CAMPUS: Residence hall residents voice outrage at being blocked from their homes after basketball games. Page 3.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103,NO.70
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
December grads look ahead
Job hunt should be in works now
Students graduating this month still face many of the same issues as spring graduates, including finding a job.
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
Some KU students hope to receive one item a few days before Christmas — their diplomas.
But because of the fewer number of fall graduates, they will have concerns unique to their impending departure date.
At the University Placement Center, the number of interview schedules set up by off-campus recruiters has decreased by about 15 percent from last December, said
Terry Glenn, director of the center. Most of the recruiters visiting campus were interested in hiring December graduates, Glenn said.
In general, fall graduates often have a slightly harder time finding work because most employers tend to focus their energies on the larger number of spring graduates, Glenn said. But, he said, students should consider finding some form of employment while they wait to locate a more fulfilling position.
"They might not be looking for as high a number of employees as last year, but they are hiring," Glenn said. "But people need to start the process early. If they're just starting their job search and plan on graduating in December, they're starting late."
"People have to be adaptable," Glenn said. "Ive always been of the position that it's better to hire someone coming from a
employed position than one who is unemployed."
"If they're graduating, they've been successful in the environment of the University," DeSalvo said. "They will now have to learn the rules of a new environment."
While graduating students may feel overwhelmed by the new responsibilities of their move to the work force, they could take some comfort knowing their average earnings after graduation continue to outpace those of noncollege graduates, said
Fall graduates trying to determine their career plans often turned to the Career Counseling and Planning Service at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said Francis DeSalvo, director of the service. Students preparing to graduate often express concern about the transition they must make between college and the working world. DeSalvo said.
Joshua Rosenbloom, assistant professor of economics.
"What has happened is a substantial shift for employers seeking college graduates," Rosenbloom said. "It is increasingly competitive for a worker to find a low-wage, low-skill position. This is an advantage for college students, where they have the greater level of skill."
NEWS:864-4810
For graduating students anticipating graduate or professional school, they should consider what they hope to achieve with an advanced degree, said Bob Bearse, associate vice chancellor for research and graduate studies.
"The need for education—both informal and formal — is increasing." Bearse said. "But remember that life is long. You'll have many opportunities. Make sure you understand what your situation is and deal with it intelligently."
English program frustrates some foreign students
By Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writer
Nawshad Shaikh, who majored in English at his high school in Dhaka, Bangladesh, never expected to find himself in a remedial English program.
But when Shaikh enrolled at the University of Kansas in 1990, he discovered that his scores on his English placement tests were too low. He was required to take two semesters of noncredit classes at the Applied English Center, where he said instructors often asked him why he was not enrolled in regular English classes.
"I felt like I was being dragged to class and that I was being punished for something I hadn't done," said Shaikh, now a KU sophomore.
International students must take tests to determine their English skills. A low score could send them to the Applied English Center to take classes, which count as credit hours on schedules but do not count as credit on transcripts. Some international students — who pay $3,470 each semester — resent the cost and hassle.
Passorfail
"They feel like their money is being spent around," said Nesi Igoren, secretary general
International students are tested to determine English proficiency.
*Test of English as a Foreign Language - Students must choose one choice of test with individual scores in 5 in three categories.*
of the International Council.
Applied English Center Proficiency Test -- if the students scored too low on the first test, this comprehensive test would determine whether they need the center's classes.
KANSAN
Gerald Harris, director of International Student Services, said that KU had lost 12 international students this semester because of frustrations with the center. He said that those students would tell others at home about the problem, and KU could lose still more students.
Isgoren, Izmir, Turkey, sophomore, said the center served an important function. However, the combination of stressful tests at the end of each semester — which determine whether the student is ready for English 101 — and the lack of credit for the classes can discourage students, she said.
The solution, Harris said, is to combine the center's classes with English 101 and 102 classes. That way, students could earn credit and learn special English skills.
"Students should get academic credit for the academic work they do," he said.
Harris said the International Council and International Student Services would wait until a permanent director of Freshman/Sophomore English was named before proposing the change.
Elizabeth Soppelsa, director of the center, said putting the students in specialized English 101 and 102 classes would further separate them from American students.
Most students find the process frustrating, but realize the center serves a necessary purpose, Soppela said.
Soppelsa also said the center's methods were the best way to cope with students with different proficiency levels in English.
INSIDE
图
Holiday cheer The University Dance Company and the Cohen/Suzeau Duet Company bring the spirit of holiday dance to KU.
INSIDE
Holiday cheer
Page 7.
Traci Bunkers-Branden, Lawrence resident, spins wool into yarn for mittens and hats in the Kansas Union Gallery. Bunkers-Brandon, owner of Bonkers Handmade Originals, spun wool during Student Union Activities' Arts and Crafts Fair yesterday. The fair runs until Friday.
Spinning away
Clinton signs long-fought handgun bill
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — As James Brady turned in his wheelchair to watch, President Clinton signed into law the most sweeping handgun control bill in a quarter century yesterday. "Americans are finally fed up with violence," the president declared.
The new law, which takes effect in 90 days, will require a five-day waiting period and a background check on handgun buyers. It was named for Brady, the White House press secretary who was gravely wounded and left disabled in the 1981 assassination attempt against then-President Reagan.
Cheers and applause erupted in the East Room as Clinton signed the long-fought bill before an audience of law enforcement officials, mayors, governors, members of Congress and families who have lost relatives to gun violence.
Reading slowly from notes as his wife, Sarah, held a microphone for him, Brady called the ceremony "the end of unchecked madness and the commencement of a heart-felt crusade for a safer and saner country."
The emotion-filled ceremony marked the end of a nearly seven-year battle by the Bradys and gun-control advocates with the National Rifle Association and its congressional supporters. Every major law enforcement organization had endorsed the bill.
It was the first major gun bill since 1968 when Congress — in the aftermath of the assassinations of Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr. — banned mail-order purchases of rifles, shotguns, handguns and ammunition and curbed out-of-state buying of those firearms.
Clinton said the Brady bill finally passed "because grassroots America changed its mind and demanded that this Congress not leave here without doing something about this."
"America won this battle," the president said. "Americans are finally fed up with violence that cuts down another citizen with gunfire every 20 minutes."
A major anti-crime bill, to put 100,000 more police on the streets and ban several assault-style weapons, is expected to be high on the agenda for Clinton and Congress next year. It is a politically popular issue, since polls show that violence-weary Americans say crime is their top fear.
Trying to debunk a central argument against gun control, Clinton said that opponents have successfully portrayed gun restrictions as an impingement on the American culture of hunting and fishing.
He said that signing the Brady bill was "step one in taking our streets back, taking our children back, reclaiming our families and our future."
"We have taken this important part of the life of millions of Americans and turned it into an instrument of maintaining madness," the president said.
"It is crazy," Clinton said. "Would I let anybody change that life in America? Not on your life. Has that got anything to do with the Brady bill or assault weapons or whether the police have to go out on the street confronting teen-agers who are better armed than they are?" Of course not."
Critics contend the bill will have a limited effect because criminals will simply buy their weapons in illicit markets.
At least 25 states have Brady-like restrictions on handgun sales.
Brady bill finally becomes law
President Clinton signed the Brady bill after Senate Republicans agreed to pass it on the condition that Congress consider modifications to the bill next year. The Brady bill is named after former White House press secretary James Brady, who was wounded in the 1981 assassination attempt on former President Ronald Reagan
Key provisions of the Brady bill
▶ Waiting period ▶ Background check
Handgun purchasers could be screened for any history of criminal activity or mental disorders during the waiting period. The bill provides $200 million annually to establish the queue system, switching to computerized "instant checks," which would replace the waiting period.
imposes a five-workday waiting period for anyone to legally purchase a handgun.
What Senate Republicans want to change
Shorten the five-year phase out of the waiting period to four, giving the attorney general the option to add a fifth year; have the instant background check ready earlier, possibly two years after bill takes effect
SOURCES: News reports, Congressional Quarterly
Pledge Riddles Tribute / KANSAN
SOURCES: News reports. Congressional Quarterly
Knight-Ridder Tribune / KANSAN
Sex in the stacks: Ever done it in the library?
By Donella Hearne
Kansan staff writer
There is probably not a university library in the country that has not been the site of sexual encounters. Watson Library is no different.
Liz Welz, St. Louis junior, works at the circulation desk at Watson and said she had heard countless stories about students having sex in the library.
Although she has never seen anyone having sex in the library, she said she had found a used condom in the stacks.
"I've seen some pretty convincing evidence," she said.
Custodians also have told Welsch that they find used condoms on a daily basis.
William Crowe, dean of the libraries, said although he had not had any recent reports of students having sex in the library, it would not surprise him.
"I have worked at five major libraries in the country," he said. "Large university libraries are not unfamiliar with these issues."
The library is open late at night, and there are many remote areas where students could engage in sexual activity, Crowe said.
Keith Wingert, Omaha senior, who works at Watson's circulation desk, said he thought it was the nature of the library that made students want to have sex there.
"After all, it's a place of education," he said. "People come here and check stuff out."
One place where students are reported to be having sex is near a section of books on sex and sexuality. Wingert said.
Dennis Dalley, professor of social welfare, said certain materials such as books on sex may create an excitement in some people.
"You need to be sensitive to the people around you," he said.
"For a small group of people there is some heightening of the experience by taking subtle risks," he said.
He also said the thought of having a sexual experience in a public library could be considered erotic to some.
Maureen Carroll, Ft. Collins, Colo., senior, saw something she said she did not want to see while looking for a book in the Watson stacks.
"There were two guys up there having a lot of fun," she said. "I just turned and walked away."
Dailey said that although he had nothing against the expression of sexual feelings, students should be concerned about interfering with other people when expressing those feelings in a public place.
She said she thought the library's labyrinth design, with its large and seud-
ed corners, made it an ideal place for some.
"It's an old library," Carroll said. "It's no wonder people go there."
John Sindt, Lawrence sophomore, said he was oblivious to the fact that people were engaging in sexual activity in the library.
"I never thought people would be crazy enough to do it." he said.
-
Library workers said they rarely caught anyone in the act.
"There's really no way to detect it until after the fact." Crowe said.
When employees do catch people, the employees are instructed to walk away and call KU police.
Police can charge students with trespassing, indecent exposure or disorderly conduct, which are punishable by fines, said Officer Burdel Welsh.
2
Wednesday, December 1, 1993
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The Douglas County AIDS Project is pleased to announce:
AHOLIDAY RED RIBBON NIGHT Saturday, Dec. 4
Abenefit with a silent art auction and presentation by artist Nate Fors.
The following artists have generously "contributed" artaments,"donated artworks that will benefit those challenged by HIV disease by supporting the efforts of the Douglas County AIDS Project.
Dessert Reception, 9:00 p.m.
Presentation, 9:45 p.m.
Spencer Museum of Art
University of Kansas Campus
Tax-deductible donation:
5.00/per person at the door;
advance tickets available at DCAP, 2619 W. 6th St.,
Lawrence, KS, (913)843-0040
Tom Allen
Susie Ashline
Jon Blunb
Gale Carter
Louis Copt
Wally Emerson
Yvonne English
Nate Fors
Dan Gauthier
Norman Gee
Ron Hinton
Susan Hyde
James Holnes
Earl Iverson
Judi Kellas
Doug Koch
Lee Mann
Christine Mercer
Jan Morris Nitcher
Mike Orr
Jeremy Pilkington
Cynthia Schira
Jeannot Seymour
Jim Slough
Cathy Tisdale
Dave Vertracik
Wendy Vertacik
Laurie Whitehawk
Joe Zeller
CAMPUS BRIEF
Administrator to retire from Med Center
Kay Clawson will retire this February after more than 10 years as executive vice chancellor of the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Cawson began at the Med Center Sept. 1, 1983, and has helped the center grow in the areas of patient care, education and research.
Nursing and Medicine, and faculty grew from 682 to 801. The operating budget increased from $199 million to $281 million, and research funding quadrupled to $36.5 million in 1993.
During his time as executive chancellor, there was a total enrollment of 28,000 health care professionals at the Med Center's three schools of Allied Health.
"Dr. Clawson has done much to advance the academic cause of the Medical Center. Our schools of Medicine, Nursing and Allied Health all enjoy strong national reputations, and they are deserved reputations," Chancellor Gene Budig said.
A Harvard Medical School graduate, Clawson served as dean of the College of Medicine at the University of Kentucky from 1975 to 1983.
Clawson served as the chairman of the American Medical Association, which accredits the nation's medical schools, from 1988 to 1989.
WEATHER
Weather around the country:
Atlanta '56/41'
Chicago '45/37'
Houston '76/61'
Miami '80/71'
Minneapolis '36/24'
Phoenix '68/46'
Salt Lake City '40/29'
Seattle '44/43'
Wichita: 50'/34'
●
Tulsa: 57'/44'
TODAY
Tomorrow Friday
40% chance for afternoon showers
Cloudy
GOV change for
High: 48'
Low: 37'
Source: Mark Akin, KU Weather Service; 864-
Mostly cloudy
Cloudy
60% chance for showers
High: 43°
Low: 39°
300
ON THE RECORD
High: 40°
Low: 32°
A student's car window was broken in the parking lot south of Robinson Center on Monday, KU police reported. Damage was estimated at $150.
A student's stereo valued at $300 was taken from a car in the parking lot east of Jayhawker Towers on Thursday or Friday, KU police reported.
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 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.
Teach for America - Information Session has been moved due to the KU Basketball game New location: Kansas Union Alcove G at 6:30pm
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1993 PRE-SEASON N.I.T. CHAMPIONSHIP SHIRTS NOW AVAILABLE!
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BOOKSTORES
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ARTS AND CRAFTS BAZAAR
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NOVEMBER 29 - DECEMBER 2, 1993
9:00 - 5:00 P.M.
KANSAS UNION GALLERY
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STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
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CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, December 1, 1993
3
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
Do you think the U.S. government is doing enough to reduce the nation's deficit? 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 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?
Traffic blocks residents
Those interested in Lead ... or Leave may call 1-800-99-CHANGE.
X
Game routes seal halls' lots
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
With the excitement of the KU basketball season comes heavy traffic and unhappy residence hall students.
Tonight after the basketball game against Temple, about 14,000 fans will need to find a direct route off campus, and KU police will provide the most direct routes available for KU basketball fans.
But students in the residence halls are complaining that the routes are anything but direct.
"It's ridiculous to get up onto the hill after the game. It's absolutely insane," said Timothy Joyce, Oak Park, Ill., junior and Hashinger resident.
Joyce said he realized there was a problem routing traffic after games but blocking off access to the parking lots of the halls was not the solution.
"They allow the traffic to flow but they inhibit people from getting into their homes," he said. "We're denied
access to our homes, our jobs and our cars."
The problem lies with Endel Road
The problem lies with Engel Road. KU police have Engel Road barricaded at 15th Street, by Templin and Lewis halls and at Irving Hill Road between Hashinger and Ellsworth Halls after men's basketball games at Allen Field House.
The barricades allow traffic to proceed uninterrupted onto Iowa Street.
Sgt. Rose Rozmiarek of KU police said there were no alternative routes for students to take to get into the residence hall parking lots.
"After games the flow of traffic has to go in one direction, otherwise there will be a jam," she said. "Engel Road is the road that gets people to the residence halls, and we understand that. But we can't have through traffic. We have to keep the vehicles moving in the same direction."
Rozmiarek said traffic was always a problem at the start of the football and basketball seasons until people adjusted to the routes.
It takes about 30 minutes to relieve the traffic now, she said, but later in the season it might take longer.
"With conference play coming up, we're looking at a little heavier traffic."
Residence hall parking disorder
Residence hall residents are able to leave their parking lots at any time during KU basketball games, but cannot enter the lots right after the games. The 30- to 45-minute delays are caused by one-way traffic leaving the Allen Field House area.
Daisy Hill residence hall Police or roadblock
15th St.
Iowa st.
Irving Hill Rd.
Allen
Fleid
House
Naismith Dr.
19th St.
Dave Campbell / KANSAN
Source: Sgt. Rose Rozmlarek, KU Police
So that might make it a longer wait," she said.
Monday night Erin O'Donnell, Derby sophomore, said she waited 15 minutes before she got into her lot.
"It's just really annoying and an inconvenience," she said. "I don't know what the cure is but surely they could figure out a way to make an entrance for us."
"When ball games are over, the traffic does cause some problems, and I don't know if there's an answer for it," he said. "Everyone is traveling in one direction. It's like a fish going upstream."
The traffic problem after games has been a concern for many years, said Ken Stoner, director of student housing.
THE ORCHESTRA
Super conductor
John Gamble / KANSAN
Thomas Stidham, University Band conductor, leads the band during the School of Fine Arts music and dance concert series. Stidham conducted the band last night at the Lied Center.
Speaker warns of forest decline
By Kathleen Stolle
Kansan staff writer
Against a backdrop of stuffed North American mountain goats, deer and bobcats, Edgard Vascones introduced a small audience to monkeys, birds and snakes from his native Peru.
Vascones, an eight-year tour guide of Peru's Amazonian rain forests, gave a slide presentation last night to about 70 people gathered in the rotunda of the Museum of Natural History in Dyche Hall.
Vascones is visiting schools throughout the United States for three weeks, speaking about Peru, the Amazon River and rain forests. He was invited to Kansas by state schoolteachers, and the KU museum
requested a special stop-off while he was in the area, said Kathryn Wiese Morton, the museum's coordinator of public relations.
Earlier in the day, Vascones met with local media and spoke about the endangerment of the forests. He said logging, farming and the country's increasing population were taxing the forests. He said there was a growing movement in Peru to preserve sections of forests and its inhabitants, such as the macaw, a bird which is endangered.
Although billed as a discussion about the deforestation of Peruvian rain forests, the presentation featured the flora and fauna of the Amazon Basin, and information on the tour company for which Vascones works.
As a guide, Vascones said he saw about 3,500 tourists last year and expected that
number to increase to about 5,000 this year.
"This year was great, but it's going to better the next few years," he said.
He said that the influx of tourism dollars boosted the Peruvian economy and that concerns about exploitation from tourism were unfounded because the forests in which the tours were given were within reserved areas.
The toughest part of his job is the large amount of time he spends away from his wife and two daughters, who live about 50 miles away in the city of Iquitos, Vascones said.
Although this is Vascones' first visit to the United States, viciously he has learned a lot about the country and its citizens, he said.
"We are learning every day from tourists, sharing experiences," he said.
ON CAMPUS
Rock Chalk Revue will hold auditions for in-between acts today at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union. Sign-up sheets for audition times will be at the Organizations and Activities Center in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Scott McPhail at 832-8274 or 864-4033.
OAKS — Non-Traditional Students Organization will have a brown bag lunch from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at Alcove G in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Gerry Vernon at 864-7317.
MBA will sponsor a lecture, "Why Communism Failed," by Professor Svetozar Stojanovic at noon today in 427 Summerfield. For more information, call Paul Melland at 841-4657.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor a lunch and forum, "Impact of TV on Society," from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at the Center, 1204 Oread Ave. 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.
The department of fine arts will sponsor a student art exhibit from 1 to 7 p.m. today on the fifth floor of the Art, and Design building.
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 sponsor an informational meeting for students interested in studying in Great Britain at 4 p.m. today in 2015 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 in the Burge Union. For more information, call 864-7316.
American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics will meet at 6 p.m. today in 2002 Learned Hall.
KU Kempo will meet at 6 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Ershadi at 842-4713.
KU Environers 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 Anishansilh at 843-3099.
Literary Club will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove D in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Julie Munjak at 864-2582.
Students Tutoring for Literacy will meet at 7 tonight at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-3660.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will have a House/Hall Contacts meeting at 6:30 p.m. today at the Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
KU chapter of Habitat for Humanity will meet at 7:30 tonight at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. For more information, call 832-0777.
KU Sailing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
**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.**
CAMPUS BRIEFS
February trial set for running back in shoplifting case
Kansan staff report
A trial has been scheduled for Kansas running back June Henley in February. Henley is accused of attempting to shoplift at the 1/2 Price Store, 2727 Iowa St.
Halley Kampschroeder, Henley's lawyer, appeared in court on Nov. 24 on behalf of Henley.
Henley was stopped by a security guard after attempting to leave the store with a leather coat and a pair of shoes, according to police reports. The value of the items was estimated at $141.
If convicted on the misdemeanor charge,
Henley faces up to a year in jail and a fine of
up to $500.
Henley's trial is scheduled to begin Feb. 11.
Forum to look at TV violence
Kansan staff report
Two KU professors will examine television's role in society today in a University Forum speech.
Aletha Huston and John Wright, professors of human development and family life, will present a speech, "Impact of TV on Society," at noon in the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Building, 1204 Oread.
Wright said he and Huston would examine two conflicts in the television industry: First Amendment rights of television producers and excessive television violence.
"It's a very difficult issue," he said. "Censorship or the lack of censorship — neither are acceptable solutions."
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4
Wednesday, December 1, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Brady bill's gun control sign of hope in Congress
Last week's passage of the Brady bill marks a significant move toward compromise in fighting escalating violent crime in America. Jim Brady and his wife, Sarah, should be applauded for sticking with their seven-year fight for stricter gun control measures.
The GOP's decision to compromise and allow the bill to pass with a five-day waiting period for the purchase of handguns and a background check is representative of the growing national concern that action against violent crime is needed now. In return, the bill will be subject to modifications as soon as next year, and the waiting period will expire as soon as a national, computerized background check is implemented.
The Bradys, who have fought long and hard after Jim Brady was wounded during the 1981 assassination attempt on President Ronald Reagan, were instrumental in gaining national support for the waiting period. Their perseverance should be a model for everyone who is concerned about the tragic number of Americans who are wounded or killed each year by handguns.
The waiting period will give potential handgun buyers a chance to "cool off" and will allow suppliers to run the background check, which is supported by the National Rifle Association. Together, the two measures will help prevent convicted felons from purchasing handguns and give people the chance to think through their purchase of a gun.
Although the effectiveness of the Brady bill will not apparent for years, the recent compromising nature of Congress is encouraging and should extend into next year's session as other vital issues are addressed.
The fact that the Brady bill has been surrounded by controversy makes this victory bittersweet. An issue of this magnitude should demand compromise immediately, not after seven years, so that progress is not impeded. Violent crime should not be a bipartisan issue.
EISHA TIERNEY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
New bill would target teen drunken driving
The need for the legislation is obvious.
That's the centerpiece of a bill now winding its way through Congress under the sponsorship of Republican Sen. John Danforth of Missouri.
Teen-age drivers should be required to maintain clean records for one year before they are allowed to receive permanent licenses.
Danforth's bill focuses primarily on teen-agents. It offers $100 million in grants to states if they beef up their laws on drunken driving.
Drunken driving is the No. 1 killer for young Americans ages 16 to 24. Teen-agers are the most vulnerable. They have only 7 percent of all driver's licenses but account for 15 percent of highway deaths.
Under the bill, a young driver would first have to acquire a provisional license effective for one year. If the driver keeps a spotless record, he or she can then seek a permanent license.
The bill would also offer grants to states that:
— Establish a mandatory fine of
at least $500 to anyone who sells or gives alcohol to a minor.
— Set the blood-alcohol content at 0.02 for drivers under the age of 21. The current level, which is used by police to measure intoxication, is 0.10.
— Suspend for a minimum of six months the license of anyone under 21 who is caught buying or possessing alcohol.
Those measures are tough and reasonable, but a couple of others in the bill are too harsh. One section of the bill, for instance, would confiscate the vehicles of anyone convicted of drunken driving more than once in a five-year period.
Such a law could place a severe hardship on the innocent members of families who rely on their vehicles for transportation to and from work. States should focus instead on stiffer sentencing, strengthened treatment programs and better enforcement of suspended licenses.
With a few changes, Danforth's bill could help reduce the number of Americans — particularly young people — who get behind the wheel when they shouldn't.
The Freelance-Star
Fredericksburg, Va.
MARIO BENEZIO
MirageThriller
ROLLINS
CLAP!
Trouble in the choir
Personal loss inspires AIDS prevention work
Over the last few years, people have asked me why I am involved in AIDS-related programs. I, like most others, became involved with AIDS causes for personal reasons.
Blake Rothas was a boyfriend of a friend of mine named Erich. They met when Blake was distributing condoms in Oklahoma City. Blake gave Erich's friend a condom with his phone number on the wrapper.
Blake was very good-looking and had been a model. His family had moved to San Francisco from Oklahoma when he was still in high school. He used to cut class, going into the Tenderloin or Castro areas to stand on the corner with his friends, watching the men go by. And he did more. Blake was reluctant to talk about that, to me anyway.
Blake also had AIDS. Back then we thought it was romantic, to have a dying lover. We were 19; none of us had experienced the pain of outliving someone we loved.
Blake was a bit of a celebrity in Oklahoma City. He appeared in the media, answering questions about AIDS and HIV infection. He tried to educate as many people, gay and straight, as he could.
I was an assistant editor for a humanities journal at the time, and I thought an interview with Blake would be a great piece. It would be his last interview, as he had just been hired by the state to be its first AIDS education trainer. During the interview he told how being HIV-positive had affected his life, given him a philosophy of making a difference.
PATRICK
DILLEY
Blake also mentioned how difficult
it was to become close to someone. I remembered how Erich had quickly dumped Blake, saying he could not handle the emotional burden. Every time he and Blake tried to make love, Erich would see these little plastic tubes hanging out of Blake's chest. The tubes were to test his blood count. Erich would close his eyes, but then he would feel the tubes, or hear the nearly whisper noise of them rubbing against each other, pounding home the fact that Blake was dying. Then, if Blake would try to hold him, or bend over to kiss him, the tubes would brush against Erich's skin. Erich was right; he couldn't handle it.
COLUMNIST
Blake was hurt, of course, but understanding. Even in the end, when he talked about the people he loved, Blake always said he never blamed Erich. If anything, he said, it was his own fault.
After the interview, Blake encouraged me to attend a training session for AIDS counselors. I thought it would benefit the story and provide good background information. I did not realize it would become a focal point of my life.
One night Blake and I went to play
pool. He was bothered that night, about his work, his life and his progressing illness. He appeared tired and thinner, but I told him he looked well. He stared at me, put his hand on my arm, and asked, "What about my hair? Can you tell I'm losing it?" For a moment the person in front of me was no longer the state's spokesperson for AIDS education, but the young man whose good looks were fading, whose hair was falling out, whose vitality was vanishing. The only time I lled to him was when I told him I did not think his hair was thinning.
I visited Blake before he died. He floated in and out of reality. He reached for a jar from his bed stand, and rubbed clear ointment of some kind all over his lips, repeatedly, in larger and larger swipes, until he was applying it to his chin. I asked what he had been doing since last we spoke. He responded, but his voice was not his; it was the voice of a locust, trying desperately to leave its shell, yet unable to wrestle free. "I've been dead for weeks."
Today, on World AIDS Day, I remember why trying to prevent AIDS is important. And I remember the faces and voices forever gone. Dennis, from high school. Timmy, who entertained so many of us. Larry, whose graff exterior belied a helpful nature. Roger, whose droll humor prodded but never hurt. And Blake, whose dedication and style showed a purpose for me in the madness of the world.
Patrick Dilley is a Lawrence graduate student in higher education.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Columnist should not portray Mexico as inferior
I choked, and I had to read the article twice to realize it was true that someone actually wrote that. I could not believe what Jim Kimmel wrote Thursday. Nov. 18. I'm aware of everybody's right to express, and I am able to write this because of the same reason; yet this freedom is not unlimited. There are points one should not go beyond, especially when it comes to others' rights to be respected.
KANSAN STAFF
that, as a Mexican, I am deeply offended by some of Kimmel's comments. The anger is greater because it's not only a personal aggression, but it extends to my whole nation. Where is the respect my people and I deserve? How can we have a pleasant atmosphere at KU, and how can we talk about nondiscrimination when people write in the newspaper that "without these steps we may become more like Mexico instead of Mexico becoming more like us?"
The reason I write today is to say
about Americanizing Mexico? What makes him think becoming like Mexico is bad? Why would it be better for Mexico to become like the United States? I guess he cannot really see the sovereignty of Mexico. I find it offensive that he implies that Mexico is inferior, and that it would not be a good thing to become like it. Let's just hope that now that NAFTA has been passed Mexican people don't become like Kimmel and his ideas; then we would certainly be lost as a country.
Liliana Valderrama-Blum
Oueretarama, Mexico, freshman
Who told this guy Mexico wants or should become like the United States? With what right does he talk
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
Assistant to the editor ... J.R. Clairborne
News ... Stacy Friedman
Editorial ... Terrilyn McComrick
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Kriati Fogler
Photo ... Klip Chin, Renee Knoeber
Features ... Erra Wale
Graphics ... John Paul Fogle
AMY CASEY Business manager
Well, all of that aside, KU games can be great enjoyment. You can learn much from the very knowledgeable fans that stand behind you and yell things that will convince you that they would make great referees. Things like, "Hey, ref, are you watching the same game we are?" If you decide to brave the conditions, have fun and GOICHABODS, I mean, JAYHAWKS!
KC TRAUER, Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
Chris Ronan is an Overland Park pamphle
majoring in broadcast journalism.
Business Staff
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Business Start
Campus sales mgr ... Ed Schager
Regional Sales mgr ... Jennifer Perrer
National sales mgr ... Jennifer Everson
Co-op sales mgr ... Blythe Focht
Production mgr ... Jennifer Blowey
Kate Burgess
Marketing director ... Shelly McConnell
Creative director ... Brian Fusco
Classified mgr..Gretchen Kotterleinrich
3. Getting in and finding a seat. This is the most fun adventure of the trip because at about 9 a.m. — before the game is but a speck in your eye — loyal fans with nothing better to do camp in the lobby of the Field House. They, and 6,000 of their closest friends enter the second gates open and quickly fill up the north (fun) end of the court. You then have to sit in the south student section with fellow 50-year old, two children, graduated in the '60s "students." You may be able to find a seat in the fun section, about 4,000 feet above sea level, where the players look like little pencil specks.
As we here at KU bid farewell to the football season (sob, sob) we happily welcome the arrival of the long-awaited basketball season (yippee, yippee). As with most years, this squad shows great promise in that, at some point, trying to attend a game will cause each and every one of us to lose many hairs.
Allen boasts several great matchups this year. Among them, Indiana, Temple, Kansas State and the perennial powerhouse Washburn Ichabods (mark Dec. 6 on your calendar). But take it from me. Getting in to see a game can be almost as interesting and suspenseful as the game itself. Several factors can lead you to want to go home long before the contest has even begun. Let's look at a few examples:
1. Driving. Getting to the game by way of car is, well, downright stupid.
It is stupid because if you want to take your car, you will battle with about 50,000 people from Kansas City who all converge on Lawrence at the same time. Also, unless you want to leave the game with over ten minutes left and Washburn only down 160-4, you will deal with the same 50,000 Kansas Citians who all reach their cars and leave the campus at the same time.
This leads us to our next problem ...
2. Parking. Unless you arrive several hours before the game — which may not be early enough — plan on parking somewhere near Eudora. This is because at about 4 p.m. — give or take an hour — the "Parking Patrol" begins charging $2 for parking in any lot within 10 miles of campus. These are the same lots that you may have paid $50 — plus tax — to park in for the year. As you can imagine, the Kansas Citians all get to the lot, see a sign that says "PARKING $2. YES, EVEN PEOPLE THAT PAID FOR PERMITS." reach into their pockets, find $2, get change and then ask questions like, "OK, so where's the Field House from here? Can we walk there?" This causes a huge backup to 23rd Street. If you do make it to Allen, you will experience our next problem ...
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and homeetown, or faculty or staff position. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be
Field House hassles are adventurous part of game
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.
photographed. The keeper reserves the right to relict or edit letters, guest columna and cartoons. They can
COLUMNIST
CHRIS
RONAN
University of Mars
A
A hand reaching up to catch a bird flying over the moon. A tower silhouette against the moon. Two characters looking at the scene.
---
by Joel Francke
L
66
9
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, December 1. 1993
5
Hashinger choir sings for fun
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
A sign posted in Hashinger Hall's lobby convinced Wendy Eichel that she would be perfect for the Hashing Hall Showchoir.
"The sign read something like, 'Even if you can't sing, come and have fun with us anyway,' said Eichel, Boulder, Colo, freshman. "It seemed like my kind of choir."
Eichel, a tenor, is one of 20 Hashinger residents in the choir that meets twice each week in Hashinger's theater. Hashinger is the only residence hall that has a choir, said Ken Koch. Hashinger's programming coordinator and director of the choir. Hashinger residents auditioned for the choir early this fall.
"We have many students who are very talented musically who can't join choirs for one reason or another. This is a chance for them to satisfy that interest," he said.
And it is not often students get an opportunity to perform popular Broadway and show tunes in such an informal group, he said.
The choir will perform such tunes as "A Whole New World" from the movie "Aladdin" and "Hail, Holy Queen" from the movie "Sister Act" at the Student Affairs Banquet in
Koch said the choir, which consists of 16 women and four men, sometimes presented unique difficulties.
Hashinger's theater on Dec. 7. Only student housing officials and staff are invited to the banquet, which will be the choir's only performance this semester. Three performances are planned for the spring semester.
"We have three female tenors, so when my one male tenor doesn't show up, it's fun to watch the female tenors try to hit all the low notes," he said. "But this is the first choir that I've been associated with that people have fun going to rehearsals and practicing."
Alissa Oatman, Denver senior and an alto in the choir, said the relaxed nature of the choir made for better practices.
"You relax and forget about other things, but that also somehow tends to make you work harder in practice," she said.
Jennifer McCullough, Strawberry Point, Iowa, freshman, said that because members of the choir knew and lived close to each other, the group was close-knit.
"It's not high-pressure," she said. "They don't mind if you're having a bad voice night. We're not all perfect singers — but we are dedicated."
Study shows women are more likely to contract AIDS in heterosexual acts
Until recently, most women who got AIDS were intravenous drug users. But more and more cases of AIDS in women are being associated with heterosexual sex.
By Liz Klinger
Kansas staffwriter
Kansan staff writer
"Over 50 percent of all new heterosexual cases of AIDS in 1992 were in women, and that tells a big story," said Janine Demo, coordinator of health education of student health services.
Demo said a study conducted about three years ago by researchers at the University of California at San Francisco and at Berkeley estimated a woman having sex with an AIDS-infected man is 12 times as likely to catch the virus as a man having sex with an AIDS-infected woman.
---
Henry Buck, gynecologist at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said women were more susceptible to sexually transmitted diseases because they have a larger surface area near their vagina that absorbs viruses through breaks in the skin, he said.
"The receptive partner is always the one at greatest risk." Buck said.
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins, said women retain male partners' secretions much longer than men exposed to women's secretions.
"Basically if you don't use a condom, your partner's secretions may be with you for a few days," Yockey said. "The vagina eventually cleans itself, but it takes time. The male penis is dry and not so conducive to bacterial growth and viruses."
Demo said societal norms are partially to blame for some women's attitudes toward AIDS prevention.
"Let's face it, women like to please," Demo said. "They like to trust. It's something they've been taught to do. Unfortunately, it's those trusting, caring females that don't want to question a partner's behavior that are going to get it."
"Women take care of their children, they take care of their family, before they take care of themselves," Demo said.
To protect themselves from STDs, Buck said sexually active women must not use only latex condoms but also use vaginal spermicides.
Yockey said that although condoms were effective in preventing sexually transmitted diseases, they did not offer 100 percent protection.
"Condoms have never been more than 90 percent effective for preventing pregnancy, so there's no reason to think they'd be better for preventing STDs," Yockey said.
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6
Wednesday, December 1, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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The University of Kansas
Department of Music and Dance
Presents the
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 accepted for phone orders.
Partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activity Fee. STUDENT SENATE
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Tickets: Adults, $4.00 Single Game, $10.00 Classic Pass
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By Clare Nullis The Associated Press
Lawmakers struggle to beat GATT deadline
GENEVA — World leaders support it. Business leaders plead for it. American textile workers and French farmers loathe it.
Asingle four-letter word — GATT — is now at the center of a giant world trade debate that could determine the fortunes of nations for years to come.
At stake is an additional $270 billion in annual global income because of increased exports, according to some estimates. The snag? The agreement must be reached by Dec. 15.
ANALYSIS
The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade is a set of world trade rules. It is also the name of the organization that enforces and updates these rules to let market forces work.
GATT came into being in 1948 as part of an effort to reshape the world economy after the Great Depression and World War II.
it has been fairly successful. A series of GATT accords has cut customs taxes during the past 40 years from about 40 percent to an average 5 percent of the price of an import.
That is good news for exporting countries. They can sell more, which creates more wealth, which creates more jobs, which creates yet more wealth. Consumers in importing countries have a wider variety of products in stores at lower prices — though cheap imports can sometimes threaten domestic producers.
But world trade has changed, and the GATT rules have fallen behind.
Take the case of the family car. The car manufacturer may be a Japanese company, which builds the car in Europe, using components made in several different countries and borrowing money from a U.S. bank.
The current effort to update GATT began in September 1986, when ministers from about 100 countries got together in the Uruguayan seaside
resort of Punta del Este and decided to build a bigger, brighter and better world trading order.
After repeated delays, the talks are hurting toward a Dec. 15 deadline and hundreds of diplomats are locked in long evening bargaining sessions.
The deadline is the last date that President Clinton can submit a finished agreement to Congress on an all-or-nothing basis. If the accord comes later, representatives can pick at individual provisions, stretching out the process.
Since the United States is the world's largest economy, a GATT accord without the United States would be worth nothing.
Special interests are affected everywhere. There will be short-term job losses as previously protected sectors like French farming and American textiles are opened up to foreign competition. In addition, lobbies in dozens of countries are jostling to make their voices heard, so making a deal is more difficult.
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DANCES
Photo courtesy of University Dance Company
Photo courtesy of University Dance Company Candice Franklin, St. Louis, junior, right, will be featured in the upcoming University Dance Company performance, "Cajun Annunciation." With Franklin are Paggie Lai, Lawrence sophomore, far left, and Barbara Smith, Lawrence junior.
The University Dance Company and the Cohen/Suzeau Duet Company are spreading the season's cheer through music, diversity and
A dose of holiday dance
Kansan staff writer
By Sara Bennett
Forget The Nutcracker. This year, dance fans won't have to drive to Kansas City for their annual dose of holiday dance entertainment. This year, the University Dance Company and the Cohen/Suzaue Duet Company will present a holiday dance concert right here in Lawrence.
Janet Hamburg, associate professor of music and dance and producer of the concert, said the show was ideal for those seeking holiday entertainment.
"It's a very festive concert," she said. "People are getting ready for the semester to end, and this will help them get into the holiday spirit."
Dancing elves, a New Year's Eve outing and a depiction of the Virgin Mary's encounter with the angel Gabriel are only a few of the offerings in the University Dance Company's first holiday production. All pieces are choreographed by the KU Dance Division faculty and performed by the 29-member company of KU students.
"The Night Before the Night Before..." a ballet choreographed by JEREL Hilding, assistant professor of dance, portrays elves preparing toys for delivery to deserving children. "Steppin," choreographed by dance lecturer Willie Lenoir, is set to big band music by Gene Kupra, Jimmie Lunceford and Cab Calloway, and depicts what happens when four young ladies "step out" on New Year's Eve.
"Cajun Annunciation," choreographed by dance historian Joan Stone, portrays Mary's realization that she will bear the Christ child through ritualistic gestures taken directly from 14th and 15th century paintings. The piece is set to traditional Cajun music, and features Candice Franklin, St. Louis, Mo., junior, in the role of Mary.
Franklin was recently selected to study at the Alvin Alley American Dance Center in New York City during the spring semester. A Crimson Girl and honor student double majoring in dance and business, Franklin was selected for the Alley program through open auditions held in Kansas City last spring. Franklin, who hopes someday to own a dance company in Georgia, said portraying Mary in "Cajun Annunciation" was daunting at first.
"My teachers thought it was a crazy idea for me to play Mary because they know me," she said. "So, it's been challenging. The piece is very cerebral."
did not portray Christian themes. Patrick Suzeau and Muriel Cohan of the Cohen/Suzueau Duet Company were inspired to choreograph "Tikkun Olam" after a trip to Israel. "Tikkun Olam," Hebrew for "the healing and repair of the wounded world," is a two-part workset to contemporary Estonian music.
Hamburg said other pieces on the concert
"Primordius," also choreographed by Cohen and Suzeau, depicts the stirring of new life accompanied by an original score by Edward Matilla, KU professor of music theory and composition. A piece entitled "Thillana" features Suzeau in a traditional East Indian dance.
"It's all inclusive," she said. "We have a one- world view, and I think people will appreciate that. There's so much variety in the music and dances."
Hamburg said the diversity of the concert made it appealing to all audiences.
Performances of the holiday dance concert are at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, Dec. 3-4, and at 2 p.m. Sunday Dec. 4 in the Crafton-Preyer Theater in Murphy Hall. Tickets are $6 for the general public, $3 for students and $5 for senior citizens, and are available through the KU box offices and SUA office in the Kansas Union.
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Arts and Craft Bazaar will be through Thursday in the gallery on level four of the Kansas Union, free
DECEMBER 1, 1993 PAGE 7 KULife
Tour du jour by David Cateforis, assistant professor of art history, on abstract expressionist work in the collection from 12:15 to 12:45 p.m. Thursday at the South Balcony Gallery, 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
Exhibition — "NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt" and Photographs from the Bonham Project" will be on display through Dec. 12 in the Spencer Museum of Art, free
People and places at the University of Kansas.
calendar
See CALENDAR, Page 8.
EXHIBITIONS & LECTURES
Exhibition — "A Survey of the History of Photography from the Collection" will be on display through Jan. 9 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 in the Spencer Museum of Art, free
Exhibition — Spencer "Preseplo" and Holiday Tree will be on display through Dec. 30 in the Spencer Museum of Art, free
Exhibition — "Abstract Expressionist Works from the Spencer Museum Collection" will be on display through Jan. 9 in the Spencer Museum of Art, free
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KU students have an opportunity to take care of angels this holiday season.
By Shan Schwartz Kansan staff writer
'Angels' await adoption in Union
The "angelso" are up for adoption on three Christmas trees in the Kansas Union as part of the Salvation Army's nationwide "Adopt an Angel" program. The program allows individuals to donate gifts to needy children in Lawrence.
The Angel Trees are in the fourth floor lobby of the Kansas Union. Each tree holds construction paper ornaments with a child's first name, age and clothing sizes.
Anyone can adopt one of the children by taking an ornament and purchasing a gift for the child. Gifts should be returned to the Student Union Activities office by Friday. Dec. 10.
Betsy Anderson, holiday assistance coordinator for the Lawrence Salvation Army, said the Salvation Army
had coordinated the Angel Tree program nationally for more than 50 years.
Other Angel Trees in Lawrence are sponsored by Silver Wings, an ROTC organization, and the Lawrence Kmart and Wal-Mart stores.
This is the third year that the Union has sponsored an Angel Tree.
Anderson said the Angel Tree was different from other holiday programs because it was easy for individuals to participate.
"You don't have to worry about spending a lot of money, and you can focus on giving something to just one person," Anderson said.
"College students don't often have a lot of money, but they can still participate and make a difference without having to spend a lot."
Susan Hoffman, SUA program adviser, said the Union sponsored the program to give students an opportunity to help others in Lawrence.
we wanted to help with a community project," Hoffman said. "It's a
good time to give back to the community."
Although the Angel Trees ask for only one gift for each child, Hoffman said some people brought back two or three gifts for their children, and some purchased extra gifts for other children that might have been forgotten. Hoffman said last year's gift delivery to the Salvation Army filled an entire pickup truck.
"It was really inspiring to help out, and to see that we were making so many others' holiday a little better," Hoffman said.
Clothing, books or toys are the gifts recommended by the Salvation Army, Hoffman said.
Hoffman said there were 150 angels on the Union's trees so far this year, but she hoped all would be taken and that she would have to get more.
"In years past, some fraternities and sororites each took five, so we had to go get a hundred more," Hoffman said. "We hope we'll have to do that again this year."
CALENDAR:
Continued from Page 7.
Lecture — "Visitors/Objects:
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in the auditorium of the
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Thomas Stidham and J. Kent McAnally, conductors, Vincent Gnojek, saxophone soloist, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Lied Center,
$3 public, $2 students and senior citizens
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I
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, December 1, 1993
9
NFL adds Jacksonville to roster
Two former NFL cities shut out
The Associated Press
ROSEMONT, Ill.—The NFL took on a distinct Southeast tilt yesterday, selecting longshot Jacksonville, Fla., to join Charlotte, N.C., as its 1995 expansion teams.
"The Southeast is a terrific area for football," commissioner Paul Tagliabue said.
So it will be the Jacksonville Jaguars, the longest shot when the process began, playing in aqua shirts trimmed with yellow sleeves and black spots with an open-mouthed jaguar on the helmet.
They joined the Carolina Panthers, giving the expanded NFL 30 teams, by beating out St. Louis and Baltimore, as well as Memphis, Tenn. St. Louis and Baltimore each has lost teams in the past decade. Memphis was one of the favorites when the NFL first began discussing expansion six years ago.
Charlotte was chosen five weeks ago at a meeting in which the owners couldn't decide on a second team. This time they did decide.
The expansion and finance committees voted in tandem 10-2 for Jacksonville, with Robert Tisch of the New York Glants and Norman Braman of the Philadelphia Eagles supporting Baltimore. The final expansion vote was 26-2, with Braman and James Busch Orthwein of New England, an original member of the St. Louis group, voting against Jacksonville. Tisch's co-owner, Wellington Mara, switched the Giants' vote to the majority.
The Los Angeles Rams, Cincinnati Bengals and the Patriots all have indicated willingness to move. Baltimore is interested in the Rams and St. Louis is interested in the Patriots.
Tagliabue downplayed that possibility.
"We will follow our normal process for moving teams," he said, citing rules requiring owners to show they could do better in a new territory.
The Jacksonville group, headed by Connecticut shoe manufacturer Wayne Weaver, included former President George Bush's son Jeb.
The ownership also includes Deron
Cherry, the former All-Pro safety of the Kansas City Chiefs.
Walter Payton, the NFL's all-time leading rusher, was part of the St. Louis effort.
"How much does this hurt?" Payton asked. "There are no words to describe it. I think Jacksonville was the safest choice they could make. I wouldn't want to get into a situation where I'm going to be in court for the next 15 years."
That, rather than tilting the league to the Southeast, might have been a major factor in the decision. Some owners seemed to believe picking St. Louis and Baltimore would lead to court battles.
St. Louis lost the Cardinals to Phoenix in 1989, five years after Baltimore lost the Colts to Indianapolis.
Experienced Temple looms next for Kansas
By Mark Button Kansan sportswriter
After playing three top 20 teams in their first four games, things are not setting any easier for the Kansas Jayhawks.
Tonight's 8:30 game at Allen Field House poses the No. 3 Jayhawks, 4-0, against the No. 7 Temple Owls, who have yet to play a regular season game. Kansas already has defeated No. 6 California, No. 10 Minnesota and No. 18 Massachusetts, as ranked when they played Kansas.
Temple coach Don Chaney has five returning starters from last year's team that advanced to the final eight of the NCAA Tournament before losing to Michigan. He said that his players do not get caught up in the rankings, especially since this is their first game.
"We have some guys that have been around," Chaney said. "They fully understand that the ratings mean nothing. The basketball season is a long journey. It's not like football when you lose your first two or three games, and you're out. Our long-term goal is to get into the NCAA."
Headlining Temple's returning starters are senior guard Aaron McKie, 6-foot-5 and 247 pounds, and senior forward Eddie Jones, 6-6 and 190 pounds. McKie averaged 20.6 points and almost six rebounds a game last year, and Jones added 17 points and seven rebounds.
Kansas coach Roy Williams said he was aware of Temple's talent, especially Jones'.
"Ireally thought that the two best players at the Under-22 tryouts in Chicago last summer were Eddie Jones and Vashon Lenard," said Williams. "I think what you see is a young man with tremendous leaping ability who can take the ball to the basket and can also shoot the three-point shot."
The two teams are in completely different situations. Kansas, with four games and two exhibitions under its belt, enters the game knowing its strengths and weaknesses. Although its players know each other well and have shared success in the past and in two exhibition victories, Temple has not had the opportunity to prove anything yet this year.
Still, Williams said he was envious of Chaney.
"I'd rather be in John's shoes," Williams said. "Last year we had Indiana at Indiana. They had the NIT deal, and it was our second game. Everyone was saying there is no way you can beat Indiana at Indiana, and I love that. I would like to trade places with John right now because he has the same situation."
The Jayhawks defeated Indiana 74-69 in that game.
Kansas players said they knew that they needed to execute better than they did in Monday night's 98-82 double-overtime defeat against the Australian National team. And, in some cases, they thought the loss helped.
"I think it could help us," said senior forward Patrick Richey. "It knocks us down to reality. We know that we can't rely on last week's success."
Note: It is possible that Kansas might not be able to rely on senior guard Steve Woodberry. Woodberry sustained a knee injury in Monday's game that caused swelling and forced him to sit out of practice last night. Williams, however, said he anticipated that Woodberry would play tonight.
KANSAS
20
senior guard Steve Woodberry shoots over Gregg Hubbard of the Australian national team. The Jayhawks will take on No. 7 Temple at Allen Field House at 8:30 tonight.
Swim, dive teams head to U.S. Open
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas swimming and diving team will travel to Ann Arbor, Mich., for the U.S. Open Swim Meet, which starts tomorrow.
The meet is an open competition that invites some of the best swim clubs and collegiate teams in the country. The competition also features some of the best high school talent from around country along with several Olympians.
The impact of the team's performance on recruiting possibilities is not lost on Kansas coach Gary Kempf.
"You take a chance. If you go in and do well, you look good," Kempf said. "If you don't, people start wondering what's going on in Kansas."
"Michigan is one of the best teams in the country," Kempf said. "Quance is probably one of the best women's swimmers right now."
He said that the field in this weekend's meet would give the team some stiff competition. Michigan, which has the home pool advantage, will have a strong showing as will Texas and Southern California, which will send most of its team — including Kristin Quance, who is considered one of the best female swimmers in the country.
Senior swimmer Michele Riffel said that going into this meet was a little different than going to an
average collegiate meet.
"It's more individualized." Riffel said. "For me, my personal time is very important in this meet."
She said that the team was at a pivotal point in the season and that a successful meet this weekend could help carry the team into competition next semester. The meet will be the team's last before semester break.
"The U.S. Open allows us to compete against some of the elite competition in the country," Riffel said. "It also gives us an opportunity to see where we are against international-level competition."
Freshman swimmer Erik Jorgensen said that he saw the meet as a springboard for the rest of the year. He said the competition was more focused on the individual performances than the team's previous competitions.
"It's a good way to see how we're doing at the national level," Jorgensen said.
Kempf said that his goal for the team was for them to swim a fast race without lightening the team's practice, or "tapering," for the meet.
Kempf said that because of injuries and slow performances, his team hadn't been seen at full strength. He said that this weekend would be a good chance for his team show what it could do.
"We're going to need some people to step up for us this weekend," Kempf said.
'KU Past and Present scores bowling fame
By Anne Felstet
Kancon shortwriter
Kansan sportswriter
'KU Past and Present' may not have brought fortune to the University's club bowling squad, but it may have brought fame.
Each of the five members of the team paid $100 to bowl in the World Team Challenge Nov. 13 and 14 in Edmond, Okla.
'KU Past and Present' finished third, and out of the money, in the tournament broadcast on Prime Sports Network, cable channel 45 in Lawrence. The tournament was one of 13 qualifying rounds prior to the final tournament to be held in June in Reno, Nev. The winning team in Reno will receive $125,000.
Senior John Colfax, a member of Kansas' bowling team, organized the five-man team, which consisted of past and present bowlers associated with the Kansas bowling team. Colfax asked his coach Tim DeMars, his teammate senior Jay Kriertzer, and Robert Glass, an assistant scientist at the University's Institute for Public Policy and Business Research, to join him on the team.
"Bob is the man about bowling in Lawrence." Colfax said.
Glass was the Kansas bowling coach in 1980 and 1981. Colfax, who works at the Jaybowl, said Glass practiced almost every day at the lanes.
Glass participates in regional professional bowling tournaments on the weekends and in one or two national tournaments a year.
During his Kansas coaching days,
Glass coached the fifth member of the team, Brian Goebel, now a professional bowler.
Glass and Goebel are used to bowling in televised tournaments, but this was the first experience on television for the others.
"The lights were real bright and pretty hot," DeMars said. "I don't know about the others, but I was sweating."
Colfax said the lights were hot, but the silence struck him more than the heat.
"It was eerie being the only one bowling with 40 other lanes empty," he said. "You can't not notice that it's quiet."
Besides having a perfectly still bowling alley, the bowlers had to stop for commercial breaks, and a 25-second shot clock was used to keep the pace moving.
DeMars said the shot clock sped up his rhythm because he had to get ready quicker.
Colfax did not have that problem. He said he glanced at the clock, but ignored it because he knew he did not take that much time to bowl.
Before this tournament, Goebel was the only one who had not bowled with his teammates before.
Colfax said he had met Goebel before, but had never bowled with him.
Despite never bowling together, the team, Colfax said, was happy with the way it bowled.
"Everybody was pleased with their performance," he said. "We got national notoriety for KU and the bowling team."
SPORTS BRIEF
K-State accepts Copper Bowl bid
The Associated Press
The Wildcats, who under Snyder have progressed steadily from one of the worst programs ever, will play Wyoming in the game Dec. 29 in Tucson. Ariz. Kansas State was 8-13 this year and finished third in the Big Eight.
MANHATTAN, Kan. — Kansas State accepted a bid to the Copper Bowl yesterday in a step that Coach Bill Snyder said took his program up another notch.
By contract, the Aloha was required to take the Big Eight's third place team if that team was available and eligible. But the Aloha preferred second-place Colorado, and Kansas State wanted to go to Tucson, enabling more fans to attend the game.
The Copper wanted Kansas State because the Wildcats would bring an estimated 12,000 fans with them, Snyder said.
34
Junior guard/forward Angela Aycock calls a play while Creighton guard Tracy Landuyt plays defense. The No. 15 Jayhawks will take on the Shockers at Wichita State tonight.
Kin Chin/KANSAN
Jayhawks' No.15 ranking will be Shockers' incentive
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportwriter
Kansan sportswriter
Two women's basketball teams have something to prove at 7:30 tonight when Kansas plays at Wichita State.
No. 15 Kansas
sively as it
comes off a
shaky 74-68 victory against Creighton Friday, and the Shockers are playing their first game of the season.
No. 15 Kansas must improve defen-
WOMEN'S
BASKETBALL
Kansas freshman guard Tamecke Dixon said the Jayhawks had not played to their capabilities in their first game during the Thanksgiving holiday — even though it was the team's first victory against Creighton's Lady Jays in three years.
"Being that we didn't play well against Creighton, we should take it out on them," Dixon said of the Shockers.
Wichita State has an incentive to defeat the Jawhaws.
"Every team that plays us, as long as we're nationally ranked, will be trying to beat us," said Kansas coach Marian
if it's a chance to measure yourself against a nationally ranked team," she said. "I told my team they have to realize that most of these teams are going to play their best basketball against Kenyon."
Washington. "That's all the incentive you need."
As Kansas goes through the season, the Shockers will not be the only team looking for the upset, Washington said.
Wichita State hopes that holds true.
"I'm excited to have the opportunity to play Kansas," said Wichita State coach Linda Hargrove. "We have great respect for them."
Wichita state hopes that nofits true. The Shockers are coming off one of their best seasons in years, finishing fourth in the Missouri Valley Conference with a 15-12 overall record. They are also returning all five starters from last year, including senior forward Anna Sanders.
Hargrove said the Jayhawks were a little inexperienced, but the Shockers were a young team. Sanders is the only senior on the Wichita State team. Kansas returns four starters from last year, but all four freshmen have seen time on the court, playing more than
10 minutes in each game.
"I really don't consider them young when they have Lisa Tate, Angela Aycock, Charisse Sampson and Ericka Muncy." Hargrove said. "I would never think we have an advantage against Kansas. It may be an advantage that we're playing at home, which is good, but this is our first game, and Kansas is already into the season."
Kansas uses a fast-paced offense, which is dependent on its defense forcing turnovers. Hargrove said Wichita State needed to play well defensively and players needed to hustle back after an offensive set.
"Our transition defense is going to have to be very good," Hargrove said. "We can't allow them a lot of fast-break opportunities."
Despite Kansas' national ranking, Hargrove said, Wichita State would not be intimidated.
"It's not like we're going to be in awe of these nationally ranked teams," she said. The Shockers also will play No. 3 Texas Tech later this season. "We want to eventually get this program to the caliber of these other programs."
1
10
Wednesday, December 1, 1993
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West Virginia, Notre Dame battle for Sugar Bowl rights
CHARLESTON, W. Va. — West Virginia, which lost a national title to Notre Dame in the 1989 Fiesta Bowl, appears to be locked into another big battle with the Irish. This time it is for the right to play in the $4.15 million Sugar Bowl.
The Associated Press
"Everybody wants Notre Dame," a source close to the bowl negotiations said yesterday. "Their TV ratings are light years ahead of everyone in college football."
Bowl officials indicated that West Virginia's first choice was the Sugar Bowl. But it was unclear whether the Mountaineers or Notre Dame would be the Sugar Bowl's first choice to play No. 9 Florida, 9-2, or No. 16 Alabama, 8-2-1. The two play for the Southeastern Conference championship Saturday.
"We have not addressed that," said Troy Mathieu, executive director of the Sugar Bowl. "We do not play the what-if games."
Sugar Bowl officials are scheduled to make an announcement today, said Dom Bernstein, a representative for the bowl coalition.
The way things stand now, the Sugar Bowl might not get a choice. The Cotton Bowl is in line to pick first under the bowl coalition format.
If the Cotton Bowl picks No.3 West Virginia and it passes, the coalition must send the Mountaineers to the Sugar Bowl.
"The Big East champion and ACC champion and Notre Dame must play in the Orange, Sugar or Cotton ... unless it's 1 vs. 2," said Rick Baker, executive director of the Cotton Bowl.
But the scenario could change by Sunday, the day final regular-season rankings are released and bowl invitations officially can be extended.
If the rankings shake up enough, it is possible the Sugar Bowl could pick first. And it is also possible the Sugar Bowl committee might opt for No. 5 Notre Dame, 10-1, and its megabucks TV following.
"If we would be picking ahead of the Cotton Bowl, then our committee would have a decision to make, and it changes the complexion of things because we're picking first at that point," Mathieu said.
If the Sugar gets Notre Dame, the Cotton would not complain about landing West Virginia. The Mountainers, though, probably will be
upset about missing out on the $1.15 million more the Sugar pays per team than the Cotton.
"If we have the opportunity, I don't think it's any secret that the Cotton Bowl this year would like to invite the highest ranked team possible to play Texas A&M," Baker said.
"And if you're looking at the pop now, that would be West Virginia," he said. "And as everyone knows, they have the option to pass."
Television is apparently another player behind the scenes.
"A home run for NBC is Notre Dame in the Cotton, so they don't have to compete against themselves at o'clock on Jan. 1," said a bowl source who asked not to be identified.
Notre Dame has a contract with NBC, which also will telecast the Orange Bowl. The Sugar Bowl, telecast by ABC, is broadcast in the same prime time slot as the Orange Bowl. Notre Dame plays in the Sugar, it could cost NBC's telecast of the Orange Bowl valuable rating points.
West Virginia officials would not confirm any reports yesterday. They said the university was continuing to weigh its options and would not accept it was offered an invitation.
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CHEERIOS - KIX - TOTAL
& ALL OTHER BIG G CEREALS
BONELESS CHUCI ROAST
98¢
LB. FAMILY PAK
10 LB. FRUIT SALE
RUBY RED GRAPEFRUIT, WASHINGTON RED DELICIOUS APPLES, SUNRIST ORANGES
288
10 LB. BAG
TIDE LAUNDRY DETERGENT
588
98 OZ. REG.
110 OZ. W/BLEACH
85% LEAN GOLDEN GLO GROUND TURKEY
58¢
LB.
GOLDEN GLO GROUND TURKEY 1 LB. ROLL 68¢
FLORIDA RUBY RED GRAPEFRUIT
25¢
LARGE 32 CT. SIZE EA.
U.S. NO. 1 RUSSET POTATOES
97¢
10 LB. BAG
I.Q.F.
COD FILLETS
298
LB. FAMILY PAK
GREEN GIANT PEAS, CORN OR MIXED VEGETABLES
78¢
EA.
W/BLEACH
16 OZ. BAG
COUNTRY STYLE SPARE RIBS
CUT FROM PORK BUTT
128
LB. FAMILY PAK
BONE-IN PORK STEAK FAM $118 LB.
BOSTON BUTT PORK ROAST
98¢
LB. FAMILY PAK
1/2 SLICED PORK LOIN
128
LB. 18-22 ASST. PORK CHOPS
FROM THE BAKERY FRESH BARED FRENCH BREAD
2¢ $1
LOAVE IN A BAG
MOOSE BROTHERS BREAD STICKS
99¢
LAST WEEKLY FROM BROTHERS PIZZA
TOMMY THREE-DLLED OR SHAVED CORNED BEEF, PASTRAMI, OR ROAST BEEF
298
LB. FAMILY PAK
CAM 2 ANTIFREEZE & COOLANT
288
1 CALLON
EXTRA-LIGHT BULBS
98¢
SKICK 50
FS 100 WAIT
FROM THE BAKERY SUGAR-FREE APPLE PIE
199
LB. 26 OZ.
ASST VARIETIES GOURMET COOKIES $198 DOZ.
BLUE ORANGE SUGAR OR SNAPPED CHEESE BALLS
298
LB. 1 LB. OR LARGER
ASST VARIETIES SMALL CHEESE BALLS $398 LB.
FRESH, CRISP CABBAGE
18¢
WOODEN DOG HOUSES
SMALL TO EXTRA LARGE
$350 M
$200 OFF Any Christmas tree Checkers Parking Lot Sponsored by: Luncheon Optimists
FRESH KANSAS RAISED BUFFALO DAILY!
Checkers LOW FOOD PRICES
23RD & LOUISIANA
ASK ABOUT OUR PARTY TRAYS!
K
ALL THE BEST STUFF IS CHEAPER AT CHECKERS!
23RD & LOUISIANA LAWRENCE
PRICES EFFECTIVE
DECEMBER '93
SEQUENCE NO. TWO THREE FOUR SEA A
| | | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
|---|---|----|----|----|----|
| 8 | 6 | 7 | | | |
Got a fever with a cold or the flu? receive up t
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
IMTCI International Medical Technical Consultants, Inc. 5300 W. 94th Terrace - Prairie Village, Kansas
1-800-669-4682
100s
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
120 Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
205 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available.
Classified Policy
I
Classified Directory
100s Announcements
105 Personals
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 (FHA) and may not be displayed on a residence, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to such preference, limitation or discrimination.
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.
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on race, religion, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
110 Bus. Personals
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Saturday 8:30am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
The Ekt. Shop and Ray-Ban are giving you a gift back each time you buy Ray-Ban/Backpack sunglasses.
The Ekt. Shop .282 Mass
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8:40am-3:00pm
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
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
Hoops, Pendants & more!
For Gaugs and Gala
222 Mass. Downstown
120 Announcements
*SPRING BREAK*
Early Booking Special
Friday
LOWEST PRICES GUARANTEED!
Joan at 865-6611
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
380 Want to Buy
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358-
4UJS Real Estate
408 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
BEACH Springbreak Promoter
Small or larger groups.
Your's FREE, discounted or CASH.
CAM1 CMI 1-803-425-6246
Have fun this year cutting your own Christmas tree at beautiful Pine Hill Farm. Enjoy free horse rides & horse-drawn trailer rides into our fields Sip hot water & select a fresh beautiful decorated wreath. We're celebrating our 22nd year of providing Christmas memories. Drive east on 4 miles to County Road 10 and right on a half mile. Edmonds Family 543-2517.
HELP IN PREPARING FOR FINALS. Workshop includes time management, memory techniques, presentation skills. Wednesday, December 1, 2pm, 300 Strong. Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
STEAMBOAT
*JAN 2.8
*SIX NIGHTS
*4/5 DAY LIFT
*FREE PARTIES
*$259
BILL 832-2277 & 841-9111
Presented by
BENCHWARMERS
SKT
SPRING BREAK 94
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND
NORTH PADRE/IMUSTANG ISLAND
F-LI-O-R-I-D-A
DAYTONA BEACH
PANAMA CITY BEACH
ORLANDO DOWNT Disney WORLD
STEAMBOAT
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
BRECKENRIDGE/KEY$TONE
S-O-U-T-H C-A-R-O-L-I-N-A HILTON HEAD ISLAND
RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW
DETAILS AND COLOR BROCH*\*\*\*\*\
DETAILS AND COLOR BROCHURE!
1.800 SUNCHAKE
1·800·SUNCHASE
---
Leebian, gay bl - or unure? You're not alone. Come to a safe and confidential group. Call Headquarters or KU for more info.
Nature and the Egg: Systemic mutation achieved You'll say what's that? That's your shake-up of the system. Do you help with it? Help do follow-up on systemic mutation. Systemic mutation is the most impassioned help for humans nature can afford.
130 Entertainment
Free Party Room Available
at Johnny's Tavern/Up & Under
Call 842-0377 for details.
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, December 1, 1993
11
COME WATCH 90210
MELROSE PLACE
TONIGHT!
Now Showing At
7pm AND 10pm
BENCHWARMERS
*$3 burger'baskets
- burger baskets
* Domestic longneck
special
NEW RIDDIM
This Thursday
December 2
25 ¢ DRAWS!
at
BENCHWARMERS
BENCHWARMERS
Exclusive KU ALUM message area shared over Fidonet. Real time chat. Easy data menus! Lawrence on line/TBBS; 865-1440. Voice/help: 861-1042.
MATERIAL ISSUE
from Chicago FRIDAY
December 3 (ADV.TIX)
at
$ save money $
CLIP A COUPON
BENCHWARMERS
is back!
SOUL FOOD CAFE
Saturday December 4
2 FOR 1 WELLS!
at
BENCHWARMERS
140 Lost & Found
FOUND: Women's wrist watch between Bailey and Strong on Nov. 29. Fossil Brand. Identify to claim. Call Dan at 864-445.
女 厕 男 厕
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
18TENTION COLLEGE STUDENTS! Need fresh loans sometimes don't cover those "hidden costs." We can help! Call Faith Marketing for information. Call 24-780-3599. Free 24-hour recorded message. Call 24-780-3599.
SIGNING BONUS. We currently are accept
the applications for full and part-time licensed copsicologist or barbers. 2 weeks paid vacation.
Apply at Pro-Cuts, 2500 Lane
AX Cruise & Travel jobs. Earn $2500/mo. + travel the world free! (Caribbean, Europe, Hawaii, Asia!) Cruise jobs now hiring for busy holiday, Season Listing Call. Call 929-293-6980 ext. 131.
ACADEMIC AIDE POSITIONS AVAILABLE. (1) English Reader, Duties include: Reading textbooks and other materials for students who are blind or have reading disabilities. Reading exams and assisting with library research, $4.25/hr. in the field. $8.50/hr. (3) Typetruly/Scribe. Duties include: Type papers/class notes and transcript exam answers, $4.25/hr. Applications available at the Student Assistance Center, 133 Strong Hall, 864-4064. Application deadline: Dec. 6, 5:00 p.m. Typetruly/Scribe. Application deadline for Law Reader is December 15 at 5:00 pm.
ADMINISTRATIVE USER SERVICES
Student Monthly. Deadline: 12/3/1993. $550/$650/
month depending on experience. SCO-UNIX support,
provide application, design, documentation
and deliver software training sessions for end
users, provide LAN installation and problem solu-
tion assistance. SOO-Unix support:
demonstrated excellent oral and written
communications skills, knowledgeable about
computerized databases and their uses, experi-
ence with client systems, and continued enrol-
ment through spring 1995.
Complete job description available. Apply. sub-
mit a letter of application and a current resume to
Computer Administrative Assistant, Campus Cente-
rium University, Anaheim, Lawrence, KS 85069. EO/A
EMPLOYER
AMIGOS
advisor/Assist Mgr
After-school children wished in my home for 2
children 8 & 11yrs. 842-4366
Supervisor now - Manager later! Learn the business from the ground up and advance according to your performance. If you are an aggressive customer, be sure to keep your intensity pace, an opportunity to put these skills to work and equip a leader is available. Relocation be required by please plus benefit Apply at: amigios.181.W.23rd.
EARN $15 CASH
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W 24th 749-5750
Child care positions available: Sunday morning hours in nursery (babies/toddlers) and preschool (ages 3-5) areas at Grace Church. Experience pre-
前 interviewing. Call Katy @ 842-5006 for interview time.
Earn $1,000 per week at home filling orders! Free
Information. Please send long self addressed
stamped envelope to CJ Enterprises, Box 70768H,
Cuvahay Falls, OH 44222.
Full-time assistant manager needed immediately.
Must live on site. Call 841-8468.
Graphic Design Students
Fast-growing company that design company needs assistance in producing logo and marketing brochure. Great experience and excellent salary. Call Sterling Properties 865-9629
RAISE UP TO $1,000 one WEEK For your fraternity, sorority & club. Plus $1,000 for yourself! And A free T-SHIRT just for calling. 1-809-932-0588, ext. 75
Immediate openings. Must be able to work Holiday
Immediate Racquet Club, 412 Cunningham
Pkwy from 10-3.
Looking for someone eligible for Work Study to work part-time in a candy store. Business or accounting experience. Call 863-1903 for interview.
Marketing Assistant position available at Naimhall Hith for the spring semester. Applicant must have an MBA, degree in business (desktop publishing experience a plus), and have background experience in marketing, advertising, customer service, or sales. Position will be part of a marketing team. Required education is standard. 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 to www.naimhalldrive.com/sk5-6042-D/E/MF/USA.
work weekday mornings, call 641-8488 to apply.
Part-time position for person with business or accounting major to show apts, answer phones, and general office work. Own car needed, must be a Krasna resident, enrolled at KU in at least 12 months, and have a GPA of 2.0 or higher. Call 641-8403 9-M-F.
Part-time temporary Extension 4-H Assistant.
Assist 4-H Agent with the promotion of the 4-H Enrichment program and related work.
Required: High School Graduate and ability to work with people; B.S. preferred. $5.25 per hour, plus mileage, 20 hours per week; January 3-June 13; December 10 to December 18; December 10 to: Dennis Beijot, Extension Director; 2110 Harper, Lawrence, KS, K6046. EOE
Phone Work. Part Time, Flexible Hours. Paid Daily. Call 232-2983.
PRE-MEDICAL SECRETARY/ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT: Half-time graduate position (20 hrs a week) with the possibility of becoming an assistant. Required to include acting as a resource person for pre-health professions students, maintaining current information for the students, processing recommendations for students applying to health/dental/teaching positions, developing student confidence files for evaluation by the Health Sciences Committee, planning information meetings twice a year, handling correspondence on behalf of Chief Medical Officers preparing medical records related to medical school acceptance, using Word Perfect 5.1, and being able to perform general office duties. Above all, must have excellent interpersonal skills and ability to work independently in pre-medical school in long-term employment. Must be a KU graduate student. Please apply and bring (or send) resume to the Pre-Med Office, 110 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66544, 8643-8697, or The University of Kansas at January 3. The University of Kansas is an A/E/O Employer.
SEMESTER BREAK POSITIONS! Inl. chain filling 47-PT, FT entry level openings. Earn $90-150 per hour or less for each 25. Can remain PT next semester. Interview in 842-8331 or Over lander 311-6975.
Restoration/maintenance positions for skilled person with excellent references. Steady work, strong communication skills.
RESUME SERVICES Professional Business
Interview Training Free initial interview 821-800
Temporary, per diem position 3 hrs./day, Mon-
Thurs. Contact blood donors by phone to schedule
appointments; make cold calls as needed.
Credit card training; provide credit card训
cognition skills. Prefer telephone solicitation experience.
$4.25 hr. Apply American Red Cross, 120 W.
29th, Lawrence, 834-355 M/F EOE
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.
you can help save the rainforests and others to help save the rainforests, stop toxic waste, and protect the ozone layer. FT/PT 190 to 193, paid training, hours 2 to 19 m.p. Call 811-313-8381.
Work in beautiful Colorado mountains this summer at Cheley Colorado Camps program. R.N.; drivers; secretaries; wranglers; nanny; camp counselors; sports, crafts counselors. Camps age 9-17. Room and board, cash salary, travel allowance. Our 74th summer! Must be a t least 19 to apply. Applicants will be notified of campus interview dates. Camps, Box 6253, Denver, CO 80206. 303-737-3816.
225 Professional Services
Birthright 843-881. Free pregnancy testing.
Leahman, gay bi- or unisex? If you need to talk to someone, call a Peer Counselor. CONFIDENTIAL. Call KU Info or Headquarters.
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S Fake ID'& alcoholics divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
prompt abortion and contraceptive services. Dale
Cinton M.D. 841-5716.
Research Assistance - MS/MLS information specifi-
cation, these dissertations, research projects. 85% of
students.
Donald G. Strobe Sally G Ketsay
16 East 13th 842-1133
Dissertations
Hardbinding and Gold Stamping
3 Day Turnaround
Lawrence Printing Service, Inc.
512 E. 9th Street 843-4600
Thesis &
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
Rick Frydman,Attorney
823 Missouri
843-4023
235 Typing Services
Unique issues. cover letters, laser prints. Fast.
High-resolution. durable. Graphic ideas, Inc.
827/915. 841-1071
A Word Perfect word processing service. Laser printer. Near campus. 842-895.
1-der Woman Word Processing, 843-2063.
Expert typing, IBM Correcting Selectric.
$1.50 double spaceed book. Call Mrs Baili 841-236-9718.
Transcriptions
Resumes
• cover letters
• writing
• consultation
Resumes
1012 Mass 842-4619 Suite 201-upstairs
PA RW
member of
Professional
Association
of
Resume Writers
*last, accurate word processing; term paper, dissertation, thesis and graphics services available. laser printing Engineering and LawReview experience. Call Pam at 841-1877 anytime.
Pro-Type - fast, reliable, service, professionally. Any kind of typing. Call today at 841-6242.
Running out of time?
Let me do your TYPING!
Lazer printing to WOW! your pro's.
It is very useful.
All typing jobs accepted.
Grammar and spelling corrected!
Call Jack at
Makin' the Grade
885-2855
Word processing, applications, term papers, discussions, rush job available. Masters Degree 841-6544
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
1 Bdrm ap1, just blocks from campus available for 2nd semester sublease. washer/dryer, dishwasher fan...the works. $220 per o./person. 1138 Kentucky 885-6720. Call now.
91 Schwinm Impact Pro> good condition asking $275. LM or ask for Steve 832-0275.
Beds, desks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
968 Mass.
Drafting table 40*38*30 Adjustable chair, fluoresc-
tant light and teledyne post drafting machine. Call 212-769-2500.
Fall Clearance: All adult tapes on sale $12.80 and
$13.99, or Miracle Video Tole 190, 1910 Haskell, 841-704.
I'm graduating and need to sell my *Beautiful*
wood chest, cherry wood chest, wood bead board, matching night stand W&h 2 drawers, cherry wood chest with vanity mirror. Paid $300 a year ago but not to pay $75. You
own it!
Fender acoustic guitar. Great X-Mas present,
hands-on use, soft case, $200 or best
buy. #378-9340
Pinewood Queen waterbed/mattress $350,
pinewood & g dresser warmer w/ mirror $20, a desk
for $10, an entertaining center for 10, and a glass
table for 8. Pinewood Queen $30, Queen box spring
and mattress $84, 81-6840.
Mac SE, 40 meg HD, Carrying case, ImageWriter
Mac SE, 40 meg HD, Compact board games, and more.
$69.95 for ACR (dr. Acr.)
Futon with frame, 1 yr. old. 832-2953. $150
Jackets: Leather bomber 75. *Leather biker* $100.
Obermeyer ski pulver $110 *Skiolver* 843-7857
Macintosh Quadras. Best prices available. Student discounts apply. 800-249-2441
1983 Black Jeep CJ-7, S-Speed. Hard top, new
car. 34,800 cu. ft. Bare ground. Call 822-3567
and leave a message.
1975 Bulk Skylark Coupe with 327 Chev engine,
400 horsepower. Consider monthly payments.
C64-121-207
Cannondale SFR 400 road bike with Lock pedals,
exc.cond. $550 841-7050
84 Prelude S1. 119k Hwy ml. Power runn out and
all options, $3,800 Call Sqr. 642;
8700 MUST SSEI
8790 MUST SSEI
Spend New Year's in Chicago! Leaves KC on Dec 26
& returns Jan. 5, Only 10%! Call 841-3941 non-breaking
digit code: 841-3941.
1986 Dodge Charger 2-dr hatchback, AM/FM/carbon
Body in good shape and runs well. Call 842-750-6300
Finto 82' 1607. Manual. Running no problem. $360 Call
842-1607
B6 Prelude S11 10k Hwm iP. Power sumrud & win-
hreads all options $3.00. Mull Call on Seng A87;
MUST SSEI 10k.
1 roommate to sublease apt, 1 blk. from campus, $180/mo. Call 941-4207.
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
very nice! Available Spring Sep. Interested?Call
866-321-2097
4 bdrm, lrg rms, stove and refrigerator,
6 bedrooms, bookups, $700 monthly. Available
15. Dec. 84-93
4 Bedroom house for sub-lease, Cheap rent, low
price. 5 Bedroom house for C.C. Attention Marks
9440,9449 for calling!
1 Bdrm. wood floors, lt of windows, Oread nearhood, Very Nice $200/month. Call 82-352-95.
1 bedroom Apt. for sublease available Jan. I. Only $300/month. Water paid, gas heat, on Bus Route,
3 bedroom towhouse for rent Jan. 1, dishwasher,
gas range, refrigerator, Spectraon on the bus
route, very nice EAP! $849.00
Available at semester break, apts. in new section West Hills 100 Emery Rd. bapt. apt., alcohols, boilies, hookups, dw, microwave, fan, mini blinds, balcony, energy efficient, great location near carpark, parking lot, school
Indiana University Students for KW want IU-KU tickets for Dec. 22. Call Cliff at (813) 323-2500.
4 br house for rent, 2 blocks from campus, clean,
clean, clean. 839-516-2000 help leave all help KU Cali Elmberg at 749-839-6193
One -- three Indiana vs Kansas basketball tickets.
One -- three Indiana vs Kansas basketball tickets.
833.
370 Want to Buy
Available Jan. 1, 3 bdmr. apt. on bus route. Call
749-15258-2-8 Mon.-Fri.
Available Jan. 1 3 berm, apt close to campus,
Georgetown高校.
Call, 852-649-7497 or 749-779.
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
Available now nice clean clean apt. close to cam-
puter. Call 842-2349 3653. 865/mm. No pets. Call 842-2349 please lv. message
A
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
Bd furnished apartment cute and clean borders campus available Jan. 1st 1841-0027 or 816-785-4455.
- Close to campus
• Spacious 2 bedroom
• Laundry facility
• Swimming Pool
• Waterbed allowed
Furnished room for female grad. student: Clean,
balcony, 1790 Indoor 843-623-7751. No smoking.
Bath, 1790 Indoor 843-623-7751.
9th& Avalon 842-3040
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and
room from KU. Off-street parking
no pets. Call 841-554-8360
Furnished studio apartment. 2 short blocks from Water paid. Off street parking. No pets. 841-5500
Great sub-lease opportunity 1416 Tennessee Large
great, clean, quiet. great clean. 842-7750 or 793-9057
MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments in well kept old homes. Also some houses.
Best in Lawrence, sign up for next year.
Best in New York, sign up for next year,
available for more info 811-762-3500.
Newly Remodeled Studio on Campus. Call 841: 8468.
Nice furnished large rooms, new pain/capet.
Hetted garden, W/ kitchen use. Prof or student.
Bathroom, washroom.
Room to sub-lease in a large house start Jan 1st.
$180 plus / less $250. Tenn. Call 843-1065-806
**PLEASE READ DESCRIPTION BEFORE RENTALING**
*This listing is subject to change.*
123
Share nice large home, nice neighborhood or studio, 1.2 bed home apt, a block to KU. Reference
Cottage stone near campus available at semester break or be unfirmed, #465/mo, no pets. Call 691-837-2080.
Spring Semester sub-lease, 1 br Apt very close to campus $350/mo. Call 832-0161
Studio subdues, furnished, avail Jan. 1. Water
764-219 and Nights 841-566, no pets. Day
764-219 and Nights 841-566.
Sublane 3 bedroom apt. at Boardwalk. Available
in room A101, Suite A25. Entrance to Jan
KU bus route, water pay. $350, 841-6484.
Sublease 2 br. Townhouse W/D hookups and
mortgage loans +MOI + utilities.
Call Harvey Place #M1-1124
Sublease begin Jan 1. 1. Great studio ap in old building. 2. Sublease with new suite to dtwent and campus. $200-unit. Call 842-2659.
Bedroom apts.
Avail. now.
Recently const.
On Bus Route, Dishwasher, Central Air& heat, walk in closet,
2 bath.
Sablasse Jan.-May 2-8 bdrm apartment Birchwood Garden, near campus, lower 1/4 of 4-plax.
we're making life easier!
Now leasing for Spring!
honDAY Apartment
Holiday
- Front Door Bus Services
•"Dine Anytime" with
Unlimited Seconds
•Laundry and Vending
Facilities
•Free Utilities
211 Mount Hope Ct.
430 Roommate Wanted
*Weekly Maid Service
1 bdmR / wmi/ private bath of 2 a8bmR apt avail
2 bdmR / wmi/ private bath of 4 - 1/4仗享
ON BUS ROUTE: K码 847-6031.
1 Female needed, spacious 2 bedroom ap for spring sem. on bus route $233 Mm. + / utilities
1 or 2 females needed for spacious 3 bdm apt. for
camp, on campus, from camp, on campus,
+ 2 / u/til, 842/767.
NAISMITH Hall
1 rmmate needed to load 3 bdm api. Jan 1 or
December 1996 to load 3 bdm api. Jan 1 or
Christia 885-1008 day or 852-1058 after 4 pm
Female needed to share townhouse. Will have own
dining room. Washer / dryer $25/mo.
£ utilities. Call 642-3900
1 roommate needed to share nice/clean 3 bdm apt. in Kansas City (IU - I35/87th area) $264 a bedroom needed to share beautiful, historic 3 bdm apt. in downtown area. Wood floors & W/D roommate
2 NSP Upperclassman 2 NSP to share clean,
furnished 4 bdmr, bath apt. Bus Route. Nice
Nighborhood. Pool, Laundry rm $196 + 1/4 ut.
Call Morgan 280-0133 or Rae孟军 86591-8247
Female non-smoker needed to share three bedrooms.
$259/month. U/L Utilities. Call 748-1495.
$179/month. U/L Utilities. Call 748-1495.
Female non-smoker. Now Bru Aug 2 BR apt. in-
tul. in-room. Cars 824 - 832. Pilv furnished. Close to camper. 822-698.
1800 Naismith Drive (913) 843-8559
Sublease: Studio w/bedroom. 1 Bk from campus.
Yes, gas pad available. Wash-up required. Washington.
No deposit required.
FEMALE ROOMMAST WANTED N/E/ move in,
uiltilite
Quiet areas. Call Patti at 943-2810
SUBLEASE STUDIO APT. for Spring Semester, 2
bks from campus, of off street parking, W/D, full
kitchen, bkth, 9th and Louisiana, Rent, and Utilities
$300/$800 to bkth $41-679 if no answer $544
$844.
67/Dryer in hunting. No deposit. 824-502-7111
Brownson farm, 8. S of Lawrence is an installed traditional farm home, complete with porches and a great deck. 2 bdm1 bath; heated by natural gas (no propane tank). 3 bdm1 bathroom. Washrooms, quiet location. Will rent to people with refs. $400/mo 794-109 to respond 6 pm.
Fur 3 bed, 2 bath condo on bus r.turf. w/d in app
Bedroom 1, 2 bath condo on bus r.turf. w/1. Chris 858
or 851-464 after 12 p.m.
Looking for a female roommate to bring 4 bdmr. 2 bm apartment. On bus route, fully furnished & very INEXPENSIVE!! Call Holly or Beth at 865-1481
Male roommate needed to share a 3drm, 2batm,
apartment spring semester. Top floor, terrace,
microwave, dishwasher at Colony Woods. Available
at $235/mo + else. Call (81-643-874),
leave message
N/S Female needed for 4 bdm聘 with W/D,
garage, office, $170/mo. + utility On bus
pass. No longer needed.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
N/R/semblem fumale roommate needed for 2
R/N/semblem fumale roommate needed for 3
R/N/semblem fumale roommate needed for 4
Deposit not available ASAP. Ded $74,980.00
home /var/www/html/book
home /var/www/html/book, available
www.book/book, valid
NSP w/ small dog needs a responsible NSP to
NSP w/ small dog needs a responsible NSP to
Need clean, responsible, N/S, male to share 2br.
apt. 825.50./mo. +1/½ utilities. Free cable. Close to
bus route. Furnished (except for room). Available
Dec. I Call quick! 842-4899.
Need mature, N/C male to share 2 hr abp
N/C female to share 4 hr abp $193
Some utl. pd. Awail, Jan 1, 749-4369
Needed: N/S female to share nice 3 bdm, apt w/
hard wood floors near campus and township.
$175/mo. + $175 deposit. Avail. immediately. Call
822-0370 evenings.
NSP w/ small dog needs a responsible NSF to
have the dog spring semester $180/mo.
Call 719-6491 Call 719-6492
- Byphone: 864-4358
Roommate needed. M/F to share a 2dmin Apt and
roommate needed. M/F to share a 3dmin Apt - 8187
mcall. call 409-4698 and leave a message.
Roommate wanted for 5 bdm. house. Has washer
& $200/mo. includes utilities except phone.
Has a cell phone.
Responsible male roommate wanted for 4 bedroom, 3 bath townhom in West Lawrence. Large kitchen, fireplace, and washer/dryer. Cabinet, trash bin. $600 / mo +1/2 call. Call 841-8530 and leave a message
One NS female needed to share a quiet 2 BR Ap. on bus route w /WD hookups. Move in after fall finals. Please call 832-8790.
Roommate needed to live in lrg. 48D DRouse. Very
close to campus. $160/ml + eng. 832-1918
One roommate needed at four bedroom house for
$200/mo + utilities Ask for
Parental 652-280-2961
Seeking NSRP to sublease NEW 13B ram on c8h &
Enter $25 + / utilities. Available NOW! Cowl
- Dv Mail: 119 Staffer Flint. Lawrence. KS. 6045
Classified Information and order form
Ads shown in may be billed by your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
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.
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 days when cancelled before their expiration date.
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of gage lines the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of lines in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
| Num. of insertions: | Cost per line per day |
|---|
| 1X | 2-3X | 4-7X | 8-14X | 15-25X | 30+X |
|---|
| 3 lines | | 2.65 | 1.55 | 1.05 | .65 | .75 | .50 |
| 4 lines | | 1.90 | 1.15 | .80 | .70 | .65 | .45 |
| 5-7 lines | | 1.65 | 1.05 | .75 | .65 | .60 | .40 |
| 8+ lines | | 1.75 | .90 | .65 | .60 | .55 | .35 |
When canceling a classified list 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 check or with cash are not available.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kassan office for a fee of $4.00.
Rates
at per line per day
105 personal
118 business personalis
120 announcements
130 entertainment
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
1
385 for sale
340 auto sales
368 miscellaneous
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| | | | | |
378 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wanted
Total ad cost:___ Classification:___
Name:
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Address
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence,KS.66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
The Ant who lived Hardvark
1
12
Wednesday, December 1, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BULLWINKLE'S
Monday: Pitchers $275
Tuesday: 25c Draws $300 Cover
Wednesday:$1^{50} Big Beers 75¢ Draws
Thursday: $100 Big Beers $300 Cover
The Tradition Continues...
Friday: $1^{25} Cans
Saturday: $175 Imports
1344 Tennessee 843-9726
CAFE JAYHAWK CAFE
Tuesdays;
Light Night: $1^{10}Domestic Light Bottles,
Shot and Light DrawSpecials
Wednesdays;
25c Draws
Thursdays;
Retro/Disco Night: Live D.J.;No Cover
Join us for Captain Morgan Night;
Captain Morgan Drink Specials and Tons of Giveaways!!
THE HAWK
HAWK
THE HAWK Lawrence, KS Since 1919 1340 Ohio (913)843-9273 3pm-2am, Mon.-Sun. Call or come in to check our daily specials!
Join us for KU Basketball Games on T.V.
Yacht Club Daily Specials
Monday: $3^{25} Pitchers
Tuesday:
$1^{50} Domestic Bottles
2 Pitchers $5^{50}
Wednesday: $1^{25} Margaritas
$50¢ Draws
$1^{50} Big Beers
Thursday: 75¢ Draws
2 Pitchers $5**
Friday: $1^{50} Busch/Busch Light/Keystone Light
Saturday: $1^{100}Yacht Shots
Sunday: $2^{50} Cheeseburger, Fries and a Draw or a Coke 75¢ Refills
THE YACHT CLUB
Louisiana KS
LOUISE'S WEST
"World Famous"
DRINK SPECIALS
LOUISE'S WEST
Sundays: $ 2^{00} Bloody Marys
Mondays: $1^{50} Schooner Night
Tuesdays: $1^{50}22 oz. Bottles
Wednesdays: $150Schooner Night
Thursdays: $1^{100}Bottle Night
Fridays & Saturdays: Shot Specials
DAILY SHOT SPECIALS!
7th & Michigan Lawrence, KS 832-8004
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MON...$1.25 BOTTLES
TUES...$1.00 DRINKS
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SAT...$1.00 DRAWS
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1
SPORTS: No. 3 Kansas was no match for No. 7 Temple last night at Allen Field House. Page 11.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103,NO.71
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2,1993
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
It's Costa Rica for credit during Xmas
5 students will spend 2 weeks working on community projects
By Casey Barnes Special to the Kansan
Writing a final paper at home or spending the Christmas break in Costa Rica learning first-hand about a foreign culture — that is the choice presented to students in Urban Planning 565.
Five students in Donna Luckey's class of 39 have opted to experience the culture of the Central American country rather than merely write about it. Those students will be working on projects in Costa Rica from Dec. 27 to Jan. 9.
This is the first time the Costa Rica trip has been offered. Luckey, associate professor of
architecture and urban design, said the class had been receptive to the idea.
"There is much more interest than I expected," Luckey said. "The students have realized that hands-on experience is critical."
The trip is expected to cost $1500.
The students will fly to San Jose, Costa Rica, and stay in youth hostels for the first few days. Later they will travel to a work site in Golfifo, where they will work on community projects, such as planting trees and cleaning city parks and a landfill.
The goal of the program is to give students the opportunity to immerse themselves in a different culture and become familiar with another way of life.
Spencer Salzberg, graduate teaching assistant in urban planing, said he hoped the trip would allow students to learn more about the Latin American culture, which is a focus of the class.
"We hope that the students will realize that what they are learning can affect environmental planning." Salzberg said.
Luckey said she hoped this trial trip would encourage other professors to adopt a similar program.
"I'm trying to expand the opportunities for students with more field work," she said. "I want to show that it can be done. And if students are interested, why not let them get the experience?"
The students will see the implementation of social, personal and environmental planning in a Latin American country while on the trip.
"We are going to be visiting places in which projects are under way and places where plans are being developed," Luckey said.
Jori Thielen, Omaha senior, is one of the five students going on the trip.
"It will look great on a resume, and it sounds so interesting to do work for a community that I've never been around," Thielen said. "In two weeks I will be able to see more than I'll ever read about in a textbook."
U.S.
Mexico
Pacific Ocean
Map area
S. America
Nicaragua
Caribbean Sea
COSTA RICA
San Jose
Pacific Ocean
Panama
0 N 50 Miles
Knight-Ridder Tribune
Artists create colorful cloth
Students seek recognition for 40-year-old field of fiber art
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
Art students who work with cloth and dye rather than canvas and paint displayed their work on the fifth floor of the Art and Design Building yesterday.
Four rooms showcased bolts of colorful cloth, handpainted dresses and paper clothing. Tie-dyed sheets lined the hallway, including a red-checkered cloth bordered with circling ants and eight silk-screened servings of frozen dinners.
These were among more than 250 displays in the student-sponsored textile art show, created to let viewers see the work of 51 student artists, said D'Arcy Jensen, Omaha, Neb., senior and organizer of the event.
Because fiber provides artists with a means to work in both two and three dimensions, Jensen said, textile art allows for more flexibility and creativity in their creations.
"A lot of contemporary artists are using more pliable fibers for their art," Jensen said. "We're working with the same techniques that have been done all over the world."
Many people view textile work as craft or handiwork rather than an art, Jensen said. Artists who work with fiber have attempted to challenge this stereotype by emphasizing the sense of touch in their work and using fiber in unexpected ways.
"A glove is not only made for the hand but is something tactile to be felt," Jensen said. "Fiber art goes beyond the obvious uses of clothing and interior design."
Cynthia Schira, professor of textile design, said she agreed that people were more familiar with traditional textile crafts, such as knitting or crochet, than the 40-year-old field of fiber art.
"Most people aren't aware enough to know what the potentials are for the textile field," Schira said. "It's ironic, too. You're swaddled in cloth when you're born, and you're swaddled in it when you die."
Art critics and patrons continue to argue about fiber art's potential to rise above its roots as a craft, said Cathy Lynn Gasser, assistant professor of textile design.
"It's a huge debate topic," Gasser said. "But I do believe it's getting more attention. People are getting used to seeing materials they don't expect at art shows."
During the exhibit, Scot Shandalove, Lawrence junior, wove a six-foot scarf on his loom. As he shot the shuttle of black thread back and forth inside the strands of brightly colored yarn, Shandalove said the art of weaving, though time-consuming, had unexpected benefits.
"Once you set yourself up on the loom, the rest of the work becomes very relaxing and natural," he said.
I am a master of the art of weaving. I am also an artist who creates works that are both functional and decorative. My work is characterized by its use of materials such as wool, silk, and cotton. My designs are often inspired by nature and human experience. I am known for my innovative use of technology in my artwork, including robotic knitting machines. My work is also influenced by modernist and postmodernist styles. I am a proud member of the textile art community and am interested in exploring new possibilities for our art.
Susan McSpadden / KANSAN
Scot Shandalove, Lawrence junior, works on a loom while KU faculty and students view the textile exhibit on the fifth floor of the Art and Design building. More than 250 pieces were on display yesterday afternoon.
SenEx OKs revisions in policy on dating
Final governance vote Dec.9 on new guidelines student-faculty relations
By Christoph Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
The University Senate Executive Committee yesterday approved sending a new consenting relationships policy to University Council.
The new policy, which SenEx recommended to replace the existing consenting relationships policy, came from the consensual relationships task force report. Kim Wilcox, associate professor of speech, language and hearing and head of the task force, presented the report to SenEx.
The policy will be presented to Council during its Dec. 9 meeting.
w policy discourages, but does not prohibit, consenting relationships when a power differential exists, such as a relationship between an administrator and faculty member, faculty member and student or supervisor and employee.
"It places a strong emphasis on professional ethics and responsibility."
WII Linkugel
SenExmember
munication studies and SenEx member.
The existing policy prohibits consenting relationships where one person has direct power over the other, such as relationships between a professor and student.
T. P. Srinivasan, professor of mathematics and head of SenEx, said the new policy was clearer than the existing policy.
"This addresses all components of the University," he said.
The new policy states that if a consenting relationship develops, then the person in authority must assign the work evaluation or grade to someone else in the department.
"We wanted to try and formulate a policy that would apply to the entire University community," said Bob Friauf, professor of physics and astronomy, task force member and head of Council.
A footnote on the new policy recommends that there be a dedicated effort to educate University officials and faculty on the issues and consequences involved with consenting relationships.
"The notion of education was a recurring theme for the task force." Wilcox said.
Wilcox said the new policy was intentionally left vague because it was difficult to put a definition on each incident that could be called a consenting relationship.
Because there was such a consensus among the 16 members of the task force, who represented KU's faculty, students, classified and unclassified staff, Srinivasan said he expected the equally diverse Council to accept the new policy.
"I think the Council will lend its support," he said.
After reviewing the policy, Council will send its own recommendations to Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor. Chancellor Gene Budig will then make the final decision after he receives the policy from Meyen.
INSIDE
Just imagine!
JOSHUA BATES
For KU art instructor John Talleur, imagination is the key. He teaches his philosophy through his art and life.
Page 7.
Living zombies populate world of sleep deprivation
All-night test crammers beware. You're at risk for seizures, mono, strip throat and, ironically, test amnesia.
All-night test
By Liz Kilinger
As finals approach, many KU students such as John Ludenia II, Mansfield, Ohio, sophomore, find themselves studying more and sleeping less.
Kansan staff writer
Two weeks ago Ludenia did not sleep for 28 hours to prepare for and take two tests. Ludenia he drank caffeinated soda, ate pure sugar and ran around his apartment complex to stav awake.
After his first test, he was in a daze.
"I forgot where I lived for a while," Ludenia said. "I forgot where I was going. I felt completely drained. I couldn't think."
Sleep deprivation is a problem students should be aware of, said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center. He said one or two KU students often were
hospitalized each semester because they had gone without sleep.
Yockey said students staying up for 48 hours or more may have to be hospitalized for a a sleep-deprived seizure that can include loss of consciousness, a rapid heart rate and increased blood pressure. Students who go without sleeping and overdose on caffeine and nicotine also may be hospitalized for a rapid heart rate.
"It's pretty difficult to go beyond 48 hours of not sleeping and be able to function normally," said Frank DeSalvo, director of the Counseling and Psychological Services Center.
Students not hospitalized for sleep deprivation may be at risk for mononucleosis, strep throat and upper respiratory infections.
Adrienne Morton, Albuquerque,
New Mexico, sophomore, said she
felt the physical impact of going without sleep when she stayed up for 28 hours to write a research paper. She went to Watson Library, took food breaks and wrote the paper at her friend's house. She also drank soda and coffee to stay alert.
Both Yockey and DeSalvo said it was important for students to get as much continuous sleep as they could.
"It's much more productive to get five hours of sleep than two three-hour naps." Yockey said.
Students who alternate entire days of studying with entire days of sleeping are not benefitting academically or health-wise, DeSalvo said.
"I got really sick" said Morton, who became pale and experienced the shakes. "I was throwing up. I looked like hell."
"That's the equivalent of running a marathon and then taking a day off and then running another marathon," DeSalv said. "It's a very inefficient
While students such as Joe Kronawitter, Shawnee junior, try to keep up with their school work so they do not have to go without sleep when preparing for final exams, some find all-nighters are inevitable.
way to study and a terribly ineffective way to retain information."
"Three of mine are in three days in a row," Kronawitter said. "What can you do?"
( )
Yockey said it was essential that students about to take a final got a good night's sleep so that they could at least demonstrate what they know on a test.
"Test amnesia is real common when you're sleep-deprived," Yockey said. "You just go blank. If you're confident and prepared you probably can recall information you were studying six weeks ago better than stuff you just tried to memorize last night."
9
}
Thursday. December 2.1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VV
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ON CAMPUS
Canterbury House will celebrate Holy Eucharist at noon today in Danforth Chapel.
KU Judo will meet at 4:30 p.m. todav in 207 Robinson Center.
Society of Women Engineers will sponsor a gift exchange at 6 p.m. today at the Koch Lounge in Learned Hall. For more info, call Charity Hastings at 832-8994.
Student Senate will have a Center for Community Outreach meeting at 6 p.m. today at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more info, call Julie Harris or Shanda Vangas at 864-3710.
KU Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at Parlors A, B and C in the Kansas Union. For more info, call Erik Lindsley at 841-4585.
InterVarsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more info, call David Zimmerman at 864-7117.
KU Pre-Law Society will sponsor a lecture at 7 tonight at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. For more info, call John Wasylenko at 843-6585.
Psi Chi (Psychology Club) will meet at 7 on tonight in 547 Fraser Hall. For more info, call Jennifer Wallace at 749-1086.
University Chess Society will meet at 7 tonight at the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union. For more info, call Nathan at 842-0049.
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in Robinson Center. For more info, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
Lesbian, Bisexual and Gay Services of Kansas will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Frontier Room in the Burge Union.
Amnesty International will meet at 8 tonight at the Glass Onion, 624 W.12th St.
Jayhawkier Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more info, call John Dale at 864-1115.
KU Libertarians will meet at 8 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more info, call Allen Tiffany at 824-2411.
KU Young Democrats will meet at 8 tonight in the Kansas Union.
Le Cerule Francais will meet at 8 tonight at 2032 Mass St. in the home of Ted Johnson, professor of French and Italian. For more info, call Alice Yee at 865-1907.
Icthus Christian Outreach will meet at 8:30 tonight at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union. For more info, 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 info, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445.
CORRECTION
The caption of the photograph on Student Union Activities' Arts and Page One of yesterday's Kansan Crafts Fair ends today. contained incorrect information.
BENCHWARMERS CATERING
WEATHER
Omaha: 48°/25°
LAWRENCE: 47°/28°
Kansas City: 48°/30°
St. Louis: 43°/38°
Wichita: 52°/28°
Minneapolis: 28°/26°
Phoenix: 75°/49°
Salt Lake City: 43°/23°
Seattle: 49°/42°
TODAY
Tomorrow Saturday
Partly cloudy
High: 47°
Low: 29°
Mostly sunny
High: 43°
Low: 27°
Mostly cloudy
High: 43°
Low: 28°
Source: Gregg Potter, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
KANSAN
- Rock Chalk *X-Miss 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 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 119
Stauffer-FintHall, Lawrence, KA. 66045.
WEATHER
*FULLSERVICE CATERING FOR ANY AND ALLOF YOUR PARTY NEEDS.
TODAY Tomorrow Saturday
Partly cloudy Mostly sunny Mostly cloudy
Lawrence man dies in fire at closed gas station
--to a call of a fire at 230 Locust St. at
2:48 a.m.
Kansanstaffreport
Leroy Walburn died of smoke inhalation, the county coroner reported. Fire Marshall Rich Barr said the fire started when a cigarette ignited a sofa cushion. Damage was estimated at $20 000.
A 51-year-old Lawrence man died in a fire early yesterday morning in a condemned gas station in North Lawrence, fire department officials said.
When firefighters arrived, the building was engulfed in flames, Battalion Chief Bill Stark said.
When Stark arrived at the scene, police officers told him someone might be inside the 1½ story wood building. Fire investigators found Walburn's body after the fire had been put out, Stark said.
Lawrence firefighters responded
Barr said it was the sixth fire fatality in Lawrence this year, which is a record.
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843-3826
Noam Chomsky Manufacturing Consent: Media Manipulation in Modern America
This lecture which was videotaped on November 12,1993 in the Kansas Union Ballroom will be replayed:
-8:00pm Kansas Union
-Thursday, December 2nd
-Woodruff Auditorium
Admission is free.
If you have any questions call 864-3477
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUK
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
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841-2662
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CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, December 2, 1993
3
LIGHTING THE TOWN
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
The Christmas display at the home of Alice and Charles Stone is one of the largest displays in the Lawrence area. The display includes about 30,000 lights and several hundred figurines. The house, located about three miles south of Lawrence on U.S. 59 can be seen from the highway.
An antique car, with Santa and Mrs. Claus at the wheel, sits in the yard of Alice and Charles Stones' home.
Holiday displays can brighten the holiday spirit
By Shan Schwartz
Kansan staff writer
Students seeking a break from final projects and exams can find some holiday cheer just a short drive from the University.
Holiday displays in Topeka, Kansas City and Lawrence offer students an inexpensive night trip to view both historical and modern settings dressed in lights.
--each January, the tree is cut into lumber and made into commemorative ornaments sold by Hallmark for charity the next holiday season. Free musical entertainment is presented inside the Crown Center shopping center during December.
In Lawrence, the Convention and Visitors Bureau this year is sponsoring a "Festival of Poinsettias," with poinsettia displays at several stores in Lawrence. The biggest display is at the Eldridge Hotel, 701 Massachusetts St., with a 12-foot poinsettia tree made of 120 poinsettias. More than 300 poinsettias are in the hotel lobby.
One of the biggest light displays around Lawrence is at the home of Alice and Charles Stone, three miles south of Lawrence on U.S. 59. The driveway is lined with lighted archways and toy soldiers, and the lawn is filled with a nativity scene, elves, and Santa and his sleigh.
P
The Stones estimate that their display has about 30,000 lights.
Alice Stone said that they only had been decorating their home for three years but that the display grew quickly.
"We started out just putting some lights here and some lights there and a few trees," she said. "But the next year, we decided we couldn't stop there."
--each January, the tree is cut into lumber and made into commemorative ornaments sold by Hallmark for charity the next holiday season. Free musical entertainment is presented inside the Crown Center shopping center during December.
Kansas City has many neighborhoods, parks and shopping centers with holiday lights, but one of the most famous is the Country Club Plaza, a historic shopping and dining district. The Spanish-style architecture of the Plaza is lit up by 175,000 lights connected by 60 miles of wires.
Crown Center, a convention and shopping center owned by Hallmark Cards, boasts the nation's largest Christmas tree. The tree is 100 feet tall and decorated with more than 5,600 lights and 900 large ornaments. After it is taken down
A train of reindeer covered with Christmas lights pulls Santa on his sled as part of the display at the Stone's home, three miles south of Lawrence on U.S. 59.
--adorned with lights and decorations. Grassy islands at each intersection of the brick-lined streets also are decorated, displaying holiday stories, songs and poems for drive-by visitors.
In Topeka, the state Capitol building and grounds are filled with a diverse collection of holiday decorations. Christmas trees inside the Capitol are traditionally decorated by German, Polish and Mexican groups, which have significant populations in Kansas. Christmas trees and other lighted decorations highlight the Capitol and state Supreme Court building grounds.
The historic Potwin Place neighborhood in Topeka is another area exquisitely decorated for the holidays. Large restored houses of Victorian baroque, Italianate and 19th-century farmhouse styles all are
Holiday displays
Lawrence
Festival of Poinsettias — Displays of poinsettias at various merchants in Lawrence, with the largest display at the Eldridge Hotel, 701 Machusetts St.
Topeka
State Capital Grounds — 10th and Jackson streets. From interstate 70 take 10th Street exit and go four blocks west on 10th.
Potwin Place neighborhood — 4th and Potten Green streets. Take 4th street exit from Interstate 70, go 16 blocks west on 4th Street.
Oakwood Hills neighborhood — 42nd and Adams streets. Take South Topeka exit from the Kansas Turnpike, go south on U.S. 75 (Topia Ave.) to 45th Street, east on 45th to Adams, north on Adams to 42nd.
Country Club Plaza - 47th and Broadway streets. Take Interstate 35 north to Shawnee Mission Parkway, go east on Shawnee Mission Parkway
Crown Center — Pershing and Main streets. Go north on Main from the Plaza, or south on Main from Downtown Kansas City.
KANSAN
On Topeka's south side, the Oakwood Hills neighborhood displays more modern lights and decorations on each home. Visitors are welcome to park and walk to see the animated lawn figures, window displays and candle-lit sidewalks.
Television programming is too violent, professors say
They say guidelines needed to require more diverse shows
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
Aletha Huston and John Wright think there is too much violence on commercial television today.
Huston and Wright, co-directors of KU's Center for Research on the Influences of Television on Children, think that too often the television industry ignores its responsibility to provide educational programming, choosing instead to run violent programs that are popular with TV viewers and advertisers.
Ultimately, these are negative influences for children and teen-agers, said Huston and Wright, both professors of human development and family life.
Results from nearly 350 university studies revealed that people became more aggressive as they watched more violence on television, Wright
"But saying television damages kids is like saying libraries damage kids because they've got bad books," Wright said. "Television is like a library whose founders went out and bought a lot of trashy paperbacks to get started quick — but they are planning, or at least we're hoping they're planning, to enlarge and enrich their collection of works."
He said that TV violence had a significant impact on children and teenagers, often desensitizing them to violent acts.
"Can most kids handle watching violence on TV? Yes, but not the kids who are on the edge, who are angry and at risk," he said.
said.
Those youths are most likely to act out their aggressions, he said.
Huston said she thought TV violence affected people of all ages.
"Most of us won't literally go out and hurt someone after we've seen violence on TV. It works differently than that," she said. "It embeds in us a feeling that violence is acceptable, that it is an easy and quick solution."
Huston and Wright said they would like to see stricter regulations on television programming. For example, tougher guidelines that would increase the amount of educational programming could be enforced when broadcasters renewed their licenses, Wright said.
"We're not endorsing censorship but just telling the broadcasters that they have to do a better job," Wright said.
But not everyone wants to see stricter regulations placed on television broadcasters and producers.
Max Utsler, associate professor of broadcast journalism, said television was not any more responsible for society's ills than other media.
"I'm really weary of hearing everybody blame television for all of the social problems in the 20th century." Utsler said. "I'd like to think television is responsible for a great number of positive types of behavior, but you'll never see TV get credit for that."
Utsler said he was strongly opposed to the regulation of television's programming content. He said the market would determine when television violence became too excessive for people to tolerate.
"A good example of this was Morton Downey Jr. being taken off the air a few years ago," he said. "When he got too absurd, people stopped watching him, and the show was yanked."
Utsler said MTVs "Beavis and Butt-head" cartoon, the subject of recent television violence controversies, was a harmless satire.
"Jeepers, let's give some people credit for their intellect," he said. "When they suggested taking it off, that was ridiculous. There has to be some parental responsibility first."
Angela Lucero, Topeka senior, said that she thought children imitated what they saw on television.
"When I've worked with children in the past, some of them would come in and hit chop each other like the (Teenage Mutant) Ninja Turtles," Lucero said. "They see this on TV, and often they don't know any better."
Lucero said she thought violence on television would increase.
"People like violence—and kids do, too," Lucero said. "There's no easy solution."
Oread parking plan up for vote
Neighborhood group's proposal will go to city council if approved
By Tracl Carl
Kansan staff writer
And, if they succeed, KU students who are now squeezing their cars into parking places on the neighborhood's streets will be forced to find a new place to park.
The residents of homes and apartments directly east and north of campus have completed a proposal to take back their streets.
The Oread Neighborhood Association will be voting on a parking permit proposal during its meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at 946 Ohio St.
The proposal would use permits to limit parking to residents only. If it passes, the association will submit the proposal to the city for approval.
But KU students and employees, many of whom commute from other cities, park on streets such as Ohio and Mississippi and force residents to park blocks away from their homes, Brown said.
So far, the association has had very little opposition to the proposal, said Jennifer Brown, the association's coordinator.
Many homes in the Oread neighborhood were built at the turn of the century without garages or driveways. For many residents, the streets are the only place to park their cars.
The association originally chose the times between 7 a.m. and 2 p.m. to prohibit people from parking on the streets, which is when most arrive.
Business owners at 12th Street and Oread Avenue asked the association to consider changing the time to 7 to 11 a.m. so that the permits would not affect their early afternoon business, Brown said. The association will decide on one of the two times Wednesday.
The proposal
The proposal originally restricted the number of permits an apartment or home could buy to three. The area has a
The Oread Neighborhood Association's parking proposal includes:
■ the area between Tennessee and Maine streets and between Ninth and 14th streets;
■ limiting parking to residents with permits from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. or from 7 to 11 a.m. Monday through Friday. The association will decide the times Wednesday;
■ issuing $10 permits through the city clerk's office to anyone who could show proof of residence or ownership in the designated area and a vehicle registration. They also could receive one guest permit:
tickets issued by police officers to anyone without a permit that could cost a minimum of $10 to a maximum of $100. Repeat violators be towed.
KANSAN
large number of apartments and the problem of whether to issue the permits to renters or landlords encouraged the association to abandon permit restrictions per household.
"The only thing permit parking can control is parking by nonresidents," Brown said. "It doesn't make sense to limit parking per household."
Under the present proposal, anyone who owns a car and lives or owns property in the area that requires permits can apply for one.
The permits would not be effective from Aug. 15 to Sept. 1 so that students could move in and out of apartments. Nearby residents who want to be added to the permit program can apply to the association.
Last spring, representatives from the scholarship halls told the association they were concerned about the proposal because they often had to park on city streets when University parking was full. Brown said.
Bob Kraft, Concordia junior and Grace Pearson Scholarship Hall resident, 1335 Louisiana St. said he did not like the parking permit idea. Parking in the University lots is not as hard this year after a lot was added, but there still can be times when the lots are full, he said.
"That area is overflow for us," he said.
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Thursday, December 2,1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Rushdie invitation shows Clinton's lack of fairness
The recent presidential invitation to Salman Rushdie, author of "Satanic Verses," was not only ill-advised, but a decision that led to yet another hostile statement by the Iranian government.
Iran deemed President Clinton as the most hated man in the Islamic world. Such a statement is belittling to Muslims and does not reflect the peaceful and rationale side of Muslims. It also perpetuates the violent stereotype of the Islamic world in the non-Muslim world. It's bad enough that Muslims are lumped together, and their different characteristics and opinions are either ignored or misunderstood by others.
Iran's government, which controls a population of about 60 million, cannot speak on behalf of nearly one billion Muslims in the world. It is impossible. Iran's statement therefore should not be considered by the United States as the sentiment of the entire Muslim world.
What should be considered is that Rushdie's talk with the president may have been insulting to Muslims, including those living in the United States who felt insulted by Rushdie's book.
If President Clinton wanted to commend the author and show his support, he could have done so through a phone call or a messenger. No one is saying that Rushdie had no right to write the book, but the visit could have been conducted in a more diplomatic manner keeping the feelings of Muslims in mind.
Whether this was a courageous act on the part of President Clinton or simply a political move is debatable. It has irritated the very government to which we are appealing to remove the death threat on Rushdie. And it certainly does not help build a bridge between the West and the rest of the world.
It is our hope that President Clinton shows his concern and leadership not for a selected few, but for everyone who lives in the United States.
MUNEERA NASEER FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Tobacco bill will face defeat without revisions
The recently introduced Tobacco Education and Child Protection Act is in danger of going down in flames. This well-intended bill to protect children from cigarette or tobacco advertising has little hope of passing in its current state.
Most of the bill is reasonable. It plans to force makers to rotate stronger warnings including that smoking is harmful to child development and that it can cause cancer in non-smokers. There would also be warnings on chewing tobacco.The bill would end the distribution of free samples and require cigarette vending machines to be only in places inaccessible to children.Any item that bears a tobacco product logo would also have to contain a warning.
However, two aspects of the bill ensure instant defeat. The bill would ban advertising in sports stadiums, movies, music videos and any place within 2,000 feet of a school.
Also, the bill would prohibit tobacco sponsorship of events such as the Virginia Slims tennis tournament unless the sponsor hands out information about the effects of tobacco.
A similar bill introduced in 1990 failed to pass and this one faces the same fate if it is not amended.
Surgeon General Joycelyn Elders said about the bill, "We must use every means to protect our children." But to pass the bill, the means must be reasonable, and currently not all of them are.
TERRILYN McCORMICK FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
KANSAN STAFF
KC TRAUER, Editor
KC TRAUER, Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE
Managing editors
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
BILL SKEET, Systems coordinator
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Assistant to the editor ... J.R. Claiborne
News ... Stacy Friedman
Editorial ... Terrilyn M cornrick
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Krist Fogler
Photo ... Klip Chin, Renee Knoeber
Features ... Ezra Wale
Graphics ... John Paul Wolf
Business Staff
Business Start
Campus sales mgr ... Ed Schager
Regional Sales mgr ... Jennifer Perrier
National sales mgr ... Jennifer Evanson
Co-op sales mgr ... Blythe Focht
Production mgrs ... Jennifer Blowey
... Kate Burgese
Marketing director ... Shelly McConnell
Creative director ... Brian Fuco
Classified mgr ... Gretchen Kootterleinch
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 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.
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Condom distribution in school won't solve concern with AIDS
The Republican senators warned this country that Joyceylan Elders' policies were extremist, and that because of that, she was unfit to be this country's surgeon general. But the insightful Republicans were ignored, and Elders was confirmed as U.S. Surgeon General. Elders said she would take this country's fight against AIDS into the classrooms of kindergarten across the United States, and she added that girls should always carry at least one condom in their purse and that condoms should be available to everyone that attends a public school. Elders still holds true to this philosophy even though a similar plan that had been tried in the New York public schools was a complete failure. Elders continues to believe that this country's best weapon against the spread of AIDS is the condom, and to the chagrin of a lot of parents in the New Haven, Conn., public schools, this deficient ideology is now being implemented into their schools.
In the footsteps of Elders' ideology, the public schools of New Haven, Conn., are going to be the first school system in the nation to make condoms available to 10-year-olds. School officials claim this action
COLUMNIST
LANCE
HAMBY
needs to be taken in order to prevent unwanted pregnancies and the possibility of becoming infected with the AIDS virus. But is this the answer to the problem, or just another reason for parents to pull their children from the increasingly liberalized public schools of the Northeast?
Elders is leading this country down a path that is a proven failure, but even more disturbing, she is clouding up what the real problem is — the family. With a majority of today's kids growing up in broken homes, the school needs to be a place that children can model themselves after. Distributing condoms, which increases the chance that students (kids) will have sex (i.e. New York school system), is not the type of example that schools should be setting for the
impressionable minds that walk through their doors everyday.
Abstinence is a word that most liberals just don't understand, and to the American public's chagrin. Elders is included if that category. The word means self-restraint. This word is repugnant to most liberals because the policy is embraced by the Christian right. And in today's society, everyone knows how evil those God-fearing, morally principled people are.
But a second evaluation of the abstinence policy suggests that this idea could be a viable answer to the AIDS problem in this nation's schools. After all the idea is free, it's not controversial, it's universally accepted, and it is impossible for this proposal to add to the problem like Elders' naive idea would.
AIDS is a problem that won't go away for a long time. Handing out condoms to little children against the will of several parents' wishes will not change the dire situation that our society is in because of the current spreading of the AIDS virus. Abstinence, even though it can't end the AIDS epidemic, can certainly stop the spread of it. However, there is just one trick to the magical idea of abstinence — you have to teach it for it to work.
Handing out condoms to 10-year-olds is not only stupid, but it could be potentially dangerous as the people in New York are already aware. If 10-year-olds have free access to condoms, it is only logical that, even if the students are taught about the dangers of sex, the students' curiosity to have sex will be facilitated by the distribution of condoms from the people they are supposed to look up to. The distribution of condoms in schools only increases the sexual activity of the students that the program is designed to protect. Inevitably these students will start to experiment with sex without the condom, and then the Connecticut schools will find out what others already know — this policy won't work.
Elders' policy is completely bankrupt, but in the face of a terrible epidemic, she is willing to risk the lives of America's children. With some public schools starting to come on-line to Elders' ideology, the only question left is, "Can America continue to endure the ideology of the left?"
Lance Harby is a Wichita junior majoring in political science and Journalism.
Toys For Tots saves children from cheerless Christmas Day
Christmas is around the corner, and many of us will have packages to open on Christmas Day. But what about those who will not have any gifts? Particularly, what about the thousands of children in our nation whose parents are unable to purchase gifts? Christmas can be detrimental to children, and every child should have an opportunity to have a merry Christmas.
The fact that a child's parents are unable to buy gifts at Christmas is no reason for a child to go without presents. There are enough people in our nation to ensure that every child is happy on Christmas Day. In fact, there are many organizations that distribute gifts to children in need.
COLUMNIST
TIFFANY
HURT
Toys For Tots is an international
organization that collects toys, gifts and cash donations for children. The U.S. Marine Corps Reserves is the organization's Lawrence representative. This year, the Marines unite with Sunflower Cablevision once again to ensure that the children of Douglas County have gifts on Christmas Day.
Sunflower Cablevision will host its Fourth Annual Benefit Telephone, "Toys For Tets — Remember the Feeling!" from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 12, in its local studio. The telethon will benefit infants through 18-year-olds, and the toys will be distributed by the Salvation Army.
Last year, more than 300 local businesses, organizations and individuals participated in the campaign, which was successful in reaching the children of Douglas County.
Individuals or organizations who wish to participate in the program may donate toys, gifts or cash via the telethon or the distribution sites throughout Douglas County.
Campus organizations providing
drop-off sites include the association of University Residence Halls, facilities operations and the Jayhawker Towers Tenants Association.
Toys or gifts donated to the campaign must be new and unwrapped. All cash donations will be used to purchase gifts. Those who are registered with Douglas County social service agencies are eligible to receive gifts.
This Christmas, let us remember that it is better to give than to receive. Let us ensure that someone else will have a merry Christmas also by donating some of our time and money to the Toys For Tots campaign.
Tiffany Hurt is an Overland Park senior majoring in Journalism and English.
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
Term limit vote shows voters' dissatisfaction
The voting results on term limit proposals would lead one to suspect that those most dissatisfied with the way government does business are the voters themselves.
The most significant vote took place in New York, where voters, by a 2-1 ratio, limited the number of terms elected officials can serve. In the Big Apple, nearly every organized interest that spoke out on the measure — government workers, unions, even Common Cause and the Chamber of Commerce — spoke out against it.
The voters chose limits anyway. Indeed, voters across the country have been saying "yes" to limits almost every time they have been the chance to voice their opinion.
The voters favor term limits for the same reason politicians and special interests oppose them. Both understand that term limits will drastically change the way things are done. With members of Congress limited to two or three terms, the idea of professional politician will be well on its way to becoming a thing of the past.
would benefit one category of constituents.
More important is what that will mean in terms of how term-limited lawmakers see their role. Knowing that they have only a short time in office, they will be much less under the control of special interest groups, be they federal lawmakers, contractors, farmers or welfare recipients. That should make it easier for a member of Congress to consider what would be good for the country as a whole — what would be the "right" thing to do — than what
One hopes so, anyway. What is more certain is that under the rules of the current system, government cannot act responsibly.
Ruling will end denial of harassment issues
The Times Union Albany, N.Y.
The high court's unambivalent ruling on (sex) harassment in the workplace) comes as a breath of fresh air. The issue of sexual harassment has festered in the national psyche ever since the hearings on Clarence Thomas' confirmation to the Supreme Court, whatever the truth of the allegations and denials in that
depressing matter.
The Supreme Court's latest ruling, prompt and to the point, should go far to dispel whatever national tendency there might be toward denial of the problem.
The court's newest justice, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, in writing a brief concurring opinion, sought to move sexual discrimination to a position of concern equal to that of racial discrimination. This could presage some interesting developments in the court — and for the country — over the next few years.
The Providence Sunday Journal Providence, R.I.
》
]
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, December 2, 1993
5
THE NEWS in brief
一
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
Winds delay shuttle launch and repair of Hubble telescope
High winds forced NASA to scrap yesterday's planned launch of the space shuttle Endeavour on its long-awaited mission to repair the Hubble Space Telescope. Better weather is expected for the new launch scheduled for 3:27 a.m. today.
NASA stalled the countdown clocks at the nine-minute mark early yesterday and waited for the weather to improve, but gave up five minutes before launch time.
Crosswind gusts of up to 22 mph were well over the safety limit.
If Endeavour is not off the ground by the end of next week, NASA plans to wait until January rather than work through Christmas.
The $629 million repair mission has been years in the making. A record five and possibly seven spacewalks are planned during the 11-day flight to correct the $1.6 billion telescope's problems.
LOS ANGELES
Riot injuries cost evangelist his life
Street evangelist Wally Tope wanted to make a difference. The day after riots erupted in Los Angeles, he went into the streets to preach to the looters. His conviction cost him his life.
Tope died Nov. 24 in a convalescent hospital in suburban Pasadena, 19 months after he was beaten into a coma while trying to stop looters, District Attorney Gil Garcetti said yesterday.
Tope, 54, never regained consciousness after the April
30, 1992, attack in Hollywood.
Fidel Ortiz, 22, and Leonard Sosa, 24, have pleaded innocent to attempted murder and aggravated mayhem in the Tope attack and are awaiting trial.
His death brought to 55 the number of people killed in the three days of riots.
After watching the city burn on the first day of the riots, Tope went to a strip mall in a rough section of Hollywood and started preaching to people looting stores.
Ortiz told police that Tope had confronted him and had told him to repent or go to hell. The men scuffled.
Witnesses said that Tope had been beaten and kicked in the head for about three minutes.
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Bosnia's U.N. ambassador, Muhamed Sacirbey, said,
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the recreation of Berlin.
The offer came on the second day of talks held under a European Community initiative to end conflict in former Yugoslavia.
The development signaled an important step forward in the often troubled three-sided talks aimed at ending a 19-month war that has claimed more than 200,000 lives.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
Sources close to peace talks said that Serbs were insisting on getting about 40 percent of the Bosnian capital and that they would be willing to return other territory to the Muslims as part of a deal.
Bosnia says it would share Sarajevo
Bosnia's Muslim-led government said for the first time yesterday that it would agree to divide Sarajevo with rival Serbs if that would save lives among the besieged population.
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1
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Thursday, December 2, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Two Cold War survivors CIA opens old files and new doors
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Live, from the nation's capital. it's the CIA!
With the Cold War over, the Central Intelligence Agency is suddenly warming to the idea of telling the American public what it's about — even putting its chief, James Woolsey, on prime-time TV to take view calls.
Americans have long been suspicious of the CIA, but when was the last time ordinary folks had a chance to call the spy agency's top guy and put him on the spot?
Probably never.
Woolsey recently had appeared on PBS's "MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour" and was featured in an NBC News look inside the CIA's suburban Washington headquarters. But his stint Tuesday evening on CNN's "Larry King Live" went a step further, putting the spymaster in the line of fire from viewers around the globe.
The groundwork for the CLA's new effort at openness was laid in April in an internal task force report that examined ways of making the agency more visible.
tions were mostly of the friendly, glad-you-asked that variety. A man from Huntsville, Ala., for example, asked Woolsey whether the rapid shrinking of the U.S. military made his job harder.
"Many Americans do not understand the intelligence process" and many "still operate with a romanticized or erroneous view of intelligence from the movies, TV, books and newspapers," the report said. "These views often damage our reputation and make it harder for us to fulfill our mission."
As it turned out, the callers' ques-
The question gave Woolsey a chance to emphasize one of his favorite themes, that the end of the Cold War and the need to reduce the size of the American military makes the intelligence agencies' work more, not less, important.
The exchange with the Huntsville viewer highlighted the fact that the CIA's motivation for becoming more open with the American public goes beyond a sense that the collapse of Soviet communism reduces the need for official secrecy.
An equally important motive is a recognition by Woolsey and other intelligence agency leaders that in order to preserve their budgets they must come in from the cold and sell Congress and the American public on
their value to the nation.
In making his case for the CIA's recent record on lifting the veil from its past practices, Woolsey noted that the agency had decided to declassify materials on many of its most sensitive Cold War-era operations, including the failed 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba, the 1954 overthrow of the president of Guatemala and covert operations conducted during the 1950-53 Korean War.
NATO searching for a new mission
The Associated Press
BRUSSELS, Belgium — When the Cold War ended, some assumed that NATO would fade into obscurity and that the millions of dollars spent to support it would be freed up in a "peace dividend."
Wrong.
In fact, spending has gone up, albeit only slightly.
And in a remarkable example of bureaucratic ingenuity, the 16-nation North Atlantic Treaty Organization has scrambled to find new work — and extend its lease on life — by developing ties with its former adversaries in Eastern Europe.
So, while some military operations have been scaled back and jobs in weapons divisions and other Cold War issues trimmed. NATO has added
Peace, for some, appears hard to swallow. Once an archemeny is vanquished — in this case, the Warsaw Pact — where do you go from there?
"NATO has a fairly desperate problem of ensuring its own relevance in the world," said Owen Harries, editor of The National Interest, a foreign policy magazine in Washington.
Officials at NATO headquarters outside Brussels are reluctant to say whether the alliance has reduced staff in recent years — or even disclose how many employees still work there. A request for interviews with personnel officials was denied.
The rejection reflects nervousness ahead of this month's meetings of foreign and defense ministers and a January summit where President Clinton
and other leaders are expected to make long-term decisions about NATO.
In 1990, the end of the Cold War, NATO had 1,250 civilian employees at its headquarters. Sources, demanding anonymity, said NATO had cut 5 percent to 7 percent of its staff since then, but they did not know how many people were still employed.
Spending, though, has not declined. The 1994 budget is projected at 4.9 billion Belgian francs, the equivalent of $136 million, up about 1 percent from 190, the sources said.
The extra money is mostly going to the new East European projects, they said. In 1991, the alliance set up the North Atlantic Cooperation Council as a forum for exchanging views with nearly two dozen nations in Eastern Europe.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, December 2,1993
---
7
A KU art professor is
Teaching the art of discipline and of imagination
A profile of John Talleur
Mr.
Talleur stands in front of three prints he made that are on display in his home. The house is filled with paintings and sculptures from friends, family, and his many trips abroad
Only in men's imagination does every truth find an effective and undeniable existence. Imagination, not invention, is the supreme master of art as of life.
The printing presses are in the basement, a Matisse original hangs in the den, and the sound of Frank Sinatra fills the air. In the living room, surrounded by various objets d'art, KU art professor John Talleur explains the original use for his coffee table."You see how it's indented all along here?" he asks, pointing to the circular grooves cut into the piece. "It's early nineteenth century Austrian and was used by silversmiths.
-Joseph Conrad
"Apparently, they would stick their round little bellies, they were round because they drank a lot of beer, more beer than most people; anyway they would stick their bellies in the circular part, work on their piece of jewelry, then pass it on to the next person."
Talleur pauses before talking about other pieces from his museum-class collection of paintings, relief prints, sculptures, and antiques.
He won't tell who his favorite artisies are or who influenced his style of woodcuts and printmaking.
"I just can't pick favorites," he said, laughing.
His house is filled with works from artists all over the world, including past students. His own creations are framed and hung beside famous and not-yet-famous artists.
"When you look at your own art, it's your life," he said, rolling his eyes. "It's all the horrors of your own life staring back at you."
Talleur's "horrors" have been staring back at him nearly all his life.
"I could draw before I could write," he said. He began taking art lessons in first grade and painting lessons every Saturday when he was in third grade.
"One of my first memories of my own art was in first grade," he said. "I made a picture, and the teacher thought it was so good that she framed it under glass and gave it to me to take home."
Talleur said that he kept the drawing for many years. He no longer has it, but still has several of the drawings and paintings of a budding artist.
"I always knew I wanted to be an artist," Talleur said. "But I also adore music. I don't know what I would do without it."
Tallure had to decide to become a composer or a visual artist.
"I decided that, for me, music would be a mathematical kind of thing, and I can't add twoplus two and get the answer twice, so I decided to sell my piano and focus on visual arts. I thought since I didn't have to add that I might at least have a chance."
The road has led him to exhibitions and one-man shows throughout Europe and North America. His works have been purchased by more than 60 institutions in the United States and abroad, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City and the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.
Was Taleur's decision to pursue a path to visual arts the right one? He thinks so.
Talleur, an only child, was born in Chicago, and grew up in Oak Park, Ill. His father, Leo, was a banker and stock broker, his mother, Dorothy, a homemaker.
--after that it was back to bed."
"Really, though, my mother was hideously bright," Talleur said. "She should have been a businesswoman, but father wouldn't allow it."
"When my parents adopted me I was hideously sick," Taller said. "I had rickets and allergies, and all kinds of stuff. They had to get goat's milk for me and that was during the Depression."
Taller said that during his early childhood he only attended school three days a week. "That's why I can't count or spell, and I'm not nice when I should be," he said, chuckling.
Instead, his mother devoted much of her time caring for Tallour's fai health.
The remainder of his time was spent in bed except for Sundays mornings.
"Church was a must, you know," he said. "But right
By the time he reached high school Talleur had out grown much of his illness and attended classes full time.
"I walked two-and-a-half miles to school with my friends and we told dirty jokes both ways." Talleur said, running his calloused fingers through his thick, gray hair. "It was a marvelous time in my life, even though high school for me was difficult because I'm not a natural scholar. I had to work my didyldoo off."
Between studying and attending activities with his friends Talleur began honing his artistic talents. After graduation from Oak Park High School in 1943, Talleur attended The University of Chicago and the Chicago Art Institute. He graduated in 1947.
Talleur's first teaching position was at Carleton College in Northfield, Minn. He stayed for two years, and left when life at a small university became stifling.
"I mean, every time I sneezed, the faculty said 'Gesundheit!'" he said. "I vowed never to teach at a small college again."
In 1950 Talleur took his first trip to Europe. After returning to the United States he accepted a graduate research assistantship at the University of Iowa.
"It was the best art school in the country at the time, and I knew it wasn't worth a tidy doo to get a bachelor's and a master's at the same school," he said. Talleur spent a year at Iowa, then returned to Europe, this time on a Fulbright Scholarship. He studied at L'Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris.
Taller returned to Chicago for year, then came to Kansas as an art instructor in 1953.
He married one of his former students in 1975. They later divorced. They have one daughter, Ann Beatrix Talleur. She lives with her mother in Cortona Italy.
--dents view art in a clearer way.
Local artist Freddy Henderson studied graduate printmaking under Talleur. He said that Talleur helped him see art in a different way.
"Every time I made something he would always say, 'No, that's not the answer. Do it again.' Then one day I made something and when I showed it to him he said, 'Oh, that's very nice.' I almost fell over."
Henderson said that apart from Taleur's teaching techniques, his sense of humor helped students view art in a clearer way.
"He has such great language," Henderson said. "He'll say something like, 'Well, that's not quite ipsy pipsy, is it?' which is open-ended and fluster some people, but students gain wider, clearer eyes for looking at things that are unspeciful."
Laura Waldo-Semken studied printmaking and drawing under Tallure for four years. She describes his style as abstract.
WATSON
"The main thing is to look at the art first," she said. "The eye has fun with it, then everything falls together like a puzzle, and it's very beautiful. He has a lot of depth, texture, and layers to his pieces."
The layers are also incorporated into Tallleur's teaching style.
"He taught discipline in being critical of my work and still have fun and be playful with it," Waldo-Semken said.
Taller wonders what he will do without his students, his "angels." He is retiring next year.
"I cannot help but care deeply about them," he said. "I know what they're trying to do and how difficult it is."
Talleur encourages students who want to pursue art to do it in spite of what anyone says.
"No amount of criticism can discourage a good student," he said. "When you're in school the teachers care, but when you get out one gives a damn whether you make another picture. The world already has more art than it wants to look at. If you don't have the will, then do something else. God knows we could use more plumbers and carpenters."
Though he won't be in the classroom next year, Talleur will keep in touch with campus activities.
"One of the great pleasures of my life is adding to the collection of representative prints, particularly western prints at KU. I will continue to do that after retirement." he said.
Talleur plans to stay in Lawrence and spend time in the studio in his house, working on his relief prints and wood cuts.
"I couldn't possibly go anywhere else," he said. "The people I've met here and all the students have been marvelous. They're nicer than anywhere else."
8
Thursday, December 2, 1993
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Photo illustration by William Alix / KANSAN
Has stress turned you into a pen-tapping nail-biting, knuckle-cracking mess? If so, those habits could signal a problem. But most cases are a normal reaction to excess energy
to excess energy.
By Sara Bennett
By Sara Bennett
Kansan staff writer
Stefanie Moore, Lawrence freshman, decided to quit her nervous habit when she discovered that it annoyed her friends.
"I used to constantly push my hair out of my face when I was nervous," she said. "Finally, some guy turned around in class and imitated me in front of a bunch of people. I quit after that."
Those who are annoyed by the nervous habits of others should take a good look at themselves, because almost everyone indulges in some habit when bored or under stress. Some people tap their pens in maddening rhythm. Some bounce their knees, causing everything within a 5-foot radius to shake. Some people bite their lips to shreds, crack their knuckles or swing their legs into desks and students in front of them in class.
JeffZuehike, Mount Prospect, III., junior, said his nervous habits sometimes were uncontrollable.
"I always do this to my fingers," he said, extending his fingers and revealing ragged cuticles ravaged by constant picking. "And I grind my teeth in my sleep. I don't know why I do it. It's just one of those nervous things."
Nervous habits can have many causes. Jennifer Hollister, Netawaka junior, said her nervous habit often surfaced around her boyfriend.
"It's a problem when you're unable to stop... or when it has negative repercussions for your ability to function."
Sheldon Preskorn professor of psychiatry
"When I'm unsure of what my boyfriend, Greg, is going to say, I bite one side of my lip," she said. "He thinks it's cute."
Hollister added that students might be more likely to fidget now because of worries about finals.
"It just seems that at this time of the year, there's lots of nervous energy running through the body, especially when everybody's been staying up late," she said. "They have to do something to release all that energy."
Sheldon Preskorn, professor of psychiatry at the University of Kansas School of Medicine-Wichita, said nervous habits could be a normal way to release pent-up energy, calming and
occupying people who were upset, nervous,
under stress or bored.
But nervous habits also can signal more serious disorders, Preskorn said.
"Fidgeting can vary anywhere from normal behavior that occurs out of boredom to being symptomatic of a number of different problems — ranging from drug use to too much caffeine to epilepsy to thyroid disorders," he said.
Nervous habits become a problem when they are intense and uncontrollable and when they interfere with normal day-to-day functioning, Preskorn said.
"It's a problem when you're unable to stop, when you're not in control of it or when it has negative repercussions for your ability to function," he said.
But what if a college student merely annows her friends by repeatedly clicking her pen while listening to a dull lecture? Is that considered problem behavior?
"Then you're just bored," Preskorn said.
Whatever the cause and whatever the habit, students probably are the last ones to notice if they are guilty of nervous fidgeting. Brian Clark, Merriam freshman, said that he rarely was aware of how his habits — cracking his knuckles and biting his nails — affected those around him.
"I'm sure it annoys other people, but I don't think about that when I'm doing it," he said.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
DECEMBER 2, 1993 PAGE 9
KU Life
People and places at the University of Kansas.
calendar
NIGHTLIFE
Benchwarmers Sports Bar & Grill
1601 W, 23rd St
Bachwarmers Sports Bar & Grill
1601 W. 23rd St.
New Riddim, 9 tonight
Material Issue with Love Squad, 9 p.m.
tomorrow, advance tickets
Soul Food Cafe, 9 p.m. Saturday
The Crossing
12th and Eread
Transylvania 2000, 9 tonight
Danger Bob, 9 p.m. tomorrow
Lonesome Hobbs, 9 p.m. Saturday
Dos Hombres
Dos Hombres
814 New Hampshire
Eight Men Out, 10 p.m. tomorrow, free
Full Moon Cafe
Full Moon Care
803 Massachusetts St.
Timber Rattlers, 8:30 tonight, free
Ry Brown and Clark Jensen, 8:30 p.m.
tomorrow, free
Young Johnny Carson Story, 8:30 p.m.
Saturday, free
Tim Cross, 8:30 p.m. Sunday, free
The Jazzhaus
926 1/2 Massachusetts St.
'70s Disco Party, 9:30 tonight
Hat Full of Rain, 9:30 p.m. tomorrow
Soul Shaker, 9:30 p.m. Saturday
Chubby Carrier and the Bayou Swamp, 9:30 p.m. Wednesday
Rick's Neighborhood Bar & Grill
Rick's Neighborhood Bar & Grill 623 Vermont St.
Arkansas White Trash Express,
9:30 tonight, $3
Fast Johnny, 9:30 p.m. tomorrow, $3
The Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire St.
Best Kissers in the World and Chainsaw Kittens, 10 tonight
Common Ground, 10 p.m. tomorrow
Beausoleil, 10 p.m. Saturday
Flaming Lips with Red Red Meat, 10 p.m.
Sunday
Mountain Clyde — Unplugged, 10 p.m. Tuesday
Cher U.K., Road's Factory and Rival Sons,
10 p.m. Wednesday.
Granada Theater
Canada Theater
1020 Massachusetts St.
Open Mike Night, 8 tonight
D.J. Kip with 107.3, 8 p.m. tomorrow
Nic Cosmos, 8 p.m. Saturday
'80s Night, 8 p.m. Wednesday
See CALENDAR, Page 10.
10
Thursday, December 2, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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1013 Massachusetts St.
Walking on Einstein, 10 tonight,
$3; Chubby Smith and his Orchestra,
10 p.m. tomorrow, $3
Lonesome Hound Dogs, 10 p.m.
Saturday, $3
Lee Roy Shakespeare and Ship of Vibes, 10 p.m. Wednesday, $3 Acoustic Open Mike, 10 p.m. Sunday, free
Hockenbury's Tavern 1016 Massachusetts St.
Continued from Page 9.
Harmony Hall
10 East 9th St.
Scott Stuewe, 8 p.m. Saturday,
$6
642 Massachusetts St.
Short Cuts 4:30, 8:30, p.m. daily
with a 1.p.m. show Saturday, Sunday
a day
642 Massachusetts St.
Liberty Hall
Free State Jazz Quartet, 7-9 p.m.
tomorrow, free
Nightmare Before Christmas (PG),
4:35, 7:10, 9:35 p.m.
Free State Brewing Co.
636 Massachusetts St.
MOVIES
Man's Best Friend (R), 7:10, 9:40 n.m.
My Life (PG-13), 7:20, 9:55 p.m.
The Nutcracker (G), 7:15, 9:30
p.m.
Dickinson 6
2339 South Iowa St.
Where Back (G), 7, 9:30 p.m.
Perfect World (PG-13), 7, 9:45
p.m.
Varsity Theatre
Addams Family Values (PG-13), 5:15,7:30,9:30 p.m.
1015 Massachusetts St.
Hillcrest Theater
Ninth and Iowa Streets
Carlito's Way (R), 5, 8 p.m.
Carlito's Way (R), 5, 8 p.m.
The Three Musicales (DC)
The Three Musketeers (PG) 5.7:15. 9:30 p.m.
The Joy Luck Club (R), 5:15, 8 p.m.
Josh and Sam (PG-13), 5:15 p.m.
Malice (R), 7:30, 9:45 p.m.
Mrs. Doubtfire (PG-13), 4:40,
7:15, 9:50 p.m.
Senate warns little money remains
The committee only discussed four of the seven bills on its agenda. Two of
31st and Iowa St.
In the Line of Fire (R), 5,7:30, 9:50 p.m.
Cinema Twin
By Donella Hearne
Jurassic Park (PG-13), 5, 7:20,
9:50 p.m.
"Unlike our federal government, we will not deficit-spend," Shoemaker said.
Kansan staff writer
The Student Senate finance committee received a warning from Treasurer Jeremy Haas last night before it considered $28,057 in bills. Haas reminded committee members that Senate only has $29,590.94 left to allocate to student groups for the remainder of the academic year.
After all the money is spent, groups will be told that there is no money left to give, said John Shoemaker, student body president.
the bills were withdrawn by the sponsors of the bills, and one bill was tabled.
The committee passed three bills but did not pass the KU Federalist Society's request for $290 to advertise a forum it had planned.
Senate will hear the following bills at its meeting at 6:30 p.m., Dec. 8 in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union:
n $5,000 to bring Dr. Ruth Westheimer to KU. Student Union Activities would like to include Westheimer's lecture as part of a weeklong effort before Spring Break to promote safe sex.
for speakers it will present in April and entertainers and supplies for the powwow on April2.
n $4,963 for the Native American Heritage Month and fourth annual powwow. The Native American Student Association requested money
n $3,755 for LesBiGay Awareness Week. LesBiGayS OK requested money for the week's events, which will be held April 10-16. Speakers during that week will be Nolte, a stand-up comedian who bills himself as the "Comic With AIDS," and Donna Redwing, executive coordinator of the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation National Chapter. Kari Finn and Susan Howard will present their two woman show, "Ladies on the Couch," which deals with lesbianism.
If the Senate passes these bills, only $15,872.94 will remain for next semester.
City hopes salt will last through wet winter
By Traci Carl Kansan staff writer
KU
KU
800KSTORES
The National Meteorological Center in Washington said this winter season should be drippy but not too nippy.
So city and University of Kansas officials are gearing up for snow and ice storms like last winter's.
Tom Orzulak, assistant director of public works, said the city has about 3,000 tons of salt in storage. Last year it used 2,500 tons.
The city's shortage usually was caused by persistent bad weather and delayed deliveries, he said. This year it
The city usually buys salt throughout the winter as it needs it, he said. But last winter, its salt supply was low from January until spring.
"We were always on the verge of running out," Orzulak said. "We always just had enough to get by."
"We learned what is the minimum amount we can use," he said.
Mike Richardson, director of facilities planning at KU, said the department gets its salt from the city, so he was not worried that it would run out this year.
Orzulak said the city already has had to use salt this winter. Last week during Thanksgiving, snow and ice coaxed the salt trucks out onto the city streets.
But he said he did not know if this winter's weather would be as bad as last winter's.
"I've been trying to guess them for 20 years, and I haven't gotten any better," he said. "We're just hopeful that we have plenty of the stuff right now."
ordered salt in August and had it delivered in the fall.
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What the heck does pasta have to do with selling shoes?
Pasta
Probably nothing. But then again, that depends on you.
The Kansan will be selecting several creative staff members for the Spring 1994 semester. You will be able to test your ideas and develop new ones as you're trained in making creative layouts for area advertisers. And you will gain valuable computer experience.
The University Daily Kansan business staff is looking for creative individuals who can make the ordinary, extraordinary. We want people who can turn the mundane into something wild and unique, yet have it still be meaningful.
Not to mention, it's a lot of fun.
So, if you excel at combining ideas in an exciting meaningful way, call us. Get in touch with John Carlton at the Kansan by December 9. After all, what you make of your ideas is up to you.
Contact John Carlton at the
University Daily Kansan
119 Stauffer-Flint
864-4358
.
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, December 2,1993
11
Allen turns into Temple of Doom
Owls' match-up zone kills Jayhawks' inside game
By Mark Button Kansan sportswriter
Kansas coach Roy Williams said he was not happy with his team before last night's 73-59 defeat against Temple. After the game, he said he was not happy with himself
"They were lethargic," Williams said of the Jayhawks' warm-up before the game, "Before the Cal game I thought we had a lot more fire; we were antsy. I didn't feel like we had that tonight."
KA
KU
"The best team won tonight — and the best coach," Williams said. "I didn't do a good job getting this team ready. We should have worked more on their zone."
What the Temple match-up zone did, and did well, was clog up the middle of the paint close to the basket, making it difficult to get the ball into the hands of Kansas' frontline players.
Later, after the Owls' defense had shut down the Jayhawks' offense and Temple senior forward Eddie Jones and senior guard Aaron McKie lit the Allen Field House nets on fire for 24 points a piece, Williams complimented his onposition.
Jayhawk senior forward Richard Scott and junior center Greg Ostertag shot a combined four for 13. Add in reserve freshmen center Scot Pollard and forward Nick Proud, who each came up empty in two field goal attempts, and the zone's effectiveness was apparent.
"They were sagging down on me," said Scott, who scored seven points and had four assists. "但它不 just我, they were sagging on Greg (Osterago), too. We've been effective in the past, but they executed their defense well."
Ostertag said when he did get the ball, he should have been more effective.
"We should have been stronger with the ball," he said.
"Instead we were kind of fumbling around with it."
But there was more to that pesky zone than just shutting down the inside game.
"It was frustrating." Ostertag said. "We started relying on the outside shot, and it just wasn't falling."
The Owls' defense forces teams to defeat them with a strong perimeter game.
Kansas senior guard Steve Woodberry had his best offensive showing of the year, dumping in 24 points on nine-of-14 shooting. Past Woodberry, though, the rest of the team was cold.
"Their guards up top were really quick," said Kansas sophomore guard Sean Pearson, who shot three for 10. His cohorts in the back court, senior Patrick Richey and juniors Greg Gurley and Calvin Rayford, shot a combined four for 12.
"They were strong and kept hitting our arms and making us change our pauses." Pearson said.
Williams said that even if Kansas had been successful at executing well, the game was not just the team's for the taking. He said that despite what many fans might have thought, Kansas was not a measuring stick and that it wasn't just that Kansas lost — it was that Temple won.
"I think a lot of coaches get hung up on that and don't give the other team enough credit," Williams said. "Temple's pretty dog-gone good."
William Alix / KANSAN
That might be an understatement.
Jones, McKie and Owl junior point guard Rick Brunson accounted for all but seven points, and they had plenty of time to get their points as each of them played the entire game.
Temple led 31-26 at the half and despite a few runs by Kansas in the second half, the Owls kept the 'Hawks at an arm length. After falling behind 43-32 early in the second half, Kansas never got back to within 10 points.
"They did a good job getting in the lanes on defense," said Richey, who scored seven points. "They made us take shots that they wanted us to shoot instead of us taking the shots that we wanted to take."
Temple senior forward Eddie Jones blocks Kansas sophomore guard Sean Pearson's shot. The Owls defeated the Jawhawks 76-59 last night at Allen Field House.
Owls guard key to victory
Kansan sportswriter
By Matt Doyle
Korean sportswriter
Temple coach John Chaney said that junior point guard Rick Brunson would be the key to any success that the No. 7 Owls have this season.
Owens will have this season.
"This will be his team in terms of leadership and decision-making." Chaney said.
Brunson lived up to his coach's words last night in Temple's 73-59 victory against No. 3 Kansas at Allen Field House. Brunson had 19 points and 5 assists to complement the game-high 24 points from both senior forward Eddie Jones and senior guard Aaron McKie.
The Owls' point guard played all 40 minutes against constant
defensive pressure from Kansas point guards freshman Jacque Vaughn and junior Calvin Rayford. Brunson said he was ready for the challenge of playing the entire game.
"I want to play as much as I can," Brunson said. "It is tough, but you have to be in shape, and I feel that I'm in good shape."
"We don't have anybody to replace Rick Brunson or our guards," Chaney said. "He is the keeper to what we believe in. Point guards are responsible for running our team, and I place my emphasis on Brum-
Chaney said that he had no choice but to play Brunson all 40 minutes against the Jayhawks.
son. When he doesn't do well, we are going to get kicked."
Brunson was the key contributor in kicking the Jayhawks around in the second half. He scored seven of Temple's first 12 points in the second half as the Owls extended their 31-26 halftime advantage to 43-32 with 15:7 left in the game.
"We wanted to play really confident and look like we were playing really confident, and I feel we showed that," Brunson said. "We were ready for the first challenge of the first game, and it was up to me to take control of the ball against Kansas."
The closest Kansas was able to close the deficit after that was 13 points, at 58-45 with 6:40 left.
Temple 73, Kansas 59
Player fm/fts fm/fts tp
Scott 3.8 7-5 10
Richey 3.6 0-0 7
Ostertag 1-5 0-0 2
Vaughn 2-3 0-0 5
Woodberry 9-14 2-2 24
Pollard 0-2 2-2 2
Rayford 0-3 0-1 0
Gurley 1-3 0-1 0
Williams 0-2 0-0 0
Pearson 3-10 0-0 8
Proud 0-2 2-2 2
Totals 22-58 7-12 59
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Player fgm/fga fm/ta tp
Jones 8-15 8-8 24
Ivey 0-3 1-2 1
Battie 1-3 1-1 3
Brunson 7-15 1-4 19
McKie 8-16 5-7 24
Cunningham 1-1 0-3 2
Ozment 0-0 0-0 0
Van Velsen 0-0 0-0
Totals 25-53 17-25 73
Halftime Temple 31, Kansas 26
Temple
3-point goals Kansas 8-18 (Woodberry 4-7, Pearson 2-5, Vaughn 1-1, Richey 1-2, Rayford 0-1, Gurley 0-2), Temple 6-13 (McKie 3-4, Brunson 3-0)
The Kansas women's basketball team won on the road last night, defeating Wichita State 75-56 in what
**Inbounds** Kansas 37 (Osterag 10), Temple 38 (Ivey 10).
**Assists** Kansas 13 (Scott 4), Temple 9 (Brunson 5).
**Total fouls** Kansas 23, Temple 19.
**Attendance** 15,800.
Marian Washi n g t o n described as a good defensive effort by the Javhawks.
No.15 Kansas improved its record to 2-0 in the Shockers' first game of the season. In their first game last weekend, the Jayhawks defeated Creighton 74-68.
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
"We played better defensively than against Creighton," Washington said. "We were able to score a lot of points from turnovers."
The Jayhawks forced 21 Shocker turnovers while committing 22 themselves. Kansas led 33-26 at the half but started on an 8-3 run to set the tone for the second half. The Shockers never again got closer than 10 points.
"We really struggled offensively, mainly because Wichita State pulled out a match-up zone defense" she said. "We hadn't seen that this year. New Zealand didn't do it and neither did Creighton."
Kansas junior guard/forward Angela Aycock shot nine for 16 from the field and ended with a team-high 20 points, 12 of which came in the second half.
Assisting in the Kansas effort was sophomore guard Charisse Sampson. She was only six for 14 from the field, but she made three three-pointers in the second half. She ended the game with 18 points and nine rebounds.
Washington said Wichita State caught Kansas off guard at the start the game.
The match-up zone defense is a combination of a zone and one-on-one defense. This can make it hard to run an offensive set if a team has not played against it before, like Kansas.
Sampson has now made six of 10 three-pointers this season, and Washington said she could see the improvement from last year.
"Charisse simply had to get more physical, more strong," she said. "The big difference between this year and ldst year is that she has become strong."
The Jayhawks played all four freshmen again last night, as they did in their two previous games.
Washington said that was good and bad for Kansas.
"The fact is that we have to depend on all four freshmen," she said.
"That's good down the line for the Big Eight race, but that also means that we'll struggle from time-to-time."
Kansas 75
Wichita State 56
Ransas
Player
fgm/tga
ftm/fta
to
Sampson 6-14 3-5 18
Aycock 9-16 2-6 20
Muncy 3-5 1.2 7
Leathers 0-1 0-0 0
Halbleib 4-9 0-0 9
Dixon 2-7 2-2 6
Canada 0-1 1-2 1
Trapp 2-2 2-2 6
Tate 3-4 2-4 8
Totals 29-59 13-23 75
Wichita State
Sanders 2-5 0-0 4
Evans 3-10 6-12 14
Lewis 3-6 0-0 6
Hollingsworth 1-10 2-3 4
Fliers 0-0 0-0 0
Stucky 3-8 5-5 13
Shaw 0-2 3-5 3
Alexander 1-1 0-0 2
Su.Wright 0-0 0-0 0
Se.Wright 1-2 0-0 2
Barnett 3-13 2-3 8
Totals 17-57 18-28 56
Halftime Kansas W3, Michailla State 2
3-point goals Kansas A-1-3 (Sampson
7. Leathers O 1, Habblet B-1. Dixon
8. Leathers E-1 (Evans 2-6,
Sturky 2. Schoeh 0.1)
Rebounds Kansas 45 (Sampson,
Aycock, Tate 9), Wichita State 37
(Sanders, Hollingsworth 7).
Assists Kansas 13 (Muncy, Dixon 3)
Wichita State 10 (Hollingsworth,
Strucky 3)
Total fouls Kansas 20, Wichita State 15. Attendance 1,577.
KANSAN
SPORTS BRIEFS
COLLEGE FOOTBALL All-Big 8 team picked
Named to the offensive team for the second time were Nebraska running back Calvin Jones, Kansas guard John Jones, Missouri guard Mike Bedosky, Nebraska guard Zach Wiegert and Iowa State kick returner James McMillion.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas State senior safety Jaime Mendez was named to the coaches All-Big Eight team. Mendez joins nine first team repeat selections on the team announced yesterday.
On defense, repeating with Mendez were Nebraska and Trev Alberts, Oklahoma State linebacker Keith Burns and Colorado defense back Chris Hudson.
Named to the first team on offense were Charles Johnson, wide receiver, Colorado; Rickey Brady, tight end, Oldhamia; Lance Lundberg, tackle, Nebraska; Ken Mehlin, guard, Nebraska; John Jones, guard, Kansas; Quentin Neujahr, center, Kansas State; Hessley Hempstead, guard, Kansas; Bedosky; Wiegert; Andre Coleman, wide receiver, Kansas; Chad May, quarterback, Kansas State; Rashaan Salaam, running back, Colorado; Calvin Jones; Ty Stewart, kicker, Iowa State; and McMillion.
Named to the first team on defense were Jason Gildon, end,
Jennifer Hays of Stillwater, Okla., signed a letter of intent with the Kansas women's golf team, making her Kansas' sole recruit to sign during the early signing period.
During her freshman year at Stillwater High School she was the Junior PGA player of the year. She won the class 5A Oklahoma Girls State Championship the next year. In 1992-93 Hays finished fifth in the seven-week Junior Ping Tour, which was played over a span of several months.
"I'm delighted to sign a lady of that quality," Kansas women's golf coach Jerry Waugh said. "She has demonstrated that she can play well under pressure as well as having a good swing."
Compiled by the Associated Press and Kansan sports writer Kent Hoffield.
Healthy Men Needed Receive up to $375
IMTCI, a pharmaceutical research company, is now seeking volunteers to participate in a medical research study
To quality you must:
be age 18-40
be able to attend three
29 hour visits at our clinic
WOMEN'S GOLF Top player recruited
Call IMTCI for more info: Mon-Fri from 8am-5pm
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SEE THE CLASSIFIEDS
story idea? 864-4810
OPEN HOUSE TONIGHT - 6-8pm
✨ ✨
Oklahoma 'State; Shannon
Clavelle, lineman, Colorado;
Kerry Hicks, lineman, Colorado;
Chris Maumalanga, lineman,
Kansas; Alberts; Burns; Mario
Freeman, linebacker, Oklahoma;
Thomas Randolph, defensive back, Kansas State; Chris Hudson,
defensive back, Colorado; Barron
Miles, defensive back, Nebraska;
Mendez; Scott Tyner, punter,
Oklahoma State.
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12
Thursday, December 2, 1993
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Pistons' 'Bad Boy' center retires after 14 seasons
By Harry Atkins The Associated Press
AURURN HILLS, Mich. — Bill Lalmbeer, realizing he had become the kind of player he despised, retired yesterday at age 36.
With all his teammates and the entire Detroit Pistons front office looking on, Lambeir said that he simply had lost his desire to compete.
"When I saw players come in here who no longer are willing to sacrifice body and mind, I used to advise them," he said during a news conference at The Palace. "I'd good them into it. If that didn't work, I'd reject them. Now, I'm one of those players."
Laimbeer said the feeling had been coming on for the last two or three seasons. He said he had known before training camp that this season could be his last.
"Coming to camp, my goal was to make it through the season," Laimbeer said. "I knew that I did not feel like doing it anymore. But I wanted to help the franchise. I thought maybe we'd get off to an 8-0 start or something and I'd feel better about things."
That didn't happen, of course. The Pistons were 5-7 when Lambeer made up his mind Monday. He told his teammates of his decision before their game Tuesday night in Cleveland. They lost that game with Lambeer on the bench.
"I just felt all the negative factors were too great to overcome," Lambeer said. "It's like a shining light just opened up in my mind and said, 'Bill, let's go, let's get out of the way.'"
During his 14 seasons in the NBA, all but one with the Pistons, the 6-foot-11 center became one of the most hated players the game has ever known. His flying elbows and hard picks sent bodies flying and tempers flaring everywhere he played.
But the Bad Boy role was one he was glad to play. For one thing, it suited his personality. For another, it helped the Pistons win NBA championships in 1989 and 1990. It became part of their mystique.
"I think hate" is a strong word, "Laimbeer said." "We're in the entertainment business. I wore the black hat. Somebody has to play that role. I accepted it."
He was just a big guy with minimum basketball skills. Yet when he called it quits, Laimbeer had played in 1,068 regular-season games and 113 playoff games. Last season, he became only the 19th NBA player to pull down 10,000 rebounds and score 10,000 points.
He holds Pistons records for rebounds and games played. Yet, he was most proud of his durability.
In his 14-year NBA career, Lainbeer missed only eight games. Four of those were due to injury, one due to a coach's decision and two due to suspension, in addition to his lame-duck Tuesday night at Cleveland.
As for his future, Laimbeer said he and his father were trying to buy a business. He added that professional golf and politics also were possibilities.
The Associated Press
Only Knicks could ruin Rockets' run at record
HOUSTON — The Houston Rockets are at 14 victories and counting, and only the New York Knicks stand between the Rockets and a page in the NBA record book.
The Knicks, 9-2, have won four of five home games in the Garden and lead the Atlantic Division.
"We can do it," Hakeem Olajuwon said. "There is no better place to play and win than Madison Square Garden."
The undefeated Rockets play the Knicks tonight and need only that victory to tie the old Washington Capitals, who opened the 1948 season with 15 straight victories, for the best start in league history.
The Capitols' record start was set 45 years ago by a team coached by Red Auerbach, who later built the Boston Celtics dynasty. At that time, the Capitons were playing in Providence, R.I.; Rochester, N.Y.; and Fort Wayne, Ind.; and were led by Robert Feerick, Horace McKinney, Clarence Hermsen and Fred Scolari.
Tuesday night, Houston defeated Milwaukee 102-91 for its 14th consecutive victory.
A tough defense that has yet to allow an opponent 100 points has allowed the Rockets to firt with the record. The closest the team have come to losing was a 95-93 overtime victory a week ago at Utah.
"It's a great achievement, but it has not ended yet," Otis Thorpe said. "14-0 is like being in second place, so 15-0 is our next challenge and the next step up the ladder."
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8
AUGUST THROUGH JULY 1987
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
Don't worry about your bike, books,
clothes, computer, furniture, etc.
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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 accepted for phone orders.
Partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activity Fee. SUGENT SENATE
It's everywhere you want to be...
The Best Collegiate Savings Card program in the Nation is coming this January!
Classified Directory
100s
Announcements
108 Personal
119 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
235 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
Classified Policy
The Kansan will not knowingly accept any advertisement for housing or employment that discriminates against any person or group of persons based on nationality, nationality or disability. Further, the Kansan will not knowingly accept advertising that is in violation of University of Kansas regulation or
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and any other federal law that restricts 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
are open. If you have a job as the newspaper,
are available on an equal opportunity basis.
100s Announcements
The Etc. Shop and Ray-Ban
are giving you a gift.
Ray-Ban & Lomb sunglasses
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Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
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110 Bus. Personals
I
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-1:30am
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
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Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Saturday 8am-12:30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
Call Today!
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AIRLINE TICKETS Don't Wait
We'll find the lowest fares and best schedules.
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120 Announcements
Have fun this year cutting your own Christmas tree at beautiful Pine Hill Farm. Enjoy free horse rides and horse-drawn trailer rides into our fields. Sip hot wassail & select a fresh beautiful decorated wreath. We're celebrating our 2nd year of providing Christmas memories. Drive east on Hwv 14 miles to DG County Road 167, then drive north one and a half miles. Edmonds Family 542-2317.
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308 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
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130 Entertainment
Exclusive KU ALUM message area shared over Fidonet. Real time chat. Easy data menus! Lawrence on line/TBBS: 865-1440. Voice/help: 841-1042.
NOW OPEN!
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
MATERIAL ISSUE
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Saturday December 4
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at
BENCHWARMERS
Free Party Room Available at Johnny's Tavern/Up & Under Call 842-0377 for details.
140 Lost & Found
POUND: Women's wrist watch between Bailey and Strom on Nov. 29. Fossil Brand, Identify to RIGHT.
Lost: German textbook, Kaldesoft, on 11-23-93
from 600 Wescole. Please call 841-1800.
Loast: Leather Jacket in vicinity of The Malls
Key call Kevin at 342-8278 for info and reward
Thursday, December 2, 1993
200s Employment
MEN'S TOILET
WOMEN'S TOILET
205 Help Wanted
$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 lau
*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: 383-7979.
ACADEMIC AIDE POSITIONS AVAILABLE. (1) English Reader. Duties include: Reading text instructions blind or have reading disabilities. Reading exams and assisting with library research. $4.25/hr. (2) Law Reader. Same as above. Academic experience required. Duties include: Type papers/clase notes and transcribe exam answers. $4.25/hr. Applications available at the Student Assistance Center, 133 Strong Application deadline. Application deadline for pm English Readers and Tysle/Scrie. *$ at application des*
ADMINISTRATIVE USER SERVICES
student Monthly. Deadline: 12/3/93 $550-
include providing microcomputer LAN, SCOUN
UNIX support, provide application, design,
documentation and deliver software training sessions
and provide training for new students.
lms solutions support, and other duties. Required
qualifications: Demonstrated excellent oral and
written communications skills, knowledgeable
experience using microcomputers, currently
enrolled at KU and continued enrollment through
spring 1995. Complete job description available.
current resume to Ann Rint, Personnel Admini
Computer Center, University of Kansas,
Lewisburg, KS 6045. EO/AEMOLEYER
After-school schoolbaby wanted in my home for 2 children 8 & ityrs. 842-4366
AMIGOS Supervisor/Assist Mgr
Supervisor now - Manager later! Learn the business from the ground up and advance according to experience. Demonstrate your ability to orientered 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. Relocate to New York and benefit plus. Apply now: at Amigos, 1819 W. 23rd.
Euro $1,000 per week at home filling orders! Free Information. Please send long self addressed stamped envelope to CJ Enterprises, Box 67086H, Cuyahoga Falls, OH 44222.
Full-time assistant manager needed immediately.
Must live on site. Call 814-848.
Fast-growing local property management company needs assistance in producing logo and marketing brochure. Great experience and excellent salary. Call Sterling Properties 865-5699
GREEKS & CLUBS
RAISE UP TO $1,000 one WEEK For yur fraternity, sorority or club. Plus $1,000 for ydurself! And a FREE T-SHIRT just for calling 1-800-652-0538. ext. 75
Help wanted: Hardware/Software manager. KU School of Architecture and Urban Design seeks qualified graduate student. For position description contact James Armstrong at 864-3244. Applicant must have a bachelor's degree in ACM or related.
Immediate openings. Must be able to work holiday
weekends at Rocquelet Acct Club, 4210 Clinton
Pkwy from 10:34.
Looking for someone eligible for Work Study to work part-time in a candy store. Business or accounting experience. Call 863-1303 for interview.
Marketing Assistant position available at Natsim Hall for the spring semester. Applicant must have excellent people skills, good computer skills (desktop publishing experience plus), and have a degree in IT or related field. Provide customer service, or sale. Position will be part time with compensation of room and board plus stipend. Potential for full time use, 1994. Great resume and portfolio builder to help you get started in this field. Apply at Natsim Hall 1000 Natsim Hall Drive, Lawrence KS 60044. E/O.E/M.F/H.A/A.
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Need some extra $84 during Christmas break. Pizza Hut is now hiring delivery drivers and cooks for the upcoming holiday season. Drivers must be fluent in English. Apply at Pizza Hut 944 Lowry Suite Q 845-3000.
Part-time position for person with business or accounting major to show apts, answer phones, etc. Bachelor's degree required. A Kansas resident, enrolled at KU in at least 12 months, and have a GPA of 2.0 more. Call 841-7603.
Phone Work. Part Time. Flexible Hours. Paid Daily.
Call: 233-9283.
Part-time temporary Extension 4-H Assistant.
Assist 4-H Agent with the promotion of the 4-H
Employee. Req: Bachelor's degree and 3-4 weeks
Required: High School Graduate and ability to
work with people; B.S. preferred, $5.50 per hour,
plus mileage, 20 hours per week; January 3-June
Sunday. Send resume and referent of reference;
by December 15th to Director, 211 Harper, Lawrence, KS, 60048 EOE
Phone Work Part Time FAX 210-657-9800
PRE-MEDICAL SECRETARY/ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT. Half-time graduation position (20 lrs a week) with the possibility of becoming a teacher, providing professional experience including act as a resource person for pre-health professions students, maintaining current information for the students, processing recommended academic requirements and preparing optometry schools, preparing student confidential files for evaluation by the Health Sciences Com
mittee, planning information meetings (twice a year, handling correspondence on behalf of Chief Counsel), and managing relations related to medical school acceptance, using Word Perfect 5.1, and being able to perform general office duties. All above, all must have excellent interpersonal skills and ability to work independently in a long-term employment. Must be a KU graduate student. Please apply and bring (or send) resume to the Pre-Med Office, 110 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60048, 843-3667, December 3. The starting date is approx. January 3. The University of Kansas is an NA/EO Employer.
Restoration/maintenance positions for skilled
workers required. Call 841-7827 for more information.
Call 841-7827 for more information.
...SUME SERVICES Professional Business
Business, Cover Letters, SP-171s, Interview
Requests
SEMESTER BREAK POSITION! Inl. chain kill 47-PT, FT entry level openings. Earn $9.00 up to 10.00 start interview new start After Dec. 31 and until January 28 in Lawrence 842-831 or Overland Park 831-9675.
Temporary, per diem position 3 hrs/day, Mon-
Thur. Contact blood donors by phone to schedule
appointments; make cold calls as needed.
Receive training in job skills and cation skills. Refer telephone solicitation experience $4.25/hr. Apply American Red Cross, 2120 W.2h. Lawrence, M5M-M45/M EOF
Wanted- Designs for education classes at Hair
Design Team Salon. Free hairstyke call 641
825-790-3050.
Work in beautiful Colorado mountains this summer at Cheyenne Colorado Camps summer program. R.N.s; drivers; secretaries; wangrriers; nany; staffing; arts clubs; sports counselors. Camps age 9-17 Room and board, cash salary, travel allowance. Our 74th summer. Must be a must 19 to apply. Applicants will be notified of campus interview dates. CO 80206, 303-377-3616. Box 8025.
You CAN make a difference, Greenpeace K.C.
You can help protect the rainforest and others to help save the rain forests, stop toxic waste, and protect the ozone layer. PT/F1/$190 to $300 per week, training, hours 2 to 10 p.m. Call
225 Professional Services
Attorney at Law
Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors,
landlord/tenant
719 Massachusetts 749-5333
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 843 - ^23
Research Assistance - MSML information preparation
dissertations, research projects 843-629
disertations, research projects 843-629
Unique resumes, cover letters, laser prints Faint,
Large resumes, graphic Articles, Inge 267
1/2 Marm 844-1071
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Prevent abortion and contraceptive服务. Dale L. Clinton M.D. 84-3176
Thesis & Dissertations
TRAFFIC-DOYS
Fake ID's & alcohol offences
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
DONALD L. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
Experting typetype. IBM Correcting Selectric.
Double space spaced Call Mats. Matisi at
1219.
Hardbinding and Gold Stamping
3 Day Turnaround
Lawrence Printing Service, Inc.
512 E. 9th Street 843-4600
Fast, accurate word processing; paper term, dissertation, thesis and graphics services available. Laser printing. Engineering and Law Review experience. Call Carm at 841-9791 antivirus.
1-der Woman Word Processing, 843-2063
Pre-Type - fast, reliable, service professional quality. Any kind of typing. Call at 814-6243.
X
Word processing, applications, term papers, di-
tribution. Master's degree or equiv., rush job available. Masters Degree: 604-835
Let me do your FYPING!
Lazer printing to WOW! your prof's.
18. Write a letter of acceptance.
All typing jobs accepted.
Grammar and spelling corrected free!
Call Jack at
Makin' the Grade
305 For Sale
Full Fall Cleanance: All adult tapes on sale $12.95 or
morning, $14.95 or evening, or Miracle Video Tape 300/180, #417-7600.
Beds, deks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
838 Maa.
91. Swichman Impact Pre: good condition asking
$27.5M. LM or for ask Steve @ 32-0275.
300s Merchandise
Fender acoustic guitar. Great X-Mas present.
Priced at lowest price, soft case $00 or best
offer. Call 822-930-4790
I'm gradating and need to sell my - Beautiful wood bed room set. I queen size床 with cherry wood headboard, matchting it night stand with a velvet dresser. I'll get it to $129. Paid $300 a year ago but it's go to $17. You
Futon with frame, 1 yr. old. 832-2953. $150
Mac SE, 40 mg HD, Carrying case, ImageWriter
Mac OS X, 32-bit HD, games, and more. 980
+ 1685 + 2458 + A8 (Ask or Buy)
Macintosh Quadras. Best prices available. Student discounts apply. 800-249-2411.
IBM Compatible 286 186m, press-to-phone,
driver vGA, sound card, mouse, and
drive of programs. Best offer. Call Scott 865-189
Tukker Lambda Computer 865-189 Tukker Lambda Computer
Jacketts: leather bumper #75, leather biker #100
Obermeyer pullover #81, Call #68-7529
Neon beer bags $125. Busch Mountain wall clock
$125. Call 749-1084 after 6 p.m. m-th.
Pinewood Queen *waterbed/mattress* $250.
Pinewood Queen 6 drawer dresser w/ mirror $200, a desk
$40. Pinewood Queen 6 drawer dresser w/ chalkboard
top kitchen table w/ a chair $0, Queen box spring
and mattres $91-841-6800.
Cannondale SR 400 road bike with Look pedals.
exc. cord. $550/81-7060
1975 Buck Skylark Skylark with 327 Chev. engine,
1980 Buick 1800. Consider monthly payments for
the vehicle.
Spend New Years in Chicago or Beverly Hills
Spend New Years in Chicago or Beverly Hills
Bake 141-845-999 before it
sells (females only)
Bake 141-845-999 before it
sells (females only)
1981 WJetta 5, spd-2, dr. Good Condition. AM-FM cassette $170.00. Call Mike 841-7795.
340 Auto Sales
1985 Dodge charger 2-d hatchback, AM/FM cassette Body in good shape and run well.
86 Prelude S. 119 HkY mI. Power sumrof & win-
hold. 87 Prelude S. 119 HkY mI. Call Seng at
84-798-798 MUST SELL
86 Preclude Si. 119 Kwhy mI. Power sunroof and
87 Bustle Si. 119 Kwhy mI. Power sunroof and
88-847:309 MUST SELL.
88-847:309 MUST SELL.
@occ Hace Aero 1985 The scorer for two (Excel)
@occ Hace Aero 1985 Call the scorer (Call
@occ Hase Aero 1985) If no answer, leave message
Black sleep (black) > Speed, Hard top, new
hard drive. 802-6150 001-BO call
832-6266 and leave a message.
370 Want to Buy
Pinto 82' Manual. Running no problem. $300 Call
842-1607
Indiana University Students for KU want IU-KU tickets for Dec. 22. Cal Call at (812)332-2500.
400s Real Estate
B 1d furnished apartment cute and clear borders campus available Jan. 1st 841-0292 or 876-165-4755
I 1 bedroom, furnished apartment, on bus route, off 6th S. Verry Clean! Call 843-8719
1 bedroom ApL. for sublease available Jan. 1. Only $300/month. Water paid, gas heat on Bus Route.
Special Spring or Spring and Summer Leases ALL NEW!
5 bdm apt ext to campus available for 2nd
phone number. Available for vaulted ceiling,
$35/mo. Call 81-5797
3 bedroom townhouse for rent Jan. 1, dishwasher,
garden/W/D bathroom, Spacious, on the bus
parking lot. CHEAPER
CHEAPER
1 roommate needed to sublease apt., 1 blk. from campus, $180/mo. Call 814-4207.
Available Jan. 1 to 3 bdm. apt, clo to camps,
and clo to closeout closures Georgetown
Call 632-8181 or 749-7297
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
very nice! Available Spring rent! Interested Call
3 bedroom condos with all the amenities.
123
4 Bedroom house for sub-lease. Cheap rent iow
2000, 3000, 4000, C.E.C. Attention Mark
8414. 5696. Thanks for calling!
4 bdm, lrg irs, cooks and refrigerator,
2 bookcases, cookups, 7000 a.m. Available.
15.83-94-0324
4 br house for rent, 2 blocks from campus, clean,
clean, clean, help all help Cokie College 748-7393
Available at semester break, apts. in newer sec.
Rd. rds. Rd. raid. Rd. bapm. apc$90, mwb. apc$80, bapm. apc$70,
hookup, dw, microwave, fan, mini blinds,
balcony, energy efficient, great location near cam-
plex.
Available now nice clean studio apt. close to campa-
name/washier/dryer 1796 1800 $658/No pets.
No mattresses needed.
Available Jan. 1, 3 bdm. apt. on bus route. Call
749-1556-2 5 p.m. Mon-Fri.
Beautiful I Bd. unfurnished, available Jan 1.
Beautiful I Bd. laundr facilities $25 +
utilities Call 849-4190
Furnished room for female grad. student. Clean.
Bachelor's or higher privilege. No smoking. 109th Iowa Indiana.
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and
room in KU. FO- street parking.
Nets, Call 811-590-6788
Furnished studio apartment. 2 short blocks from
UK Water paid off street parking. 941-351-7680.
Bedroom apts.
Avail. now.
Recently const.
On Bus Route, Dishwasher, Central Air & heat, walk in closet,
2 bath.
Holiday
Apartments
Great sub-lase opportunity 1318 Tennessee Lodge
3rm plus base bath, quiet, clean, great
room or 789-240 or 789-650
MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments in well long older homes. Also some houses. Call 841-293-2065.
Call for appt 843-0011
211 MountHope Ct.
New Lange 4Bdr. Available Specials offered thru May or July. Include DW, MW, FT, trash compactor. cable paid. Call 841-7847. 4501 Wimbledon Dr.
Newly Remodeled Studio on Campus. Call 841-8488.
Nice furnished large rooms, new paint/carpet.
Nested garage.
Student room or student
room.
Room to sub-lease in large house start Jan itm
Telephone: 914-105-1065
for Doe's or R43 for R42 rent.
(For more details, call)
Spacious, sunny 1 bdr. unfurnished Apt. Cable included, Close to campus. Ceiling fan. Deck and microwave. $375/month available for sub-lease Jan 1. 841-8409.
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
- oSend Volleyball Court
- Sand Volleyball Court .
- Basketball Court
- Microwave
- 1&2 Bedroom Apts.
- On Bus Route
842-5111 1301 W.24th
Wishing You The Best This Holiday Season!
Stone cemetery near campus at semester break. 2 brunish unmounted $450/mo, no pets. Call 841-736-9181.
Sublease 2 bedroom apt. at Boardwalk. Available
at $379,000. Available Jan-18. JUK
bus route, water paid, $350, 941-6940.
Spring Semester sub-lease, 1 br Apt very close to campus. $350/mo. Call 823-0161
Sublease 2 br. Townhouse WD/jackups and
utilities $150/mo. utilities.
Call Hanover Place M14-1212
Sublease begin Jan 1. Great studio apt, in old house. Lots of windows, newly redo, close to dwntown & campus. $200 + util. Call 924-2056
Sublease Jan - May 2 bdm or
Sublease Jan-May 2 bdm apartment, near campus, lower of 1/4 plus $45,押金/mo 842-7890.
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
NAISMITH Hall
1800 Naismith Drive (913) 843-8559
SUBLEASE STUDIO APT. for Spring Semester 3.
bks from campus, off street parking, W/D, full
kitchen, kitchen, 800 and Louisiana, Rent, Ullities
$400/month-call 814-1971 or no answer 814-
9845.
Soblease: Studio w/bedroom. 1 Bilk from campus.
Gas and gas pipe: $450. Washroom: $230. Water closet: No, depot. No, depot.
Tired of noisy apartment living? 15 min. S. of Lawrence is an insulated传统 farm home, complete with porches and a great deck. b 1rm b inath; heated by natural gas (no propane tank). c 1rm b inath; heated by natural gas (no propane tank). d 1rm b inath; heated by natural gas (no propane tank). e quiet location. Will rent to responsible people with refs. $400/mo *749-1589* after 6 p.m.
1 Female needed, specied 2 bedroom apt. for spring sem. On bus route $230 Mo + ½ apts. for summer sem.
BDRm w/sem-prev-bath private with a 2 dBRm apt avail
and 1 dBRm apt unavailable +/- u/i/still
N BUS ROUTE. Call 684-0733
or 12 females needed for spacios 3 bdm apt. for
1 or 2 females needed from campus, on campus,
bte rcd, 200+ util. utd. 984-567-1234
1 mmate needed to share 3 bdmap amt. Jan 1 2018
after $850/mo, and an additional $400 required.
or $390/mo, or $425/amt 1825/1930
Hey? Need a place to live! VM/roommate needed
Meeting room? SM/phone: Heather at 841-5601.
1. roommate needed to share nice/clean 3 bdmr
appartment, in Kansas City (15% / 87th area) $224
or 20% / 87th area) $294
2. roommate wanted for 3 bedroom apartment
campus, $202 per month + 1/vacation. Call
859-346-5466
2 NSF Upperclassman need 2 NSF to share clean,
furnished 4 bdmr 2 bpm airt bus. Hotel Ride.
Neighborhood, Pool, Laundry rm $19 + 1/4 ut.
Call Moran 740-0213 or Renee 811-6500
Two bedroom bungalow at 83rd & New Hampshire.
Washer/Dryer, Dishwasher, detached garage,
neighborhood, perfect for grad.
student. School. Mail. Avail. Jan. 1.
$63 per month. Call 401-1313
Female roommate, beautiful 3 bedroom townhouse
Available. Jan. 1, 729-848 or 611-590-
848. Available. Jan. 1, 729-848 or 611-590-848.
430 Roommate Wanted
Female needed to share housewife. Will have room available to share Wavier/desher $225/month or Kitchen/Wavy Deser $190/month.
Looking for a female roommate to share a 4-bird, 2 bth apartment. On bus route, fully furnished & very INEXPENSIVE!! Call Holly or Bet at 865-1481
For 2 bed, 2 bain couch on bus rt. fur w/ dn in pkt.
Alt util. pcp. moh. pcw. avail. Ctrl 833 de 834
PCP. PCP.
FEMALE GOOMMATE WANTED! N/S; move in
Quiet Area. Call Pat at 862-571-3900.
Quiet Area. Call Pat at 862-571-3900.
Male roommate must share 2 bdrm, 2 bathm
apartment spring semester. Top floor, terrace,
microwave, dainasher at Colony Woods. Available
phone: $252/mo +1-877-641-8370.
Message: Call 841-638-1570.
Mature, studious, stable house mate wanted to
shake up a 900-droom house 200 m²/4.91 .N.S.
S. K. M. C. T. R. P. S. U. P.
N/S responsible female funnel female needed for 2
mails of $70,000. Available ASAP. Deposit neg. req.
499-3228.
N/S Female needed for 4 bdm cups with WD, garage, fireplace; $170.00 + utility. On bus with RV
Need mature, clean, N/MS male to share 2 hr app
w/male grade student. Close to campus $190/mo.
Email: stephen.russell@univ-of-north-carolina.edu
clean, responsible, N/S, mate to share 2hr.
apt. Need $30./50 + 1/4 utilities. Free cable. Close to
bus route. Furnished (except for room). Available
D.1 Call. Quickly #84-4899.
Needed Smoking male-female to share 3 DBMR of BUR TATE, 187/Month + 1/5 months. Call 823-1300.
Needed: N/S female to sleep 3 bbm. apt.w/ hard wood floors near campus and downtown. $175/mo. + $176 deposit. Avail. immediately. Call 823-0307 evenings.
Non-smoking female needed to share 3 kid @
house, own room, washers, available
at www.mydesignhomes.com with 811-652-0797
M3, N/M, P to share a very nice b2 br. api,
to use January 31, 1897/50/mo.
\; \util C1 -p48-0002
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
One roommate needed at four bedrooms house for Spring Semester $200/mo + utilities Ask for
Roommate needed to live in gr. BDHR室. Very close to campus {160/mi +/no} 832-1918
NSF w/ small dog needs a responsible NSF to share
their equipment in spring semester. $198/m.
Call: 749-760-3822
Roommate needed. Start Jan. 1. $280/mo plus 15
mo. non-smoker. Call 865-2690 for
static leaves.
Responsible male roommate wanted for 4 bedroom, 3 bath townhome in West Lawrence. Large kitchen fireplace, and washer/dryer. Cable, trash patio $180/mo + \* call. Utility Call #834 and leave message.
Roommate needed for spacious house, block from
the street. 1100 sq ft, wonderful per
perche. $180/mo. Call Chris at 824-3821
- By phone: 864-4358
One N5 female needed to share a quiet B3. ApL.
Please leave move in after final
Plea.
Roommate needed. M/F/ to share a 3dbm Apt and
route to 1877 bus station. call 849-9066 and have a pass. month call 849-9066 and have a pass.
How to schedule an ad:
The Hillhouse has space available for irg*viduals seeking a unique Jewish experience for the Spring semester. If interested, call 864-3948 for more information.
Roommate wanted for 3 bdmr. house. Has washer
250/mo. includes utilities except phone.
841-2579
By Mail: 119 Stauffer Flat, Lawrence, KS 68045
www.lexanderfairfield.edu
Seeking NSF to sublease NEW3 bdm condo on 9th
phone; $20 + 1 utilities. Available ONL now (CALL)
Stop 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.
As phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* in person: 119 Stairwater Flint
Classified Information and order form
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 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.
Num. of insertions:
Classified rates are based on the number of consecutive day insertions and the size of the ad (the number of agains the ad occupies). To calculate the cost, multiply the total number of days in the ad by the rate that it qualifies for. That amount is the cost per day. Then multiply the per day cost by the total number of days the ad will run.
The advertiser may have responses sent to a blind box at the Kansan office for a fee of $4.00.
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 or with cash are not available.
Rates
Classifications
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
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2.05 1.55 1.05 .85 .75 .50
1.90 1.15 .90 .70 .65 .45
1.85 1.85 .75 .65 .60 .40
1.75 .90 .65 .60 .55 .35
105 personal
110 business personalis
120 announcements
130 entertainment
148 lost & found
205 help wanted
225 professional services
225 typing services
ADS MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Classified Mail Order Form - Please Print:
1
2
3
4
5
370 want to buy
495 for rent
438 roommate wanted
Name:
1
Date ad begins: Total days in paper
Total ad cost: Classification:
VISA
Method of Payment (Check one) □ Check enclosed □ MasterCard □ Visa
(Please make checks payable to the University Daily Kansas)
Furnish the following if you are charging your ad:
Print exact name appearing on credit card:
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Signature:
The University of California Davis Kaiser, 119 Stauffer Street FIll Hall, tAwareness. ksus.60045
---
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1993 FarWorks Inc./Not by Universal Press Syndicate
"It's OK! Dart not poisonous ... Just showin' my kid the ropes!"
14
Thursday, December 2, 1993
CHINA HIGHWAYS
WAY
NATURAL
Natural Fiber Clothing
820-822 Mass.
841-0100
Want To Exhibit In the
Kansas Union Gallery?
Applications Now Available for Spring 1741
Inquire at the SUN Box Office -- 864-3477
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Level 4, Kansas Union
STOCK
$10 Says that we beat the competition!
And save you time & money!
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
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.
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 | | ✓
| |
| :--- |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
Your Books Will Be Ready When Residence Halls Officially Open!
SPORTS
Name: ___
KU Address: ___
City: ___ State: ___ Zip: ___
Home Address: ___
City: ___ State: ___ Zip: ___
KU Phone #: ___
Home Phone #: ___
The Fine Print!
- Books not picked up by the 2nd day of classes will be returned to stock
- Some books may not be available prior to the start of classes
- All books are returnable through the 2nd work of classes
- New books which are returned must be saluable 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 – September 3rd
- Gift Certificate is redeemable on each purchase of regularly stocked items
- Sorry, limit one $10.00 gift certificate per person per semester
CBS
Jayhawk Bookstore Your Book Professionals at the Top of Nalsmith Hill
UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Your Book Professionals at the Top of Naismith Hill
1420 Crescent Road
Lawrence, KS 60044
(913) 843-3826
Fax (913) 843-9787
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
Runner finds success after Kansas
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
Cathy Palacios did not stop running just because her college eligibility ran out.
The Oak Brook, Ill., graduate student, who finished her collegiate eligibility in 1992 as a runner at Kansas, continues to compete around the country. During Thanksgiving weekend, she competed in the USA Cross Country National Championships in Missoula, Mont.
trates primarily on the 3,000-meter event.
She finished seventh overall and helped her Asics team to a second-place finish behind the team from Reebok.
"It was really cold out there, but it was a good race," Palacios said.
Palacios ran for the Kansas track team for two years after transferring from Southeast Missouri State in 1990. She ran the 800, 1,500 and 3,000-meter events in college. But now, as an amateur runner, Palacios concen-
"There is a huge difference between the college and post-college level," Palacios said. "Running at this level is like being drafted by the pros in any other sport."
Palacios credited part of her success in adjusting to the post-collegiate level to her coach, Steve Guymon, who is also the assistant coach with the Kansas track team.
"A very small percentage go on from college," Guymon said. "A lot of athletes get burned out, and there is a financial sacrifice."
He said that running a variety of events during her entire career had helped Palacios keep from getting burned out.
Signing with a company was a big step in her career, Palacios said. She runs for Asics shoe company, which sponsors about 150 track athletes across the country.
"We're especially interested in distance runners from programs like
Kansas," said Mark Kenow, promotional coordinator for Asics.
Good runners lead to national, even international exposure for the shoe company.
"If they rise to the Olympic level, obviously we get a lot of national exposure," Nenow said. "The others can give us feedback and some regional exposure."
"It'd be like going to the Rose Bowl to make that team," Palacios said.
The Olympics are something that Palacios said she was thinking of, but she said her more immediate goal was making the U.S. team, which runs annually in the world championships.
When You Really Have To Go
Palacios said that running allowed her to continue doing what she loved to do while she pursued her master's degree in sports psychology and exercise science. She said that after graduation in May, she hoped to pursue a doctorate in sports psychology.
"Hopefully I can take my degrees and make myself marketable after I get out of college," she said.
For all your travel needs
Crown Cinema
- Low-cost US Student Airfares
- The Best International
- International ID Cards
- Student Airfares Anywhere
- Eurailpasses Issued On-The-Spot
BEFORE 8 PM, ADULTS $3.00
(UNION) $1.75 (EATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $2.00
Council Travel
1343 Irington Ave.
Everston, IL 60201
1-800-475-5070
VARSITY
America's largest student travel association
Addams Family Values
PG-135:15, 7:30, 9:30
The 3 Musketeers PG 5:00, 7:15, 8:30
The 3 Musketeers PG .715.830
The Joy Luck Club PG .515.830
Josh & Sam PG-13 .515.830
Carilito's Way PG .500.800
Mrs. Doubrefire PG .440.800
GINEMA TWIN
17TH OWA 441 1912 $1.25
Jurassic Park PG-13
The Program $ ^{R} $
5:00,
7:30,9:50
5:10,
7:20,9:30
Daily Showing Times
Jayhawk Bookstore
"Your Book Professionals" "At the Top of Natham Hill"
Hrs: 7-8 M-T. 4-Fri. 5-Sat. 12-4 Sun.
918-263-9202
FROM THE DIRECTOR OF THE PLAYER
SHORT CUTS(R)
642 LIBERAL BALL 749
Mass. 101
TODAY(4:30),8:30/FINAL WEEK!
DICKINSC
THEATR
Dickinson 6 **13** 4:20* ,7:20,9:55
My Life **Nutcracker** 6*13* 4:20* ,7:15,9:30
The Nutcracker 6*13* 4:20* ,7:15,9:30
Where Back 6*5*30* ,7:00,9:30
Man's Best Friend 6*4*20* ,7:10,9:40
Nightmare Before Christmas 6*4*35* ,7:10,9:35
Perfect World 6*13* 4:05* ,7:00,9:45
$3 Primetime Show (†) Hearing Dolby
City Silicon Citizen Anyone Impersonated Steroid
Wetlands Preservation & the South Lawrence Trafficway
An important Current Issues of the Day panel discussion about wetlands conservation and the debate over the Haskell Wetlands
- Joyce Wolf - Jayhawk Audubon
- Dr. Roger Boyd-Baker University Biology Professor
- Speakers will be joined by additional panelists to discuss prospects and solutions, both nationally and for Haskell
Speakers;
8:00 pm, Thursday December 2nd Walnut Room, KU Student Union
- George Tiger-President, Haskell Board of Regents Jovce Wolf-Jayhawk Audubon
Sponsored By: St Lawrence Human Services Committee HINU Student Senate, & KUEnvirons
MEETING
JAYTALK
NETWORK
♂
Eclectic, kind of quiet, lionet type (not shy) in need of change. Looking for SWF to help me open up. I'm a 5" trim, 24sh, SWM guilt of being affectionate, sensitive and sometimes stubborn. Seeking N/S sensual, sensible, 21+ petite SWF who can & likes to dance @ #4567
Athletic SWM 26 KU Grad in a stable job looking for single female 21-29 to spend time with. Must be attractive outgoing, romance and dance. #46338.
Single white male in mid-20's, grad, student seeks single female intellectual/genius/art type with an extremely silly sense of humor and weird taste in music, movies, books etc. #43715.
To check out these ads call 1-900-285-4560 You will be charged $1.95 per minute (must be 18 yrs old)
SWM 20yrns, 910,150 lbs. long brown hair, I love Henry Rollins, Tom Wate, Waite Dishion. I own a motorcycle, don't have job and probably drink to eco-freak need not apply." #45226
Very attractive, intelligent and charming. 27 year old grad. student. 'S1'11, *16*. Seeking the type of female who keeps her eyes open on rollercoasters. #4216
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Looking for someone who enjoys the great outdoors and all seasons. Listen to all the different sounds or go for a car ride to get away. #46364
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WOMEN
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MEN
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2 attractive SWF's seeking 2 SWM's **22+** (,Grad,
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GBM, 25, 6 f, 200 lbs., love music and quiet evenings. Seeks GM, 10, 40 for friendship or possible relationship. If interested respond to box #42983 GWM, 18, 6'4, 10 blue blond eyes, good-looking model type, shy, intelligent and philosophical seeking 18 GWJacks, rap lovers, or soccer players who are butch, claosed, have all male friends, body, cute boy looks, for possible relationship #44771
65
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GMW 27, 6, 165, fun, sinner, attractive, graduate student, relationship oriented. Enjoys working out, cinema, concerts, theater, dance, dancing and music. Seeks fit, versatile, mature, romantic, down to earth, GM 21-38 with similar qualities for friendship, dating, possible relationship, race discrimination, respect for low people. Inscribe responses only. Dissection assured/expected! #29291
Sincere handsome & ambitious GBM with nice body seeks sharp gay male for mutual appreciation, relationship. is anyone else masculine yet happily secure with their sexuality? Sure there is i nice guy out there seeking the same, discreet call back. Not an ad for sex. Box 22911
MEN SEEKING MEN
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22502
---
FRIENDS SEEKING FRIENDS
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
PLACE AN AD FREE!
Call 864-4358
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS To place an ad
1. Call or come into the *Kansan* at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, 864-4358.
1. Call or come into the Kansan at 191 Stuart-Hill Hall, 684-4358.
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.
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
1
SPORTS: The Kansas women's basketball team plays host to the Dial Soap Basketball Championships this weekend. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103,NO.72
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1993
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
Vespers regains its tradition in Lied Center
TOM SCHUTZMAN
Professor of choral music James Ralston conducts the KU Vesper Choir during practice. This year will be Ralston's last to direct the Vespers before he retires at the end of the spring semester. Performances will be at 3:30 and 7:30 p.m. Sunday at the Lied Center.
New admission charge fewer seats may prevent students from attending annual choral concert
By Shan Schwartz Kansan staff writer
NEWS: 864-4810
The 60th annual Vespers at the University of Kansas is Sunday, and its move to the new Lied Center means a better venue but a higher ticket price for concertgoers.
Vespers was performed in Hoch Auditorium until 1990. The concert moved to Allen Field House in 1991 after a fire gutted Hoch. The opening of the Lied Center begins a new era for Vespers, said Stephen Anderson, chair of the department of music and dance.
Performances will be at 3:30 and 7:30 p.m. Sunday and will feature the Kansas Brass Quintet, the combined KU Choirs and the University Symphony Orchestra. The audience is invited to sing along with some songs.
When Vespers moved to the field house, the program had to be changed and many of the traditional processions and activities of Vespers were lost.
Anderson said that Hoch Auditorium was cherished by many as a traditional site for Vespers but that its poor acoustics diminished the quality of the concert.
Vespers is directed by James Ralston, professor of music and dance and director of choral music. Ralston has directed Vespers for 27 years, and this year will be his last. Ralston is retiring at the end of the spring semester after being associated with KU's choral music program since his student days in the 1950s.
The move to the center permits some of the tradition to be restored. Anderson said.
"We believe we have made it a much more enriching production." Anderson said.
But the move to the center also prompted a less popular change in Vespers — a $5 ticket price. Admission to Vespers was previously free of charge.
ed the advance ticket sales.
Anderson said several factors necessitat:
One of the factors was crowd management because the Lied Center cannot accommodate as many people as Hoch or the field house, he said.
"In Hoch, two performances could seat over 6,000 people, and in the field house, we think we had upwards of 7,000," Anderson said.
"The Lied Center is a magnificent place, but we can accommodate only 3,000," he said. "There are two concerts there, and that's all we can schedule."
Anderson said advance tickets were necessary to prevent having to turn away large crowds on Sunday.
Anderson said he was sympathetic to those who might not be able to attend Vespers this year because of limited seating or the ticket price. But he said the decision came down to continue the Vespers tradition in a high quality performance hall or cancel it altogether.
The admission fee will cover the costs of the concert — music, programs and advertising — and will benefit scholarship funds for music majors.
"We've always taken a free will offering, but those have been going down," Anderson said. "And it is for the students because some of the money goes to those kids on the stage."
Tickets are available at the box offices at the Lied Center, Murphy Hall and Student Union Activities. Lied Center box office officials said that tickets were still available yesterday afternoon but that they were selling quickly.
"We are very excited about finally being able to do a wonderful production that is very musically and artistically fulfilling." Anderson said.
The 3:30 p.m. Vespers performance will be broadcast live on KANU 91.5 FM. The performances also will be recorded for compact discs and cassette tapes that will be released in April.
[Image] Two men seated at a table with papers and materials, engaged in conversation. One man gestures with his hand while the other looks on. The background shows a room with people sitting around tables.
nontraditional return
No longer is the college classroom filled with fresh-faced high school grads. In 1991, about 45 percent of university students in the United States were over 25.
Valerie Botranger / KANSAN
For these students, tests and homework often compete with full-time jobs and families.
Tony Jones, Lawrence sophomore, explains childcare at the University to Roxanne Doyle, Hays graduate student. Jones and Doyle were enjoying lunch Tuesday at the Burge Union during a brown bag lunch sponsored by OAKS—Non-Traditional Students Organization.
By Donella Hearne Kansan staff writer
In classrooms across campus there is someone sitting in the front of the room who seems older than the other students. Maybe the tell-tale sign is that she has gray hair or that he is balding.
Jones is one of 4,703 nontraditional students enrolled at the University of Kansas this semester, making up almost 25 percent of the total undergraduate population.
Maybe that student asks more questions or just answers more. Maybe that student is setting the curve.
Tony Jones is a 41-year-old sophomore and one of those students. He is a single father who has come to college in hopes of providing a better life for his 5-year-old daughter.
More and more people are going back
to school. In 1991, about 45 percent of the 10.6 million college students in the United States were over 25, according to the 1991 Guide for Nontraditional Students from the Association of American Publishers.
"I thought I was going to get a million dollars," he said. "I just assumed I would
After graduating from Lawrence High School, Jones said that he wasted a lot of time waiting for his ship to come in.
have a successful life even though I didn't have a plan. I woke up and realized that wasn't going to happen."
He decided that he needed to find a career and that same day he joined the Army. After four years in the service, Jones returned to Lawrence from where he was stationed in Frankfurt, Germany, and started a construction business with
See NONTRADITIONAL, Page 7.
Leadership program dropped
Program's termination could be related to cuts in budget allocations
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
The Office of Student Affairs will discontinue the student leadership program next year, said Kelli Zuel, assistant director for the program.
Unless the University finds a replacement position for her by then, she will lose her position as an unclassified University employee. Zuel said.
Zuel said Ann Eversole, director of the Organizations and Activities Center, told Zuel on Nov. 2 that the program, which is based out of the center, and her position will end as of May 17.
Eversole did not confirm whether the program had been cut.
"All the noninstructional units have been reduced by a certain amount, including the Office of Student Affairs." Eversole said. "But I can't comment on that specific program right now."
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, and Caryl Smith, dean of student life, were unavailable yesterday for comment.
Zuel said she thought the program's termination and her dismissal had come from budget cutbacks.
"I was assured it had nothing to do with my performance," Zuel said. "I knew it was concerning budget cuts."
According to the 1993-94 KU budget, the University allocated $2,663 to the student leadership program for a supply and expense account, along with the salary of Zuel, the program's only assigned employee.
The four-year old student leadership program promoted leadership development among students, enhanced students' job skills and assisted student leaders with their organizations. Zuel said.
Along with developing the annual Blueprint Leadership Conference, held Nov. 13, Zuel said that she worked with students to design and promote the Emerging and Established Leaders Series, a series of workshops designed to help students develop leadership skills.
After learning of the cutback, many students had expressed their surprise and disappointment to Zuel, she said.
"They find it difficult to understand why this happened," Zuel said. "What our office does is help students. They should have had some say in whether this should have been discontinued or not."
John Shoemaker, student body president, said the University had chosen the wrong area to make budget cuts.
"I realize there are a lot of budget cuts going on," Shoemaker said. "But the student leadership program is one of the major reasons I have the position I have."
Shoemaker said that he was shocked and that he did not understand why the Organizations and Activities Center had not consulted students.
"I'm trying to figure out why Student Senate was not consulted," Shoemaker said. "They may have gotten student input but used a different method than usual."
Shoemaker said he thought that the lack of student input was an oversight on the part of the Organizations and Activities Center.
Jamie Cuturbitt, president of the Association of University Residence Halls, said Zuel's role as an adviser for student leaders affected many students, not just participants in the leadership-development programs.
"The program might work with 50 people who work to train 2,000 others," Cuturbth said. "This is a senseless budget cut. It takes away the venue for students who aspire to be leaders on campus."
INSIDE
Hearthemring
The ringing season goes hand-in-hand with the holiday season, and bellringers are out in full force despite the frosty weather.
Page 3.
(2)
Professors do not reap book profit royalties
By Kathleen Stolle Kansan staff writer
To Carole Rich, associate professor of journalism, $120 is a small price to pay to avoid any hint of unethical practice.
She could have earned that much in royalties. But instead she doled it out to students in her reporting classes this semester after requiring them to purchase a textbook she wrote.
"I don't feel that I'm here to make money off my students," she said.
Kansan staff writer
Is it unethical for professors to require textbooks they have written for classes they teach?
Some students and professors say no,not if the product is high quality.
Matt Irwin, Overland Park sophomore, is a student in Rich's class.
"I felt really bad taking the money," Irwin said. "I think she earned it because the book's really good."
In fact, Pinches' students can actually recover the cost of the textbook if they are quick enough. The preface of his textbook promises $10 to each student who is the first to find a new error, everything from a misplaced apostrophe to a mathematical error.
"I've got some colleagues who are forceful enough to say, This stinks. We want to use something else," he said.
George Pinches, professor of business.
"I'm sure we've paid out $500 or $600," he said, noting that the publisher helped with that cost.
said because his colleagues helped select his book as a required textbook, he felt justified in using it.
Pinches said he relied on his students to improve the quality of his textbook.
"The ultimate consumer is the student, and what you want is something that addresses the students' needs," Pinches said. "That's why I encourage my students to tell me if there's something wrong or something they don't like because they are
Judy Perkinson, marketing manager for Prentice Hall, a New Jersey-based textbook publisher, said most textbook authors — almost all of whom are professors — earned about 10 percent of the book's list price.
"The other ones I've had, for the most part, were horrible," he said. "I think the professors wrote them so they could make money."
But if a book's quality is questionable, then so is the motive for requiring it, said Derek Shirk, Iola senior. Of all the textbooks that professors wrote and required in Shirk's classes, only one book was satisfactory.
the ultimate judge."
And that is only for new books. Professors and publishers get nothing from the sale of used books, she said.
"It's a big problem that no one's been able to figure out vet." Perkinson said.
As the author of several textbooks, Douglas Whitman, professor of business, knows
the ways of the used textbook industry.
The professors' loss may be the students' and bookstores' gain. Bill Muggy, manager of Jayhawk Bookstore, said two-thirds of his store's annual textbook sales was in used books, of which profits go to the bookstore only.
"I haven't received a dime in years on books sold here," he said. "You basically sell the books the first semester. For most professors, they're not going to be making much money on their books, period."
Muggy said used books in very good condition were bought back at up to 50 percent of the new book price and were resold at 75 percent of the new price.
Aside from the ethical debate, professors and students alike agree that having the author of the textbook behind the lectern can be advantageous.
"Obviously with that you're getting it pretty much straight from the horse's mouth," said Jarrett Steele, Prairie Village senior.
2
Friday, December 3, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VV
The Etc. Shop 928 Mass.Downtown
Parking in the rear
ON CAMPUS
SWIM QUIK
Jug '94
WINTER BREAK
The largest selection of
swim & cruise wear
in the KC metro area!
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will celebrate Mass at 12:30 p.m. today at Downtown Forchall
KU Nippon Kempo Karate Club will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in 207 Robinson Center.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445.
Women's Student Union will meet at 5 p.m. today at Alcove D in the Kansas Union.
Latin American Solidarity/Campus VII will sponsor "Fiesta Centroamericana" (Central American Party) at 6:30 p.m. today at Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St.
For more information, call Eduardo Molina at 841-2370.
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, "Science and Religion," at 7:30 tonight at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mehdi Khoshsabegheh at 841-7585.
The Astronomy Associates of Lawrence will meet to stargaze at 8 p.m. Sunday on top of Lindley Hall. For more information, call Corey Zirlin at 842-2225.
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1033 VERMONT, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-841-7787
ON THE RECORD
A student's parking permit valued at $50 was taken from a car in Lawrence police reported. the 1300 block of Kentucky Street on Tuesday or Wednesday
CORRECTION
The holiday concert presented by the University Dance Company and the Cohen/Suzueau Duet Company will be at 2 p.m. Saturday not Sunday as was originally printed.
WEATHER
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 63°/47°
Chicago: 45°/35°
Houston: 75°/56°
Miami: 81°/71°
Minneapolis: 34°/23°
Phoenix: 70°/43°
Salt Lake City: 41°/25°
Seattle: 50°/40°
LAWRENCE: 47°/32
Kansas City: 49°/31°
St. Louis: 54°/40°
Wichita: 46°/28°
Tulsa: 53°/35°
TODAY
Tomorrow Sunday
40 percent chance of scattered showers
High: 47°
Low: 32°
Partly cloudy
High: 49°
Low: 30°
Mostly sunny
High: 53°
Low: 29°
WEATHER
TheUniversityDailyKansas(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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KANSAN
Call 864-4810 for the newsroom:
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Call IMTCI for more info: Mon - Fri from 8am - 5pm
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Jayhawk Bookstore
100
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Kansas Union, Level Two
(level four beg. Dec. 8th)
8:30 - 5:00 Mon.- Fri.
10:00 - 4:00 Sat.
Noon - 3:00 Sunday
864-5285
Burge Union, Level Two
8:30 - 7:00 Mon.-Thurs.
8:30 - 5:00 Friday
10:00 - 4:00 Sat.
Closed Sunday
864-5697
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
KU Bookstores Kansas and Burge Unions The only store offering rebates to KU students
You'll Laugh Again!
You'll Cry Again!!
You'll Hurl Again!!!
WAYNE'S WORLD 2
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CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, December 3,1993
3
Spanish HBO may come to cable
By Traci Carl
Kansan staff writer
Sunflower Cablevision customers might be able to access movies with Arnold Schwarzenegger saying more in Spanish than "Hasta La Vista, Baby."
Dennis Knipfer said Sunflower was examining the possibility of offering movies like "The Terminator" in Spanish. Translated movies would be available to customers that receive the Home Box Office movie channel. They would not have subtitles.
Sunflower is considering the Spanish HBO access after a request from the Costa Rican Student Association.
"It seems to be a low-impact way to possibly answer their request." Knipfer said.
Knipfer said he did not know when he could announce a final decision, which would be based on the costs of the access.
Gustavo Alvarado, Ramon, Costa Rica,junior and president of the association,said he would prefer a channel with all Spanish programming.
"The idea is to have a real Spanish channel, not
"The idea is to have a real Spanish channel, not just translated movies"
Gustavo Alvarado
just translated movies," Alvarado said.
GUSTAVO AVAREZ
President of Costa Rican Student Association
Alvarado said the association wanted the channel for fluent Spanish speakers and Spanish students. It has signatures from about 1,000 students in favor of the channel.
The channel also be a way for non-Spanish speaking people to experience the language and culture. The channel would offer news and programs on Latin American issues.
"It's kind of a way to share cultures," he said
But translated movies would not offer Spanish culture. Gustavo said Sunflower at first considered offering Spanish programming that would share a channel with different programming.
"We have to take a good hard look at any addition to the cable line-up," Knipfer said.
The Cable Act of 1992 does not affect programming, Knipfer said.
Knipper said Sunflower only can offer 40 channels, and all channels have programming. Adding channels could increase costs.
Alvarado said the association was studying whether the Cable Act of 1992 would require Sunflower to carry a Spanish channel with enough public support.
John Katch, associate professor of radio and TV journalism, said the act did not give the public more power in determining the programming a cable company offers.
Bellringers brave cold weather Volunteers collect money to assist Salvation Army
NUTRITION IS CAREING
CAMPAIGN
GOSPEL VOL. 101
When he goes home to the Salvation Army Shelter at night, David Beust can still hear bells ringing.
"It's exciting for the kids to hear, but I sort of get burned out on it," Beust said.
Beust is ringing the bell for a second year. He said that he stood outside Dillons when the temperature was 15 degrees Saturday wearing a coat, hat and gloves to help him stay warm.
"It's a good way for me to pick up a little rent money to put in the bank," he said. "I'm hoping I can get a job pretty soon, but it seems like things always get bad from October to December."
"I stand by the door and try to catch some heat on the really cold days," he said. "I wish it would snow — that makes it seem more like Christmas."
Blake Hodges, Winnetka, Ill., freshman, dropped some change into Beast's pot.
David Beust, Lawrence, stands outside Dillon's, 1015 W. 23rd St., as a bellringer for the Salvation Army. Beust spends seven hours a day, six days a week waiting for people's donations.
"I know they're out there, and they work hard to have a good Christmas," he said. "I usually try to spare some change for them."
Some avoid eye contact with the bell ringers, others meekly walk by, and a few proudly walk up, say "Merry Christmas," and drop in some change, said Gale Armbrister, Baldwin resident and bell ringer.
"After you do this for a while you start getting ringers wrist," Armbrister said with a smile. "This is my fifth or sixth year at this, and I've found it's a real socio-psychological test out here. Usually you don't have a lot of eye contact, but if you stare at people and say hello they usually come back out and drop in some change."
Lois Covert, McClouth resident,
stood outside of Walmart yesterday
with Armbrister for an hour in the
"I don't care if it rains, just as long as it doesn't get cold and freezing." Covert said. "No matter how cold it gets, it makes you feel good, and you know the money is going to a good cause."
Money collected from the bell campaign, which will end Dec. 31, makes up 65 percent of the Army's yearly budget, said George Windham, commanding officer for the Salvation Army.
Even though students usually find their pockets empty this time of year, they are still giving, the bell ringers said.
Liz Hansen, Chicago junior, said she felt bad when she walked by without giving money to the bell ringers.
standing there, and they look so cold," she said.
Her friend, Kristen Lyon, St. Louis, junior, said she always gave spare change when she had it.
"I don't feel guilty because there are so many all over town, and you can't be expected to give to all of them," she said. "Being a college student, sometimes I think I need the money as much as they do."
"I feel guilty because they're just
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Last night's forum on the South Lawrence Trafficway and its impact on the wetlands south of Haskell Indian Nations University began with a prayer.
"For a majority of the Indian people, that's just the way we're taught," said George Tiger, a member of the Haskell Board of Regents.
the purpose of the forum, held at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union by the St. Lawrence Human Services Committee, Haskell Student Senate and KU Environs, was to explore the issue of the trafficway and not to debate with Douglas County officials, said Scott Schulte, KU graduate and treasurer of the services committee.
Trafficway issue concerns many on KU campus
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
"We wanted to structure a discussion that focuses on solutions," he said.
"We want an opportunity to be heard, and all we're saying is that we've been through this before," said Tiger, a Haskell alumnus.
Both city and county officials have said that the trafficway would ease traffic on 23rd and Iowa streets and allow greater access to the west side of the city.
Discussion of wetlands concentrates on solutions
Tiger spoke on the spiritual meaning of the wetlands, where plans to build a four-lane trafficway over 31st Street have Haskell students and officials worried. He said the trafficway would increase noise levels and ruin the religious significance of the land for the Haskell student body.
Although no county officials were officially invited, Jim Chappell, county commissioner, attended to listen to Haskell's concerns.
"I don't think we can hear enough of the perspective Haskell Indian Nations University has about the wetlands and the roadway," he said.
Joyce Wolf, a member of Jayhawk Audubon, said that flood control was one of the most important aspects of wetlands and that wetlands would have helped the Midwest during this summer's floods if many of them already had not been drained.
Gaele Gillespie, a member of KU's library faculty who attended to learn more about the issue, said the trafficway placed money over people.
But county officials should have asked Haskell's permission to build the trafficway before planning it, he said.
But two-thirds of the fish consumed by people spend at least part of their life cycle in wetlands, Boyd said. He said the wetlands provided vital links to the environment's food chain and helped with flood control.
"It's almost like having a church with no walls," he said.
"I'm wondering whether it's really needed at all," she said.
"Most people feel wetlands are just infested with mosquitoes and are muddy and smelly," he said. "They try to avoid them or drain them."
Haskell's medicine wheel and sweat lodges — which lie in the wetlands — would be violated by the trafficway, said Lonnie Duncan, a member of the Haskell Student Senate.
Roger Boyd, a professor of Baker University who spoke at the forum, said the trafficway would damage the fragile ecosystem of the wetlands. He said most people did not realize their environmental importance.
The extended hours will begin today and end Dec. 19.
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Library hours will be later during finals
Students will have more time to study for finals when Watson Library extends its hours during finals period.
The library will maintain its normal hours from 8 a.m. to midnight from Monday to Thursday, said Stephen Roffenberger, Watson Library assistant.
Roffenberger said the circulation desk would be open during the extended hours, so students could check out books.
Friday's closing time will be extended from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. The library will be open from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday and noon to midnight Sunday.
But, he said, the reference desk would still have normal hours, from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. from Monday to Thursday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday, 1 to 5 p.m. Saturday and 1 to 9 p.m. Sunday.
Two KU graduates are Rhodes candidates
Two KU graduates will be considered for Rhodes scholarships tomorrow.
Jacqueline Gordon and Munro Richardson, who both graduated from KU last spring, will be interviewed tomorrow in Neapolisby a scholarship committee, said Sandra Wick, associate director of the honors program.
Gordon graduated with a sociology degree and is a staff intern at St. Elizabeth's Shelter for the Homeless in Santa Fe, N.M. Richardson graduated with an East Asian languages degree and is a graduate student at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass.
Rhodes scholars are awarded a full scholarship to study two years at Oxford University in Oxford, England.
Richardson is also a candidate for the Marshall scholarship, which is a two-year scholarship to study at any university in England. Marshall scholars will be announced Monday.
KU has had 22 Rhodes scholars, the most recent being Pan McElwee last year.
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Friday, December 3,1993
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Hillary Clinton expands importance of first lady
After 10 months in the White House, Hillary Rodham Clinton has redefined the role of the first lady. While former first ladies have generally been content to be supportive companions, she has shown that she is a competent and influential woman, independent of her husband.
Though critics initially quipped that she wears the pants in the Clinton household, she has struck an appropriate balance between promoting her husband's ideas and working to accomplish her own goals. Rodham Clinton is a respected political figure in her own right, but she is also committed to working on behalf of her husband.
This is evidenced by her inarguable dedication to instituting much-needed health care reforms. She has consistently impressed political enemies and allies alike with her intelligence and her knowledge of our nation's health care system. Together, Bill and Hillary Clinton are working to ensure that every person has access to affordable health insurance.
Politics aside, Rodham Clinton is an admirable female role model. She has proven that women can be competent and assertive without seeming inappropriately domineering. Her intelligence and strong work ethic are unquestionable and have won her the respect of both men and women.
Rodham Clinton's reformation of the role of first lady is a positive precedent, and she should serve as an example to all women. She has shown that the first lady can and should be politically active without overshadowing her husband.
COLLEEN MCCAIN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Gridlock losing its grip on federal government
The governmental gridlock of the last few years is breaking up. During the last few months, federal lawmakers have debated and passed several pieces of significant legislation, including NAFTA and the Brady Bill. They also are poised to resume debate on national health-care reform and other important issues during the next few months.
President Clinton and members of Congress should share the credit for the growing spirit of bipartisan compromise in Washington. Clinton has proven himself to be adept at addressing members of both parties when working to pass controversial legislation. Congress also has approached new legislation with the good of the country in mind, rather than focusing on strict party loyalties or campaigning concerns.
Regardless of your opinion about each of these pieces of legislation, when viewed together they form a progressive and aggressive body of legislation that could signal an end to the partisan politics that paralyzed the government of the late 1980s and early 1990s.
CHRIS REEDY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN EDITORIAL BOARD: DAVID BURGETT,
JR CLAIRBORNE, CHRISTINA CORNISH, CARSON ELROD, TOM
GRELINGER, MANNY LOPEZ, COLLEEN MCCAIN, TERRILYN
MCCORMICK, MUNEERA NASEE, NATHAN NASSIF, KIRK RED-
MOND, CHRIS REEDY, RANDALL REITZ, MIKE SILVERMAN, EISHA
TIERNEY, KC TRAUER, DAVID WANEK
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UDK 93
During Thanksgiving break, my father and I made a pact. Because he has paid for my four years of college, I will allow him to take the family to Furrs Cafeteria just once before I graduate.
Dad's desire: to savor Furrs' fried-food buffet
Yes, my mother, sister and I have agreed to swallow our pride and venture into that no-mans land of white, tasteless food, where equally tasteless people repeatedly slide up to the trough, giving new meaning to the term "all you can eat." Just once before I leave the University of Kansas, we will partake of that buffet of chicken, instant mashed potatoes and tapioca pudding where everything is deep-fat fried and pleniful. We will do it for Dad.
My father, a simple man with simple tastes, truly believes Furrs is the Mecca of fine dining. Dad, a die-hard Wildcat fan, was skeptical of my decision to attend KU until, on the way to my dorm, he spotted that brown sign on 23rd Street. "They have a Furrs!" he exclaimed with glee that quickly was squealed by the groans and laughter of myself, my mother and sister. If Dad had any hope of crossing Furrs' threshold that day, Mom put it to rest with an ignorant snort.
COMMENTARY
SARA
BENNETT
But Dad is tenacious. Every time he and my mother visit Lawrence and the subject of where to eat arises, he finds a way to surreptitiously suggest Furrs. "Well, Furrs is right on the way," he says, or, "You know whose seafood I really like? Furrs!" And my mother, sister and I always respond with the same condescending laughter. "Oh, Daddy," my sister and I sigh. "Really, Tom," my mother scolds. "We are not going to Furrs!"
Yet Dad persevers, and it is in tribute to his bravery and persistence that
I struck a deal with him. Perhaps I felt like a snob for thumbing my nose at a place where people can eat as much as they want and never taste a thing and where Jell-O and succotash are featured menu items, not undesirables to be pushed under a napkin. Perhaps I felt guilty for denying my father his simple dream of visiting what is, in his eyes, KU's one redeeming feature. Perhaps, deep inside, chocolate cream pie and Salisbury steak really do sound good.
Whatever my motive, the deal has been sealed, and the date has been set. This Sunday, Mom and Dad are coming for Vespers. Afterwards, we are going to Furrs.
Mom and my sister and I have made a deal as well. We have agreed that Sunday is Dad's day, and we will let him enjoy his meal at Furs without laughter or snide comments. Dad has paid for four years of college. The least we can do is pay for him to eat at Furrs just once before I graduate.
Sara Bennett is a Manhattan senior majoring in Journalism.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Christianity portrayed as superior by teacher
The following lines are taken from the syllabus of Ann Jurcyk, Western Civilization instructor:
"It is the perspective of this instructor that Western Civilization and the history thereof is in fact better represented by the phrase 'The Rise and Fall and Subsequent Renewal of Christendom' ... It is the purpose of my course to give credence to the fact that objective Truth is a real and knowable, and thus qualifiable fact.
It is also the intent of this instructor to show that, in fact, Christian culture best represents this objective Truth and that had said culture not been derailed by the 'Reformation,' many of the great evils of the world (such as racism, nationalism, communism, or imperialism) would not have come into existence.
I can't believe that a graduate teaching assistant with such radical views is distracting a fundamental liberal arts course into a forum for ideology more commonly heard from the steps in front of Wescoe Hall. I would like to congratulate the Western Civilization program on its recruiting abilities: It must not have been easy to pry Jurczyk from the Phelps ministry.
... Bear in mind that it is the opinion of this instructor that Christian culture can objectively be defended as a superior cultural model. That is
not to say that other cultures possess no Truth, but rather to say that Christian culture at its height possesses the fulness of Truth."
Besides my personal disagreements with Jurcyk, there are many philosophical and pedagogical arguments against having such a person teach a required course at a large university.
Jurcyk must have realized that her beliefs would be challenged. In fact, this syllabus is a revised edition; her original syllabus was unacceptable with the higher-ups in the Western Civilization program, so she toned it down to this version.
What about Jurczyk's argument that supporting her beliefs does not
constitute discrimination against other beliefs? If this were true, then another professor would be free to teach a course from the perspective that Nazism "possesses the fullness of Truth" or that homosexuality "can objectively be defended as a superior cultural model."
I think that teaching a course by emphasizing a narrow ideology as proper standard or better than others is discrimination against those who do not share that ideology.
This kind of intolerance and inconsideration for cultural sensitivities of diverse students at the University can have only one effect: the perpetuation of dislike and misunderstanding among groups with different ideologies and different cultures. I think Jurcyk may be a nice person. But I also think that she has no business teaching classes at the University. Too many people with equal or better qualifications can teach the course with the proper objectivity and an acceptance of divergent viewpoints.
Lawrence senior
COLLEEN NATHAN McCAIN OLSON Spring 1994 Editorial Co-Editors
Kansan looks for diversity in hiring for opinion page
The students of the University of Kansas represent a myriad of backgrounds and beliefs. Many ethnic, religious and political groups are found among KU's 26,000 students.
Accordingly, the Kansan strives to represent a varied cross-section of students' viewpoints. The opinion page, in particular, attempts to reflect this diversity.
At times, though, the page isn't successful. Some people claim that the page is too liberal, others that it is too conservative. Now critics have the chance to change things.
The opinion page is changing next semester. Next week we will be hiring a new editorial board, new columnists, strip cartoonists and editorial cartoonists. All students, whatever their beliefs or ideas, are encouraged to apply.
Many students hesitate to apply for positions because they think only journalism majors can write for the page. That simply isn't true.
Students from all areas of study are sought to form a more heterogeneous group. All students should have the opportunity to express their views, and by contributing to the opinion page, they will do exactly that.
The editorial board will consist of approximately 15 people. The board will meet twice a week to discuss and vote on issues. Board members must be able to write logically and concisely. They must also be dependable and committed to serving on the board.
Diversity is an essential element to the editorial board. By selecting board members who represent many different perspectives, we will be more able to effectively discuss the issues. Second, the different perspectives will allow editors to reflect the entire University.
A varied group of columnists is also needed. Columnists create an interesting and balanced editorial page. Each semester, new columnists are hired to present fresh perspectives.
COLUMNISTS
All types of columnists are encouraged to apply. Humor columnists could offer a light-hearted look at local or national events or even share amusing personal experiences. Issue columnists may write about issues at every level - from campus politics to international politics.
Columnists must also be able to write clearly. They must be able to offer relevant, well-supported arguments to current issues.
To complete the page, opinion and strip cartoonists are necessary. Opinion cartoonists draw political cartoons that respond to editorials and current events. Strip cartoonists must present an original comic strip that can be continued throughout the semester.
Completed applications for all positions on the opinion page will be taken until 5 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 8. Applications are available at the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Interviews will be conducted beginning Dec. 10.
Each of the editorial board members, columnists and cartoonists is integral to the strength and success of the page. Take the initiative and apply.
Colleen McCain is a Salina sophomore majoring in journalism. Nathan Olson is a Chicago graduate student in English.
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
Edith Hall...Terrian McComlock
Campus...Ben Grove
Sports...Kristi Fogler
Photo...Kip Chin, Renee Knoeber
Features...Zur Weile
Graphics...John Paul Fogel
Wire...Alexander Bloemhof, Vicki Bode, Kevin Ettrada
Assistant Editors
Associate editorial...Colleen McCain
Associate campus...Dan England
Assistant campus / planning...Jesa DeHaven
Associate sports...Todd Selfert
Associate features...Almee Estrada
Copy Editor
Alexander Bloemhof...Allison Lippart
Tracey Ritchie
News Clerk...Teresa Veazey
Reporters
Scott Anderson...Sara Bennett
Mark Button...Tracel Carl
Cheesey Dohl...Matt Doyle
Anne Fellet...Gerry Fey
Christoph Fuhrman...Donella Hearne
Krishnan Jainfield...Rafan Jamie
Liz Klinger...Shan Schwartz
David Stewart...Kathleen Stolle
Carlo Tejada...J. Watson
Copy Editors
KANSANSTAFF
Elizabeth Beary ... Craig Boxx
Kevin Butter ... Dan Carver
Lisa Countrito ... Jesse Delvaken
Dan Rockland ... Jack Palmer
Matt Hydenman ... Matthew Martino
Stacy Mortord ... Sarah Nagi
Mumeera Nussar ... Barbara Schultz
Todd Seffert
Photographers
William Alix ... Valerie Bontrage
Julla Clarke ... Richard Devinki
John Gamble ... Doug Hesse
Paul Kotz ... Melissa Lacey
Tom Leininger ... Holly McQueen
Susan McSpadden
Dave Campbell ... James Frederick
Michal Leasker ... Dan Schauer
Designers
John Paul Fogel...Steve Friedman
Will Lewis
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 Burgese
Marketing director...Shelly McConnell
Creative director...Brian Pusel
Classified manager...Gretchen Koestelmich
Nearsection manager...Judith Standley
Teesheets manager
Retail assistant...Triola Bumpus
Creative assistant (photographer)...Andrew Amone
Zone Managers
John Carlton ... Jason Eberly
Justin Garberg ... Josh Hahn
... Robin Kring
Retail Account Executives
Mindy Blum ... Chris Bulgren
Chris Butler ... Kelly Caffrey
Jennifer Carr ... Jenni Goorke
Laura Guth ... Allison Kaplan
Jason Kort ... Mark Mastro
Chris Morrissey ... Frank Muller
Paula Ostrowski ..Heather Richetto
Jenny Schwab ..Andrew Shriver
Dave Smith ..Stacey Stricklin
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Keri Kimmal ... Beth Pols
Shannon Reilly ..Troy Tarwater
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Regional Account Executive
Arville Crawford ... Alex Kolb
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Account Assistants
Shelley Falevits ... Bradley Felnberg
Dean Hownd ... Mark Slothick
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1
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Clinton's struggles with North Korea continue
5
WASHINGTON — After a string of foreign policy setbacks from Bosnia to Somalia, President Clinton is struggling to defuse a tense showdown with communist North Korea with a package of incentives backed up by the threat of sanctions.
Facing an unpredictable adversary with one of the world's largest armies is a great test for a president still getting his footing in foreign policy.
"It's probably the most serious problem facing the country because of the possible consequences," said Brent Scowcroft, who was national security adviser to former President Bush.
While the United States emphasized that it wants a diplomatic solution,
"If North Korea develops a nuclear device and we don't do anything about it, I think it is almost inevitable that we will soon see a nuclear Japan and maybe a nuclear South Korea," Scowcroft said. "Those are big developments. That kind of an Asia we don't want to have happen."
ANALYSIS
North Korea was talking tough. It says it will never yield to pressure and that it is prepared for war or sanctions.
While pressuring North Korea to allow international inspections of its nuclear facilities, the United States is worried that pushing too hard might backfire, with the Pyongyang government pulling out of the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty.
Any conflict would put 37,000 American troops stationed in South Korea at risk.
Clinton has offered North Korea a package of incentives to allow limited inspections, including financial aid and cancellation of U.S.-South Korean military exercises. But there is no sign that this strategy has worked. So far, there's been no official response — although with North Korea, back channel talks often are more important than public pronouncements.
"I still think there's a chance that we
can put them in a position where they can crawl back off this ledge they are on, and I certainly hope they will," Clinton said.
Friday, December 3, 1993
Secretary of State Warren Christopher, at a NATO meeting in Brussels, Belgium, said that if North Korea continues to drag its feet, the next step would be to seek economic sanctions from the United Nations.
Yet, Clinton said last week that sanctions are not a particularly attractive option. Leaders of Japan and China have warned Clinton that sanctions could boomerang, prompting North Korea to take an even harder line.
"In the end, it seems there is little chance you can negotiate them out of this," said Eliot Cohen, director of strategic studies at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies. "I think they are determined to go for some kind of nuclear program. The question is, can you coerce them out of this?"
Extremists try to stop peace plan
Extremists PLO leaflet urges uprising against Israel, agreement
The Associated Press
JERUSALEM — With 10 days to go before Israel is to start transferring power to the PLO in occupied lands, extremists on both sides tried yesterday to exploit recent violence to block the transfer.
Under a key component of the peace accord Israel and the PLO signed 2 1/2 months ago, Israeli troops were to start pulling out of the occupied Gaza Strip and Jericho on the West Bank by Dec. 13. But bloody clashes that have escalated with the approach of that date have called the deadline into question.
Yesterday, a PLO leaflet protesting the killings of Palestinian activists urged Palestinians to reignite their uprising against Israel. Thousands in the occupied Gaza Strip marched
against the plan.
Jewish settlers, meanwhile, outraged by the killing of two Israelis by Palestinian gunmen Wednesday, set up the first of dozens of planned mobile camps designed to entrench the Jewish presence in the territories.
At a news conference in Bonn, Germany, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin said it was unlikely Israel would start pulling out troops from Gaza and Jericho by the Dec. 13 deadline. However, he and the PLO denied an Israeli newspaper report that Rabin and PLO chief Yasser Arafat had agreed to push back the deadline.
The Palestine Liberation Organization said a delay in the pullout would endanger the peace process.
Secretary of State Warren Christopher is due in Israel today at the start of a weeklong regional tour meant to revive the flagging peace process. Israel wants him to concentrate on larger issues such as its talks with Syria, but the Palestinians have urged him to intervene on details of the autonomy accord.
The leaflet distributed by the Ramallah branch of the PLO's predominant Fatah faction said the recent killings of Palestinian activists were cause to rekindle the 6-year-old uprising against Israeli rule.
"We won't be cheap targets for their bullets and settlers," the leaflet said "The stones and weapons can be laid aside only once there is a true, just and comprehensive peace."
Hundreds of Jewish settlers, meanwhile, set tires on fire and disrupted morning rush-hour traffic throughout the West Bank to protest the killings of the two Israelis.
After the accord was signed, Fatah had announced Israel was halting violence.
However, protesters did not stone Palestinian motorists as they did after earlier bloodshed. But some were arrested after living in the road.
Settlers from Alon Shvut, the home of one of the victims in the Gush Etzion bloc, seized 1 1/2 acres of land nearby and set up a mobile camp that they described as a precursor to a new outpost.
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Two, one, liftoff; shuttle success
Endeavour mission set to repair Hubble
The Associated Press
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Space shuttle Endeavour roared through the predawn darkness into orbit yesterday after the mission to restore the Hubble Space Telescope's vision and vitality was delayed.
The 4.5 million-pound shuttle, carrying seven astronauts, blasted off at 3:27 a.m. CDT, lighting up the sky for miles around.
The critical, long-awaited repair job, to begin over the weekend, features more spacewalks than any American mission to date — five, maybe more. Endeavour is carrying 11 new parts for Hubble to be installed by the astronauts.
It's "a very great relief to have this mission on orbit," said Loren Shriver, a shuttle manager who commanded the mission to deploy Hubble 3 1/2 years ago. "It will be nice to have humans be able to go and visit it again
and do the necessary corrections to get it back up to full speed."
NASA needed two tries to launch Endeavour. The first attempt Wednesday was thwarted by high wind.
NASA puts the cost of this mission at $629 million; $251 million for Hubble parts and related activities and $378 million for the shuttle flight.
Many believe NASA's reputation rests on this mission. The space agency has suffered numerous blows over the past several years, including perpetual shuttle trouble, a maligned space station project and a vanished Mars Observer, not to mention the Hubble mirror fiasco.
To help ensure the success of the Hubble repairs, NASA has conducted an unprecedented number of mission reviews and the new telescope parts have been tested repeatedly. The spacewalkers also have undergone unparalleled training.
NASA chose only experienced space travelers for the flight. Endeavour's seven crew members have 16 previous shuttle flights among them.
When Hubble is brought in for repairs
A space shuttle crew will grapple the Hubble Space Telescope into the shuttle bay for repairs during a mission in December. If necessary, another shuttle will return in 1994 to finish the job.
Urgent: needed to prevent total failure of Hubble
Repairs to correct flawed main mirror
Computer repair
New processor
for computer that
has been having
unexplained
memory lapses.
Other repairs
New gyroscopes Essential for pointing telescope. Three have failed. One more failure, and Hubble will be useless.
New magnetometers
Sense Earth's magnetic field, used for pointing telescope. Originals failing unpredictably.
- New wide-angle camera
Used for observing planets. New one can compensate for flawed main mirror.
New solar panels Original panels wobbled, threatened to break off. IVISA
SOURCE: NASA, Boston Globe,
Dallas Morning News, news reports
COSTAR: Telephone-booth sized instrument. Its mirrors will correct images going to Hubble's cameras and spectrographs.
Knight-Ridder Tribune/ KANSAN
BOGOTA, Columbia
EURASIA
Manhunt ends when police, soliders kill drug lord Escobar
Security forces killed drug lord Pablo Escobar in Medellin yesterday, ending an exhaustive and sometimes bloody 16-month hunt for one of the world's most wanted men.
THE NEWS in brief
At one time, Escobar's drug trafficking gang was the world's biggest cocaine exporter. But after his escape, his empire was splintered by bloody internal rivalries and by vigilantes and security forces.
GENEVA Talks fail to bring about peace
Police and soldiers shot Escobar dead at a shopping mall in the heart of the city that served as the base for his cocaine empire, according to local radio reports. Colombia's prosecutor general, Gustavo de Greiff, confirmed the death.
Bosnian peace talks broke up yesterday with no agreement on how to divide the country, and the Muslim-led government blamed Serbs for refusing to give up some of their battlefield gains.
Escobar was killed by members of a 3,000-man police and army force that hunted for him since he escaped from prison in July 1992. The United States and Colombia offered $8.7 million for his capture.
Leaders of the three warring factions said they were willing to return to the bargaining table.
TOPEKA
Wednesday, the government for the first time agreed to discuss giving up parts of Sarajevo but demanded that Serbs return chunks of land in eastern Bosnia.
U. N. mediator Thorvald Stoltenberg confirmed there was no agreement on any issue so far but said bilateral talks would continue in coming days.
Former counsel plans campaign
Bob Eye, former general counsel of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, yesterday announced his candidacy for governor as an Independent.
He said four key issues of his campaign would be the abolishment of the property tax, restoration of public safety, adoption of a health care plan that emphasized prevention and the development of a renewable energy economy.
Eye, 42, has been an anti-nuclear activist in the past.
He also said he was opposed to the death penalty and supported a woman's right to an abortion.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A
Friday, December 3,1993
7
nontraditional return
his brother.
The business was unsuccessful so Jones went to work for the Lawrence Fire Department.
"It was a good career," he said. "But it wasn't practical because of my daughter. They have 24 hour shifts and hazardous duty."
The reasons nontraditional students left school or never started college are as varied as the students themselves.
Some did not get their degrees because they could not afford school. Others could not attend college because they started a family at a young age, sometimes right out of high school.
But the reasons they give for coming back are the same.
Financial issues push some people back into the classroom. In a changing and weak job market, it can be difficult to live on the wages offered to those without a college degree.
The value of a high school diploma has dropped steadily as more and more young people go on to earn bachelor's degrees right out of high school. As the high school diploma's
Age groups on Lawrence campus
The undergraduate population on the main KU campus in Lawrence
1% age 41 and up
3% age 31-40
19%
age 23-30
77%
age 17-22
Chart
does not include 15 and 16-year-old undergraduate students. There are 11 students in this group in Lawrence.
The oldest ... A 73 year old student
The youngest ...
Source: Office of Institutional Dan Schauer/
Research and Planning KAANSAN
value falls so does that of a bachelor's degree. This domino effect is making graduate school more and more necessary, even for people who have already earned a college degree.
Other nontraditional students come back because they feel they missed something. For those people there is a great sense of accomplishment just in getting a college education.
Linda Pritchard, a 47-year-old sophomore who works full time in the Student Affairs office, said she always wanted to return to college.
"By the time I get my degree it will be time to retire," Pritchard said. "I just want it. I think I have expanded my perspective by going back to school."
Because of the difficulties that may lie ahead, the decision to return to school is not always an easy one.
Pros and cons
For nontraditional students, going back to school means more than deciding on a major. Often it includes juggling work, family, classes and strict budgeting of time and money.
Because most nontraditional students have been out of school for a long time, they often have forgotten how to study, said Ronnie Bryant, vice president of OAKS—Non-Traditional Student Organization.
Nontraditional students also are frustrated by the differences that separate them from their classmates.
"It's hard to get to know traditional students," Bryant said. "It's hard to make traditional friends."
He said that he would like to be able to study with some of the traditional students in his classes because studying has proved to be one of the hardest aspects of returning to school.
Studying with nontraditional students also could be beneficial for traditional students.
Beverly Williams, Daytona Beach, Fla., freshman, said an older student in her Understanding America course seemed to lead the discussion in class.
questions." she said.
Stacy Kaplan, Minneapolis, Minn., junior, said she had heard students say negative things about the nontraditional students because they ask a lot of questions.
"He knows more about it, and he
"But they ask questions others would want to ask and don't," she said.
William Arnold, associate professor of sociology, said that nontraditional students often asked questions in class that had not occurred to him.
"They pay more attention to the world around them," he said. "They also have more life experience with family and kids."
But many traditional students may not realize that the nontraditional students asking the questions are often setting the curve.
"The nontrads I know think a B is a bad grade," he said. "And C's are not even thought of."
Bryant said that the nontraditional students he knows take their grades very seriously.
Charla Tungt, a 44-year-old graduate student, said that as a nontraditional undergraduate she had to learn to set priorities.
One of those priorities is graduate school. Tunget is planning a career in community health services, and she knows that without graduate school that career would be impossible.
"If I'm going to spend my time and money, I want to do well." she said.
Tungtet said that students could do well if they went to class, paid attention and studied. Those are the easiest aspects of going back to school, she said.
The money
The most difficult challenge facing nontraditional students is the limited power of the pocketbook.
"Most people I know are going to school on loans," Brant said.
Loans stack up easily and make the thought of graduating and paying them back a little scary. Bryant said.
Traditional students work and take out loans as well, said Laura Morgan, OAKS faculty sponsor. But most traditional students do not have to support a family, as many nontraditional students do.
Although some scholarships are available for nontraditional students, they are rare. Morgan said.
Adding to the frustrations of a non-
Most schoolships are given to students coming right out of high school.
No firm definition has been created to determine what makes a person a non-traditional student.
But the University of Kansas has created a definition for the purpose of tracking enrollment.
What is a nontraditional student?
The definition used by the Student Assistance Center lists the following criteria for determining nontraditional status.
KU undergraduates who are:
three or more years older than the average age for their class. For example a 24-year-old freshman would be non-traditional.
married or have children, regardless of age.
commuters who travel more than 10 miles to school.
veterans.
Many nontraditional students fit into more than one of the above categories, which makes it difficult for the University to compile an accurate count of nontraditional students.
Source: Kansan staff research
Bryant said that he was frustrated by having to take courses outside his major.
traditional student is time pressure.
The age factor is what really sets the older nontraditional students apart from the traditional students who are 18-22 years old.
"When you're 20 you have time to change," Bryant said. "But when you're 40 or 50 you feel that chance is shot."
He said that he thought most traditional students thought of nontraditional as losers or admired them for making a change in their lives. Whatever perceptions they might have, Bryant said that he hoped traditional students would realize that all students share some common experiences and should try to learn from one another.
Jones, the retired firefighter, said that he wanted students to remember one thing:
"We may be a little older than the traditional student, but we're not dead yet."
[Image: Two men seated at a bar, one blowing a bubble gum. The other looks on.]
Valerie Botranger/ KANBAN
Gerry Vernon, Colby graduate student, president of OAKS, eats lunch in the Burge Union. Vernon ate with other nontraditional students Tuesday. Only a few of the 4,703 nontraditional students attended the OAKS lunch.
New scholarship aids nontraditional students
By Donella Hearne
Kansan staff writer
A new scholarship may give parttime nontraditional students at KU a break next fall.
The Breakey Scholarship will be one of two scholarships specifically for nontraditional students. The other, the Gottdenker Scholarship, was created in 1992 for unmarried women 50 or older who attend KU full-time and need financial support.
The Breakey Scholarship would be awarded only to nontraditional students enrolling in six hours or less and demonstrating financial need, said Linda Delker, assistant director of the Student Financial Aid office.
"This scholarship would be helpful for many nontraditional students," Delkera said.
All nontraditional students are eligible for federal financial aid programs, such as Stafford Loans, she said. But in order to receive federal grants, students must demonstrate financial need.
The University does offer some need-based scholarships through the Endowment Association. Those scholarships require a 3.5 grade point average and financial aid eligibility, which is determined by the federal financial aid guidelines.
Laura Morgan, assistant director of the Student Assistance Center and adviser for OAKS—Non-Traditional
Student Organization, said she thought that part-time students had the most difficulty getting financial aid.
"Most scholarships are only for students who are enrolled full-time," she said.
Many nontraditional students do not have the time to take a full 12 hours because of other commitments, she said.
Marti Ruel, director of the University Scholarship Center, said that nontraditional students who were enrolling in college for the first time were eligible for the same scholarships as students entering right out of high school.
Standard requirements for a scholarship include an ACT score from the past five years and sufficient high school course work. Ruel said.
Because of changing high school requirements, students who graduated from high school 10 years ago may not have taken the courses needed for scholarship eligibility.
Nontraditional students also may be eligible for scholarships offered through various academic departments, Ruel said. Information on those opportunities would be available through department offices.
Students who have questions about financial aid for nontraditional students should contact Laura Morgan at the Student Assistance Center, 133 Strong Hall.
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Friday, December 3, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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The Rev. Joe S.T. Alford leads the celebration of the Holy Eucharist. Canterbury House members assembled yesterday at Danforth Chapel for the ceremony.
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Giving praise
Women's fair gives housing residents a chance to relax
Organizers hope event will become annual tradition
By Brian James Kansan staffwriter
The fair, which runs from 1 to 4 p.m., is open only to KU student housing residents, said Nikki Stipp, Barrington, Ill., junior, and one of the four resident assistants organizing the fair. The other RAs are Elaine Joseph, Lawrence junior; Julie Carroll, Shell Beach, Cal., junior; and Misty Grace, Lasalle, Ill., senior.
About 25 Lawrence businesses are co-sponsoring the event, which will be held in Oliver's main floor lobby. The fair will feature stair-exerciser and aerobics demonstrations, door prizes and free gifts from the businesses.
Residents of KU student housing will have the opportunity to see a fashion show, do aerobics and pick up a few free items tomorrow at the Oliver Hall Women's Fair.
A fashion show will be a highlight of the fair, Stipp said. Twelve Oliver residents will model clothing supplied by three Lawrence clothing stores.
The purpose of the event is to give residents a break in between Thanksgiving and finals, Joseph said.
"It's a stress reliever," she said. "We're giving a little something special back to the women, and it makes for a nice programming event on a larger scale than normal.
"They can come and watch, hang out and maybe get ideas about different things. It's also a chance to get some free stuff that will make you smile."
Joesph stressed that although this was a women's fair, men were encouraged to come. The fair is free of charge.
The resident assistants who organized the fair hope to make it into a large, annual student housing event, Joseph said.
"We're looking forward to this because since I've been here, we haven't had this big of an event in one hall," Joseph said. "I've told to some student housing people, and we think it would be nice to turn this into an Oliver Hall tradition."
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Joseph said that the floors of the four sponsoring resident assistants each spent $15 in organizing the fair and that the money came from each floor's general fund.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday, December 3, 1993
3
JENN
13
Holly McQueen / KANSAN
Senior rightside middle blocker Barb Bella spikes a ball in a match against Baylor. The volleyball team will play in the National Invitational Volleyball Championships today through Sunday in Kansas City, Mo.
Team's season not over yet
Jayhawks ready for tournament
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
Although the Kansas volleyball team was not invited to the NCAA tournament, its season continues at 11:30 a.m. today in the National Invitational Volleyball Championships.
Kansas is the host of the 20-team tournament at Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City, Mo. The Jayhawks are a No.1 seed along with Oklahoma, Butler and Sacramento State.
The top seed gives 16-12 Kansas some respect going into the tournament, senior middle blocker Cyndee Kanabel said. Kanabel led the Jayhawks in six categories with 318 kills, 721 kill attempts, a .273 attack percentage, 29 service aches, 13 block
solos and 72 block assists.
"With a No. 1 seed, people know that we would have got into the tournament, even though we are the host team," Kanabel said. "We're seeded No. 1, which makes the Big Eight look good. People should understand that the Big Eight is a good conference."
The tournament is broken down into four pools of teams. Joining Kansas in pool play will be Louisiana State, a team Kansas defeated this season, Georgia Tech, Siena and Bowling Green State. Kansas opens the tournament against GeorgiaTech.
After round-robin play today and tomorrow, the best team from each of the four pools will play in the semifinals for a chance to advance to the championship match at 1 p.m. Sunday.
Kansas coach Frankie Albitz said this would be a good experience for her team. The teams in the NIVC are the 20 best remaining teams in the
nation after the NCAA tournament teams are selected. The NCAA expanded its field from 32 teams last season to 48 this year.
"I think it helps because it doesn't end your season," Albitz said of competing in the tournament. "I know the NCAA went to 48 teams, but I think the competition is good. The teams around the nation are getting closer and closer."
Kansas' Big Eight adversary, Oklahoma, is also a top seed, but Kanabel said she was surprised that the Sooners were not invited to the NCAA tournament after finishing third in the conference.
"The NCAA's would have been good for them," Kanabel said.
Although Kanabel thought Oklahoma was slighted, she said she wanted to meet the Sooners in the NIVC semifinals.
"It'll be my last year playing against
them," she said of the Sooners. "I'really want to beat them. I think they have a good chance of advancing."
The tournament gives the seniors one last chance at postseason play, but it also allows younger players to gain some experience, sophomore setter Lesli Steinert said. Steinert led the team in assists and digs with 902 and 364 respectively.
"We get to play that extra week together," Steinert said. "Then, hopefully we'll be invited to a better tournament next year."
Kanabel said the Jayhawks were not strangers to quality competition from around the nation. Kansas was 11-6 on nonconference matches this season before entering Big Eight play.
"We played so well against nonconference teams," Kanabel said. "We won our tournament here and we went to Pittsburgh and won that tournament. I think we do really well."
Cuban players follow party line, not money
The Associated Press
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Cuban pitcher Omar Ajete knows he could make a fortune in the major leagues and knows that as a left-hander with control he could provoke a bidding war.
But unlike former teammate Rene Arocha and unlike 40 countrymen in Cuba's delegation to these regional championships, Ajete says he and his current teammates aren't leaving their impoverished Communist nation and their world championship national amateur team.
"To us, this isn't about money. This is about love. We play to play," said the 28-year-old Ajete before an exhibition game with major leaguers Wednesday night.
Arocha, a former starting pitcher for Cuba's club, has risen to big league stardom with the St. Louis Cardinals since his defection. Ajete knows that Arocha pulls down more money in a month than he's ever seen.
"Arocha intends to make money. We don't," Agete said while signing baseballs and Chinese-made Cuban flags for some of the 20,000 spectators at sold-out Hiram Bithorn Stadium.
The recent defectors say that the loyalist athletes are following the party line, that the loyalists know Castro has ruined Cuba and that many of them are staying behind only because of family ties.
Some other players, such as Cuban home run champ Oreste Kindelan, say they have little reason to defect; they and their families are well provided for, and they are considered heroes in Havana, not crybabies or worms — Communist propaganda for the more than 1 million exiles since Castro took power in 1959.
A Cuban exile leader, Guillermo Toledo, said hours earlier that a Cuban amateur star such as slugging third baseman Omar Linares "would have to have his head examined" if he didn't defect. Under a three-decade U.S. embargo on Fidel Castro's government, defecting is the only way Cubans can play in the big leagues.
Toledo, who is helping the other defecting athletes and officials, hired a plane to buzz the stadium before game time, trailing a banner that called for the athletes to defect. He draped a placard with the same message in the right-field stands.
At game's end, the Cuban players walked out on the San Juan field to hear the cheers of the fans. Ajete, who had surrendered a two-run, game-winning homer to Atlanta Braves catcher Javier Lopez that broke Cuba's 100-game victory streak, hoisted his gym bag on his shoulder around the third-base line as a clan formed and grew.
"Quedate aqui!" the fans yelled. "Stay here!"
The players listened for a minute or two but did not heed the advice. Instead, they made their way across the field to the home players' dugout. And the exits.
Jayhawks prepare for Windy City trip Kansas down, but 17.7 points last
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
After four impressive victories and a Preseason NIT championship, No. 3 Kansas has suffered defeats in its last two games.
Wednesday night, Kansas was defeated by Temple 73-59 and two nights earlier, the Australian National team claimed a 93-82 double-overtime exhibition victory against the Javahawks.
Both games were at Allen Field House.
What better place is there to put the wind back in the Jayhawks' sails than the Wind City itself?
At 8:30 tomorrow night, Kansas will face DePaul at the Rosemont Horizon in Chicago.
Kansas coach Roy Williams said that it did not matter who the Jayhawks faced next. If they did not improve, they would not win, he said.
"We've got to get better, or we couldn't beat the Salvation Army," said Williams following the loss to Temple. "Joey Meyer is a good coach and he could bring in four cheerleaders and beat us if we don't play better, and if I don't coach better."
The Blue Demons, who are 1-0 after defeating Chicago State 110-84, is by junior guard Tom Kleinsmidt. Kleinsmidt averaged
DePaul also received significant performances by senior forward Kris Hill, who scored 20 points, and junior college transfer guard Will Macon, who scored 15 points.
Meyer said he looked forward to playing the Jayhawks, and that the game would be a good early season test for his team.
"Kansas is certainly an experienced team this season with having played five games by the time they play us," Meyer said. "This is a great game for us to play so early in the season because it will give our guys a chance to see what one of the top three teams in the country is like."
Williams, although respectful of Meyer's opinion, disagreed with both points.
"We lost four starters and we've got kids that are trying very hard to do the right thing," Williams said. "But right now we're not very good. We screwed up because we won the NIT. People had unrealistic expectations and we just fueled it more."
Kansas forward Richard Scott, who was named the Big Eight Conference player of the week last week for his MVP performance in the NIT, said the loss to Temple broke the momentum the team had gained in New York.
"We play real hard and take pride in our play," Scott said. "It's hurts to lose. We let Coach Williams down, and we have to correct our mistakes, play Kansas basketball and go up to Chicago and win this one for him."
TEMPIE
21
KANSAS
20
Tom Leininger / SPECIAL TO THE KANSAN
Kansas Guard Steve Woodberry drives around Temple's Aaron McKie. Kansas lost the game Wednesday night at Allen Field House 73-59.
Governors bet soybeans, steaks on game
The Associated Press
CHEYENNE, Wyo. — Wyoming Gov. Mike Sullivan has accepted Kansas Gov. Joan Finney's friendly wager on the outcome of the Copper Bowl between Wyoming and Kansas State.
He also delivered some good- natured ribbing about the bet.
bushel of soybeans?" Sullivan said yesterday. "I'm not sure what you do with those."
"Can you imagine she's betting a
Sullivan said he would put up an assortment of steak and lamb products, "which I think by anybody's estimation would be a more valuable wager than soybeans."
Sullivan told a group of state officials yesterday that the bet was noot anyway, since Wyoming was going to win.
Wyoming, 8-3, meets No. 20 Kansas State, 8-2-1, on Dec. 29 in the Copper Bowl in Tucson, Ariz.
State Treasurer Stan Smith suggested another product to wager.
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
Kansas sophomore guard Kristel Thalmann works on her shooting during practice. The Jayhawks practiced yesterday for this weekend's Dial Soap Classic.
"Why don't you counter with a quart of Rocky Mountain oysters," he said.
Rocky Mountain oysters are cooked testicles clipped off a bull calf when it is branded.
Lady Hawks
Jayhawks ready for Dial Classic
Oral Roberts poses first threat to Kansas
By Kent Hohlfeld Kansan sportswriter
This is the 15th year that Kansas has played in the annual tournament. The field includes Jackson State, 1-1, Oral Roberts, 1-1, and Central Michigan, 1-0.
The No.15 Kansas women's basketball team is set to take on Oral Roberts University at 8 tonight in Allen Field House in the Dial Soap Basketball Classic.
Kansas coach Marian Washington said that the team's busy schedule had kept her from scouting the Titans, who return three of five starters and five of seven letterwinners from last year's squad.
"Right now we don't know to much about ORU," Washington said. "I expect that it'll be some good competition."
Kansas enters the tournament with a 2-0 record, with road wins against
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
Washington said she thought being forced to play against a zone defense against the Shockers would help her team.
Creighton and Wichita State. The team struggled past Creighton, 74-68, before defeating Wichita, 75-56, Wednesday.
"We're coming off a road trip, and it'll be good to play at home," Washington said.
"We don't have a chance to play against a zone defense very often," Washington said.
Washington said the tournament would give the team a chance to work on some of the plaguing aspects of its game. Turnovers were the biggest problem for the Jayhawks in their last two games. The Jayhawks turned the ball over 19 times against Creighton and 22 times against Wichita State.
Senior guard Ericka Muncy said the team needed to cut down on the mental mistakes it made in previous games.
"We really want to cut down our turnovers," freshman guard Angie Halbleib said. "We haven't really played up to our abilities yet."
Another area that has hurt the Jayhawks is injuries. Junior forward Alana Slatter missed the Wichita State game because of a knee injury, and senior guard Michelle Leathers missed the Wichita State game because of a back injury.
The winner of the Oral Roberts/Kansas game will play the winner of the Central Michigan/Jackson State game at 6 p.m. tomorrow. The losers will match up in a consolation game at 4 p.m.
"We just want to run a good, set offense this weekend," Muncy said.
Washington said that she thought Leathers might be able to play this weekend but that Slatter probably would miss both games. The injuries have given other players some valuable playing time, however.
"It gives us a chance to get some of our younger players some experience,"Washington said.
SPORTS BRIEFS
PROFESSIONAL BASKETBALL
Crudup again eligible for play
Crudup waived his right to a jury trial and was convicted in Missouri by Boone County Circuit Judge Jodie Asel of driving with a blood-alcohol content above. 10 and driving on the wrong side of the road.
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Missouri basketball player Jevon Crudup played against Arkansas yesterday, hours after he was given a 15-day suspended sentence and fined $300 on alcohol-related charges.
Crudup also was placed on two years of unsupervised probation and ordered to complete an alcohol traffic offenders program.
Crudup, a senior forward, had been suspended from the basketball team since his arrest Sept. 9.
He entered the Arkansas game with slightly more than 8 minutes gone in the first half. He played 8 minutes in the first half and scored four points.
"The case has been settled and we have been given the terms of the verdict," Missouri coach Norm Stewart said. "Jevon's response to the situation has been satisfactory for us to make him eligible for playing status."
PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL
Phillies trade Mitch Williams
PHILADELPHIA — Mitch Williams, who gave up the World Series-winning home run, was traded from the Philadelphia Phillies to Houston yesterday and replaced by reliever Doug Jones and minor league pitcher Jeff Juden.
Williams, known as "Wild Thing," blew a 14-10 eighth inning lead in Game 4, then gave up the Series-ending homer to Toronto's Joe Carter in Game 6.
Williams said he wanted to return to Philadelphia next season, but many in the Phillies' organization felt he could not pitch there again.
1
Briefs compiled by The Associated Press
10
Friday, December 3, 1993
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Army-Navy game's past holds last-minute thrills
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Patron Malcom and Frank Schenk have known the thrill of the Army-Navy game as few people have.
The Associated Press
Both have hit field goals in the final minute with everything on the line in "The Game" for the academies.
Malcom did it last year in Philadelphia with a 49-yarder with 12 seconds to play to give Army a 25-24 win. Schenk converted from 32 yards in 1898 to give Navy a 19-17 victory at Giants Stadium, the site of tomorrow's game.
For both, the game is as vivid as yesterday.
"With this year's game approaching, I think about it a lot," Malcom said in a telephone interview from Fort Rucker, Ala., where he is attending helicopter flight school. "I'm really excited. A lot of people have brought it up lately. I miss the pressure and the pre-game activities. It was definitely the high point of my life."
Schenk, assigned to the mine sweeper USS Pledge in Everett, Wash., remembers the kicks but laughs about the minutes leading up to the attempt.
"Iremember the cameraman was trying to find me the whole time," Schenk said. "I just remember him walking up and down the sidelines during the final drive and I heard him keep saying: 'The kicker is No. 1. The kicker is No. 1. Where is he?'"
Hiding was the answer, said Schenk, who was then a junior.
"I was just sitting there nice and quiet in my jacket, 'cause as soon as they knew it was me, they were going to have the camera right in my face," he said. "Finally, once we started getting close, I had to take the jacket off, and all the sudden I heard, "There he is."
The story behind Schenk's game-winning field goal is less colorful, although there was a little drama.
Schenk had missed a short field goal in the win minutes in Navy's previous game, a 10-9 loss to Delaware. He learned from that though.
"I just told myself over and over, It's a 32-yard
field goal, *' he said. "I made a ton of those in practice and I had done well all year inside the 40. This was another kick. If you get caught up in all the other stuff, you mess up."
Schenk didn't, and neither did Malcom last year, even though he had two chances to blow it.
The kick was perfect, except Army got hit with a delay-of-game penalty.
Army, which twice trailed by 17 points in last year's game, pinned Navy deep in its own territory in the final minutes and eventually took over at the Navy 32-yard line, down by two points.
"Before I got too distraught, I counted off seven yards and got ready for the next kick." Malcom said. "I made the first easily, so I wasn't worried about the distance. The second kick was actually a lot less pressure."
"I knew it was coming down to a field goal," Malcom said. "With the time, there was no way we were going to put it in for a touchdown. It was one of the few times I ever went over to the coaches and said anything. I said: 'If it's coming down to a field goal, let's get it in the center of the field.'"
"I think I was more excited that I had been able to come through for the team, than thinking I had just beat Navy," said Malcom, who was playing in his final game at Army. "That was nice. I felt like I had done my job."
Army did, and Malcon eventually walked onto the field for a 44-yard attempt.
"That was probably the most pressure," he said. "I was just trying to concentrate on my form and see where the wind was blowing."
One thing the two have in common is that they don't want this year's game to come down to a field goal.
"Actually I hope it's a blowout," said Schenk, who plans to watch the game on television with friends.
Malcom plans to attend the game.
"I wouldn't want another kick," he said. "I'd rather see Army in control the whole way."
And it was just as good.
Malcom plans to attend the game.
SEC 'dream matchup' loses last year's dazzle
The Associated Press
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — The Southeastern Conference had a dream matchup for its inaugural championship game last year — an undefeated Alabama beating Florida on a dramatic play to advance to a national championship showdown.
The same two teams are back for the second title game. But all the glitter is gone, and maybe one of the key players is, too.
Instead of playing for a second straight national crown, No. 16 Alabama, 8-2-1 overall and 5-2-1 in the SEC, will be trying to avoid its third loss in four games tomorrow.
Defensive back Antonio Langham — who had a game-winning interception return for a touchdown last year — was declared ineligible last week following revelations he had signed with a sports agent. Alabama is awaiting word on an appeal with the NCAA.
Ninth-ranked Florida, 9-2 and 7-1, meanwhile, is coming off a 33-21 loss to Florida State. One of the Gators' tandem of starting quarterbacks, Danny Wuerffel, is out with a knee injury.
All this adds up to a championship game that has yet to sell out, despite being played at Alabama's second home, Legion Field. More than 6,000 tickets remain in the 83,091-seat stadium, and promoters have resorted to going on the radio to remind fans that, hey, the SEC title is still at stake.
Alabama coach Gene Stallings, who spent much of this week answering questions about Langham and deflecting rumors that he plans to retire soon, acknowledged that his players were "hurt emotionally" after losing to archival Auburn in their final regular season game.
"But we are in the championship game," he said. "Remember we were in it last year and we were 11-0. So it was a lot more fun last year than it was this year. But I'm not too sure that in certain areas we haven't performed a little bit better under tough conditions this year."
Hockenbury Tavern
1016 Massachusetts
Fri.- Chubby Smith & His Orchestra Sat.- Lonesome Hounddogs
865-4055
100
What the heck does pasta have to do with selling shoes?
Probably nothing. But then again, that depends on you.
The University Daily Kansan business staff is looking for creative individuals who can make the ordinary, extraordinary. We want people who can turn the mundane into something wild and unique, yet have it still be meaningful.
The Kansan will be selecting several creative staff members for the Spring 1994 semester. You will be able to test your ideas and develop new ones as you're trained in making creative layouts for area advertisers. And you will gain valuable computer experience.
Not to mention, it's a lot of fun.
So, if you excel at combining ideas in an exciting, meaningful way, call us. Get in touch with John Carlton at the Kansan by December 9. After all, what you make of your ideas is up to you.
Contact John Carlton at the
Valed Through July 34, 1991
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Lesbian, gay, bis - or unsure? You're not alone!
Group call. Group call. Group call.
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Have fun this year cutting your own Christmas tree at beautiful Pine Hill Farm. Enjoy free horse rides & horse-drawn trailer rides into our fields. Sip hot wassaf & select a fresh beautifully decorated wreath. We're celebrating our 2nd year of providing Christmas memories for you and your family. And 167, the drive right one & a half miles. Edmonds Family 542-2917
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Come and observe heavenly bodies. The Clyde Tombaugh Observatory is open to the public every clear Sunday night at 8:00 pm. Located on the top of Lindley Hall.
DATABANK Your key to the Internet
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130 Entertainment
Free Party Room Available at Johnny's Tavern/Up & Under Call 842-0377 for details.
MONDO DISCO welcomes LesBiigaySoK Monday,
Dec. 6th 8:09 p.m-2:04 oam, House/TeachDJ
Ray Velasquez. At The Hideaway 865-4100
SUMMIT COUNTY COLORADO
Mondo DISCO just minutes from 5 ski
resorts. X Mar, New, and college ski week
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140 Lost & Found
FOUND: Women's wrist watch between Bailey and Street on Nov. 29, Pensil Brand, Identify to them.
Lost: German textbook, Kaleidoskop, on 11-23-93
from 400 Wescoe. Please call 641-1800.
Please call Kevin at 842-3478 for info and reward
Bookstore on Tue, Nov 30th. Please be consider-
bookstore on Tue, Nov 30th. Please be consider-
bookstore on Tue, Nov 30th. Please be consider-
Men and Women
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
*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: 383-799-7
@GNINING 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
ACADEMIC AIDE POSITIONS AVAILABLE. (1) English Reader, Duties include: Reading textbooks and other materials for students who are blind or have reading disabilities. Reading exams and assisting with library research. $4.25/hr. in the field with library assistance once in the field. $6.50/hr. (3) Typist/Scribe. Duties include: Type papers/clas notes and transcribe exam answers. $4.25/hr. Applications available at the Student Assistance Center, 138 Strong Hall. @ 6.046 Application deadline Dec. 6, 5:00 PM. English Reader and Typist Scrip. Application deadline for Law Reader is December 15 at 5:00 pm.
ADMINISTRATIVE USER SERVICES
Student Monthly. Deadline: 12/31/95. $850-$650/
provide providing microcomputer LAN, SCO-UnIX use
provide application, design, documentation
and deliver training sessions for end users,
provide LAN installation and problem solutior
sessions for computerized communications: Demonstrated excellent oral and written communications skills, knowledgeable about
computerized databases and their uses, experience
with network administration and continued enrollment through spring 1995.
Complete job description available. Apply, submit a letter of application and a current resume to Ann Rait, Personnel Assistant, Computer Center,
Assistant, Anaas, Lawrence, KS68445, EO/AAM
EMPLOYER
AMIGOS
Supervisor/Assist Mgr.
2 Graphic Design Students
Supervisor now - Manager later! Learn the business from the ground up and advance according to your skills. Be ready 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 in valuable Relocation Advocacy and this benefits. Apply how at: Amigio, 1815 W. 23rd.
Full-time assistant manager needed immediately
Must live on site. Call 841-8468.
Earn $1,000 per week at home filling orders! Free information. Please send long self addressed stamped envelope to CJ Enterprises, Box 67068H, Cuvahos Falls, OH 44222
Fast-growing local property management company needs assistance in producing logo and marketing brochure. Great experience and excellent salary. Call Sterling Properties 865-529
Immediate opens. Must be used to work Holiday
Senior. Apply with Availmar Reacquet Club, 4120 Cilion
Court.
Marketing Assistant position available at Naiam Smith Hall for the spring semester. Applicant must have excellent people skills, good computer skills (skill publishing experience a plus), and have a background experience in marketing, engaging, customer service, and web design in room and office.
Help wanted: Hardware/Software manager. KU School of Architecture and Urban Design seeks qualified graduate student. For position description deadline November 30, 1998.
board plus stipend. Potential for full time effective jobs in this field would help you get an edge on the job market. Those interested can apply at Naisihm Hall, 1809 Alam Ghar Road, Kisumu, KS454. KE354. E.O.E. M.F.H.A. F.M.A.
The premier agency - 9 yrs experience. Families with children under 18 will be PA, PA, and Sunny FL. Call today placed tomorrow!
Need some extra $48 during Christmas break. Pizza Hat is in handy hiring delivery drivers and cooks for the upcoming holiday season. Drivers must be at least 18 years old, apply. At Pizza Hat 244 Iowa Suite Q 943-3000.
Short-time position for person with business or
academic background. General office work. Owr car needed, must be Kansas resident, enrolled at KU in an least 12 hours, and have a GAP of 2 or more. Call 841-6095-3871
short-time temporary Extension H-4 Assistant. 2+H agent with the promotion of the 4-H Program in the Department. Requires High Graduate and ability to work with people; B.S. preferred. $25 per hour, or equivalent; 10 hours per week and 3 letters of reference, by December 10 to Demi Benjo, County Extension Director, 211 Harper, Lawrence, KS 60046. House Work- Part Time, Flexible Hours. Paid
Phone Work- Part Time, Flexible Hours. Paid Daily.
Call 232-9283.
SERVICES Professional Business
Training. Free initial registration. $40
Training. Free initial registration. $40
SUMMER BREAK POSITIONS! Inl. chain fill
40-PT, PT entry level earnings. Earn $36.
Can maintain PT next semester. Interview in
82-831 or Overland Park 81-967s.
temporary, per diem position 3 hrs./day, Mon.-Sund.
Court blood donors by phone to schedule
appointments; make cold calls as needed.
requires H/S/CED diploma, excellent communication.
preferred. $42.25/hr. Apply American Red Cross, 1218 W.
Lawrence, 83-355-8 M/F EOE
The Mid West *M most Elite* Juice Bar is now in hiring mode. No drugs, No Drugs or Alcohol.
Says M81-2766 Even the
PRE-MEDICAL SECRETARY/ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT: Half-time graduate position (20 hrs a week) with the possibility of becoming three-quarter time as of July 1. Responsibilities include providing professional students, maintaining current information for the students, processing recommendations for students applying to medical/dental/optometry schools, preparing student confidentiality materials for the students, miting, planning information meetings twice a year, handling correspondence on behalf of Chief Pre-Medical Advisor, aiding in compiling statistics related to medical school acceptance, using computer-aided design software for office duties. Above all, must have excellent interpersonal skills and ability to work independently with initiative. Prefer some interested students to apply. Please apply and bring (or send resume to the Pre-Med Office, 118 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60454, 843-367, by Wednesday, December 8. Starting date is approx. 3:00 p.m., The University of Kansas is an AA/EQ Employer.
Restoration/maintenance positions for skilled work.
Work with clients to design and implement work.
Call: 617-243-7980 for more information.
Wanted-Models for education classes at Hair
Design Team Salon. Free has makeover Call 841-
706-2593.
You CAN make a difference, Greenpeace K-C,
and others to help save the rainforests, stop toxic
toxine, and protect the ozone layer. FT/PT 190 to
194, training, hours 2 to 10 m.p. Call 816-351-3844.
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
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816 W 24th 749-5750
225 Professional Services
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, servicing KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Attorney at Law
AttorneyatLaw
Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors landlord/tenant
719 Massachusetts 749-5333
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.
Lesbian, gay, bi- or unsure? If you need to talk to someone, call a Peer Counselor. CONFIDENTIAL. Call KU info or Headquarters.
Research Assistance - MS/MI.S information specialist available to assist with term papers, theses, dissertations, research projects. 843-4205.
reviews. cover letters, laser prints. Fast.
and flexible, graphic Articides. Inc. 927
128 Maps. 841-107.
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
340 Auto Sales
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses divorce, criminal & civil matters The law offices of
DONALDG.STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
24-Hour Turnaround for under 30 pages. Any size accepted. $1.25 p./Call Ruth after 5 p.m., 843-6438. A Word Perfect work processing service. Laser printer. Near campus #84-6855.
Expert typing through the holidays. IBM Correct
for 50/50 double space page. Cail Mirs
Matila 811-243-7692
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.
o- type - fast, reliable, service, professional quality. Any kind of typing. Call today at 814-6242.
Let me do your TYPING!
Lazer printing to WOW! your profs.
18 years professional experience.
All typing jobs accepted.
Grammar and punctuation corrected free.
Call Jack at
Make the
Gradek
Word processing, applications, term papers, dis-
turbations, resumes. Editing, composition, rash
writing.
X
Adom stereo power amplifier GF A-355, $160, 29 gallon fresh water aquarium complete w/stand and accessories $150, Nice full size futon $175. Call 865-0720.
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
Chow mixed puppy, four months old, good health if interested call 749-1601 after 3pm and talk to Gabriela.
Beds, deks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
908 Mass.
'91 Schwim Impact Pro> good condition asking
$275. LM or ask for Steve 832-0275.
Ice table mattresses, box springs, and frame for sale
Good condition. Must suit! Ask for Wendy BM1-
841.
Mac SE 46, mqHD img. Carrying case, image Writer,
games, and more. games, and more.
961-845-1431 Ask for DD.
961-845-1431 Ask for DD.
Macintosh Quadras. Best prices available. Student discounts apply. 805-249-2441.
Fender acoustic guitar. Great X-Mas present,
hard case, soft case, $200 or best
offer. Call 829-9040
Finewood Queen waterbed/mattress $250
.pinewood 6 drawer dresser w/ mirror $25, n desk
for $10, an entertainment center for $10, and a glass
desk for $25, an entertainment center for $10, box spring
and mattress $50. 841-6840.
need to sell: KX- P2132 Panasonic (color option)
printer 210: lamps, love seat, coffee table, book-
shelves, table, chairs and miscellaneous. Call #82-
4727
IBM Compatible 388 imx, printer, 60 mb hard drive, SVCga VGA, mouse, card, and humdinger.
Putoon wint trample, Lyr. id: 823-283-6150 $150
bindings only used
Lego, KNX, Calibell K4110 $79.99
Ku basketball tickets for sale. Will take best offer.
Call 832-8145 and leave a message.
Neon bee signs $125. Busch Mountain wall clock
$125. Call 749-1084 at 6:00 p.m.-h.
Power book 1458 · 4/80 barely used 3 months old bought new at $199 asking $99. Call 749-4501.
Canondale SR 490 road bike with Look pedals, exc. cond. $850 914-7050
V
new Years Chicago) Leaves KC on Dec 31
Call 841-7541 now before I
sale! (females only)
190 WJ Hetta, 5-pd. s-dd. Good Condition, AM-MF cassette $170.00 Call Mike 841-7765.
1975 Buck Skylark Coupe with 327 Chev. engine,
540 hp. Consider monthly payment.
Call M-1291-8700.
*see Henda Area 1853* The scorer for two *Excel*
call 84-1278. If no answer, leave message.
*see Henda Area 1853*
Prelude-11. SI88 mlw ml. Power sunroof & win-
hold. SI88 mlw all options, Call Seng call Si-
nten=SI88 MLW.
Pintz 82> Manual. Running no problem. $300 Call
449-1907
Pridelude SI-116 Howi ml. Power sunset and window 5-second, all options $69, Calgm Call 842-384-2750
370 Want to Buy
Indiana University Students for KU want IU-KU tickets for Dec. 22. Call Clifft at (812) 332-2500.
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
Now Buving
exercise equipment, downhill-ski, mountain bikes, and all sporting equipment
1029 Mass. 841-PLAY (7529)
405 For Rent
1 3 Bdrm apt, just blocks from campus available for the second semester sublease, washer/dryer, dishwasher, ceiling fan. the works. $22 per mo./person. 1138 Kirchen 855-0720. Call now.
400s Real Estate
1 Bed furnished apartment clean and clear borders
1 Camp available Jan. 18 941-8027 or 816-7545-475.
1 Bedroom, furnished apartment, on bus route,
6fth St. Very Clean. Call) 843-8719.
1 bedroom Apt. for sublease available Jan 1. Only room in Water. Paid gas, heat on Bout Rose.
3 bedroom townhome for rent Jan 11, dishwasher,
garage, D江房upon request, ample on the bus
passway.
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
very nice! Available Spring sem. interested? Call
(312) 555-8900.
4 dbm. lrg rms. stove and refrigerator
3 bdm. hotel bookings. $700 a month. Availabl
t 12% NMK.
1 roommate needed to sublease ap, 1 blk. from campus, $180; call 814-4207.
4 Bedroom house for sub-lease. Cheap rent. Low
price. B W, R, R.C.E. Attention Mark: 814.
5694. Thank you for your business!
Available at semester break, apts. in new section of West Hills 1000 Emery Rd. 1. bdm apt. $380/mo. 2 bdm apt. $505/mo. Cable pd. w/d bdm apt. $695/mo. Cable pd. w/d bdm apt. $695/mo. Energy balency, energy efficient, great location near campus & on bus rt. No pets. Call 841-3800 or 424-3842.
Avail le Jan 1. 3 bdm apt.
pu & on bus rt. no. Pets. Call 814-3000 or 842-3884.
Available. bdm. apt. on bus route. Cable
Phone. Call 814-3000 or 842-3884.
Available Jan 1 3 bbm. apt. close to campus,
Georgetown. Georgetown.
Acs. Call 838-182-1467-7297.
Available now nice clean studio app. close to campus washer dryer 1296 Ohio #060. no mpa. No tags.
Beautiful 1 Bd. unfurnished, available Jan 1.
Towels 2 Bds. Laundry fees $25 +
Utilities Call 842-4100
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and
room for rental to KU. Off-street parking
no. Petals. Kit 814-550-8925
Furnished studio apartment. 2 short blocks from KU. Water pipe off street parking. No pets. 341-760-5398.
Great sub-lase opportunity 1416 Temecula Large
more clean, quiet, clean, quiet,
location 842-755 or 748-7597
Nice furnished large rooms, new paint/carpet.
Heated garages and bathrooms for student
students.
$299-$359/month; $300-$349/month.
Room to sub-lease in a large house start Jan 1st
Phone to Dave or 832-8749 evenings
Spacious, sunny 1 bdr. unfurnished Apt. Cable included. Close to campus. Ceiling fan. Deck and microwave. $375/month available for sub-lease Janl 181-8409.
Stone cottage near campus available at semester
phone: 924-3838, $45/mo, no pet. Cal 614-
3800 or 924-3838
Spring Semester sub-lease. 1 br Apt very close to close to campus. $350/mo. Call 832-0161
Sublease available Trallridge Studio apc. $112 MU On KU bus call. Call Calhoun Dalton at 832-2081.
Sublease 3 bedroom at, at Boardwalk, Available mid December until may, residual payment Jan. 1st. JCU
Sublise begins Jan. 1. Great studio apo in old house. Lots of windows, redneck close, red window.
Sublease 2 br. *Townhome WD* bookups and
subleases 1 br. *Townhouse WD* bookups + utilities.
Call Haravee Phone: 841-1212
Sublease from Jan. 5 - July 31 J. 1 bdmr w/ wash-
carpentry $96/mo. Call after 6pm; m. #-8850
$96/mo. Calf up 4pm; m. #-8850
MEADOWBROOK
842-4200
meadowbrook
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? We have a studio or a one bedroom apartment ESPECIALLY FOR YOU!
APARTMENTS • TOWNHOMES
• RESIDENCES
Large 18x12 room in nice room, 3 miles from KU for female non smoker $10, utl. paid 749-616-696
STAR for rooms and apartments in well kept homes. Also some houses. Call StAR (7827)
MON-FRI! 8am-5:30pm,
New Large 6 bdr. Available, Special offered thru May or July, Includes DW, MW, PP, trash compactor, cable paid. Call 841-7847. 4501 Wimbledon Dr.
(Sorry, no pets)
3 bedroom condos with all the amenities.
Newly Remodeled Studio on Campus. Call 841-8468.
Special Spring or Spring and Summer Leases ALL NEW!
Will place individuals and groups of 2,3,or 4
Call today 843-4420.
927 Emery A 201
College Hill Condominiums
College Hill Condominiums
Sublease Jan. May 2 bdrm apartment, near campus, lower 1/4 of alex 4-plex. m82-84780.
SUBLEASE STUDIO APT. for Spring Semester, 2
bks from campus, off street parking, W/D, full
rooms, $390/month-call 181-4791 or if no answer
5845.
**Sublease:** Studie u/b/bedroom. TBL from campus
Wastar, Westerland Building. No deposit. 954-728-3061.
*Dryer* building. No deposit. 954-728-3061.
Now leasing for Spring!
we're making life easier!
life easier!
•Weekly Maid Service
•Front Door Bus Service
•"Dine Anytime" with Unlimited Seconds
•Laundry and Vending Facilities
•Free Utilities
NAISMITH Hall
1800 Naismith Drive
(913) 843-8559
Tired of noisy apartment living? 15 min. S. of Lawrence is an insulated traditional farm home, complete with porches and a great deck. 2 bdrm I bath, heated by natural gas (no propane tank). 2 bedrooms, 3 baths, accessible from residence site, quiet location. Will rent to responsible people with refs. $490/mo/749-1589 after 6 p.m.
Two bedroom bungalow at 23rd and New Hampshire.
Washer/Dryer, dishwasher, detached garage,
bedroom. Quit neat neighborhood, perfect for grad students. Students Avail. Jan. 11.
$85 per month. Call 749-1311
Drop Into Our Place to ask about our Mid Term Leases
Colony Woods Apartments
$365-$435
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Sand Volleyball Court
- 3 Hot Tubs
- Basketball Court
- Microwave
842-5111 1301 W.24th
Microwave
- 1&2 Bedroom Apts.
- On Bus Route
Female needed to share towhouse. Will have
room awaiting last wish! Washer/dryer $255/mo +
$300/wk.
Wishing You The Best This Holiday Season!
2 NSF Upperclassman need 2 NSF to share clean,
furnished 4 bdmr, bath apt. Bus Route. Nice
Neighborhood. Pool, Laundry rm. $196 + 1/4 ut.
Room at Range 841-8559.
I roommate wanted for 3 bedroom apartment close campus. $62 per month +1/2 utilities. Call
1 roommates need to share nice/clean 3/bm² apt. in Kansas City (15% / 8B# stater) a $224/month. 2 roommates need to share nice/clean 3/bm² apt. in Kansas City (15% / 8B# stater) a $224/month. 1 roommate wanted for 3 bedroom apartment close campus $602 per month + /vitality. Call
$2 to share spacious house, completely furnished,
$250 distance to campus, $250 per month
1. two rooms at 3 BR house, W/D, Bus Route.
2. two rooms at 3 BR house, Availability. Jan. For information call 749-6048.
I lrmate needed to share a bdpr ap. Jan 1 or
Jun 3, 2018 at 9:45 am. Call Chris 886-1009 day or 882-1522 after 4 p.m.
Female non-smoker. Now thru Aug. 8 BR apt. in
Savannah, GA. Residency required. Plyl
Pityly Reserved. Close to Atlanta.
Female roommate, comfortable 3 bedroom townhome on bus line. $250 + utilities, no pets, no smoke. Min 18 mos.
For 2.3 bed, 2 bach condo on bus rt. fur, w/d apl. For 3.8 bed, 2 bach condo on pho/30 mo./av1 %Chris B32-2528 or 1-681-2528
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANDED N/S/ move in Jan. kit = 3 baths, on BTH bus route, / utilitie
in Jan. kit = 2 baths, on BTH bus route, / utilitie
430 Roommate Wanted
bird in formaculair house, a few bloks from campus
$210. - What a bargain! Call 749-3787.
Looking for a female roommate to share a barm, 2b apartment. On bus route, fully furnished & very INEXPENSIVE!! Call Holly or Beth at 865-148
N/S, male, needed to share a Bdhr towroom with 3
children. Rent a kitchen, patio,
garage, $400 + / utilities 18/24.
$150 per hour.
N/N Female needed for 4 birmond with W/D,
B/F Female needed for $170/mo. + utility On bus
Route Call 861-700-2900
Mature, studious, stable house mate wanted to
keep a 1-bedroom house 200 m² &'/1 unit. N.
N. Pet.
I dkrm1 w/mm-private-bath of a 3 bkmr app avail
I dkrm1 w/mm-private-bath of a 7 utilite
ON BUS ROUTE. Call 644-7831.
1 Male needed, very spacious 2 bdrm townhouse on
75th St. in the heart of the city - 2 a/bath
4 Bathrooms - 4 Bedrooms - 3.5 Flats
^Vacant Call 649-7872
1. Pile needed, spacious 2 bedroom apt. for spring sem. on bus route B5; +8 /u i/lit accent
2. Pile needed, spacious 3 bedroom apt. for summer sem. on bus route B6; +8 /u i/lit accent
N/S responsibility female roommate needed for 2
families. Fully furnished 3-bedroom 2-story
deposit fees. Available ASAP. Dbg 794-5892.
Need clean, responsible, N/S, Male to share hbr:
$203.50/mo + 1/vials/rest. Free cable. Close to bus route. Furnished (except for room). Available D.1. Call quickly 482-4989.
or 12 females needed for spacious 3 bdm apt. for
1 person or 1 min from campus, on bus ride,
or 1947-04-14, usr-867-2958.
Hany) Need a place to live? MW roommate needed
for New York. Send resume to NSK@MNAC.net
SMiles/SNS手机热线 at 843-5061
BRIDGE YEAR: 187/7 month + 7 counties. Call 832-1380.
Needed: N/S female share nice 3 mbs. apt. w/hard wood floors near campus and downtown.
Needed: AVAILABLE. Avail immediately. Call 832-0790 eveinties.
Need mature, clean, N/M male to share 2 br apt
w/male grad. student. Close to campus. $189/mo
Some ull. pd. Avail. Jan. 1, 749-4389.
Non-smoking female needed to provide 3 nibs dkm,
house, own room, W/D, dishwasher, available
NS, M/F'/to share a very nice clean br. abr.
NS, M/F'/to share Janet J. Janet 3. 1875/90/m
Call 1-852-485-1022
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NSP w/ small device needs a responsible NSP to save short alarm, opt for spring extension. $196/mo
- By phone: 864-4358
OSN female needed to share a quiet BTP Apt. on bus route w/ DW hookups. Move in after fall finals.
Roommate need Start Jan. 1, 1280+mo plus 1280+
for details. Callman. Call 855-2690 for details,
have message
How to schedule an ad:
Seeking NSS to sublease NEW 3 birmond condo on B
& Emery $250 + 9 utilities. Available ONLY
CALL
One roommate needed at four bedroom house for Spring Semester $600/mo + utilities. Ask
Roommate needed for spacious house, block from Campus Huge Kitchen, two bath, wonderful pet-friendly apartment.
Roommate needed for 3 bdm chair just 4 bdm from campus. $160 a month + /u`til Call 865-364-661
Roommate need to live in igr 6 BDM house. Very close to campus. $160 mo/+ uml. 832-191-8
Responsible male roommate wanted for 4 bedroom, 3 bath townhouse in West Lawrence. Large kitchen, fireplace, and washer/dryer. Caballite trash bin. $590 / month + / call. Call 641-8247 and leave message.
Roommate wanted for 5 bdm. house. Has wawer
& over $90/mo. includes utilities except phone
call.
- Dr. Mail: 11$ Staffer Flint, Lawrence, KS. 68045
Share large Victorian home, many amenities, downtown area, rare value. $300 + 1/8 until 842-4222. The Hillel house has space available for individuals seeking a unique Jewish experience for the Spring semester. If interested, call 864-3948 for more information.
Ads phone in may be billed to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
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365 for sale
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140 lost & found
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The University Daly Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS. 68445
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
CHANNEL CHANNEL CHANNEL
MIDRANGE REVERB SUCK
MIDRANGE REVERB TREBLE TREBLI
BASS BASS
MIC
Raymond's last day as the band's sound technician.
---
1
12
Friday, December 3,1993
Kites
Futons
Slippers
Loft Beds
Waterbeds
New & Used
Furniture
KU Bean Bags
Bobbi's Bedroom 2429 Iowa 842-7378
Bottleneck
913 841 live
737 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS
Tonight Common Ground
Saturday
Special 8 p.m. Show
Beausoleil
18&Over
AdvTix
I want you to call me for Student Loans!
Sunday Flaming Lips 18&Over AdvTix
"Service,
service,
service."
That's the motto at
Mercantile Bank.
If you want service in addition to your PLUS, SLS, or Stafford Loans, you want Mercantile!
Call now: 865-0278
MERCANTLE
BANK
Member FDIC
Lender ID #804699
Equal Opportunity Lender
fifi's
Offering Fine Continental Cuisine
Open for Lunch Mon-Fri 11:00-2:00
Dinner 7 days a week
841-7226
925 Iowa
Next to Hilbert Theatre
AMERICAN BISTRO
Fresh All-American Cuisine
Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner
841-8349
701 Massachusetts
In the Eldridge hotel
fifi's
Serving The University of Kansas
Party & Banquet Catering
842-1771
Banquet
Connection
1350 N. 3rd Street
LION
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd. Lawrence, Ks. 66044
(913)1843-3826
Rock. Then Roll...
...down the road to success. Attention Seniors in Marketing, Journalism and General Business: limited opportunities exist in the fast paced world of entertainment. Contemporary Group, Kansas City's leading producer of live entertainment, is looking for a few exceptional interns to join our creative team.
SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
end written request and resume to
Contemporary
Tammy Fruits
2310 West 75th Street.
Prairie Village, Kansas 66208
913-384-8940
NFL takes big risks choosing Jacksonville
Pride key to new team's success
By Dave Goldberg The Associated Press
Commissioner Paul Taglabie and a lot of NFLowners were gushing about the selection of Jacksonville as the NFL's 30th franchise.
"The Southeast is the nation's most rapidly growing area," Tagliabue said, adding that NFL ratings in Jacksonville were higher than any of the other four contenders.
"We get a lot of our players from there," said Jerry Jones, owner of the Dallas Cowboys, who indeed have an inordinate number of players from the state of Florida — thanks largely to the fact that Jimmy Johnson coached college football in the state and knew the talent there.
But the fact remains that the NFL is taking a calculated risk by tilting to the Southeast with its two newest franchises.
Because the NFL's most loyal fan base is in the northern half of the country — where it began and where college football doesn't have the incredibly deep emotional loyalties that run through the South.
Why?
teams that have the deepest loyalties, year in, year out, win or lose — Chicago, Cleveland, Pittsburgh and Buffalo; Washington, New York, Philadelphia, Green Bay and Denver.
To put it another way, draw a line from Washington west to Denver and turn it up north and you find the NFL
If the fans don't come to cheer, they come to boo the "Dawgs" in Cleveland's pound may not like Bill Belichick, who show up to razz him. The same is true in Philadelphia, where you see signs every week suggesting that owner Norman Braman return to Florida, the south of France or anyplace but the misnamed city of Brotherly Love.
The Sun Belt?
About the only city where an NFL team draws consistently well is New Orleans, which has the mindset of those northern cities—we'll go to the game to cheer or boo, but we'll go.
Forget Los Angeles, where USC, UCLA, the Dodgers and the Lakers are king — the Rams have to win to draw and the Raiders have never really settled in.
San Francisco?
One reason the Niners are a good road team is that their home crowd is quite laid back. If they ever start losing, how many of those fans will take their wine and brie elsewhere?
Dallas?
The Cowboys may be "America's Team," but they belong to Texas only when they're winning. During the awful years of the late '80s, they were drawing only 60 percent of capacity to Texas Stadium — the best crowds were for Tex Schramm's 1987 strike replacements.
And Florida is no great NFL stronghold.
Miami has been a consistent contender since Don Shula got there in 1971, yet still doesn't sell out every week — moving to safer and more comfortable Joe Robbie Stadium from the Orange Bowl didn't do the trick. And visiting teams draw fans there — watch this week's game with the Giants and check out how many transplanted New Yorkers are cheering for the visitors.
Jacksonville could be a different story — a city looking for an identity that the NFL might put on the map. Being "the only game in town" has made NFL boomtowns of Denver, Buffalo and New Orleans, and Jacksonville residents say the city has a similar kind of civic pride.
But the south is college football territory and always has been. Florida and Florida State are within a two-hour drive, and south Georgia, from where the Jaguars also hope to draw, is a place where "How about them Dawgs?" is part of the dialect.
The NFL hopes that civic pride will take over because none of those colleges has any public identification with Jacksonville, although Georgia and Florida meet there annually.
The question is what happens in the fourth season, after the Jaguars are 2-5 after having gone 1-15, 2-14 and 4-12?
If they get 73,000 raucous fans in the Gator Bowl booing the hometown heroes, the NFL will know it's made a wise choice.
Juicers
Showgirls
The
Midwest's
Most Elite
Juice Bar
Opens at 7:00 pm
913 N Second
(I-70 West to 204 Exit,
turn left, just past
Tanger Factory Outlet
Lawrence, KS
913-841-4122
AUDIO/VIDEO SALE
EVERY KNOWN WAY TO SHOP - FULL SERVICE TO SPECIAL ORDER - YOU CHOOSE THE PRICE AND THE TERM*
Boston Acoustic HD-7
$99.00ea.
AWESOME SELECTION!
Denon CD Player
$228.88
Denon Receiver
$268.88
Yamaha Dual Cass
$234.75
Onkyo CD Player
$210.00
B&WLoudspeaker
DM620
$375.00ea.
Paradigm 35SE
168.88ea.
KIEF'S
AUDIO/VIDEO
24th & Iowa St. PO Box 9 Lawrence, KS 68044
AUDIO VIDEO - CAMSTERO CD & LADES
913·842·1811 913·842·1438 913·842·1544
AWESOME SELECTION!
DM620
$375 $00ea.
Denon CD Player
$228 $8
Denon Receiver
$268 $8
Yamaha Dual Cass
$234 $5
Onkyo CD Player
$210 $9
Paradigm 35SE
168 $8ea.
1
4
CAMPUS: Law school graduates are having a harder time finding a job. Page 3.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.103,NO.73
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
MONDAY, DECEMBER 6,1993
ADVERTISING:864-4358
NEWS:864-4810
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
LUCKY ATTEMPTS TO
STOP THE HYPOTHESIS
OF A DISTRACTED MIND
Gary Price, professor of counseling psychology, developed the internationally used inventory style of teaching called Productivity Environmental Preference Survey. The style is geared for adults and helps them take advantage their learning styles.
Rhodes fulfills grad's destiny
By Donella Hearne Kansan staff writer
Even in grade school, Munro Richardson knew that he wanted to go to England's Oxford University. Now, the Spring 1993 KU graduate is on his way with a Rhodes scholarship.
Richardson, a Harvard University graduate student, is one of only 32 U.S. scholars to receive the prestigious award this year. A regional selection committee in Minneapolis announced the scholarship recipients Saturday.
Although he is enjoying Harvard, Richardson said, he will not be sad to leave.
"I see this as a step in the journey of where I am going," he said. "It's even possible I may come back to Harvard "
Dianna Richardson, his mother, said that Richardson had worked for the Rhodes for most of his life.
In the spring Richardson was chosen to receive the Mellon fellowship
PENGUIN
Richardson
to do graduate study at Harvard.
The University's 23rd Rhodes recipient, Richardson was offered another prestigious scholarship, the Marshall scholarship, last week. The University has had only five Marshall scholars.
Either scholarship would allow him to study in England, but Richardson chose to accept the Rhodes because
he wanted to attend Oxford, he said.
"I made my choice because of the prestige of the Rhodes and the tradition of Oxford," Richardson said. "It was a tough decision to make."
Mary Klayder, assistant director of the honors program, said Richardson was a worthy recipient of the honor.
"He's a terrific student and a great guy," she said.
At the University, Richardson earned a degree in East Asian studies, an uncommon major. His mother said he had been interested in East Asian cultures for a long time.
"It started because he was intrigued with the art and history of East Asia," she said. "His interest just grew from there."
Richardson said the uniqueness of his studies might have been one of the reasons he had been chosen for the
scholarship.
"It's an unusual major," he said. "And being an African American studying East Asian studies, I'm even further set apart."
Keith McMahon, associate professor of East Asian languages and culture, said that Richardson had been a dedicated student.
"He was very well disciplined and intelligent." he said.
Richardson said that Oxford would provide some unique opportunities for studying Hong Kong's history, a subject he is interested in pursuing.
KU project helps people understand their learning style
He said he thought that the education he had received at the University was the reason for his success.
"All that has happened, the Mellon fellowship and now the Rhodes, has been because of the strength of KU's education system," he said.
Word of mouth helped make professor's work popular worldwide
By Allison Lopez Special to the Kansan
Are you the type of person who prefers to schedule all your classes in the morning because you have a difficult time concentrating after lunch?
Or, do you prefer to get those few extra winks of sleep and schedule your most difficult classes in the afternoon?
The answer to these questions indicates your preferred time of day to learn, one of 22 preferences surveyed in an internationally used inventory developed by a KU professor.
The Learning Style Inventory is the brainchild of Gary Price, professor of counseling psychology. It has been helping educators develop more efficient teaching methods for nearly 20 years by identifying how students in grades three through 12 prefer to learn.
The survey differs from the inventory only in that teacher-motivated and parent-motivated are not measured preferences.
The adult version of the inventory, the Productivity Environmental Preference Survey, is used in business and training for the learning and working environment.
"We assume that adults are motivated not because of their teachers or because of their parents but because of themselves," Price said.
Price said that understanding one's learning style could be an asset to any person entering today's quickly changing job market.
"We can't prepare people for jobs, but we can help them use their learning styles to their advantages." Price said.
Some think that learning styles may be the future of education,
"The students have changed, and now it's time for the system to change, too," said Ben Rambo, a teacher at Louisville Learning Center.
Louisville, Texas, who has been using learning style teaching since 1985.
Rambo, who trains other teachers to use the inventory, said that knowledge of his own learning styles had been helpful while he continues his education.
"It's a common-sense approach to teaching," Rambo said. "I believe in it wholeheartedly."
Sherry Dobbson, secondary curriculum director of Jacksonville Independent School District, Jacksonville, Texas, said that use of the inventory increased the efficiency of education by making the classroom more student-centered and less teacher-centered.
"A lot of it is simply making teachers aware that not all students learn just by listening." Dobbson said.
For example, a student who is auditory would be encouraged to read aloud. A kinesthetic student, who learns best through full-body learning, may be encouraged to pace back and forth when studying.
Dobbson said that students' selfesteem levels rose when their special learning needs are addressed.
"We have seen a tremendous change in students' attitudes," Dobbs said. "They respond in such a positive way."
Price said his plans for the inventory included increased global use, profiles printed in Chinese and the development of a computer program that would administer the inventory with pictures and sound.
Use of the inventory has been spread solely by word of mouth, which matches Price's quiet and unassuming demeanor. Not surprisingly then, many people haven'theard of the learning survey.
But this hasn't affected the popularity of learning styles among educators.
For more information about the inventory, write to: Gary Price, P.O. Box 1818, Lawrence, Kan. 66044.
"We don't advertise or anything." Price said.
"It's spreading like wildfire," Rambo said.
FVJ 749
William Alix/KANSAN
O Tannenbaum
Laura Houston, 8, Kansas City, Kan., takes shelter from the wind while Clark Morton, Lawrence senior, ties the Houston family Christmas tree to their car and Jaimee Carswell, Belfast, Ireland, senior, checks that the tree is securely fastened. Morton and Carswell work at Pine Hill Farm, six miles east of Lawrence, cutting the trees and preparing them for transportation.
High price tag on health care calls for reform
By Liz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
Everyone likes to go out to lunch, but few enjoy picking up the tab.
The tab for health care in the United States represents a labyrinth of unimaginable proportions.
Health care costs are expected to reach a staggering $903.3 billion this year, 14.4 percent of the gross domestic product. How Americans could manage to spend almost a trillion dollars on visits to physicians, surgeries and medical equipment is as complex as health care itself.
No one knows what health care
HEALTH CARE
in the '90's
R $ ^{\mathrm {x}} $
reform will bring. But one thing is certain. It must remove the roots of the system's hefty price tag.
What began as physicians making house calls in the 1800s has evolved into an endless maze of health care providers, insurance plans, high-tech medical machinery and massive
paperwork that does not guarantee good health or low prices. The only guarantee in the health care system is that someone must pick up the tab.
Ray Davis, head of health services administration at the University, said health care costs were skyrocketing because of:
the uninsured:
the insured who had uninsured family members;
long-term care:
job lock — people who switched jobs and went without insurance for a limited time;
people who put off medical treatment until their conditions deterior-
rated or created medical emergencies.
"The system in this country assumes you're going to take care of yourself," Davis said.
Tim Zeddies, director of planning and health policy for Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas City in Kansas City, Mo., said that the public's increased awareness of advances in medical technology had created a demand for more sophisticated and expensive services.
"Society has been willing to pay for more and more health care," Zeddies
See HEALTH CARE, Page 3.
INSIDE
Devil of a time in Chicago
After being down by 14 points in the second half, Kansas — with the help of senior guard Steve Woodberry — turned up the heat and beat the DePaul Blue Devils 79-74.
Page 9.
Holiday money woes plague many students
21
By Shan Schwan Kansan staff writer
Lack of funds incentive for creative financing
Besides the stress of final exams and projects this time of year, the end of the semester and the holiday season give students something else to worry about — money.
Many students say December is the worst time of year because they have to buy gifts for friends and family, and the money they had at the beginning of the semester — often loan or scholarship money — has run out.
"You spend it all early in the semester, and then you have to live two months off of
Spaghetti and Jeno's pizzas," said Tracy Daniel, Garden City senior.
But even living on cheap food does not always keep students from going broke at the end of the semester. Students can find a variety of ways to get a little extra cash.
One thing students do is sell belongings they no longer use or want. Several merchants in Lawrence will pay cash for used clothing or compact discs.
But some students look further than just selling a few of their unwanted possessions and risk their more valuable property.
When Daniel ran out of money, she said,
she took her jewelry to a nawn shop.
"I've pawned stuff three of four times before, like my necklace or my rings," Daniel said. "They don't give you much money, though. And you have to be able to pay it back or they'll keep your stuff."
"But I have to be really poor to do that, because it hurts," she said. "And it makes you really weak. I have to psych myself up for it."
Daniel also donates plasma to get extra money. She said that she could get $15 on the spot for a 30-minute trip to the donor center.
Plasma centers are not the only medically related sources of money for students. Newspaper advertisements and posters on campus lure students into medical research projects.
Kelly Dunkelberger, Woodland Park,
Colo., senior, participated in a medical
study during his freshman year. He said it
was the end of the fall semester, he was low
on money and he saw a poster in his scholar-
ship hall.
"I was walking down the stairwell, sniffing a lot, and I saw this sign that said, 'Are
He said he contacted the research center and made arrangements to participate. The study involved a new nasal spray that had potential health risks. Dunkelberger was placed in the control group, however, and he said he just sat in a room for seven hours and studied for his final exams.
you sniffing?" " Dunkelberger said. "They were looking for people with colds."
"They weighed my Kleenex," he said. "They'd come in every hour, have me blow my nose and weigh it."
Dunkelberger said he also got a free physical examination and received $175 for about a 10-hour commitment. He said it was worth it.
"I was kind of prostituting my body for money," he said, "but I aced my calculus final because I had studied all day."
0
2
Monday, December 6, 1993
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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 748-0753.
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
KU Nippon Kempo Karate Club will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in 207 Robinson Center
Clan na Daghda ValFather (Clans of the Good God all Father) at Alcove F in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Debra
or Michael Terry at 841-2960.
Harambee 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 "Fundamentals of Catholicism" class at 7 onatight at the, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
or Michael Terry at 841-2696.
St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center will sponsor a video course, "Exploring the Faith," at 8 tonight at the Center, 1631 Crescent Road. For more information, call 843-0357.
Black Student Union will meet at 7 tonight at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Terry Bell at 864-3084.
ON THE RECORD
Astudent'sparkingpermitvalued at $50 was taken from a car in the parking lot west of Murphy Hall on Nov. 21, KU police reported.
taken from Allen Field House on Nov. 29, KU police reported.
A student's KUID and bus pass, valued at $60, were
A student's parking permit valued at $55 was taken from a car in the parking lot at Sunflower Avenue and Illinois Street on Tuesday, KU police reported.
the Fred Phelps ministry. Also, Juricy's syllabus was approved in its original state. There were no revisions.
Aletter to the editor on page 4 of Friday's *Kansan* contained misleading information. Ann Jurcyk never has been associated with
CORRECTION
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High: 34°
Low: 28°
Source: Mark Akin, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
High: 39° Low: 27°
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The University Daily Kansan business staff is looking for creative individuals who can make the ordinary, extraordinary. We want people who can turn the mundane into something wild and unique, yet have it still be meaningful.
The Kansan will be selecting several creative staff members for the Spring 1994 semester. You will be able to test your ideas and develop new ones as you're trained in making creative layouts for area advertisers. And you will gain valuable computer experience.
So, if you excel at combining ideas in an exciting, meaningful way, call us. Get in touch with John Carlton at the Kansan by December 9. After all, what you make of your ideas is up to you.
Not to mention, it's a lot of fun.
Contact John Carlton at the University Daily Kansan 119 Stauffer-Flint 864-4358
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Monday, December 6, 1993
3
So many lawyers, so few jobs
Law graduates find job market null and void
By Angela Cunningham Special to the Kansan
Many graduates of KU School of Law are finding that a high-paying job is not always attainable or desirable.
According to statistics compiled by the KU Law School Career Services Office, 26 percent of 1992 graduates are still seeking employment. In 1988, that number was 5 percent.
"The '80s were a blip," said Linda Gill Taylor, owner of Of Counsel, a service that finds temporary jobs for out-of-work lawyers.
"I can't help but feel empathetic, but becoming a lawyer is an apprenticeship," she said. "Our clients require lawyers who have done what they need many times."
Taylor blamed the tough job market on competition created by the increasing number of law students in the nation. She said the lawyer population must decrease before job opportunities became available.
"It it used to be that everyone out of law school would have a job somewhere but not anymore," she said.
"For the next three years, young law grads are going to have trouble finding jobs."
"There is a book for lawyers called 'How to Find a Job in a Tight Market,' " she said. "It was published in 1978.
But the job market has fluctuated in the past; said Georgann Eglinski, associate dean of the school. She said that the legal market had always had its ups and downs.
"The legal profession goes in cycles. Will this last? Probably not."
Eglinski said that because of the sluggish economy, firms and other organizations were hiring later and more carefully than they once did.
Eglski. She said law firms were requiring graduates to pass the bar exam before being hired.
Lillian Six, director of school's Career Services office, agreed with
But Six also said that some graduates did not want to take the usual entry-level positions, which often require long hours. Some unemployed graduates are looking for jobs that are less demanding, she said.
"Students are concerned with quality of life," Six said. "In that age group they tend to be finding a spouse and starting a family. That's hard to do when you're working all the time."
Mike Roberts, a third-year law student from Lawrence who will graduate in December, took a job as a law clerk in Topeka because he did not want to work the 80-hour weeks required by some firms.
"I'm looking for jobs that people in my position didn't used to take," he said.
Roberts said working as a summer associate in a large firm changed his idea of what he wanted to do in his career.
tion made her rethink what she wanted to do.
Becky DeSalme, a third-year law student from Bartlesville, Oklaho, who will graduate in May, said that working for two large firms and a corpora-
"Law school doesn't help you decide what you want to do," she said. "I want to get out and see if I even like the practice of law. I'd like to work in a small firm, or on my own, doing everyday things people need you to do, like wills, bankruptcy and divorce.
"But I don't have the courage or the malpractice insurance to hang out my own shingle."
Eglinski said such students could find jobs outside the traditional career path. Such jobs include legal services, public defense and nonprofit organizations, such as the Children's Defense Fund.
Taylor said that students should consider law carefully before choosing it as a career.
"If you have been burning to be a lawyer since you were five and you love the law and you're interested in being a public defender or a prosecutor, then do it," she said. "But if what you want is to make $50,000 a year at 24, forget it."
Decline in employment
The number of law school students who found jobs upon graduation.
97%
95%
85%
85%
74%
(155 of 164)
(150 of 155)
(137 of 161)
(134 of 157)
(127 of 172)
1988 1989 1990 1991 1992
Source: The University Of Kansas School Of Law James Frederick KANSAI
BROOKLYN, NY - A woman is organizing clothes in a closet.
Susan McSpadden/ KANSAN
Coat giveaway
Students plan to work be merry during break
Jessie Whitlock of Lawrence picks out coats for her family at the National Guard Armory during a coat giveaway sponsored by the Salvation Army and Scotch Cleaners. More than 2,000 items were given away at the Armory on Friday and Saturday.
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
Winter break. Those words are sweeter to college students than the taste of candy canes to children.
Students relish nearly a month of freedom without the worries and anxieties of deadlines, papers, tests and early morning classes.
But what exactly do KU students do to occupy their free time during vacation without the every day grind of college life?
Robin Schillaci, Chicago senior, plans to spend her vacation in Florida, tanning on the beach. Schillaci said she had seen enough snow to last her a lifetime.
"My parents just bought a condo so I'll be lying on the beach, jet skiing, drinking and relaxing," she said. "My parents are leaving after Christmas, so my friends are all coming we can party on my parent's pad."
Simonna's friend, Cord Burk, Lawrence senior, said he would like to visit her but that, like many students, he would be working to earn some extra money for school.
"I'll be working at Teller's pretty much all through vacation," he said. "I might even take a day or so off and go home for Christmas. Overall, it should be relaxing."
Topping the list of student agendas was rest and relaxation. Still, some students might be busier between semesters than they were during their fall semester.
Lineette Toschi, San Andreas, Calif, senior,
said she had planned her Christmas vacation
down to the last day during her Thanksgiving break.
"I'm flying into San Diego on Tuesday since I'm done with finals on the first day," she said. "I'm going to hang out with friends from the University of San Diego and I'll be lying on the beach while everyone else is studying.
"Then I'll go north to Irvine to see the Hertz Castle and L. A. to Disneyland. I'm spending Christmas with my family and working at a ski resort in Bear Valley for a week. I'll spend three days in San Francisco with my mom hitting the after-Christmas sales. And after a three day visit in Santa Cruz with friends, by then it'll be time to go back to Kansas."
Other students are looking forward to seeing friends from their hometowns.
Many people would prefer not to study during break. But Sam Hutton, Derby sophomore, is planning to get an early start on next semester by going to Europe through the study abroad program.
"I'm thinking about going skiing with some friends because there's not a lot to do where I'm from," said Raja Paranjothi, Parsons junior. "I'll probably rent a lot of movies, relax and catch up on sleep."
Hutton said he would be spending Christmas at home and New Year's in Amsterdam drinking in bars.
"Then I'm going to be studying at the Goethe Institute in Munich, Germany, a language school," he said. "When I come back, I'm going to get my degree in German."
NEALTH CARE: Astronomical costs don't ensure quality care
Continued from Page 1.
said. "They don't want Wal-Mart health care, they want Neiman Marcus health care."
Prolonging lives with advanced technology also has increased costs, Zeddies said. About 25 to 30 percent of health costs are generated by people who die within a year, he said.
But Robert Lee, associate professor of health services administration, said that despite the extra services and the hundreds of billions spent on health care, Americans were not better off than people in other countries who spent less.
"We spend a whole lot more than
anybody in the world, and our population's not healthier than others," Lee said.
A lack of control over spending keeps the system from being fixed, Lee said.
"When you're up to your ears in alligators, it's hard to remember your objective was to drain the swamp," Lee said.
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said that reforming the health care system to provide universal access at affordable costs was an immense challenge.
"I think the biggest problem we have is not taking away the patients' incentive to choose and their incentive to
pay for some of the services they receive," Yockey said. "If you change that to a social system, what you receive in benefits, you sacrifice tremendously in quality. And that's a decision the American people are going to have to make."
John Knack, executive vice president of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Kansas in Topeka, said that under the health care system, neither the provider nor insured patients had strong incentives to keep costs down. Providers charge as much as they can, and patients pass on the bills to their insurance companies. Because of that, health insurance companies are mirrors that reflect the costs generated within the entire medical community, he said.
To reduce costs, Americans must put themselves on budgets and must have economic incentives to cap costs, Knack said. They also must focus on preventing health problems.
"If the American public changes lifestyle habits, that will have the biggest bearing on us in the long run," Knack said.
Donald, Hatton, physician at The Reed Medical Group Chartered, 404 Maine St., said that in addition to maintaining health care budgets and taking care of themselves, Americans must receive only necessary treatment.
"I think that we have to try to be certain that the treatments we give are
effective," Hatton said. "I think there are a lot of things we do that are unnecessary treatments."
The cost of health care has exploded for numerous reasons, including the uninsured, advances in medical technology, unnecessary treatment and a system that does not control its costs. Inflation, new drugs and medical procedures, extensive medical training and malpractice suits can be added to the list of costly problems.
Untangling and dusting off the complex web of health care reform will involve a close examination of the quality of care offered and access to it. But whatever health care plan emerges, its cost must be digestible by the American public.
Projected health care costs by percentage of the gross domestic product if the current system is not changed.
Percent of GDP increases
35%
30%
25%
20%
15%
10%
'93 2000 2010 2020 2030
Increasing costs
Source: Health Care Financing Review KANSAN
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Monday, December 6, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Templin residents should lose battle over the buff
The Templin Hall residents who stubbornly refuse to remove the pictures of scantily clad women from their hallway doors are fighting an inane battle.
When a few residents of this men's residence hall recently taped pictures of topless women to their hallway doors, a female employee of the Department of Student Housing complained that the pictures created a hostile working environment. Templin's hall director asked the residents to remove the pictures, but the residents claim that they are justified in putting whatever they choose on their doors.
This simply is not true.
When these Templin residents signed their residence hall contracts, they agreed to abide by residence hall rules. Student Housing guidelines forbid door decorations that are offensive by University guidelines. University guidelines prohibit actions of a sexual nature that create a hostile working environment.
Furthermore, residents' doors technically are part of the hallway. The hallway is a public area, not a private room. Accordingly, the hall director has the authority to control public areas within the hall. But residents may display pictures of nude women on the walls within their rooms if they choose.
Common courtesy suggests that the residents simply display the pictures inside their rooms and respect the feelings of the female employee. No justifiable reason exists for displaying these pictures outside rather than inside their rooms.
These Templin residents are refusing to cooperate out of stubbornness. Templin residents would be wise to choose their battles more carefully. A battle about bare-chested women is not worth anyone's time or effort.
COLLEEN MCCAIN FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Awareness decreases holiday drunken driving
Mixing drinking and driving this holiday season is a reliable way to ruin a joyous time of the year.
Deaths from alcohol-related accidents have declined from 22,084 in 1990 to 17,699 in 1992. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the number of traffic deaths attributed to alcohol decreased as a result of tougher law enforcement and increased awareness.
To raise consciousness of the dangers of the forthcoming season, groups like GAMMA, Greeks Advocating Mature Management of Alcohol, and PARTY, Promote Alcohol Responsibility Through You, encourage students to resist the temptation to drive while intoxicated. Last week, GAMMA set up a table in front of Wescoe Hall and distributed red ribbons to students. By accepting the red ribbon, students pledged not to drink and drive during the holiday weeks. GAMMA hopes that the display of red ribbons will show other people that college students disagree with the dangerous practice of mixing alcohol and driving.
PARTY will have a table in the Kansas Union on Wednesday and Thursday. They will encourage students to sign pledge cards promising not to drink and drive during the holiday season, or until January 1. Students can also get pictures of Santa, and there will be a list of the top ten reasons for being a designated driver.
These efforts are to be applauded and are one small step in reducing alcohol-related traffic accidents and the tremendous cost these accidents impose on the health care system.
TOM GRELINGER 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
Assistant to the editor ... J.R. Clairborne
News ... Stacy Friedman
Editorial ... Terrilyn McCormick
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Kristi Fogler
Photo ... Kip Chin, Renee Kneeber
Features ... Erza Wolfe
Graphics ... John Paul Fogel
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ... Ed Schager
Regional sales mgr ... Jennifer Perrier
National sales mgr ... Jennifer Evanson
Co-op sales mgr ... Blythe Focht
Production mgr ... Jennifer Blowey
Kate Burgess
Marketing director ... Shelly McConnell
Creative director ... Brian Fuoco
Classified mgr ... Janice Davis
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and homeetown, or faculty or staff position. Guest columns should be class and double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
photographed the right to insert or edit letters, text columns and cartons. Then you
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LET'S FIGURE OUT WHAT'S WRONG WITH THIS THING
Painted roving cows could provide tax help
It is pathetic but true that we Americans hardly ever think about agriculture. We walk into a restaurant and order a hamburger, and we rarely stop to ask ourselves: Where, exactly, did this hamburger come from? And did everybody involved wash his hands?
Yes, too many of us take agriculture for granted, failing to realize that, without it, there would be virtually nothing to do in, for example, Nebraska. That is why today I am going to devote yet another column to an extremely important facet of agriculture: the cow facet. We'll start with a
TROUBLING COW-PRODUCT
ADVERTISEMENT
This advertisement, which was brought to my attention by readers Gloria Bell and Betty Hermsmeyer, appeared on pages 10 and 11 of the February 1993 issue of Beef Today magazine. If you foolishly threw your copy away, I urge you to rush out to the landfill and dig around until you locate it, because this is a fascinating advertisement. It's for a product called "Safe-Guard," which is used to de-worm cows (the headline states: "It pays to question your dewormer"). There's a large color photograph of two men, clad in overalls and billed caps, standing behind the rear end of a cow (the cow's face is not shown, and you will see why). The men look normal and sane, except for one thing: One of them has much of his right arm inside the rear end of the cow. The man does not appear to be at all concerned about this. He's not even looking at the cow. His head is turned casually toward the other man, and he's saying something, perhaps: "I'm afraid I can't go bowling tonight, Ted. There's a cow on my arm." Or "Hey! I found my dentures!"
I wrote to the manufacturer of Safeguard. Hoechst-Roussel Agri-Vet Co., asking what was going on in this pic.
COLUMNIST
DAVE
BARRY
ture. I got a letter back from a veterinarian; he explained that the man in the picture is "palpating" the cow to find out if it's pregnant. Apparently this is a perfectly legitimate veterinary procedure, although I imagine there are serious risks if you don't know exactly what you're doing.
MOB LEADER: We caught this varmint palpatin' out at Jess Fooper's place!
SHERIFF. What seems to be the trouble, boys?
VOICES IN MOB: Yeah! He's a palpator!
SHERIFF. But that's a perfectly legitimate veterinary procedure!
MOB LEADER: He was palpatin' a BULL.
SHERIFF: String him up.
VOICES IN MOB: Let's palpate him first!
--words so as to "create a new text." I think this is a terrific idea, and I believe that the government should seriously consider using wandering painted cows to generate the instructions for filling out federal tax forms. I bet cows would do a MUCH better job than whoever is doing this now (my guess is hamsters).
Meanwhile, out in Pinedale, Wyo.,
we have a situation involving:
ARTISTS PAINTING ON COWS
You may have heard about this. Three artists got a $4,000 grant, some of which came from the federal government, to paint words from a pioneer woman's diary on the sides of live cows. I am not making this up. The idea was that the cows, with the words on their sides, would wander around and poop on symbolic representations of U.S. taxpayers.
No seriously, the idea, as explained by one of the artists, was that the wandering cows would scramble the
nnn
COW-PART SPILLS IN MARIETTA,
OHIO
Speaking of government action, it is clearly time to do something about.
I have here several issues of the Marietta Times, sent to me by a reader named Sheri Fleagle. These issues contain a series of front-page stories — with headlines such as DUMPED ON AGAIN! and NEW SPILL NO JOKE — concerning an epidemic of trucks spilling loads of cow parts on the highways in and around Marietta. There are large, vivid color photographs, including one with a caption saying, "Street Superintendent Richard 'Moose' Mayer removes cow parts from Washington Street," and another one captioned, "Cow heads and feet along Muskingum Road" (this one is directly over a headline that says, CLINTON WORKS ON HIS IMAGE).
In a strongly worded editorial, the Times came out foursquare against cow parts on the road. I could not agree more. The people who do this should be arrested and thrown into prison, unless of course it turns out that they are artists, in which case they should be given federal grants. The important thing is that SOME-THING must be done if we are to maintain our quality of life in this great nation, a nation in which all people have the absolute and fundamental right to question their de-wormers.
Dave Barry is a syndicated columnist with the Miami Herald.
COLUMNIST
VAL
HUBER
Sexual misfits are pop icons of the'90s
In the beginning there was that little Fisher girl, Amy, and the Buttafuccos, Joey and poor, faithful Mary Joe. Then, more recently, we got to know the Bobbitts, John Wayne and the infamous Lorena. You would think that reports of their exploits would have come and gone. Instead, they are the recipients of one of our country's highest accolades: Pop Ion status.
All have become what we both fear and love. They are the Sexual Superheroes of the '90s.
I keep wondering why these people keep garnering double-page spreads in normally newsworthy magazines like Newsweek. Once upon a time, this was the stuff of the tabloid press. Is it our morbid fascination with the bizarre? Or, in these AIDS-ridden times, did these five live out our own unachievable fantasies? Or could it be that they represent a microcosm of modern-day society? In one instance, we find the brutal victimization of women, in the other, an example of cutting the intergender playing field down to size.
Actually, I think it was the movie
actuates.
Let's face it, we had Drew Barrymore prancing, wriggling and giggling out all the juicy details of the "Long Island Lolita" more daring escapades. If we didn't like Drew's version, we had a second. Why ever bother reading Nabakov?
While "Cutting Through the Thick of it," or "an inch or a Mile: The Search for John's Penis Envy" (my own working titles) haven't been put into production yet, rumor has it that Madonna is hoping to play Lorena Bobbitt.
Producers are still desperately searching for someone, anyone to play John Wavne Bobbitt.
I guess the long and (in Bobbitt's case) the short of it is that if it's well, scandalous, can be construed to represent truth, justice and the American way, and is all (well mostly) true, we will watch it, read it and talk about it with Phil and Orah.
Gone are the days of Lady Chatterly's Lover and Wuthering Heights. Sadly, we just don't need them anymore. The nonfiction versions, while not as well written and much less developed, thrust us into the story with live action video.
But at least we don't have to worry about any dreary sequel. Eventually, the Bobbits, Buttafuococcs and Amy Fishers will recede from the collective memory.
Unless... No, it would never happen.
But then again, with both Amy and Joey in the big house... I can see it now:
"Prison Child: The Last Buttafuoco."
Kind of has a nice ring to it don't you think?
Vat Huber is a Lawrence graduate student in Journalism.
Column about gays appalling to reader
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Enough is enough! I have had enough of Patrick Dilley. The political correctness movement on this campus has gone so far that people can no longer express their feelings without asking first: Who will this offend?
I cannot say that I am totally devoid
of homophobia. But I can say that I am comfortable enough with my masculinity to allow homosexuals to go about their business as freely as I enjoy going about mine.
The Kansan has chosen to place the interests and values of the homosexual community above the concerns of other students at the University, and I am appalled. Whatever happened to opposing viewpoints
that are supposed to be the mainstay of objective reporting? Honestly, if you people can't find anything better to do with your editorial space, let me suggest selling it to local merchants for advertising space and at least earning a little money for the amount of paper you waste everyday on ridiculous articles like "conference crush" and Dilley's past experience as an AIDS activist!
University of Mars
Because you don't believe in printing anything that might be considered "incorrect," I don't expect to see this in the paper. But I felt something had to be said on behalf of the heterosexual majority here at the University who are smothering under this blanket of "politically correct" journalism.
John Colfax Lenexa senior
Man, I studied all night for this test. What about you?
I didn't study at all. Ya see...
I don't need to study because I've figured out a system to "ace" these bubble tests" It's all mathematical mumba umba.
A mathematical formula, if you will. You probably would wouldn't be able to grasp the concept if I told you. But I will tell you this: With my system I'm guaranteed an "A"
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by Joel Francke
Vola, Instant + "A".
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That's just because you're looking in the math don't
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1
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, December 6, 1993
Flawed Hubble solar panel junked
Spacewalk second longest for NASA
The Associated Press
SPACE CENTER, Houston—NASA officials decided yesterday to jettison the bent solar panel on the Hubble Space Telescope after trying, and failing, to roll it up for stowage on the trip home.
After two spacewalkers remove the panel overnight, astronaut Kathryn Thornton will hold it overhead and simply allow it to drift away.
The panel will join some 7,000 pieces of space junk until it eventually is drawn into the atmosphere and burns up.
The decision came hours after two astronauts made the first repairs on the telescope overnight, replacing failed parts and latching a misaligned access door.
9 Jeffrey Hoffman and Story Musgrave accomplished all their tasks—installing two pairs of gyroscopes, two gyroscope electronic units and eight fuses. Everything they put in worked.
But they were stymied by the doors to the compartment containing the gyroscopes. At one point, there was a one-inch gap between the two halves of one latch.
After more than two hours of work, Hoffman and Musgrave closed all four latches.
The spacewalk lasted 7 hours and 45 minutes — one hour and 54 minutes more than planned — and was NASA's second-longest spacewalk. The longest one, conducted during a satellite capture last year, was eight hours and 29 minutes.
"We're real pleased with the way things went," said shuttle commander Richard Covey. "It looks like anytime you can declare victory on (space-walk) day 1, then you're doing pretty well."
Yesterday's spacewalk was the first of five outings to restore Hubble to full vision and fix other problems. Today, Tom Akers and Thornton will replace Hubble's shaky solar panels, one of which was bent.
In the five days of cargo bay activities, the spacewalkers have 11 parts to install on the $1.6 billion telescope, including the two pairs of gyroscopes. Yesterday's efforts restored three of the telescope's six gyroscopes, which had failed.
Hubble's biggest problem is its primary mirror. A manufacturing error caused the telescope to be launched in April 1990 with an improperly ground mirror; NASA did not discover the problem until two months later.
Hoffman worked on the 43-foot-long Hubble from the end of Endeavour's robot arm.
Musgrave acted as a free floater to help in the tasks.
THE NEWS in brief
WASHINGTON
Murphy Brown speech raised important family issues, Clinton states
President Clinton says Dan Quayle wasn't all wrong -when he raised questions about too many children being born out of wedlock in his memorable speech attacking television character Murphy Brown.
In two interviews this week, Clinton said the former vice president had "a lot of good things" to say in the speech during the 1992 campaign in which he attacked the fictional Murphy Brown for becoming a single mother.
"I read the whole (Quayle) speech," said Clinton in an interview with Tom Brokaw shown Friday night on NBC. "I... I thought there were a lot of very good things in that speech."
Although Clinton said he thought Quagle "got too cute" by attacking a popular television character, "it is certainly true that this country would be much better off if our babies were born into two-parent families."
2. In a separate interview with Newsweek, Clinton expressed similar thoughts.
Again recalling the Quayle speech, which was widely criticized at the time, Clinton said, "There were a lot of very good things in that speech. ... Wouldn't we be a better-off
The interview will appear in *Newsweek*'s Dec. 13 issue, which goes on newsstands today.
society if the babies in this country were born to married couples? You bet we would."
KANSAS CITY, Mo.
Rains may delay winter flights
KANSAS CITY. Mo.
Heavy summer rains delayed construction of one runway at Kansas City International Airport and forced the closure of another, and American Airlines is worried that will mean longer delays this winter.
Local and federal aviation officials said air traffic won't be affected by the runway delay.
But a spokesman for American, which has 17 daily departures from the airport, disagrees.
"If you get a heavy snowfall, then you are going to look at much longer delays, possibly a half-hour," said John Hotard. American representative in Fort Worth, Texas.
5
Soggy soil delayed construction of a new north-south runway, which crosses the east-west runway. The construction forced the closure of the east-west runway in May, leaving only one existing runway fully operational.
A section of the new runway is now operational only in good weather and favorable visibility conditions, an airport official said.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
CANCUN SPRING BREAK'94
From $559** per person March 18-25
Spaces are limited
- Roundtrip airfare between Kansas City and Cancun International Airports
- 7 nights hotel accommodations at either the Kin Hau Cancun Hotel or comparable, or the first class Calinda Beach Hotel or comparable based on 4 people sharing one room
- Roundtrip transportation between the Cancun international Airport and your hotel
* All Mexican value added hotel taxes and gratuities
- College Tours representatives on site in Cancun to see to the needs of tour members
- Carlson Travel Network/Sunflower Travel Service travel packet including airline, ground transportation and hotel vouchers, luggage tags, and final instructions
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4.
6
Monday. December 6,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
FROM THE DIRECTOR OF THE PLAYER
SHORT CUTS(R)
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FROM THE DIRECTOR OF THE PLAYER
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SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY
The results reflected disillusion in former East Germany with unkept promises of swift prosperity after Germany's two halves reunited in 1990.
The balloting in Brandenburg state, which surrounds Berlin, was closely watched across Germany as an indication of the mood in the troubled east ahead of next year's state and federal elections.
POTSDAM, Germany — Chancellor Helmut Kohl's party suffered a big defeat yesterday in the first electoral test after German unification, losing to the opposition Social Democrats in an eastern state.
Pancho's
The Associated Press
The Associated Press
Vote shows Germans' growing disillusionment
Where the Jayhawk goes for Homestyle Mexican Food
The state's 1.9 million voters chose mayors and councils in four cities and 1,700 towns yesterday.
Explosion at Lenin statue may send Yeltsin message
MOSCOW — An explosion toppled a statue of Lenin in Russia's North Ossetia province yesterday, a day before President Boris Yeltsin was scheduled to visit the restive region.
711 W 23rd in the Malls Shopping Center
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The blast in Vladikavak may be a message of defiance to Yeltsin, who arrives today.
The area, part of the Russian northern Caucuses, is a center of resistance to Yeltsin's draft constitution. Local leaders say it would not give the region enough autonomy from Moscow.
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
Last August, explosives damaged the bronze statue of Vladimir Lenin, the founder of the Soviet state that oppressed some ethnic groups in the Caucasus.
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This time the blast brought his likeness down and shattered windows in nearby houses.
Hong Kong and China tussle over future,political reforms
Bv Marcus Ellason
The Associated Press
HONG KONG — Hong Kong has hit a jarring pothole on the road to 1997.
Beijing promptly replied that anything done without its approval would doom the Anglo-Chinese talks on the political future of the British colony, which will revert to China in 1997.
But the reforms unveiled Thursday are only the least controversial ingredients of Patten's overall design. Once he gets around to the more sweeping changes, things could get much rougher.
The latest round of Anglo-Chinese acrimony began Thursday when Gov. Chris Patten declared that China had exhausted his patience and he was going ahead with electoral reforms whether Beijing liked it or not.
China also faces dilemmas. It is preoccupied with the succession to senior leader Deng Xiaoping, who is 89; has a huge financial stake in Hong Kong; and recognizes that the transfer of sovereignty will work only with Britain's cooperation.
Given Hong Kong's role as a world financial hub and a key bank roller of China's enormous economic growth, every pothole jars its nerves.
China has fashioned its own body of law to govern the territory and may see Patten's proposals as "upsetting the fundamentals of the structure," said Professor Yash Ghal, a constitutional expert at the University of Hong Kong.
Britain realizes that trouble with Hong Kong could endanger its share of the Chinese economic bonanza.
--our new location!
ANALYSIS
China has undertaken to keep Hong Kong autonomous and capitalist for 50 years.
The argument is essentially about whether pro-democracy or pro-Beijing forces will command a majority in the legislature. Patten's proposals, to broaden the electoral roll and create single-seat constituencies, tend to favor democrats.
The dispute mirrors a broader one. To the British, parliamentary democracy is the natural route for Hong Kong, but China's communist leaders see things differently.
Possibly the Chinese fear that, unless they make a strong show of blocking Fatton, other provinces of China will be emboldened to demand the same deal as Hong Kong's.
The Chinese suspicions were voiced Friday by Wen Wei Po, a Hong Kong newspaper under Beijing's control, which accused Britain of trying to keep a foothold in post-1997 Hong Kong. Patten, it said, was attempting "to cultivate anti-China, pro-British forces who will manipulate the Legislative Council."
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1
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, December 6, 1993
7
North Korea plan OKs some nuclear facility inspections
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — North Korea can be dissuaded from building nuclear weapons, Vice President Al Gore said yesterday, adding that North Korea must see that the world is determined to keep it non-nuclear.
Gore, speaking on NBC's "Meet the Press," acknowledged that it was difficult to predict the actions of the isolated regime but that it was "most unlikely" that the dispute about North Korea's nuclear program would lead to war.
"I think that it's very likely that the world will find a way to deal with this problem. But North Korea should not misunderstand or underestimate the resolve of the world community," he said.
It is a difficult problem, Gore said, and "our basic roadmap for dealing with it is to do everything we can to explore the possibility that North Korea does not want to build nuclear weapons and to try to persuade them not to do so."
He said that economic sanctions remain an option if North Korea refuses to open up its facilities to inspections, and the administration is working "in a deliberative and careful and determined way" to ensure the cooperation of China and other countries in whatever steps are taken.
"We'll have more discussions among ourselves tomorrow," and that it would be "premature to make a shift in our approach right now," he said.
Gore said there were "some good things" and "some bad things" about a recent North Korean proposal that would allow limited international inspection of its nuclear facilities.
He said the administration was "in the midst of studying this very carefully."
Administration sources said North Korea was willing to permit the International Atomic Energy Agency to resume inspections of some facilities but had refused the U.S. demand that it revive talks with South Korea on denuclearization of the Korean peninsula.
The CIA believes North Korea may have enough nuclear material for one or two weapons. The country denies having a nuclear weapons program but has barred full inspection by the atomic energy agency.
A document, issued by the Vatican on Saturday, provides guidelines on how to integrate Church of England members, including the "exceptional circumstances" of married priests. The priests were ordained in a faith that allowed marriage and sexual relations.
Vatican may accept clergy who leave Anglican church
The Church of England decided last year to allow women priests. Over 30 Anglican clergymen have quit in protest.
The Associated Press
VATICAN CITY — Vatican leaders and British clergy met Friday to discuss plans for accepting Anglican clergy—including married priests—who leave their church to protest its decision to ordain women.
The document was released as Pope John Paul II lauded efforts to fight discrimination against women and racial minorities.
The Associated Press
Weekend earthquakes shake Oregon, Alaska
KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. — Earthquakes caused moderate damage in Alaska and Oregon this weekend.
The quake struck about 2:20 p.m. and measured 5.4 on the Richter scale, said Pat Jorgenson of the U.S. Geological Survey in Menlo Park, Calif.
The earthquake heavily damaged at least one building in Klamath Falls, Ore., Saturday afternoon, witnesses said. There were no immediate reports of injuries.
In Alaska, an earthquake rattled Prudhoe Bay on the coast of the Arctic Ocean early Saturday. A smaller earthquake shook the central Aleutian Islands only hours later.
The quake measured 5.7 on the Richter scale, said Guy Urban, a representative for the Alaska Tsunami Warning Center.
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The earthquake occurred at 5:12 a.m. and was centered 60 miles southeast of Prudhoe Bay, at the foot of the Brooks mountain range.
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1
8
Monday. December 6. 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
"Your Book Professionals"
Jayhawk
Bookstore
"At the top of Naismith Hill"
Hrs: 8-7 M-Th., 8-5 Fri.
9-5 Sat. 12-4 Sun.
843-3826
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December brings variety of holidays, celebrations
By Christoph Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
For most University of Kansas students, December means receiving presents and celebrating Christmas.
Hanukkah is the celebration of the Jews' victory against the Syrians. After defeating the Syrians, the Jews returned to find their temple destroyed. They could find only enough oil to light the temple candle, the Menorah, for one day. But instead of one day, the oil lasted eight days.
But Christmas is not the only religious holiday celebrated by students during December.
Hanukkah will begin at sundown Wednesday and end at sundown Dec. 15.
During Hanukkah, one of eight candles on the Menorah is lit each day for eight days signifying the victory, which is why Hanukkah also is called the festival of lights.
Markc said students who wanted to light a Menorah could do so during Hanukkah at the Hillel House.
Markc said she did not mind the constant attention given to Christmas but would prefer not to see so much of it on campus.
"There is a constitutional separation of church and state," she said. "I would not want to force my religious beliefs on somebody else for any reason."
Although Hanukkah occurs at the same time as Christmas, other religious holidays do not occur during the same time of the year.
Another holiday celebrated during December is Kwanzaa, which is not a religious holiday. Kwanzaa, an African-American holiday founded in 1965, is a celebration of cultural heritage and the recognition of political accomplishments of African Americans, said Sherwood Thompson,
Kwanzaa was formed by Ron Karen- ga, who is now a professor of Pan-African studies at San Diego University.
director of minority affairs.
Kwanzaa begins Dec. 26 and ends Jan.1.
Thompson said for each day during Kwanzaa, a social affirmation was celebrated. They are:
Umoja—unity.
Ujamaa cooperative economics.
Nia — purpose
■ Kujichagulia — self-determination.
Kuumba—creativity.
Imani - faith.
Ujima — collective work and responsibility.
City ponders public transportation
Although Kwanzaa was created for African Americans, Thompson said the celebration was open to people of all races.
"That's what it's all about — it's a unifying holiday," he said.
3 groups offer plans for expanded service
By Tracl Carl
Kansan staff writer
Getting around town may be easier for low-income, disabled and elderly Lawrence residents next year if one of three transportation proposals is approved by the City Commission.
Three groups submitted proposals last month for a $100,000 federal grant to improve and expand public transportation in Lawrence. The commission should receive an analysis of the proposals later this month.
The proposals all coordinate existing transportation facilities to offer more efficient transportation.
The Douglas County Community Transportation Coordinating Council, Inc., proposed a brokerage system, which would set up a central office to coordinate existing transportation systems such as the Lawrence Bus Co. and Independence, inc., which operates transportation for elderly residents. If approved, the
proposal would begin March 15.
Patricia Weaver, chairperson of the council and associate research scientist at the KU Transportation Center, said the brokerage would give all residents single access to all of Lawrence's transportation services.
"It would help link the potential rider to the service needed," she said. "We want to make it really easy for people to access specialized service."
The proposal would integrate the general public into the specialized transportation systems. The service would cost $5 for a full fare. Elderly, low-income and disabled individuals would pay $1 for each one-way trip.
Under the proposal, the Lawrence Bus Company would provide a liftvan for extended hours. Riders would be required to make reservations 24 hours in advance to ride in the van that can seat many.
Specialized Transportation Services of the Lawrence Bus Company in Merriam made a proposal that also would use a central dispatcher. The proposal also requires 24-hour advance notice for all rides.
The proposal aims to implement a system that provides $2 rides for residents who do not have access to cars or public transportation. Its goal is to begin services Jan. 2. Rides would cost $5.50. Riders who qualify for a subsidy would pay $2.75 and the rest would be paid for out of the $100,000 federal grant.
The third proposal was made by A-1 Cise Cab, Inc. It proposed purchasing and operating a lift van. Like the other two proposals, it would designate a coordinator who would organize the city's existing transportation systems and make them more efficient, said Paul Shackelford, president of the company. The proposal would be operational within 21 days of approval.
"The problem we have seen in the past is disorganization and misuse of equipment," Shackelford said. "It should be done on a share-ride basis where you can pick up multiple passengers."
Shackelford said he was offering the proposal because the city needed a better organized transportation system that would respond immediately to each rider's request and on a fixed-route or advance-notice basis.
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4
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, December 6, 1993
9
Windy City blows victory Jayhawks' way
Blue Demons fall after halftime lead
By Mark Button Kansan sportswriter
ROSEMONT. Ill. — What a week.
After losing to the Australian National team in an exhibition game 93-82 in double overtime and Temple 79-59, the Jayhawks on Saturday defeated DePaul 79-74 at Rosemont Horizon in Chicago, capping a turbulent week of basketball.
Kansas waited until the last moment, 9:35 p.m. Saturday to be exact, to turn things around for itself.
It was then, the beginning of the second half with a 40-30 Blue Demon lead, that the Jayhawks began to play with intensity.
"The ship wasn't sinking, but it was sure toddling over," Kansas coach Roy Williams said. "We were tentative. You can't play basketball and not be aggressive. I told them that I've never had a team that was not an aggressive team."
But before 9:35 p.m. Saturday, it looked like he did.
Last Monday in Kansas "glorified practice" against Australia, Williams said that he purposefully played team members in situations that he would not in a real game.
"The only way you get depth is by playing it," Williams said.
The result was nervous play from inexperienced players and a defeat.
After a practice Tuesday, Kansas played host to Temple on Wednesday.
It wasn't even close.
**I'll miss even though.**
Williams said that before the game he felt the team was lethargic. The Owls, on the other hand, received 40 minutes of intense play by seniors guard Aaron McKie and forward Eddie Jones and junior Rick Brunson.
The three combined for 67 of their team's 73 points.
"We didn't have the spark," said Kansas junior center Greg Ostertag. "We weren't thinking, and things weren't clicking."
After resting Thursday, Kansas flew to Chicago on Friday to prepare for DePaul. Saturday at 8:38 p.m., DePaul won the tip.
They also won the first half.
Using a seldom-used zone defense, DePaul did basically what Temple did — shut down
the inside and made Kansas shoot from the perimeter. It worked.
After trading baskets with Kansas for the first 12 minutes of the first half, DePaul caught fire. With 7:35 left in the first half, DePaul led 20-19. The Blue Demons, led by sophomore forward Brandon Cole, then went on a 11-0 run before taking the 10-point lead into the locker room. Cole scored 14 of his 21 points in the first half.
Kansas shot just 32 percent in the first 20 minutes, including a meager 2-for-9 from behind the three-point arc. On the inside, Ostertag and senior forward Richard Scott combined for a 4-for-11 shooting mark.
So just what happened at halftime to spark the 49-point second half?
What happened was the seniors spoke to the team while the coaches stood in the hall.
"We told them to be aggressive," senior guard Steve Woodberry said. "I said 'If you want to shoot it, shoot it.'"
So, at 9:35 p.m., the Jayhawks began to play what might have been their best 20 minutes of basketball this season.
The surge found its power from the typical place — a senior.
Woodberry decided to put the ball up in the second half. He did it 11 times. Seven of the shots, including a career-best five three-pointers, found net.
Woodberry's first two three-pointers, which came within 30 seconds of each other, sliced the Blue Demon lead to 44-38. Then — after a Scott field goal, a three-point play by Ostertag, a layup by Woodberry and another free throw by Ostertag — Woodberry's third gave the Jayhawks a 53-51 lead with 12:13 remaining, despite DePaul scoring three times during the run.
Junior guard Greg Gurley did.
"I have a lot of confidence in my shooting abilities, and I hoped some of it would rub off on them," said Woodberry, who scored 23 points, 21 of which came in the second half. "I was being aggressive and hoped everyone would follow my lead."
Two minutes after Kansas took the lead, Gurley's only field goal attempt of the night swished through the cords to the thundereous applause of the more than 2,000 Kansas fans that joined the other 10,000 at Rosemont.
DePaul hung tough, though. With 3:44 remaining, the Jayhawks were clinging to a 71-68 lead.
However, Scott finessed a layup while being fouled, converted the free throw and Kansas pulled away.
There was more significance to Scott's three-point play than just breaking the backs of a scrappy DePaul team. The free throw was Scott's 1,000th point as a Jav Hawk.
"It means a great deal to me," Scott said. "It's nice to know that I'll be remembered as one of the better players at Kansas and an offensive threat."
One of the better is right. Scott is just the 30th player to reach the 1,000-point plateau in the history of Kansas basketball.
By the numbers Kansas 79, DePaul 74
Player ftm/fta ftm/ta tp
Pearson 2-10 0-0 4
Scott 6-11 1-4 13
Ostertag 3-6 2-4 8
Vaughn 0-4 0-0 0
Woodberry 8-16 2-2 23
Richey 3-5 2-2 10
Pollard 5-7 1-3 11
Rayford 2-6 1-2 5
Gurley 1-1 0-0 3
Williams 0-0 0-0 0
Proud 0-1 2-2 2
Totals 30-67 11-19 79
DePaul
Kleinschmidt 6-11 6-9 20
Hill 3-5 0-0 6
Ravizie 2-3 4-4 8
Cole 8-18 1-2 21
Parks 1-7 0-0 2
Macon 0-0 0-0 0
Curie 0-0 0-0 0
Bowden 3-6 0-1 6
Austin 0-0 0-0 0
Singer 1-2 0-0 3
Patton 2-5 2-2 8
Totals 26-57 13-18 74
Heftime DePaul 40 Kansas 30
*point goals* 8-20 (Woodyd berry 5-8, Richley 3-2, Gurley 1-1, Rayford 2-O, Pearson 4-O), DePaul 9-19 (Cole 4-10, Kleischmidt 2-3, Patton 3-2, Singer 1-2, Poke 0-1)
Rebounds Kansas 39 (Pollard 8), DePaul 38
(Kleinschmidt, Cole 8), Asalsit Kansas 19 (Ray-
ford 8), DePaul 19 (Kleinschmidt 5).
Toothfouls Kansas 19.
Attendance 12,000.
KANSAN
SCOTT
34
MACUN
0
Senior forward Richard Scott shoots a jump shot over DePaul junior Will Macon. The Jayhawks won the game 79-74 Saturday.
Big Eight discusses conference merger
The Associated Press
According to unidentified sources, the new league would include: the Western Athletic Conference's Brigham Young University; the Big Eight Conference and the SWC's Baylor, Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech, Rice, University of Houston, Southern Methodist and Texas Christian.
HOUSTON — Athletic directors from several Southwest Conference and Big Eight schools are discussing a new conference with membership conditions that could exclude up to four SWC schools, the Houston Chronicle reported yesterday.
But the Chronicle reported that guidelines for the new league may be so expensive that four SWC schools—Houston, Rice, SMU and TCU—could be priced out of the competition.
However, members of this new league would be given several years to meet the requirements.
Jayhawks clean up in Dial Soap Classic
"This is a solid option," one athletic director told the newspaper. "I certainly wouldn't say it's pie in the skv. It's a viable option."
While discussions are in the preliminary stages, more formal proposals could be prepared within the next 90 davs.
"There will be a lot more discussion at the NCAA Convention," one source said. "A lot of people think this is going to hit in February."
The NCAA Convention in San Antonio, Texas, is Jan. 8-12.
Those involved in the discussions deny that the concept is a merger.
"This would hot be a merger," one source said. "This would be a new league, not a merger of the two."
Several athletic directors insisted that the new league was just one option. SWC and Big Eight members, they said, still could consider an alliance between the leagues, membership in other leagues or the current format.
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
Freshman guard Angie Halbleib had a memorable debut in Allen Field House this weekend as the Jayhawks won the Dial Soap Basketball Classic '93. She scored 28 points Friday night to help No. 15 Kansas, 4-0, defeat Oral Roberts University 94-66 and scored another 22 against Central Michigan in the 81-65 game victory Saturday.
Against Central Michigan, Halbleib hit six of 14 three-point shots and broke the school record for three point attempts in a game, which was set last season at 12 by Shannon Kite. Her six three pointers left her one shy of the school single-game record for three-point baskets.
"I didn't even know about the record until after the game," Halbleib said.
94
Kansas coach Marian Washington said that she thought that Halbleib — the tournament MVP — had the potential to be one of the best shooters in the country.
"What you saw tonight was what we saw when we recruited her," Washington said after the Western Michigan game.
The team needed Hallebib's hot shooting in the first half, as the team shot only 39 percent from the floor. Central Michigan suffered from even colder shooting, hitting only 21 percent of its shots from the field, helping Kansas to build a 42-16 halftime lead.
Doug Hesse/KANSAN
The Jayhawks outscored the Chippews 30-11 in the first 14 minutes of the second half. Central Michigan made a small run late in the second half but were never able to cut Kansas' lead to less than 13.
"When you get ahead by so many points you tend to relax a little," said junior guard Angela Avcock.
Aycock finished with 14 points, 10 rebounds and was named to the all-tournament team. The difference for the Jayhawks was the play of Halbleib and freshman forward Jennifer Trapp.
Freshman guard Angie Halbleib dribbles around the Chippewa's Natalie Thompkins. Halbleib, who set a school record for the most three-point attempts made in a single game, was named tournament MVP.
Trapp averaged 14 points and seven rebounds in the tournament. The Lawrence native said that she enjoyed playing at home.
"It's really great seeing people you know in the stands." Trapp said. She said that many of the team's freshmen were still adjusting to college play, but that she enjoyed the faster pace of the college game. "It's definitely rough underneath." Trapp said.
One of the areas that concerns Washington is the number or turnovers that have plagued the team throughout the young season. The Jayhawks had 26 turnovers against Oral Roberts and 23 against Central Michigan.
"With young players they are going to make some mistakes," Washington said. "We just want to get the freshmen some confidence early."
Washington said that the freshman would be crucial to the team's early success because of injuries to junior forward Alana Slatter and senior guard Michelle Leathers. Slatter has not played all season because of a knee injury, and Leathers has been out with a back injury. Leathers' playing status is questionable for Wednesday's 7 p.m. game against Morgan State at Allen Field House. Washington said Slatter's status will be game-to-game.
"Leathers' situation will be a chronic problem this season," Washington said. "We're really going to need the younger players to step up for us."
By the numbers
Kansas 81, Central Michigan 65
Player fgm/fga ftm/ta tp
Aycock 4-10 6-8 14
Trapo 5-10 5-8 15
Tate 2-7 0-2 4
Halbleib 7-15 2-2 22
Dixon 3-7 1-3 8
Muncy 2-5 2-2 6
Sampson 4-12 2-3 11
Canada 0-2 1-2 1
Totals 27-68 19-30 81
Central Michigan
Ritz 6-15 0-0 14
Thompkins 8-22 6-10 22
Evans 0-0 0-0 0
Claar 4-9 1-2 10
Renken 5-11 2-2 12
Taylor 1-4 0-0 2
Ritter 0-6 3-5 3
Bumside 1-1 0-0 2
Robinson 0-0 0-0 0
Totals 25-68 12-19 65
Halftime Kansas 42, Central Michigan 16
3-point goals Kansas 8-20 (Hableble 16,
Dixon 14, Isona 1, Sampson 1.5) Central
Michigan 3-11 (Ritz 2.8, Clear 1.3)
Rebounds Kansas 51 (Sampson 12),
Central Michigan 42 (Thompkins 14).
Assists Kansas 13 (Aycock 7), Central
Michigan 11 (Thompkins, Clear 3).
Total fouls Kansas 17, Central Michi-
gan 21.
Attendance 550
KANSAN
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Flight Instruction Scholarship
The Willis A. Waas 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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*navc at least 5 hours of dual instruction time logged (attach a copy of navc from lookbook)
*be enrolled at least 50% time at the Lawrence campus
Applications available at Aerospace Engineering Department 2004 Learned Hall * 864-4267
10
Monday, December 6, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Chiefs get victory against Seahawks
The Associated Press
SEATTLE — Joe Montana doesn't need Jerry Rice or John Taylor anymore. He's got Marcus Allen, Derrick Thomas and Albert Lewis on his side now.
Playing in his second game since missing three games with a pulled hamstring, Montana helped the Chiefs defeat Seattle 31-16 yesterday. Allen scored three touchdowns, Thomas ran back a fumble 86 yards for a score and Lewis set up two touchdowns with takeaways.
If the 37-year-old Montana can avoid another injury this season, a fifth Super Bowl may be in his future. The AFC West-leading Chiefs, 9-3, which haven't been to the Super Bowl since 1970, are 6-1 when Montana has been healthy enough to start.
Montana has become an instant hero to Kansas City's defense. He's been a big incentive for the Chiefs to intercept passes and recover fumbles.
Kansas City went ahead 31-6 with
6:04 gone in the third quarter on Allen's 30-yard touchdown run. Allen's third touchdown was set up by Lewis' recovery of Kelvin Martin's fumble at Seattle's 47. The Chiefs scored two plays later.
Montana, a three-time Super Bowl MVP, completed 20 of 30 passes for 239 yards with no touchdowns and no interceptions. The Seahawks, 5-7, who lost to the Chiefs for the fifth straight time, knocked Montana down twice, and he showed his age once: when he tripped and fell for an 8-yard loss in the fourth quarter.
Seattle rookie quarterback Rick Mirer threw two interceptions and lost a fumble but had his best NFL passing day. He was 18 of 30 for 287 yards with no touchdowns.
Kansas City's offense did not have the ball for the first 10:45 of the second quarter but the Chiefs still led 17-6 at halftime.
On Montana's longest completion of the day, he beat cornerback Dwayne Harper with a 33-yard pass to Kimble Anders, moving the ball to the 1-yard line. Allen then scored his first touchdown.
On the Chips' next offensive series, Montana moved them 59 yards to the
Kansas City 7 9 5 0 340
Denver 7 5 0 340
Raiders 7 5 0 340
San Diego 7 5 0 340
Seattle 7 5 0 340
West
Central
AFC
NFL
Houston 8.40 4.00
Pittsburgh 7.50 2.00
Cleveland 6.60 3.10
Cincinnati 1.110 6.00
Miami 9 3.0 4.20
Buffalo 8 4.0 4.10
Cincinnati 7 4.0 5.20
Indianapolis 7 5.10
New England 11 4.0 6.0
East
Auston, 33, Atlanta 17
Chicago, 11, Greenwich 17
Indianapolis, 9, Jets 6
L.A. Raiders 25, Buffalo 24
Minnesota 13, Detroit 0
Milwaukee 14, Cleveland 17, New Orleans 13
Washington 23, Tampa Bay 17
Phoenix 38, L.A. Rams 10
San Diego 16, St. Louis 17
Kansas City 13, Miami 14
Kansas City 31, Seattle 16
San Francisco 21, Cincinnati 8
Houston 33. Atlanta 17
West
NFC
East
W L W T DIV.
San Francisco 7 1-4
New Orleans 8 -3-0
Atlanta 5 7 0 3-2
L.A. Rams 7 0 0-5-0
The University of Kansas
Central
Tonight's Game
Philadelphia at Dallas
8 p.m.
N.Y. Giants 9 3 0 5-10
Dallas 7 4 0 4-10
Philadelphia 5 6 0 4-10
Philadelphia 5 6 0 4-10
Washington 3 9 0 1-80
Detroit 7 5 0 2.40
Green Bay 7 5 0 4.20
Chicago 7 6 0 3.90
Miami 6 0 2.50
Tampa Bay 3 9 0 2.50
29, and Nick Lowery kicked a 47-yard field goal for a 10-3 lead.
Department of
Seattle's offense was on the field for 11:38 of the second quarter, but the Seahawks came up with only a field goal by John Kasay.
ble recovery returns — when Darren Mickell sacked Mirer, causing him to fumble at Kansas City's 14.
Valid Through July 31, 1994.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
Thomas got the opportunity for his third career touchdown — all on fum-
Seattle's only touchdown came on a 1-yard run by Chris Warren in the third quarter set up by a 41-yard pass, from Mirer to Blades. Kasay kicked, field goals of 22, 26 and 37 yards.
Music and Dance
A Celebration of Beethoven's Birthday featuring the
University Symphony Orchestra and Some Invited Friends
Brian Priestman, Conductor
Performing Beethoven's works for orchestra, vocal ensemble, voice, violin, piano, trombone, harp, and saxophone.
For general admission tickets, call the box office (Murphy: 913/864-3982,
Lied: 913/864-ARTS); public $3,
students $2, senior citizens $2;
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for phone orders.
7:30 p.m.
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December 8, 1993
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www.affordableluxurycondos.com
140 Lost & Found
Black Lab, puppy, found on campus, 12-03-11. Call
@41-6128
German textbook, Kaleidoscope, on 11-22-81,
from 4006 Wesco, Please call 81-1980.
Least Leather Jacket in vicinity of the Mallia.
Please call Kevin at 942-8478 for info and reward.
Men and Women
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Earn $1,00 per week at home filling orders! Free information. Please send long self addressed, stamped envelope to CJ Enterprise, Box 87306H, Cuyahoga Falls, OH 44222.
Full-time assistant manager needed immediately.
Must live on site. Call 841-8468.
- Integrate pharma staaes
- Fast growing food management company
- needs assistance in production and marketing
- brochure. Great experience and excellent salary. Call Serling Properties 865-8699
Help wanted: Hardware/Software manager, KU School of Architecture and Urban Design seeks a position description contact Uralla Stammer at 340-268-3454. Application deadline November 30, 1993.
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday, December 6, 1993
11
[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 1-383-7979.
Adams Alumni Center needs a dishwasher, A.M. & P.M., and a pantry person, A.M. Flexible hrs, positions available immediately. Apply in person at Adams Alumni Center 1266 Oread Ave.
AMIGO8
Supervisor/Assist Mgr
Supervision now - Manager later! Learn the busnea from the ground up and advance according to your own needs. Work with 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. Benefit apply now at: Amjog, 1819 W. 23rd.
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 years old. Send school graduate. Send resume/cvote to J. Warnock, Department of Ecology, sourl, Lawrence, KS 4604. Open field.
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today,$30 This week
By denoting your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W 24th 749-5750
Marketing Assistant position available at Naiasmith 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, and communications time with compensation of room and board plus stipend. Potential for full time effective July, 1994. Great resume and portfolio build to help you apply for Naiasmith Hall. You can apply at Naiasmith Hall, 1809 Naiasmith Drive, Lawrence KS, 68044. E/O.E/M.F.H/A.
Need some extra $$$ during Christmas break?
Honeybake is now hiring delivery drivers and cooks for the upcoming holiday season. Drivers must be able to lift 10 lbs., apply at Honeybake, or apply at Honeybake 249 Jawa Suite 643-8000.
Hart-time position for person with business or accounting major to show apts, answer phones, and general office work. Our car needed, must be a Kansas resident, enrolled at KU in at least 12 hours, and have a GPA of 2.0 or more. Call 841-6003 6M-F.
Part-time temporary Extension 4-H Assistant.
Assist 4-H Agent with the promotion of the 4-H Enrichment program and related work.
Required: High School Graduate and ability to
provide a preference, January 1,
17, 1994. Send resume and 3 letters of reference, by December 10 to: Dennis Beijot, Extension Director
2110 Harper, Lawrence, KS, K65046. EOE
EXPLORE CAREER OPTIONS WHILE SERVING IEWISH COMMUNITY.
Chicago area undergrads: serve the Jewish community while gaining valuable career insight! Apply
Management, Fundraising, Communications, or Human Resources. $130 stipend. For
before March 1, 1994 for an eight-week summer internship in the fields of Health Care, Social Service, Psychology/Education, Management, Fundraising, Com-
Chicago,IL 60606
312-444-2868.
tuesday Foster, fmi-CEA9;
Jewish Federation of Metropolitan
Chicago J.S. FranklinSt.
Data Entry, part time, $4.25/hour, 49.m-5p. every days a week. Two people work the work time each taking half of the days. Must have previous data entry and basic computer skills.
Prairie Room Waiter/Waitress, part time $3.00
per hour plus tip. Monday thru Friday 11a.m.
3-6pm. Must have previous food service, wait/
waitress experience.
Chelse's Helper, part time. $4.25 per hour, Monday thru Friday 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Previous food prep and gme grish experience preferred. Have must have previous food experience and be able to stand for long periods.
Apply Kansas and Burge Uniones' Personnel office. Level 5. 13th and EOE. EOW
professions students, maintaining current information for the students, processing recommended information to assist with geography schools, preparing student confidential files for evaluation by the Health Sciences Commission.
hand handling correspondence on behalf of Chief
Assistant to the School District for school
related to medical school acceptance, using
scholarship funds.
PRE-MEDICAL SECRETARY/ADMINISTRA-
TIVE ASSISTANT. Hard time graduate position
@2s a week with the proximity of
quartertime as of July 1. Responsibilities
include acting as a resource person for pre-health
students, maintaining current info-
World Perfect 1. s, and being able to perform general office duties. Above all, must have excellent interpersonal skills and ability to work independently with initiative. Prefer someone interested in long-term employment. Must be a KU graduate. Please apply and bring (or send) resume.
of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 68045, 684-367, by
Wednesday, December 8. Starting date is approx.
January 3. The University of Kansas is an AA/EO
Employer.
Restoration/maintenance positions for skilled
professionals in various areas of the
good pay. Call 841-7827 for more information.
RESUME SERVICES Professional Business
Training, Training Free initial interview. 823-100
BREAK POSITION! Inl. chain引 47-PT, FT entry level openings. Earn $9.00-
$15.00 per day. Visit www.Den.25.Can. remain PT next semester. Inlaw in Lawrence 8431-8331 or Overland Park 381-9675.
225 Professional Services
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, servicing KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 851-7749
For a confidential, caring Friend, call us
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Birthright 843-4821. Free pregnancy testing.
TRAFFIC-DUI's
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri
843-4023
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey 16 East 13th 842-1133
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
Lesbian, gay, bis- or unisex? If you need to talk to someone, call a Peer Counselor. CONFIDENTIAL. Call KU info or Headquarters.
Prompt abortion and contraceptive services. Dale L.
Clinton M.D. 841-8716.
Research Assistance - MS/MSL information specialist available to assist with term paper, theses, these.
Thesis & Dissertations
Hardbinding and Gold Stamping
3 Day Turnaround
Lawrence Printing Service, Inc.
512 E. 9th Street 843-4600
Unique resumes, cover letters, laminar prints, Post-
cards, handwritten letters. Graphic ideas, Infographics,
97/8-143-801-107
235 Typing Services
1-der Woman Word Processing, 843-2063.
24-Hour Turnaround for under 30 pages. Any size accepted. $1.25/p. Call Ruth after 5 p.m. #84-6438. A Word perfect word processing service. Laser printer. Near campus. #84-655.
Expert typing through the holidays. IBM Correct
100/sdbe double space page Call Mr. Matlia
Matali 841-213-4960
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.
cality. Any kind of typing. Call today at 841-62-
running out of it?
Let me do your TYPING!
Lazer printing to WOW! your profs.
18 years professional experience.
Accent learning.
Grammar and spelling corrected!
Call Jacki at
Makin' the Grade
865-293-7288
Word processing, applications, term paper, tissues,
reume, resume filing, composition, rush
production.
X
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
91. Schwim Impact Pro; good condition asking
$275. LM or ask for Steve 832-0275.
1. single mattress, box springs, and frame for sale.
Good condition. Must sell! Ask for Wendy Bai-
1. box springs, box springs, and frame for sale. Good condition. Must sell! Ask for Wendy Bai-
Adcom stereo power amplifier GFA-335L, $160.29
gallon fresh water aquarium complete w/stand
and accessories $150, Nice full size futon $175. Call
865-0720
Basketball coupons 4-sale (all) Will sell ASAP & will take best offer.
Beds, desks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
936 Mass.
Chow mixed baby, four months old, good health
For free. If interested contact 749-1610 after apm and
e-mail: chowmixedbaby@yahoo.com
Head skis for sola. Solomon 757 bindings only used
1 season, $175. Call Phil 841-914.
**Basketball Compatible** 286 iMm, printer. 60 mb hard drive, super VGA, sound card, and hound mouse. **Compatible with:** Kau basketball tickets for sale. Will take best offer. Call 832-4145 and leave a message.
MSE, Mac 20 mg ID, Carrying case, ImageWriter
$84.95, Cardboard games, and more.
$80.91-84.95 Ask for Dcm
Macintosh Quadras. Best prices available. Student discounts apply. 800-240-2411.
Need to sell. KX-P2123 Panasonic (color option)
printer 810, lamps, love seat, book case, book-shelves, table, chairs and miscellaneous. Call 892-4737
Neon beer signs $125. Busch Mountain wall clock $125. Call 749-748-1 at 6:00 m-th.
Pinewood Queen waterbed/matress $150
pinewood 4 drawer dresser w mirror $200 Call
866-743-8200
Cannondale SR 400 road bike with Look pedals,
exc. cord. $850/105-705
Power book 145b - 4/80 barely used 3 months old bought at n $159 asking 959. Call 749-4501.
Season Student Basketball tickets for sale. Make your best offer. 855-2302 evenings
STUDENT BASKETBALL TICKET
FOR SALE BEST OFFER 841-6429
340 Auto Sales
82 Buick Century Clean, Reliable. Make an offer
Call Angie 864-2279
1. w 2 female roommates need to sublease fully
unimited 3 DBD apt., w private bath. For Spring
sem, or sooner. 1 blk. from campus, $180/mo. Call
641-4007
1975 Buck Skylark Coupe with 327 Chev. engine, mug wheels. 800 Consider monthly) payments
86 Preclude S1. 11kHw Hiwy mi. Power sumrow & win-
drop to a new option $3. 890 Call us at 842-7890.
MUST S18K. MUSEI
SAB8' sun roof, A/C, electric mirrors 90K run
great, asking for $91. Call 842-6725.
1983 Black Jeep CJ-7, S-Speed. Hard top, new
1984 Jeep Wagoneer at $4,000. Call Oblz 3216
and leave a message.
I bedroom apt, for sublease available Jan. I only call 719-548-3601, gas付, gas on Bus Roof 719-548-3601
1981 WV Jetta, 4d. Dr. Good Condition AM-FM奏
s装备, $170 pp. obl, Call Mike 841-7795.
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
84 Prelude-S11 1998 Hwy. ml. Fire sunset and snow
all options $3,990 Call B54; 842-
WUSTLUSET MUSIC.
3 Bt ApL for Rent. Easy access to downtown, KU, and bus route. Features 24 hr maintenance, off-street parking, microwave, dishwasher, and WD. mo. Day Michelle 7418-729 Eve Stair 740-0174
370 Want to Buy
HOME
exercise equipment, downhill-skis, mountain bikes, and all sporting equipment
I Bedroom, furnished apartment, on bus route, off dh St Verv Clearly! Call 843-8719
400s Real Estate
b dbm apt. close to campus available for
rent or lease. Call 615-207-3849, furnished,
celling rooms, Cell Phone: Call 615-207-
3849.
Available at semester break, aps. in newer section of West Hills 1000 Erd Rd. 1 bapm. apt., campus kitchen. In addition to hookups, dw, microwave, fan, mini blinds, balcony, energy efficient, great location near cambridge, and UMass Boston.
1029 Mass. 841-PLAY (7529)
Available Jan 1, 1 bdm; apt on bus route Cell
749.158-366 mon-Pri. Fm.
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
very nice! Available Spring semi. Interested? Call
(718) 260-5398.
Available Jan 1 3 bdrm. ap close to campus,
Avail Date: Mon 26 Mar 2017
Georgetown
Call 852-3831 or 76-277-292
Beautiful 1 Bd unfurnished, available Jan 1.
Acad from stadium. Laundry facilities $250 +
$300 per room.
Available now nice clean apt. close to campa-
nion waderry 1726 Ohio. Ohs#. No pets.
1 8 Bdm rpm. just blocks from campus available for 2nd semester sublease. washer/dryer, dishwasher. calling fan...the works. $220 per no./person. 1138 Kibenni 865-7029. Call now.
405 For Rent
For sublease starting Jan. 1, 1994: Birchwood Gurrows, 2 bedrooms, within walking distance to RU.
For rent - spacious one bedroom apt, with hardwood floors. 841-6911.
Free Rent in exchange for part-time child care.
Flexible hours. Please mature student with some experience.
1 bdr. ap, overlooks stadium, off street parking,
subLEASE in this month-Rent Fees. Leave
until pick-up date.
3 bedroom condos with
Will place individuals and
all the amenities.
Professional women seeking N/S female Grade.
student for one bedroom, half bath in my home on West 20th. Terrace. Kitchen privileges. W/D use the room as quiet, responsible, enjoy cats. $235-$483.97
at Kansas University
Call today 843-4420.
OPEN DAILY
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
MASTERCRAFT
offers furnished
1, 2, 3, & 4 DUMP apls...
designed with you in mind!
Go to ...
Campus Place·841-1429 1145 Louisiana
Hanover Place - 841-1212 14th & Mass.
Regents Court 749-0445 1905 Mass.
MASTERCRAFT
Orchard Corners - 749-4226
15th & Kasold
Sundance - 841-5255 7th & Florida
Tanglewood - 749-2415 10th & Arkansas
Great sub-lease opportunity 141 Tennessee Large
Greater, 842-758-7693, clean, quiet, great
842-758-7693
Room to sub-lease in a large house start Jan 1st
Call 832-8749 on call. 832-8940 for Prave or 832-8749 for Ravenscroft.
842-4455
Furnished studio apartment. 2 short blocks from
Water paid. off street parking. No pets. #341-896-5700.
Spacious, sunny 1 bdr. unfurnished Apt. Apple included, Close to campus. Ceiling fan. Deck and microwave. $375/month available for sub-lease Jan 1. B41-849J.
Sublease 2 bedroom apt. at Bedwalk. Available
for $149,000. Bid: 81-164-8400.
kruet bus route, price $50, 81-164-8400.
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and
living room from KU. Off-street parking.
No petCal permit required.
Soblease 2 br. Townhouse W/D bookups and
callership. Call Harvey Phone 401-822-3500 / mci+
Callen Harvey Phone 401-822-3500
Large, bright, caye & copy. Private entrance, garden apn. in home on West 20th. Terrace. Two brd. fireplace. W/D hookups. No peta/smoking. 4450-500. Utilities/Cable paid. 843-9487.
Skive cottage near campus访问 at semester
and can furnish furnished, $450/mo / no pets Call 641-894-
352 or 583-2684
Spring Semester sub-lease, b *Br Apt very close to*
close to campus; $350/mo. Call 823-0161
New Large 4 Bdr. Available. Specials offered thru May or July. Includes DW, MW, FP, trash compactor, cable paid. Call 841-7847. 4501 Wimbelden Dr.
LARGE 15k room in nice house, 3 miles from KU for female non smoke U2l, uuI paid. **749-016-068** MORNING $TAR for rooms and apartments in well kept老屋 places. Also soon house. Call 691-124-085
We also have 2 & 3 bedrooms for 2nd semester & are close to campus.
meadowbrook APARTMENTS • TOWNHOMES • RESIDENCES
So...how about those roommates? I like 'em but can't live with them?
We have a studio or a one bedroom apartment ESPECIALLY FOR YOU!
MEADOWBROOK
842-4200
Nice furnished large rooms, new paint/carpet,
new furniture or student or student
Free from the patl unit. no/mo. $895-$1495
Free from the patl unit. no/mo. $895-$1495
One be. ap. Bony but good. Microwave, dishwash-
ing. One be. ap. Molybdenum. Microwave,
dishwash. Case at 684-1076 call to 931-2455.
Case at 684-1076 call to 931-2455.
MON-FRI 8am-5:30pm,
SAT 10-4
SUN 1-4.
(Sorry, no pets)
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 Cou
- Microwave
- 1&2 Bedroom Apts.
- On Bus Route
842-5111 1301 W.24 $^{th}$
Wishing You The Best This Holiday Season!
Sublase available-Trailridge Studio apt $112 MU On KU bus route. Call Calm Dalton at 832-2081.
Sublease begin Jan 1. 1. Great studio apt. in old
building near downtown. B225-920-1111 Call 842-2056-
to dunnett & campus. B225-920-1111 Call 842-2056-
Subline from Jan 5 - July 31 J1 bbmR w/wash-
carport $39/mo Call after p8. m4-88500
$39/mo Call after p8. m4-88500
Sublease Jan-May 2-8bm apartment, near campus,
lower /4 of l/b $365/mi. 942-7890.
we're making life easier!
*Weekly Maid Service
- Weekly Main Service
- Front Door Bus Service
- "Dine Anytime" with Unlimited Seconds
- Laundry and Vending Facilities
NAISMITH
1800 Naismith Drive (913) 843-8559
$ 10 share spacious house, completely furnished,
walking distance to campus, $250 per month
for one year.
1 roommate needed to share nice/clean 3 bdm
rooms / month + 1/uil. Avail. Jan.). Call am457896
1 roommate wanted for 3 bedroom apartment
to campus. $202 per month + 1/uil. Call
am457896
430 Roommate Wanted
Female needed to share townhouse. Will have own
car. Call 843-292-1060. Contact us: Call 843-292-1060.
Contact us: Call 843-292-1060.
For 3 bed, 2 bath condo on bus r.l. fur. w/d in w/
Furn. 2 bth. xp. ph. xp. f. Carrier. C933-858-2634
Sleeping area 100 sq ft. Bathroom 60 sq ft.
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED N/S, move
Jan. 1, key to 2, bath on BN, bus route, *u* utilities.
Please contact: roommate@haworth.com
Female roommate needed by Jan. 1 to July 31.
Cute nineperson 2b apartment near campus,
furnished except for your room. Call immediately.
B42-4105 and leave message.
Female roommate wanted for 2 bfr. apc. Close to (11m) and (11h) to Aval. $180/mo. T/aval. Avail on Sunday
Female roommate, comfortable 3 bedroom townhouse on bus line, $255+ utilities, no pets, no smokers, pet welcome.
1 rmatem needed to share 3 bdm ap. Jan 1 or
2 rmatem needed to share 6 bdm ap. Jan 1 or
3 rmatem needed to share 49 bdm ap. Jan 1 or
483-800 105-828 or 832-1580 after 4 pms.
Female non-smoker. New Ibu Aug. 3 2 HB ppt. in
Tampa, FL. Born January 18, 1965. Plymouth
Pillly furnished. Close to Campus. 88-400-7500.
2 NSE Upperclassman need 2 NSE to share clean,
furnished 4 bath, 2 bath app. Bus Route. Nice
Neighborhood, Pool, Laundry rm. $196 + 1/4. ut.
Call Morgan 720/811 or Range 841/850.
Need a place to live! IVR room needed me!
Smart. No/Call Heather at 844-561-3911 / uxilities.
Smart. No/Call Heather at 844-561-3911
Looking for a female roommate to share a 4-bird, 2 bth apartment. On bus route, fully furnished & very INEXPENSIVE!! Call Holly or Beth at 851-489
Mature, studious, stable house mate and made
clean a bedroom 200/m² & ¼/uilt. N.S.
Litter box, washbasin, toilet.
N/S, mile, needed to share a BdR townhouse with 3
patio, garden, $200 + / utilities. Call 617-445-1000.
N/S/ responsibility fun female roommate need for 2
female roommates in a residential apartment. Deposit ng, available ASAP. DB47-73629.
1 to 2 females needed for spacious bkm apt. for
mom, or sooner, or mite from campus, on busi-
ness trips.
1 Dbm/dw sem-private bath of a 8bdm apv avail-
dance on BUS TOTAL. Call 602-954-3474 / u! utilities
on BUS BOTTOM. Call 602-954-3474
Nested mate, clean. M/ male to share 2 br apt/
m/ male to share. C/ clean. Tom assess $18/m.
Clear. A/G.
Need clean, responsible, N/S, mile to share 2 br.
apt. $30/50 m² + 1/4½ lives. Free cable. On bus route. Furnished (except for room). Available
1. Call Quick! 842-4888.
1 Female needed, spaced 2 bedroom apt, for spring sem. on bus route $35 + 1/4 inch floor.
1 Male needed, very spacious 2bdrm townhouse on
the corner of 38th and level 2, & 1/2 bath
with two bedrooms. Call 914-570-5161.
Needed: N/S/ female to need 3 bdmr. apt w/
hard wood floors near campus and downtown.
$175/mo. + $17.60 deposit. Avail. immediately. Call
822-830-7073 evenings.
1 f 8 roommates, 3 BR house, W/D, Bus Koe
2 f 10 roommates, Available Jan. For
information call 749-0748
I drom in spectaculare house, a few bliss from cannip. 1210. *a bargain!* *a bargain!* 739-378.
Non-smoking female needed to share own 3 lb. chlam.
January $1990 mn./ - plus /u$ 850 available
January $1,990 mn./ - plus /u$ 850 available
NSF w/ small dog needs a responsible NSF te
share 2 bdm. apl. for spring semester. $198/mo+
Ull. Call 790-1897.
One or two Female roommates! Larger
Room on a walk-in closet and private bath. W/D in apu College Hill Condo on 6 & Eerry. Available
at college Hill Condo or beginning of next. Call
Katharine at 865-323-1400.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NS, M/F to share a very nice clean b. apl.
MS/F to share starting Jan 1, $197.50 /b.
One or two people to share three bedrooms, two baths
and a kitchen. Available. Arrive January 1, 1994. Call 857-7272
One roommate set for four bedroom house for
$300/mo + utilities. Ank for
Paria at 855-296-206.
Seeking NSF to sublease NEW l3 condom on Call
Emmy $50 + 10% utilities. Available NOW on Call
How to schedule an ad:
Roominate for spacious house, block from campus. Huge kitchen, two bath, wonderful peekaboo bed. Great location.
Roammate needed for 3 barm床 just 4 kb from campus $490 a month +/u. Voltil $65-364.
Roammate need N/.SGrad. student 2 Bdr. $865. +/m half. voltil On bus route. Bus voltil $84-308-262.
Roammate need. Start Jan. 1. $830/m plus 1/u. Voltil $1614 room. Non-smoker. Bus voltil $65-290 for
"Doomate wanted for 5 bmz. house. Has hawker
$200/mo. includes Utilities except phone 617-
485-3390.
Responsible male roommate wanted for 4 bedroom, 3 bath townhouse in West Lawrence. Large kitchen, refrigerator and washer/dryer. Cable, trawl net, 800/m³ / a/1. Call 814-3681 and leave e message.
Ads phone in may be held to your MasterCard or Visa access. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made. *
* In our manner: 118 Stuart Fletch Filet
Share large Victorian house, many amenities,
downmarket, rare value; $300 + /½ until 842-4222.
The Hillhouse home is space available for individuals
seeking a unique Jewish experience for the Spring semester. If interested, call 684-3943 for more information.
Wanted: Roommate for 3 bedroom apartment for
10 people. Bachelor's in Nursing 110 & India.
Close to campus 749-5927
You may print your classified order on the form below and mail it with payment to the Kenan offices. Or you may choose to have it filled in your MasterCard or Visa card. 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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155 personal 140 lost & found 355 for sale
118 business perennials 265 help used 340 auto sales
122 announcements 225 professional services 360 miscellaneous
130 entertainment 235 typing services
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, lawrence, KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1988 FarWorks, Inc./Dist. by Universal Press Syndicate
© 1986 FARWORKS INC./UST BY UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNCARD
"Ooooooweeeeee! This thing's been here a looooooooong time. Well, thank heaven for ketchup."
1
12
Monday, December 6, 1993
Volume 1 Continuous
"Your Book Professionals"
S
Jayhawk Bookstore
"At the top of Naismith Hill"
Hrs: 8-7 M-Th., 8-5 Fri.
9-5 Sat. 12-4 Sun.
843-3826
COFFEE BAR
NATURAL WAY
Natural Fiber Clothing & Body Care
820-822 Mass. St.
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
(913) 841-0100
BENCHWARMERS CATERING
*FULLSERVICE 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.
Tie it all together with The Etc. Shop All kinds of Unique and Unusual Ties!
- American Film Classics
- American Fum Cue
* Art Ties
* Tabasco
* Endangered Species
* Enchanted Forest
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Monday Dec. 6 $ ^{th} $ : Information table, Petitions, Human Rights Video's-4th Level Kansas Union
Wednesday Dec. 8th: Holiday Card Actions - Send the gift of Hope to a Prisoner of Conscience- 4th Level Kansas Union
Wednesday Dec. 8th - "Raise Your Voice" - a celebration of Life Performance - 8pm Lawrence Art Center General Admission $2
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2493 Iowa + Lawnry
1992
Volleyball team ends season with defeats in tournament
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
A 1-3 record in the National Invitational Volleyball Championships in Kansas City, Mo., was not the way Kansas wanted to end the season, but the tournament was not a complete disappointment, Kansas coach Frankie Albiz said.
Albitz said the Jayhawks' play at the NIVC in Municipal Auditorium was a little disappointing, but she was still happy with the team's effort.
"We got stronger every match," Albitz said. "I felt like if we played to our potential, we could have beaten anybody. But we didn't play to our potential."
The team played its last match of the season Saturday against Louisiana State, losing 1-3. Kansas ended the season 18-16 overall and 5-7 in the Big Eight.
Albitz said she was happy with her team's disposition going into its last match.
"I was concerned as a coach that there might be a let-down," she said. "I think they just went out and played the best they could."
Kansas senior middle blocker Cyndean Kabela said she wanted to finish the season with a victory. Kabela said Louisiana State was determined to win because the Jayhawks defeated the Tigers Sept. 17.
"The feeling going in was, 'Let's play the match of our lives,'" Kanabel said. "They were kind of on a mission. They're a better team than when we played them last time."
The Jayhawks did not start the tournament well with a 0-3 defeat against Georgia Tech on Friday. Albiz叫led the match a disaster.
"We were tight," Albitz said. "Sometimes that happens with a team in postseason play. It was maybe the worst match of the year. Georgia Tech played extremely well."
Kansas seemed to lose the match at the net, getting only two team blocks compared to 16 for the Yellow Jackets.
In Kansas' 3-2 defeat against Bowling Green State on Friday, both teams played good defense. Bowling Green State set an NIVC match record with 136 digs, but Kansas was not far behind with 129 digs.
Kansas countered that defeat with a three-game victory against St. College on Saturday before facing Louisiana State. The Jayhawks' tournament play typified the way the season has gone, Kansas sophomore middle blocker=rightside hitter Jenny Larson said.
"We were very up-and-down," Larsson said. "At times, we looked as good as we have the whole season. Then again, there were times when we looked awful."
Albitz said the play of younger players was encouraging, especially freshman outside hitter Katie Walsh.
The 5-foot-8 Walsh looked surprised that she was blocking in one rally during game two of the Louisiana State match when she had two solo blocks in a row. But Louisiana eventually hit around Walsh and won the game 15-8.
"Jenny Larson and Katie Walsh did a good job," Albitz said. "You have to remember she's a freshman. Katie actually can block. Someone told her or maybe she just assumed that since she is a shorter player, she can't block."
"I felt like throughout the season I was a little up-and-down," Larson said. "I felt really comfortable this weekend." †
Larson, who played well the entire tournament, said she wanted to finish the season strong. She had 45 kills and 15 block assists in the tournament, along with five service aces.
Even though the Jayhawks ended the season with a defeat, Kanabel said she was satisfied by playing a team as good as Louisiana State.
"We wanted to go out with a win," she said. "But I was glad we went out against a good team instead of a team like Siena. We still ended up with a winning season."
Kansas
1
John Gamble/KANSAN
Sophomore middle blocker Jenny Larson bumps the ball as sophomore setter Lesli Steinert prepares to start.
Side out
Friday
Kansas ended its volleyball season this weekend, posting a 1-3 record in the National Invitational Volleyball Championships in Kansas City. Mo. All four matches were in round-robin play.
Georgia Tech (L)
5-15, 10-15, 4-15
Bowling Green State (L)
14-16, 9-15, 11-15, 15-11, 10-15
Saturday
15-8, 15-1, 15-2
Louisiana State(L)
15-10, 8-15, 11-15, 11-15
The table is set
Kansas ended its season 18-16 overall and 5-7 in the Big Eight.
Orange: Florida State vs. Nebraska
Sugar: West Virginia vs. Florida
Cotton: Texas A&M vs. Notre Dame
Rose: Wisconsin vs. UCLA
Hall of Fame: Michigan vs. North Carolina
State
it's official! The bowl coalition announced its selections for each of the bowl games. No. 3 West Virginia turned down the Cotton Bowl to play in the Sugar Bowl, which pays $1.15 million more West Virginia. The team earned the berth after defeating Alabama 28-1.3 Saturday.
Peach: Clemens vs. Kentucky
Gator: Alabama vs. North Carolina
Alamo: Iowa vs. California
Citrus: Penn State vs. Tennessee Fiesta: Miami vs. Arizona
Fleata: Miami vs. Arizona
Carquest: Boston College vs. Virginia
Las Vegas: Ball State vs. Utah State
Hancock: Texas Tech vs. Oklahoma
Aloha: Fresno State vs. Colorado
Liberty: Michigan State vs. Louisville
Copper: Wyoming vs. Kansas State
Holiday: Brigham Young vs. Ohio State
Freedom: Southern Cal vs. Utah
Independence: Virginia Tech vs. Indiana
KANSAN
Source: The Associated Press KANSAN
The Associated Press
Nebraska eager to prove it deserves Orange Bowl
OMAHA, Neb. — The Cornhuskers are headed into their Orange Bowl match up against Florida State eagler to prove that they deserve to be there.
"We're one of the top teams in the country. We're going to go out and play like one of the top teams," split Corey Dixon said yesterday after the bowl coalition announced the official pairings.
The match up is a repeat of last year's Orange Bowl, when Nebraska fell to Florida State 11-1 27-14.
Coach Tom Osborne said that he was pleased with the pairing but good coaching alone did not get Nebraska to where it is.
In the close games this year, the victories were pulled out by extra effort from either the offense or the defense, he said. He also credited consistent kicking and good fortune.
If the game against the Seminoles gets close, Osborne and Florida State coach Bobby Bowden said they doubted they would try to run up the score to impress poll voters.
Osborne said he was pleased with the opportunity to play Florida State. "They are truly one of the great teams of this decade," he said.
Osborne is 8-12 in bowl games at Nebraska, which has played 24 consecutive bowl games.
"Never having won one, a piece is better than nothing at all," he said.
Osborne said he would be happy to share the national championship.
When game time does come, the key will be minimizing mistakes, Dixon said.
Tight end Gerald Armstrong said several factors would be important to win — especially containing senior quarterback Charlie Ward.
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1 Call or come into the Kansan at 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall. 864-4358.
1. Call or come into the Kansan 105 North St.
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.
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
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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: NCAA scholarship restrictions for football programs could hurt some teams' chances in 1994. Page 11.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103.NO.74
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
Gender segregation drops little
Some KU schools keep traditional student ratios
Editor's note: This is the first in a series of three articles dealing with gender issues in KU professional schools.
NEWS:864-4810
By Kathleen Stolle and Carlos Tejada Kansan staff writers
Forty years ago, society permitted women to be nurses and teachers and men to be anything but.
Times have changed ... but not dramatically.
Enrollment statistics from the Department of Educational Services indicate that while many of the University's professional schools are approaching equal proportions in men and women enrollment, several schools maintain traditionally male or female enrollments.
And as the children get older Muehlenhard said, teachers pay more attention to male students than female students. The result is a generation of inquisitive men, and women who tell themselves they must be reserved.
"Things have really not changed all that much," said Charlene Muehlenhard, associate professor of psychology and women's studies.
The schools of architecture and urban design, engineering and medicine each have less than 35 percent female enrollment. Meanwhile, men compose less than 35 percent of the total student body in the schools of allied health, education, nursing and social welfare.
The reason, said Muehlenhard, is cultural. Children in the United States are bombarded with messages that say women are inferior in math and science, she said.
"That's likely to be a self-fulfilling prophecy," she said.
Muehlenhard said that toys s reinforce the stereotypes. Boys play with toys that arouse curiosity and enhance spatial skills, such as building blocks. Girls' toys, such as dolls, emphasize social skills.
Muehlenhard said that as girls get older, they do not often meet women who work in scientific fields.
"I'll bet a lot of girls haven't met a female engineer, and if they did they might think, 'She likes her job, maybe I can do that,' she said.
"It's socialization," he said. "Men can change bedpans as well as women, and women can be aggressive."
Likewise, society is responsible for increasing proportions of females in previously male-dominated fields, Hohn said. In the past five years, the
Robert Hohn, professor of educational psychology and research, said he knew of no evidence that suggested professional abilities were based on gender.
proportion of women to men has grown slightly in KU's schools of law, pharmacy, business, engineering and medicine.
"When they are young children in school, their teachers and parents tell them they can become a businesswoman or lawyer or doctor," Hohn said. "I think there's an increasing series of comments made to women that these fields are open to them."
Women can benefit from their minority status in the job market because of affirmative action laws. But along with the advances come expectations, Hohn said.
"A lot of people will say 'Now you have this great opportunity, and you better live up to it,' and that's a lot of pressure," Hohn said.
Women's work?
Here is the percentage of students who are female in KU professional schools, followed by the percentage employed in a corresponding career field.
% of women in KU % in careers
Allied Health 82% 79%
Architecture 27% 15%
Business 42% 46%
Education 68% 79%
Engineering 18% 9%
Fine Arts 57% 52%
Journalism 58% 51%
Law 44% 24%
Medicine 34% 21%
Nursing 91% 94%
Pharmacy 62% 37%
Social Welfare 83% 69%
Sources: Dept. of Educational Services, U.S. Census
Melissa Lacey / KANSAN
ONLY
Dan Schauer/KANSAN
Live art
Antonia Casagrande, Lawrence graduate student, performs her final project during the eighth annual evening of performance art at The Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St. Cross-dressing, harsh lighting and lots of water were used by the seven performance art class members last night.
Student department faces '95 budget cut
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
Fate of leaders program still undecided; Ambler is seeking student input
The department of student life will look to cut $51,000 from its fiscal year 1995 budget, but it has not decided whether or not to drop the student leadership program, said David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs.
"We do intend to continue having a leadership program," Ambler said. "No programs are being eliminated entirely. It may mean they will be diminished. It may mean there will have to be some arranging of what people do."
The planned reductions in the department of student life would follow this year's similar cut in the budget for Watkins Memorial Health Center, Ambler said.
"I have not discussed fully where I will take the required 1 percent reduction for next year," Ambler said. "I don't want to talk about particulars because I really don't know that. Some programs will probably be more affected than others."
While Ambler said he had not decided to end
the student leadership program, he said he would not discuss the planned dismissal of Kelli Zuel, assistant director of the program.
"I have a high commitment trying to deal with personnel matters in a very professional and ethical way," Ambler said. "For personnel matters, I don't consider that you should put them up to a popularity vote."
For those budget decisions that would cut out entire programs, Ambler said he would consult student leaders for their input. Ambler said he had informed John Shoemaker, student body president, about the current status of budget reviews for non-academic programs.
"I think we would talk to student leaders for any service we would eliminate," Ambler said. "But that's not where we are at this point."
Shoemaker said he had hoped to have additional meetings with Ambler later this week and during the winter break to discuss further the budget process. Shoemaker said he would need additional information before deciding if any cut to the student leadership program were required.
"It's going to be a lot easier for me to understand now that it's been discussed," Shoemaker said. "I'm still not certain this is the best cut. It may or may not be."
Working directly out of the student leadership program, Tara Fink, Oregon, Moj. junior, said she had helped coordinate last month's Blueprints Student Leadership Conference.
She had not heard whether the leadership program would definitely be dropped.
"My assumptions is that everything is on hold," Fink said.
Students must learn basics of health policies or pay high price
Editor's note: This is the second in a series of three articles addressing how health care reform affects students.
By Liz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
Molly Maxwell, Prairie Village sophomore, is covered under her parents' health insurance policy. But Maxwell has no idea which plan that is or what it covers.
"I guess I just assume it will be taken care of," Maxwell said. "Until your health is bad, you don't think about it."
Maxwell is like many students who may be unprepared for medical emergencies or the day when they must purchase insurance policies.
Jim Boyle, associate director of student health services at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said, "It's an area where students tend to say, 'Oh, I don't need to worry about insurance,' and it's something that sure can rear up and bite them hard. There's a lot of areas in life in which I'd wished people would have said, 'You need to pay attention to this,' and insurance is one of them. I think a lot of people get burned."
Donald Hatton, physician at The Reed Medical Group Chartered,404 Maine St., said that catastrophic poll-
Ray Davis, head of health services administration, said that all students should have at least catastrophic policies, which cover serious medical problems such as injuries sustained in a car accident.
HEALTH CARE
in the '90's $ R_{x} $
$ R_{x} $
cies also were helpful if students found themselves between jobs, moving or traveling without insurance after graduation.
For about $60, Hatton purchased a two-month, catastrophic plan last year for his son when he was unemployed temporarily.
"The thing I think needs to be stressed are those transition points," Hatton said.
Boyle said that when students graduated and weighed job offers, they
should learn the basics of health care and should consider coverage.
On Oct. 30 at the Midwest Health Summit in Kansas City, Mo., first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton observed that most people knew more about the cars they bought than their health insurance.
Andy Draper, a Lawrence graduate student in health services administration and a unit clerk at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 325 Maine St., said, "When you go out and buy a car, you want something with four wheels and an engine. But what else do you want? What doctor do you want? What hospital do you want to use? Do you want eye coverage?"
Boyles said that before selecting policies, students should assess their health care needs and should decide
what kind of coverage they want. Students who have pre-existing medical conditions, such as diabetes or heart problems, should be aware of the extent to which different policies cover those needs.
Boyle said that such students might need to purchase additional insurance because most policies provided little or no coverage for pre-existing conditions.
Most businesses have waiting periods before they cover new employees, Boyle said. The University has a waiting period of 60 days for new employees.
Madi Vannaman, assistant director of human resources, said that if new University employees who had pre-existing conditions chose a health care plan and the desired options
before the 60-day waiting period ended, the University policy would cover those conditions. University employees also will not be penalized for pre-existing conditions if they choose a plan during a one-month open enrollment, which is offered annually in October.
Draper said that waiting periods allowed businesses to assess employees' health before covering them. For example, a student who is pregnant at the time she is hired or who becomes pregnant during the waiting period may not be covered.
Draper, who was a health policy intern for Sen. Nancy Kassebaum this summer in Washington, said that if President Clinton's health care
INSIDE
See HEALTH. Page 16.
The swamp thing
Graduate student Joe Mendelson loves to stomp through sticky swamps and leafy forests in search of his first love exotic frogs.
Page 3.
Intern is learning keys to the city
KU graduate student garners experience in manager's office
By Tracl Carl
Kansan staff writer
When Jonathan Allen grows up, he wants to be a city manager.
Allen started his yearlong internship with Lawrence in June. In the past seven months, he has done everything from helping with the city budget to spending a day with firefighters, including riding with them on emergency calls.
As an intern at the City Manager's office in City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets, the Fort Lauderdale, Fla. graduate student, is well on his way.
As a KU student interested in local government, Allen knows the city's impact on students' lives.
From the water students use to the streets they drive on, the city's services and decisions affect them every day.
Students can also play a powerful role in city government, he said. "It's up to them to exert that power," Allen said.
"You learn how to work with people and come to a consensus," he said. "You have to trust the process to come up with the correct and appropriate outcome."
Students can get involved in their city by volunteering or serving on advisory boards, Allen said. Board vacancies are announced on the public information channel. Applications are at the city manager's office. Students' participation will teach them valuable cooperation skills, he said.
Aten received his bachelor's degree in economics from Florida A&M University in Tallahassee, Fla. He is working on his master's in public administration and is the first recipient of the Advancement of Local Government Executives award at KU. He also is president of the KU Association of African-American graduate students.
"The weather is more attractive in Florida," he said. "Sixty degrees is cold to me."
"If you want to be a city manager, you go to KU," he said. When he graduates in May, he wants to find a job in a city office. He would prefer to work in Florida.
Allen said he decided to come to KU because of its strong public administration program.
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
Mike Wildgen, city manager, said he chose Allen for the internship because Allen was serious about his job as an intern.
DADRON RUBENZALO
Jonathan Allen, Pt. Lauderdale, Fla., graduate student, has been working with the city manager as an intern since June.
"He's dedicated to being a city manager," Wildgen said. "He wasn't just exploring what he wanted to do."
Wildgen said the city has sponsored the internship program for more than 20 years.
Dave Corliss, assistant to the city manager, said Allen had adjusted to the office and its demands.
"In a very rapid fashion, he has fit well into our management team," Corliss said.
2
Tuesday, December 7, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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1509 W 6thLawrence KS66044 • 843-0959
OAKS- Non-Traditional Students will have a brown bag lunch at 11 a.m. today in the Burge Union. For more information, call Gerryn Vernon at 864-7317.
LesBBigayS OK encourage anyone who is lesbian, gay, bisexual or unsure to call the organization or KU Info about a confidential meeting.
The Center for Excellence in Computer Aided Systems Engineering will sponsor an information session at 2 p.m. today at the Apollo Room in Nichols Hall in KU West Campus. For more information, call Tony Wet at 864-7743 or Nancy Hanson at 864-4896.
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.
The Association of the United States Army will meet at 4:30 p.m. today at Room 209 in the Military Science Building. For more information, call Capt. Dan Miller at 864-3311.
KU Judo Club will meet at 4:30 today in 207 Robinson Center.
Amnesty International will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alceve 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.
AURH will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the AURH office in McColum Hall. For more information,
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.
call the AURH executive board at 864-4041.
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.
KU College Republicans will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Leigh Smith at 865-6585.
Native American Student Association will meet at 7 tonight in 3012 Haworth Hall. For more information, call Johnnie Young at 864-4351.
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 at Robin- son Center. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
Original Klub of KU Looney Tunes will meet at 7:30 tonight at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Julie Dollinski at 864-1233.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries and Lutheran Campus Ministries will sponsor "Taize" to celebrate the second week of Advent at 9:30 tonight in Danforth Chapel. For more information, call Leah Peck at 841-5424.
WEATHER
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 60°/34°
Chicago: 37°/26°
Houston: 62°/53°
Miami: 79°/64°
Minneapolis: 27°/18°
Phoenix: 74°/47°
Salt Lake City: 42°/30°
Seattle: 48°/41°
TODAY
Partly cloudy with 15 percent chance for precipitation
High: 42°
Low: 21°
Tomorrow
Partly cloudy
High: 39°
Low: 20°
Thursday
Clearing and cold
High: 43°
Low: 23°
TODAY
Source: Gregg Potter, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
CAMPUS BRIEF
Commission to discuss limit on downtown bars
KANSAN
Partly cloudy
Kansan staff report
The City Commission will discuss a report that would prohibit future drinking establishments in the downtown area unless the establishment has 50 percent or more of its revenues coming from food sales.
The commission will discuss the issue at 6:30 p.m. today at City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets. Public comment is welcome.
Current drinking establishments would not be affected by this new zoning requirement.
If the commission approves the zoning requirement, it will be sent to the planning commission for approval.
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CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, December 7, 1993
3
KU graduate seeks unknown species
Exotic animal researcher ventures to remote places to find amphibians, reptiles
1968
Paul Kotz/KANSAN
By Brian Masillonis Special to the Kansan
Joe Mendelson, Lawrence graduate student, is working on a new species of toad he found in Guatemala. Mendelson is seeking his doctorate in systematics and ecology and this week will be traveling to Australia for a five-week expedition.
Joe Mendelson remembers being fascinated with snakes as a child.
"I'd catch them and keep them as pets," said Mendelson, a Lawrence graduate student.
That fascination led him to seek a doctorate in systematics and ecology with a concentration in herpetology, the study of amphibians and reptiles.
He already has discovered two new species of frog, which will appear in a future issue of "Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington," an annual report of new discoveries in biology.
He also is working on the description of a new species of toad he found in Guatemala.
It will be called Bufo campelli, named after the professor from whom he received his master's degree at the University of Texas at Arlington.
This Wednesday he will be leaving for a five-week expedition in Australia in search of new species of reptiles and amphibians. But this will not be the first time he has traveled far.
He has been in remote regions of Mexico, Guatemala and Peru.
He's seen the Inca terraces of the Andes, the deep green forests and immense swamps of the Amazon basin and he has been challenged by adversity in obscure locations in Guatemala.
Mendelson's expedition alone in Guatemala proved at times to be very scary.
He spent the entire summer with few amenities on a coffee plantation in the middle of nowhere.
"There were times that I'd get lost in a forest," he said. The language barrier also proved difficult at times when Mendelson couldn't tell if the local people were telling him iokes or warning him of danger.
Even with the danger in Guatemala, he found largest documented boa constrictor in Guatemala, at 10 1/2 feet long. Mendelson searches for and compiles different species of frog within one region and compares them with species in surrounding regions. This involves looking under rocks and attempting to find 1-inch frogs on large, leafy trees.
A student in Mendelson's biology lab, Derek Reid, Libral sophomore, said Mendelson was the most interesting
person he had ever met.
"He makes the course seem easy because he brings our material to life in what he does, making it very easy to understand.
"I couldn't believe that a graduate student at KU is involved in such an exotic field of study," Reid said.
Mendelson recently went to Peru as a member of Biotrop, a group comprised of KU researchers from the Museum of Natural History and a Peru conservation organization.
The KU museum team was the only research group allowed in that area since 1941.
After 1941 there was a border dispute between Peru and Ecuador and the strip of land became a military zone. Louis Mandela's first trip to South America
It was Mendelson's first trip to South America.
"Of the 100 species of reptiles and amphibians I saw during the trip, I previously had only seen three of those species in the wild," he said.
Mendelson always knew what he wanted to study, and he even knew he wanted to study eventually at KU.
"Kansas has one of the best herpetology programs in the world," he said.
Bangladesh Club praises KU to pad compatriot enrollment
"We have people from as far as Mexico and Peru at KU."
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Last year, there were only 20 KU students from Bangladesh.
"We started exploring how we could get Bangladeshi students at KU," he said.
Rashid Malik, Dhaka, Bangladesh, graduate student, and his friends decided to change that number.
The result was last year's formation of the Bangladesh Club and the beginning of a letter-writing campaign aimed at Bangladeshi high school students. The letters touted the positive aspects of Lawrence and KU.
The idea worked.
"The response was tremendous," Malik said. "Our population increased two-fold. I can ensure it will increase four-fold next semester."
"A lot of students don't know about Kansas," said Nawshad Shaikh, Dhaka, Bangladesh, sophomore. "This way, they feel secure here."
To build a Bangladesh community in Lawrence, the club also sends electronic mail to Bangladeshi students who attend universities in other parts of the United States.
He said the club planned to continue writing letters until the Bangladeshi community at KU reached about 200.
"The best way is to talk about the best things about Lawrence, and we do that," said Malik. "We got the word out that we're the best."
UNITING TO BE HEARD
But the Bangladesh Club does not just focus on recruiting students from Bangladesh, which is next to India in southeast Asia. The club also helps the students who are new to this nation understand U.S. culture.
"We've got our experiences to go on," Malik said. "We look at each other and say 'What did we face when we came to America?'
The problems Bangladeshi students face come from unlikely sources, Malik say. For instance, their lifestyle and diet usually are at odds with student housing. The Bangladeshi diet includes large amounts of heavily spiced mutton, lamb, beef and chicken.
Bangladesh students also have a hard time finding jobs because international students must wait nine months before they are eligible for campus employment, said Shaikh.
To overcome these problems, the club formed a big-brother, big-sister type of organization. Each member is responsible for the well-being of new members when they arrive, Shaikh said.
The club also wants to bring speakers to KU about the Bosnian situation and this summer's floods, Malik said. Bangladesh, like Bosnia, is mostly Muslim, and is often struck by flooding.
"We want to tie it up with our own problems and try to find a common solution." Malik said.
Jobs increase for graduates
By Shan Schwartz
Kennedy staffwrites
For the first time in five years there is good news on the job front for new college graduates.
That news is a survey of 618 businesses, industries and governmental agencies that projects a 1.1 percent job increase for 1994 college graduates, the first increase in five years.
The annual recruiting trends survey was released yesterday by the Career Development and Placement Services office at Michigan State University.
"The pendulum is beginning to swing in a positive direction for job opportunities," said Patrick Scheetz, director of the Collegiate Employment Research Institute, who conducted the study.
Those expecting the greatest increase in hiring new college graduates included:
- banking, finance and insurance
aerospace, chemical and engineering
food and beverage processing hotels, restaurants and recre-
health care services
Scheetz reported that employers' methods of conducting business had changed fundamentally in recent years because of computers and other automated technologies.
ational facilities
Numerous clerical, support and middle management positions have been eliminated to cut costs, the report said. However, personnel staffing has been cut enough to enable some employers to begin hiring new college graduates.
Fred Madus, placement director in the school of business, said the number of companies recruiting for KU business graduates increased last year after three years of decline. He said that companies' involvement in the Business School's career fair this fall also had increased significantly.
Students in the masters of business administration program experienced the most notable improvements in job offers, Madus said.
"Our MBAs did quite well last year," he said. "Their salaries were significant, and a large percentage of people had jobs by mid-summer."
Students question fees plan
Regents proposal seeks higher salaries for faculty
By Donella Hearne Kansan staff writer
The student governments of Regents schools are facing choices about the future of their tuition dollars.
This month these students have been voting either to endorse or to oppose the plan that would designate part of e 2 to o percent.
Student leaders across the state are questioning the merit of the Partnership for Excellence program, which was developed to increase faculty salaries through a tuition increase.
a 3 to 9 percent increase in tuition for faculty raises.
Emporia State University's instate tuition would go up 5 percent, according to the plan. Emporia State's student body president, Wes Montee, said their student senate had voted to oppose the program.
"There was overwhelming support for that resolution." Monte said.
The plan proposes to bring faculty salaries and tuition fees
Tuition plan
STUDENTS — KU, K-State and Wichita State students would pay a 9 percent increase in in-state tuition and a 13 percent increase in out-of-state tuition. Emporia State, Pittsburgh State and Fort Hays State would face a 5 percent increase for residents and a 13 percent increase for nonresidents.
STATE — The Legislature would increase its contribution to the Regents schools by 3 percent of the State General Fund. $9.3 million of the money raised from the tuition increase would be designated to go directly to faculty salary increases.
BOARD OF REGENTS — Students would have increased input in selection and tenure of faculty. The Board would agree to drop tuition increases back to 5 percent if the Legislature did not increase general fund financing by at least 3 percent.
Source: The Associated Press KANSAN
up to the same level as those of peer schools. Peer schools are those schools that are similar in the population they serve, the size of their student bodies and their state legislature's budgets.
Montee said Emporia already was paying more for education than peer schools, which is one of the reasons the students are opposing the plan.
"Besides, it's the state's responsibility to fund faculty salaries," he said.
KU's student body president, John Shoemaker, said he thought that the Kansas student governments that were opposing the plan did not fully understand its purpose.
He said he thought the presentation of the plan to students at other schools had not explained that tuitions would increase, whether the plan was put into effect or not.
"Our student senate is 100 percent behind it," he said.
"The students are behind it. I think the reason for that is that our press has relayed the information in a reliable and concise manner."
Kansas State University also was considering a resolution to oppose the plan, which failed after Shoemaker appealed to their student government.
KU would face a 9 percent increase in resident tuition and nonresident tuition would increase by 13 percent.
Shoemaker, who helped develop the Partnership for Excellence plan, said he would like to be able to explain the reasoning behind the plan to all of the Regents schools.
"This plan is foreseeing a tuition increase and finding a way it can most help the individual schools," he said.
He said the plan would guarantee that a portion of the money from the increase would be used only for the faculty salary increase.
"There is no reason to be against this plan," he said. "There is no down side to it. It baffles me that people would come out in opposition to this plan."
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Tuesday, December 7, 1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Rework finals schedule to prevent wasted days
The semester's end has been unnecessarily delayed by a finals schedule insensitive to the needs of faculty and students. This year's finals schedule delays the last day of examinations until Dec. 20. It seems that the schedule was made without regard for when the last day would fall. Placing the last day of the semester on a Monday does not make sense; it delays students' departure and final grading for three days. Because the last final is delayed until Monday, thousands of students must wait and delay their return home because the last final is delayed until Monday.
The delay is bothersome to the faculty, as well. If the last final was Friday, there would be another weekend that faculty could use for grading examinations before grades are due. Additionally, in a time when the University is under financial pressure, the delay causes another full weekend of operation for the University, most notably residence halls and buildings. A reduction of these costs is imperative.
Stop day is a Friday, creating a three-day weekend. This seems out of line with the intent of stop day, which provides a one-day break between the end of classes and the start of finals. The University should be more open and flexible in molding the finals schedule to the calendar so that the time could be used more efficiently. Why not move stop day forward a day and start finals Friday and eliminate the three-day delay at the end of the semester? If the mindlessness of the present schedule is due to a Board of Regents mandate or a University guideline, it is the responsibility of Chancellor Budig and the rest of the administration to change those rules for benefit of KU's students, faculty and finances.
It is unreasonable to suggest that the finals schedule could be further reduced from six days to five, but it is reasonable to start the six-day schedule earlier to prevent lengthening the semester. This would prevent a three-day delay for one day of finals.
CHRIS REEDY FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS:
DAVID BURGETT, J.R. CLAIRBORNE, CHRISTINA CORNISH, CARSON ELROD, TOM GRELINGER, MATT HOOD, MANNY LOPEZ, COLLEEN McCAIN, TERRILYN MCORMICK, MUNEERA NASEER, KIRK REDMOND, CHRIS REEDY, MIKE SILVERMAN, EISHA TIERNEY, KC TRAUER AND DAVID WANEK
INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
Third World aid often filtered back to source
One, everyone, of the civilized nations earned $100,000 for having a man or woman dead rather than alive in 1992. Of this per person cost of death, the United States earned about $50,000 per person killed. These figures are provided by the world's biggest investment cartel, the World Bank.
As against this huge amount spent on arms, a paltry sum of $56 million was provided in economic aid to developing countries in 1990 and the lending nations also sold
In a recent report titled "World Military and Social Expenditures 1993," the World Bank, a major lender to less-developed countries ... says after the end of the Cold War, world military spending in 1992 alone exceeded $600 billion, of which nearly half of the earnings went to the United States. And six million people died in the wars fought with these weapons that exchanged hands between the3 seller and buyer nations.
to them weapons worth $36 billion during the same year. In other words, 64.28 percent of the financial "aid" found its way back to the "donor" countries through arms sales, leaving only $20 billion for economic or social "development" projects ...
It is not only the poor countries that need to develop social services and human environment by diverting funds from meeting fabricated threats, the United States and other arms producers as well need to stop fabricating war threats. The world's only existing superpower matches poor nations in having one person in seven living in poverty, with half of its adult population illiterate, and with more than 37 million Americans lacking any form of health care — despite earning $300 billion through arms sales in just one year. That means there is something terribly wrong with what leaders of developed countries call their civilization.
SAUDI GAZETTE
JIDDAH, SAUDI ARABIA
KANSAN STAFF
KC TRAUER. Editor
JOE HARDER, CHRISTINE LAUE Managing editors
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News ... Stacy Friedman
Editorial ... Terrilyn McCormick
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Kristi Fogler
Photo ... Kip Chin, Renee Kneeber
Features ... Efra Wolfe
Graphics ... John Paul Fogel
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Campus sales mgr ...Ed Schager
Regional sales mgr...Jennifer Perrler
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Creative director ..Brian Fumco
Classified mgr..Gretchen Kootenleinch
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.
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The Kauai reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kauai newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
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Student Senate's decision against funding club is discrimination
The Student Senate Finance Committee missed a prime opportunity to enhance the quality of political debate at the University of Kansas by killing a bill to provide advertising money for a series of forums hosted by the KU Federalist Society. The KU Federalist Society, as it is chartered and was presented to the finance committee, is an organization that seeks to promote a forum for the discussion of law and public policy issues primarily through the use of speaking engagements. These speaking engagements typically take the form of a debate between two speakers with opposing viewpoints who discuss such important political issues as gun control, public financing for the arts, and health care.
The Federalist Society's opponents on the Finance Committee displayed a paranoid fear of any group that
COLUMNIST
LANCE
HAMBY
The organization is restricted by its charter from taking positions on policy issues and endorsing political candidates. Nonetheless, the Finance Committee refused to support the organization because its members are primarily conservative and libertarian.
might give speaking time to points of view they do not share. They ostensibly rejected the funding request because Senate has a prohibition on financing organizations with a political slant.
members.
This is an extraordinary claim in light of Senate's funding for liberally oriented publications such as Who 'sinations and organizations like Enviros which participate in political protests. In fact, the Finance Committee passed, at the same meeting, a bill to finance LesBiGay Awareness Week in which the expressly stated purpose was to further "the political growth of KU students." Evidently, the prohibition only applies to organizations whose philosophies differ from those of the Student Senate
The Federalist Society can be distinguished from other groups that deal with political issues by its commitment to objectivity in its public forums. The group demonstrated this commitment in a debate it hosted on the school voucher issue between state Representative Kay O'Connor and Russell Getter, a KU political science professor. The event attracted students from various political backgrounds who freely expressed a diversity of opinions.
Nadine Strossen, President of the ACLU, commented on the organization at a Yale University event: "It has been my pleasure to speak at many Federalist Society gatherings around the country, and I think one thing your organization has done is to contribute to free speech, free debate and most importantly public understanding of, awareness of, and appreciation of the Constitution." The predominately liberal ACLU would never offer such high praise if the organization was as conservatively-biased as some Finance Committee members asserted.
More than 98 percent of the Federalist Societies across the country receive financing from their student governments. The KU group asked for only $290 to advertise a series of five speaking engagements. The Federalist Society will pay for all other expenses for the forums that the organization is planning to schedule. Other groups that won approval for speaking engagements at the same committee meeting had requests in excess of $5,000 and sought honoraria as well as advertising money.
By killing funding for the Federalist Society, the Finance Committee demonstrated the ugliest stereotypes of a politically correct student government. Federalist Society events across the nation have involved such prominent speakers as George Bush, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and Alan Dershowitz.
The committee's decision was a great disservice to all of the students at KU and showed that student government will not tolerate conservative opinions even if they are presented in a neutral forum.
Lance Hamby is a wichita junior matoring in political science and journalism.
Technology wreaks havoc on holiday
There are certain things that will never cease to amaze me. Like the fact that the stores put up Christmas decorations days before Thanksgiving. Or the way the end of the semester, for which we all pray and hope, can sneak up on us like it does. Or the fact that Thanksgiving break qualifies as a Major Absence.
COLUMNIST
A Major Absence is an absence from classes after which people must greet each other with a hearty, almost surprised greeting like "Hey! How're you?" and then ask, "How was your Thanksgiving (or other Major Absence title)?" Having been asked this a million or two times in the last week, in the interest of efficiency and breath saving, I will make public the Ryan McGee Thanksgiving Story.
I spent Thanksgiving, also known as The Great Big Spectacular Holiday Shopping Season Kick Off With Lots of Bargain Basement Prices, with some extended family in the Middle of Illinois Somewhere. This in itself is somewhat of a remarkable fact, in that for me to have spent the holiday there, Mabel, my not-so-trusty vehicle and sidekick, must have made it that far. Which is not to say that the journey was entirely without incident. My breakdowns were few in number and occurred in the daylight, though, so they are hardly worth mentioning. They are only important because they are what caused me to have my first Negative Holiday Experience. When I arrived at the Middle of Illinois Somewhere, I went to the auto parts store and grappled with a thing they have there called the Damncomputer. Actually they call it The Almighty and Wise Super Helpful Computer. They are wrong. They only call it that because they are taught to call it that in Auto Parts Store Employee School. If they really knew its true nature, as I do, they would call it by its real name, the Damncomputer. Lest you become
COLUMNIST
RYAN
McGEE
a naive and ever-so-wrong auto parts store employee, let's look briefly at why this is its real name. First, it lies. I personally saw it look an employee straight in the eye and tell him that my car had a part which it does not have. And has never had. Without even cracking a smile. Second, well ... Okay, never mind. There's only one reason. But it's a dang good one.
After fixing Mabel, I went inside to join my relatives and fellow Thanksgiving celebrators for a bit of rest and relaxation. This, I soon found out, was the wrong place to go. Inside was where the action was, after all. There was the traditional bustle going on the kitchen. Only it wasn't Thanksgiving yet. It was only Wednesday. I thought this odd, but having been raised by my mother to be a good boy and help out whenever possible, I washed my hands and poked my head in (all that would fit with all those pots, pans, turkeys, people and stuffing flying around in there) to see if I could be of any help. I was forcibly ejected from the area. And told to not come back until the next day, when things would be busy. "All right, then," I thought, "to the living room for a bit of TV.
Been a long time since I've seen any. Hope I still know how to work one." I didn't have to know. When I got to the living room, my cousins were battling my uncle for the remote control.
Uncle: "Gimme the controller, boy!" Cousin 1: "Dad, there's no reason to watch commercials with one of these."
Uncle: "You change channels too much! Chill the controller!"
Cousin 1: "There's no reason to watch commercials. You always leave the commercials on. We can watch two games at once."
I had to leave. Things can get ugly when they team up on him like that, and I didn't have the heart to watch. I didn't know where else to go, though. No kitchen, no TV — what else is there? I began to wander around the house distractedly, my eyes glazed over from aimlessness. And I didn't stop until Sunday, when it was time to come back to school, where I wander around distractedly, my eyes glazed over from an undecided major.
Ryan McGee is a Worland, Wyo. sopher. more
Sex in stacks story was ill-timed, in poor taste
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Had Wednesday, Dec. 1 been like any other day, I would have been merely annoyed with the University Daily Enquirer's decision to print its bit of journalistic voeurism, "Sex in the stacks: Ever done it in the library?" on Page 1.
I personally have no interest whatsoever in reading about used condoms found lying around in public places and find the use of quotes from a social welfare professor a rather pathetic attempt to legitimize the existence of such a piece.
However, Dec. 1 was not like any other day. It was World AIDS Day.
Although the frivolities of sex do have their place, it was not on Page 1 during World AIDS Day.
Even more mysterious was why the Kansan would stash such an important article as "Study shows women more likely to contract AIDS in heterosexual acts" on Page 5 of the same day.
The 51 percent of the population who are female, whether straight or lesbian, especially those attending KU, need information like this (preference doesn't matter here since any woman can be the focus of sexual assault). Some experts are saying that in the next decade seven out of 10 heterosexuals who contract AIDS will be women.
Heidi Kraus
KU employee
The federal government didn't even recognize women with AIDS for medical benefits until recently.
I'm not above finding humor in humanity's fobles or occasionally seeking titillation in the public media, if the source isn't too tawdry.
Even the Page 3 article on game-day parking problems at the dorms more directly affects the lives of student than does "Sex in the stacks."
But do these subjects really belong on Page I versus the human interest section on any day? Especially World AIDS Day?
Resident's complaint shows his immaturity
I have some advice for the resident in Templin Hall who became upset after being asked to remove some pictures of naked women from the outside of his dorm room door: GROW UPI ignorant attitudes such as his have stood in the way of progression throughout time. No one is prohibiting him from hanging pictures of naked women over his bed (where he may find it the most useful). I hope that someday he will learn that people are diverse and he alone cannot define what is offensive to the world.
Jennifer Warren
Jennifer Warren Ottawa senior
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, December 7, 1993
THEIR FINAL WORDS
These columns are the best works from Professor John Ginn's Editorial and Interpretive Writing class.
5
Hit the road, Sen. Packwood; we're all tired of your games
Dear Diary: Bob Packwood should resign from the Senate and hop on the next flight back to Oregon. His resignation would be a great justice to all and save the Senate the trouble of kicking him out.
BRADY PRAUSER
have accused him of sexual misconduct over the years are wrong. Then, he later tells us that his once uncontrollable boozing should render him unaccountable for his actions.
Now, he's telling us he shouldn't have to turn over the diaries documenting his escapades. This guy is a real character.
the two-day debate over the diaries hadn't chewed up so much of the Senate's time and energy, it would have been comical. The tug-of-war
over Packwood's scrawlings resembled a bunch of second-graders fighting over a love letter on the playground.
But it overshadowed a day of debate on such weighty issues as NAFTA and balancing the federal budget. Instead of doing the jobs they were hired to do, the Senators had to deal with this accused miscreant. Even so, the debate focused not on Packwood's alleged misconduct but on whether he should have to fork over the diaries.
Complicating matters was Packwood's possible criminal involvement in allegedly trying to persuade lobbyists to give his wife a job. He cheerfully agreed to give the 94 senators who subpoenaed him for the diaries "every scintilla of information" about that, but nothing about the women who accused him of sexual misconduct.
Rightfully so, the Senate told him to take a hike. Ordinary citizens wouldn't be able to bargain over the terms of a subpoena, it said.
Is Packwood trying to hide damming evidence that could destroy him? We think so. Now he is appealing the subpoena and further damaging the Senate by sticking around.
The Senate shouldn't have had to waste its time with this charade. Sen. Robert Byrd of West Virginia, who called for Packwood's resignation, agreed. "None of us is without flaws," Byrd said. "But when those flaws damage the institution of the Senate, it is time to have the grace to go."
Dear Diary; Bob Packwood is a disgrace to himself. He is a disgrace to the Senate. Most of all, he is a disgrace to his constituents. If he has any microminiscule inkling of scruples left, he should resign.
Cat adoption ends in sorrow
I am a cat lover. Siamese are my favorite, but I am a sucker for anything that purrs. My friends know this, and whenever any of them find a
SAMANTHA ADAMS
stray, they automatically ask me to take it. My cat, Newt, is not
fond of other cats, so I have reluctantly declined adopting several adorable kittens in the past. But when a friend called me and pleaded with me to take a kitten that was bound for the animal shelter, what choice did I have?
After all, I am a cat lover.
That evening I brought home a yellow and white furball that my eldest daughter dubbed Figaro. He looked like he was about six weeks old, but he was thin. For the first few weeks that we had Figaro, it seemed like all he did was antagonize Newt and eat.
From the instant she laid eyes on "The Intruder," Newt rebelled. Separate food dishes, litter boxes and sleeping arrangements were necessary for the incompatible cats. But I could rationalize the inconvenience. I felt good knowing that I had kept a kitten alive that would have otherwise been run over or ended up at the shelter where it would have had a one-
week stay and a slim chance of being adopted.
Unfortunately, the inconveniences multiplied. Although I had been assured that Figaro was healthy when I took him, his ear mites and digestion problems soon required a visit to the vet. A examination, an immunization and some ear medicine cost me $70—my grocery money for the week.
Then Figaro acquired a fondness for digging up house plants and shredding the couch. This forced us to banish him to the bathroom whenever we left the house. And no lockup ever took place without a house-wide cat hunt that made me late for school or made my husband late for work.
Figaro and Newt became mortal enemies, fighting so fiercely at times that breaking them up meant scratches and bites for the intermediary. Fights led to infections, which led to more vet bills, which caused me to question whether I could afford having Figaro around.
Even the children became disenchanted with him. He played too roughly and scratched too much. Soon they avoided him as much as Newt did.
the local no-kill shelter. It was already at its 45-cat limit. I even considered making him an outdoor cat when the weather became warm, but I knew he would cause problems for the birds and squirrels in my yard. There were no easy solutions to the problem. I had to get rid of Figaro.
I called friends to find a home where Ifigaro might fit in better. I also called
After considering every option one last time, I drove him to the shelter where he was unceremoniously dumped into a holding cage. He huddled in the corner, shaking and afraid. I cried as I filled out the necessary paperwork and knew that I might be signing his death warrant. I wanted to explain to the resigned woman behind the counter that I really was a cat lover and that I had tried everything before bringing him here. But she obviously had heard it all before. I stumbled out, unable to look at Figaro as whispered "goodbye."
Things are back to normal at my house, but I will never forget that kitten. I couldn't keep him, but sending him away was the hardest thing I've ever done. More than 8,000 animals are taken to the Topeka Humane Society every year. Only about half of them are adopted. I hoped for the best, but in my heart I knew that Figaro probably was not one of them.
Take a lesson from the stars; see what truly matters in life
Grab my hand, and take a walk with me. I know you have a lot of work to do, but this will only take a couple of minutes.
Put your coat on; these winter nights are chilly.
JACOB ARNOLD
ly been so busy that you've hardly had time to notice the change in seasons.
Step out the door, and the cold nips at our exposed nose and ears. We can almost feel our ears turning pink. We bury our hands deep in our pockets, pulling our coats close against our bodies.
Playfully, I pull you from the sidewalk. Heads down, we shuffle through the leaves like we did as kids. Feel the stiff grass break underfoot. Smell the crisp air as it burns through your nostrils. Hear the snowy crystals crunch in the quiet dark.
We raise our eyes and look through the leafless trees. Their stark branches grasp at the cold stars overhead, but their sturdy trunks anchor them. The trees envy the stars. I do too.
The stars are almost free. Only the stern moon watches over them as they wheel through the velvet sky.
The stars have been there a long time. They saw Aristotle take his first steps, and they saw Rome take its last breaths. They saw the Great Wall of China built up, and they saw the Berlin Wall torn down. They saw our birth, and they will see us die.
The stars remind us that little in which we can succeed or fail will matter a thousand years from now. The stars live only for the present. They treasure each moment given to them. It is a good way.
Finally, we must again turn our toes toward home. The electric lights flooding through the windows lure us back to the world of man. They pull us back into a world overrun with term papers, unpaid bills and irate bosses.
We reenter the fray, but a little part of our souls are with the stars where there is joy in just being.
I hope you have enjoyed our little stroll. Tomorrow, go with someone you love. A spouse, a friend, a pet or perhaps just your god.
Don't let your time on this planet slip away without savoring some of the simple pleasures of life.
WE'RE ON THE MOVE!
Our new store in the Tower Plaza Shopping Center on South Iowa is almost ready . . . but not quite!
As of December 1 we will be a temporary location:
1404 W. 23rd (formerly The Mad Greek).
Stop in, or order by our regula phone number (865-5071). Phone orders from our suppliers will still be delivered "next day".
we apologize for any inconvenience this may cause, and ask that you bear with us as we work to open up in our new location as soon as possible.
Sincerely,
dlar
Sincerely,
Virginia J. Smith
Virginia Smith Lawrence Retail Manager School Specialty Supply
EASTERN
School Specialty Supply
JOCKSTRAP
FOR YOUR
NIKE FOOT.
Air Force Mid.
Valid Through July 31, 1997
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
C A R D
1404 W. 23rd (Temporary location)
Lawrence • PHONE 913-865-5071
Nike
842-2442
840 Massachusetts
JOCK'S NITCH
SPORTING GOODS
The Sports Look of Today!
The Best Collegiate Savings Card program in the Nation is coming this January!
It would be like throwing money away...
CAUTION:
DANGEROUSLY
LOW PRICES!
COUPON
STRIP
This coupon entitles the bearer to one 60 $ game during open bowling.
60c
Bowling
(Exp.12/21/93)
Limit two coupons per person per visit.
Karanaa Union
Level One
864-3545
--one night rental
Jayboul
BROADWAY
CREATE - A - PRINT
Enlargements Ready In 5 Minutes
25¢ OFF 5X7 - 50¢ OFF 8X10
75¢ OFF 11X14
Enlargements Ready in 5 Minutes YOU Paint & Copy Photo Yourself!
ONE HOUR PHOTO
& Portrait Studio New York
2340 IOWA 442 8564 DRIVE THRU
3400 1940
Hours:M F 9-6p m, Sat 10:4p m.
NATURALWAY Natural Fiber Clothing
THE MEN OF THE WORLD
THE MAN OF THE WORLD
THE MAN OF THE WORLD
15% Off Jewelry
STERLING SILVER EARRINGS WITH ANIMALS IN THEM
EUROPEAN
TAN HEALTH & HAIR SALON
23rd st. & Ousdahl
(behind Perkin's)
841-6232
BURN FAT!
BUILD MUSCLE!
Chromium one w/
Chromium
Makes you thinner
& firmer w/more
energy
100%NATURAL
100%GUARANTEED
HOT TUB
$7 PERPERSON
(incluces cable TV/stereo)
(Excludes items already on sale.) Expires December 21,1993
820-822 Mass. Downtown Lawrence
---
Find the Porpoise!
15% off any purchase
Framewoods Gallery 819Mass.842-4900
Must be presented at time of purchase
This inclusion and many others
available at Formworks.
Must be presented at time of purchases
Sale items may be excluded.
Limit 1 coupon per purchase.
EXPIRES 12/15/93
IMPERIAL GARDEN
CHINESE RESTAURANT
聚豐園
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 12/14/93
DUDS'nSUDS
Good clean fun!
Redeemable for One Free Wash
- Snack Bar Pool Tables Big Screen TV & Video Games
The Only Place to do Laundry
- Limit One Coupon Per Person
- Not Valid During Free Dry
Not Valid During Free Dry
*Top Loaders Only
*Top Loaders Only
Expires 12-14-93
918Mississippi 841-8833
841-8833
Expires 12-14-93
VIDEO DIZ.
2 Video Tapes and VCR
VIDEO BIZ
9th & Iowa
5. 99
749-3507
2 Movies for the price of one!
Expires 12-31-93
6
Tuesday, December 7, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Ray·Ban
SUNGLASSES BY
BAUSCH & LOMB
The world's finest sunglasses™
M M M M M
Ray-Ban*
SUNGLASSES BY
BAUSCH & LOMB
The world's finest sunglasses.™
The Etc.
Shop
928
Mass.
Downtown
Parking in the rear
32 Toppings to choose from!!!
Rudy Tuesday
2 Pizzas
ONLY
$8.99
plus tax
2 toppings
2 drinks
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
749-0055
Now located at 704 Mass.
BASKETBALL TICKETS
ATTN: STUDENTS REDEMPTION PERIOD
GROUP #5 DECEMBER 13 - DECEMBER 15 8:00 A.M.- 5:00 P.M.
GAMES:
JAN. 10 - OKLAHOMA SOONERS
JAN. 17 - KANSAS STATE WILDCATS
JAN. 26 - OKLAHOMA STATE COWBOYS
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 OR RED SPRING 1994 FEE STICKER ON YOUR KUUD TO RECEIVE YOUR TICKETS.
** WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR LOST OR STOLEN COUPONS
Study break tips: food, folks and fun
When long hours of studying start taking their toll on
Audra Nellans, Peabody freshman, she takes her aggressions out on a hue bowl of chocolate chip cookie dough.
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
sits out on a huge piece of wood,
"Chocolate chip dough is my weakness," she said. "I
guess I sort of take my frustrations out on it while I relax in
front of the television."
RI
This time of year, many KU students find themselves studying long, grueling hours for their finals. And many times, students find comfort away from the monotony of their studies by resorting to activities they enjoyed during their childhood.
"Sometimes after you've been studying, it's good to go for a walk and see little kids playing," Jennifer Wright, Kansas City, Kan., junior, said. "I think anything you do that brings you back to when you were a carefree little kid relieves a lot of stress."
Wright said she read that coloring helped to relieve stress. Now there is a stack of coloring books on her coffee table.
"After a lot of studying, my roommate and I take 30-minute coloring breaks, and it really seems to work," she said.
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
A late-night studier, Steven Hasvold, Bonner Springs junior, said he liked to dance to country, rock or jazz music to rejuvenate himself for studying.
Frank Desalvo, director of counseling and psychological services, said he did not know if childhood activities helped all students relax. But he said for some people who found something they really enjoyed during their childhood, it might enhance their free-time away from studying.
"As crazy as it might sound, I light up a cigarette, hold it and dance in my room," he said. "It gets my energy back
"The concept is not so much that the activities relate to childhood but that they are a much needed distraction from current studies," he said. "Taking breaks recharges the batteries in students. It clears their minds, giving them a fresh start."
Brian Evans, Lenexa sophomore, plays a video game on the first floor of the Kansas Union. Evans said that sometimes he played video games to relieve stress and sometimes just for fun.
up."
Many students like to spend time with friends or roommates when they need a break from the books.
Ryan Lynch, Lenexa junior, said he and his roommate played hockey and basketball on Super Nintendo for a studybreak.
"It's a good stress reliever," he said. "We take out our aggressions on the TV instead of our books."
Lynch also said he drank a lot of Coke during finals. "I live on Coke, except I drink warm Coke," he said. "It's something I've done since I was a little kid."
Natalie Rollins, Springfield, Mo., junior said that next week as she was studying for her finals, two of them back to back, it would be the perfect excuse for her to indulge in junk foods.
"I eat a lot of candy when I'm studying for big tests," she said. "Sometimes I even stay on campus so I can raid the vending machines. Usually I eat chocolate. Cheese Doritos and Snickers is the perfect combination."
Don't let life in the pits get you down
ThePike
HOME DEVELOPMENTS
Special Spring or
Spring and Summer Leases ALL NEW!
ALL NEW!
3 bedroom 2 Bathroom condos with all the amenities.
with all the amenities
Will place individ
927 Emery
A 201
Call Today
843-4420
College Hill Condominiums
树
st Kansas University
story idea? 864-4810
CLIP A COUPON!
NATURAL WAY
Natural Fiber Clothing
820-822 Mass.
841-0100
About a dollar a slice.
Thin crust pepperoni. Extra cheese. No anchovies.
About a dollar a day.
Introducing the new Apple Computer Loan. Right now, with this special financing program from Apple, you can buy select Macintosh and PowerBook computers for about $30* a month. Or about a dollar a day. (You could qualify with just a phone call.) And if you apply by
Microsoft
Qualcomm
The Macintosh Quadra 610/8/160, Apple Color Plus
*1& Display; Apple Extended Keyboard II and mouse.
January 28,1994, your first payment is deferred for 90 days. It's an incredible deal no matter how you slice it. So, why should you buy an Apple computer? It does more. It costs less.It's that simple.
Introducing The New Apple Computer Loan
union technology center
Macintosh. The Power to be your Best at KU.
APPLE
KU
KU
VISA
MAXIMUM CARD
DISC WEB
Academic Computer Supplies, Service & Equipment
Burge Union * Level 3 * 913/864-5690
VISA
MasterCard
One Click
*Monthly payment is an estimate based on an Apple Computer Loan of $1,949.58 for the Macintosh Quadra 610 system above. Price and loan amount are based on Apple's estimate of higher education prices as of October 21, 1993. All computer system prices, loan amounts and monthly payments may vary. See your Apple Computer dealer for current system price. A 5.5% loan origination will be applied to the required loan amount. The interest rate is variable, based on the commercial paper rate plus 5.35%. For the month of October 1993, the interest rate was 8.57% with an APR of 8.90%. Your loan term will be adjusted for the prepayment penalty. The monthly payment assumes no deferred payment of principal or interest (deferred will add to your monthly payments). The Apple Computer Loan is subject to copyright ©. 1993 Apple Computer Inc. All rights reserved. Apple, the Apple logo, Macintosh, Macintosh and PowerBook are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc.
---
NATION/WORLD
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, December 7, 1993
7
North Korean offer not enough
U.N. seeks to inspect seven nuclear sites
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Clinton and U.N. inspectors faulted North Korea's offer to open nuclear sites to limited scrutiny yesterday and declared the offer inadequate to make sure the Koreans were not making bombs.
Clinton called top advisers to the White House to discuss a next step and said he also wanted to discuss the matter with South Korea and other allies in the area before deciding on any action.
Asked at a news conference about North Korea's latest effort to defuse the situation, Clinton said he was encouraged by indications "that they understood that we needed to both start inspections and the dialogue again between the South and the North."
But other comments by the president and an official of the U.N.'s International Atomic Energy Agency were more negative.
"Obviously we are not entirely
satisfied with the response of the North Koreans" to U.S. appeals for full cooperation with the IAEA, Clinton said. He expressed reluctance to go into detail before talking with advisers and allies about the North Korean proposal that was presented to U.S. officials in New York last Friday.
At IEA headquarters in Vienna, Austria, representative David Kyd said North Korea offered to permit unrestricted inspection of five of the seven nuclear sites at Tongbyon.
But at the other two sites, which the IAEA and the United States consider to be the most important, the inspectors could only change batteries and film in monitoring cameras. They could not, Kyd said, check seals and monitoring sensors.
Kyd said the IAEA does want to visit the five sites because it has not inspected them since last February but "they are not at the heart of the program."
The two sites that are the IEA's top priorities are a nuclear reactor, containing spent fuel laced with plutonium with bomb-
making potential, and a facility that North Korea calls a chemical laboratory but that the IEA says is a reprocessing plant for extracting plutonium from spent reactor fuel rods.
Kyd said the IEAA would not respond officially to the North Korean proposal until after the U.S. government has made its position known. He said State Department officials briefed Hans Blix, the agency's director general, on details of the proposal over the weekend.
"It does not respond to our position," Kyd said. He said his comment reflected Blix's view, expressed numerous times since August, that North Korea must permit full access by inspectors to all seven declared sites.
Blix told the 25-nation board of governors of the IAEA last Thursday that because of North Korea's refusal to allow inspections, his agency could no longer provide "any meaningful assurance" that North Korea was adhering to its Non-Proliferation Treaty obligation not to build nuclear weapons.
PLO seeks support
JERUSALEM
BL O cooks
JERUSALEM — PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat tried Monday to get the United States to side with Palestine in its dispute with Israel over a ground-breaking peace accord.
In appealing to Christopher, Arafat stressed the pressure he was under from Palestinians angry that the accord might fall short of their expectations.
Secretary of State Warren Christopher met with Arafat in Amman, Jordan, and discussed the economic and political problems confronting the Palestinian leader as he tries to assert PLO control over Gaza and the West Bank town of Jericho.
LOS ANGELES
Frank Zappa dead at 52
LOS ANGELES — Frank Zappa, whose compositions stretched the boundaries of rock, jazz and classical music, and tested the limits of free speech, died in his Los Angeles home Saturday of prostate cancer. He was 52.
Zappa made his name in the late 1960s when he led his band the Mothers of Invention in what he called "sonic mutilations." With the band or as a solo artist, he released about 50 albums, including "Freak Out!," "Hot Rats" and "Sheik Yerbouti."
Compiled from The Associated Press.
layhawk Bookstore
Coconut Tree
"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
Winter blues? Finals stressing you?
Come to the CADILLAC RANCH for some stress-free fun for our
CORONABEACH PARTY
Thursday, Dec. 9th
Giveaways all night long!
Have your picture taken with the Corona Girls
Cadillac Ranch "Where it's family"
2515 W. 6th
842-9845
Palm Tree
Probably nothing. But then again, that depends on you.
The University Daily Kansan business staff is looking for creative individuals who can make the ordinary, extraordinary. We want people who can turn the mundane into something wild and unique, yet have it still be meaningful.
palm tree
What the heck does pasta have to do with selling shoes?
The Kansan will be selecting several creative staff members for the Spring 1994 semester. You will be able to test your ideas and develop new ones as you're trained in making creative layouts for area advertisers. And you will gain valuable computer experience.
Not to mention, it's a lot of fun.
So, if you excel at combining ideas in an exciting, meaningful way, call us. Get in touch with John Carlton at the Kansan by December 9. After all, what you make of your ideas is up to you.
Contact John Carlton at the
Contact John Carrion as University Daily Kansan 119 Stauffer-Flint 864-4358
$ \varphi \Lambda \Omega $ $ \Phi \mathrm {K} \Psi $ $ \cdot \Phi \mathrm {K T} $ $ \Phi \mathrm {K O} $ $ \cdot \Phi \mathrm {M I} $ $ \Pi \mathrm {B} \Phi $ $ \Pi \mathrm {K A} $ $ \Sigma \mathrm {A E} $ $ \Sigma \mathrm {K} $ $ \Sigma \mathrm {X} $ $ \Sigma \mathrm {A T} $ $ \Sigma \mathrm {K} $ $ \Sigma \mathrm {N} $ $ \Sigma \Phi \mathrm {E} $ $ \Sigma \Xi \Sigma $ $ \mathrm{T K} $
ΘX ZBT ZTA AXO AAM AFA AKA AOH AΦ ΣA ΛΙΩ ΑΣΑ BOH XΩ AX AAY M ATA AZ FΒB KAΘ
The men of the 1992-1993 Interfraternity Council would like to congratulate the new Interfraternity Council for 1993-1994:
VP for Membership: MIKE STANLEY
President-MIKE WARD
VP for Fraternity Affairs-LUKE DAVIS
VPforAdministra
VPforPublicRelations-MARK GALUS VPforPublications-DEREK KING VPforFinance-JEREMY FORT
odluckar
1045879276
AXO AVI AFY AKA AOI AΦ A2A AT12 A∑A BOI X42 AX AAA M ATV AZ TFβ KAO KVA KKI K2
CAUTION:
DANGEROUSLY
LOW PRICES!
COUPON
STRIP
Gloves
Onion
12th & Oread
12th & Oread (above Yellow Sub)
Pasta Dinner only $2^{49}
pasta, homemade marinara sauce, garlic toast With coupon only. Not valid w/ other offers
With coupon only. Not valid w/ other offers
1 offer/coupon/customer. Expires 12/20/19
8
Yello Sub
1814 W. 23rd
12th and Indiana
Yello Sub for Lunch?
Monday-Friday Lunch Special!
Any 6" sub only
$2.49 with purchase of drink
(Up to $84 value)
With this coupon, I am to 2 pm only. Not valid with other offers.
I offer/coupon/person. Coupon expires on 12/2003
SAVERS
*Hilcress* /9th & Iowa
*Park Plaza* /27th & Iowa
*Dibbles* /23rd & Nasmith
*Dibbles* /28th & Lawrence
ACME
DRY CLEANERS & LAUNDERERS
LAWRENCE'S
VALUE CLEANERS
Laundered SHIRTS On Hangers 99¢
Not valid with any other offer.
Coupon must be received before morning order.
12/23/2023
Kief's
25% OFF
Christmas CDs
With this coupon, expires 12/7/93
Not valid with any other offer.
KIEF'S
CDS/TAPES
24th & Iowa St. PO, Box 2, Lawrence, Ks. 60944
CDS & TAPES WALRODIDGE CASTERLEO
082420144 813-449-1891
Coupon must be handed Rainbow Balloon Bouquet
Rainbow Balloon Bouquet
1/2 Dozen Rainbow Colored 11" Latex Balloons with your choice of a jelly bean jar, teddy bear or Jelly Belly candy cone.
must be presented before ordering
limeware per person per pen+
cappon Not valid with other items
Expires 12-31-83
BALLOONS
N' MORE
It's your PARTY
Southern Hills Center • 749-3455
Bell's
PIZZA
Shoppe
601 KASOLD DR
842-0600
MANICOTTI or LASAGNA
1 POUND OF SPAGHETTI
+ GARLIC TOAST
+ 32 OZ COKE
(ADD $1 FOR MEATBALLS)
LINE IN OR CARRY OUT
FREE DELIVERY
Bell's
PIZZA
Shoppe
601 KASOLD DR
TOLL FREE 800-222-3456
842-0600
MEDIUM
PIZZA
SINGLE TOPPING EXTRA TOPPING 75.
$6.95
2nd Pizza for $4
freshly baked
LARGE
PIZZA
SINGLE TOPPING EXTRA TOPPING 95.
$8.95
2nd Pizza for $5
2nd Pizza for $5 (Equal or lesser value)
Equal or lesser value)
JUNIOR'S FARM RECORDS factory fresh compact discs, cassettes, &c
$2.00 OFF
any CD
our already great prices
$1.00 OFF any cassette
842-3344 downtown 924/2 MASS. expires12/31/93
8
Tuesday, December 7, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VISIONS
VISIONS
Optical Dispensary
806 Massachusetts
841-7421
Kansas Classifieds Work
ional sports event marketing company. It looks
for motivational posters in office spaces,
Beds, Desk
ment internship.
Namely, retail sales, bar, bakery, Sakura, Salary
BENCHWARMERSCATERING
*FULL SERVICE CATERING FOR ANY AND ALL OF YOUR PARTY NEEDS.
*Rock Chalk"X-Mas Parties"Formals "(Call Joke or Clay at 841-0505)" 12 dayain advance.
Want To Exhibit In the Kansas Union Gallery?
Applications Now Available for Spring 1974
Inquire at the SUN Box Office -- 864-3477
9:00 - 5:00 p.m.
Level 4, Kansas Union
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
It's No Wonder People Demand So Much From Us. Look What They Demand From Themselves.
I'll try to be more accurate. I'll just provide the text as it appears.
The image shows a person flexing their arm, indicating strength or muscle definition. The background is plain and dark, focusing attention on the subject.
Nobody pumps more strength and durability into athleticwear than Russell Athletic. Their field-tested tanks, T-shirts and shorts ease you through the toughest workouts-as well as lighter more casual times. Russell Athletic because you demand and deserve the very best.
RUSSELL:
ATHLETIC
Henitage • Quality • Performance 840 Massachusetts
JOCK'S NITCH
SPORTING GOODS
The Sports Look of Today!
842-2442
Others just want young healthy males.
The research compares over-the-counter medications with prescriptions or a name-brand prescription with a generic version, Dockhorn said.
Some businesses want you to buy their products.
International Medical Technical Consultants Inc., 16300 College Blvd. Lenexa, is one of about 50 businesses worldwide who conduct clinical research for pharmaceutical companies. About 40 to 50 percent of the firm's 2000 volunteers this year are college students, said Shelley Dorsh, marketing coordinator for the firm.
Males between the ages of 18 and 40 are desirable candidates for Phase 1 research, which tests medications for pharmaceutical companies, said Robert J. Dockhorn, physician and firm president and founder.
Tests can range from 30 minutes to two weeks in length, Dorsh said. Reimburssement is based on the amount of time a volunteer is involved with the study and can range from $30 to $1500.
Males wanting to be involved in the clinical research usually undergo a prescreening by phone, and, if they
"We're down doing the nitty gritty kinds of things that aren't spectacular," Dockhorn said. "But they are the kind of things that have an impact on all of us. We're sort of the everyday people."
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said being a volunteer in such research was considered a lower health risk because the drugs already have been used on animals, and the drugs are taken only for short periods.
"It's a necessary thing to get drugs approved," Yockey said.
"You're compensated adequately for your time, but it can take up a considerable amount of time," Yockey said. "You're not going to get wealthy doing these studies. If you want to pick up a few bucks for Christmas, sure."
Kansas Union, Level Two
(level four beginning Dec. 13th)
8:30 - 5:00 Mon. - Fri.
10:00 - 4:00 Sat.
Noon - 3:00 Sunday
864-5285
CAMPION MORTY
Men or women using birth control or who are sterile can be volunteers for Phase II through VI research, which tests a medication's efficacy and side effects on people possessing the illness or disease the medication is supposed to treat. Dorsh said. Marketing and advertising research about the medication is also conducted, she said. Phase II through IV testing is usually outpatient.
Women have not been used in Phase I research because of the potential risk to an unborn child cited by the Food and Drug Administration, Dockhorn said.
Free Holiday Shopping Coupon!
In any form of research, 30 to 40 people are part of a typical study, which may test such things as asthma or allergy medications, Dockhorn said.
By Liz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
Drug experiment company seeks healthy young men for research
Volunteers take medication and then the level of medication in their blood is measured. Usually the test involves at least a 24-hour stay at the site.
Matter Aviator Jackets
$279.95 to $448.95
*Clothing & Accessories
for Men& Women
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*Bausch & Lomb
Ray-Ban®
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*Boxer Shorts
*Chili Pepper Lights &
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qualify, they will undergo a screening visit, which includes a physical exam at one of the firm's sites in Lenexa, Prairie Village or Tulsa, Okla., Dockhorn said.
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gift guide
Stocking stuffers for the fun at heart
By Sara Bennett
Only 18 shopping days left until Christmas.
You've bought gifts for Mom, Dad, the siblings and the significant other, but what do you get the roommate whose only apparent interest is beer and video games, or the best friend who is sick of getting sappy verses written in pink calligraphy What does the security system? On what about that one person whose tastes lie just on the fringes of good taste?
That special someone on your list has probably spent the semester slaving over Augustine and Aristotle. Wouldn't he or she appreciate a little mindless entertainment to occupy those long days of vacation? If the answer is yes, Why not try
PARKER
these unique stocking stuffers?
Kathie Lee Gifford's CD, "Sentimental," sets the mood for a romantic evening or a ride in an elevator.
photo illustration by Paul Kotz / KANSAN
KATHIE LEE GIFFORD, SENTIMENTAL
If you liked Kathie Lee in the Carnival Cruise line commercials, you'll love her collection of golden oldies, "Sentimental" is especially appropriate for fans of elevator music. This CD makes one wonder if television's peppiest morning talk show hostess got her start as a Lawrence Welk singer.
Each song, from "When I Fall in Love" and "Over The Rainbow" to "I Had to be You" and "Hey There," features Kathie Lee's inspid voice accompanied by the same swing beat, violins and background singers commonly heard in your favorite dentist's office. "Sentimental" is perfect music for a romantic evening in front of the fire or for having your teeth drilled. Mercifully, Kathy Lee's cohort Regis Philbin doesn't sing on the CD.
THE HANGOVER HANDBOOK: 101 CURES FOR HUMANITY'S OLDEST MALADY
The perfect gift for those who tend to overdo Christmas and New Year's. Not only is this a comprehensive guide to curing post-partying alliments, it is one of the best examples of political correctness seen all year.
Common knowledge holds that hangovers happen to those who abuse alcohol. Indeed, "The Hangover Handbook," written by Nic Van Oudtshoorn, has an entire chapter devoted to famous drunks throughout history. By its very title, you would think "The Hangover Handbook" pretty much glorifies tying one on.
But wait. At the front of the book is a warning about the dangers of alcohol and driving under the influence. "Don't be stupid," Van Oudtshorn admonishes readers. "Don't abuse alcohol."
Preaching aside, The Hangover Handbook contains everything there is to know about drinking and hangovers. With more than 24 pages of remedies from around the world, hung over souls should be able to find something that works — if they're brave enough, that is. One cure, the Dairy Delight consists of vodka, tomato juice, Worcestershire sauce, Alka-Seltzer and full cream milk.
THE "HATING BRENDA" CD
The CD's cover aptly describes "Hating Brenda" as "Araging, hormone generated secretion of pop music genres and pop TV culture." "Who is Brenda?" is a technodance song perfect for a small rave. "Alternative College Radio Gunge Hit (Smells Like Teen Brenda)" sounds suspiciously like Nirvana, complete with unintelligible lyrics. "Horny Brenda" is an angst-filled folk song about Brenda's sexual exploits. Other songs include "Dylan's Choice," "Everyday is Brenda Day" and "Brenda Can't Dance to This."
The perfect gift for anyone who hates Brenda, the raven-healed, perpetually premenstrual twin played each Wednesday on "Beverly Hills 90210" by TV's bad girl Shannen Doherty. This compact disc, recorded by "Rump," is an extension of the band's "We Hate Brenda" newsletter, which started publication at the height of Doherty's infamy. "Hating Brenda" is also perfect for those who hate "90210" in general.
Rumor has it there's an "I Hate Brenda" book out too.
THE BEAVIS AND BUTT-HEAD EXPERIENCE
Experience Beavis and Butt-Head in stereo, if you dare. This mindless masterpiece is a collection of songs by bands which, according to MTV's metalhead duo, "don't suck." Never before released songs by Nirvana, Anthrax, Aerosmith and the Red Hot Chili Peppers are narrated by Beavis and Butt-Heads' trademark monotone laughter. Needless to say, everything on this album is "cool."
Beavis and Butt-Head themselves try their hands at
THE BEAVIS AND BUTT-HEAD EXPERIENCE
music on the album with a song called "Come to Butt-head," a satire of R&B love songs. The song lends itself well to the pair's adolescent sexual giggling. Beavis and Butt-Head also pair up with Cher for a revamped "I Got You, Babe."
Whether or not Beavis and Butt-Head are as funny without the benefit of visual antics is debatable, but this CD is a great gift for anyone who will admit to having the same tastes as Beavis and Butt-Head.
MARY ANN'S GILLIGAN'S ISLAND COOKBOOK
In the forward to this handy dandy little book, Bob Denver, immortalized as Gilligan on the comedy show "Gilligan's island," said he once took an informal poll to see which single female castaway was more popular with young men. Mary Ann won hands down over Ginger, he said.
It seems Mary Ann was, and still is, every prepubescent boy's dream girl, which makes this book by Dawn Wells, the original Mary Ann, the ideal bachelor's gift. Recipes help hone the culinary skills, while photos of Mary Ann in pigtails and a halter top recall those not-so-bygone days when adolescent guys mooned over the buxom castaway from Kansas.
Beavis and Butt-Head Experience CD
Scattered throughout the recipes are quotes from "Gilligan's island" episodes, biographies of each character, trivia and anecdotes about the show's cast and crew. These features, plus a complete episode guide, make "Mary Ann's Gilligan's Island Cookbook" an ideal viewing guide for those vacation nights spent watching late-night runs.
This book is also a tribute to the show "Gilligan's Island," which had its debut in 1964, ran two seasons and has continued in syndication.
Recipes include "Poo Poo Pee Doo Dip," "Professor's Miracle Rescue Slaw," "Three Hour Tour Fruit Salad," "Skipper's Goodbye Ribeye," and there is an entire chapter devoted to, what else, coconut cream pie.
BEAVIS AND BUTT-HEAD: THIS BOOK SUCKS
This is the perfect companion to "The Beavis and Butt-Head Experience," although "Huh Huh Huh" doesn't transfer well from the television screen to the written word. They're right. This book does suck. But if you're amused by Beavis and Butt-Head, you'll be amused by this.
Mary Ann's
GILLIGAN'S ISLAND
COOKBOOK
Foreword by Bob Denver
Dawn Wells
Ken Reck & Jim Clark
Mary Ann's Gilligan's Island Cookbook
People and places at the University of Kansas.
Three-year-old takes family car for joy ride, hits parked cars and burns his house
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On Oct. 1, Mikey Sproul, age 3, made national news when he commandered the family car, which had one flat tire, and cruisered down Highway 41 near Tampa, Fla., hitting two parked cars and narrowly missing several moving ones. Mikey's assessment: "I go zoom." On Nov. 11, using a cigarette lighter, Mikey burned down his family's house, sending his father to the hospital with second and third-degree burns. Mikey's assessment: "Now I have no more house."
Aspoiled party
A 25th wedding anniversary party was disrupted in Webster, Mass., last month when 20 people were hospitalized because the chicken-gizzards-and-banana dish, which is a Puerto Rican delicacy, spoiled.
Snake of an appetite
China's 'Nanjing Daily' reported in May that farmer Li Hongzhong, 42, has eaten a snake nearly every day for the past 20 years, feels miserable on the days he can't eat one, and not surprisingly, has had difficulty meeting prospective marriage partners. Reporters witnessed Li eating a two-foot-long snake that was twisting violently as he swallowed it.
City spills its guts
In March, a small dump truck overturned in Marietta, Ohio, littering the street with cow parts. A smaller shipment fell off of a truck on the same street the following week, running the total of cowparts spills to four within a year. Said City Councilwoman Katie McGlynn, "I would just like to know why this continues to happen. Maybe we need a stronger ordinance to make this a more serious crime."
Check all the rooms first
In April, Merriam District Attorney Paul Morrison said that the body of a man who had committed suicide went undetected for three days in a bathroom of a house that was being shown by a real estate agent. Apparently, neither the agent nor perspective buyers were interested in looking inside that particular bathroom. And over a four-day period in February, guests slept in a room at an Edmonton, Alberta, motel unaware that a woman's body was stuffed between the floor and the box spring.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
December 7.1993 PAGE 9 KULIFE
See WEIRD, Page 10.
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Tuesday, December 7, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Residence halls ready for vacation
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
When the residence halls close at 9 p.m. Dec. 20, many of the residents will have already left.
But many resident assistants and hall directors will stay behind to make sure each hall is safe and secure.
RAS must check every room on their floor to make sure they are free of fire hazards and security risks, said Ken Stoner, director of student housing.
Jim Rupprecht, complex director of Hashinger and Ellsworth Halls, said the process was tedious but necessary.
they've probably forgotten it."
"A good number of residents leave their windows open, leave food out and even leave without locking their doors," Rupprecht said. "You name it,
He said that when RAs inspected rooms they were not looking for hall policy violations, such as possession of alcohol.
"But often we'll find furniture that residents have taken, or borrowed, from their floor lobby," Rupprecht said.
Rupprecht and other hall directors recommend that students follow guidelines from a checkout sheet that was posted on residents' doors earlier this month. Among other requirements, the guidelines suggested that students lock their windows, unplug everything and return dishes to the dining halls.
Stoner said that student housing staff would monitor halls that were closed during the break.
For some residents who have to stay in Lawrence during the holidays, two residence halls, Lewis and Templin, will be open. Jayhawker Towers, Stouffer Place Apartments and Sunflower Duplex Apartments also will remain open.
Stoner said very few students had requested rooms in the halls. Most of the students who will be staying during the winter break already live in Templin or Lewis, Stoner said.
Boumaza said she was planning to travel to Kansas City and St. Louis during the break.
© 1993 Reebok International Ltd. All Rights Reserved. REEBOK and HEXAITE are registered trademarks of Reebok International.
For international students, like Fadila Boumazza, Alsace, France, senior, who lives in Lewis, staying in the halls during the holidays was not considered a problem.
WEIRD: Odor leads police to 800 mice, rats
In June, Steven Muys, 27, and Candace Temen, 21, were charged with mistreatment of animals in Park Forest, Ill., after police responded to a neighbor's complaint of a bad smell coming from their home. Muys told police the smell was probably the cat's litter box, but when the police went to the basement to see it, they found 42 snakes and about 800 mice and rats, who were apparently being bred as food for the snakes.
To shoot or not to shoot
In February, in Columbia, S.C., a bullet was fired through the office window of county treasurer Marjorie
Sharpe amid growing displeasure at delays in her office's tax-appeal hearings. Sharpe told reporters, "Don't (the vandals) realize it's going to make their tax bills (even) higher when we have to replace these windows?"
Worst criminals
On Oct. 29, two men approached a teller at the Harbor Bank in Baltimore with a note reading: "I have a gun. Gimme me (sic) your money or else." According to a witness, the teller looked at the note, which was printed on the bank of a deposit slip from another bank, and replied, "This is a
Maryland National Bank transaction — you have to go to Maryland National." The men looked at each other, panicked and ran off.
The Weirdo-American Community
In Augusta, Ga., in September, Dr. Keith Dale Rose, 31, resigned from a hospital staff and left town after pleading guilty to public indecency. Two female neighbors had reported seeing Rose emerge from his apartment nude with his mouth gagged, his hands tied over his head and a small, empty paint bucket attached to his penis.
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SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, December 7. 1993
11
Coaches: fewer scholarships will hurt teams
Player numbers cut by NCAA rule
By Matt Doyle
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas football coach Glen Mason faced a situation this year that he would rather not face again in his coaching career.
In injuries to many Jayhawk players affected Mason's team in 1993 and reduced the number of players available for game action. Mason said this situation the Jayhawks endured affected the quality of play.
Injuries are an aspect that could affect the quality of play of any college football team. Next year, college teams will have three fewer players on scholarship to replace any injured players.
Mason and other coaches in the Big Eight Conference are concerned about play being affected when the total number of scholarships for football are cut from 88 to 85 starting in 1994.
"We were hard hit this year with injuries," Mason said. "With all the NCAA legislation talking about major college football taking scholarships down 85 or below, the quality of the game will definitely be affected if you have a number of injuries. People who are making these decisions better realize that."
The NCAA, in a cost-cutting move, started to reduce football scholarships from 95 five years ago to 85 by next year.
Coaches said that there was a perception by college presidents and faculty representatives that college football was not much different from professional football.
Nebraska coach Tom Osborne said
professional football dealt with players who were already developed as football players. He added that was not always the case in the college game.
"In most college programs, 90 percent of your freshmen really aren't ready to play and need to redshirt that year." Osborne said. "You also have a few sophomores that aren't big enough or strong enough to play. So there is a third of your squad that's in a developmental stage."
Toss in about 10 to 14 players lost due to injuries, and Osborne said a team was left with 45 to 50 players who could play. Mason said he had only 21 healthy defensive players for the final game of the season against Missouri.
"It's going to become an injury game, and that's what we're all going to have to live with." Walden said. "We'll all be keeping our fingers crossed that this is not the year that it hits us."
Iowa State coach Jint Walden said that because of the reductions in scholarships, football would become a game of which team could stay healthy.
Injuries affect a team's depth. Former Missouri coach Bob Stull said he noticed a considerable difference in the quality of play when he had to use second- and third-story personnel in place of first-string players.
Kansas used 46 different starters in 1993. Junior reserve tight end Brent Willeford played on both sides of the football this season. He began the season at tight end, but he became a starter at defensive end for the Utah game.
Willeford started the following two games at defensive end before returning to tight end before the Iowa State game.
Recruiting could be affected with these reductions in scholarships.
Oklahoma State coach Pat Jones said there would be less room for error in recruiting players.
"It's a balancing act between players who can give you a chance to win and those who can survive academically," Jones said. "The more you shrink the talent pool, which is occurring, there will be fewer of those guys available."
Mason said that coaches have been pleading their cases about what dilemmas could occur with reductions in scholarships. But Mason said these pleas had been falling upon deaf ears.
"We don't have much of a say. I don't think many people are listening to what football coaches are saying," Mason said. "Some people look at football coaches as being the problem, and that's not true. We were the first to respond to cost-cutting measures, and we're the ones in the field that probably know what's going on. This measure will affect the game."
Cutting down
Scholarships for NCAA Division I football will be reduced from 88 to 85 next year. The following is a list of Big Eight schools and the number of scholarship players they had in 1993.
Missouri 88
Nebraska 87
Iowa St. 87
Kansas St. 86*
Colorado 84
**KANSAS** **81**
Oklahoma 73
Oklahoma St. 65
KU
Kansas St. did not release this total.
Our figure is based on information from company cover Kansas St. regularly.
Late scoring run lifts Kansas to victory
KANSAN
WASHINGTON 3
Poor shooting percentage leads to better second half
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
After leading by only five points at halftime, Kansas defeated Washburn last night 82-68 at Allen Field House with the help of four three-pointers by senior guard/forward Steve Woodberry.
Kansas coach Roy Williams said he was not happy with Kansas' offensive play. Kansas ended the game shooting 40.5 percent.
"We were just bigger inside," Williams said. "I did want the basketball to go inside. I wasn't pleased with our offense, but I liked how hard we played defensively."
The Jayhawks' height advantage in the middle did not pan out. Only 11 of the Jayhawks' 30 field goals came inside the key.
Kansas guard Jacque Vaughn said the team's plan entering the game was to go inside and exploit the Ichabods relatively small line-up. Washburn's tallest player is 6-foot-7 compared to Kansas' three players 6-8 or taller.
"We definitely wanted to pound the ball inside," Vaughn said. "They started to sag in the middle because we weren't shooting well outside. But I'm sure we'll see more of that. We definitely want to go inside before we shoot from the outside."
Susan McSpadden / KANSAN
In order to work the ball inside, Kansas must hit more outside shots, senior forward Patrick Richey said. Junior center Greg Ostertag and senior forward Richard Scott combined for 21 points.
Greg Ostertag, junior center, aggressively makes his way to the basket as Washburn forward Tim Watson attempts to block his way. Kansas won the game at Allen Field House last 82-68.
"It's a little tough to get the ball inside because we're not shooting well," Richey said. "I know it's got to be frustrating for Richard and Greg."
Woodberry, like the entire Kansas team, was cold from three-point range in the first half. Woodberry missed all five of his attempts in the first half, while Kansas was zero for 10 from behind the three-point stripe.
Despite the cold start, Woodberry again led the second-half charge as he did in Kansas' victory against DePaul on Saturday. He scored 12 of his team-high 16 points in the second half.
"I didn't have any plans to hit the three-pointers," Woodberry said. "I just hit the open shots."
The game was not in hand until there was 5-29 remaining in the second half. Kansas freshman guard Jacques Vaughn took an outlet pass from Scott and hit a three-pointer, capping a 16-0 run by the Jayhawks that made the score 76-52.
Woodberry said the Jayhawks' defense was the key to the run.
"We were just more aggressive," he said. "Our defense makes our offense."
Working the clock was something that Williams said disturbed him — specifically, the absence of a five-second penalty. The rule change that went into effect this season allows players to dribble the ball without worrying about a five-second penalty.
Washburn burned the clock numerous times as Ichabod guard Richard Griffin dribbled around the top of the key.
Woodberry's shooting gives team second straight victory
Senior guard Steve Woodberry found the shooting touch in the second half for the second consecutive victory for Kansas. And once again, his hot hand led the Jayhawks to success.
By Matt Doyle
"I despise that rule," Williams said. "I don't think that's what the game of basketball is supposed to be like. It's one guy dribbling the ball, while four players stand around."
Kansan sportswriter
In Saturday's 79-74 victory at DePaul, Woodberry sparked the Jayhawks rally from a 10-point halftime deficit by scoring 21 of his 23 points in the second half.
"They could have been worn down, but I'd like to think that Kansas has better players," he said. "Not to cut down Washburn. They made us play. If we would have played less than 90 percent, we would have lost the game."
Woodberry said he did not have plans coming out of halftime against the Ichabods to improve on his 2 of 7 shooting in the first half.
Woodberry connected on all four of his three-point attempts in the second half as No. 7 Kansas shot past Washburn 82-68 last night at Allen Field House.
"I just continued to take open shots, and they went down for me," Woodberry said. "The first half I was hesistant, and I was just missing. In the second half, I kept shooting, and they fell for me."
The first open shot Woodberry had in the second half came just seven seconds after halftime, and he buried the three pointer from the right wing.
"I told the team at halftime that I wanted us to be aggressive on offense," said Kansas coach Roy Williams. "Steve came out and made 4 of 4 from the three-point line in the second half, and those were some big baskets for us. But we can't depend on Steve Woodberry to be the entire Kansas basketball team."
Woodberry's final three-pointer started the Jayhawks on a 21-2 run that broke open the contest. Woodberry knocked down a three-pointer from the left wing with 11:05 remaining in the game that gave the Jayhawks a 58-50 lead.
giving Kansas a 41-33 lead. Woodberry made two more three-point shots in the next four minutes as the Jahvahs continued to hold off the Ichabods.
Despite Woodberry's success, the Jayhawks continued to struggle shooting the basketball. Kansas shot only 40.5 percent from the field against Washburn and has not been above 50 percent in any of its seven regular-season games this season.
"I'd like to shoot a higher percentage," Williams said. "We made a living of shooting great shots and making them for five years, so maybe this is the year we'll learn to make some of them."
Kansas 82, Washburn 68
KANSAS (6-1)
Player fgm/fga ftm/ta tp
Richey 2-7 3-4 12
Scott 6-9 0-0 12
Ostertag 3-10 3-5 9
Vaughn 3-7 0-0 7
Woodberry 6-11 0-0 16
Pollard 4-7 0-0 8
Gurley 1-2 4-4 6
Rayford 0-2 0-0 0
Williams 2-5 2-4 6
Pearson 2-10 2-2 7
Proud 1-4 1-3 3
Whatley 1-4 1-2 1
Weichbrodt 0-0 0-2 0
Totals 30-74 16-26 82
WASHBURN (4-2)
Watson 3-5 0-0 6
Lewis 2-3 0-0 4
Tyson 4-4 0-1 8
Canfield 3-4 0-0 8
Griffin 1-16 0-0 2
Smith 3-11 1-2 9
Johnson 6-10 2-2 16
Berlin 3-3 2-2 8
Harris 1-1 2-2 4
Bachelor 1-2 0-0 3
**Totals** 27-59 7-9 68
Arkansas takes top spot, Kansas drops in AP poll
The Associated Press
Arkansas coach Nolan Richardson is taking his first-ever No. 1 ranking in stride.
"It's still early in the year and early in the season, and as I told our kids, being ranked No. I is just another part of growing up and being a good team," Richardson said.
H尔福里 Kansas 38, Washburn 33 3-point goals Kansas 65, Washburn 7-24. Rebound Kansas 46, Washburn 35 Assist Kansas 17, Washburn 16 Attendance 14,000
"The keys now are to go out and play your hearts out simply because being No. 1, everybody's after you." he said.
Arkansas,3-0, took over the No. 1 ranking in the Associated Press college basketball poll yesterday with 51 first-place votes and 1,603 points from national panel of writers and broadcasters. Arkansas moved up one spot when Kentucky,2-1, lost to Indiana 96-84. The Wildcats dropped to sixth.
After Arkansas' 111-76 victory over Northwestern Louisiana on Saturday night and Kentucky's loss that afternoon, Richardson said he expected the Razorbacks to move up.
Richardson made no predictions on how long his team could hold the top spot, already occupied by three teams this season. Kentucky held the ranking for a week, replacing preseason pick North Carolina. The Tar Heels fell to Massachusetts, but are now back at No. 2
"There isn't anything wrong with being No. 1," he said. "We are not going to shy away from it. It's our turn. Let's take it."
"College basketball is so competitive there may be 10 teams ranked No. 1 before the season is over," Richardson said.
After getting the No.1 ranking in 1978, the Razorbacks won their next two games before losing to Houston. The Eddie Sutton-coached team featuring Sidney Moncrief, Ron Brewer and Marvin Delph went to the Final Four, where it lost to eventual national champion Kentucky.
Arkansas is averaging 108 points a game with the average margin of victory 37.7 points against Murray State, Missouri and Northwestern Louisiana. The Razorbacks defeated Missouri by 52. Only one player has played more than 22 minutes in any game, and all 15 Razorbacks have played in every game.
North Carolina, 6-1, moved up from fourth. Michigan, Duke and Temple, ranked fifth through seventh a week ago, also jumped two spots. The Tar Heels received eight first-place votes and 1,481 points, 14 more than Michigan, 4-0, which got one first-place vote. Duke, 3-0, and Temple, 2-0, each had two first-place votes and UCLA received one.
After Kentuckv. it was Kansas. Mas-
AP Top 25
The top 25 teams in the Associated Press' college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, record through Dec. 5. total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking:
rank team record pts. pr
1. Arkansas (51) 3-0 1,603 2
2. N. Carolina (8) 6-1 1,481 4
3. Michigan (1) 4-0 1,467 5
4. Duke (2) 3-0 1,420 6
5. Temple (2) 2-0 1,385 7
6. Kentucky 2-1 1,261 1
7. Kansas 5-1 1,231 3
8. Massachusetts 5-1 1,070 9
9. UCLA (1) 2-0 947 10
10. Louisville 1-1 896 11
11. Purdue 5-0 826 14
12. Indiana 1-1 768 21
13. Syracuse 4-0 743 18
14. Arizona 3-0 731 19
15. Oklahoma St. 4-1 728 8
16. Illinois 2-0 720 16
17. Minnesota 4-2 641 15
18. Georgia Tech 3-1 583 17
19. Wisconsin 3-1 355 24
20. Cincinnati 4-1 354 23
21. Connecticut 3-1 342 —
22. Virginia 2-1 177 12
23. Vanderbilt 3-1 169 20
24. Geo. Wash. 2-1 163 20
25. California 2-1 130 13
Others receiving votes: Boston College 118,
Florida St. 109, Ohio St. 96, Marquette 79,
Maryland 75, W. Kentucky 61, LSU 41, Villanova
36, Washington 38, Michigan St. 35, Memphis St. 32,
Santa Clara 29, New Mexico St. 25, Va. Commonwealth 24, Old Dominion 23, Penn 18, Miaoult 15, Seton Hall 15, Georgia 14, New Orleans 14, Pepperdine 14, Georgetown 13,
Tulane 10, Xavier, Ohio 0, Oklahoma 5, Pittsburg
4, Texas 4, Wake Forest 4, Florida 4,
hattannogee 4, Ala. Bloomingham 2, Iowa 1,
Michigan St. 1, Nobraska 1, Texas-EI Paso 1.
Source: The Associated Press KANBAN
sachusets, UCLA and Louisville rounding out the Top 10.
Purdue headed the Second Ten, followed by Indiana, Syracuse, Arizona, Oklahoma State, Illinois, Minnesota, Georgia Tech, Wisconsin and Cincinnati.
Connecticut, 3-0, was the only newcomer this week, moving in at No. 21. Fellow Big East member Georgetown, nonwinners against Division I fois, dropped out.
Rounding out the Top 25 were Connecticut, Virginia, Vanderbilt, George Washington and California.
Indiana, which lost to Butler in its operer, made the biggest jump with its victory. over Kentucky. The Hoosiers went from 21st to 12th.
Explosive Smith blasts past Eagles: Cowboys snap streak
The Associated Press
His 57-yard run in the fourth period, reminiscent of a 62-yard backbreaker against Philadelphia earlier this year, carried the Dallas Cowboys to a 23-17 victory against the Eagles last night.
IRVING, Texas — Emmitt Smith gives the Philadelphia Eagles fits in the fourth quarter.
The defending champions moved a game behind the New York Giants in the NFC East with an 8-4 record while Philadelphia fell to 5-7.
Smith, who gained 172 yards on 23 carries, broke loose for 57 yards to the Eagles 16. Five plays later fullback Daryl Johnston scored the clinching touchdown on a 2-vard run with 9:16 to play.
"It was the right play at the right time," Smith said. "They had me in check until the big run. We were struggling big-time."
"Mark McMillian caught me from behind. I thought I was going to score. It was like the road runner running up alongside the covote."
On Halloween, Smith scored on a 62- yard run in the fourth period to cap a club-record rushing performance of 237
yards in a 23-10 victory against the Eagles...
"It is kind of ironic." Smith said: "Philadelphia has had a lot of injuries, but they still play tough. Before the big run, we kept saying we had to get things rolling, and the play opened up."
The Cowboys had lost their previous two games, and coach Jimmy Johnson was relieved to have put the losing streak to rest.
"It was satisfying because the Eagles always play us tough," he said. "It's a big deal to beat them twice in a single year. We haven't done it in a longtime. They've always had our number."
Johnson said Smith "always comes up with the big plays when you need them. That's what makes a great player."
Philadelphia coach Rich Kotite agreed. "Emmitt puts pressure on you every time he touches the ball," he said. "He's a great player. We just have trouble stopping him."
And now the playoffs become that much more difficult for the Eagles.
"We're going to have to get some help in the division to make the playoffs," Kotte said.
12
Tuesday, December 7, 1993
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Victories carry teams to spring
Men, women seek to continue success
I
By Kent Hohlfeld
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas swimming and diving teams have used the fall portion of their schedules to build a foundation for next spring.
The women's team will take a 2-1 dual meet record into the spring season, while the men's squad holds a 2-0 dual meet record.
"The highest point of the fall season was beating Southern Methodist for the first time," sophomore Ryan Lowe said.
The men's team defeated Southern Methodist for the first time in team history, 130-111, Nov. 13 in Oklahoma City. The victory avenged last year's 181-151 loss to the Mustangs.
The men finished third behind Southern California and Michigan. The women finished fourth behind Southern Methodist, Southern California and Michigan.
"I think we swam well," Kansas coach Gary Kempfsaid. "We spent the semester in the aerobic phase of our training."
He said that the aerobic phase of the team's training built a foundation for the team as it moved into the competitive phase of its training.
Lowe was one of the team's bright spots in the U.S. Open. He qualified for the finals in the 200-meter butterfly. He won the preliminary meet and was seeded first going into Saturday's finals.
MEN'S AND WOMEN'S SWIMMING
"I performed pretty well in that event," Lowe said. "The meet was what I hoped for at this point in the season."
He said that he felt the fall portion of the team's schedule prepared the swimmers for the spring season.
"I think we met most of the challenges better than we have in the past," Lowe said. "I think we performed strong for this point in the season."
Senior Krista Cordsen said she thought the fall season was a good stepping stone for the spring schedule.
some of the best competition in the country.
Cordsen said the team needed to regroup mentally and gain some mental toughness for the spring season.
Cordsen said that she thought the U.S. Open was a good meet for the team to see how it compared with
"We need to be able to focus more and work through pressure," Cordsen said. "We can't let the pressure get to us."
The spring schedule includes road meets against Southern Illinois, Iowa State and Notre Dame. The team will have home meets featuring Minnesota and Arkansas on Jan. 15, and Nebraska on Feb. 12.
1980
She said that the team needed to perform well in all of its spring meets.
Kempf agreed that consistency would be a key element for the team's success in the spring.
"We're the type of program other teams get up for," Kempf said. "We don't go up against any teams that aren't ready."
Kempf said that the team would rest during winter break and then return for a two-week training camp starting Dec. 28.
"The team has some basic decisions on how good they want to be," Kempf said. "Right now we have some horses that are running like colts. We need our horses running like stallions."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday, December 7,1993
13
Oklahoma coach says Big Eight discriminates
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Big Eight is unfair to Oklahoma, and the school should take a "serious, serious look" at other conference arrangements, basketball coach Billy Tubss said yesterday.
"I think the Big Eight shows the Sooners no respect in any form or fashion," the Oklahoma coach said during the weekly coaches' teleconference. "I just think Oklahoma definitely needs to look at new alignments."
Tubbs has complained before of having to play the Big Eight's popular postseason basketball tournament every year in Kansas City, where local fans tend to favor the local schools.
Tubbs made the remarks when he was asked about reports that the Big Eight and the Southwest Conference again were discussing some sort of merger or realignment. The talks have been going on for more than a year.
It also was in Kansas City in 1988 that Kansas beat Tubbs' favored Sooners in the finals of the NCAA tournament.
"I'm burned out on going to Kansas City every year for that event," Tubbs said. "I think the Big Eight
caters to certain people, and that's it."
Despite Tubbs' complaints, Oklahoma has won four postseason titles in Kansas City, the same as Kansas and two fewer than Missouri's six titles. Against the three local schools, Kansas, Kansas State and Missouri, Tubbs' teams are 9-10 in the tournament.
"If's as neutral as neutral can be." Allen said. "In fact, we go overboard to make sure that we treat each institution equally."
Tim Allen, assistant Big Eight commissioner, said the conference gave preferential treatment to no one.
Tubbs also criticized an exemption that allowed Brigham Young players to take a two-year leave of absence to do Mormon missionary work and return to varsity competition beyond the normal age limit for NCAA athletes. BYU also has been mentioned as a possible entry in the new Big Eight-SWC alignment.
"Put Oklahoma in the Southwest Conference, and put BYU in the Big Eight. Then we'll both wave bye-bye to each other."
Tubbs would not identify to which schools he believed that the Big Eight gave preferential treatment.
Colorado secondary hurt by suspensions
The Associated Press
BOULDER, Colo. — Colorado will enter the Aloua Bowl with its secondary depleted by two suspensions.
Senior defensive backs Dennis Collins and Dwayne Davis will not play in the Christmas Day game against Fresno State.
Collier, a cornerback, was suspended last week for missing class. Davis, a strong safety, is being punished for getting ejected at Iowa State for fighting.
Penguin
In the Aloha Bowl, the Buffs will be facing Fresno State's Trent Dilfer, the nation's top-ranked quarterback.
"It's a one-shot deal." Brown said of the prospect of shuffling his secondary.
"No doubt this causes some reshuffling," CU secondary coach Greg Brown said.
His options for replacing Collier include moving all-Big Eight free safety Chris Hudson to comback, or using freshmen Maurice Henriques and Kenny Wilkins, or sophomore Tim Ross.
Greg Lindsey, who started six of the first seven games this season, will replace Davis.
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Collier said, "I was angry at first, because it seemed like (Coach Bill McCarnet) was trying to find a way to not let me go on the trip."
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ayhawk Bookstore only at the top of Naismith Hill!
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14
Tuesday, December 7, 1993
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Volleyball team ends tough season
Bv Gerrv Fev
Kansan sportswriter
Things looked good for the Kansas volleyball team at the start of the 1993 season. Returning starters, a tougher schedule and an expanded NCAA tournament gave the Jayhawks high hopes.
Four months and 34 matches later, the season is over. Kansas did not qualify for the NCAA tournament, and it ended the season 18-16 overall and 5-7 in the Big Eight.
The team lost its last match 1-3 Saturday against Louisiana State at the National Invitational Volleyball Championships in Kansas City, Mo. But Kansas coach Frankie Albitz said she was happy with how the season went.
"I think the only disappointment was the Big Eight season," Albitz said. "In the NIVC, we could have done better, but our pool was the toughest pool in the tournament."
One of the team's goals was to play in the four team postseason conference tournament. But Iowa State beat out Kansas amid confusion over
a tie-breaking procedure. The teams tied for fourth in the Big Eight, but the Cyclones went to the tournament because they did better against Kansas in head-to-head competition. The teams split their season series, but Iowa State defeated Kansas in three games to win its match, while Kansas needed four to win the other.
Senior outside hitter/setter Shelby Lard said that was the biggest disappointment of the season.
"It would have been nice to play in the Big Eight tournament," Lard said. "I think we're better than Iowa State. I don't think they deserved to be there. We started the season really well. I wish we would have continued it through our conference games."
Kansas began the season with a 10-5 record in nonconference matches, including a victory against then nationally ranked Louisiana State. But Kansas could not continue that success through the Big Eight schedule.
Albitz said Kansas was scheduled to play tough nonconference teams as a way to challenge the team.
phenomenal matches," Albitz said. "They've beaten teams that two years ago we couldn't have touched."
Seniors Lard, middle blockers Erin Kramer, Cyndee Kanabel and Barb Bella will be missed, Albitz said. Bella missed the last half of the season after being declared medically ineligible because of a shoulder injury.
"I think my team has played some
Kanabel said she wasn't sad even though she had played her last match as a collegiate.
"I don't have any regrets about my college playing career," Kanabel said. "The feeling going in was, 'Let's play the game of our lives.'"
The defeat by Louisiana State was not how the team wanted to finish, but sophomore outside hitter/righte side player Jenny Larson said positive things came out of the season and the NIVC tournament.
"We all know that we could have done a lot better in the Big Eight than we did," she said. "Our younger players got a lot of experience, and the tougher schedule this season will be good for next season."
TOMMY BROWN
John Gamble/KANSAN
Freshman outside hitter Katie Walsh bumps the ball at the National Invitational Volleyball Championship in Kansas City. Mo. The Jayhawks lost their match 1-3 Saturday against Louisiana State.
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Alterdant care, 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. Req. Master's degree or letter to J. Yancey, Bert Nash CMHC, 336 Misc庐 Lawrence, KS 6044. Open until filled. EOE. Alterdant care, 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. Req. Master's degree or letter to J. Yancey, Bert Nash CMHC, 336 Misc庐 Lawrence, KS 6044. Open until filled. EOE. Cashiers, part-time, temporary, KU Booksorte, $4.25 per hour, January 4-20, 1993. Work approx. 34 hours per week. Weekends as scheduled. Must have previous,感情可支付 handling experience. Apply Kansas and Burge Unions' Personnel Office, Level 5, 13th and Oread. EOE.
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Frieie Room Waltner/Waitres, part time $68 per hour plus tips. Monday thru Friday 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Must have previous food service, waiter/waitress experience.
Cook's helper part time, $4.25 per hour, Monday Friday 10am, m-19pm., Previous food prep and grill experience preferred. Must have previous cooking experience and be able to stand for long periods.
Data Entry, part time, $42.25/hour, 4p.m.-5p.m,
seven days a week. Two people cover the work
time each taking half of the days. Must have pre-
vious data entry and basic computer skills.
Apply Kansas and Burge Unione' Personnel Office, Level 5, 13th and EOE. EOA
PRE-MEDICAL SECRETARY/ADMINISTRATOR ASSISTANT: Half-hour graduate position (40 hours) must be completed three-quarter time as of July 1. Responsibilities include acting as a resource person for pre-hhealth professions students, maintaining current information for the students, processing recommendation forms, providing recommendations to dental/optical schools, preparing student confidential files for evaluation by the Health Sciences Committee, planning information meetings twice year, handing correspondence on behalf of Chief Health Officer, and working related to medical school acceptance, using Word Perfect.5.1, and being able to perform general office duties. Above all, must have excellent personal skills and ability to work independently in any position. Perform necessary tasks in long-term employment. Must be a KU graduate student. Please apply and bring (or send) resume to the Pre-Med Office, 110 Strong Hall, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98123, or 864-3867, by January 3. The University of Washington is an AA/EO Employer.
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W 24th 749-5750
Restoration/maintenance positions for skilled person with excellent references. Steady work, high level of training required.
BESUME SERVICES Professional Business
Interview Training, Free initial interview 82-1400
Training, Free initial interview 82-1400
$MEMESTER BREAK POSITION$! Ini. chain lift 47-PT, PT entry level openings. Earn $9.00 per day.投入新 start After De. $2 can remain PT text next in Lawrence $8531 or Overland Park 31-8675.
Temporary, per diem position 3 hrs./day. Mon.-Thurs. Contact blood donors by phone to schedule appointments; make cold calls as needed.
Requires HS/GED diploma, excellent communication skills, and experience in expense $2.50/hr. Apply American Red Cross 120. W28. Lawrence. B43-355 M/F EOE
The Mid West "Most Elite Mice in job now hiring"
Drys 841-2799 Drys 841-123
Dayes 841-2799 Dayes 841-123
*Wanted-Motels for education classes at Hair Design Team Salon. Free hair makeover Call 691-235-8420.*
225 Professional Services
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, servicing KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's a license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
OUI/Traffic
Criminal Defense
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman, Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
For confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Birthright 843-6421. Free pregnancy testing.
Prompt abortion and contraceptive services. Dale L. Clinton M.D. 841-5716.
Thesis &
TRAFFIC DUIS
Dissertations Hardbinding and Gold Stamping 3 Day Turnaround Lawrence Printing Service, Inc. 512E.9th Street 843-4600
Research Assistance - MS/MLS informal specialist available to assist with term papers, theses, dissertations, research projects. 843-6290.
Unique resumes, cover letters, laminar prints. Fast, easy updates, affordable. Graphic Ideas, Inc. 927/-/Mas. 1041-1071
TRAPFIC-DUTS
Fake ID's & alcoholoffenses
divorce,criminal & civil matters
the law offices of
DONALD G. STROLE
Donald G. Strole Sally G. Kelsey
16 East 13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
1-der Woman Word Processing, 843-2063
%Hour Turnaround for under 30 pages. Any size accepted, $1.25; Pc Cal Ruth after m, #843-488.
A Word Perfect word processing service. Laser printer. Near campus. 842-8655.
Expert typing through the holidays IMT Correct-
ment 8142 - double spaced page. Call Mira Mat-
bai 8411-2135
Fast, accurate word processing; term paper, distraction, thesis and graphics services available. Laser printing. Engineering and Law Review experience. Call Pam at 841-975 anvtime.
Pro-type - fast, reliable, professional,
quality. Any kind of typing. Call today at 941-6542
Let me do your TYPING!
Lazer printing to WOW! Your pro's.
18 years professional experience.
Grammar and spelling corrected free!
Call me
Make the Grade
865-2855
Resumes
- cover letters
- writing
- consultation
Linda Morton, CPRW
Word processing, applications, term papers, dia-
sentation, resume, Editing, composition, rush
proofreading.
1012 Mass 842-4619 Suite 201-upstairs
300s Merchandise
X
305 For Sale
91"Schwin Impact Pro. good condition asking
$275. LM or ask for Steve 832-0275.
1 single matte, box springs, and frame for sale.
Good condition. Must suit! Ask for Wendy at 841-305-6759.
PA RW Professional Association of Réumé Writers
PA RW
Adoom stereo power amplifier GFA-33SL $160, 29
gallon fresh water aquarium complete w/ustensil
and accessories $150, Nice full size futrs $175. Call
865-0720
Airline ticket KCI to Wash, D.C., Dec. 22 thru 28,
$359 mag. 842-6382.
Beds, desks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
984 Mass.
Basketball coupons 4-sale (all). Will sell ASAP & will take best offer.
Chow mixed puppy, four months old good health
and comfort call 749-1801 after 3pm and
to talk to Georgia.
Fender acoustic guitar. Great X-Mas present,
sweet gift. Soft case, soft $200 or best
offer. Call 829-9-10.
Head skis for sale, Solomon 787 bindings only used 1 season, 875. Call PhilM 841-1014.
For Sale: Cigarette Cases, Sterling Crosses, Lock-
er Boxes, Antique Jewelry, Coins and Antique
Mags 939 Mintage Artifact B4-8277-01
Help? Need to sell! Am graduating and living in KC and have 6 mo membership to Body Boutique.
IBM Compatible 386 168m, printer. 60 mb hard
disks. Bench program. Bench app. Call Scott 985-1844
KU season basketball tickets for sale. Will take best offer. Call 832-8415 and leave a message.
Mac SE 64, mqg 60mg Carrying case, ImageWriter
MC 59, mqg 80mg Cartridge games, and more,
$60. 841-2835 Ask for Dk
$49. 841-2835 Ask for Dk
Macintosh Quadras. Best prices available. Student discounts apply. 800-240-241.
Need to sell: KX-P2123 Panasonic (color option)
printer 8120, lamps,爱琴桌, book table,
book-shelves, table, chairs and miscellaneous. Call 842-
4737
Neon beer signs $125. Buch Mountain wall clock 121.
Call 764-1984 6 o'clock 8 p.m.h
Pinewood Queen waterbed/mattress $150
pinewood 4 drawer dreser w mirror $200 Call
Washroom $60
Power book 1456 - 4/60 barely used 3 months old bought at new $1599 asking 99C. Call 749-4501.
Season Student Basketball tickets for sale. Make your best offer. 855-5393 evening
your best offer - sss-sss events
Cannondale SR 40 road bike with Look pedals,
28" tires
STUDENT BASKETBALL TICKETS FOR SALE BEST OFFER 841-6429
340 Auto Sales
*82 Buck Century Clean, Reliable. Make an offer Call Angie 864-2279
*88 Honda Cali 41-037 or 864-169*
*4995. Call 814-037 or 864-169*
1957 Buick Skylark Coupler with 327 Chev. engine, mag wheels, $800. Conside monthly payments.
JW Vetta Jetta, 5-spd, *dr. Good Condition*. AM-FM
carsetter $1,750 bp. Call McKenzie 841-7795.
830 Black Jeep CJ-7, *Speed* hard top,
engine pulldown to airline, *44,000 COB* Call 825-
1323.
1984 Honda Accord LX, automatic transmission, power locks and windows. Runs great. Interior in good condition, blue, some hail. Excellent A/C & stereo cassette $2,800; call 842-8612.
B6 Prelude S1. 119k Hwmi m. Power rundow & swfm
B7 Prelude S1. 119k Hwmi option $5, 000 Call sgat at 424-
789, MUST SELF.
86 Preclude I386. I108 wmi. mI power andurn and
mI options. $99, Call $99. Baj4: 824.
MUST.SELL. TUSSEL
88 Ford Tracer, wheel 4, doors, auto, A/C, 80,800 miles, $2,900.00 I 0-594-3414-31
SAAB '88 sun roof, A/C, electric mirrors 90K runs great, for asking $500. Call 842-6752.
370 Want to Buy
PLAY IT AGAIN SPORTS
Now Buying
1029 Mass. 841-PLAY (7529)
exercise equipment, downhill skis, mountain bikes, and all outdoor equipment
1 B3bm apt, just blocks from campus available for 2nd semester sublease. washer/dryer, dishwasher, ceiling fan. $20 per mo./person, 133 Kentucky k85-0720. Call on:
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
b. dpr. apc, overlooks store, off street parking,
sublease, moves in to the month-Rent Free! Leave
me alone!
b bedroom APP for apparelable appliant J In Only
b bedroom APP for apparelable appliant J In Only
b bedroom APP for apparelable appliant J In Only
HEATHERWOOI
VALLEY
APARTMENTS
2040 Heatherwood
Available Jan 1st
1-2-3 Bedroom
Apartments
1 bedroom, furnished apartment, on bus route, of 6th St. Very Clear.' Call 837-4719
or 2 female roommates need to sublease fully furnished 3BD apt-, w/ private bath. For Spring sem. or sooner, 1 blk. from campus, $180/mo. Call 841-4207.
- Fully Equipped kitchens
- Vertical and mini blinds
4 bedroom apartment for rent. fully furnished,
very nice. Available Spring sem. Interested Call
800-325-9711
[bdrm apt. call to campus available for 4th week]
[bdrm apt. call to campus available for 4th week]
furnished cabins; bdlls; call 800-323-7566
Call Gina today at 843-4754 for an appointment!!
4 bdbm, lrg rms, stove and refrigerator,
3200 sq. ft. hookups, $700 a/m. Available.
Dec. 15 to May 18
- Laundry facilities on site
2 Br Apt. for Rent. Easy access to downstairs, KU, and bus route. Features 24 hr maintenance, off street parking, microwave, dishwasher, and W/D. 470 per m。
3 Bedroom, 2 bath. HALL DE NOPESF REQ D Q
only pay electricity. Located on R.U. Bus Route
610. 985-242-2400. www.sbtrade.com
Day Michelle 749-7279 Eve Stuart 749-0174
Available at semester station, apt. in new section of West Hill allora 402/953; fax: 877-619-9500; fax/mini/phone: 890/850/9mo; cabs: pdl w/ bookups, dw, microwave, ceiling fan, mini blinds, balcony, energy efficient, great location near campus.
Available Jan. 1 2 kbm. tcl to campus, waesher/dry hook-up, spaceion Georgetown
Available Jan. 1, 8 a.m. apn, on bus route Call
749-1598 126-mon-Fri.
Available now clean studio apo a clean to campain washer/dryer 7980 086a. No mpa. No pets.
Available Jan. 31, Michigan-Ap-3b barm, 2 barm with fireplace, or dryer in kitchen-new
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
VILLAGE SQUARE apartments
- Close to campus
• Spacious 2 bedroom
• Laundry facility
• Swimming Pool
• Waterbed allowed
For rent - spacious one bedroom apt, with hard-
doug floors. 841-6931.
9th& Avalon 842-3040
Beautiful I 84, unfurried, available Jan 1.
Adults 82; Laundry费 $233 +
allows Cb 849-410.
For sublease starting Jan 1, 1984. Birchwood Girders Rental distance to KU = 75; Call Christian at 842-243-675; Call MSG at 842-243-675
Free Rent in exchange for part- time child care.
Bake hours. Prefer mature students with some
knowledge of cooking.
Furnished apt available Dec. 18. BRE near cam-
paign付, paid $370/month. Call 841-8881 or 822-
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and
warehouse from KU. Off-street parking
no pets. Call 814-563-2029
Furnished studio apartment. 2 short blocks from
Water pain. Off street parking. No pets.篮子
80*40*30cm
Great sub-lease opportunity 1416 Tennesse Large
clean, quiet, clean, quiet, large 848-773-7489-9797
Large, bright, coy & new. Private entrance, garden apt. in new home on West 20th. Terrace. Two Bdr., fireplace, W/D hookups. No pets/smoking. 540- 1003. Cable/paid Bd. 934-987.
Large 15x18 room in nice house. 3 miles from KU for female non smoker 10,1u. wil. paid 749-6166
meadowbrook
APARTMENTS • TOWNHOMES
• RESIDENCES
So...how about those roommates?! Like 'em but can't live with them?
We have a studio or a one bedroom apartment ESPECIALLY FOR YOU!
MEADOWBROOK
842-4200
MON-FRI 8am-5:30pm,
SAT 10-4
SUN 1-4.
We also have 2 & 3 bedrooms for 2nd semester & are close to campus.
New Large 4 Bdr. Available Specials offered thru May or July. Includes DW, MW, FP, trash compactor, cable paid. Call 841-747. 4501 Wimbeldon Dr.
MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments in
other homes. Also some houses. Call M11-
67627 (67627)
iine br. apt. Bony but good. Microwave, dishwasher,
router master. Routemaster. $450/month.
Limited time offer.
Nice furnished large rooms, new paint/carpet.
Student fee:
Fee/accent/get/put/bench/mm/fee/mm
student fee.
Nice 38r. 2 Bath. 2 Floor unit w/ FP, DW,
K70mm. 369x479. Available inroom.
K70mm. 369x479. Available inroom.
25 PARK APARTMENTS will have a select few 1 and 2 BR apartments available for Dec and Jan move in. For details call 843-1495 or stop in 2401 W. 25 943.
(Sorry, nopets)
MASTERCRAFT offers furnished
OPEN DAILY
9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
Professional woman seeking N/S female Grad. student for one bedroom, half bath in my home on West 20th. Terrace. Kitchen privilege. W/D use furniture as quiet, responsible, enjoy cats. $235-$439.85
Room to sub-lease in a large house Jan start $1890
$1990 / 6 of annuals. 1923 Test call: cell 458-1656 ask
for details on availability.
Hanover Place - 841-1212 14th & Mass.
Regents Court 749-0445 1905 Mass.
Spring Semester sub-lease, b Irpi very close to
close campus, $350/mo. Call 823-0161
Orchard Corners - 749-4226 15th & Kosold
Spaicus, include. Jim b lbr. unfurnished Apt. Cab.
inadded. close to Campus. ceiling. Fan deck. and
microwave. $375 monthly available for sub-lease
Jan1. 841-949-909.
Sundance - 841-5255
7th & Florida
Sublease 1 bdmr on bus route. $380 a month plus
utility, Water and trash paid. Cbj 941-3628.
we're making life easier!
Tanglewood-749-2415 10th& Arkansas
Subzone 2 bdrm (townhouse) available (eb: 856-7t76,
garage, big lfm) #745/mo. call eb: 856-7t76
MASTERCRAFT
*Weekly Maid Service
*Front Door Bus Service
*"Dine Anytime" with Unlimited Seconds
*Laundry and Vending Facilities
*Free Utilities
842-4455
NAISMITH Hall
1800 Naismith Drive (913) 843-8559
Sublease 2 br. Towhouse WD w/ hookups and
tools $103/mo + utilities.
Call Hanover Place 841-212-6957
Sublease available-Trailridge Studio api $132 MB On KU bus
route, Call Cullen Dalton at $23-801-391.
Sublease begin Jan. 1. Great studio apt, in old
building on campus. $2500+. Call 842-793-6500 to
rent a dwm. $2500+. Call 842-793-6500 to
rent a dwm. $2500+. Call 842-793-6500 to
rent a dwm. $2500+. Call 842-793-6500 to
rent a dwm. $2500+. Call 842-793-6500 to
Sublease from Jan. 5 - July 31 Jbm dbrw / mbrw/dyre from Jan. 5 - July 31 carport *carport* After cup 69 mh. 48-560
WINDY DAYS
Drop Into Our Place to ask about our Mid Term Leases
$365-$435
- 3 Hot Tubs
- Sand Volleyball Court
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Basketball Court
- Microwave
- 1 & 2 Bedroom Adts.
- On Bus Route
Wishing You The Best This Holiday Season!
842-5111 1301 W.24th
Siblase studio api_1, block from RU. Available-Duree (see below). Electricity & phone. Call 885-3700
SUBLEASE STUDIO APPT. For Spring Semester, 2 bks from campus, off street parking, W/D, full kitchen, bth, wh and Louisiana. Rent and Utilities 90/month/cal 841-1471 or 1 no answer 854-8845.
Sublease $b/d bedroom. TBW from campus
Water & gas paid. Avail. Jan 1 or June.
Washroom $b/d bedroom. TBW from campus
Female needed to share townhouse. Will have
room availances. Warehouse/dryer $225/mo.
Phone: 630-749-8191. Call: 630-749-8190.
Two bedroom bungalow at 3rd & New Hamphire.
Washer/Dryer, dishwasher, detached garage,
large private yard. Quilt neighborhood, very
OK. Available for OK Avail. Jan 1,
$85 per month. Call 748-1311
Female roommate, beautiful 3 bedroom town-house on bus line, $400; utilities, no pet, snake, mosquitoes.
Female non-smoker. Now first 38 h BPR apt. in
London. On appointment. Plymouth, 943-696-1200.
Plywood furnished. Close to campus. 943-696-1200.
1 Female needed, spacious 2 bed aptm. for spring sem.
On bus line £235 M+ ½ utilities.
Female roommate needed to share large 2 BDR,
romanite floormate needed to share no space,
pets, maids... mo. Call Gail Genns 800-795-6321
430 Roommate Wanted
For 3 bed, 3 bain chondro on bus rt. fur. w/d in lf.
For 2 bed, 3 bain chondro on bus rt. fur. Chius 883-2685-
01-461-9450 or 12/26/22
A roommate needed by Jan. 1 to July 31st.
Cute inexpensive 2 bd apartment near campus,
furnished except for your room. Call immediately.
842-4105 and leave message.
Female roommate wanked for 3 bbr. apc. Close to
auvail. 1- Feb or 1- May. L Valsat I Gak 1- Feb or
1- May. L Valsat I Gak 1- Feb or 1- May.
Looking for a female roommate to 4 bdrm, 2 bd apartment. On bus route, fully furnished & very INEXPENSIVE! Call Holly or Bet at 865-148
Hey? Need a place to live! M/P JM room needed
for patient care. No other rooms required.
Smoker/NSM No at 841-356.
Mature, student, stable house mate wanted to
share clean 4 bedroom house 200 sq.ft. U.N. S.
18' x 12'
1 Male needed, very spacious 28th floor housewouse
1 Male needed, very spacious 28th floor housewouse
1 Male needed, very spacious 28th floor housewouse
8 / 520 + \/ 430 | Call 649-7247
N/S, male, needed to 4 bdr townhouse with 3th
5 yr seniors; W/D, vaulted ceilings, patio,
foyer.
Need 1 Female lmated. 2 share 2 br. apr. for spr,
sem. Spacious, fumil, fully equip. kitch, bus rt. 2
bills from std. $200/mo. + /\ut. 841-4565.
N/S responsible five female roommate needed for 24
female rooms. Required ASAP. Deb Ref-749-3282.
Deposit neg. required ASAP. Deb Ref-749-3282.
Need mature, clean, N/ M male to share 2 br ap
Some must have $180. $190.
Some unit. Avail. Jan 14. 11am-5pm.
Need clean, responsible, N/S, male to share 2hr.
Apst. $30.50/m + 1/12hrs. Freebie. Clasp.
to bus route. Furnished (except for room). Available
Dec 1. Call quickly 842-8999.
1 3 roommates. 3 BH教室, W/D. Bus Route.
1 3 roommates. Available Jan. For information call 740-694-012
1 inmate needed to share 3 bdm ap, Jan 1 or
2 inmates needed to share 3 bdm ap, Jan 1 or
4 inmates needed to share 4 bdm ap,
Chrissi 684-109 858-023 or 858-109 858-023
1 roommate needed to hire nice/clean 3 bldm
month + midtown Avail. Jan, I call Amani 94-796-
2500. AVAIL JAN, I call Amani 94-796-
2500.
Needed: 5N female to sell 3 bmrs. apt w/ hard wood floors near campus and downtown.
$175/mo. $175 deposit. Avail. immediately. Call
823-0330 evenings.
1 roommate wanted for 3 bedroom apartment
to campus. $200 per month +\/village. Call
us
Non-smoking female need to share 3 kb/dm²
available in the following:
1. $1/mo + /\+ until $92/mo
2. $20/mo + /\+ until $92/mo
$ 2 share gracie house, completely furnished,
waling distance to campus, $ 850 per month.
$ 1 share gracie house, $ 475 per month.
NW, M/W to share a very nice br. 3 abr.
(Northwinds) age starts! J. 3.1975/50 mo.
(Jacksonville) age starts! J. 4.1980/50 mo.
NSF w/ small dog needs a responsible NSF to
NSF w/ large dog needs a $198/ms /
\/UUI Call 749-1687
One female roommate needed to share 3 bdms.
Roommates must have $825/month + deposits
Garage or other roommate fees.
One or Two Female roommates needed! Large room with walk-in closet and private bath. W/D in room with walk-in closet on 961& Emery Available of this semester or beginning of next. Call Kathleen at 865-283-80.
One or two people to share three bedroom, two bath
roommate. Available January 1, 1994. Call 867-2571.
One roommate needed at four bedroom house for Spring Semester $00/mo + utilities. Ask for
Roommate needed. N/S grad. student 2Bd, 803r,
+ mo. half仗. On bus route. Call Tom 945-2022.
roommate needed. Bus route. Call Tom 945-2022.
1814 room. Non-smoker. Call 885-5601 for
details, leave message.
Roommate needed for 3 bdm house just 4 bliks from campus,拍 820m a month + you. call 685-366-8. Roommate needed for Spring semester. Roommate needed for Spring semester. Sublease any time beginning Jan. Call 681-437-0
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Roommate wanted for $8dm. house. Has washer.
$700/mo. includes utilities except phone.
$50/mo. includes utilities except phone.
Roommate needs for spacious house, blues 11 campus. Huge kitchen is wonderful, baked potatoes and chicken on the stove.
Responsible male roommate wanted for 4 bedroom, 3 bath townhouse in West Lawrence. Large kitchen, fireplace, and wash/dryer. Cable, trash bin, 750/300 ml +1/4url. Call 841-6836 and leave message
A large Victorian home, many amenities, downstairs with a sitting room and fireplace. The Hillet house has space available for individuals seeking a unique Jewish experience for the family if interested, call 864-3948 for more information.
Seeking NSF to ntablease NEW1 bNew condo on W1
& Enter $250 + / utilities Available ONW1 (Call
NSF)
Ads phone may be in charge to your MasterCard or Visa account. Otherwise, they will be held until pre-payment is made.
* In person: *119 Stuart Flier Flint*
Wanted: Roommate for 2 bedroom apartment, for -
4th floor. Applicants must be 18th and 11th
age. Close to campus! 697-9524
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140 lt test & found ... 356 for sale
85 help used ... 440 auto sales
225 professional services ... 360 microlessive
225 tui service
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370 want to buy
485 for rent
430 roommate wanted
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The University Daily Kansan, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, lawrence. KS. 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
127
It was a special moment, as father and son watched their weekend project attract its first tenant.
16
Tuesday, December 7, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSA N
HEALTH: Learning the basics
reform proposal, which includes universal access, was made law, students would have to assume more responsibility for their health. Newly employed graduates who are obese, engage in high-risk activities such as mountain climbing, use tobacco products or consume alcohol on a regular basis will be considered a higher risk to insure and may have to pay more, he said.
"It's a decision that you make to reduce your health risk," Draper said. "It's
responsibility, that's the bottom line."
"We're covered under our parent's policies until we graduate," Draper said. "Then we're forced to make our most important decision about the most important part of our lives, health care."
Many students graduating and entering the work force have been under their parents' health insurance policies and may be unfamiliar with the basics of most plans. Jim Boyle, associate director for student health services at Watkins Memorial Health Center, and Jim Strobl, director of students health services at Watkins, said that when weighing job offers or purchasing health insurance, students should:
By Liz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
1) Assess their health needs and their wants or needs in an insurance plan;
Insurance policies should answer health care needs
2) Consider pre-existing medical conditions such as diabetes. Some businesses will not cover the expenses of pre-existing medical conditions. Others require waiting periods before covering new employees;
3) Read the fine print in potential insurance plans.
Many people find out that they are not covered after they receive medical attention;
4) Ask questions or ask to be referred to someone in the insurance company who can address concerns;
(5) Get the most health care coverage for their dollars by hiring the basics of health care plans;
Deductible - the amount of money insured people pay out of their pockets for medical expenses
Co-Payment - the percentage of money the insured and the insurer pay for medical treatment after the deductible
Limit - the maximum amount of money the insured spend for medical treatments before insurance covers 100 percent
Coverage - the maximum amount of money insurance companies pay for medical treatments.
If you purchased a 80/20 co-payment plan that had a yearly deductible of $200, a $3,200 limit and a coverage of
$250,000, it would mean:
Let's say that during the first few months under this plan, you get a chest X-ray for a sports injury, go to a physician for a cold and get several lab tests and get medical attention for a lacerated finger. The cost for those three medical visits is $250. You would be required to pay the $200, which is your deductible. Under the 80/20 co-payment plan, you would pay 20 percent of the remaining $50, or $10, and the insurer would pay 80 percent, or $40. The 80/20 co-payment would continue until you have paid the limit of $3,200 for medical treatment, which includes the $200 deductible.
Reaching the $3,200 limit would mean that you received medical treatment that cost $15,200,$12,000 of which is paid by your insurer. If you require medical treatment that costs more than $15,000, but no more than $250,000, 100 percent of that additional cost would be covered by your insurer.
You should know:
tropical rain and evergreen forests represent 50% of the earth's remaining forest
land.
In1989 we were clearing 60 acres every minute.
At this rate these forests will all be gone in 50 years.
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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 custom for 21 days.
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 post of $1.95 per minute. The average time 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.
FEATURES: Love Squad keeps creativity high with acoustic jam sessions. Page 9.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103.NO.75
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 8,1993
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Zoning amendment could limit new bars
Liquor licenses may depend on food sales
By Traci Carl
Kansan staff writer
There are almost 20 bars in the downtown area, and if a City Commission zoning amendment is approved, they will be the last.
Last night, the commission decided to send a zoning amendment to the Lawrence/Douglas County Planning Commission that would prohibit any future bars in the downtown area. The downtown area is enclosed by New Hampshire, Vermont, Sixth and 11th streets.
Restaurants in the area could serve alcohol, but 50 percent of their revenues would have to come from food sales to qualify for a liquor license.
If the amendment is approved by the planning commission, it will be sent back to the city commission for approval.
In a presentation to the commission, Dave Corliss, assistant to the city manager, said that bars in operation when the amendment passed would not be affected by the food requirement.
If these bars change ownership or name, they still will be able to operate as a bar without the requirement, Corliss said. But if a bar is vacant for more than six months, it will have to meet the requirement to retain its liquor license.
Commissioner Bob Schulte said that he did not think preventing new bars from opening downtown was a problem.
"The bars that exist become potentially more valuable," he said.
The amendment was designed to stop the growth of bars in the downtown area, Schulte said.
In the past year, eight new bars have opened, four of which are in previous bar locations.
"We need to be concerned with the mix of businesses downtown," he said. "A proliferation of bars can lead to an atmosphere that attracts people to hang out. And that can lead to safety problems and possibly keep people away from downtown."
Mayor John Nalbandian said he did not like the number of bars downtown because it encouraged people to get drunk downtown.
But he was concerned that entertainment businesses, such as jazz clubs, would suffer from the 50 percent food requirement. He said he was questioning whether the food requirement should be less stringent.
Jerry Neverve, owner of the Red Lyon Tavern, 944 Massachusetts St., said competition would be enough to decide if there were too many bars in Lawrence. Right now, competition is stiff, he said.
"If there are too many bars downtown, then some will go out of business," he said.
If Neverve wants to expand his bar, he will have to meet the food requirement. He said he was not considering expansion.
"I would just hate to have that opportunity taken away from me," he said.
Semester health fees support reduced cost of Watkins care
Kansan staff writer
By Liz Klinger
Editor's note: This is the last of three articles addressing how health care reform affects students.
Sean Bell, Shawne junior, is one of 37 million Americans without health insurance. If Bell needed any form of medical treatment, for a lacerated finger or for life-saving surgery, he would be responsible for the cost.
For students like Bell, Watkins Memorial Health Center is invaluable. Bell's basic health care needs are met at Watkins through the University's student health fee of $69.50 a semester.
Bell has visited Watkins for allergy inoculations. flu vaccines and a raucetball injury.
"Obviously, money's tight," said Bell, who with his parents pays for his education. "I rely on Watkins heavily for services."
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins, said,
"What we've got here is a prepaid health care
Watkins is organized like a Health Maintenance Organization, which provides health care at a reduced rate to a select, prepaid group, Strobl said. By paying health fees every semester, students receive unlimited visits to physicians. Group prepayment keeps care and services at reasonable rates for students.
The University has one of the oldest college health care programs in the country. What began in 1906 with 42 students who formed a health care group and paid 50 cents each has become an organization that has 95 full-time staff members, including 11 physicians, who average 300 patients a day.
"KU students really use the health services here," said Jim Strobel, director of student health services at Watkins. "The amount has tripled in the last 10 years."
Group protests police treatment
HEALTH CARE in the '90's Rx
plan that covers about 90 percent of students' health care needs."
Yockey said that a universal access health care plan, as proposed by President Clinton, could require that Watkins serve nonstudents. Such an arrangement exists at the University of Oklahoma's Goddard Health Center, to which faculty, staff and their family members, as well as students and their children, have access.
Joanna Blair, administrative assistant to the director at Goddard, said the arrangement had kept health care costs low for students and had been well received.
Yockey said that if physicians at Watkins were required to see nonstudents, the hospital would have to offer more services for the larger variety of age groups. This requirement could steer Watkins from its focus on students.
"College health really is a specialty in medicine," Yockey said. "Anybody who caters to one group of patients can be more efficient and effective for that particular group. If you make combine tires and every couple of hours
"It's worked out well," Blair said. "I think students have more confidence in the health center when they see faculty and staff sitting in the health center with them."
Since the arrangement went into effect in 1985, a pediatrician has been added to the staff to accommodate needs. Blair said.
Black Student Union Kansas City officers used mace on crowd By Carlos Tejada
See HEALTH CARE, Page 16.
By Canos Tejada Kansan staff writer
Members of the Black Student Union are protesting their treatment by police during a party in Kansas City, Mo., last Saturday night.
More than a dozen KU students said that members of the Kansas City police department used mace to disperse a crowd leaving a party at Callahan's, 323 W. Eighth St.
Terry Bell, Tampa, Fla., senior and president of the Black Student Union, said the group as a whole would pursue the matter.
"We're going to push it until we get a formal apology," he said. $ _{i} $
"We do not use, and we do not tolerate anyone using, chemical spray to disperse a
Capt. Vince McInnerney of the police department, who was present at the party, denied any officers used a chemical device.
Karen Blackwell, Wheaton, Ill., sophomore, read her account of the incident at Mondaynight's BSU meeting.
crowd," McInerney said. "That's not a policy."
He said the room on the first floor, which he rented to the fraternity for the party, had exceeded its 300-person limit. Tate estimated the crowd at 800-1,000 people inside and outside the building.
"Suddenly there was a funny smell," she said. "I started coughing and my eyes started to water when I realized that someone was spraying tear gas."
In addition, Tate said, minors had brought their own alcohol and were drinking on the premises.
The party, which was held by Omega Psi Phi fraternity, followed Saturday evening's Black Expo in Kansas City. At about midnight the manager of Callahan's, Dave Tate, called the police to disperse the party, which he said had become too crowded.
"We have to go by the guidelines that we have," he said. "We can't break them."
The police arrived minutes later and began to usher people out of the building. Witnesses at Monday's meeting said a police officer
then used mace on the crowd leaving the party.
Mclherney said three off-duty officers had been hired as security for the party, but they also did not use mace.
Mclenney said Kansas City police carried a pepper-derivative spray with effects similar to those described by witnesses. But he said the usual policy for dispersing a crowd includes threatening arrest and then arresting people in the crowd.
Officers reported that somebody in the crowd might have sprayed the mace, he said. McInerney said multiple witnesses had called and reported the officer's badge number.
Because of a one-digit difference in the number reported by different witnesses, McInerney said the badge number could belong to one of three sergeants on the force. Two of the sergeants were not in the area at the time and it was doubtful the third was present, he said.
Blackwell said the actions were unjustified.
"They cannot go around spraying people with mace," she said. "They should be reprimanded."
P
Feeding frenzy
Valerie Bontrager / KANSAN
Matt Sullivan, Lawrence senior, enjoys a barbecue rib from The Bum Steer at the "KJHK Cares" Holiday Auction and Food Fair. Last night's fair is at the Halliday Inoldome, 200 McDonald Drive. Proceeds went to the American Red Cross of Kansas Flood Relief.
INSIDE
A legendary portrayal
Dorthy Pennington transforms herself into historical figure SojournerTruth for secondary education classes across Kansas.
Page 3.
PLEASE DO NOT EDIT OR MODIFY THIS IMAGE.
Engineering still attracting few women
When Annette McClintock, St. Louis senior, first enrolled in the School of Engineering, she knew she would be outnumbered by male students.
Editor's note: This is the second of three articles dealing with gender issues in KU professional schools.
By Carlos Tejada Kansas staff writer
"It didn't really surprise me," she said. "I knew it was primarily male-dominated."
Scatological scarcity: There are only half as many women's bathrooms as men's bathrooms in the School of Engineering. Page 16.
Despite the progress made by women in the job market since the 1950s, engineering
still is primarily male. In the School of Engineering, less than 20 percent is female, the lowest percentage of any KU professional school.
The numbers concern Carl Locke, dean of engineering, who said gains made by
women in the field have been small.
"Prior to the mid- to late-'70s, you could almost count in one hand the women in engineering," he said. "It was a white male-dominated field."
Male dominance is shown in faculty numbers as well. The school has four female faculty members, two of which joined the school this year.
"That number ought to be something like 10." Locke said.
The solution, Locke said, is to change the perception that young girls have of science and mathematics.
"I have been told that girls are being told engineering is not something to enroll in," he said.
Mary Plumb, director of women's engineering programs, said the school was trying to recruit more women. She said the school sent speakers to junior high and high schools to tell girls to consider engineering as a career. The school also sponsors weekend workshops for female high school students interested in engineering
Recruiting efforts are not restricted to
students. Workshops also instruct teachers, guidance counselors and parents to encourage girls interested in science.
"We try to encourage them to look at the way they teach and look at their views of professions." Plumb said.
But changing people's minds in such a fashion is difficult. Plumb said.
The process has had some slow success. Since 1989, the percentage of female students has risen from 14 to 18 percent. But Plumb said many years remained before the school would reach the stated goal of 25 percent.
"You're changing a whole social mind set," she said. "That's a difficult thing to do."
"It's difficult for kids to go against the flow," she said. "That's socially uncomfortable for kids, especially young girls."
Plumb said these efforts often ran up against girls who were still forced into traditional gender roles.
Ultimately, Plumb said, the changes have to come from American society, where women still are raised with preconceived
Changing myth
The percentage of women in the school of engineering has been steadily increasing since 1989.
Percent
20
15
10
5
0
Year '89 '90 '91 '92 '93
Source: Department of Educational Services Dave Campbell / WANSAN
notions of "women's work."
"It's going to have to be on a national level that there [have] to be some changes," she said.
2
Wednesday, December 8, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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ON CAMPUS
OAKS—Non-Traditional Students Organization will have a brown bag lunch from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at Alcove G in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Gerry Vernon at 864-7317.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor a lunch and forum, "Issues in '94 Kansas Legislature," at 11:30 a.m. today at the ECM, 1204 Oread Ave. 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 law student discussion group at 1:10 p.m. today at Alcove B in the Kansas Union. For more information, call 843-0357.
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 3 in Lippincott Hall. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742.
KU Nippon Kempo Karate Club will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in 207 Robinson Center
KUGAR will meet at 5:30 p.m.
today on the third floor of the
KU Environers will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Amy Trainer at 841-4484.
Burge Union. For more information, call 864-7316.
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 Anishslin at 843-3099.
■ Women's Student Union will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove D in the Kansas Union.
KU Kempo will meet at 7 tonight in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Mandana Ershad at 842-4713.
KU NORML will meet at 7:30 tonight at the north end of Union Square in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Nick at 864-6002.
FACTS, Forming Awareness of Cancer Through Students, will meet at 8 tonight at the first floor conference room in Watkins Memorial Health Center.
United Students will hold an informational/organizational meeting at 9 tonight at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Jon-Paul Shores at 864-6473.
WEATHER
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 61°/39°
Chicago: 37°/32°
Houston: 71°/60°
Miami: 79°/60°
Minneapolis: 35°/26°
Phoenix: 75°/49°
Salt Lake City: 50°/34°
Seattle: 47°/40°
Omaha: 54°/32°
LAWRENCE: 57°/35° Kansas City: 56°/41°
St. Louis: 54°/45°
Wichita: 58°/38°
Tulsa: 63°/47°
TODAY
Tomorrow Friday
Clear and warm
High: 57°
Low: 35°
Clear and warm
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Low: 36°
Mostly sunny
High: 54°
Low: 31°
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The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66042. Annual subscriptions by mail are $60. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
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CAMPUS/AREA UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, December 8,1993
3
POPULAR MUSIC
Courtesy of the University Archives
Dorothy Pennington, associate professor of communication and African-American studies, dresses with shawl and cane to characterize Solioum Truth. Pennington visits classrooms across Kansas in her portrait. She said she became interested in Truth while teaching two courses at KU.
KU professor portrays historical figure in schools around Kansas
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
When Dorothy Pennington steps into a classroom, history comes alive.
As part of a Kansas Humanities Council educational program, Pennington, associate professor of communication and African-American studies, portrays Sojourner Truth during visits in classrooms across Kansas.
Pennington, dressed like an elderly woman, usually begins her portrayal of Truth by entering the classroom leaning heavily on a cane while humming a hymn. She then lowers herself into a chair and begins to weave the story of Truth, a Black woman born a slave in 1797.
Truth later became a well-known evangelist and public speaker on
civil rights and the feminist movement. Truth perhaps is best-known for her speech, "Ain't I a Woman?" originally given at a women's rights convention in Akron, Ohio, in 1851.
Pennington said students were more receptive to realistic portrayals of historical figures than reading about them in books.
"Within the first few minutes, students are generally captivated," she said. "I've had high school teachers tell me that's highly unusual of their students."
When the Kansas Humanities Council was searching for professors to present first-person characterizations of people who left their mark on U.S. history and literature, Pennington jumped at the chance.
Pennington said she became interested in Truth and her life while teaching two courses at KU.
"I don't think I could ever portray anyone else," she said. "She was such a dynamic and spiritual person
— I don't think I could identify with anyone the way I do with her."
Pennington said Truth used her spirituality as a defense against her critics.
"People would try to undermine the basis of her ideas and credibility," Pennington said. "Usually her argument was, 'God gave me the ideas and thoughts.' Prayer was very important to her."
Pennington's spells all presentation into three parts: reciting some of Truth's phrases and speeches and singing a few of her songs; answer-
Pennington's performances are not open to the public and are scheduled by the Kansas Humanities Council.
questions from the audience while portraying Truth, and answering questions outside of Truth's character.
Getting "into" Truth's character -- trying to portray her personality and speaking style as accurately as possible -- was based on Truth's own narrative that was published in 1850 and a few secondary sources, Pennington said.
Marion Cott, executive director of the Kansas Humanities Council, said that Pennington was able to accurately portray Truth because Pennington had a deep respect and admiration for Truth.
"She draws you back in time, immersing you in the character and time period," she said. "It's mesmerizing."
Want to put off a final?
Policy could rule out some exams
By Kathleen Stolle
Kansan staff writer
Students dreading exams scheduled for today or tomorrow may have the perfect excuse to skip them.
Professors cannot give exams the week before finals unless they also have scheduled an exam during the finals period, according to University Senate Rules and Regulations.
The reason for the rule is twofold, said Larry Maxey, professor of music and head of the University Calendar Committee.
"It protects the students from having all of their exams on the last day of class," he said.
Although professors can ask for permission to hold exams the week before finals, they rarely do, Maxev said.
"We have very, very few requests for exceptions," he said.
For students who already have taken exams this week, the point is moot. Maxey said.
"I think the students' options end when they take the exam," he said.
Students whose professors have scheduled exams this week but not next week should notify the
professor's department chair.
If meeting with the head of the department is inappropriate — for example if the chair and the professor are one in the same — students should go to the Student Assistance Center, Maxey said.
Laura Morgan, assistant director of the center, said she encouraged students to notify their professors, department chairs or the center if they thought professors were violating the regulation.
"We assist the students in resolving grievances regarding that issue, although we're by no means the only office," she said. "I think students need to know that they need to come forward as soon as possible. If an exam has been taken, you can't undo it."
She said although she had not received complaints of violations this semester, she had in the past.
"It has been a problem, but I can't estimate the frequency," she said.
Carole Ross, acting associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said she did not think the regulation was violated often.
"I think when it does happen, the professor just isn't aware of the Senate rules and regulations," she said. "I don't think any professor intentionally schedules exams against the rules."
For professors who do break the rules, the levels of reprimand could range from a warning to suspension. Ross said.
Take-home finals preferred by many
"Normally I think this can be solved with a warning and by working out problems within the department," she said.
By Christoph Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
With the holiday season just around the corner, most KU students would prefer to skip finals and head for home.
But because students do have to take finals, some of them would rather have take-home finals instead of the regular classroom finals.
Mike Stalker, Wichita junior, has two take-home finals next week.
He said he preferred take-home finals to classroom finals because he could take more time to work on the final.
"You can make sure you get every idea covered." Stalker said.
Stalker said he learned and understood information better from take-home finals.
"Most of the time with a test, I end up cramming, but after the final you forget everything," he said.
"Students have the opportunity for more time for thinking and reflection," she said.
It is because of that cramming that Reva Friedman, associate professor of educational psychology and research, said she preferred take-home finals. She said her students learned how to better express what they learned in class on take-home finals.
Friedman said the belief that take-home finals were easier than classroom finals was misleading.
"If the (take-home) final deals with more complex thinking, than
it would not be true." she said.
Although Friedman gives her students a take-home final, she said classroom finals were better than take-home finals for certain courses.
"It depends on the content of the course, the objectives of the course and the purpose of that final assessment," she said.
Because each course has different objectives, Phil McKnight, professor of curriculum and instruction, said he gave a two-part final, both a take-home and a classroom final.
"I want to give a lot of opportunities to students to show what they have learned," he said. McKnight said a two-part final benefited all of his students.
"People have different learning styles and different testing styles," he said.
Amy Newton, Washington, Mo., junior, said a take-home final was difficult because she had more research to do to complete it, but the extra time was welcomed.
“it's going to be harder, but I can take my time on it,” she said.
Even though students have more time to complete a take-home final, they must still hand in the final on the assigned date in the table, according to the University Senate regulations.
Robert Shelton, University
ombudsman, said a student could
hand in a final before the assigned
date in the time table if a professor
allowed it.
CAMPUS BRIEF
Two 'peeping-toms' arrested for looking into sorority window
Kansanstaffreport
Two KU students were arrested early yesterday morning and ordered to appear in court to answer charges of window peeping at the Alpha Delta Pi sorority, 1600 Oxford Ave.
Police were called to the sorority at 2:17 a.m. after a report of a prowler on the fire escape, said Sgt. Rick Nickell. One of the officers who responded saw one person standing on top of another person's shoulders. He was looking into a window that was about 10 feet off the ground. When the officer attempted to talk to the subjects, they ran. Both were apprehended after a brief foot chase.
Mark Hudson, Lenexa senior, and Troy Haynes, Topeka freshman, were arrested in the incident yesterday, Lawrence police reports said. Hudson was released from the Douglas County Jail after paying a $155 bond. Haynes was released after paying a $190 bond. Both were issued notices to appear in Lawrence Municipal Court on Dec. 20, court records said.
Shoemaker says he fulfilled goals
Senator feels he should be more visible, outspoken
Halfway through his term, John Shoemaker, student body president, said he thought he had accomplished much of what he had set out to do.
By Donelia Hearne
Kansan staff writer
The top three goals Shoemaker brought into office with him are close to being reached, he said.
Shoemaker said he thought next semester would bring the completion of plans for expansion of child care and health care services for students. He said he thought his goal to give the Office of Minority Affairs a stronger voice in the University administration had been
"We've managed to keep it accessible to students but still have the ear of the executive vice chancellor," Shoemaker said.
accomplished. Changes in the structure of the minority affairs office have brought it closer to top University administrators, he said.
Also on his list of priorities was to encourage a new attitude in Student Senate, he said.
"I've tried to convey the message that it is time for us to identify those students feel are necessary and make sacrifices to get those done," he said.
Katie Hutchinson, Wichita senior and Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, said it was difficult for any student body president to have a large effect on the University.
"There's only so much Student Senate can do," she said. "John has been involved. He's always in the office."
those who got in touch with him, he needed to try to reach students more.
Hutchinson said she thought that although Shoemaker was accessible to
"I'd like to see a president be more outspoken and visible," she said. "We need more publicizing of Student Senate."
The president also has the responsibility of working with the administration, which Hutchinson said was Shoemaker's strength.
John Shoemaker
"He has a very good working relationship with the administration," she said, "But he's got to work with students too. But
that's hard to do because there is a 1800 degree difference in the goals of students and the goals of the administration."
Chancellor Gene Budig said Shoemaker had participated with campus groups on policy matters and had been open and accessible.
"The amount it costs to go to KU will increase I'm in office," he said. "And some people will say I'm a tax-and-spend president."
"I have high regard for John," Budig said.
"We are better because of his service."
Shoemaker said one of the major issues he would be facing next semester would be tuition and fee increases.
1
But he said he thought the cost increases were necessary to provide a high quality education and were worth the budget tightening students will have to do, he said.
"Some people will have to cut $20 they spend at Louise's West or Johnny's," he said. "I don't feel sorry for them."
Shoemaker does not care if people like him as long as they respect what he is doing,he said.
"I hope I've made some people happy and some of them mad," he said. "If everybody is happy or everybody is mad something has gone wrong."
4
Wednesday. December 8,1993
OPINION
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Teacher deserves raise but was fired instead
Ateacher worthy of promotion was fired last week. In Georgetown, Del., a woman named Adele Jones was fired for attempting to educate the youth of America.
The school board of Georgetown, in a 6-4 vote, fired the algebra teacher for flunking too many students. The tragedy is that instead of being rewarded for her refusal to accept mediocrity, a teacher was dismissed because she would not let the children slide by.
Sussex Central, where Jones worked, has a 60-70 percent rate of college attendance by its students. They enjoy their school. They enjoy their teachers. They do not however, enjoy an easy algebra class. Students must adhere to the highest standards of academia to pass Ms. Jones' class. She runs a tight ship, and she knows it. For this reason, she holds review sessions before tests and is willing to help students with their homework up to three hours before school each day. Despite her efforts, the Georgetown school board terminated her employment.
The decision was a mistake. In America today, education is not up to par with international standards. The system consistently passes its students so it will appear to be doing a valuable job. It doesn't recognize that many of its graduates missed out on challenging worthwhile educations.
This case sets a horrifying precedent. The message it sends is: If you are a teacher and you fail a student who doesn't comprehend the material, rather than send him unprepared into college or the work force, you will lose your job.
The school board stated that something is wrong when a teacher flunks 60 percent of her students. On the contrary, when a teacher refuses to pass someone who does not deserve to pass in lieu of robbing him of a high-quality education, perhaps something is finally right.
CARSON ELROD FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Students: be responsible and save KU staff time
The semester is almost over, and students are starting to panic. Finals, vacation plans and the stresses of the holiday season are here. Although the University staff, which includes fellow students, faculty and classified employees, are almost always willing and eager to help answer questions, we must remember that we are college students and are responsible for taking care of our own accounts.
Mom and Dad dropped you off at college, but you sign your own loan papers and stand in enrollment lines. At the same time, the University staff is not your surrogate parent. The business office, registrar and financial aid office, to name a few, are overwhelmed with questions that can be answered by simply reading the information available to you. Not everyone is guilty of being too lazy to read general information, but too many students assume that someone else will sift through and solve their problems.
Whether you like it or not, someday you are going to graduate from college, and nobody will be around to make your phone calls or ensure that all of your papers are filed. Next semester make a vow to become responsible for your own actions; you might be surprised how easy and less stressful life becomes.
MANNY LOPEZ 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
Assistant to the editor ... J.R. Clairborne
News ... Stacy Friedman
Editorial ... Terrilyn McCormick
Campus ... Ben Grove
Sports ... Kristi Fogler
Photo ... Klip Chin, Renee Kneeber
Features ... Erza Wolfe
Graphics ... John Paul Fogel
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ... Ed Schager
Regional sales mgr ... Jennifer Perrier
National sales mgr ... Jennifer Evenson
Co-op sales mgr ... Blythe Focht
Production mgrs ... Jennifer Blowey
... Kate Burgess
Marketing director ... Sheily McConnell
Special sections mgrs ... Judith Standley
Creative director ... Brian Fuco
Classified mgr .. Gretchen Koetterheinich
Some Rock Chalk groups had financial advantage
WOULDN'T THIS GO A LOT SMOOTHER WITH ONE CENTER?
BILL
1
KENNEDY
MOVNIHAN
HEALTHCARE
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
I applaud the Rock Chalk Revue Advisory Board's interest in encouraging nongreek participation, as was stated in the Nov. 30 article, "Rock Chalk Reve — It's not just a greek thing." However, it seems the board, while requesting more diversity, is unaware of the budgetary restrictions of nongreek living communities that potentially prohibit these groups from submitting winning entries. Therefore, I challenge the board to follow through on its comments by capping the amount spent on notebooks. The purpose of submitting anonymous notebooks is to concisely present all aspects of a musical performance. While I was not involved in my living organization's Rock Chalk efforts this year, I was still aware of the frustration experienced in attempting to compete against groups with sometimes three times as much money budgeted for this vital portion of the competition. Rock Chalk exists to raise money for the United Way while inciting community spirit. Limiting the amount spent on notebook compilation would not only base competition on creativity alone, but would also save money that could be directly donated to charity. If the Advisory Board is serious about increasing nongreek participation, it should take action to ensure fair representation for everyone.
**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 phoned. 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.
Kansan must show guts to publish.be damned
Whitney Baker Wichita senior
The Kansan has a well-deserved reputation for neatness, professional execution and predictable dullness. No doubt that is why it regularly wins awards for the best student newspaper. But anyone seeking articles of real interest and relevance to campus life on a regular basis will be disappointed. Those rare occasions when the paper produces a real scoop — the publication of the list of faculty salaries, the Tonkovich story, the Dean Jerry memorandum — only serve to emphasize the day-to-day bansality of the paper the rest of the time.
university that presumably the Kansan finds "too hot to handle." One can think of several:
the inconsistency of the ROTC policy on homosexuals with the ideals of the University, which was "solved" by sending off a couple of academics to take on the Pentagon!
the policy of the University, dripping with political correctness, circulated by Vice Chancellor Meyen this fall that faculty are required to hold special make-up tests for student who decide that they don't wish to take an exam because of a conflict with a religious festival.
The paper has failed to cover a wide range of questions facing the
discussion of the problem of academic dishonesty by students, 25% of whom, according to a Fall 1993 circular form the vice chancellor for academic affairs, are fraudunkies
the complete breakdown of the grievance procedures at the University of Kansas, which seem to function only when there is a student or an "undesirable" faculty member to be expelled.
The editorial staff of our student newspaper can't live with their collective heads in Kansas loan forever. They need to be conscious that there are problems at KU and that they have to have the guts, and independence, as professional journalists-in-training to chase up a story, to publish and be damned. Or does the training in Stauffer-Flint Hall consist of the shaping of complaint yes-men (oops! yes-persons) for the official press? How much official pap should we have to take in our diet anyway?
Associate professor of mechanical engineering
The Nov. 23 "Viewpoint" editorial argued that the Pentagon's policy regarding gays in the military was "best" because it "avoids conflicts of homophobia and sustains morale."
The policy accomplishes neither. Rather than avoiding conflicts over homophobia, its institutionalizes homophobia through a morally corrupt scheme of "let's pretend that there are no homosexuals in the military" and of excluding an entire class of citizens because of a characteristic unrelated to individual ability to serve in the military. Such a policy inevitably undermines the morale of a modern, liberal democracy.
Pentagon's policy fails to resolve gay conflict
The ostensible assumption driving the government's policy — "homosexuality is inconsistent with military service" — has been discredited by the Pentagon's own research reports that were commissioned to examine that assumption. These reports concluded that homosexuals were as capable as others to serve and that full integration of homosexuals into the military was feasible.
The courts, however, will decide the merits of "don't ask, don't tell." The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit recently became the fourth federal court this year to strike down the policy, dismissing the government's arguments as similar to those that formed the basis for racial segregation in the military until 1948. The court held that the military's stated reasons for excluding gays were irrational on their own terms. This "rational basis" argument may be the argument most convincing to the swing justices on the Supreme Court, should it hear a case challenging the policy.
I have to say after reading the commentary on Furrs by Sara Bennett in the Dec. 3 Kansan, I was left with a bad taste in my mouth. My opinion of Sara Bennett's article is that it is tasteless and without class. Furrs does cater to the elderly which I think is wonderful. Having a place to go eat and meet friends without listening to wild music and people running around, as a lot of the eating establishments in this town who cater to college students do, is a pleasant change. Her quote of "no-mans land of white, tasteless food, where equally tasteless people repeatedly slide up to the trough, giving new meaning to the term 'all you can eat'" was thoughtless, rude and judgmental. I will feel sorry for you in your twilight years but right now... please show your article to your father and apologize to the man who pays for your education.
Furrs deserves better treatment by writer
Geoffrey Steere
Associate Professor
Sabrina Marino Lawrence resident
COLUMNIST
P. B. CAMPANELLO
JIM
KIMMEL
Liberal label starts quest for accurate political call
After several of my columns had been published and I still hadn't received any letters, I began to wonder if you were paying attention. So I put it to the test. I wrote a column that was slightly critical of a certain over-exposed, egotistical media figure — you know which one. I was not disappointed. The dittoheads were happy to set me straight. They called me the most dirty, vile and insulting thing that they could think of, a word that the FCC was considering banning from the airwaves as obscene, something that you wouldn't want to say in front of small children. Yes, they called me a ... liberal.
Needless to say, I was shocked. I had never really considered myself "liberal." I always thought I was a middle-of-the road type of guy, but if a ditto-head took the trouble to write and tell me that I was liberal, then it must have come down from Rush, supreme god of the noble conservatives, and has to be true. How devastating. What would my friends say if they found out? When it was published in the letters section of the *Kansan* editorial page, it was definitely time for some damage control. So I carefully asked a friend of mine if she considered me politically, well you know, the Lword.
"The L word?" she asked as she broke into laughter for five minutes. "Oh no," I thought, "it must be true." Then, after she composed herself, she assured me that she thought I was way too conservative on almost every issue imaginable. She also assured me that she could not understand how I could get a job writing for a liberal paper like the Kansan in the first place, or why they would make the mistake of publishing my columns.
At first I was relieved. But then the thought occurred to me, "What if she was liberal too, maybe even more so than I am? Or worse yet, what if I was a conservative?" I didn't want to be a liberal, but I didn't want to be a conservative, either. I decided I needed a second opinion. So I met another friend of mine at a local bar. I knew that he was a good Republican who watched Rush at least once a day. I bought him a beer, and he told me a couple of tasteless jokes about Hillary Clinton. I asked him where he thought I stood politically. After carefully considering the question, he said that I did have liberal "tendencies." He assured me that the condition was entirely curable if I watched Rush's TV show at least twice a day and listened to his radio show. Otherwise, I might lose my eternal soul.
Well, now I had a real problem. I was either a bleeding-heart liberal or an oppressive white male conservative. I was without a political identity. Finally, another friend suggested that I might be a moderate. "A moderate?" I asked. "What's that? "That's someone who forms an opinion on an issue based upon its individual merits or problems," my friend told me, "not by allowing someone else to form their opinion for them." "Do such people really exist?" I asked. "They do, but they are becoming more rare all the time. Looking at both sides of an issue seems to take too much effort," my friend replied. "That's too bad," I said. Yes, agreed my friend, "it really is."
Jim Kimmel is a McLouth junior majoring in history and sociology.
University of Mars
Hey, what's with the new towel, sandals and tan?
IT's the middle of winter.
Nothing beats a tan in winter when it comes to pickin' up babes. I went to one of those tanning salons. What do you think of my new skin color?
Nothing beats a tan in winter when it comes to pickin' up babes. I went to one of those tanning salons. What do you think of my new skin color?
You're lucky...
Why's that?
...I hear ORANGE is coming back in style.
Hardy, har, har.
You're lucky...
why's that?
by Joel Francke
Hardy, har,
har.
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, December 8, 1993
5
Somalia's future remains uncertain
Clan conflict remains despite famine relief and military presence
The Associated Press
MOGADISHU, Somalia — There is food in Somalia now and bright-eyed, laughing children. Still, a haze of anarchy and clan conflict obscures the future.
A summer of battles in Mogadishu between U.N. troops and supporters of Mohamed Farrah Aidid has overshadowed the success of the mercy mission in relieving hunger and restoring calm elsewhere in Somalia.
In Mogadishu, American soldiers and other foreign troops mainly sit in fortified compounds, seeing few, if any, Somali. They train in urban warfare for possible rescue missions in the warren of narrow streets. Much of their time is spent fighting boredom by playing cards or volleyball.
Aidid, the man responsible for the deaths of American fighting men, was flown by a U.S. plane to attend talks in Ethiopia.
The president of Ethiopia is meeting with Somali faction leaders in an effort to set up a peace conference with little success.
In a country with generations of fac
tional violence, clan loyalties take precedence over all else. There are six main clans and a bewildering welter of sub-clans.
While some Somalis still smile and wave when foreigners drive by in the city, more shake their fists in anger.
It is a sharp contrast to the countryside. There, foreign troops get a warm reception.
That was the result world leaders sought when they intervened a year ago.
Disease, warfare and famine killed about 350,000 Somalis in 1992, and the world watched in horror as long lines of living skeletons trudged across a scorched land in search of food.
Operation Restore Hope came to pacify Somalia and allow delivery of life-saving food.
The landing in the early hours of Dec. 9, 1992, was bizarre. American commandos struggled ashore on a Mogadishu beach, shielding their eyes from TV lights and brushing aside microphones and journalists.
Thanks to the international effort, aid workers could do their job again. Helped by a break in the drought, farmers have harvested bumper crops. A few schools have re-opened.
In April aid agencies began trying to wean Somalis from food aid so they could concentrate on desperately
needed health care.
But with starvation waning, the anarchy and violence that caused the famine steadily seeped back into Mogadishu's everyday life.
A critical turning point in the United Nations' first effort at nation-building came on June 5. Simultaneous ambushes killed 24 Pakistani soldiers.
After the attacks, the signs of progress in Mogadishu vanished as U.N. troops fought with Aidid's militiamen.
Then on Oct. 3, a furious, daylong battle killed 18 American soldiers and 300 or more Somalis. That led Washington and then the United Nations to accept Aidid as a political force.
"Aidid has made it clear he wants international assistance and is prepared to work with the United States on a range of issues," said Richard Bogosian, the recently named U.S. ambassador. "Every Somali, including Aidid, has said it's time to work for peace. He's not rattling swords."
Still, there are reports the factions have been re-arming in preparation for battle after the American withdrawal. U.N. officials also recently warned that international terrorists, probably from the Muslim fundamentalist group Hezbollah, have arrived in Mogadishu for possible attacks.
Serbs continue to block U.N. aid convoys
The Associated Press
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — Bosnian Serbs are again blocking the delivery of clothes and other winter supplies to millions of Bosnians, U.N. officials said Tuesday.
The convoys are crucial for the survival of nearly 3 million Bosnians this winter.
Bosnian Serbs have refused to allow the delivery of winter materials, such as wood or plastic sheeting, claiming they are not humanitarian aid.
Serbs have blocked deliveries of winter clothes, shoes and office supplies for aid workers in the besieged Muslim town of Gorazde, said Ron Redmond, a spokesman for the U.N. High Commission for Refugees, based in Geneva.
Serb soldiers also were refusing to allow a team of Swedish engineers into the city, one of six U.N.declared "safe areas." The engineers want to rebuild at least 200 shell-damaged houses. Redmond said.
He said about 60,000 people are living in "terrible conditions" in Gorazde, where Serb shells had severely damaged 60 percent of the buildings.
Only two UNHCR convoys have reached Gorazde since Nov. 7, and food is short, he said. There is no electricity or running water.
The soldiers at the checkpoint to Goradez "have indicated they don't care what the Bosnian Serb authorities say
about anything." Redmond said.
The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees last month summoned the leaders of Bosnia's three warring factions
— Serbs, Croats and the Muslim-led government — to Geneva. They signed a pledge Nov. 18 to allow free passage of convoys and gave the aid agency the right to decide what constituted humanitarian aid.
Redmond said the Serbs had not kept their promise.
Nikola Koljevic, vice president of the self-proclaimed Bosnian Serb republic, rejected the U.N. criticism. He also repeated the Serb position that construction material "is not strictly humanitarian aid."
Ray Wilkinson, the UNHCR Sarajevo spokesman, said Monday that aid convoys into Bosnia had picked up after a dismal November, but remained disappointing.
He cited a bottleneck on a route through eastern Bosnia where Serbs were insisting that their checkpoint would be open only one hour a day.
Lt. Col. Bill Aikman, the U.N.'s military spokesman in Sarajevo, said Serbs had presented a "long list" of conditions for allowing convoyes into Tuzla.
Those included clearances for all equipment on the convoys. Serbs also wanted to delay all convoyes until a meeting Friday with U.N. officials. They were also opposing having interpreters travel with the convoys, Alkman said.
Four convoy, carrying supplies for U.N. troops, were allowed to head to Tuza on Tuesday, U.N. officials said.
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Dale Carter
Marcus Allen
Nell Smith
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EVERYDAY
value
Have it hour long.
EVERYDAY
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Have it Your Way!
6
Wednesday, December 8, 1993
The Athlete's Foot.
914 Massachusetts 841-6966
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LAWRENCE KANSAS
JACQUE'S LAWRENCE KANSAS
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865-4040
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841-6232
The Etc. Shop
REVO Sunglasses
928 Mass.
Downtown
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA
&
STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE
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PRESENT
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JAMES STEWART and DONNA REED in FRANK CAPRA'S "It's a Wonderful Life" LIONEL BARRYMORE THOMAS MITCHELL HUCKY TRAUMER
Miracle on 34th Street
MON., DEC. 13 8 PM
THUR., DEC. 16 8 PM
NAT. LAMPOON'S
SAT., DEC 11 3 PM
WED., DEC 15 9 PM
FRI., DEC.17 8 PM
CHRISTMAS VACATION
"HOW THE GRINCH STOLE CHRISTMAS"
SAT., DEC.11 8 PM
TUES., DEC.14 8 PM
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ALL SHOWS IN WOODRUFF AUD., LEVEL 5, KANSAS UNION. CALL 864-SHOW FOR INFO. HAPPY HOLIDAYS FROM SUA.
NATION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Denny beating trial ends; defendant gets 10 years
LOS ANGELES — A judge gave the maximum 10-year sentence yesterday to the African-American man convicted of viciously beating white truck driver Reginald Denny and attacking other motorists at the outset of last year's deadly riots.
The Associated Press
Some African-American community leaders and even the jury chair that convicted Williams criticized the sentence as unfair.
Police went on alert yesterday as a precaution against possible violence following the sentencing.
"It's intolerable in this society to attack and main people because of their race," Superior Court Judge John Ouderkirk said as he sent Damian Williams to prison.
Ouderkirk sentenced African- American co-defendant Henry Watson to probation until January 1997 and to 320 hours of community service.
But the city remained calm.
Williams, 20, was convicted of attacking Denny and four Hispanic and Asian victims as a rampaging mob took to the streets on April 29, 1992, the first day of the Los Angeles riots that killed 55 people.
Watson, 29, was convicted of misdemeanor assault and pleaded guilty to an assault count against trucker Larry Tarvin. He served 17 months between his arrest and the trial.
The riots were unleashed by the state court acquittals of four white police officers in the videotaped beating of African-American motorist Rodney King.
His lawyer, Edi Faal, said Williams was relived because he had once faced the possibility of two life sentences plus 47 years. Now, he said, Williams will be eligible for parole with four years' prison time. He was also fined $1,000. Faal said he would appeal the convictions.
The attack on Denny was televised live from a news helicopter and became a symbol of the race riots. Videotape showed Williams in a gleeful dance around Denny's body.
Denny, nearly killed in the beating testified about the numerous skull fractures and operations he experienced and said he remembered nothing about the assault. But he recently expressed forgiveness toward his attackers and said they should receive leniency.
Energy Department concealed tests
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The government has concealed more than 200 nuclear weapon tests since the 1940s and conducted about 800 radiation tests involving about 600 humans, some of whom were unaware of the risks, the Department of Energy acknowledged yesterday.
"It left me appalled, shocked and deeply saddened," said Energy Secretary Hazel O'Leary. She learned only recently that 18 civilians had been injected with highly radioactive plutonium in the 1940s to determine what doses workers might be exposed to safely..
"It is apparent that informed consent could not have taken place," she said. All the individuals are dead, although many of them lived for years after the experiment.
Launching a new era of openness about the weapons programs, the department released summaries of previously secret information about nuclear tests in Nevada, the amount of plutonium produced and currently located at weapons factories, and limited information about government tests during the 1940s and '50s on humans to determine the health effects of radiation doses.
Recently the Albuquerque Tribune reported the testing and identified
five of the 18 individuals. Those five were injected with plutonium as part of work being done by the Manhattan Project in the 1940s in the development of the first atomic bomb.
The fact that some tests were done on humans in connection with the government's nuclear program has been known for years, but few details have been available and officials have said the participants always were aware of the potential danger.
O'Leary said she would not rule out a possible lawsuit against the government by survivors of the 18 individuals whose cases are being investigated. The last of the 18 died two years ago.
ALL NATIONAL BRAND POP & BEER
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NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, December 8, 1993
7
South African council commences in effort to give Blacks government
The Associated Press
CAPE TOWN, South Africa — Blacks took seats in government for the first time Tuesday to help steer the country toward democracy and end 341 years of white domination.
Right-wing whites staged a theatrical bid to stress their opposition to reforms, but their seizure of an abandoned fort hundreds of miles away was dwarfed by the significance of the Transitional Executive Council's first meeting.
"To be part of the TEC means the struggle we have engaged in over the years is bearing fruit," said the African National Congress' secretary-general, Cyril Ramaphosa.
The council, composed of representatives from the ANC, government
and other Black and white groups, will serve as a government watchdog before the country's first multiracial elections April 27.
The election of a new Parliament in April will give Blacks their first vote in national affairs since Dutch settlers arrived in 1652.
It is the first time the Black majority has had the power to affect the future from within the halls of government.
"Certainly the TEC is the final step in the process to bring about true democracy in South Africa," said the government's constitutional affairs minister, Roelf Meyer, one of seven whites among the 32 politicians who met at the old President's Council chamber.
Each of 16 parties sent two representatives. Three other parties
planned to join the meetings later in the week.
The Conservatives have joined other right-wing white groups and the mainly Black Inkatha Freedom Party in a boycott of the council, saying it evolved from negotiations hijacked by the ANC and President F.W. de Klerk's government.
The Conservatives, the Zulu-dominated Inkatha and smaller right-wing groups say the ANC will destroy their followers' cultures and languages. They have demanded guarantees of sovereignty for ethnic groups, something the ANC says would amount to another version of apartheid.
Last-minute efforts late Monday to bring the holdouts into the Executive Council failed, but they were urged to join if they changed their minds.
While it does not have the power to introduce laws, the council can veto government decisions on security, intelligence-gathering and finances. The required votes for a council veto vary according to the issue.
Ramaphosa said the council must not be a "toothless" advisory body, but de Klerk stressed that the council "isn't the new government of South Africa."
In its first work of substance, the council approved South Africa's request to the International Monetary Fund for a $850 million drought-relief loan.
The council began at 10:20 a.m. with a moment of prayer, followed by brief comments from delegates.
The council then adjourned until tomorrow.
United States, France in talks standoff
By Martin Crutsinger The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - With 116 nations engaged in a historic effort to draw up trade rules for the 21st century, why does it appear to be a battle to the death between just two players, the Americans and the French?
Just a year ago, the United States threatened to triple the price of imported white wines because French officials would not relent on subsidies that were costing U.S. soybean farmers $1 billion annually in lost sales.
That dispute was eventually resolved by something called the Blair House accord, which dealt with the much broader issue of all farm subsidies.
The reduction of trade-distorting farm subsidies has been a key goal since the inception of the
ANALYSIS
Uruguay Round of global trade talks.
However, French officials, confronted by 1 million angry French farmers, said they would never accept the Blair House agreement.
All of a sudden last week, with the Dec. 15 deadline for Uruguay Round fast approaching, the Clinton administration switched positions and said it would consider changes in Blair House to meet French concerns as long as the EC was willing to make similar concessions to meet U.S. concerns.
The U.S. demands involve films and Airbus, the European consortium that is now the world's second-biggest manufacturer of civilian airplanes behind Boeing Co., with a government-run French company holding 37.9 percent ownership.
A deal has been struck that will allow both U.S. and European farmers to sell more government-subsidized grain into world markets over the next six years — while still hitting a target of cutting the volume of such subsidies by 21 percent at the end of
Commercial aircraft are America's No.1 manufacturing export. U.S. negotiators are seeking a cap on government subsidies to Airbus, which holds about 28 percent of the world market for jetliners.
six years.
The American film, television and home video industry had worldwide sales of $8 billion last year with 55 percent of those sales coming in Western Europe.
That occurred despite the fact that many European countries, led by France, put quotas on the number of American entertainment shows that can be broadcast.
BENCHWARMERS CATERING
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Equipment Upgrades/Trades
Desks, Beds, Chests and Bookcases
Equipment Upgrades/Trades CELLULARBROKERS call FREE for details. 10563 Widmer Lenexa, KS 66215 800-222-6090
PENGUIN
Everything But Ice 936 Mass.
CreditCheck and Deposit may be required
"Home of the Pocket-Za"
.357 Special
Wednesday carry out only
$3 small 1 topping
$5 medium 1 topping
$7 large 1 topping
tax not included
RUDY'S
PIZZERIA
749-0055
Now located at 704 Mass.
G
Hockenbury Tavern 1016 Massachusetts
Wed.- Leroy Shakespeare Thurs.- They Came in Droves Fri.- Caribe Sat.- Killer Bees
865-4055
THE STUDENT FRIENDLY STORE
A
Happy Holidays!
Holiday Gift Selections! Holiday Party Goods! Happy Holidays
Graham's Retail Liquors The mom and pop liquor store of lawrence 1906 Mass. 843-8186
The Everythings's on Sale
SALE
Inventory Reduction Entire stock is on sale!!!
WOMEN'S:
Cambridge Sportswear up to 1/2 off
Woolrich Outerwear 25% off
Russ
Berens
Knits & t-shirts
from $10.99
River City Skirts & pants from $39.99
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919 Massachusetts Extended Holiday Hours! Monday-Friday 9:00 am-8:30 pm Saturday 9:00 am-6:00 pm,Sunday 12:00 pm-5:30 pm
AIRFIELD
Henry Grethel
Blazers $149.00
Fun, novelty ties $14.99
919 Massachusetts
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DECEMBER 8 IS APPRECIATION DAY FOR KU STUDENTS & FACULTY
TAKE AN ADDITIONAL 25% OFF YOUR ENTIRE PURCHASE
All students and faculty show your KU identification for extra savings all day from 9am to 11pm!
112
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Price Stores
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YOUR COST 6.00 Not to be used in combination with any other discount offer
6.00
2727 Iowa Street
8
Wednesday. December 8. 1993
LIBRARY HARVEY
FROM THE DIRECTOR OF THE PLAYER
SHORT CUTS (R)
TODAY(4:30);8:30/FINAL WEEK!
Dickin
DICKINSON
THEATER
144 KNOW
4400
Dickinson 6
3239 South Iowa St
My Life Pg^13*4.20* 7:20 9:55
Nightmare Before Christmas Pg^4.35* 7:10 9:35
Nutcracker Pg^4.10* 7:15 9:30
Rescue Me Pg^13*4.20* 7:10 9:40
We're Back Pg^3.55* 5:30, 7:00, 9:30
Perfect World Pg^4.35* 7:00, 9:45
13 Primetime Show (1) Hibernate Delray
Sci-Fi Guest Animate Impress Studio
Crown Cinema
BEFORE & P.M. ADULTS $3.00
( LIMITED TO MATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
Addams Family Values PG-13 5/15, 7/20, e30
The 3 Musketeers $7.99
The Joy Luck Club R $8.15
Josh & Sam PG-13 $1.15
Malice R $7.99
Carilto's Way R $8.99
Moubett Fire PG-13 $7.99
CINEMA TWIN
1110 IOWA 841 5191
$125
Jurassic Park PG-13 5.00
7.20 8.50
In the Line of Fire R 5.00
7.30 8.50
SHOWTIMES FOR LODDA ONLY
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The Crystal Ice Bucket Bouquet
MERRY CHRISTMAS
The season's freshest flowers in a lovely 24% full-lead crystal ice bucket. We can send one anywhere.
Teleflora
Owens-
FLOWER SHOP
9th & Indiana • 843-6111
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Kennedy GLASS
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car windshields, desk top glass,
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730 New Jersey 843-4416
Niners, pump up more strength and durability into athleticwear than Russell Athletic. Their field-trained t-shirts and shorts ease you through the toughened workout as well as higher related casuals. Russell Athletic
RUSSELL
ATHLETIC
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SPORTING GOODS
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842-2442
840 Massachusetts
CAROLS & CANDLES
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ECM CENTER - 1204 OREAD
cross street from the Glass Onion and Yello Sub
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CANCUN SPRING BREAK '94
Spaces are limited
- Roundtrip airfare between Kansas City and Cancun International Airports
From $559** per person March 18-25
- 7 nights hotel accommodations at either the Kin Ha Cancun Hotel or comparable, or the first class Calinda Beach Hotel or comparable based on 4 people sharing one room *
* Roundtrip transportation between the Cancun international Airport and the city centre.
- College Tours representatives on site in Cancun to see to the needs of tour members
* Carlson Travel Network/Sunflower Travel Service travel packet including airline,
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- Carlson Travel Network/Sunflower Travel Service travel packet including airline, ground transportation and hotel vouchers, luggage tags, and final instructions
For more information
Carlson Travel Network
**U.S. & Mexican Departure Taxes not included
CALL:
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1-800-444-4248
- optional party package available!
Sunflower Travel Service
704 Massachusetts In Downtown Lawrence
NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Hubble's guidance and power systems were replaced during two earlier space walks, on Sunday and Monday.
Hubble gets tuned up
Endeavour's crew makes space walk for delicate repairs
The Associated Press
SPACE CENTER, Houston — NASA's high-altitude repair crew installed replacement parts to fix half of the Hubble Space Telescope's near-sightedness Tuesday.
Even as they exulted that "we won the division and we are now in the playoffs," NASA officials cautioned against taking success for granted.
The result of the repairs by the Endeavour's crew should be a telescope that will live nearly up to the original promise of getting crisp images and detailed scientific data from the faintest and oldest bodies in the universe.
In less than two turns around the world, cremewen Jeffrey Hoffman and Story Musgrave defyly pulled out Hubble's old camera like a dresser drawer and slid in the new one, a 620-pound unit the size of a baby grand piano.
But NASA has been stung before. The agency suffered its greatest
the new mirrors and get the photograph that astronomers call "first light."
embarrassment not long after the April 1990 launch of the Hubble when it had to admit that the main 94.5 inch-diameter lens had been ground to the wrong specifications, leaving the telescope blurry-eyed.
Two space-walking astronauts installed a camera whose mirrors make up for the flaws created by the telescope's musshapen main mirror.
A second team, Kathy Thornton and Tom Akers, was set to install a tricky device that intercepts incoming light and corrects it before it hits three other Hubble optical instruments.
The mirrors are in a 7-foot-high telephone booth-like box that weighs 640 pounds. It is slid into a space now occupied by a high-speed photometer. That instrument, which provided only 2 percent of the Hubble's science capability, will be brought back to Earth.
It will take six to eight weeks to orient the telescope, recalibrate its instruments, fine tune the position of
When Hoffman installed the new magnetometers near the very top of the four-story telescope, two sides of the box came off in his hand. Mission Control thought at first of putting a "baggy" over it, then decided to install pieces of insulation from the cover of a tool in the cargo bay later in the flight.
As each part was installed, engineers on the ground conducted tests and proclaimed that all electrical connections had been properly made.
THE NEWS in brief
KIRYAT ARBA, Occupied West Bank Gunfire during funeral procession threatens PLO-Israel peace plan
Arabs stoned a funeral procession for two Jewish settlers, drawing gunfire from mourners and soldiers yesterday. Israel sent thousands of troops to the occupied lands to cope with growing violence.
Clashes occurred as the cortege crossed the West Bank town of Bethlehem and as mourners headed to the Jewish cemetery in Hebron, also in the West Bank. Three Arabs were reportedly wounded by gunfire.
Thirty-seven Palestinians and 14 Israelis have been killed since the Sept. 13 signing of the PLO-Israel accord as extremists on both sides try to undo the agreement.
The daily violence threatens to postpone Israel's withdrawal from the occupied Gaza Strip and the West Bank region of Jericho, set to begin Dec. 13.
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin has said that although a small delay in implementing the accord is needed to iron out security arrangements, any substantial change would hand the extremists a victory.
"We are fully aware of the difficulties that still lie ahead, but I believe that together with those in the Arab side who want peace it will be possible to overcome these difficulties," Rabin said Tuesday.
Palestinian negotiators who met yesterday with visiting U.S. Secretary of State Warren Christopher said keeping with the peace plan was the only way to stop the violence.
WASHINGTON
Latex source of allergic reactions
Europa
WASHINGTON — Natural rubber latex is causing allergic reactions ranging from mild irritation to life-threatening shock, a dermatologist reports.
The Associated Press
One study found that 7 percent of surgeons and 5 percent of operating room nurses were allergic to their latex surgical gloves.
In a lecture at the at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Dermatology, Dr. Ronald R. Brancaccio of the New York University Medical Center said yesterday allergy reactions are being reported "more and more commonly," especially among medical workers.
Allergy reactions often develop from an increased exposure to a substance, Brancaccio said, and the AIDS epidemic has caused increased use of latex like health care workers using a new set of gloves for each patient they treat, and the national safe sex campaign to use latex condoms to avoid getting AIDS.
Brancaccio said more cases are being reported of both male and female sex partners experiencing allergic reactions to latex condoms.
PARIS
World illiteracy falls, rises in Africa
The Associated Press
In a two-year report the United Nations Education, Scientific and Cultural Organization also said war and social upheaval hampered education in the Third World and former Soviet bloc. It urged a shift from military to educational spending.
PARIS — Illiteracy has fallen globally for the first time but continues to rise in Africa, where education needs to encourage women to have fewer children, UNESCO said yesterday.
The 172-page World Education Report comes one week before the world's first education summit in New Delhi, involving the nine most populous countries representing 72 percent of the world's illiterates.
The study said the number of illiterate adults fell to 905 million in 1980, down from 945 million in 1980.
In sub-Saharan Africa, however, the number of illiterates rose from 132 million in 1980 to 138 million in 1990.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
BASKETBALL TICKETS
ATTN: STUDENTS REDEMPTION PERIOD
GROUP #4
DECEMBER 8 - DECEMBER 10
8:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
GAMES:
JAN.5 - UNC-ASHEVILLE
JAN.8 - SMU
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 OR RED SPRING 1994 FEE STICKER ON YOUR KUID TO RECEIVE YOUR TICKETS.
** WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR LOST OR STOLEN COUPONS.
0 0 2 7 2 2 0 W 10 W
music
___
Melissa Lacey / KANSAN
Love Squad members Al Levine, guitar and vocals, left, and Joe Salem, guitar, play a recent gig at Benchwarmers, 1601 W. 23rd St. Levine and Salem nightly moonlight playing acoustic sets whenever possible.
Love Squad
Acoustic duo lends diversity to its alternative rock group by playing in coffee houses to release creative juices.
A BAND WITH AN EDGE
By JL Watson
Kansan staff writer
When Al Levine whips out his mandolin onstage with the band Love Squad, a tiptoe through the tulips is hardly what he has in mind. Unlike the image of Tiny Tim or the mellow, tragically hip music of REM, Levine has something a bit more uplifting in mind.
"With us the mandolin stuff is the most rockin'," Levine said.
Levine and the other members of Lawrence's own Love Square, guitarist Joe Salem, bassist Byers, and drummer Brad Coffelt, tempt audiences with morsels of alternative rock with an edge. They've just released their third album, "Posertown" on the Mercy label. They've worked hard to achieve an individual sound without citing specific influences for their path of musical direction.
13 "We always end up getting pigeon-holled in John Mellencamp meets REM," Levine said. "We get tagged with that post-REM label. We confronted it on this album." The result is "REM Song." Don't expect to find tunes of such pop icons en masse on the release.
Love Squad is known more for the rocked-out performances that audiences from Wisconsin to New Orleans have come to expect. Just like other road-weary bands, Love Squad, spends too many nights driving into wind-whipped blackness and eats more meals at the palace of golden arches than it would care to admit. To a certain degree, the image holds true.
But for two members of the band, Levine and Salem, there is another chapter to the story. In addition to the loud, head-bangin' grooves of Love Sound, the two play acoustic guitar, in public.
"When it's the two us of playing acoustic, we bill ourselves as The Coffee House Bums," Levine said. Occasionally, they each play solo.
"Everyone from our parents to the publisher of the Note said, 'Don't play alone,' Levine said. It's not that playing solo is the kiss of death. Both Levine and Salem have the talent and confidence to play alone, but the acoustic sounds they create together complement each other. The challenges of playing acoustic differ from those issued from a plugged-in sound.
"You don't want it to be monotonous," Salem said.
"You have to have songwriting and playing skills." Unfortunately, there is not a strong network of circuit venues for acoustic performers.
"People don't recognize the value of it," Levine said. "There are so many people out there with guitars. It's kind of like looking at an abstract painting and saying, 'Oh, I could do that.' But you really can't."
Acoustic audiences come to shows with different expectations than typical rock audiences. "A lot of it is story telling," Levine said. "It's like a conversation with the audience. Very rarely can you be on auto pilot in an acoustic show. Not to say that Love Squad isn't spontaneous, but sometimes I have to psych myself up to play acoustic."
Audiences at acoustic shows usually stay seated and pay attention to the music, Levine said. "It's a much more intimate experience," he said. "You can't stop and have drum fills."
Levine, Salem and the rest of the Squad spend much of their time on the road. Their van, with 250,000 miles on it, is proof that this is a working band. With so much time spent promoting and touring with the band, Salem and Levine squeeze in acoustic performances whenever possible. They play coffee houses and radio stations, using the publicity twofold — as a way to promote the band and as an outlet for their acoustic juices.
Byers and Coffelt don't mind the extracurricular performances, Salem said. "They knew when they joined the band what we do. And everyone in this band has other interests. We all want to work on solo projects or get into other aspects of the industry."
Brian Byers, president of Mercy Records, has heard Salem and Levine play different forms during their recording sessions at the studio.
"They do a lot of the same songs that they do with Love Squad, just with more feeling," he said. "It seems to have a softer edge."
Levine has a hometown style, Brian Byers said. "It has kind of a country feel to it, and for Joe, the writing is stronger than the playing," he said.
Whether playing with the band or as an acoustic duo, Levine and Salem build their blocks of credibility on a foundation of songwriting, as well as vocals.
"Our songs are built around the melody as opposed to the groove," Levine said. "It's more a
band backing up songwriters as opposed to vice versa. The extraordinary musical moments are built around the vocals."
Vocals and songwriting aside, neither Salem nor Levine plan any radical changes in playing techniques in the near future.
"We've just started to hit our stride," Salem said. "In a lot of ways we're already successful. We're playing our own music in front of people who want to hear it. If we could make more money I'd be happier, but that's the only thing I'd change."
HALF DAY
Melissa Lacev / KANSAN
Levine sings to a much different tune when playing acoustically with Salem. Acoustic sets are more demanding and intimate than electric rock sets, Levine said.
Tribe, Soul to shake KU's soul at concert
By JL Watson
Kansan staff writer
A Tribe Called Quest, De La Soul use their music to send fans a message of social responsibility
Phife, Q-Tip and Ali comprise the trio of A Tribe Called Quest. They are promoting their second release on Jive Records, "The Low End Theory." The title is a reference to the way society downplays the aspirations of young African Americans. It also refers to the band's music.
They left behind a life on Linden Boulevard in Queens, N.Y., in search of soulful rhythms and rhymes. The journey has led them to the set of MTV Unplugged, recording studios and singing with groups like Dee Lite, LL Cool J and MC Lyte. For A Tribe Called Quest the next stop on the highway to success is 8:30 tomorrow night at the Kansas Union Ballroom.
"Bass and drum beats are real guttural, low sounds, and when you hear a loud system you feel that sound vibrate through you. That's the low end of bass and drums, and that's the low end theory." Phile said.
For "The Low End Theory," the band recruited the talents of legendary jazz bassist Ron Carter. Carter, who had never heard of the Tribe until they mailed him a copy of their tape, immediately agreed to lend his music to the new project. He
A Tribe Called Quest has expanded the boundary of hip-hop from their 1990 release "People's Instinctive Travels and The Paths of Rhythm." However, they haven't sacrificed their original sound.
Not far from A Tribe Called Quest's roots are the rap sounds of De La Soul. The two bands have shared the stage on more than one occasion, and tomorrow's performance will be no exception. Perhaps the main difference between the two is the language they use to convey their musical message.
"The only rule we have is to go off, not to preach concepts and metaphors," Q-Tip said. "This sets the tempo for the whole album. For best results, throw on your hoody, put on your new kicks, and pop the tape in your Jeep or your Honda for your foes and your friends."
recorded all his tracks in one session. The results are melodic raps that maintain a hard edge and have earned the Tribe respect on the street level and considerable cross-over appeal.
A Tribe Called Quest strives to achieve clarity as De La Soul delights in mystifying the audience by speaking in tongue. Their third release on Tommy Boy Records is "NOW," and the message is that the Da.L.S.Y. Age of three years ago is dead.
The only way to fully discover the wonders of the Soul is to be at the performance.
THE BOYS
Souls of Mischief opens the three-act show. Tickets are $14 for students, $15 for nonstudents and are available at the SUA Box Office in the Union; Streetside Records, 1403 West 23rd St. and Recycled Sounds in Kansas City.
photo courtesy of Jive Records/ KANSAN
Rap group, A Tribe Called Quest has a dreamy, melodic, yet buoyant style. Tribe expanded the boundary of hip-hop without losing their originality and earned their respect from names like L.J. Cool J.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
December 8,1993
PAGE 9
KU Life
People and places at the University of Kansas.
calendar
EXHIBITIONS & LECTURES
Exhibition — "Names Project AIDS Memorial Quilt" and "Photographs from the Bonham Project" will be on display through Dec. 12 in the Spencer Museum of Art, free
Exhibition — Spencer "Presepio" and "Holiday Tree" will be on display through Dec. 30 in the Spencer Museum of Art, free
Beethoven Birthday Concert: University Symphony Orchestra and Friends, Brian Priestman, conductor 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Lied Center, $6 public, $3 students, $5 senior citizens
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
Exhibitions
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
Performances
Kathleen Goldsmith, MFA Thesis paintings will be on display through Dec.9 in the gallery of the Art and Design building, free
Faculty and staff art show will be on display through Thursday in the gallery of the Kansas Union
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
Inge Theatre Series: "Displaced Persons" by Ron and Ludvika Popenhagen 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Lien Cen
Theater and Dance
ter, $6 public, $3 students, $5 other students and senior citizens
University of Kansas Opera; "The Mikado" by Gilbert and Sullivan 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, Jan. 13-16, 1994 at the Lied Center, $6 public, $3 students, $5 senior citizens.
Upcoming Lied Center events: Minneapolis Children's Theatre in "Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm" Jan. 13, 1994 and Bobby McFerrin and the Kansas City Symphony Jan. 25, 1994
1
10
Wednesday, December 8,1993
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Students making long trips need rest, well-preparedness
By Liz Klinger
Kansas staff writer
Stuart Vidanage, Newport Beach,
Calif., freshman, will drive 31 hours during a period of three days to get home for the holidays.
Kansanstaff writer
"I'm driving home because I didn't have enough money to buy a plane ticket." Vidanage said. "It's a long drive. I'm not looking forward to it. I want to get home."
Vidanage is one of many KU students who will be driving long distances to visit family and friends during winter break.
One KU student has been killed in an automobile accident during winter break since 1984, said Danny Kaiser, assistant dean of student life. And 26 out of the 71 reported KU student deaths since that time have been caused by automobile accidents, he said.
Students driving many miles during break need to be prepared and cau
tious, said Tim Lockett, administrative lieutenant for the highway patrol in Topeka.
"The biggest problem we have is sleep deprivation," Lockett said. "They try to drive too far in a relatively short period of time."
Before leaving on a long trip, students should be well-rested. On the average, well-rested students can drive about 300 miles or six hours in one day. Lockett said.
He said students who felt tired while driving should either check into a motel or pull off to the side of the road as far as possible and take a nap, Lockett said.
Many students begin their trips within an hour after their last final and might become fatigued while driving, said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
"It makes a lot more sense to pull over and sleep for another hour than not to arrive at all," Yockey said.
Am minors, Wayzata, Minn., freshman, and her sister, Sara, will be making a 7-hour trip to their home outside of Minneapolis during break. Minns said she always checks the weather forecast before leaving and makes sure their car has antifreeze in it.
"If one of us gets tired, we stop and switch right away," Minors said.
It is important that students tell family or friends precisely when they are leaving. Lockett said.
"We get lots of calls from parents and other relatives about misplaced students," Lockett said.
And as always, driving while under the influence of alcohol or drugs inhibits a driver's judgment and should be avoided. Lockett said.
Lockett said driving too fast for weather conditions was another problem. Students might need to drive more slowly in December and January, when snow and icy roads make for perilous driving conditions.
Bond bows out of governor's race
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — One of the Legislature's most powerful members bowed out yesterday of the race for the Republican nomination for governor and threw his support to Secretary of State Bill Graves.
The Graves campaign intended the endorsement of Sen. Dick Bond of Overland Park to be taken as a sign of strength. In recent weeks, Graves has battled the impression that he has lost both momentum and the status of perceived front-runner.
Bond said he hopes to play an important role in Graves' campaign by providing advice on political strategy and policy. He also said he is willing to raise money for Graves.
"The Graves campaign is on the
move," Graves told reporters during a Statehouse news conference.
Two other candidates played down the importance of the race. The other declared candidates are former Senate Majority Leader Fred Kerr of Pratt, Pittsburg businessman Gene Bicknell and Lenexa Mayor Rich Becker.
Kerr speculated that Bond was under pressure to endorse "another Johnson County candidate." Graves grew up in Salina and claims it as his hometown, but he now lives in Lenexa.
"Sen. Bond's endorsement of the secretary of state is not surprising as the negotiations between the camps had been rumored for months," Kerr said.
Bicknell described such announcec-
ments as "just a set up" and "one politician endorsing another one."
Bond said he and his wife, Sue, decided he should not run for governor in part because he has spent most of his career in the legislative branch. Also, he indicated that concerns about how a campaign would affect his family helped persuade him to bow out.
"It's what I expected, and I expect to see a few more of them in the next week or so," Bicknell said.
"I still haven't caught that 9-pound bass," Bond joked.
Bond, 58, said his decision probably means that he will never run for governor though he plans to remain in the Senate, running for another four-year term in 1996.
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Wednesday, December 8,1993
11
When the clock strikes 00:00
I am a man who lives in the heart of the world. I am a man who is loved by all who see me. I am a man who is grateful for everything that has happened to me. I am a man who is always ready to help others. I am a man who is always willing to learn new things. I am a man who is always happy. I am a man who is always true to myself. I am a man who is always genuine. I am a man who is always honest. I am a man who is always faithful. I am a man who is always loyal. I am a man who is always caring. I am a man who is always kind. I am a man who is always generous. I am a man who is always responsible. I am a man who is always trustful. I am a man who is always trustworthy. I am a man who is always reliable. I am a man who is always dependable. I am a man who is always faithful. I am a man who is always trustworthy. I am a man who is always dependable. I am a man who is always faithful. I am a man who is always trustworthy. I am a man who is always dependable. I am a man who is always faithful. I am a man who is trustworthy. I am a man who is dependable. I am a man who i
Richard Devinki/KANSAN
Mike Maddox, third year law student, studies for classes while on campus. Maddox, who was a forward for the Jayhawks from 1988 to 1991, said his first year away from college basketball was the hardest for him.
They were the big men on campus. Their lives, their fame revolved around how they did on the basketball court. But after their senior seasons, they were forced to find new lives.
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
The roar of the crowd and the bright lights of the cameras are fickle. For a moment, the crowd is the players' best friend and cameras abound. Then they are gone.
For former Kansas basketball players Milt Newton, Jeff Gueldner and Mike Maddox, the cameras have dimmed, and the athletes have been forced to find a new niche.
Maddox, who was a forward for the Jay-
hawks from 1988-1991, said it was a hard
adjustment from playing on the '91 Final
Four team to sitting in the stands, but feels
he has fully adjusted to being a fan.
"It's an ego thing," he said. "First of all you miss the attention, and second you miss being a part of the team with its camaraderie and trying to accomplish something with your teammates."
Maddox had the hardest time adjusting to life after basketball the first year away from it, but the more time that passes, the easier it becomes.
Maddox and his wife, Bonnie, are building a house in Lawrence so they can move back from Overland Park where they are living now. She is also a Kansas graduate.
Newton, a forward for Kansas in 1887- 1899, said he had to adjust to not having the free time he enjoyed as a Jayhawk
"We'd have a two-hour practice then we were free." he said.
"If I missed basketball too much I wouldn't have left it," he said.
After Kansas, Newton played in the Continental Basketball Association for Grand Rapids, Mich., and Rockford", Ill., and overseas on the Australian national team, but now is working in Denver, Colo.
Newton returned to Lawrence after playing basketball and worked at West Junior High School while he completed his master's degree in sports administration. He taught all subjects to children with behavior disorders.
On June 3 of this year he began working for the NBA's Denver Nuggets as the community relations coordinator. One of the big projects he coordinates is Night Moves, a project that provides after-school activities for junior and senior high school students.
Newton said he did miss playing, but he made a decision not to play and to get on with his life.
"I'm happy to still be in the basketball profession," he said.
Gueldner, a guard during the 1987-1990 seasons, shied away from the limelight during his tenure as a Kansas basketball player. He performed his basketball responsibilities, but kept away from anything that would bring attention his way. Now he wishes he would have cared more about the attention. He said the fame only lasted so long, then it was gone. He does not receive as much attention now, but the fans still recognize him when he attends Kansas games, he said.
"I belong in the section with the 90-year-olds," he said. "I'm the worst fan in Allen."
He doesn't stand up or yell like rest of the crowd, but does applaud — albeit politely — when the team makes a good play.
That stoic manner helps him to be an objective color commentator. For the past four years, he has been giving the how and why of plays for Creative Sports Inc., the producer and distributor of the Jayhawk Television Network.
He color comments about three or four games a year, he said, and he would like to accumulate a few more.
"I'm very opinionated, and it's fun for me." he said.
Gueldner pursued several job opportunities before accepting his current job 10 months ago at Cellular One in Lawrence. He is an account executive who handles sales and client service.
He said he's tried to keep in touch with his old teammates, but it was difficult because everyone had started new lives and was getting used to their new routines.
With the Denver Nuggets, Newton sees former Kansas players who have turned pro. He said he still spoke with former teammate Danny Manning, now with the Los Angeles Clippers, and he will be able to watch Mark Randall in practice. Randall signed with the Nuggets Nov. 29.
Maddox said the former players wanted the current team to do well.
The former Kansas players not only support their professional counterparts, but also the current Kansas players.
"They make us proud to be former players," he said.
Richard Devinki/KANSAN
Cellular One
Jeff Gueldner, a Cellular One sales representative, displays the cellular phones available for sale. Gueldner was a guard for the Kansas basketball team from 1987 to 1990. Gueldner said he was never interested in the fame that went along with playing for an NCAA Championship team.
SPORTS BRIEFS
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
Payless ShoeSource is corporate sponsor for fan-seeking team
Bob Frederick, athletic director, announced Monday that the Kansas women's basketball team would now have Payless Shoore as a major corporate sponsor this season.
The sponsorship is the first of its kind for Kansas women's basketball and in the Big Eight conference. It will be highlighted by the televising of the Kansas-Colorado game Jan. 9 on the Jayhawk Network.
Kansas coach Marian Washington said it was her ultimate goal to increase the popularity of women's basketball at Kansas.
In connection with that game, Payless ShoeSource will be distributing free tickets beginning Dec. 17 at its stores in the Kansas City metropolitan area, Lawrence and Topeka. The goal is to fill Allen Field House in the hopes of breaking the current attendance record of 3,750.
"We're very fortunate to get a sponsorship like this one," she said. "I hoped that one day before I left, I'd have a chance to see the field house filled."
PROFESSIONAL BOXING Punch puts champ in pokey
IOWA CITY, Iowa — Former World Boxing Organization champion Tommy Morrison pleaded innocent yesterday to charges of public intoxication and punching a student, whom he claimed was staring at him in a restaurant.
Morrison and an unidentified friend and their dates were eating at Country Kitchen early yesterday when Morrison approached a group of University of Iowa students seated at another table. He hit one from behind, Iowa City Police Sgt. Craig Lihs said.
Llhs said Morrison, of Overland Park, told police the students were staring at him.
"The kids were eating and studying for finals," Lihs said. "They were looking at him and saying he was in the movie 'Rocky V.'"
William Strout, the 20-year-old man who was hit, was not injured. His friends "left immediately" and called police. Lihs said.
Morrison, 24, who had a blood-alcohol level of 0.24, also was charged with simple assault. He posted $260 bond. A court date probably won't be set until next week.
Lihs said he didn't know why Morrison was in Iowa City.
Morrison won the World Boxing Organization heavyweight title on a unanimous decision against George Foreman on June 7. He lost the title in a first-round knockout by Michael Bent in Tulsa, Okla., on Oct. 29.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL Coach bans players from hoops
LINCOLN, Neb. — Nebraska coach Tom Osborne doesn't want his football players on the basketball court before the Orange Bowl showdown with Florida State.
Two players have been injured playing pickup basketball games.
Wingback Clester Johnson sprained his ankle playing basketball last week and missed Monday's practice.
Defensive tackle Billy Wade previously hurt his knee in a basketball game.
A "no-basketball" rule is now in effect for the No. 2 Cornhuskers, who will play No. 1 Florida State on New Year's night. The winner of that game is expected to be crowned the national champion.
Compiled by Kansan sportswriter Gerry Fey and the Associated Press
Morgan State, its nine freshmen to test itself with No.15 Kansas
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
While the Kansas women's basketball team may be considered young with all four freshmen seeing considerable playing time, it has nothing on Morgan State — the team with only one senior and nine freshmen.
as the Jayhawks, Kansas coach Marian Washington said.
At 7 tonight, the 4-0 Jayhawks face 0-4 Morgan, State in
"All I know is that they are an up-tempo type ball club, "Washington said. "It's good for this team. It helps as far as it's the tempo we like."
The Bears play the same style of game
Morgan State is a Division-I team, but Washington said this game took the place of what was to be a Kansas-DePaul matchup.
"We were disappointed with DePaul," she said. "We had a contract with them, but they were not able to fulfill the contract."
"It gives our kids a chance to see a Division-I program at the top," Powell said. "There's no better role model than Kansas.
Morgan State coach Anderson Powell said he enjoyed the challenge of playing the No.15 team in the nation.
Kansas can relate to losing players because of injuries. At the beginning of the season, Washington said if the Jayhawks stayed injury-free, they would have a chance for a successful season.
"It's a growing process for us," he said. "We lost eight upperclassmen to graduation, eligibility or injuries. But we're a team that's going to be good."
"Leathers is going to play," she said. "With the injury, we're going to spot-play her. I'm happy with that. She'll be able to encourage this young team. It's a chronic back problem, so she'll be playing with some pain."
But the injury bug already has bitten the Jayhawks twice this year. Kansas will be without junior forward Alana Slatter against Morgan State, and senior guard Michelle Leathers will play sparingly.Washington said.
Losing Leathers in the backcourt has given freshman guard Angie Halbleib a chance to play. She scored 22 points against Central Michigan, hitting six of 14 from behind the three-point line. Halbleib
Morgan State will be the first of six games in December for Kansas, but Washington said the schedule would not put much strain on her players.
said she and the team's other freshmen accepted the challenge.
"I think we're going to be expected to contribute because we only have 10 scholarship players," Halbleib said.
"Right now, I think we're spaced out pretty well," Washington said. "We just went through three games in four days."
For the rest of the break, Washington said she thought Athletes In Action, an exhibition game, and Lamar would be the toughest games. Kansas plays against Athletes In Action on Saturday at home, followed by Lamar on Dec. 19 in Beaumont, Texas.
Kansas capped off four days of games Saturday with a 81-65 victory against Central Michigan, winning the Dial Soap Basketball Classic '93.
"Athletes In Action has former Olympians on the team," Washington said. ("No. 1) Tennessee only beat them by three, but they do have one key player that has been injured. I think our hardest series of games so far is behind us."
Hectic, NBA-like schedule continues for No. 7 Kansas
After trips to New York and Chicago, No. 7 Kansas will play North Carolina State at 6:30 p.m. in Raleigh, N.C.
Kansan sportswriter
By Mark Button
Kansan sportswriter
On the road again.
The Jayhawks, 5-1, are undefeated in their three games on the road this year. However, the NBA-like schedule seems to be taking a toll on Kansas.
MEN'S
BASKETBALL
The Jayhawks flew to the Big Apple two weeks
And tonight, of course two days after their last game, the Javhawk face the 2-3 Wolfpack.
ago, played two games with one practice in between and came home with the Preseason NIT championship. Last week the 'Hawks lost an exhibition game 93-82 at home against Australia's national team on Nov. 29. Two days later, Kansas was defeated 73-59 by Temple at Allen Field House. On Saturday, the team was off to Chicago and earned a come-from-behind, 79-74 victory against DePaul. Then on Monday night, Kansas came back to the field house and defeated Washburn 82-68.
"It's difficult to find time to study," said Kansas senior Patrick Richey. "And we have to do that to get those good grades. I think we need the experience, but I'd like to get some more home games in."
"It's a team I used to think of like a lot of people around here think of K-State," Williams said. "I've been booed in there and had people call me all sorts of names. So it's just like any other arena in the Big Eight."
North Carolina State is led by 6-foot-11 junior center Todd Fuller, who has averaged 14.6 points and 10.2 rebounds in the team's five games. Also crucial to the Wolfpack has been the play of seniors, guard Lakista McCuller and forward Lewis Sims, who have averaged 12.4 and 10 points, respectively.
Williams, who as a assistant coach at North Carolina from 1978 to 1988, said he had a history with the Wolfpack fans.
Kansas coach Roy Williams said he took full responsibility for the team's hectic schedule. Does he think it will help his young team?
"Ask me again in January," he said.
Kansas has been led by senior forward Richard Scott and senior guard Steve Woodberry, as Williams expected.
Williams said early in the year that the two would have to find ways to score with the defense aimed at them, contrary to last season when the opposition was geared to stop then senior guards Rex Walters and Adonis Jordan.
So far, so good for the two seniors this year.
Woodberry has improved his scoring average from 10.1 points at the end of last season, to 17.2 this season. Scott has improved from 10.6 to 15 points this year.
1
12
Wednesdav. December 8,1993
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Incoming varsity athletes face dealing with change
"Sometimes I wonder what it would be like just to be in school," Charlene Reyes said.
By Anne Felstet
Kansan sportswriter
As an outfielder for the Kansas softball team, she said she figured just being in school would be boring.
Reyes, a freshman, is one of the varsity athletes who simultaneously adjusted to college life and varsity athletics. She has successfully survived her first fall season and looks forward to her more competitive spring season.
Reyes had an advantage over most of the incoming players. She played softball for San Marcos Junior College in California. She said she understood the time commitment she would have to make, and it was not a big adjustment for her.
Nonathletes do not realize how much time athletes put into their sport, she said. By 8 p.m., other students in her residence hall were running around because they had slept all day, while she had been busy.
"Somehow we manage to find a social life and attend school," she said. "Somehow we just do it."
Trent Tucker, freshman Kansas tennis player, had difficulties adjusting to the structured, full schedule of varsity athletics. He moved from high school tennis directly to collegiate tennis and was thrust into the varsity athletic environment with no control over his own schedule.
Instead of following the typical freshman routine of going to class, staying up late, and acquainting himself to his surroundings, he was learning the ropes of being an athlete.
He monitored his diet, attended practice sessions that lasted three hours longer than he was accustomed to, and he was rolling out of bed at 5:30 every morning for weight training.
"I didn't feel like a student at all," Tucker said. "I wanted at least one morning to sleep in."
The fall season is not as busy as the spring season in many sports, and it gives new athletes a chance to acclimate themselves to the new routine of balancing college with varsity athletics.
Tucker said the fall season had taken away his nervousness about playing varsity tennis and it taught him what he would need to do at the collegiate conference and national level to be a competitive player.
"The spring season will be insane," he said.
"The spring season will be insane," he said. Sophomore Chessa Bieri also is a newcomer to Kansas tennis, although she has a slight advantage over Tucker. She opted to redshift last year, so she witnessed the intensity she would be expected to maintain when she played with the team.
"You never really realize how much it takes until you actually do it," she said. "No one can tell you about it; you have to learn it by going through it."
However, seeing and doing are two different things.
She described varsity athletics as a full-time job with no sick days. She said it was a major time commitment and she had to sacrifice a lot, but the rewards equaled all the time she put into it.
"It's a great experience to do something you enjoy doing, and you get a lot of opportunities through it," she said.
Scripture-toting fan ordered to stand trial
The Associated Press
SANTA ANA, Calif. — Rollen Frederick Stewart, known to television sports fans as "Rainbow Man" for his multicolored wig, was ordered to stand trial on charges that he set off stink bombs at the Crystal Cathedral and other buildings.
At a hearing Monday, Stewart was scheduled for arraignment on Dec. 21 on four felony counts each of discharging a gaseous, nauseous substance in a public place and of placing a fake bomb with the intent of making people fear for their safety.
Stewart, 48, was sentenced in July to three life terms for taking a hostage last year at a hotel near Los Angeles International Airport. He told police the incident was intended to publicize the second coming of Jesus Christ.
During the 1970s, Stewart traveled to sporting events around the world, posing for television cameras in a curly, colored wig and often holding up signs with religious slogans or Bible verses.
He faces a maximum of five years in prison for the stink bombings, and defense attorney Robert Knox said Stewart probably would plead guilty if he could get a sentence to run concurrently with his prison terms.
"The rapture was motivating him," Knox said. "He is remorseful, and he never must harm anyone."
s Tornoseful, and he never meant to harm anyone."
Several witnesses testified that Stewart placed homemade bombs at the Crystal Cathedral in Garden Grove, home to television evangelist Robert Schuller; a Christian bookstore in Garden Grove; Trinity Broadcasting Network Studios in Tustin; and the Orange County Register in Santa Ana, all in 1991.
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The women of Panhellenic Association and the men of the Interfraternity Council would like to take this opportunity to wish all KU students good luck on their Finals.
THEATERFRaternity Council
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SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, December 8, 1993
13
Experienced divers hope to build on fall successes
By Kent Hohifeld Kansan sportswriter
One semester through her junior year, Kansas diver Amy Graham has proved to be one of the bright spots for the diving team this season.
which is looking to build on last season's conference tournament championship.
"Any is an intense competitor," Kansas diving coach Don Fearon said. "I enjoy getting a chance to work with her."
Amy Graham
A. J. K.
Graham said that she thought this season's squad would be one of the team's strongest in recent years.
"Instead of the diving team being a weakness, the team will be a real strength this year," Graham said.
She said that she thought the team had improved since her freshman year. That helped bring better talent to the team.
Graham said that the fall portion of the season had helped prepare the team for the competition it would face during its spring schedule.
Graham said that all three of the team's divers had performed strongly in most of the fall meets. She said that her best personal performance had been Nov. 13 in the meet against Southern Methodist in Oklahoma City.
Southern Methodist defeated Kansas 129-114, bit Graham came in second in the 1- and 3-meter diving board events behind Southern
Methodist's Cheryl Santini, who was a nationally ranked diver last year for the Mustangs.
Fearon said he wished that the team had competed in more diving competitions during the fall. Besides the three dual meets, the diving team performed in the Texas Invitational last weekend, which was its second 10-event, or championship, meet of the year. Each diver competed as an individual, not for the team.
He said that raising the divers' competition levels would be a key to the team's success in the spring.
Sophomore diver Michelle Rojohn said the meet in Texas proved that the team had some aspects that it needed to work on.
"We really need to work on our required dives," Rojohn said. "We have to be more consistent on those dives."
Graham said that earning high scores on those required dives had been a problem for her during the fall season. Graham said that one of her goals for the spring schedule was to gain consistency on the required dives.
Both Graham and Rojohn said they enjoyed competing in the 3-meter events more than the 1-meter events.
"Higher up, there is more time to do things," Graham said. "I'm also better at the 3-meter, so that may be part of why I like it more."
Fearon said that the team needed strong performances from Graham, Rojohn and junior Erika Rasmusson during the spring schedule.
"We're looking forward to the meet against Nebraska," Graham said of the Feb. 12 meet. "We don't want them to walk into the conference thinking they can handle Kansas diving. I don't think they can."
NCAA forms group to examine playoffs
The Associated Press
OVERLAND PARK — The NCAA is again considering a playoff system for major college football.
The governing body said yesterday that it had formed a group to study the advantages and drawbacks of a Division I-A playoff.
Clearly, there would be no time to institute a Division I playoff and settle this season's Nebraska-West Virginia-Florida State logjam at the top of the polls. Nor could a playoff system be in place before the 1995 season.
But the formation of a study group will be hailed by playoff advocates. It also could mean that schools will vote on a playoff at their convention in January 1995.
"I don't think this necessarily advances the possibility of a football playoff," said Francis Canavan, the NCAA's group executive director for public affairs. "What it advances is that, finally, there will be a firm decision, yes or no."
The NCAA Joint Policy Board said it had formed a group chaired by Charles Young, UCLA chancellor, and would include Cedric Dempsey, incoming NCAA executive director; Donnie Duncan, Oklahoma athletic director and chairman of the NCAA special events committee; and Tom Jernstedt, chief operating officer of the NCAA.
Greg O'Brien, chairman of the NCAA Presidents Commission, said the formation of the group should not be seen as an endorsement for the idea.
A high-powered sales pitch was made to the Presidents Commission at its meeting last summer, presented by in part by Nike International, which said as much as $40 million could be raised.
At that time, presidents said they were impressed by the slick presentation but not inclined to go along with it. A football playoff cannot be implemented until it gets the approval of the commission, which has promised to try to lessen the commercial aspects of big-time athletics.
Alvin's IGA
Buy One Get One Free Sale!
Prices good Dec. 9 to Dec. 14
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14
Wednesday, December 8, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Surgeon General supports legalizing drugs
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Surgeon General Joyceyln Elders said Tuesday she believed the United States would "markedly reduce our crime rate" by legalizing drug use. The White House immediately distanced itself from her remarks.
Elders, fielding questions at the National Press Club, said legalization
Elders told the press club that "60 percent of most of our violent crimes are associated with alcohol or drug use."
has worked for one or two other countries where drug went down without drug use going up.
"Many times they're robbing, stealing and all of these things to get money to buy drugs. I do feel that we would markedly reduce our crime rate if drugs were legalized," she said.
Elders, a former Arkansas health commissioner, said she does not know all "the ramifications" of such a
"The president is against legalizing drugs, and he's not interested in studying the issue," responded White House Press Secretary Dee Dee Myers.
move but believes it warrants further study.
"She expressed a personal opinion. It's been made clear to her that the president doesn't share that view," added Myers.
Elders' office subsequently issued a statement saying the remarks were her "personal observations based on the experiences of other countries."
WASHINGTON — The White House is not ready to seek sanctions against North Korea over its refusal to allow unrestricted inspections of its suspect nuclear sites, officials said yesterday.
The Associated Press
President Clinton discussed North Korea's latest inspection proposal with South Korea President Kim Young-sam in a 25-minute telephone call. Both leaders agreed that North Korea's proposal was inadequate, Press Secretary Dee Dee Myers said.
She said they agreed on two objectives:
North Korea must agree to inspections of all seven
U.S. puts sanctions against North Korea on hold
nuclear sites by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), a United Nations organization.
North Korea must agree to resume talks with South Korea on making the whole Korean peninsula nuclear-weapons free.
IAEA officials say North Korea was offering to permit unrestricted inspection of five of the seven nuclear sites at Yongbyon.
But at the other two sites, which the IAEA and the United States consider to be the most important, the inspectors could only change batteries and film in monitoring cameras.
Caroling for Food Interested in helping? Call 749-9226 for more information.
December 10th,7 to 9 p.m.
Order of Omega Applications will be available at the OAC 400 Kansas Union Stop Day December 10 Due February 1,1994
If you have any questions call Kristy Abel 841-0894
SQUIRREL
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Hrs: 7-8-M-th, 8-5-Fri, 9-5-Sat, 12-4-Sun. 843-3826
Now Leasing Winter & Spring Newly Redecorated Units 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.
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Our readers are hereby informed that all jobs and housing advertised in this newspaper are available.
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Have fun this year cutting your own Christmas tree at beautiful Pine Hill Farm. Enjoy free horse rides and horse-drawn trailer rides into our fields. Sip hot wagonail & select a fresh beautifully decorated wreath. We're celebrating our 22nd year of providing Christmas memories. Drive east on 10 miles to BG County Road 90 then drive right one and a half miles. Edmondson Farm 82-2517
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Affordable county condos just minutes from 5 ski resorts. X Miss, New Years, and college ski week available. (303) 468-6991
Lust! Leather Jacket in vicinity of The Mails
call Kevin call 842-8248 for info and reward
---
Black Lab, puppy, found on campus, 12-09-93. Call
841-621-8380.
200s Employment
男 女
205 Help Wanted
[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 1-833-799-799.
ACADEMIC PROGRAM COORDINATOR
The KU Department of Student Housing announces at least 1 Academic Program Coordinator (APC) variance for spring '14. The APC holds a 50% position, to facilitate academic progress, encourage good teaching and provide educational material in the living unit. It is not a live-in position. Required: Graduate student in good standing at KU, taking no more than 10 hours per semester. Preferred: Residence hall living experience and educational programming; and, knowledge of commercially-available computer applications. This position does not allow for regular student teaching or to town-capital or internship duties. Significant extracurricular activities are able to commit at least two evenings per week to the position. Compensation: $500 per month from January 1 through May 31, 1994. Contact Milton Scott, KU Department of Student Housing, 422 University Avenue, Des Moines, ID 80716. Application materials: Deadline: December 19, 1990. EOA/EA Employer.
Adams Aulani Center is now hiring bandage staff for next semester. Flexible hours. Must have daytime availability and professional demeanor. Apply in person.
Adams Alumney center needs a dishwasher, A.M. & P., and a manhattan person, A.M. Flexible hrs, available immediately. Apply in person at Adams Alumny Center 1266 Oread Ave.
AMIGOS
AMIGOS Supervisor/Assist Mgr.
Supervisor now - Manager later! Learn the business from the ground up and advance according to your performance. If you are an aggressive customer, you will have the ability to intensely pace, an opportunity to put these skills to work and develop as a leader is available. Relocation may be required, plus benefits. Apply W.I.W. 322-711-5899.
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, December 8, 1993
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W 24th 749-5750
15
Attendent care, 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. Req. Letter to J. Yancey, Bert Nash CMHC, 336 Missouri; KS, 69044. Open until filled. EOE
Attendent care, 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. Req. Letter to J. Yancey, Bert Nash CMHC, 336 Missouri; KS, 69044. Open until filled. EOE.
Cashiers, part-time, temporary, KU Bookstore, $4.25 per hour, January 4-20, 1993. Work approx. 34-40 hours per week. Weekends as scheduled. Must have previous, verifiable landlord application and a handheld for long periods. Apply Office, Kansas and Burge Union^2 Personnel Office, Level 5, 13th and Oread. EOE
Earn $1,000 per week at home filling orders! Free Information. Please send long self addressed stamped envelope to CJ Enterprises, Box 67086H, Caviahone Fails, OH 42222
JOB OPENINGS
Earn extra cash over Christmas break! Many temporary jobs available in Topeka for production, warehouse, office and retail. Work as much as you want.
Apply at KEY Personnel,
400 SW Croix, Topeka.
267-9999
Graphic Design Students
Fast-growing local property management company fast needs assistance in producing logo and marketing brochure. Great experience and excellent salary. Call Sterling Properties 865-5629
Help wanted: Hardware/Software manager. KU School of Architecture and Urban Design seeks qualified graduate student. For position description email to info@ku.edu with 684-3244. Deadline application deadline 30.10.1993.
Market Research Product Manager. Computer and math skills important. Wichita Kansas, send resume and cover letter to Personal PO Box 4345 Wichita Kansas, 67204
Marketing Assistant position available at Naisimh Hall for the spring semester. Applicant must have excellent people skills, good computer skills (desktop publishing experience a plus), and have a bachelor's degree in business administration 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 get you the job. Please contact us at Naisimh Hall to apply at Naisimh Hall, 1800 Naisimh Drive, Lawrence KS 66044. O.E.M/F.H.A/A.
Lawrence KS, 6044. E.O.E/M F.H/A.A.
NANNIES...spend a year near NYC with a family who truly "treasures you." Call 1-800-858-170, any-
Need some extra $$$ during Christmas break?
Pizza Hut is now hiring delivery drivers and cooks for the upcoming holiday season. Drivers must be certified in food preparation. Apply at Pizza Hut 2441 Iowa Suite 843-3000.
Part-time position for person with business or accountant major to assist wpis, phones, phone calls, Owr work. Equip with Kia kansas resident, enrolled at Kia in at least 12 hours, and have a GPA of 2 or more. Kia 841-6003
Practical experience figuring wages, payroll taxes, sales tax, bank reconciliations using a computer program in a small business. Work with *FA*PA 24-hour hours, 10/9m, 842-2566.
Prairie Room Waiter/Waitress, part time $3.00 per hour plus tips. Monday thru Friday 11a.m.-3p.m. Must have previous food service, waiter/waitress experience.
Data Entry, part time, $42.25/hour, 4p.m.-5p.m.
seven days a week. Two people cover the work
time-each taking half of the days. Must have previ-
cal data entry and basic computer skills.
Cook's Helpper part time, $4.25 per hour, Monday thru Friday 10a.m.-1p.m. Previous food prep and some grill experience preferred. Must have previous cooking experience and be able to stand for long periods.
Apply Kansas and Burge Unions 'Personnel
Level. 5, 13th and Oread, EOE.
PRE-MEDICAL SECRETARY/ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT: Half-time graduate position (20 brs a week) with the possibility of becoming three-quarter time with or July 1. Responsibilities include acting as a resource person for pre-health care, providing training, and processing recommendations.
include acting as a resource person for pre-hhealth professions students, maintaining current information for the students, processing recommendations, supporting students in customery schools, preparing student confidential
files for evaluation by the Health Sciences Committee, planning information meetings twice a week. The committee pre-Medical Advisor, aiding in compiling statistics related to medical school acceptance, using
tions related to medical school acceptance, using Word Perfect 5.1, and being able to perform general office duties. Above all, must have excellent interpersonal skills and ability to work independently.
in long-term employment. Must be a KU graduate student. Please apply and bring or resume service at the University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 65045, 864-3667, by Wednesday, December 8. Starting date is approx. January 3. The University of Kansas is an AA/EO Employer.
Rellable person needed for part time help. Hours:
10 am-9 o'clock m 9:00-12:00; Call
Jorff or Jaday @ 843-5663
Restoration/maintenance positions for skilled
work. Send resume to:
good pay. Call 814-7627 for more information
RESUME SERVICES Professional Business
Training. Free initial interview.
B2-810. Free initial interview.
47-TP-PT, entry level openings. Earn $9.00-
$19.00-usd. Interview now start after Dec. 25. Can
be offered in Lawrence in Lawrence
b4d331 or Overland Peak 311-8675.
The Mid West 'Middle Elite Juice Bar is now hiring
Alcohol. Days 841-279, Eyes 841-1412
Days 841-279, Eyes 841-1412
Wanted-Model for education classes at Hair Design Team Salon, fine hair make-up Call 844-267-9133
225 Professional Services
Research Assistance - MS/MLS information specialist available to assist with paper terms, paper formats and materials.
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
For free consultation call
Rick Frydman,Attorney
823 Missouri 843-4023
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
Unique features, cover letters, laser prints. Fast,
easy to use. Graphic. Designs, Ideas, Inc.
871/ Mass. 844; 107. 755
BRAXTONB.COPLEY
Traffic Tickets, Misdemeanors,
Landlord/tenant
719 Massachusetts 749-5333
Driver education offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KI students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7719.
Thesis &
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.
Wake up to listen and with you
We're here to listen and talk with you.
843-852-1411 Free pregnancy testing.
Lebanon. Call a Peer Counselor, CONFIDENTIAL.
Call KU Info or Headquarters.
Prompt ablation and contraceptive services. Dale L.
Clinton M.D. 841-5716
235 Typing Services
1 + word processing, letters, term papers, etc. 424 874A. After 5:30 PM weekdays, any time.
1-der Woman Word Processing, 843-2063.
24-Hour Turnaround for under 30 pages. Any size accepted. $12.5/p. Call Ruth after 5 p.m., 843-6438. A Word Perfect work processing Laser printer, Near campus, 842-6955.
Expert typing through the holidays. IBM correct
50/double space page. Call Mtulia 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 typed. Call todd. 814-6242.
Resumes
Resumes
• cover letters
• writing
• consultation
Linda Morton, CPRW
Transcriptions
1012 Mass 842-4619
Suite 201-upstairs
A Member of
Professional Association of Resume Writers
Running out of time?
Let me do your TYPING!
Lazer printing to WOW! your profs.
18 years professional experience.
All typing jobs accepted.
Grammar and spelling corrected free!
Call Jack at
Makka the Grade
865-285-8
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
91 Schwinn Impact Pro; good condition asking $275. LM or ask to Steve 832-275.
1 single matten, box springs, and frame for sale.
a condition. Must sell! Ask for Wb at 814-6824
48DX, 33 MHz, 170 MB hard drive, dual high density
hard drive, 4 MB memory, internal modem,
super VGA, mouse, preloaded software. Runs perfect.
1800. 843-9513
Basketball coupons 4-sale (all). Will sell ASAP & will take best offer.
Fender acoustic guitar. Great X-Mas present.
Priced at $95, soft case, $200 or best
offer. Call 833-990-800.
Airline ticket KCI to Wash, D.C., Dec. 22 thru 28,
$350 mg. 842-6232.
Adcom stereo power amplifier GPA-S38L $160.29
gallon fresh water aquarium complete w/stand
and accessories $150, Nice full size futon $175, Call
865-0720
Chow mixed puppy, four months old, good health
from age 74-160 help after 3pm and
to talk to Georgia.
For Sale. Cigarette Cases, Sterling Crosses, Lock-
er, Glove Boxes, Antique Bags and Antique
Magnets Mass Antique 843-8773
Heard skis for sale, Solan 757 bandings only used
1 season, $175 Call Phil 841-1914.
will take best offer.
Beds, desks, and bookcases. Everything But Ice.
dc sec 19.40 mg HD, Carrying case, ImageWriter
dac rom, game board, game cards, and more.
864. 842-3581 Ask for Done
Macintosh Quadras. Best prices available. Student discounts apply. 800-240-241.
1
Need to sell: KP- K123 Panaonic (color option)
printer #210: lamps, loveseat, coffee table, book-
shelves, chairs and miscellaneous. Call #82-
4737
navigator G-1 Leather Jacket. Never used, size
44.150 negotiable. Call 891-4045.
Klein MNT bike frame & fork $250, car stereo amp
$250, jw $250, audi sub box w/ 8 in.
$613. 4641-401
IBM Compatible 368 16mz, printer, 60 mb hard drive, super VGA, sound card, mouse, and hunter mouse.
Pinewood Queen waterbed/mattress $150
Dove 6 drawer dresser w/ mirror $900 Call
81-646-6630
North Face Mt. jacket & fleece层, excellent cont. $300; Call 864-1573
Neon beeper price $125. Busch Mountain wall clock
$123. Call 749 1084 after 6 o'clock m-th.
Season Student Basketball lickets for sale. Make your best offer. 865-3293 evenings
STUDENT BASKETBALL TICKETS FOR SALE BEST OFFER 841-6429
340 Arito Sales
**88 Honda Civic LX, 4dr. 1 owner, Excellent condition.**
*899*. Call 405-8374 or 037-548-5169.
Power book 1458 - 4/60 barely used 3 months old bought new at $159 asking 899. Call 749-4501.
1983 Black Jeep CJ-7, S-400. Hard top, new
seats. Speed $4,000, OBO Call 822-
1115 or love a mission.
82 Buck Century Clean. Make an offer. Call Angie
864-2279.
1975 Buck Skylark Couple with 27 Chev. engine, $800. Consider monthly payments B41-187-197.
1981 WV Jetta, 5-spd, 4-dr. Good Condition. FM-FM套
裝, $170.00. Call Mike 841-7795.
1984 Honda Accord LX, automatic transmission,
power locks & windows. Runs great. Interior in
good condition, blue, some hail. Excellent A/C &
stereo cassette. $2,800/bu Call 842-9612
84 Prelude_Si.11% Hwy mi. Powerun and
all options al3 options BM. CallSg. 84+
84 MUST SEL.
Prelude SI. 110k Hwy mI. Power numerd & win-
dow Prelude SI. call option $5, $001 Call at $483-
7908. MUST SELL
88 Ford Tracer, white, 4 doors, auto, A/C, 68,000 miles,
$2,900.00 O.B. 1-594-3341.
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
SABB 78 sun roof, A/C, E microrrors 90K runs,
great, asking for $500. Call 842-6752.
Now Buying
Now Buying exercise equipment, downhill skis, mountain bikes, and all sporting equipment 1029 Mass. 841-PLAY(7529)
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
1 3 Bdrm apt, just blocks from campus available for second sublease student, washer/dryer, dishwasher, fan…the works. 6220 per mo./person. 1133 Kentucky k855. 0729. Call on
1 bdm. apl, wood floors, walk to campus, 19th & 18th Available Jan, 1 $25/mo. Call (800) 746-3255
1 bedroom, furnished apartment, on bus route, off 6th St. Very Clean! Call 843-8719
I bdr. apt., overlocks stadium, off street parking,
sublease, this month-Rent Free Leave
with us.
1 bedroom Apt. for sublease available Jan. 1. Only
Water, paid water, gas on bus B Route,
749-3466
749-3468
or 2 female roommates to sublease fully
furnished 3BDR apt., w/ private bath. For Spring
orm, so oroner. 1 blk. from campus, $180/mo. Call
841-4207.
1Bdrm. furnished apt. for rent in prvt. home, prvt.
entrance, 1bk from KU. Available in J1 grad student
preferred, no pets. $300/mo. Includes all util.
& cable. B64-863444 for info
b dbrm. on bus rt. clean, quiet. Avail. Jan. 1.
n no pets. no petts 48-438 (days) or 843
(early days)
3 Bedroom, 3 full bath, NO DEPOSIT RD²'D You
are invited to KU in Bout Hotel.
Available Jan. 1, Call 821-2450.
2 Br App. for Rent. Easy access to downwind, KU, and basa route. Features 24 hr maintenance, off street parking, microwave, dishwasher, and W/D office mo. Day Michelle 749-720 Eve Stuart 749-0174
3 bdmrt to campus for campaival for 2nd
campaign, availd vcnt. 495/ms, Call 817-5977
vaulted cistern, 495/ms, Call 817-5977
3 bedroom townhouse, 2/4 bath, separate living and family room, washer & dryer hookup, fireplace, carpent KU bus route, 2 pools, tennis courts. Call 865-3637
4 bdmr, lrg.ms, stove and refrigerator,
8 bdmr, lrg.ms, cookups, $700 a mnd. Avaliable
15, 95-8422 16, 95-8422
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
Available Spring Sale. Interested? Call
842-454-3201
Available at semester break, apts. in never seer
$800/ mo. 2 bpm apts. $500/ mo. Cable pd. w/d
hookups, dw, microwave, cefiling fan, min blinds,
balcony, energy efficient, great location near car-
port, 3-story building.
Available Jan. 1, 13 bdm. apt. on bus route. Call
749-1556-2 8 for Monday-Fri.
Available Jan 13 2 bmr ap, close to campus,
Georgetown. Apt. Call 632-812-181 or 749-729-7.
Call 632-812-181 or 749-729-7.
Beautiful I Bd. unfurnished, available Jan 1.
Across from stu., Laundry fees $235 +
$10 for a wash and dry.
Available now nice clean studio apt. close to campa-
mware/wather 1276 Ichio $85/mo. No pets.
Free wifi.
Available Jan. 341 Michigan-Apt 3 bdm, 2 bdm
厨房升级, full kitchen new,
建築 $862-892-9104
建设 $862-892-9104
For sublease sale Jan 1, 1944; Birmingham Gar-
lage; May 23, 1944; destination to KU,
$875; Californian at 843-224-6071.
For rent: Winterpark condo. Available Jan 1 thru
Feb 8. For rental: Winterpark 2-bath, sleeps up to
800. For call: Carr Galk.
Boardwalk
For rent - spacious one bedroom apt, with hard-
wood floors. 841-6931.
Free Rent in exchange for part-time child care.
Flexible hours. Prefer mature student with some college education.
Furnished apt available Dec. 18. 1 BRE near campus water paid, $370/month. Call 841-8848 or 842-
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Now leasing for Spring & Summer Move-ins.
Furnished room for rent with shared kitchen and
room on kU. Off-street parking.
no pets. Cat 841-5500
524 Frontier 842-4444
Furnished studio apartment. 2 short blocks from Water paid. Off street parking. No pets. $35-$40.
Great sub-lease opportunity 1416 Tennessee Large
Large 842-703-7981, large clean, quiet, great
842-703-7981 or 749-7977
OPEN DAILY
1, 2, 3, & 4 bdmr apts...
designed with you in mind!
Go to ...
WASTERCRAFT
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
Large, bright, cool & new. Private entrance, garden apt. in new home on West 20th Terrace. TwoTerrace. Bfire, placeware, W/D hookups. No pet/smoking. $450 - 500. Utilities/Cable paid. N84-9487.
Hanover Place-841-1212 14th&Mass.
Regents Court 749-0445 1905 Mass.
offers furnished
1 2 3 4 bedrm suite
Mature, NH house mate needed Available Dec 15
+ 8200 + 1/2 + 1/4
Interested call 764 4200
Sundance - 841-5255 7th & Florida
Orchard Corners - 749-4226
15th & Kasold
New Large 4 Bdr. Available. Specials offered thru May or July. Includes DW, MW, FP, trash compactor, cable paid. Call 841-7847. 4501 Wimbelnd Dr.
MASTERCRAFT
large 1638 room in nice home, 3 miles from KU
or female non-female $200.uI, urd.补贴 C47-0496-106
842-4455
Nice Nirr, 2 Bath, 2 Floor unit w/ FP, DW,
3Mbr, garage, pantry & W/D hookup.
$750/mo / 749-0587 Available immediately/Jan 1
Fri. $750/mo / 749-0587 Available immediately/
On bus route. Mastercraft, Approx. $350/mo
negotiable. Call Casey at 844-8100 or call 842-1212.
PARK 25 APARTMENTS to have a select few i
and 2 BR apartments available for Dec and Jan
move in. For details call 842-1455 in 2401 W.
MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments in
Santa Monica. Also some houses.
Call B1-B2-F1AR (7287).
Professional woman seeking N/S female Grad.
student for one bedroom, half bath in my home on
one side. Cerise. Kitchen privileges. WD use
needed. Bare quiet, respite, enjoy WCs.
$250. 843-987-987
Room to sub-lease in a large house start Jan 1st
or until the end of June, evenings at 9:15-10:00
(for Dawn or 8:52-8:74 evening)
meadowbrook
APARTMENTS • TOWNHOMES
• RESIDENCES
We also have 2 & 3 bedrooms for 2nd semester & are close to campus.
So...how about those roommates? I Like 'em but can't live with them?
We have a studio or a one bedroom apartment ESPECIALLY FOR YOU!
MEADOWBROOK
842-4200
MON-FRI 8am-5:30pm,
SAT 10-4
SUN 1-4.
(Sorry, nopets)
Rooms in 4 bedroom, 2 bathroom townhouse available in January. On bus route, W/D hookup
Spring Semester sub-lease, 1 br Apt very close to
close to campus. $350/mo. Call 832-0116
Spring Semester-Going over ourselves-looking for
job opportunities. Send resume aphp1 bk from
campus $190. Call John. Call me @
763-248-5470.
Spacious, sunny 1 bdr. unfurnished Apt. Cable included. Close to campus. Ceiling fan. Deck and microwave. $375/month available for sub-lease Jan1. 841-840-96.
Sublease 2 bdmr townhouse, available fb ist,
garage bid, bmr $475/mo; call Wavat at 865-3762
Sublease 1 bdmr on bus route $330 a month plus utilities. Water and trash paid. Call 814-3428.
Drop Into Our Place to ask about our Mid Term Leases
Colony Woods Apartments
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS 2040 Heatherwood AvailableJan1st 1-2-3 Bedroom Apartments
- Laundry facilities on site
- Fully Equipped kitchens
Call Gina today at 843-4754 for an appointment!
Sublease 2 br. Townhouse W/D/j hookup and ma-
riage. Call Harvey Place 614-810-3500 or
Call Harvey Place 614-810-3500.
Sublease available-Trailridge Studio apd. $130 Mb On KU bus route. Call Cullen Dalon at 823-2081.
Sublease 3 bdmr. api. Jan 1- July 1 on bus rct.
washer/dryer $450/mo. + util. 749-3843.
Sibillease from Jan. 5 - July 31 1 bbmr w/ wash-
casease by 4pm. fm. m-88-500 carport
carsport after 6p.m. m-88-500
Sublane studio apt. block from KU. Available
for rent at $265/mo + electricity &
Call 818-365-7909
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
1800 Naismith Drive (913) 843-8559
$365-$435
NAISMITH HALL
Two bedroom bungalow at 23rd & New Hampshire.
Washer/Dryer, Dishwasher, detached garage,
Quincy, neighborhood, perfect for grad. students. STD. OK. Avail. Jan. 1,
$625 per month. Call 749-1311
SUBLEASE: Studio with bedroom, close to cam-
paigner suite, an rent FREE. Gas and
water paid. Call 843-6472.
SUBLEASE STUDIO APT for Spring Semester 2.
bks from campus, off street parking. W/D, full
kitchen, bikhne, and Louisiana. Rent and Utilities
$300/month-cell 841-4791 or no answer 841-
8945.
430 Roommate Wanted
3 Hot Tubs
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
1 Female needed, spacious 2 bedroom apt. for
room number 2735. R$ 4 + /½ uplift.
Call Chris 749-1841.
1 Female needed 1 share 2 BR apt. lj, onbus
3 Female needed 1 share + Mo + 1/s electricity
other utility paid) Calls 832-453-8
- Sand Volleyball Court
1. Male needed, very spacious 2 bdrm townhouse on
street with enclosed skim-3 level, 2 & 1/2 bath
Dw $250 + 1/2 utility room
Dw $250 + 1/2 utility room
1 or 2 females needed for spacious 3 bdm apt. for
stem, at操, or sooner. 2 level, 5 min from campas, on
the ground.
- Basketball Court
1 or 2 roommates. 3 BR house, W/D. Bus Route.
2 rooms. Available Jan. Format
Information call 749-0784
842-5111 1301 W.24th
- Microwave
1 trommate needed to hire 3 bdm apt. Jan 1 or
2 trommate needed to hire 4 bdm apt. Jan 1 or
Chris 885-1068 day or 823-1529 last required.
4 trommates needed to hire 4 bdm apt. Jan 1 or
1&2 Bedroom Apts.
1 roommate needed to share nice/clean 3 barm
1 roommate needed to share nice/clean 3 barm
1 roommate needed to share nice/clean 3 barm
1 roommate needed to share nice/clean 3 barm
- On Bus Route
Wishing You The Best This Holiday Season!
$ Bd Ap1 available at STADIUM VIEW, very close
to the library. Dry Sub lease for next month
98-7640
1 roommate wanted for 3 bedroom apartment
2 campus $002 + 1/12th. Call Us
3 656-429-7280
THE FAR SIDE
3 to share spacious house, completely furnished, in walking distance to campus; $250 per month.
Female needed to share Colony Woods apt for
business. Call 813-849-9730, or
8290/mm, + call 813-849-9730.
Available Jan. 1st Female/Nonmkm Grad Student.
Very nice, furnished except for bedroom.
Room has desk, study table, microwave, computer, DW, LG kitchen, spilt kitchen, computer, 748-160-9500
+ cheap cupboard, musical note, music stand
Female needed to share warehouse. WILL have own
vehicles. Washers/wardrobes $25/mo +
utilities. Call 944-3890
Female roommate, beautiful 3 bedroom townhouse,
Available Jan. 1. 749-2868 or 61-5988
Female non-smoker. Now brui Aug 2 BR apt. 185, 209, 347, 367, 387, 407, > utl Pily furnished. Close to campus. #425-826.
Hey? Need a place to live! F/M roommate needed
Need a place to live! F/M roommate needed
Smber. NSN / Job Healer at 841-3601.
For 3 bed, 2 bath condo on bus rt. fur .w in apf
Albany NY, 618-749-2222 or avail / Chris H382-8582
Female roommate needed by Jan. 1 to July 31.
Cute inexpensive 2 bd apartment near campus,
furnished except for your room. Call immediately,
842-405 and leave message.
.
Female roommate requires for 2 brs. *abr.* - Close to Avail. Jan. 1 or Feb. 1. Call Kitua at 839-1250.
/email rmzone needed to share large 2 BDH,
petals /m23mo /.mail Calgen 865-087.
/m23mo /.mail Calgent 865-087.
N/S, male, needed to share a 8d rdr housewith all 35h yr seniors; W/D, waited vaults, patio, garage, $200 + 1/2 utilities. Call 665-0625
Mature, studious, stable house mate wanted to
be bedroom house bedroom 200/mo /&/ use. N U
S Pets 749-805
Looking for a female roommate to share 4 bfrm, 2 bb apartment. On bus ride, fully furnished & very INEXPENSIVE! Call Holly or Beth at 865-181
N/S responsible fun female roommate needed for 2
FEMALE roommates (no children).
Deposit neg. applied ASAP. DB47 786-3262
MOVE IN N/M N/S/em needed to share a nice.
N/A W/D hooks. w / W/D hooks.
W 750/W 4 + 1/12u 832-8790
N/runtime household - 3-bird duplex W/D/CA,
garage, HPO guard. Avail Jam 1 first May 31.
HPO guard. Avail Jam 1 first May 31.
Need 1 Female Imed. 2 share 2 br. apt. for spacial sempituit, five equip kitch. bus rt. 2 rb. arm chair. two shared seats.
Need clean, responsible, N/S, make to share 2 br, spc.
$230.50/m² + /+ utilities Free, close Cab.
bus route Furnished (except for room). Available
Dec 1 Call quicklvk 482-4899.
Need mature, clean, N/S male to share 2 bp br
male. Some adults $198; some
Some.util pd. Avail. Jan. 1, 4:00
...on smoking friends need to share 3 bldm /
own room, W/D, dishwasher, available
in room.
M/F, M/F to share a very nice clean 2 br. appli-
nsal. KF to share Jan 3. $19.05/mo. +/
US. Call 1-852-602-0521
One female roommate needed to share 3 bdm. $1/
bath room home. $230 + $1/ utilities + deposit.
Garage + other luxuries. 865-5127.
or two Female roommates needed! LARGE room with walk-in-closet and private bath W/D in apll college Hill Cordos 8 on & Emmy. Available before registration or beginning of next. Call Kathleen at 865-2930.
NSF w/ small dog needs a responsible NSF tsh
package for spring semester $188/mo.
\Utl Calc 1: $188/mo.
One or two people to share three bedroom, two bath
room, 2-bedroom roommate. Available
January 1, 2014. Call 867-358-9412.
One roommate needed at four bedroom house for Spring
2018-2019: $290/mo + utilities. Ask for
802-762-3545.
Open-minded roommate need to share large 2BDR apt. quit locale, on bus route. $23.50/per mo +/-1/alf. Water/cable paid. available now and Dec free. #323-8698.
Quiet upperclassman M mrmnt, needed for Sp sem in spacious 2 bed/2 bath bath Lvng. rvm & kit, furnished. $225.00 + elec. only 841-6370
possible male roommate wanted for 4 bedroom, 3 bath townhouse in West Lawrence. Large kitchen, fireplace, and washer/dryer. Cabrine, trash bin. 600 / mo +1 / day. Call 841-830 and leave a message
Roommate needed for spacious house, block from campus. Hungry kitchen, two bath, wonderful peachy room. $1700/mo.
Roommate wanted for $5 bdm. house. Has washer
$200/mo. includes utilities except phone
841-2379
Roommate needed for 3 birmm house just 4 blks
from campus. $200 a month + 1/8 usl Call 865-364-8
110/123-4567 865-364-8252 $225/month and electricity. Own bathroom.
Sublease any time beginning Jan. Call 841-6370
Roammate needed. N/S grad. Student. 2.Bdr. $25/0
+ mile. half on. Bus route. Call Tom 843-2023.
ii. ull on our bus. Call Tom on hoo.
Roommate needed. Start Jan. 1. $230/mo plus 1/2
util. 16x14 room. Non-smoker. Call 855-2690 for
details. leave message.
Sharare large large Victorian home, many amenities,
downtown area, rare value $300 + / 1/uit. B42-422-422-
Share large Victorian home, many amenities,
e.g. large yard, fireplace, pool and clubhouse.
The Hillel house has space available for individuals seeking a unique Jewish experience for the family if interested, call 864-3948 for more information*
Wanted: Roommate for 2 bedroom apartment, for
renting in 10th & 11th Bendines. Close to
Campus: 749-972-8599
By GARY LARSON
© 1984 Farrar, Straus & Co. Ltd. by Universal Press Syndicate
"Just keep starin', buddy, and I'l show ya my bad eye!"
1
16
Wednesday, December 8, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
"Your Book Professionals"
Jayhawk Bookstore
"At the top of Naismith Hill"
Hrs: 8-5:30 M-T., 8-5 Fri.
9-5 Sat. 12-4 Sun.
843-3826
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841-0100
841-7421 VISIONS 806 Massachusetts Featuring i.a. Eyeworks
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The largest selection
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Women's rooms difficult to find in Learned Hall
Finding a women's restroom in Learned Hall, home of the School of Engineering, can be rather difficult.
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
Built in 1963, when women in engineering were almost nonexistent, Learned Hall boasts 10 men's restrooms but only five women's restrooms. On some floors, taking a trip on the elevator to another floor is faster than finding a women's restroom on the same floor.
The disturbing part, said Kim Roddis, professor of civil engineering, is that such a ratio is actually progressive in the world of engineering.
"I have worked in buildings where there are no women's bathrooms," she said.
Roddis, who began working the engineering field in 1973, said women's restrooms were scarce in the engineering field because women were not accepted in the field until recently.
Carl Locke, dean engineering, has asked the University to look at the school's restroom situation. But Jim Modig, director of design and construction management, said no changes were planned.
Modig said that according to state plumbing codes, which dictate the number of restroom fixtures per gender, women have too many restrooms in the school. The best course of action is to not change the restroom situation for the present, he said.
Barb Griffith, Raytown, Mo., engineering major, said female engineering students should not worry about the restroom situation.
"I think we need more women in engineering rather than more women's bathrooms," she said. "I think we need to worry about the women first. The bathrooms can wait."
HEALTH CARE: Plan reduces cost
you have to stop and make an automobile tire, obviously you're not as efficient."
Although students enjoy the reduced costs of the health care system at Watkins, some are concerned about the volume of treatment, about the time spent seeing a physician and about the quality of health care.
Yockey said that while growing up, most students had visited private physicians, whom they had learned to trust. Before their children enter college, parents usually take them to the physician, fill out necessary forms and pick up medication from the local pharmacy, he said.
"If you ask the American public about medical care in general, they're going to have a negative attitude. But if you ask them about their own doctor, they'll say, 'Oh, he or she is great.' We always have to struggle because we're not the doctor back home," Yockey said.
Some students question Watkins' accuracy and get second opinions, which often differ from the first.
Nine of 11 physicians at Watkins are board-certified, meaning they have three years of training beyond their medical degrees in a specialty area and that they have passed a comprehensive two-to-three day exam. But Watkins is by no means perfect.
Strobl said that Watkins, just like any other health organization, had made mistakes.
"I think your chance of being misdiagnosed is less here than if you go to a private physician because, quite frankly, our physicians are more highly trained. The more trained your physicians are, the less chance you'll be misdiagnosed. We deal every day with what college students have." Strobl said. "And your hometown doctor may not see students on a frequent basis like we do, hour after hour."
And for students like Beli who have no health insurance, Watkins provides invaluable services they could not afford otherwise.
How does it rate?
Jim Strobl, director of student health services at Watkins Memorial Health Center, has toured about 40 college health centers in the United States. He said he had looked at four areas to measure a health center's success.
1) . Utilization, or how often the center is used by students. Last year, Watkins had 142,818 visits by about 70 percent of the student population.
2) Student satisfaction. Of 700 students surveyed about Watkins, satisfaction for overall services ranged from 94 to 98 percent, and more than 99 percent said they would return to Watkins.
3) Services offered. Watkins provides students with 15 different health services;
vices:
allergy injection clinic
nutritional counseling
gynecology
radiology
cholesterol screening
pharmacy
general medicine
physical therapy
health education
sports medicine clinic
hypertension screening
tuberculosis prevention clinic
laboratory
wart clinic
counseling and psychological s
laboratory
wart clinic
counseling and psychological services
4) Facilities. Strobli that Watkins needed more space. A $5,650,000 health expansion proposal was passed by the Board of Regents on Nov. 18 that would increase space for examination rooms, urgent care, gynecology and counseling and psychological services.
Source: Jim Sirobi, director of student health services at Watkins.
Colorful past
The University has one of the oldest college health care services in the United States. A unique aspect of the University's 87-year-old services is students' involvement and initiative.
1900 — Students form the Health Benefit Association — 42 students pay 50 cents each, and the money supports two students who become ill.
1908 - 742 students pay $2 to each continue the association a hospital, based in four rented houses, is staffed by a physician and a nurse.
1931 — Elizabeth Watkins donates the first Watkins Memorial Health Hospital, which is now Twente Hall, and its equipment to students.
1972 — Students vote to build a new hospital, which is now Watkins Memorial Health Center. Each student pays $7 a semester to support the construction of the $3.6 million hospital.
1993 The Student Health Advisor Board passes a $5,650,000 expansion proposal of Watkins. The student health fee of $69.50 is expected to increase $10-$12 to pay for the addition. If passed by the Board of Regents and Student Senate, construction will begin in July 1995.
Source: Jim Strobl, director of student health services at Watkins, Watkins Memorial hospital pamphlet 1993.
A
What the heck does pasta have to do with selling shoes?
KANSAN CLASSIFIED WORK
The Kansan will be selecting several creative staff members for the Spring 1994 semester. You will be able to test your ideas and develop new ones as you've trained in making creative layouts for area advertisers. And you will gain valuable computer experience.
Probably nothing. But then again, that depends on you.
The University Daily Kansan business staff is looking for creative individuals who can make the ordinary, extraordinary. We want people who can turn the mundane into something wild and unique, yet have it still be meaningful.
Not to mention, it's a lot of fun.
So, if you excel at combining ideas in an exciting, meaningful way, call us. Get in touch with John Cartton at the Kansan by December 9. After all, what you make of your ideas is up to you.
Contact John Carlton at the University Daily Kansan 119 Stauffer-Flint 864-4358
( )
Winter Heat Wave Predicted.
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HotSpring® Portable Spas
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Palm Tree
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1033 VERMONT, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-841-7787
Winter blues? Finals stressing you?
Come to the CADILLAC RANCH for some stress-free fun for our
Palm Tree
CORONABEACH PARTY
Thursday, Dec. 9th
Giveaways all night long!
Have your picture taken with the Corona Girls
Cadillac Ranch
"Where it's family"
2515 W. 6th
842-9845
着
春
Spend Your Nights In The Woods...
3 Hot Tubs Volleyball & Basketball Courts Near Enteries & Groceries Indoor Heated Pool & Outdoor Pool
1301 W. 24th 842-5111
Meeting Community Challenges
Community Section '93
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page 8- One KU student explains how Christmas traditions in the United States differ from those in the country where she was raised.
Page 12- Penn House, a Lawrence nonprofit organization, makes Christmas wishes come true with its Adopt-a Family program.
Page 13- Toys for Tots agencies make sure kids will have presents to wake up to Christmas morning.
Page 14- KU sororities and fraternities revel in spreading holiday glee with nursing home residents.
Page 16- LINK kitchen serves food for the hungry people in Lawrence.
Kyou
COVER PHOTO BY
ANDREW ARNONE
CREDITS
Creative Director Brian Fusco
Special Sections Manager Judith Standley
Copy Chief Allison Lippert
Managing Editor for Planning & Design Christine Laue
Copy Editors
Matt Hydeman, Kevin Butler, Sarah
Nagl, Barbra Schultz
Assistant to the Editor J.R. Clairborne
Designer
Todd Seifert
Co-Photo Editors
Kip Chin, Renee Knoeber
ELVIRA ANGELETTI INTERIORS
PRESENTS
GIFTS
□ FINE ANTIQUES & GIFTS
□ INTERIOR DESIGN
□ ORIENTAL RUGS & DHURRIES
1015 West 9th St., Lawrence
open 9:00 - 5:30
closed Tuesday & Sunday
or call for appointment
Shape up for the holidays!
SAVE $139
on a full-year or six-month membership!* Absolutely NO joining fee!
BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility
749-2424 925 Iowa
*you can stop your membership over X-mas break!
COMMUNITY * K-you * December 8,1993
K-youth ENGLISH Science History MATH
W
We asked Lawrence kids how they would attract business if they were advertisers for a pizza shop, a furniture store, or even a theater, and these are the ads they created!
Over 800 Lawrence elementary and Jr. High students recently agreed to participate in our advertising contest, K-Youth.
K-Youth was a program developed in order to teach the kids of our community about Advertising. Approximately 10 Elementary classes and two Jr. High classes entered the contest this year. Each class was assigned a Lawrence business to create ads for, and the most imaginative ad was chosen for publication.
After presenting the classes with instructions about their
clients business, how to create an ad, and what pertinent information to include. The artistic side was up to each individual student. The students had from three to five days to design their ad in the best way they could. This gave each child a fair time span to work under. The ads were then picked up,and taken to the businesses for a final selection.
Although many of the Ads were outstanding, we would like to congratulate our winners! Many of the students even expressed that they would like to go into "Newspaper" when they grow up. This contest gave the students of Lawrence a chance to learn about advertising, be creative, and really shine!
Special thanks to the following Lawrence schools for all your hard
work:
Broken Arrow Elementary Pinckey Elementary Quail Run Elementary Schwegler Elementary New York Elementary Hillcrest Elementary Grant Elementary Kennedy Elementary Centennial Elementary East Heights Elementary West Jr. High South Jr. High
Gunby's Pizza SALE
Gunby's Pizza SALE
Two 10" 2-item Pizza& Sodas
FREE DELIVERY $7.99!
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841-5000
Two 10"
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841-5000
Left: Pia Cruver South Jr. High 7th grade The best thing about the K-Youth program is: "It gives kids a chance to show their talent."
Right: Melissa Trammell New York 4th grade I designed my ad this way because: "I thought it would be cool."
Love Jazz Thursday!
Paradise Cafe, 728 mass
Gam Food
Love Jazz Thursday!
Paradise Cafe 738 mass
Good hour food
Paradise
Paradise
December 8, 1993 K-you • COMMUNITY
3
GOOD TIMES Bruss Apple GRILL & BAR GREAT FOOD
GOOD TIMES
Brass Apple
GRILL & BAR
GREAT FOOD
LAWRENCE'S BEST IN CASUAL DINING
GREAT BURGERS, SANDWICHES & DINNERS
DINE IN A RELAXED ATMOSPHERE
• OVER 50 BEERS FROM AROUND THE WORLD •
★ DAILY FOOD & DRINK SPECIALS ★
• SUN NIGHT—WING NIGHT—ONE DOZ. $1.50 8-11PM
KU SPORTS VIEWING HEADQUARTERS
WATCH THE GAME HERE!!!
10 TVS -BIG SCREEN -SATELLITE
HOURS: SUN-WED 11AM-12AM ★ THURS-SAT 11AM-1:30AM
3300 WEST 15TH ST. ★ ORCHARD CORNERS ★ 841-0033
3 MINUTES WEST OF CAMPUS ON 15TH STREET
Holiday prompts grocery specials
Small-town stores deck the halls with contests and prizes
By Scott Ritter Special to the Kansan
Students from medium or small towns might have noticed differences since arriving in Lawrence. Gone are the days of the local barber asking about gossip or making a trip through town without worrying about stoplights and heavy traffic.
Alvin's IGA, 901 Iowa St., said that it plans sales on items such as ham, turkey and pumpkin pie. They said the Christmas season was one of the busiest seasons of the year.
Jim Lewis, manager of Checkers, 2300 Louisiana St., also said plenty of Christmas foods will be on sale.
The holiday season has brought out one other noticeable difference: the way grocery stores celebrate it. Lawrence's grocery stores are getting into the holiday spirit with gigantic sales on the traditional holiday foods, but it is a big change for those used to the more local-oriented celebrations at small, non-chain grocery stores.
"In the past, we have had Santa and his
reindeer out front and may do that again this year." Lewis said.
Food 4 Less,2525 Iowa St., and the three Dillon's stores, at 1740 Massachusetts St. 3000 W.Sixth St.,and 1015 W.23rd St., had not made specific plans yet but promised huge sales to their customers.
Those used to living in larger cities may not find that unusual, but many may be more used to what happens in Burlington,a town of 3,000 people south of Topeka. Burlington has one grocery store in town.
The grocery store, Hoover's Thriftway, is operated by a local man and his son and daughter. They have been very successful, in part because of the local feel they attempt to keep in their store.
Co-manager Tammy Salava said, "On the Saturday before Christmas, we set up a tree at the front of the store and give away random prizes to customers."
The prizes are donated by Hoover's and other local merchants. In the past, Hoover's has given away stuffed animals, lottery tickets, grocery certificates and other items.
This year, the store also is having carolers sing in the store on the days leading up to the holiday.
"I think the large grocery stores don't do this because they don't have to, " Salava said. "They are not as community-oriented as we are."
1035 Massachusetts
Downtown lawrence
841-7272
Mon-Wed 11am-10pm
Thur-Sat 11am-12 pm
Sun 12am-8pm
PAPA KENO'S
PIZZERIA
"It's so good you'll
want it for breakfast."
PAPA KENO'S
PIZZERIA
" It 's so good you 'll want it for breakfast. "
Left:
Justin Hosek
Quail Run
6th grade
The best thing
about the K-Youth program is:
"It teaches kids to look at different things differently."
COMMUNITY * K-you * December 8, 1993
Holiday fund-raiser benefits AIDS project
By Allison McCready Special to the Kansan
A night of art, education, and awareness was the theme for the World AIDS Day holiday fund-raising event for the Douglas County AIDS Project, which was held at the Spencer Museum of Art on Dec. 4.
Rose R. Rousseau, the executive director of the organization, said that the event was modeled after a Kansas City fund-raiser called "Night of a Thousand Stars."
Rousseau said that the fund-raiser was the first in Lawrence to enlist the support of artists.
The evening included private dinner parties hosted by people in the community, followed by a party at the museum. Several works of art were donated for exhibition and for a sealed-bid auction.
Tickets for the reception at Spencer were $5. The KU Student Bar Association cosponsored the event.
"The arts community in this area really hadn't been tapped as far as involvement in assisting with the AIDS project," Rousseau said. "I thought this would be a good opportunity for that."
Rousseau said that several KU staff members and graduates, as well as other regional artists, donated their artwork for the fund-raiser. Nate Fors, an internationally-recognized artist and a KU graduate, unveiled a new work. The focus of the piece
was his uncle, Dennis Helm, a Lawrence man who died of complications of AIDS. Two panels of the AIDS Quilt were on display.
Brett Brenner, a third-year law student from Wichita, is holding one of the dinners. Brenner serves on the board of directors of the Douglas County AIDS Project.
Brenner said that his goals for the fundraiser were multi-faceted. He said he hoped the event would educate his friends and other people about AIDS. He said he wanted people to know that it was not a disease that discriminated against any group of people, but one that affected the entire society.
He also said he hoped the event would raise a lot of money for the organization, which relied on the community for financial support.
Brenner said that the fund-raiser should have a broad appeal to anyone concerned with the AIDS issue.
"The art is very compelling," he said. If people enjoy themselves and leave with a good feeling about the Douglas County AIDS Project, they may volunteer more, Brenner said
According to Rousseau, people from KU have been very active in the organization. Three-quarters of the volunteers at the Douglas County AIDS Project have KU ties.
"We're really hoping we can get KU students over there, too," she said. "It's the price of a movie ticket."
International students face Christmas alone
Those far from home find stateside options
By David Kelsey Special to the Kansan
Imagine waking up Christmas morning knowing that your family is thousands of miles away celebrating the holiday without you.
That is what some of KU's 1,992 international students will experience this winter break. Brenda Baker, a KU foreign student advisor, said that international students who live in the dorms may sign up to stay in Lewis and Templin Halls over winter break. The cost is $11 a night or $55 for the entire break. International students should be prepared for eating delivered pizza and take-out food because no food service will be provided by the residence halls.
Baker said that there are a few programs that try to match international students up with American families. International students may sign up through the Foreign Student Adviser Office for the Christmas International House program. This program places students with families throughout the United States.
"The Christmas holiday can be a pretty lonely time for international students,"
Bakersaid.
Jenny Lin is a freshman from Taiwan. She lives in Naismith Hall and will probably spend winter break with friends. "I have been invited to stay with friends in Kansas, but I am not sure yet," Linn said.
Arthur Chu, president of the Asian Student Union, said some of the international students in his organization do not celebrate Christmas like Americans. "They miss their families more than anything else," Chu said.
Susanna Loof, who is a freshman from Sweden, said that she wanted to travel over winter break. "Colorado is calling me. I really want to go skiing," Loof said.
Loof said that she had invitations from friends to spend Christmas in their homes but that she really wanted to travel. "I want to see Chicago, and maybe Texas," Loof said.
Loof said she would miss eating Christmas dinner with her family. "This will be my first Christmas away from home," Loof said.
Another Swedish Christmas tradition, Loof said, is watching old Walt Disney movies, which are broadcast over the state-run television station. Loof said they begin playing the movies at 3:00 p.m. on December 24 and continue for several hours. "I have been watching those movies every Christmas," Loof said. "The whole country watches them."
THE BUCK'S START HERE!
Advertise in the KANSAN
read by thousands daily
call
864-4358
The KANSAN Daily
Left:
Regan Buck
South Jr. High
7th grade
The best thing about the K-Youth program is:
"It is exciting to know you have tried something new that could even be published."
Right:
Arijit Pal
Schwegler
5th grade
I designed my ad this way because:
"I thought Santa would like new shoes for a change."
THE BUCK'S START HERE!
Advertise in the KANSAN
Read by thousands daily
call 864-4358
Left:
Regan Buck
South Jr. High
7th grade
The best thing about the K-Youth program is:
"It is exciting to know you have tried something new that could even be published."
Right:
Arijit Pal
Schwegler
5th grade
I designed my ad this way because:
"I thought Santa would like new shoes for a change."
Cheap! Cheap! cheap!
Nike Boots Only $59.99
I finally got new boots
So, if you need boots, if you want boots, go to The Athlete's Foot at (914 Mass.)
Phone number 841-6966
Athlete's Foot.
Cheap!
Cheap!
cheap!
Nike Boots Only $59.99
I finally got new boots
So, if you need boots, if you want boots, go to The Athlete's Foot at (914 Mass.) Phone number 841-6966
December 8, 1993 *K-you* • COMMUNITY
5
Restaurant business booming
By Llane Henderson Special to the Kansan
Restaurant business in Lawrence, as well as the overall attitude of customers, booms during the holiday season, said Fifi Paden, owner and manager of Fifi's Restaurant, 925 Iowa St., and the American Bistro, 101 W. Seventh St.
Shopping in Lawrence increases tremendously from Thanksgiving until Christmas Day, and this has an impact on the lunch business in Lawrence, Paden said.
"Our lunch business increases greatly during the shopping season, both at Fifi's and the American Bistro. People come in for a relaxing lunch in the middle of shopping. They are looking to warm up, to rest and to be waited on." Paden said.
Liz Linds, director of catering for both the
American Bistro and Fifi's Banquet Connection, 1350 N. Third St., said that besides an increase in business during lunch, there also was an increase in the number of banquets.
"We have a lot more small gatherings during the holiday season. There are also a lot of parties, of course, and family gatherings, all of which have an impact on the holiday business boom," Linds said.
Business booms not only for restaurants but also for the wait staff. Mark Pierce, a waiter at the American Bistro, said that because customers generally would be in better moods when they came in the restaurant, the wait staff could be more cheery than usual.
"Maybe the customer just found the perfect present for a difficult person or merely
had an enjoyable day," Pierces said. "The holiday season is easier for everyone. These overall good holiday feelings also reflect in the tips — they go way up."
But the holiday season is bittersweet. Paden said that after New Year's Eve business decreased immensely while everyone waited for bills to come in.
"It seems that everyone is either on a diet, broke or exhausted, and because of this, the desire to go out to eat rapidly decreases after the holiday season," Paden said.
Brooks Hanson, a manager at Applebee's Neighborhood Grill & Bar, 2520 Iowa St., said that as a new addition to the Lawrence restaurant competition, he was excited about the holiday season.
"We are anticipating being a part of the Lawrence holiday tradition," Hanson said.
The restaurant began a promotion for gift certificates that will continue through the holiday season, Hanson said. Hanson also said that holiday platters would be available throughout the holiday season for parties and catering purposes.
Some restaurants are affected by semester break, when a large number of students leave Lawrence.
Lori Conklin, a manager at Dos Hombres, 815 New Hampshire St., said, "There is a lot more variation in tips during the holiday season. Either they are really good or really bad, depending on the customer."
Usually a member of the wait staff can count on a 15 percent tip, but during the holiday season, tips depend more on how the holiday season affects the customer, Conklin said.
Holidays make child's dream of shiny, new ax a reality
By Zach Emahlser Special to the Kansan
Food, folks and fun. Those words are synonymous with the true meaning of the holiday season: a season of unfulfilled wishes combated by love and generosity, a season of giving at your expense with the hopes of making someone merry. That was the spirit that Edward Ensminger of Iowa carried with him as he thought of his grandson 11 years ago.
At the time, Matt Jansen, Overland Park junior, then 10 years old, had dreams of
becoming a lumberjack. As the holiday season approached, his parents became desperate to find a solution for Matt's dream. You can't put a 10-year-old boy on the next flight to Saskatchewan, and you can't walk into Children's Palace and venture over to the lumberjack section. So what is a parent to do?
"That year my mother kept asking me if there were any other types of gifts that I might like," Jansen said. "However, my heart was set on lumberjack equipment."
Unable to find a solution for Matt, his parents went ahead with their holiday shopping. They purchased gifts for Matt that they thought would be appealing. Deep down they knew that it wasn't what Matt really desired, however, they felt that if they showed him with a plethora of gifts that he would forget about the lumberjack theme.
As the family gathered around and began to open presents, an unexpected visitor entered the scene. It was Grandpa Ensinger, but not even his presence could override the disappointing feeling that Matt possessed inside.
"My grandfather could see the disappointment on my face," Jansen said.
After everyone had finished opening their gifts, grandpa instructed Matt to go outside and get his pipe out of his truck.
When Matt returned his eyes were filled with excitement. His grandfather had done the impossible.
"When I went outside there it was," Jansen said. "A truck load of uncut wood, an ax, a pair of gloves and a flannel shirt. My dream was happening."
And all it took was love and generosity.
SUITS
BUY ONE
GET ONE
FREE
REGULAR SALE $599
"TRADITION ONLY WITH A DIFFERENCE"
843-5755
COMMUNITY • K-you • December 8, 1993
Rape Victim Survivor Service
Advocacy Support Awareness Prevention
For more information or to speak to an advocate call Headquarters Counseling at 841-2345
6
24 Hour
RVSS A.S.A.P STUDENT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS SENATE
Festival of Trees
1.
Right: Four-year-old Abby Sullivan and her grandmother, Marna Moore, both of Lawrence, preview the Christmas trees at the Lawrence Festival of Trees at Liberty Hall, 624 Massachusetts St. The festival is a fund-raising event for The Shelter, Inc. Businesses and individuals donated decorated trees, which were auctioned off at the festival party November 30. Below: Gale Haslam of Lawrence calls this tree "Pasta Natalizi," which is Italian for Christmas pasta. Haslam donated the tree for the Festival of Trees. Haslam made the ornaments for the tree from dry pasta with some design assistance from her son.
(1)
Photos by Julia Clarke/ KANSAN
A girl in pajamas is looking at a holiday tree decorated with miniature houses and snowflakes. Another girl stands behind her, also wearing pajamas and looking at the same tree.
Waiters on Wheels
Quinton's Bar & Deli
Cornucopia
Full Moon Cafe
Low Rider
Paradise Cafe
Uptown Bagel
Tin Pan Alley
842-2662
11am-10pm
$2.00
service charge
Left:
Robin
Smith
Broken
Arrow
4th grade
I designed
my ad this way because:
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Right: Ryan Morgan Quail Run 6th grade I designed my ad this way because: "I think it gives enough information and it looks good."
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-
7
Holiday symbols not universal; countries have own traditions
Christmas season a 'foreign affair' for one KU student
By Trevor C. Wohlford Special to the Kansan
Regardless of your cultural background, if you grew up in the United States, you are undoubtedly familiar with certain American holiday icons.
You are sure to know what Santa Claus looks like, where he lives and how he travels from house to house. And what American hasn't heard the story of Frosty the Snowman or Rudolph the Red-nosed Reindeer?
However, if you are Dominique Solcher, a senior at the University of Kansas who grew up in Bad Essen, Germany, these holiday icons are not quite as familiar. To Solcher, Christmas in the United States is a foreign affair.
Solcher said that her upbringing was different from the average American's. She said most Americans weren't aware that almost every country had its own, unique Christmas traditions.
Solcher has spent the past four years in the
United States, but she said she was still amazed at some of the things she saw during the Christmas season.
"Here, everything goes 'Christmas-crazy.' It's everywhere," she said. "But the weirdest thing is that people wear Christmas clothes, like socks that make music. In Germany, people would never do that."
In the United States, Christmas is family-oriented but relatively secular, Solcher said. In Germany, families don't travel long distances to be with one another. Instead, Solcher said, the focus of a German Christmas is religion.
In Germany, children make Advent wreaths and buy Advent calendars to prepare themselves spiritually for the Christmas season, Solcher said.
"And on Christmas Eve, we all would go to Mass four times that day," Solcher said, recalling her past.
Despite the emphasis on religion, Solcher said there were a lot of fun holiday traditions that she practiced at home in Germany.
"There is no Santa Claus in Germany," Solcher said. "Instead, there is a man named Nikolaus, who comes on Dec. 6. You put your shoes by the window, and he comes and puts candy in them."
Solcher said that since her family was part Dutch, it also practices Dutch tradition. In
Holland, Solcher said, the children believe in a man called Sinte Claas, who is similar to the American Santa Claus. Except, she said, he comes from Spain and rides a white horse across the rooftops, bringing presents to all the good children.
"...the weirdest thing is that people wear Christmas clothes, like socks that make music..."
Dominique Solcher KUsenior who grew up in Germany
"If you are bad, Sinte Claas puts you in his sack and takes you back to Spain, where you have to pick oranges for a year," Solcher said.
Solcher said she loved Christmas when she was young. However, she said the most memorable Christmas for her was when she was much older — Christmas 1989. That
was the year the Berlin Wall was torn down, and East and West Germany were united.
Solcher said she celebrated that Christmas at a party for foreign students in Wichita.
"At the party, we built a wall out of boxes and then tore it down," she said. "We weren't sure, at the time, how to tear it down. But, after the first person started, we all followed."
Solcher said that the Berlin Wall being dismantled was the most amazing thing she had ever experienced.
"When I think about it, I get goose bumps," she said.
"It was the greatest Christmas present East Germany could have ever received," Solcher said. "It was better than the most expensive gift in the world. For the first time, there would be unity that Christmas. It was a Christmas of pure hope."
Solcher said that this year she would once again celebrate Christmas like Americans. Although she knows she will get homesick, she said she would try to stay busy working and traveling during the holidays.
However, a white Christmas might ease her homesickness a bit. Solcher said it didn't snow much in Germany. And, she said, she felt that the snow Kansas gets during the holidays added a lot of spirit to the Christmas season.
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When snow falls, sleds sell quickly
By Sarah Morrison Special to the Kansan
Basketball tickets are not the only things hard to come by at KU during the winter months.
Students planning on sledding down Campanile Hill had better buy their sleds now because after the first snow, they might have better luck getting tickets to the Final Four.
According to local retailers, seeds are almost impossible to keep in stock after the snow hits.
Phyllis Brubeck, an employee at Cottin's Coast to Coast hardware store, 1832 Massachusetts St., said her store sold out of sleds within a day of the first snowstorm.
"The minute the sleds came in the back door, they would go out the front door," she said. "We couldn't order more because the warehouse was even backed up."
Kirsten German, Wichita senior, said she was frustrated by the lack of sleds available.
"I have never been sledding before, and I was really looking forward to it," she said, "But I couldn't round up a sled or an inner tube or anything. Every place I went was sold out."
Sean Miller of Cottin's Coast to Coast said the most popular sled was the Flexible Flyer, a traditional wooden sled with metal runners. He said they also carried a plastic disc sled made by the same company.
Brubeck said that after the store sold out of sleds, students bought anything that
"We were selling buckets, lids to trash cans, just anything that would slide," she said.
could be used to glide down a hill.
German said she finally made a sled out of a cardboard box.
"It worked fine until the box got so wet that it fell apart," she said.
Lori Collier, Lawrence junior, also created her own sled.
"I did not have a sled, but a friend loaned me his water-bed cover," she said. "I just hopped on that sucker and flew down the hill. It was great."
Collier said that many of the other students sledding on Campanile Hill had makeshift sleds.
"Lots of people had cardboard boxes with
plastic stapled to the bottom," she said, "But there were two guys who made body suits out of trash bags, and they were just diving head first down the hill."
Collier said another popular alternative to the conventional sled was cafeteria trays.
"Some people smuggled trays out from the dorm cafeterias and used those, but they did not look like they were working too well," she said.
German said that trying to find something to use as a sled was half the fun.
"I don't think I would have had as much fun if I had bought some cheap, plastic sled," she said. "Getting together with your friends, patching together a sled and crossing your fingers in hopes that it works is part of the fun.
Downtown Lawrence provides one-stop shopping
By Holly Boren Special to the Kansan
What gift are you going to give your boyfriend or girlfriend, parents, friends, or brothers and sisters this year for Christmas? When it comes time to shop, you may not need to go anywhere else except downtown Lawrence.
The stores on Massachusetts Street have it all.
If you're looking for an unusual gift for a unique person, you might want to stop by The Creation Station,726 Massachusetts St. The Creation Station sell items such as incense, clothing, massage oils and lava lamps. Lava lamps are clear glass tubes that
contain oil and wax. When heated, the wax moves up and down throughout the oil. The lamps come in different colors and sell for about $60.
The Palace, Eighth and Massachusetts streets, sells a variety of gift items. Among the strange gifts the store sells is an out-of-the-ordinary wall clock that is numbered backwards and moves counter-clockwise. It sells for $20.50.
For those of you wondering what to give the child you know, Thomas the Tank Engine seems to be a popular theme. Marks Jewelers, 817 Massachusetts St., carries a ceramic Thomas the Tank Engine piggy bank for children. Fun and Games, 816 Massachusetts St., sells Brio Railways wooden railroad tracks and trains. The system starts at $14.50 and some pieces can cost more than $100. This system also features Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends.
Dinosaurs are also high on children's Christmas lists. Fun and Games also carries a line of museum-quality Carnegie dinosaurs. Prices range from $2.99 to $19.99. They also sell the popular Madame Alexander collector's dolls for $40.
Natural Way, 820 Massachusetts St., sells a variety of custom gift baskets where you can choose a theme for your basket. You can select a variety of items that include natural body care items, incense, cocoa, coffee, bath products, loofahs and men's shaving
products. Nearly anything can be included in the basket. The prices range from $10 to $30 for a basket.
Something new to Campbell's Clothing, 841 Massachusetts St., is the line of men's Nautica Footwear. The line includes boots, bucks and loafers, and prices range from $75 to $120..
If you're stranded in Lawrence for the holidays or if you know someone who will be, some free food might be greatly appreciated. Teller's, 746 Massachusetts St., and Paradise Cafe, 728 Massachusetts St., offer gift certificates. Certificates come in any denomination and can be purchased from the managers of both restaurants.
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Left:
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The best thing about the K-Youth program is:
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Right: Elizabeth Snyder Centennial 3rd-grade The best thing about the K-Youth program is: "It is fun to have a design in the newspaper along with my name."
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December 8, 1993 *K-you* • COMMUNITY
9
Santa won't be bringing tax breaks
Plan cutbacks now for 1994,experts say
NEW YORK — In a season dominated by Santa Claus, save a little of your time and attention for Uncle Sam.
The Associated Press
So advise the nation's tax experts, noting that the clock runs out this month not only on holiday shopping plans but also on most practical ways to cut your tax bill for the year.
"Don't wait until you're well into 1994 to think about your tax status," urges Greg Sullivan, vice president at the International Association for Financial Planning.
You will have plenty of time after New Year's to calculate your tax bill for 1993, he notes, but only limited opportunities to take any action about it.
What follows is a basic, though by no means comprehensive, check list of lastminute tax planning possibilities for the year:
Contributions to charity. You can get 1993 deductions for charitable contributions of money made by check or credit card through Dec. 31. If you give tangible items such as old clothes or household goods, take care to document your contribution.
State and local taxes. Pay bills for estimated state income taxes, local property taxes and so forth by Dec. 31 so that you can deduct them on this year's return.
— Deferring income and accelerating expenses. If you are self-employed or can
otherwise control when you receive income, hold off billing customers until after the first of the year. Similarly, pay for any pending deductible business expenses before the end of the year.
— Gifts. "Under current law, the first $10,000 of gifts of qualifying property each year are exempt from gift and estate taxes," notes the accounting firm of Grant Thornton. "This annual exclusion applies to each recipient, or 'donee.' Over a period of years, the reduction in estate taxes can be considerable."
Adds Lawrence Krause at the Clarfeld and Co. accounting firm in New York: "Gifts not made by Dec. 31 cannot be carried over."
Investments. A stock, bond or mutual fund on which you have a paper loss can be converted into a tax deduction, within limits specified under the rules, by selling it
before Jan. 1.
Consider waiting to sell any investment at a profit until after the first of the year, to keep that transaction from increasing your 1993 taxable income.
Strategy. Resolve to operate with a year-round tax planning strategy starting in 1994, so that hasty year-end moves won't be necessary in future holiday seasons.
Most standard year-end tax recommendations presume that you won't be in a much higher tax bracket next year and thus want to defer taxes into 1994 rather than accelerating them into this year.
Says the accounting firm of Deloitte & Touche: "Even if you expect your tax rate to be the same in 1993 and 1994, it may be worth paying some deductible expenses a few months early in order to gain the tax benefit a full year sooner."
Holiday cheer in the office can lead to harassment
The Associated Press
WICHITA — "Tis the season for office parties, but keep the holiday merrymaking on a professional level, advises a Wichita State University business professor.
"The holiday season is coming up. So there will be a lot of office parties and a more relaxed environment," professor Esther Headley said. "Yes, you can have fun. But make sure you don't do anything that will offend anybody by your behavior."
Sexual harassment continues to be a problem in the workplace, she said.
In the wake of the Clarence Thomas-Anita Hill controversy of alleged sexual improprieties by Thomas, sensitivity to sexual
harassment and complaints about it increased, said Brandon Myers, chief lawyer for the Kansas Human Rights Commission in Topeka.
In fiscal 1991, there were 75 Kansas sexual harassment cases reported to his agency, Myers said. The number doubled in fiscal 1992, after Thomas' U.S. Supreme Court confirmation hearings at which Hill's allegations were discussed.
"I don't think the United States Supreme Court or any other court will ever be able to
Brian Grace, a Wichita attorney who handles employment cases, said sexual harassment could be difficult to prove, especially when it came down to one person's word against another's.
draw an absolute hard and fast line," Grace said.
But the court recently held that a person need not suffer serious psychological injury to have a case. Any behavior that unreasonably interferes with working conditions can constitute sexual harassment, the court said.
"The courts are getting more used to dealing with the blatant sexual harassers."
In the two cases the court heard, the behavior plaintiffs objected to included anti-female obscenities, displaying nude posters, comments about anatomy and a male boss who asked a female employee to get coins out of his pants pocket.
Headley said. "That's pretty much more cut and dried. Where it gets more difficult to prove in the court system is the issues that deal with hostile work environment and cultural diversity as it relates to sexual harassment."
Headley said professionalism still was the best way to guard against sexual harassment problems.
"My advice to an individual, whether in the office or at a holiday party coming up with the Christmas season, is always play it safe," she said. "If you feel that you may be offending somebody by your behavior or they are upset by the behavior, play it safe. Always act professional."
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843-4111
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Left: Natalie Vincent
Quail Run 5th grade
The best thing about the K-Youth program is:
“Kids get to draw the ads not just professional artists.”
Right: Emily Seibel
Hillcrest 5th grade
I designed my ad this way because:
“I thought it was a good design, simple and effective.”
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Christmas tree debate lives on
Real trees help protect resources, tree grower says
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Chuck Wright has had it with plastic Christmas trees.
He stops short of calling them un-American but says they definitely are an affront to tradition, harmful to the environment and detrimental to the U.S. economy.
"Wake Up, America! Celebrate Christmas with a real Christmas tree and wreathe while helping protect our valuable non-renewable environment," he proclaims in a pamphlet that he is providing to live tree growers nationwide in an effort to bolster the evergreen tree industry.
Wright, a former mayor of Topeka, has been growing Christmas trees for 23 years on 20 acres of land northwest of Lecompton, which is north of the Kansas River halfway between Topeka and Lawrence.
He launched his national crusade to ban plastic trees in October with an announcement in the fall issue of "Christmas Trees" magazine, which he has published since 1978.
His pamphlet, 5,000 of which he has sent
out so far, emphasizes four points:
Plastic trees and wreaths are made from nonrenewable petroleum.
"Real Christmas trees and wreaths do not harm our environment and our resources," Wright said.
If a plastic tree catches fire, it pollutes the air with toxic fumes.
"A properly cared-for real Christmas tree will not catch fire easily," he said.
Plastic trees cannot be recycled.
"When they are disposed of in a sanitary landfill, they will not disintegrate but will remain there forever, taking up increasingly scarce landfill space," Wright said.
- Plastic trees are manufactured mostly outside the United States.
Kansas, Wright said.
Wright, 74, who served as Topeka's mayor from 1965 to 1969 and whose son, Doug Wright, was mayor from 1981 to 1987, is phasing out his Christmas tree business. But he plans to continue publishing the
"If we can protect the spotted owl,by golly,we can protect the real Christmas tree industry."
There are about 10,000 Christmas tree growers in the United States, with 173 in
"Thousands of jobs have already been lost in the Christmas tree industry because sale and use of fake trees and wreaths continues to be encouraged," he said in the pamphlet.
Chuck Wright Christmas tree grower
magazine.Hehas apaid circulation of 8,000 mostly in the United States, Canada, Mexico Great Britain and Australia.
He and his wife moved in 1970 to the heavily wooded Lecompton acreage, which he inherited when his parents died in 1966. The couple lived in a travel trailer for six months until their home was built.
Wright said he sought the advice of Earl Van Meter, former Douglas County extension agent, on what he might
do with the land, most of which was covered with thick brush and trees. Van Meter recommended raising Christmas trees.
Wright cleared 20 of the 70 acres and got started in the business.
At one point, he had 10,000 trees but is now down to about 2,500, he said. He gradually
has sold them off before Christmas each year and last spring lost about 500 trees to disease when heavy May rains prevented spraying them with fungicide, he said.
Asked why he launched his anti-plastic tree crusade now when he is winding down his business after more than two decades, he replied:
"I've been waiting for some organization to get involved, but the National Christmas Tree Association in Wisconsin didn't pick up on it, so I just decided now is the time to get going."
Wright plans to go to Washington, D.C., early next year to lobby environmental and farm groups and members of the Kansas congressional delegation to join his campaign.
His main selling point will be the economic impact of plastic trees on an American industry.
"Most of these damn things are made outside this country," Wright said. "They don't help our economy a bit, and they're driving our Christmas tree growers out of business."
The National Christmas Tree Association estimates there will be about 30 million live trees sold in the United States this holiday season, down from about 50 million sold in the 1960s.
"If we can protect the spotted owl, by golly,we can protect the real Christmas tree industry," Wright said.
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December 8, 1993 K-you • COMMUNITY
11
Treasury Greetings
Richard Devinki / KANSAN
Linda Laffen, co-director of Penn House, wraps presents donated for needy families in Douglas County. Penn House is a Lawrence organization that provides families with Christmas dinners, presents and gift certificates through its Adopt-a Family program.
Program fills holiday needs
Penn House provides help in Adopt-a-Family
By Allison Rose Lopez Special to the Kansan
Have you ever been in a position in which you wondered whether you would have anything to eat Christmas Day? Has your family ever forgone Christmas in order to pay the monthly bills?
Many low-income Lawrence residents face these problems this time of year. Luckily, there is a place they can go for a helping hand and asympathetic ear.
Penn House, 1035 Pennsylvania St., is a nonprofit organization that helps families every year with the Adopt-a-Family program. Last year, Penn House helped more than 200 families celebrate a traditional Christmas that otherwise would have been impossible.
"We like to think of ourselves as a self-help organization," said Bessie Nichols, director of Penn House. "We're here to help people help themselves."
Penn House organizes the Adopt-a-Family program with four other area organizations. These five organizations are members of the Holiday Bureau, which was formed to make sure that families are not adopted more than once and that as many families as possible are helped. The other members of the Holiday Bureau are: the Salvation Army Church, Ballard Community Center Inc., Indian Center of Lawrence and Help Connection, Eudora.
The Holiday Bureau also works to maintain anonymity. People who adopt families or make donations never meet those they help. Nichols said that this policy allowed parents to reach out for help and to maintain pride and independence.
Nichols said that adopted families were provided with food for Christmas dinner and a personal item or toy for each family member. Many donations are given as gift certificates to Dillons, Checkers Foods
and Food 4 Less. Nichols said that some families preferred gift certificates because they could then choose their own food. Donations do not have to be large to make a difference, she said.
"A $5 gift certificate could mean a lot to an elderly couple or a single person," Nichols said.
John Travers, Iola junior, has volunteered every Tuesday morning for the past two months at Penn House. He said that working at Penn House helped him realize how fortunate he was and gave him a better sense of the problems of the underprivileged in the Lawrence community.
"It really brings the problem home," Travers said. "It's very humbling."
Linda Laffen, co-director of Penn House and organizer of the Adopt-a-Family project, said that the response of the Lawrence community was encouraging.
"The community always comes through for us," Laffen said. "It's just a great feeling."
12
COMMUNITY • *K-you* • December 8, 1993
Meaning of Christmas is not lost in hype
Commercialization doesn't ruin sentiment of season
PITT
Jason Schnabel, Nickerson junior, and his roommate Konan Hauser, Hutchinson junior, pick out ornaments for their Christmas tree. Schnabel and Hauser said the tree gave the apartment "a touch of home."
By Deedra Allison Special to the Kansan
Susan McSpadden/KANSAN
"Silver bells. Silver bells. It's Christmas time in the city." How can you tell? Just ask Santa at the mall. The original meaning of Christmas centers around the birth of a savior, but retailers have hyped the holiday into something else.
For some, the true meaning isn't completely lost.
"I think it's awesome," said Mark Skolaut, Olmitz sophomore. "It's incredible that the Christian world as a whole celebrates Christmas."
Laura Peterson, Olathe freshman, said that Christmas was a time for family to get together. She said that she thinks malls and businesses that commercialize Christmas are self-serving and have gone too far.
"It's just a moneymaking process," she said. "I think they're doing it for the good will of their bookbooks."
Retailers bombard shoppers with Christmas music and snowy decorations as early as the day after Halloween. As Christmas gets closer, benches and trash cans are pushed aside to make room for shiny Santas and enormous trees.
Skolaut, however, said that he thought commercializing Christmas was not detrimental to the true meaning. But others say it may be a little too much.
"They go overboard with decorations and candy canes, especially so early," said Jason Schnabel. Nickerson junior.
Malls acknowledge that the day after Thanksgiving is the biggest shopping day of the year. Melissa McCollough, Pratt junior, said that she avoided shopping that day because of the crowds.
Still, people manage to internalize the meaning of Christmas.
"The build-up is especially good for kids," Schnabel said. "They always get excited. I love that."
He said he loves seeing his younger brothers shaking presents.
"That's what it should be about." he said.
Perhaps the hype at the mall stirs the feelings associated with Christmas.
"Christmas would be missing something if there wasn't a to-do about it," Peterson said.
Skolaut said that he was not offended by the commercialization. He said that although Christmas was a spiritual time, "We don't need to be 'religious' about it. We should have fun and rejoice."
A person doesn't need to have a religious upbringing to appreciate the excitement Christmas generates. Because of his upbringing, Schnabel said, he doesn't think of Christmas in a religious sense.
"Christmas is seeing my family, dinner at Grandma's once a year and playing with my cousins," he said.
The Christmas excitement businesses arouse can also bring positive rewards for people who do not believe in the Christian holiday.
McCollohough agreed. She said the hype helped get people in the Christmas mood. Also, activities like food drives are more successful at this time of year, she said.
"I like having the Santas hang out of the corners bumming for money," Schnabel said. "It's for a good cause. It's supposed to make people feel good."
Even though stores start taking down decorations the day after Christmas, for Schnabel, the Christmas season won't be over.
"It doesn't go away until a few days after New Year's," he said.
Toys for Tots launches another year of giving
Franklin
VITREX
Organization works so kids won't go toyless
By Kimberly Cashman Special to the Kansan
Paul Kotz / KANSAN
Remember the excitement of waking up Christmas morning to the sight of presents waiting to be ripped open under the glow of the lights on the Christmas tree?
The fourth annual Toys for Tots telethon, "Remember the Feeling," sponsored by Sunflower Cablevision, will be from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday on Channel 6.
"We expect the need will be greater this year because of this year's flood and because of area businesses downsizing and closing," said Jan McNish, office manager at Sunflower Cablevision and organizer of this year's event. The local telethon provides Christmas gifts to Douglas County children, from newborns to 18-year-olds, she said.
"I believe our program is successful because it focuses on kids, it is completely local and 100 percent of the cash donations go back toward purchasing gifts," McNish said.
Last year's campaign generated over 6,700 toys, $9,100 in cash and hundreds of stockings, McNish said.
The fourth annual Toys for Tots campaign brings toys to youths from newborns to 18-year-olds. The Toys for Tots telethon, "Remember the Feeling," will be televised from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday on Channel 6.
Local businesses donate all administrative expenses, she said.
Last year's donations helped 865 families, said Capt. George Windham, commanding officer of the Salvation Army in Lawrence, which is a co-sponsor of the event. "There is no reason why any child in Douglas County should not have a toy for Christmas."
The Marine Corps Reserve, another co-sponsor of the event, provides the drop-off boxes and posters for the campaign. McNish said.
Once collected, the toys are sorted into age and sex categories and transported to
the Toy Shop at the National Guard Armory, 200 Iowa St., where they will be distributed Dec. 15 and 16, she said.
"Many people do not think about teenagers with the name 'Toys for Tots,' " Brown said.
KJHK is sponsoring a benefit concert Friday at Benchwarmers Sports Bar and Grill, 1601 W. 23rd St., with the bands Sufferbus and Kill Creek playing, said Craig Brown, sports director for KJHK. All donations will go directly to the toy fund, he said.
Windham said that families needing help must register with the Holiday Bureau. The bureau consists of several agencies, including the Salvation Army, Ballard Community Center, the Indian Center of Lawrence, the Help Connection and the Penn House.
The money donated will go directly to buy gifts for older kids, he said.
"KJHK is always looking for ways to get involved in the community and to give to organizations in need," said Brown.
Drop-off boxes for donations are located in each floor lobby of all University of Kansas residence halls, Brown said. The Association of University Residence Halls has donated a $150 prize for the floor that donates the most toys, he said.
---
Additional drop-box sites include Jayhawker Towers, facilities operations and more than 50 businesses in Lawrence.
December 8, 1993 K-you • COMMUNITY
13
Students share seasons greetings with elderly
By Zamora Jenkins Special to the Kansan
It is Dec.25,1993,and outside the window snowflakes float gently to the ground.Inside,everyone is nestled beneath their covers,fast asleep. Then they are awakened by "HO! HO! HO! Merry Christmas." Everyone slowly draws themselves from bed and at a pace of 20 steps a minute,gathers in the front room to participate in the festivities.
Welcome to the Colonial Manor Nursing Home Christmas party, one of the annual celebrations planned by Kathy Eisman, activities director. Every year, volunteers are relied on to donate their time to help spread joy to the residents, and direct them to appropriate places.
Eisman said that KU students were great about visiting the home on a regular base. Throughout the year, fraternities and sororities played various games with the residents such as bingo, or exercised with the residents during theirphysical fitness workout. Many times, a sorority will make its visit even more special by participating in one-to-ones with the female residents, which may consist of painting their finger nails or doing their hair.
Many of the social activities at the home evolve from a small budget. Eisman's annual budget is based on the number of residents. The majority of the time, money is not donated to the home, because it is a nonprofit organization. To help compensate for the minimal funding, the kitchen at the home on special occasions will bake cakes. For instance, the kitchen will bake a birthday cake for the resident, and Eisman will supply the balloon. For the Christmas, party the kitchen will furnish cookies and punch. Along with the refreshments, every year the Lady's Auxiliary, Camp Fire Kids, Sallie Mae Singers, Cotton Woods and Girl Scouts go
through the halls caroling to those residents who are unable to get out of bed. Eisman said that the residents loved music whether it was good or bad. They just look forward to seeing the carolers and participating in the activities. This year's celebration will consist of a visit from Santa and his elves.
Many families will attend the party. For those residents who have no relatives, or whose family has dropped them off and will never return, the home has created Adopt a Grandparent day. A gift is furnished to those residents by Corpus Christi Catholic Church. The individual is asked to make a list, and most of the time only personal items are requested. Males will ask for a sweat suit or a pair of socks, and females will ask for a shawl or robe.
However, no matter how many gifts are received, residents still miss their traditional celebrations with family. For some, many of their memories of past Christmases are
gone and can no longer be retrieved. Nevertheless, others who have lived in the home longer, share their new traditions with the younger residents. Residents try to create a homey atmosphere by decorating the tree and halls.
Surprisingly enough, some residents have lived in the home for as long as 10 years, some for as few as three. Their ages range from 40 to 101. Being in a nursing home for some gives them a safe environment and a sense of security with doctors and nurses on duty 24 hours. Others have been checked in by family members who are unable to take care of them.
Some may think of the residents as being merely old, but many of them have been around since the turn of the century and are a part of history, something that others can only read about. The residents love to tell stories and see new faces. They may still have a lot to give to society.
Foreign students see good and bad in United States
By Brian A. Masillionis Special to the Kansan
"The trees are so pretty here, and the small shops are great," said Uta Goeckede, Dormund, Germany. "I also like how you can get everywhere on a bike; it's not as spread out like it is in Germany. I've also heard that Massachusetts Street is really nice during the holidays."
Pablo Martinez De Valasco Astray, a tourist from La Coruña, Spain, said that the recreational facilities such as Lone Star Lake and Robinson Center are much better than in Spain. Martinez also anticipates how
Lawrence will look as the holiday lights go up. He was, however, critical of the United States and Lawrence.
"It's not really a free country," said Martinez.
He said he believed that all the constraints on the American people create the violence seen in many parts of the country. These constraints include the 21-year-old drinking limit. In Spain, the Americans who visit are always drunk, he said.
"They're not used to the freedom we have in Spain with that respect, so they go overboard," Martinez said. "When something is illegal, people will do it many times because
they aren't supposed to.
"Lawrence is peaceful, though the rest of the country scares me because it is too violent."
When asked why he thought America was so violent, he said television and the ability to get guns might be the problem. In Spain people can't have guns so it's harder to do real damage, he said.
Patrick Roos, Dormund, Germany, said that there was less violence in Germany where guns are outlawed.
"In the United States, when people abuse alcohol as they tend to do and loose control, it's not hard to find a gun and do something
crazy." Roos said.
Martinez's idea to make Lawrence better was blunt.
"In Spain, everyone stays out late. I usually wouldn't get home until six or seven in the morning because the bars don't close until 9:00 a.m.." he said.
Martinez said Lawrence could be improved if bars stayed open later, drinking restrictions were lifted and guns were outlawed.
"There are police everywhere here," he said. "In Spain there aren't that many because there's not that much of a problem."
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COMMUNITY * K-you * December 8, 1993
Greeks spend holidays doing public service
By Tina Park Special to the Kansan
Trick-or-treating, eating turkey, shopping, getting presents and Santa Claus are some of the things that we think about when the holiday season rolls around and it gets closer and closer to Christmas time.
The smiling faces of little kids and the caring and loving atmosphere that seems to be everywhere during the holidays are other things that we look forward to.
One group of students that is thinking of others and willing to give the extra time to help others or spend that extra dollar during the holiday season are students in the greek community.
The greek community has always been active in philanthropies and volunteering for community service throughout the year, but the idea of helping others in the community becomes even stronger as the holidays approach.
Panhellenic representative Carrie Neiner said that there was nothing across the board that all fraternities and sororities do together.
"Specifically around the holiday season there is no one joint project." Neijer said.
But this year, one joint project greek houses did together was going door-to-door, trick-or-treating for cans.
Two sororities were paired against two fraternities. They were to go trick-or-treat around a specific block, and the
Other activities sororities and fraternities take part in during the holidays are shoveling snow for the elderly, caroling at nursing homes, making Christmas cookies for the Boys and Girls Club and inviting the children to the house for a gift exchange and a visit with Santa Claus.
team who got the most cans won. Another joint activity that the greek houses are trying this holiday season is Christmas caroling.
"Some of the things that the houses do individually are ringing bells at the outlet mall or gift wrapping for Christmas," Neiner said.
Trina Rudolph, Panhellenic chair for Alpha Chi Omega, said that her house had a Halloween party for children, who went room-to-room, trick-or-treating for candy.
"For Thanksgiving we skip a meal, and the money we would have spent on that meal is donated to the Salvation Army," Rudolph said.
Phoebe Louis, a Kansas City, Kan., junior in Delta Delta Delta sorority, said that she always looked forward to the excitement and anticipation of the holiday season because it is a time to buy things for people other than yourself.
Hilltop children learn about different cultures
"The best thing about volunteering and giving during the holidays is to see how people's attitudes change and the excitement on people's faces when you know that you have helped them," Louis said.
By Lora Cornell
Special to the Kansan
On the first day wooden shoes are filled with hay.
On the second day an Advent candle is lit. On the third day a pinata is broken, spilling candy onto the carpet.
Children at Hilltop Child Development Center spend two weeks learning how different cultures celebrate during the winter months.
Ann Miller teaches 3-, 4- and 5-year-old children. She said she spent each day teaching about one country or culture. She said she decorates her classroom's walls with students' artwork related to particular holidays.
Miller said she thought that teaching children about different cultures was important. Jan Conrad, kindergarten teacher, said. "We do it to broaden their perspectives
— make them more accepting of differences."
Conrad said that students' parents would come to the day-care center and discuss how they celebrate a holiday. She said last year a parent educated her classroom on the Japanese New Year.
"The children dressed up in kimonos and had a good time," Conrad said.
Miller said parents did not complain about their children learning about other cultures.
"This excites the parents," she said. "Children will go home and teach their parents something that they did not know."
Miller began teaching at Hilltop 12 years
ago. She said she did not teach about religious or cultural celebrations. No one at Hilltop did.
"For so long we were afraid to do Christmas," she said.
Miller said she became more aware of teaching about different cultures when Hilltop was trying to get accredited by the National Association for the Education of Young Children. To achieve accreditation, Hilltop needed to increase cultural awareness.
"When we first started teaching there was nothing," Miller said.
Since then, more material for cultural education has become available.
Among the holidays included in the celebration are Diwali, the Festival of Lights Celebration in India, the Chinese New Year and Hanukkah.
Not all classrooms at Hilltop learn about such a variety of religions and cultures. Wendy Wyatt, who teaches first graders, said that in her classroom she focused on the cultures represented. She said the children did activities related to the holidays discussed.
Assistant Director Pat Pisani said children learned that other cultures' holiday celebrations could be just as much fun as their own. Learning differences pertaining to holidays make the children more tolerant of other cultural differences.
"I think children who are aware of different cultures and their holiday celebrations are more accepting of people being different in other ways," Pisani said.
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15
Local shelter welcomes the homeless
By Lora Cornell Special to the Kansan
Edith Hlyton, 52, and her family spend their days walking up and down Massachusetts Street. When the Hlytons get tired they go to the public library. However, instead of going home when the library closes, the family finds a place to sleep at the Salvation Army homeless shelter.
"We walked for days, Hlyton said." We had no place to go and no money to do anything with."
Hlyton's family walked to Lawrence from Denver.
Hilyton and her family are a small part of Lawrence's 913 homeless people. But there is room for only 50 people at the shelter.
Capt. George Windham, director of the Salvation Army shelter, said that anyone
who was homeless could stay at the shelter. The only rule is that those who are drunk cannot come in. This is why the shelter is never overcrowded, even in the cold winter months.
"That would be great if we ran out of room," Windham said. "That would mean more homeless people would feel comfortable here."
He said that a large number of the homeless have drinking problems. He said that they use what money they have to buy alcohol. Once they are drunk, they must spend the night on the streets, usually in an alley.
The homeless who stay the night at the shelter agree that the no-drinking regulation is a good one. James, 36, who asked that his last name not be used, has been homeless for five months. He said that he enjoyed the evenings he spent at the shelter. He said
the staff was supportive of those who helped themselves.
"They have some stiff rules—no drinking, no drugs," he said. "That's for the best. If an individual is drinking every day, his life is unmanageable."
James said he was evicted from his apartment because he could not afford to pay rent. He had to sleep on the streets because of his drinking problem.
James said staying at the shelter was safer than sleeping on the streets. He said that you needed street knowledge to ensure your safety outside the shelter.
"You have to know who you are dealing with," he said. "You can't trust anybody."
James said he has had a drink with someone he trusted, only to wake up to find his wallet empty.
Hlyton said she did not view Lawrence as
dangerous for the homeless. She has spent days on the streets here but not nights.
Hylton's daughter, Evelyn Lane, 24, said that Lawrence needs a shelter that is open 24 hours a day. The shelter is open from 9 p.m. to 9 a.m. She said she felt welcome at the shelter, however.
The Salvation Army earns 65 percent of its annual budget during the winter months. The organization accepts money, food, clothing and items such as cots, blankets and pillows. Windham said the donations were immediately used to help the homeless.
Hlyton sat on her cot and looked around the shelter.
"I didn't used to give money to the Salvation Army, because I didn't think they helped people," she said. "Now that I've been here, I plan to help out."
Community kitchen serves meals to hungry in Lawrence
By Manny Lopez
Special to the Kansan
Grumble, mumble and tumble.
Your midsection shakes and shudders with each roar. All the while everyone around you giggles at the guttural sounds coming from your stomach. What they are not aware of is that you have not eaten in two days because you are down on your luck.
Thanks to the Lawrence Interdenominational Nutrition Kitchen, you do not have to go hungry. This organization, commonly referred to as LINK, provides meals to those in need every Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday, and the last Friday of every month.
"No, there is not starvation in Lawrence, but there is hunger," said Ed Dutton, secretary of the LINK board of directors.
In its nine years of existence, LINK has served more than 115,000 meals to the needy.
"We don't ask any questions, and everyone who comes eats until they are full," said Pam Casagrande, LINK board of director's president.
Each week volunteers organize to serve anywhere from 65 to 100 meals per day. Volunteers from area churches alternate days for preparing and serving food. LINK was founded Feb. 14, 1985. It served only six
people the first night.
Local grocery stores often donate food. Dillons stores, Alvin's IGA and Checkers foods routinely provide food such as bread that would otherwise be thrown away. Students from the University of Kansas volunteer their services to the kitchen.
Recently, the KU Homeless Coalition and members from the Alpha Delta Pi sorority repainted and cleaned the facilities at the dining area in the First Christian Church, 1000 Kentucky St.
Although the organization's first mission is to provide meals to "guests," Dutton said a second goal is to provide a social atmosphere.
"Overall, the best thing is to see what a community can do when it pulls together for the common good." Casagrande said.
This Thanksgiving, LINK provided a traditional Thanksgiving meal from 1:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. and delivered carry-out meals to the homebound.
LINK volunteers work throughout the year. During the holidays when the Salvation Army is closed, LINK volunteers will work to try to ensure that everyone has a hot meal accessible to them everyday, Casagrande said. LINK is able to provide its services through fund raisers and donations. All contributions should be addressed to Casagrande.
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COMMUNITY • *K-you* • December 8, 1993
Local organizations assist holiday needy
By Melissa Multack Special to the Kansan
If you have ever wondered what you can do to help people less fortunate than yourself, keep reading. Your holiday can be blessed by helping others.
"Remember that the holiday season is a time for joy and sadness," said Barbara Ballard, psychologist and a director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. She said that it was important to remember those who do not have the luxury of a happy holiday, such as battered women and children living at the Transitional Care Center.
You may not be able to make someone's holiday merry, but every little bit helps, said Wendy Kahn, a staff member of the center. The center is a shelter for abused women and their children.
The center has a few ways for the public to help. Every year the center holds a Christmas dinner for the women and children staying there, Kahn said. Monetary or food donations for the dinner are a great way to make a difference in someone's life.
Every year since 1983, Head Start Community Children's Center, 925 Vermont St., has sponsored a Christmas party for the children and families involved in the program, said Charline Freitag, director. Head Start is a program for less fortunate children. They provide dental and medical screening, and they have a social worker on staff.
"Sometimes it's the only Christmas the
Donated gifts are given to Head Start children, Freitag said. The party includes approximately 340 children, and Santa Claus will come to take pictures with them, she said.
The party will cost approximately $4,000. Cash and toy donations would be greatly appreciated by the staff and the children.
children get," Freitags said.
Another program to help needy children is the Salvation Army's option to adopt a family.
"We want to make sure all kids have a merry holiday," Capt. George Windham said. People can adopt a family through the Salvation Army, 946 New Hampshire St., and donate food and toys to the needy family, he said.
Lawrence stores also help the needy.
Wal-Mart, 3100 Iowa St., has a program to help deprived children during the holidays. Bonnie Tennyson, Wal-Mart chair for in-store activities, said that the store tried to reach needy children and teens through both the Angel Tree and Toys for Tots and Teens.
Children decorate a Christmas tree at Wal-Mart with cut-out angel figures, Tennyson said. The tree is named The Angel Tree. Each angel belongs to a child, and customers pick out an angel and buy a present for the child it represents, she said. The Salvation Army provides sizes and ages of the children. Tennyson said all names of donors and recipients are confidential.
Organization works so kids won't go toyless
High-tech gifts strain budgets
By Chad Ferguson Special to the Kansan
With the influx of computer games and technologically advanced toys, it seems as though Santa's elves must need a master's degree in electrical engineering to put out the types of toys children want these days.
Some parents say they believe that there is a distinct correlation between children's age and the price of the toys and games they want for Christmas.
Barbie Dolls and Tonka trucks no longer suffice as adequate gifts for Christmas. This puts an unnecessary burden on parents who now need to spend more money on their children to make them happy.
Marty Welland, an Overland Park mother of two, agreed.
"Years ago I could buy a ton of toys for my kids and keep them happy," said Debra Willett, an Overland Park mother of three. "But now I spend the same amount of money, they each open three presents and it's over."
"Once they started getting older, they started wanting stereos and computer games," she said. "I guess they had all of the Hot Wheels and Nerf footballs they could handle."
Larry Cornelius, store manager at Fun and Games, 816 Massachusetts St., said that he did not notice a great increase in prices because of science and technology.
"Prices now, after inflation, aren't much
different than they were ten years ago," he said.
Cornelius also said the more expensive toys were less likely to be bought this year.
"We've really gotten back to the basics," he said.
He said that he expected dinosaurs and other simple, inexpensive toys to dominate sales this year. He said that a lot of video games and other more complex toys will be purchased but sees that as the exception, not the rule.
Cornelius is referring to toys that young, elementary-aged children would want. Junior high students have been exposed to the more technological toys and games and want those for Christmas.
"I think it is very true that as kids get older, they want more expensive things. It's not that they are being malicious, it's just what they want," Willett said.
One advantage to these types of gifts is that they outlast the average Nerf football by years. Once a computer or stereo is purchased, parents do not have to worry about replacing it the next year with a new one.
Also, parents can avoid buying their children gifts that they will use for only a few months after Christmas by purchasing a technologically advanced product. Once these are purchased, parents can buy a few new games or compact discs to keep their children content.
Younger children seem to want more simple, basic toys, but for those who no longer have elementary-aged children, these more expensive purchases are difficult to avoid.
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December 8, 1993 K-you • COMMUNITY
17
Underage drinking discouraged
Area bars, groups promote dry holiday
With the holidays soon upon us and the ending of another academic year, people have a reason to celebrate. Students armed with fake IDs, friends' IDs, any IDs — and sometimes even no IDs — beat a path to local watering holes to begin the festivities.
By Alan Grunspan Special to the Kansan
Both high school and college students partake in underage drinking. According to the March 1992 Congressional Quarterly Researcher, drinking is the No.1 drug problem in college towns.
Some drinking establishments in Lawrence are well aware of the problem. Chuck Magerl, owner of Free State Brewing Co. Inc., 636 Massachusetts St., said that anyone who wanted to order an alcoholic drink must be 21 and must have proof of identification.
"We are continuously watching for under- age drinkers," he said. "We can't afford to be fined."
Mike Newman, associate director of company operations for Applebee's International, said, "If a waiter or waitress is unsure about the validity of a customer's driver's license, they are to go to the manager on duty for further assistance in determining its legality. That's policy."
because it was becoming a family restaurant.
Newman said that Applebee's Neighborhood Grill & Bar, 2520 Iowa St., did not experience many problems with alcohol
Magerl said that the bartender or manager would call a cab if a customer had one too many drinks.
"I believe that our customers are not mass consumers of alcohol and are looking for quality rather than quantity," he said.
At the University, organizations and KU police are trying to reduce underage drinking.
KU police offer many informational programs, such as discussion panels dealing with alcohol consumption and fake IDs, in residence halls at the beginning of each semester.
Officer Burdel Welsh said, "With the new tougher standards, as of July 1, 1993, for the state of Kansas, the legal blood alcohol content was lowered from.10 percent to.08 percent. This makes it easier to become legally impaired faster."
Greeks Advocating Mature Management of Alcohol also addresses alcohol consumption. Tim Marks, Salina senior and president of the group, said that the organization focused primarily on the greek community and sometimes on the Lawrence community.
The organization is sponsoring a "Red Ribbon" campaign. It will hand out 20,000 red ribbons to tie to car antennae as symbols of not drinking from Thanksgiving to New Year's Day, he said.
"During the holiday break, the students won't have the services of the buses and Saferide. It's crucial that they are careful over break because one bad accident can ruin anybody's vacation," Marks said.
Leaf mulching is disposal method of choice
The Associated Press
SPRINGFIELD;Mass. — If you can't burn 'em or bury 'em,let 'em rot and sell'em.
That's what this city and hundreds of other New England communities have been doing since environmental concerns ended the practice of burning leaves that used to obscure village and town in haze in the late fall.
"Springfield was one of the original four communities to try composting in 1987, and it now has the biggest municipal program in the state," said Sumner Martinson, recycling program coordinator for Massachusetts.
All of the leaves raked by residents of the city of 160,000 people — some 4,000 tons — are laid out in massive windrows on top of a closed section of the city landfill on a spit of land extending into the Connecticut River. Even chopped fine, the leaves plus another 3,000 tons of separately mulched tree branches, weeds and other yard waste cover about eight acres.
By using special shredding equipment that chomps through the paper bags in which the
leaves are collected and keeping the leaves soaked to speed decomposition, the city is able to produce finished compost in about six months, said Michael Pattavina, the city's chief composter.
The city gives away a few hundred tons to residents for use on their gardens, uses a few more hundred tons for its own plantings and fill for ballfields and sells the rest — about 5,000 tons annually — to the highest bidder. Currently, it is getting about $2 a ton from a private firm based in the Midwest, but Pattavina wants to add screening equipment that he figures could triple or quadruple the price.
The portable machine, capable of gobbling 100 cubic yards of tree limbs and other woody debris an hour, serves Springfield and a dozen smaller communities, Pattavina said.
Martinson said, "We're now concentrating on other organic residential waste and the commercial and agricultural sector. All you have to do is offer the service and make it easy for them and people will recycle. Once people understand why they are doing it, it makes sense to them."
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COMMUNITY • *K-you* • December 8, 1993
Nuns want the record set straight
Ursuline sisters launch public service campaign
By The Associated Press
CINCINNATI — Movies have perpetuated a mistaken and unworldly image of nuns for too long, say Ursuline sisters who are launching an ad campaign to set the record straight.
"So much of the media is still imaging us as we were in the '40s and '50s — the garb, being behind the wall, not in touch with the world," said Sister Jacquelyn Herpy, membership and vocation director at the Ursuline motherhouse in Youngstown, Ohio.
Sister Herpy, 46, said she had a pretty clear idea of what being a nun was all about because she was a lifeguard at a camp run by Ursulines before she joined the order.
"I perceived them as very human beings. I think most people have a different image," she said.
To change that, Ursulines in the United States and Canada are working with a Cincinnati ad agency on a series of public service advertisements that will be available to radio stations and newspapers beginning early next year.
"The perception of nuns as very strict, unworldly, blackrobed teachers lacking in personality is plain wrong," said Jeffrey Tolvin, vice president of media relations for the New York-based Young & Rubicam Inc., which has an office in Cincinnati.
"They asked us to help communicate who they are today educators, social workers, health care professionals and administrators who attend movies, take classes and dress in contemporary garb," he said.
"What I'd like to see is a switch from the stereotype of women who are hidden out of the way to dynamic women who are in touch, who have something to contribute," she said.
Sister Herpy said the main purpose of the ads isn't to fill the ranks.
The agency charged the order nothing to develop the $70,000 campaign.
"A lot of communities are concerned about their image. We just happen to be taking the lead," said Sister Maureen McCarthy, general superior of the Ursuline motherhouse in Pepper Pike, Ohio, which operates Ursuline College.
Twenty-five years ago there were 176,341 nuns in the United States, and their median age was 46; there now are 99,337 and their median age is 65.
Ursulines are among religious orders having trouble attracting new members.
"The project wasn't done for the key purpose of recruiting," she said. "It was done for the key purpose of stating who we are as women today."
Not that the order wouldn't welcome new members.
"It would be wonderful if people showed interest and wanted to come to our community. But mostly we want to get the stereotyping of nuns changed," said Sister Anne Maureen Maher, superior. The title "mother superior" has been phased out of many motherhouses.
She hopes the ads show Catholic women that life in a religious community is worth considering.
"I think some people are turned off to it because they don't see it for what it is," she said. "We're normal human beings. We don't pray 24 hours a day, but we do take praying seriously."
The Order of St. Ursula was founded in 1535 in Brecia, Italy, by Angela Merici. The first bishop of Cincinnati asked the order to establish a colony in Ohio in 1845 to open a school for girls.
That group still operates Ursuline Academy in Cincinnati and Chatfield College in St. Martin, Ohio.
One of the print ads shows Sister Margaret Scheetz doing carpentry work at a shelter for homeless women with children.
In another, Sister Pam Mueller, a speech pathologist, is at a Kentucky farm, holding a child whose hearing loss caused developmental problems.
"On Mondays, I have night class; I'm working on my master's degree," says the voice on the radio ad. "Wednesdays I get together with friends to see a movie... I guess people are surprised when they find out I'm a nun."
A third shows Sister Michael Marie with kids at a Cleveland inner-city youth center.
Sister McCarthy, who joined the order in 1955, said she has seen change in the order's way of life.
"It it used to be a very structured schedule. Today, variety is the word," she said. "There was no social life, except to go home to visit our families. Today, we go to plays, sporting events, all kinds of things."
Sister Susan Durkin, 30, is one of the newest members of the Pepper Pike motherhouse. She has not yet taken permanent vows but recommends the sisterhood to other women "without reservation."
"Being a woman and looking at what my peers are doing, I feel I'm so much more empowered," she said. "The friendship and support and love and care of people I live with are the most important things. I don't feel like I really gave up anything."
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19
Mutual funds hot stocking stuffers
Investments provide children lasting gift
The Associated Press
NEW YORK - Instead of another video game or scarf-and-mittens set, many financial advisers are talking up mutual funds as a holiday gift suggestion for children this year.
No, the little ones' eyes probably won't light up with joy when they find a share-purchase confirmation statement in their stockings.
But the idea is right in tune with the 1990s theme of savings and investment, rather than consumption. While funds don't provide much instant gratification, they are one of the hottest products in the American marketplace.
"Your present really becomes the gift of a lifetime," said Stein Roe & Farnham, a Chicago firm that runs a family of 15 mutual funds with combined assets of almost $30 billion.
Marketing officials at many fund organizations have taken steps to package their wares for easier use as gifts.
The up-front cost can be one big obstacle, with minimum initial investments in many funds running in the $1,000 to $2,500 range. But some groups set lower minimaus for gifts to minor children, just as they do to start individual retirement accounts.
Indeed, more and more funds now are willing to open accounts with low or no minimum antes, as long as you agree to some sort of systematic investment plan of as little as $25 to $50 per month.
If a child has income from a job of any sort, perhaps the gift can be given in the form of an IRA. This may have the advantage of reducing or negating any federal income tax on the child's work-related earnings, and provide for tax deferral as the value of the account grows in future years.
A more common approach, usually better suited to purposes such as college savings, is to set up a custodial account under the Uniform Gift to Minors Act.
"The mutual fund shares are registered in the name of an adult (usually the parent) as custodian for the child," said Porter Morgan at the Liberty Financial Cos. in Boston. "While the child is still a minor, the parent would exercise investment control.
"Small gifts of mutual funds while the child is young can make a big difference when the child is ready for college.
"For example, a $5,000 gift from a grand-parent to a 3-year-old would grow to over $20,000 in 15 years if the fund produced an average return of 10 percent per year, and to over $60,000 if an additional $100 per month was added to the account."
Aside from tax considerations, investing early in life gives access to the power of compounding, which can be prodigious if it is given enough time to work.
"Investing systematically has another benefit as well," said the United Mutual Fund Selector, an advisory letter based in Wellesley Hills, Mass.
"Besides being a disciplined form of investing, by committing regular dollar amounts over an extended time you participate in a dollar-cost-averaging program," the letter said. "You will buy more shares when the fund's net asset value is down, and fewer when NAV is higher."
German television station raises conflict on first day
The Associated Press
BERLIN — Germans tuning in to a new U.S.-backed local TV station on its first day could watch a religious service, a horse race, a Gina LoHobrigida movie, David Janssen in "The Fugitive" — and commercials.
The competition is not happy.
Claiming to be the first local commercial station in Germany, 1A is aimed at the 6 million people in the German capital and surroundings. Berlin Mayor Eberhard Diepgen pushed a button to start the broadcast Nov. 28 and wished 1A "good cooperation" with Germany's big public broadcasters.
The first comment from that sector, however, was negative.
A report on ZDF, one of two public channels funded by viewers' fees, cast a sharply questioning eye on the style of American commercial TV and on the ambitions in Eastern Europe of the U.S. backers of the new station.
"Could it be," asked Luiza Braun, host of the "Aspekte" culture program, "that this American way of broadcasting, though it is presented so democratically, has totalitarian aspects?"
Never before have so many people in the world been able to see the same films, read
the same books, hear the same music and watch the same television, Ms. Braun said, adding that that was a quote "not from Comrade Stalin, but from Time-Warner," the U.S. media company that owns about 22 percent of 1A.
The same portion is held by Hungarian-American financier George Soros.
CEDC, a company headed by former U.S. Ambassador to Hungary Mark Palmer, owns about 43 percent. A German commercial radio pioneer, Ulrich Shamoni, holds 10 percent, and a Munich-based firm has a small share.
Palmer, whose company also is building
an office complex in Berlin at the site of the former Checkpoint Charlie, called the ZDF commentary "ludicrous," "amusing" and "annoying."
In a telephone interview, he said 1A will have less American programming than the public networks or the national commercial networks, which have pulled ahead of the public broadcasters in audience ratings.
"The success of local television is to be close to the local market and try to figure out what interests people have and provide that," Palmer said. "We're a typical local station, with lots of local features, local sports and local advertising."
fifty
Come and join the warmth and caring Happy Holidays
Left:
Stormy Amanda McPherson
East Heights 4th grade
I designed my ad this way because:
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Right:
Greg Schei-derer
Quail Run 5th grade
I designed my ad this way because:
"They have big juicy hamburgers, mm-mm."
Left:
Stormy Amanda McPherson
East Heights 4th grade
I designed my ad this way because:
“It goes with the holidays.”
Right:
Greg Scheiderer
Quail Run 5th grade
I designed my ad this way because:
“They have big juicy hamburgers, mm-mm.”
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COMMUNITY • K-you • December 8,1993
Molly McGees
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Th-Th-Thats
NOT all Folks!
20
Corporations providing child daycare
Employers arrange training, volunteers
The Associated Press
NEW YORK—Barbara Katersky has what she calls "working parent syndrome." On weekdays, she wants to be at her job with American Express Co., but she also wants to be with her 2-year-old son. Lawrence.
She worries about what he does with his care providers, how he is progressing and whether he is adequately cared for.
Hoping to alleviate such concerns among employees, American Express and 116 other companies together with 28 public or private organizations have invested $26.3 million during the past year in 308 dependent care programs in 25 states and the District of Columbia.
Programs range from training for dependent care providers and in-home volunteer programs for the elderly to the development and expansion of child-care facilities and school vacation programs.
Katersky spoke after participating in one such program, a five-day training workshop for 25 directors of New York-area infant and toddler programs that included an exchange with working parents.
"The session made me feel more confident about my decisions," said Katersky, who is vice president for employee relations at American Express. "If eased the emptiness I feel at not being."
Katersky is one of an estimated 40,000 employees who have taken advantage of the ambitious program known as the American
Business Collaboration for Dependent Care, or ABC, established in September last year.
The goal was for companies jointly to establish elder or child care programs they could not afford alone.
The effort seems to have stepped beyond its initial goals. Fifteen companies committed more money, nine more companies joined the effort, the collaboration collected an additional $900,000 and the number of projects was increased from 300 to 308.
"The collaboration has meant a great deal in an environment of declining resources," said Ted Childs, director of work force diversity programs at International Business Machines Corp.
"The collaboration has done a fantastic job," said Dr. Bradley Googins, director of Boston University's Center on Work and Family.
Besides the more obvious successes in establishing or expanding care programs, Googins said, "It has raised a lot of important issues about the role of the corporation."
Praise for the effort has been almost universal.
The initiative also has brought together disparate groups to focus on community needs, said Dana Friedman, co-president of the New York-based Families and Work Institute.
The collaboration reflects the growing role of women in the labor force and the absence of government aid for working couples with dependents.
Labor Department research shows that 58 percent of women work outside the home, compared to slightly more than a third in
In addition, about 40 percent of workers expect to be responsible for their aging parents in the next five years,the Families and Work Institute projected.
1960. Women constitute nearly half the total U.S.work force, compared to less than a third in 1960.
Recognizing that trend, more companies are spending more money on programs to help employees balance work and family needs. The ABC has marked a new approach to the increasingly vital issue.
"In order to have a population that is as productive as it can be, we need to be involved in work-family areas. It's a partnership," said Cindy Sutherland, director of work-life initiatives at Motorola Inc. "We are investing dollars to attract and retain the best work force available."
The Schaumburg, Ill-based company which makes computer chips and cellular telephones, has focused on four projects under the collaboration that reach about 80 percent of the company's employees. Sutherland said.
Xerox Corp. also has taken on more projects under the collaboration than it would have been able to pay for on its own, said Pat Nazemetz, Xerox's director of benefits.
"We feel it has been a worthwhile endeavor," Nazemetz said.
Xerox, American Express, Motorola and IBM are among the 11 blue-chip corporations that form the core of the collaboration and have provided the bulk of the resources.
Other companies leading the effort are Exxon Corp., Eastman Kodak Co., Travelers Corp., Johnson & Johnson, Amoco Corp., the Allstate unit of Sears Roebuck and Co. and American Telephone & Telegraph Co:
In establishing the programs, the companies created no entity. Outside contractors run the day care centers and projects.Each is financially independent, requiring only an initial investment.
Sutherland said that Motorola's biggest problem has been getting the word out to employees about the new programs offered.
"We have had to look closely at communication," said Mary Kay Leonard, a vice president at the Boston consulting group, WorkFamily Directions, which helped to set up the initiatives nationwide.
"Sometimes, we not only have to get the word out once, but many times and in different ways so employees know about the programs and feel comfortable with them."
Work-Family Directions is currently evaluating the programs for their usefulness to employees and their quality. From there, the decision will be made whether to invest further as a group or not, she said.
It also has been important not to be lulled into a sense that with the collaboration companies have achieved all they needed in terms of dependent care, IBM's Childs said.
"By no means have we solved the problems," he said.
Still, an interesting sideline of the collaboration has been the interaction among companies from different industries or among competitors, said Chris Kjeldsen, Johnson & Johnson's vice president of human resources.
"The whole issue seems to be one that strikes a chord," he said. "The future of the workplace depends on these issues. We're doing together what we can't do alone."
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Be nice Think Twice and you'll see some good things. Alphxi Delta wants to wish you a safe and happy holiday season.
December 8, 1993 *K-you* • COMMUNITY
21
Attic contents may be worth hundreds in tax deductions
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Searching for yearend tax deductions? Look in your attic, basement or garage.
Old clothes, books and household goods can be worth hundreds of dollars on your next federal income tax return if they're donated to qualified charities by Dec. 31 and adequate records are maintained.
"If you haven't worn ... or used it ... in a year, then go ahead and donate it," said William R. Lewis, a Lincoln, Neb., accountant who has developed "Cash for Your Used Clothing," a booklet listing market values of nearly 600 items of used clothing and household goods.
The Internal Revenue Service lets taxpayers claim as an itemized deduction the "fair market value" of donated property, which means what comparable items would sell for in places like thrift or consignment shops.
The government puts the burden of determining that value on the donor, not the charity. Moreover, if the value of all the donated property exceeds $500, taxpayers must fill out extra paperwork — Form 8283. An outside appraisal is required if the total value reaches $5,000 or more.
Few people, however, take the time to accurately calculate the value of their property or check out a charity's background. The IRS says only about 10 percent of the 114 million returns this year included Form 8283.
"To avoid filling out forms, they'll guess at a number less than $500. Unfortunately, they're short-changing themselves," Lewis said.
He says most people would be surprised by how much their discarded items might be worth if resold over the course of a year.
Among the examples listed in his 44-page booklet, which sells for $25: A man's two-piece suit could fetch $15 in fair condition to $65 in good condition; boy's jeans, from $2 to $7; maternity slacks, $3 to $9; books, 50 cents to $2; or an electric typewriter, $15 to $40.
Estimates are based on audits of several consignment and thrift shops in the Midwest and South; prices may be higher in the Northeast and West coasts.
"You probably can do a lot better than a garage sale ... (and) it's less time-consuming," Lewis said.
In fact, Lewis said that he first got the idea for his booklet several years ago, when his wife Karen announced she was planning a garage sale to eliminate some old stuff around the house.
"I had no desire to have a bunch of strangers go into my garage ... just so we can sell a shirt for $1," he said. "I said to my wife, 'I'll take whatever you're going to sell to the Salvation Army and just write you a check for what they would be worth.' I gave her a check for $400. I saved her a lot of time."
annual incomes of between $36,900 and $89,150 can save 28 cents in taxes for every $1 in itemized deductions.
Lewis estimates households with
Non-cash donations totaling $1,500 for the year could add up to a tax savings of $420.
They also add up to millions of dollars in revenue for the charities.
Goodwill Industries of America, which collects everything from cars to comic books, had revenue totaling $425.3 million last year from donated items resold to the public in its thrift shops, said Jeanne Hamrick, a spokeswoman for the Bethesda, Mdbased organization. She said Goodwill received 646 million pounds of clothing and textiles in 1992, or about 45 pounds per individual donation.
Like many other charities, Hamrick said that Goodwill always had "a surge of donations" the final week of the year because that is the last chance to obtain tax deductions for the current calendar year.
The key to assuring the deductibility of a donation, though, lies in proper record-keeping. That means obtaining an authorized receipt from a charity and maintaining a list of the donated items, noting things like the original purchase price, current market value and condition of the property. Photographs or videos are also likely to stand up to IRS scrutiny.
While charities don't put a value on a particular donated item, they can say what comparable items have sold for.
Neighbors sue over holiday light display
By James Jefferson The Associated Press
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Jennings and Mitzi Osborne say they have a constitutional right to sprinkle more than a million points of light around their home every Christmas.
The two sides met last week in court.
Their neighbors say the dazzling electric display has gotten out of hand, drawing crowds that diminish property values as well as residents' enjoyment of their own property.
A lawyer for the neighbors who sued the Osbornes likened the display to a theme park.
"It involves the construction and operation of an enormous and spectacular Christmas light display of such size and extravagance that it has become a tourist attraction," lawyer Gary Corum said.
The neighbors sued after the Osbornes put up 1.6 million lights last year, then bought the houses on either side of them and promised to make this year's electrified holiday cheer even larger.
Osborne lawyer Sam Perroni said shutting down the display would violate his clients' First Amendment rights to freedom of speech and religion.
He said the neighbors only would be affected by heavier traffic, which happens at Christmas anyway.
Corum said neighbors sought to eliminate the crowds, not the light display. He cited a Louisiana case in which the courts ordered a private light display scaled back after neighbors sued.
The light show includes: miles of strands of red lights draped over the house, yard and brick wall; Christmas tree masts of lights at least 80 feet above the house; a rotating illuminated carousel; and Mickey Mouse driving a steam engine. Also lit up is the usual cast of Christmas characters: wise men, camels, Santa Claus and reindeer.
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COMMUNITY • *K-you* • December 8, 1993
Kansas & Burge Unions
ON MARCH 11 & 12, 1994, THE ENVIRONMENTAL OMBUDS MAN OFFICE AT KU WILL SPonsor THE NATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CONFERENCE TO BE HELD AT THE KANSAS NOINU SYSNS.
The committee works for continuous improvement in the areas of recycling, environmental awareness and education which will influence many of the decisions, both fiscal and moral, that the management of your Kansas & Burge Unions will make in future years.
Office paper recycling is instituted throughout all Union departments.
Water conservation is achieved in the restrooms equipped with automatic faucet shut-offs.
Plastic rings from thousands of pop cans in vending machines are recycled by KU Concessions.
Glass filling 30 gallon barrels, collected by Union Food Services, is recycled weekly.
Bags for purchases in the KU Bookstores are made with an annually renewable resource to enhance degradation and are printed with water based inks.
Napkins made of unbleached, 100% post consumer recycled paper are used in Union Food Service areas.
O
NESS
Kansas Union's air conditioning system has been converted to use environmentally safe refrigerant.
KANSAS &
RECYCLE
BURGE
USE OF ENVIRONMENTALLY FRIENDLY PRODUCTS
Newspaper recycling at Unions collect large quantities each week that are turned into building insulation.
ENVIRONMENTAL AWARENESS EDUCATION
Paper hand towels made of
unbleached, 100% post consumer
recycled paper are used by
Custodial Services
in the Kansas & Burge Unions
The Kansas e3 Burge Unions at the University of Kansas operate these areas on the Lawrence campus Bookstores, Union Food Services, KU Concessions and Student Union Activities.
December 8, 1993 K-you • COMMUNITY
23
Rebecca
Of sunny
brook
farm
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Lied Center Presents
The Children's Theatre Company of Minneapolis in Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm
T
Thursday,January 13,1994 8:00 p.m. Lied Center
Kristen Tudrow Kennedy 4th grade I designed my ad this way because:"I thought it would be a good idea and I might even want to go into advertising."
Tickets on sale at the Lied Center Box Office (864-ARTS); Murphy Hall Box Office (864-3982); and any Ticketmaster outlet (816) 931-3330 or (913) 234-4545 all seats reserved; publish $15 and $13 KU, Haskell and K-12 students $7.50 and $6.50 senior citizens and other students $14 and $12 KU student tickets available through the SUA office Kansas Union; phone orders can be made using VISA or Master Card.
24
COMMUNITY * K-you * December 8, 1993
THE LION SCHOOL CENTER
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There are plenty of reasons to fight underage drinking.
Here's how we're doing it.
At Anheuser-Busch we're committed to putting an end to underage drinking.
That's why we have developed, or help to support, comprehensive programs to tackle the problem. They're all based on providing the education and awareness that young people need for responsible behavior and decision making.
drinking and promotes education designed to enable the students to make informed choices about their lives.
(2)
Barbara Babb Lecture Series Some young people may believe that the consequences of underage or
Family talk about drinking.
Experts agree that it is important for parents to Family Talk About Drinking
discuss drinking with their children at a young age to help prevent underage drinking. Our Family Talk brochures prepared with the help of professionals in alcohol education, child psychology and family counseling, provide parents with/useful discussion guides to help them answer questions and cover important points with their children For copies, just call 1-800-359-TALK.
National Collegiate Athletic Association Foundation. Along with the National
ong with the National Collegiate Athletic Association Foundation, we provide alcohol education grants through their "Choices" Program. It encourages NCAA colleges, universities and conferences to develop,
NATIONAL COLLEGIATE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION
N.F.O. FOUNDED 1906
implement and evaluate campuswide alcohol education programs that work toward the elimination of underage
BACCHUS.
Established on over 500 college and university campuses throughout
North America, BACCHUS is an international student organization devoted to providing proactive alcohol education programming at a peer to peer level. Through the development of year-round education initiatives, BACCHUS students promote responsible decisionmaking, healthy lifestyles and encourages respect for the law and campus drinking policies.
BECCHES
Program ID.
We sponsored this booklet to help retailers enforce drinking age laws. It provides prototypes of drivers' licenses from all 50 states to help verify the authenticity of ID's when presented.
CITY OF WILMINGTON
WATER SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT
CITY OF WILMINGTON
WATER SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT
excessive drinking will occur to somebody else, never to them. Barbara Babb, R.N. and former critical care flight nurse, dispels that myth in her provocative presentation entitled "Tying One On." She has made a
lasting impression on over a quarter of a million high school students across
the country.Her program gets underage kids to think hard about what they could be doing to themselves and their loved ones if they drink.
[Picture]
Programs like these are working. Underage drinking is on the decline. According to a study by the University of Michigan Institute for Social Research, drinking among high school seniors has dropped 25% since 1978 and is now at its lowest level since the study began in 1975. Since 1982,the number of drivers killed in teenage drunk driving accidents has decreased by 48% as reported by the U.S. Department of Transportation. It's progress, but there's a lot more work to do.
At Anheuser-Busch, we feel that education and awareness are the best tools to fight underage drinking. We will continue to support these programs and develop new ones to help make underage drinking a thing of the past.
A
Anheuser-Busch, Inc.
We invite you to share your thoughts on the issues mentioned here. We would also be happy to send you information regarding our policies and programs designed to encourage responsible drinking. Write: Anheuser-Busch, Inc., Consumer Awareness and Education, One Busch Place, St. Louis, MO 63118
U Magazine The National College
$U_{i}$, 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 students, read campus newspapers, commission articles and photography by the best student journalists, and maintain an ongoing dialogue via the Internet and U.-View lines with students at hundreds of campuses nationwide.
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GAMLE MORRIS SWEETLAND
Managing Editor
Associate Editor
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ARI CHEREN
KELLEY TUTHILL
JACKI HAMPTON VAUGHAN
Editors on Fellowship
GAYLE COHEN James Madison U.
PAUL HELTZEL Virginia Tech
ELIZABETH LEE William and Mary
Editorial Assistant J. BRENNA GUTHRIE
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.
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DR.FRANK RAGULSKY Oregon State U.
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TOM ROLNICKI Associated Collegiate Press
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DIMESON
WILL WORK FOR FOOD
MOVE OVER.
VICTIMS
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JUST COMPLETE
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U-Mail
About last issue...
After reading your November issue's update on the University of Alabama, Birmingham's ditching of their mascot "Blaze" because he was "too white, male and violent," I just had to write this note. This smells just like the flap they had at UMass-Amherst with the Minuteman insignia and mascot, with the exact same complaints!
It just goes to show that today's colleges are caving in to a bunch of lowlifes who have nothing better to do than to bitch, moan and gripe for every little thing, and then make a big political stink about it! Doesn't the university administration have the guts to tell these punks to go back to class, learn something, and GROW UP??!!
College should be a place for learning and self-betterment ONLY, and not for protesting and carrying on about every stupid little thing! If students wish to use college life only to protest and demonstrate, then they should be kicked out of school and sent to the military, where they can learn what discipline and growing up are all about! Lloyd A. Marshall Jr., senior, State U. of New York, College at Fredonia
Your review of Pearl Jam's latest album $Vs$. is complete crap. [Rod O'Conner's] first comment on how the "masses may think twice and steer clear of $Vs$." was obviously not true when the album almost went platinum after only one week on the charts. "Daughter" and "Dissident" are both excellent works of music, not "ordinary rock" as he says. The rest of the album is full of incredible grooves, fantastic licks and strong bass. It's not as "finished" as Ten was, but this album is a fantastic sequel
COVER PHOTO: KEVIN ESTRADA, LOS ANGELES
to an incredible first album. Jason Schleifer, junior, U. of California, Santa Barbara
October reactions
Thanks a lot for the college fashions!! Now maybe I can convince my mom that I'm not the ONLY person in America who dresses - ahem - "funny." Hafizah Shamsiddeen, freshman, Pace U.
Regarding your October 1993 issue, Dartmouth is a college and not "Dartmouth U." as it was called in two articles. Also, "your school newspaper" around here is The Dartmouth, while The Dartmouth Review mentioned in your confiscation article is an off-campus weekly. Scott Meacham, junior Dartmouth College
After reading the story "Does a Real Solution Exist?" I was so angry that I was crying. I'm a conservative, and I get so tired of seeing all these "privileges" given to people that I don't think really deserve them. It seems to me that if people such as women's athletic teams want the funding that men's teams do, then they should EARN those privileges by hard work.
Regardless of Title IX, these sports should not be forced to give up something in an effort to fill the gap. If teams such as women's tennis want funding, then they should be the ones to earn that money themselves. As far as the women who are filing suit, they, in my opinion, are just selfish. Sara Kaiser freshman, Ball State U.
Cool penis article ["My thesis is bigger than yours"], but I had trouble visualizing some things the author was describing. For instance, what exactly is a "baculum?" In the future please include photos/diagrams of such exotic phenomena to further assist in reader comprehension. Once again, congratulations on what can only be described as a triumph of journalism.
Chris Georges, graduate student, U. of North Carolina
Garth Brooks ["The Great CD Debate"] is full of s---! Royalties are paid only upon the initial sale of the record, book, etc. Look at the used book market. It is HUGE!!! But do you hear [authors] complaining that used book sales are cutting into their revenues? NO!! Let's be realistic here. There will always be a market for new CDs. After all, if nobody buys a new CD, how can it become a used CD? I like to buy new CDs because I don't want to have to wait for somebody else to get tired of listening to it and sell it. I just think that Garth Brooks and his little friends are a bunch of crybabies and need to SHUT UP!! Amiri Jones, senior, Florida A&M U.
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Opinion Poll
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THIS MONTH'S QUESTION
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Short Takes & Updates
YOUR DREAM SCHEDULE
Bored with Biology 101? Here's a sampling of America's strangest class offerings:
- "Magical Plants." Kansas State U.
- "Dog Mushing 126," U. of Alaska, Anchorage
- "Anthropology of Tourism," U. of California, Berkeley
- "Madonna Undressed," U. of Colorado
- "The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence," Pennsylvania State U.
- "Homemade Lotions," U. of California, Davis
- "Elvis as Anthology," U. of Iowa
RED ROVER, RED ROVER... SEND A MEDIC RIGHT OVER
LAWRENCE, KAN. - For Rod Jones, the starting left tackle on the U.of Kansas football team, the hazards of the gridiron are nothing compared to the perils of kids' games.
Jones injured his shoulder in a theater and film class during a game of "red light, green light." The injury sidelined him for the team's game against the U. of Utah.
"When it was first told to me, I said, 'He did what?' " Coach Glen Mason told the Daily Kansan. "I thought it was some kind of theatrical act, but as I kept asking questions, it came down to 'He was playing red light, green light.'"
I'M TOO SASSY FOR YOUR SCHOOL
Sassy, Sassy on the stand, who's the foulest in the land?
Sassy magazine recently released its list of the top 10 "unsassiest" schools in the country, and leading the pack was the U. of Alabama. The university was picked because of its "terrorist Greek system." All the lucky, albeit unsassy, schools were awarded the label for being immoral, fetid, nasty, rotten, foul," and just plain "objectionable."
The writer of the story, Diane Paylor, attended Florida A&M U. "It's sassy 'cause it's got a great band," she told us from Sassy headquarters in New York.
Other unsassy schools, according to the teenybopper publication, are the Citadel and Virginia Military Institute ("testosterone-filled"), Boston U. ("such an intolerable Prez") and Yale U. ("repulsive list of alums").
TESTOSTERONE RUN AMOK
UNIVERSITY PLAZA, GA. - From our Weil Duh department comes a ground-breaking scientific study, which blames testosterone for the "rowdy" behavior of some fraternity members.
James Dabbs Jr., a psychology professor at Georgia State U., conducted the study at an unidentified university. The results suggested that testosterone levels were higher in three "rowdy" fraterni-
continued on next page
U.NEWS From campuses nationwide
PHOTO COURTESY NEBRASKA SPORTS INFORMATION
1972 Heisman trophy winner gives it another college try
HOU10 NEBRASKA SPORTS INFORMATION
In 1972, Johnny Rodgers was more concerned with football greatness.
Twenty years after leaving the U. of Nebraska in search of "money, fortune and fame," college football legend Johnny Rodgers is back in school. But this time instead of a Heisman trophy, Rodgers is after a diploma.
In 1972, as a wingback for the Cornhusker football team, he earned the coveted Heisman trophy. In 1973, the San Diego Chargers picked Rodgers in the first round of the National Football League draft, and he left college 45 credits short of a diploma. Although he chose to play his first four seasons in the Canadian Football League, he finished his career with the Chargers in 1977 and 78.
Rodgers, 42, says he regrets not finishing college earlier.
"It would have been a lot easier getting a degree at 22 than 42," he says.
It will take between a year and a half to two years for
Rodgers to earn the credit hours he needs to complete his bachelor's degree in broadcasting. This semester, he took 12 hours — the minimum needed to be considered a fulltime student — while he continues his job in sales and television work at an African-American television station in Omaha. But there's still time for football — he goes to some of the Nebraska games and attends a study hall with the team.
The Northeastern U. Center for the Study of Sport in Society, an organization for former athletes, is paying the bill for Rodgers' education. In return, Rodgers will make speaking appearances and do other work for Nebraska.
Rodgers says his children influenced his decision to return to school — his son Terry graduated from Nebraska in 1991, and his daughter LaTonya will graduate from the university in May. "My successes influence them, and their successes
influence me." he says.
He would like his example to inspire other former professional and college athletes. "Hopefully this will influence others to get a quality degree. That dictates what they can do after football," he says. "I think a college degree is necessary for anybody who wants to survive in the 21st century." Tim Pearson, Daily Nebraskan, U. of Nebraska
RAMON IEE GANAV V NERDRACAM II DE MERDRACA
In 1993, academics have taken priority.
You just can't beat those sorority sisters at U. of North Texas
Ah, the joys of visiting your old sorority. Paddling pledges, forcing them to eat hot peppers, breaking eggs on their heads... all in good fun. At least, that's what five alumni sorority members at the U. of North Texas may have thought.
But they've probably changed their minds since they were convicted of hazing, a misdemeanor, in a Denton County court.
Justice came swiftly and painfully for the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority and five of its alumni who were convicted of hazing pledges on a May visit to the university.
In September, the court gave the five alumni probated sentences of 90 days in jail, and $500 fines were levied against two of them. Cases are still pending against two additional members.
"They were hitting them with eggs, breaking raw eggs
The university sent convicted sorority members trespass notices and said the women could be arrested if they
over their heads," Phil Reynolds, Denton County assistant district attorney, told the Associated Press. "It was verbal, mental and physical hazing."
Susan Rogers, public affairs director at the university, says the chapter has a "record of violating the rules," but thinks national representatives for AKA have "made a real effort to change the way people get selected" to
were caught on campus.
Blindfolding 51.4%
Sleep Deprivation 18.6%
Encouraged Drinking 9%
Branding 0.4%
join fraternities and sororities.
UNT banned the chapter for five years, and its members have been suspended from group activities since the incident was reported in April.
North Texas will allow the sorority to regroup in 1998, operating under tight surveillance for the next five years.
"I don't feel good about [the penalty] at all," says Mary Shy Scott, national president of the 85-year-old sorority. "But right now, I just feel that's what we had to do. Every young lady knows up front that we are not going to allow hazing." Christopher Brick, The Daily Texan, U. of Texas
6.
U.Magazine
DECEMBER 1993
The Only Credit Card Worth Using (Other Than Your Dad's).
Of course, if you really want to have some independence
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No card is more accepted on the planet. You can use it to get cash at ATMs all over. And only MasterCard $ ^{ \circ} $ has the
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Student races to find donor for miracle match
College students typically worry about papers, tests, blind dates, money. Shahbaz Bagherian, a Rutgers U. senior, used to have those things on his mind. But his worries changed when he found out he has leukemia.
ORGAN TRANSPLANT RE
PLANTION
RANDALL MUllER THE DAILY TARGUM RUTGERS II
A transplant could save Shahbaz Bagherian's life.
"When I was at Rutgers, the only things I had problems with were classes and exams," the 23-year-old says. "Now my only problem is what I am going to do tomorrow to find a donor so I will live."
This past summer, the day after marrying his college sweetheart, Bagherian was rushed to the emergency room where he was diagnosed with leukemia, cancer of the blood. He and his wife, Patricia, planned to spend their honeymoon in Hawaii. Instead, they spent it in the hospital.
RANDALL WILLIER THE DAILY TARGUM, RUTGERS U.
save his life.
Now Bagherian has put off finishing school while he tries to find a donor for the bone marrow transplant that could
Leukemia is a disease that affects white blood cells. In 1989, 18,000 people died from the disease and almost 30,000 cases have been diagnosed this year.
A bone marrow transplant is the only chance for survival. And the only way to find a donor is through a test that measures six parts of the blood. All six parts must match the patient's — a 1 in 20,000 chance.
It's crucial that he finds a donor before his disease progresses. "If I don't find a donor, I'm finished."
Anyone who wants to help should call Bagherian at (908)563-6790.
The National Marrow Donor Program has information about how
to become a donor, and keeps a data base so anyone who is tested will stay on file in case future patients match their six digit code. They can be reached at 1-800-654-1247.
"It's just like the New Jersey lottery. I have my ticket. If someone else has the same six [blood configurations], I win. It's like a miracle match." Mark S. Rosky, The Daily Targum, Rutgers U.
Have a clean record? You have to prove it at St. Augustine's
A high GPA and SAT score used to be enough to get you into college. But at St. Augustine's College, students have a bit more to prove.
This fall, prompted by a wave of violent crime on and off campus, the small, historically African-American school in Raleigh, N.C., started a controversial admissions policy. They asked all applicants to submit criminal background checks from their hometown police departments.
Prospective freshmen and transfers must have police fill out and notarize a "Police Record Check" form asking whether applicants have juvenile or police records (including minor traffic offenses). Applicants with criminal backgrounds will be reviewed by a special committee.
"We're considered the guardians of these students when they arrive on campus," says spokesperson Tracey Todd. "We don't want to make this a prison-like campus; we do want to make this an institution conducive to higher learning."
But Jim Shields, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of North Carolina, is worried the policy may encourage discrimination should other schools adopt similar policies. Since African Americans often receive unfairly harsh treatment from police, he says, they are more likely to have such a record.
"We don't need more reasons to discriminate against black students," he says.
Sophomore Jesonna White isn't convinced the policy will work: "Even if you don't have a criminal record you can still do things." Other students maintain that most of the violent crime is committed by non-students anyway.
St. Augustine's will evaluate the policy next year. But for now, they're sticking by the decision. "Going to college is not a right," says Todd. "It's a choice. If you come to St. Augustine's, this is one of the requirements." Mark Tosczak, Technician, North Carolina State U.
Grad student wants poetic justice
Most teachers would be thrilled if a student wrote a poem in their honor. At this point, members of the U. of Houston's history department would settle for a little peace of mind.
In 1986, Houston's history department expelled doctoral student Fabian Vaksman from their Ph.D. program after rejecting his thesis. But they had by no means heard the last of him.
In the poem, a researcher at a state university ultimately uses an assault rifle to murder five faculty members who try to stifle his intellectual opinions. Some say the fictional murder victims closely resemble actual faculty members.
Now Vaksman, who filed suit and regained admission to the doctoral program, has penned a vengeful tale that many believe is targeted toward the history faculty.
Vaksman has been back at the university since March 1992, and is $122,500 richer in compensation and
An excerpt from the ending of "RRacist," which was sent to the U. of Houston's counsel in May 1993, reads:
"Bobson sat at his desk/about to jump up/... as he sprayed him with bullet fire... /He heard screams... /He saw blood... /Lots of it..."
damages. But time and money haven't made him any less angry.
Fabian Vaksman: researcher, historian, poet, screenwriter?
Vaksman contends: "My poem is symbolically killing the demagogues, bullies and pushovers that exist all over America, not just at UH."
MARK SCHMAN, THE DAILY COUAGER, U. OF HOUSTON
But Houston placed an armed guard outside the history offices for one month, and has since instructed history department faculty members to stay off campus between 5 p.m. and 9 a.m.
"We are handling him with kid
gloves because no one wants to confront him," says an anonymous history professor. "All we can do is hang in there until the situation is resolved."
U. News
While UH is appealing the decision, Vaksman has until September 1994 to present his thesis. Meanwhile, he has written the treatment for "RRacist II" and adapted the original "RRacist" into a screenplay. Robert Arnold, The Daily Cougar, U.of Houston
More Short Takes
continued from previous page
ties than those in two "responsible" ones.
THEY'LL ALL LICK MY FACE
TALLAHASSEE, FLA. — Don't call it a comeback. A Florida State U. student is aiming for the Guinness Book of World Records by attempting to memorize 100,000 digits of Pi.
Rajan Mahadevan, an FSU doctoral candidate, set the world record in 1981 with 30,000 digits, but a Japanese man has since broken the record. Mahadevan, who also knows 1,500 phone numbers and every clue from Trivial Pursuit, will shoot to reclaim his title this summer.
And as if this story wasn't odd enough, the Indian government plans to make a stamp out of Mahadevan's likeness. "Thousands of women will be licking my face every day," says the number cruncher.
updates
STILL LOOKING: Federal investigators, who have been trying to capture a serial bomber who has terrorized college faculty for 15 years [U. Magazine, Aug./Sept. 1993]. After offering a $1 million reward in October, the government has received hundreds of phone calls from people who say they have information on "Nathan R," the name listed on a note that may have been written by the bomber. Any information on the case can be reported to the FBI at 1-800-701-BOMB.
GUN BEARING: The U. of Massachusetts' mascot, the Minuteman, who narrowly escaped the unemployment line in October after 40 student protesters asked the university to dump the white, armed figure. Protesters called the Minuteman a symbol of sexism, racism and violence. UMass officials rejected the idea of dumping the mascot after Massachusetts Gov. William F. Weld called the controversy "political correctness run amok."
The debate follows a similar controversy at the U. of Alabama, Birmingham, where mascot Blaze, a Nordic warrior, was dropped this fall for being too white and male [U.Magazine, Nov. 1993].
LOST: The U. of Montana's time capsule for their centennial celebration [U.
Magazine, Aug./Sept. 1993]. The university drilled 13 holes in the cornerstone of Main Hall before giving up their search in August. Ever optimistic, university officials placed a new capsule in one of the holes and are hoping someone will find it at UM's bicentennial in 2093.
Briefs are compiled from the U. network.
8
U. Magazine
DECEMBER 1993
The Ups and Downs of'93
U. readers pick the good, bad and ugly in entertainment
Send bell-bottoms back to the '70s. Pay homage to Seinfeld And who really cares if Michael Jackson did it or not? At least that's the consensus of U. readers in our revealing
entertainment survey, complete with blunt revelations and intuitive perceptions of Hollywood.
The U. Entertainment survey was distributed to 545 students at 22 campuses. This is not a scientific survey.
Thumbs down:
BITCH OR MISUNDERSTOOD?
By Jake Batsell, State Press, Arizona State U.
Thumbs down:
Brenda doesn't evoke much sympathy, as an overwhelming 68 percent slapped the S0210 princess name "Bitch" label. This question required responses than any other on our survey. One student says Brenda gives her whole state a bad name: "Being from Minnesota myself, I don't think Minnesota girls should be so hasty as she is," says senior Sam Fritsch from the IU of Illinois. The most frequent write-in was misunderstood "Bitch."
Everybody is sick of that Whitney Houston song — you know the one we mean. Thirty-five percent say they will always turn the phrase off the next time they hear "And I ..."
Another 24 percent say Tag Team's "Whoump! (There It Is)" can't where it's at.
MOST OVERPLAYED SONG
Christian Slater and Jadie Foster take young movie star trophies. Proving youth is a matter of opinion, even Al Pacino and Jack Nicholson received nominations.
By Jake Batsell, State Press, Arizona State U
Everybody is sick of that Whitney Houston song — you knew the one we mean.
Thirty-five percent say they will always turn the Radio station that once they hear "And I ..."
Another 24 percent say Tag Team's "Whoseup! (There It Is)" can't where it's all.
MOST OVERPLAYED SONG
MOST OVEREXPOSED
"[Bell-bottoms] should have been left in the '70s, never to re emerge," says junior Scott Nordl at the U. of Wyoming, and 37 percent of voters agree.
WORST COMEBACK
Frasier wins best of the newcomers—a dubious honor among this year's slim pickings. Some poor, loyal fan wrote in The Chevy Chase Show.
"lol"
Beavis and Butt-head suck (huh-huh). At least the what readers say about the most overexposed to gory. "It's getting better now, but for a while you couldn't go anywhere without everyone giving the Beavis and Butt-head impersonation," says B. of Illinois sophomore Grant Badger. The NoahNorth adolescents claim 29 percent of the total vote, using past the Jurassically optimistic Barnett.
C. K. W. H.
PETER BERLIN
BREAK YOUR
THE UPS AND DOWNS OF THE JACKSONS
thumbs up
Who cares?
thumbs down
Michael Jackson — did he do it?
"Who cares?" say more than half of respondents who take
Michael Jackson — did he do it?
"Who cares?" say more than half of respondents. 93 times who take sides, 51 percent say the King of Pop didn't do anything bad or dangerous. In a best to worst ranking of the Jackson album readers give Janet top honors by Michael J. Harrington. Tite and others.
FAVORITE NEW TV SHOW
in a beautiful
sunset.
The negative
takes the
most votes
for best film.
Jurassic Park
comes in a
close second.
isn't far
behind.
Thumbs up:
CLOSET TV FANS SPEAK OUT!
Don't tell anyone, but all members are discreetly watching programs like The New World (19 per-
cent). Loved by The Bull (17 percent) and American
Hornmen (8 percent). Only eight people admit they
FAVORITE YOUNG FILM CELEBS
FAVORITE FILM
FAVORITE FILM
FAVORITE TV SHOW
the movie master and producer, raking in all pertinent of the favorite show around him, by a fascinating cast who, as the best obnoxious on the show, beating Steve and Elaine back with his energy.
After receiving memorable stage experiences, taking part in the Toronto show circuit, Dan, by a tenth of the audience wins, on the best observations on the show, boosting rating and Elaine back to top.
TRACEY POIRIER, H.P.A.
DECEMBER 1903
U. Magazine • 9
COLLEGE MUSIC LIVES
A weekend in the life
Both Sides jams at the Georgia Theatre in Athens.
Top: Outside the Offramp Music Cafe in Seattle.
Middle: Admiring a show in Portland: "He's so dreamy."
Bottom: Getting ready to hit the Athens, Ga., scene.
This isn't a story about the next Seattle. It's about asking six writers and photographers to show us your town one weekend in October. There are too many vibrant scenes to cover them all, but here's a sampling of some of the best college music has to offer...
PARK UNTIL
W HUNT
W. H. OAKES JR., THE RED & BLACK, U. OF GEORGIA
PORTLAND
HOB KERR DAILY STANDARD PORTLAND STATE U
it's noon at Portland State's University Commons, and another live show invades the lazy stillness of a mid-term Friday. Molly Cliff, a local band, left the comfort of dark, smoky dives to show students their gothic-punk-rockabilly-lounge act in the crisp autumn daylight. The loud weirdness occasionally finds an open door and spreads out into the bustling park blocks, a signal to all within earshot that the weekend has begun.
From Satyricon, it's a short jaunt across the Willamette River to La Luna to catch former Interscope signees Love On Ice. La Luna, the busiest concert club in town, is packed tonight, and this lively
W H OAKES THE MILLER REACH OF GEORGIA
After tving up the week's loose ends, it's off
Friday night opens at Satyricon, with a carousing, strangely hostile opener from Lesser Face, an aggressive newcomer to the local scene, followed by an imposing, down and dirty, wall-of-punk/thrash group called 90-proof. After more than three years of merciless stage-bludgeoning in Portland, 90-proof's sound has developed into an earnest, gut-level assault.
After tying up the week's loose eras, it's on to a nearby downtown brew pub to sample the latest seasonal. Talk soon turns to live music options, and there's rarely a shortage. For music in Portland, Ore., students look to a melange of jazz, blues, world beat, folk, thrash, funk and almost any combination of these styles.
"A lot of [students] have their CD players, fancy stereos and kegs of beer, and they just do it at home," says Seth Perry, guitarist for Big Daddy Meat Straw, one of Portland's most successful unsigned bands.
But homebodies miss out on the vitality and atmosphere of hot spots like Satyricon, a seedy cavern that reverberates almost nightly with anarchic, visceral pandemonium.
"Portland is still looking for a signature scene," Perry says. "You've got the 'East Side sound' — kind of a funky, bohemian coffee house type of thing — and that could be it. It's going to take a while, but it definitely won't be the Seattle thing all over again."
four-piece is in fine form.
A visit to Laurelthirst Public House, an especially hip East Side spot, helps wind down the festivities with some original, irreverant folk rock from Two Hippies and a Guy from Long Island.
At Laurelthirst, the locally brewed ale is good and the climate is casual. On finding such an atmosphere, students tend to linger, and a good linger punctuates a Portland evening perfectly.
ERIK LYONS, THE DAILY VANGUARD, PORTLAND STATE U.
SEATTLE
When searching for the next Seattle, don't overlook the current one that rainy musical mecca of the Pacific Northwest with a coffee fetish and hundreds of bands aspiring to be the next Mother Pearl Garden.
With myriad shows available every night of the week, it's sometimes a chore to decide on a single event.
On Friday, inside the industrial depths of
Rockcandy, the seven members of El Steiner take the stage. They perform an eclectic brand of funk as lead singer Larry Steiner divides his time between bouncing on the stage and jumping around in front of it.
A few steps away, at the Offramp Cafe, the five members of Lazy Susan are throwing down.
The Offramp resembles a crawl space more than a club, but what it lacks in ambiance,it makes up for with live music seven nights a week.
As Lazy Susan's Kim Virant fills the room with her melodic twang, security is forced to heave people off of the stage into the surging masses. It is a bit rowdy.
"That guy owes me a drink," Virtant says, pointing at a patron. "He spilled my drink, dammit." And on this accusatory note, Friday night comes to an end.
Saturday night has a diverse range of opportunities for music lovers, but Pioneer Square is
the destination. Paying a joint cover, patrons can barhop, sampling many different bands. At the Colourbox, Forced Entry begins a three-man assault on an intense crowd. Guitar player Brad Hull glares angrily after being hit in the face with a full glass of beer.
This show has a very worthy mosh pit, and the frenzied crowd makes it difficult for security to pick up fallen patrons before they are trampled.
The highlight of the evening, however, comes with Forced Entry's closing song "Get F—Up." Lead singer Tony Benjamins invites the crowd onto the stage to participate in this one, and 10 guys do, slamming around between the band members. The four members of Dr. Unknown finish the evening, performing a heavy, grinding set for the sweaty audience, which remains energetic throughout the act.
And so ends a night in Seattle. Damp young men and women exit Seattle's clubs with battle wounds and ringing ears, clot clothes and missing shoes. It's almost
1:45 a.m. — time to hit the store for beer ANNE BENSON, THE DAILY, U. OF WASHINGTON
more
piz
b
is
end's
riginal music is alive and well in the Chapel Hill area even when the U. of North Carolina is on fall break. Like other college towns, Chapel Hill has its share of coffee houses, pizza joints and fraternity bars but what sets it apart is an intense concentration of musical talent. You can't swing a dead cat without hitting a band member, and the bands are as varied as they are abundant. This weekend's samplings comprise typically diverse fare.
CHAPEL HILL
Cup a Joe, a coffee house in Raleigh near the North Carolina State U. campus, starts off the action Friday night with the Olskies, a hard-edged
10
U. Magazine
ROB KERR, THE DAILY VANGUARD, PORTLAND STATE U.
DECEMBER 1993
"IT DEFINITELY WON'T BE THE SEATTLE THING ALL OVER AGAIN."
alternative band, for a standing-room-only crowd. Their diverse following ranges from middle-aged paternal types to men with mohawks, swathed in black and covered with tattoos.
After Cup a Joe, it's off to Local 506, a club in Chapel Hill near the UNC campus. The club boasts a '70s disco ball and a looming papier-maché pterodactyl.
On stage is local band Smog, a group whose mingling of styles — from slow and melodic to hard-core — brings a lukewarm response from a thinning crowd.
Just a half-hour drive away at The Record Exchange in Raleigh, Chapel Hill's Two Fish Blue performs an acoustic set for a browsing crowd. Their somewherebetween-folk-and-rock style brings them one of the biggest followings in the area.
Drummer Ian Schreier plays both a snare and an upside-down water cooler jug mounted on a Christmas tree stand. The band is easygoing and amenable, and they play without a list.
The last show for the weekend is back in Chapel Hill at the Hardback Cafe and bookstore, a college-age bohemian hangout.
The main act, Spatula, cranks up at 1 a.m. to a sleepy but appreciative audience. Lead singer and guitarist Chuck Johnson, dressed casually in jeans and a Marshall U. football shirt, leans into the mike and passionately sings/screams.
It's 2 a.m., and even though half of Chapel Hill appears to be gone for the long weekend, there's still enough artistic aggression to keep everybody going until the next weekend.
ROBIN CAGLE, THE DAILY TAR HEEL, U. OF NORTH CAROLINA Summer Burkes, The Daily Tar Heel, also contributed
MINNEAPOLIS
If you attend school at the U. of Minnesota, you plant yourself in the midst of a one of the most celebrated local music scenes in the country. Though the legends are still around — on Saturday, ex-Replacement Tommy Stinson turns in a low-profile set at the 7th Street Entry nightclub — the newer bands are cause for the most celebration.
A trio of wide-eyed, slightly tortured-looking guys known as Trash Gordon warm up the Entry crowd Thursday. A vexing range of guitar noise rumbles through the tiny room, while beats from a crowded funk party seep in from the adjacent, much larger sister club First
Avenue. But Entry occupants are wrapped up in the spectacle of the guitarist's sample loops and the drummer's creative use of a power saw blade on his cymbals.
Following Trash Gordon are the appropriately pamed Peasants. At various points in the show, three to seven of the biggest outcasts and losers possible take the stage. Some are full-time band members, others are part-timers who jam when they feel like it, mixing guitars, drums and a saxophone into noisy decoration.
drums and a keyboard, voices-style pads, several audience manifestations from the spectacle.
The guitar lifter but equally interesting scene is on the Benny at the White Music Hall underground at the university's student union. The club plush amphitheatre and venue run by student volunteers makes up of trumpet bands is called a staff favors group; christian carrie Camela Valfer sets out for him over like appearance, Raggedy-Ann dress and sweet waistwear chattering, the frenetic band plays mad, quirky numbers. During a climactic jam, bassist Howard Hampton runs a four photograph and a bugle through his pickups, cutting previously unknown sounds out of his instrumentation. On the basis of pure originality the opening band with an encore.
Howard's multilingual group, the Hang Ups, are celec-
EDER SESSER THE DAILY U. OF WASHINGTON
brating the release of their debut album, He's After Me. The band entertains the tightly grouped crowd with impossibly pretty melodies and harmonies. Just when it seems that the Hang Ups are the most conventional, low-key band of the weekend, guitarist John Crozier lashes out a blissful wash of distortion to keep the audience smiling.
After two varied nights in the local underground, the Minneapolis scene reveals itself — diverse personalities and musical styles peacefully clash, creating fertile ground for new sounds by encouraging innovation.
"If it's just redoing the formula of verse-chorusmelody, that seems to be not enough," says Hang Ups front man Brian Tighe. "We've got to experiment and find new sounds."
SIMON-PETER GROEBNER, THE MINNESOTA DAILY,
U. OF MINNESOTA
Minneapolis
Família Valker of the
quirky, frenatic band
Sancer.
Seattle: The members of Dr. Unknown kick out a grinding set.
ATHENS
With so much stiff competition in town, diversity and ingenuity are key to success in the Athens, Ga., scene — a musical mecca for studios, independent record labels and artists.
On this October weekend, more than 30 of the almost 350 local bands are playing live in the clubs of Athens.
"It's difficult to break through because there are so many groups and the students are accustomed to seeing live music," says singer/guitarist Alex Wolf, whose hard-edged improvisational band Both Sides is jamming at one of the premier venues in town, the Georgia Theatre.
From the Theatre we head over to Frijoleros, a Mexican eatery and bar popular with U. of Georgia students. The Red River Ramblers are here, pickin' and grinnin' with members of Athens Grass.
"The friends amongst the bands play with other people and those turn out to be really hot shows," says Katie Parrish.
with a saxophone into noisy deconstructions of lugy and shuffle toes-style pulses, several audience manifestations run the spectacle.
The theater but equally the interesting scene is opposite Benny at the Vehicle Art Museum and around at the university's student union.
"The club plus the nonprofit cultural venue runs a student volunteer program of touring hands is known staff favors the special artist Amen Valfer sends out for free some like appearance, Raggedy-Ann dress and sweet waltz themaker, the frenetic band plays mad, quirky instruments. During a climactic jam, bassist Howard Hampton runs a few photograph and a bugle through his pickups, cocking previously unknown sounds out of this instrument. On the basis of pure originality the mooning band who an encore.
In the multimedia group, the Hang Ups, are cele-
Kathy Parrish, singer and guitarist for the Ramblers, uses a tight-knit group of people."
Conveniently located in the center of "Barmuda Triangle," where three lows are just steps away from each other, Frijoleros is a necromatic performer the block between the Georgia Theatre and Alabama Theater, dive and a good place to swim.
Alabama town, students bartop, a musical masterly disparate as the musical styles they spareitate.
Though the differences in personality and state between, say, jazz freaks and metal heads are often striking and conflicted passionately arise, acceptance is up to the Athens scene.
"There's a wide range of open-minded people varying musical interests," says the Ramblers' Parrish.
Once regarded as simply the home of REA and the B-52s, the Athens roster has other successful national
A few blocks away another young crowd marked by attentive truck rallies and confetti rains inside the street among the new arrive. A crowd to see the individual members of Yankee Girl, Hagen and Tipper. There is a leaf grow up rocking with a friend on the ground on a chair.
Despite the call over the fields only 75 percent the Casbah this season the department of San Diego indie scene. Locally, the club presents every name of the week to check out the touring and musical bands.
Although the shows feature two hosts short and on a similar note. The audiences start talking with friends as the band takes equipment. Students gather as they campus and the conversation, playing tomorrow night?"
HARRY HARMON THE DAILY AZTER, SAN DIEGO STATE UNIVERSITY
acts like the psychedelic grooving Widespread Panic, hard-driving 5-8 and country singer John Berry.
ple and those turn out to be really hot shows," says Kathy Parrish, singer and guitarist for the Ramblers, a tight-knot group of people.
"Conveniently located in the center of "Barmuda Triangle," where three buses are just steps away from each other, Frijoleros is a neatly positioned block between the Georgia Theatre and the Walt Disney World dive and a good place to hang out. Two hundred students barhop, and another group disparate as the musical styles they appreciate.
Though the differences in vocabulary and style between, say, jazz freaks and metal heads are often staring and conflicted passionsally arise, acceptance is due to the Athens center.
"There's a wide range of open-minded people with varying musical interests," says the Ramblers' Paula B.
Once regarded as simply the home of R.F.M. and B-52s, the Athens roster has other successful national
But the up-and-coming Athens bands are what make the music scene distinctive. Athens' devotion to cultivating fresh talent pays off, as evidenced by local boys the Vigilantes of Love, recently signed by Capricorn Records. The band closes out another long evening of music at the illustrious 40 Watt Club with their eclectic brand of folk, rock and gospel-influenced pop.
Afterwards, it's time to wind down with a fine import and kick back on a sofa at the Globe, a European-style pub frequented by grad students and professors, delving into profound conversation with local heavies on music and life.
BRIAN GERBER, THE RED & BLACK,
U. OF GEORGIA
At San Diego State U., students groan at the mention of their city becoming "the next Seattle," but the local music scene has slowly snowballed from backyard parties and garage shows into the national spotlight.
Both musicians and fans are recovering from last weekend's music blowout, the Independent Music Seminar, which showcased 250 bands, two-thirds of which were fr
DECEMBER 1993
SAN DIEGO
On Friday night, a crowd consisting mainly of students in baggy jeans and oversized T-shirts gathers outside Cafe Chabalaba, a downtown coffee house and one the few remaining all ages venues in San Diego. Most d outside before the music starts, debating whether pay the $4 to see power-pop band Project or the avy post-punk sounds of Whack. About half the owd forgoes the cover, catching the bands from a side angle through the large windows.
San Diego. But that didn't keep them at home.
Those who remain outside see Whack bassist Joseph Garcia running out the door in the debut of his wireless amplifier cord. The band continues to play, but one wonders about the purpose of a cover when the musicians come to you.
Students look off campus for the underground acts which make up the local music scene and gladly make the 10-mile trek downtown to see who's playing.
Inside, the laid-back crowd spreads around the club, some sitting on a couch, others dancing in their own personal space in a sort of anti-moshi.
BRIAN POBUDA THE MINNESOTA DAILY, U OF MINNESOTA
A few blocks away another young crowd marked by attentive truckers allons and squeezes inside the backyard of a small hotel near evening. None came to see the indie musician now roaming. Nowame to tour with the indie musician of Vanity Girl, Hazel and Tripping. He has made a few shows up to hang with friends on his way home.
Despite the scandals with their holdls only 75 people in the Gasball has become aware that of San Diego indie scene. Locals flirt with the club but most every day of the week to check out our touring and vocal bands.
Although the shows flare two hour short afternoons on a similar note. The audiences still speak and listen to talk with friends as they band together for equipment. Students gather as it becomes campus and the conversation, which often plays tomorrow night?
HARRY HARMON THE DAILY AZTEC SUNDAY STATE
ROB KERR, THE DAILY VANGUARD, PORTLAND STATE U.
11
What to use when your term paper's still not finished but your printer i
VISA
4PLUS VISA
With Visa* you'll be accepted at more than 10 million places, nearly three times more than American Express. And that's not a misprint.
Visa. It's Everywhere You Want To Be?
©Visa U.S.A.Inc.1983
U. readers tell Santa what they really want this season
U. surveyed 625 students at 22 schools about what they want for the holidays.The results, in order of preference:
1. $1,000 cash
2. Plane ticket to Europe
3. Guest spot on Letterman
4. Starring role w/Sharon Stone
TRANSPORTATION
1. Car
2. Bicycle
6. Starring role w/Kevin Costner
3. Utility vehicle
4. In-line skates
5. Motorcycle
VEHICLE ITEMS
"an' I wanna firetruck, an'a G.I. Joe, an'I wanna car, an'..."
1. Car AM/FM/CD/Cassette
2. Car speakers
3. Tune-up
1. CD player
2. Speakers
AUDIO EQUIPMENT
4. Anti-theft device
COMMUNICATIONS
3. Digital Compact Cassette
4. Receiver
5. Tires
1. Cellular phone
2. Fax machine
4. Answering machine
3. Stationery/Stamps
5. Headphones
5. Phone
SPORTS/FITNESS GEAR
1. Athletic shoes
2. Skis/Ski equipment
3. Hiking boots
1. Compact discs
4. Workout clothes
2. Concert tickets
3. Movie tickets
5. Camping gear
ENTERTAINMENT ITEMS
4. Movie videos
5. Cassette tapes
TV/VIDEO
EQUIPMENT
1. Camcorder
2. VCR
3. Color TV
4. Video games
5. High-Definition TV
1. Jeans
2. Jacket/Coat
CLOTHES & ACCESSORIES
3. Shoes
4. Shirts/Bleuses
Nikon
D610
5. Sweaters
PHOTOGRAPHY
EQUIPMENT
1. Film
2. 35mm camera
3. Lenses
ACADEMIC TOOLS
1. Computer
2. Printer
3. Software
DECEMBER 1993
CO PHOTO BY TON N. JAGATIC THE DAILY Y EXPONENT T PURPOSE U
U. Magazine 1
13
MUSIC
on disc this month
U. COLLEGE RADIO CHART
SPONSORED BY SONY
1. Nirvana, In Utero (Gefen)
2. The Breeders, Last Splash (4-AD)
3. Smashing Pumpkins, Siamese Dream (Virgin)
NIKYANA
IN JEREMY
6. Morphine, *Cure For Pain* (Rykodisc)
4. Various Artists, Judgment Night Soundtrack (Immortal/Epic)
7. Crocker, Kerosene Hat (Virgin)
3. Revolting Cocks, Linger Fickin' Good (Reprise)
9. William S. Burroughs, Spare Ass Annie (Island)
5. P.J. Harvey, 4-Track Demos (Island)
10. Pearl Jam, Vs. (Epic)
Charly� based on college radio airplay. Contributing radio stations: KASR, Arizona State U.; WIDB, Southern Illinois U.;WTL, Tulane U.; KUCB, U. of Colorado; KCMU, U. of Washington; WUOG, U. of Georgia; WRL, U. of Kentucky; WVUM, U. of Miami; KRNU, U. of Nebraska; KCR, San Diego State U.; KHIB, SE Oklahoma U.;KWVA, U. of Oregon; WUSC, U. of South Carolina; WUTK, U. of Tennessee; WUVT, Virginia Tech
Key: ★★★★★= Presents ★★★★= Family ★★★= Fruitcake ★★★= Lump o' coal ☆= Grinch
Key: ★★★★= Presents ★★★= Family
Buzzcocks
Trade Test Transmissions (Caroline)
★★★★
In the late '70s, the Buzzcocks changed the face of punk by adding a pop sensibility to the raw anger and political dogma of bands like the Sex
MENU
Pistols and the Clash. With their latest, Trade Test Transmissions, the Manchester quartet proves they can walk the fine line between punk and commercial music.
Their overproduced and syrupy single "Do It" seems to suggest that their second coming has fallen flat. But from the next song "Innocent," through the final cut "Inside," this CD is pure Buzzcocks - overdriven and uptempo guitar, hyper drumbeats and the popy vocals of guitarists/singers Pete Shelley and Steve Diggle.
Whether you're a die-hard fan or a newcomer to the Buzzcocks' fold, buy this CD. The new generation of punks could learn a lot from listening to the real thing. Dwayne Fatherree, The Vermilion, U. of Southwestern Louisiana
Revolting Cocks Linger Fickin' Good (Reprise) ★★★1
Exploring familiar guitar-heavy industrial territory, the Revolting Cocks take on the challenge of creating compelling industrial music. The
NEW YORK COPE
SHERIFF HUNTING
FICKEN 7,000
and other burglary additions
result? An intense and danceable beat, but this hour-plus CD rapidly becomes tedious.
There is one standout — the cover of "Do Ya Think I'm Sexy," a funky, irreverent track that will forever change the way you think about Rod Stewart. And the final nine-minute title track is a humorous, slower-paced oddity. The bass/percussion rhythms are simplistic and jazzy, and the result is an extended "Ministry meets the Ren Stimpy soundtrack" song full of vocal self-parody.
These two songs cannot, however, make up for the eight other loud but bland Ministry-esque industrial offerings. Don't buy this one until you win the lottery. Travis Major, Collegiate Times, Virginia Tech
Machines of Loving Grace Concentration (Mammoth)
★★★
Angst-drenched vocals, white noise, inhuman technology — at times, Machines of Loving Grace sound no different than a host of other industrial-rock outfits.
MACHINES
THE NEW STORY
But here's the catch: The Machines actually play their own instruments. On their sophomore release, Concentration, guitar riffs and funky bass lines share equal time with keyboards and samples. They have a unique sound and clever experimental style that includes a string orchestra ("Ancestor Cult") and honest-to-God vocal harmonies ("Perfect Tan").
Concentration will seem tame to hardcore fans because it lacks the unbridled frenzy and teeth-rattling force of, say, Nine Inch Nails. Nevertheless, this apparent weakness may prove to be a selling point. By slowing down the tempos and smoothing out the rough edges, Machines of Loving Grace make industrial music accessible to newcomers. Richard Challen, The Tiger, Clemson U.
Melvins
Houdini (Atlantic)
★★★
While Kurt Cobain was still scrawling lyrics on his history folder, the Melvins were perfecting their unmarketable, hardcore stun-grunge.
Their latest, Houdini, may leave some Melvins disciples disenchanted because of its more mainstream grime. In fact, most listeners will find Houdini
disappointing.
Songs like "Spread Eagle Beagle," void of a tune, throb like a basement boiler and push even the limits of hardcore. "Hooch" and "Going Blind" showcase the Melvins' formula of slowed-down Black Sabbath. In the end, even the mellow "Lizzy" doesn't make Houdini any easier to swallow than a mouthful of screws and bolts.
The move to Atlantic Records and the contributions of Nirvana's frontman (Cobain played on and produced several of Houdini's tracks) may make Melvins disciples sneer, but they can rest assured. Houdini may be more accessible, but it's still bad enough to scare friends away. Sally Kuzemchak, The Daily Collegian, Pennsylvania State U.
Greg Osby and 100 X
3-D Lifestyles (Blue Note/Capitol)
★★★★
Greg Osby's frantic, expressive saxophone provides the backbone for a jazz/hip-hop experiment that breaks boundaries untested by other forays into the genre.
GRI
OSSEY
LAKE ELLEN
3-D Lifestyles intertwines raps by 100 X — an unsigned Philly-based group — with the saxophonist's considerable jazz chops.
The fusion is extreme and convincing, and Osby's improvisational style vibrates with insistent intensity in tracks like "Mr. Gutterman."
Osby is ahead of his time and even he admits that Lifestyles has met with resistance in both jazz and hip-hop circles. Recognition may have to wait until the general public graduates from the stagnant institutions of gangsta rap and neo-classicist jazz. Jeff Howe, The Post, Ohio U.
in the studio
R&B standouts Lisa Stansfield and TLC are both working on releases for the spring. Stansfield's latest promises more of the same Anglo-soul-diva pop, and TLC is once again working with producer Dallas Austin, architect of the group's past radio staples, including "What About Your Friends." Call it a groove dynasty.
- California garage-noise legend Pavement is back in the studio, recording a full-length album for release on Matador Records in January. Unpredictable drummer Gary Young left the band, but fans hope his replacement will swing road kill above his head at shows, too.
- Message-rap masters Michael Franti and Rono Tse of Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy must have thought that the
beats on their last CD didn't measure up to their ballistic vocals. For their next effort, being recorded in San Francisco, they've recruited producer Joe "The Butcher" Nicolo, Cypress Hill's chief rocka. Now if they can only teach William Burroughs to scratch records. - Joe Warminsky, The Daily Collegian, Pennsylvania State U.
Liaa Stansfield
PRIYANTHA GANDHI
Holiday CDs on parade
In descending order of desirability, ascending order of cheese-factor
Frank Sinatra, The Christmas Album; Nat King Cole, The Christmas Song; Bing Crosby, Merry Christmas; Tchaikovsky, The Nutcracker; Handel, Messiah; George Winston, December; Dean Martin, A Winter Romance; The Beach Boys, Christmas Album; Take 6, He Is Christmas; Garth Brooks, Beyond the Season; Carpenters, Christmas Portrait; Alvin & The Chipmunks, A Chipmunk Christmas (plus Vol. II); Christmas with Placido Domingo; Air Supply, The Christmas Album; A Merry Christmas with Engelbert Humperdinck; New Kids On The Block, Merry, Merry Christmas; Elvis, Christmas Classics; Raffi's Christmas Album; John Tesh, A Romantic Christmas; Elmo 'N' Patsy, Grandma Got Run Over By A Reindeer
"I'm very embarrassed."
quotable
14
— Harry Connick Jr., after forgetting lyrics to various Christmas carols during CBS TV taping
U. Magazine
DECEMBER 1903
infilm
on screen this month
BATMAN
Batman: Back on the big screen after his comic book/little screen/big screen successes.
There's no predicting the film tastes of the American public. Last year people flocked to see a Whitney Houston musical romance, a meditation on fly-fishing and an Irish film on gender ambiguity. More surprises are in store this year as Hollywood unrolls ambitious Oscar contenders and unabashed holiday fluff. Here's a look at some of the best of the holiday lot:
Batman: Mask of Phantasm (Warner Bros.)
The animated version of the television series arrives complete with McDonald's Happy Meal tie-ins and features the considerable vocal talent of Mark Hamill (Luke Skywalker, from our "Whatever Happened To..." files). Based on the dark television series, the film once again has the Caped Crusader dealing with his split personality. Unless the film is in 3-D, Odorama, Feel-O-Vision, or presented in virtual reality surround sound, it doesn't promise to be much different than the series, but that probably won't keep loyal fans away.
Schindler's List (Universal)
Steven Spielberg completed post-production work on Jurassic Park via satellite as he crafted this ambitious epic. Liam Neeson (Husbands and Wives) plays a German industrialist who exploits Jewish factory workers during World War II but ends up saving their lives. If the Academy snubs Spielberg at Oscar time for this sprawling, black and white, documentary-style epic (with 30,000 extras), he has every right to sic T.Rex on them.
The Pelican Brief (Warner Bros.)
Best-selling author John Grisham ties with William Shakespeare for the highest number of film adaptations this year. Julia Roberts-Lovett stars as a law student who knows why two Supreme Court justices were mysteriously murdered. Teaming up with a journalist (Denzel Washington), she must dodge
the usual band of legal villains in order to make the truth known. Directed by Alan
A.
Pakula (All the President's Men), this film should keep Roberts' career from dying young.
In the Name of the Father (Universal)
Jim Sheridan, director of My Left Foot, rejoins Oscar winner Daniel Day-Lewis to deliver what should be a searing portrayal of a father-son relationship. When an Irishman is imprisoned wrongfully for IRA terrorist activities in England, his father comes to his defense and finds himself in jail as well. Although the paternal title may imply that this is another male bonding film, the amazing Emma Thompson (Howard's End) provides her unique feminine touch.
What's Eating Gilbert Grape (Paramount)
Johnny Depp
(Benny & Joon)
plays Gilbert
Grape in perhaps the most bizarre entry
C
of the yuletide film crop, a strange comedy/drama about the unpredictable life of a dysfunctional family. Darlene Cates gives a 500-pound performance as the Grapes' mother and Juliette Lewis (Cape Fear) plays a mysterious stranger in town who helps Gilbert extract his emotional seeds.
Philadelphia (TriStar)
A gay attorney (Tom Hanks) is fired from his firm when he develops AIDS, and Denzel Washington plays the homophobic lawyer hired to defend him. Director Jonathan Demme, who caught a lot of flack for his creepy depiction of homosexuality with the
transvestite serial killer in Silence of the Lambs, mends the appropriate fences with this compassionate courtroom drama.
Six Degrees of Separation (MGM)
The awardwinning play by John Guare has become an unexpected premise for a
THE MEMORIAL MARRIAGE OF THE WESTERN HUNDREDS
film, starring Will Smith of Fresh Prince fame. Smith's savvy character convinces well-to-do New York couple Stockard Channing (Grease) and Donald Sutherland (Backdraft) that he is Sidney Poitier's son. The trio go on a tour of the city, forcing the socialites to reexamine their outlook on life.
The War Room (October Films)
Documentary pioneer D.A. Pennebaker codirects this look at Bill Clinton's victorious campaign. The film focuses on James Carville and George Stephanopolous as they work their magic in the now-legendary Little Rock war room. Viewers get a rare glance at the making of an American president.
PENGELUMPU PRESENTAIRAN
More December flicks:
Geronimo: An American Legend, starring Jason Patric and Gene Hackman; A Dangerous Woman, starring Debra Winger as a disturbed outcast caught up in a love triangle; Whoopi Goldberg's Sister Act II; Tombstone with Kurt Russell playing the gunsingles Wyatt Earp; and Wrestling Ernest Hemingway, featuring Robert Duvall and Richard Harris as skinny-dipping retirees. Stephen Brown, The Gamecock, U. of South Carolina
on the set
Comedy is always risky — especially in these politically correct times. Even the most innocent joke might offend someone, somewhere. But that's exactly what the makers of P.C.U. want.
Starring Saturday Night Live regular David Spade, P.C.U., scheduled to be released by Fox early next year, focuses on Port Chester U., a campus divided into cliques like the Malcolms, the Wormynists, the Causeheads and the Stoners. Taking advantage of the
101
Samuel is a PC dean who's in cahoots with a pseudo-right-wing society led by Spade. "We want an upright response. We want to tweak the noses of those who take them selves too seriously," says producer Paul Schiff (My Cousin Vinny).
David Bande enrolled at P.O.B.
Spade agrees. He says it's time to take a stand — comically speaking. "Even with [SNL] you can't get away with as much," says Spade. "Everyone's just so hypersonsistent. You need somebody to stand up and say, 'Shut up. It's just a joke.'" = Steve Graystock, The Varsity, U. of Toronto
video calendar
Holiday movie classics (and some not-so-classics)
Holiday movie classics (and some not-so-classics)
A Christmas Carol (1938,'51,'84); Holiday Inn (1942); Christmas in Connecticut (1945,'92); The Bishop's Wife (1947); It's a Wonderful Life (1946); Miracle on 34th Street (1947); Holiday Affair (1949); White Christmas (1954);
Homecoming: A Christmas Story (1971); Home for the Holidays (1972); You Better Watch Out (1980); A Christmas Story (1983); Silent Night, Deadly Night (1984,'87,'89,'91); A Very Brady Christmas (1988); Screoged (1988); National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation (1989); Home Alone (1990,'92); The Muppet Christmas Carol (1992)
quotable
"It was a little difficult because there were photographers and reporters waiting around campus for me, and I really wanted to quietly fit in."
--Sara Oliford, star of Palm Beach and TV's Maracanã, on her arrival at Yale H.
16 • U. Magazine
15
DECEMBER 1903
JULIA ROBERTS DENZEL WASHINGTON
PELICAN BRIEF
OPENS DECEMBER 17 EVERYWHERE
An Unexpected Discovery
After crossing an ocean, Hiep Thi Le has made it to college and taken the lead in Heaven and Earth
Vietnamese peasant farmers have always referred to themselves as gao kho,the word for rice chaff, in reference to the impermanence of their lives and the
great disasters that have blown them like the winds from their homes. But Hiep Thi Le, a senior at the U. of California, Davis, has shown that she is made of weightier stuff and that, no matter what winds blow, she has the ability to remain.
Hiep, star of Oliver Stone's upcoming film Heaven and Earth, left Vietnam as a "boat person" in 1979, a 9-year-old fleeing with only her 7-year-old sister. After time in a refugee camp in Hong Kong, she was reunited with her family in 1981 and settled down with them in San Francisco. Maybe it's these early hardships that account for her unassuming manner. Hiep isn't pretentious about her imminent fame. She sees it as a diversion from her college studies.
So how does a 23-year-old physiology major with no acting experience except the standard high school play (which Hiep describes as "a big flop") land a role in an Oliver Stone movie?
"It was really an accident," she says.
At home to relax after midterms, her friends decided to attend one of the open casting calls that director Stone held across the United States. Hiep went on the condition that afterward the group would still go out for the evening in San Jose. She auditioned "just for fun."
When she got back to Davis, Hiep's roommate (in typical roommate fashion) told her that "someone fro m Los Angeles called." Hiep didn't call back. "I don't know anyone in Los Angeles,"
she says. Several days later she received another message with the instructions to call back collect. She finally called, although she thought it was a joke. It wasn't.
She was flown to Los Angeles to audition for Stone. Thinking her first meeting with Stone would be her last, Hiep asked to have her picture taken with him as proof to show her friends. Shortly after Hiep went home, Stone decided she was perfect for the part.
When Hiep began five months of filming in October, she says she felt nervous about her acting ability. But she wasn't nervous at all about working with stars like Joan Chen (Twin Peaks), Tommy Lee Jones (JFK, The Fugitive) and Dr. Haing S. Ngor (The Killing Fields) because she she didn't realize who they were. "I thought they were all like me - normal people," she says.
Despite Hiep's lack of theatrical training, her background makes her
THUY TRUNG SUA PHAT CHIENG DAN BHONG KONG
well suited for her role as Le Ly Hayslip. The movie chronicles the life of Hayslip, a young Vietnamese woman who survives the occupation of her native land, marries an American Marine, moves to the United States and eventually returns in 1986 to the place of her birth to deal with her past. Both Hiep and her character are from the same part of Vietnam and are intimately acquainted with the effects of the war that tore apart their country for nearly 30 years. Since leaving Vietnam, Hayslip has spent her life helping heal the wounds of her country. Hiep has worked with several foundations to organize relief for the refugee camps in Hong Kong, Thailand and the Philippines.
Hiep with Le Ly Nayslip, who inspired Heaven and Earth
For Hiep, returning to her homeland to film was an emotional pilgrimage.
"The day when the producers told me I would be returning to the country where I was born, all I could do was cry and cry. I am still awestruck," she told a reporter in Vietnam.
"I was crawling out of my skin with excitement," Hiep says, remembering when the day came to leave for Vietnam.
Hiep, who was studying to be a nurse, decided to become a physician after seeing the clinics Hayslip founded. Back at Davis, she has resumed her studies in physiology. Surprisingly, dealing with sudden fame has not become a problem. Hiep says no one on campus treats her differently because, simply, "No one knows who I am."
Although Hiep's plans for the future don't include acting, she looks forward to a medical career. "I have always wanted to be something," she says, "as long as I don't disappoint myself."
Hey, isn't that...?
You're standing in line at the dining hall when you see, well, Darlene. If you're smart, you won't make a crack.
For student celebrities like Roseanne's Sara Gilbert, tests and papers are nothing compared to the demands of their high-profile careers.
SARA GILBERT
School: Yale U.
Major: psychology
Age: 18
Known for: playing
Darlene on the sitcom
Roseanne. She also
starred in Poison Ivy.
The powers that be at Roseanne didn't want to lose Gilbert to Yale, so they set up a New York location to film episodes including her character, who's also in college.
"I've really tried to just be a student and my classmates, roommates and professors have all been very respectful of that," she says.
SHAI
School: Howard U.
Majors: music, English,science and political science
BUTTONS
Ages: 22-24
Known for: their top 40 singles "If I Ever Fall In Love" and "Baby I'm Yours."
The four members — Carl Martin, Marc Gay, Darnell Van Rensalier and Garfield Bright — hit it big just as they were leaving college.
Gay graduated in 1992, and the other members left Howard as seniors. But the four still consider the campus their favorite haunt. "It's still like home," Martin says. "Sometimes freshmen flip when they find out. But everyone else is like, 'Hey, what's up?' That's why we go there."
CHRIS O'DONNELL School: Boston College Major: business marketing Age: 23
Known for: earning a
Golden Globe nomination for playing opposite Al Pacino in Scent of a Woman. This fall, he stars in Disney's The Three Musketeers.
O'Donnell, a senior, says he enjoys his fame. But he's also trying to keep it in perspective.
"I may never be in a position like this for the rest of my life," he says. "In a year, I could be trying to get Circus of the Stars going with David Hasselhoff." Bethany Matsko, The Post, Ohio U.
Matt Hendrickson, The Heights Boston College, also contributed to this report.
18
By Shawn Lingo, The California Aggie, U. of California, Davis
U. Magazine
DECEMBER 1993
CONTESTS & SPECIALS
Did you Capture the Nike Spirit?
Find out next month
Find out next month The S1000 Grand Prize winner will be published with a national Nike ad in the next issue of U. On campuses Jan. 31.
U.Wants More Great Editors
u. wants four top editors to serve as editors on fellowship for a year, starting next June. Benefits include free housing and $1000 monthly salary.
Applicants must have at least two years experience working on a student newspaper or magazine, with one year as an editor or section editor, and a bachelor's degree as of June 1994.
Qualified students should send a SASE to Kelley Tuthill, associate editor, 1800 Century Park East, Suite 820, Los Angeles, CA, 90067. Or call (310) 551-1381 for more information.
Journalists: Win $1000
NANCY SUN, UC, BERKELEY
Enter U's 1994 College Journalist of the Year contest. Five outstanding college student journalists will each win $1000 in the categories of news, features, entertainment, sports and photos/graphics. Entries must be published in a college newspaper or magazine between June 30, 1993, and June 30, 1994.
For an application send a SASE to Jacki Hampton Vaughan, advisory editor, 1800 Century Park East, Suite 820, Los Angeles, CA, 90067. Or call (310) 551-1381 for more information.
U. Photo Contest: Win $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 $25 and your name and campus will be credited.
NTRY BY DANIEL P. REARSON, OHIO STATE U.
PLUS, we're offering four S1,000 scholarships and runner-up prizes for the best ones submitted in four categories: Campus Life, & Lifeties, Sports, Entertainment and News/Events (politics, personalities, demonstrations & events).
Ohio State U.'s Butter 'by not' congratulates defeated U. of Washington's Napoleon Kaufman on a game well played.
Photos can be of anyone or any activity on or off campus
ANIEL P. REARSON, OHIO STATE U.
from the normal to the outrageous, from the serious to the funny — orientation, lost frost, moving day, dorm life, political and pep rallies, bands, spring break, 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 University Review section showing campus student photo entries and winners. Four first-place grand prize winners will receive $1,000 cash scholarships. Run-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 cannot be returned and become the property of *U*.
Mail entries to U. Magazine Photo Contest, 1800 Century Park East, Suite 820, Los Angeles, CA 90067-1503.
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U. CLASSIFIED REACH 4.5 MILLION YOUNG ADULT CONSUMERS. FOR INFORMATION, CALL (310) 551-1381 U. 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 paraphernalia), pornographic materials and other products 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 wored 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 mignon race 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.
DECEMBER 1993
U. Magazine
19
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SPORTS: The women's basketball team blasted Morgan State 117-48 last night. Page 11.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
VOL.103.NO.76
HURSKDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1993
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Student Senate lacks members to vote on bills
Kansan staff writer
By Donella Heame Kansan staff writer
Student senators left last night's meeting saying they were ashamed to be members of Student Senate.
The meeting was adjourned after a roll call revealed that not enough senators were present to vote on the remaining bills.
A count of senators had been taken midway through the meeting to determine whether enough were present to make a vote valid. At that point, 33 senators were present, exactly enough to meet the 50-percent-plus-one requirement.
Several senators then left the meeting, which resulted in the decision to adioum the meeting.
Senators who remained said they did not know why the other senators left or why so few were present at the beginning of the meeting.
The student groups whose bills were not heard left the meeting feeling cheated. The events they had planned might never take place because they will not be able to secure reservations without confirmation that they will have money to pay for the events.
John Shoemaker, student body president, said he was outraged.
"I am incensed that senators did not show up to do their duty as members of this body," he said.
Shoemaker said that because so few Senators were present he planned to veto a resolution passed early in the meeting that opposed the proposed trafficway near Haskell Indian Nations University.
"I don't feel we had enough people to make a fair decision on the bill." he said.
Chander Jayaraman, Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, said he encouraged KU students to show their disappointment in senators who did not show up.
"I encourage all students to go to the Senate office and find the name of their representatives," he said. "Everyone should tell their senators how they feel about those who did not show up to do the job they were elected to do."
LesBiGaysOK was one of the student groups whose bill was not heard. The bill requested money to pay speakers for LesBiGay Awareness Week.
"There will be no LesBiGay week," said Alan Pierce, nontraditional student senator and member of LesBiGaysOK.
Jessica Bobker, freshman senator and member of SUA, said that because SUA's bill to bring Dr. Ruth Westheimer to campus was not heard, the event might have to be canceled. Westheimer was to speak before Spring Break about safe sex.
"SUA has to know if they have the money so they can tell Dr. Ruth," she said.
If SUA cannot get the money, it will be unable to reserve a date with Westheimer.
William Alix/ KANSAN
PUZZLE SPEL GAME BY
M. E. LEEKMAN
It's a time for toys
Eric Braddy, Lawrence junior, looks over the latest board games at Fun and Games, 816 Massachusetts St. The store has toys for children and adults ages 3 to 90. See story, page 10.
Bids for Hoch exceed budget by $3 million
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
KU architects and contractors will go back to the drawing table in the next few weeks to try and find cost-cutting measures to rebuild Hoch Auditorium.
All bids submitted Tuesday by eight Midwest contractors exceeded the $15 million Hoch reconstruction budget that had been approved last year by the Kansas Legislature.
Hoch Auditorium, built in 1928, was gutted by fire after it was struck by lightning June 15, 1991.
The estimated cost to rebuild Hoch had grown in the last year to $18 million, including architect's fees and interior furnishings, said Jack Shippman, director of purchases for the state. Shipman's office received the contract bids.
The lowest construction bid, submitted by a Wichita firm, was $18.3 million. The highest bid, submitted by a Topeka firm, was $20.9 million, Shipman said.
"We will meet with contractors and see where the original estimate was lacking," said Allen Wiechert, University architect. "We'll have to examine options for reducing the scope of the project."
When Wiechert unveiled the plans for a new Hoch Auditorium last February, they called for three large lecture halls, four classrooms and a library. More than 2,000 students could attend classes in Hoch when it was completed, according to the original plans.
Although much of the design probably would not change much, Shipman said one possible way to cut costs would be to scale down the architect's original plan. Reducing the size of the library or the classrooms are options, he said.
"It isn't something that we can just say, 'OK, we'll take out this and remove that and that will be three million dollars worth of cuts,'" Shipman said. "You have to look at the project and decide what would be best for the building in its entirety."
One other cost-cutting measure, Shipman said, was to change the building materials without letting the safety of the new Hoch suffer.
Funding to rebuild Hoch was appropriated by the Kansas Legislature from the $185 million in federal funds received by the state for shortfalls in federal payments in previous years.
State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, said it was unlikely that more funding would become available to finance the project.
Wiechert said that KU probably would not ask the Legislature for additional funds.
Shipman said that officials involved in Hoch's reconstruction had hoped to begin construction by April 1994.
Because architects and contractors must examine cost-cutting measures, construction could be delayed more than four to six weeks, Shippan said.
"I'm hoping there are no more hitches," he said.
Male nurses try to break free from job stereotype
By Kathleen Stolle
Kansan staff writer
Just nurse will do.
Call Mark Simmerman a male nurse and watch him flinch.
Simmerman, Mayetta graduate nursing student, is sometimes frustrated by biases and myths about men who are nurses.
"I think the most annoying one is the notion that all male nurses are homosexual," he said. "I'll admit there is a certain number of homosexuals in nursing, but that's not an issue or a problem."
"When you're in class and you're talking about social issues, especially sex, marriage, violence, there occasionally becomes this male-bashing mentality."
What can be a problem is the reverse sex bias that men in nursing encounter, Simmerman said.
Simmerman said.
Male nurses also sometimes discover a bias in their patients.
"Occasionally the woman patient herself would rather have a female provider for nursing care, which is OK," Simmerman said. "But many times that person has a male OB/GYN provider."
Such attitudes may change, however, as the number of male nurses grows.
In 1992, the national average of males in nursing undergraduate programs was 9.5 percent, according to a study by the American Association of Colleges of Nursing. KU's School of Nursing has 9 percent male enrollment. Meanwhile, men compose only 6 percent of all nurses in the workforce, according to the 1990 U.S. Census.
"I am hearing from deans that they are seeing more men coming in," said Dan Meziblu, director of public affairs for the
American Association of Colleges of Nursing.
Mezibov said he expected changes in the nation's health care to draw more men to nursing.
"The need for health care is growing by leaps and bounds, and nursing is the nation's largest health care profession." Mezibov said. "So I think these are people who are recognizing that, and they're getting into the largest health care field when the need is great and at a time when the jobs are out there."
The KU School of Nursing receives three to four times as many applicants as it can accept, said Eleanor Sullivan, dean of nursing.
In turn, the school does not do any recruiting, she said. However, it is campaigning to promote the image of the profession itself, she said.
"One of the misconceptions is that the nurse is the handmaiden of the physician," she said. "Nursing itself is a separate and distinct profession."
Nursing student Todd Clayman, Overland Park senior, said he enjoyed nursing because of the holistic nature of the profession.
"You're not just at the bedside, holding a patient's hand," he said. "It's a highly skilled and technical career."
Clayman, who said he is sometimes mistaken for a doctor because of the white lab coat he wears when working at the KU Medical Center, said male nurses can possess the same characteristics as female nurses.
"Sometimes people think females might be a better care-giver," he said. "That's not necessarily the case."
9.0 percent
Male nursing under-
graduate at KU (1)
Nurses in the '90s
A look at the roles men play in the field of nursing.
9.0 percent
Male nursing under-graduates at KU (1)
9.5 percent
Male nursing under-graduates nationally(2)
8.0 percent
Males in the nursing work force (3)
field of nursing.
9.5 percent
6.0 percent
1. Source: University of Kansas School of Nursing
2. Source: American Association of Colleges of Nursing
3. Source: American Academy of Pediatrics
John Paul Fogel/KANSAN
INSIDE
Michael Young, director of the honors program and professor of philosophy, has learned a lesson about life while dealing with death.
Knowledge of Life
Section Two.
Section Two.
DESPERATELY SEEKING DEANS:
By David Stewart and Kathieen Stole Kansan staff writers
Four of the University's 12 professional schools are searching for new academic deans. The schools of education and pharmacy have acting deans temporarily filling vacancies left by Ed Meyen and Howard Mossberg, respectively. Both received promotions into
higher administration at KU in 1992. A finalist for each position may be selected before classes resume next semester.
As four KU professional schools continue their search for new administrators, students are making their needs known.
Earlier this fall, both Max Lucas, dean of architecture and urban design, and Robert Jerry, dean of law, announced plans to step down next summer. Searches for those positions now are underway.
By July 1, 1994, each of these schools could have a new leader.
The sign read "Esther for Dean."
But Esther Cordle, an administrative assistant in the School of Architecture and Urban Design, was not in the running.
Museum available The Chinaworld of Higher Education
The University of Kansas
DEAN
Acknowledgement and apologies to the University of Kansas for the acceptance of this announcement and to the people of Kansas for their support. The University of Kansas is grateful for your assistance in obtaining the acceptance of this announcement.
The University of Kansas
University of Kansas
Lawrence, Kansas 66210
D341A banner
The anonymous campaign sign, posted on the school's dean search information board last month, was a harmless — but perhaps telling — gag.
It clearly reflected the students' affection for the woman who knows them by
name
and keeps their
lives and lives in line
name
But it also revealed something deeper: Students wouldn't mind a little nurturing and guidance from their new dean.
See DEANS,Page 7.
2
Thursday, December 9, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and 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, KA 66045.
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What the heck does pasta have to do with selling shoes?
X X X X X
Probably nothing. But then again, that depends on you.
The Kansan will be selecting several creative staff members for the Spring 1994 semester. You will be able to test your ideas and develop new ones as you're trained in making creative layouts for area advertisers. And you will gain valuable computer experience.
The University Daily Kansan business staff is looking for creative individuals who can make the ordinary, extraordinary. We want people who can turn the mundane into something wild and unique, yet have it still be meaningful.
Not to mention, it's a lot of fun.
So, if you excel at combining ideas in an exciting, meaningful way, call us. Get in touch with John Carlton at the Kanson by December 9. After all, what you make of your ideas is up to you.
ON CAMPUS
Contact John Carlton at the University Daily Kansan 119 Stauffer-Flint 864-4358
Canterbury House will sponsor Holy Eucharist at noon 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 in 206 Lippincott Hall. For more information, call Nancy Mitchell at 864-3742.
KU Judo Club will meet at 4:30 n.m. today in 207 Robinson Center.
p.m. today in 207 Robinson Center.
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.
KU Triathlon and Swim Club will meet at 7:30 tonight at Robin-son Center. For more information, call Sean Roland at 865-2731.
InterVarsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight at the International Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call David Zimmerman at 864-7117.
University Chess Society will meet at 7 tonight at the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Nathan at 842-0049.
Amnesty International will meet at 8 tonight at the Glass Onion,624 W.12th.
Jayhawker Campus Fellowship will meet at 8 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. For more information, call John Dale at 864-1115.
LesBiGay OK will sponsor a play, "Coming Out/Coming Home," at 8 tonight at Dyche Auditorium in Dyce Hall.
Icthus Christian Outreach will meet at 8:30 tonight at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Mark Winton at 843-2260 or Noel Storey at 749-5848.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 9 tonight in 130 Robinson Center. For more information, call Jen Snyder at 841-6445.
The Office of Study Abroad will sponsor an informational meeting on National Security Education Program (NSEP) scholarships for graduate or undergraduate students at 2:30 p.m. Dec. 16 in 203 Lippincott Hall. For more information, call Mary Debicki at 864-3742.
■ Bangladesh Club will visit a home for the elderly from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Christmas at 2401 W, 25th St., Apt 14B7. For more information, call Rashid Malik at 841-9422, Rushed Haque at 749-1014 or Nawshad Shaikh at 749-3241.
WEATHER
WEATHER
Omaha: 63°/27°
Kansas City: 57°/33°
St. Louis: 61°/36°
LAWRENCE: 59°/32°
Wichita: 65°/24°
Tulsa: 65°/36°
Weather around the country:
Atlanta: 63°/47°
Chicago: 41°/26°
Houston: 76°/57°
Miami: 78°/68°
Minneapolis: 42°/19°
Phoenix: 78°/41°
Salt Lake City: 46°/29°
Seattle: 48°/42°
TODAY
Partly cloudy with southwest winds
High: 59°
Low: 32°
Tomorrow
Mostly cloudy and cooler
High: 50°
Low: 30°
Saturday
Mostly cloudy and much cooler
High: 44°
Low: 30°
Source: Gregg Potter, KU Weather Service: 864-3300
KANSAN
Sunny
CORRECTIONS
A story on Page One of yesterday's Kansas contained incorrect information. Capt. Vince McNerney of the Kansas City Police Department was not present at the party at Callahan's in Kansas City, Mo., on Saturday night.
A story on Page 18 of yesterday's community section contained incorrect information. Greeks Advocating Mature Management of Alcohol is sponsoring a "Red Ribbon" campaign to discourage drinking and driving.
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CAMPUS/AREA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, December 9, 1993
3
BURIED IN HISTORY
Bibliothek
Turmerechnus „Mittwoale.“
1797
De Bibliothek, und ausschließlich im Zusammenhang mit Wiesnauer wie
Wiesnauer gelegnt Hin.
In Wiesnauer eine aus dem 14. Jahrhundert ein
einem und auf dem Ende der 15. Jahrhundert ein
einem und auf dem Ende der 16. Jahrhundert ein
einem und auf dem Ende der 17. Jahrhundert ein
einem und auf dem Ende der 18. Jahrhundert ein
einem und auf dem Ende der 19. Jahrhundert ein
einem und auf dem Ende der 20. Jahrhundert ein
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Min. Path. College American Library
Institute and Library Center
www.ukw.edu
The books available in the Max Kade Center for German-American Studies are printed in German and range in subjects from American History to gardening.
Professor busy with KU's first German library
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
Helmut Huelsbergen will spend his winter break buried in books by choice.
He already is stacking books at the historic Sudler House, home of the University's first German-American library.
"It's a growing book collection," said Huelsberg, professor of Germanic languages and literature. "We've ordered shelves to house the whole collection, which we hope to get during Christmas break."
Since the April 1992 opening of the Max Kade Center for German-American Documents and Research, the collection has grown to more than 5,000 documents.
"We made the effort to collect books that have to do with the faith, the dreams and plans of German immigrants coming over into this country," he said. "We're still looking largely for books from the 19th century, published in this country in German."
The $215,000 renovation of the Sudler House, a large stone home built in 1929 for Mervin T. Sudler, the first dean of the University of Kansas' School of Medicine, was financed by the Max Kade Foundation in New York.
"The renovations were made in order to keep with the tradition of the house," Huelsbergen said. "The history and character of the house was preserved as much as possible."
Max Kade was a German immigrant who came to the United States and made a fortune by developing a cough syrup. The Max Kade Foundation is a philanthropic organization that fosters German studies in this country, Huelserbergen said.
KU's Max Kade Center, located one block north of West Campus Road and 11th Street, was renovated to include a finished learning center on the main floor and a furnished apartment with a conference room on the second floor.
The apartment will be used for the visiting Max Kade distinguished professor of German.
Bill Ballew, Franklin, N.C., graduate student, who began going to class in the center last spring, said that facilities planning had done an excellent job renovating the house.
"They reidid the wood floors and walls, keeping the original look of the house," Ballew said. "I've looked through the books in the library and there's some pretty amazing stuff in there."
Eric Zelt, Lawrence graduate student, said there were other Max Kade Centers at universities in the United States sponsored by the Kade organization.
He said his studies had kept him from reading the literature for enjoyment, but he said he had looked through some of the books and documents that had been taken out of storage and shelved.
"Much of it is local literature dealing with German-American studies, records from old towns and historic writings," he said. "The library is full of books, and it looks like interesting reading."
Helmut Huelsbergen, director of the Max Kade Center for German-American Studies, places books on the shelves of the German-American Library in the Sudler House, one block north of West Campus Road and 11th Street.
Faculty calls for improved firing process
Tonkovich hearings prompt suggestions
David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
As the Board of Regents decides whether to hear the reinstatement appeal of former law professor Emil Tonkovich, a University faculty group released its recommendations yesterday on how to improve the faculty dismissal process.
With two of its members in attendance at all the Tonkovich hearings, the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors, or AAUP, listed eight recommendations on its report on how to ensure due process in disciplinary procedures against the faculty, said Felix Moos, professor of anthropology and president of the KU chapter of AAUP.
AAUP rules require its members to submit a written report on the procedures following any faculty dismissal hearing. Moos said,
The five-member Tenure and Related Problems committee voted in July to uphold Chancellor Gene Budig's dismissal of Tonkovich for moral turpitude and ethical violations.
The four-page report was signed by Moos and the seven other executive AAAU members. Moos said the more important recommendations were:
Discouraging the University from conducting hearings like criminal proceedings.
■ Separating the authority of the general counsel to investigate allegations against faculty from the authority to prosecute.
Specifying a reasonable statute of limitations for complaints against faculty.
Providing those faculty who could not afford counsel with legal representation.
Under current University policy, Moos said, the University's general counsel who investigated could not be called to testify by the accused faculty member.
"We see that as a real problem," Moos said. "It is an uneven playing field for faculty members."
Moos said he hoped that the Senate Executive Committee would approve the recommendations presented in the AAUP report.
Rose Marino, associate general counsel, would not comment on the release of the AAUP report or its contents.
T. P. Srinivasan, professor of mathematics and head of SenEx, said the Tenure and Related Problems committee had considered many of the proposals brought up in the AAUP report since early this semester.
"That committee is in the thick of discussions on these matters," Srinivasan said. "They are to come up with an exhaustive list of recommendations by mid-February."
SenEx will vote on the recommendations in Spring 1994, Srinivasan said. While he agreed with many of the changes proposed by AAUP for disciplinary procedure for faculty, Srinivasan said he saw the report's recommendations only as guidelines.
"They simply provide a benchmark," Srinivasan said. "They are not a substitute for formal prohibitions and procedures."
Tonkovich said he saw the report's proposed changes as proof that the University had violated his due process during his nine-month hearing.
"This was not just a question of the University violating procedures but flagrantly ignoring procedures altogether," Tonkovich said. "These recommendations are AAUP policy and there is no precedent for what the University did."
On Dec. 1 Tonkovich filed his reply to a brief from the University, he said.
He did not know whether he would use the AAUP report to bolster his appeal, Tonkovich said.
Student sues KU over residency
Deciding where senior Krista Hans legally can call home has led to her suing the University.
Currently living in Lawrence, Hans has sued the University over its decision not to grant her in-state residency status.
Hans has lived in Kansas since 1913, paid Kansas state resident income taxes and intends to reside and work in Kansas after graduation, according to the petition filed by Michael Rilang. Biling, attorney.
Neither Riling or Hans could be reached for comment.
in his petition, Riling said that Hans "relies mainly upon Kansas sources of income for her support."
Rose Marino, associate general counsel, said in the University's response to the lawsuit that Hans had only shown earning $8,700 from Kansas sources while living expenses for the past 12 months were $12,810. Marino said in her response that Hans had not adequately explained the source of the $4,100 difference.
"I'm not going to comment on the specifics of the case," Marino said in an interview. "It's still in progress."
— David Stewart
One year later, scholarship remembers loss of student
By Sara Bennett and Christoph Führmans Kansan staff writers
From weathered fliers, Alexis Dillard smiles at passers-by. Just as he has since the night he disappeared a year ago.
On the eve of the anniversary of Dillard's disappearance, there are still no clues as to what happened to the Wichita senior. Now, one year later, family and friends remember Dillard's accomplishments as they deal with the pain of not knowing where he is.
"It's still a tremendous loss for us," said Dillard's mother, Felicie Dillard. "But you know we look forward to building on the legacy that he left us. We are going to focus on what he has left us for the future."
Alexis Dillard is being remembered through a memorial fund established to create an award in his honor. Sue Morrell, the Student Union Activities adviser who worked with Dillard at SUA, said family and friends were initiating a fund-raising effort to create a student recognition award in conjunction with the University.
Morrell said the fund would benefit a
graduating senior who embodied Dillard's ideals and strength of character. Morrell said she hoped that the fund would benefit a senior whose contributions, like Dillard's, had gone largely unrecognized.
"Alexis was the type of leader that helped others succeed but didn't want to be recognized himself," she said.
Felicie Dillard said she hoped the fund would help students remember her son.
"I think it's a special kind of tribute to him — to the kind of person he was," she said.
On Dec. 10, 1992, Alexis Dillard went out with friends to celebrate the end of the fall semester. The group ended up at Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. Second St., the last place Dillard was reported to have been seen.
Dillard's fraternity brothers reported him missing when he did not return home the next day. Fliers were distributed while friends and police combed the banks of the Kansas River. Dillard had talked about swimming the river before, and some feared he might have tried it again that night. The searchers found footprints matching Dillard's size 10 Rockport shoes. The footprints lead to the river but not
---
Dillard
Brunt of the Lawrence police said the case remained open, but no new leads had surfaced.
"We actively pursue a case until we're out of leads," he said. "That's where we are in the Alexis Dillard case."
Brunt said the case would stay open until solved. He declined to comment on what might have happened to Dillard but said there was no evidence of foul play. The case is still classified as a disappearance.
Felicie Dillard said she was surprised at how painful it was not knowing what happened to her son.
A year later, the mystery remains unsolved. Lt. Ed
Jump
"Alexis' name is still brought up around here," he said. "He was a hell of a guy." Contributions to the memorial fund can be directed to the Alexis F. Dillard Fund in care of the KU Endowment Association. Questions can be directed to Sue Morrell at the SUA office, 864-3477.
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Westen Hyter, Hutchinson junior and Phi Gamma Delta president, said Dillard was still on the minds of fraternity members.
Repeated searches of the river by the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks and the Kansas Army National Guard failed to find Dillard. Other leads failed to yield new information.
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"There's a lack of closure even though the evidence says that realistically he may never come back," Radcliffe said. "People don't want to write it off. We want to keep that approach until we hear differently."
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Until he is located, friends and family prefer to believe Alexis Dillard may return someday. Bill Radcliffe, Lawrence senior and member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, where Dillard was a member, said fraternity members wanted to wait until the case was solved before they established any kind of memorial.
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"I didn't realize a year ago how that would play such an important part," she said.
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Thursday, December 9, 1993
OPINION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VIEWPOINT
Jackson should return home to face the music
A 13-year-old boy who claims he was sexually abused by Jackson believes so. The Los Angeles District Attorney's Office has stepped up its investigation into the charges. Pepsi has dropped sponsorship of Jackson.
Is Michael Jackson dangerous?
And Jackson has admitted his addiction to pain killers.
The never-ending tabloid story to discern fact from rumor has proved to be a thriller, and the key player is still missing. Jackson's disappearance from the country and, most importantly, Los Angeles county gives credence to the rumors that the "king of pop" isn't just a child's friend, but a molester.
Until Jackson comes out of hiding, his innocence will be doubted. If he has any desire to save his name and career from destruction, he will come home and face the charges.
As the 13-year-old boy's attorney said, "By hiding Jackson and delaying the suit, Jackson's lawyers are making him look like a criminal."
If Jackson is as innocent as he and his publicist claim, he would be willing to submit to such a search and clear his name.
The L.A. police have given him until Jan. 1 to return home for a search of his genitals because the boy has described markings on them.
Until he does this, his image will be overshadowed by the doubt. And no one will know how dangerous he is.
TERRILYN McCORMICK FOR EDITORIAL BOARD
Killer-turned-songwriter should not earn royalties
Rock band Guns n' Roses is once again the focus of a major controversy. Their new album, "The Spaghetti Incident?" includes the controversial song, "Look At Your Game Girl," which was written by convicted mass murderer Charles Manson. This raises the question of who should receive profits from the song. The decision is clear: Whoever receives the profits, it should not be Manson.
Law enforcement groups and victims' rights advocates have scorned the decision to record the song as an attempt to glorify Manson and his crimes. Axl Rose, lead singer of the band, defended the decision by detailing the methods the band used to downplay Manson's part in the song. The song is not listed on the cover and Manson's name does not appear. Rose also plans to donate all personal proceeds from the song to an environmental group.
Rose's profits are not in question, however. It is the proceeds which would normally be directed to the songwriter that are of concern. We feel that Manson should not be allowed to receive the profits.
DAVID BURGETT FOR THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Since Manson is sentenced to life in the California state prison system, the royalties should go one of two places. The first choice would be to give the money directly to the state, perhaps to be redirected into the prison budget. The second choice would be to move the royalties directly into a victims' fund which would help support crime victims in the state. This way, both Guns n' Roses listeners and Californians would benefit from the decision to include the song.
EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBER :
DAVID BURGETT, JR CLARBORNE, CHRISTIAN CORNISH, CARSON ELROD, TOM GRELINGER, MATT HOOD, MANNY LOPEZ, COLLEEN MCCAIN, TERRILYN McCORMICK, MUNEERA NASEEK, KIRK REDMOND, CHRIS REEDY, MIKE SILVERMAN, EISHA TIERNEY, 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. Claiborne
News ...Stacy Friedman
Editorial ...Terrilyn McConnell
Campus ...Ben Grove
Sports ...Krist Fogler
Photo ...Kip Chin, Renee Kneeber
Features ...Erzra Wolfe
Graphics ...John Paul Fogel
AMY CASEY
Business manager
AMY STUMBO
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Business Staff
Campus sales mgr ... Ed Schagger
Regional sales mgr ... Jennifer Perrier
National sales mgr ... Jennifer Evanson
Co-op sales mgr ... Blythe Focht
Production mgrs ... Jennifer Blowey
Kate Burgese
Marketing director ... Sheilly McConnell
Special sections mgrs ... Judith Standley
Creative director ... Brian Fusco
Classified mgr. .. Gretchen Kooterlainch
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 to answer questions. The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
MARVEL Chicago Tribune
Perot's Last Stand
Giant Sucking Sound
NO!
College years provide best opportunity for dating not
The end of the semester is here, and it's time for the long-awaited and much-anticipated, "Dating Column." This is my small effort to report on the state of dating at the University of Kansas. So here it is.
You, the reader, are probably dating, while I, the writer, am definitely not. OK, now the focus of this piece has shifted from KU as a whole to my own pathetic situation, which is kind of funny in a sick way.
I am not dating because I am the most inpt dater on the face of the planet. Actually, that is misleading because it suggests that I go on dates and somehow fail while on them. Unfortunately, I don't get that far. I am disturbed by a self-diagnosed alient called "Canta Talka to a Girla Ima Interested Ina Interrupts." This condition has hindered me for the past year and, because of recent developments, is starting to worry me.
Perhaps you have read that, college is the best time of life to meet someone because you'll never have the same amount of people with the same interests in the same place again. I have concluded that if I'm doing this
COLUMNIST
CHRIS
RONAN
badly now, then what happens when I graduate? I'll tell you what's going to happen — I'm going to be in more trouble than someone swimming in a pool with Jaws. Something has to be done, but what?
Perhaps I should explain the source of my problem. First, I made the mistake of dating someone while in high school and continued dating her into college. This is bad because I've spent the last 11 months answering the popular question, "Are you and (ex-significant other) still dating?" I tell them, "No," and they always say, "Oh, I'm sorry." I want to say, "Why? It's not like she moved to France, met a waiter, and I decided to barricade myself in my room or anything." I also never
had to play the singles scene in high school (or junior high, or elementary school), and when you try to figure it out in college, it's kind of difficult. One might savit it's nearly impossible.
Second, I don't know about you, but when I come upon someone that I may be interested in, my mind hits me with a barrage of questions. Is she dating someone (or in the worst case scenario — married)? Does she hate men? Does she hate me? "Does she have a shadow of interest in me?" Can NEVER tell. A girl could walk up to me, give me her phone and social security numbers and a two-page essay on why she'd like to get to know me better, and I'd still be clueless.
So I did what no one should do — I asked my "successfully dating" friends for advice. This is bad because "friends" can give you no advice on this subject that could possibly work. They mean well, but it doesn't help to listen. The most popular idea was to walk up and talk to someone RANDOMLY. Yeah, right. My good friend Alison had a suggestion along those lines too. (Incidentally, Alison and I would never date because, as I've found out from personal experience,
if the relationship goes sour, there's virtually no way to fix the friendship.) She suggested that I just call the girl I was interested in. Yeah, right. That would sound something like this:
INTERESTING GIRL "Hello?"
ME: "Uh, I'm uh, well, uh,..." CLICK! Amazingly enough, this great advice hasn't panned out (Yes, it shocked me, too). So I continue to be clueless and dateless (a double-whammy). And my quest goes on. I may wait until it becomes typical for women to ask men out, instead of vice versa. I can't wait until it's somewhat unusual for a guy to ask a girl out. This probably will happen sometime next month. But it may happen later (like never). But hey, I'm still young. There may be hope. So I, like everyone else, will have to adapt. What a rip-off.
Anyway, I truly hope you can study as little as possible and still do well on finals. Have an exemplary holiday break and a safe New Year's. May you have much time to sleep, and most importantly, have a great dating life.
Chris Ronan is an Overland Park pamph- majoring in broadcast journalism.
Final column yields three tips for readers left behind at KU
As a college student, we have spent many years doing higher education-type things, such as skipping classes and drinking lots of Jagermeister. This has made for a very fulfilling and very numb four years.
Since this is our last column, we have decided to offer to you — our readers — some very important words of wisdom, such as, "When you say Budd backward, it sounds like you are saying 'get up' with a cold."
As a senior who is graduating, we would like to say one thing to the rest of you who have to put up with "graduation requirements" or "ARTS forms" or "dorm food". Ha.
COLUMNIST
With that in mind, here are some other interesting dinner conversations. So come on in — the thinking is shallow and plenty safe.
Sometimes the Parking Department gets a bum rap. Or maybe we are just making that up. At any rate, one thing
1. The Parking Department is evil.
We have received many phone calls and many letters from people saying,
"Todd, why don't you write something about the Parking Department, which is evil?" To which we eagerly respond, "Ahhh, yes; but have you been in the Enrollment Center laterly?"
COLUMNIST
TODD
PUNTNEY
1. The Parking Department is evil.
about the Parking Department is clear with profits from illegal parkers (i.e., us), the University of Kansas is indirectly funding the Nicaraguan Contras. Seriously.
Parking Department employees are also very helpful, in that they like to take your money.
STUDENT: I would like to pay my parking fines now. Do you have an installment plan?
EMPLOYEE: (blank stare)
STUDENT. Also, I would like to inquire about where the hell I am supposed to park during basketball games if I have to study, which I'm paying $2.3 million to do here at KU.
EMPOWER: (growing begins)
STUDENT: Also, in the interest of
NAFTA and international good will, I
am advocating that people pay their
EMPLOYEE: (EKG flat)
fines in pesos. Can you direct me to the nearest Mexican ATM?
STUDENT: Also, is that 666 on your forehead, a tattoo or a birthmark? If it is a birthmack, I would just like to say I enjoyed "The Omen Trilogy" and would very much now like to pay my fines and be on my Christian way.
2. A common misconception: Western Civilization classes are very important.
The Western Civilization department's recipe for well-roundedness:
1 student, slightly inebriated 25 hours online and
35 books,very long and very dry 27 authors,very boring and very dead
In a large mixing bowl, pour in authors and 1/2 cup political correctness. Add four tablespoons righteousness and bring to a boil. Stir in books. Let sit for two semesters. For best serves, serve over a bed of holier-than-thou. For those special occasions, add a touch of Waste-o'-Thrum.
3. The library: a place to find books on sex, or a place to have sex on books?
After numerous consultations with the Parking Department, the library has revised its overdue fines policies, in that it now costs the financial
equivalent of campus fees per book per day late. (And what are these "campus fees" anyway? We don't remember anyone asking us to pay for buses that make walking along Jayhawk Boulevard seem like you are sucking on the tailpipe of a Sherman tank.)
Hint: Instead of paying your fines, have sex! It's all the rage now, and library employees enjoy finding used condoms, which can also be used as bookmarks! By having sex in the library, you are saying in your own little way: "Hey, library! I am not paying my fines because I would rather have sex! I am even going to check out more books and return them up to three months overdue so that I will be fined again!"
We certainly hope that you have learned from our experiences and that someday we will hear about a black hole forming above the Parking Department and sucking the employees from it like they suck the life from students.
As for now, we have one last thing to say: "Pass the Southern Comfort."
Todd Puntney is a Manhattan senior majoring in Journalism.
Liberals slant Finance Committee's budget
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
I am writing in response to Lance Hamby's article on the Student Senate Finance Committee's biased opinions on conservative issues. I was a member of the Finance Committee this year and am part of it no longer. I'd not attend meetings any more because I feel the committee expresses too liberal views and my "ye" or "nay" wasn't important. My
views are more conservative than some and apparently too conservative for the committee.
The issue of the KU Federalist Party not receiving any allocated money for their advertising isn't the first time the committee has taken money away from such groups. I can recall meetings when the committee has passed bills and distributed funds to groups expressing more liberal intentions. The
I agree with Mr. Hamby in that the Finance Committee "demonstrated the ugliest stereotypes of a politically correct student government," and is geared toward groups and individuals with which they agree, discounting the views and opinions of the rest of the KU students. After all, I thought Student Senate represented the student body. The committee needs to watch its spending and give every group equal opportunity to express their views.
Finance Committee overspend early in the year, diffusing money to all groups with which they agree, leaving themselves with a smothered budget. They allocate way too much money to groups with which they agree and cut funds to groups that might nudge the right hand of the political chart.
Tv Shafer
Dallas freshman
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, December 9.1993
THEIR FINAL WORDS
These columns are the best works from Professor John Ginn's Editorial and Interpretive Writing class.
928 Mass. Downtown
Pit bull's disposition in owner's hands
5
Someone deeply hurt my girlfriend, Korrie.
Korrie has a dog named Sally. Sally is an idiot. She is one of those dogs whom you can just look at and realize she is simple-minded, even for a dog. She will forever be a puppy—curious and happy.
Jacob Arnold
When I came along, I received some of the love that had always been Sally's. Sally had a generous heart though, and she didn't mind. As long as she could lie with Korie and me while we watched TV, she was happy. Sometimes she would give us slobbery puppy kisses if she saw us in an embrace. She just wanted to be with us. The only thing Sally ever asked for was somebody to play with.
Korrie got Sally as a puppy a year and a half ago. right before her
Korrie loves Sally and Sally loved her back.
Sally is not Korrie's first dog or even her second or third. Sally was special, though. Sally gave an unconditional love. Sally trusted Korrie when nobody else did. Sally needed Korrie when nobody else did. Sally often slept in Korrie's bed, a living teddy bear for a scared little girl in a woman's body.
already chaotic life turned upside down. Korrie has lived on her own since she was fifteen. Her life has been rough, but she has survived. One of the things that has helped her get through all the betrayals and hard luck has been her pets.
Korrie has had to uproot and move several times in the last year and a half. Sally has remained the one constant. When Korrie moved to Lawrence, Sally was her only friend. Sally kept Korrie company while I was away at class.
Korrie is an animal lover and has had a lot of pets, everything from tarantulas to a 10-foot Burmese python named Mr. Jones. These animals kept her company.
Pit bulls are feared, loathed, and, in some places, banned because of the unhappy fate of a few unlucky creatures. Sally, a cherished pet, could easily have come to this fate if she had been stolen by one of these heartless demons.
Then some cruel and heartless person took Sally away.
Don't blame the breed, though
These inhumane owners are the ones who give pit bulls a bad name. Pit bulls are powerful dogs with lots of endurance. They are built for fighting, but it is humans who teach them to fight. Only man has the mental capacity to be mean, but he can teach it to animals.
Korrie came home Saturday and found her silly puppy missing. Sally's chain was gone too, but her stake was still in the ground. Either some horribly evil person took this beloved pet off her stake, or an even lower scum stole her.
Sally is a beautiful red with yellow eyes. She has a terrific disposition and wags her tail whenever she sees people. She is also a pit bull. That makes her valuable.
We were lucky. The police found Sally Tuesday morning. We will never know what really happened to Sally.
When someone talks about how horrible pit bulls are, I think of a forlorn little girl wandering around in the dark and cold calling for her stupid red dog.
When Korrie went to the pound, they were holding eight other pit bulls. These poor dogs were covered in scars. Some had partially healed wounds and others were still caked in dried in blood. One was so scared of people that he cowered in a corner when someone looked at him. These pathetic creatures had been seized in a raid that captured 84 fighting dogs. Now they are being held until the trials of their owners. Most will be destroyed because they are too mean to keep.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
expert in a field; assert ideology. We are not here to have drones and unquestioningly accept information from an opinionated professor. Our purpose here is to argue, rationalize and discuss what we have learned through readings and discussion; only then can we approach true learning. And Jurcyk does not punish dissent in her class. I, in fact, am probably her greatest skentic.
The most commonly cited statistic is that one in nine women will be diagnosed with
breast cancer. Roughly translated that means that in the 1990s 1.5 million women will be diagnosed with the disease and half a million of them will die of it.
I will continue to laud Jurcyk for her integrity. She knows the history of Western Civilization and is a fair instructor. Although I disagree with Jurcyk's ideology almost constantly, I admire her ability to create and sustain a relevant forum. Jurcyk has suppressed NO ONE. This is not kindergarten, nor is it day camp. If you cannot sufficiently understand the true process of pedagogy, get out of the proverbial kitchen. It is you who is unaccepting of the divergent viewpoints at the University.
Although medical experts are reluctant to call this an epidemic, it begins to sound like one. Consider that in the last decade, 450,000 women died of breast cancer and 194,000 people died from the epidemic known as AIDS.
own health.
Mary Bernard
In about the time it takes to read the editorial page, another woman will have died of breast cancer. Every 12 minutes, one more. The clock is ticking. Before time runs out, we must learn to take responsibility for our
What I see in Abbott's letter is the assumption that fairness for all viewpoints is necessary in academia. What he fails to realize is that acceptance of all views is itself an ideology preached by instructors. Recently, in fact, it has been portrayed as "better than others." Jurycik is doing in her classroom what every instructor has earned the right to do by becoming an
Richard Wetzel Denver senior
But this isn't a competition. It is a fight for our lives.
I am writing in response to Russell Abbott's letter in the Kansan on Friday. He asserted that Ann Jurcyk, a graduate teaching assistant in the Western Civilization program, was unfit for her role because of her lack of "proper objectivity and acceptance of divergent viewpoints." Ignoring the snipes Abbott made toward Jurcyk, which tend to cloud his argument, I would like to assert that Jurcyk's method of instruction is indeed relevant and vibrant, as well as necessary, in the University forum.
More research funding needed to battle with breast cancer
Western Civilization teacher creates open forum for ideas
Doctors know that smoking causes lung cancer and that a bad gene causes colon cancer, but ironically they have no clue to what causes breast cancer.
Researchers have come up with a list of risk factors such as having a close relative who had the disease, early menstruation, late menopause or giving birth late in life. Some new research suggests that exposure to electromagnetic fields, DDT or even automobile emissions may be factors. But the exact mechanism remains unknown.
Breast self-exams and annual mammograms for women over the age of 50 are still the best diagnostic tools available. All women should be strongly urged to use them. But neither diagnostic tool prevents the incidence of the disease. They simply help detect it in the early stages. Only research that isolates the causes of breast cancer will hasten its cure.
And the lists of risk factors can be misleading. Depending on which study you look at, 70 to 85 percent of the women who get breast cancer have no known risk factors at all.
To that end we must call for increased research on the causes of breast cancer.
We must call for more money to fund that research.
And we must call for a comprehensive national strategy on breast cancer that emanates from the White House. Nothing less is acceptable.
We must call for universal access to screening for all women, even those without health insurance.
Sherry Kohlenberg, a 37-year-old wife and mother with breast cancer who spoke last spring at the nation's capital, may have said it best: "This year, 46,000 women will die of breast cancer. I will probably be among the statistics. But I will not go silently. I will go shouting into the dark night, enough is enough."
Sherry Kohlenberg died on July 14, 1993.
The time has come. Enough is enough.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
6
Thursday, December 9, 1993
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WASHINGTON
Clinton signs NAFTA implementation bill, finalizes trade pact
President Clinton celebrated an oh-so-sweet victory yesterday when he signed legislation to implement the North American Free Trade Agreement.
The trade agreement, scheduled to take effect Jan. 1, eliminates barriers to the movement of goods, services and investment during the next 15 years among the United States, Canada and Mexico. It creates the world's largest and richest trading bloc.
Clinton's enthusiastic audience at a government auditorium included members of Congress, governors, mayors, business leaders and other supporters of the three-nation trade agreement.
"This whole issue turned out to be a defining moment for our nation," Clinton told them. "We are ready to compete, and we can win."
AUSTIN, Texas Senator faces ethics charges
Republican Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison was re-indicted yesterday on ethics charges stemming from her 2 1/2-year tenure as state treasurer.
Hutchison was previously indicted in September on four felony counts and one misdemeanor charge.
She was accused of using Treasury employees to perform personal and political chores on state time and of attempting to cover up the activity.
The charges were dropped Oct. 26 after Hutchison's lawyers discovered that a grand juror was ineligible to serve.
The case was taken to a second grand jury by the county district attorney.
The second grand jury studied mostly depositions and heard from witnesses before deciding to indict Hutchison.
GARDEN CITY, N.Y. Racial hatred led to train shootings
The gunman accused of opening fire on a rush-hour commuter train was driven by racial hatred and waited until the train left New York City to avoid embarrassing Mayor Dinkin, authorities said today.
The suspect, Colin Ferguson, 35, of Brooklyn, is a native of Jamaica. He has no criminal record, police said.
The Black suspect, accused of killing four passengers and wounding 19 during the three-minute spree, carried notes expressing his hatred for whites, Asians and "Uncle Tom Negroes," said Nassau County Police Commissioner Donald Kane.
Compiled from The Associated Press.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, December 9,1992
7
DESPERATELY SEEKING DEANS:
Continued from Page 1.
“One of the things we want is a dean who has a rapport with students,” said Kurt Brouckelmann, St. Louis senior. “These are qualities the students are looking for in the dean, and these are qualities that Esther has.”
Broeckelmann is one voice among 4,700 students in the four schools searching for new deans. Through search committee student representatives, all voices can have a say in the decision.
But before students can influence who their new deans are, they first must define what a dean is. And that, the deans themselves admit, is no easy task.
THE DO-IT-ALL DEAN
Many architecture students want a dean with a strong academic background who can offer constructive criticism on projects, said architecture student Jose Fernandez, Bahal Blanca, Argentina, senior.
"We need somebody who comes down to the jury room and says, This sucks' or You're doing a great job," Fer-
A dean who steps out of the office and into the classroom would motivate faculty and students alike, said architecture student Laron Casey, Lawrence senior.
"We want the dean to be an educator and to inspire us," he said. The chair can't push the faculty the way the dean can."
For other students, the dean doesn't have to be a "Superteacher" — merely an accessible administrator.
Even having an open-door policy — an avenue to an often isolated individual — would appease students, said Donald Francis, Lawrence law student and president of the law school division of the American Bar Association. "There's not a lot of interaction
"There's not a lot of interaction there on the academic end," Francis said. "But our dean has been fairly receptive."
Keith Jones, Tulsa, Okla., law student and representative on the law dean search committee, said law students wanted a dean who could function well in all areas of his position — from leader of the faculty to mentor of the students.
"You have to look for someone who can avoid being in some sort of allegiance that he or she can't move around easily," Jones said. "Students want someone who is decisive, someone who has practiced law as well as had administrative experience."
students said that in smaller schools, such as law, with 353 students, and pharmacy, with 420 students, the dean may have more opportunity to interact with them. But low enrollments do not guarantee more interaction.
Elise Asn, Derby senior, represents about 270 undergraduate students on the pharmacy dean search committee. She said she thought most of the students, including those who have never known a permanent dean, expected some level of contact with their new dean.
Education students also said that even in their school of 970 undergraduate and 1,960 graduate students, they looked for a dean who could get out of the office and meet with students.
"The students should know who they are and should feel comfortable to talk with them." Ash said. "It is unrealistic to think the dears are there every day, every minute of the day. But some visibility. I think that's necessary."
Richard Zikes, Overland Park graduate student and president of the Higher Education Student Association, said that for the seven years he had taken classes at the education school, he had become familiar with most of his deans, including associate and assistant deans.
Mary Myers, graduate student representative for the education dean search committee, said students wanted someone who could understand all aspects of the school. "What we're really looking for is a small-college president," Myrs said. "We are asking a lot of the dean, someone who can maintain common ground."
REALITY CHECK
"Our deans are social," Zikes said. "We talk to them. We see them. I feel my administration at the school of education has been very accessible."
the role of the dean is not working with students but dealing with issues outside of the school that effect the school." the Kansas City. Mo. senior said.
When expressing their desire for more involvement with their deans, students are reinforcing misconceptions about the dean's evolving role in the 1990s, administrators said.
Like deans at other financially strapped universities, those at KU must devote more time to raising revenues on the outside rather than seeing students on the inside. Dispelling that misconception has been part of Calones' role as the undergraduate representative on the architecture dean search committee.
Jones said he could not blame students for wanting an interactive, accessible dean. However, they should realize that time a dean spends visiting with students is time not spent rounding up dollars for the school, he said.
- "One of the problems with students is they don't realize
no spent training up for the schools, he said.
Ed Mewen, executive vice chancellor and dean of edu-
Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellion from 1986 to 1992, said he did not expect most students to know about the dean's emerging role in generating money for their schools.
Meyen said the traditional image of a dean as an academic leader largely had been supplanted by that of an administrator who could run a school while keeping the coffers full.
"If a dean cannot play a significant role in the fund raising of the school, he won't be an effective dean," Meyen said. "Fifteen years ago, that wasn't the situation."
Meyen said working with outside concerns, such as fund raising, could take a fraction of the deans' time but half their energies.
As dean of pharmacy from 1966 to 1992, Howard Mossberg, now vice chancellor for graduate and research
"We've consciously kept the job description very general so as not to exclude those candidates who might be very strong administrators or have very strong skills in academics."
studies, saw the dean's evolution first-hand.
"In general, deanships 25 years ago were not as consuming as they are today." Mossberg said.
"In this case, for the architecture school, we need somebody who can get down to the studios and see what's going on and interact with the students."
From balancing school budgets to wooing wealthy alumni, the deans' array of financial responsibilities demands a lot of time outside of the school, Mossberg said
During the first 10 years of his deanship, Mossberg car-
Kent Spreckolmeyer chair of architecture dean search committee
Cal Jones, who represents about 670 undergraduates in architecture's three departments, said he felt overwhelmed and uncertain when the architecture dean search began.
Max Lucas said he, too, experienced a decline in the level of contact with students during his 12 years as dean of architecture. Duties, such as writing accountability reports and attracting corporate sponsorship, kept Lucas out of the hallways or, in some cases, out of the school altogether.
He a full-time teaching load. But as his administrative duties mounted, he, like other deans, found himself spending less time in the classroom and more time on the road or behind the desk. Mossberg said.
just like the faculty and alumni," Jerry said. "But in the final analysis, the selection of the dean is by the chancellor, who uses the advice of the vice chancellor for academic affairs."
group financing
"It's not the role I enjoy, and it's one of the reasons I'm stepping down," he said
Some students may not like the shifting role of a dean away from direct student involvement.
But, in actuality, they may benefit from the change. Fruits of a dean's labor include scholarships, computers, visiting professors and student
Law students consistently look to their dean to help them find outside funds because of the school's small size and proportionally small allocations from Student Senate, said Allison Cumberbatch, Lawrence law student and president of the Student Bar Association.
"We want a dean who makes student organizations a
priority," she said. "Dean Jerry has tried to be as helpful as he can, but it hasn't been enough."
"It basically has meant that students need to deal with department chairs rather than the dean to solve problems," said Eric Strauss, head of the department of urban planning since 1986.
The dean's changing role also has shortened the chain of command for students.
As chair, Strauss handles admissions teaching assignments, course schedules and some budgeting.
The chairs ease a dean's workload by providing specialization in their departments, Strauss said.
"Students want a dean who understands the education process they're going through," Strauss said "But more
Jose Fernandez
Lenexa senior
Generally speaking, students comprise 20 percent of the committee and faculty another 50 percent. The remainder of the committee is a collection of a higher administration representatives, a dean from another KU school, staff, alumni and professional constituents.
"I didn't know how to handle it at first, and I thought we needed more student representation on the committee," he said. "But as time goes on, I realize students have basically similar concerns."
Jones said he believed his views had equal weight in committee meetings.
But architecture student Aaron Casey expressed fear that staff and faculty voices would have more resonance, given the composition of the committee.
"What I'm hoping to find is a student who will reach out to the remaining students, who will serve as a conduit to the remaining student body," he said.
"Students are an extremely important constituency.
"It's not representational," he said. "It's senatorial."
"Once you close that door, there's no hierarchy," he said.
MAKING THE RIGHT CHOICE
Robert Jerry, dean of law, said this diverse mixture had been proven to work well in the past when selecting deans.
Selecting candidates who are sensitive to staff, faculty and student needs is the duty of the four search committees.
Voicing just what those student needs are is the job of the student representatives.
Though student representation has found its place in choosing deans, students may do well to
When the four finalists in the education dean search met individually with students, Caroline Elton, Overland Park senior and undergraduate dean search representative, said she copied down student questions and concerns.
importantly, students need to understand that one person can't understand everything. The dean can be sensitive to their needs but not know everything."
David Shulenberger, vice chancellor of academic affairs, selects search committee members — including students — from lists of nominees, compiled by the school faculty. In choosing suitable student representatives, Shulenberger said he looked for people who had proven an ability to communicate well with their peers.
"As far as the system goes, students could give their input," Elton said. "They had equal say. Each had a time to speak with the candidates alone and discuss any topic that was on their mind."
remember that their stay at the University will end with graduation, said Donald Francis.
"It would be nicer if we had more representation, but I understand the position of the faculty." Francis said. "They have to work with this person for 10 years or more. I'm going to be gone in six months. The faculty will be here for a while."
Val Stella, professor of pharmaceutical chemistry, is head of the pharmacy search committee, which continued searching for a new dean after two finalists declined offers last spring. While visiting with candidates, students sometimes gained insight that faculty committee members could not, he said.
As the pharmacy search committee's graduate student representative, Beverly Benson, Lawrence, spoke for the school's approximately 150 graduate students in five departments. Although faculty may feel a new dean's impact for a longer time, they still value the student perspective. Benson said.
Keith Jones, law student representative, said he planned to give law students opportunities to voice their concerns.
"The candidates will say things, talk more openly," he said. "Sometimes they show their true colors, and maybe sometimes they feel more comfortable and come across better."
"The faculty actually wants the students' input," she said. "I really, in this case, do not feel that the students are there as to token student members."
"It's a tougher job than it was. Once upon a time the University was an ivory tower and you didn't have to care about the outside world, but now you do."
"At the review forums, essentially I'm going in and saying that I need some direction." Jones said. "Once we've narrowed it down to six people, those six are brought in and they meet with the students one-one. They get a lot of involvement directly."
David Shulenberger vice chancellor for academic affairs
Students haven't always had the opportunity to have such direct input on search committees. Although students began pushing for more involvement in University decision-making in the late 1960s, it was not until 1976 that guidelines for including students in dean searches appeared in the faculty handbook.
Today students may pick up candidates at the airport or attend discussion forums. They may request candidates.
their projects or ask the candidates to explain their philosophy on education.
Students not only can size up the candidates, but also can give the candidates a flavor of their specific needs.
But until the final candidates arrive on campus, confidentiality reigns.
HUSH HUSH
For zealous students like architecture student Jose Fernandez, the confidentiality factor, though understood, is frustrating.
"What we're dealing with is an employment process really, and with that, the people who are part of the candidate pool are at the same time trying to maintain jobs," he said. "The confidential nature is done exclusively as a professional courtesy to a candidate."
"I care a lot," he said, "and I want to have a part in deciding who the next dean is."
But the secrecy is necessary, nonetheless, said Kent Spreckelmeyer, associate professor of architecture and head of the architecture dean search committee.
Finding suitable candidates, ensuring confidentiality and involving students all require that the committee members stay sensitive to needs of the school and their potential new deans, said Keith Meyer, professor of law and head of the law dean search committee.
"The process is not an easy one," Meyer said. "We want to help get someone who will help us continue the tradi-
WHO IS REPRESENTING YOU?
"Dean searches are a mirror image of real life — like with Congress or the President — people are going to represent you the rest of your life."
TEDDY TAYLOR
ARCHITECTURE
Cal Jones Kansas City, Mo., senior president, National Organization of Minority Architecture Students
BelleVille graduate student
"There's only a minimum of students getting interested. It would be nice if we had a broad range of students showing interest. I don't think it's because they don't care. I think it's because they don't feel like they have any power."
— Brad Skipton
Belleville graduate student
EDUCATION
PETER FISHMAN
"As far as the system goes, students could give their input ... They had equal say. Each had a time to speak with a candidate alone and discuss any topic that was on their mind."
— Caroline Elton
Overland Park, senior
president, School of Education
Student Organization
"The School of Education is very complex. What we're really looking for in a dean is a small college president. We are asking a lot of the dean."
- Mary Myers
Lawrence graduate student assistant director, Organizations and Activities Center
LAW
1972
"it's my role to express the concerns that are uniquely student-oriented. I would want to take stances that I feel would be in the best interest of students' opinions, student wants, student desires and student needs,"
— Keith Jones
Tulsa, Okla. law student vice president, KU Student Bar Association
PHARMACY
"Students always have concerns about where their education will be going, and they want to make sure they'll have a dean who's in touch with their needs ... I feel that I understand what's needed in a dean as far as the students and the school is concerned." — Elise Ash
president, Kappa Epsilon, a pharmacy sorority
P
"I feel like the students are given time a bit of give to speak and our voices are heard. In fact, we're encouraged. The faculty actually wants the students' input. I really, in this case, do not feel that the students are there as token student members."
Beverly Benson Lawrence graduate student president, Pharmacology and Toxicology Graduate Student Organization
Robert Jerry, outgoing dean of the School of Law
July 1, 1989 — Jerry is appointed dean of the School of Law, replacing Mike Davis.
August 20,1993 Jerry announces he will
The Search to Replace...
step down from his position as of June 30, 1994.
**Fall 1993 — Eight-member committee begins soliciting nominations for new dean.**
PENGELANGUAN
Iranian Communist Party of America.
n February - March, 1994
— Committee invites six finalists to campus for interviews.
July 1, 1994 — Intended starting date of the newly selected law dean.
Dec. 1, 1993 -- Committee begins screening process.
Howard Mossberg,
former dean of pharmacy
Spring 1992—Howard
Mossberg accepts the
position as vice chancellor
for research and graduate
studies; Ronald
Borchardt, chair of pharmaceutical chemistry,
acts as interim dean.
Spring 1993 — The dean search committee
Fall 1993 — The search committee begins reviewing about 15 applications.
produces two finalists both of whom decline the position.
Jan. 1, 1993 — Soonest date a new dean could be appointed
Early December — The committee invites the four candidates to KU; a list with recommendations is prepared for the Vice Chancellor of Academic Affairs, David Shulenberger.
Max Lucas, outgoing dean of the School of Architecture
April 1980 - Max Lucas is appointed new dean of the School of Architecture, replacing Dean Charles Kahn.
Sept. 13, 1993 Lucas announces his
MARCO BOLI
July 1, 1994 — The new dean's appointment is expected to begin
decision to step down as of June 30, 1994; a search committee is formed
Fall 1993 —The search committee solicits nominations and by early December has about 10 applications.
Jan, 4, 1994 — The committee plans to begin paring down its list of applicants to about six candidates
Ed Meyen, former dean of education
July 18, 1992 -- Meyen become executive vice chancellor; Richard Whelan, professor of special education, assumes the position as acting education dean.
Spring 1993 Though a search committee selected three candidates in Fall 1992, David Shulenberger, vice掌cellor for academic affairs, decides not to hire any of them.
P. S. MOHANWAL
Summer 1993 — The University appoints a second search committee.
Oct. 25 - Nov. 18, 1993 Four selected candidates visit campus. Nov. 24, 1993 The search committee makes its recommendations.
Jan 1, 1994—Earliest expected date a new dean could be appointed.
8
Thursday, December 9, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Oread Neighborhood group approves parking restrictions
City Commission next to vote on morning limits
By Traci Carl
Kansan staff writer
Residents of the Oread Neighborhood Association have created a proposal to keep KU students and employees from using their streets as parking lots.
Now they are ready for the city commission to approve their proposal.
Nineteen members of the Oread Neighborhood Association voted unanimously last night to submit their parking proposal to the city.
The association approved a parking permit plan that would limit parking between 7 a.m. and 11 a.m., Monday through Friday, to residents or property owners. Under the latest proposal, permits would be required for cars parked on streets north and east of the University — the residential area enclosed by Tennessee, Maine, Ninth and 14th Streets.
Permits would not be required from
Aug. 15 to Sept. 1 so students could move in and out of apartments.
Residents and property owners in the parking permit area would be able to purchase $10 parking permits from the City Clerk's office. They also would be able to purchase visitor permits for guests, service people and potential renters.
The fine for parking in the area without a permit would be a minimum of $10 and a maximum of $100. Repeat offenders could be towed.
Luke Jordan, a resident of the 1600 block of Kentucky Street, said the intent of the proposal was to force KU students and employees now parking on the streets to buy permits for KU parking lots.
The proposal would not guarantee a parking space to every resident, he said, but it would provide more parking spaces than are available now.
Kyle Kinnibal, the association's presidents, said he was not concerned about students and employees not finding other places to park.
"We've been told by KU parking service that there is plenty of parking on the KU campus," he said.
He said that the proposal would not
go into effect until next fall if it is approved by the commission.
Lawrence Puzzo, a resident in the 1200 block of Louisiana Street, said he would like to see buses stop at parking lots that are far from campus and take students to campus.
Anne Winter-von Schlemmer, owner of Recycled Sounds, 622 W. 12th St., voted in favor of the proposal because it may provide more parking for her customers, she said. Most of the people who park in the morning stay all day, she said. The general public still would be able to park in the afternoon, she said, but they would be coming and going, so there would be more opportunities to find a parking space.
Kurt Winter-von Schlemmer said he wanted to make sure the association had student support because many students lived in the neighborhood.
Jennifer Brown, the association's coordinator, said that she had received a few phone calls about the current proposal from students and that they had showed support for the proposal.
"It is important not to come off looking like an anti-student thing," he said.
Entrepreneurs create fare business
KCI shuttle service begins this month
By Shan Schwartz Kansan staff writer
Two entrepreneurs from the University are hoping to make money from something as simple as a ride to the airport.
trailer hook-ups to accommodate passengers and their luggage.
Jayhawk Airport Shuttle, founded by a KU student and a recent KU graduate, is looking to accommodate students who need transportation to Kansas City International Airport in Kansas City, Mo, this holiday season. "We thought we'd let our entrepreneur spirit kick in," said Kevin Lyons, Tulsa, Okla, senior and one of the shuttle's co-founders. "We heard a lot of students saying they needed a shuttle to the airport, and there was not much competition in Lawrence. We thought we'd get a piece of the pie."
He said the shuttle service was not related to his biochemistry studies, but his co-founder, 1993 KU graduate Susie Dolak, put her graphic design degree to use in designing and promoting the shuttle with posters on campus.
Lyons said he had rented vans with
Lyons said posters were up on campus last week and more than 50 reservations already had been made.
Paul Shackelford, president of A-1 City Cab, which operates the only other airport shuttle service in Lawrence, said the demand for shuttle service in December and January fluctuated depending on the weather. If the weather and roads were bad, Shackelford said, more students would use a shuttle instead of driving their own cars.
Shackelford said that the summer months, especially May and August when school was beginning and ending, were the busiest for the A-1 shuttle.
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"If the Christmas season does well, we'll definitely consider it," he said. "We might do it for spring break, or make it a permanent business."
Lyons said the intentions for the Jayhawk Shuttle were only to operate this holiday season. But if the shuttle is successful, Lyons said, he might consider operating it again in the future.
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The women of Panhellenic Association and the men of the Interfraternity Council would like to take this opportunity to wish all KU students good luck on their Finals.
INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL
PANHELLENIC UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Have a fun, safe Winter Break!!!
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, December 9.1993
---
9
By Liz K
Kansas
and they came from KU
By Liz Klinger
Kansan staff writer
Next July, Trey Hohman, Topeka freshman, will leave behind the geographic calm of Kansas for the sights and sounds of New York. He will trade his room in the Sigma Nu fraternity house for an apartment on the upper west side of America's most infamous metropolis. He will bid farewell to the departments of theatre and film and music and dance for a highly competitive program in which outcomes are uncertain.
Jack Wright, professor of theatre and film, said the life of a performing artist was extremely demanding.
And he will do whatever else it takes for a slice of the limelight on Broadway. Hohman is one of many students and alumni who have left the University for one of the most unstable careers in the United States — life as a performing
"It's really a career that demands a lot of personal discipline and a lot of determination to stick it out," Wright said. "You've got to want to do that and nothing else. Not everybody's sugar is cut out to do that."
Becoming a triple threat
Of about 10,000 people who auditioned last year for the American Musical and Dramatics Academy in New York. Hohman was one of only 75 people accepted into the program and one
artist.
But five alumni and Hohman seem to have the right "sugar" for such a career.
of three chosen while a high-school senior. Hohman did three auditions, consisting of a monologue and two songs, for the academy in Kansas City, Mo., Dallas and New York.
1 2 3 4 5
Hohman said that he had viewed the auditions as practice and that he had not expected to be selected by the academy.The academy usually accepts older students who have more experience,he said.
The auditions took place in the spring, and it was not until August, on the day before Hohman would leave for the University, that he found out that he had been accepted. But the academy allowed him to enroll as late as next July, so he decided to study at the University for one year.
During the first week of classes,
1985
Trey Hohman KU freshman
A. M. C.
Roger Nolan
Commercial and television actor
1977 graduate
Hohman auditioned for and earned a leading role as Sam Bick in University Theatre's production of "Assassins." Hohman's days were filled with acting, modern dance and composition classes and jazz choir. For six weeks, many of his nights were rehearsal with the cast of 19.
"Within the school, it is just incredible, the things that people know." Hohman said. "There's just so many things you can learn. I've become a better performer this last semester, working with these people on a day-to-day basis."
Hohman's schedule at the academy will consist of theater-related classes from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. There he will hone his acting, dancing and singing skills to become what is known in theater as a "triple threat."
"You can't be a prima donna," Hohman said. "You can't have that attitude. You've got to be willing to work hard."
The commercial man
If you bumped into him at the supermarket, you might wonder, "Haven't seen him somewhere before?" The 6-foot, 145-pound mystery man who has a cap of curly black hair, an effortless smile and a prominent nose looks familiar, yet you have no idea who he is.
The answer lies in TV commercials. Roger Nolan has appeared in at least 100 since he graduated from the University.
"I'm kind of like every guy," said Nolan, who now lives in Hollywood. "I have a generic look. I'm not too good-looking. I'm not too character. Probably you have seen me many times but gone right on by."
Of the commercials in which Nolan has appeared, many may remember him lathering up in a Coast commercial in the mid 1980s. It was a unique source of recognition.
A few years later, Nolan starred as a representative of Gulf Oil in a series of commercials, which gave him notoriety in areas where it was frequently shown, such as Atlanta. In that role, special effects made one of Nolan's fingers look like a fuel injector that squirred gas and a finger on his other hand look like a piston. Joining those two fingers caused an explosion.
"Everybody kept saying, 'I saw you naked in the shower,' he said.
Nolan said, "I just had to act like it was an everyday experience to have your hand exploding.
"I must portray a friendly person because that's what I get a lot. Sometimes I play kind of a hapless character. I play a lot of kids and doctors."
People can see me, and I don't get overexposed."
Another memorable commercial, which was shown during the 1991 Superbowl, was for Budweiser. In the $1.8 million commercial, Nolan portrayed a man who sat at a bar with magazines in front of him. The magazines featured photos of well-known professional football players of today and years past who peeled themselves from the pages to engage in a football game on the bar. During the game, they ran on a surprised Nolan's arm.
"I sat in the same position for two days," Nolan said. "I couldn't move. They had to animate these things over me."
Nolan is working on Alamo Car Rental's first national TV commercial, which will be shown in mid-January during the third quarter of Superbowl XXVIII. The 90-second spot begins with a couple, the Sedgewicks, who see an Alamo commercial that boasts that mileage is free and decide to drive across every mile in the United States. During the ad, which involves special effects, Nolan portrays Sedgewick. While driving across the country, Nolan will age 40 years, and at the end, he will play his own son.
"It itms silly I have to go into so much detail to explain a commercial." Nolan said. "But that's the way they are. Lots of special effects."
Commercials, as opposed to other types of performances, may not be glamorous, but they do offer perks, such as driving a race car for a motor oil commercial, Nolan said.
"Sometimes I go in and give the best audition I have ever given in my life, and I don't hear anything." Nolan said. "Sometimes I go in, and maybe I'm in a bad mood, and I'm just tired, and maybe I don't like the director. I'll do what I think is a bad audition, and they'll hire me. I don't understand it."
"It's clean and fairly honest and doesn't take a great deal of difficulty to do," Nolan said.
In addition to commercials, Nolan has appeared in episodes of "Seinfeld," "L.A. Law," "Night Court," "The Wonder Years" and "Doogle Houser." is appearances in feature films include "Sleepwalker," "Rampage" and "Iron Eagle." Most recently, he had a larger role in an NBC miniseries, "A Matter of Justice," which starred Patty Duke and aired in early November.
But, as is true with any type of performance art, nothing is guaranteed.
Rebecca Balding Television actress 1970 graduate
BROOKLYN
"There may be some good weeks or months, but there may also be some very lean ones," Nolan said. "It could be the next thing you audition for will make you a millionaire, or you could not even work for a year."
Anything but dull
In a well-known TV sitcom, she seduced Billy Crystal, became pregnant with his child, left him at the altar, deserted the baby, ran off with a cowboy, came back for the baby and discovered that Crystal had become a homosexual.
And so went the plot of KU graduate Rebecca Balding's off-and-on three-year stint on "SOAP," in which she portrayed Carol David and Crystal portrayed Jodie Dallas.
"That was probably the most fun I had out here," said Balding, who has lived in Los Angeles since 1976. "Billy Crystal is so sweet."
In January 1976, she moved to Los Angeles and was cast in a play within one month. Since then, she has had guest appearances on "Designing Women," "Family Ties," "The Rockford Files," "Barnaby Jones," "The Tony Randall Show," "Starsky and Hutch" and a recurring role on "Paradise." Balding appeared as a cheerleader in an episode of "Home Improvement" about three weeks ago.
Balding's life off-screen has been as interesting as the guest leads she's played on-screen. By the time she reached the University, Balding had lived in 23 cities throughout the United States and Puerto Rico. It was performing in the theatrical productions that gave Balding a feeling of stability, she said.
The summer after graduating from the University, Balding toured Germany with a University production of "The Prime of Miss Jean Broadie." She then moved to Chicago, did several years of community theater and worked at an insurance agency as an underwriter.
Getting fired from the "Lou Grant Show" led to a short-lived career in horror films. She appeared as a reporter on the show but was replaced after the show's first several episodes. The producers thought that she looked too young and that there was not enough chemistry between her and one of the male reporters.
Balding had the lead in a horror film called "The Silent Scream." She described the film as a story about a college girl who went into the attic of a boarding house and encountered monsters.
Although a leading role in the horror flick "Boogens," filmed in Utah in 1814, did not garner her an Oscar, it did provide the basis for meeting her husband, James Conway, producer, writer and director.
Balding said she had been fortunate in her career.
"It all just kind of fell into place for me," said Balding, who lives in a two-
1986
Sarah Terrell
Stage actress, dancer and singer
1990 graduate
story, five-bedroom house in the San Fernando Valley with Conway and their two children, Sarah and Kate. "You have to take care of yourself for television. You have to be on time and know your lines and don't bump into the furniture. You just do the best you can and work hard."
On the road again
Last week she was in Hatsburg,
Miss. This weekend it was Memphis,
Tenn. Monday it was Ruston, La.
Today it is Daytona Beach, Fla.
Life on the road as a performer is something that 1990 KU graduate Sarah Terrell takes in stride. She is a member of a cast of 25 touring in a Troikaright production of "City of Angels," which she describes as true American musical theater with the sound of a 1940s big band. The 30-week tour began Nov. 1 in Huntsville, Ala., and will conclude in May in Las Vegas.
Terrell is no stranger to performing on the road. In 1990, she took part in another national tour — Chicago's 3-D Production's "The Pajama Game." She also performed as a singer with American Hawaii Cruises in the summer of 1991.
Terrell said she lost a sense of home when touring. Although she is based in New York, Terrell said, she often seeks work outside the city. While touring, she does not keep an apartment in New York for financial reasons and relies on an answering service for messages. Terrell's mail is sent to Trikaright's main office in Maryland and forwarded to her once a week.
"It's a very nomadic life right now for me," Terrell said. "I'm living like a gypsy."
Terrell has a unique way of touring the cities she visits.
"I get on my rollerblades and explore whatever city I'm in," she said.
Terrell said she hoped to find an agent in New York and would like to see a resurgence of great American musical theater. She would like to play leading ladies who dance, she said.
"It may be a steady, slow climb for me, but it's going to happen," she said. "Sometimes it's hard to remember that when you're begging a homeless person for the dime back you gave for a subway token. That experience is one I won't forget."
No matter what happens, Terrell has no doubts about attending the University.
"I'm glad I stayed to get my degree," Terrell said. "Getting a theater degree at KU was not just theater or music. There were many other classes you take to broaden your horizons. Til
Mary Ann Crawford
Joyce Castle
Opera singer and actress
1961 graduate
never regret staying five years there.
never regret staying five years there. "There seem to be a lot of KU alums in the city. It's great. It's a nice support system."
Patience was biggest strength
Who ever knew that Little Red Riding Hood eventually would become a giant on the New York opera scene? Joyce Castle knew.
In the second grade, she played the childhood character that visits her grandmother. Today, she is performing in the New York Metropolitan Opera production of "Rusalka."
"I have been extremely focused," Castle said. "I have been following my dream for so long.
After graduating first in her class from Baldwin High School, Castle ventured only 13 miles to the University, where she was cast in the first play of her freshman year.
"I practiced a lot. I can remember waiting for school to end so I could go home and practice. This is what I love to do. Mother never had to tell me to practice."
If she did not get enough of the performing fix during the school year, there were always the summers. She spent one summer performing in the state fair in Dallas, where she got to work with Shirley Jones. She also went on a United Service Organization tour of the Far East to visit the armed forces.
After earning a masters degree at Eastman School of Music in New York state, Castle found a job with the symphony in Syracuse as an artist-in-residence.
Castle began to receive grants, and she performed in Europe, moving to Paris in 1976. While in France, Castle appeared in opera houses and performed on Radio France. Six years later, she moved back to the United States.
"Then, everything took off," Castle said. "I was hired by a lot of people at the same time. All the stars seemed to be in the right place at the right time. My voice was ready."
Castle performed with the New York City Opera and was hired by the Metropolitan Opera in 1985.
"It took me a long time to get where I am," Castle said. "I'm not one of those overnight successes. I just kept at it. I knew early on that one of my strongest suits was patience. I've been working very hard. I mean non-stop since 1983.
"I believe in the power of music and theater, and I believe it's an important thing in life, and it takes it to a different level. Otherwise I wouldn't be in this business. If I can in any way do my
PETER WILSON
Kip Nevins Stage and television actor 1968 graduate
best up there and share with the audience, then that's my mission. I am a work in progress."
Happiest upon a stage
As a Prairie Village first grader, he made his theatrical debut portraying a whistling rabbit named Flossy.
It may have been awhile since Kip Nevins was in the production of "Peter Cottontail," but Nevins never has stopped loving the theater.
"The creative process of the theater is extraordinary," said Nevins, who portrays Drake, the butler, eight times a week in the off-Broadway production of "Annie Warrick."
Although the show, which opened August 9, has not made him rich or famous, portraying Drake has allowed Nevins to save the day in the show and to tell some good lokes.
"Unlike the guy who has to bounce books or wash cars or cut out rain-coats, when I go to work, I get to play." Nevs said.
As a student at the University, Nevins said, he was involved in productions including "Oliver," "Oh. What a Lovely War" and "Gypsy," in which Don Johnson, who attended the University for one year, played a newsboy. Nevins said studying theater at the University gave him the chance to perform roles beyond those that a student would be able to do professionally.
After serving in Vietnam, Nevins returned to Kansas but moved to California in 1971. While in California, he appeared in 10 feature films, including "Earthquake," and about 40 TV shows, including "The Bionic Woman" and "Marcus Webly." He also did some theater acting and began directing.
Nevins eventually tired of the commercialism of Los Angeles, he said, and moved in 1886 to New York. He did some television, soap operas and theater for a few years. Last year, he came to the University to direct the University Theatre production of "The Tempest."
Shortly before his role in "Annie Warbucks," Nevins worked on the TV feature, "Return to Lonesome Dove," directed by Mike Robe, also a graduate of theatre and film. Nevins recently had a guest role on "Law and Order."
Sacrifices and struggles aside, Nevins still is glad that he chose to be a performer.
“It's something that I've probably always wanted to do, and when I'm at work there's nobody happier than I am," Nevins said. "The problem with this as a career is the time between work. When I was young, those times didn't seem so debilitating."
1
10
Thursday. December 9, 1993
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WAYNE'S WORLD 2
Lawrence residents still battling flood
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
STUDIO BENEFIT OF A FUNDRAISING EXHIBITION AT THE MUSEUM OF ART IN CHICAGO.
Last summer's flooding is more than just a memory for some homeowners in North Lawrence.
In fact, for Cynthia Butler, Lawrence resident, the flood is as close as her own basement.
Butler's basement and the basements of several homes near Lake Street have been filled by rising ground water. Butler said her basement has had at least an inch of water on the floor.
"I've put all my life savings and all my efforts into this," she said, indicating the house she is remodeling. "I don't know what I'm going to be forced to do."
The rising ground water level is the result of last summer's heavy rains, which dumped more than 18 inches of rain on the Lawrence area. Much of that water has lingered in the North Lawrence soil. Because the area once provided drainage into the Kansas River, the soil consists of materials that naturally absorb water.
And Butler said the city had not done enough to address the problem.
"You can kind of think of it as a deep trough that for years has been filled with sand, gravel and clay," said Jim McCauley, a geologist for the Kansas Geological Survey.
In places where the water table is higher than the ground, the rising level has given Lake Street's name a measure of irony. Ponds created by last summer's rain lie east and north of Butler's house.
McCauley said the result was a higher water table, which is the level at which water instead of air fills spaces in the ground. According to the United States Geological Survey, the water table is five feet higher than average.
Butler said the city should pump the water out of the ground or buy out the properties of the affected homeowners. She said different city officials had given her conflicting information about what the city would do.
Lawrence resident Cynthia Butter contemplates the damage inflicted to her property by this summer's flood. Her house is in northeast Lawrence near city limits, where residual flood water is still visible.
"The right hand does not know what the left hand
is doing," Butler said.
Bob Moody, city commissioner, said the city probably would do nothing. He said the city did not have the funds to either remove the water or buy the property. He also said such actions were not the city's responsibility.
"The city cannot protect all people from all things," he said.
Home-buyers should be aware that most of North Lawrence lies on a 100-year flood plain, which means it has a one-in-a-hundred chance of flooding each year.
100-year flood plains to be built two feet above the ground. But houses such as Butler's — which survived a disastrous flood in 1951 — were excluded because the regulations went into effect in the late 1970s.
Gene Shaughnessy, chief building inspector for the city, said current regulations require houses on
Requiring houses to be built at a certain level above the water table is impossible, Shaughnessy, said.
"Anything in North Lawrence damaged by the rising water table is out of our hands," he said. "There's no way we can predict water table levels."
Shaughnessy said the best solution for Butler and her neighbors was to pump the water out of their basements and hope for less rain.
'Oodles' of high-tech games draw in shoppers
By Chesley Dohl
Kansan staff writer
Some KU students might secretly wish they could once again sit on Santa's lap and ask for toys like they did when they believed in the man in the red suit with the full white beard.
Wishes still come true; and the toy industry is doing all it can to keep up with the demand of adults who are still kids at heart.
Burt Hochburg, senior editor of Games magazine, said the magazine even hired people to test games.
"They're hired to play the games on the market to determine if each game is worthy of being a part of our top-100 list," he said.
The list is compiled annually to inform game lovers about what is hot on the market. Hochburg said party games were the trend this holiday season.
Hochburg said one of this year's most popular games among college students was "Oodles," a game new to the store shelves this season.
Mark Morris, public relations manager for Milton Bradley, said "Oodles" was unlike any trivia game.
"It's the opposite of Trivial Pursuit in that you're using the oodles of
knowledge already in your head — asked in a creative way, "he said.
Another game that might become popular among KU students is the electronic board game, "Omega Virus," which comes complete with sound effects and timer.
The purpose of the game, Morris said, is to find the virus which is hidden in a space station room on the game board. If the virus is not found before time runs out, the space station explodes. "Omega Virus," sells for $37.
At MicroProse, a company specializing in computer software, Gary Almes, director of public relations, said the top game for computer buffs was an award-winning game called, "Civilization."
Civilization is a game that begins with the first civilization and goes through to the space age. Almessaid it was fast-paced and almost realistic.
"It has virtually no end and no limits," Almes said. "You can play it as long as you want and create your own world. But it's addictive."
At Fun and Games, 816 Massachusetts St., manager Larry Cornelius said the demand for toys by students varied from complex electronic board games to stuffed animals.
"The 'Star Trek: The Next Generation' Board Game, with sound effects, is a new popular item with students," Cornelius said. "The demand is high. We ordered it in June, and we just got it in."
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SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, December 9, 1993
20
11
Jayhawks roll against winless foe
23
HAWKS
33
By Gerry Fey
Kansan sportswriter
In the Kansas women's basketball team's 117-48 pounding of Morgan State last night at Allen Field House, the No. 14 Jayhawks' defensive intensity was lacking in the second half.
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
Photos by Holly McQueen / KANSAN
That might be understandable, considering the team was ahead 71-17 at halftime.
It was understandable but not tolerable, said Kansas coach Marian Washington.
"I wasn't very happy with our defense in the second half," Washington said. "It's very difficult to keep that kind of intensity up after scoring 71 points in the first half."
It was the third-largest margin of victory and the third-most points scored in Kansas women's basketball history. Kansas improved its record to 5-0, while Morgan State dropped to 0-6.
Washington said she set a goal at half-time to try and keep the Jayhawks' intensity at its first-half level.
"We have a goal of coming out and playing with the same intensity in the second half as we do to start the game," she said. "We didn't do that."
Kansas freshman forward Jennifer Trapp, who scored a career-high 22 points, said the Jayhawks did not meet their halftime goals. However, she said she was happy with her offensive output.
"We had a goal of not letting them get 40 points, and we didn't meet it," Trapp said. "We still have a lot of work to do on defense. I still have a lot to work defensively. But as far as shooting, it's my best performance."
The game was close for the first six minutes until Kansas exploded with a 23-0 run in the next five minutes. Kansas freshmen guard Tamecka Dixon scored seven of those points, mostly off steals and other Morgan State turnovers. Kansas turned the ball over only 14 times, while Morgan State had 29 turnovers.
Washington said she was thankful that Morgan State traveled from Baltimore for the game, even though last night was supposed to be a Kansas-DePaul match
In the second half, the twin guards for Morgan State helped the Bears look more respectable. Karla and Kaira Warfield combined for 17 points.
Dixon ended with 11 points, joining six other Jayhawks who scored in double figures.
Freshman guard Angie Halblieb added 20 points.
"I don't want to take a thing away from Morgan State, but this is the second year that DePaul has broken their contract," Washington said. "We're very appreciative of Morgan State."
Aycock said it was important to fix some minor details before facing better competition. The 6-foot-2 guard had 22 points, 12 rebounds and five steals in tonight's game.
"We wanted to play well and keep the game flowing, no matter whoever was in the game," Aycock said. "We need to work on our rotation defense—the little things that will help you when you play a nationally-ranked team."
Trapp said although the game was a blowout, it was still valuable.
"It helps us to know what to do in practice," she said. "We still have to stay intense on defense. That's how you can get better."
Above: Kansas freshman guard Tamecka Dixon attempts to rebound the basketball from Morgan State's Karla Warfield. Right: Freshman forward Shelly Canada starts a Kansas fast break. Kansas defeated Morgan State 117-48.
Kansas 117. Morgan State 48
Kansas (5-0)
Aycock 10-14 14-25 22, Taw 9-16 4-6 22,Tate 5-10 2-12, Halbleib 19-4 0-20, Dixon 5-19 4-11, Muncy 2-6 3-6, Canada 5-9 2-4 12, Sampion 5-12 0-11, Leathers 0-3-0 0, Thalmann 0-3-0 0.
Totals 50 96 14-27 117
Morgan State (0-6)
Johnson 2-11-0 1-0, Saffold 2-6-0 1-0, Ross 2-13
8-1 8, Warfield, Karla 7-15 1-0, Warfield,
Kaira 4-22 1-2, Edwards 0-12-2, Norman 0-0 0,
Wilson 1-3-0 2, Warfield, C-0-4 0-1, Brown
0-3-0 0, McGriff 0-2-0 0, Totals 18-80 11-13
48
Halftime — Kansas 71, Morgan State 17
3-point goals — Kansas 3-14 (Halbleib 2-6,
Dixon 0-1, Sampson 1-5, Leathers 0-2), Morgan
State 1-9 (Warfield, Karla 1-4, Warfield, Kaira 0-
4, Wilson 0-1).
Rebounds —Kansas 70, Morgan State 46.
Assists —Kansas 25, Morgan State 9. Total
fouls —Kansas 14, Morgan State 20. A —400.
MORGAN
48
STATE
LATHAWKS
44
Seats available for Indiana game
Students can buy unclaimed tickets
By Stephen Martino Special to the Kansan
Contrary to popular belief, more than 2,000 tickets set aside exclusively for students are still available for the Dec. 22 Kansas/Indiana basketball game.
The change in student ticket distribution created a surplus of tickets for home basketball games, said Bernie Kish, director of ticket sales and operations for the Athletic Department.
Instead of issuing tickets when students ordered them, the department issued guaranteed redemption coupons that students could exchange on specified days for tickets. As long as students redeemed their coupons on those days, they were guaranteed tickets.
However, Kish said, many students had not redeemed their coupons for the Indiana game by Tuesday's deadline. That created a ticket surplus for students who did not purchase the sports combination package. The department set a period of time for all-student purchase, which is Dec. 8-17 for the Indiana game. All students with valid KUIDs can purchase the remaining tickets to the game at the ticket office in Allen Field House. Tickets are $3.
Students with coupons may still redeem them, but they will not be
guaranteed tickets. They will receive the tickets from the same pool that all students may purchase from after the deadline.
Kish said the new ticket distribution process had created some confusion about the policy.
The purpose of the policy was to give students who did not purchase the sports combination a chance to attend games instead of leaving seats vacant when students who purchased the combination chose not to attend, he said.
The student-exclusive purchase period began yesterday and will continue until Dec. 17.
Beginning Dec. 18, all remaining student tickets will go on sale to the public for general admission seating.
"We are not going to sell any public tickets until students get a chance to purchase them," Kish said. "Students should have priority."
He said the department had received an "unbelievable amount of calls" from the public about general admission seating for the Indiana game.
Students with guaranteed coupons for tickets to the Jan. 15 UNC-Ashleve game and the Jan. 8 Southern Methodist game can redeem them until tomorrow. Remaining tickets will go on sale to all students on Monday. Coupons for the Jan. 10 Oklahoma game, Jan. 17 Kansas State game and Jan. 26 Oklahoma State game, can be redeemed Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday. Remaining tickets will be available for all students starting Dec. 16
'Hawks tame Wolfpack; Gurley nets career high
The Associated Press
RALEIGH, N.C. — Greg Gurley doesn't think his hot shootout last night will land him a starting spot in the Kansas lineup any time soon. However, it did wonders for his confidence.
The seventh-ranked Jayhawks, 7-1, defeated North Carolina State 74-57 behind Gurley's career-high 17 points, including a career-best five in a row from 3-point range.
"My role is not a starter. I never claim to be that," said Gurley, a junior who plays behind team scoring leader Steve Woodberry. "Steve is a great player, and I'm not looking to take anybody's job. I'm just looking to come in and do what I'm asked."
Gurley was often left open on the outside as the Wolfpack, 2-4, experimented with a triangle-and-two defense to help shut down Kansas' inside game.
The Jayhawks beat the Wolfpack for the eighth straight time. N.C. State shot 28.9 percent in the second half and 31.9 percent for the game.
The Jayhawks started to find the range from outside during a decisive 13-0 run to end the first half, keyed by five points from Woodberry.
Kansas looked sloppy in the first 13½ minutes, committing 11 turnovers as the Wolfpack grabbed a 30-26 lead at 3:53 before intermission.
Woodberry, the team's leading scorer was shut out for the first 14 minutes, but he hit a 3-pointer and two free throws in the spurt. The run reached 18 straight points when Richey and Jacque Vaughn sank baskets opening the second half.
With the Kansas lead at 14, the Wolf pack came storming back with an 11-
Kansas 74, N.C. State 57
KANSAS (7-1)
Player fgm/fga ftm/fta tp
Richey 2-6 0-0 4
Scott 5-11 4-6 14
Ostertag 4-6 0-0 8
Vaughn 3-7 2-3 10
Woodberry 2-8 3-4 9
Pollard 2-3 3-6 7
Pearson 1-2 0-2 2
Williams 0-2 0-2 0
Gurley 5-5 2-2 17
Rayford 1-3 0-0 2
Proud 0-0 0-0 0
Whatley 0-0 0-0 0
Weichbrot 0-0 1-2 1
Totals 23-53 15-27 74
N.C. STATE (2-4)
Wilson 4-7 0-0 8
Feggins 0-2 1-4 1
Fuller 1-7 2-2 4
McCuller 3-9 0-0 8
Davis 3-9 0-0 8
Lewis 1-5 0-2 2
Marshall 2-11 0-0 4
Daniels 3-4 0-0 8
Sims 4-13 0-0 9
Hyatt 2-3 0-0 5
Sutton 0-2 0-1 0
Totals **23-72** **3-9** **57**
Halftime Kansas 9.3N, N.C.State 30-point goals Kansas 9.13 (Gurley 5.9, Vaughn 2.8, Woodbury 2.3, Richey O-1, Pearson 4.0), N.C.State 8.29 (Daniels 2.3, Davis 2.6, McCuller 2.8, Hyatt 1.1, Sims 1.3, Sutton 0, Marshall 0.8) **Rebounds** Kansas 43 (Pollard 9), N.C.State 38 (Fuller 7) **Assists** Kansas 18 (Vaughn, Rayford 5), N.C.State 16 (Marshall 7) total foul Kansas 12, N.C.State 22 Attendance 9,100
1 run behind six points from Marcus Wilson.
North Carolina State closed to 45-41 with 13:19 left, but Kansas scored seven straight points to increase the margin to 11, and the Wolfpack got no closer than eight the rest of the way.
No Wolfpack players scored in double figures.
Players picked for All-American football team
Kansas absent, but K-State player makes elite squad
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Heisman Trophy favorite Charlie Ward, Lombardi Award winner Aaron Taylor and three-time selection Marshall Faulk were named to The Associated Press All-America college football team yesterday.
Faulk made the team for the third straight year, the first player to do that since Georgia's Herschel Walker from 1980-82. The San Diego State running back, who will skip his senior season to enter the NPL draft, led the nation with 24 touchdowns, was third in all-purpose yards and fifth in rushing.
Ward directed top-ranked Florida State's "fast-break" offense, which led the NCAA in scoring with a 43.2-point average. The elusive quarterback was the nation's fourth-leading passer, completing 69 percent for 3,032 yards, 27 touchdowns and only four interceptions.
Taylor, the Lombardi winner as the nation's top lineman, and Rob Waldrop made the team for the second consecutive year.
Joining Ward and Faulk in the backfield is Northern Illinois' LeShon Johnson, the nation's leading rusher with a 179.6-yard average. Johnson twice gained more than 300 yards in a game and finished with the fourth-highest rushing total -1,976 yards—in NCAA history.
Taylor, an offensive tackle from Notre Dame, anchored a line that opened holes for the country's sixth-best rushing attack. Waldrop, a nose guard for Arizona, spearheaded a defense that gave up an NCAA-low 30.1 yards per game on the ground.
Another record-setter, Wyoming's Ryan Yarborough, leads a trio of pass receivers on the AP squad. The other pass catchers are J.J. Stokes of UCLA and Johnnie Morton of Southern Cal.
yards to become the NCAA's all-time leader in receiving yardage with 4,357. He finished second in career touchdown catches with 42.
Stokes tied a UCLA mark with 17 TD catches, including a school-record 95-yarder against Washington. Morton, Southern Cal's all-time leading receiver, tied a Pac-10 record with 78 catches this season and set a league mark with 1,373 receiving yards.
Yarborough caught 67 passes for 1.512
The all-purpose player is Alabama's David Palmer, who was used as a runner, receiver, quarterback, punt returner and kickoff returner. Palmer set school records with 61ceptions for 1,000 yards and gained more than 100 all-purpose yards in every game.
Rounding out the offense are center Jim Pyne of Virginia Tech; tackle Wayne Gandy of Auburn; guards Mark Dixon of Virginia and Stacy Seegars of Clenson; and placekicker Biom Merten of UCLA.
Merten is the only freshman on the squad Along with Waldron, the defensive line
includes Dan Wilkinson of Ohio State, Sam Adams of Texas A&M and Kevin Patrick of Miami.
The linebackers are Trev Alberts of Nebraska, Derrick Brooks of Florida State and Dana Howard of Illinois. The secondary features Antonio Langham of Alabama, Aaron Glenn of Texas A&M, Jeff Burris of Notre Dame and Jaime Mendez of Kansas State.
Mendezmade 13 touchdown-saving tackles for Kansas State, which had its best season (8-2-1) since 1931.
The punter is Auburn's Terry Daniel, who finished second nationally with a 46.9-yard average.
The All-America team will be featured on the Bob Hope Christmas show Dec. 15 from 8-10 p.m. EST on NBC.
Florida State, Auburn, Alabama, UCLA, Texas A&M and Notre Dame each had two players on the team, which was selected by AP football writer Rick Warner and regional AP sports writers.
All-America Team
Offense
Marshall Faulk, San Diego State, Jr.
Wide recievers: J.J. Simes, UCLA Jr.; Johnny Morton
Running back: Chuck Ward, Florida State.
Running back: Shon Johnson, Northern Illinois, Sr.
Maryville Coll. (Phys.)
Wide receivers: J.J. Smith, UCLA Jr., Johnny Morton, Southern Cal., Sr.; J.K. Borough, Wyoming, Sr.
Center: Jim Piney Amanda Tech, Sr.
Guards: Mark Dixon, Virginia, Sr.; Stacy Seegars, Clemson
Tackles: Aaron Teymur Notre Dame, Sr.; Wayne Grandy,
Auburn, Sr.
Defense
All-purpose football, Palmer, Alabama, Jr.
Placickeridge, Merten, UCLA, Fr.
Lineman
Coach M.Crop, Arizona, Sr. Dan Wilkinson, Ohio State, Sr. Chris
Hampson, Texas &M, Jr.; Kevin Patrick,
**Linebacker** Terrell Alberts, Nebraska, Sr.; Derrick Brooks,
Florida $146; Diana Howard, Illinois, Jr.
Florida St. Dana Howard, Illinois, Jr.
Backs: Alcorn, Alabama, Sr.; Jeff Burris, Notr.
**Bakee:** Alonzo Langham, Alabama, Sr.; Jeff Burris, Notre Dame, Sigma; Tamla Mendez, Kansas State, Sigma
Second Team Big 6
0
Charles Jackson, receiver, Colorado
Thomas Richardson, back, Kansas State.
Calvin Jones, geo.lebanco
Zach Wiegert, geo.lebanco
Garrett Nanneman, geo.lebano State
Andre Coleman, all-purpose, Kansas State
Bruce Banna, linebacker, Oklahoma
Source: Associated Press
)
KANSAN
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Thursday, December 9, 1993
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Thursday, December 9, 1993
NCAA could develop playoff system
Coaches open debate on postseason play
By Stephen Hawkins The Associated Press
Like Christmas shopping, the debate on how to pick college football's national champion is making the rounds.
Fans are talking about it, some coaches are campaigning for it, the NCAA and CFA are studying it, and some groups are proposing a playoff series.
It's easy, some say. Set up a system, such as a 16-team playoff, and determine a true national champion. Others propose a four-team playoff after the bowls.
"It's easy to sit down and say we are going to have a playoff," said Roy Kramer, commissioner of the Southeastern Conference. "There are a lot of issues that have to be resolved before we could get to a playoff."
Major issues include the format, how to determine playoff teams, the effects on the current bowl setup and
the bottom line—money.
Nineteen bowl games, most backed by corporate sponsors, are expected to pay out nearly $70 million to teams this year. And with revenue-sharing agreements in many conferences, that money will be spread out among more than half of the 106 Division I A schools.
Kramer, whose conference is locked into agreements to provide teams for five bowls, admits that a playoff system would have to provide at least that much money to be feasible.
13
Citrus Bowl executive director Charles Rhoe said estimates about how much money a playoff could generate had been "grossly exaggerated," noting that the NFL makes only about $30 million for the Super Bowl.
And how would the bowls, the money generators along with TV, fit into a playoff system?
Troy Mathieu, executive director of the Sugar Bowl, said he had not seen any proposal which would be able to incorporate bowls into a playoff system and maintain any resemblance of the current situation.
The NCAA has formed a group to
study the advantages and drawbacks of a I-A playoff. However, no changes could be made until at least the 1995 season. A College Football Association committee will deliver a report on postseason football next June.
Several groups, including Nike, Disney and the Aloha Bowl, have made playoff proposals. But they haven't gotten very far.
So the debate continues: Do once-beaten Florida State deserve to play undefeated Nebraska for the national title in the Orange Bowl? Did West Virginia, the only other eligible undefeated team, deserve a title shot? And what about once-beaten Notre Dame, which handed Florida State its only loss?
"Can you explain to me how our one loss knocks us out and Florida State's one loss doesn't do them in?" Notre Dame coach Lou Holtz asked.
West Virginia athletic director Ed Pastilton said he would support a playoff system if the bowls were included.
"I think some pluses would be a definite national champion and economic benefits," he said.
Nebraska coach Tom Osborne said
he was not sure a playoff would end the controversy.
Alabama coach Gene Stallings opposes a playoff.
"I don't know how you can pick eight top teams without somebody complaining about which eight and where they have to play the games," he said.
"I think the bowl alliance can always work out to where No. 1 can play No. 2, and you can settle who the national champion is," he said.
Auburn coach Terry Bowden, whose team is undefeated but ineligible for a bowl game because of NCAA probation, favors a playoff. Before coming to Auburn, Bowden coached teams in the NAIA and NCAA Division I-AA playoffs.
"It's a wonderful system and it works. And it would work with the bowls," he said.
Critics claim a playoff would force players to miss more classes and make the season too long. Bowden disagrees.
"I coached Division 3," he said. "We had a 14-game schedule, and we didn't ever miss classes ... and were through by Christmas."
Team managers have all-American importance
By Anne Felstet
Korean sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
Managing a varsity team is not the most glorified position a person could ever hope to fill, but Jeff Himes, administrative assistant and head football equipment manager, said he never had to hunt for people to assist the Kansas football team.
The football program employs nine managers, one for each coach, and two people who do the laundry. The men's basketball team has five managers, headed by assistant coach Steve Robinson.
The managers arrive a few days earlier than the players do in August to set up the equipment that will be used throughout the season.
All nine managers then attend every practice and make sure the coaches and players have everything they need. Four managers attend the away games, but as the season progresses more managers travel to help the players with the extra laundry resulting from the colder weather, Himes said.
He said all nine managers flew to Hawaii last year when Kansas played in the Aloha Bowl, which it won against Brigham Young 23-20.
Senior Patrick Gormann has been a footballmanager for four years, and he said he felt like part of the team.
"The players are good friends of mine," he said.
"The players are good friends of mine," he said. Senior center Dan Schmidt said the team would be chaotic without the help of the managers, especially during away games. A player's job is to be focused on the game, and the manager's job is to alleviate distractions, he said.
"We definitely notice what they do for us on game days," he said. But he said the team did take it for granted that everything was in order.
On game days, the managers organize the locker room and hang each player's jersey, pants and helmet in their lockers.
He said the coaches appreciated the managers' work, even if they did not always acknowledge it because of their hectic schedules.
"Everybody has their role," Himes said. "The managers just go in and do their job."
Gormann said he was interested in being a football manager because football was his favorite sport and he wanted to be associated with it.
"I'm with the team, I get to know the players, and I get to see how college football works," he said.
He said his pet peeve with managing the team was hearing fair-weather fans gripe about the players.
"They don't realize how much time the players put in and how hard they try," he said of the fans.
Schmidt said that the managers put in longer hours than the players but that they did not get credit for the work.
He said they could be considered student athletes just as much as the players because of the time they put in. They know what it is like to balance practice and class, he said.
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Thursday, December 9,1993
SPORTS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
'Hillbillies' may end on top of college football world
The Associated Press
CHARLESTON, W. Va. — The only thing West Virginia used to lead the nation in was unemployment and hillbilly jokes. But make no joke about it, this is now football country.
It would take some doing, but it's not inconceivable that West Virginia could win three national college football championships this season. West Virginia in Division I-A, Marshall in Division I-AA and Glenville State College in NAIA Division I all are possible champions.
West Virginia University is ranked third in the nation and is one of three remaining unbeaten teams in Division I-A. The Mountainaees (11-0) play No. 8 Florida (10-2) on New Year's Day in the Sugar Bowl with a possible co-national championship on the line.
Defending champion Marshall (10-3) plays Troy State (12-0-1) in an NCAA I-AA semifinal on Saturday in Huntington, W.Va. Also Saturday, Glenville State (10-2) is at East Central, Oka, (9-3) in the NAIA Division championship game.
"I think it's definitely unique that a state that's as sparsely populated as West Virginia has three teams this close to winning a national championship," Glenville State coach Rich Rodriguez said.
"The chances of it even happening in a big state with a large population and a lot of schools are slim," Rodriguez said.
With about 1.8 million people, West Virginia is smaller in population than Chicago and barely bigger than Houston.
The state has 11 football-playing universities and colleges. West Virginia is the only Division I-A team, while Marshall is the only Division I-AA team.
So, what's the secret?
"I think it speaks well of the fact that the high school football in the area is excellent," said ESPN analyst and former college football coach Lee Corso.
West Virginia and Glenville State are within driving distance of Pennsylvania, which has some of the best high school football players in the country. Marshall is close to Ohio and Kentucky, also recruiting hotbeds.
All three schools also have made successful forays far beyond the state line.
West Virginia spent $20 million on 63,500-seat Mountainteer Field in 1980 and has steadily upgraded it. Marshall unveiled a new, $30 million stadium in 1991.
Marshall's posh facilities have helped the Herd land nine I-AA playoff games at home since 1991 and caused one opposing coach to term the playoffs "The Marshall Invitational." The stadium will be site of the I-AA championship game on Dec. 18, even if the Herd doesn't participate.
Glenville State, with much less money to spend still has spruced up its field and added a modern weight room.
"Besides a good education, every kid is looking for a place where there's good morale from the standpoint of where they train and where they eat and where they lift weights," said Marshall coach Jim Donnan.
Mountainers athletic director Ed Pastilong, a state native who coached at West Virginia's Salem College before it dropped football, said pride had something to do with it.
"I think our following in the state and enthusiasm for sports benefits all of our athletic programs," Pastilong said.
West Virginia coach Don Nehlen doesn't mind national exposure, but he's glad the school is off the beaten path, just the same.
"Thank golly a lot of people don't want to move in here," he said. "That's what makes this a great place. Let them think we don't wear shoes."
Knight's rage hits son, ticks off fans
By Steve Herman The Associated Press
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — Bob Knight swung his foot. Whether his son was the intended victim or just happened to be in the way, the reaction from Indiana fans was enough to send the General into another tirade.
It's nothing new, of course. Just the first time this season. But considering the No. 12-ranked Hoosiers' campaign is only three games old, Knight already appears to be in midseason form.
His outburst in Tuesday night's 101-82 victory against Notre Dame was triggered by some sloppy play in the closing minutes by the Hoosiers' mop-up crew, which included his son Pat, a 6-foot-6 junior.
Indiana was up by 28 points when the younger Knight made a bad pass that Notre Dame's Ryan Hoover intercepted and took in for a fast-break layup. That was too much for the old man.
During a time-out, Knight went face-to-face with his son, screaming at him while the players went to the bench. Knight apparently kicked at something, and some fans, who thought that it was his son's leg, started booing. That's when Knight turned from his seat and glared at the anonymous offenders behind him.
You didn't need to be a lip-reader to make out his four-letter response.
But back to the kick. Did he, or didn't he?
The crowd of players surrounding the bench prevented most people from seeing the apparent assault. Knight refused to speak to the news media after the game and did not return a phone call to his office yesterday.
A TV cameraman said he caught Knight's kick on tape.
"It shows him kicking somebody. From where I was sitting, it looked like he meant to kick him," said the cameraman, who asked not to be identified.
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(1 hour limit, up to 6 people, must take trip Thurs., Dec. 9)
3rd: 2 Jacque's T-Shirts
Demonstrations by Robert Cox, 9-10 p.m.
**Demonstrations by Robert Cox, 9 to 10 p.m.**
(Ranked 3rd in the world 1990, 3-time Missouri State champ, 4-time Kansas City Champ)
Free Steak Dinner to All Players Who Top Robert's Total Score for 2 Games!
6th & Kasold Westridge Shopping Center 865-4040
Pick These Sweats Once And You May Never Pick Them Again
that's because Russell's NuBlend poly-cotton sweats are virtually pill-free. So they'll look better longer, and you won't have to keep picking ugly fuzz balls off your sweats.
Russell Athletic NuBlend sweats are made to be as long lasting as the uniforms that they make for professional athletes. So choose Russell Athletic'sNuBlend sweats, and leave the picking to somebody else.
NUBLEN
RUSSELL
ATHLETIC
Quality • Performance
R
Heritage
840 Massachusetts
842-2442
JOCK'S NITCH
SPORTING GOODS
The Sports Look of Today!
Optical Dispensary VISIONS 841-7421
PERSONAL HEALTH CARE FOR WOMEN
- Complete GYN Care - Pregnancy Testing
- Depo Provera & Norplant - Tubal Ligation
PROVIDING QUALITY HEALTH CARE TO WOMEN SINCE 1974
CONFIDENTIAL ABORTION SERVICES
- Licensed Physicians/Caring Staff • Modern State-Licensed Facility
COMPREHENSIVE 345-1400
health for women OUTSIDE KC AREA
VISA
MasterCard
4401 W. 100th (I-435 & Roe) 1-800-227-1918
Overland Park, KS TOLL FREE
Classified Directory
100s
Announcemente
225 Professional Services
108 Personal
110 Business
Personal
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost and Found
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, nationalism 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 subject to change.
II
100s Announcements
105 Personals
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 (FHA) and requires experience, 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-
Classified Policy
Times may come and go... but Best Friends will last forever!!!
Bon Voyage Mindy (Coach) .. Have fun sailing the seas! Barbie, we will miss you lots. I don't know what we will do without both of you. As we all sail our separate ways remember to take all of the good times we have shared with you!! We love you, Jojo, Melissa, Friskie, Amy, Troy.
It has been wonderful getting to know you these last couple of weeks, I hope to see even more of you in the future!
LOVE SCOTT
PETER SMITH
I'll be thinking of you all while I'm away!!!
"I be thinking of y all while I am away!" (you too Barb, Amy, Troy, and Chael) Thanks for everything...I'm gonne miss you, you love me! Mell Love always and forever..."
MINDY
110 Bus. Personals
Shirin-Kitchens
Indian/Pakistan based Indian Food
Fresh delicious home made foods made to order
Group/Party orders welcome
call 776-7827
The Etc. Shop and Ray-Ban
are giving you a gift
get back when you buy
Ray-Ban/Bauches and Lomb sunglasses.
The Etc. Shop 2928 Mass
Unique Sterling Silver Jewelry
Hoops, Pendants & more!
For Guys and Gals
The Etc. Shop 2928
9228 Downmatt
300s Merchandise
Call Today!
For Christmas and Spring Break
---
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
AIRLINE TICKETS Don'tWait
We'll find the lowest fares and best schedules.
Maupintour
749-0700
-Kansan Classified: 864-4358
On Campus Location in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
400s Real Estate
405 Real Estate
430 Roommate Wanted
SEE THE CLASSIFIEDS
WATKINS HEALTH CENTER 864-9500
Regular Clinic Hours
Monday-Friday 8am-4:30pm
Saturday 8am-11:30am
Urgent Care (Additional Charge)
Monday-Friday 4:30pm-10pm
Saturday 11:30am-4:30pm
Sunday 8am-4:30pm
Pharmacy Hours
Monday-Thursday 8am-9pm
Saturday 8.90am-12.30pm
Sunday 11am-3pm
KUID with Current Registration Sticker Required for All Services
120 Announcements
*SPRING BREAK*
Early Booking Special
$2 Deposit
LOWEST PRICE CHARGEED!
JUNE 14TH
Have fun this year cutting your own Christmas tree at beautiful Pine Hill Farm. Enjoy free horse rides & horse-drawn trailer rides into our fields, Sip hot water & select a fresh beautifully decorated wreath. We're celebrating our 22nd year of providing Christmas memories. Drive east on Hwy 104 miles to DG County Road 167, then drive north one and a half miles. Edmonds family 542-9417
WANT TO ACE THE WESTERN CIVILIZATION FINAL EXAM?
Get
NEW VIEW:
review & study guide AVAILABLE AT COPY CO.
(on 23rd Street)
bring in this ad for $2 off
SPRING BREAK '94 Jamaica & Cancun from
'149, Daytona & Panama City Beach from $129.
ORGANIZE A GROUP AND TRAVEL FREE!!!!
CALL STS @800-684-4849.
Getting Busy Signals?
Need Telnet\FTP Access to KU and/or the Internet
Call
DATABANK
Your key to the Internet
Voice 842-6699
Data 842-7744
130 Entertainment
SUMMIT COUNTY COLORADO
Affordable luxury condos just minutes from 5 ski resorts. X Mas, New Years, and college ski week available. (303) 468-6991
140 Lost & Found
Black Lab. puppy, found on campus, 12-01-93. cam
841-6128.
MEN AND WOMEN
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
[ATTENTION COLLEGE STUDENTS] *We need someone to work hard can be extremely expensive and loans sometimes cost*. We can help! Call Faith Marketing for details. Phone: 212-756-8329. Free 24 hr. recorded call. Call 1-888-727-3040.
AMIGOS Supervisor/Asalist Mgr
---
Supervisor now - manager 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 work in a fast, intense pace, an opportunity to put these skills to work and develop as a leader is available. Relocation now at: amitg, 1819 W. 23rd. benefit apply.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, December 9,1993
15
ACADEMIC PROGRAM COORDINATOR
The KU Department of Student Housing and
assistantrator (APC) vacancy for Spring 2014. The APC holds a 50% position, working to facilitate academic progress, encourage good study skills, and promote living unit. It is not a live-in position. Required: Graduate student in good standing at KU, taking in more than 10 hours per semester. Preferred: Master's degree or equivalent experience; Working knowledge of educational programming; and, Knowledge of commercially-available computer applications. This position requires a Master's degree or equivalent of town-capricorn or internship duties. Significant extracurricular commitments are not allowed; all must be able to commit at least two weeks from January 1 through May 31. $500 per month from January 1 through May 31. Contact Milton Scott, KU Department of Student Housing, information and application materials. Deadline December 16, 1993. EEO/AE Employer.
Adams Alumni Center is now hiring banquet staff for next semester. Flexible hours. Must have daytime availability and professional demeanor. Apply in person.
Adams Alumini Center needs a dishwasher. A.M. & P.M., and a pantry person, A.M. Flexible bris, positions available immediately. Apply in person at Adams Alumini Center 1386 Oread Ave.
EARN CASH ON THE SPOT
$15 Today $30 This week
By donating your life saving blood plasma
WALK-INS WELCOME!
NABI Biomedical Center
816 W 24th 749-5750
Attendant care, 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, school graduate Send resume/cover letter to J. Yancey, Lawrence, KS 66044. Open until filled. EOE
Attendant care, 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, school graduate Send resume/cover letter to J. Yancey, Bert Nash CMHC, 38 Missouri, Lawrence, KS 66044. Open until filled. EOE
JOB OPENINGS
Earn extra cash over Christmas break! Many temporary jobs available in Topeka for production, warehouse, office and retail. Work as much as you want
Apply at KEY Personnel,
400 SW Croix, Topeka.
267-9999
Cashiers, part-time, temporary, KU Bookstore,
$4.25 per hour, January 4-20, 1993. Work approx.
34-40 hours per week. Weekends as scheduled. Must
have previous, verifiable cash handling and cash
register experience. Abile to stand for long period.
Education: Bachelor's degree or Personal
Office. Level 5. 13th and OREO.
Full-time assistant manager needed immediately.
Must live on site. Call 841-8468.
Fast-growing local property management company needs assistance in producing logo and marketing brochure. Great experience and excellent salary. Call Sterling Properties 865-5629
Help wanted: Hardware/Software manager KU
*School of Architecture and Urban Design seeks*
qualified graduate student. For position description
email: job@ku.edu. 864-3244. deadline
deployment date 13.1993.
Market Research Product Manager. Computer and math skills important. Wichita Kansas, send resume and cover letter to Personal PO Box 645 Wichita Kansas, 67204
Great resume and portfolio builder to help get you an edge on the job market. These interested can apply at Naismith Hall, 1800 Naismith Drive, Lawrence KS 60404, E.O.E. M/F. H.A. F.
NANIRES . spend a year near NYC with a family
NANIRES . call 1-800-857-8001, any time.
*No time. No fees.*
Practical experience figuring wages, payroll taxes, sales tax, bank reconciliations using a computer program in a small business. Work with CPA Flexible hours: 10/mn, 849/2668
Part-time position for person with business or accounting major to show apts, answer phones, work in office, take care of a Kansas resident, enrolled at KU in at least 12 hours, and have a GPA of 2 or more. Call 841-70063.
Need some extra $$$ during Christmas break?
Pizza Hut is now hiring delivery drivers and cooks for the upcoming holiday season. Drivers must be comfortable with food handling. Apply at Pizza Hut, 844 IOWA Suite 94, 843-3000.
Priere Room Waiter/Waitress, part time $3.90
per hour plus tips. Monday thru Friday 11a.m.
-3p.m. Must have previous food service, waiter/
waitress experience.
Apply Kansas and Burge Unions', Personnel
Office, Level 5, 13th and Oread, EOE
Cook'sHelper, part time, $4.25 per hour, Monday
'truday 10 a.m.-1 p.m., Previous food prep and
some grill experience preferred. Must have previous
food preparation experience and be able stand for
long periods.
Reliable person needed for part time help. Hours:
10:00 am - 9:00 pm; mornings 9:00-12:00; Call
Jerl or Julty at 843-9838
Data Entry, part time, $4.25/hour, sp.m.-p.m.
seven days a week. Two people cover the work
time-each taking half of the days. Must have pre-
vious data entry and basic computer skills.
For a confidential, caring friend, call us.
We're here to listen and talk with you.
Birth date 839-4231. Free pregnancy testing.
eEMESTER BREAK POSITION! Inl. chain filing FT-4T, PT entry level openings. Earn $9.00 per session new no start after Dec. 23. Remain PT next view in Lawrence 842-533 or Overland Park 81-9675.
RESUME SERVICE Professional Business
Interviewer Training. Free initial interview. 823-8100.
The Mid West "Miss Elite" Juice Bar is now hiring
the Mid West "Miss Elite" Juice Bar is now hiring
Nurses or Alcohol.
*Days 841-759/eyes 841-122*
*Day 841-759/eyes 841-122*
Restoration/maintenance positions for skilled person with excellent reference, ready work, experience. Travel required.
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED
Handicare Worker Certification
NAILTIQUE
info meetings, Sunday Jan. 9, or Wed., Jan 12, 8:
4pm, 1149 Massachusetts, Call 841-2345
**Wanted:** Models for education classes at Hair
Temple Team Salon. Freelance has make him.
Call 617-528-3920.
舌
225 Professional Services
- Back Scratcher Nails *
* Pedicures * Manicures *
* Sculptured Tips & Overlay
2449 Iowa
• Linen Wraps •
Driver education offered by Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 yrs. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
*Pedicures* *Manicures*
*Sculptured Tips* & Overlays
TRAFFIC.DUI'S
Gift Certificates Available
For first visit:
$2.00 Off Manicures
$5.00 Off All Other Services
Call Heidi at 832-2900
Thesis &
Prompt abrupt contraction and contraceptive services. Dale L. Clinton M.D. 841-5714
Dissertations
Hardbinding and Gold Stamping
3 Day Turnaround
Lawrence Printing Service, Inc.
512 E. 9th Street 843-4600
TRAFFIC-DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
divorce, criminal & civil matters
The law offices of
Donald G. Strobe Sally G. Kelsay
16 East 13th 842-1133
Research Assistance - MS/ML information spe-
cialized by the NSF; these dissertation,
research project numbers 843-6200,
OUI/Traffic Criminal Defense
For personal contact call Rick Frydman, Attorney 823 Missouri 843-4023
Unique resumes, cover letters, laser prints. Fast,
easy updates, affordable. Graphic ideas, Inc.
www.graphix.com
BRAXTON B. COPLEY
Attorney at Law
TrafficTickets, Misdemeanors. Landlord/tenant
719 Massachusetts 749-5333
235 Typing Services
1 + word processing, letters, term
terms, 7454. After 3:50 PM weekdays, any
weekend days.
1-der Woman Word Processing, 843-2063
24-hour 'turnaround' for under 30 pages. Any size accepted. $1.59 p. Call Rush 5p. m., 843-6438.
A Word Perfect work processing service. Laser printer. Near campus. 842-6955
Expert typing through the holidays. IBM Correct
typeping 50/ doubled space page. Call Ms.
Matilla 841-1291
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.
Running out of time?
Let me do your TVBING!
Pro-Type - fast, reliable, service, professional quality. Any kind of typing. Call today at 814-6242.
Let me do your TV TITING!
Lazer printing to WOW! your profits
18 years experience.
Tips up jobs accepted.
Grammar and spelling corrected free!
Call Jacki at
Makin' the Grade
2005-06-25
Word processing, applications, term papers, dis-
tributions. Work in customer rollout, rush
job availability, Masters Degree 694-824
job available. Masters Degree 694-824
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
1 single mattress, box springs, and frame for sale.
2 condition. Must Ask! Ask for Wendy at 841-6844
486DX, 33 MHz, 170 MB hard drive, dual high density floppies, 4 MB memory, internal modem, super VGA, mouse, preloaded software. Run perfectly. 1800. 843-9513.
91. Schwain Impact Pro > good condition asking
$25.75. LM or ask for Steve 832-0275.
Adcom stereo power amplifier GFA A553L1, $160, 29 gallon fresh water aquarium complete w/stand and accessories $150, Nice full size futon $175. Call 865-0720.
Air Ticket from KC1-Norfolk(VA) 18-Jan.18
Air ticket for $300 or B$30 ASAP Call 865-7499
Anytime
Chow mixed puppy, four months old, good health
Chow mixed puppy, 749-1601 after 3pm and
to Georgia.
Head skis for sale, Solomon 752 bindings only used
1 season, $175. Call Phil #81-1914
Basketball coupons 4-sale (alie). Will sell ASAP & will take best offer. Call 814-6370.
For Sale. Cigarette Cases, Sterling Crosses, Lecck
Cases, Antique Bracelets, Coin and Antiques.
$95 Mantas Antique Mail. 842-731-6722.
Fender acoustic guitar. Great X-Mas present,
and a wonderful soft case. $900 or best
call. Call 823-9040.
Need to sell: KX- KP2132 Panasonic (color option)
printer 210: lamps, loveset, coffee table, book-shelves, table, chairs and miscellaneous. Call 842- 4737
Macintosh Quadras. Best prices available. Student discounts apply. 800-240-2441.
North Face Mt jacket & fleece jacket, excellent cost. $300. Call 864-1573
Oak queen watered on platform of 6 drawers/ &
heater in linen included $190 Call Engine $85-6790
or linen included $190 Call Engine $85-6790
Klein MTN bike frame & fork $250, car stereo amp.
$250, $250, JL audio box w/2 b/8.
H11#-440
H11#-440
avail navigator G-1 Leather Jacket. Never used, size
44, 115 negotiable. Call 811-9045.
Pinewood Queen waterbed/mattress $150
4 drawer dresser w/ mirror $200; Call
61-8460
CD player Sony 7band EQ, PFT 5076XD1, CMD
player with enclosure. MQuart Bunt quater.
Call Tm #8014.
Student ask basketball lickets for sale, best offer.
Ack for Brian I-783-4829.
Season Student Basketball tickets for sale. Make your best offer. 865-5293-893
1981 VW Jetta, 5-psd. d-good Condition AM-MF-Me-
cracer, $1700 call. Call Me 841-7796.
"82 Buck Century Clean. Make an offer. Call Angie
864-2279
U.S. Airline Uctet. Docket RC, goes to Denver
United Airlines Kg. 206, RC Jan 5,
1994. Cull Jacinter et 800-446-800.
Cull Jacinter et 800-446-800.
fast Honda Accord LX, automatic transmission,
power locks and windows. Runs great. Interiors in good condition, blue, some hail. Excellent A/C & gterco cassette, $2,800/ooh K4 861-6921
1883 Black Jeep CJ-7, S-Speed. Hard top, new
honda radio, $4,900 Call 812-659-2525,
and have a message.
84 Pridele St. 1116 Hwy mi. Power audim and fin-
uing options $3, 000; Call us at 842-7898. MUST SELL
88 Honda Civic LX, 4-dr. 1 owner. Excellent condition. $495. Call 81-0373 or 84-369.
SABA '8, sun roof, A/C, electric mirrors 9K runa
great, taking for $500. Call 843-7852.
88 Ford Tracer, white, 4 doors, auto, A/C, 88,000 miles
88,000.0 (900.0) O/L, 1,094-3341
I need 3 tickets to the Nuttercater on Friday,
10th, 10th. Call Rats at 941-1682, 846-3599.
Now Buying
PLAY IT AGAIN
SPORTS
exercise equipment, downhill-
skis, mountain bikes, and all
sporting equipment
A
1029 Mass. 841-PLAY (7529)
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1 Bdrm ap, just blocks from campus available for 2nd semester sublease, washer/dryer, dishwasher, ceiling fan, $220 per mo./person. 113 Kentucky 865-0729, Call on.
1 bbl. apc., overlocks stadium, off street parking,
2 mall parking, this month-Rent Free Leave
at 805-796-3400
1 Bdmr- studio apt. in older house, 1300 Blk Vermont. Private entrance. Quit. Party整 glass windows, ceiling fax. Avail. end of Dec. 8. no dogs, Call Lois 814-1074 or Jen 794-3781.
i bedroom apt. for sublease available Jan I. Onlyly
broom room, gas paid, water gas, on Bus, Route
B.
1 bdmr. apt, wood floors, walk to campus, 18th &
Louisiana. Available Jan. 12, 2019; Call (818) 657-3400
1. 2 female roommates need to sublease fully furnished 3 DBD apt., w/ private bath. For Spring sem. or sooner 1 blk. from campus, $180/mo. Call 841-4207.
18Drm,建筑 apt. for rent in pvt. home. prvt.
entrance, 1bk from KU. Available Jan. 1, Grad student
preferred, no pets. $30/mo. includes all util.
& cable. Call 864-9944 for info.
I bedroom, furnished apartment, on bus route, or
o6th St. Very Clear! Call 843-8719.
2 bdrm on bus rt, clean, quiet. Avail. Jan. 1.
$85/mo/depot, no pets. 864-3553 (days) or 843-
7970 (weeks).
2 Bedroom, 1 bath, Bath DEPOSIT REQD D You
3 Bedroom, 1 bath, Bath DEPOSIT REQD D You
4 Bedroom, 1 bath, Bath DEPOSIT REQD D You
Available Jan. 1 Call 855-277-2900
2 Br Appl. for Rent. Easy access to downtown, KU, and bus route. Features 24 hr maintenance, off street parking, microwave, dishwasher, and W/D. 8470 per day Miehli Mc947-729 Eve Stuart 7498
3 bedroom townhouse, 2/3 bath, separate living and family room, washer & dryer hookup, fireplace, carport, KU bus route, 2 pools, tennis courts.
Call 865-3637
3 bdm apt. close to campus available for 2nd
furnished, furnished,
walled ceiling $459; call 814-7521
4 bdmr, lrg rms, stove and refrigerator,
6 chassis, knockups, $700 a month. Available
15. December 15, 843-5820
4 bedroom apartment for rent, fully furnished,
very nice! Available Spring sem. Interested? Call
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS 2040 Heatherwood Available Jan 1st 1-2-3 Bedroom Apartments
- Fully Equipped kitchens
- Vertical and mini blinds
- Laundry facilities on site
Call Gina today at 843-4754 for an appointment!!
Boardwalk
Available Jan. 1. 8:30 bpm. apt. to campus.
Available Jan. 2. 9:30 bpm. apt. to Georgetown.
Call: A83-821 or 794-729.
Call: A83-821 or 794-729.
Available at semester break, apk, in newer sec.
phone: 340-278-9652; email: aik@ucl.edu; $80/mo, b2dm apk/i-mo; Canela pd, w/
hookups, dw, microwave, ceting fan, mini blinds,
balcony, energy efficiency, great location near cam-
puter lab.
Available Jan. 54 Michigan-Akp-3b drum, 2 bdrm for fireplace, wipeash and & dryer-fit kitchen-new
Clerk. Spring Semester Bus Pass Sales, Kansas
University. Applicant must be 19 years old,
12, 1944 - 12, 1984. l.m. 4390. m. Must have previous
experience cashiering or handling money. Apply
Kansas and Burge Urge Personnel Office. Level
1. Please include a resume and cover letter.
Available Jan. 1, 3 bbmr. on bus route Call
749-1566 8-5 pmn-Mon-Fri.
Available now nice clean studio apt. close to cam-
sroom. Call 842-2249 lv. message no. 605. No pets
Bullock 842-2249 lv. message lv.
Beautiful 1 Ed. unfurnished, available Jan 1.
Beautiful 2 Ed. Laundry费 $355
Utilities Call 843-4190
Furnished gt available Dec. 18. BRE near camp
water paid, $370/month. Call 841-881 or 824-
895.
For rent. Winterpark park. Available Jan. 18th.
Furnished. Formal rooms, sleep six.
Rental at $495 per night at 814-762-3000.
MORNING STAR for rooms and apartments in well kept homes. Also some houses. Call 841-269-5000.
Furnished room for rent for with shared kitchen and
office space on kU. Off-street parking.
No pets. Call 841-5500.
Free Rent in exchange for part-time child care.
Willing to provide child care with some
child care equipment. No minimums.
New Large A Bdr. Available. Specials offered thru May or July, include DW, MW, FT, trash compactor, cable. Call 841-7847. 4501 Wimbeldon Dr.
for rent - spacious one bedroom apt. with hard-
doug floors. 841-6931.
524 Frontier
842-4444
For suburbia starting Jan. 1, 1964, Birchwood Gurnard, 2 bedroom, within walking distance to KU, $38,000 per month; 3 bedroom, $52,000 per month.
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Now leasing for Spring & Summer Move-ins.
Professional woman seeking N/S female Grad
student for one bedroom, half bath in my home
on West 20th. Terrace. Kitchen privileges. W/D use
for personal use. Be quiet, responsible, enjoy cats.
$350. 845-987.
Room to sub-lease in a large house start Jan 1st
Room to rent in a large house start Jan 45 - 105 assns
for Dave or B3-827-849 evenings
Nice 38r, 2 Bath, 2 Floor unit w/ P/E, DPW,
Microwave, garage, pantry & W/D hookup
750/mi. mo. 749-0637. Available immediately/Jan1
One apt. aboy. body工具. Microwave dishwasher
Furnished studio apartment. 2 short blocks from
Water paid. Off street parking. No pets. 841-5050
Great sub-lease opportunity 1416 Tempeese Large
3-rm plus bath spa 8300/m. clean, quiet, great
kitchen space
rooms in 4 bedroom & townhouse avail-
room in 2 bedroom & bus route W/D wckout
190 mic 104-657-371
Spacious, sunny 1 Mnr. unfurnished Ant. Cable included. Close to campus. Ceiling fan. Deck and microwave. $375/month available for sub-lease Jan 1 841-809.
negotatable Call Casey at 864-4101 call **bw** ... 2
PART 25 APARTMENTS will have a select **bw**
and 2 BR apartments available for Dec and Jan
For details call 864-1455 or stop in 2601 W. 95A 291
Spring Semester-Going over averages for looking for
performance metrics in a bit of time from
$190.00; call Cali @ 867-574-2800.
MEADOWBROOK
842-4200
Large 18x18 room in nice home, 3 miles from KU for female non-smoker $101, utl paid. Call 749-6156
Doga OK. 1 bkk from NalaimiBt. $220/m + ¼ /a interests. Interested call 749-6151
meadowbrook
Spring Semester sub-lease. b I apt very close to
close to campus. $350/mo. Call 821-0161
Large, bright, cozy & new. Private entrance, garden apt. in home on West 20th Terrace. Tile two. Fireplace, W/D hookups. No pets/smoking. 8450 - 900. Utilities/Cable paid. 843-987.
We also have 2 & 3 bedrooms for 2nd semester & are close to campus.
APARTMENTS • TOWNHOMES
• RESIDENCES
Sublease I bdmr on bus route.$330 a month plus
water. Uses water and paid cash. Paul841-3428.
So...how about those roommates? I Like 'em but can't live with them?
We have a studio or a one bedroom apartment ESPECIALLY FOR YOU!
MON-FRI 8am-5:30pm,
SAT 10-4
SUN 1-4.
Sublesse 3 bdm.帐. Jan.I July 31. On bus rl.
washer/dryer 450/mo. +ti. 749-3943.
**Sublease 2** bdm townhouse, available feb. 11
garage, big yard, $475/m call. Waynet at 865-527
**Sublease 2** bdw Townhome W/D hookup and
garage. Available Jan 1. *Aus. 10.815 m* ooil+ mth.
+ electric & phone, cable available. On KU bus
route. Call Cuilton Dalton at 832-2081.
am 5 - July 31 bwf / bmw/ dry/eve
dry/eve fireplace, carport
mmc $call. Amor call
SUBLEASE STUDIO APT. For Spring Semester, 2 kls from campus, off street parking W/D, full bath, kite and 9louisiana. Rent and Utilities about $300/month-call 41-897 or if answer 814-
Sublease studio appl. *block from KU* Availability mid-bee, until July 31. $250/mo + electricity &
OPEN DAILY
MASTERCRAFT
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Reserve your home today!
Campus Place - 841-1429
1145 Louisiana
3, & 4 burn apis ...
designed with you in mind!
Go to ...
offers furnished
1 2 3 4 hydromate
Hanover Place - 841-1212 14th & Mass.
Regents Court 749-0445 1905 Mass.
Orchard Corners - 749-4220
15th & Kasold
Sundance - 841-5255
7th & Florida
Tanglewood - 749-2415
10th & Arkansas
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Drop Into Our Place to ask about our Mid Term Leases
$365-$435
- 3 Hot Tubs
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Basketball Court
- Microwave
- On Bus Route
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts.
842-5111 1301 W.24th
Wishing You The Best This Holiday Season!
SUBBLEARANCE AND BUILDING. Students with bードoom, nードoom to CARD
and BUDGET. Student with bードoom, nードoom to GAM
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2 bedroom bungalow at 32d & New Hampshire.
Washer/Dryer, Dishwasher, detached garage,
neighborhood, perfect for grad students. Small KA Avian. Jan 1, $625 per month. Call 749-1311.
430 Roommate Wanted
1 Female needed, spacious 2 bedroom apt. for spring term. On bus route. $235 Mo. + /u/ utilities.
1 Female needed i share 2 BR apt. Jan 1st on Bus
2 Female needed i share 3 BR apt. +/s electricity
(other still paid) 633-843-493
1. Male needed; very spacious 2 bdmn townhouse on
terrace, with balcony level 2, & ½ ba/
Dw. $250 / x10 + Call 749-785-1170
1 or 2 females needed for spacious 3 bdmr ap, for prsr stem, or lower 2 level, 5 min from campus, on the campus.
I am scheduled to share 3 bdm ap. Jan 1 to
lrmate required to share 3 bdm ap. Jan 1 to
require Chris 865-1082 day or 865-1828 day if required
1 roommate needed to share a 3 bedroom apt. with 2 graduate students starting in January. They study a lot but don't smoke. It is a 2 story apart-ment. You can get a place in one of utilities. Call 841-0289 to come and take a look.
l roommate needed to share nice/clean 3 bdm
apt. in Kauai City (1-45) & St. Natha area (82)
l roommate needed to share nice/clean 3 bdm
apt. in Kauai City (1-45) & St. Natha area (82)
l roommate needed for 3 bedroom apartment
to campus. $20 per month + 1 visitation. Call
$153.
1975 Trailer House in Lawrence, split bills, $160 monthly + $160 deposit, 827-8494. Mark.
2 Bd Apt. available at STADIUM VIEW, very close to location. Submit.
3 BdAp available at STADIUM VIEW, very close
location. Dry. Sublease for next sixm
weeks. 749-889.
3 to share spacious house, completely furnished, in walking distance to campus, $260 per month, +
Available Jan. 1st Female/Nonmurk Grad Student
Very nice, tarsured escaped for bedroom,
hot tub, desk, microwave, computer, DW, Lg kitchen, split
kitchen, refrigerator, 749-7539 - 749-7539
$20 + cash up, Negotiable. Must be
Female needed to share Colony Wods apet,
to provide meals & bath. On bus ride.
824/mon, 10am-3pm
825/mon, 10am-3pm
Female needed to share townhouse. Will have own room available Jan 1st. Washer/Dryer $225/mo + **Other**
**Costs:** 280/mo
Female roommate needed by Jan. 1 to July 31st
Cute insensitive b2d apartment near campus,
furnished except for your room. Call immediately.
842-4105 and leave message.
Female non-smoker. Now thru Aug 2, 8R ap, in house, W/D, DW, CA, Cable. $200/Mo + 1/2 up Ptly furnished. Close to campus. 842-8396.
Female roommate wanted for 2 bdr. apt. Close to camp (10) and Ohio). $180/month / t/a. Avail.
$2,000/month - Room for female roommate.
Female roommate needed to share large 2 BDK.
Bathroom, kitchen, laundry, smoke no., pets 225, moll + mall Calgain Green 601-749-3890.
Female roommate, comfortable 3 bedroom townhouse on bus line, $285 + utilities, no pet, no smoke.
Looking for a female roommate to share a bdrm. 2bth apartment. On bus route, fully furnished & very INEXPENSIVE!! Call Holly or Beth at 854-1681.
Hey! Need a place to live? W/R roommate needd
fork? No. No, I don't need any of that stuff.
Smoke/SN/Not Heather at 841-561-561.
For 2 bed, b 2 bath condo on bus rt. fur w/ in npt.
b 3 bath condo on bus rt. oval w/ Chir 832-6833
or 41-6834 or 149-6830
N/S responsible female roommate needed for 2
M/F responsible female roommate needed for 2
Deposit reg. available ASAP. Debt: 749-3282.
N/S, male, needed to a 48rd townhome with 3
garage units / utilities. Call 861-292-3050.
garage #292 / utilities. Call 861-292-3050.
garage #292 / utilities. Call 861-292-3050.
MOVE IN N/C N/FSm needed to share a nice,
197.50/m + /^ u/sl 823-8790 w / W/D hookups.
197.50/m + /^ u/sl 823-8790
N/S roommate wanted-3 bdm-dlpm W/D/C/A
N/S roommate wanted-4 avail. Jan 11 th May 31,
315 855-092-692.
N/S roommate wanted-4 avail. Jan 11 th May 31,
315 855-092-692.
Need 1 Female Immed 2 br bpr aft for apm
sensuions, fortune灵 immed 3 br bpr aft for apm
immed 0 mo/ 2 + /suat 81-4366
Need mature, clean. N/S male to share 2 br apt
w/ male grade. Student. Choose campus. $190/
room fee.
Need clean, responsible, N/S, мы share to 2hr.
$203.50/month + 1/½ months. Free cable. Close to bus route. Furnished (except for room). Available
Dice. 1 Call quickly #49-4089.
Non-smoking female need to share three 3 bldm.
1. $190/mo + /\+ usd 184/bldm, available
午 1 $190/mo + /\+ usd 184/bldm, available
wr /w small dog needs a responsible NISP mo.+
/s/Lu12 prem. up for spring semester $168 +o/
/s/Lu12
On retreat roommates needed to share 3 bdm. 1/2 bath to home. $230 + 1/2 utilities + deposit 3 bdm. $460 + 1/2 utilities + deposit
One or Two Female roommates needed! Larger room with walk-in closet and private bath. W/D/in room with walk-in closet on W/D & Eremy Available end of this session or beginning of next. Call Kathleen at 853-2803.
or two people to share three bedroom, two near RU, with en-suite room; roommate. Available in New York.
One room-mate needed, spiced BR, APt. Avail-
one room-mate needed, spiced $237/m + 5/₂ utilities
E619 Ser-657 500
THE FAR SIDE
One roommate needed at four bedroom house for Spring Semester $200/mo + utilities. Ask
Open-minded roommate needed to share large zbrapt. Quit. Local on bus route. $237.50/per 1 + /u.1 Water/cable paid. Available now and Dec. free. B23-8698
Quel upplærsemann M rmrt, needed for Sp sem in spacious 2/bath/2 bath Lvm. rg. & kt, fur-tenning.
Responsible male roommate wanted for 4 bedroom, 3 bath townhome in West Lawrence. Large kitchen, fireplace, and washer/dryer. Cabral, trash bin, placemat and call. Utility call 814-8530 and leave a message
Roommate wanted for 5 brd. house. Has washer and dryer $20/room. Includes utilities except phone.
Roommate need for 3 barm house just 4 blks from campus *$200 a month +1/uit* Call 855-364-664.
Roommate needed for Spring semester. $225/
time beginning Jan. Sublease any time beginning Jan. Call 841-637-807
room needed: N/S grad student 2 Bdr. $265/
mo+ half助上. on Bus route. Tom C4-858-2021
Roommate needed. Start Jan. 1 12300/mo plus 17
at 14 60 room. Non-smoker. Call 885-2900
for details.
Share large Victorian home, many amenities downyard, rare value. $300 + 1/3 until 842-422-222
Sublease clean, furnished a bdm. thrush. July. One block from Union. Waited. paid $298 /mo. + $80
*Discounts valid to the date of publication.*
Wanted: Roommair for 2 bedroom apartment, for
utilities 10th & 11th Avenue. Close to campus '785-792
Now leasing for Spring!
we're making life easier!
- Weekly Make service
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1800 Naismith Drive (913) 843-8559
By GARY LARSON
NAISMITH Hall
12-3
Iggy knew he was extremely lucky to get a room with a view.
Larson
16
Thursday, December 9, 1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
MARC JACOBS
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State Rep. Barbara Ballard, D-Lawrence, said that although the latest estimated revenues for the next two fiscal years seemed "rosy" — a $50 million surplus for 1994 and $135 million for 1995 — the state had to remain careful with its spending.
Thank you to all our Jaytalk advertisers!
Reforming the current state health care system, renewing interest in gun control, and revitalizing the job market in economically strapped areas of the state are the most important issues the Kansas Legislature will face in in the upcoming session, state legislators said yesterday.
Legislature to confront tough issues
By Brian James Kansan staff writer
"We still don't have money to throw around." Ballard said.
One factor that could affect future revenues, legislators said, was a decision by the U.S. Supreme Court last July that said states could not levy taxes on military pensions. As a result, the state of Kansas must pay back $100 million to those military retirees whose pensions were taxed
State Sen. Sandy Praeger, R-Lawrence, said health care reform would remain one of her top priorities during the next session. Praeger heads the Senate's Public Health and Welfare Committee.
"What we have is a definite problem," she said. "Health care spending, if it continues at the rate we've been spending, will go far beyond our budget."
Praeger and Ballard said they would like to see stricter laws that would make purchasing firearms more difficult.
Praeger and Ballard said they would endorse a law that would make it illegal for a minor to possess a firearm, similar to one recently passed in Colorado.
State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, said one of the most important legislative issues for the University was the Kansas Board of Regents budget proposals. The
Regents recently proposed a 3-percent increase in the overall budget from last year, Ballard said.
Charlton agreed.
"As tuition increases each year, we are always looking for additional funds from the state, especially for student aid programs," Praeger said.
The representatives said that because this year was an election year in the Legislature, more "hot" issues would be discussed.
"State universities are supposed to be state supported, to some degree," Charlton said. "I think we should look carefully, skeptically, at any tuition increases and examine what funding is available and make changes."
The legislators said they had no problems with the increases.
"I think we'll see issues like gay rights, abortion, and even the death penalty being addressed this year," Ballard said. "I anticipate a very active session."
CALENDAR
One increase the representatives said they did not support was a hike in tuition.
Nightlife
Benchwarmers Sports Bar & Grill
1601 W, 23rd St
*Three Walls Down (produced by R.E.M.) 9.p.m. Thursday
KJHK benefit, 9 p.m. Friday,
advance tickets
Trip Master Monkey (from New York), 9.p.m. Saturday
The Crossing
12th and Oread
Young Johnny Carson Story, 9 p.m.
Thursday
Norsay Acoustic Juice. 9 p.m. Fridav
Pet Fettish, 9 p.m. Saturday
Acoustic Juice, 9 p.m. Friday
814 New Hampshire
Eight Men Out, 10 p.m. Friday, free
Arkansas White Trash Express,
8:30 p.m. Friday, free
Three-piece Suit, 8:30 p.m. Thursday. free
Beth Skilllet, 8:30 p.m. Saturday,
free
803 Massachusetts St.
The Jazzhaus
926 1/2 Massachusetts St.
KU Jazz Ensemble, 9:30 p.m. Thursday
Mountain Clyde, 9:30 p.m. Friday
Common Ground, 9:30 p.m. Saturday
day Mountain Clyde, 9:30 p.m. Friday
Rick's Neighborhood Bar & Grill
623 Vermont
Arkansas White Trash Express,
9:30 p.m. Thursday, $3
Fast Johnny, 9:30 p.m. Friday, $3
Terrance Simien, 10 p.m. Thursday
The Bottleneck
Baghdad Jones, 10 p.m. Saturday
Ogranada Theater
Granada Theater
'80s Night, 8 p.m. Wednesday
1020 Massachusetts St.
8:05 Night, 8 p.m. Wednesday
Open Mike Night, 8 p.m. Thursday
Soul Food Cafe, 10 p.m. Friday
Fat Jam with D.J., 8 p.m. Friday
AZ-ONE, 8 p.m. Saturday Hockenbury's Tavern
AZ-ONE, 8 p.m. Saturday
rockefeller's tavern
1016 Massachusetts St.
They Came In Droves, 10 p.m.
Thursday. $3
Caribe, 10 p.m. Friday, $3
The Killer Bees, 10 p.m. Saturday.
$5
Acoustic Open Mike, 10 p.m. Sunday, free
Free State Brewing Co.
626 Massachusetts St.
636 Massachusetts St.
Free State Jazz Quartet, 7-9 p.m. Friday, free
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
CAMPUS
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1993
The Knowledge of Life
SECTION TWO
"I like my life, very much. What I want to do most of all is get back to it."
- Michael Young
]
Michael Young is a husband,father and philosophy professor. He also has brain cancer.Between the operations and treatments,he teaches and spends time with his family. This story is a look at his life.
Story by Traci Carl
They call Michael Young "the resurrected one." The KU professor of philosophy does not believe in God, but his colleagues at the KU Honors Center could not resist comparing him to Jesus when he returned in October from a cancer treatment that nearly killed him. A cancer that first appeared in 1985 as a small mole on his back was rediscovered July 9 after Young complained of headaches, loss of vision and hearing, fatigue and fainting spells. But this time, doctors discovered that the melanoma,
See KNOWLEDGE,Pages 4B & 5B.
Campus group decries killings
Life group resists abortion, violence
By Allison McCready Special to the Kansan
Tanya Teresa Weide, Lawrence senior and president of KU Students for Life, is concerned about recent attacks against abortion doctors from anti-abortion activists.
"It's a stereotype — people take it and reflect it on the whole group rather than seeing it as the action of one crazy person." Weide said.
During this year abortion doctors nationwide have been the targets of violence and harassment by anti-abortion activists. David Gunn, a Pensacola, Fla. doctor, was killed outside his abortion clinic last spring, and this fall a doctor was shot while leaving his clinic in Wichita.
Weide said she did not think the shootings had damaged the credibility of her group. But she said students who were considering joining KU Students for Life might associate the violent tactics of those extremist individuals with her group.
"It's the bad press, publicity and feelings they might get from being associated with these people." Weide said. "So it's really hard on us because it just turns that many more people against us."
Weide said that her group's fundamental belief was the right to life. She said the murder of Gunn and the attempts on other doctors' lives went against that belief.
"These people who are shooting abortion doctors, they're unstable." Weide said. "They really don't understand what the pro-life movement is
"I think by their actions, by screaming in front of the clinics and carrying violent and graphic signs, they encourage it in a real roundabout way," she said.
all about, if they would try to save babies by taking the lives of others. We're not trying to trade one life for another."
But Stephanie Gabriel, Orland, Calif, sophomore and president of the KU Pro-Choice Coalition, said that although many anti-abortion groups have denied involvement in the shootings and harassment, they supported any means by which babies were saved.
Weide said her group focuses on donating time and money to Birthright and Hannah's House, institutions that provide help for unwed mothers.
"By using terrorist tactics, scaring doctors away from doing abortions, closing down clinics all over the country, you're virtually taking away choice, for all practical purposes."
Gabriel said KU Pro-Choice Coalition members volunteered with political campaigns, sponsored letter-writing campaigns, donated money to Planned Parenthood and escorted patients from abortion clinics.
But Gabriel and Weide have one thing in common — finding support for their causes. Both said they hoped to gain that support through public discussion or other nonconfrontational methods.
"That is what democracy is all about—listening to many points of view and hopefully coming up with the right solution," Gabriel said.
Photographs by Doug Hesse
Child care search is stress for students
Campus centers have long wait list
By Katherine S. Barber Special to the Kansan
As finals approached, Galindo's babysitter quit.
For nontraditional students like Maria Galindo, Nueva Rosita, Mexico, the stress of being a parent outweighs the stress of being a student.
Her 4-year-old daughter attends the Hilltop Child Development Center, but there are no openings in the class for her 2-year-old son.
For one week, her brother and a friend alternately watched the boy, but Galindo had no idea who would watch him after that.
The number of students like Galindo is growing. According to the student profile compiled by the Division of Student Affairs Research Committee, the number of student-parents on the Lawrence campus has grown. In 1988, there were 992. In 1992, the number had grown to 1093.
In March Ed Meyen, executive vice chancellor, formed a task force to study child care needs of students, faculty, staff and the community.
Ann Eversole, director of the organizations and activities center and associate dean of student life, chairs the committee. She said that in order to fully understand the extent of the problem, the Institute for Public Policy and Business Research would conduct a telephone survey of child care needs in the University community.
Presently, there are child care facilities on campus, such as Hilltop Child
Development Center and the Edna A. Hill Child Development Center in Dole Human Development Center and Haworth Hall. But the waiting lists are long. Hilltop has a waiting list of 171 applicants, which can mean a six-month to a year wait, said Andi Workman, director of Hilltop. On-campus day care is not the only alternative for students. Many put their children in other centers in Lawrence. The KU Dependent Care Referral Service in Carruth O'Leary Hall can help students, faculty, staff and Lawrence residents find child care. The phone number is 864-4648.
The service can give parents a list of facilities that have slots for their child's age group. It is the parents' responsibility to decide whether the facilities meet their criteria for quality, cost, location and transportation availability.
Betty Peterson, coordinator of the referral service, said, "We do the phone calling for them. That in itself is stressful."
Because of the cost of infant care, Linda Kunkle, office assistant in custodial services, had two students a day come and watch her son, Dakota, until he was 7 months old. She paid them a small wage and gave them access to her home. The real benefit to the students was guaranteed study time while Dakota slept.
"We have a lot of good child care in Lawrence, in both centers and home," Cooper said. "But parents still have to really do some sleuthing and make sure that it is good, that it's what they need and that it fits their family situation."
JUSTICE FOR
NATIVE HOME
NOW!
institutional racism
WILL END!
Working to unite a community
Adrian Brown believes in evil.
He says he has seen evil — not in a metaphoric sense, nor in a religious sense.
By Carlos Tejada
Kansan staff writer
He says he has seen it — in the form of racism — on the streets of Lawrence.
"It's not the people," says Brown, student body vice president of Haskell Indian Nations University. "It's more of an evil in the city itself that makes Lawrence what it is."
Mike Jimboy of Lawrence stands in front of City Hall protest the treatment of American Indians in Lawrence during a protest in April.
Photos by Brian James / KANSAN
"To me, that calls up religious images," says Andersen, Lawrence city commissioner. "In my church, we look at evil as 'live' spelled backwards.
Jo Andersen does not believe in evil.
"Iagree with him, but I don't put any demonic element into racism."
Brown and Andersen, both members of the Lawrence community, see the world from different perspectives. But from these two different people — a
Brown and Andersen are members of NALE, Native American Law Enforcement. Their missions, and the missions of the Lawrence American Indian community and the city government, is to reconcile years of mistrust between American Indians and Lawrence law enforcement.
young American Indian student from the Viejas Band of Mission Indians reservation near San Diego and a white resident of Lawrence since 1964 — comes an effort to unite a community that has been divided for as long as most involved can remember.
Between them is a history of miscommunication that Brown
"Who's the mayor here?"
Brownsays. "EvenI don't know."
says has made many American Indians and Haskell students feel distant from the city.
Judy Sevier holds a picture of her brother, Gregg, who was fatally shot by two Lawrence police offi-
See BRIDGING, Page 6B.
not by two Lawrence police officers in April 1991. More than
Historu of distrust
The mayor of Lawrence is John Nalbandian, KU associate professor of public administration, and he says he is frustrated by the
300 people attended the April march in memory of her brother.
[Image of a woman with long hair, holding a framed picture].
2B
Thursday December 9,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Optical Dispensary
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749-4333
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By Shelly Falevits Special to the Kansan
Palestinians, Israelis at KU still uncertain about power transfer
Peace in the Middle East may have begun with a handshake between PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat and Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, but neither Palestinian or Israeli students at KU seem ready to walk arm-in-arm together.
The historical signing of the Declaration of Principles by the Israelis and the Palestinians on Sept. 13 calls for a five-year trial of Palestinian control in Gaza, Jericho and possibly the West Bank. It also recognizes a peaceful coexistence between the Palestinian Liberation Organization and Israel.
Palestinian and Israeli students at KU agree the accord is a positive development, even though the two sides are not sure whether the first transfer of power will take place in mid-December as scheduled.
Eyal Hartuv, Ashkelon, Israel, graduate student, said he was optimistic about the agreement.
Israel and the Middle East is sufficient enough to take the risk that such an agreement entails," Hartuv said.
The hope of achieving peace in
Niddal Taylem, Atchison sophmore, said that just having both sides talk to each other was a major accomplishment, but that neither side had lost sight of the pain of past decades.
"Two cousins of mine were put in jail for 20 years for throwing stones at Israeli jeeps. Why should people have to live and die like this?" Tayiem said. "My father was also kicked out of his home as a child and was forced to live on the streets."
regev Alon, Schavey-Zion, Israel, sophomore, said most Israelis were tired of living in fear, and hoped for a better future.
"In most places, especially Kiryatshmona, located near the South Lebanese border, Israelis have gotten very tired with living in shelter," he said. "They have stayed in hiding and not gone to work for many months due to bombings and terrorist attacks. I think they are looking forward to this peace agreement the most."
The land is the most important issue to both Palestinians and Israelis. Both sides strongly assert that the land known as Israel is their homeland.
Hakam Abu Al-Khair, vice president
of the General Union of Palestinians, said he was not satisfied with the agreement.
Al-Khair has both American and Jordanian citizenship.
"The Palestinian people have lived their lives trying to get their country back. To me, this is not the deal I want. It is like someone taking your house away and giving you back your bathroom."
"I can never show my child my homeland because it was taken away from me. My village does not exist anymore," he said. "It is almost the same as what happened to the Indians in this country."
Hartuv said that he hoped the land would bring both sides together in the end.
"The ultimate goal in life is not how much land or wealth you have, but only to be happy. Therefore, the land should not be the ultimate goal of either party, but rather a peaceful existence in the future of the Middle East."
Although the past will never be forgotten, the future looks promising to Israelis and Palestinians. Both sides say making the peace agreement possible depends on how well they work together.
"It is hard for me to recognize an
organization that used to be adversary and opposed to the existence of a Jewish state that borders with Arab countries," Hartuv said. "I am still not clear on what the Palestinians real goals are — to advance or to lead to further conflict?"
SHINFORD & SONS
Control of Jerusalem is the next issue to be discussed. Andy Nolan, vice president of the Middle East Club, said he did not see much agreement on Jerusalem right now because the city has so much significance to both Palestinians and Israelis.
"The religious and historical bond to Jerusalem is too strong for either side to just give up," Nolan said.
Brad Feinberg, president of HawkPac, a pro-Iraeli organization at KU, said he is optimistic about the agreement. Feinberg, Deerfield, Ill., sophomore, said he got involved in Israeli activities because of his Jewish heritage and background.
"I think the peace agreement was the only way to end the long war between the PLO and Israel. It will hopefully provide security for both sides," he said. "I also feel positive about the future. Hopefully Jews and Arabs will be able to live together in peace, as it was meant to be."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, December 9, 1993
3B
Abusive relationships are hard cycles for students to break
By Sarah Morrison Special to Kansan
Editor's note: Because of the sensitive nature of this story, some of the names have been changed.
When Stacy's boyfriend Chris smashed her in the face with his fist, shoved her down the stairs and punched her again, one thought kept racing through her mind.
"It hurt, but all I was thinking was I'm free, he has finally set me free," she said.
Two and a half years of emotional and verbal abuse finally had culminated in physical abuse, and Stacy knew she had to get out of the relationship.
"It is sad, but I always told him 'If you hit me, I will leave you.' The very fact that I ever felt compelled to say that to him was reason enough to leave him," she said. "I wanted to get away from him so many times, but until he actually hit me, I never could.
out even after the physical abuse starts."
"I am lucky. Many women don't get
Stacy never understood abused women and often would get frustrated when she heard about abused women who stayed with abusive men.
"Now I know how abused women feel," she said, "I used to look at them and just think, why don't they just leave? I thought abused women were just stupid or weak. But now I know better. Now I know what an abusive relationship is really like, and it is just not that simple."
Susan Hickman, a graduate teaching assistant at the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, said dating violence was something people were beginning to pay more attention to.
"I think it is far more common than people think," Hickman said. "People are beginning to realize that it is an issue."
Dating violence became an issue for Stacy when she moved home to
Wichita after her sophomore year at KU. That was when she started dating Chris.
"When I got back home, I felt terrible," she said. "I felt like such a loser. I had been a theater major at KU, but I was giving up on my dream of ever being an actress."
Stacy said the relationship didn't start out abusive, and when she first arrived, Chris had been kind and supportive.
"He always told me how smart I was and how beautiful I was," she said. "At first, it seemed like he really respected me."
But soon the respect turned to contempt, and the verbal abuse began.
"He would call me a stupid bitch, and say I had a high IQ, but no common sense," she said. "I just tried not to think of what was happening. Emotionally, I was dead. I just did not feel anything."
"I had invested all this time into this person and built him up to my family. It is hard to say, 'You are right, he is a
Then came the night when Chris hit her in the face. The couple had traveled to Emporia to visit her friends.
jerk. I've wasted the last two years of my life."
"He got really blitzed at a party," she said, "I took his car keys and arranged a ride home for him with one of my friends. Then I took a cab back to the hotel. When he got there, he was enraged that I had taken his keys. That was when he hit me."
Stacy said she never doubted what she had to do.
"It all became clear to me," she said,
"At first I was kind of in shock, but I knew what I had to do. Within a couple of days I broke up with him."
Stacy began to piece her life back together. The hardest part, she said, was calling all her old friends.
"I was so scared," she said, "I didn't know what they thought of me. But I got up the nerve and called them all. They were very happy to hear from me. They were happy to have me back."
Stacy has since moved back to Lawrence and enrolled at KU. She said she has not seen Chris since she left Wichita a year and a half ago.
"I talked to his mother once," she said. "She told me he was in therapy. I hope he learned something from me. I hope he gets help."
As for Stacy, she says she feels her recovery has been relatively fast, but she still has some healing to do.
"Ifeel like I did some hard time," she said. "I feel like I served two years in prison. I am still not completely healed, but I feel like I dug myself out of the mud pretty fast."
Stacy broke the cycle of abuse by breaking up with Chris.
Angie Reinking, of the Lawrence Shelter for Battered Women, said most women who were in abusive relationships needed support to help them get out.
"There are all kinds of personal options for getting support," she said.
Helpforvictims
Women who have been abuse victims can call these local agencies for help:
■ Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center 864-3552
■ Headquarters 841-2345
■ Lawrence Women's Transitional Care Services, Inc. 841-6887
---
KANSAN
"That is one thing someone needs who's in an abusive relationship. Whether that be through a spiritual network they have, through friends, through a counseling center, through a crisis line, through family or wherever they can get that."
Stacy said breaking up with Chris was not the only step in her putting the relationship behind her.
"I broke the cycle," she said, "But I still have not forgiven him, I still don't feel safe. Until I forgive him, I can't completely let go."
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4B
Thursday. December 9,1993
"We are discussing no small matter, but how we ought to live."
”
- Socrates
THE KNOWLE
CARING ENOUGH...
STEVE GROW, Cedar Falls, Iowa graduate student, has taken several classes from Young.
"There are few issues that come up that he is not prepared to discuss," he said. "And if there are, he cares enough to follow up on them later."
He described Young as uncompromising when it came to the effort he expected from a student.
"You can't come out of a class afraid he's lobbing softballs," Grow said. "I take it as a sim of respect."
Sandra Wick, assistant director of the honors program, said Young inspired students to believe in themselves and their abilities.
"They think, 'Dr. Young thinks I can do it, so I can,'" she said.
Young expects the best from himself, Wick said, but he is always willing to admit his mistakes.
"He's a philosopher without any arrogance, which means he's well aware of his humanity, his humanness," she said.
P
ALEXANDER BROWN
(Above) Michael Young works for many hours each day in one of his three offices. His office at home is cluttered with everything from tools. He is working on a thesis on Immanuel Kant, a philosopher. (Left) Young thinks about possible alterations for a scholarship application. The about his chances for survival, he is realistically pessimistic about the experimental immunotherapy he is undergoing.
about appearances
contricized by
Reichenbach
"appears white"
RC ↑ H.R.
being white"
Young teaches his Theory of Knowledge class. His colleagues took over his class for him while he was in the hospital recovering from a tainted batch of white blood cells he received while undergoing immunotherapy.
Continued from Page 1B
a deadly form of skin cancer, had spread to his brain, lungs and arm.
His colleagues called him "the resurrected one," but not because of two brain surgeries, one in July and the other in early September.
They christened him out of relief after he survived an infection caused by a highly experimental cancer therapy, immunotherapy, and a fever that spiked as high as 107 degrees.
On Sept. 17, Young's doctors told his wife that he would not live very long.
"The betting was that I wasn't going to make it through the weekend," Young said. "They had one of the nurses take my wife aside and tell her to prepare for my death."
When he regained consciousness Sept. 21, the director of the KU Honors Center just wanted to get better and go home.
His Theory of Knowledge class would be ready to begin the contemporary articles on empirical knowledge. The Marshall and Rhodes scholarship applicants would be learning if they had received national interviews.
This was the life he always had wanted, with home and family, friends and students in a college community.
"I like my life, very much," he said. "What I want to do most of all is get back to it."
He relies on his life for support and strength.
At age 49, Young was not trying to be a hero. He did not want pity or attention. He just wanted to go back home and enjoy life while there was still time.
A constant exchange of ideas
It is 12:43 on a Tuesday afternoon, and Michael Young does not have much time. He is finishing lecture notes for his Theory of Knowledge class. It begins in 17 minutes.
A sign in German hangs in his Wescoe Hall office. Loosely translated, it means "Do not dump junk," something he claims to have trouble with as he silts through papers on his desk.
A black-and-white picture of himself, his wife, his daughter and his oldest son hangs at eye level. A picture of a vase with flowers has "happy father's day" scrawled near the base and seems to crown his head as it hangs behind him.
He usually spends four to six hours preparing for each day's lecture.
His colleagues helped teach the course while he was in the hospital. A few weeks after the Fall 1993 semester commenced, a golfball-sized tumor was removed in emergency brain surgery.
Young does not look like a man who almost died three months ago. A scar across his forehead and a small bald patch on the back of his head are the only marks of the two surgeries. The September fever spike caused blood clots in his foot. Now he has an excuse to wear Birkenstock sandals all the time.
Because of the pressure caused by the tumor, he had begun to lose control of the right side of his body. Simple math became impossible.
"After the surgery, I asked for paper and pencil and sat there happily doing long division." he said.
The surgery provided instant relief.
As 1 p.m. approaches, he takes the stairs, not the elevator, to class.
in the classroom, the discussion and exchange of ideas intrigue him. For 24 years, he has helped KU students look at life through a philosopher's eyes. Then they critically examine the philosopher's point of view.
This constant exchange of ideas attracted him to teaching philosophy.
"Philosophy consists of a give and take of arguments," he said. "So you can see why I love teaching."
The large, unanswerable questions drew him to his field of study.
"Philosophers deal with questions that are big and very
basic," he said. "Like what the mind is and how it relates to the body. Those are very fundamental questions that have always intrigued me."
A son of a Kmart executive in a Chicago suburb, Young became interested in philosophy during high school. He earned his bachelor's degree in philosophy from Grinnell College in 1965. He earned his master's degree in 1967 and his doctorate in 1969, both from Yale University.
For 15 years, Young's research interest has been Immanuel Kant's philosophy of mathematics.
In November, he won the Mortar Board Outstanding Educator Award for the second time.
When his oldest son, Jason Young, called from Yale to announce that he also was going to major in philosophy, Young had the same reaction that his parents had more than 25 years earlier.
"The first question that bubbled to my head was 'What are you going to do with it?' Young said.
But Michael Young did not have a career in mind when he decided to major in philosophy.
"At that stage in my life it was like, 'I don't care. It's the only thing that interests me,'" he said.
By the end of the 90-minute class, he has glanced only twice at the notes he spent hours preparing.
Young's freshman year of college opened the academic world to him. He decided never to leave.
As associate dean of liberal arts and sciences, it is important to him that every student receives the same experience that he did.
"I've always felt my college experience was so important to me and so exciting and formative," he said. "I want the same excitement: the same impact for everybody."
And he has worked to improve KU's influence on students
From 1982 to 1985, he served as chair of the committee to reform the general education requirements in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. A year of his life was dedicated to meeting with each department as he worked with
a committee to restructure the bachelors' degree requirements in the college.
Before the restructuring, students could take any of the classes from each department, he said. Prerequisites were not required for upper-level courses, so upper-level courses were taught with the assumption that students were prepared.
"Because every course counted, the departments did have to ask themselves how they were contributing to general education," he said. "Students were taking upper level courses without prerequisites, and the result was kind of dumbing down."
Munro Richardson, a 1992 KU graduate who now working on his master's degree at Harvard University full scholarship, met Young during freshman orientation
Richardson, a first-generation college graduate and Rhodes Scholarship recipient, said he attributed his success to Young, who had helped him with many de sions.
"He was really like a surrogate parent in that cas Richardson said.
Richardson still keeps in touch with Young, who help him with his nomination for the Rhodes and Marsh scholarships for study in Britain.
"It's more than just a job for him." Richardson said. a passion."
The art of fly fishing
It is 1:15 on a Sunday afternoon, and Michael You does not look like a man pressed for time.
He is lounging in a rocking chair in his living room, reinscribing about past fly fishing trips in Colorado and Nsouri with his 20-year-old son, Bryan. a KU junior magna in civil engineering and German
Bryan and Roura Young were married in July 24. after Young's first brain surgery. He attended the wedd in a golf cap and a tuxedo.
Young enjoys spending time outdoors and the taste
Thursday, December 9,1993
5B
EDGE OF LIFE
"Man wants to live comfortably and pleasantly, but nature intends that he should raise himself out of lethargy and inactive contentment."
ing'
m-
its-
or-
ays
ing
of
- Immanuel Kant
o pictures of his family.
ugh he is optimistic
---
While a student answers a question, Young sits on a desk to relieve the pressure caused by blood clots in his feet. He says he learns more about philosophy every day he teaches.
I am an author, a poet and a teacher. I write novels, short stories and essays. I have also taught at many schools and universities. I am interested in writing fiction, non-fiction and poetry. I believe that writers should be able to express their own ideas and emotions through their words. I am a creative individual who is passionate about literature and writing. I am a kind person who is committed to creating a positive and inspiring environment for readers. I am a person who values diversity and inclusion. I am a person who believes in the power of imagination and creativity. I am a person who is driven by a passion for writing and storytelling. I am a person who is always looking for new ideas and experiences to share with others. I am a person who is willing to work hard and put effort into every project. I am a person who is confident in my ability to succeed in any领域. I am a person who is happy to share my knowledge and experience with others. I am a person who is proud of my accomplishments and achievements. I am a person who is passionate about writing and storytelling. I am a person who is always looking for new ideas and experiences to share with others. I am a person who is willing to work hard and put effort into every project. I am a person who is proud of my accomplishments and achievements.
POETIC ABSTRACT
(Above) Young sits with his son, Bryan. The books on the coffee table describe the professor's interests in poetry, nature and philosophy. (Below) Lorraine Claassen, Hesston junior, and Truman Scholarship applicant, reads over her application with Young. Young is director of the KU Honors Center.
1983
THE BASICS OF IMMUNOTHERAPY
WHEN MELANOMA cancer spreads to the brain, it does not respond to proven treatments, such as radiation, chemotherapy and surgery. Immunotherapy, which Michael Young is undergoing, is an experimental treatment that increases the body's immune system response to cancer cells. According to Gary Wood, Young's immunotherapist, the treatment uses the patient's cancer cells to light the cancerous tumors;
1. The first step of the treatment is to surgically remove the tumors from the body. Michael Young has had three tumors taken from his brain.
A nurse draws blood from a catheter in Young's chest to extract white blood cells. The process takes up to three hours. Young had the tubes implanted into the upper left portion of his chest to aid in drawing blood for immunotherapy.
3 The neutralized cells are then injected into the patient to prepare the white blood cells, also called T-lymphocytes, to attack the tumor cells.
2. Then the tumor cells are neutralized with radiation to prevent them from multiplying.
4. The next step is to take the primed white blood cells out of the body.
see more photos
n'the her she is a
'is this on a cafee
e," wed wall
5. In the laboratory, doctors use tumor cells to stimulate the white blood cells.
6. Then the white blood cells are ready to be injected into the body to fight the tumors. In September, Young received contaminated white blood cells during this step of the process, which nearly killed him. Bacteria had been on the rim of the test tubes holding the white blood cells. Since the infection in September, Young has undergone the entire treatment again. On Friday, he was admitted to Providence Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., to begin the last step of the treatment, receiving the primed white blood cells. Doctors should know how well he is responding to the treatment by early January.
The Med Center's immunotherapy program was designed for brain cancer patients. Gary Wood, Young's immunotherapist at the Med Center, said that immunotherapy had never cured a person of cancer but that it had been able temporarily to reduce the size of tumors.
trout. But fly fishing was not easy to learn.
"I spent about 80 percent of my time climbing pine and spruce trees retrieving flies," he said. "But when it's done right, it just is beautiful."
His 23-year-old daughter, Michelle Young, who is now a dancer in Las Vegas, does not share her father's love for fly fishing.
1970. Michael and his wife, Carolyn Young, brought home 6-week-old Michelle, an African American, Carolyn Young said they had already had planned to adopt a baby that would not have otherwise had a permanent home.
"It seemed to us it might be one small way to overcome racial differences." Michael Young said.
But it was not always easy. Others were quick to hurl racial insults at Michelle, especially when they lived on Long Island, N.Y., for a year while Young was doing research.
"We were very idealistic," Carolyn Young said. "We felt if we acted on our ideals, they would come true."
Disagreement comes easier as a grandparent. When asked about Michelle's 3-year-old daughter, Michael Young smiles and says Brittany is wonderful.
"There was just no room for that in his methodical thinking." Carolyn Young said. "They are cut from a different cloth."
Michael Young and his daughter are very different people, Carolyn Young said. Michelle was not particularly interested in school or her artistic ability.
He remembers a Sunday last spring when she was eating dinner with her grandparents. Brittany decided she was finished eating and began talking about leaving her high chair. But Young was not paying attention.
"She looked at me and said, 'Hey! I talking to you!" "Young said. "I just laughed."
But Jason Young, 24, who now works in Manhattan, N.Y., for Teach for America, a volunteer teaching corporation, is cut from the same cloth as his father, Carolyn Young said.
Jason Young prides himself on being independent. He is
not always quick to tell his family of his thoughts, plans or feelings.
"Jason doesn't readily let you into his life," Carolyn Young said.
"There's a lot to live for"
- His father can be like that, too.
It is 8:05 on a Monday night, and Carolyn Young is teaching a cello and violin lesson at home on Highland Drive.
Her husband is not around, but a "New York Times Magazine" lies open on the kitchen table to a review of "Reveries of a Solitary Walker" by Jean Jacques Rousseau. The review is titled "The Promenades of a Philosopher."
Together, Michael and Carolyn Young often take long walks for exercise and to enjoy nature. When they first moved *Lawrence* in 1969, she said, they used to sit at their window and watch storm clouds thunder into view
Carolyn Young teaches social studies at Highland Park High School in Topeka. Philosophy never interested her, but she shares her love for music and nature with her husband.
Carolyn and Michael Young met in high school. He was captain of the football team, and she was captain of the pompon squad. They celebrated their 30th wedding anniversary in January.
They have spent many summer vacations hiking in the Colorado mountains.
"I was singing 'Am I Blue' and 'Singing in the Rain' and other appropriate songs, and lightning was bouncing all around us," she said. "We've had other brushes with death."
She remembers one hike when threatening, black clouds forced them to crouch in a small depression.
After the storm, they worked up enough courage to slide down Andrew's Glacier. Michael Young broke his tail-bone.
"Ive often said that he was made of Kmart materials."
Carolyn Young said and laughed. "For such a strong man, he is kind of fragile."
But he is determined to live, she said.
"When he had just gotten out of brain surgery, he quizzed everyone in the recovery room," she said. "He just wanted to be sure that he knew the things that he knew and still had the ability to learn.
"He's very strong-willed," she said. "If you lived with him, you could stubborn."
Since his illness, Carolyn Young spends hours studying articles and books on melanoma and its treatments. She walks her husband's black Labrador, an animal she never really liked. She encourages her husband to continue thinking positively and to attend his cancer support group.
And he appreciates everything.
"This whole illness, as you can imagine, has been hell for her," Michael Young said. "The fact that I still live under this imminent threat of death, that's pretty scary.
"She's had to think about all those long-term questions that surround death: What are our assets? How is she going to manage?"
The worst, she said, was during the fever. At one point, her husband opened his eyes and looked at her sitting by the bed.
"He asked, 'When is my wife going to be here,' "she said. "I said, 'am your wife.' Then he began to cry."
I said, I am you wife. Then he began to Jason and Michelle Young flew home.
Carolyn Young said she kept thinking about all the students in his classes and in the honors program.
"One reason I was so determined that he should live was that I think he does a lot of good, and he should be around for years and years and years." she said.
"Statistically, I should be dead," he said. "The average
But the National Institute for Cancer Research refuses to treat melanoma patients with brain cancer because there is no proven treatment. The immunotherapy program at the University of Kansas Medical Center does not usually treat patients with cancer as advanced as Young's.
Last Friday, doctors resumed the treatment that had caused the September infection, which nearly killed him.
survival time for people with my cancer is two months,
and I'm well past that."
"Basically I'm confident and optimistic, but I have occasional moments of fear," Young said.
Others in his cancer support group rely on God and the promise for a better life after death. He does not have that resource.
"It would be nice to know that there is going to be an afterlife, and things would be reasonably good." Young said. "There's a real consolation in thinking you're not really going to disappear. If you think you are, on the other hand, that's not a very pleasant thought."
Maybe it is the philosopher in him, he said. He believes that, with proof, knowledge is possible.
"The most simple-minded skeptic would claim to know that knowledge is impossible, which is paradoxical," he said.
But there is not enough persuasive evidence for him to know there is a God.
So he concentrates on life.
Whether he is planning the new class he will teach next semester. Themes in Modern Philosophy, or watching a beaver dam grow south of Interstate 70 as he drives to his immunotherapy appointment at the Blood Center of Greater Kansas City, Young relishes having his mind, something the tumors denied him from May to September.
"I treasure every single day that my mind is clear and fresh." he said.
And even though the odds are against them, they have not given up hope for the future.
Right row, Michael and Carolyn Young are researching other treatments in case the immunotherapy treatment at the Med Center fails.
"We want to see Bryan and Roura's kids, and we want to see if Jason ever gets married and if Michelle ever finds her man," she said. "There'a lot to live for."
6B
Thursday, December 9,1993
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Stop in, or order by our regular phone number (865-5071). Phone orders from our suppliers will still be delivered "next day".
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Lawrence • PHONE 913-865-5071
Bridging the barrier of distrust
Continued from Page 1B.
Nalbandian's voice raises when he talks about the rumors that many of the more than 900 students at Haskell hear before they set foot in Lawrence.
Virginia Smith
Lawrence Retail Manager
School Specialty Supply
"A lot of that relationship was affected by the deaths of the Native Americans here and the feeling that not as much was done as could have been done," Nalbandian says. "I don't agree with that at all, but I think that's the perception."
They know the story about John Sandoval and Cecil Dawes. Sandoval, a 19-year-old American Indian, was found dead in the Kansas River in April 1989. Dawes, a 21-year-old KU student and an American Indian, was found dead in the river seven months later.
But he says he can understand why some in the American Indian community do not trust the Lawrence police department.
Haskell students and other American Indians in Lawrence do not always know the names, but they know the stories.
Sincerely,
Virginia J. Smith
They know the story about Christopher Bread, an American Indian whose body was found one mile east of Lawrence, near East 15th Street, in 1990. The Douglas County Sheriff's Office says Bread was hit and killed
"We like to think that when parents send their children here that Lawrence takes some responsibility for the well-being of their people," he says.
What kind of message do you send when you have a shoot-to-kill policy?
by a car while walking home from the Outhouse, a music club that features punk and heavy metal rock bands. More than two years later, Marvin Schaal of Lawrence was convicted of leaving the scene of an accident in the Bread case and served nine and a half months in prison. Leaders of the American Indian community say the sentence was too weak.
And they know the story of Gregg Sevier, an American Indian who was killed by two Lawrence police officers April 1991.
"They've said police officers will kill you, and it won't get investigated, and nobody will care." Brown says.
The other cases involved the sheriff's office, not the police department. But the Sevier case is the best-remembered, and it has cemented the fears many American Indians have toward the police.
EASTERN CITY HOSPITAL
"The circumstances were just so tragic, it culminated in the most organized expression of concern in the city," says Dan Wildcat, chair of department of natural and social sciences at Haskell.
Lance Burr The Sevierfamilyattorney
The police involved and the family of Gregg Sevier agree on many points. Both say Orene Sevier, Sevier's mother, called 911 and told the operator that her son was upset and holding a knife. Both say Sevier was drunk. Both say Willie Sevier, Sevier's father, helped officer Ted Bordman pick the lock to Sevier's door when Bordman arrived to answer the call.
Lance Burr
And both say minutes later, Sevier was dead on the floor with six bullet wounds in his body.
From there, the two groups disagree. Officer James Phillips, who arrived moments after the door was unlocked, testified with Bordman at the coroner's inquest one week later that Sevier stood up and leaned against the doorway holding the knife. The two officers said that Sevier then lunged at Bordman. Each officer fired three shots — all at the chest and abdomen as Lawrence police officers are trained to do — and each shot hit.
The Seviers said their son never lunged at Bordman. They said that the officers never asked them about the situation and that they had called 911 for somebody who could calm Sevier down. They said he did not
The coroner's jury at the inquest found the two officers had acted appropriately. But in November 1992 the Seviers filed suit against the city, Police Chief Ron Olin, the two officers and Sergeant George Wheeler, who was the sergeant on-duty that night. The suit is now pending in U.S. District Court in Toneka.
Lawrence officials cannot comment directly about the Sevier case because of the lawsuit.
pose a threat to anybody or himself.
In the meantime, many American Indians still recall the shooting.
"That's a kind of ex post tacto demonstration that people in this community judge you by the color of your skin and the length of your hair," he says.
The message, Wildcat says, is one of unmean treatment.
"What kind of message do you send when you have ashoot-to-kill policy?" says Lance Burr, the Seviers' attorney. "What is being sent?"
Ed Brunt, a lieutenant in the Lawrence police department, does not deny that there may be racist officers in the force. But is the entire force racist? He says no.
Actions might also unfairly reinforce perceptions. Brunt says an American Indian driver who is pulled over by an officer might remember stories of Bread or Savier and come to the conclusion that the stopping was the result of racism.
"We've responded well to the scrutiny that Haskell and the community has given us," he says.
Brunt says that the department cannot be responsible for the personal views of its officers but that it can ensure that all members of the Lawrence community are treated equally.
"When people say you have racist police officers, is that because an action happened to you and you disagree with it?" he says. "Or is it against your race, sex or religion?"
Racism in Lawrence
During a talk in ninth grade about police, Jose Larios met a Lawrence police officer for the first time.
"When he came to speak, I felt extremely uncomfortable around
Lawrence is like the wife who cannot leave the man who beats her
Member of the Lawrence chapter of the American Indian Movement
Such perceptions keep many American Indians from trusting local law enforcement and city government.
him," says Larios, now a senior at Lawrence High School. "He constantly stared at me, and it looked like he was glaring."
Pixie Larios
Such perceptions also have fueled the creation of Lawrence's first chapter of the American Indian Movement, an activist pro-American Indian group.
"Where there are unexplained, unnecessary, unattended deaths, there's a need," says Pixie Larios, Jose Larios' mother and a member of ALM. "When someone is asked to serve nine months and a few days for the murder of a young Native American, there's a need."
Larios says the entire city sometimes contains a hidden racism. She compares racial incidents in Lawrence to a husband who flies into occasional rates and beats his wife.
"He's tight on his anger," Larios says. "It comes out in circumventive ways. Then there's an explosion."
In 1992, Jerry Thomas, Pahoa, Hawaii, resident, wrote a book on the Sevier shooting after hearing about the case from a friend in Lawrence The book, "Hitchita!: The Documented Story of the Gregg Sewic Homicide," does not restrain itself to just the shooting. "Hitchita!" — which means "behold" in the Creek Indian language — also alleges that many residents and city officials are racist.
'The primary purpose in producing 'Hitchita!' was to increase their
Story continues, Page 7B
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UN I V E R S I T Y D A I L Y K A N S A N
Thursday, December 9, 1993
7B
Continued from Page 6B.
awareness." Thomas says.
More than a year after the book was written, and almost two years after the Sevier shooting, Thomas says it easily could happen again.
"A test of the question might consist of constructing a similar situation wherein the person calling 911 to get help for her son is not an Indian woman but a white woman," he says. "It would, no doubt, be difficult to find anyone willing to volunteer for such an experiment."
The solution, Thomas says in his book, is for Lawrence to admit its racism the way an alcoholic admits his or her alcoholism.
Chris Mulvenon, then a representative for the police department, wrote in Kansas Fraternal Order of Police magazine that the only serial aspect of the deaths was "cereal malt beverage."
Mulvenon, the police department and the city commission promptly apologized for the remark. Mulvenon, a civilian employee, was transferred to another section of the department
Some American Indians point to an incident that occurred in 1991, a few months after Wall Street Journal writer Ann Hagedorn visited Lawrence to write a story about the deaths of Sandoval, Dawes and Bread. The article, which appeared in 1990, suggested that all might have died as the result of attacks by a serial killer.
Adrian Brown says much of the racism comes from the local media. He cites recent columns in both the Lawrence Journal-World and the University Daily Kansan that he says
belittled American Indians.
"A lot of what goes into print feeds off that Lawrence evil," Brown says. "Then it fuels that evil even further."
But Wildcat says that labeling Lawrence as racist is too easy. The problem arises when people assume Lawrence — a city with two universities and a highly-educated population — has no problems whatsoever, he says.
Trying to set a new course
A history of American Indian relations in Lawrence
Two American Indians were found dead in the Kansas River in a seven-month period. John Sandoval was found in April. Cecil Dawes, a former KU student, was found in October.
Gregg Sevier was shot and killed in April by two Lawrence police officers in his home in east Lawrence.
Native American Law Enforcement formed in October to resolve years of conflict and tension.
1989 1990 1991 1992 1993
Christopher Bread, an American Indian, was hit by a car and killed on East 15th Street in March.
A temporary task force on racism in Lawrence becomes a permanent city organization, the Lawrence Alliance.
"People are so enamored with what Lawrence can offer in quality of life that they ignore the parts that can be ignored," Wildcat says.
Lawrence should change that attitude, he says, especially concerning the police and American Indians.
He also says that the department now communicates better with the community. Efforts such as allowing members of the community to ride with officers on patrol, sponsoring a citizens academy to educate citizens on police policies and participating in
Almost two and a half years after the shooting, the city and the police department are trying to do just that.
"The Lawrence Police Department is not 5 feet 10, 165 pounds with blue eyes," he says, "it's just not true."
1989 1990 1991 1992 1993
Christopher Bread, an American Indian, was hit by a car and killed on East 15th Street in March.
A temporary task force on racism in Lawrence becomes a permanent city organization, the Lawrence Alliance.
"They do not trust the police department to be fair in the treatment of members of the minority community," Wildcat says. "If that's the way the community feels, then the department should address that."
Ron Olin, chief of police, says that perceptions have been the root of the problem. He says the current personnel on the force reflect the racial demographics of the city.
Changing perceptions
Source: Kansan staff research
NALE — Native American Law Enforcement — have allowed the community to better understand the department, he says.
"It's a general feeling on everybody's part to cooperate and find answers and make this city a better place to live," he says.
NALE was created by Nalbandian this year to get the two sides talking. NALE is made up of Haskell students, American indian KU students, leaders of the city's American Indian community and members of the police department.
Jo Andersen, the city commission's representative to the group, said the goal was to create a dialogue that has been lacking.
"There's a lot of conflict that's been perpetuated by stereotypes," she said.
The group has met three times this
year. Andersen says the meetings are closed to the press because the atmosphere fosters open communication without guarded speech. While in the meetings, members are allowed to speak freely about their frustrations.
The officers involved are not public relations officers. Instead, the group asked that the police department send regular street officers to attend the meetings.
Brown says the group helps break down stereotypes on both sides and might bring Haskell closer to the community.
"We see an invisible barrier around Haskell," he says. "In order to relieve that, we need to break down that area."
Andersen says the group plans to work with the sheriff's department as well in the future.
Dan Schauer/KANSAN
In addition, a temporary committee created to look at racism in Lawrence after the Sevier shooting — the Task Force on Racism, Discrimination and Human Diversity — has become a permanent city institution called the Lawrence Alliance. Lisa Blair, coordinator of the group, says the group and NALE are the crucial first steps in fostering communication.
"For the first time, people are willing to address the issues that help and hurt the community as it moves into the year 2000," she said.
But Blair says the police department and Lawrence have a long way to go.
"Lawrence is racist or else there wouldn't be a Lawrence Alliance," she says. "That's a self-indictment on the part of Lawrence."
Blair says the police need additional
sensitivity training and should use professional counselors on domestic disputes such as the one at the Sevier household all those months ago. Olin disagrees, saying that the Lawrence police department already has the second-longest training session for police in the United States. He also says that professional counselors on routine calls would be more of a safety hazard to all involved rather than help out.
Pixie Larios, a member of NALE, says the police department and the American Indian community have begun a positive process she hopes they finish.
"It's a time when we're all waiting for changes to happen," she says. "It's a foundation-building time. It can be used as a foundation for change, or it can be used to make Jell-O."
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Take Home A Bakery Basket Instead of a Laundry Basket
This holiday season, surprise your family with a delicious holiday bakery basket from Perkins Family Restaurant & Bakery. We fill each festive basket with a dozen fresh-baked mini muffins, cookies, cinnamon rolls and brownies.
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Bring in the coupon below for one of our scrumptious cookies. Happy Holidays from your friends at Perkins!
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Bear the health dog has run of boy's Med Center room
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He helps the 11-year-old deal with nerve disorder
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KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Eleven-year-old Ted Mustion doesn't go anywhere without his dog Bear — even to the hospital.
Bear, a certified "health dog," was the first dog allowed to check in with a patient at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. He also was the first dog allowed to stay with a patient on the pediatric ward at the city's St. Luke's Hospital.
Ted, a fifth-grader at Fox Hill Elementary School, has a nerve disorder that affects his balance, muscle development and motor skills. Bear helps him by providing service and, perhaps more importantly, companionship.
"Bear is always there with Ted," said his mother, Robin Mustion.
The two were at the medical center last week when Ted had steel rods inserted in his back to straighten his spine.
Bear sleep on the boy's bed, kept him company and even visited the intensive care waiting room.
"We had some initial reservations," Greg Horton, one of Ted's doctors, said about Bear's stay. "But it seemed to go off without a hitch. The dog hasn't proven to be a problem. He didn't interfere with Ted's convalescence and has comforted the child and the family."
Bear never left Ted's side except during the seven hours the boy spent in surgery and the three days he was in intensive care. The separation depressed both, Ted's mother said.
"Bear keeps Ted's spirits up," she said.
She said the dog was protective, but not aggressive toward the doctors and nurses who visit Ted's bedside.
When Ted was a patient at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., Bear got between a doctor and Ted after the youngster had need for 20 minutes during a pain procedure.
"Bear just moved the doctor back and away from Ted," Mustion said.
Before the surgery at KU, the Mustions met with Ted's doctor, Marc Asher, the head nurse and the head of disease control at the hospital.
"We try to do everything ahead of time to avoid problems."Mustion said.
But Bear is rarely a problem. He draws attention from the staff, other patients and visitors, but the attention is always positive, Mus汀 said.
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Mutition spent several years searching for a dog for her son because many of the agencies that provide specialty dogs told her Ted's speech problems made him a poor candidate for their programs, she said.
Then Mustum heard about the Kansas Specialty Dog Service in Washington. Ted met Bear there 2 years ago.
Ted, his mother, and his father, Richard, attended a two-week training session to learn commands, grooming and ways to deal with the public's questions and concerns about the dog.
Bear stays with Ted during school and carries Ted's supplies on his back. He is trained to pick up things that Ted drops and to turn in Ted's papers. Bear's harness is connected to Ted's wheelchair, and he helps Ted get around.
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