elite.
ROTC UNDER INSPECTION
In 1918, a fledgling ROTC program met with resistance from faculty who predicted the experiment would fail. Skeptics could not imagine the military, with its reputation for dogma and glorification of war, blending with a liberal arts campus where an open-minded pursuit of truth was considered sacred.
Despite its successes, ROTC is arguably one of the most controversial programs at KU. Some people think the military doesn't belong on KU's liberal campus. Others simply don't like the military. Controversies have, at times, threatened the future of ROTC.
In the 1930's, a student officer resigned and said that ROTC taught propaganda. This event sparked anti-ROTC protests by students who accused the program of trying to militarize the campus.
Article 10 of the University's Code of Student Rights and Responsibilities states that a student may not be denied the right of access to and participation in any University-sponsored or University-approved activity because of sexual orientation. The ROTC programs must abide by the U.S. Department of Defense's policy that excludes homosexuals.
ROTC took still more gigs during the Vietnam War. Violent protests prompted studies by the University and College of Liberal Arts and Sciences into ROTC's future at KU. Those discussions were renewed in 1990 when ROTC came under inspection over gays in the military.
These controversies have inspired attempts to abolish liberal arts credit for ROTC courses. The latest attempt came in 1991 at the height of the gays in ROTC issue when a College Assembly vote to deny credit failed in a tie.
ELUSIVE ISSUES,
UNANSWERABLE
QUESTIONS?
When ROTC comes under inspection, the issues debated are issues that have plagued the program since universities began to examine the experiment of combining the military with liberal arts. Questions raised by these issues may ultimately be unanswerable.
Questions of academic compatibility were addressed in 1969 when the University Senate voted to retain ROTC with certain modifications. An ROTC committee was formed to review the credentials of potential instructors. Military drills were stripped of credit, and ROTC courses like political science that were not purely military were integrated into the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
In the past, ROTC opponents argued that the program inhibited academic freedom because courses were prescribed by the military, and ROTC instructors' obligations were to the military, not to the open-minded pursuit of truth. In a 1968 letter to the University Senate subcommittee investigating ROTC, Burt English, then an assistant professor of political science, said, "Obedience and academic freedom are not compatible."
Is ROTC training compatible with a liberal arts education?
Some have maintained that ROTC is incompatible with a broad-based liberal arts education because it trains students to work for a specific company in a specific profession.
Del Shankel, a professor of microbiology who was acting executive vice chancellor during the gays in ROTC uproar, said ROTC was no different from any of KU's professional schools.
"ROTC isn't liberal arts, but then neither is the school of engineering or the pharmacy school," he said. "Engineers can get credits in liberal arts. So can business majors. And nobody can major in ROTC. It's an auxiliary program."
"Leadership is definitely an art. It's not a science," he said. "There's not a formula you can plug numbers into. Influencing people to do something
Van Hoof said she disagreed with arguments that ROTC was incompatible with a liberal arts education.
"The way I understand it, the point of liberal arts is to teach you to think critically," she said. "Maybe a lot of people think the army teaches everyone to think the same because everyone looks the same, but especially with the officers, that's not the case. They teach you things that are practical, that you can use."
Athey said ROTC's leadership training belonged to a liberal arts university.
they would rather not do is a difficult concept."
Why is ROTC important to a university that values diversity?
Shankel said this was one of the most important arguments for keeping ROTC at universities like KU.
ROTC advocates say officers trained at diverse colleges like KU are less likely to fall victim to self serving militarism, or "military myopia."
"Our country clearly needs a strong system of defense, and I believe that system will be better if officers get their educations from areas like KU," he said. "There are countries where they don't, and I wouldn't want to live in those countries."
Puntney agreed.
"Certainly the Pentagon doesn't want a bunch of narrow-minded machines working for it," he said.
Athey said the military also benefited by drawing a diverse leadership from a school like KU.
"You're interacting with cadets from all over the country and from all different cultures," he said. "KU is such a multicultural university. The diversity of the University has helped the program do so well."
Excluding the military from the University would undermine diversity, Hunter said.
"Diversity is highly valued here," he said. "On the one hand, there's a real desire to increase diversity. On the other hand, there's an undercurrent to get ROTC off campus. These are diametrically opposed goals. The prevailing philosophy of most of our officers is that we are nothing more or less than a reflection of our society."
But how diverse is an organization that excludes homosexuals?
ROTC claims it does not discriminate because anyone, regardless of sexual orientation, can take ROTC classes. Openly practicing gays cannot, however, be commissioned or receive scholarships under the Department of Defense's "don't ask, don't tell" policy.
Shankel, who went to Washington in 1991 to lobby for changes in the Department of Defense's policy, said ROTC's responsibility to both the school and government posed problems.
"I'm sympathetic to the dilemma that ROTC officers face because they clearly can't go against the Department of Defense's policy," he said. "We have this dilemma that the Department of Defense won't change its policy to come into line with the University's policy."
Shankel said that abolishing ROTC over the gay issue would probably not have much effect nationally and would remove KU's ability to be an active
player in changing national policy.
Scott Manning, Lawrence graduate student and co-director of LesBlgayS OK, said the organization, then Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, specifically targeted ROTC in 1990 because it wanted to make KU aware of gay and lesbian issues.
"The real problem wasn't with ROTC. It was with the KU administration," he said. "We wanted to put pressure on the administration to put pressure on the government. Our purpose was to draw attention to discrimination on a campus that claims it doesn't discriminate."
DOES ROTC PASS INSPECTION?
"ROTC has a lot of successes it can point to with justifiable pride," he said.
"The benefits and the good things outweigh the negatives."
Shankel, a former army corporal, said the opportunities ORC brought to KU made it valuable, regardless of any controversy surrounding the program.
"I would hope most people would look on us with a certain pride," he said. "It's scary when some people see us as a threat. It's scary when people threaten a program that is, at its heart, filled with good intentions. Some may see us as antisocial, militant, war-gaming freaks, but we're really college students who have chosen a career where we could possibly lose our lives."
Some issues surrounding ROTC may never be resolved. No doubt, liberal arts credit for ROTC courses will continue to be a controversial subject as new issues confront the program. Whether ROTC will pass future inspections remains to be seen, but Puntney said he hoped the program would continue at KU.
RICK KUSHNAM
Photo courtesy of University Archives
Students protesting the Vietnam War offer a flower to an ROTC cadet standing at attention during a drill. Protests against ROTC have occurred since the program came to the University 75 years ago.
William Alix/ KANSAN
AIRPORT CALIFORNIA
Naval ROTC battalion commander Todd Puntney closely examines midshipman fourth class Jonathan Koch during battalion commander inspection.
8.
NATION/WORLD
Tuesday, November 23, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Clinton aids in ending airline strike
--ple to end the strike and return to the bargaining table immediately," Clinton said at a White House news conference.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The American Airlines strike is over, President Clinton announced yesterday.
With a nudge from Clinton, Union members and the airline agreed to accept binding arbitration to end their increasingly bitter dispute. Union members agreed to go back to work, and the airline agreed not to fire them.
The walkout, which began Thursday, was costing the airline more than $10 million a day, disrupting travel for 'thousands and threatening to bring chaos to airports during the upcoming Thanksgiving break.
"I have spoken with both parties involved. Both have agreed in principle to end the strike and return to the bargaining table immediately," Clinton said at a White House news conference.
The airline said it hoped to return to a full schedule by the end of the week.
"Passengers who hold American Airlines tickets, if they come to the airport tomorrow, can do so with some confidence," American chairman Robert L. Crandall said after Clinton's announcement. "I have no doubt that we'll get everybody where they're going in time for Thanksgiving."
The president's announcement came one day after Crandall said he was opposed to arbitration, believing it would cost the airline too much money. Crandall changed his mind
after a phone conversation with Clinton yesterday.
At Chicago's O'Hare International Airport, a big cheer went through a line of Association of Professional Flight Attendants picketers as they heard the news on the radio and raised their fists, chanting "Unity Now!"
Under the agreement, the flight attendants would return to work and not lose their jobs. The airline had threatened to fire the strikers. The union represents 21,000 of the airline's employees.
needed to do. We wanted respect from the company."
"I think it's going to take a while for passengers to trust American again, but it's a great feeling right now," flight attendant Loren Pastirik said. "We wanted to work. We did what we
"I think it's a pretty selfish thing to do at this time of year," said Elizabeth Moser, 23, whose flight from Los Angeles to celebrate her honeymoon in Hawaii was delayed Sunday.
The union walked out Thursday during a contract dispute over pay, medical benefits, staffing and work rules. The strike was to continue until Sunday, the end of the busy holiday travel period.
Before the strike, American had been expected to report a slim profit in the final three months of the year. Crandall said the strike has destroyed that possibility and would certainly cause a loss for the year.
"Summer of safety" to precede AmeriCorps
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Clinton's national service team has visions of a "summer of safety" in which young people combine resources to fight violent crime in America.
The summer program, in which about 3,500 people would participate, would serve as a prelude to the September 1994 launch of AmeriCorps, which in its first year will enable 20,000 students to get financial assistance for college in exchange for
public service work.
Catherine Milton, vice president and director of National and Community Service Programs, said a summer of service program focusing on violent crime would precede the official launch of AmeriCorps. "We'll be using kids as a resource to get at crime problems," she said.
Among possible projects:
—College students assisting shopkeepers in protecting against robberies.
—Teaching middle-school children how to handle disputes peacefully.
—Community escort services for the elderly.
The AmeriCorps program fulfills Clinton's campaign promise of creating a domestic version of the Peace Corps.
AmeriCorps participants would be required to work 17,000 hours. They would receive a stipend equal to the minimum wage, about $8,000, plus health care and child care benefits. They also would earn $4,725 a year toward college tuition or repayment of student loan payments.
U.S.-European Community talks heat up in global trade
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - President Clinton has less than a month to strike a global free-trade agreement while coping with demands from angry French farmers, upset Brazilian citrus growers and furious textile workers around the world.
The president and other administration members were optimistic that they could overcome all these obstacles and complete the Uruguay Round of trade talks by a Dec. 15 deadline. The negotiations, involving 110 nations, are meeting under the auspices of the Geneva-based General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, the organization that governs world trade.
U. S. Trade Representative Mickey Kantor sat down yesterday with his European counterpart, Sir Leon Brittan, in what were described as make-or-break talks.
The United States and the 12nation European Community hoped to resolve differences on a range of issues that separated them during the talks Monday and Tuesday. They included farm subsidies and tariffs on textiles and other manufactured goods and European barriers to American-
made films and television shows.
Economists said the stakes for the Uruguay Round were enormous—holding out the possibility of increasing global output by $270 billion over the next decade. But neither the United States nor the EC showed any willingness to compromise as this week's talks began.
The United States insisted that it would never yield to a French demand that it renegotiate provisions of a deal reached a year ago to reduce the use of farm subsidies.
The Europeans complained about U.S. refusal to make further concessions that would cut high American tariffs on Third World textile products.
The Clinton administration insisted that its come-from-behind victory on the North American Free Trade Agreement, creating a free-trade zone linking the United States, Mexico and Canada, would give it the momentum needed to wrap up the global talks.
But others are not so sure. They said that the deals the administration was forced to make to get NAFTA through Congress would make it harder to complete the Uruguay Round.
NORTHAMPTON, Mass.
Four killed when their plane hits falling sky diver
THE NEWS in brief
ROYAL OAK, Mich.
Seconds later, his ankle hit the plane's tail and it crashed. All four people aboard were killed. Peters, 51, of Westfield, survived Sunday's collision with a broken ankle and a terrible scare.
Sky diver Alfred Peters was hurtling toward Earth at about 100 mph when he saw a plane coming straight at him.
Killed were Elliot Klein, 49, of Rhinebeck, N.Y., the pilot of the single-engine Cherokee Piper Warrior II; his 18-year-old son, Jonas, a student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; fellow MIT student Christina Park, 18, of Auburn, Wash.; and Jean Kimball, 45, of Pine Plains, N.Y.
The accident happened as the Piper was飞ing at about 120 mph 7,000 feet over Northampton Airport, from Poughkeepsie,
N. Y., to Boston.
Investigators said they don't know why the pilots were unaware of each other.
The sky-diving plane carrying a pilot and four other parachutists radioed controllers at nearby Bradley International Airport in Windsor Locks, Conn., to warn others of the jump. It was unknown if Klein was following flight rules by keeping his radio tuned for such warnings as he entered the designated jump zone.
Kevorkian present at suicide
An apartment rented by Dr. Jack Kevorkian was used Monday for the suicide of a fellow physician, the first that Kevorkian has attended since he was jailed on a charge of illegally assisting another death.
It was the 20th suicide at which Kevorkian has been present since 1990. No charges were filed.
All Khalili, 61, a rehabilitative medicine specialist from Oak Brook, Ill., died after breathing carbon monoxide.
Khaliii was diagnosed in January 1990 as having multiple myeloma, a bone cancer. The disease had spread through his skeleton, and he was in constant pain despite a morphine
pump that regularly injected him with the powerful pain reliever, Kevorkian attorney Michael Schwartz said.
Khalili was an associate professor at Northwestern University's medical school in Chicago, where he taught part time, university representative Chuck Loebbaka said.
When he was jailed earlier this month, Kevorkian vowed to starve himself and refused solid food during his stay. He was freed after three days when he was bailed out by a lawyer who said he was tired of Kevorkian's headline-grabbing.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 23, 1993
9
Jayhawks trip New Zealand
Turnovers high in 85-60 victory
Bv Gerrv Fev
Kansan sportswriter
If the turnovers in Kansas' 85-60 victory against Auckland Basketball of New Zealand didn't hint that the game was an exhibition, New Zealand's uniforms did.
New Zealand lost its luggage before last night's game and had to borrow uniforms from Pittsburgh State, and the Kansas women's basketball team struggled in the first half, ending the game with 27 turnovers.
Kansas coach Marian Washington said Kansas' defense in the second 10 minutes of the first half did not please her. But the Jayhawks did keep New Zealand scoreless for the first 6:41 of the second half.
"I was a little happier in the second half, but we've got a long way to go," she said. "They had 20 points in the paint on us in the first half. But we have kids out there that are new, and what I really appreciated was their effort."
Among the new players was freshman guard Tamecka Dixon, who
ended the game with 13 points and three assists. She shared duties at point guard with seniors Ericka Muncy and Michelle Leathers.
In the second half, Dixon took the ball to the free-throw line off the dribble and made a double-pump jump shot. That shot made the score 67-44, and from then on, the game was out of reach for New Zealand.
Dixon squared off against New Zealand guard Antonia Solomon in the contest, who had six points and seven steals. Dixon complimented Solomon on her abilities.
"I thought she played a pretty good game," Dixon said. "I will be going against some good guards during the season, like Shelley Sheetz of Colorado. She's a good player."
Although the Jayhawks did give up many turnovers, they also caused 30 turnovers with pressure defense. Freshman guard Angie Halbieb led Kansas with four steals and also contributed 13 points, including two three-pointers. Sophomore guard Charisse Sampson also had 13 points and made two three-point shots.
Kansas was five of 11 from behind the three-point line, but Washington said the Jayhawks would take what
was given to them.
"Angie Habbleib is going to be one of our top shooters and certainly Charisse," Washington said. "They know that if they're wide open I don't have any problem with them pulling the trigger. They're fine shooters."
Kansas junior forward/guard Angela Aycock, who led Kansas with 15 points, said she was glad to see Halbleib take those shooting opportunities.
"Angie is an awesome three point shooter," Aycock said. "I'm glad they did it in the game; they've been killing us in practice."
Freshmen forwards Jennifer Trapp and Shelly Canada also saw playing time last night. Trapp started the game in part because junior forward Alana Slatter was out with fluid in her right knee. She will be out two or three weeks, Washington said.
"At this point, it certainly allows us to play the young players more," she said.
Creighton will be the next opponent for Kansas on Friday in Omaha, Neb. Dixon said it was good to have this exhibition game before the season began.
"It was a good test," she said. "I'm glad it was an exhibition game, but I think this team will be good."
Kansas 85. New Zealand 60
honors
Player fgm/fga ftm/fta tp
Aycock 4-12 7-8 15
Trapp 4-9 0-2 8
Tate 6-8 0-0 12
Sampson 5-12 1-2 13
Leathers 1-4 0-0 3
Muncy 1-2 0-0 2
Dixon 6-7 1-2 13
Canada 2-5 0-1 4
Hablelb 5-9 1-2 13
Thalmann 1-1 0-0 2
Totals 35-69 10-17 85
NEW ZEALAND
NEW ZEALAND
Norris 3-11 2-5 8
Beardsley 0-0 0-0 0
Akkerman 6-14 5-6 17
Noon 0-2 0-0 0
Solomon 3-7 0-1 6
Cunningham 9-19 0-0 18
Walker 3-6 2-2 11
Bunce 0-0 0-0 0
Totals 24-59 9-14 60
Hairtime Kansas 41, New Zealand 34
*3 point goals Kansas 5-11 (Sampson 2-5,
Halibble 2-5, Leathers 1-1), New Zealand 3-8
(Walker 3, Noon 0-2, Solomon 0-1)
Rebounds Kansas 43 (Tate and Sampson
Kansas 22, Ascock 19), New Zealand
Kansas 22 (Aycock and Murcy 5), New
New Zealand 13 (Walmer 4) Total foul Kansas
17, New Zealand 18, Attendance 450.
21
Tom Leininger/Special to the KANSAN
Kansas' Ericika Muncy keeps the ball away from New Zealand's Antonia Solomon. Kansas won yesterday's game 85-60.
NATIONAL
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
Kansas junior fullback Costello Good breaks through a pack of Oklahoma defensive personnel. Kansas finished the season 5-7.
Jayhawks looking forward to successful 1994 season
22 seniors will give leadership to team
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
Former Kansas All-American running back Gale Sayers said in early August that a Jayhawkloss to Florida State in the Kickoff Classic could kill the Jayhawk football program.
Kansas lost to Florida State 42-0, which started the Jayhawks off toward a 5-7 season. But several Jayhawk players said after Saturday's season-closing 28-0 victory against Missouri that the Kansas program was not dead.
"Definitely not. Next year they can go nowhere but up," said departing senior defensive tackle Chris Maumalanga. "There is a lot of talent on this team and a lot of heart. Heart is sometimes more important than the talent you have."
The Jayhawks displayed a lot of heart throughout the second half of the season. It would have been easy for the Jayhawks to give up on the season after a stunning 41-16 defeat at home to Utah on Sept. 18 and a tough 10-9 loss at Kansas State on Oct. 9.
Senior free safety Clint Bowen said that after the loss at K-State, which left Kansas' record at 2-4, he and his teammates would not give up for the last half of the season. They did not, and Coach Glen Mason did not let that go unnoticed.
Mason said the team's lack of success, as well as the injuries his team accumulated throughout the season, could have really hindered his program during the final half of the season.
"My program is great because if it wasn't solid we would have crumbled, we would have absolutely crumbled," Mason said. "The second half of this season said more about my program than winning last year and going to a bowl game. I'm more proud of this team than I was of that team."
This Kansas team easily could have joined last year's a bowl team. Two one-point losses, at K-State and the 21-20 heartbreaker against Nebraska on Nov. 6, were the difference between a 5-7 record and a 7-5 record. At 7-5, with a 5-2 record in the Big Eight, officials from the Copper and Alona Bowls would have certainly considered the Jayhawks for their games.
34
91
The victory against Missouri gave returning Jayhawk players a positive feeling heading into preparations for the 1944 season. Mason said that he would have 34 returning starters in 1994, more than any other team in college football.
Mason was forced into using 46 different starters during the 1993 season because of the rash of injuries. Junior linebacker Don Davis said the number of experienced players returning will help the Jayhawks next season.
However, the Jayhawks will spend Christmas at home this year, and not in Tucson, Ariz, or Honolulu.
"We could be 7-5, but we can't control that now," said senior center Dan Schmidt. "We really came close, but I can take pride that the senior class gave great leadership and the younger players stepped up when needed. That's why the future of this program will be outstanding."
"The attitude from this season will carry over into next year," Davis said. "We will have 22 seniors next year, so we'll have good leadership."
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
Kansas freshman running back Mark Sanders runs for yardage against Missouri. He will be one of four running backs that will compete for starting positions next season.
Sophomore linebacker Ronnie Ward said this season was a learning experience which should benefit players returning next season.
SPORTS BRIEFS
"We really showed a lot of character and kept a positive attitude, which pushed us through the season," he said. "During the offseason, all those guys that were injured will get healthy. And now we'll have a lot of experience returning because of all the injuries this year."
WOMEN'S CROSS COUNTRY Kansas last in national meet
The Kansas women's cross country team had a rough time in its first championship meet in team history. The Jayhawks came in last in the 22-team meet in Bethlehem, Pa.
The team finished with 471 points and was led by Julia Saul. She finished in 65th place with a time of 17 minutes, 40.3 seconds. Melissa Swartz was the next Jayhawk to cross the finish line in 120th place.
Villanova defeated perennial power Arkansas for the women's title with 66 points. The low score wins in cross country. Arkansas continued its dominance of the men's national meet, taking first place defeating Brigham Young.
The women's Big Eight teams were led by Colorado, which finished 14th, and Nebraska, which finished 20th in the meet.
PROFESSIONAL FOOTBALL
49ers march over Saints
SAN FRANCISCO—In a stunning show of power, the San Francisco 49ers swept away the New Orleans Saints 42-7 last night and reasserted themselves as the dominant team in the NFC West.
Merton Hanks gave the 49ers 'top-ranked offense a jump start as he returned a first-quarter interception 67 yards and scored. His second interception set up the first of three, second-quarter downs and the Saints, 6-4, found themselves down 28-0 at halftime.
It got worse from there, with the Saints all but conceding late in the third quarter. Trailing 42-0, Wade Wilson was pulled and replaced by Mike Buck. San Francisco also let up, pulling its front-line offense and replacing Young with Steve Bono.
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
Jayhawks to face Gophers in NIT semis in Big Apple
Kansas coach Roy Williams is not having Thanksgiving dinner for the Jayhawk basketball team at his house in Lawrence this year.
With a 73-56 victory against California Friday night, the Jayhawks will spend the remainder of this week playing basketball and eating turkey in the Big Apple.
The first game of the Presseason National Invitational Tournament semifinals, which along with the finals takes place at Madison Square Garden in New York, matches the No. 6 Jayhawks against the No. 9 Minnesota Golden Gophers. The second game features No. 1 North Carolina and No. 18 Massachusetts.
All four teams in the semifinals are guaranteed two games.
Although Williams insists that there is no one or two key match-ups, he said he was aware of what Lenard could do.
Minnesota, which defeated Rice and Georgia on its road to the NIT semifinals, boasts one of the top players in college basketball. Junior guard Vashon Lenard, 6-foot-4 and 205 pounds, averaged 16.5 points and 4.5 rebounds in the Gophers' first two games.
"I set up the trials at the USA Basketball this spring in Chicago," Williams said. "Vashon Lenard may have been the best player at the camp. He is outstanding and was one of the first selections on our Under-22 team, but he had to change because of summer school commitments."
Lenard is not the only Minnesota player that Williams is familiar with.
Williams recruited three of Minnesota coach Clem Haskins' players. Williams paid visits to the homes of both senior guard Arriel McDonald and junior forward Jayson Walton. Kansas also heavily recruited Gopher freshman forward John Thomas.
Kansas' road to the Garden also has been a short one. The Jayhawks only needed to hit the court twice. Both Western Michigan and Cal were turned away from Allen Field House without victories.
Williams said he was pleased with the Jayhawks' defensive efforts thus far, but he said to be successful in New York, the team would have to improve offensively.
"I look and see our shooting percentage is 44 percent," Williams said. "I am concerned, but I would like to see the opponents percentage stay where it is at."
Kansas held Western Michigan and Cal to 34 percent shooting from the field.
Haskins agreed with Williams that no one match-up would determine the game. He said he was concerned with the inside-outside play of senior forward Richard Scott and senior guard Steve Woodberry. Also, upon viewing
AP Top 25
Kansas moved up to No. 6 in the poll after defeating California Friday night
rank team record pta. pr
1. N. Carolina (61) 2-0 1,620 1
2. Kentucky (2) 0-1 4,625 1
3. Arkansas (1) 0-0 1,452 3
4. Duke 0-0 1,352 4
5. Michigan 0-0 1,321 5
6. Kansas (1) 2-0 1,183 9
7. Louisville 0-0 1,144 7
8. Temple 0-0 1,116 8
9. Minnesota 2-0 1,025 10
10. Oklahoma St. 0-0 913' 11
11. Indiana 0-0 844 12
12. California 1-1 791 6
13. Georgia Tech 0-0 761 14
14. UCLA 0-0 731 13
15. Georgetown 0-0 710 15
16. Virginia 0-0 637 16
17. Illinois 0-0 563 17
18. Massachusetts 2-0 469 22
19. Arizona 0-0 403 18
20. Syracuse 0-0 377 20
21. Purdue 0-0 363 21
22. Cincinnati 1-1 276 19
23. G. Washington 0-0 227 24
24. Vanderbilt 0-0 225 23
25. Wisconsin 0-0 148 —
others receiving votes; Florida St. 134, Marquette 133, Xavier, Ohio 91, Yarus 88, Ohio St. 85, Boston College 73, Connecticut 56, W. Kentucky 39, Missouri 37, Memphis 32, LSU 30, Tulane 27, Nebraska 21, Saton Hall 20, Va. Commonwealth 17, Alabama 16, Peppardine 16, Georgia 15, New Mexico St. 14, Southern Cal. 14, New Orleans 10, NE Louisiana 7, Brigham Young 6, West Virginia 5, Coppin St. 1, Towson St. 4, Arizona St. 3, Penn 3, Michigan St. 2, Providence 2, Clemson 1, Tennessee St. 1, UNLV 1.
KANSAN
Source: The Associated Press
highlights of the Kansas-Cal game, Haskins expressed worries about junior center Greg Ostertag.
"He's mobile and blocked several shots," Haskins said. "I told my coaches "This guy looks like a lottery pick." We have to keep him away from the basket. Once he gets inside we'll have problems."
Williams said that the team would get together on Sunday for a three-day late Thanksgiving feast.
Tournament Notes:
Minnesota won the 1993 Postseason NIT in March by defeating Georgetown 62-61. No team has ever won the Postseason NIT and the Presseason NIT in the same year. Only Indiana has ever won both tournaments.
Kansas is 9-1 in the Presseason NIT and has won six consecutive games in the tournament under Williams' coaching reign at Kansas.
.
10
Tuesday, November 23, 1993
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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841-4833
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*Rock Chalk*X-Mas Parties*Formals* (Call Jake or Clay at 841-0505) *12 days in advance.
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Join WIBW-TU in traveling to Chicago, December 4. See KU play the DePaul Blue Demons.
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IMTCI, a pharmaceutical research company, is now seeking volunteers to participate in a medical research study To qualify you must: be age 18-40 be able to attend three 29 hour visits at our clinic
Call IMTCI for more info: Mon-Fri from 8am-5pm
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840 Massachusetts
Men's soccer ends a winning season
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
National tournament losses hide 9-2 record
The Kansas men's soccer team wrapped up its season with a winning record despite three losses at the national tournament in Phoenix.
The team had a 9-2 record after the regular season.
In addition to playing his part in the winning season, Kansas senior player Chris Lewis was named to the all-tournament second team. Coach Mark Salisbury said the all-tournament players were chosen by the coaches after each game.
Kansas lost its first game to Auburn 1-0. Salisbury said the game was the best game he had seen the team play. Auburn scored on its only chance in the second half. Salisbury said the loss hurt the players emotionally.
in the second game, Illinois defeated Kansas 4-0. In Kansas' last game, it was shut out by Weber State 5-0.
Salisbury said that it was useful to the team to see at what level of competition it had to compete.
Sophomore Dan Ayars said the team did not expect the competition to be as tough as it was.
"In the Illinois game we noticed we had to bring our play level up higher than ever before," he said.
Lewis said the team struggled with the tougher competition. The team played well, but it played better in the Chartrand tournament Oct. 16-17, he said.
He said that the team had not played a game in more than a month and that team members had played lackadaisically during the first game.
The team had potential, he said, but it needed to play more competitively to become a better team.
Salisbury said the team needed to have its perception changed to become more successful. He said the team was seen as disorganized, but that was not true.
Ayars also said organization was the key to gaining and keeping good players. He said knowledge of the team would also help the team gain skilled players.
"It's up to the freshmen to keep us going," he said. And if Salisbury came back, he would keep the team's motivation up.
Lewis said the team could improve and it would get better, especially with Salisbury as the coach.
First-year coach Salisbury said he was not sure if he would return.
Ayars said the team had an overall successful season.
"The team played as a team, and everybody put effort forward," he said. "People were more motivated, and hopefully we can make it back to nationals."
VISIONS 806 Massachusetts
Featuring l.a. Eyeworks 841-7421
1990
Holly McQueen / KANSAN
THE STUDENT FRIENDLY STORE
Happy Thanksgiving!!
GRAHAM'S RETAIL LIQUORS
The mom and pop store of Lawrence
1906 Mass 843-8186
Trey Thompson, senior defender, left, and Chris Lewis, senior midfielder, work on drills during soccer practice. The team finished with a 9-2 record for the season, but lost three games in the national tournament in Phoenix.
---
KANSAN CLASSIFIED WORK
32 Toppings to choose from!!!
Rudy Tuesday
2 Pizzas
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2 toppings plus tax
2 drinks
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
719-0055
Open 7 days a week
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Give a Friend the Escher Eye
The Eye
M. C. Escher's mind bending graphics on T-shirts.
See outrageous new styles at
Downtown Lawrence
820-822 Mass. 841-0100
Don't sink this low...Recycle.
If everyone in America recycled only 10 percent of their newspapers, 25 million trees would be saved every year.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Christmas Trees We have your size Whether you live in a house or a room, we have the tree for you!
- sizes from 2 to 12 feet
- Garland Roping
- Choosefrom Scotch Pine, White Pine,Fraser Fur,& Douglas Fur
- Treestands
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FREE DELIVERY
10% Discount to Dorms, Scholarship Halls, Fraternities, and, Sororities Enter to win (2) excellent tickets for KU vs Indiana Deadline Dec 15th Drawing Dec 16th (no purchase necessary)
Putt Putt $ ^{\circledR} $ Tree Shop
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7 Days a week
843-1511
31st & Iowa (Across from K-Mart)
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 23,1993
11
Classified Directory
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, race, religion, disability, nationality, or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or dis-
I
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are open.
100s Announcements
105 Personals
SWF, 20 yrs. old with light brown hair and brown eyes. Look for a SVM who will take me out and me drunk with no strings attached the next day. Call me for a night you won't want to forget.
110 Bus. Personals
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO Really Listen Call or drop by Headquarters We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. We're always open
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
Hoops, Pendants & more!
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$92 Bass, Downsworn
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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
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
Pharmacy Hours
Monday, Thursday 8am-9pm
Saturday 8am-12pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
120 Announcements
*SPRING BREAK*
Early Booking Special
$25 Deposit
LOWEST PAYMENT GUARANTEED!
Joan at 865-5811
BEACH Springbreek Promoter
Small or larger groups.
Yours FREE, discounted or CASH.
Call CMI 1-800-423-5264.
130 Entertainment
tree at beautiful Pine Hill Farm. Enjoy free horse trips & ride horse-drawn trailer into our fields. Sip hot wassail & select a fresh beautiful decoration for your own travel providing Christmas memories. Drive east or Hwy 10.4 miles to DG County Road 1057, then drive one and a half miles. Edmonds Family 542
Exclusive KU ALUMM message area shared over Fidnet. Real time chat. Easy data menus! Lawrence on line/TBBS; 865-1440. Voice/help 841-1042.
Nature and the Egg : Systemic mutation achieved!
Help do follow-up on systemic mutation.
The whole system! Don't block human knowledge.
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Free Party Room Available at Johnny's Tavern/Up & Under.
Call 842-0377 for details.
140 Lost & Found
Lout. Black Leather Jacket 11/10(W) or 11/11(L)
Lout. In Haworth or Wesco. Reward Call 822-8463
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200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
*ATTENTION COLLEGE STUDENTS! Need*
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details about making money. ONETY. Free 24 hr.
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2550 SIGNING BONUS. We currently are accepting applications for full and part-time licensed cosmetologists or barbers. 2 weeks paid vacation. Apply at Pro-Cuts, 2500 Iowa
A local vacuum repair business needs part-time
mechanically inclined person. Call 843-1287-8
AA Cruise & Travel Jobs. Earn $250/mo. + travel the world free! (Caribbean, Europe, Hawaii, Anas) Cruise Lines now hiring for busy holds! Call (619) 439-4386 ext. 11. Listing Service. Call (619) 439-4386 ext. 11.
ADMINISTRATIVE USER SERVICES
$student Monthly. Deadline: 12/3/19. $850-$500 month depending on experience. Duties include performing software training for end users, provide LAN installation and problem-solving, provide application, design, documentation and deliver software training sessions
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Supervisor now - Manager later! Learn the business from the ground up and advance according to your skill level. Be ready to work for oriented person and like a work at a fast intense pace, an opportunity to put these skills to work and develop as a leader is available. Relocation benefits apply. Benefits now at: Amigus, 1819 W. 23rd.
BASS PLAYER AVAILABLE
Experienced bass player playing for serious occasions. Must have a large bass instrument, including Lawrence bars, I own/produce equipment and play both freelance and five string instruments. Must be comfortable with gurly, groovy stuff, but can I flexible. No metal, hardcords, or cheese. Dedicated band members a must. If you've been looking for that hard to find instrument, you'll love it.
Brandon Woods Retirement Community is currently hiring wait staff for the 11am-8pm shift with possibility of an occupancy 9pm-7pm. Hrs are required. Bachelor's or equivalent in person 150 Inversed Dr. Lawrence K. E.O.E.
Earn $1,000 per week at home filling orders! Free information. Please send long self addressed stamped envelope to CJ Enterprises, Box 67086H, Cuyabeno Falls, OH 44222.
Full-time assistant manager needed immediately.
Must live on site. Call 841-8468.
Help wanted: Hardware/Software manager, KU School of Architecture and Urban Design seeks qualified graduate student to begin work in early December. For position description contact Ursa Stammeri at 864-3244. Application deadline November 30, 1993
FAST CASH
By donating your life saving blood plasma
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WELK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
Local business seeks qualified individuals to provide a variety of services to community residents.
Marketing Assistant position available at Naismith Hall for the spring semester. Applicant must have excellent people skills, good computer skills (desktop publishing experience a plus), and have a background experience in marketing, advertising, marketing research, or teamwork time with compensation of room and board plus stipend. Potential for full time effective July, 1994. Great resume and portfolio builder to help you an edge on the job market. Those interested can apply at Naismith Hall, 1800 Naismith Drive, New York, NY 10026.
NEED EXTRA CASH!?? Work as a cashier/clerk during Spring Fee completion held on January 7th and April 1st for accounting in General Accounting. 20 Carruth O'Leary in Genoa at 8:04am -11:04am. 1 : 00pm - 1:00pm. M-F. Deadline for applying is November 30, 1999. Must be current employer or an equal opportunity action emblem.
Part-time app. maintenance person wanted to work weekday mornings, call 841-1968 to apply.
Phone Work - Part Time - Flexible Hours. Paid Daily.
Call: 232-9283.
RESUME SERVICES Professional Business Interview Resume Fitting interview interview 832-810-
SEMEMEST BREAK POSITIONS! Inl. chain training 47-PT, FT entry level openings. Earn $9.00-$10.00 start Interview now Start after Dec. 25. Can work with CNC machines in Lawrence 8431-8331 or Overland Park 8331
Taco Bell now bring day and night help哎
Taco Bell now bring day and night help哎
Saturday through Saturday 1408 W. 23rd
and 1220 W. 66th
United Child Dev. Center has openings for nap aids at $4.25/hr. Experience working with young children helpful. Apply at UCDC 946 Vermont St. Lawrence, KS. EOE.
Work in beautiful Colorado mountains this summer at Cheley Colorado Camps summer program. R.N.s; drivers; secretaries; wranglers; nanny; song leaders; riding, hiking, climbing. Summer camp experience ages 9-17 Room and board, cash salary, travel allowance. Our 74th summer! Must be at least 19 to apply. Applicants will be notified of campus interview dates. Call 802-675-3716, Camps Box 6525, Denver 802-675-3716.
You CAN make a difference, Greenspace K.C.
We can help to protect the rain forest and others to help save the rain forests, stop toxic waste, and protect the ozone layer. PT/FT 180 m. Call 183-583-3841, paid training hours 2 to 19 p.m. Call 183-583-3841
225 Professional Services
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, servicing KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you
Donald G. Strole Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
Research Assistance - MS/ML information application
dissertations, research projects 845-2028, those
dissektations, research projects 845-2028.
Birthright 843-4821. Free pregnancy testing.
Prompt abortion and contraceptive services. Dale L, Clinton M. D. 541-576.
235 Typing Services
Bods, deks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
989 Mass.
Drafting table *40 x 20* Adjustable chair, fluorescent
lighting and telework post document machines. Call
861-734-2921
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense For free consultation call
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
Fast, accurate word processing; term paper, dissertation, thesis and graphics services available. Laser printing. Engineering and Law Review call. Call Pam at 841-1977 anytime.
A Word Perfect word processing service. Laser
Nearer. Near campus. 842-695-96.
Expert typing. IBM Correcting Selectric.
Double space spaced page. Call Mr. Matti 641-1219
1-der Woman Word Processing, 843-2063.
Pro-Type - fast, reliable, service, professional quality. Any kind of typing. Call today at 814-6242. Word processing, applications, term papers, disks, emails. Masters Degree or rush job available. Masters Degree 814-6242.
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
For all your TYPING needs call
Word Processing Help
Fire walking. walk on water! WALK ON PRASHA!
Fire walking. walk on water! WALK ON PRASHA!
Store, 750 Mast Msat 10:30-30; General
1143.
305 For Sale
X
Are you Makin' the Grade?
WORD PROCESSING & LASER PRINTING
6 ft. bookcases for $29, full sized bed $128; coffee
sets for $3, piece dinner set $110. T.C. Furniture
Rentals rents and sells new and used furniture, 601
Kasol 841-7111.
I'm graduating and need to sell my - Beautiful wood bed set, queen size bed with cherry berry pillow, king size bed with drawers, cherry wood chest with vanity mirror. Paid $55 a year ago but it's got to be $175. You can't get a tutor for that. I'm not able to buy it for $150. Observe me call *u*1145 usl@auckley.edu or *u*8432 b7857
Weight lifting machine, leg curls, bench press,
weight training condition, $225
for both, Call 644-7703 and weekends.
Guaranteed Quality and Lowest Price
Call 832-7244 (o) 842-5421 (h)
Visit our office behind Food 4 less at
2201 W. 25th St. B-1.
Floppy Discs Guaranteed Quality and Lowest Price
Macintosh Quadras. Best prices available.
Student discouns apply 800-240-5441
Spend New Years in Chicago! Leaves KC on Dec 31
and leaves Cai 841; November 2019 now
it's sold! (female only)
340 Auto Sales
**88 Honda Civ LX 4-dr, l owner, ex car, w/ no tint, binds Honda license plates. /w are**
*187 miles*, *binds Honda license plates.* **841-0437-2900**
1978 Buck Skylark Coupe with 327 Chev. engine, mug wheels. 800. Consider monthly payments
WVJ Wetta, 5-pd. g-dd. Good Condition AM-MF cassette. $1700. cabo Mk. 814-7795.
1986 Dodge Charger 2-ditch hatch, AM/FM套件
Body in good shape and run well. Call 625-734-2050.
1983 Black Jeep CJ-5, S-bed Hard top, new
2014
One- three Indiana vs. Kansas basketball call
要 be general admission, will call cash be
325.
85" Red Pontiac Fiero, sunroof, AC, new paint
excellence. $3,000 OBY 749-3989.
Needed up to 14 KU General Admission Basketball
tickets. Leave message for Shane at 864-7004.
370 Want to Buy
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1 Bdrm apt, *just blocks from campus available for 2nd semester sublease, washer/dryer, dishwasher, ceiling fan...the works. $220 per mo./person. 133 Kentucky 8057-0290. Call
4 Bedroom room for sub-less. Cheap rent. low
loan. No deposit. C.C. Attention Mark: 100.
Thank you for calligraphy!
1BD furnished apartment closure and clear borders
campus available Jan. 181-8027 or 818-765-4755.
1 bedroom apt. for rent. Furnished. On bus route.
A flat, insulated, flat, but I have move.
Questions? 814-1864.
123
4 br house for rent 3 blocks from campus, clean,
clean, clean. Help leave help leave help KU, Call Elizabeth at 749-6393.
Avail. now.
Recently const.
On Bus Route, Dishwasher, Central Air & heat, walk in closet,
2 bath.
Holiday
230 Mount Hope
Apartmenta
Available at semester break, apes, in new seeder of West Hills 1000 Emery Rd. b1 armpt. a380/m. 2 bdm捷. a505/c. Cable pwd. w/bookups, dw.microwave, cw Microwave, min blinds, balcony, energy efficient, great location near campus, laundry facilities. Available An ian LARGE 2 br dorm room. Heat, water, cable paid DW, AC, excellent maintenance. $450/m Call 841-7582.842-781.
Apt. for Rent 1. bldrm, new carpet, unfurnished at
216 W. Broadway, 48th street, our road
Available Dec. 1. set%75/month; bed%32/med.
Call for appt.
843-0011
Available: Spring semester. Room at Nalshimn
Hafidt floor, meet plan. Call 840-963-1057, leave
message.
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
JEFFERSON PLACE
764-1471 119th&1-35
Stocked fishing lake, courtyards w/fountain, sand volleyball, pool, acuzzi & exercise facility
Available Jan. 1 3 bdrm. ap. close to campus.
Available Jan. 2 3 bdrm. ap. close to campus.
Georgetown Aug. 18 181-812 or 76-777.
The Best Place to Live at KU is in K.C.!
Available Jan. 1, 3 bdm. on bus route Call
749-1566 8 p.m Mon.-Fri.
For lease 4 bedroom, Sindance rent near cam-
parking negative, 790 + utilities
Call: 686-892-9292
available now nice clean studio app. close to clamawater (dryer) 1756 Ohio $38/mo. No pet.
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
Furnished studio apartment. 2 short blocks from KU Water paid. Off street parking. No pts. $81-$150.
Painted room for rent with shared kitchen and kitchen room in KU. Off-street parking. No pets. Call 841-8500.
1, 2, 3, & 4 bbm apts ...
designed with you in mind!
Go to ...
offers furnished
Campus Place - 841-1429
1145 Louisiana
Hanover Place - 841-1212 14th & Mass.
9th& Avalon 842-3040
Tanglewood-749-2415 10th & Arkansas
Regents Court 749-0445 1905 Mass.
- Close to campus
• Spacious 2 bedroom
• Laundry facility
• Swimming Pool
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
842-4455
MASTERCRAFT
Stone college ncr campus available to seminary
Stone college ncr campus $450 per ncr student
Utility or ncr校办 $180 per semester
Studio sublure, furnished, avail Jan 1. Water
749-219 and Nights 841-568. no pets, daids
749-219 and Nights 841-568
Sub-lease 2dmm, 2 bath, 225 ca rm, Water, gas,
trash pail, phone charger, move phone hook-up.
Phone: 1-866-749-2011
Cell: 1-642-269-898
Sublase b derm apil at a meadowbread. Avail. Dcil
1st for one month or DCil 1- May Stil. Call today
for more information
Drop Into Our Place to ask about our Mid Term Leases
Colony Woods Apartments
$365-$435
3 Hot Tubs
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Basketball Court
- Microwave
- On Bus Route
- 1&2 Bedroom Apts.
842-5111 1301W.24th
Wishing You The Best This Holiday Season!
SUBLEASE STUDIO APT. For Spring Semester, 2
blks from campus, off street parking, W/D, full
kitchen, bath, nth and Loungeau, Rent and Utilities
about $309/month, call 814-491-4 or if no answer
kills.
Subleases: Naimith Hall, Pool, Re, Room, Maid
865-234-1950, Read for Spring Conference, Call All
865-234-1950
Unique 8 bedrooms / 7 bath apa1 hardwood floor2; 3
birds床 from campus/downtoft; 46/4month
room; 5 bedroom; 9 bath; 40/50
room; 6 bedroom; 10 bath; 46/4month
Now leasing for Spring!
we're making life easier!
*Weekly Maid Service
*Front Door Bus Service
*"Dine Anytime" with
Unlimited Seconds
*Laundry and Vending
Facilities
*Free Utilities
Newly Remodeled Studio on Campus. Call 814-8468.
New Four Bdrs Now Available
One bedroom apartment avail $236 a month 8H &
Louisiana no dept. Call 865-3928
best in New York State Now Available
sitting in New Four Seasons Arena
person/130 sq. ft., all amenities, ex-
port ports
person/150 sq. ft., all amenities, ex-
port ports
- Weekly Maid Service
Share nice high frame, nice neighborhood or situ-
ate nice high frame, a block to kB. References:
841-6244 or 842-7200
Supress sublease for 2 persons, 3 bdmr, 1 bath, 1 host.
895/mo +. 895/mo /
Avail 11/7/19/84/31/86 883-3824
Messenger
www.kodik.com
430 Roommate Wanted
1 roommate (m or I) needed for 3 brap amt $200/m + ¼ u/l. Washer/dryer, dishwasher, on bus route, fully furnished (except for room). Avail. J first 1 spring semester. Call 749-1185.
1800
or 12 females need for spacious bd apt. for
1 or 2 females, need for spacious bd apt.
from campus, on bus. roo. 200 - 150, 923-767-766
or from campus, on bus. roo. 200 - 150, 923-767-766
1 Roommate needed to share beautiful, historic 2
Bathroom. Warehouse & Flood W/Od 8/217
17 month. 943-365-1600
NAISMITH
Female roommate needed to share large BLDR, 280,
855/mm², call Cail W69-668-5085, no pets,
855/mm², call Cail W69-668-5085
CHEAP! Female wanted: $12 per month + 1/4%
from close to campus, also has fireplace.
Gal. 760-973-8957
Male needed for spacious townhouse on巩
mos +1/2 util Call Colby
633-707 and learn a lesson
Female needed to share townhouse. Will have own
phone number. Wander /driver $225/mo +/
8 utilities! Phone 849-3890.
Female non-mobile need to need three bedridens.
Month Pay $\times$ 1/4 Month, Call 798-4165.
Middle Pay $\times$ 1/2 Month, Call 798-4165.
Naismith Drive
Male or female roommate will for 3 bdm
first second seconddam call. Call David at 842-8035. Lv mg.
2 NSE Upperclassman need 2 NSE to share clean,
furnished 4 bdrm, 2 bath apt. Bus Route. Nick-
Neighborhood. Pool, Laundry rm. $19 + 1% uL
Call Morgan 749-0311 or Renee 841-859.
N/S responsible fun roommate needed for 2 bd/m2
applicable utilities. Utilities. Deposit neg
available ASAP. Debt 72%-89%.
Male roommate needed to share 2 bdmr, 2 bathbrm
apartment spring semester. Top floor, terrace,
microwave, dishwasher at Colony Woods. Avail-
ing $235/mo + cash. Call 841-687-1281
leave message
Responsible female to share nice, 3 bdm. unrushed house on bus route, $25 a mth, utilizes
Need a roommate (male or female) ASAP for a
flat apartment. For more information
call 862-495-7128.
Included. Available immediately. Call 491-608.
Roomie Wanted: Female non-smoker for cute-
duplex available Jan. 1. $183 a mo. +1/2 utilities.
Call 832-1280.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Need mature, N/C male to share 3 br apt
and a bart to pres $189/mm.
Someuit p. dAval. Jan, 746-858.
N/A.
One room in spacious 4 BDR apt. Available mid- Dec, or Jan. 1 Half min. to campus, Balcony & color TV. $194/mo. + 1/ul. Call 865-3511
Nsf w/ small dog needs a responsible NSF to-
help them. Send spring semester $190/mo.
/\# Ual Cell 769-1687
open minded female needed to share two bedrooms
often to camp in summer thru May. Call ang-
gela at 804-721-3266.
Roommate needed, M/F to share a 2 bdrm Apt and,
util. cable epson, else have 2 pass route $187 m
and/or 187 fb.
Roommate needed. Start Dec 1, $150/mo /u/l
Roommate needed. Start Dec 1, $200/mo /nin
carmouse. Call 642-7313 for details.
Ads phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* in mnemonic: 119 StairFor Flint
Stay by the Kasan 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.
- By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 66045
Koomeind need for beautiful two story apt. 3, min. walk to campus, $121/mo. +/- $12. Utilizable. mid-Dec. or Jan. 1, lots of windows, patio & yard. Call BS-5311
Roommate need to live in large six bedroom house. Very close to campus. $160 mo + utilities.
Seeking NSF to sublease NEW 3IND rm condo on 9th & Emery 250+ 1 + utilities. Available ONLY CAT!
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.
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105 personal
110 business personalis
120 announcements
130 entertainment
Classifications
148 lost & found
203 help wanted
240 help auto
225 professional services
268 miscellaneous
295 customer service
370 want to buy
405 for rent
438 roommate wanted
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1993 FarWorks, Inc./Dist by Universal Press Syndicate
© 1943 EBWOREL THE TOTAL BY UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICAT
"Listen up, my Cossack brethren! We'll ride into the valley like the wind, the thunder of our horses and the lightning of our steel striking fear in the hearts of our enemies! ... And remember—stay out of Mrs. Caldwell's garden!"
1
12
Tuesday, November 23,1993
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Crown Cinema
Advertise in the Kansan!
BEFORE 4 PM. ADULTS $1.00
(幼儿, 2-5 yrs) TATING
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
VARSITY
(801) 745-3620 | 841 5191
Addams Family
Values PG-13 5:15
7:30, 9:30
HILLC REST
Carlito's Way $ ^{\text{R}} $ 8.90,8.90
Cool Runnings $ ^{\text{PG}} $ 8.15,7.30,2.30
Rudy $ ^{\text{PG}} $ 7.14,8.20
Ernest Rides Again PG 5:15
Joy Luck Club R 5:15, 8:00
The M Club R 5:30
CINEMA TWIN
1720/OWA 841 S19
$1.25
The Firm $ ^{R} $ 5.00, 8.00
5.15
Sleepless in Seattle $ ^{PG} $ 7.00, 9.30
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Daily Showing Times
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DAZED & CONFUSED (R)
LAST DAY! (5:00), 7:15,9:30
"SHORT CUTS" OPENS TOMORROW
DICKINSON
THEATRE
414 8000
Dickinson 6 2319 W. 2319 N.
---
DICKINSON HEATING
641 8000 2239 South Street St.
Dickinson 6
641 8000
My Life **P15** 4:30* , 7:20, 9:55
Flesh & Bone *B4* 1:15* , 7:05, 9:45
Nightmare Before Christmas **P4** 4:35* , 7:10, 9:35
Man's Day *B4* 1:15* , 7:10, 9:40
Fearless **P7** 7:10, 9:50
Look Who's Talking Now **P14** 4:25*
Beverly Hillbillies **P4** 2:0* , 7:15, 9:5
Women take second,men fourth in Invitational
3 Primetime Show (+) Meaning Dolby
Senior Citizen Animation Stereo
The Kansas swimming and diving teams faced perennial powers Tennessee and Indiana, as well as Big Eight rivals Nebraska and Iowa State, in the Minnesota Invitational in Minnesota last weekend.
Kansan sportswriter
The women's team put together a second-place performance, while the men's team finished fourth in the invitational.
By Kent Hohlfeld
MEN'S AND WOMEN'S SWIMMING
The men's team scored 491 points, five points less than third-place Tennessee. Minnesota and Indiana took first and second, respectively.
By Kent Hammond
Kenneth Hammond
Kansas coach Gary Kempf said he
expectd Minnesota to perform well.
"The Minnesota men's team came in 11th in the nation last year," Kempf said. "So it wasn't a real surprise that they had a strong team."
He said the level of competition was high despite the departure of Florida, which placed second in the women's and ninth in the men's NCAA Championship meets last year. Florida pulled out of the meet to enter another competition.
He said that Minnesota had its entire team at the meet and that gave the
team more opportunities to score.
"They had a lot of swimmers there who were rested," freshman Erik Jorgensen said.
"We wanted to place in the top three," Jorgensen said. "But the other teams were rested for the meet."
Jorgensen won the 1,650-yard freestyle, placed fifth in the 500-yard freestyle and placed 12th in the 200-yard freestyle. Jorgensen said that he thought the team put in a good effort despite not placing in the top three.
Just as the men did, Minnesota's women used a larger team to take first place. Kansas scored 1,038 points, placing second behind Minnesota's 1,201-point performance.
Freshman Rebecca Andrew got her first collegiate victory in the meet in the 100-yard butterfly. She said she liked the format of the meet more than she had liked her three previous dual-meet competitions.
"I like there to be more teams out there," Andrew said."
She said the fact that Minnesota was at home and could use its entire team helped the Golden Gophers.
"One of our goals was to move forward this weekend, which we did," Kempf said.
Kempf said that although the playing field was not equal, he thought the team had done well in its third competition of the season.
VISIONS841-7421 806 Massachusetts
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Advertisement
Dept. C-1
Union Technology Center service technician Steve Smith works on a KU student's computer.
photo courteous Andrew Arnone
Students can get Macs fixed on campus
By John Carlton Union Tech Center
Mindy Blum, Wichita junior, is one of many students on campus frustrated by her computer.
She said, "I have the biggest problem right now. I bought a program from the store in the Burge, installed it, and now the printer won't work."
Due to the nature of technology, such problems are sometimes unavoidable for KU students and faculty. Downtime can be very frustrating and getting your computer fixed can sometimes be a pain.
"I don't have enough time to take it to Kansas City. I'm too busy." Blum said.
Earlier this month the Tech Center was approved to be an authorized service provider for Apple Computers. They are currently the only authorized Apple service provider in Lawrence.
But a new program that allows the Union Technology Center in the Burge Union to service Macintosh computers has made it more convenient for KU students to get repairs.
"I'm excited. This will be so much easier on me." Blum said.
The service is available to all KU students, faculty and staff, as well as any former students, faculty or staff who bought their computer from the Tech Center.
The computers are serviced by Steve Smith and the UTC staff. Smith has fifteen years of electronics and computer experience and said he enjoys providing guidance in technical matters.
Smith said, "I often solve computer problems by listening to our client's questions. My work includes educating individuals as well as troubleshooting systems."
Common questions for students and faculty include problems with printing, system errors, lost files and modem communications. Solutions involve software troubleshooting, hardware maintenance and client orientation.
The Union Technology Center is always willing to answer any question, no matter how simple it may be. Smith suggested that students wanting to know more about how computers and programs work could also benefit from
a visit to the Computer Center. Also, faculty members will want to drop by the ASTUTE Center in the Dole Human Development Center for tips on using technology in the classroom. These two places, he said, are excellent resources for anyone inexperienced with computers.
Steed Bell of the Union Tech Center said he was pleased the UTC could provide so much to the KU community. "With our educational pricing, convenient location, and now service on Apple hardware, I think we have a great deal to offer students and faculty members."
union technology center
vcu
The Union Technology Center is located on Level 3 of the Burge Union. Students, faculty and staff can take their Macintosh computers to be serviced there, or call 864-5690 for more information.
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Common abbreviations
1. Call or come into the Kansan at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
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
PLACE AN AD FREE! Call 864-4358
1. Call in the Kansai 19th学员 Kim Yun-ah 604-1582
2. You'll place an ad in the Jayatlk 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.
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS To place an ad
3. After your ad runs in the Mon., Tues., & Thurs. editions of the Kansan, you call a free 800-number (every 3rd day from the day that you initially place your voice message), to listen to the messages people leave for you. Any other day, you may call the 900-number to retrieve your messages at a cost of $1.95 per minute. The average call is 3 mins in length.
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 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.
CAMPUS: An oil company donates a valuable fossil collection to the University. Page 3.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103,NO.68
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 29,1993
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Task force gives ban on dating a thumbs down
Committee suggests less restrictive wording for relationships policy
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
The consensual relationships task force came full circle Wednesday when it finished its report on KU's consensual relationships policy.
The task force's recommendation that KU should have a policy discouraging consensual relationships but not a complete ban was the same recommendation made by the sexual harassment task force's report in Spring 1992.
The report was used by the administration to form the existing policy of prohibiting consensual relationships between students and professors who have a class together.
The report was written by the task force's 16 members, who represented KU's faculty, students, classified and unclassified staff.
Besides the report, the consensual relationships task force also created two possible policies that could replace the existing consensual relationships policy.
Kim Wilcox, associate professor of speech, language and hearing and head of the task force, said both policies recommended against a consensual relationship but did not ban it.
KANSAN
"They are two examples of policies that embody our comments," he said.
The consensual relationships task force was supposed to base some of its report on public response from University members. But the task force received only five responses about the policy.
Sandra Wick, assistant director of the honors program and task force member, said the task force managed without much University response.
"We had a lot of in the committee discussion about different scenarios," she said.
The task force was formed by University Council on Sept. 16 and was given a set of issues to address. Responses to those issues formed the basis of the task force's report.
The task force answered:
- whether the policy should be limited to sex.
The consensual relationships task force will present its report to the University Senate Executive Committee on Wednesday. SenExthen will send the report with possible revisions to University Council
What happens next
After reviewing the report, Council will make its own recommendations to Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor. Meyen then will send the results to Chancellor Gene Budge for the final decision.
ual or romantic relationships or be amended to include other relationships that could harm the faculty/student or supervisor/employee relationship, such as faculty members teaching their relatives.
The task force recommended that all conflicts of interest, including consensual, parent/child or spousal, be avoided.
- whether the policy should be renamed the confictual relationship policy.
- The task force recommended that the policy be renamed the consenting relationships policy.
- whether the policy should clearly explain what types of relationships are allowed and prohibited.
The task force recommended the policy be general in purpose because of the difficulty in defining what types of relationships should be allowed or prohibited.
Record Breaker
Thanksgiving cold sets record in Lawrence
- whether the policy should be publicized in any special forms, such as the faculty handbook.
- The task force recommended the policy should appear in the faculty code of conduct and other unclassified staff handbook, the classified employees handbook, the students code of conduct and the University's affirmative action policies. The task force also recommended the policy should appear in a separate brochure.
- whether changes should be recommended for implementation of the policy.
The task force recommended the policy should be implemented through increased visibility and education of University members.
whether recommendations are needed for the sexual harassment policy.
The sexual harassment task force is being consulted for revisions to the sexual harassment policy.
The coldest Thanksgiving Day in Lawrence history
Old record: 15°F New record: 10°F
1898 and 1950 1993
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
Along with turkey and stuffing, Thanksgiving in Lawrence this year came with a hearty helping of record cold weather.
A 95-year low of 10 degrees was recorded Thursday, breaking the 1898 record of 15. The cold weather created dangerous conditions on the highways throughout the state, according to the Kansas Highway Patrol.
During the four-day Thanksgiving holiday, eight people died on Kansas roads, including three members of a Chanute family killed Saturday in a one-vehicle crash near Garnett, which is in Anderson County.
Last year, two people died on Kansas roadways during the Thanksgiving holiday.
Along with the cold temperatures and icy roads, Lawrence experienced its first accumulated snowfall of the season Saturday, and low temperatures continued.
"It's a true arctic outbreak in every sense of the word," said Mark Bogner, meteorologist for Weather Date, Inc., a private weather service. "This is the same air that had been stored up over Alaska — it originated over Siberia.
"The thing that's hard to deal with is we're getting it in November instead of January."
some students said they still had to adjust to the dipping mercury and the ice roads.
Scott Hillard, Waco, Texas, freshman, said his return home for Thanksgiving break coincided with his birthday. He received some warmer winter clothes, snow boots and an ice scraper as gifts from his family. But even going as far south as Waco did not keep Hillard away from the subfreezing temperatures, he said.
"For the first time in the longest time, it snowed just a tiny bit," Hillard said. "It just usually doesn't get that cold."
Harmony Baldwin, Columbia, S.C., freshman, said she welcomed the change to colder weather. Before moving to Lawrence, Baldwin had been warned by friends and relatives who live in Kansas about the potential severity of Kansas weather.
While spending the Thanksgiving break in Little Rock, Ark., Baldwin said she received a call from Kansas friends telling her about the area's first snow.
"We get maybe one snowfall in five years in South Carolina," Baldwin said. "I had only been through here during Christmas time before coming here, but it's sort of why I really wanted to move here."
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
10
Coach for a day
William Alix / KANSAN
Kansas second baseman Clint Hardesty, Choctaw, Okla., sophomore, coaches Taylor Parker, 8, as Josh Wisehunt, 13, and Karl Lischer, 7, wait for their turn. The Kansas baseball team had a clinic for children from the Lawrence area yesterday at the Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
Despite shortcomings, Hubble telescope a valuable tool
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — When tests in the summer of 1990 showed that the $1.5 billion Hubble Space Telescope had a flaw that left it seriously nearsighted, despair swept through the astronomy community.
it was crushing," recalled Sandra Faber, an astronomer at the Lick Observatory at the University of California who had spent years planning to use the Hubble. "Our whole hopes and plans — scientifically, financially, personally and otherwise — were completely demolished."
Some astronomers became like shell shocked survivors of a war, she
said. But others sought solutions.
Tod Lauer of the National Optical Astronomical Observatory provided the first hope. Days after the discovery of the problem, he demonstrated a way of using a computer to correct the flaws created by the Hubble mirror.
Others developed similar computer enhancement techniques, and within six months of finding the flaw, astronomers began to realize that something important might be salvaged from even a bleary-eyed Hubble.
Since then, photos taken by the orbiting telescope have reshaped some of the fundamental understandings about the universe. Even in its
degraded condition, Hubble has probed the previously unseen heart of distant galaxies and photographed the individual pieces of a speeding asteroid. Hubble has taken astronomy to the brink of locating and proving the existence of black holes, the mysterious, theoretical objects that are so dense even light cannot escape their gravity.
"We have done better than I thought we would at working around the problem," said Peter Stockman, deputy director of the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore. "There are many areas where the Hubble findings are unique. There are discoveries that could not have been
made in any other way."
With image enhancement techniques, "we got back about half of the capabilities that we had expected," said Alan Dressler of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. "The images were good enough to see the basic features of what galaxies look like at 4 (billion) to 5 billion light years away."
A light year is the distance light travels in one year, or about 6 trillion miles. It is also a measure of time because the light carries an image of what existed when it was created.
Most astronomers believe the fundamental success of even a myopic Hubble has been to study stars at the
center of galaxies that appear only as bright blobs on ground-based telescopes.
For example, in the center of a galaxy called NGC4261, about 45 million light years away, the space telescope found a disk of dust around a bright hub that may include a black hole. The immense gravitational force of the black hole pulls gas inward so rapidly that the material is heated millions of degrees.
But the Hubble has fallen short of what was expected when it was launched in 1990.
It has not been able to look back the full 10 billion years as planned. And it has not been able to precisely measure the size of the universe, one of the fundamental goals of the whole project.
"It hasn't acted as the time machine that we hoped that it would," said Stockman.
That may be changed by the Hubble repair mission of the space shuttle, set for launch Wednesday. If the adjustments go as planned, the Hubble will be able to look back in time 10 billion to 14 billion years, to within a few hundred million years of the Big Bang.
"The fix, if it works, will multiply the output by a factor of 10," said Faber. "And that will be well worth the money."
INSIDE
19
Kansas became only the second team to win the Preseason NIT twice when it defeated Massachusetts in Friday's final 86-75.
Twice is nice
Page 9.
Offensive pictures may trigger sexual harassment claims
Students told to remove poster of nude woman on Templin hallway door
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
When a few residents of Templin Hall taped pictures of topless women to their doors, they said they did not think the pictures would offend anyone — especially in a men's residence hall.
But when a female student housing employee saw the pictures, she was offended. She claimed that the pictures created a hostile working environment, thus constituting sexual harassment.
Her complaint left Dan Murrow and other residents facing the question of what is
appropriate for door decorations.
"Most of the guys have no problem with this kind of stuff," said Murrow, Kansas City, Kan., freshman. "I think I have the right to put up anything on my door, even if somebody considers it offensive. I don't see why they have a problem with it."
Murrow said he had posted a picture of a nude woman on his door two weeks ago and soon after received a letter from the hall director, Jim Schmaedeke, asking him to take it down.
Schmaedeke could not be reached for comment yesterday.
Murrow and other residents said the policy concerning offensive material on doors was too vague.
Fred McElhenie, assistant director of student housing, said offensive posters, such as pornographic pictures or derogatory signs, could trigger sexual-harassment
charges against a resident if that person refused to take down the material in question.
McEhenie said that residents who repeatedly refused to take down the offensive material could face expulsion from the hall or the hall system. But McEhenie said that such cases were rare and that often residents took down the material after they had been asked to do so.
McElhene said that material posted on the outside of doors was considered much different than material posted inside a residence hall room.
"We spell out everything in the contracts. We are not a moral arbiter. We respect their privacy," he said. "But the hallway is a public area. We feel we have every right to protect our employees and keep everything very much in line with sexual harassment guidelines established by the University."
According to student housing guidelines,
decoration on the outside of the room door is "permitted if it is not offensive according to University guidelines."
McElhenie said material that was visible to the public was subject to the guidelines, such as a poster displayed in a window or posted on the outside of a door. Posters displayed inside student's rooms are not subject to these guidelines.
Tom Berger, associate director of the office of affirmative action, said his office, along with the University ombudsman, handled most sexual harassment cases on campus.
2
Monday, November 29,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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ON CAMPUS
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting for students interested in studying in Spanish-speaking countries at 10:30 a.m. today in 4010 Wescoe Hall. For more information, call Ellen Strubert at 864-3742.
Narcotics Anonymous will meet from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. today at Alcove I in the Kansas Union. For more info, call Andy at 843-9461 or Laura at 748-0753.
St. Layrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chanel,
Clan na daghda ValFather (Clans of the Good Godall Father) will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove F in the Kansas Union, For more information, call Debra or Michael Terry at 841-2996.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a Catholic law student discussion group at 12:30p.m. today in 109 Green Hall. For more information, call 843-0357.
Harambe will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the American Baptist Center, 1629 W. 19th St. For more information, call Anthony Case at 865-1682.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a "Fundaments of Catholicism" class at 7 tonight at the Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will show a video, "Exploring the Faith," at 8 onight at the center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more info, call 843-0357.
ON THE RECORD
A student's leather jacket value at $135 was taken in the 500 block of Wisconsin Street on Friday, Lawrence police reported.
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Hra: 8-7 M-Th., 8-5 Fri., 9-5 Sat, 12-4 Sun. 843-3820
A student's wallet and its contents, valued together at $21, were taken in the 1700 block of Massachusetts Street on Thursday, Lawrence police reported.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
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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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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 29, 1993
3
Common sense the key to safety at bars, parties
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
College can be the best place for people to find the perfect match. It may never be easier for students to find someone the same age with similar interests.
But that search can be a dangerous, especially for women.
Alice Ann Lieberman, professor of social welfare, said there were different reasons that women were more likely to find themselves in awkward and dangerous social situations than men.
"Roles are ambiguous as to the way men and women act in social situations," she said. "It used to be that it wasn't cool for women to be socially aggressive, but that is somewhat changing."
Lieberman said another reason was that men are physically larger and can overpower women.
So how can students have fun be safe in social situations?
It is not true that people can be too careful. Lieberman said.
"If you have any qualms at all about an individual or their actions, don't go with them," she said. "Don't do it. Don't take any chances. It's your life at stake."
Students should stay in groups and go with their gut instincts about people. Lieberman said.
"People who are younger don't feel mortality like older people do," she said. "They think they're invincible to hurt and tragedy."
Dave Breo, Chicago senior and bartender, said it was common to see men and women meeting and exchanging telephone numbers for the first time at Johnny's Bar and Grill. 401 N. Second St.
"It seems like all people do from
Breo said he did not know whether people who had just met always left Johnny's together.
1:30 on is ask for pens and paper," he said.
Sgt. Rose Rozmiarek of the KU police, said social safety was different with each individual.
"I watch guys strike on out girls using some cheesy line," he said. "But then it'll work on another woman. At the end of the night, usually they end up walking toward the door together."
"I can't say what's right or wrong," she said. "Everyone has their own behavior and personal preference in handling situations."
But she said social safety at bars and parties was a matter of common sense.
"Students are not too trusting, but they let their guards down," she said. "You have to be aware of the circumstances and the situation at all times."
Alcohol may play an important role in the safety and the outcome of a night out, said Barbara Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center.
"People aren't themselves after they've been drinking," she said. "Everyone needs to know what their drinking limits are."
There is always the chance that something bad will happen, Ballard said.
"In a nutshell, don't leave with a
total stranger," she said.
Instead, Ballard said it was good to exchange phone numbers.
"If he doesn't call you back, then maybe there was something more on the mind of that person in the first place than a sincere interest in you," she said
Center uses seminars to educate about rape
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Fifteen percent of female students at the University of Kansas have experienced acquaintance rape, according to the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center.
Of those, only one in 10 have reported it. the center savs.
Barbara Ballard, associate dean of student life and director of the center, said a lack of education among college students contributed to the numbers.
"They come to college, and they experience lots of things," she said. "Alcohol is one of them. Sex is one of them. Living on their own is one of them."
KANSAN
Such concerns were the motivating factors behind the creation three years ago of the Sexual Assault Prevention and Education Program. The program, an extension of the center, tries to educate students about acquaintance and date rape. Ballard said.
"You don't deserve to be sexually assaulted," she said. "We try to get that message out."
The program provides speakers and workshops for residence halls, scholarship halls, fraternities, sororities and other groups. The workshops are intended to instruct students about acquaintance rape, which is forced or manipulated sexual intercourse by somebody the victim knows.
"You might be somewhat willing to participate in romance," Ballard said. "But maybe you draw the line at having intercourse. Some people don't stop, and you
Date rape help
The Sexual Assault Prevention and Education Program provides programs about acquaintance rape for no charge. For more information about the program, call 864-3600 from 8 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
might be afraid, or you might be intoxicated. That says it was rape."
"It doesn't take much to ask, 'Is this okay?' " she said. "And if you have any doubts, don't do it."
Ballard said the lessons also were aimed at men, so they could avoid causing acquaintance rape.
No scientific way can prove whether the program is effective in preventing rape, Hickman said, but the amount of audience participation showed that students were interested in learning.
Susan Hickman, graduate assistant for the program, said the workshops provided a way for students to get information about acquaintance rape that they might not find in any other place.
"It's hard to get the information out there," she said. "This is one way to get it out to the students who need it."
"An amazing number of people have stories about friends and acquaintances who have been raped," Hickman said.
To participate, living groups must contact the program, Hickman said.
W. B. K.
Roger Kaesler, director of the KU Museum of Invertebrate Paleontology, sits among fossils of fusulinids in Lindley Hall. The museum received the fossils from Shell Western Exploration and Production, Inc. three weeks ago.
Andrew Arnone/Special to the KANSAN
'Irreplaceable' sea fossils donated to KU museum
★
Acquisition provides link to Earth's past
Kansan staff writer
By Kathleen Stolle
Kenneth staff writer
Stored like corpses in little wooden coffins, the fossil remains of 25,000 fusulinids rest in the bowels of Lindley Hall.
But Roger Kaesler, director of the KU Museum of Invertebrate Paleontology, is not in mourning.
The fossil collection consists of single-cell sea organisms, which the oil company used in determining the age of rocks to find drilling sites.
Andrew Arnone/Special to the KANSAN
"It's absolutely irreplaceable," he said of the recently acquired collection.
The museum received the fossil collection of long extinct single-celled sea organisms three weeks ago from Shell Western Exploration and Production, Inc. The oil company used the fossils, which indicate the age of rocks in which they are found, in selecting oil well drilling sites.
The collection is invaluable not only for its usefulness in research, but also because the fossils were extracted during drilling, a costly procedure, Kaesler said.
Kaesler said he had had his eye on the collection for about 20 years, but the oil company was using it until only recently.
"They're doingmore foreign and offshore exploration and less exploration in areas covered by this collection," he said.
Kaesler, who is also a professor of geology, said the collection was available to anyone and will be used in his spring semester course on microfossils. Researchers studying geographic history also may tap the collection
as a resource.
"We're not interested in finding oil, but we're still interested in finding the geologic history of the earth," he said.
Fusulinids meet the criteria needed in fossils to help determine rock age. Kaesler said. They evolved rapidly, they are easily identifiable and
they are found throughout the world and in different environments. The ones in the collection came from throughout the Midwest.
About the size of a grain of wheat, each fusulinid shell is extracted from the rock in which it is embedded. A thin section then is sliced from the shell and affixed to a glass slide. Under ammicroscope, the collection of chambers in the fusulinid shell
resemble kaleidoscope images to the untrained eye.
The single-celled organisms lived in the seas from about 325 million years ago to about 245 million years ago before dying out completely, Kaesler said.
"About 95 percent of all species went extinct and nobody knows why that happened," he said.
Alice Hart, a geologist in the museum, said that no organisms evolved from the fusulinids and their role in the ocean was minimal.
"They were lower in the food chain and would have been consumed by larger organisms," she said.
Millions of years later, however, the role in KU may bring the Univer-
ity international attention. Hart said she was helping enter details about the collection into a computer data base. Researchers throughout the world could learn about the collection by computer and request to borrow portions for study, Hart said.
The new acquisition may bolster the reputation of the museum, which is one of three in the United States designated as fusulinids repositories, Hart said.
"It's always nice to expand on something that's one of your strengths to begin with," she said.
The collection is the second-largest collection of fusulinids at the museum. A collection of 35,000 fusulinids was donated by another petroleum company several years ago.
Science library temporarily extends hours
CAMPUS BRIEFS
New hours, which went into effect yesterday, will extend the usual midnight closing time at the science library to 2 a.m. Sundays through Thursdays until Dec. 16, said Mary Hawkins, assistant dean of University libraries.
Late-night studiers at Anschutz Science Library will have an extra 10 hours a week to prepare for their fall finals.
Friday hours will remain from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Hawkins said. Saturday hours will remain from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m.
No staff-assisted library services, including circulation and reference desks, will be available during the daily two-hour extension, Hawkins said.
Nominations open for teaching awards
David Shulenburger, vice掌cancellor for academic affairs, is accepting nominations for two teaching awards.
The Distinguished Teaching Award is designated for full-time tenured faculty. The Silver Anniversary Teaching Award is designated for full-time faculty who have taught for less than seven years.
Faculty members may be nominated by any student, student organization, alumnus, faculty member or professional school.
Nominations should be letters stating why the nominee deserves the award. The deadline for nominations is Dec. 20.
Computers track stolen permits
Brife compiled from Kensan staff reports.
By Shan Schwartz
Kansan staff writer
The new hanging parking permits may be easy to steal, but both the Parking Department and KU police want thieves to know that using a stolen permit can be self-incriminating and costly.
Both departments have had some success in finding stolen parking permits this fall.
Donna Hultine, assistant director of parking, said that when a parking permit was stolen, the permit owner should report the theft to the police. Then, the owner can obtain a new permit for $3 and the parking department enters the old permit number into its computer as stolen.
Hultine said parking officers periodi-
hally had been searching random lots
for stolen permits. Officers check parked cars and enter the permit numbers into the computer. If the number from a stolen permit is entered, the computer indicates to the officer that the permit has been reported stolen.
Hultine said that at least one permit had been found this year by the random searches. She said the search for stolen permits would be easier and faster next year after the department had purchased electronic scanners that would read bar codes on the permits.
Hultine said that when a car was found with a parking permit that had
KU Police Sgt. Rose Rozmiarek said that 39 parking permits had been reported stolen this school year, and three permits have been recovered by the KU police department.
been reported stolen, the car was towed and the owner fined $25 by the parking department for display of a stolen permit.
Parking would notify the KU police department, Hultine said. KU police also would impound the vehicle so both the police and the parking department would have to approve the release of the car by the towing company.
Before the car owner gets permission to retrieve the car, the visit to the police station could lead to criminal charges.
"They would probably at least be charged with possession of stolen property, " Rozmiarek said.
Additional charges were possible, Rozmiarek said, but each case would be handled differently depending on the circumstances.
-
Monday. November 29.1993
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Schools should increase role in sex education
The International Planned Parenthood Federation reported some distressing news: The United States has the highest rate of unwanted
ed States has the highest rate of unwanted pregnancies in the West. The report clearly signals the need for U.S. schools to make sex education a higher priority.
According to the report, teen-agers are becoming sexually active at a younger age than ever before, and unfortunately many are still sexually illiterate. The report said that "many young people think they cannot become pregnant the first time they have intercourse, or if they only have sex occasionally or unless both parties have an orgasm."
In response to this problem of sexually activity, yet uninformed teen-agers, U.S. schools should provide more accessible and confidential advice on the use of contraceptives as well as make contraceptives available. Advice on the emotional as well as physical consequences of being sexually active would not hurt as well. Young adults can get involved in this respect, giving teen-agers a chance to learn from their peers.
This report calls on people to update their attitudes towards teen-agers and sex and calls for schools to play a more active role in educating young people about sex in the '90s. Today, sex education and advice should be as common to a teen-ager's school life as football games and high school dances.
CHRISTINA CORNISH FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Parents must pay heed to kids and their toys
It is the time to shower the people you love with gifts. It is also the time to make sure that those gifts are not harmful.
According to a recent report, each year, many children are killed in toy-related accidents. The most common fatal accidents involve choking, strangulation and falls.
Hundreds of new toys are introduced into the market each year. Each one must pass a series of safety-related tests created to help ensure that the toys are not potentially harmful to children. However, it sometimes seems that children are smarter than the adults testing the toys for safety.
The most dangerous toys are those that contain small parts that can be detached or broken from the main portion of the toy. Small children instinctively put objects in their mouths; it is the parents' job to ensure that the children do not have access to dangerous objects.
Other dangerous toys are those that have cords or chains, which can strangle children. These include play telephones with long cords as well as sports equipment and pull toys. Also dangerous are ride toys and walkers. Walkers often obscure the sight of the child, causing falls down stairs. Ride-on toys are similar, often moving out of control of the child and causing an accident.
In each of these cases, the burden of safety is on the adult supervising the child. However, it is the responsibility of the conscientious gift-giver to help ensure that the child has toys that will not endanger his or her safety.
DAVID BURGETT FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS:
DAVID BURGETT, J.R. CLAIRBORNE, CHRISTINA CORNISH, CARSON ELROD, TOM GRELINGER, MANNY LOPEZ, COLLEEN McCAIN, TERRILYN MCCORMICK, MUNEERA NASEER, NATHAN NASSIF, KIRK REDMOND, CHRIS REEDY, RANDALL REITZ, MIKE SILVERMAN, EISHA TIERNEY, KC TRAUER AND DAVID WANEK
U. S. EXPORTS TO RUSSIA :
McDonalds
DIRTY CAMPAIGNING
HOOD UDK '93
Mating alligators and editors imperil writers
If you look at any list of great modern writers such as Ernest Hemingway, William Faulkner and F. Scott Fitzgerald. you'll notice two things:
1. They all had editors
2. They are all dead.
Thus we can draw the scientific conclusion that editors are fatal. I was made intensely aware of this recently when, as the direct result of an idea conceived by my editor, I wound up flailing around up to my armpits in the Swamp of Doom.
That is not its technical name. Its technical name is the Big Cypress National Preserve, which is part of the Everglades ecosystem, an enormous, wet, nature-intensive area that at one time was considered useless, but which is now recognized as a vital ecological resource, providing Florida with an estimated 93 percent of its bloodsucking insects.
No, really, the Everglades are very important. Tragically, they have been tampered with by man, an ecological moron who is always blundering into sensitive areas and beofling them with beer canes, used condoms, golf courses, etc. Only lately has man realized that the best thing for him to do is stay out of the Everglades. This was certainly MY policy. For years the only contact I had with the Everglades was when I drove across it on Highway 41 at a speed of 87 miles per hour, which I figured was fast enough to outrun any wildlife that might prey on motorists. Even then I occasionally had Nature Encounters, such as the time my car encountered a flying green bug large enough to have a Business Class section, which produced a windshield splat the size of U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Reisch.
COLUMNIST
DAVE
BARRY
So it never occurred to me to set actual foot in the Everglades until my
So one Saturday morning we went.
On the edge of the Everglades we stopped for supplies at a combination truck stop/sporting-goods store. I bought the basics: a safari-style helmet, a machete, beef jerky, Evian water, a snake-bite kit and Certs.
"It's real interesting," he said, never once mentioning alligators, let alone poison trees.
editor, Tom Shroder, suggested that I go hiking with him out there.
(Here is an actual quotation from the snake-bite kit instructions: "Misuse of the lymph constrictor ... could cause gangrene which might even necessitate amputation." And this does not refer to the snake.)
I used the machete to cut the tag off the safari-style helmet, so the wildlife creatures would not think I was some easily edible swamp rookie. But I was still nervous. And I did not feel better when we met our guide, John Kala-farski, a Park Service ranger who is knowledgeable about wildlife.
"See this tree?" he said, pointing to a tree that looked, to me, exactly like every other tree in the Everglades. "This is a Poisonwood tree. You don't want to touch it."
I'm not touching anything, Tsau. Then we began our hike. At first it was fine. But suddenly John, having apparently brushed up against a lunaticwood tree, plunged RIGHT
"I'm not touching anything." I said.
INTO THE SWAMP. Soon we were up into our knees in murky, festering soup, walking on one of those squishy muck bottoms, surrounded by dense growth and the smell of rotting vegetation. I was fighting my way through big snails of vines, stumbling over logs, falling into hidden holes, while up ahead, John, oblivious to the aura of menace all around us, was delivering a cheerful nonstop commentary on the flora and fauna, pointing out rare mushrooms, tree snails, etc.
I wanted to scream, "TREE SNAILS? There could be GIANT SNAKES hiding in this water, and you're looking at TREE SNAILS?"
But I did not want to act like a weenie. I saved that until the water was up to our armpits and John, pointing right in front of us, said, "This is an alligator hole."
"You mean there's a (bad word)
ALLIGATOR in there?" I asked.
"Yes," said John, "and it's appropriate that you use that word to describe him, because this is mating season."
"WE DON'T WANT YOUR WOMEN! I shouted at the hole.
"That might offend him," Tom said.
"NOT THAT WE DON'T FIND YOUR WOMEN ATTRACTIVE!" I shouted at the hole.
When we got back onto the dry trail, I opened the beef jerky package with my machete and passed it around, and we enjoyed a pleasant sense of fellowship and accomplishment and wondered if we would need oral surgery to repair the jerky-related damage to our teeth. If you enjoy nature, I strongly recommend that you, too, take a hike to the Everglades. I'll wave to you from the car.
Dave Barry is a syndicated columnist with the Miami Herald.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Your coverage of the OUI issue in the Kansan was inadequate and one-sided. I respectfully take exception with your implication that moderate social drinking is unacceptable. While driving drunk is a crime, having a glass of wine with dinner is not. Your coverage should not equate severe intoxication with
OUI article inaccurate; lawyer slamming unjust
moderate social drinking.
Secondly, your willingness to print law enforcement officer Hegemen's off-hand remark that "law students are the worst ... they usually have an attitude and start naming laws" is irresponsible
In sum, the picture your article painted was unrealistic. Your coverage led the naive reader to believe that driving after having one drink could lead to arrest, detention, battery of tests, suspension of license, attorney and court costs, a criminal record, rehabilitative treatment and counseling. This is not reality, and you should not try to scare your readership into believing it. Is moderate social drinking is here to stay; let's get used to it and be responsible.
Stephen Parker
Lawrence second year law student
Rock concert etiquette for flannel shirt wearing folk
I have recently become an authority on something else. Hard to believe I know, but it's true. My new area of expertise is concerts — also known as "rock concerts" or "shows." This makes me an authority on everything in the world. I would be remiss if I held these vast storehouses of knowledge captive without sharing them, so today, I will help you enrich your life through music.
Rule two is arrive late. Do not arrive at the time at which the show is supposed to start. If one arrives early or on time, one will have to wait for the equipment to be set up and for the rest of the crowd to arrive. Also, if one arrives on time, one will have a place to park. This means that there will be no stories to tell to the rest of the attendees about how far one had to walk to get to the show from one's extremely horrible parking spot on a street several miles away in the snow.
Rule number one is clothing. When one goes to a rock concert, one must dress as much like one thinks everyone else will be dressed as one can. This, these days, generally means that one puts on a flannel shirt. Not, mind you, on one's torso, but one's waist. This is the proper way to wear a flannel shirt. Tied around the waist, so that the sleeves hang down to the tops of one's mock work boots direct from the pages of J-Crew. On the torso goes a Lollapaloza T-shirt or some similar shirt that proves that one has been to another concert and is therefore a jaded and cool person when it comes to these things. If one is lucky, it will be a worn T-shirt with a faded print, so that the image is one of an experienced and jaded concertgoer.
Rule three is to learn to obey The Switch. The Switch, for you inexperienced folks, is a huge imaginative switch on the wall backstage controlled by a roadie who only talent is being able to recognize when the music is being played. When the band starts playing, he turns The Switch on. When the music stops, he turns it off. The Switch is important (would I capitalize something that wasn't?) because it controls the audience's movement. When The Switch is on, the audience dances or jumps or grooves or bops, and when it is off, the audience stands still. If one does not learn to properly obey The Switch, one will not conform, which is definitely not cool.
Rule four is to totally disregard your fellow audience members. Do not stop to think that they may not want to smell your, no doubt, sweaty body, or touch you while you dance, or hear you sing along to all your favorite songs, or even see you舞. Pretend if possible, that you are the only one at the concert.
RYAN
McGEE
Rule four, subrule A, is to exhibit the same lack of respect for the band. Feel free to throw things at them and heckle them. Feel obligated to act like it is the band's privilege to play for you.
These rules in mind, you should be able to fully enjoy your next concert experience and reach the zenith if your coolness, thanks to me and any newfound authority. You're welcome.
Ryan McGee is a Worland, Wyo. sophmore.
KANSANSTAFF
KC TRAUER
Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET
Technology coordinator
Editors
Assistant to the editor ... J.R. Cialiborne
News ... Stacy Friedman
Editorial ... Terrilyn McComick
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Kristi Fogler
Photo ... Kip Chin, Renee Knoeber
Features ... Ezra Wolfe
Graphics ... John Paul Fogel
Wire ... Alexander Bloemhof, Vicki Bode, Kevin Butter
Assistant Editors
Associate editorial ... Colleen McCain
Associate campus ... Dan England
Assistant campus/planning ... Jesse DeHaven
Associate sports ... Todd Selfort
Associate features ... Almee Estrada
Copy Chiefs
Alexander Bloemhof ... Allison Lippert
... Trace Ritchle
News Clerk ... Teresa Veazey
Reporters
COLUMNIST
Copy Editors
Elizabeth Beary ... Craig Boxx
Kevin Butler ... Dan Carver
Lisa Countrillo ... Jess Delvane
Dan Erlando Fisher ... Jack Fisher
Matt Hydeman ... Stephen Martino
Stacy Morford ... Sarah Nagi
Munera Nasser ... Barba Schultz
Scott Anderson ... Sara Bennett
Mark Button ... Tracel Carl
Chesley Dohl ... Matt Doyle
Anne Felstet ... Gerry Fey
Christoph Fuhrmans ... Donella Hearn
Kent Hoffield ... Brian Jones
Lie Klinger ... Shan Schwartz
David Stewart ... Kathleen Stolle
Carlos Tejada ... JL Watson
Photographers
William Alix ... Yalerle Bontrager
Julia Clarke ... Richard Devkni
John Gamble ... Doug Hease
Paul Kotz ... Melissa Lacey
Tom Leininger ... Holly McQueen
Susan MoSpadden
Employees Resident
Dave Campbell ... James Frederick
Micah Laiker ... Den Schauer
John Paul Fogel...Stacy Friedman
...Will Lewis
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STUMBO Retail sales manager
Sales and marketing adviser
PAT BOYLE
Business coordinator
BILL THOMAS
Business Staff
Campus sales manager...Ed Schager
Regional sales manager...Jennifer Perrier
National sales manager...Jennifer Evenson
Co-op sales manager...Blythe Focht
Production managers...Jennifer Blowey
...Kate Burgess
Marketing director...Shelly McConnell
Creative director...Brian Punco
Classified manager...Gretchen Koetterhahnichk
Special sections manager...Judith Hobson
Manager...Robynn Pang
Retail assistant...Tricia Bumpus
Creative assistant (photographer)...Andrew Amone
Creative assistant (photographer)
Zone Managers
John Carlton ... Jason Eberly
Justin Garberg ... Josh Hahn
... Robin Kring
Retail Account Executives
Mindy Blum ... Chris Bulgren
Chris Butter ... Kelly Caffrey
Jennifer Carr ... Jenni Goorke
Laura Guth ... Allison Kaplan
Jason Kort ... Mark Mastro
Chris Morlissey ... Frank Muller
Paula Ostrowski ... Heather Richetto
Jenny Schwab ... Andrew Shriver
Dave Smith ... Stacey Stricklin
Campus Account Executives
Keri Kimmel ... Beth Pols
Shannon Reilly ... Troy Tarwater
... Jeanne Tohey
Regional Account Executive
Arville Crawford ... Alex Kolb
Brian Platt ... ...
Account Assistants
Shelley Falevits ... Bradley Felinberg
Dean Hovind ... Mark Slothick
... Matt Spett
---
✓
NATION/WORLD
2 1 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 29, 1993
5
Mexico's top political party picks presidential candidate
The Associated Press
MEXICO CITY — The party that has governed Mexico for more than 60 years named public works chief Luis Donaldo Colosio as its presidential candidate yesterday, virtually assuring that he will be the nation's next leader.
The announcement by the Institutional Revolutionary Party's national chairperson, Fernando Ortiz Arana, ended months of speculation on who was going to be its standard bearer.
The party, known by its Spanish initials as PRI, has not lost a presidential election since it was founded 64 years ago.
Colosio, 43, is a native of northwestern Sonora state and a close friend of President Carlos Salinas de Gortari. Both carried out post-graduate studies in the United States. Colosio holds a master's degree and a doctorate in urban economic development from the University of Pennsylvania.
"Luis Donaldo Colosio is the PRI member who, because of his social vocation and party experience, is the candidate of unity and of hope for all Mexicans to overcome old backwardness and new challenges of the future," Ortiz said in his brief announcement.
In the next few days, Colosio is to resign his Cabinet post as Secretary of Social Development, a job Salinas created for him out of the old Urban Development Department two years ago, to enter the campaign.
The election is Aug. 24,1994
He faces a formidable challenge from Cuauhtemoc Cardenas of the Democratic Revolutionary Party, who nearly carried away the election that put Salinas into power in 1988.
Colosio was coordinator of Salinas' campaign, then for about two years the president entrusted him with reforming the party. Colosio's aim, he said at the time, was to make it competitive in a more open political atmosphere.
It is part of the president's effort to improve Mexico's tarnished image abroad, especially now that the nation has entered into the North American Free Trade Agreement with Canada and the United States.
Salinas, meanwhile, has been pushing for political reform aiming to do away with favoritism and corruption and to open the field to give opposition people greater access to public jobs.
But opposition party leaders have been saying he has not done enough.
Israeli helicopters attack guerrilla bases
The Associated Press
SIDON, Lebanon — Israelis helicopters attacked the bases of Palestinian guerrillas opposed to the Mideast peace process yesterday, wounding at least three people, security sources said.
Four other Israeli air raids since the accord targeted Lebanese guerrillas, who are fighting Israel's occupation of southern Lebanon.
In Jerusalem, the Israeli army acknowledged the attack and said the helicopters hit a base belonging to the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine.
The attack on the Ein el-Hilweh refugee camp near Sidon was the first to target Palestinians in Lebanon since Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization signed a landmark peace agreement Sept. 13.
The sources in Lebanon said two helicopters fired five missiles that blasted two adjacent bases, one belonging to the DFLP and the second to its ally, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.
Three guerrillas were wounded. The extent of damage couldn't immediately be determined.
The refugee camp also houses offices and training bases for supporters of PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat. They were not affected by the attack.
The PFLP and DFLP are at odds with Arafat, who reached the accord with Israel without their consent. The agreement calls for limited Palestinian self-rule in the occupied Gaza Strip and the West Bank town of Jericho as a first step toward a permanent settlement for the occupied territories.
Since the accord was signed, Arafat's Palestinian opponents have strengthened their alliance with the Iranian-backed Hezbollah.
MOGADISHU, Somalia
Somali warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidi is boycotting this week's conference in Ethiopia, his representative said yesterday, threatening to ruin a chance for the nation's rival factions to reconcile their differences.
Aidid won't attend conference unless prisoners released
THE NEWS in brief
Aidid would attend the conference only if the United Nations releases three of his top aides, the representative, Abdi Ghabbad, told an organized rally of Aidid supporters in Mogadishu, U.N. and American officials have said the men likely won't be released soon.
The U.N. Security Council removed Aidid from its wanted list two weeks ago while it investigated the Somali slayings of 24 Pakistani troops in Mogadishu in early June. The three aides are suspected of masterminding subsequent attacks that killed at least 24 Americans and scores of other U.N. troops.
241 militants and scores of other U.N. troops.
U.N. Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali
last week appointed a commission to investigate the attacks, most of which took place in Mogadishu between June and October.
U. N. and U.S. officials have said the men could be released in the meantime, but they expressed doubt they would be freed on time for the conference.
FRANKFURT. Germany
Drug lord's family in Germany
Four members of Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar's family arrived in Germany yesterday, but authorities did not immediately follow through on statements that the family would be refused entry.
The family's departure from Colombia was taken as an indication that Escobar might be about to surrender if he knew that his family was safe from people trying to kill them.
Reporters waiting at Frankfurt airport for the Lufthansa flight that arrived yesterday afternoon from Bogota via Caracas were not permitted to see the Escobar relatives.
The border police issued a statement saying four Escobar relatives had arrived.
The four were two women, a man and a girl, the statement said. It did not give their names, but from reports in Colombia when the group left under heavy guard, they would be Escobar's wife Victoria, son Juan Pablo and daughter Manuela, and possibly a sister of the fugitive drug chief.
In Bonn, an Interior Ministry representative who did not give his name said that Escobar's family would not be granted entry and would be put on the next available plane.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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Vince Gnojek,
saxophone soloist
7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, November 30, 1993
Lied Center
For general admission tickets, call the box office (Murphy): 913/864-3982; Lied: 913/864-ARTS); public $3, students and senior citizens $2; VISA/MasterCard accepted for phone orders. Parsimily funded by the KU Student Senate.
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The Willis A. Wasa Memorial Scholarship is awarded each February to a KU student to assist in obtaining a private pilot license.
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To be eligible, a student must:
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* be enrolled at least 50% time at the Lawrence campus
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Applications available at Aerospace Engineering Department 2004 Learned Hall · 864-4267
UNIVERSITY DANCE COMPANY
HOLIDAY CONCERT
with the COHAN/SUZEAU
DUET COMPANY
8.00 p.m.
Friday & Saturday,
December 3 & 4, 1993
2:00 p.m.
Saturday, December 4, 1993
Crafton-Preyer Theatre/
Murphy Hall
For general admission tickets, call the box office (Murphy: 913/864-3982,
Lied: 913/864 - ARTS); public $6, students $3, senior citizens $5;
VISA/MasterCard accented for phone orders.
Partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activity Fee. SUDENT
SENATE
V
Murder is the third-leading cause of on-the-job fatalities
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Murder was the leading cause of workplace death in five states and the District of Columbia during the 1980s, according to the first federal study to pinpoint workplace fatalities by state.
Of the 7,603 Americans slain on the job in the last decade, 985 workers were murdered in Alabama, Connecticut, Maryland, Michigan, South Carolina and Washington, D.C.
New York doesn't tabulate on-the-jobicide, but the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health estimated its toll at 867. If accurate, that would make New York the capital of workplace murder.
The institute first warned about workplace homicide last month, when an early analysis of this study showed murder to be the biggest killer of working women. The full study was released Monday.
Nationwide, 62,289 civilians died on the job from 1980 through 1989 about 17 workers a day.
Overall, murder was the third-leading killer of civilians,following motor ing vehicle crashes and machine injuries.
vehicle crashes and machine injuries.
Texas, California and Florida had the highest number of workplace fatalities.
A better measure of risk is the rate of fatalities per 100,000 workers. Using that, the workers most at risk were in Alaska, with 34.8 deaths per 100,000 workers, followed by Wyoming, 29, and Montana, 20.9.
The safest workers were in Connecticut, with a fatality rate of 1.8; Massachusetts, 2.3; and New York, 2.6 — even though Connecticut and New York had 50 and 867 workplace murders respectively.
Water-related accidents were the top killer of Alaskan workers, and air transportation accidents led in Hawaii and Nevada. Car crashes were the biggest killers in the remaining states.
Construction and transportation and utility workers accounted for the most fatalities, 18 percent each.
The riskiest occupation was mining. Almost 32 of every 100,000 workers in the mining industry died.
Most likely to be murdered at work were taxi drivers, police officers and retail workers. At highest risk were people working with money or valuables, or working alone and at night, said Lynn Jenkins, author of the study.
She said most of the homicides probably occurred during robberies but had no numbers. The study was compiled from death certificates, which list cause of death, not its circumstances.
The good news: workplace fatalities decreased, from 7,405 in 1980 to 5,714 in 1989. So did the fatality rate, from 8.9 deaths per 100,000 workers in 1980 to 5.6 in 1989.
Even workplace homicides declined 24 percent, from 914 murders in 1980 to 694 in 1989.
"As our economy shifts to a more retail- and service-oriented economy, the rates may continue to decline." Jenkins said. "These industries have relatively low rates of occupational fatality compared to heavy industry."
Surgeon General crusades for sex education
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Comprehensive health education from kindergarten through 12th grade is crucial to reducing the numbers of children born out of wedlock, Surgeon General JoyceyL Elders said yesterday.
Schools teach drivers education, but when we come to health education, which includes sexuality education, we refuse to teach them that." Elders said on ABC's "This Week with David Brinkley."
issues including drugs, alcohol, sex and violence. "It's not going in there and giving them a plumbing lesson. I feel that's a waste of time."
She said only 5 percent of public schools now have comprehensive programs.
"A major cause of children dying is really related to many of the social problems impacting their health, so I really feel we need to have a comprehensive health education program in our schools from kindergarten through 12th grade. This is the equalizer," she said.
Elders, who as the former top health official in Arkansas was outspoken on the need to provide condoms to sexually active teenagers, said that contraceptives should be made available, but "if you don't have the education I could go out and throw condoms up in the air and let them rain."
Elders said health education must include the entire spectrum of social
Charles Murray of the American Enterprise Institute, appearing on the same show, blamed the welfare system for the sharp rise in single mothers.
"You lift the economic burden, social stigma goes down," he said.
The Clinton administration has
promised welfare reform, and the New York Times reported yesterday that one plan being considered is to give corporations up to $5,000 for every welfare recipient they hire.
Donna Shalala, secretary of health and human services, said no options on welfare reform had been presented to President Clinton.
During a hospital visit to promote the president's health care plan, she said that a working group has discussed giving money to corporations, but did not know whether such a proposal would go to Clinton.
If that happens, Murray said,
"Everything that you are looking at
now in terms of our reaction to crime
and our reaction to drugs and the rest
of it will be many times greater, and
that looks to me very much like a centralized, authoritarian state that bears
very little resemblance to what Jefferson or Madison had in mind."
TheTraditionContinues...
CAFE JAY HAWK CAFE MICHAELS DRY BUDWEISER
Monday;
Monday Night Football!!
$300 Domestic Pitchers
$400 Premium Domestic Pitchers
(Samuel Adams, Killian's Red, & Boulevard)
Wednesday;
25¢ Draws
Tuesday; Light Night: $150 Domestic Light Bottles and Shot Specials
Thursday; Disco/Retro Night! Big Beer Specials
THE HAWK
Lawrence, KS
Since 1919
1340 Ohio
(913)S43-9273
Mon.-2am, Mon.-Sun.
Call or come in to check our daily specials.
77
Pre-ordering your books means they're prepackaged and waiting for you before classes start. That can save you time hunting for your books and standing in long lines. Preorder customers also get first 'shot' at all used books in stock. That saves you money - up to 30% off new prices. Pre-order books totaling $90.00 or more from the Jayhawk Bookstore and receive a $10.00 gift certificate good on your next purchase when you pick up your books.
And save you time & money!
$10 Says that we beat the competition!
Please indicate semester this order is for: Fall: Spring: Summer:
Dept. Course Number Instructor or Staff (Please note if lab or discussion group) Line # Time / Days Preference New Used
ENG 203 Swalm (example) 82345 8:30 M W F | | ✓
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| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| | | | | | | |
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Name: ___
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The Fine Print!
The Fine Print
- Books not picked up by the 2nd day of class will be returned to stock.
- Booked books may be available for or to start of classes.
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- New books which are returned must be售卖 as new for full refund in order to receive $10.00 gift certificate, orders must be received by the following dates: Fall Semester Clases – August 3rd; Spring Semester Clases – April 6th.
- Gift Certificate is redeemable on next purchase of regularly stocked items.
- Sorry, limit one $10.00 gift certificate per person per semester.
---
CIBS
Jayhawk Bookstore
Your Book Professionals at the Top of Naismith Hill
1420 Crescent Road
Lawrence, KS 60044
(913) 643-3826
Fax (615) 493-9788
8 a.m.- 7 p.m. Monday-Thursday
8 a.m.- 5 p.m. Friday
9 a.m.- 5 p.m. Saturday
Noon - 4 p.m. Sunday
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 29,1993
Poinsettias
WATER
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THE NORTH FACE
MOUNTAN JACKET
MOUNTAIN LIGHT
DENAI JACKET
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SUNFLOWER B04 MASSACHUSETTS 843-5000
We have all the trimmings to deck the halls!
10,000 beautiful poinsettias
Fresh and artificial wreaths and boughs. Plain or already decorated for those on the run.
PENCE
Q
Nursery $ \cdot $ Garden Center $ \cdot $ Greenhouse 500 freshly cut Christmas trees 3
Christmas ribbons sold by the yard. We'll even tie your bow for FREE
Your complete Christmas store
Fresh Garland Roping sold by the yard or save and buy a 25 yard coil.
- 10 ft. Beautiful quality and lowest prices in 3counties.
843-2004
15th & New York
st prices in 3counties.
Campbell's
Q
FOR GREAT GIFTS AT AFFORDABLE PRICES
SAVE UP TO 50% OFF ON CLOTHES FOR MEN AND WOMEN.
*ALSO MEN-FOR INTERVIEWS COMING-UP,
BUY ANY SUIT FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK,
AND PICK A BONUS SUIT FREE.
841 MASSACHUSETTS - DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
CHRISTMAS GIFTS
you'll love to give
14kt.
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Charms
Kizer
Cummings
jewelers
749-4333
Open evenings for Christmas
SUITS
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REGULAR PRICE $299 TO $599
EASTON'S
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PRICED BY
"TRADITIONAL CLOTHING WITH DIFFERENCE"
EASTON, MA 01438 843-5755
COMMUNITY
MERCANTILE
9th & Mississippi
saturday-sunday 8am-9pm
sunday 10am - 9pm
The Natural Choice in
Whole Foods Grocers!
Gift
Baskets!
Custom or pre-packed
starting December 1st!
Poinsettas are just the beginning...
Thanks to all students, faculty and staff for your continued patronage and support throughout the year
Sunday December 5 6:30-7:30pm Make a Bay Leaf Garland for a quick, easy and fragrant holiday gift. A wonderful way to say "Happy Holidays!" Thursday December 9 7-8:30pm Amazing Grains Baking Class. When you go home from this hands-on class you'll be carrying a delicious loaf of wholegrain ginger bread! A delightful study break tonight...and for days to come!
Sunday December 12 Noon-6pm Holiday Fun at the Mercantile! We'll have live music, holiday sampling, and local artisans will be selling their wares. A fun and relaxing day of nibbling and shopping! A perfect chance to buy gifts for your family!
Saturday December 18 11-12:30pm Children's Holiday Craft Class for 8-12 year olds. Children can choose from a variety of crafts to make for holiday giving!
Please call 843-8544 or stop by bv to overseeer for classes.
Kansas & Burge Unions
鱼
KU
fifiis
AMERICAN BISTRO
Offering Fine Continental Cuisine
Open for lunch & dinner 11:00 2:00
841-7226
925 Iowa
northeast theatre
Fresh All-American Cuisine Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner
841-8349 701 Massachusetts in the Eldridge hotel
Party & Banquet Catering
fifty Banquet Connection 842-1771 1350 N. 3rd Street
fifi's Banquet Connection
Wishing You the Best of the Holiday Season
W
NATURALWAY
Holidaze!
Add Sparkle to this Season's Festivities in dresses, skirts, and vests from Natural Way!
Pier1imports
820-822 Mass.
Downtown location
841-0100
for a change this holiday
Hours: Mon-Sat 9:30-5:30
Thurs 9:30-8:30 & Sun 12:00-5:00
WWW.NMIT
Leather Aviator Jackets
$279.95 to $448.95
736 Mass
The Etc. Shop
- Clothing & Accessories
- forMen&Women Leather Gloves
- Leather Gloves
* Bausch & Lomb
Rav-Ban®
M M M
- Sunglasses
- Ray-Ban®
- Boxer Shorts
- Chili Pepper Lights& 42 other Novelty Styles
M
Downtown • 842-5199
*Sterling Silver Jewelry*
*1928 Jewelry*
*Bulova Watches*
*Leather Handbags*
*Novelty Lingerie*
Leather Motorcycle Jackets $198 to $389.95
Hours: M-S10-5:30
Thurs 't18, Sun 12-5
Parking in the rear
Sterling Silver Jewelry
928 Mass FESTIVAL OF POINSETTIAS
"Best Place to Take a First Date"
Paradise
Best Place to Take a First Date
Paradise
Cafe & Bakery
Good Real Food
Come Visit Our Bar!
Live Music Thursdays!
Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner
728 Massachusetts
Downtown • 842-5199
Shop at Cleopatra's Closet in Downtown Lawrence this Holiday Season
- Semi-Precious Stones
Don't miss our Grand Opening sale starting Dec. 1
Chokers
-Sterling Silver
- Fashions by Biel Bonne
& Betsey Johnson
Belts
- Agnelli
- Jasmine
- and much more..
CLEOPATRA'S
743 Mass. 749-4664
CLOSET
a unique boutique
[T]
Holiday Hours:
M-Sat. 10-9; Sun 12-5
Teller's
Enjoy the Finest Cuisine in the Heart of Lawrence!
746 Massachusetts
843-4111
8
Monday, November 29, 1993
ADVERTISING WORKS!
Camera America
ONE HOUR PHOTO
We Process
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In Only 3 Hours!!!
1610 West 23rd Street
841-7205
Football Frenzy Delivery for $1
All day Sunday
and Monday
5-10pm
842-2662
Must mention coupon while ordering
Expires 1/10/94
Delivering From Lawrence's Favorite Restaurants
DON'S AUTO CENTER
"For All Your Repair Needs"
*Complete Auto Repair
*Machine Shop Service
*Parts Department
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
Cornerstone SB
802 W 22nd Terrace
(behind KFC at dead end)
Sunday School 9:30
Worship Service 11:00
Come join us in fellowship and Bible Study
Need transportation-call 843-0442
Waiters
-on-
Wheels
DON'S AUTO CENTER
"For All Your Repair Needs"
*Complete Auto Repair
*Machine Shop Service
*Parts Department
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
ADVERTISING WORKS!
Camera America
ONE HOUR PHOTO
We Process
E-6 Slide Film
In Only 3 Hours!!!
1610 West 23rd Street
841-7205
Football Frenzy Delivery for $1
All day Sunday and Monday
5-10pm
842-2662
Waiters on Wheels
Must mention coupon while ordering
Expires 1/10/94
Delivering From Lawrence's Favorite Restaurants
DON'S AUTO CENTER
"For All Your Repair Needs"
*Complete Auto Repair
*Machine Shop Service
*Parts Department
841-4833
920 E. 11th Street
Cornerstone SD
802 W 22nd Terrace
(behind KFC at dead end)
Sunday School 9:30
Worship Service 11:00
Come join us in fellowship and Bible Study
Need transportation-call 843-0442
HOW DO YOU GET TO PLANET REEBOK?
GO OUT YOUR DOOR, TAKE A RIGHT,
THEN JUST KEEP GOING.
THE REEBOK® TELOS Hi. THIS HIGH PERFORMANCE LIGHTWEIGHT HIKER IS BUILT TO WITHSTAND THE RIGORS OF THE GREAT OUTDOORS. IT HAS A MOLDED EVA MIDSOLE FOR LIGHT-WEIGHT CUSHIONING. AND A STEEL SHANK FOR SOLID SUPPORT.
AQUASUEDE™ LEATHER UPPERS RESIST RAIN AND SNOW, WHILE RUGGED CARBON RUBBER OUTSOLES PROVIDE SURE-FOOTED TRACTION.
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Telos Hi
840 Massachusetts
JOCK'S NITCH
SPORTING GOODS
The Sports Look of Today!
842-2442
Cornerstone SBC
802 W 22nd Terrace
(behind KFC at dead end)
Sunday School 9:30
Worship Service 11:00
Come join us in fellowship and Bible Study
Need transportation-call 843-0442
Reebok
Reebok
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© 1993 Reebok International Ltd. All Rights Reserved. REEBOK is a registered trademark of Reebok International / AQUASUEDE is a trademark of Ivining Tanning Co
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Offer to lift sanctions lures Bosnia factions to negotiate
The Bosnian Serbs, who have gotten crucial backing from Yugoslavia during the 19-month war, hold about 70 percent of Bosnia. Bosnian Croats, who have gotten help from Croatia, hold much of the rest.
The Associated Press
Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic, who is under pressure from
The 12 European Community foreign ministers will meet today with the leaders of each faction in a bid to restart the talks. Their new offer involves phasing out international sanctions against Serb-led Yugoslavia if Belgrade pressures the Bosnian Serbs into giving more land to the Muslims.
GENEVA—The European Community is hoping to lure the leaders of Bosnia's warring factions back to the negotiating table with an offer to lift sanctions on Yugoslavia, the region's power broker.
hard-line Serbs not to yield an inch, has ruled out any further territorial concessions.
Serbia is crumbling under the U.N. sanctions, imposed in May 1992 to punish Serbia for encouraging the Bosnian war. Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic is considered the key to ending the conflict, in which more than 200,000 people have died.
Under the earlier plan to divide Bosnia into Serb, Croat and Muslimled states, Muslims would have gotten about 31 percent of the country.
He has not yet said publicly whether he would exert pressure on the Bosnian Serbs to give up more land, but his close aides have rejected the idea.
The plan fell apart when Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic insisted on getting 3 percent to 4 percent more territory from the Serbs and secure access to a port on the Adriatic from the Croats.
The initiative was endorsed by U.N. Security Council members United States and Russia, whose envoys are scheduled to attend the negotiations. Suspending the sanctions would require Security Council approval.
Last week, the European Community backed a French-German proposal for a "gradual suspension" of the sanctions against Belgrade if the additional land is surrendered to the Muslims.
Other agenda items include guarantees regarding the safe passage of aid convoyes in Bosnia and defusing tensions between Croatia and Serb-controlled Krajina, a region in Croatia seized by the Serbs during a 1991 war.
Izetbegovic also demanded foreign military intervention to protect aid convvoys, which are being blocked despite a recent agreement between the warring parties to allow their free passage.
Natural gas problems in Sarajevo second weapon against Bosnians
The Associated Press
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — At 3 a.m. on a frosty night in blacked-out Sarajevo, Neiraj Ciber got up to take her daughter to the bathroom.
As she struck a match to light a candle, the room exploded. Ciber and a cousin were nearly killed. Her husband and two daughters were burned.
The cause: an improvised natural gas connection with no telltale odor to warn of leaks.
the city.
Many blame the irregular gas supply on the siege of Sarajevo by Bosnian Serbs, who control the pipeline into
As they face a second winter of war with almost no electricity, wood or heating fuel, Sarajevans are using makeshift pipes and garden hoses to tap a dangerously unpredictable natural gas supply. They know the perils, but such risk-taking has become a necessary ritual of survival.
"I see myself as a victim of another weapon of the Serbs," Daniel Ciber, Nezira's 47-year-old husband, said from his hospital bed, his face blackened and blistered, his hands wrapped with white gauze.
"I think they are just using this to blow up somebody," he said. "They know that people here are desperate like I was. Just to spare shells, they do this, too."
Sarajevo has been without gas since August, except for intermittent resumptions at low pressure.
Engineers say gas is more dangerous at low pressure than high because its movement through pipes cannot be predicted, and people tend to bypass regulators that close when pressure drops below a certain level. That leads to accidents, particularly in the early morning when gas has accumulated.
Aid workers say the Bosnian Serbs, who control the gas distribution station outside Sarajevo, aggravate the problem by not adding odorants that would alert people to dangerous buildups.
The Cibers were not the first victims and aren't likely to be the last. An estimated 70,000 households are hooked up illegally to a gas system designed for 12,000.
Twenty-eight people have been admitted to Kosevo Hospital with serious burns since early September, compared to eight in the previous eight months, said Anadi Begic, chief of the burns unit. Most were victims of gas explosions.
Nine people have died since September, and 11 have been evacuated, including Ciber and her daughters.
Naismith Hall
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Advertisement
photo courteous Andrew Arnone
Union Technology Center service technician Steve Smith works on a KU student's computer.
Students can get Macs fixed on campus
By John Carlton Union Tech Center
Mindy Blum, Wichita junior, is one of many students on campus frustrated by her computer.
She said, "I have the biggest problem right now. I bought a program from the store in the Burge, installed it, and now the store won't work."
Due to the nature of technology, such problems are sometimes unavoidable for KU students and faculty. Downtime can be very frustrating and getting your computer fixed can sometimes be a pain.
"I don't have enough time to take it to Kansas City. I'm too busy," Blum said.
But a new program that allows the Union Technology Center in the Burge Union to service Macintosh computers has made it more convenient for KU students to get repairs.
Earlier this month the Tech Center was approved to be an authorized service provider for Apple Computers. They are currently the only authorized Apple service provider in Lawrence.
"I'm excited. This will be so much easier on me," Blum said.
The service is available to all KU students, faculty and staff, as well as any former students, faculty or staff who bought their computer from the Tech Center.
The computers are serviced by Steve Smith and the UTC staff. Smith has fifteen years of electronics and computer experience and said he enjoys providing guidance in technical matters.
Common questions for students and faculty include problems with printing, system errors, lost files and modem communications. Solutions involve software troubleshooting, hardware maintenance and client orientation.
Smith said, "I often solve computer problems by listening to our client's questions. My work includes educating individuals as well as troubleshooting systems."
The Union Technology Center is always willing to answer any question, no matter how simple it may be. Smith suggested that students wanting to know more about how computers and programs work could also benefit from
a visit to the Computer Center. Also, faculty members will want to drop by the ASTUTE Center in the Dole Human Development Center for tips on using technology in the classroom. These two places, he said, are excellent resources for anyone inexperienced with computers.
Steed Bell of the Union Tech Center said he was pleased the UTC could provide so much to the KU community. "With our educational pricing, convenient location, and now service on Apple hardware, I think we have a great deal to offer students and faculty members."
union technology center
KU
The Union Technology Center is located on Level 3 of the Burge Union. Students; faculty and staff can take their Macintosh computers to be serviced there, or call 864-5690 for more information.
SPORTS
' UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Monday, November 29,1993
9
Richard Scott dominated opponents in the paint. Jacque Vaughn dished his way to his best college game. Steve Woodberry shut down another All-American candidate. And Kansas came away from New York with the Preseason NIT championship, giving Jayhawk fans ...
SOMETHING TO BE THANKFUL FOR
Mississippi 14
The Associated Press
Massachusetts' Derek Kellog is guarded by Kansas freshman guard Jacque Vaughn during the first half of the National Invitational Tournament championship game at Madison Square Garden in New York. Kansas won the NIT title Friday night with a 86-75 victory.
Kansas knocks off U Mass in final for NIT championship
By Mark Button Kansan sportswriter
NEW YORK—Four and zero.
Those two numbers represent the respective victories and defeats of the 1993-94 Kansas Jayhawks after their 86-75 triumph against Massachusetts on Friday night in the championship game of the Preseason National Invitational Tournament. Kansas advanced to the finals after defeating No. 9 Minnesota on Wednesday in the semifinals 75-71.
Kansas coach Roy Williams received balanced scoring from his troops as the No. 6 Jayhawks were able to fight off the No. 18 Minuteset. Several times in the championship game, Massachusetts made charges towards the Jayhaws, who held the lead for most of the game.
All five starters for the Kansas team, as well as freshman reserve center Scot Pollard, scored in double digits.
The tournament's most valuable player, Kansas senior forward Richard Scott, paved the way for the 'Hawks, scoring 16 points and swiping eight boards in just 26 minutes of play. However, having fouled out of the game, Scott refused to smile during the postgame award ceremony.
"Iasked Richard why he wasn't smiling out there when he got the trophy," said Williams of Scott, who sat out much of the second half with foul troubles. "He said he didn't like to smile, and I said it must just be an ugly smile. But I can tell you the way he played out on the court was not ugly. He played his rear end off."
The two teams exchanged baskets for much of the first half. However, with 7:10 remaining, Kansas junior guard Gurley swished a three-pointer, giving the Jayhawks a 25-21 lead. Kansas never relinquished that lead.
But it wasn't easy.
Kansas stretched the lead to 37-28 late in the first half, before turning the ball over twice in less than a minute. Massachusetts sophomore guards Dana Dingle and Donta Bright each converted layups after the Kansas turnovers, and the Minutemen closed the gap to 39-35 at half time.
Massachusetts junior forward Lou Roe helped and hurt both the Jayhawks and Minutemen in the first half. He scored 13 points, canning four of six shots from the field but struggled from the free throw line, converting just five of 13 charities.
"It's a mental thing," Roe said. "I have no excuses. I just have to go back and work on it."
The second half saw Kansas turn things up on defense, holding the Minuten scoreless for the first 3:48 while the Jayhawks added 10 points to their tally.
The Minutemen would come back, though.
narrowing the margin to 57-52 following Scott's third and fourth fouls, which both occurred within 35 seconds of each other.
But Kansas answered.
With the shot clock winding down, freshman point guard Jacque Vaughn quieted the thousands of U Mass supporters with a three-point shot from the corner that found nothing but net.
Williams said that Vaughn, Kansas' only member of the All-Tournament team, played his best game as a Jayhawk. The Pasadena, Calif., native dished out 10 assists and scored 11 points with only one turnover.
Kansas again looked to pull away, but not for long. With 3:24 remaining, Scott fouled out, and Roe scored two of his game-high 25 points, closing the gap to 77-71.
This time the answer came in the form of three monster dunks from junior center Greg Ostertag. The dunks sealed the game for good.
Kansas answered again.
"I was really shocked that Greg Ostertag was not on the All-Tournament team," Williams said. Ostertag scored 27 points, grabbed 20 rebounds and blocked six shots in the two games at Madison Square Garden in New York. "If anyone's lines can match up to his, then they deserve to be on more than he does, but I have a hard time believing he didn't deserve to be on there as well."
In Wednesday's Kansas victory, Golden Gopher junior guard and All-American candidate Vashon Lenard was held to nine points on 4 of 14 shooting while being defended by Kansas senior guard Steve Woodberry. Woodberry dumped in 17 points of his own, and Scott added 20.
Massachusetts, in its semifinal game, pulled off the biggest upset of the season, defeating No.1 North Carolina 91-86 in overtime.
Kansas will play host to the Australia National team at 7 tonight in Allen Field House in its second exhibition game.
NIT TIDBITS
Kansas 85. Massachusetts 75
By the numbers
Player fgm/fga ftm/fta tp
Scott 7-14 2-7 16
Richey 3-7 4-4 10
Ostertag 5-10 3-4 13
Vaughn 3-5 4-5 11
Woodberry 4-9 3-4 12
Pollard 5-7 0-1 10
Rayford 0-1 0-0 0
Gurley 1-2 0-0 3
Williams 0-2 2-2 2
Pearson 3-8 0-2 8
Proud 0-0 1-2 1
Weichbrodt 0-2 0-0 0
Whatley 0-0 0-0 0
**Totals** 31-67 19-31 86
Massachusetts
Dingle 7-10 5-7 20
Roe 9-19 7-20 25
Klegg 4-6 0-0 12
Meyer 0-2 0-0 0
Williams 2-10 4-6 8
Bright 4-21 0-2 8
Travieso 0-0 0-0 0
Padilla 0-4 2-2 0
Cottrell 0-0 0-0 0
Totals 26.74 18.37 75
Haltime Kansas 39, Massachusetts 35
3-point goals Kansas 5-13 (Pearson 2-6,
Vaughn 1-1, Woodberry 1-2, Gurley 1-2, Richey
1-1, Weichbrot 0-1), Massachusetts 5-15
(Kelag 4-5, Dingle 1-1, Roe 0-1, Bright 0-2,
Padilla 0-2, Bright 0-4)
Rebounds Kansas 52 (Ostertag 12), Massachusetts 40 (Dunlap 13)
Assists Kansas 10 (Vaughn 10), Massachusetts 15 (Kelor 4)
Total foula Kansas 27, Massachusetts 25
Attendance 13.590.
Kansas became the first school ever to win the Preseason NIT twice. The Jayhawks won the tournament in 1989 to start Williams' second year of coaching.
Source:The Associated Press KANSAN
RESPECT: Kansas won the preseason
NIT,despite apparent lack of support,says
Kansan sportswriter Mark Button Page 6.
Friday's championship game had a tournament-record 101 substitutions by Kansas and Massachusetts.
Kansas is 11-1 and Williams is a perfect 8-0 in Preseason NIT play.
SOUTH STUDEN
43
33
Kip Chin/KANSAN
Freshman guard Tamecka Dixon rebounds the ball while Creighton forward Shannon Struby tries to intercept it. The Kansas Jayhawks defeated the Creighton Lay Days 74-68 in Froma, Neb.
'Hawks defeat Lady Jays in season opener 74-68
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
OMAHA, Neb. — All the elements of a high school basketball game were present Friday as Kansas defeated Creighton 74-68 in women's basketball action — even a high school gym.
The Creighton Lady Jays, who usually play in the Omaha Civic Auditorium, moved the game to a local high school because the Big Eight Volleyball championship was at the auditorium. But if the gym didn't make it feel like a high school game, the numerous turnovers certainly did.
The teams had 48 turnovers between them,29 of which were committed by Creighton.
Kansas coach Marian Washington said she was happy that the No.16 Jayhawks were victorious in their first game of the season, regardless of the sloppy play.
"We haven't beaten this team in three years," Washington said. "But there's still a lot of work to do."
Creighton coach Connie Yori said that kind of play was expected but not accepted.
"Turnovers go hand-and-hand with the first game of the year," Yori said. "We have to do a whole lot better job of taking care of the ball, but we also played against really a pretty good defensive team."
Yori said she was disappointed with Creighton's rebounding in the late stages of the game. A Creighton player fouled Kansas freshman guard Tamecka Dixon in the last minute of the game, but Kansas got the offensive rebounds when she missed.
"The ball was on their side of the court for well over a minute." Yori said. "If you can't rebound when the game's on the line in a free throw block-out situation, you're not going to get the ball and get a chance to score."
Fouling Dixon was the plan at the end, Yori said. Dixon was five for nine from the freethrow line and had a team-high 19 points, but Kansas freshman guard Angie Halbleib came up with two key offensive rebounds on Dixon's misses in the last 50 seconds of the game.
Halbleib said she was trying just to hold onto the ball.
"I was thinking, 'Pull the ball out and hold onto it,'" she said. "We didn't play our game tonight. It showed us that we are beatable."
Halbleib ended the game with five rebounds but no points. In Kansas 'first game against New Zealand, she had 13 points, including two three-pointers.
"My shot was off tonight," she said. "But that's to be expected sometimes."
Sampson hit two three-pointers in the first half, and Kansas led 37-31 at halftime. But Sampson said the team finally played together in the second half.
One Kansas player who was on fire from the three-point line was sophomore guard Charlie Sampson. She had 18 points and was three-for-three from the three-point stripe.
Washington said she was pleased with some offensive and defensive things the Jayhawks did in the second half.
"We were kind of out of sync at the beginning of the game," she said. "We were kind of stuff. But for us to have four freshman play like they did was great."
"I was certainly pleased that, one, we won the ball game and, two, that we got some of these young players experience before the start of the Big Eight race," she said.
Kansas 74. Creighton 68
By the numbers
Ramses
| Player | fgm/fga | ftm/fta | tp |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Sampson | 5-10 | 5-6 | 18 |
| Aycock | 7-17 | 1-2 | 15 |
| Dixon | 7-12 | 5-9 | 19 |
| Trapp | 5-11 | 0-2 | 10 |
| Tate | 4-9 | 2-4 | 10 |
| Halbleib | 0-4 | 0-2 | 0 |
| Canada | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 |
| Muncy | 1-3 | 0-1 | 2 |
| Totals | 29-66 | 13-26 | 74 |
Creighton
Flynn 9-18 2-2 20
Landuyt 1-4 2-4 4
Miller 1-3 0-0 2
Struby 4-10 0-0 8
Kugel 5-9 2-4 12
Homer 1-1 0-0 3
Olson 6-9 6-6 18
Budak 0-0 0-0 0
McCullough 0-2 1-3 1
Gebhart 0-2 0-0 0
Totals 27-58 13-19 68
Halftime Kansas 37, Creighton 31
3-point goals Kansas 3-1 / Sampson 3-3, Dixon 0-1,
Halibert 0-3), Creighton 1-5 (Landyud 0-2), Miller
0-6)
Rebounds Kansas 37 (Sampson 8), Creighton 43
(Olson 9). Assists Kansas 14 (Municy 5), Creighton
17 (Flynn) 6. Total fouls Kansas 19, Creighton 23.
Attendance 549.
Source: The Associated Press
KANSAN
Women's basketball players miss family dinners, thankful to spend it with team
Bv Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
Spending the Thanksgiving holiday on the road is not new to the Kansas women's basketball team. This year the team ate its traditional turkey dinner in Omaha, Neb.
Coach Marian Washington said she worked really hard to keep the team from missing classes during the fall semester, and the best way to do that was to travel during breaks.
"The team only misses one day of classes due to basketball by design," she said of this semester.
She said she started planning the team's holiday celebration a month in advance to ensure that the team would get its traditional dinner. Washington had the meal catered by the team's hotel because she did not want another Thanksgiving with full restaurants.
The team's game against Creighton did not keep the players from enjoying their dinner.
Washington said she ordered the traditional turkey dinner with all of the fixings: dressing, cranberries, vegetables and dessert.
Sophomore guard Charisse Sampson said the team didn't worry about indulging in a heavy meal the day before a game. The meal did not keep Kansas from defeating the Lady Jays 74-68.
While the Jayhawks may have been without their real families, they were not alone.
"The team is a family." Washington said. "They truly care about one another."
Sampson said, "It's nice to share with somebody."
This was Sampson's first Thanksgiving on the road with the basketball team, and she said it made her think a lot of her family in Los Angeles.
Last year the team celebrated Thanksgiving together but not on the road. Sampson said the team ate at Washington's house.
Washington said that if team members could not be with their families, then it was nice to be around people who cared about each other.
10
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When I say on the road, I really mean on the road. While the Garden was a neutral site for all four teams, Kansas supporters were definitely the minority. The only way one could find the Kansas section was to find the small group of people that weren't wearing Carolina light blue, Massachusetts maroon or Minnesota maroon and gold. There was, however, a small handful of Jayhawk fans who waved tiny red pompon from time to time. Nice try.
Most say respect is something that is earned. After my trip to New York and the Presseason National Invitational Tournament at Madison Square Garden, a few things stick out in my mind concerning respect and earning it.
Humble pie was served at NIT
Kansas was the only school that had no band, no cheerleaders and no mascot. Hardly more than the players themselves wore the crimson and blue. It was embarrassing to see three sections on the floor of the Garden painted in school colors, and one section spattered with colors of no order or significance.
Respect.
Are there no East Coast Kansas alumni? Even if there aren't any (but I know there is), it wasn't just a meager showing of fans. The school deserves some blame as well.
First, Roy Williams' 1993-94 basketball team earned much respect. I know that Kansas dodged a bullet (more like a cannon ball) with Massachusetts' 91-86 defeat of North Carolina, but still this very young and inexperienced Kansas team went on the road for the first time and wont two tough games.
Now I know it was Thanksgiving, and holidays are to be spent with families, but I'm pretty sure it was Thanksgiving in Minnesota, North Carolina and Massachusetts, too.
The Jayhawks were booed and heckled in their games while Minnesota and Massachusetts players were cheered-on like it was homecoming.
Williams and the Hawks, with their four freshman and numerous other inexperienced players, kept their poise and earned respect while shutting the mouths of thousands of anti-Kansas fans en route to the NIT title.
Respect from press row
During the games at the Garden, I was seated next to John C. Manuel of the Daily Tarheel.
I can admit my prejudices, and I am against promoting stereotypes of any kind, but Mr. Manuel's arrogance was overflowing. I wouldn't be surprised if his confidence is shared by, or even a result of, his peers at Chapel Hill, N.C.
"Who was better last year, Michigan or us?" he asked.
As I was diligently taking notes during the Kansas-Minnesota game, John felt inclined to continuously yap in my ear about his beloved Tar Heels.
I told him what he wanted to hear—that the better team won the game.
"So what do you think of our team this year?" John said.
7 Days a week
I told him that on paper. North Carolina was definitely the best team in college basketball this year.
"Do you think we'll lose a game this year?" he asked me.
"Carolina could lose tonight against Massachusets," I said.
I told him of course North Carolina would lose a game, no team can go through the Atlantic Coast Conference, or most any other conference, undefeated. I told him anyone could lose on any night.
He laughed.
Then, he started in on the Jayhawks. "Who is this Ostertag?" He sure gets a lot of hotpe, "John said. 'Is he for real?' I told him that I hoped he was.
"I hope you guys win so he can face Montross (North Carolina's All-America center), and we'll see if he's for real," he said.
At halftime of the Carolina-Massachusetts game, the Big Apple was calling me to take a bite, so I left the Garden. I was shocked when I saw the last minute of Massachusetts' overtime victory from a television inside a tavern.
So after being served a Thanksgiving turkey and stuffing feast by my friend's family in New Jersey, I found that the best dish, served by yours truly, was yet to come.
Upon arriving at the Garden on Friday night, courtesy of the Massachusetts Minutemen, I served a fat piece of humble pie to my friend John from North Carolina.
"It's too bad the Tar Heels lost, then you could have seen that Ostertag is for real," I said.
So much for the undefended season, John. On his behalf though, he ate it like a man and said the Minutemen had earned his respect.
Team ends season at nationals
Bv Kent Hohlfeld
By Kent Hohfield Kansan sportswriter
WOMEN'S CROSS COUNTRY
The Kansas women's cross country team had something extra to be thankful for during the Thanksgiving weekend. The team finished its season with its first ever trip to the NCAA Cross Country Championships Nov. 22 in Bettlehem, Pa.
The team came in 22nd with 471 points in the 22-team meet. Villanova won the meet with 66 points, and cross country power Arkansas came in second with 71 points. The lowest score wins in cross country meets. Conference rivals Colorado and Nebraska came in 14th and 20th respectively.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz said that the team had hoped to run better but that he was proud of the way the team performed in the championship meet.
"We were going against 22 of the best teams in the country," he said. "There wasn't a weak team in the field."
This year's Jayhawk squad was not lacking in big meet experience. The Jayhawks ran against 11 of the 22 teams competing in the national meet during the regular season.
"Nationals are a different kind of big meet," Schwartz said. "There is usually a weak team or two in most meets; there really wasn't a weak team in this meet."
Schwartz said another factor that affected the team's performance was injuries to two key runners. Junior Kristi Kloster fell at the end of the race after aggravating a knee injury that she had surgery for last summer. Senior Ashley Ace suffered from a foot injury that hampered her performance.
Senior Julia Saul, who came in 65th in her last collegiate cross country meet, said that the team knew it would be tough to place well in its first NCAA championship meet. Saul, who competed in the championship
"It's hard to go in and do well your first time up," Saul said.
meet the last two years as an individual, said that the first championship meet was always difficult.
The experience the team gained this year should help the team next year, she said.
Schwartz agreed that the meet was a good experience for the team which will lose seniors Saul, Ace and Daniela Daggy.
Daggy, who came in 126th at the national meet, said that she thought the team performed about as well as it had expected. She said that the tough schedule this season helped the team deal with the pressure of running against the teams at the meet.
"We didn't go in and freak out," Daggy said. "This experience will definitely help the younger runners."
Schwartz said that winning the district meet and qualifying for nationals was a big step for the program.
"We'd have preferred to take a bigger step," he said. "But we competed with 22 great teams and came in 22nd."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 29,1993
11
Montana-led Chiefs stampede Buffalo
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Even a less-than-perfect Joe Montana is better than no Joe at all.
So rusty from a three-week layoff that he dropped a center snap, Montana returned to Kansas City's lineup yesterday and threw two touchdown passes and lead the Chiefs past Buffalo 23-7.
"I didn't think I played that well," said Montana, who had missed three games after reinjuring his left hamstring Oct. 31. "I felt a little pressure about not wanting to make bad plays after being out for a while. I'm sure people were watching for that."
Montana hit 18 of 32 passes for 208 yards and two touchdowns and his second interception as a Chief.
A defense that yielded 190 rushing yards in a loss last week to Chicago surrendered a season-low 43 yards to the Bills.
The Chiefs, 8-3, maintained their one-game lead over Denver in the AFC West and dropped the three-time AFC champion Bills, 8-3, one game behind Miami in the AFC East.
Montana, who played only 14 of the Chiefs' first 40 quarters, was 10-for-17 in the first half, with an interception. But he was sharper after intermission
while directing a seven-play, 80-yard march that gave the Chiefs a 17-17 lead. Four of his passes were either tipped or batted down at the line.
Montana hit Marcus Allen for an 18- yard touchdown in the first half and flipped a 1-yard score to a wide-open Keith Cash in the third. Nick Lowery added three field goals as the Chiefs, for the fifth straight year, avoided a second straight loss at home.
With 1,442 points, Lowery moved past Jim Turner for No. 4 on the NFL's all-time list.
Kelly drove the Bills 80 yards on 13 plays to seize a 7-0 lead in the first quarter. From the Kansas City 21, Kelly dumped the ball to Pete Metzelaars for 12 yards, then Kenneth Davis dragged two tacklers into the end zone on the next play.
Kelly sat out the final minutes with a slight left-ankle injury.
The Chiefs' only offensive spark in the first half came with the help of a turnover. Lewis knocked the ball out of Andre Reed's hands and Charles Mincy fell on it as it was about to roll out of bounds at the Bills' 28.
AFC
On third-and-9 from the 18, Montana flipped the ball to Allen on the 16, and the veteran dragged Matt Darby into the end zone for his 108th career touchdown.
West
Kansas City 6 4 0 400
Denver 6 5 0 340
L.A. Raiders 6 5 0 330
San Diego 6 5 0 320
Central
Houston 7.4 4.0 40-20
Pittsburgh 6.5 6.0 22-0
Cleveland 5.6 3.1 31-0
Cincinnati 1.10 0.6 00-1
NFL
East
Miami 9.2 0 4.2-0
Buffalo 8.3 0 4.2-0
Cincinnati 7.0 0 1.4-0
Indianapolis 3.7 1.0 1.4-0
New England 3.1 0 1.4-0
NFC
West
*Chicago 10, Detroit 6
*Miami 16, Dallas 14
Atlanta 17, Cleveland 14
Cincinnati 16, L.A. Raiders 10
New Orleans, Minnesota 14
Oklahoma City 0
Green Bay 13, Tampa Bay 10
Philadelphia 17, Washington 14
Denver 7, Seattle 19
N.Y. Giants 7, Cincinnati 7
N.Y. Giants 19, Phoenix 17
San Francisco 35, L.A. Rams 10
Houston 23, Pittsburgh 3
*Played Thursday
W L T Div.
San Francisco 8 3 0 7
New Orleans 7 3 0 8
Atlanta 5 6 0 3-0
L.A. Rams 6 0 3-0
Central
Detroit 7 4 0 2-30
Green Bay 7 4 0 1-10
Milwaukee 6 5 0 4-00
Minnesota 5 6 0 4-20
Tampa Bay 3 8 0 2-50
East
N.Y. Giants 8 3 0 5-10
Dallas 7 0 4 1-10
Washington 5 2 4 1-10
Phoenix 3 8 0 3-10
Washington 2 9 0 1-60
Toulouse's Game
San Diego at Indianapolis
9 a.m.
Montana moved the Chiefs 59 yards in 12 plays to set up Lowery's 30-yarder for a 10-7 lead in the second period.
Cash was all by himself for Montana's 1-yard pass for the TD. Saleamua, whose fumble return for a touchdown keyed the Chiefs' victory
over Green Bay on Nov. 8, hauled in a fluttery pass that Kelly put up as Neil Smith was crashing into his blind side. The bulky noseguard returned it 13 yards to the 17 and Lowery made it 20-7 with a 22-yarder.
With 5:11 left, Lowery connected on a 34-varder for a 23-7 lead.
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ALTERNATIVE GIFTS like pigs, goats bricks, chicks, sheep and yards of concrete, all distributed through Heifer Project International and Lawrence Habitat for Humanity. (With each purchase you receive a Christmas card announcing the gift, ready to give to friends and family).
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SANDERS' CLAWS. NIKE
Orange Bowl Florida State vs. Nebraska
-
Sugar Bowl Notre Dame vs. winner of Florida vs. Alabama game
Probable Bowl Game Matchups
Cotton Bowl Texas A&M vs. West Virginia
Rose Bowl UCLA vs. Wisconsin or Ohio State
Fiesta Bowl Arizona vs. Miami
Gator Bowl North Carolina vs. the Florida-Alabama loser
Carquest Bowl Boston College vs. Virginia
Citrus Bowl Tennessee vs. Penn State
Hall of Fame Bowl Michigan vs. North Carolina State
Holiday Bowl Chio State vs. the Western Athletic Conference champion
Peach Bowl Clemson vs. Kentucky
Liberty Bowl Louisville vs. Michigan State
Hancock Bowl Texas Tech vs. Colorado or Oklahoma
Independence Bowl Virginia Tech. vs. Indiana
Freedom Bowl Southern Cal vs. fourth place WAC team
Copper Bowl Kansas State vs. Wyoming
Las Vegas Bowl Utah State vs. Ball State
Alamo Bowl Iowa vs. California
Aloha Bowl Fresno State vs. Oklahoma or Colorado
Confusion reigns in football polls
Orange Bowl will match Nebraska, Florida State
The Associated Press
Florida State handed West Virginia its first loss of the season yesterday. The defeat came in the polls, however, not on the field.
The Seminoles edged the Mountaineers by 69 points in the combined Associated Press and USA Today-CNN polls, setting up a probable Orange Bowl showdown between Florida State and Nebraska for the national title.
The Associated Press media poll ranked Florida State No. 1, Nebraska No. 2 and West Virginia No. 3. The USA Today-CNN coaches' poll had Nebraska in the No.1 position, followed by West Virginia and Florida State.
In the combined polls, which determine the major bowl match ups, the order was Nebraska (11-0), Florida State, 11-1, and West Virginia, 11-0.
Since No. 1 vs. No. 2 games are mandated by the bowl coalition when possible, Nebraska will play Florida State in the Orange Bowl Jan. 1 if both teams hold their positions in the last combined poll, to be released next Sunday. Nebraska, Florida State and West Virginia have completed their regular seasons, so there little chance of a major shift in the polls next week.
If Florida State meets Nebraska in the Orange Bowl, West Virginia will go to the Cotton Bowl and play No. 7 Texas A&M, 10-1. Since West Virginia is No. 2 in coaches' poll, the Mountaineers might win a share of the national title if Florida State beats Nebraska.
"Maybe there'd be a co-championship. Who knows?" said West Virginia coach Don Nehlen, who has lobbied hard to get his team in the Orange Bowl.
Florida State coach Bobby Bowden said the Seminoles deserve a shot at the title because they probably played the most difficult schedule in the country. The Seminoles' opponents have a combined record of 77-57, compared to 56-63-2 for West Virginia's foes.
"I have no animosity toward Don Nehlen and I know he doesn't have any toward me," Bowden said. "But we've got to get our point across. And mine is one thing: strength of schedule."
Florida State and West Virginia staked their claims to a title game over the holiday weekend by beating highly ranked opponents. The Seminoles beat No. 9 Florida 33-21 Saturday, snapping the Gators' 23-game home winning streak. The Mountaineers won 17-14 on the road Friday against No. 15 Boston College, which upset Notre Dame two weeks ago.
Nehlen's campaign for a game against Nebraska almost paid off. The Mountainer rose from No. 5
The Associated Press
The Associated Press 1993 college football poll first-place votes in parentheses, records through Nov. 27, 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 | Pts | Pvs |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1. Florida State (42) | 11-1-0 | 1,508 | 1 |
| **2. Nebraska (17)** | 11-1-0 | **1,480** | **2** |
| 3. West Virginia (1) | 11-1-0 | 1,410 | 5 |
| 4. Auburn (2) | 11-1-0 | 1,366 | 3 |
| 5. Notre Dame | 10-1-0 | 1,339 | 4 |
| 6. Tennessee | 9-1-1 | 1,255 | 6 |
| 7. Texas A&M | 10-1-0 | 1,139 | 8 |
| 8. Miami | 9-2-0 | 1,075 | 9 |
| 9. Florida | 9-2-0 | 1,029 | 7 |
| 10. Wisconsin | 8-1-1 | 1,018 | 10 |
| 11. Ohio State | 9-1-1 | 878 | 12 |
| 12. North Carolina | 10-2-0 | 844 | 13 |
| 13. Penn State | 9-2-0 | 810 | 14 |
| 14. UCLA | 8-3-0 | 720 | 15 |
| 15. Boston College | 8-3-0 | 694 | 11 |
| 16. Alabama | 8-2-1 | 630 | 17 |
| 17. Arizona | 9-2-0 | 551 | 19 |
| **18. Colorado** | **7-3-1** | **476** | **18** |
| **19. Oklahoma** | **8-3-0** | **423** | **16** |
| **20. Kansas State** | **8-2-1** | **384** | **20** |
| 21. Indiana | 8-3-0 | 321 | 21 |
| 22. Virginia Tech | 8-3-0 | 241 | 22 |
| 23. Michigan | 7-4-0 | 230 | 23 |
| 24. Clemson | 8-3-0 | 141 | 24 |
| 25. Michigan State | 6-4-0 | 34 | 25 |
Others receiving votes: Southern Cal 32, Louisiana 31,
Fresno State 23, Cincinnati 18, Virginia 13, North Carolina
State 12, Washington 11, Arizona State 4, California 4,
Wyoming 4, Bali State 2.
Source: The Associated Press
to No. 3 in the Associated Press poll and climbed from No. 3 to No. 2 in USA Today-CNN, but they remained behind Florida State in the combined polls.
Although he was disappointed by the poll results, Nehlen said he wasn't going to get upset.
"We had a perfect season, and it's very difficult for our kids to understand how the bowl coalition works, especially when the coaches voted us No. 2," Nehlen said. "But there's no way I'm going to get bent out of shape because we get a chance to go to a great bowl and play a great football team."
Nebraska coach Tom Osborne said Saturday that he would prefer to play West Virginia in the Orange Bowl. That's understandable considering that the Cornhuskers have lost bowl games to Florida State three times in the past six years.
"Ideally, you'd like to play another school from a similar climate that plays on AstroTurf and has the
The 1993 USA Today-CNN football coaches' poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, record through Nov. 27, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and last week's ranking.
USA Today-CNN
| | Record | Pts | Pvs |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| **1. Nebraska (43)** | 11-10 | 1,525 | **1** |
| 2. West Virginia (8) | 11-10 | 1,477 | 3 |
| 3. Florida State (10) | 11-10 | 1,448 | 2 |
| 4. Notre Dame (1) | 10-10 | 1,367 | 4 |
| 5. Tennessee | 9-11 | 1,276 | 5 |
| 6. Texas A&M | 10-10 | 1,246 | 6 |
| 7. Wisconsin | 8-11 | 1,069 | 8 |
| 8. Miami | 9-20 | 1,055 | 9 |
| 9. Florida | 9-20 | 983 | 6 |
| 10. Ohio State | 9-11 | 958 | 10 |
| 11. North Carolina | 10-20 | 898 | 13 |
| 12. Penn State | 9-20 | 882 | 11 |
| 13. UCLA | 8-30 | 841 | 14 |
| 14. Arizona | 9-20 | 707 | 16 |
| 15. Alabama | 8-21 | 641 | 17 |
| 16. Boston College | 8-30 | 625 | 12 |
| **17. Oklahoma** | **8-30** | **470** | **15** |
| **18. Colorado** | **7-31** | **464** | **18** |
| **19. Kansas State** | **8-21** | **454** | **19** |
| 20. Virginia Tech | 8-30 | 391 | 20 |
| 21. Indiana | 8-30 | 381 | 21 |
| 22. Michigan | 7-40 | 280 | 22 |
| 23. Clemson | 8-30 | 274 | 23 |
| 24. Fresno State | 8-30 | 73 | — |
| 25. Louisville | 8-30 | 70 | — |
Others receiving votes: Michigan State 68, Southern California 64, California 42, Virginia 69, Cincinnati 25, Wyoming 23, North Carolina State 16, Bell State 7, Texas 7, Tech Zone 6, Arizona State 10, Iowa 7, Utah State 1
Florida State received 42 first-place votes in the Associated Press poll, while the rest went to Nebraska (17), Auburn (2) and West Virginia (1). In the coaches' poll, Nebraska got 43 first-place votes followed by Florida State (10), West Virginia (8) and Notre Dame (1).
Source: USAToday-CNN
same logistics problems of getting everybody transported down there," Osborne said. "But if we don't play West Virginia, it isn't going to happen."
No. 4 Auburn, 11-0, is the only undefeated team besides Nebraska and West Virginia, but the Tigers are barred from postseason play because of NCAA probation.
If Nebraska and West Virginia lose their bowl games, Auburn might finish No. 2 bobhin Florida State in the Associated Press poll. That would give Bobby Bowden and his son, Auburn coach Terry Bowden, the first 1-2 family finish in the poll.
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Classified Directory
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405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
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100s Announcements
105 Personals
SWF. 20 yrs. old with light brown hair and brown eyes. Looking for a SWM who will take me out and get me drunk with no strings attached the next day. Call me for a night you won't want to forget.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, November 29,1993
13
110-Bus. Personals
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Call or drop by Headquarters
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Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
Hope, Poennis & more!
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WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
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Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
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Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
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120 Announcements
*SPRING BREAK*
Early Booking Special
$23 Deposit
LOWEST PRICES GUARANTEED!
BACH FRIES GUARANTEED!
BEACH Springbreak Promote
Small or larger groups.
Yours FREE, discounted or CASH.
CALL CMI 1-800-423-5264.
PREPARING FOR FINAL EXAMS
Time management, test anxiety, memory techniques, test-taking strategies
Wednesday, December 1, 7-9 p.m.
330 Strong Hall
Offered by the Student Assistance Center
Have fun this year cutting your own Christmas tree at beautiful Pine Hill Farm. Enjoy free horseids & horse-drawn trailer rides into our fields. Spit hot wassail & select a fresh beautiful decorated wreath. We're celebrating our 2024 year of providing Christmas memories. Drive east on Hwy. 10 miles to DG County Road 1057, then drive north and a half miles. Edmonds family 542-9171
HELP IN PREPARED FOR FINALS. Workshop includes time management, memory techniques, test-keeping strategies, test anxiety. FREE PREP: 7 a.m., 1-7 p.m., 400 strong. FREE PREP: No Shopping.
Laiban, gay, bi - or unure? You're not alone.
Call Staquaret or KUInfo for more. Call Staquaret or KUInfo for more.
CHRISTMAS
SKI BREAKS
JANUARY 2-16, 1994 • 5, 8 or 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT
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130 Entertainment
Exclusive KUALM message area shared over
digital. Real time chat. Easy data menu!
Lawrence on line/TBBs, 885-1440. Voice/help:
361-1042
Free Party Room Available at Johnny's Tavern/Up & Under.
Call 842-0377 for details.
男 女
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
[ATTENTION COLLEGE STUDENTS] Need
access to college materials and
labs sometimes don't cover those "hidden
guests." We can help! Call Faith Marketing for
a job to make a call. Free 24 hr.
recorded video at 1-855-789-7900.
Brandon Woods Retirement Community is currently hiring wait staff for the 1am-8pm shift with proximity to an occasional 9pm-7pm hrs. Its employees are trained in the medical training 1081 Inversion Dr. Lawrence K. E.O.F.
Child care positions available: Sunday morning nursery in nursery (babies/toddlers) and preschool at Grace Church. Experience preferred, reference required. Call Kathy #84-9350 for interview time.
$250 MISSING BONUS. We currently are accepting applications for full and part-time licensed cosmetologists or barbers. 2 weeks paid vacation. Apply at Pro-Cuts, 2500 Iowa
AMIGOS
Supervisor/Assist Mgr.
Supervisor now - Manager later! Learn the business from the ground up and advance according to your needs. Train in a role that offers them oriented person and like to work at a fast intense pace, an opportunity to put these skills to work and develop as a leader is available. Relocation will be free and benefits apply. Apply now at: Amigia, 1819 W, 2xrd.
AA Cruise & Travel jobs. Earn $250/mo + 1 travel the world free! (Caribbean, Europe, Hawaii, Asia) Cruise lines now hiring or busy holiday trips. Listing Service Call (919) 929-838 ex. 131.
ADMINISTRATIVE USER SERVICES
Student Monthly. Deadline: 12/3/98, $500-
$850/month depending on experience. Duties:
Assist with documentation of UNIX support, provide application, design, documentation and deliver software training sessions for end users, provide LAN installation and problem solving, perform quality qualifications: Demonstrated excellent oral and written communications skills, knowledgeable about computerized databases and their use, proficiency in Microsoft Office, enrolled at KU and continued enrollment through spring 1996. Complete job description available.
To apply, submit a letter of application and a curriculum vitae to the Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence KS 60405, OEAA EMPLOYER
FAST CASH
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Bydonating your life saving blood plasmu
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
Earn $1,000 per week at home filling orders. Free information. Please send long self addressed stamped envelope to CJ Enterprises, Box 67068H, Cuyahoga Falls, OH 44222
Full-time assistant manager needed immediately.
Must live on site. Call 814-8468.
Hoved wanted: Hardware/Software manager. KU School of Architecture and Urban Design seeks software engineer in December. For position description contact Urmus Stamnelen at 864-2344. Application deadline
Looking for someone eligible for Work Study to work part-time in a candy store. Business or account experience. Call 863-1303 for interview. Part-time apt. maintenance person wanted to work weekday mornings, call 841-6486 to apply.
work weekdays mornings, call 841-5680 to pp.
work weekends, Time. Flexible. Paint Days.
Call 232-8931. Call 232-8932.
LEVI'S
OUTLET STORE
New Tanger Outlet
Mall
Operated by County Seat
LEVI'S OUTLET, opening Dec.
15, 1993 has excellent career
opportunities for bright, engi-
neering professionals to join our
team. Positions are available
for the following:
Sales Associates
•Full and part-time
Stock Positions Full and part time
*Full and part-time
Management positions also available.
(Full-time)
Enjoy a competitive starting salary, a 50% employee discount, in addition to annual benefits
Applications available at KU Burge
Union Placement Center. Interviews
must be on time. Lobby of Burge Union (3d Floor)
Tu, Nov. 10, 2019 from 6 p.m.
No appointment necessary.
For more information, contact Wendy
Levis An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/D Outlet
RESUME SERVICES Professional Business
Resume Cover Letter Interview Tips Interview
Travel Resume Writing Tips
Taco Bell now hiring day and night help. Apply in
through Saturday at 12:30 p.m. W 10th, 8:2d
and 12:20 w. 6th.
SEMESTER BREAK POSITIONS! Inl. chain fill 47-PT, FT entry level openings. Earn $9.00-$18.00. Ft after延庆. Des. Can remain PT next semester. Can remain Lawrence 8823-831 or Overland Park 8825-317
United Child Dev. Center has openings for naps at $4.25/hr. Experience working with young children helpful. Apply at UCDC 946 Vermont St. Lawrence. Ks. EOE.
You CAN make a difference, Greenpeace K.C.
MO is now hiring energetic and articulate students
and others to help save the rain forests, stop toxic
waste, and protect the ozone layer. PT/PT $100 to
$300 work, paid training, hours 2 to 10 p.m. Call
815-381-3884.
Work in beautiful Colorado mountains this summer at Cheyler Colorado Campus summer program. R.N.s; drives; secretaries; wranglers; nanny; kitchen; song leaders; riding, hiking; backpacking; room service; catering; Room and board, cash salary, travel allowance. Our 4th summer: Must be a 1st to 19 apply. Applicants will be notified of campus interview. Course will be held at Campus. Box 825, CO, 80260, 303-773-8761.
225 Professional Services
Research Assistance - MS-MLS information specialist available to assist with term paper, theses, books or research.
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, servicing KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 811-7749.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and talk with you. Birthright 843-4211 Free pregnancy testing
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters law office
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
oeblan, gay, b| or unsex? If you need to link to
come, call a Peer Counselor CONFIDENI-
ZATION
Hardbinding and Gold Stamping 3 Day Turnaround
Prompt abortion and contraceptive services. Dale L. Clinton M.D. 841-5716.
Lawrence Printing Service, Inc 512 E.9th Street 843-4600
Thesis &
Unique resume, cover letters, liner prints. Fax,
e-mail: info@churchresearch.com. Graphic ideas, Ic
mas. #641-1071
235 Typing Services
Expert typing. IBM Correcting Selectric.
Double space placed Call Mats. Mattila attis.
Faster Woman's Work Processing, 84-2065.
The woman's processing service. Laser printer. New carton.
Fast, accurate word processing; term paper, dissertation, thesis and graphics services available. Laser printing. Engineering and Law Review experience. Call Pam at 841-1977 anytime.
Any kind of typing. Can do it at all.
Running out of time?
Lake me do that!
Lazer printers go to WOW! your prof's
18 years professional experience.
All typing jobs accepted.
Grammar and spelling corrected free!
Call Jack at
Makin' the Grade
Pro-Type - fast, reliable, service professional quality. Any kind of calling. Tcp call at 814-6243.
Word processing, applications, term papers, dissertations, resumes. Editing, composition, rush projects.
X
300s Merchandise
6 ft. bookcases for $39, full sized bed $12; búce rooms for $33, 3 piece diniette set $110. T.C. Furniture Rentals rents and sells new and used furniture, 601 Kasdil 8411 758-1
Beds, decks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
908 Mass.
Full Cleanance: All adult tapes on sale $612.95 or
Mirror Video Too, 910 HIHADE, 841-750-6500, or Miracle
Video Too, 910 HIHADE, 841-750-6500.
305 For Sale
Weight lifting machine, leg curts, bench press, JK. Great condition, Rowing Machine, press 225 lbs.
Floppy Discs
Guaranteed Quality
and Lowest Price.
Call 832-7744 (o) 842-5421 (h)
Visit our office behind Food 4 Less at
2201 W. 25th St. B-1.
Futon with frame, 1 yr. old, 832-2953. $150
I'm graduating and need to sell my - Beautiful bedroom wood set床。1 queen size床 with cherry wood head board, match right night stand with 2 headboards. The set is $750. Paid a $300 ambiit but it it's got to $175. You
Macintosh Quadras. Best prices available. Student discounts apply. 800-249-2411.
can'tyg Aducer for That. Call me at 866-0756
to get more information.
Obermayer saplier 1910 Cable 866-7571
Obermayer saplier 1910 Cable 866-7571
Cannondale SR 40 road bike with Look pedals,
exc. road $851.9250
Student basketball tickets-best offer. Call Ralph at 749-4155
340 Auto Sales
1983 Black Jeep CJ-7, S-Speed. Hard top, new
hardtop. $4,000. Call 822-652-7022.
and leave message.
1975 Buck Skylark Coupe with 327 Chev. engine, 480cc. Consider monthly payment (call 614-729-3030).
85' Red Pontic Fiero, sunroof, AC, new paint.
£3,000 BOD OBA 79-3898.
884 Dodge Charger 3-ditchback, AM/TM/MS
body in good shape and rum well. Call
882-3642
Pinto 82. Manual. Running no problem. $300 Call
842-1607
Needed up to 1 KU General Admission Basketball
Leave message for Shane at 864-7004.
370 Want to Buy
One- three Indian vs Kansas basketball tickets.
One- three Indian vs call 623-297-1000.
405 For Rent
1 8 Bdm apl, just blocks from campus available for 2nd semester sublease. washer/dryer, dishwasher, ceiling fan. the works $220 per mo./person. 1133 Kentucky 6072-059. Call us
1B furnished apartment cute and clear borders
camp available Jan. 1st: 841-0297 or 815-745-475.
1Bdm, wood floors, lots of windows, Oread nearhood. Very Nice $290/month. Call 832-2953.
New Four Bda New Available
Best in training, signing up for next year.
$240 per month. Carports, car ports
available. For more info call 841-7849.
Newly Remodeled Studio on Campus. Call 841-
400s Real Estate
1 bedroom apt. for rent. Purnified. On bus route.
2 bedrooms, one flat, and I shall have move.
Questions? 841-1844.
4 Bedroom house for sub-lease. Crab rent pay
15%. C.Atention Mark: 441
5469. Thanks for calling!
Furnished studio apartment. 2 short blocks from
Water paid. off street parking. No pets.
6th floor.
offers furnished
1, 2, 3, & 4 bdm apts...
designed with you in mind!
Go to...
4 bdmr. lg rms. stove and refrigerator.
5 bdmr. lg rms. stove 700 a mailable.
6 dec. 15. 843-0022
Available at semester break, apt. in newer室
atrium at willis 1000 Emery Bld. b.dpt. m.
nursing room, dmw microwave hookups,
dw, microwave, ceiling fain, mini blinds,
balcony, energy efficient, great location near cam-
plex.
4 br house for rent. 3 blocks from campus, clean,
clean, clean. We will send help all leaving
Call Killian at (801) 696-7222
1 roommate needed to sublease apt., 1 bk. from campus, $180; mail. Cmll 841-4207.
Available Jan. LARGE 2朝 near stadium, Heat,
water, cable paid. DW, AC, excellent maintenance.
$445/mo. Call 841-5797, 842-7841.
Available Jan. 1 to bbm, apt. close to campus,
Mt. Vernon. Accepting apacious Georgewaltz
Call: 635-8139 or 712-4500
*valuable Jan. 1, 3 bbm; ap on bus route Call 748-1556-1880 Mon-Pri. 2*
OPEN DAILY
MASTERCRAFT
Available now nice clean studio apt. close to cam-
sroom. Call 682-2421, kvv message. No pet.
Call 682-2424, kvv message.
Furished room for rent with shared kitchen and
shelving room. KU, Off- street parking.
No calls. KU 814-5000.
Furnished room for female grad, student: Clean, Quiet, Close. Kiteh prenylges. N smoking or smoking.
Campus Place - 841-1429
1145 Louisiana
Hanover Place - 841-1212 14th & Mass.
Regents Court 749-0445 1905 Mass.
Orchard Corners · 749-4226
15th & Kasold
Sundance - 841-5255
7th & Florida
Tanglewood-749-2415 10th & Arkansas
Reserve your home today!
842-4455
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Share nice large home, neighborado or stu-
tle with a cell phone, a block to KU. Referenc-
e 841-654 or 874-654.
One bedroom apartment available. $255 a month, 8th &
Louisiana No. deposit. Call 862-9338
Spring sublease for 2 persons, 8 bdrm., 1 bath, on
half floor. Avail 14/11/14 (95) 682-3922,
Avail 14/11/15 (95) 682-3923.
MASTERCRAFT
Stone cottage near campus locations at semester
beginning. $450, no mo; call 841-629-
8244 or 841-629-8344
Drop Into Our Place to ask about our Mid Term Leases
Colony Woods Apartments
$365-$435
3 Hot Tubs
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Basketball Court
- Microwave
- On Bus Route
123
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
842-5111 1301W.24th
Wishing You The Best This Holiday Season!
Tired of noisy apartment living* 15 min. S. of Lawrence is an insulated traditional farm home, complete with porches and a great deck. 2 drm B of Lawrence is an accessible Ample storage; private phone line; on historic quail, location. Will rent to responsible people with refs. $490/㎡ 759-1589 at 6 p.m.
SUBLEASE STUDIO APPT. For Spring Semester, 2
bkts from campus, off street parking, W/D, full
bath, kitchen, 90 and Lousiana, Rent and Utilities
at $300/month-call 814-4871 for answer 104
answer 56.
Unique 3 bedroom/1 bath apt. hard wood floors. 2 blocks from厂房/distribution. $48/month
Now leasing for Spring!
Holiday
Apartments
Bedroom apts.
Avail. now.
Recently const.
On Bus Route, Dishwasher, Central Air& heat, walk in closet,
2 bath.
230 MountHope
Studio sublease, furnished, avail Jan. 1. Water
Studio and Night & Night 8a to campus, per pet days.
Sat. 7th through Saturday.
Sub-lashe 2. bath; 225 en / Mo, Water, transhard 2pb. Near basin; 225 en / Water, phone hook-up
we're making life easier!
430 Roommate Wanted
I Roommate needed to share beautiful, historic bap in apartment. down town. wood floor & W/D 3
1 Female needed, spaciosa 2 bedroom apt. for
room number bus23 RXS + M. utilities.
Call Giraffa 745-809-7650
- Weekly Maid Service
• Front Door Bus Service
• "*Dine Anytime" with
Unlimited Seconds
• Laundry and Vending
Facilities
• Facilities
1 roommate to share 2 BR lowhouse on bus route.
82$/add /uilt. Avail. Jan. 1. Call 865-3826
or 12 females needed for spacious bdpr. apt.
or 8 females needed from campus on bus,
park, or taxi. URL 842-7604.
1 roommate (m or l) needed for $3rm appl.
$300/m + 1/4 u/l. Washer/dryer, dishwasher, on bus route, fully furnished (except for room). Avail.
Jan 1 for spring semester. C947-1185.
CHEAP! Female wanted: $170 per month + ⅓
fireplace and cover parking. Call 783-077-821
2 NSP Upperclassman need 2 NSP to share clean,
furnished 4 bdmr, bath apt. Bus Route. Nice
Neighborhood. Pool, Laundry rm. $196 + 1/4 ut.
Call Morgan 749-0213 or Rene 8451-8859
NAISMITH
1800 Naismith Drive (913) 843-8559
Female needed to share townhouse. Will have room available Jan in Washerv /drier $252/mo + tax.
May close 10am on Sunday.
Male or female roommate wanted for 3 bdrm,
second roommate, Call Davalley, lv. mrs
Male roommate should to share 2 bdrm. 2 thirtm apartment spring semester. Top floor, terrace, microwave, dishwasher at Colony Woods. Avail $650/bmc + mo/day. Call 841-6587, leave message.
Female non-smoker needs to share three bedroom.
duplex on KU bus route. Washer/Dryer.
$175/month. Pay $/Utilities Call 749-4145.
Male or roommate must
N/S female needed for a 4birm duplex with W/D, garage fireplace $1710/mo. + utility on B.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
N72 responsible room hostname needed for % jdm
Available ASAP. Dgf 789-3526.
Available ASAP. Dgf 789-3526.
Open minded female needed to two bedroom
room. Please contact us via May. Call any-
time, leave message 749-251-3000
Need mature, clean, NJS male to share 2 bt br apt
need mature, clean, NJS male to share $195.00
Some mtl. Avail. Jan. 14. Janel 1.
One room in spacious 4 BDR apt. Available mid-
night. Wide walk, min. desk at Balcony &
color TV, LENO wifi router, Ethernet.
$169
NSP w/ small body needs a responsible NSP to ship
a new remote spring semester $180/mo.
IHCAI Call $250/mo.
Roommate need for beautiful two story apt. 3 min walk to campus, $212/mo. + /u/ available mid-Dec. or Jan. 1 lots of windows, patio & yard. Call 895-3011
Roommate needed. Start Dec. 1, $185/m² will
free gas, water, cable at 124 room, 2min from
roommate to work area.
Roommate needed. M/P to share to 28pm Apt and
818a airtime. call 643-9583 and leave a message.
Roommate needed to live in eng. @ BDHR Very close to campus. $160/mo / 832.1918
Ads phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
Atoomey Studies: Female non-smoker for
duple wanted. Jan. 1, 1818.00 a.m + 4 uplifers
available.
Step by Step the Kanaan office between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ads may be prepaid, cash or check, or charge - MasterCard or W Visa.
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Calculating Rates:
Classified Information and order form
by monk: "I should print, Lawrence, AS, 80469"
You may印出 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 VIA account. As that they billed to Visa or MasterCard qualify for a refund on unused days when cancelled before their expiration date.
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4 lines
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| Cases per liter per day | 1×2X | 4×7X | 8-14X | 15-29X | 30+X |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 2.65 | 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 |
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
t per line per day
140 lost & faxed 300 for sale
285 help wanted 340 sale calls
225 professional services 360 miscellaneous
225 joins services
Classifications
105 personal
118 business personals
129 announcements
136 entertainment
Date ad begins:___
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, lawrence. KS.60445
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1993 FarWorks Inc./Dial by Universal Press Syndicate
"A word of advice, Durk: it's the Mesolithic. We've domesticated the dog, we're using stone tools, and no one's naked anymore."
>
14
Monday, November 29,1993
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Britain-IRA contact upsets Northern Ireland meetings
BELFAST, Northern Ireland — The British government's reluctant admission that it has secretly communicated with the IRA has cast a shadow over months of peacemaking efforts for Northern Ireland.
Sinn Fein, the IRA's political ally, said the contacts were more substantial than the British government was willing to admit.
The Associated Press
The secrecy surrounding the contacts underscores Britain's fear that publicity could blow apart the peace efforts.
British Prime Minister John Major is due to meet his Irish counterpart, Albert Reynolds, next month in Dublin, where they hope to reach agreement on a way toward peace.
But Northern Ireland's Protestant majority already suspects Britain may try to cut a deal with the Catholic-based IRA.
The IRA wants Northern Ireland to unite with the Irish Republic, which is predominantly Catholic. The province's Protestant community supports continued British rule, fearing it will lose political clout in a mainly Catholic nation.
At least 3,100 people have been killed in 23 years of sectarian violence surrounding British rule in Northern Ireland.
After weeks of denials, the British government admitted yesterday that it has had secret communications with the IRA in hopes of persuading the outlawed group to end its violent campaign against the British.
The disclosure was made by Sir Patrick Mayhew, Britain's leading official for Northern Ireland, who said that Britain had long used intermediaries as contacts with Sinn Fein.
The government was forced to conceale the existence of the contacts after The Observer published yesterday the text of Mayhew's instructions to an emissary who met Sinn Fein deputy leader Martin McGuinness in March.
Mayhew denied any negotiations took place and promised to publish full details of British messages to the IRA.
Protestant leaders demanded that Mayhew and Major resign for their "bare-faced lying" and that contact with IRA supporters cease.
Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams said that Britain was lying about the scope and authority of the secret talks and dismissed the British claim that it was only responding to IRA peace wishes.
"The process of dialogue and contact between the British Government and Sinn Fein was more than a mere conduit." Adams said.
Bush ready to remember, humor and inform as he starts lecture circuit trips
The Associated Press
HOUSTON — After nearly a year of self-imposed exile, former President Bush is hitting the public speaking circuit.
In recent months, Bush has shown up in Dallas, dispensing his reflective perspectives to hotel executives. He's also been to Florida, playing tennis with retired professional Chris Evert. And he went to Puerto Rico to raise money for his presidential library at Texas A&M University.
George Bush's words and White House witticisms are not for cheap groups looking for a toastmaster. His big before Amway distributors in September cost a cool $100,000, about half of what he earned annually as president. Other groups won't divulge how much they paid.
"I have no comment on that." Rose Zamaria, a Bush spokeswoman, said of the speaking fees. So what does a group get with Bush?
So what does a group get with Bush?
nus promise of keeping mum on his successor's actions.
His monologue is part reflection with some self-depreciation, part forecast and part media-bashing, sprinkled with anecdotes about life with Barbara and the dogs in Tanglewood, the Houston subdivision where they live. And except for his comments in early October that President Clinton may be mishandling the Somalia situation, Bush has stuck to
"I must confess I wish I was as good as my predecessor, Ronald Reagan," Bush said in October before 3,600 executives with Choice Hotels International at their annual convention. "I know I had some problems."
He said he regretted not being able to convey his concern about the country's "moral emptiness." But he is proud of his accomplishments in the foreign diplomacy arena.
"I'm proud of what we did, and I have a funny, satisfied feeling — I may be a little early — but I have a satisfied feeling that history will judge this period kindly," Bush said.
Betsy O'Rourke, representative for the hotel chain, would not disclose Bush's fee but said the cost was more than worth it.
"He was just terrific. He connected with the audience, and they connected with him," she said.
While in Washington for the signing of the Israeli-Palestinian peace accord, Bush told an audience how his wife was in charge in their new Houston home.
"We got a neat house there," he said. "Barbara's doing all the heavy lifting, and I'm up here having a good time."
Singer Blades enters Panama presidential race
The Associated Press
PANAMA CITY, Panama — Singer-actor Ruben Blades became a presidential candidate yesterday, promising to end corruption.
Incumbent President Guillermo Endara, whose popularity has slipped to single digits in some polls, said he did not want to run again. About a dozen parties are expecting to field candidates.
blades, an internationally known salsa singer who also has appeared in movies, has led recent polls for the May 8 election. Panamanians had been expecting he would run for months.
Blades, 44, said he is leaving the "security and comfort" that he enjoys as a successful entertainer living in the United States to face "a political panorama that is not a bed of roses."
"We haven't come to rob and we will not permit anybody to rob," Blades said as he accepted the nomination of his Papa Egoro party, a new organization whose name means "Mother Earth" in the indigenous Cuna language.
"I william to confront it so that others ... do not have to struggle against the same current of raw sewage," he said, referring to widespread corruption in Panama.
Political opponents criticize Blades, who holds a doctorate from Harvard in international law, for being away from Panama for most of the past two decades.
"A country is not abandoned because we are far from its territory, a country is abandoned when we remove it from our heart," he said
Blades pledged to decentralize the economy and government in order to give Panama's rural provinces a chance to develop.
Panama's economy is growing, but it was badly battered in the 1980s by ineptness and corruption under the military regime of former Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega and by a trade embargo the United States imposed while he was in power.
Nortiega was overthrown by a U.S. invasion in 1989, and was taken to Miami, where he was tried, convicted and sentenced to 40 years in prison on drug trafficking charges.
Other major election issues are the Panama Canal, which is to become Panamanian at the end of the century, and American military bases, which are scheduled to be closed.
There is rising sentiment in Panama to extend the American presence, at least on the military bases, because of the thousands of high-paying jobs the bases provide.
It's No Wonder People Demand So Much From Us. Look What They Demand From Themselves.
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To check out these ads call 1-900-285-4560 You will be charged $1.95 per minute (must be 18 yrs old)
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Top 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 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 (every 3rd day from the day that you initially place your voice message), to listen to the messages people leave for you. Any other day, you may call the 900-number to retrieve your messages at a cost of $1.95 per minute. The average call is 3 mins in length.
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.
CAMPUS/AREA: A clip-out survey asks for your thoughts on young-adult involvement in politics. Page 3.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL. 103, NO. 69
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1991
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
[Image of a person lying on their stomach in a sandy area, wearing shorts and sunglasses. The background is a grassy field.]
---
The image is likely from a publication or journal article featuring the individual in a relaxed pose. However, the content does not include any textual descriptions, headings, or footnotes. Instead, it shows only the person lying down with their legs extended upwards. The focus is entirely on the body and posture.
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
TAN MAN STILL CATCHING RAYS
NEWS:864-4810
John Schneider, also known as the Tan Man, sunbaths beside his trailer on Michigan Street. Schneider was laying out yesterday afternoon despite a high of 49 degrees.
KU sunbathing legend absent from campus, spends time at home
By David Wilson Special to the Kansan
The Tan Man is missing. Lawrence's original, full-time sun worshiper and a subject of KU lore has not been seen sunbathing on campus since 1988.
For more than a decade, the Tan Man was part of the KU landscape. He was a Lawrence man who would sit outside, shirtless and shoeless, and soak up the rays for five or six hours at a time, even on winter days. His primary campus hangout was a bench on the east side of Wescoe, in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall.
So where has the Tan Man been? The Tan Man, whose real name is John Schneider, now sathes only around his trailer on Michigan Street.
"The traffic is bad so I don't ride my bike, and the cab fare went up." Schneider said.
But economic and safety considerations are not the only reasons for the disappearance of such a legend. The main reason the Tan Man stopped coming to campus was that people stopped saying hello.
"They just wouldn't say anything," Schneider said. "I'd say, 'hi,' and they wouldn't say anything back."
On campus, Schneider could absorb the rays of humanity as well as the rays of the sun.
"I could meet people, more younger people, who would be more likely to talk to me," he said.
Don Marquis, professor of philosophy, said that people did not pay much attention to Schneider the last few years he tanned on campus.
"I sometimes said, 'hello' to him," Marquis said. "But I've found that if you stop to talk to some of the characters around here, you may be in for a longer conversation than you expected."
Marquis said Schneider regularly would sunbathe when the temperature was around 50 — or even lower.
Schneider is not bothered by the cold or the threat of skin cancer.
"I go to the doctor, and he tells me to put that sunscreen stuff on," Schneider said.
Schneider was born April 8, 1943, in Wichita, but celebrates his birthday June 21, the first day of summer and the longest day of the year.
"It's warmer then," he said.
Schneider went to high school in Augusta and came to Lawrence in 1967. After nine years of tanning on campus, Schneider left for Corpus Christi, Texas, in December 1977 in search of a summer climate. He returned to Lawrence in May 1979.
"I thought it was warmer down there, but the people weren't as nice," he said.
During his years on campus, Schneider left such an impression on people at KU that both Lawrence Yello Sub locations sell a tea named for
him — Tan Man Sun Tea.
"There's nothing special about the recipe," said Bob Jones, owner of Yello Sub. "It's with Yello Sub for many years."
Schneider said that he relished the local fame that tanning brought him.
He once appeared on a postcard created by two KU students. A photograph of Schneider was pasted onto a picture of Potter Lake. The postcard read, "Don't skd Nebraska, surf Lawrence!"
He also remembers being featured in an ad for Pyramid Pizza. The design of the ad was similar to the postcard.
"They had me on a surfboard." he said.
Schneider's tan has faded a bit since his days on campus. He walks slowly and carefully, and his speech is calm. He smiles, but the smile is tinged with a bit of sadness.
Schneider has worked for the last thirteen years as a night janitor at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. He works nights so he can sunbathe during the day.
For now, Schneider plans to do all his sunbathing at the trailer park, where he is content to talk with his neighbors.
"It's probably better that way."
New Iowa policy on sexual films prompts debate
Students notified before explicit material shown
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
Required warnings about sexually explicit material have prompted protest at one of KU's peer institutions.
Now the new policy at the University of Iowa in Iowa City has raised concerns among the KU faculty on how much liberty professors have to present controversial material in class.
The Iowa Board of Regents enacted a policy last month that would require faculty to inform their students before any showing of "explicit representations of human sexual acts."
The policy stemmed from complaints about two films depicting explicit homosexual acts shown during class to Iowa students who were not informed of the films' content, said Marvin Berenstein, president of the Iowa Board of Regents and author of the Iowa policy.
Berenstein said the policy was nothing more than a courtesy to students, and teachers had the discretion to provide warnings on explicit material.
"The policy is not intended to be stifling to academic freedom," Berenstein said. "It was brought to an issue by various students who were embarrassed and didn't want to go to a class to see some of this stuff."
Berenstein said he had received a petition of about 100 signatures from Iowa faculty members who objected to the new policy. Though Berenstein remained concerned about the faculty's right to academic freedom, he said students should have the right to be warned.
"This is the right answer," Berenstein said. "Nobody has an ax to grind on the Regents. This is just to protect students from potential embarrassment."
Although student objections to films showing homosexual sex prompted the policy, Berenstein said complaints that the Iowa Board of Regents were homophobic were absolutely false.
"I would have had the same reaction if it had been a man and a woman making love," Berenstein said. "It has absolutely nothing to do with homophobia. Speaking for the entire board, that was never an issue."
Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare, said he gave students in his human sexuality class the choice of whether they wanted to watch prepared audio-video material. Dailey said the syllabus for the class let students know ahead of time that Dailey would present explicit material.
"Students need to be aware of what is going on in class," Dailey said. "I recognize that some students may choose not to view the material."
Dailey said it was his decision and not University policy to make students aware of the class' content. Even so, Dailey said he saw the University of Iowa policy as a major infringement of academic freedom.
"For me, it's an issue of common courtesy," Dailey said. "Adults need to take responsibility for their own learning."
Chuck Berg, professor of theater and film and director of film studies, said he was not aware of any policy intended to inform students of potentially explicit material. Berg said that just by giving warnings to students about explicit material, professors would need to define what such material was.
"Giving a warning is not necessarily a problem," Berg said. "But where do you draw the line of what is objectionable?"
Although some professors may decide to tell their students about class content, Berg said students had to show judgment themselves.
"I believe we rely on the good judgment and common sense of my colleagues in the humanities," Berg said. "But the sense of responsibility is a two-way street. If people come to the University with such a fragile belief system that they are not willing to examine their own views, then it raises the question of what those students are doing here in the first place."
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
Organization formed to bridge cultural differences
United Students seeks to join races
By Christoph Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
Michael Huntington and Adrien Lewis are tired of seeing segregation when they eat at the Lenoir Ekdahl Dining Commons.
Lewis, Springfield, Mass., freshman, said if students did not sit with people of the same race or culture, the students were considered sellouts by their friends.
That is why Lewis and Huntington, Hutchinson junior, are forming a new student organization called United
Students in an effort to create racial harmony on campus.
Lewis, who is vice president of United Students, said the organization was for students of all races and cultures that were part of the University.
"There is no social organization based on the fact that you're human," he said.
Huntington, president of United Students, said he did not want students to be afraid of socializing with students of different races and cultures.
"That's what we're fighting is the sellout idea," he said. "We're talking about trying to help create an environment at KU where no one feels like
an outsider."
Besides trying to improve racial harmony at KU, Lewis said the organization would allow students to learn more about different races and cultures.
"You learn a lot about people in social situations that you can't in the class rooms," he said. "That's the motivation, to see what you don't see, to learn what you don't know."
Lewis said United Students was an alternate organization to other campus groups such as the Black Student Union and the Hispanic-American Leadership Organization.
"We're not trying to break down the other organizations," he said.
Huntington, who is a resident assistant for the ninth floor at McCollum Hall, and Lewis, who lives on the ninth floor of McCollum, got the idea for United Students from discussions with other ninth-floor residents.
Huntington said he expected a positive response from the University, based on the enthusiasm of the 50 people who already had expressed interest in the group.
"We have people bouncing off the walls because they're so passionate about this," he said.
To become a KU student organization, a group must fill out an application and have an adviser as a sponsor
Huntington said United Students
would have three advisers to represent different races and cultures.
Lewis said Barbara Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Center, and Norman Yetman, professor of American studies, had agreed to be the first two advisers for the organization.
"We want to adequately represent our group," he said.
Ann Eversole, director of organizations, said United Students was in the process of registering with the University.
Students who are interested in joining United Students should call Lewis at 864-6479 or Huntington at 864-6474.
GAA
Susan McSpadden/KANSAN
Adrien Lewis, Springfield, Mass., freshman, and Michael Huntington, Hutchinson junior, have started a new organization called United Students.
INSIDE
Done under
The Kansas basketball team lost to the Australian National team 93-82 in an exhibition game last night at Allen Field House.
Page 11
BASKETBALL
Rock Chalk Revue — It's not just a greek thing
Directors of philanthropy want greater involvement from all University groups
By Shan Schwartz
Kansan staff writer
Rock Chalk Revue directors want all students — not just greens — to know that they can be involved in the student-run philanthropy project.
Tad Gomez, executive producer of Rock Chalk Revue, said the Revue had a "greek stereotype" that directors had been trying to eliminate for several years. Gomez said the efforts, to some degree, were working.
About half of the Revue's board of directors this year, all students, are not affiliated with any Greek living organization, Gomez said. And this year, besides show proposals from the scholarship and residence
halls, Amini Scholarship Hall paired with Alpha Delta Pi sorority to submit a show proposal.
Although nongreek groups have submitted show proposals in recent years, the five feature musicals all have been from fraternity-sorority pairs since the combined scholarship halls performed in the Revue in 1990.
Before that, it had been 15 years since a nongreek group successfully submitted a show proposal for Rock Chalk Revue.
"I think a lot of it is just exposure, "Gomez said. "If someone isn't used to having their hall submit a notebook for a show, they just think it can't or won't happen. But if you're in a fraternity or sorority, you know all about it."
halls' interest had continued.
"And hopefully the interest will keep growing." Gomez said.
Gomez said that interest from the scholarship and residence halls had been unheard of before the scholarship halls were in the 1900 Revue, but since then, the
Several living groups not involved in the Rock Chalk Revue performance contribute through community service, according to Kelly Fults, community service coordinator for Rock Chalk Revue. Last year, more than 16,000 hours of community service were donated by participating living groups.
Rock Chalk Revue culminates in a musical performance that benefits the United Way of Douglas County and will be performed Feb. 24-26. But the purpose of Rock Chalk Revue is charity.
The Revue's "Most Charitable Award" will be presented in February to the group that donates the most hours per person in community service.
And if students still want to perform on stage with Rock Chalk Revue, there are
two ways they can do that, said Scott McPhail, In-Between Acts director.
One way is to audition for an In-Between Act, a 5-6 minute performance between the featured musical productions. Auditions for In-Between Acts are scheduled for tomorrow and Thursday, and students must sign up for auditions by 5 p.m. today in the Organizations and Activities Center, 400 Kansas Union.
Another way students can perform in the show is in the Revue's opening number. McPhail said Rock Chalk Revue would be looking in January for anyone who could sing, dance or act in the opening number.
McPhail said he tried specifically to get nongreek students into the show.
"We do publicize it as something for the whole campus," McPhail said. "So I try to get students who aren't greek involved in the IBAs and the opening number."
2
Tuesday. November 30. 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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■ LesBiGaySOK encourage anyone who is lesbian, gay, bisexual or unsure to call the organization or KU Info about a confidential meeting.
OAKS- Non-Traditional Students will have a brown bag lunch at 11 a.m. today in the Burge Union. For more information, call Gerry Vernon at 864-7317.
Graduate Association of Students of History will sponsor a lecture at 3:30 p.m. today at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Heinz Kattenfeld at 749-1186.
Amnesty International will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Danelle Myron at 842-5407.
International Students Association will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
**Inspirational Voice Voices will meet at 6 p.m. today in 328 Murphy Hall. For more information, call Kim at 749-3819.**
Hispanic-American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Walnut Room In
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will have House/Hall Contacts meeting at 6:30 p.m. today at the Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-9357.
the Kansas Union. For more information, call Octavio Hinojosa at 864-4256.
Native American Student Association will meet at 7tonight in 3012 Haworth Hall. For more information, call Johnnie Young at 864-3513.
PRSSA will meet at 7 tonight at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Kevin Grace at 865-3744.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries and American Baptist Campus Ministry will sponsor "TAIZE," a Christian prayer experience of song and scripture at 8:30 tonight in Danforth Chapel. For more information, call Leah Peck at 841-5424.
Le Carce Francaise will meet at 9tonight at the Free State Brewing Co., 636 Massachusetts St. For more information, call Alice Leo at 865-1907.
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Houston: 71'/38'
Miami: 74'/59'
Minneapolis: 21'/13'
Phoenix: 76'/50'
Salt Lake City: 39'/22'
Seattle: 47'/41
LAWRENCE: 51'/40' Kansas City: 51'/38'
St. Louis: 45'/33'
Wichita: 55'/46'
Tulsa: 57'/49'
TODAY
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Partly cloudy
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Low: 40°
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A brief on Page 3 of yesterday's Kansas contained incorrect information. Four faculty members will receive the Distinguished Teaching Award, and one will receive the Silver Anniversary Teaching Award.
KANSAN CLASSIFIED WORK
*FULLSERVICE CATERING FOR ANY AND ALL OF YOUR PARTY NEEDS.
*Rock Chalk*X-Max Parties*Formals*(*Call Jake or Clay at 841-0505*) *12 days in advance.*
Information in the "Inside" box on Page One of yesterday's Kansan was incorrect. Kansas became the first team to win the Preseason NIT twice when it defeated Massachusetts on Friday.
BENCHWARMERS CATERING
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 30.1993
3
Group aims to get youth involved
Lead ... or Leave works Washington for this generation
By Tracl Carl Kansan staff writer
Chris Fuller is worried that 76 million Americans between the ages of 12 and 32 are stepping up to a corporate ladder with the bottom rungs removed.
Fuller, 25, is field director for Lead ... or Leave, a nonpartisan campaign based in Washington that is working to give young Americans a boost to those higher rungs by helping them become more involved in politics that will affect their future.
"We don't have the kind of representation we need," he said. "We're getting slammed."
The organization, which has more than 100 chapters and 100,000 members nationwide, is working to organize and educate young people about their economic future, Fuller said. It also aims to educate Congress and the
White House on the problems young Americans face, he said.
"The attitude is students aren't going to vote, students aren't going to care," he said.
But Fuller said young Americans are concerned with the $4.3 trillion federal deficit, which increases more than $1 billion a day.
Its interest payments could be used to create permanent jobs, Fuller said. Two-thirds of all jobs created in 1992 were temporary, which do not usually have benefits.
"They don't have to give us benefits because they know we'll work," he said. "The job market is so competitive."
Retirement also may not be an option in the future. The Social Security Administration projects that the social security fund will be broke by the year 2019, even though young workers pay 20 times more in social security taxes today than their grandparents did 45 years ago.
"What we're fighting for is generational equity," he said. "There's an image of our generation as this MTVwatching, knee-jerk consumer, when many of us are disillusioned.
Lead ... or Leave has three goals to help Washington leaders plan for the future of young Americans:
"A lot of the members of our generation don't want to look ahead."
- Force the federal government to eliminate the budget deficit by 2000.
Lead ... or Leave was formed a year ago when its co-founders, Rob Nelson and Jon Cowan, asked congressional candidates in the 1993 election to promise to halve the federal deficit in four years or not seek re-election. Of the 101 candidates that took the pledge, 18 were elected to office.
Invest in the future by spending on education, job creation, repairing inner cities and cleaning up the environment.
Ensure the equity of U.S. economic policy for all ages. This includes stopping policies that shift wealth from the young to the old.
The campaign does not sponsor a certain politician or party. Fuller said.
"We're not trying to tell anyone how to vote," he said. "We're not trying to tell people how to think. We just want to get young people face to face with our leaders."
Chad Speakar, Cimarron senior.
There is an image of our generation as this MTV-watching,
knee-jerk
--consumer..."
Chris Fuller
Director for Lead ... or Leave
said he did not think young people were being ignored. It is just harder to be heard because so many people have a voice in government, he said.
He concentrates on taking care of himself, he said.
"I vote. I take a stance," he said. "I guess I'm just worried about my own future, rather than the future of my nation."
Talking about our generation
Lead ... or Leave and the University Daily Kansan are co-sponsoring a student survey to assess the level of participation and interest in politics. The results will be published and incorporated into a national report that will be sent to Congress and the White House. Surveys can be dropped in boxes outside the Student Union Activities office in the Kansas Union, the Kansan newsroom in Stauffer-Flint Hall and the lobby of Lewis Hall. The boxes will be collected on Thursday.
Are you worried about getting a job after graduation? YES NO
Will you have student loans to pay after you graduate? YES NO
Do you think it is harder to get a job now than it was when your parents were your age? YES NO
Do you think the U.S. government is doing enough to reduce the nation's
Do you plan on voting in the 1994 Congressional Election? YES NO
Do you feel young people are getting involved in politics? YES NO
Did you vote in the 1992 Presidential Election? YES NO
Do you think the U.S. government is doing enough to reduce the nation's deficit? YES NO
Do you plan on voting in the 1994 Congressional Election? YES NO
Do you feel that the economic future of our generation is in trouble? YES NO
Would you like information about Lead ... or Leave, an organization dedicated to protecting the economic future of young Americans? YES NO
What's your No. 1 political concern?
---
Those interested in Lead... or Leave may call 1-800-99-CHANGE.
Christmas market offers unusual gifts
Holiday shopping could help needy third-world family
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Instead of the usual boring Christmas gifts of ties, salad shooters and Nerf footballs, students can shop just off campus for something unusual this year.
On the second floor of the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center, 1204 Oread Ave., there are 18 tables heaped with handcrafted items from countries around the world on sale through Dec. 3 at the Christmas Giving Market.
Place mats and napkins woven in India, ceramic pitchers and mugs from Thailand, stockings from Bangladesh, woven baskets from the Philippines and jewelry from Kenya are a few of the items available.
The crafts are imported by Mennonite and Church of the Brethren agencies.
For the past five years a group of KU campus ministries has co-sponsored the sale. Not only are the gifts original, but the sales of the handcrafted gifts benefit third-world artisans and families in need.
Holcombe said the Christmas market not only benefited third-world artisans financially, but also gave
"This is an ideal way to allow international artisans to sustain themselves independently," he said. "It's a very worthwhile cause, and it stirs up local and global consciousness."
Tad Holcombe, campus pastor for Ecumenical Christian Ministries said there were few markets in third-world countries. He said that when artisans do find a market, many times people take advantage of them by buying their crafts in bulk at low prices and then selling them for high prices.
them hope for the future of their trade.
"It gives integrity to the craft and provides self-esteem for the artisans," he said. "It keeps alive a market that can be passed down from generation to generation that might otherwise die out."
Last year, sales from the Christmas market reached $8,800, so the market was expanded this year to the American Baptist Campus Center, 1629 W. 19th St. Holcombe said that on Sunday about $1,000 worth of merchandise was sold at the Christmas markets, but he said there was $11,000 worth of merchandise still available.
KU students, faculty and Lawrence citizens volunteer their time and labor for the Christmas market.
Mary Holzhausen, Topeka sophomore, discovered the Christmas market last year and volunteered to help this year because she knew it was for a worthy cause.
"You don't see stuff like this everyday," Holzhausen said. "I like to just come in and admire everything."
1973.
People can donate money and designate it for such items as chicks, pigs, rabbits or fish for hungry third-world families and communities through the Heifer Project International. Money for bricks, concrete and windows also can be donated to help provide decent housing for poverty-stricken families through Lawrence Habitat for Humanity.
For the second year, the Christmas market includes alternative gifts more unusual than the handcrafted items.
"It's a way to capture some of the true meaning of Christmas spirit by giving and helping those less fortunate."
Rod Stafford, pastor of the Peace Mennonite Church, said it took some time for people to catch on to the idea of giving a live animal for a Christmas gift. But he said it was a gift that promoted the true spirit of the holidays.
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
The Rev. Joseph S.T. Alford, KU chaplain for the Canterbury House, looks at some baskets from the Philippines. Alford browsed yesterday through handcrafted international gifts at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building. The ECM has items for sale from around the world through this Saturday.
Black Poets Society encourages expression, education
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas was a turbulent place during the fall of 1990.
But in that time of racial tension and Gulf War protests on campus, a group of students found its voice through verse.
That semester, Lewis said, the verbal harassment of a female African-American pizza deliverer contributed to an atmosphere of tension.
"During any social movement, a lot of people express themselves through poetry," said John Lewis, a founding member of the Black Poets Society.
UNITING TO BE HEARD
Lewis, who graduated in spring of 1991
and now works in Kansas City, Mo., said the group provided an outlet for the frustrations of African-American students.
Although KU has calmed down since then, the Black Poets Society still serves the same purpose, said Curtis Triggs, St. Louis senior and president of the group.
The group's shows — which feature poetry readings by the authors — can be confrontational as well as artistic, Triggs said.
"It was a way for people to vent a lot of things about the Black experience," he said. "Poetry is an excellent vehicle."
"If the poetry is boring, then it's no use," he said. "We get enough boring poetry in classes."
"We don't try to offend," he said. "If you offend someone, you can't really educate them. It's like shouting. You can't educate somebody like that."
Any poetry fan — regardless of race — is welcome to join the group, Triggs said. He said their readings were not attended only by African Americans.
But Triggs said he did not want to force the group's poetry on people.
"We get mixed crowds, but we always get positive feedback," he said.
Triggs said the Black Poets Society often traveled to high schools in St. Louis and the
Kansas City area to read poetry. He said the readings showed potential college students that KU could be fun as well as academic.
In addition, the group wants to provide education for the audience at its shows, he said.
"We want them to walk away with a better appreciation of African-American literature that they probably didn't get in school," Trigssa said.
This year's group is relatively young, Triggs said. He said the group had spent its spring semester reading Langston Hughes, Maya Angelou and other African-American poets. The group's shows will begin next semester, he said.
Former KU director appointed by Finney to finance board
Keith Nitcher was appointed to the Kansas Development Finance Authority board of directors on Wednesday by Gov Joan Finney.
Nitcher retired in August as director of business and fiscal affairs at the University of Kansas. He had been at KU since 1957.
The authority board is a group created by the Legislature to issue bonds and arrange financing for public purposes such as construction and the purchasing of new equipment for state agencies.
Nitcher's appointment was effective immediately.
Nitcher said he was pleased to join the board of directors.
"I have a great deal of respect for the work of the staff," he said.
Justin Garberg, Overland Parksenior, was chosen as business manager. Garberg, an advertising major, is responsible for the Kansan's advertising.
The University Daily Kansan advisory board has chosen the business manager and editor for next semester.
Ben Grove, Davenport, Iowa, senior, was chosen as editor. Grove, a journalism major, is responsible for the Kansan's news content.
The advisory board consists of three faculty members of the School of Journalism, the current Kansan editor and business manager and a representative of Student Senate.
Campus briefs compiled from Kansan staff reports.
ON THE RECORD
A student's purse and its contents, valued together at $273, were taken in the 1600 block of West 25th Street on Nov. 23, Lawrence police reported.
A student's backpack and its contents, valued together at $121, were taken from the first floor of the Kansas Union on Nov. 23, Lawrence police reported.
A student's cellular phone and driver's license, valued together at $206, were taken from a car in the parking lot east of Jayhawker Towers on Wednesday or Thursday, KU police reported.
A student's blender, camera and miscellaneous clothes, valued together at $295, were taken from a residence in the 1700 block of West 19th Street between Wednesday and Saturday, Lawrence police reported.
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4
Tuesday. November 30. 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Charging for Vespers defeats event's purpose
Christmas comes but once a year. And so does Vespers. But this year students will have to pay $5 a ticket to see the Vespers performances at the Lied Center.
This may be a disappointment for many who have attended this event for free in the past. And now some students may decide not to attend because $5 is too much to ask.
Tickets have to be issued to maintain crowd control at the center. The $5 fee will cover the cost of tickets and programs, and part of the money will also be used to for music scholarships for students.
The alumni of the University should make donations to Vespers. It's a good cause, and KU alumni have a good reputation for coming through with help.
It is a suggestion that not only the alumni donate for this cause but that three performances instead of two in one day may reduce ticket costs to $3 a ticket, which would be more reasonable for students.
The head of the department of music and dance, Stephen Anderson, said that donations at Vespers had gone down in the past years for unknown reasons which decreased the number of scholarships.
The Vespers tradition of more than 60 years should continue at this University with wonderful performances and more donations because Christmas would not be Christmas without any presents.
And Vespers will not be Vespers without any donations.
MUNEERA NASEER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS:
DAVID BURGETT, J.R. CLAIRBORNE, CHRISTINA CORNISH, CARSON ELROD, TOM GRELINGER, MANNY LOPEZ, COLLEEN McCAIN, TERRILYN MCCORMICK, MUNEERA NASEEK, KIRK REDMOND, CHRIS REEDY, MIKE SILVERMAN, EISHA TIERNEY, KC TRAUER AND DAVID WANEK
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
APEC could be as tough as NAFTA was to pass
If you liked NAFTA, you'll love APEC.
The North American Free Trade Agreement directly affects only Canada, the United States and Mexico, and it has introduced countless Americans to the age-old argument between those who favor trade barriers and those who oppose them.
But the Asian-Pacific Economic Cooperation form, to give APEC its formal name, takes in 15 Pacific Rim nations, some of them as far apart, politically and geographically, as the United States and China.
President Clinton has had a tough time convincing the American public and especially congressional Democrats that NAFTA will be good for the United States, even though all of this country's Nobel laureates in economics and all of its living former presidents have endorsed the treaty.
At this stage, the hard sell on APEC is aimed not at the American public, but at the leaders of the organization, most of whom have their own agendas and timetables for economic development and ... their own worries and fears about helping a rival gain the upper hand.
Some APEC members fear that President Clinton (supported by
Canada, Australia and New Zealand) seeks to export Western idealism as well as Western products. Human rights, as we understand them, don't carry much weight in places such as Malaysia and Singapore, where the priority is on economic rather than political advancement.
Additionally, some smaller Pacific nations fret that China, Hong Kong and Taiwan may be able to gang up on them, economically, if they find a way to work together. Taiwanese already are deeply involved in mainland Chinese investments, even though they are technically illegal ...
APEC may be just a comet streaking across the economic sky, destined to burn out and be forgotten, or it may become a bright, shining fixture in that same sky, guiding the world to better times and greater political stability.
If it is to become that bright star though, it will surely take many years of hard work and negotiations among the 15 beneficiaries. In time, APEC could be as familiar an acronym as NATO. That would be a welcome development.
TAMPA TRIBUNE
TAMPA, FLA.
KANSAN STAFF
KC TRAUER. Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE Managing editors
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
TOM EBLEN
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
AMY CASEY Business manager
Editors
Assistant to the editor ... J.R. Cairbone
News ... Stacy Friedman
Editorial ... Terrilyn McCormill
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Kristi Fogler
Photo ... Kip Chin, Renee Kneeber
Features ... Ezra Wolfe
Graphics ... John Paul Fogel
AMY STUMBO Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ...Ed Schoger
Regional sales mgr ...Jennifer Perrier
National sales mgr ...Jennifer Evenson
Co-op sales mgr ..Blythe Focht
Production mgr ...Jennifer Blowe
**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**
Marketing director ... Shelly McConnell
Creative director ... Brian Fusco
Classified mgr. ... Gretchen Kottenleinch
The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Staffler-Flint Hall.
MAX NELLY Chicago Tribune
Cold War
WHERE ARE WE WARREN?
RIGHT ALONG HERE SOMEWHERE, SIR...
END CONSTRUCTION
Father's illness cuts to the heart of health care worries, reform
EDITORIAL EDITOR
My father was admitted to the hospital last weekend for chest pains. He doesn't have health insurance anymore, and I don't just worry about his health.
On his 45th birthday, my father had a severe heart attack. Memories of that day and the following weeks appear to me like a series of still pictures. My father reaching out to me in pain as his heart struggled to keep beating. The tubes that endlessly snaked in and out of him. My mother's nervous hands clinging to each other for comfort. And the tears that spilled without warning as I struggled with the possibility of losing my father. The $125,000 bill meant nothing. We had
It is the $5,000 tests, the $750 medicine and the $1,000-a-day hospital rooms that worry me. It is the possibility that a third heart attack could financially devastate my parents that keeps me up at night.
Two years ago, my father was insured. My parents paid the bill every month assuming that when it was needed, all our emergencies would be covered.
The next several months strained my family. My father was learning to live with his broken heart by quitting his high-stress job, eating healthier and exercising. My sister and I were facing the realization that parents don't live forever. And my mother became the breadwinner. Life was difficult, but we coped. In fact, sometimes we almost forgot it ever happened.
But it wasn't always that way.
TERRILYN McCORMICK
And an emergency came Nov. 4, 1991.
Then it happened again. Eighteen months later, my father had another heart attack. It wasn't as severe. He only stayed in the hospital a week and a half. But emotionally it was just as difficult. And I wanted to scream in
And it did.
health insurance. And that is what it is for — to give assurance as life is falling down around you.
frustration. My father was supposed to get better, not worse. He had changed his lifestyle. But it seemed all the steps we took to change our lives to help Dad were in vain. After his second heart attack, we realized we weren't in control. We were helpless against the organ that keeps my father alive.
This time the bill was only $25,000.
Again we didn't worry. That's what health insurance is for. Or so we thought.
Shortly after my father came home, his health insurance rates were increased 130 percent. We could no longer afford to pay the premiums that had been subsidized by his employer. But we weren't worried. We assumed he could just switch over to my mother's insurance. Simple as that.
And the company agreed to cover him. He is covered for any illness or condition except one—his heart. The insurer said he has a pre-existing condition. This means he has a condition that desperately requires health insurance. However, to the company covering his heart costs, it doesn't make business sense. He simply is a loss. Therefore his heart-related bills
aren't paid for.
Last weekend, my father was admitted to the hospital for chest pains. Luckily, this time it was only a virus. But we live with the reality that next time we might not be so lucky. We live on edge knowing that we cannot control my father's heart or the health insurance industry. We are still helpless.
I now understand that health care is a basic need. It is as fundamental to our lives as food and shelter. However, you would never know by examining the injustice of our health care system. The United States is the only highly developed country that does not offer some kind of basic health care to its citizens. And it is the only country in the Western world to discriminate against the sick when providing care.
Health care reform is desperately needed. You may be tempted to believe that just because you are young and healthy or because you have insurance that you are safe. But that is what we thought. And we were wrong.
Terriyll McCormick is a Kansas City, Mo...
senior manager in Journalism.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
KU should join Haskell in opposing trafficway
It is not often that a university community is faced with such a historic opportunity as is presented by the current struggle for justice by Haskell Indian Nations University's opposition to the South Lawrence Trafficway.
The opposition by Haskell to the South Lawrence Trafficway is directly related to its educational goals and the special spiritual relationship to the earth of its students. An understanding of this relationship would be wonderful to have, but is not necessary for respect and constitutional protection. The construction of the trafficway will destroy irrevocably the worship sites on Haskell property and will infringe greatly upon the educational goals of the University by filling 12 acres of near pristine type-B wetlands of biomass and biodiversity.
It is hoped that the students and administrators at KU are thoughtful enough to avoid this maligned development. This is not to say that I am opposed to the development of Campus West but that this community and KU must agree today the full cost of such development, which at least includes not placing the traficway in any alignment between Haskell and the Wakarusa River.
Lane Jorgensen Syracuse junior
Reader needs be aware of track performance
As a member of both the Kansas cross country and track teams, I am glad to see that Lawrence residents are interested in our performances.
Boulder, Colo.
As for the men, the cross country team has managed a top-16 finish in three of the last five years, placing as high as 10th.
We athletes feel no need to make excuses or explain ourselves, but I ask Mr. Kassell to consider the difficulty of competing against foreign athletes who are often much older and against programs that, unfortunately, do not observe the rules as strictly as KU.
Perhaps Mr. Kassell is not aware that the Lady Jayhawks qualified for the NCAA Championships or that the women's track team finished second at the Big Eight meet last spring in
Kaarl Kassell asks in his letter to the Kansan, "Why can't KU compete in track anymore?"
Mr. Kassell, I appreciate your interest in KU track. Our first indoor meet is Jan. 15. Hope to see you there! Ladd McClain
Overland Park senior
Fair-weather fans should stop criticizing teams
Headline: "Students Watch Notre Dame Game, Ignore Kansas." This is front page news?
The football team struggled this year because of injuries and the loss of key seniors and all the Kansan can do is take pot shots and kick it while it's down. Who cares when students found out the score of the Kansas-Colorado game?
Calling the year a "dismal season" is embarrassing, especially because it was written by a fellow student. Even the Kansas City sports writers are more sympathetic toward the team and don't write irrelevant, irresponsible articles like this one.
I cheer for the University of Kansas because it's my school and I like football. It doesn't matter that, "it's hard to get excited when it doesn't seem like there's much to get excited about." Did any of the interviewees go to the Nebraska game? If we had such a "dismal" team, how did we come within a two point conversion of beating (the) number six team in the country?
A valid criticism of KU fans is whenever the football team loses or starts doing poorly they respond, "wait until basketball season." When faced with this I always reply, "those
Those same people will be the first ones out of Allen Field House if, God forbid, the basketball team begins to lose. Look for them: Chesley Dohl will be leading the pack.
John Percival
Lenexa senior
aren't KU fans, they are fair-weather fans who jump on the bandwagon of any team who is winning."
Death penalty is only cold-blooded murder
I just couldn't believe my eyes when I read the "Viewpoint" of Nov. 17 about capital punishment. It was not just the idea of defending the death penalty, which I consider nothing but legal, cold-blooded murder, but the arguments that really scared me. By the way it was written, this article looked to me like a nice fascist pamphlet or a beautiful column from *Pravda* in its worst years. Here are a few examples of quotes from the article:
The death penalty "... would serve as a deterrent to violent crime if it were carried out more efficiently" as "immates on death row ... sometimes ... die of natural causes while still in prison." Well, what about lynching? Is it quick and efficient enough?
"This would also dramatically reduce the problem of prison overcrowding ... " Gosh, Hitler would be harvy to read this one!
"It is imperative that we, as Kansens, support it." What does being a Kansan have to do with supporting death penalty? This is a deeply moral issue and has absolutely nothing to do with our homeland or our national pride.
The death penalty "... is the only sure way to prevent some criminals from committing their crimes again." No, it is not. Just don't let them out of prison. That will do.
cally much less likely that a white person who has killed an African American or a Hispanic is condemned to death. At least 80 innocent people have been executed in the United States in this century. The mere possibility of executing an innocent should drive us all crazy.
I would finally like to point out some further considerations. Most of the executed criminals are African American or Hispanic that have killed a white man. It is statisti-
Finally, the United States is the only western democracy where capital punishment is practiced. In my opinion, a country cannot consider itself civilized if the death penalty is allowed. The roots of the problem are very deep. Effective gun control, education against violence and encouraging self-responsibility are the only effective solutions to prevent crime. The death penalty is just revenge.
Textbook out of line to preach economics
Francisco Poyato-Ariza Spain graduate student
I am writing to bring your attention to yet another instance of political correctness and historical revision in the University's classrooms.
It involves the textbook "Elements of Sociology Through Theory" by Daryl Evans which is used in Sociology 104. On page 83 of this tone Evans teaches the following:
For example, a person would have to have the brain of a newt to still be trying to push the ameliorative aspects of "trickle down economics" for the working class. Trickle down economics didn't work for poor and middle-class people and it made a lot of rich people a lot richer, and it was based upon greed and a malignant indifference for people in need.
It is clear that Evans's contention is extremely biased and should not be taught as fact in a classroom environment. This should not be tolerated at a University which claims to encourage a free exchange of ideas and has no place at our supposed "institution of higher learning."
Derek Shirk
Job senior
Iola senior
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婚
WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 30,1993
5
London rife with political conflict
Protestants want Major to resign over IRA contacts
The Associated Press
LONDON — The British government won praise and encouragement in the House of Commons Monday as it defended its secret contacts with the Irish Republican Army.
Only Protestant lawmakers from Northern Ireland criticized the government; others across the political spectrum supported the peace initiatives.
"We shall keep exploring the opportunities for peace," said Sir Patrick Mayhew, the Cabinet official who represents Northern Ireland.
Gerry Adams, leader of the political party Sinn Fein, which supports the Irish Republican Army's campaign to end British rule in the province, said he expected contacts to continue, although he accused the British government of lying and inventing excuses for not negotiating.
The London Observer exposed the secret contacts, embarrassing Mayhew and Prime Minister John Major who both had strongly denied that any talks were taking place.
Protestants in Northern Ireland that a British deal with the IRA could eventually end the province's union with Britain and make it a minority in a reunited Ireland dominated by Roman Catholics. After the Observer's article, some Protestant lawmakers called for Mayhew's and Major's resignations.
"There is no question of resigning by reason of any efforts that I or the prime minister have made to secure, by proper means, peace in Northern Ireland," Mayhew said, drawing cheers from his Conservative Party colleagues.
He released copies of the government's communications with the IRA and its allies. Though these did not resolve all the differences between Mayhew and Adams, they did show that Britain had insisted throughout the talks that the IRA cease its use of violence.
Contrary to its public demands for a permanent cease-fire, the government accepted a two-week halt in the IRA campaign in May as the price for talking.
IRA supporters told a different story. Britain got cold feet after the IRA agreed to a two-week cease-fire in May in response to a British offer of intensive talks, they said.
Peace deal would lift U.N. sanctions
The Associated Press
GENEVA — European peacemakers offered yesterday to gradually lift sanctions to entice Yugoslavia to help end the war in breakaway Bosnia. But Yugoslav strongman Slobodan Milosevic demanded a quick end to the crippling sanctions before Yugoslavia would enter such a bargain.
The European Community peace deal was proposed at the first meeting of Bosnia's warring Muslims, Serbs and Croats since talks collapsed in September. The EC hopes to forge a
peace accord for Bosnia and negotiate an end to ethnic disputes in Croatia, an other former Yugoslav republic.
The proposal marks the latest European effort to try to halt 19 months of war in Bosnia. More than 200,000 people have died, and more than 2 million have lost their homes since Serbs took up arms against Muslims and Croats who voted to secede from Serb-dominated Yugoslavia.
The plan proposes to ease U.N. trade sanctions if Serbia can persuade Bosnian Serbs to relinquish 3
percent to 4 percent of their territorial gains in Bosnia. The sanctions, imposed in May 1992 to punish Yugoslavia for inciting Bosnian Serbs to war, have devastated its economy.
The EC would not agree to finally lift all sanctions until a peace plan is implemented settling ethnic disputes across the former Yugoslavia. Fighting also continues at a much lower level between ethnic Serbs and Croats in Croatia, where a shaky truce has been in effect since January 1992.
In Washington, White House representative Dee Dee Myers said the administration has not waived from its demand that the Serbs give more ground.
"Our position always has been that the Serbs know what they need to do to get the sanctions lifted, and we've urged them to make additional territorial concessions to the Bosnian Muslims," she told reporters.
Talks among the warring sides were to continue this week, led by Lord Owen and Thorvald Stoltenberg, the EC and U.N. mediators.
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
Black and white groups seeking autonomy in apart-apartheid South Africa ended a meeting with the government today still undecided about whether to take part in April 27 elections.
Parties to consider boycott of election to seek autonomy
On Sunday, the Zulu-based Inkatha Freedom Party — one of the main Freedom Alliance parties — set several conditions for its participation. But an Inkatha official indicated today that the group would participate in the election.
Opposition to the ANC and the government prompted Inkatha and right-wing white groups to form the Freedom Alliance several months ago. But Inkatha is reluctant to be portrayed as an ally of pro-
THE NEWS in brief
apartheid groups and has sought to win Black support by stepping up demands for a Zulu homeland. Inkata fears the elections will lead to an ANC-
dominated central government that would ignore Inkatha's demands and destroy the Zulu culture. Strong regional governments would give Inkatha a power base in eastern Natal province, where most Zulus live.
CAIRO, Egypt PLO: Israel stalling on peace
Israel is stalling talks on implementing its peace accord with the PLO to put pressure on Palestinian negotiators, the chief Palestinian delegate charged Monday.
Nabil Shaath told reporters that Israeli negotiators may not meet a Dec. 13 deadline for Israeli troops to begin pulling out of the Gaza Strip and
Jericho on the West Bank.
The date was set at the Sept. 13 peace accord which would have Israel give the two areas to Palestinian control as a test for a full peace later.
Shaath and other Palestinians say the deadline is important so the negotiations won't be overwhelmed by violence in the areas and to avoid delays in Israel's peace talks with Syria, Jordan and Lebanon.
israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin said his government was working toward the deadline, but it was more important to come up with a good plan than be tied to a specific date.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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High Court will review church-state separation
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court today agreed to re-examine its landmark 1971 ruling on how far government may go to accommodate religious practices without violating the constitutional doctrine of church-state separation.
The court's ruling in Lemon vs. Kurtzman said laws or government practices are unconstitutional if they have a religious purpose, primarily advance or promote religion, or excessively entangle government and religion.
In the church-state case accepted for review today, New York courts ruled that the creation of the Kiryas Joel Village School District was an unconstitutional government endorsement of religion.
New York legislators created the Kiryas Joel district in 1989 to resolve a dispute over how to educate disabled children in the Orange County village.
Almost all village residents are members of the Satmar Hasidic sect,
a devoutly religious group that maintains an insular community where religious ritual and distinctive dress are observed, Yiddish is often spoken instead of English, and girls and boys are educated separately.
Disabled Hasidic children had attended class in the public Monroe-Woodbury Central School District. But their parents withdrew them, saying they were traumatized by going to school outside the Kiryas Joel village.
The new public Kiryas Joel district was created to accommodate their needs. It teaches a secular curriculum to mixed classes of girls and boys, and all of its teachers live outside the village.
Officials of the New York State School Boards Association challenged the creation of the district, saying it was a constitutionally impermissible accommodation of the Jewish sect's beliefs.
A state judge and mid-level appeals court ruled that creation of the district violated the Constitution, and the state's highest court agreed.
"The primary effect... (is) to yield to the demands of a religious community whose separatist tenets create a tension between the needs of its handicapped children and the need to adhere to certain religious practices," the state Court of Appeals said.
The Monroe-Woodbury district and state Attorney General Robert Abrams joined the Kiras Joel school district in appealing that rulling.
The law creating the school district "has, at most, the effect of accommodating the needs of a community of devoutly religious people," the Kiryas Joel appeal said. The Supreme Court has repeatedly held that such accommodations do not necessarily violate the Constitution, it added.
But lawyers for the state School Boards Association officials said the main effect of creating the Kiyras Joel district was "to involve the state in sponsorship of Satmar separatist precepts."
That "violates the very core of constitutional prescriptions for the separation of church and state," they said.
Nonmilitary spending doubled in fiscal'93
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON—Defense spending on domestic nonmilitary activities doubled to more than $4.6 billion in fiscal year 1993, partly because of the costs of closing bases, according to a government report.
The Defense Department was given at least $10.4 billion for civil activities in the past four years with 96 percent for programs authorized by Congress such as counternarcotics operations, defense conversion and medical research, the General Accounting Office said in a report released last weekend.
The GAO, Congress's auditing agency, said congressional directed activities increased from $2.3 billion in 1992 to $4.6 billion in 1993.
cuts.
The increase included $472 million for defense conversion, or closing bases, and $254 million for a parallel program for active forces affected by
Another $120 million was given to disaster relief.
Money spent on Army research programs included $210 million for breast cancer — a new program — and $57 million for AIDS, up from $27 million in 1992.
The Pentagon received $1.1 billion for counternarcotics efforts, down slightly from 1992.
Other items were $141 million for the national aerospace plane technology program, $171 million for university research grants, $180 million for the strategic environmental research and development program, $9 million for World Cup USA and $2.7 million for the National Board for the Promotion of Rifle Practice.
Funding not given by Congress included $1.6 million for the presidential inauguration, $3 million for the Boy Scout Jamboree, $1 million for
homeless shelters and $16 million for the Navy's Blue Angles flying team.
The Pentagon also spent $5.7 million to help control the Los Angeles riots last year.
The GAO report quoted military officials as saying the Los Angeles riot duty helped junior officers gain command experience and gave troops real-world training. Mobilizing for Hurricane Inki was similar to mobilizing for war.
On the negative side, officials said they were concerned that combat units could miss opportunities for core military training and that equipment wore out faster when, used in airlifts and other international peacekeeping and humanitarian missions.
The report was prepared for Rep. Floyd Spence, R-S.C., the ranking Republican on the House Armed Services Committee.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 30, 1993
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Hold the phone book City and KU set up recycling bins
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Doug Hesse / KANSAM
Joshua Freeman, job coach for Community Living Opportunities, stands by a box full of last year's phone books that are ready to be recycled. Freeman was at the Wal-Mart recycling center yesterday where the books were picked up by the phone company for recycling.
Two years of recycling have saved about 800 trees, coordinator says
By Liz Kiinger
Kansan staffwriter
Although old telephone books may balance an uneven table or make a nifty drink coaster, many directories end up in the trash and eventually become part of America's growing landfills.
"There are tens of thousands of phone books distributed every year in Lawrence," Ask said. "The combined effect of all of these being thrown away is a big issue. This is a really good example of the kind of issue where it's a number of small actions that combine to make a big impact on the environment."
Telephone books will be recycled in an attempt to reduce unnecessary waste at KU and in Lawrence through Dec. 15, said Sue Ask, associate environmental ombudsman. The recycling effort is timed with the recent arrival of the new Southwestern Bell directories, she said.
Phone books may be recycled on campus in bins at Carruth O'Leary Hall, the Burge Union and between Haworth and Summerfield halls, Ask said. Off-campus recycling bins are at all Lawrence Dillons stores, City Hall, Wal-Mart, Simple Goods General Store, Haskell Indian Nations University and Southwestern Bell Telephone.
"We're hoping to have everyone participate who gets phone books," Ask said.
Mike Scott, recycling coordinator at Lawrence Southwestern Bell, said his company began a recycling program in Lawrence three years ago.
"Lawrence was a community that was ripe for this type of project,"
Scott said. "We got it going, and it's been a great success."
Last year 33,000 phone books were collected in Lawrence, Scott said. In 1991, the first year of the recycling effort, 70,000 directories were collected, he said.
"It just seemed like people had been ' holding on to them for a long time," Scott said.
Scott said Lawrence's recycling efforts in the past two years saved
about 800 large trees,125 barrels of oil and 150 cubic yards of landfill space.
"I think that has a very good impact on the environment when you're talking about those numbers," Scott said. "And that's just one community."
Recycled phone books are taken to Central Fiber, a large recycling company in Wellsville, where the books will be made into mulch and insulation materials.
Lark Oxler, Lenexa junior, is one of many KU students who will be reminded of the impact AIDS has made on their lives during World AIDS Day tomorrow.
By Liz Klinger Kansan staff writer
"I just found out two days ago that one of my instructors died of AIDS, probably one of the most inspirational men I've ever met," Oxler said.
World AIDS Day erases negativity
Remembering the 204,390 people who have died from complications of AIDS since 1981 is just one of the goals of World AIDS Day, an event sponsored by the World Health Organization designed to raise awareness about the fatal disease.
Oxler studied modern dance last summer at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in Pasadena, Calif., under Dana Landers. Although Landers' physical condition deteriorated during the six-week course, Oxler said he maintained a positive attitude that made her look forward to his classes.
"Now I have somebody to think about and remember," Oxler said.
About 1.5 million people in the United States may have HIV, said Janine Demo, coordinator of health education student health services. In Kansas, there have been 1,031 cases of AIDS and 649 AIDS-related deaths since 1981. Demo said. There have also been 849 cases of HIV from July 1990 to September 1993 reported in Kansas, she said.
Dealing with AIDS and HIV is not only difficult for its victims, but also for the friends and family members of those afflicted, said Allen Omoto, chairman of the board of directors for the Douglas County AIDS Project, 2619 W. Sixth St., Suite F. The project focuses on helping those affected by AIDS and educating the people about the disease.
"Societally speaking, there still is a lot of negativity associated with HIV disease, and I think we need to strive toward a more compassionate response to people with HIV," Omuto said. "People who are affected by the disease are afraid to tell other people. They might lose their jobs or their friends or their insurance. That's a tremendous amount of stress for people who are already stressed by their disease."
This year's theme for World AIDS Day is "Time to Act" — a sentiment that students should consider, Demo said. Although most students are
Tomorrow:
World AIDS Day
A U.S. postal stamp recognizing AIDS awareness will be unveiled at noon at Lawrence's main post office, 645 Vermont St. The unveiling will feature short presentations by elected officals, members of the Douglas County AIDS Project and the Lawrence post office.
Peer educators from Watkins Memorial Health Center's center for sexual services will distribute red AIDS awareness ribbons and educational literature from noon until 4 p.m. in the Kansas Union.
Source: Kansan staff research
Dan Schauer/DANBAN
aware of AIDS, issues such as mutual monogamy, trust and protected sex are often not discussed among sexual partners, she said. The attitude of feeling invincible to AIDS, which is shared not only by students, but people in general, must be changed, she said.
Residence halls participate in Toys for Tots
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
KU students can help make this holiday season a little more fun for kids in the Lawrence area.
Beginning today, all of KU's residence halls will be collecting toys for the annual Toys for Tots Campaign. The Salvation Army, the Marine Corps Reserve and Sunflower Cablevision are organizing the drive to collect toys to give to needy families living in and around Lawrence.
"We're not expecting many students to give us cash, but some 13- and 14-year-olds will probably appreciate that more than Barbie dolls," she said.
Nikki Reed, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, and programming coordinator for the KU Association of Residence Halls, said boxes would be placed in the residence assistants' rooms of every floor in every residence hall. She said this was the first year that AURH had organized a toy campaign in the halls.
Reed said that new toys and used toys in good condition would be accepted through Dec. 10. Money and clothing also will be accepted in the campaign.
Reed said she and 10 other students from the residence halls would be counting the toys and other contributions at the end of the campaign. The floor that contributed the most would receive $150 to be put into their general floor fund.
"They'll also appear on TV during Sunflower Cablevision's benefit telethon for the campaign," she said.
Sunflower Cablevision will sponsor the Toys for Tots Campaign telleton in mid-December, she said.
Campaign television host Dee Brown said Reed said that students who did not live in residence halls could make contributions to the campaign at the residence hall of their choice.
Milton Scott, assistant director of student housing, said he was happy to see AURH involved in the campaign.
"It's a chance to spread the wealth in a sense — to help out a few families," Scott said.
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Officially, unemployment remains at 2.5 percent. According to an Asahi Bank report, that would be equivalent to 6.5 percent in the United States.
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Outlook grim for Japan's market
Lack of good news blamed for latest stock market drop
Now, he faces mounting pressure to make the economy his No.1 concern.
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On the positive side, prices aren't rising, public works spending has grown by an average 14 percent in three years, 21 percent in 1993, and the discount rate is at its lowest level ever — 1.75 percent. However, investment has not picked up. Help wanted signs appear on most Tokyo city
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Many businesses have announced job cuts or cutbacks in production.
"The stock market is warning of a bottomless downturn," an editorial in the newspaper *Mainichi* warned yesterday. "To prevent a disaster, effective economic programs need to be implemented quickly."
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Last month, Japanese manufacturers reported sharp drops in profits across the board, and department-store sales were down. Japan's auto
Yesterday, the Tokyo Stock Market's key index plunged to its lowest level this year. After hours of panicky trading, the 225-issue Nikkei Stock Average shed 647.61 points, to close at 16,078.71. Analysts said the drop was not a reaction to any specific event, but the lack of good news.
look forward to," said Richard C. Koo, senior economist at Nomura Research Institute.
It capped a monthlong decline of more than 3,600 points and added to snowballing pessimism over the prospects for an economic recovery.
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THE NEWS in brief
Navy admiral claims innocence in assaults of Tailhook scandal
The Navy's top admiral today denied he visited the floor of a Las Vegas hotel when women were harassed during the 1991 Tailhook convention.
"I was not there," said Adm. Frank B. Kelso II, chief of naval operations.
Kelso testified in a hearing to determine whether Cmdrs. Thomas Miller and Gregory Tritt will face a court-martial. In all, 83 women say they were assaulted on Saturday night, Sept. 7, 1991, on the third floor of the hotel where the convention was taking place.
Kelso's appearance came two months after Navy Secretary John Dalton tried to fire the admiral, saying he showed lack of leadership in the Tailhook matter. Kelso, 60, kept his job when defense Secretary Les Aspin overruled Dalton.
Kelso told military judge Capt. William T. Vest Jr. that he attended the convention to give a speech on Friday, Sept., 6, 1991, and visited the hotel's third floor that night.
The next night, Kelso said, he was on the hotel's main floor attending a banquet and gambling in the casino.
Defense attorneys said 33 people told Pentagon investigators they saw Kelso on the third floor on the night of Sept. 7.
ROYAL OAK, Mich. Kevorkian arrest warrant issued
Ajudge issued an arrest warrant yesterday for Dr. Jack Kevorkian on a new charge of assisting a suicide. Kevorkian was declared a fugitive after falling to surrender when authorities said he had promised to.
The judge signed the warrant charging Kevorkian for last month's suicide of 72-year-old Merian Frederick, said Larry Kozma of the Oakland County Prosecutor's Office.
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Christmas display gets out of hand
Neighbors sue over enthusiastic display of holiday lights
The Associated Press
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — For years, Jennings and Mitzi Osborne have caused traffic jams as they've dazzled passersby with their vast and ever-growing Christmas displays, which twinkle with more than a million lights.
But when they bought the houses next door to expand, neighbors decided they had had enough electrified holiday cheer. Their lawsuit, demanding that the Osborns pull the plug on their holiday display, went to trial Monday.
The Osborne's say their light show, begun in 1986, is their constitutionally protected way of sharing the sea.
son's cheer.
The lawsuit was filed after the Osbornes, who own a medical testing laboratory, strung 1.5 million lights last year and bought the houses on both sides of them with the promise of a bigger spectacle this year.
They haven't disclosed their electric bill, but one year they blew a transformer and blacked out part of their affluent neighborhood.
"It involves the construction and operation of an enormous and spectacular Christmas light display, in a residential area, of such size and extravagance that it has become a tourist attraction," attorney Gary Corum said in his opening statement on behalf of the neighbors who are suing.
The Osbornes' lawyer, Sam Peroni, said shutting down the display would violate his clients' First Amendment rights to freedom of
He said that apart from the normal increase in Christmastime traffic, neighbors suffer no harm from the display. The Osbornes' house-turned-Christmas card sits on Cantrell Road, a thoroughfare technically designated as a state highway and heavily used by suburban commuters.
speech and religion.
Pulaski County Chancery Judge Ellen Brantley acknowledged powerful feelings exist on both sides, but admonished all parties to "recognize the spirit of the season, keep a cheerful outlook and keep tempers under control."
The trial is being held in a borrowed federal courtroom to accommodate all the spectators. The judge has set aside more than a week to hear the case.
During the December extravaganza, visitors approaching the gate of
the Osborne home hear recorded Christmas music and receive candy canes and color postcards of the display.
Last year's light show included miles of red lights draped over the house, yard and brick wall. Christmas-tree-shaped masts of lights towered 80 feet above the house. Multicolored lights flashed from a suspended 30-foot globe. An illuminated carousel rotated in the air. Mickey Mouse drove a steam engine atop the brick wall, where lighted wise men, camels, Santa Claus, a sleigh and reindeer twinkled and 6-foot-high letters beamed "Merry Christmas" and "Happy New Year."
This year's display has the same, and more.
The Osbornes' attorney rejected the plaintiffs' offer Monday to settle for a toned-down display, saying he doubted the two sides could agree on one.
An accent on talk
An accent or a dialect can make a person vulnerable to prejudices and discrimination, but for some it's a way of expressing individuality
n. 1. The relative prominence of a region is greater intensity or by a greater intensity or by a smaller intensity.
2. vocal prominence or emphasis related to a
2. vocal prominence or emphasis related to a
particularly significant event of publication
N
ooo
By Brian James
No more than a word or a phrase will tip off most people that Linda Larivee is from Massachusetts.
When she drops the "r" sound in some words and adds it to others,—such as, "Pawking the caw is a good ideal"—heads turn and people look at her differently.
Often they will ask what it's like to live in Boston, Larrivee said. But people with accents and dialects do not always enjoy their different way of talking, or in Larrivee's case, "tawking."
She said that having a Boston dialect often meant dealing
Larrivee moved from central Massachusetts to Lawrence four years ago.
"If the accent is going to affect me, usually it will be in a negative way," said Larrivee, a clinical supervisor at the University of Kansas' speech-language-hearing clinic.
with people's negative perceptions or stereotypes of East Coast natives. On a recent day at lunch, for example, she said she was introduced to a woman by a mutual friend
"She heard my accent and assumed I wasn't nice either," she said.
Diane Paul-Brown, director of speech-language pathology at the American Speech-Language and Hearing Association in Rockville, Md., said an accent or a dialect made a person vulnerable to prejudices and sometimes discrimination.
"When I said, 'How are ya?' she said, 'Oh, I bet you're from out East.' And you know, she wouldn't talk to me for the rest of the time." Larrivee said.
Larrivie learned later that the woman had recently traveled to Boston and had not gotten along with the people she met.
An accent is a phonetic trait from a person's original language that is carried over to a second language. For example, an American can tell the difference between a German and a French speaker based on their accents, Paul-Brown said.
A dialect is a specific form of a language spoken in a
baw of boy
baw of boy
baw of boy
baw of boy
baw of boy
baw of boy
baw of boy
baw of boy
baw of boy
baw of boy
baw of boy
baw of boy
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baw of boy
baw of boy
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baw of boy
baw of boy
"The important thing to remember is that the problem lies with perceptions,
not with accents, Paul-Brown said. Many people used the words "accent" and "dialect" synonymously, but they have different meanings, she said.
å pet þay å sæn å father å pet þay å sæn å pet þay å sæn å pet þay å sæn å pet þay å sæn å pet þay å sæn å pet þay å sæn å pet þay å sæn å pet þay å sæn å pet þay å sæn å pet þay å sæn å pet þay å sæn å pet
out loudly or quite in front of this word. Which is it? 21.
æscens øcens æsyn)n11 The relative prominence of a particular syllabic or pronunciation by the use of modulation of vowel and/or accent predominantly or by variation or modu-
pitch or tone.
4 A mark or symbol used to indicate certain language to indicate level of speech to the grasped to understand level of hearing.
ae
ae
given geographic area. A dialect dif-
aven geographic area. A dialect differs from a country's standard language and encompasses differences in pronunciation and the use of regional expressions. A New England accent or a southern drawl are examples of dialects, she said. Rob Burisek, Downers Grove, Ill., senior, said he catches himself when he pronounces words "like a Chicagoan."
her cat a as in father, as inclusive
Words with the letter "a" — such as dad, accent, even Chicago — were especially troublesome, he said.
Complete strangers give me crap about it," Burisek said. "I'll be talking to someone for just a few seconds and they'll ask me if I'm from Chicago. It's crazy."
For KU international students, a heavy foreign accent often hinders communication with other KU students.
Eliecer Osorio, Herrera, Panama, sophomore, said that even though he had been at the University for two years, he still had to repeat words and phrases for people.
"It gets annoying when people cannot understand me again and again," he said. "It's a nightmare."
Osorio said he had difficulty understanding some Americans because of their dialects.
"It was like he was from another country," Osorio said. "I was answering him, 'yea, yea, OK, sure,' but I couldn't understand anything."
For example, when Osorio was traveling last summer to Tallahassee, Fla., on a bus, he could not understand a man from Tennessee who was sitting next to him.
Osorio said he thought he had improved his English vocabulary but needed to work on his pronunciation. Osorio thought he could lose his accent entirely in another year.
But sometimes losing an accent is tougher than people think, Paul-Brown said.
"They have to be strongly motivated and embrace the local language and accent," she said.
Sometimes the process is easier if they find help from a professional
Sometimes the process is easier if they find help from a professional speech pathologist or consultant, Paul-Brown said. However, accent reduction may be costly. Some private speech services offer 10- to 15-week courses and cost as much as $250 an hour. Group lessons and community college courses can be less intensive but usually offer better rates and a great deal of peer support. Paul-Brown stresses at the idea of an accent-reduc
that the idea of an accent-reduction program is not to remove all
traces of a person's native speech patterns.
"The focus is to enhance communication, not to suppress that person's linguistic culture," she said.
Larrivee and others said they were proud of their accents or dialects.
"I think an accent is a mark of individuality," Larrivee said. "It's part of my personality."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PAGE 9
NOVEMBER 30,1993
KULIFE
People and places at the University of Kansas.
Need a gift for that special stoner? It's 'Deals in Dopesville'
Abraham Krupinski, 19, and a 17-year-old roommate were arrested in Milwaukee in February on drug distribution charges. Recovered from their home, according to police, were 17 marijuana plants, gardening supplies, two books on marijuana cultivation and a hand-lettered board game they created, roughly resembling Monopoly, called Dealing in Dopesville. In the game, two or four players toss dice and make drug deals in different neighborhoods. In place of Chance and Community Chest cards are "Passport" and "Car alarm" cards.
Oh, no not another wedgie
In June an Iowa administrative law judge ruled that former dishwasher Tom Schneckloth had "good cause" for quitting his job at a restaurant in Glenwood, Iowa, and was thus entitled to unemployment benefits. The restaurant's owners — Kathy and Dan Smith — often had marital fights on the premises and would sometimes throw kitchen knives at each other, endangering Schneckloth and other employees.
So much for unity
Most of the 36 inmates jailed in Mason City, Iowa, started a hunger strike on the morning of May 12 to protest the quality and portions of the meals served to them. The strike went well at breakfast, but inmates became weary and dropped all of their demands by lunchtime.
Workplace hazards
Weirdo community
USA Today reported in October that two soccer coaches were asked to resign at Smith Academy in Hatfield, Mass., because they had permitted the older players to haze younger ones by pulling up their underpants, giving them "wedgies."
The London newspaper The Guardian reported in October that Great Britain's Department of National Heritage is likely to outlaw the Dec. 18 startup of a new satellite TV service, "TVs on TV" — an all transvestite channel. The channel originated in Germany. A representative said the voyeur audience is expected to be at least 10 times the crossdresser audience.
No wonder cats hate people
Fat pigs get no respect
A hospital in Birmingham, England, came under fire in August for its attempts to defray the cost of an expensive, sophisticated cancer scan-
See Weird,Page 10.
10
Tuesday, November 30.1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Techno-lust lights up the screens in on-line dating
.The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Susan MacCoy, a 46-year-old hairdresser, steps into a room filled with regulars and a couple of newcomers. She glances around, notices a couple of guys she has dated and lights up a cigarette.
Men call her "goddess." Women do too, though few have actually seen her. MacCoy chats, flirts and has a good time — all without leaving her home, all via computer.
Computer bulletin boards are being called the bar scene of the '90s, an electronic forum where people share their most intimate—and often sexual—thoughts.
"it's tech-lust," MacCoy said. "It's the big bar in cyberspace, except you don't have to do your hair, put on your makeup, and you can show up anytime you want."
Hy Roseman, 36, of Schaumburg, Ill., said he and his wife signed into an electronic forum for excitement. "There's so much flirting going on, it's just like being in a singles bar," he said.
MacCoy and Roseman are among several million people who subscribe to consumer-oriented, on-line services. They range from the thousands of small bulletin boards run by
hobbyists to big commercial enterprises such as Prodigy, CompuServe, America OnLine and GEnie.
Some services offer news and information, let a subscriber pay bills, trade stocks and shop.
Many also offer "live" interaction, with individuals and groups trading messages while logged on. That's where on-line dating goes on.
Critics call it a "chilling" trend that leads to broken hearts.
Boosters say it's good, clean fun and, just possibly, a way to meet the person of your dreams.
The setup is eerily similar to bars. Most interactive, on-line services charge men fees ranging from $10 to 600 an hour. Women get in free.
The whopping phone bill that comes from using a modem to talk to people thousands of miles away can give users a headache to top the worst hangover. Although some networks have local phone numbers, many charge fees that depend on the distance between users.
Conversations range from playful banter to pornographic come-ons. Various companies offer "alternative lifestyles" services, including chaitines for gays and lesbians.
Ron Peiril, who owns a Chicago-based computer bulletin board for adults called Compu-Erotaia, said many people signed on to avoid the bar scene.
"There are a lot of people on-line who are sort of disillusioned with the singles bars or meeting people through work or school," he said. "On-line, you get to know the person from the inside out. You see what a person is really like on the inside before you ever see the outside features, like how good-looking a person is."
Psychologist Michael Broder called that howwash.
"It's chilling. For a lot of people, it's a fantasy life," said Broder, an author on the subject. "People have to be advised they can't take this stuff too seriously. I've heard of a lot of hearts being broken.
"No real person can measure up to personalities one sees in computer messages. When these people try to have a real relationship, they're going to wind up feeling as though they have been cheated."
Indeed, in a widely publicized case in California, several women who used an on-line service compared notes and discovered a computer lothario had professed undying
And the Justice Department recently warned that parents should keep a close eye on young computer junkies to ensure that they're not contacted by pedophiles via electronic mail. On-line users say the lesswidest come-ons often are from youngsters who use their parents' sign-ons.
love to each of them
Sociologist Bernard Beck of Northwestern University, in the Chicago suburb of Evanston, called on-line dating a natural progression of technology and the social scene.
"The fact is that there's been a continuing problem of how people who don't have stable social connections and who are adults can find and meet people," he says. "For a while, it was fitness — going to the gym to meet people."
"Now, it's the development of new technologies that allow you to stay safely at home and do your business. It's chilling, though, that our general social world has become more frightening to us, and we are kind of huddling behind our safe four walls," he said.
He said fear of crime and catching AIDS likely are behind the increase in on-line users.
Rebekah Goodwin, 39, said she met her husband, Peter, through an early service provided by America OnLine, which has some 800,000 subscribers.
"We became really good friends on-line," she says. "He was in Massachusetts, I was in California. We actually had, I believe, fallen in love on-line without ever meeting."
The two decided to take a two-week cross-country car trip, later developed a phone relationship and three years later were married.
Mrs. Goodwin, who had a bilateral mastecomy and calls herself "mildly agoraphobic" said that without the help of a computer, she likely would be alone now.
"I felt very unlovable, and I certainly wouldn't have given anyone in person a chance to get close enough to me to fall in love," she said. "Since it was on-line, we were able to interact as two people, rather than two bodies. I think on-line services provide a really unique opportunity if you use them wisely."
Weird: No respect
Her view is echoed by MacCoy, who owns a hair salon in Chicago. She said she met her boyfriend through her subscription to an online service.
"What people need to realize is that once you get into a real-life relationship, there's work to be done there," she said.
Continued from Page 9.
-er by renting it out during down times to local farmers, so they could use it to scan pigs' bodies to assure that only the meatiest ones were allowed to breed.
A politician who's anti-politicians?
In April, Arkansas Gov. Jim Guy Tucker vetoed a bill that would have encouraged the state's public schools to use important public documents in class. He said he specifically objected to students' being exposed to the Congressional Record, which he said contained "bizarre polemics on religious and political positions."
Different strokes for different folks
In September, Warrant Officer Gregory Crandall was buried with full military honors in Arlington Cemetery over the protests of his family. The Pentagon said that Crandall died in Laos in 1971, but the family continues to hope that he survived because the only part of his body recovered was a tooth, which was placed alone in a full-sized steel casket for the burial.
Texas twine ball squashes Kansans' pride
Cawker City has tizzy; Ripley's won't believe their ball is biggest
The Associated Press
"The question is, is there any point in having the world's second-largest ball of twine?" asked Cawker City resident Merle Schreuber. "I think we've been resting on our laurels for too long. Maybe it's time to get this
CAWKER CITY, Kan. — A bail of twine in Texas has stolen an honor held for more than 30 years by this small southeast Kansas town, and residents here are vowing to win back their title.
town back in gear."
The new world's largest ball of twine is the work of J.C. Payne of Valley View, Texas. His ball of twine, measured at 10 feet high, 41/2 feet around and 13,000 pounds, was named largest by Ripley's Believe It Or Not!, which is building a museum around the ball set to open next year in Branson, Mo.
Ripley's bought the ball of twine for more than $20,000.
Cawker City's ball measures 40 feet around and weighs 16,292 pounds. Its unofficial caretaker says the Texastwine ball might be judged bigger, but it's not pure twine.
"Iheard it had plastic twine and all kinds of twine," Harold Reined said.
"But our ball is all sisal. We're all sisal."
Sisal is a strong fiber related to henequen, which comes from the agave plant grown in Mexico. Many farmers use it to wrap hales.
Edward L. Meyer of Ripley's has seen balls of twine in Crowker City; Darwin, Minn. and Valley Views, Texas. He said all three were big, but the Texas ball was definitely the biggest.
"He literally stopped just when he got big enough to be the biggest," Meyer said of the Texas twine ball's creator. "He was motivated purely by a competitive urge to be the biggest."
People in Darwin once said their ball was 40 feet around and weighed
8. 7 tons, but Reling says those measurements were taken when the ball was wet.
Ripley's judgment of the twine balls will not be the last word on the subject, most Cawker Citians said.
"I'm sure, even as we speak, someone is out there feverishly stringing twine together, making a bigger ball," Ripley's Meyer said. "It's only a matter of time before this record is broken."
In Cawker City, work on the twine ball will begin again at the August "Twine-a-thon" picnic, which has been a tourist attraction since 1961.
"I'm sure we'll wrap a little faster this summer and make up for lost ground," Shirley Laft said.
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
2.
Tuesdav. November 30. 1993
11
Aussies defeat' Hawks after 2 OTs
Australia ends U.S. tour in Allen with 7-2 record
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
The night began with the Australian National team receiving T-shirts and handshakes from the Kansas Jayhawks.
It ended, a 40-minute regulation and two five-minute overtakes later, with an Aussie player shouting and making obscene gestures at the Kansas crowd.
Aussie guard Shane Heal, at the end of both overtime periods, had some words with a few of the 13,200 fans that came to Allen Field House to watch the 93-82 double-overtime defeat of Kansas by the Aussies.
"The crowd was on us all game," Heal said.
"I just wanted them to know I heard them."
Heal's teammate, guard Andrew Gaze, was quick to defend him.
Although the game was an exhibition — Kansas' record is still 4-0 — the Jayhawks were upset with the outcome.
"Any time someone's keeping score and there are fans in the seats, it feels like a game, and we want to win," said Jayhawk senior forward Patrick Richey. "But this was just a glorified practice, it wasn't our best practice, though."
The Jayhawks made many errors in the game. Poor execution and missed free throws were some of them.
Kansas led the Aussies 53-42 with 7:32 remaining in regulation. Instead of the Jayhawks putting the game away, Australia scratched its way back into the game.
"We were in position to take care of the ball and salt the game away," said Kansas coach Roy Williams. "And we make mistakes and miss free throws and give them a chance to get back in it."
For Kansas, the free throws were anything but free.
The Jayhaws made just 10 of 25 charities, including splitting pairs of free throws three times in final two minutes of regulation and missing six consecutive in the first overtime.
Williams said that he used the exhibition to get his young players some experience in late-game situations. All 11 scholarship players saw more than 10 minutes of playing time, and each of the four freshman saw time in the overtime periods.
"Iplayed some people that I might not have played if it was a regulation game in certain situations," Williams said. "But those guys I
Australia 93, Kansas 82 (2 OTs)
RANKING Player fgm/fga ftm/fta tp Richey 4-4 0-0 8 Scott 5-13 1-5 11 Ostertag 11-16 4-6 26 Vaughn 0-3 0-4 0 Woodberry 7-19 4-8 18 Proud 2-5 0-0 4 Pollard 1-3 1-2 3 Pearson 1-6 0-0 2 Gurley 1-3 0-0 3 Rayford 3-5 0-0 7 Williams 0-3 0-0 0 Totals 35-80 10-25 82
AUSTRALIAN NATIONALS
Ronaldson 11-16 3-3 26
Vlahov 6-11 1-1 14
Borner 1-2 2-4 4
Gaze 10-19 2-4 23
Heal 4-9 2-2 14
Goodwin 1-2 0-0 2
Maher 1-4 0-0 2
McKay 0-2 0-0 0
Reidy 2-3 0-0 5
Hubbard 1-2 0-0 3
**Totals** **37-70** **10-14** **93**
Halftime Kansas 32. Australia 27
Rafftime Kansas 32', Australia 27'
Regulation Kansas 66, Australia 27'
Regulation Kansas 11, Australia 27'
3-point golf Kansas 2-13 (Gurley 1-3, Rayford 1-1,
Pearson 4-0, Woodberry 0-6), Australia 9-24
(Ronaldson 1.4, Vlahor 1-3, Gaze 1-6, Heal
4-8, Reidy 1-1, Hubbard 2-1). Rebounds
Kansas 44 (Scott and Pollard 8), Australia
41 (Ronaldson 13). Assists Kansas 19
(Reidy 1-1, Hubbard 2-1). Rebounds
kansas 17, Australia 22, Technical
foulte Kansas 17, Australia 22, Technical
foulte Australian bench. Attendance 13,200.
was playing have to play, too. It's not just Steve Woodberry and Richard Scott on this team, we got other guys that are wearing Kansas iersseys, and they have to get read."
However poor the Jayhawks did play, Kansas players said the Aussies deserved credit for their performance.
"They're a good team," said senior forward Richard Scott. "We had some break downs, and they capitalized on our mistakes like a good team would."
Offensively, the Aussies were led by forward Anthony Ronaldson, who scored 26 points and grabbed 13 rebounds. Gaze added 23 points.
For Kansas, junior center Greg Ostertag dumped in 26 points, while blocking three shots. Woodberry scored 18, including seven in the first overtime.
With the loss, Kansas joins Kentucky, Nevada-Las Vegas, UCLA, Maryland, Long Beach State and North Carolina State as victims of the Aussies. Only Duke and Virginia have defeated the Australian Nationals, who finished their American tour with a 7-2 record.
AQUAS
00
Australia
10
ALIA
11
Kansas junior center Greg Ostertag attempts to make a jump shot around Australia National's Andrew Gaze. Ostertag scored 26 points in the game, but Kansas lost 93-82 in double overtime.
KANSAS
33
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Kansas junior guard Greg Gurley and junior forward Sean Pearson defend against Andrew Vlahov of the Australia National Team.
Australia's height helps pull off double OT victory
Bv Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
The No. 3 Kansas Jayhawks lost to a big team last night. The Australian national team used their big players and a physical style of play to defeat Kansas 93-82 at Allen Field House.
Australia had six players taller than 6-foot-7, and only two of the team's 12 players weighed less than 190 pounds. The Australians used that height and weight advantage to hold Kansas to 43.8 percent shooting from the field.
Australian coach Barry Barnes said that the low number of foul shots, 14 for Australia, surprised him considering the physical style both teams played.
"I'm really pleased to come off our tour and be 7 and 2 against the caliber of teams that we've played," said Barnes.
He said that the defense Kansas played against his team was some of the best he had seen during the team's nine-game tour, which included Kentucky, UCLA and Nevada Las Vegas.
Barnes said that the size was a factor in
Kansas senior forward Patrick Richey said that Kansas would face similar physical teams later in the season.
the physical style of play that dominated the game.
Kansas tried to keep Australia from getting into a rhythm on offense by switching from a man-to-man defense to a 1-3-1 zone defense.
"It was physical out there, but we have to play some physical teams, so we have to get physical ourselves," Richey said.
"We saw a lot of tape and worked on it," Barnes said.
Guard Shane Heal said that the team got more confident as the game went into the second overtime. He said the fact that the team was made up of older, more experienced players helped during the overtimes.
Kansas coach Roy Williams said the Jayhawks would have to deal with physical teams in the Big Eight.
"They were physical, but we'll face some physical teams down the road," Williams said. "No one is more physical than Missouri."
AP Men's Basketball Top 25
The top 25 teams in the Associated Press' college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, record through Nov. 28, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and pre season ranking:
rank team record pts. pr
1. Kentucky (30) 1-0 1,536 2
2. Arkansas (14) 0-0 1,478 3
**3. Kansas (13)** **4-0** **1,475** **6**
4. N. Carolina (2) 3-1 1,402 1
5. Michigan (3) 1-0 1,397 5
6. Duke (1) 1-0 1,364 4
7. Temple (1) 0-0 1,144 8
**8. Oklahoma St.** **2-0** **1,057** **10**
9. Massachusetts 4-1 982 18
10. UCLA (1) 1-0 915 14
11. Louisville 0-1 889 7
12. Virginia 0-0 714 16
13. California 1-1 710 12
14. Purdue 3-0 671 21
15. Minnesota 2-2 625 9
16. Illinois 0-0 615 17
17. Georgia Tech 0-1 528 13
18. Syracuse 1-0 526 20
19. Arizona 0-0 436 19
20. Vanderbilt 1-0 353 24
21. Indiana 0-1 337 11
22. G. Washington 0-0 286 23
23. Cincinnati 1-1 249 22
24. Wisconsin 1-0 237 25
25. Georgetown 1-1 214 15
Others receiving votes: Marquette 39, Connecticut 99, Florida 90, Ohio 82, Bayer, Ohio 81, Boston College 79, Maryland 54, W. Kentucky 47, LSU 44, Memphis St. 43, Mlouisur 31, Penn 26, Tulane 62, Leavenworth 22, Commonwealth 22, Nebraska 21, Seton Hall 21, Alabama 18, New Mexico St. 18, Pepperdine 14, New Orleans 12, Washington St. 11, Texas 10, Buttere 6, Georgia 6, West Virginia 5, Tennessee St. 4, Arizona St. 3, Oklahoma 3, Brigham Young 2, Coppin St. 1, Idaho 1, Oldham D, UNLV 1.
Source: The Associated Press
KANSAN
Cuban athletes seek asylum in Puerto Rico
By David Beard
The Associated Press
SANJUAN, Puerto Rico — In pairs, Cuban athletes evaded their security guards and informers to defect during regional championships. They sneaked out from the pool, from the playing field or from their beds.
Waiting outside Immigration and Naturalization Service offices to make their formal appeals for political asylum, eight athletes said yesterday they had each plotted with a best friend, sometimes months in advance, to escape return to their Communist homeland.
They didn't tell their families. One championship weightlifter, 23-year-old Emilio Lara, said he didn't even tip off big brother Pablo Lara, a world record-holding weightlifter, who had also been among the 900-some Cubans here for the competition.
"You can't trust anybody," Emilio Lara said, munching on potato chips from a vending machine. "We took the chance at night and left."
The Cubans have been melting away from the Central American and Caribbean Games in record numbers. Thirty-nine Cuban athletes and officials had departed as of yesterday, including top basketball player Andres Gibert; 25 had sought formal political asylum by midday, the Immigration and Naturalization Service reported.
Exiles and INS officials expect the total to climb before the competition ends late today.
Cuban exiles call the defections an embarrassment to President Fidel Castro and say the escapes are spurred on by political repression and Cuba's downward-spiraling economy. The defectors agree, but add that their decision took in a combination of circumstances, including being in a Spanish-speaking U.S. territory and a generous American immigration law.
A 1967 act of Congress grants residency to nearly every Cuban who makes it here, a status not given to any other nationality. Despite protests from others fleeing political persecution, including Haitians, there has been no attempt to change the law.
"If we were in some place like Oklahoma, I would not have gone," said roller skater Dany Garcia, 18, who left with a teammate after competing Friday night in the southern town of Salinas.
Antonio Perez, who with fellow water polo player Norge Blay took off after leaving the pool Friday night in nearby Ponce, said the two had been planning their escape since first discussing the subject months ago while walking on a Havana street.
"If he didn't make it, I wasn't going. And vice versa. It was all or nothing," said the 6-foot-3 Perez, dressed in a new white polo shirt and jeans bought by a Cuban exile group Sunday.
The 19-year-old said there was no future for Cuba's youth.
"I want to work, to study and to have what's mine," Perez said.
Colts continue losing ways
The Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS — The Indianapolis Colts, moving the ball and threatening a first-quarter touchdown, decided to get cute.
Stanlev Richard wasn't fooled.
The Colts went from their own 25-yard line to the Chargers' 26 in seven plays on the opening drive of the game. Then Jeff George handed off to running back Anthony Johnson, who hurled an under thrown pass to Jessie Hester.
"The trick play didn't work for them," the San Diego safety said of his interception that ended the only Indianapolis scoring threat in last night's 31-10 loss to the Chargers.
Richard stepped in front of Hester and picked off the ball at the San Diego 3.
"They drove down the field and came up with no points," said
That's nothing new for the Colts, whose offense has not scored a touchdown in the first quarter of any game this season. The pass from Johnson was the closest the Colts came to scoring in the entire game.
The Colts were getting good yardage early from the pass. Jeff George hit his first four attempts, including an 18-yarder to Hester on the play before Richard's interception.
Richard.
Johnson, who rushed only twice for a net minus-1 yard, left the game on the Colts' second possession with a sprained right ankle.
The interception set the tone for the struggling Colts, who also lost the ball twice on fumbles in the second half.
The Colts have seenawed from 1-15 in 1991 to 7-9 last year and 3-8 this season with seven losses in the past eight games.
Stull relieved of coaching duties
The Associated Press
COLUMBIA, Mo. — A solemn Bob Stull was relieved of his football coaching duties at Missouri on Monday and was named assistant athletic director.
Athletic director Dan Devine said the decision was reached mutually between himself, Stull and Missouri Chancellor Charles Kiesler.
Both Devine and Kiesler took pains to praise Stull's integrity, but it was clear that the bottom line was winning at once-proud Missouri. The Tigers completed their 10th consecutive losing season Nov. 25
by losing in a shut out to traditional rival Kansas, 28-0.
"While it was a very difficult decision to make the coaching change, the chancellor, Coach Stull and I felt it was necessary in response to the negativity that surrounded the program for the last half of the season and the serious limitations such an atmosphere placed on us for next year," said Devine.
stances," he said. "We've done the best we could."
"We really believe we did what we thought was best under the circum-
Stull, who had gone on the defensive as criticism of his program mounted, said he believed he had built a solid foundation at Missouri.
Devine said Stull's coaching staff would remain until a nationwide search for a new coach is completed. A decision likely would come quickly because recruiting officially begins Dec. 1.
Still, 48, was 15-38-2 in his five seasons at Missouri. He was considered a wunderkind among coaches
Former Chicago Bears defensive coordinator Vince Tobin and Oklahoma assistant Merv Johnson have been mentioned as candidates. Each played at Missouri and coached for Devine.
after performing miracules at Massachusetts and Texas-El Paso.
Stull started 2-3, but his best season of 4-7 in 1990, but his last three years were 3-7-1, 3-8, and 3-7-1.
Missouri has had a potent offense, but made only slight improvement this year on a defense that was horrendous last year.
The losses this year included a 73-0 embarrassment at the hands of Texas A&M in the second game.
Skull's defense of the program included the traditionally tough schedule that Missouri plays, inadequate facilities and high academic standards.
1
12
Tuesday, November 30, 1993
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Thursday, December 2, 1993
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Resume Writing and Interviewing Skills for Women
Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center 115 Strong Hall. For more information, contact Roni Speicher at 804-352-5525.
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St. Louis leads the pack for NFL expansion team
City has stadium being constructed
By R.B. Fallstrom The Associated Press
ROSEMONT, III. — After all these years of waiting, the favorites to get the second NFL expansion franchise today may be the Johnny-comelaties.
St. Louis' Gateway Football Partnership, hastily assembled the day before the league awarded the first franchise to Charlotte, N.C., on Oct. 26, was considered the front-runner when the NFL owners meet for E-Day, Take Two, at a suburban Chicago hotel.
The city has the nation's 18th-largest television market — the biggest without a team — and a domed stadium under construction. Plus, there's the threat that New England owner James Busch Orthwein would move the Patriots to St. Louis if denied an expansion team.
"Other people are talking about stadiums," said Stan Kroenke, head of the St. Louis group. "We're building ours. St. Louis has got to be extremely attractive to the league."
The group also is close to adding Walter Payton, the NFL's career leading rusher. Chicago Bears owner Mike McCaskey said he would cast his vote for his former player.
Coming up fast from a standing start is the third Baltimore ownership group headed by Al Lemer, a minority owner of the Cleveland Browns. This group wasn't formed until Charlotte got a team.
The other four entries — Jacksonville, Memphis and the other two groups from Baltimore — have been around for years.
But the two other Baltimore groups, headed by Leonard "Boogie" Weinglass and Malcolm Glazer, were spurned by their own city's expansion committee. Gov. William Donald Schaefer quickly threw his support to Lerner.
Baltimore likely needed one because of its proximity to both Washington and Philadelphia. Also, the league already voted in one East Coast team when it picked Charlotte
"I think if we had stayed pat, we would have been out altogether," Schaefer said. "It's a whole new ballgame. It gives us a whole new dimension."
and had indicated it wanted the two new teams to present a balanced ticket.
"We accept the fact that we're located where we are and that the TV market is not quite that of St. Louis," said Herb Belgrad, chairman of the Maryland Stadium Authority. "We can't change those things. But when it comes to the stadium lease and the selling of luxury boxes, we're better than all the other cities."
The day begins about 8 a.m., when the expansion and finance committee meets. This will probably last all morning, and each group has been asked to be available for any last-minute questions. Lerner also may get to make a presentation.
The committee then makes a recommendation to the owners. After that, it's anybody's guess when the waiting will end. The winning city needs votes from 21 of the 28 owners, and most in the competition expect a long day.
St. Louis and Baltimore are both trying to get back into the league. St. Louis lost the Cardinals to Phoenix after the 1987 season, and Baltimore lost the Colts in 1984 when owner, Robert Irsay backed up the moving vans in the dead of the night.
Injuries scratch all but golden oldies
There's Joe Montana, 37; Phil Simms, 38; Warren Moon, 38, and even Steve DeBerg who, at 39, is the oldest player in the league.
By Dave Goldberg The Associated Press
Thirtysomething quarterbacks have been the rage this season because their younger counterparts have been victimized by injuries and inconsistency.
Throw in John Elway, 33, and Steve Young, 32, and it seems that 24-year-old Brent Favre of Green Bay is a rarity among those leading their teams toward the postseason.
The Associated Press
When it comes to quarterbacking a team toward this year's NFL playoffs, older seems to be better.
Montana, a four-time Super Bowl winner, is a perfect example.
Simms, Montana's counterpart in the Giants-40ers games of the 1980s, passed for 337 yards Sunday, his highest total in six years. On the desperation drive that led to Brad Daluiso's game-winning 54-yard field goal for the Giants, Simms took a fierce hit on third and 18, yet completed a 23-yard pass to Mark Jackson.
"Idon't think I played very well," he said after completing 18 of 32 passes for 208 yards in Kansas City's 23-7 victory Sunday over Buffalo.
Maybe not, but his return from injury seemed to inspire the Chiefs — particularly the defense, which a week earlier blew a 14 lead in a loss to Chicago.
Moon, whose throws have been intercepted 15 times in his last five games against Pittsburgh, threw for 295 yards Sunday, including a 66 yard touchdown pass, helping Houston beat the Steelers and take the lead in the AFC Central with its sixth straight win.
Three days earlier, Miami's DeBerg wisely attacked Dal' las with a short passing game during an ice-bound drive to what could become the game's most famous blocked field, goal and an eventual victory for the Dolphins.
Young threw for 462 yards as the 49ers continued their march through the NFC West. Elway had a near-perfect game as Denver beat Seattle 17-9 to remain within striking distance of Kansas City in the AFC West.
Favre was knocked silly, but came back to throw a 2-yard TD pass with 1:16 left. That gave Green Bay a 13-10 victory over Tampa Bay and a share of the lead in the NFC Central.
"We kind of pitter-patter and step on our feet until our backs are against the wall," he said. "Then it's do or die, and we do it."
THE BUGEL SOUNDS TAPS?
The loss Sunday after Daluso's 54-yard field goal for the Giants was heartbreakting.
Phoenix coach Joe Bugel has exceeded the seven-loss quota allowed by Cardinals owner Bill Bidwil. Seven of the eight defeats were by a touchdown or less.
"What do you want me to do? Sit around and suck my thumb and say: 'The ultimatum, the ultimatum,' said Bugel, now 16-43 in his four seasons as head coach.
"I've been in this game for 19 years," he said. "I think know what it takes to coach. I've been a winner my whole life. The owner wants to win too, bless his heart. There's nothing wrong with that."
Bidwill said Bugel would need to win nine games in order to keep his job.
SINCE 1972
LAWRENCE'S FOREMOST NAME IN OUTDOOR CLOTHING
HH HH SUNFLOWER HH 843-5000 804 MASSACHUSETTS
SKI BIBS AND STRETCH PANTS AT THE BOTTOM OF THE MOUNTAIN THEY SELL HELLY HANSEN SKI BIBS FOR $85, WE SELL THE SAME BIB FOR ONLY $47.95 AS THE ALTITUDE RISES, SO DOES THE PRICE.
Wetlands Preservation & the South Lawrence Trafficway
prospects and solutions, both nationally and for Haskell
An important Current Issues of the Day panel discussion about wetlands conservation and the debate over the Haskell Wetlands
8:00 pm, Thursday December 2nd Walnut Room, KU Student Union
Speakers:
证
- George Tiger - President, Haskell Board of Regents
- Joyce Wolf - Jayhawk Audubon
- Dr. Roger Boyd-Baker University Biology Professor
Sponsored By: St Lawrence Human Services Committee HINU Student Senate, & KUEnvirons
BIG 6 SPORTS CLUB
History & Tradition
Thursdays: 50¢ Draws
- BUD LIGHT
- SAMUEL ADAMS
- MOOSEHEAD
- BOULEVARD PALE ALE
Live Bands Thursday,Friday & Saturday Nights
- 2 Big Screen TV's•
A great place to watch the games!
701 Massachusetts In the basement of the Eldridge Hotel
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, November 30, 1993
13
CHRISTMAS SKI BREAKS
LODGING • LIRTS • PARTIES • PICNICS • TAXES
STEAMBOAT $199
BRECKENRIDGE
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
TELLURIDE
LAST CHANCE!
SUNCARE BEACH
Sunclare
BREASTING
TOLL FREE INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
1·800·SUNCHASE
HELP IN PREPARING FOR FINALS. Workshop includes time management, memory techniques, test-taking strategies, test anxiety FREE! Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
PREPARING FOR FINAL
FXAMS
Time management, test anxiety,
memory techniques, test-taking
strategies
FREE!
Wednesday, December 1, 7-9 p.m.
330 Strong Hall
Offered by the Student Assistance Center
Nature and the Eeg: Systemic mutation achieved!
Systematic mutation is the most impractical help for humans
whole system! Don't block human knowledge.
Help do follow on systemic mutation. Systemic
mutation is the most impractical help for humans
130 Entertainment
Exclusive KU ALUM message area shared over Fideton. Real time chat. Easy data menu! Lawrence on line/TBBS; 865-1440. Voice/help: 810-102.
Free Party Room Available at Johnny's Tavern/Up & Under.
Call 842-6377 for details.
SKI
BILL 832-2277 & 841-9111
STEAMBOAT
*JAN 2-8
*SIXNIGHTS
*4/5 DAYLIFT
*FREE PARTIES
*$259
BILL NO. 0377 B 041 0114
BENCHWARMERS
MATERIAL ISSUE from Chicago FRIDAY December 3 (ADV. TIX) at
BENCHWARMERS
COME WATCH 90210 &
MELROSE PLACE Every Wednesday
NowShowing At 7pm AND 10pm
*$3burgerbaskets
- Domestic longneck special
BENCHWARMERS
200s Employment
ATTENTION COLLEGE STUDENTS! Need financial help? School can be extremely expensive and you may not have the money to cover *osa*s. We can help! Call Faith Marketing for more information or contact us. Free 24 hr. recorded message. Call 1-833-7977-690
205 Help Wanted
1559 SIGNING BONUS. We currently are accepting applications for full and part-time licensed costometologists or barbers. 2 weeks paid vacation. ambly for Pro-Cut-03. 3500 Iowa
Part-time apt. maintenance person wanted to work weekday mornings. call 814-6846 to apply.
AA Cruise & Travel jobs. Earn $2600/mo. + travel the world free! (Caribbean, Europe, Hawaii, Anat) Air cruiser now hiring for busy holiday, cruise season. Listing Service. Call (919) 829-4398 ext. 11
ADMINISTRATIVE USER SERVICES
Study in Maternal Deadline: 12/24/1983 $850-
650/month缴金 deadline: 12/29/1983 Duties include providing microcomputer LAN, SCOUNIX support, provide application, design, documentation and deliver software training sessions for end users, provide LAN installation and problem solutions support, and other duties. Required knowledge includes computer skills, written communications skills, knowledgeable about computerized databases and their uses, experience using microcomputers, currently enrolled at KU and continued enrollment through the university's curriculum. To apply, submit a letter of application and a current resume to Ann Riat, Personnel Assistant, Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 65045. EOEA EMPLOYER
After-school baby监护 wanted
After-school babysitter wanted in my home for 2 children & 8 ill vrs. 649-4366
FAST CASH
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-IN'S WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center 816 W24th 749-5750
AMIGOS Supervisor/Assist Mgr.
Supervisor now - Manager later! Learn the business from the ground up and advance according to your needs. You'll enjoy a more oriented person and like to work at a fast intense pace, an opportunity to put these skills to work and develop as a leader is available. Relocation may be required. 15-1K is benefits. Apply
Child care positions available: Sunday morning hours in nursery (babies/lodgers) and preschool (ages 3-5) areas at Grace Church. Experience preferred, reference required. Call Kathy @ 843-206-9500
COLLEGE TEXTBOOK BUYER $16/hr. starting comm. part-time, 15 hour minimum. Purchase unwanted books from faculty. Sales exp. Norwest Textbook 1-800-381-9295.
Earn $1.00 per week at home filling orders! Free Information. Please send long self addressed stamped envelope to CJ Enterprises, Box 67088H, Cuvana Falls OH. 44222.
Full-time assistant manager needed immediately
Mail time on call 914.828.648
GREEKS & CLUBS
RAISE UP $1,000 in JUST ONE WEEK! For your fraternity, security & club. Plus $1,000 for yourself! And a FREE T-SHIRT just for calling 1-800-932-6288. ex. 75
Help wanted: Hardware/Software manager KU helped train a certified graduate student to begin work in early December. For position description contact Ursa Stamler at 604-2542. Application deadline
Looking for someone eligible for Work Study to complete a master's degree in accounting experience. Call 863-1930 for interview
Sales Associates
*Full and part-time
LEVI'S OUTLET, opening Dec.
15, 1993 has excellent career
opportunities for bright, engi-
neering professionals to join our
team. Positions are available
for the following:
Stock Positions
*Full and part-time
Cashier
*Full and part-time
Management positions also
available
(Full-time)
Enjoy a competitive starting salary, a 50% employee discount, in addition to numerous other benefits.
Applications available at KU Burge
Union Placement Center. Interviews
with current and past faculty.
Lobby of Burge Union (3rd Floor)
Tu. Nov. 30, 2019 - 6 p.m. from Coffers furnished
No appointment necessary.
For more information, contact Wendy 841-6542 or Paul 842-5430.
Levi's
Outlet
An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/D
SEMESTER BREAK POSITION! Inl unit chain 47-PT, PT, entry level openings. Earn $9.06-PT, PT entry level now start After Dec. 20. Can remain PT next session in Lawrence 842-831 or Overland Park 831-9675.
Phone Work. Part Time, Flexible Hours. Paid
Daily. Call 232-9283.
RESUME SERVICES Professional Business
Training, First interview, Interview
Training, First interview, B2-8100
You CAN make a difference, Greenpeace K.C., MO is now hiring energetic and articulate students and others to help save the rain forests, stop toxic waste, and protect the ozone layer. PT/FT$190 to $300 a week, paid training, hours 2 to 10 p.m. Call 816-331-3884.
United Child Dev. center has openings for naps at $4.25hr. Experience working with young children helpful. Apply at UCDC 946 Vermont St. Lawrence, KS. EOE
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. B41-7749.
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
Work in beautiful Colorado mountains this summer at Cheyenne Colorado camps summer program. Learn how to cook, bake, dish up, kitchen, sang leader, riding, hiking, backpacking, sports, craft counselors. Camperms age 9-17
225 Professional Services
Dur 7d sunny! Must be a lt 19 to apply.
Applicants will be notified of campus interview
date. Apply to Cheley Colorado Camps, Box 6525,
Den, CO 80203, 303-737-3816.
We're here to listen and take you with us.
Birthright 843-8411. Free pregnancy testing.
Prompt abortion and contraceptive services. Dale L. Clinton M.D. 841-3716.
Research Assistance - MS/MS information specialist available to assist with term paper, theses, etc.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
DONALDG. STROLE
Rick Frydman, Attorney
863 Missoula
403-402-303
DONALD G. STROKE
Donald G. Strohe Sally G. Keisey
16 East 13th 842-1133
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
235 Typing Services
Unique resumes, cover letters, laser prints. Fast,
easy updates, affordable, Graphic Ideas, Inc. R27
1/2 Mass. 841-1071
Expert typing. IBM Correcting Selectic
dovouble space page. Cal Mrs. Maitlil 841-3
752-692-4200.
A Word Perfect word processing laser. Laser printer. Near campus. 842-6905.
Resumes
Fast, accurate word processing: term paper, dissertation, thesis and graphics services available. Laser printing. Engineering and Law Review experience. Call Pam at 841-1977 anytime.
Pro-Type : test, reliable, service, professional
Any kind of typin Call today at 814-8242.
cover letters
- writing
- consultation
Linda Morton, CPRW
Transcriptions
1012 Mass 842-4619
Suite 201-upstairs
Professional Association of Résume Writers
A Member of
PA RW
X
Running out of time?
Let me do your TYPING!
Lazer printing to WOW! your prof's.
18 years professional experience.
All typing jobs accepted.
Grammar and spelling corrected free!
Call Uckh is
Makin 'the Grade
865-2855
Word processing, applications, term papers,
dissertations, resumes, Editing, composition, rash
writing.
305 For Sale
6 ft. bookcases for $39, full sized bed $12; cupie
beds $3, six piece setter $10, T.C. Furniture
Rental beds and rentals new and used furniture, 601
Kasold 841-711
300s Merchandise
Beds, decks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
908 Mass.
Drafting table 60 x 30" Adjustable chair, fluorescent light and teledept poet drafting machine. Call 415-627-8755.
Weight lifting machine, leg curls, bench press,
lats, etc. Great condition. Rowing Machine $225
for both. Call 843-0540 evening and weekends.
Floppy Discs
Guaranteed Quality
and Lowest Price.
Call 832-734- (o) 842-5421 (h)
Visit our office behind Food 4 Less at
2201 W. 25th St. B-1.
I'm graduating and need to sell my - Beautiful wood head board, matching night stand with 2 drawers, wooden wood chest with vanity mirror. You can get that chair for me. Phone +86-757-8724. You can't get it at the store.
Jackets: Leather bomber $75 Leather blker $100
Obermeyer skipper $100 Biker #83-757
Mac SE, 40 med HG. Carrying case, ImageWriter II printer, Claris Works, Word games, and more.
Macintosh Quadras. Best prices available.
Student discounts apply. 800-249-241.
Student basketball tickets- best offer. Call Ralph at 749-4155
1975 Buck Skylark Coupe with 327 Chev. engine, mug wheel. 800. Consider monthly payments.
Cannondale SIR 400 road bike with Look pedals,
exc. cond. $850 841-7050
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
very nice! Available Spring sem. interested? Call
One- three Indiana in Kansas basketball tickets
One- general admission, ticket calls
E12.935
Spend New Years in Chicago Leaves Ck on Dec 39
Call (811) 749-3819 now before it is sold! (females call)
340 Auto Sales
4 bdm, lrg rms, stove and refrigerator,
5 bookmark, bookuns $700 a month. Available
12, 14, 16, 19, 34
Pinto 83* Manual, Running so problem. $500 Call
842-1907
1868 Dodge Charger 32 hatchback. AM/FM cas-
body. In body shape and run well.
HOTEL
1983 Black Jeep CJ-7, S-Speed. Hard top, new
hardtop. $4,400.00 Call 822-650-
love and leave a message.
1 Bdmr apt, just blocks from campus available for 2nd semester subashe. washer/dryer, dishwasher, ceiling fan...the works. $220 per mo./person. 133 Kentucky 8075-0921. Call on
370 Want to Buy
405 For Rent
1 Ed furnished apartment clean and clear borders campus available Jan. 1st 841-0297 or 816-765-4485.
1 Bdm, wood floors, lots of windows, Great neighborhood. Very Nice $290/month. Call 323-2853.
1 roommate needed to sublease apt., 1 bk from campus, $180; mo. Call 814-4207.
4 Bedroom room for sub-lease. Cheap rent iow
841.399.607.236 Attention Mark: 841.399.607.236
841.399.607.236 Requesting for calling
400s Real Estate
Available at semester break, aps. in newer sec.
of West Hill 1000 Emery Rd. 1 bdm. apt. 4m,
library desk, office space, hookup, dw, microwave, fan, mini blinds,
balcony, energy efficient, great location near cam-
plex.
I bedroom apt. for rent. Furnished. On bus route.
Question? 81-81-84
Stay, but I have to move.
Question? 81-81-84
Available Jan. 1, 5 bbmr, apt on bus route. Call
149-188-1560 mon-Fri. Mon.-Fri.
Available Jan. 1 3 bbmr. apt. close to campus,
Available Jan. 1 3 bbmr. apt. close to campus,
Georgetown Up Call: 652-8490 or 767-777.
4 br house for rent, 3 blocks from campus, clean.
condo condition, 1 bedroom. Need help all leaving.
condo condition, 2 bedrooms. Need help all leaving.
we're making life easier!
Now leasing for Spring!
*Front Door Bus Services
*"Dine Anytime" with
Unlimited Seconds
*Laundry and Vending
Facilities
1800 Naismith Drive (913) 843-8559
NAISMITH Hall
Available now nice clean studio apt. close to cam-
puter. Call 842-2699 vl. message. No pet.
Mate 842-2699 vl. message.
Furnished room for female grad. student: Clean,
Messenger: No smoking. Smokers or
pet. 1709 Indiana 645-823-87
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and bath, 2 shares to KU. Off-street parking. 814-5000.
Furnished studio apartment. 2 short blocks from
Water paid. Off street parking. No pets. 811-504-7933
OPEN DAILY
MASTERCRAFT
1, 2, 3, & 4 boun app...
designed with you in mind!
Go to...
Campus Place - 841-1429
1145 Louisiana
Hanover Place - 841-1212 14th & Mass.
Regents Court 749-0445
1005 Mass
Orchard Corners - 749-4226
15th & Kasold
Sundance-841-5255 7th & Florida
Tanglewood-749-2415 10th & Arkansas
123
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
842-4455
MASTERCRAFT
New Four Bdrs Now Available
available. For more info call 841-7849.
Newly Remodeled Studio on Campus. Call 841-7849.
Best in Lawrence, signing up for next year.
$240/person, 1500 qr. all amenities, car ports
and parking space.
One bedroom apartment avail. $25/month. 8th &
Louisiana No payment. Call 605-2938
Holiday
Share nice large home, nice home or sturdy
home, nice home, a block to KU. Reference:
841-9245 or 842-9245.
Drop Into Our Place to ask about our Mid Term Leases
Bedroom apts.
Avail. now.
Recently const.
On Bus Route, Dishwasher, Central Air & heat, walk in closet,
2 bath.
Colony Woods Apartments
Apartamento
Stone college near campus available at semester
Stone college, $450/mo, no pets. Call 611-
492-3984
Call 611-492-3984
Spring sublease for 2 persons. 2 bdrm. 1 bath, on the hau rote pair. 1 bdrm. 395mo. /+ 846mo. /+ 846mo. /+ 846mo.
Call for appt. 843-0011
Studio sublease, furnished, avail Jan. 1. Water
248-795 and Nightingale 941-640-368.
no pets.
Tired of noisy apartment living? 15 min. S. of Lawrence is an insulated traditional farm home, complete with porches and a great deck. 2.bdm1 bath; heated by natural gas (no propane tank). Ample storage; private phone line; on historic quiet location. Will rent to responsible people
SUBLESSER STUDIO APT. for Spring Semester, 2
bks from campus, off street parking, WD, full
kitchen, btw 60 and Louisiana, Rent and Utilities
about $380/month - call 841-874-911 or if no answer
1-841-874-911
$365-$435
Unique 2 bedroom/1 bath apt. hard wood floors, 2 blocks from campus/downtown. $450/month Available Jan. 181-9268
430 Roommate Wanted
- 3 Hot Tubs
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Sand Volleyball Court
1 Furnace needed, spacious 2 bedroom apt. for
room number 2320 Road m23 + 1 utilitia
Call Chris 749-1641.
- Basketball Court
or 3 females needed for spacious 3 bdm ap for
1 female or 2 females needed from campas, on busite,
200 + /\uil. util. 943-7647
- Microwava
Roommate needed to live in frg. 4dR DUOR. Very close to campus. $160/mo. 832-1918
- On Bus Route
842-5111 1301 W.24th
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
Wishing You The Best This Holiday Season!
1 roommate needed to share nice/clean 3 bldm
2 roommate needed to share nice/clean 4292
3 roommate needed to Avail Jan, 1, aml Bdorm
1 Roommate needed to share beautiful, historic 3 bdrm. in downtown area, Woold & Dwr /
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
I roommate to share 3RB townhome on bus route
+ 8$/uil. Avail. Jan. I Call 655-3826
CHEAPF Female wanted: $170 per month + ¼ tax in a house closet to campus, also has fireplace in the kitchen.
Female needed to share housewife. Will have room availaed to share housewife / $759/200 +/m
room availaed to share housewife / $759/200 +/m
2 NFST Upperclassman app. to share clean,
furnished 4 bdmr, 2 bath app. Bus Route. Nice
Neighborhood. Pool, Laundry rm. $196 + 1/4 ut.
Call Morgan 749-0138 or Rene 8541-895
- By phone: 864-4358
Female non-smoker needs to share three bedrooms, 3 baths and 2½ acres of land. $150 monthly. Pay $/Utilities. Phone 749-614-81.
N/S Wide needed for 4 brm dupla with WID
cap. Call Route 1710/1700, utility On.
Route Call 811/806.
Open minded female neede to share two bedroom
home close to campus in thru May Call my
number 149-762-8500
How to schedule an ad:
Female non-smoker. New brul Aug 8. BR pt. /u1.
Pilum Pulverized. Cleans to Mold & Mildew.
N/5 responsible fun roommate needed for 2 d/mm
N/8 responsible fun roommate used for 1 d/mm
Deposit needs ASAP. EASP ID: 43672108
Male roommate should to share 2 bdmr. 2 bathrm apartment spring semester. Top floor, terrace, microwave, dishwasher at Colony Woods. Avail $822/mo + $10 credit. Call 841-687-8721 'bave message'
&commitee needed. M/F to share on 3 Bkt Apri
and 8 Bkt Apri, call 843-7187 and leave a message.
call 843-7187 and leave a message.
NSF w/ small heart needs a responsive NSF to
connect to a spring semester. 1189/m.
Call 815-431-7600.
Seeking NFS to sublease NEW 13rm conform on Call
+ /u/llones + /u/lones. Available ONWN (Call
835-0945.)
Roommate needed, Start Dec. 1, $180/m² / all/fire,
Free gas, water cab. 1x14 room, 2 min from
home.
Need mature, clean, N/S male to share 2 br驴
some stuff. D.p. avail. Jan 1. 749-6898.
Some mtl. D.p. avail. Jan 1. 749-6898.
Ads phoned in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
149 Student Filed
Classified Information and order form
Staple to the Kanaan 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.
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kansas office. Or you may choose to have it billed to your MasterCard or 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 refunded 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.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of page 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 in 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 Kanan office for a fee of $4.00.
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 min. per day
1X 2-3X 4-7X 8-14X 15-20X 30+X
2.05 1.55 1.65 .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
118 business persons
128 announcements
138 entertainment
305 for sale
340 surto sales
360 miscellaneous
Name:_
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
1 | | | | | |
2 | | | | | |
3 | | | | | |
4 | | | | | |
5 | | | | | |
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
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
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Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, lawrence. KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Keep a watchful € boys...There's only way outta this joint, every one of them varmin.. is thinkin' it.
At the Federal Mole Penitentiary
14
Tuesday, November 30, 1993
Kennedy
SPORTS
For All Your Glass Needs
car windshields, desk too glass,
picture frame glass.
730 New Jersey 843.4416
730 New Jersey 843-4416
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
State Radiator
Student Friendly
We recycle
anti-freeze, freon,
and metals.
842-3333
radiators•heaters
a/k water pumps
VISA
DISCOVER
---
2
DUCOVER
Hair Experts Design Team
Discover
Our
Difference
$5 Off
Hair Design
Not valid with any other offer
EXPIRES 11/30/93
Holiday Plaza • 25th & Iowa
841-6886
---
Bottleneck
913-841-live
737 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS
Tonight Salty Iguanas Unplugged 25¢ Draws
Wednesday
Jack-O-Pierce
Thursday Best Kissers in The World Chainsaw Kittens 18&Over
Friday Common Ground
Optical Dispensary
VISIONS
806 Massachusetts
841-7421
Rickin
DICKINSON
THEATRE
615-728-8000
Dickinson 615-728-8000
2329 South Bown St.
My Life $^{\text{PO}}$ **14.20** * 7:20, 9:55
The Nutracker $^{\text{GO}}$ *4:10*; 7:15, 9:30
Where Back $^{\text{GO}}$ *5:30*; 7:00, 9:30
Man's Best Friend $^{\text{GO}}$ *4:20*; 7:10, 9:40
Nightmare Before Christmas $^{\text{PO}}$ *4:35*; 7:10, 9:37
Perfect World $^{\text{PO}}$ **13.405** * 7:00, 9:45*
3 Primetime Show (1) I Heart Minnie Dabby
3 Senior Citizen Anime! Impress Teens
Crown Cinema
VARSITY
BEFORE 4 PM ADULTS $3.00
UNITED STATES
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
Addams Family Values
PG-13 5:15, 7:30, 9:30
HILLCREAT
The 3 Musketeers PG 6.00
7.15, 9.30
The Joy Luck Club R 5.15, 8.90
5.15, 11.90
Josh & Sam PG-13 7.30, 9.45
7.30, 9.45
Carlito's Way R 6.00
4.40
Mrs. Doubtfire PG 7.15, 9.50
Jurassic Park $ ^{PG-13} $
The Program $ ^{R} $
GINEMA TWIN
US JOWA B4C51R
5:00,
7:30, 9:50
5:10,
7:20, 9:30
$1.25
Daily Showing Times
Turnovers plague Kansas, opponents
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
It would upset Kansas coach Roy Williams and possibly make Phog Allen roll in his grave—turnovers.
The No. 15 Kansas women's basketball team has had 46 of them in its first two games. The Jayhawks had 27 turnovers in an exhibition game against New Zealand and 19 against Creighton on Friday.
Those numbers may cause concern for some Division I coaches, but Kansas coach Marian Washington said it didn't bother her.
"To me, I don't think the turnovers are a concern," Washington said. "The one thing about this team is they encourage one another. The upperclassmen encourage the freshmen."
Another cause of the turnovers is the style of play Kansas employs. Washington said she liked Kansas to play a fast-paced game, which gave the crowd a show.
One reason could be that she has played four freshmen for at least 10 minutes each game: forwards Jennifer Trapp and Shelly Canada and guards Angie Halbleib and Tamecka Dixon.
odds of turning the ball over are higher."
"Our team is to limit turnovers to 15 game," she said. "I know we're going to have some turnovers. When you're an up-tempo ball club, the
Dixon said she enjoyed playing fast-paced games. Dixon had a team-high 19 points against Creighton as the startling point guard for the game.
"We're a fast-breaking team so 19 turnovers are good, being that it was our first regulation game," Dixon said.
Dixon, a high school All-American, said she looked for that type of offense while she was being recruited. Nationally known programs like Vanderbilt and Stanford wanted Dixon to play, but Dixon didn't like their half-court offense.
"It was one of my main questions when I was being recruited," Dixon said of the offense.
On the defensive side, the Jayhawks have forced 59 turnovers, including 29 against Creighton.
Even though Kansas defeated Creighton 74-68 for the first time in three years, Halbleib said Kansas didn't play its style of game.
Those forced turnovers would satisfy many coaches, but Washington said she wanted more from Kansas' defense.
"We created 29 turnovers against Creighton," she said. "Just imagine if we've got our defense down how many turnovers we could create."
Women's AP Top 25
The Top Twenty Five women's basketball teams as compiled by Mel Greenberg of the Philadelphia Inquirer based on the votes of 65 women's coaches, with first-place votes in parentheses, record, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote on one point for a 25th-place vote, and preseason ranking:
| Rank | Team | Records | pts.24 |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1. Tennessee (64) | 2-0 | 1,624 | 1 |
| 2. Iowa (1) | 1-0 | 1,512 | 3 |
| 3. Texas Tech | 1-0 | 1,401 | 14 |
| 4. Auburn | 2-0 | 1,397 | 5 |
| 5. Vanderbilt | 1-1 | 1,295 | 2 |
| 6. Louis Tech | 1-1 | 1,284 | 4 |
| 7. Penn St. | 0-0 | 1,219 | 7 |
| 8. North Carolina | 0-0 | 1,083 | 9 |
| 9. Stanford | 0-1 | 1,071 | 6 |
| 10. Virginia | 2-0 | 1,031 | 10 |
| **11. Colorado** | **2-0** | **925** | **12** |
| 12. W. Kentucky | 1-0 | 856 | 13 |
| 13. Southern Cai | 0-0 | 761 | 11 |
| 14. Ohio St. | 1-1 | 689 | 8 |
| **15. Kansas** | **1-0** | **642** | **16** |
| 16. Steph. F. Austin | 1-0 | 579 | 15 |
| 17. Georgia | 2-0 | 570 | 17 |
| 18. Connecticut | 1-0 | 506 | 18 |
| 19. Alabama | 2-0 | 495 | 19 |
| 20. SW Missouri | 0-0 | 390 | 20 |
| 21. G. Washington | 1-0 | 346 | 21 |
| 22. Mississippi | 2-0 | 293 | 22 |
| 23. Purdue | 2-0 | 266 | 25 |
| 24. Maryland | 1-0 | 244 | 23 |
| **25. Oklahoma St.** | 0-0 | **131** | **24** |
Others receiving votes: Northwestern 94, Hawaii 72, Nebraska 38, UCLA 21, Clemson 32, S. Mississippi 23, Boise St. 21, Rutgers 17, Washington 16, Toledo 15, UNLV 14, Xavier, 10, DePaul 11, Long Beach St. 11, Texas 11, South Carolina 9, N.C. Charlotte 8, Notre Dame 8, Oregon St. B, Bowling Green 7, Tennessee Tech 7, Creighton 6, Louisville 6, Marquette 6, Wake Forest 6, Brigham Young 5, Georgetown 5, Providence 4, Seton Hall 4, Virginia Tech 4, Arkansas 3, Vermont 3, Arizona 2, Kent 2, Southern Methodist 2, Montana St. 1, Tulane 1.
Tennessee leads pack in AP poll
Iowa, which received the other first-place vote, moved up a spot from No. 3 in the preseason poll after beating then-No. 4 Louisiana Tech in its tournament. Defending NCAA champion Texas Tech jumped from No. 14 to No. 3 after beating then-No. 2 Vanderbilt and then-No. 6 Stanford.
The Associated Press
Source: The Associated Press
Top-ranked Tennessee, which opened the season with victories over then-No. 8 Ohio State and Montana, received 64 of 65 firstplace votes today in the first regular-season Associated Press women's college basketball poll.
KANSAN
"I thought the preseason ranking of No. 14 was about right." Texas Tech coach Marsha Sharp said after her team upset Vanderbilt 74-66 in the Women's Hall of Fame-Tippoff Classic. "After all, we had all those questions about how we would be after Sheryl Swoopes graduated."
Auburn is fourth, followed by Vanderbilt, Louisiana Tech, Penn State, North Carolina, Stanford; and Virginia.
Colorado is 11th, followed by Western Kentucky, Southern Cal. Ohio State, Kansas, Stephen F. Austin, Georgia, Connecticut, Alabama, Southwest Missouri State, George Washington, Mississippi, Purdue, Maryland and Oklahoma State.
Calculus exam review
1. $f(x) \sim \frac{a_0}{2} + \sum_{n=1}^{\infty} \left[ a_n \cos\left(\frac{n\pi x}{L}\right) + b_n \sin\left(\frac{n\pi x}{L}\right) \right]$
2. $\frac{a_0}{2} + \sum_{n=1}^{\infty} \left\{ \left( \frac{a_n-1b_n}{2} \right) e^{i\left(\frac{n\pi x}{L}\right)} + \left( \frac{a_n+ib_n}{2} \right) e^{-i\left(\frac{n\pi x}{L}\right)} \right\}$
3. $v(t) \sim \frac{a_0}{2} + \sum_{n=1}^{\infty} \left[ a_n \cos \frac{n2\pi t}{T} \right]$
$t \sim \frac{2}{\pi} (1-\frac{2}{3} \cos 2t - \frac{2}{15})$
$-n^2 w^2) c_ne \text{ inw}$
$\frac{d^2y}{dz^2} \text{ of } a^2x^2 + b^2y^2 = a^2b^2$
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MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
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MEN
SEEKING
WOMEN
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To check out these ads call 1-900-285-4560 You will be charged $1.95 per minute (must be 18 yrs old)
Common abbreviations
M Male A Asian
F Female J Jewish
D Divorced C Christian
S Single C Christian
W White G Gay
B Black L Lesbian
H Hispanic N/S Non-Smoker
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WOMEN SEEKING MEN
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**not active SWM" seeking 2 SWM" s2 "— (Grad,**
*students preferred.) Must have a good personality,*
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PLACE AN AD FREE!
Call 864-4358
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MEN SEEKING MEN
GBM, 25, 6 ft, 120 lbs, loves music and quiet evenings. Seeks GM, 25-40, for friendship or possible relationship. If interested respond to box #43963
GWM, 18, 8" 4/8, blond blue green eyes, good-looking model type, shy, intelligent and philosophical seeking 16-34 GWM jaws, rap lovers, or soccer players, have a smile, clare, have all male friends, tall, good body, cute boy keys, for possible relationship #44071
Handshake
Looking for someone who enjoys the great outdoor sounds or for a car ride to get away, #8644
FRIENDS SEEKING FRIENDS
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 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 (every 3rd day from the day that you initially place your voice message), to listen to the messages people leave for you. Any other day, you may call the 900-number to retrieve your messages at a cost of $1.95 per minute. The average call is 3 mins in length.
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.