VOL.101,NO.105
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA, KS 66612
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1991
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Return of POWs a priority for Bush
Baker to go next week to talk about postwar future for gulf
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — One day after halting the war, President Bush announced yesterday that Iraq had promptly agreed to talks on a permanent cease-fire and the return of prisoners of war.
"We are going to get back our
Peace, and we're going to do it fast.
Bush will go."
Baker also will go to the Soviet Union, which tried and failed to broker a peace agreement to avert the ground war.
With the guns silent in the Persian gulf, the administration said Secretary of State James Baker would fly to the Middle East next week to begin charting the postwar future of the Persian gulf. He will stop in Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Syria and Israel, as well as Turkey.
While combat ended with yesterday's cease-fire, elements of the U.S. 3rd Armored Division continued to demolish remnants of the Republican Guard, blowing up tanks, fortifications and weapons left behind by fleeing troops.
The division also took hundreds of prisoners, many of whom surrevene
As long as Saddam Hussein remains in power in Iraq, the administration will urge the U.N. Security Council to maintain a ban on all weapon shipments to that nation, officials said.
Bush met with the ambassador of newly liberated Kuwait and then went to the Rose Garden to announce Iraq's willingness to discuss peace terms set on Wednesday night in his moment of a conditional cease-fire.
He said Baghdad had taken a first step by agreeing to name military commanders to talk with U.S.-led allies about battlefield arrangements to make the pause in fighting permanent.
"We will go promptly back to them with the arrangements — when and where," Bush said. He said the meeting would take place very soon. Bush said the return of POWs and seized Kuwaiti would be a primary issue, he said we expect a prompt repatriation of them, Kuwaiti detainees and others."
Forty-five U.S. soldiers are missing, and at least eight are believed to be Iraqi prisoners.
Bush skirted reporters' questions about whether he would insist on prosecution of Saddam for war crimes.
"We're not going to get into that,"
Casualties of the gulf war
Allied combat losses
Tally of losses to date, as reported by U.S. and allies
United States
Total deaths 236
Killed in combat 79
Non-combat deaths:
Desert Storm 52
Desert Shield 105
Missing in action 45
Wounded 212
Prisoners of war 9
Planes lost 27
Allied forces
Killed in combat 47
Missing in action 21
Prisoners of war 4
Planes lost 9
★★★
Iraqi combat losses
U.S., allied air missions
More than 110,000 flown
SOURCE: News reports
Divisions destroyed: 40 out of 42;
each division has about 12,000 troops
Aircraft lost: 103; 97 planes,
six helicopters
Tanks lost: At least 3,000 (60%)
Armored vehicles lost: 1.860 (37%)
Artillery pieces lost: 2,140 (61%)
Scud missiles fired: 81, including
41 at Saudi Arabia, 38 at Israel, one at
Bahrain, one at Qatar
Also:
Bush said. "These matters will all be discussed in anorroarious forums."
iraiqi planes destroyed 97
iraiqi POWs (estimate) 80,000+
iraiqi deaths (Saudi estimate) 85,000+
Kuwait civilian hostages 22,000+
With the fighting over prospects were raised for bringing troops home White House press secretary Condoleezza Rice said they might begin in days, but cautioned
Knight-Ridder Tribune News
(Kuwait estimate)
that "it took seven months to get in,
it's going to take a lot of months to get out.
But we're going to start a steady withdrawal."
Some 537,000 U.S. troops are stationed in the Gulf
Pentagon representative Pete Wil
liams, asked about Fizwater's comment, said, "There is no plan yet for bringing forces home."
"I hope he'll get a little sun, get a little fishing and get a little rest, because his job is 24 hours a day, seven days a week," she said.
Bush met with his national security advisers and was in high spirits. His wife, Barbara, told a military auditor that she had to relax now that the war was over.
Bush said the end of the war — after 43 days of fighting — brought "a great day for all Americans."
Separately, Kuwait's ambassador to the United States, Saud Nasir Al-Sabah, told Bush he would "go down," as the great liberator of my country."
To visit French Foreign Minister Roland Dumas, Bush said, "You come here on an exciting day for all Americans."
At a news conference earlier, he said all countries would be first in line for billions of dollars of contracts and for the most important months of brutal Iran occupations.
In addition to demanding release of POWs and others, Bush also has insisted that Iraq inform Kuwait of the location and nature of all land and sea mines. In defeat, Iraq said it would accept all 12 U.N. resolutions imposed after its Aug. 2 takeover of Kuwait.
Kuwait wants POWs freed
The Associated Press
UNITED NATIONS — Kuwait's ambassador to the United Nations, Mohammad Abulhasan, said yesterday that Iraq had failed to cooperate in disclosing the condition or reason for the invasion. Kuwaiti civilians and 8,632 Kuwaiti prisoners of war.
"I would like to see that all elements related to this conflict have been solved: POWs, civilians, the rescuing of all claims by Iraq," Abulhasan said.
These are elements that should be taken into consideration before the Security Council's permanent ceasefire, he said.
Abulhasan said 22,000 Kuwaitii civilians were abducted from the emirate after Iraq's Aug. 2 invasion.
He complained that the Iraqis were not volunteering information on civilians and POWs
“This is the reason that we are very much doubtful of the intention of Iraq,” Abubasan said. “Don't forget, more than 24 hours elapsed since they invaded Iraq and Kuwait, and there are no signs at all of their readiness to cooperate in this field.”
Rock Chalk Revue brings students' talent to stage
400 give time,effort to make charitable production a reality
By Patricia Rojas
Kansas staff writer
A singing Humpty Dumpty, a fish in the dress and a dancing golden statue.
These characters all came to life last night at the Rock Chalk Revue in New York.
This year's presentation features productions by 10 campus living programs.
Jennifer Paugh, co-director of "Some Thing's Fish", said organizing the production had been a time-consuming process.
The fish in the prom dress appeared in the production "Some Tung's Fish," presented by Delta Tau Delta and Kapapa Delta.
She said the group had been prac- ticing almost every day since school start.
"I used to have long hair," said Paula, independent senior. "I had
to cut it off because I didn't have time to do it."
Perhaps not many participants cut their hair, but many had to sacrifice something to participate in Rock Chalk Revue.
"I just didn't sleep," said Amy Wrenick, Topeka junior.
A member of Alpha Gamma Delta, Wrenick co-directed "Just Another Western." The production featured an imaginary western town, Yoodbee, Calif.
Wrenick said she had spent a lot of time practicing and doing volunteer work.
She said the group that collected the most money and did the most volunteer work earned the Most Charitable Award.
BALLET
DANCE
This year's fund-raising goal is $30,000.
About 2,400 people attended last night's presentation. O'Sullivan said that a few tickets still were available for tonight's presentation but none for tomorrow's. Both shows are at 7:30 p.m.
Members of Kappa Delta and Delta Tau Delta perform during last night's opening performance of Rock Chalk Revue in Hoch Auditorium.
Media targets grad with 23 tank kills
KU graduate becomes instant celebrity
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Kansan staff writer
John Marks, 1987 KU graduate, is receiving a lot of unexpected media coverage.
rtsher, Mary Marks, who is studying social welfare at the University of Kansas Regents Center, said she talked to her son in the Persian gulf by telephone yesterday.
"When I talked to John, I told him about all the press coverage about him, and he couldn't believe it. "He's embarrassed by it all."
All of the coverage has resulted from ist LL. Marks' record number of tank kills in the Persian Gulf War. He and Capt. Eric Salomonson destroyed 23 Iraqi tanks Monday.
When Marks and Salomonson came back from their record-setting missions, there was a pool of reporters waiting to interview them, his mother said. The interviews have not stopped.
- Mary Marks mother of pilot
Marks is an Air Force pilot in the 76th Tactical Fight Squadron. The A-10 planes they飞 are called Warthogs.
'When I talked to John, I told him about all the press coverage about him, and he couldn't believe it.'
Since Monday, Marks' photo
has been on the front page of the Kansas City Star, in USA Today and on news broadcasts across the country.
Mary Marks said she had been receiving calls from all over the world about her son and his destruction of Iraqi tanks.
Marks graduated from KU with a degree in business and entered Air Force flight school one week later.
Mary Marks said most flight schools required an engineering degree or other technical degree.
"John was the only guy entering flight school with a business degree, and that says a lot about the KU business school," she said.
"We had newscasters here and newspapers are still calling," she said. "I told John we were on TV."
Bars could be liable for nearby events
Bv Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA - State bar owners could face legal action for events that take place within 1,000 feet of their establishments if a bill is adopted into law
Local proponents and opponents of the bill traveled to the statehouse yesterday to testify before the Senate Federal and State Affairs Commit-
State Sen Wint Winter Jr., R-
Lawrence, said he introduced the bill to address some of the problems that the city had with a local nightclub.
more power in revoking and denying license renewals.
He said that in addition to making bar owners more responsible for activities outside their clubs, the bill would also include the Alcohol Beverage Control division
"This is the bill that would give the director the authority to bring pressure to bear on the few operators who are irresponsible, who don't operate their businesses in a way that recognizes the rights of the neighbors," he said. "This bill creates a good neighbor requirement for operators of private clubs."
Winter said the bill only addressed behavior that was dangerous.
Shirley Martin-Smith, mayor of Lawrence, said the city commission issued a
"Most private clubs and drinking establishments are operated in a manner that is neither a threat to public safety nor a problem for state
or local law enforcement officials," she said. "However, a few clubs and bars do operate which attract or foster illegal conduct and activity, harm to the surrounding neighborhood, endanger the public safety and create a burden on law enforcement officers."
But Chuck Magerl, owner of the Free State Brewing Co., 636 Massachusetts St., told the committee the bill threatened his business.
"Many of the numerous private parties in the neighborhood generate complaints and are broken up by the police," he said. "These parties would be occurring whether or not The Hawk was located in the neighborhood. Yet this proposal could conceivably hold me responsible for the problems occurring at these parties."
"Senate Bill 223 is a serious threat to every license-holder in the state of Kansas and would completely devastate entire districts like downtown Lawrence," he said. "If this bill is passed, one trouble spot in our downtown district area could close to independent restaurants and clubs."
But Winter said the bill would apply only to events linked to patrons who had been at the bar, and he, too, was a member of owner responsibility to 500 feet.
Ken Wallace, owner of the Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St. , said the 1,000-foot rule would make him the best neighborhood business his was in.
Scholarship now open to gay, lesbian students
By Lara Gold
Kansan staff writer
A Kansas City, Mo., softball league has reduced restrictions on its scholarship for gay and lesbian students, making it available to more KU players.
'It is more of a statement of support of minority groups.
The Heart of America Sunday Softball League's scholarship is the first scholarship for gay and lesbian students at KU.
- Lorna Zimmer
director of Student Assistance Center
The league is offering gay and lesbian students at Kansas and Missouri universities the opportunity to apply for a $200 scholarship based on academic merit and financial need. Students must be enrolled as coordinator for the league.
Although the scholarship has existed for three years, this is the first time it has been available to people outside the league, said Tom Emerson, third-year law student, in the softball league for five years.
mously donated money for it, he said.
Emerson earned the scholarship two years ago.
Monday, Emerson brought word of the scholarship to Lorna Zimmer, director of the Student Assistance Center.
The league has been offering the scholarship since a person anony-
"It is more of a statement of support of minority groups," she
Zimmer said the scholarship was a unique opportunity for gay and lesbian students.
said.
"I am so glad about the opportunity," Zimmer said.
She said the scholarship for gay and lesbian students helped heterosexual students recognize other students' accomplishments.
Jeff Weinberg, assistant vice chancellor for student affairs, agreed.
"It would give one more avenue for people who qualified for the scholarship to pay for their education."
2
Friday, March 1, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
TODAY
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LO:33°
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51/21
61/29
58/42
74/43
74/56
Kansas Forecast
Rain across the northern part of the state clearing by evening with temperatures cooling by the weekend.
Salina 62/30 KC
Dodge City 64/35
60/34 Wichita
72/37
3-day Forecast
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
Saturday - Partly cloudy and cool. High 46/Low 26.
Sunday - Sunny and cool.
High 46/ Low 26.
Monday - Sunny and warmer.
High 59/ Low 34.
forecast by Mike Schinkel
Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lowes.
The University Daily Kansas (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stairwater-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
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On campus
A conference titled "The Road to Global Trade for High Technology Companies" will be conducted at 8 a.m. today at the Holiday Inn Holmidge, 200 McDonald Drive. The key speaker will be Fred Lawrence, senior vice president of operations with United Telecom/US Sprint.
Organization of Adult Knowledge Seekers will meet at 1:30 p.m today at the Wheat Room in the Kansas Union.
Graduate Representative Assembly will be conducted at 3 p.m. today at the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union.
■ The Office of International Studies and Programs will sponsor "The USSR: Two Steps Forward, How Many Back?" at 3:30 p.m. today at the Fine Room in the Kansas Union. The speakers will be Maria Carlson, assistant professor of history, guages and literature, and Ron Francisco and Les Dienes, professors of
- Hashing Hill will sponsor three bands from Manhattan at 8 p.m. tonight at the theater in Hashing.
- The Lawrence Coalition for Peace and Justice and Voice will sponsor a vigil at noon Sunday at South Park
Soviet and East European studies.
The University Placement Center will conduct a resume review workshop at 3:30 p.m. today at 149 Burge Union.
BACHUS and GAMMA will sponsor a speech by David Leschke on "Everything I Needed to Know They Never Taught in Kindergarten" at 7 p.m. Sunday at木ruffwool Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Eckankar will conduct a worship service at 2:30 p.m. Sunday at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union
KU Triathletes will sponsor a group run at 1 p.m. Sunday. Anyone interested should meet in front of Wescole Hall.
Police report
■ Someone threw lightbulbs onto a driveway at 6:55 p.m. Wednesday at Douthart Hall, KU police reported.
■ Someone threw a liquor bottle at a KU student's windshield at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday in Lot 111 near Gertrude Pearson-Corbin Hall, KU police reported. Damage to the car plowed $200.
- Someone entered an unlocked apartment and took a KU student's compact disc player valued at $600 between 1 p.m. Wednesday and 1 a.m. yesterday in the 1200 block of Rose Street, Lawrence police reported.
Two hubcaps valued at $50 were taken from a KU student's car
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- Someone spit in a KU student's face at 5:49 p.m. Tuesday near Allen Field House, KU police reported.
between 11 p.m. Monday and noon
Wednesday in KU 108 near Jay-
hawker Towers, KU police reported.
Someone cut the convertible top of a KU student's car between noon Saturday and 3 p.m. Monday in Lot 110 near Jayhawk Towers, KU police reported. Damage to the car totaled $960.
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KU
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 1. 1991
3
Use of University money for lobby trip challenged
By Eric Nelson Kansan staff writer
The use of University money for a Washington trip by KU officials seeking a change in ROTC's exclusion of homosexuals and bisexuals was questioned at yesterday's University Council meeting.
Clay Belcher, assistant professor of architecture engineering, raised the issue of spending University funds on research.
"I'm concerned about the use of University funds for political lobbying." he said.
Frances Ingemann, SenEx chairperson, who will go to Washington with Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, said that she and Shankel were not going to attend the graduation of Dr. William Read would express University viewpoints to legislators.
The policies of the Department of Defense, which administers ROTC, contend KU's anti-discrimination laws.
Ingemann said meetings in Washington would include those with higher education representatives, Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., Rep. Slim Jaltery, D-2nd District, and staff from the office of Sen. Bob Dolle, R-Kan.
Although the Washington trip will not focus on finance ing, Chancellor Gene Budig's trips to Topeka for financial purposes should be paid for by the University. Ingemann said
"It is his responsibility to go over there and represent the University," she said.
Ingemann also said that the University already had employees working in Washington for the needs of KU.
"We do have people who are in contact with people in government and working for the benefit of the University."
Ingemann said it was important to let the needs of the University be known.
"I don't see anything really wrong with that," she said Greg Hughes, SenEx member, the use of University medical change could be advantageous, especially in light if budget cuts proposed by the Legislature this week.
He also said that the Council already had voted to seek a policy change and that it was now time to work toward the change.
"The only way to do it is to lobby the Department of Defense," he said.
Ted Frederickson, associate professor of journalism,
agreed with Hughes and said the Council already had
decided to continue the investigation.
Frederickson made the motion to table the issue. He said that because it was not officially on the agenda, he thought it would be unfair to exclude Council members who would like to contribute to the discussion of the issue.
Student Senate refuses funds to Helping Hands Child Care
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Kansan staff writer
Helping Hands Child Care was refused financing for next year during this week's Student Senate budget budget.
Carl Damon, Senate treasurer, said Senate viewed Helping Hands Child Care, in Stoffler Place apartments, as a duplication of services. Services provides for the Hilltop Child Development Center, 1314 Jayhawk Blvd.
"it's not that we don't want to fund them," he said.
"It is just that we don't want to use student money to fund them."
Senate law states that two organizations that provide the same services cannot both receive Senate medals.
"We fund Hilltop at a minimum level, and Helping Hands wanted us to totally fund them. It would be discriminatory to Hilltop if we completely funded the school," he added. "We requested was half of the student organization bidnet."
Senate has financed Helping Hands since it opened in February, allocating $8,797 to the center for this semester. The center requested $19,800 for the 1991-92 semester and requested a hilton. Hilton requested $13,494 for next year.
Melissa Gratton, president of Helping Hands, said that Helping Hands was not a duplication of services and that it deserved the money
Our curriculum is based on diversity and on "parent activity," she said. "We are not like Hilltop."
Joan Reiber, Hilltop director, agreed that the two centers were not alike.
Hilltop mostly cares for children who need full-time child care, Reiber said. Preference is given to children of faculty, staff and students.
Helping Hands caters strictly to full-time students who need only part-time day care for their children. It also caters to students who need inexpensive child care.
A child can stay at Helping Hands for a maximum of 20 hours a week. The charge is 50 cents an hour, up to a maximum of $10 a week. The Hilltop center's care costs $15 a day.
Daniel Martin, Kansas City, Mo., graduate student, said that he planned to take his 2-year-old son, Joey, to Helping Hands but that he was afraid he might have to send Joey to a more expensive day-care center.
"If we have to go elsewhere, we will spend more money and be less satisfied with the child care," he said.
FUNKLAND PIANO
Piano man
Tom Eversole, co-owner of Eversole & Cragg Piano Shop, 1910 Haskell Ave. fine-tunes an 1920 Steinway piano. Eversole said he
had worked to restore the piano since August and needed to work at least two more weeks before it would be finished.
Bill to reorganize Graduate Council on way to Senate
By Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
Although a bill that would restructure the Graduate Student Council has not yet reached the Student Senate, the bill's authors are planning revisions that would take into account the concerns of graduate students.
Pat Warren, Senate Executive Committee chairperson and Carl Damon, Senate treasurer, began working on the revisions after members of the Graduate Representative Assembly expressed concern that too much power was being taken away from graduate students.
Graduate Representative Assembly is scheduled to meet today to discuss the bill and decide whether to support it.
Dan Murtaugh, chairperson of the Graduate Representative Assembly, said he was concerned about the elimination of at least one paid position of the executive committee and the possible loss of the graduate newspaper.
"Quite frankly, without it, many of the concerns of graduate students would never be voiced, or we'd never get any feedback," he said.
Graduate students are busy and do not always have time to follow the goings-on of graduate governance, he said.
Warren agreed to table the bill for a week so concerned graduate students would be able to discuss it and
so everyone could understand the changes.
"We want the graduate students to like this," he said.
The bill originally called for the Senate graduate affairs committee to handle the annual budget requests of graduate organizations. Presently, the Graduate Student Council, which is independent from Senate but receives all its money from Senate, handles those requests.
The revised bill calls for the Graduate Representative Assembly to handle budget requests and for the Finance affairs committee to be dissolved.
The assembly is a body of graduate students, one from every graduate program at the University of Kansas.
In short, the Graduate Representative Assembly would be the head of graduate organizations.
"Graduate Representative Assembly is the best body at the moment to handle this and the most democratic right now," said Oscar Quiros, Graduate Student Council executive coordinator.
Arlan Maltyb, Senate graduate affairs committee chairperson, said the willingness of the bill's authors to elect a senator showed that Senate was responsive.
Conference will give students a vision of global job market
By Sarah Davis
Kansan staff writer
Mark Pischke could not get his fill.
Last year he spent the summer in Europe
their economy, and now he wants to
learn even more.
Pischek, Mission Hills graduate student, will have that chance tomorrow.
Students at the University of Kansas are
invited to attend the fifth annual International Careers Conference to gain understanding of the global job market. It will take 3 weeks, from m. to 4 p.m., tomorrow in the Kansas Union.
tion."
"I'm looking forward to it," Pischke said. "I think it's a great opportunity for KU students to learn a little more about international careers. This is a real-to-life situa-
Lisa Harris, conference coordinator, said the conference would help make students more aware of international career opportunities.
"We're trying to reach students who are undecided about pursuing an international career and also those who have decided to pursue an international career but need
practical advice on how to do that," she said. "It gives students the opportunity to hear firsthand accounts from professionals working in the field."
Two prominent professionals, David Seal, international business consultant and former U.S. Consult General to Milan, Italy, and Jim Beckley, director of trade development at
Other speakers will include KU faculty and professionals working in the international field.
Kansas Department of Commerce, will speak during the conference.
The six areas of international interest that will be discussed are business, law, government, education, journalism and communication, and social and health services.
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Friday, March 1, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Equalitarian law
Proposed 'gender balance' bill would increase number of women and minorities on committees
A bill recently introduced in the Kansas House calls for appointments to state committees and agencies to reflect the sex and race compositions of the populations they serve
In effect, the bill would increase the number of women and minorities on committees.
The proposal, which has become known as the "gender balance" bill, should become law. The state has recognized a problem with the current appointment system and is taking a step to fix it. However, the bill is vague and could be ineffective if details are not worked out.
Under the bill, heads of committees would determine the race and sex ratio of the populations that the committees represent. They would be required to work toward appointing members to reflect those populations. But no specific way to enforce the bill has been announced. The bill states that violation would be grounds for action or dismissal from the committee. But it does not define what a violation is.
For the bill to be effective, a time limit for compliance must be set. Then, once committees pass the deadline without complying, appropriate punishment should be taken.
Ana Riosas, representative of the Kansas advisory committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, offered a good suggestion for further action. She said that if employees failed to appoint more women and minorities, they should lose the revenue collected from these groups. Right now, more than 56 cents of every dollar collected by the state comes from women and minorities.
By the year 2000, women and minorities will contribute 62 percent of the revenue for Kansas. Yet, as things are now, the composition of most state agencies will not reflect that percentage.
The state has found a way to change this "taxation without representation," as Riojas called it. But before the bill becomes law, representatives must eliminate the vague wording to make it enforceable.
Melanie Botts for the editorial board
Cease-fire is no celebration only the beginning of the end
I was surprised by my reaction Wednesday evening as I listened to President Bush calling for a cease fire in the Persian gulf. I thought that when news of the war's end came I would want to celebrate. But I wasn't elated, excited or even happy. I was just relieved. Relieved that the killing might soon be over. Relieved that, if the war does end, my friends serving in the gulf will come home safely.
But the war isn't yet over. Iraqi troops continued yesterday to bombard American troops with artillery fire. Rifle shots continue to echo through the desert. Blood still stains the white sand.
Bush took a step in the right direction Wednesday when he called for a cease-fire. In his statement he hinted at softening his stance on the conditions of surrender. Saddam used the phrase "principle" to operations. Bush said.
The statement seemed to be a political vaguery, implying that Iraq need only agree that reparations should be paid, not that they will be. And Bush said Iraq must "observe all relevant United Nations resolutions," perhaps backing away from his previous position that Iraq meet the requirements of all the resolutions, as he has insisted in the past.
Rod Griffin
Associate
Editorial
Editor
Experts predicted this would be a short war and a rout for the coalition forces. Thus far it has been just that, soldiers who had told about the soldiers who have died.
We are told of downed aircrafts and tank kills, but little mention is made of the pilots and crew members who died. Death tolls are tallied in little charts that accompany news stories.
We see the numbers but not the bodies
Without bodies, this war seems incredibly easy to bear. Someone said shortly after the United States became involved in the gulf that Americans love war as long as it is short and nobody gets hurt.
This war, if Iraq accepts the cease-fire, could be short. And reports make it seem that virtually no one is being hurt.
Our planes rumble over Iraq and the thunder of exploding bombs shakes the entire region. Buildings
are destroyed by "smart weapons," and very few people are killed.
The entire Iraqi army has surredered, or so it appears. Our troops haven't had to fire a shot, or so it seems
His popularity has soared. And the armed forces got to try out all their neat toys.
It's been a glorious little war. For the president anyway.
Now would be a good time for the battles to end. The president could ride this wave of popularity to re-election. More money could be spent on developing high-tech weapons. And the American people could celebrate in 2014 with successful war in more than 40 years, or so the administration hopes.
But the war isn't over. And the end of the war, in itself, will not be cause of distress.
The end of the war will only mark the end of the terror, the destruction
— the killing. And war, whether beginning or ending, is not something to celebrate.
Rod Griffin is a senior majoring in journalism.
WELCOME
HOME,SON.
ALLAH U AKHBAR
GOD IS
GREAT...
LETTERS to the EDITOR
Headline was wrong
The article on the Western Civilization program (published Feb. 26) contained an ambiguity that the headline writer turned into a full-blown falsification ("Student Senate to have input in future Western Civilization book lists"). I'm writing to clarify the matter and to correct my misapprehension. This is not a general criticism of the teacher, was trying to report accurately what he thought I said. But I did not say, nor did I imply, that the Minority Affairs Curriculum Subcommittee (much less the Student Senate!) was about to become a regular and permanent part of the program's curriculum evaluation process.
In no way did I mean to suggest that the subcommittee was about to become a regular part of our curriculum evaluation, either this year or in the future.
As in other academic units, our teaching staff and governing committee are entirely responsible for our curriculum decisions. We do try to listen to individuals and groups who express reasoned concerns or offer helpful suggestions. We have been acutely aware for some time of the issues of diversity raised by the subcommittee and others, and we actively try to deal with some of them within the framework of a two-semester program emphasizing Western "classics." Our large teaching staff includes a number of persons—both faculty and GTAs—who are knowledgeable about these issues, and some of them are contributing to our current curriculum evaluation process.
As the article indicated, members of the subcommittee will be meeting with us in March. The sole purpose of the meeting is to give them an opportunity to share their concerns and make suggestions, which they have articulated in a recent memo. What I told the reporter was that because we still will be involved in our curriculum evaluation process at that point and will not be making any substantive changes for the next academic year, the conversation with the subcommittee members could contribute usefully to our deliberations.
In no way did I mean to suggest that the subcommittee was about to become a regular part of our curriculum evaluation, either this year or in the future. Our meeting is an informal opportunity for one particular group to get together to let us know what is on its members' minds — nothing more.
Other Voices
James Wooefel
Western Civilization program director
Say No slogan no good
Rather than just fold their tents and steal off into the night on their Camels, the U.S. tobacco industry is trying to earn a touch of respectability by mounting — now, get this — a "Helping Savy Save No" campaign.
It's not that the tobacco pushers have gotten religion or that they're admitting their products are bad for kids. Oh, no, the campaign's printed materials talk about smoking as if it merely something that should be postponed until adulthood, like saving yourself for marriage.
Stressing the fact that it's illegal to
sell tobacco products to minors, the glossy, "Parent's Guide to Helping Teenagers Cope with Peer Pressure" refers only briefly to "the claims that smoking presents risks to one's health."
Not one word in there suggesting that your kids could wind up adicted if they start puffing in their teens, or that they could wind up dead at an early age from any number of smoky cigarettes. I jibe with the photos of squeaky-clean teens engaged in wholesome family activities in the materials.
Just like its cynical sponsorship of the Bill of Rights bicentennial, the
They're not fooling anyone.
tobacco industry wants to appear socially responsible by seeming to oppose smoke by kids.
They're no bobbing anyone.
What, after all, is this campaign in comparison to the industry's multibillion dollar advertising effort that portrays smokers as hip, mature and sexually desirable?
kids get that message loud and clear, unfortunately. "Helping Youth Say No" is just damage-control for tobacco companies eager to escape their true identity as merchants of death.
Patriotic, heavy-breathing 'Desert Susan' tries to comfort troops
From the Philadelphia Inquirer
In every war, there are those on the home front who do their part. From time to time I will report on these reports. Here is the first of these reports.
Michael Lobkowitz is a businessman of the Los Angeles species. That means he calls himself an audio and print artist. His works of art include an erotic magazine and a low-rating late-night radio show.
when the fighting broke out, Lobkowicz decided to do something to help the war effort. He would raise the morale of the young men over there. As he said in a message he faxed to me, "World Broadcast System is proud to announce 'Desert Susan', the first in a series of radio shows on cassettes, created especially for U.S. and Allied troops
"Desert Susan" is hosted by Susan Block, best-selling author, radio artist, matchmaker. Mistress of the
Mike Royko Syndicated columnist
Airwaves, sex therapist
He goes on to say that Block tapes the cassette in her West Hollywood bedroom. And that in a "sultry voice penetrating the horrors of war ... she comforts, inspires and counsels them on their long, lonely missions
... bring them a hot little piece of American pie with a lot of cool whipped cream. Desert Susan loves her troops ."
As a patriotic gesture, Lobkowitz says he is sending free copies of the tapes — about 10 a day — to a Desert Storm post office box.
However, he is also making him available to patriotic Americans who might wish to send them to someone over there. He is charging $11.95 a tape. But those who sign up for an email list of the people he has, a cut-rate price of $120.
As for the content of the tape, it is a bit difficult to describe.
It would be an understatement to say that Block, also known as Desert Susan, has a sultry voice. I'm not sure that seductive or erotic would do it justice. Let me put it as delicately as I can: It is the sort of voice you would expect from a lady who was nibbling on your earlobe while unbuttoning your shirt and trying to lift your wallet.
And it is appropriate that she would record the cassettes in her bedroom because she does every thing. "Was it as good for you as it was for
me?"
While breathing heavily, she slowly says, "It's so good to talk to you again I've missed you ... You are the captain of my heart. Let me whisper in your ear. Let me rock you in the cradle of my arms
"Let me touch you where the skin sage your mind." Let me kiss you
"Let me touch you where you long to be touched."
There's much more. A few romantic songs, what appears to be an effort at philosophy and cheerful messages from a few other women — Angie, Janell and Marianne, who play in the audio and paint artistry field.
But mostly it is Desert Susan, who goes on to say: '... Now I want you to snuggle up real close, close your eyes if you can, not if you're on Scud watch or anything, and think back to those good old dating days at home
where after a great evening with a
great girl, you had her just where you
were.
Then she pretends to be that girl, at one point saying "Wrap yourself around me . . ." With appropriate sighs and gaps, of course.
In a telephone conversation about his project, Lobkowicz denied the purpose of the tape was to get a woman to lose the mood to squeeze a woman's rump.
"It it's just to make them feel good," he said. "This has more to do with their feelings inside and contemplation. These are all the things we're feeling, and it's made loved ones. Ultimately, I do think that is what we're fighting for."
If he meant that the young men who heard the tapes might prefer to be in Desert Susan's bedroom, I couldn't argue with him.
Lobkowicz said he really didn't
care if he made a profit from the project, although he added. "That would be nice; it's a capitalistic society."
And he said that for every tape he sells, he will donate $1, which is very generous, to the USO. Of course, the company pays the tax, so that leaves it buy a proof of $8 or $8.
In discussing the profit potential, Lobkowicz sniffed, "Well, newspapers have been aggressive in selling their product."
That is true. On the other hand, few newspapers tell the troops that we will rub their feet or touch them where they long to be touched.
I guess we're kind of stodgy.
If you wish to order one of Lobkowicz's war-effort tapes, his address is . . . Oops, I seem to have lost it. Very careless of me.
KANSAN STAFF
Mike Royko is a syndicated columnist with the Chicago Tribune.
CHRIS SIRON
Editor
RICH CORNELL
Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
TOM FRLEN
by Tom Michaud
Business staff
AUDRA LANGFORD
Business manager
MINDI LUND
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing advise
Editors
Editors
News Melanie Mathes Campus sales mgr. Sophie Wehbe
Editorial Tiffany Harness Regional sales mgr. Darmen Cresch
Planning Holly M. Neuman National sales mgr. Jennifer Claxton
Campus Jennifer Reynolds, Co-op sales mgr. Christine Musher
Sports Pam Sollin Production mgrs. Rich Hansherr
Photography Kevin Thorpe Marketing director. Gail Einbinder
Graphics Melissa Unterberg Creative director. Chrisy Hays
Features Jill Hartlington Classified manager. Kim Crowder
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 will be required to use their student ID number.
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The Kauai reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest column and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kauai newsroom, 111 Stuaffer Flint Hall.
Home Remedies
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 1, 1991
5
Food Barn union postpones strike Kansan staff report
Local briefs
Food Barn employees yesterday postponed at least until Sunday their decision to strike in protest of the management's new contract offer.
"The company is not going to implement any of its proposals, and the union is not going to strike until Sunday," said Mike Charles, union steward for the Lawrence store, 1900 W. 23rd. St.
Charles said yesterday that the union and the management still were negotiating the new contract offer, and the union was planning a year reduction in wages and benefits.
Food Barn employees in Lawrence and the Kansas City area have voted in the past week to reject the management's contract proposal.
Although the old contract expired at midnight Feb. 16, the management is allowing employees to remain on the job while negotiations last.
The local Food Barn store employs about 40 people. Fifteen are KU students.
Robbery suspects' hearings delayed Kansan staff report
The preliminary hearings of Barry D. Rush, 29, 1820 Maine St., and Randall M. Brooks, 21, 1817 Mississippi St., have been postponed from
yesterday to March 14, said Martin Miller, Douglas County assistant district attorney.
The two also are charged in connection with the Feb. 2 attempted robbery of the assistant manager of the Sirlin Stockade.
Rush and Brooks are charged in connection with the Feb. 14 armed robbery of Sirlin Stockade, 1015 Iowa St. of the Feb. 7 armed robbery of 23rd St., and the Jan. 28 burglary of the same Taco Bell restaurant.
They have been charged with two counts of aggravated robbery, two counts of burglary, two counts of felony theft, one count of aggravated robbery and one count of attempted robbery and one count of misdemeanor nor theft.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Friday, March 1, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Arts and Entertainment
CD clubs tempt students with false bargains
Careful consumers will profit
By Vanessa Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
A penny won't buy much these days, but it still can buy up to eight compact discs.
For consumers who recently have bought a compact-disc player, the lucrative deals compact-disc clubs offer seem like the perfect opportunity to build a collection of compact discs.
In return, however, members are obliged to buy a number of compact-diests at inflated prices during a certain time period.
"On the whole they are pretty good," said Alan Krause, Overland Park senior. "It's a way to get a lot of CDs for a low price."
In addition, most clubs send members a compact disc automatically every month unless members notify them in advance not to. And while members enjoy the benefits of being present at events, they say they question this practice.
"If you don't send the slip back in time, they'll send you one whether you want it or not," said Laura Brent, Sarasota, Fla., junior. "I had
- Alan Krause Overland Park senior
'On the whole they are pretty good. It's a way to get a lot of CDs for a low price.'
a couple sent to me."
Krause said that the club notification sometimes implied that members were obliged to keep unwanted compact discs.
"There's a lot of hidden language in there," he said. "Sometimes you can return them at no charge. But sometimes you can't."
Ralph Colin, senior vice president of business and government affairs at Columbia House Record Service, called Columbia House received complaints and questions from members every day. The steady rate of criticism is normal, though, because the more than 3 million members he said.
bers eight compact discs for one cent and then requires customers to buy six more within a three-year period at prices ranging from $12.98 to $15.98.
Columbia House offers new mem
have taken us to court," he said.
"People will say they never received a notice or something. In most cases it was easier to make a small settlement instead of hiring attorneys and everything."
"There are times when members
But the problem is a two-way street, Colin said. Often, music clubs lose money because members do not 'ufill their end of the bargain.
"There are people who deliberately rip us off," he said. "We use a variety of techniques to screen customers."
Teresa Nelson, special agent in the state attorney general's office, said that she received calls from consumers who had either questions or complaints about music club services.
"A lot of them call us before they join because they don't know that they have to buy a certain number of books in a certain price within a year," she said.
But once people join clubs, the member obligations are legally binding. Nelson said.
"They're pretty self-explanatory," she said.
REVIEWS
MUSIC
'Out of Time' is intense, intelligent
Somewhere around the 25th time I listened to REM's new album, "Out Of Time," I decided that I wouldn't necessarily review it. Rather, I would try to point out why it's one of the best albums that I've ever heard.
"Out Of Time," the band's second LP release since it hopped from IRS to Warner Brothers, is nothing like any other REM album. Its particularity lies mainly in its wide use of instruments.
Previously, a mandolin was the main non-conformist instrument in the band. "Out of Time" is full of mandolin, violin, organ, piano and even harpsichord. Guests include KRS-One of Boogie Down Productions, Kate Pierson of the B-52s, jazz saxophonist Kidd Jordan and former db's guitarist Peter Holsapple, who also toured with REM on the "Green" tour, doing keyboards and guitar work.
In the March 7 issue of Rolling Stone magazine, REM drummer Bill Berry said people would either really like to join or leave there is little basis for middle ground.
The third track, "low," has a somber Mike Mills bass line and other string sounds set against the sobering effect of Michael Slipe's intensity and frustration that boils hot but is never actually released.
The same is true of "Country Feedback," which features soft, almost mismatched chords gently bouncing off each other. With Peter Buck's droning guitar feedback turning into a gentle rainfall of misused sound in the sound of the song suggests as much about the title as do the lyrics.
Though Stipe maintains in this month's issue of Spin magazine that all the songs are love songs, listeners must realize that love, especially to Stipe, is a many-faceted thing. Most of the rest of the songs do sound a little more happy — "Shiny Happy People" (with Pierson), "Radio Song" (with KRS-One) and "Near Wild Heaven" (with Radio Song) may attain the same level on the redundancy of commercial radio. But consider the validity of two respected musicians yelling that "the DJ sucks," or as KRS-One says "Now our children grow up prisoners, all their life, radio listeners."
Those who say REM sold out years ago should listen before passing judgment. This may be the highest level of shrewdness and intelligence that the band has ever achieved. Phil Wells, Special to the Kansas
e Kansan
MOVIES
'He Said' depicts battle of the sexes
The back and forth comedy of the movie "He said, She Said" matches man against woman in a tale of "I'm right, you're wrong."
The story revolves around two community-issues columnists for the Baltimore Sun. Their disagreeing banter encroaches on the heels of Siskel and Ebert. The two writers and their argumentative columns become so popular that they are invited to play host to their own talk show.
Along the way, Lorie and Dan fall for each other. Kevin Bacon plays Dan in the stereotypical "all men are pets" persona.
“Am I responsible for the personality disorders of every woman I go out with? he asks Lorie after a farewell former girlfriend comes looking for her.
Elizabeth Perkins is cast as Lorie,
a neurotic but shrewish counterpart
to Cassandra.
"Sex with me is very good," he tells her.
Many people may find the ensuing bickering between the two characters all too familiar, and it does strike a somewhat universal chord despite its stereotypical nature. What "He Said, She Said," has to do with it is the bitter battle of the sexes. Though at times gimmicky, it is mildly innovative to watch the paranoid fantasies that Lorie and Dan have about each other.
The two inexplicably become involved romantically, and their volatile on-camera relationship follows the couple into the bedroom.
"He Said, She Said," despite its trifling stereotypes, does offer a comedic introspection into the nature of male-female relationships.
- Kristine Curley, Special to the Kansan
THE CALLIGRAPHY
Mozart's opera 'The Marriage of Figaro' will be performed Monday at Hoch Auditorium.
National company to perform opera
By Vanessa Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
KU students and Lawrence residents are invited to watch the wedding of the century — the 18th century, that is.
The illustrious event will take place 8 p.m. Monday in Hoch Auditorium, when the New York City Opera National Company will perform "Trombone Suite" in four operas of all time, W. A. Mozart's "The Marriage of Figaro."
The comic opera, which premiered in 1786, tells the tale of two lovers, Figaro and Susanna, who endure innumerable obstacles and twists of plot before reuniting for the finale.
"It is one of the shows that are accessible to people even if they don't like opera," said Charla Gustafson, a professor of relations for University Theatre.
Members of the National Company, the New York City Opera's
touring arm, will compose the wedding party. Founded by Beverly Sills in 1979, the National Company will be returning for its fifth consecutive visit as part of the KU Concert Series.
Tickets for "The Marriage of Figaro" are on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office, and student tickets are available at the SUA of Fairfield University. The $20 and $17 for the public and $10 and $6.50 for students.
Friday
■ "Heathers," SUA Movie, 7 and 9:30 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union $2.50
- Rock Chalk Revue, 7:30 p.m., Hoch Auditorium, $8.
SUA Coffeehouse, impromptu entertainment, 7:30 p.m., Big Eight Room, Kansas Union, free.
Samuel Adler Festival concert, James Higdon, organ, 8 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall, free.
"Tobacco Road," University Theatre Series, 8 p.m., Crimson-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall, tickets at Murphy Hall Box Office.
CALENDAI
Red Zone, 8 p.m., Liberty Hall, 642
Massachusetts St., advance tickets $6.
■ Tuber, Creep and Roach Factory, 9,
8th Floor, Theater #5.
That Statue Worship; 9:30 p.m., The Jazwhass, 98%² Massachusetts St. $³.
"Blade Runner" SUA movie, mid-September Auditorium, Kansas Union $25.
p.m. Haslinger Hall Theatre, $1.
■ Breakaways, 9 p.m., Just A Play-
house, 806 W, 24th St., $2
Salty Iguanas and The Sleep, 9:30 p.m. The Bottletness, 737 New Hampshire St, $3
Union, must be 18, $2.
Saturday
Rock Chalk Revue, 7:30 p.m., Hoch Auditorium, sold out.
■ "Heathers." SUA Movie, 7 and 9-30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union $2.50
"Tobacco Road," University Theatre Series, 8 p.m., Crayton-Prairie Theater, Murphy Hall, tickets at Murphy Hall Box Office.
That Statue Moved, 9:30 p.m. The Jazzhaus, 92%1 Massachusetts St., $3. "Blade Runner," Movie, mid- movie.
Breakaways, 9 p.m., Just A Play house 80W, 24th St. $2.
■ Blue Dixie, 9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck,
737 New Hampshire St., $4.
- "Last Tango in Paris," SUA Movie, 4 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas
Sundav
"Tobacco Road," University Theatre Series. 2:30 p.m., Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murray Hall, tickets at Murphy Hall Box Office.
■ Sigma Alpha iota concert, "Mostly Mozart," 3 p.m., Swarthout Recital Half, free
“Heathers,” SUA Movie, 2 p.m.
Wooldruff Auditorium, Kansas Union,
$2.50
Gwar and Agony Column, 9:30 p.m.
The Bottlehead, 737 New Hampshire St.,
advance tickets $9.
Monday
Open Mike, 9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. free.
**"University Concert Series," The
Museum of Figaro." New York City,
Operational Company, 8 p.m. Hoch-庐曼
tickets on sales at Hallway Box 100.
Tuesday
■ University Bands concert, "Pops Con-
nexion," Warren Baker, guest conductor, B p.m. Library Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
■ Of Cabbages and Kings and Weasel,
9:30 p.m. The Bottleknot, 737 New
Hampshire St., $3.
Wednesday
Evan Johns and the H-Bombs and Filter Kings, 9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New Hamshire St. S4
Swarthout Society Resident Artist concert, Rita Slain, piano, and Mark Peskanov, violin, 8 p.m., Liberty Hall 642 Massachusetts St.
Thursday
Now See Hear, 9:30 p.m., The Bot
tleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., $3.
Black Carne Bone, 9:30 p.m., $12
Jazzhaus, 92.6% Massachusetts St.$
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The Swarthout Society
Friends of the University of Kansas Consert Chamber Music and New Directions Series
Presents a Musical Gift to the Community
The 1991 Swarthout Society Resident Artists
Mark Peskanov
VIOLIN
&
Rita Sloan
PIANO
In Residence March 2-6, 1991
These artists will present informances, master classes, and performances. For a complete schedule of activities, contact the KU Concert Series, 864-3469
Public Performance:
Wednesday, March 6, 1991
Liberty Hall
Free and open to the public
Special thanks to the Lawrence Travel Logic for providing lodging for our guests.
Funded by the Swarthout Society with partial support from
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 1, 1991
Nation/World
7
World briefs Izmir, Turkey
U.S. soldier shot
Assailants shot a U.S. soldier in the head yesterday in the second attack on a U.S. military employee in Turkey in a month. A Marxist group opposed to the gulf war claimed responsibility for both shootings.
U. S. officials said the victim, identified as Lt. Col. Alvin Macke, 44, was in stable condition after surgery. The semi-official news agency Anatolia said Macke worked at NATO Land Southeast Command in Izmir.
"We will continue our activities until imperialism gets its hands off the Middle East," said a caller calling to represent the Marxist group, Dev Sol, after contacting the Izmir office of the daily newspaper Cumhuriyet.
New Delhi, India
4-story building falls
An unfinished four-story apartment complex in Calcutta collapsed yesterday, killing at least 20 people, according to news reports.
United News of India reported that at least 38 others were injured, most of them seriously. Press Trust of India said police were searching for the two people responsible for the construction. Press Trust said residents of the area told journalists the construction was illegal.
Most of those killed were laborers working on the site, reports said.
The upper stories of the building caved in early yesterday, trapping many sleeping workers in the rubble. United Nations officials hats next to the building also were buried under the debris.
Rescue efforts were hampered because the narrow roads surrounding the site prompted moving in to lift the rubble.
From The Associated Press
World events since the gulf war began
Early 2015. Hungary
Feb. 25, Warsaw Pact
nations disband Soviet-led
military pact
BUDAPEST, Hungary
LONDON
Feb. 18: IRA bombs kill 2, injure scores at train station
HAITI
Feb. 7: First democratically elected president inaugurated
ALBANIA
Jan. 18: Muslims allowed to worship; banned since 1967
PERII
Feb. 15; Cholera epidemic spreading
SOURCE: Knight-Ridder research
Jan 16: 500,000 attend funeral of 15 killed by Soviet troops. Feb. 9: Citizens vote to sece from Soviet Union
LITHUANIA
Feb. 24: 40 000 demonstrate in favor of Russian President Yeltsin
MOSCOW
Jan. 29: Black faction leaders agree to end violence. Feb. 1: President de Klerk says he plans to repeal apartheid
SOUTH AFRICA
Feb. 13. Jewish settlers to increase by 5.0%
CHINA
Jan. 25, Army
KGB begin
patrolling cities;
KGB monitors
private business
Jan. 26: Pro-democracy leaders sentenced
SOVIET UNION
THAILAND
Feb. 23: Military overthrows civilian government
AFGHANISTAN
Feb. 4: Earthquake
kills 1,200
Knight-Ridder Tribune News
02/28/91
Ethnic Serbs declare plan for secession from Croatia
The Associated Press
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia — Ethnic Serbs said yesterday that their enclave would to secede from the republic of Croatia, a move likely to further raise tensions in the crumbling federation of Yugoslavia.
A Croatian official said the announcement was intended to pressure Croatia before today's sixth anniversary on Yugoslavia's political fate.
Federal Premier Ante Markovic warned yesterday of an explosion of ethnic unrest if Yugoslavia's six former Serbian president agreed soon on means to maintain the
A statement issued by the Serbian National Council in the region of Krajina said the enclave planned to secede because it disagreed with Croatia's last week to initiate a public's secession from Yugoslavia.
fractious federation.
Parliaments in Croatia and the northern republic of Slovenia decided Yugoslavia must become a loose association of sovereign states or dissolve into two or more countries if no agreement could be reached.
Yugoslavia is facing economic and legal chaos, Belgrade's daily news paper Borba quoted him as saying
Communist-ruled Serbia and Montenegro want to keep a centralized federation. Serbia threatens to expand its borders to include all ethnic Serbs in other republics if the current federation unravels
Talks between the republic leaders since Jan. 10 have failed to reach an
"The Serbian people in Krajina feel there is no reason to leave Yugoslavia, and therefore they will secede from Croatia," said the statement, broadcast by the state Tanjug broadcast. It gave no timetable for the move.
agreement.
Ethnic Serbs living in Krajina had already declared their region autonomous and their police force independent.
Croatian authorities refused to recognize Krajina's autonomy and said the rebellion there was orchestrated by the government in Serbia.
"There is no legal, economic or moral basis for such a move," said Mario Nobilo, a Croatian government adviser, in a telephone interview. His wife was limed to coincide with today's resumption of talks in Belgrade.
Ethnic Serbs are primarily concentrated in the republics of Croatia and Bosnia-Hercegovina.
A bitter dispute between Serbs and Muslims, another minority group, forced Bosnia's Parliament early yesterday to postpone indefinitely adoption of a decree on the republic's sovereignty.
The University of Kansas Theatre Present
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Director will help establish new department in Watkins
Today is Frank DeSalvo's first day of work as the director of Counseling and Psychological Services, a department that will be formed during the summer at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
By Amy Francis
Kansan staff writer
in Bailey Hall. The merger is planned
for summer CAPS will be in
Watkins.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said DeSalvo was chosen to fill the new position of his qualifications and experience.
"We were looking for somebody who had experience in merging programs," he said.
CAPS will be the result of a merger of the mental health clinic in Watkins and the University Counseling Center
Jim Strobil, director of Watkins, said, "He has merged two similar units in Arkansas. That was one of his strong points."
Ambler said DeSalvo's work at the University of Arkansas had another impact.
"He has a very strong reputation as a university counselor," he said. "We were very fortunate that he was able to accept and start on March 1."
From now until the merger,
DeSalvo will be working to organize
the merger and the resulting center's
operations, Ambler said.
The new department will try to
"He will be trying to fill a number of vacant positions," Ambler said. "There will be plenty for him to do."
offer more comprehensive services and will need a larger staff, he said.
"The Center's primary goal will be to deliver services to the university as a whole."
Strobl said DeSalve's office would be on the second floor of Watkins in the administration department. The area will be used for the new center to the administration offices move to the new location on the same floor.
Ambler said DeSalvo would spend today meeting with people from the student housing department and the counseling and psychology center.
African-American engineers honored at closing banquet for history month
Kansan staff writer
By Benjamin W. Allen
Willie Numery brought African-American History Month at KU to a close last night at a banquet honoring African-American engineers with his speech calling for equality and imperative action for minority students.
Numery, a 1971 engineering graduate of KU, founded the KU chapter of the Student Council for Recruiting, Minority Engineers 20 years ago.
Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, said that it was a tremendous honor to introduce Nunnery and that he remembered him from 1865, when Nunnery attended a program for disadvantaged students.
"He is a man of unusual talents and unusual dedication." Shankel said.
Numeray is a member of the bar in Wisconsin and Louisiana and has held executive positions at the state and federal level.
He said that as one battle was ending in the Middle East, a new challenge remains to achieve political and economic equality for African-Americans and
all minorities.
Nunnery there was a tremendous price paid for the freedoms African-Americans enjoyed.
"We must be ever and constantly reminded that you and I are beneficiaries of what was paid for before," he said.
Nunney said his speech had two basic messages in it, one for minority students and one for the University administration.
To KU students in engineering, he said, "It is not enough for you as students to study engineering, get a job and not participate in democracy."
He told minority students that it was not appropriate for them merely to wear black.
Nunnery told them they had to participate actively in democracy to erase the "color line" that W.E.B. Du Bous identified nearly 90 years ago.
"We must have a hunger and thirst to say, 'Hey, I have to do something,'" he said.
A
Nunnery said the University should have responded quicker after affirmative-action scholarships were called racist by a federal official.
African-American History
have been, 'Hell no, we're going to continue giving scholarships to minorities and disadvantaged students,'" he said.
More than 40 people attended the banquet, which was sponsored by the Center for Black Leadership Development and Research and the School of Engineering.
"Your immediate response should
The banquet not only honored African-American engineers in general, but also four engineers with ties to Kansas.
The four honorees were John Shlaughter, president of Occidental College; Horace Edwards, secretary of the Kansas Department of Transportation from 1987 to 1990; Michael Shinn, leader of General Electric's regional recruiting and university development; and Louis Smith, chief executive officer of Allied Signal Aerospace Co.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 1, 1991
9
'Hawks rebound for title shot
'Husker seniors will be psyched
By S. J. Bailey
Kansan sportswriter
After an emotional overtime loss at Oklahoma State on Jan. 12 dropped the Kansas basketball team to 0-2 in the Big Eight Conference, coach Roy Williams was asked if the next league game was critical to the Jayhawks' success during the remainder of the conference schedule.
Going into the weekend games, Kansas is tied with Oklahoma State for the conference lead at 10.3. If Kansas wins and the Cowboys lose, the Jayhawks would be the outright conference champions.
Kansas Basketball GAME 27
"I think critical is a word they use in hospitals," Williams said at that time. "There are still a lot of games left to be played, and at this point, no one can be counted out of the race. I think the teams that can win game games on the road will be the ones you have to be around at the end of the season."
If both teams win, they would share the league title, but Kansas would receive the higher seed in the conference tournament because of its record against the next-highest-seeded team.
Who could have known Williams would turn out to be such a prognosticist.
Since that bitter loss in Stillwater, Williams and the Jayhawks have posted a 12-1 record, including a 1-1 mark in league road games, and have vaulted into the driver's seat for the Big Eight Conference title.
Sunday, Kansas could claim at least a share of the league crown with a victory against the 15th-ranked Nebraska Cornhuskens in Lincoln.
KANSAS
JAYHAWKS
Coach: Roy Williams
Record:21-5
VS
PROBABLE STARTERS
NEBRASKA
CORNHUSKERS
Coach: Danny Nee
Record:23-6
Player Ht. PPG RPG Player Ht. PPG RPG F-Alonzo Jamison 6-6 10.3 6.4 F-Carl Hayes 6-8 13.8 5.6 F-Mike Maddox 6-7 7.3 3.3 F-Tony Farmer 6-10 11.4 7.0 C-Mark Randall 6-9 15.8 5.7 F-Beau Reld 6-7 10.0 4.5 G-Terry Brown 6-2 17.0 3.7 C-RIch King 7-2 15.1 7.9 G-Adonis Jordan 5-11 11.7 2.9 G-Clifford Scales 6-2 9.5 2.9
Game Notes: Kansas will play Nebraska at 2 p.m. Sunday at Bob Devaney Sports Center. The Jayhawks lead the series with the Cornhuskers 131-63, with a 48-38 advantage in Lincoln. Kansas won the first meeting with Nebraska 85-77. The Jayhawks ranked 10th in the nation in The Associated Press poll, will try to extend their two-game winning streak after Big Eight Conference victories last week against Oklahoma and Iowa State. Kansas coach Roy Williams is 3-1 against the Cornhuskers, and Nebraska coach Danny Nee is 3-6 against the Jayhawks.
Radio: KLZR (105.9 FM), KJHK (90.7 FM)
TV: NBC (Channels 4, 27)
ney
63, with
ka
s poll,
rence
Men's Basketball
The Jayhaws defeated the Cornbushers 85-77 feb. 6 at Allen Field House, but Williams said he thought Nebraska would be more fired up this time around because it would be the date for a game in front of the Cornhusker faithful.
"Clifford Scales, Rich King and Beau Reid will all be bowing up there, and I'm sure it will be a very
emotional day for them," he said.
"But we can't go up there and get caught in that kind of thing. They're very different from the team, regardless of all the emotion."
The Jayhawks will have to find some way to counter the Cornhuskers' dominating height advantage, starting around four players 6-foot 8 or taller.
rebounds in the game earlier this season in Lawrence.
King, a 7.2 center, leads the Cornhuskers offensively with 15.1 points and 7.9 rebounds a game. He scored 25 points and pulled down eight
Senior forward Mike Maddox said he hoped the Nebraska seniors would not have as good a game as the one they played in their last game on the home floor.
"They're big and strong, and we're going to have to do a great job inside rebounding to be successful." Maddox said. "If we can go out on there and just play and lose our pose, we should have a good shot at winning the game."
By Rick C. Honish
Lacrosse team must travel to play games
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas women's lacrosse team will travel to Boulder, Colo., this weekend for a tournament and a clinic.
Jeanne Brennan, vice-president of the team, said that 15 to 17 women would make the trip today.
make the trip today.
"We will play against teams from Colorado, Denver University, Colorado
State."
Breman said the team had to travel for each tournament because there were no other teams in the area.
"Missouri has tried to a team going, but they have had some trouble," she said. "Right now I think we are the only women's team in Kansas and that means we can win."
She described the sport as a combination of fieldockey and soccer. The game is played with a hard rubber ball on a field that closely resembles a soccer field. The 12 players on each team have long sticks with shallow, triangular nets on the end. A player has to "cradle" the ball in the net by sliding side while running and looking for a teammate to pass the ball to. The object is to get the ball into the opponent's goal at the opposite end of the field.
Brennan and her roommate, Ellen Brisch, formed the team last year after several women asked the men's team about playing
"We started the team with about 10 players," Brennan said. "And only two or three really knew how to play."
"There are about 40 on the roster now, but they all play on a rotational-type schedule." she said. "There are about 20 solid players."
schedule," she said. "There are about 20 solid players." She said that starting a new sport on campus was good because everyone
Stephanie Hampton, a player on the team, said that she had never even seen a stick until Brennan showed her one.
"It was hard to learn everything at first, but after our first game, we knew what we were supposed to be doing," she said. "I think we play really well together now."
"There are a lot of girls on the team who have never even seen another game played." she said.
Breman said she was excited to go to Colorado so that many of the new players could see what the sport was all about.
game played, she said.
After the Colorado tournament, the team will play scrimmages until April 14, when it will play in the Western States tournament at the University of California at Davis.
The team is financed by the Sports Club Council, but Brennan said the team would have to finance their transportation and lodging.
"We are going to have fund-raisers to help" she said. She added that the team probably would end up staying in hotel rooms, with many members
"We will probably buy our groceries here and send them out on the plane to save some more money," she said. "It's worth it though. We have a lot of fun, and we are learning how to play better."
Gathers' death draws flurry of legal action
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — One year after Hank Gathers collapsed on a basketball court and died, his name frequently recurs in court briefs, depositions and notices of appeal.
More than 30 lawyers, representing seven different firms across the nation, have made Loyola Marymount's former star the subject of suits and counter-suits, accusations and denials, before a federal judge spawned acrimony among those who were closest to him.
Gathers, a senior forward, was intent on leading the Lions to their third-straight West Coast Conference tournament title March 4 when, following one of his trademark dunks in a game against Houston, heapped to the floor. He was pronounced dead less than two hours later.
The cause of death was found to be cardiomyopathy, a heart disorder.
A jury likely will decide who or what contributed to Gathers' death and any culpability.
In the meantime, heavy publicity surrounding the $2.5 million wrongful death suit filed by Gathers' mother, brother, aunt and a 7-year-old son born out of wedlock has drawn battle lines between the family and 14 defendants, among them former Loyola Marymount coach Paul Westhead, the university and doctors
who treated Gathers before and after his collapse.
The litigation even has cast a shadow over efforts by WCC officials to commemorate Gathers' death at this year's tourney. He will be a pause to remember him at Monday's championship.
"The litigation really limits what we can appropriately do," said assistant WCC commissioner Don Ott, adding that the conference addressed with the problem. But everyone is remembering him this week.
"We can never forget the impact Hank had on the conference and the tournament." Ott was the tournament MVP twice.
There will be no public commemoration at Loyola Marymount, where Gathers was the nation's scoring and rebounding leader in 1988-89. The school's coaching staff and team doctor all are defendants in the suit, which also names the university.
Although the suit was filed last April, the first settlement conference is set for March 3. That may not come off, though, since even the defendants can't agree on strategy.
Sports briefs
Gophers will play host to the Jayhawks today
The Kansas baseball team plays the Minnesota Golden Gophers in Napoleon today in the first game of a three-game weekend series.
“There's a real concern for us in our preparation,” he said. “When you get into a great facility like that, everybody steps up their game. We need to be able to do that for three games.”
The games will be played in the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, the home of major-league baseball's Minnesota Twins
The Jayhawks, 3-3 overall, will return home to Hogland-Maupin Stadium to play Creighton at 2 p.m. Tuesday.
Kansas coach Dave Bingham said the dome might pose some problems for the Jayhawks.
Hockey club to compete in Iowa championship
The Kansas hockey club will be competing in the CSCHA Championships in Des Moines, Iowa, this weekend.
The club finished first in their
The club received a first-round bye and will begin play Saturday in the semifinals of the single-elimination tournament.
division with a 10-5-1 record, including 6-5 and 63 victories over Missouri last weekend.
The Kansas men's tennis team will play Minnesota on Saturday and Drake on Sunday in the Drake Invitational in Des Moines, Iowa.
Kansas will be competing against Drake, Washington, Iowa State, Northern Iowa and Carleton College for the championship.
Kansas coach Scott Perelman said the weekend was important for the Jayhawks in terms of rankings and postseason tournament seeds.
Kansas, 6-3 overall, is coming out of an 18th place finish at the USTA/ITCA National Indoor Team Championships last weekend.
"The Drake match is especially big for us," he said. "They're in our region, and we need to beat them and win our league to go to the NCAAs."
Kansas men to compete in Iowa this weekend
From staff reports
ALCAS
Kansas guards Darye Bieber (left) and Kay Kay Hart take a short break during an informal practice at Allen Field House. The women's
ilip Meiring/KANSAN
basketball team will leave for the Big Eight tournament in Salina at 12:30 p.m. today.
Team hopes that aggressive defense will win coming Conference tourney
Lady 'Hawks ready to take Big 8
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
The Big Eight Conference tournament is here again, and Kansas junior guard Kay Kay Hart said that he will attend the conference title home this year.
Hart said that the Jayhawks would not be the only team prepared to play a rough game. She said Kansas' first opponent, Nebraska, would also be
"Everyone is going to be pumped," Hart said. "We've got to go in and play tough."
Hart said she would look for Nebraska to try to force the Kansas offense to make fast decisions and not allow them to follow down and set up its plains.
“Couch (Angela) Beck is going to have them read,” Hart said. “The season may not have been their best, but we’re going to come in ready to play.”
"I think they'll try to hold our inside people," Hart said. "We'll have to play smarter than Nebraska and play people in the game if we want to win."
Hart said that the key to the game would be Kansas' defense getting inside the lane and out-rebounding Nebraska's taller players.
Women's Basketball
"Rebounding is defense." Hart
said. "It's desire. If you want the ball, you've got to go to get it."
Hart said that the Jayhawks would definitely possess that desire.
Kansas assistant coach Mitch Shea said he thought Kansas would be ready for a race to the boards with Nebraska.
"They have the height advantage," Shea said. "It's a plus, but it's not a definite advantage. It's something else." He also said he'd do we do with it. We're a quicker team."
Shea said that communication between players and a focused defense would secure a Kansas victory.
Kansas sophomore center Lisa Tate said that if the Jayhawks played up to their potential, the game would
Probable Starters for Women's Basketball
"We are a tournament team," Shea said. "We have the depth and the defense. It's a team effort."
Shea said that Kansas would try to force the Cornhuskers outside the lane, a strategy that might save the Jayhawks from making mistakes that would send the Cornhuskers to the free-throw line.
| Kansas | Pos. | Ht. | PPG | RPG |
|---|
| Terrilyn Johnson | F | 5-11 | 10.1 | 9.6 |
| Tanya Bonham | F | 5-8 | 6.1 | 1.9 |
| Marthea McCloud | C | 5-10 | 6.0 | 5.8 |
| Stacy Truitt | G | 5-8 | 10.1 | 4.0 |
| Kay Kay Hart | G | 5-7 | 9.4 | 3.2 |
Nebraska
Karen Jennings C 6-2 20.3 8.7
Ann Halsne F 6-1 11.0 4.6
Kristi Dahn G 5-11 7.5 2.2
Meggan Yedsena G 5-8 7.3 3.2
Kelly Hubert F 6-1 7.0 6.9
Melissa Unterberg/KANSAN
end in a Nebraska unset
When Nebraska played host to Kansas on Feb. 6, the Jayhawks lost
The Jayhawks dominated the court when they played Nebraska Jan. 23 at Allen Field House, beating the Cornuskers 83-63.
Tate said that despite the size of the Nebraska players, Kansas could outmaneuver them.
"We just have to make sure when they go for a shot that we block them out, so they don't get second chances." Tate said. "They may be bigger than we are, but we're quicker."
69-68.
The Jayhawks finished their regular season with an overall record of 16-11 and 7-7 in the conference.
"Our record might not show it," Tate said, "but I really do believe that we can win."
For the last two years, Kansas has lost the conference title to Oklahoma State by narrow point margins. In 1990, the final score of the title game was 66-65, while the final score of the 1989 clash was 62-59.
"We have nothing to lose and everything to gain," Hart said. "It's our year."
10
Friday, March 1, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
KAWVALLEYINDUSTRIAL
We offer a complete line of Kawasaki motorcycles. Parts and service for all makes and models of cycles and mopeds. So, get ready for the warm months ahead by getting your motorcycle ready now.
- Full line of accessories too.
Kawasaki
Let the good times roll.
Kaw Valley Industrial 1105 E.23rd Street 841-9751
THE ETC. SHOP MIDTERM
1. Name two great American Institutes that were established in 1865.
- KU
-Duck Head Pants
(The Etc. Shop came later)
2. Where you can see a complete line of 100%
cotton pleated pants, shorts, shirts, rugbyss, etc.?
V
The Etc.
Shop
The Etc. Shop
Clothing & Accessories
For Men & Women
Sunglasses
Costumes
732 Mass. 843 0611
VISA-MC-AM EXP-DISCOVER CARD
Cambridge West Apartments
- 3 Glass Patio Doors with Verticals
- 1,140 sq. ft./2 Bedroom/2 Bath
Walk to KU Medical Center
and Track Lights
- Clubhouse/Laundry Facilities
Saudis/100 Stains/Vergins
Off-Street Parking/Security Gates
(913) 722 - 1319
3600 Rainbow Blvd., Kansas City, Kansas
HAVE YOU BEEN TO THE APPLF
HAVE YOU BEEN TO THE APPLE
LATELY?
ALL WEEK LONG
EVERY WEEK!
wells-$2.50
imports-$2.75
prem-$2.95
draws-$1.00
domestics $1.50
imports $2.00
Bruss Apple
GRILL & BAR
EVENING SPECIALS
5:00pm-close 8:00pm-11:00pm
MON-Seafood combo Buffalo wings
$5.95 $2.95
IUE-Open face beef Tater skins
sandwich-$5.25 $2.95
HER- Spaghetti&meat Chicken chunks
sauce - $5.25 $2.95
Thursday all you can eat
boiled shrimp $7.95
& nachos-$2.95 8-11 p.m.
ALL DAY SUNDAY-SOFT TACOS $1.95
chicken & cheese
sausage & crackers
new salads and soups
oriental chicken salad
taco salad
new dinners
fantail shrimp
fried chicken
teniaki chicken
white fish
marinated chicken
new burger &
sandwiches
ozark burger
fish sandwich
team melt
patty melt
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west lawrence
841-0033
ALL WEEK LONG
EVERY WEEK!
wells-$2.50
calls-$2.75
prem-$2.95
draws-$1.00
domestics
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imports
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Kansas Alpha Chapter
HARMONY IN A WORLD OF DIFFERENCE
Sigma Alpha Epsilon presents HARMONY IN A WORLD OF DIFFERENCE
A Workshop on Cultural Diversity,
Prejudice Reduction and Coalition Building
Saturday, March 23, 1991
Kansas Union
8:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.
Admission Free • Registration Limited
Yes, I will attend the Harmony in a World of Difference workstation sponsored by Kansas Air Force, Signa Alpha Epsilon, Saturday, March 23, 1991.
To register you must complete and return this form. Your reservation will be confirmed. Please print all information.
City State
State City
Mai to: Harrington in a world of Difference, c/sigma Signa Alpha Epiphany,
1301 W. Campus Rd., Lawrence K. 66044. (Phone: 843-62525)
www.wc.edu
Together we can make a world of difference.
Save a tree , Recycle in front of Wescoe
SPECIALIZE YOUR TRANSPORTATION
SPECIALIZED.
S
Try out the new Specialized Frame System (SFS). Pedal with little effort while you enjoy a bike that fits like a glove.
HARDROCK SPORT $349
SUNFLOWER 804 Massachusetts, Lawrence, 843-5000
Wyandotte County presents Bridal Fair 1991
Do you need:
something old, something new
something borrowed,
something blue?
Then come to the first
Wyandotte County
Bridal Fair 1991.
Saturday, March 2
10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
at the Wyandotte County
Fairgrounds. Located at
98th and State Ave.
Kansas City, KS.
eru,
*Fashion show, booths,
prizes and free admission
For more information call (913) 788-5133
BAR & GRILL
HOT SHOTS
•BE A HOT SHOT, PASS THE KEYS TO A SOBER FRIEND.
FRIDAY
$2.50 PITCHERS
TACOS
50¢
while they last!
$2.50 PITCHERS TACOS 50¢ while they last!
SATURDAY
$1.00 SHOTS FISH BOWLS $2.00
Karokee is back! Everyone is a "STAR" night!
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SHOTS FISH BOWLS $2.00
623 VERMONT
Life's a Beach !
A palm tree rests on a beach. A sun hat is on the chair.
- Mossimo - Trunk - & Club Volleyball Shorts 1/2 Off..Now $15.99
- Body Glove Bikinis
1/2 Off...Save up to $35
Spring Break Sale
- Volley & Spring Break
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- *Aqua Socks & Thongs
Last Year's Style*
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- Beach Volleyball
Regular $32.99...Now $19.99
at Jock's Nitch
840 Massachusetts 842-2442
* Open until 8pm Monday - Thursday
Student hit by car has fractured skull
Kansan staff report
Brandt Pasco, Lawrence junior, suffered a fractured skull when his bicycle collided with a car that was turning into a parking stall on the drive service south of Wesco Hall room 4 p.m. yesterday, westside
"I had passed him coming down the hill," said Debbie Kidd, Leneka junior, driver of the car "I thought I was going to die of the hill. He was in my blind spot."
Kidd said Paseo's bicycle hit the front quarter panel of the driver's side of her car.
Pasco said that if he had not been wearing his helmet, he would have
been hurt more seriously.
Pasco was transported to Lawrence Memorial Hospital where he was treated and released.
Joel Kucza, Lawrence junior, said he had just left Anschutz Science Library when he witnessed the accident.
"The bike hit, and he went tumbling over the front," Kucza said.
Pasco was thrown about 15 feet from where the impact occurred and landed partially under a parked car, Kucza said.
"It's better to have a helmet for $60 than to give up my life," Kucza said.
Kueza said that in the past, he had been reluctant to buy a bicycle helmet because they were expensive.
Opposition group demands land reform power for state
The Associated Press
Under decades old apartheid laws, 87 percent of South Africa land is reserved for whites who make up about 15 percent of the population.
"We are responding to a very strong call from our people that they want land back," said Derek Hanekom of the Black opposition group's Land Commission, which drafted the paper.
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Land reform should empower the state to take back private property and create claims courts to settle ownership disputes in the redistribution of land between Blacks and Indians. National Congress discussion paper released yesterday.
President W. de Klerk has proposed repeal of all apartheid laws and negotiations with all parties on a new constitution to end white-minority
In response to farmers' fears that
It rejected calls by farm groups for a free market system of buyers and sellers with no state role.
But the discussion paper said a new constitution and bill of rights must empower the state to intervene in the land market, helping to carry out claims court decisions by seizing or compensating previous owners.
they could lose their property under a Black government, de Klerk was no one would be forced to give up his land. Mr. Klerk posed free fires unused land for Blacks.
PC WAREHOUSE
"We do not accept this proposal as there is no way moneyless people will get access to land," it said.
410 ADMRL BLV0.
KANSAS CITY, MO 64106
Landowners could be compensated with a combination of cash and industrial bonds, the paper said.
ANC representative Pallio Jordan said state intervention in the form of apartheid forced Blacks off land that were illegal, so the ANC proposal was not new.
286 - 12
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Nexia
Supermicro
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Send : Receive FAX 19.00
Modern internal 18.00
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Power Cards 12.50
Power Cards 25.00
Mouse w jr hand 11.00
Mouse w jr hand 113.00
10 Kabernet w Drive w GCP 113.00
130 MH Bad drive w GCP 501.00
130 MH Bad drive w GCP 501.00
Mk Software w ior 10.00
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Thur. 8.00 - 8.00
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I-70
Software & Hardware | Mother Board | Power Supplies | Cables | Keyboards | Modems
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March 31, 1991
3201 W. 6th 1015 E. 23rd
University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 1, 1991
11
Student misconceptions about fake IDs abound
Kansan staff writer
By Mike I. Vargas
Questions about the legality of possessing and purchasing alcohol were addressed at a meeting last night in McColumb Hall by representatives from KU police and Legal Services for Students.
One misconception that many dents have is that possession of a fake ID is not a crime unless one tries to avoid it. A real ID is for legal Services for Students.
Possession of a fake ID is a class B mistemeanor and is punishable with a fine of up to $1,000 or possible county jail time or both, she said. In addition, local prosecutors will not grant a diversion.
“A diversion means that you can't charge the change or lessen it . . . it will show up on your record,” Kessler said.
Burdel Welsh, KU police representative, said that besides at liquor stores and bars many students got
caught with fake IDs when they were pulled over while driving.
"In the stress and excitement, you pull out the wrong ID or we see that you have two driver's licenses." Welsh said.
"If students are not read their Miranda rights, they think they're scot-free," she said.
The KU police "lost and found" is another way that many students get caught with a fake ID, he said. Students who have a fake ID in their wallet or purse often receive a ticket when they come to recover it.
Kessler said that another common misconception concerned being questioned in bars by police.
Suspects do not have to be told of their rights against self-incrimination and their right to be advised by a lawyer until the suspect is placed under arrest, Kessler said. Usually, police have enough evidence to incriminate someone before he or she is arrested.
Classified Directory
200's
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Trading Services
100s Announcements
105 Personal
Kim, Sorry I missed you. Bad time. Write back Corey
Schmurtie,
I know I have not been a good sister lately, and I'm sorry! I want to say I love you very much! Good Luck in Rock Chalk! Best of luck to you and Roby.
O
Love,
Squirtos m.s. jr
110 Bus. Personal
FACULTY POSITION/ HEALTH PROMOTION University of Kansas Medical Center
PETER LOVE AND MICHAEL JONES
A. C. AUTOVENTIL is your full service auto repair shop. Classic to computerized. Body shop available. Automotive motorcycle repair and accesories. Auto parts. Diverter accession
Academic Position in Health Promotion Disease Prevention (HPDP).
Bausch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sunglasses
20% Below, SG Retail
The Etc. Shop
732 Mss, 84161
Department of Preventive Medicine seeks faculty
300's
400's
and/or teaching.
degree and 5 years or more experience in developing programs in HPDP practice
COLLEGE TUTION too expensive? Let private colleges and scholarships pay the bill.
Let your institution guarantee or your money back. For more information write to College Tutition Services, P.O. Box 401354.
A
member with doctoral
FORMAL WEAR
The Etc. Shop
Rental and Sales 732 Mass
Call (913)588-2772.
EEO/AAE.
Job-winning graduates for grades and summer internships, 21 years of experience. Satisfaction guaranteed. Req. Master's degree, tivative, 865-0198. Leave name and phone number. National-tested job resume. cover letter, self marketing job bank services. Summer internship. Satisfaction guaranteed. Call 865-0198. Shelley 865-0198.
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" makes sense of Western City! Makes sense to use it! Available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Crier Bookstores.
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
SAVE MONEY: Change your oil every 25,000 miles with AMSOIL 100% synthetic motor oil. Increase M F G and Engine bill Bilirubin. Amsoil LAW, KS 3806 or 6314. Bert 365, Lawrence, KS 9989 or 6314 or 8237.
Make a spectacle of yourself. Etc.Shop sunglasses
130 Entertainment
HEY KU! It's Spring Break Time! Party in Cancun Mexico Starting from $199 or Dinner Bay for $239? nights of pure exciting celebration! Beach Cali at 8a44 on dreadful details!!
---
Clothing & Accessories
For Men & Women
Sunglasses & Costumes
732 Masc. 843-6011
HURRY! BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE! Spring Beach is almost here and South Paddie is the place to go! Beach front hotels/condos. Day trip to Miami and more! 4 days, 7 nights. Call Leave
VV
VISA-MC-AMEXP-DISCOVER CARD
The Etc. Shop
120 Announcements
ALL NEW BOOK OF G
Quitting business sales continues at the Book End,
in Quantrill's Fife Market, 811 New Hampshire,
weekends 10-5.
Looking for the best TGIF in town, it's at the BOTTLEEN. Free the FEE, lazer karaoke, and 0o draw. WOW! See you on Fridays. Put your heart on the line, listen to other's messages or leave your own. 400-383-2633. 95 Campus Connection. A Service.
Call Douglas County Rape Victim's Support Service for confidential and caring assistance. If you need help, call 844-3560 or 841-2345.
*College Money*. Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money refunded America's Finest! Since 1811 COL. MONEY. AT&T Bank $150,000 Moneymonitor.com M0.648210 M0.1897-87485.
EARTH MOTHER ARTS
Now has incredible beeswax & plant pigment crayons, pencils, paints, and high quality recycled sketchbooks for all serious artists. The Antique Mall. 800 Mass. Lower level.
Ski Vail-Completely furnished one bedroom condominium, sleeps 4 March 8-15 $1000.
1000.333.2000 Fx1 9277
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2345. Headquarters.
Suicide Intervention - If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who call 812-245 or visit 1419 Mass., Headquarters Counseling Center.
THE WAR AFFECTS US~For a caring listener or info on support services, call Headquarters Counseling Center. 841-2345.
Gay & Leshan Peer Consulting A friendly understanding voice. Free, confidential referrals called by counselors. Headquarters for ARU Info 844-3606 Sponsored by GLOSK
INTERESTED IN MEDITATION?
Call Chris or Suzanne 724-6556
Hillel
Two young to enjoy the nightlife!" No worries.
TUESDAYS 18 and over at the BOTTLENEK
Look for other special 18 and over events. Pick up a calendar and check it out!
Events of the Week
Friday, March 1
Saturday, March 2
Havdalah Service and singing
7 p.m. HUILD House
For rides and more information,
call 664-7928.
2 30-3 30 Alcove F, KS Union
Israel and the Persian Gulf Crisis
2.30-3.30 Alcove F.K. Union
Saturday, March 2
Johnny's UP & UNDER
Dr. Maurice Friedman
is available for
is available for Engagement Parties,
Birthday Parties,
Pinting Parties and an
7 p.m. HIttel House
Pinning Parties and any other party possible.
842-0377
140 Lost-Found
2 sentimental RINGS lost at Jazzhaus Sat. Feb.
Reward $150.00 843.5296
3 month female puppy found in alley behind 800 block of Massachusetts. Brown/black Call 843-6213.
FOUND. Red, white and blue jacket. 104 Military Science Building. Last semester (forgotten till now). 864-3185. 1087 Wescow.
Found-Puppy on Campus. Looks like mix of cole-
Golden Retriever. Call to identify 863-1400.
Lost dog-Black white chest, white feet, approx
tail it half, tail it male, with green tag with
798-537
205 Help Wanted
200s Employment
SALES/ OUTSIDE INTERNSHIPS
-SUMMER JOBS-
4000
$520 per week
Facilitating
International Co-
appropriate business people. No experience necessary. Full training. Chicago and local
tentitories. For further details call
FUNBRAUSER~*We're looking for a top fraternity, security or student organization that would like to make $500-$1,500 for one week marketing on their Facebook page and hard work! Caregiving at 980.1630.2212.
Great job in Philadelphia suburb. Have fun with two kids for 35 hours weekly. Earn great salary, room, board and 2 weeks paid vacation. Start June 1 for one year. Call me Elizabeth at (212) 469-8700.
Live-in mother's helper wanted for Christian family with four young children. 841-4144 between 1 and 5.
Immediate openings for cooks. Starting pay is
$4.00/hr. Apply Monday-Friday, 8am-4:30pm at
179 Massachusetts.
Looking for talented fun-loving person to coorde kidnappers party a fairy princess, or clown Wilt but natural outing, organized by Girl's Night Out. Call It a Girl. Phone 749-3455 Ask For Tina
REWARDING SUMMER for sopharmore and her children, kids with backpacks, children with children. Backpacking, harness riding, crabs, nature, causing, railing, many activities. Summer camp, Western CAMP5. P Box 101, FLORISTANT, WESTERN CAMP5. P Box 101, FLORISTANT, WESTERN CAMP5. P Box 101, FLORISTANT, WESTERN CAMP5.
Need Cash? Earn up to $500 wk working at home.
Send SASE to: R J J Enterprises, P. O. Box 2422,
TXN 76201
SERIOUS ABOUT YOUR FUTURE? 1 need 5 dependable people to earn from $1,000 and $8,000 per month working full or part-time. If you enjoy helping others help your help, yourself call.
Now accepting applications for part-time employment at the Cinema Twine Theater, 1st and Iowa. Must work weekends. Apply in person between 7:30 and 9pm.
Summer Jobe Outdoors - Over 5,000 openings! National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews. Stamp card for free details. 113 East Wyoming, Kalispell, MT 59801
We are hiring immediately all crew positions,
part-time. We need cooks and bus care service.
Premium pay for j14mn 2019. You are ij hard work
in person at SCS Drive-In. M201 W, 6th
Need managers for rapid growing corporation.
No exp necessary. Will train in sales, marketing and management. Call 1-822-8911.
Child care. After school care of boys 8.13. Some evenings too My home. Non-smoker. Own transportation. 841-8209
data technical Position
data technician, immediately.
Department of Physics and Astronomy,
$16000, one year certain. Annual appointment
to the position requires a Bachelor's or
multoyear tenure. Computer and PC-
experience. College degree or technical
expertise required to process and distribute data from the NASA
Ulysses mission. Must use commercial and
networked telecommunications job references to Professor Thomas Armstrong, Department of Physics and Astronomy. University of Arizona. Deadline is March 3. applications will be accepted until the position is filled. Please include
any application form. Keesan is an AFR-
Informative Action Equal.
Unique Career Opportunity $1 to start and bonus.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girl summer camps. Teach swimming, sailing, waterwelling, gymnastics, archery, camping, crafts, dramatics, or riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance, $120 per hour. Kitchen, 178 Macleod, Nild, NlF. 6091. 700-446-2244
Spend the summer in the Caskill Mills of New York. Receive a meaningful summer experience that will help you develop skills and disabilities. Positions available for Counselors, Teachers, and Students to apply—especially those students encouraged to apply—especially Season dates. Contact all counseling health facilities room, board, and some travel Call Camp Jenkins.
Retirement Community is now seeking part-time receptionist. Must possess good communication skills, ability to work with children, opening for night and weekend shifts with a average of 14 hour/week. Please apply in person.
Four models: sizes 3.5 and one size 14-16. Needed for production of midwest catalog by republic lingerie company. For information call 1-242-3200.
225 Professional Services
1501 Inverness Drive Lawrence, KS FOE
Government photos, passports, immigration,
vies, senior portrait, modeling & arts portfolios
Model portfolio, portrait, wedding photographer
Model portfolio, portrait, Call 841-9689 or leave
Driver Education offered mid-Western Driving School, served KU. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749.
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 491-6028
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping
Lawrence Printing Service 512 E 9th Street
843-4600
For All Municipal and District Court Matters Free Initial Consultation
Richard A. Frydman
Attorney at Law
843-4023
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence 841.5716
235 Typing Services
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scrubbed into accurately spelled and punctuated, gramatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 8423, 206 days of eavesdropping.
1: Typing-WP-Resumes, term papers, thesis,
etc. 842-4754 at 3:30 pm wkdays, anytime
wkends
Accurate Affordable Word Processing, Word
Perfect LQ Printer. Fast service. $1.25 double-
spaced. Theresa, 841 0776
Call RJ. I's Typing Services 84192 7048
RJ. J. I's Typing Services 84192 7048
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters,
manuscripts, and written documents.
and spelling corrected. G W. Gish St 2B
N. L. Gish St 2B
I will correct grammar, punctuation or spelling errors, cell and type your words of wisdom and, in general, produce your best possible papers. PhD M.A.G.M.
Accurate typing. Resumes, Theses, Letters, Call Melany, 1-913-885-4754 or 864-3181.
Professional Typist. Reasonable rates. Call 442-3263
Professional resumes-Consultations, formating,
typewriting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc, 921} $ _{7}$
Mass. 841-1057.
Enlarged to Show Texture
TheWORDOCTORS-Why pay for typing when you can have word processing? IBM, MAC, laser since 1983. 843-3147
HELLO, GONNIE, BEGINNE
I FARMER TO THE
WATER, I COME WHEN
WE WASHING,
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WE DEVOURD TO
CHARACTER, I HOWEVER
THAT DIN'S ADDITION
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LAND, THE LIGHT
Typing and Word Processing- Any size job!
Information and price quotes, call 749-3024
Word Processing/ Typing : Papers, Resumes.
Dissertations Applications . Also assistance in spelling, grammar, editing, composition. Have M. S. Degree. 841-6254.
WordPerfect word processing. Ink Jet printer
Near Orchards Corners. Phone 843-8688
Merchandise
4 poster sand wood waterbed, queen size, carved with 5 drawers complete. Mongose California pro film. Set of chamber valve covers for a 350 engine. 542-3863 after 359
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
Cordata HM Compatible PC with color monitor, keyboard, boarder and free software Call 749-6538 Hdsev 720 Interceptor 1883 Must call Call 749-5247 Just installed a new starter.
1. uneepat flight from KCI to San Diego $190 obo
3. 7/3/16 Trip from LA to A85-1929.
Steambottle tickets: 2 five day passes valid till Apr
.8300.000, Vsell for $300.000, .843-004
IBM PC, 640K, 2,360k drives, Hercules monitor
printer, $758.GB, 843.97 excavations
Must sell: Motorola Transportable cellular phone, excellent condition. $75.00 Radar Detector. $75.00 Framed Nail Prints. 2k36, $5.00 Car clavier. excellent $15.00. 749-182.
LASER- 65 mW HeNe-$300 sell, for $12 price
$150. Chad, 844-7003
Hard portable computer IBM compatible 2 disk drive, 640K almost new, $415,794-5347. Must sell Single Sigma mattress and mattress. One year
Like new 2014, 800-432-5792 have message.
Sk Boots: like new NSD North 979 and Hanson
Cobra's. Fits size 8-1/2 Women's. 749-4660.
YAKIMA carrier rack w/ wocks. Great for bikes, skis, sailboards. Excel. condition. Fits car roofs with rainmats. 1328-3940.
ENL4RG1D
to SHOW TEXTURE
1983 Ford Escort, 2 dr, 4 speed, AC/stereo.
Showroom condition. 842-3850 after 30m.
by Brian Gunning
SPARKLY FIRE
FORMAL DRESS
MIDCASE DRESS
BLACK & WHITE
DEERN
DRESS SUIT WITH HEELS
ONE PIECE DUNGIRL
DKK
ABC 23
Very Cool Dress
Weatherproof
Design at The
LL of Alaskan
(communication)
1969 Valant-AT/PS, A/C V6, 21,000 miles. new battery, alternator, radiator, starter, etc. original repair manual. Always starts. $550
845 8866.
191 Olds Omega, 4 door Seadex. Believable transport.
191 $1.000 mg. Call 841-2467. leave message.
192 IBM HW20. 200 Gold 5 spd. 96, acd, CT
surmount, good condition. acc. Call 863-2689
1982 Tercel, 5 spd, ac, am/fm, cassette, 83K, new transmission, clutch, brakes, tires etc. $1450
749-4888
1884 VW Rabbit GL, Auto, ps, pb, 4 dr, stereo, excellent condition. 80K $2200 obo 842-9657.
1983 Toyota Corolla. $3000. AC/stereo, 4 dr hatchback, high miles, new engine and transmission.
864-6532
1986 Mercury Lynx Xr3, same as Escort Gl Fuel injection,飞袭 32 mpg, loaded Miles 67K $4300.00 must, must sell 852-287
'78 Celica, perfect college mobile, nice and affordable. Don't let it get away. Call Paolo, 842-3118. Leave a message. $900 obs.
'80 Oldmobile Omega, AC, AT, PS, cruise, am/fm cassette, good condition. Must sell. Best offer. Call 841-8213 after 6pm
Red-Hat HENRY CRXS 5, S1 p. Acam, mf./fm cassette,
64x, excellent condition, must sell. $465, 749-3411
SAFE MONEY: Change your oil every 25,000 miles with AMSOIL 5,000 synthetic motor oil.
Made in P.G. and Enginie life Bill Rubson, Amsoil
Lawrence, KS 650-3478 or 800-3651, Box 365,
Lawrence, KS 650-3478 or 800-3651
360 Miscellaneous
400s Real Estate
Rossignal skis with GEZE bindings (200 s), $100.00, student desk, $10.00, PPH 842-8631
On TV's, VCK's, jewelry, stereo, musical instruments, cameras and more. We honor Visa/MCAMEM. Disc Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry, 180 W. 6th 749-1919
405 For Rent
1 bedroom apt w/ balcony available now at Southridge Plaza Apts. $275 water and cable pd. No. b421 1160
2 bedroom apt available now at Aspen West Apts.
$360, water pfd. Lease t/ 71/31. No pets. Call
812-1160 or 842-1829
Available now! Beautiful 3 br apt. Washer and dryer, microwave, dishwasher. Woodway Apts. 849-1927
Available March 1-1) bd unbrun at, in new
bedding; WiFi internet access at WEDNESDAY;
fed wired WiFi, downsizing; DW ceiling fans, min blinds. Great location near campus.
Short lease annual $300 per month. No pets.
会
Farmed room one block from KU. Some rooms have a laundry room. HYU KU Med students. Move in June and receive is off your rent for 2 months. *Sbu1,* in KU med. Cred. Clerk. Tower Apts. KU
Affordable Living
LEARN THE A B C's of NAISMITH.
Naismith now has lower than ever prices.
Better quality living
We have our own computer center, Dining anytime, and great social events.
We have our own
Convenient location
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
Nais mith is close to campus, and on the bus route.
Naismith spells out a wise living move.
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all advertisements in this newspaper are on an equal opportunity basis.
All real estate advertisement in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, age, disability, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.'
Lorimar Townhomes, 3811 Clinton Parkway,
Quality, spacious, with all the amenities. New-
lawn available. 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease dur-
May, July or for 12 months. 841-7894. 841-1433.
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Drive
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 843-8559
Move in immediately! Beautiful 2 br apt. Washer and dryer, microwave, dishwasher. Woodwav Apts. 84-1971.
Roommate very large, very nice duplex, now
W/1) W2$) See to it believe 841.7266
W/3) W3$) See to it believe 841.7266
$45 per room first location our campus
Lease to July 31. No pet. W41.8000. 542.3844
Students Convince Parents Sunday 3/3/19
now, you manage and rent out 2 rooms. Live rent
on our property for $40/month. F/P, vaulted ceiling and fan, GHF trees, rescued
towels 70% now. Mature 104,881; Mac 06-066. Open
SUBLEASE-1 bdmr furn apt. Sundance II
$340/mo. Available immed. Day BM 5255, evenings
865-2749
One bedroom/studio, 2 blocks from campus, on bus route, bus deck. Ceiling fans, gas heat paid 841 369 days
SUBLEASE: Incredible studio apartment, close to camps and downtown. For appointment, call 841 5797.
Sublease: Studio at 13th and Ohio, available immediately, willing to negotiate. Call 841-4972 for appointment.
Sublease spaces 2BR, DW, balcony, I₂b bath on bus route. March 1-May 31 or longer. Call 749-7555 $100 Discount.
Summer sublease or now 'til August Large
no. $275/mo. 841-6784 after 6pm
THE FAR SIDE
Sublease for 3 bpm apt immediately. Clean and quiet. $600 me. Great location for groceries. Call 410-8314 leave message
student $25/mi. mo 841 6748 after 6pm
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has private rooms for spring and summer. Drop by 149 Tennessee or call 794-0871
24TH & EDDINGHAM (Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an Affordable Price!!
EDDINGHAM PLACE
841-5444
Office Hours:
12-6 pm M - F
9-3 pm Sat.
No Appt. Necessary
941-780-4567
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc
430 Roommate Wanted
Close to campus, spacios 2 BR, non-smoker,
reassess rent $51.50 plus $4 usable. 843-4780.
Female roommate wanted. Sunrise Village. 4.
Rent plus $1.95 utility. Heated. 1-649-9644.
Female roommate needed to share beautiful 2 bedroom apartment Close to campus and downstairs $25 includes gas, water and washer and dryer. 842-9045.
Female roommate needed immediately to share four bedroom townhouse. Rent $180.00 plus $4 utilities. 842-2023
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED NOW! to sublease apt w/ d/W, D/W. microwave. $215/month. Call Steve at 841-949 or 814-255 (KC).
Male student to share duplex. Dishwasher,
microwave, washer/dryer etc. Bus route $200
plus utilities. 749-3658
Roommate wanted. 3 BR house, $150 plus
utility Deadline: March 1 841-913 or 914-
890 Roommate wanted. Clean 2 cfm air immediately.
Utility Deadline: April 1 841-913 Bar zone.
Partially furnished. Call 841-8314.
Wanted: male roommate on bus route, nice area,
$225.00; Everything. 438-7480.
By GARY LARSON
The Atlantic Verses
Salmon Rushdie
12
Friday, March 1, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
NATURAL WAY
820-822 Mass 841-0100
The
Etc.
Shop
a
Ray-Ban
RWAY & BAY
MUSIC & LOVE
MADE IN CHINA
1960 1960
Go-Go Boots, Jams,
Fishnet Hose, Peace &
Smiley Face Earrings,
Military Jackets,
s
Flared Pants
FI
Barb's Vintage Rose
927 Mass. M-S 10-5:30
841-2451
Headmasters
809 Vermont 843-8808
HEY!
KU Med Students!
Do we have a deal for you!!
Move in June 1 receive 1/2 off rent for 2 months
Studio, 1&2 Bedroom heat & water paid
Rainbow Tower Apartments
Across from KU Med. Center
Kansas City, KS
913-831-9363
Life Choices: An Abortion Forum
Wednesday March 6,1991 Big 8 Room Kansas Union 8:00-10:00 p.m. Free
Sponsored by:
KU Prochoice Coalition
KU Students for Life
Kansas would be liable for waste through bill
By Katie Chipman
Kansan staff writer
A bill that would require Kansas to accept proportional liability for a low-level radioactive waste site will permit the state's state enforcement early next week.
Kansas is in a compact with four other states for storage of low-level nuclear waste. The compact commission, made up of representatives from member states, chose Nebraska in December 1987 as the host state of the facility site, which has not been built yet.
The bill clarifies the terms of the shared liability and says all member states would be responsible for extended care and long-term liability of the facility, said Mark Brohman, Nebraska legislative counsel.
Brohman said the bill, which was proposed by Nebraska Gov. Ben Nelson, had been pushed up on the hill because of its lack of legislative as quickly as possible.
are Arkansas, Oklahoma and Louisiana. The bill will be submitted to compact members for approval if it is passed by state senators in Neb.
She said that to use the site, the members of the compact would pay a proportionate amount based on how much waste they generated.
Kelly Gold, deputy director of the compact commission, said the facility was expected to cost $40 million to $50 million.
The other state compact members
"The criteria used for choosing a site was the amount of waste generated by the state," she said. "Nebis created of creating more waste than Kansas
STANDARD
THE DIFFERENCE IS THE SHOP
"Of the five states, Kansas and Nebraska had the best sites for the waste facility as far as geology. Kansas has more plants and Kansas has only one."
Unlike convenience stores,
Gold said that in compact law, each state must take its turn as the host state. Nebraska will be the host for 30 years.
AMOCO
Unlike convenience stores, the shop at Ramada Standard is stocked with automotive parts and tools to accommodate your auto needs.
Atlas Batteries, Tires and Accessories
Amoco Gasolines Free Carwash with Fill-Up
10% OFF RAMADA STANDARD
With Coupon Service Station
ALL TUNE-UPS AND OIL CHANGES
2216 W 6th 843-5488 expires March 29
Amoco
Mastercard
Visa
Discover
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Our Misery is your GAIN!
•showing this weekend in place of prescheduled Misery.
NINA JACKSON
Heathers
Friday & Saturday 7 and 9;30pm - Sunday 2pm
$2.00 Friday, March 1 Saturday, March 2 reduced price Sunday, March 3 All Showings in Woodruff Auditorium SUA Box Office, 4th Floor, Kansas Union
Godfather's Pizza
Godfather's
MEDIUM
MEAT EATER'S
DELIGHT
$599
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with coupon
New BIG VALUE MEAT EATER'S DELIGHT
Topped with Sausage, Beef, Pepperoni, Ham and Bacon
843-6282 711 W.23rd, Malis Shopping Center
BIG VALUE
MEAL
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$5.99
Topped with Beef, Sausage,
Pepperoni, Ham and Bacon
All You Can Eat
Driest Crust Only
Godfather's Pizza
11 oz. pizza box
notice the box is filled with
toasted garlic bread
or can be used as a base for
pizzas or sandwiches
EYVIDEC A.7.04
LUNCH BUFFET
EXPIRES: 4-7-91
2 FOR $5
Pizza • Pasta
Breadsticks • Dessert
Weekdays, 11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m.
Godfathers' Pizza
Add 1 lb or kg of cheese
On Monday to Friday
11 a.m. to 10 p.m.
EXPIRES: 4-7-91
Heavy Topping Original or Golden Crust
$4 OFF
Any Large Pizza Or
$3 OFF Any Medium
Godfather's
Pizza
Not until with
BUNNY BREAKS
dinner! So much
delicious after eating.
And just a little
after lunch.
ADD 15 for delivery.
EXPIRES 4-7-91
BIG
VALUE
MENU
PICK ONE MEDIUM
$5.99
NO LIMIAT IS $5.99 EACH
CHOICE FROM
• Super Popperper • I tapper
• Delicious Chips • Lightweight
• Golden Delight
Original Crust Only
Goddfather's Pizza
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Cheesy
FRIES
EXPIRES
4.7.91
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When you have Call Return from Southwestern Beu Telephone, that's exactly what your phone does with calls that would otherwise be lost—it gets them back for you. Say you can't answer the phone before it stops ringing. Don't worry. Just hit *69 on your touchpad and your phone diales the number of your last incoming call. In a flash, Call Return retrieves calls that
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VOL. 101.NO.106
KANSAN
Y
KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL
SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
MONDAY, MARCH 4, 1991
(USPS 650-640)
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
NEWS:864-4810
Strike is now real for Food Barn employees
HELP
WANTED
APPLY
WHEN
FOOD BARN
ON STRIKE
UNITED FOOD AND
COMMERCIAL WORKERS
UNION
LOCAL 576 AFL CIO.
By Patricia Rojas
Kansan staff writer
Food Barn employees went on strike yesterday to protest the management's implementation of a new policy that will reduce the year reduction in wages and benefits.
"Our goal here is to bring Food Barn back to negotiate a fair contract for the workers," said Mike Simmons, picket captain for the local store, 1900 W. 23rd St. "And if that fails, to shut the company down in order to run a profitable grocery company will buy these stores."
The company presented two proposals. The second one, which included a $6.4-million year reduction in wages and benefits, came after employees complained about the conditions of the first proposal.
The management had said that if employees did not accept the second offer by Feb. 21, it would implement its initial contract proposal.
Managers of the Lawrence store declined to comment yesterday.
The new contract took effect yesterday.
Simmons said Food Barn Inc., was losing money because of mismanagement, not labor costs.
Simmons said the new contract eliminated health insurance policies for part-time employees. In the past 10 years, he cut $48 million in wages and benefits.
"During this whole time, management has taken no cuts," he said. "They have made no concessions whatsoever."
"But I will continue to support the strike and the picketing for as long as possible."
Under the old contract, the local Food Barn store employed 40 people. Fifteen of them were KU students.
Simmons said he would have to look for another job because he has a Walmart job.
Mike Charles, store union steward,
said that four employees had quit
their jobs since the new contract
offer was announced. There are 14
employees still working. The others
are on strike.
Charles said he would continue to strike until the management decided to rethink it.
Wendy Marshall, Lawrence sophomore, who picketed yesterday, said she would work another part-time job until the strike ended.
"We're not striking for higher wages and benefits," he said. "We're trying to keep the wages and benefits that we have."
Jim Oliverius, Lawrence senior,
said he was not well-informed about
the negotiations and had no opinion
either way.
"Basically, I can't afford to send," Oliverus said. "I have bills to pay."
Dan Rebik, a janitor at Food Barn, 1900 W. 23rd St., participates in a strike protesting management's reduction in employee wages.
Allies, Iraq agree to truce POWs and land mine locations top agenda at dramatic meeting
The Associated Press
SAFWAN, Iraq — Allied and Iraqi military leaders agreed yesterday to a tentative cease-fire and a quick release of war prisoners in a dramatic meeting of commanders at desert desert airstrip in southern Iraq.
"I am very happy to tell you we agreed on all matters," U.S. Army Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf told a crowd of soldiers and journalists after the two-hour meeting in a tent beside the crushed-stone runway.
He announced that a symbolic release of POWs would be made immediately to show good faith and that all detainees, including several thousand Kuwait civilian hostages held by him would be treated as war prisoners.
Iraq's U.N. ambassador, Abdul Alur al-narbali, said in New York that Iraq had released 10 POWs that Iraq had received 14 POWs from the U.S. soldiers including one woman
Schwarzkopf said Iraqi military officers in the battlefield meeting were cooperative and had a positive attitude, and he added that if such dealings continue, a lasting peace was well on its way.
Schwarzkopf, the U.S. commander in the Persian Gulf, and other allied chiefs refused to say whether they had learned how many POWs are held by Iraq. The U.S. command knows of at least nine U.S. citizens. The only woman U.S. soldier listed as missing in the Persian Gulf War is Army Spc. Melissa Rathban-Nealy, 20, of Grand Rapids, Mich.
Schwarzkopf said U.S. troops would withdraw from occupied southern Iraq as soon as a permanent cease-fire was signed and Iraq had complied with U.N. resolutions in 2014. In addition, among other things, rescind its annealization of Kuwait and accept liability for war damages in the emirate.
The Iraqis turned over information on the location of mines planted during the seven-month crisis, Schwarzkopf said.
"We have received information on the location of minesfields in Kuwait and minesfields in international waters so that we can begin operations immediately to make those areas safe," he said.
Upon the signing of a permanent end to hostilities, he said, allied forces will be drawn back from the Iraqi territory they occupy. He said, however, that such a pullback would not occur before the formal signing.
The U.S. general, the chief commander of American forces in the gulf, did not mention other demands made by the allies and described in U.N. resolutions, including reparations descending Istanbul's annexation of Kuwait.
Schwarzkopf said agreements included steps to ensure that armed units on both sides did not come in contact with the infantry, in order to avoid further deaths.
Schwarzkopf said that the two sides were prepared to meet again but that no meeting had been scheduled.
Schwarzkopf had said before the meeting, "I'm not here to give them anything. I'm here to tell them exactly what we expect them to do."
The allied commanders at the meeting, whose exact location had been kept secret for security reasons until it began, were demanding the quick release of prisoners and the location of Iraqi mines.
More gulf news
Page 12
Iraq agrees to terms of U.N. Resolution 686
The Associated Press
BAGHAD, Iraq. — Iraqy iq-
dayed acceptance U.N. demands
for peace and began rebuilding
ruins of the Persian Gulf War.
Baghdad Radio, monitored in Nicosia, Cyprus, quoted a letter sent by Foreign Minister Tariq Aziz to the United Nations saying that Baghdad had accepted Resolution 686, which was issued after three abstentions. The resolution was opposed by Cuba.
The resolution retains the economic and arms embargo and demands that Baghdad pay reparations. It also orders Iraq to free war prisoners and captured civilians, return stolen property, rescind its annexation of Kuwait and identify the location of mines and booby traps in Kuwait.
Yesterday, the U. N. Security Council was considering easing the economic embargo to allow mercy flights of food, medicine and fuel to the war-ravaged country.
In Baghdad, a blast thought to have been from an unexploded warhead shook the city yesterday, reminding residents of the nearly six-week allied bombing campaign.
Baghdad Radio reported that President Saddam Hussein met Saturday night with his information minister and asked to discuss restoring nationwide television and radio service.
Voters in Latvia and Estonia show desire for independence
The Associated Press
In Latvia, nearly complete vote totals showed that 77 percent voted in favor of separation and that 21 percent voted against, officials said.
RIGA, U.S.S.R. — Latvians and Estonians voted overwhelmingly for independence from the Soviet Union yesterday, officials said after counting more than three-quarters of the ballots.
In Estonia, 77.8 percent voted for independence, election officials said. Officials had hoped for a strong pro-independence vote so the three Baltic republics could march in step away from the Soviet Union.
On Feb. 9, 91 percent of Lithuanians casting ballots voted in favor of independence. The Lithuanian government scheduled the referendum to be on March 4 and opposed a crackdown in the Baltics that left more than 20 people dead.
Like the Lithuanian vote, the referendums in Latvia and Estonia were little more than a public opinion poll and carried no legal weight.
They did, however, represent a strong challenge to President Mikhail Gorbachev, who has branded the United States with declarations by the Baltic republics.
Gorbachev has scheduled a nationwide referendum for March 17 on holding the Soviet Union and its 15 republics together Leaders of the Baltics, as well as the republics of Armenia, Georgia and Moldova, they would not participate in that vote.
For many, the referendum was a chance to express a heartfelt desire.
"We have dreamed all our lives about independence. Our fathers lived in a free Latvia," said Zinaigur Radiabiau.
The three Baltic republics were independent for 20 years before they were forcibly incorporated into the Soviet Union in 1940.
Rock Chalk Revue raises record $35,000 for charity
Bv Jonathan Plummer
Kansan staff writer
The 42nd annual Rock Chalk Revue, which ended Saturday night, raised about $35,000 for the United Way of Douglas County.
Leigh Reinhart, executive director of the show, said the figure was the highest ever generated by the prosecution $30,000, which was last year's total.
Good promotion, an increase in the price of tickets, tighter budgeting and the quality of the show all helped the program exceed its goal, Reinhart said.
Di
"We were just hoping to match last year," she said. "I think it basically has to do with the fact that the shows just keep getting better and better." Ten awards were presented after Saturday's show, Reinhart said.
Best Supporting Female: Jeremy Wilkins — Delta Gamma/Beta Theta
Best **Original Angle**: *Cases*. Cases
- Gamma Phi Beta/Phi Kappa Alpha
*Best Use of Sets: Kappa Delta/
Delta Tau Delta
- Best Supporting Male - Ryan Manecka - Kappa Delta/Delta Tau Delta
* Best Female - Susanna Terrell - Gamma Phi Beta/Pi Kappa Alpha
* Best Male - (tie) Jamey Welch - Alpha Gamma Delta/Lambda Chi Alpha and Kirk Cerny - Gamma Phi Beta/Pi Kappa Alba
Beta Yulu Delta
- Best Costumes: Gamma Phi
Beta/Pi Kappa Alpha
Best Production: "Change Your Ways" Gamma Phi Beta/Phi Kappa Alpha
- Best Overall: "Some Thing's Fishy" Kappa Delta/Delta Tau Delta
- Most Charitable: Alpha Gamma
Delta/Lambda Chi Alpha
The most charitable award represents not only the house that sold the most tickets to the program, but, for the first time this year, that which donated the most hours of community service.
"It was kind of hard to get people going at first, but after the first couple of times that we went out, we
Carla Byrd, who coordinated the charity drive for Alpha Gamma Delta, said that the whole house, not the office, would be rewarded to win the most christian award.
came back and told people about it, and put posters up, and it kind of kicked in," she said.
Byrd said her house donated 375 hours of service to groups recommended by the United Way, including local nursing homes, where members performed their part of the show.
Response was so positive that the house may continue to perform for nursing homes, she said.
Reinhart said that although awards were nice, winning was not the most important part of the show
to the performers.
"I think the most important thing to everyone was to put on a good show, a show you can be proud of, and the friends you make," she said.
The mood backstage was mixed with sadness about ending the show and happiness at what the show had achieved, Reinhart said.
"It was more exciting than sad," she said. "You want everything to go well. What got the most tears was how much money had been raised."
51
Activities will help finance, promote playground
Lynn Crockett makes a pass during the benefit basketball tournament.
By Rick C. Honish Kansan staff writer
"Ram and jam!" was how Greg Monkress described the style of play at yesterday's wheelchair basketball tournament, a benefit for the Ryan Gray Playground for All Children.
Monkress' hands were bruised, bleeding and swollen from two days of basketball battle that his team, the Tulsa Rollin' Roustoutbats, had lost in Miami, missouri. Oklahoma Kansas Nebraska
"We've learned in the past two days what the refs will let us get away with," he said. "These guys are out there taking advantage of that. They're playing hard."
But as Monkness watched the final game between the Northeast Kansas Wheelhaws and the Courage Rolling Timberwolves, he was all smiles.
They were also playing for a good cause.
They were also playing for a good cause. Mike Martin, tournament organizer, said the proceeds from the tournament would be used to help finance the Ryan Gray Playground.
Gray died in September at the age of 17 after a long battle against an inoperable brain tumor.
As a close friend of former Kansas basketball coach Larry Brown and the 1986 NCAA championship team, Gray attended practices and games, and the team to be put on by a friend but an inspiration.
The playground will be built in the shape of a basketball at Hillcrest Elementary School, 1045 Hilpont Drive. It has been designed with ramps and platforms instead of stairs, and its slides will have padded landings. A sandbox will be included that will be accessible to all children.
If a child is in a wheelchair or wearing a brace, he will be able to swing and build sand castles alongside his friends who are not physically different.
Martin said that having the proceeds of a basketball tournament going to help a park associated with Gray made it even more special.
"He loved the game so much, but he never
Debi Drummet, a promoter for the Lawrence St. Patrick's Day Parade, said the tournament was one of many activities designed to help finance and promote the playground.
"This event is not so much a fundraiser, but a tour of the community involved." He said.
got to play competitively," he said. "This is what I wanted to help out with something that will benefit all of us."
way to get the community involved," she said.
All proceeds from the parade will go to the project.
Drummet said judging would take place today for a community-wide elementary-school coloring contest. Of the 100 to 150 semifinalists, six will be chosen to ride in an antique train in the St. Patrick's Day parade March 17. She said pictures from the contest would be displayed by businesses in downtown Lawrence and in the Riverfront Plaza starting March 11.
"We are aiming for $10,000 from the parade," she said. "This tournament will give us around $1,500, and we have collected another $10,000 from other activities."
A religious group on campus was recently found to be in violation of certain Kansas University Religious Advisors' guidelines. Members of the group say the charges are untrue, but a former member, in a day-by-day account, says her experiences with the group left her confused and mistrustful of religion.
See stories
Pages 889
2
Monday, March 4, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
TODAY
Cloudy
HI:63°
LO:37°
52/34
42/40
53/30
70/40
66/55
79/51
70/51
Kansas Forecast | 3-day Forecast
Warmer temperatures will start off the week. Sunny skies today. High 61/ Low 37.
Salina 62/37 KC
Dodge City 61/38
67/38 Wichita 65/40
Tuesday - Mostly clear, turning partly cloudy in the evening. High 57/ Low 33.
Wednesday - Cloudy and
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
Wednesday - Cloudy and cooler. High 53/ Low 30.
Thursday - Cloudy and cooler. High 50/ Low 39
forecast by Steven A. Berger
Temperature are today's Nights and tonight's Iowa.
The University Daily Kansas (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KC 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. 60044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
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Police think same man involved in 2 robberies
Kansan staff report
An armed man robbed Hird's Retail Liquor Store, 601 Kasold Drive, at 7:30 p.m. Friday, and Lawrence police think the same suspect was involved in Thursday's armed robbery of the Super 8 Motel, 515 McDonald Drive.
A man entered the liquor store and ordered the clerk to place the cash from the register in a sack, police said. The clerk on duty said the suspect carried a long object under a blanket.
Police think that the long object was the shotgun used in the robbery at the Super 8 Motel, according to police reports.
At the hotel robbery, the man had a pump shotgun concealed under a blanket, demanded that the cash be placed in a sack and ordered the desk clerk to go into the back room, according to police reports.
The suspect in both robberies is described as a man in his late 30s to early 45, weighing about 175 pounds, short brown hair and a mustache.
Tainted Sudafed capsules may be linked to 2 deaths
The Associated Press
"Consumers should avoid taking Sudafed 12-Hour Capsules and return all Sudafed 12-Hour Capsules to the store from which they purchased the product," said Burroughs Wellcome Co. of Research Triangle Park, N.C.
SEATTLE — Two deaths and an illness in western Washington may be linked to cyanide-laced Sudafed capsules, prompting the decongestant's maker to issue a nationwide recall recently, officials said.
A 40-year-old Tacoma woman died Feb. 11 of cyanide poisoning, and a
The second death was that of a man in Lacey, another Olympia suburb, who died Feb. 18, said Burroughs representative Sharon Haggerty.
woman from Tumwater, an Olympia suburb, was treated after becoming seriously ill Feb. 1, reportedly after taking Sadafedal capsules faced with cyanide. Hutchinson the U.S. Drug Administration said Saturday.
All three victims took Sudafir
from blister packs with the lot num-
ber 812846. The boxes bore lot numbers
062847 and 812849.
Police report
An unknown suspect attempted to enter a hotel room occupied by a KU student at 1:50 a.m. Saturday in the University Place (18th) Street, Lawrence police reported.
- Someone broke a KU student's car window between 12:15 and 1:15 a.m. Saturday in the 800 block of West 26th Street, Lawrence police reported.
- Someone smashed a KU student's car window and slashed its tires
between 11 p.m. Thursday and 1:30 a.m. Friday in the 900 block of Indiana Street, Lawrence police reported Damage to the car totaled
- Someone entered a KU student's room and took a gold necklace valued at $250 between 9:30 p.m. and midnight Thursday in the 1900 block of Stewart Avenue, Lawrence police reported.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 4, 1991
3
KU team attacks Alzheimer's Profs and students are tackling a deadly disease with help from a new study and a little curiosity
By Sarah Davis
Kansan staff writer
Ansha Qian sees age-related diseases in her future.
But she does not plan to suffer from any; she plans to do research on them
And she is headed in the right direction.
Qian, a KU graduate student from Hangzhou, China, is researching Alzheimer's disease with Dick Himes, professor of biochemistry and Paul Burton, professor of physiology and cell biology.
"There's no cure for the disease," said Qian, who has been researching for three years. "But we're hoping to contribute some to the research that's related to normal aging and maybe to Alzheimer's disease."
Microtubules may be a key
Their research centers on structures in the brain called microtubules, which are tiny, hollow cylinders that serve as the railroad tracks by which vital materials are transported.
They are inside the axons, which are extensions of the nerve cell. Microtubules are hindered in the axon by terminal mineralis stones, and the nerve cell dies.
Loss of nerve cells occurs in people with Alzheimer's disease, and a recent study showed that impairment of microtubules could be the key to the disease.
"The change in microtubules is the trigger event leading to the loss of (nerve cells) associated with Alzheimer's disease." Burton said.
All people lose nerve cells as they age, but Alzheimer's patients lose them faster, he said.
Solving a tough problem
The three investigators decided to gear their work toward Alzheimer's disease research because of recent advances in the field, possibly are involved in the disease.
Because Burton has been studying microtubules for 25 years and Himes has been studying them for 17 years, the new focus fit right in.
"I's always been of interest to me," Burton said. "We talked about aging problems, and Dick Himes and I decided we should investigate this."
Burton is studying microtubules found in the olfactory neuron, which is responsible for smell, and Himes is looking at microtubules in the brain. They are using rat brain because human brains are not available.
In the future, they hope to work with frozen brains from Alzheimer's patients after a proposed tissue bank was created in Kansas Medical Center is set up.
Qian is comparing young rats' brains with old ones. She has discover-
ered differences in tubulin, a protein that assembles into microtubules, as well as abnormally constructed microtubules in the old brains.
"There is an alteration of microtubules during aging in general," she said. "If you understand the mechanisms in normal aging, that certainly helps you understand them in age-related diseases."
Profs enjoy the challenge
The question the researchers are confronting is: What causes Alzheimer's disease?
"We know what happens in Alzheimer's—they (nerve cells) die," Burton said. "We don't know what causes it."
The researchers know it is harder for old rats to form microtubules than it is for young rats, but they do not know why.
"The major goal is to understand why the old brains do not form microtubules as well as the young brains," Himes said. "What's the reason? What has happened in the aging process to bring this about?"
Himes said that because the population was aging and because people were living longer, research in the Alzheimer's research is important.
Burton said the research was pleasurable.
"It's like hunting for Easter eggs."
14
13
A cross section of a rat's brain, magnified 324,000 times, shows part of an olfactory neuron, which is responsible for the sense of smell. No. 13 indicates a microtubule with a normal number of wall units, and No. 14 shows a microtubule with incorrectly assembled units, leading to the loss of microtubules, which may be an indicator of Alzheimer's disease.
Himes said that he shared that same excitement and that the thrill of searching for answers would keep him going.
he said. "It's fun to search, and when you find one, wow! I'm really excited about discovering things. It's a neurotic high."
"I expect to be working on this till I retire," he said, pausing, then giving a smile, "or until my brain stops making microtubules."
二〇一三年十二月二十九日
Ansha Qian, Hangzhou, People's Republic of China, graduate student, houses her research rats in the Animal Care Unit in Malott Hall
Kansan staff writer
Bv Amv Francis
That is this year's theme for the second annual Safe Break Week sponsored by Watkins Memorial with Center's education department.
Keychains, pencils, buttons, bumper stickers, condoms, sunscreen and information are being given away in front of Wescow Hall today to celebrate "A Spring Break to Remember."
"We'd love for them to have a good time and a safe spring break," she said. "Of course, nobody plans for bad harm to be happen, but often it does."
David Leschke, director of chapter services for BACCHUS International, gave the week an early start last night in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. He spoke about his work, motivation and alcohol education.
Jolie Dolan, representative for BACCHIAS said, "It kind of just worked out that way. It was just a coincidence. Mainly we got him because he is phenomenal. He could motivate anyone."
Leschek's presentation was sponsored by BACCHUS, Douglas County Citizen's Commission on Alcoholism, Greeks Adviating Mature Management of Alcohol, Student Housing Department-Residence Life and the
St. Lawrence Catholic Center.
Altenhofen said, "He's going to utilize some positive influence to try to get people to make wise decisions."
She said she also hoped students would visit the tables in front of Wescoe. The tables will be there today only, but presentations will be conducted for living groups throughout the week.
Students also can get information from the education department in Watkins.
Altenhoen said she was the Uni-
tenkansas sponsored Safe
Break Week.
"Some schools just don't have these kinds of events, aren't able to," she said. "It will continue because they don't have the issue. The students take part in it."
One of the ways students take part in the week is at the booths, she said.
Students can try the Convincer, a machine that simulates the feeling of the slow speed impact that a person would feel if in a car accident.
Also, neon-colored leaflets with safety suggestions will be handed out.
At the bottom of the leaflets is a pledge card that people can sign. Students may use it to pledge that they will take specific measures to have a safe break, such as practicing safe sex if they choose to have sex.
The pledge card can be left at the BACHCH table and will be entered into a ticket. Any winner will receive the choice of one Chrysler vehicle, Altenhofen said.
"We want them to pledge themselves to have a safe break," she said.
Sexually transmitted diseases cause mental as well as physical problems
By Amy Francis
Kansan staff writer
Sexually transmitted diseases are affecting more people every year. Treatment can be expensive and uncomfortable.
But not all of the discomfort is to the body. It also can have a damaging effect emotionally.
"I think people are initially devastated by it," said Henry Buck, gynecologist at Watkins Memorial Health Center. "Nobody is happy about having an STD. We are emotionally stressed by it."
Candyce Waitley, educator for the health education department at Watkins, said stress increased when told their partners about the STD.
"They need to approach their partner," she said. "It's an especially emotional time if they've been one partner for one or two years."
Buck said chances were good that a student could encounter someone with one of two common STDs.
One in every 10 students at the University of Kansas has chlamydia and the same number human papillomavirus, he said.
This means students have a one in five chance of encountering someone with one of these diseases, he said.
"The biggest problem starting out is that people don't use barrier protection." Buck said.
'The biggest problem starting out is that people don't use barrier protection.'
— Henry Buck gynecologist at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
Another problem that results for students is what they should do after being told they have an STD.
Buck said physicians in Watkin's gynecology department tried to counsel patients individually while receiving treatment for an STD
"We spend a lot of time with the patient," he said "We sit down and explain it to them."
The department also offers written information.
"It helps to handle it emotionally," he said. "It all works to help relieve the emotional tension."
Students also can get information from the health education department.
"We get a lot of questions from students," Waitley said. "They often feel better after they have talked about it."
"People don't generally talk about sexually transmitted diseases," Watitle said. "The more people learn, and the more it is out in the open the less the stigma will be."
New tax plan could help Margin of Excellence
Students might feel they are the only ones with an STD because of the stigma associated with it.
Kansan staff writer
By Joe Gose
Amendment to bill could designate $120 million for Margin's third year
TOPEKA — Two Democratic senators introduced a tax plan Thursday that could help finance the third year of the Margin of Excellence.
Sens. Phil Martin, D-Pittsburgh, and Dick Rock, D-Arkansas City, introduced the plan, the called Tax Reduction Usem Exemption Repeal.
The bill would generate $480 million annually, with $360 million going
toward property tax relief.
Martin said the leftover $120 million would go into the State General Fund, 60 percent of which is used to finance higher education.
The plan calls for the removal of 15 sales tax exemptions, tax brackets on upper incomes and extension of 34 services to 33 services not previously taxed
"That money could be used to finance the third year of the Margin
of Excellence if someone amends the bill to say so," he said. "If the bill makes it to the Senate floor, some may want that amendment in there."
Rock said the plan was designed to create equity in the tax laws by removing exemptions that inhibited the financial stability of the state.
"It is time to act today to restore fairness to our sales and income tax system," he said "Our plan will restore fairness to our sales and income tax structure while providing financial base for Kansas' future."
The senators said that they had introduced a similar package last year but that it had failed to gain approval on the Senate floor.
Sen. Wint Winter Jr., RLawrence, said that he had supported last year's version of the plan and that he thought the present plan was a good starting point to resolve the state's revenue problems.
"We have to have a revenue increase to avoid disaster of higher education and property taxes," he said. "I like the expansion of the base that they've come up with, but it may need some further work."
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4
Monday, March 4, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Casualties of war
Government censors refuse to allow journalists onto Air Force base as soldiers' bodies arrive
Something has happened to journalists. The "watchdogs of society" have become the lap dogs of the government Because of the censorship that has been imposed on journalists covering the gulf crisis, they have inadvertently become George Bush's cheerleaders for war.
We watched "smart bombs" attack the enemy's headquarters with pinpoint accuracy.
We saw courageous pilots give the thumbs-up sign as they roared off in our million dollar planes to "kick butt."
We cheered when the news was splashed over the nation's newspapers that KU graduate John Marks had a record 23 tank kills. Tank kills?
No one mentioned the fact that each tank had a crew of five human beings — 115 dead. Iraqis, Tanks don't die. Only humans.
This is what was missing from this sanitized, censored war.
The dead.
This is a war. But it is easy to forget because the images we have been shown could be rated "G" by the Motion Picture Association of America.
This war is not reported to us by Cable News Network, but rather PNN - Pentagon News Network.
And now, in one more example of the blindfolding of the public to the horrors of war, media access to the arrival of the dead at Dover Air Force base has been blocked.
This is the first time in history that the United States has prevented media coverage of the arrival of soldiers killed in battle.
The government said the press had no constitutional right to access on government property
But the real reason access has been blocked is that the government has not forgotten the public outcry when the coffins arrived after the Panama conflict.
The government fears that support for the war will be lost if the reality of war is broadcast into the living rooms of the United States.
If a picture is worth a thousand words, what will photos of the dead from this war tell the public?
That this war is real, and the ultimate cost was paid — life.
Elicia Hill for the editorial board
Rock Chalk Revue
Annual talent show gives $35,000 to United Way
ou'd be surprised.
Fluorescent guppies swam on Hoch Auditorium stage, mouths pursuring in pursuit of food; a statue came alive, revealing the secret of hidden gold, and Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall, waiting patiently for his great fall. All of these things were made possible by Rock Chalk Revue cast and production members.
Because of hundreds of hours spent in planning, rehearsal and production, $35,000 will be donated to the 1991 United Way fundraiser, meeting the $30,000 goal and surpassing last years' Rock Chalk contribution by $7,000.
Because of students' unwavering energy and enthusiasm over an eight-month period, 26 health and social service agencies in Lawrence and Douglas County will benefit and help others. The dedication, despite midterms, finals and papers, ensured that a Mount Oread tradition continued for its 42nd year.
The Rock Chalk Advisory Board should be
commended for implementing a new aspect into Rock Chalk Revue — actively involving cast members in the United Way. The cast members were asked to fill out a group information sheet at the beginning of the semester. The information was then used by the Roger Hill Volunteer Center to place people with volunteer organizations. Between November and February, the ten living groups that participated in Rock Chalk put in over a 1,000 hours of community service in addition to time spent on stage.
The Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity and the Alpha Gamma Delta sorority captured the Most Volunteer Award for contributing the most volunteer work, in addition to selling the most tickets for the three Rock Chalk performances.
All of the people involved with Rock Chalk Revue deserve a standing ovation. The production itself was short-lived, and the moments of glory were fleeting. But the production's financial and humane donation will last for years to come.
Jennifer Schultz for the editorial board
The Kanan editorial board members are Juli Watkins, Stacy Smith, Mayniday Mccoy, Amy Zamierwik, Melanie Bottle, Tiffany Harness, Rod Griffin, Chris Shrion, Rich Cornell, Melanie Matthee, Clare McGinn, Elicia Hill, Jennifer
- Editorials reflect the opinion of the University Dalkan Kaisan editorial board. Editorials appear in a box on the left side of the page. Editorials reflect the majority opinion of the board but not necessarily the opinion of the signed editor.
Opinions expressed in guest and staff columns and cartoons are solely those of the author or artist. Views expressed in columns and cartoons are not necessarily shared by the Kansan.
MAKE-BELIEVE COMICS GROUP
PRESENTS
ENVIRONMENT MAN
Vol. I No. XI SIGHTS, SOUNDS, AND DOORS FOUND WITHIN ARE COMPLETELY REPRESENTATIONAL.
YOU SAW HIM LOSE AN ARM IN," NO MORE NUCLEAR MCE GUY"...
... YOU SAW HIM LOSE HIS SKIN IN," ACID RAIN AND MONDAYS ALWAYS MELT ME DOWN"...
... YOU SAW HIM LOSE HIS HAIR IN," WE HAD A FALLING OUT"...
... YOU SAW HIM STOP BREATHING IN," RAIN FOREST? WHO NEEDS RAIN?"...
... YOU SAW HIM LOSE HIS TEMPER IN,
" TOXIC TOUGH GUYS FINISH LAST-USUALLY"...
... NOW SEE HIM CHOKED, GAGGED, ZONKED, CONFUSED, NIBBLED, AND BEWILDERED IN...
with...
Slick-
crude dude"
from the Persian Gulf
"SLICK- BAD GUY WITH AN APPETITE Plus- TINY MAN RETURNS IN, SMALL FRY"
Other Voices
A setback in Nicaragua
Violeta Chameroil's hopes for national reconciliation in Nicaragua received a shattering setback when a former Contra leader was assassinated in the heart of Managua Feb. 16.
Since assuming the presidency, Chamorro has gone to enormous lengths to heal the wounds of the civil war. She has done everything she could to resettle the Contras, the U.S. backed guerrilla movement that fought against the Sandistas, allowing the left-wing party to retain control over the armed forces and the police.
The murder of Enrique Bermudez, who once commanded the Contras and was attempting to begin his life again in Nicaragua after spending more than a decade in Miami, was clearly intended to sabotage President Chamorro's plans to end violent political confrontation.
If men such as . . . Bermudez cannot begin their lives again in their
native country, then the specter of civil war looms on the political horizon. Naturally, radical Sandinists are suspected of killing . . . Bernudez. That is one reason why it is important that the Sandinista security forces find his killers and bring them to justice.
Chamorro has alienated many of her own supporters because she has held out the olive branch to her former bitter enemies, the Sandinistas. She hoped to restore trust and brotherhood. The murderers of Enrique Bermudez seek just the opposite.
The News & Courier, Charleston
Saddam should resign
Saddam Hussein and his regime should no longer remain in power. More miseries will befall the Iraqi people if Saddam continues to rule.
Saddam is a threat not only to the Iraqis but to the people of the entire region. If Saddam remains in power
after the war, this will impede Iraq's efforts to overcome its economic problems and end its political seclusion.
It is an imperative demand of the Iraqi people that Saddam should give up power. The Iraqi people alone should topple Saddam.
From the Al-Nadwa, Mecca, Saudi Arabia
U.S. role went too far
The fact President Bush did not want to agree to (Soviet peace initiative) shows that the Americans and their allies in the gulf conflict never were concerned solely with Kuwait but just as much with destroying the Importer's power base. This war immediately lies outside the U.N. mandate.
New student group contradicts itself, needs to define stand
From the Tages-Anzeiger, Zurich, Switzerland
Last Friday I read an article in the Kansan about a new organization on campus called the Oread Society, and quite frankly, I wasn't sure how to react. The position of the group is that there is too much radicalism on campus, and they don't like being made to feel guilt. It appears that they think minority groups are just overly sensitive.
So the members of the Oread
And what they really don't like are protests. We all know how bad those are. Protests threaten the stability of this wonderful society in which we all live. Protests create turmoil and unrest among the people. Open criticism of the establishment is subversive and downright hostile.
100%
Brian Doyle
Guest columnist
Society have a new and brilliant idea. They are going to hold their own protest to demonstrate to all people of sound mind "the lunacy of some of the past protests." The members of the Oread Society admit this may seem hypocritical, I guess I agree. It is hypocritical.
If one looks at what they are doing, what is so different? They have created and identified a campus organization. Not very new. So have
the black Men of Today, the February Daughters, Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, the Hispanic American Leadership Organization and many others. They have made a public statement concerning their perspective on campus issues. Again, not very new. They are going to hold a protest. Definitely not that original of an idea.
So I wonder, is it really the protests that the Oread Society is mad about or is it the fact that the protests don't reflect the views of its members? I didn't see mention of pro-war activism in the article. It seems they don't mind that. And why should any of us? There is nothing wrong with expressing an opinion. Unless, that is, too many voices voiced conflict with
your own.
But, this got me thinking. Imagine how utterly boring this campus would be if no one expressed an opinion. How many people are disappointed when they turn to the opinion page of the Kansan and find no letters to the editor and no juicy commentary? It's what makes the book "Literary Journal" those letters but literary protest? We thrive on the challenge of conflicting opinions and values. It's what gives us a purpose and identity.
Which brings me back to the Created Society. What is its purpose? All they have said is that they don't like the stand of other campus organizations. But what are their stand? I see no wrong in the formation of a conservatively oriented student organization on campus. In fact, I would commend one. It is true that the balance of political activism is bent towards the liberal end. But who is to blame for that? The Oread Society seems to blame the liberals. They are mad at their leaders, making them feel guilty. But honestly, I don't believe that anyone on this campus has the power to make students feel guilty unless the seeds of guilt and doubt already exist.
So, I say to the Oread Society and to anyone who might identify with its opinion, don't look for a scapegoat. We are not all scapegoats; we allow some people the chance to express their opinions who otherwise might not get that opportunity."
What's stopping those people? Anyone can hold a picket sign or write a letter to the Kansan. It is not the same as setting up a soapbox for you to speak on.
There is a saying that goes, "You reap what you sow." Those who are active in expressing their opinion earn their spot in the limelight. If you conservatives are unsatisfied with the political climate of this University, then come out of the woodwork and say something; something subversive. You do not degrees. Find a purpose beyond telling us liberals to shut up, because I'm afraid you'll find that it's not going to happen.
Brian Doyle is a Chicago junior majoring in psychology and African-american studies.
KANSAN STAFF
CHRIS SIRON
RICH CORNELL
Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
^-neral manager, news adviser
Editors Business manager
News. Campus mgrs. Sophie Whibeh
Editorial. Tiffany Harness. Carmen Dresch
Planning. Holly M. Neouman. Jennifer Claxton
Campus. Jennifer Reynolds. Co-op sales mgr. Christine Musser
Pam Solliner Production mgrs. Rich Harbargarer
Sports. Sommertialt Kate Stader
Photography. Khalil Mgr. Marketing director. Emily Eubard
Graphics. Melissa Unterberg Creative director. Chris Hally
Features. Jill Harrington Classified manager. Kim Crowder
Business staff
AUDRA LANGFORD
Business manager
MINDI LUND
Retail sales manager
JEANNIE HINES
Sales and marketing advisers
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 Kinnass
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
raman reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest column and cartoons. They can be marked or brought to the Kranawien newsroom, 111 Staffer-Finn Hall.
SO...BY THE TIME...
WE SEE
AAARGH
FACE
WHAT'S GOING ON
OVER THERE?!?
SORRY SIR...
COOK+H.
DING-H.
"A WHAT?
ANEAR DEATH EXPERIENCE...
APPARENTLY DUE TO...
BOREDOM...
AFTER PROFESSOR COLLIN NOTED SIMILAR PERIENCIES WHILE READING THE STUDENTS' ESSAYS. EVERYONE JOINED IN A CHORUS OF SEVERAL SPIRITUAL SONGS.
ENLIGHTENED
EVE WITNESS
NOTE
University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 4, 1991
5
Coalition for Peace holds final protest, vows to continue fight for world peace
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Kansan staff writer
The Lawrence Coalition for Peace and Justice conducted its last protest against the Persian Gulf War yesterday.
The coalition conducted the rally at 12 p.m. on Massachusetts streets.
The event, which attracted about 150 war protesters, was the coalition's 21st peace rally since the gulf crisis began.
Allan Hanson, coalition member and a speaker at the rally, said the push for peace would continue even though the war with Iraq had ended.
"We want people to know that the euphoria of blood lust and killing does not sweep the entire country," she said, but there still is an opposition to war."
Louise Hanson, coilition president, said the group had failed to get its peace message across to the public.
"We attempted to make clear the fundamental idea that we cannot solve international problems by international agreements." "We still believe in that message."
Hanson said the group would not disband but would instead focus on other world events now that the war with Iraq had ended.
Cindy Bachofer, Salina graduate student, said that the rally was a closure to the war against Iraq and has been used by the fight for peace needed to continue.
In contrast to the peace demonstrators, there were about 50 war supporters on the west side of Massachusetts Street.
stood in the back of his pickup truck playing "God Bless America" and wearing a yellow ribbon around his cowboy hat.
"Those guys over there have just as much right to stand out here as I do," he said. "Both sides accomplished something by coming out here, because we are all Americans, and we have that right."
Thomas Nau, Lawrence resident.
Nau said he planned to rally for the troops until they came back from the Middle East.
He said the war was not truly over until the troops came home.
Frankie Watkins, Lawrence resident, taped a sign on her Dodge minivan that quoted William Jenny Bryan. "What have you done for Liberty? If nothing, what can freedom mean to you?" Watkins.
who has a nephew in the Persian
Gulf, said she used quotations on all
of her rally sighs.
"I am here to support what I believe in, which is for everybody to believe what they want to," she said.
Jewel West, Merriam resident, said he had come to the park to look for buried valuables with his metal detector. He arrived at the rally while he was searching. He said he had listened to the groups on both sides of Massachusetts Street.
"I'm more for fighting and dying," he said, pointing to the west side of the street, where the war supporters were fighting. "I'm not so much for whiming."
"We need people for peace, but we also need people who are strong," he said. "We need a balance."
Student peace groups form united movement Campuses plan joint forum March 23-24 to study effects of war on Middle East
By Nedra Beth Randolph Kansan staff writer
Student peace groups from Kansas and Missouri have joined forces.
The Midwest Student Coalition for Social Responsibility includes students from peace groups at the University of Kansas, Kansas State University, the University of Missouri at Kansas City and the Kansas City Art Institute. The group met yesterday at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave., to discuss coming events for peace.
Voice member Scott MacWilliams,
Lawrence senior, said it was important
for campuses to join together in the
fight for peace.
"The really hard part of the peace movement starts now that the war is over," he said.
MacWilliams said there were many important peace issues that needed to be addressed, such as violence against Arabs and the environmental effect of the Persian Gulf War.
Dan McCloskey, Iowa City, Iowa, junior, said the group was planning a peace forum on campus in conjunction with a peace forum that will be conducted by Out Now! at UMKC March 23 and 24. The focus of the weekend will be the effects of the war on the Middle East.
"It will be a celebration of learning," he said. "People need to take education into their own hands, and this way, with the peace forum, they can."
McCloskey said the forum would show that the peace movement would not stop because the war had ended. The unification of separate peace groups into a larger unit proves that, he said.
Marcie Wilson, K-State sophomore, said it was important to have a cohesive peace group that extended beyond campus boundaries.
"The student coalition is kind of a support network for separate peace groups," she said. "We want to change what's going on, people to change what's going on."
Ammon Dowons, Kansas City Art Institute student, said he wanted to pull people from the Art Institute into the coalition.
"I want them to be more active," he said. "They don't have to stay in their own little world."
Although Hafiza Capehart, Kansas City, Mo., resident is not a student, she said she was very interested in education and the student coalition.
"There seems to have been a breakdown in communication between universities since the '60s," she said. "This group is providing an opportunity for people to be friendly and to learn."
VIOLIN
Fiddlin' around
Mark Peskanov, New York City resident, plays a Gypsy song at the Goodtime Radio Revue. The Revue was Saturday night at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St. Peskanov's appearance with his accompanist, Rita Sloana, begins their 1991 Swarthout Society residency at the University of Kansas. The Revue also featured the imagination Workshop, a comedy routine featuring sound effects imitating those used in old radio programs.
Ray·Ban
LAWRENCE J.
BAUCH & LOREN
KU Triathletes will meet at 7:30 p.m. at Alcove A in the Kansas Union.
KU AND LAWRENCE EVENTS
CALENDAR
Hispanic American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union
Tuesday
KU Study Abroad will meet to discuss programs in French-speaking countries at 3 p.m. at 2055 Wescoe Hall.
KU Study Abroad will meet to discuss programs in Spanish-speak-
workout at 6:30 p.m. at 207 Robinson Center.
The 843-0611
Etc.
Shop 723 Mass
KU KWellness Center will conduct stress-management workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center. It offers eight workshops in an eight-week course.
Wednesdav
A confidential support group meeting for gays, lesbians and bisexuals will be conducted. For more information on the Services of Kansas at 864-3911.
University Placement Center will have an interview-preparation workshop at 3:30 p.m. at 149 Burge Union.
KU Tae Kun Do Club will have a
KU WELLness Center will conduct a workshop called "Overcoming Overeating" at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center. The workshop is the first of eight workshops in an eight-week course.
Monday
University Placement Center will have an interview-preparation workshop at 3:30 p.m. at 149 Burge Union. Attendance meet at 7 p.m. at 1284 Oread Ave
KU Accounting Club and IRS will sponsor volunteer income tax assistance meetings at 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. on the fourth floor of the Kansas Union.
KU Wellness Center will have a stress-management workshop at 12:19 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center
ing countries at 4 p.m. Tuesday at 3040 Wescoe Hall.
The KU Office of Study Abroad will have a general meeting from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. at 109 Lippincott Hall.
KU Wellness Center will have a lecture about eating disorders at 2:30 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center.
Organization of Adult Knowledge Seekers will meet to nominate officers for its executive committee at 5 p.m. at alcove A in the Kansas
Don't Drink & Drive
Enviros will meet at 6 p.m. at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. KU Tae Kwon Do Club will have a meeting at 6:30 p.m. at 207 Robinson Center.
KU Pro-Choice Coalition will meet at 7 p.m. at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union
Resource Center will have a program called "Women's Unique History, Forgotten or Ignored" from 7 to 9 at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
Rob Lindsted, a radio talk show author, and lecturer, will speak at 6 p.m. at the McColum Hall lobby. There will be "Current Events in Bible Prophecy."
The Emily Taylor Women's
Eco-Feminist Network will have a panel discussion at 7:39 p.m. at the Lawrence Public Library Auditorium, 707 Vermont St.
■ Human Services Committee of Lawrence will have a panel discussion called "Health Care in the United States" in rooms 201 and 202 at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1613 Crescent Road. Panels will be presented by faculty members from Health Department, and State Sen. Wint Winter Jr. B-Lawrence
BOOKSHOP
KU Students for Life and KU Pro- Choice Coiffion will have a program called 'Life Choices. An Abortion Law' which is available at Eight Room in the Kansas Union.
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Bring your KU Bookstore cash and check register receipts from Fall 1990 (period 88 on top of the receipt) into the Customer Service Counters at either KU Bookstore until the end of June and receive a 7% rebate. Receive $2.80 back for each $40 book you purchased! All cash and check purchases are eligible (except computer purchases) so bring your receipts in and save! KU student I.D. is required.
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KU Wellness Center will have a workshop called "Overcoming Overeating" at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center.
K
WOULD YOU LIKE TO PARTICIPATE IN PLANNING BUS ROUTES? "KU on Wheels"
The Student Senate Transportation Board would like to hear your suggestions. Are there changes you'd like to see in the bus routes or the bus system?
- Ecumenical Christian Ministries will have a draft-counseling session from 4 to 6 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building, 1204 Oread Ave.
All Students Welcome!
Pd. for by Student Senate
You are invited to come to a route hearing to present your suggestions on March 5th at 6:00 in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. Please sign up to attend the route hearing by filling out a suggestion form in the Student Senate Office,4th floor of the Kansas Union. Even if you cannot attend the route hearing,please fill out a suggestion form. We want your input!
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Monday, March 4, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Donald Strole, local attorney, will submit today a motion to suppress all evidence and statements made by a KU student during questioning by Lawrence police at a local bar.
Attorney questions arrest Case raises concerns about the extent of police power
Chad Thoreau, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, was confronted and detained by police Oct. 12 atwlH Hot Shots, 301 South Broadway, Kansas City, Mo.
The police officer took Thorne's beverage and requested that Thorne produce identification. Thorne produced a Missouri driver's license with the date of his birth, Aug. 12, 1988. The license had a photograph of him.
The officer continued talking with Thorne for about 10 minutes, according to the motion. Then another officer joined the reporting officer, and they asked Thorne to go outside for further questioning.
Thorne was taken to the alley next to the bar, where he continued to deny that he was underage. One officer went to check the validity of the driver's license, and another officer said it sure was everything was OK." according to the motion
After about five minutes, one officer told Thorne that if he did not start telling the truth he would be arrested and taken downstreet for questioning, according to the motion. Thorne said he did not know what to tell them.
Thorne produced a voter registration card and another identification card, which had a picture. Both contained
By Mike I. Vargas Kansan staff writer
But after a few more minutes he admitted that he was 18 and that the name on the license was his brother's, according to the motion. The officer then read Thorne his Miranda rights and cited him for interfering with the duties of a police officer and possessing a cereal malt beverage.
The officer said that Thorne did not look 22 years old and asked for more identification, according to the man.
---
About 75 Hispanic-American high school students from Missouri and Kansas visited KU on Friday as part of a program to increase minor enrollment at KU.
Legal research must be done on both sides, Porter said. First there must be a hearing of facts.
Tom Porter, city prosecutor, filed a complaint Feb. 26 that stated that Thorne committed two violations of the Code of the City of Lawrence by being a minor in school attendance and for giving false information to a police officer.
Another issue is whether police were entitled to continue to question and detain Thorne for about 25 minutes after he had presented the officer with what he deemed to be a valid Missouri driver's license. Strole said
Porter said that he had not had time to respond to Strohe's motion.
Kansan staff writer
Hispanic high school students visit KU and learn about life on the hill
By Lara Gold
"He is raising fundamental constitutional questions that need research," Porter said.
"What happened here is outrageous." Strole said. "The issue here is, 'Can police exert their power 'til the point where citizens rights are violated?' "'
Strole contends in the motion that the defendant was not informed of the cautionary Miranda rights before he was questioned by the police, who were seeking incriminatory statements and evidence.
At the time of the questioning and seizure of evidence the police did not have probable cause or reasonable suspicion that the defendant had committed, was committing or was about to commit a crime. Strobe said.
Even if the officers had reasonable suspicion, they had no right to seize anything as evidence, Strobe said.
The case went to the state court of appeals where it was overturned.
The court decided that looking young was a contributing factor but that other factors were needed for the police to have probable cause, Stroile said. But that case did not infringe by the court. Therefore, a precedent was never set.
"I know there is this feeling that Hispanic students do not go to college," said Louie Lopez, president of Hispanic American Leadership Organization. "The pro-immigration movement should see a four-year university and ask questions about it."
KU faculty and administrators answered questions about housing, how to apply for financial aid and other information.
HALO members performed skits about how high school guidance counselors often stereotype Hispanic students.
"We wanted to encourage students to go to their guidance counselors and find out about college." Lopez said. "It is a self-fulfilling prophecy among Hispanic teachers that I am not expected to go to college, so I won't."
HALO members also answered questions about residence hall life life, parties, leaving home for the first time, how to join a fraternity or a sorority and how to tutoring on campus.
Marcy Acosta, a senior from Park Hill High School, Park Hill. Mo., said the program helped alleviate her fears about going to college.
There's something for everyone!!
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- Huge supply of gifts and garments
- Collection of used textbooks
"The program told me what college life was like," she said.
"I always think that I am going to flunk out at college," she said. "These kids are just like me, and they are doing fine."
Dragon
Lasa Gonzalez, North Kansas City High School senior. Kansas City, Mo., is deciding among KU and other colleges.
Sylvia Suarez, assistant director of the Office of Minority Affairs, said the program was a friendly way to recruit Hispanic-American students.
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"It helped to break down any misconceptions about the University." she said.
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Nation/World
University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 4. 1991
7
Nation/World briefs
Hartford, Conn.
Keg party causes riot
About 1,000 students at the University of Hartford rioted early yesterday when police tried to kidnap the authorized keg party, authorities said.
Students pelleted police with rocks and beer bottles after spilling out of an on-campus apartment to a nearby common.
Seven police officers and nine students suffered cuts and bruises. Twelve students were arrested on charges of first-degree riot, which is a felony, breach of peace and interfering with police.
"They were met by a very large, angry crowd out there," said Hartron police Sgt. Cary Gilbert. "It was definitely a rid."
At its height, about 100 officers from four cities and the campus safety force were called to the melee, which began when campus officers arrived about 1:30 a.m. to confiscate a beer keg, said school counselor Matsky. The students had not received permission for a keg party.
A few of the 40 students at the party started pushing and shoving the officers, who called for assistance from city police.
"It it was total mayhem," said sophomore Darren Champion, 22. "Basically none of this would have started if the police didn't show up.
If the police didn't come wielding billy clubs, it would have been over quickly."
Belfast
Pub shooting kills four
Gummen killed four people in a pub yesterday night, police said. The bar was popular with Catholics and the gunmen were believed to be loyalists, the news agency, Press Association, reported.
A representative for the Royal Ulster Constabulary said at least one other person was injured in the shooting at Boyles pub in the village of Cappagh, about 50 miles west of Belfast.
The loyalist paramilitary groups rooted in Northern Ireland's majority Protestant community oppose the government, people they claim are members of Irish Republican Army or other groups opposed to British rule.
The IRA's military campaign is supported by a minority of Roman Catholics in Northern Ireland. It grew out of the Catholic civil rights protests and violent clashes of the 1960s. The IRA has attacked police and army units in its effort to end British rule in the province, and it has killed people it claims were Protestant paramilitaries, informers or collaborators with British rule.
From The Associated Press
United plane crashes kills 25; no survivors
The Associated Press
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — A United jetliner with 25 people on board crashed in flames as it approached the Colorado Springs airport early yesterday. There are survivors, authorities said.
"We can't even find a chair," said El Paso County Sheriff Bernie Barry. "There's not a great deal of that airplane left."
United Flight 385 en route from Denver crash at 9:55 a.m. four to five miles south of the airport, the Federal Aviation Administration in Washington, D.C. said. There were 20engers on board and a crew of five.
The FAA and United said all aboard apparently were killed. The Boeing 737-200 narrowly missed houses and apartment buildings. At least one person on the ground was injured.
Dick Meyer of the FAA's public information office in Seattle and Chicago-based United said there did not appear to be any survivors.
The United States Olympic Committee said two committee employees and a coach with the U.S. Cycling Federation were aboard the plane. United officials said a list of victims probably would be released today.
"All obviously are presumed dead." said Sat. Dean Kelso of the
El Paso County sheriff's office.
Meyer said there was no communication from the pilot to the airport control tower indicating any problem before the crash.
The airplane was last inspected yesterday at Denver and had no history of problems, Lawrence Nagin, United's senior vice president, said at a news conference at company headquarters.
A witness, Army Command Sgt. Maj. Leo Martinez, said that the airplane shot sharply, veered and then crashed virtually nose first.
"I watched and it went vertically into the ground," he said. "There was a huge fireball, black smoke and orange flame.
Sheriff's lt. Bill Mistretta said the airplane crashed in an unincorporated residential area called Widefield. The airplane crashed in a park surrounded by houses and apartment buildings.
"You can see tires burning. I don't think there's a part larger than a suitcase. You can't see any wings . . . or anything."
"It's a long and narrow park." Martinez said. "If he (the pilot) did this on purpose, no one in Iraq and Saudi Arabia could have done a better job of flying. It is the only place he could have taken it in."
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8
Monday, March 4, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
. . .
Campus Connection goes on despite complaints
By Rick C. Honish Kansan staff writer
After rejecting a mediation panel's findings, a fundamentalist Christian group continues to go its own way on the KU campus.
The panel, formed by the Kansas University Religious Advisers, found 17 instances in which the group, Campus Connection, had violated KURA religious activities guidelines. In December, the panel found that
In December, the panel found that Campus Connection:
Required members to break off relationships with parents and friends who were not involved in the Kansas City Church of Christ
Used members' confessions of sins to influence behavior.
Did not inform potential converts about the expectations of members.
Father Vince Krische, KURA president and director of the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, said that in the last week, he had received two more complaints against Campus Connection.
KURA is a group of 24 religious organizations that was formed to promote cooperation among the various religious organizations on campus.
Campus Connection is affiliated with the Kansas City Church of Christ, which is part of the Boston Church of Christ movement.
The Kansas City Church of Christ is a non-denominational organization that formed in 1986 with 60 members and since has grown to 300 members. It is a separate entity from other churches, being the Lawrence Church of Christ.
The panel said that, to maintain membership in KURA, Campus Connection had to sign a statement that the group no longer would intimidate, coerce or suppress members. Campus Connection was to stop undue harassment and psychological, physical or mental pressure harmful to members' health or personal autonomy.
The panel also said that members should not be required to participate in anything that would violate a principal tenet of their faith.
JOHN A. MEYER
Damon Pabst, then professional adviser to Campus Connection, refused to the statement, so the group was expelled from KURA
"I couldn't sign it because the findings are not true." Pabst said. Investigation starts
The conflict began when the three original complaints from parents and members were filed against Campus Connection with KURA last semesters.
Krische said that because the complaints were filled through the umbrella organization, KURA could direct the investigation itself, rather than using the University's formal process.
The Rev Jay Henderson of the First United Methodist Church and a member of the inMedation panel, said the trial was designed to abjugation by researching the complaints.
"We gathered reading material, talked to the group leaders and with students and parents who were involved." he said.
Henderson said the panel reviewed its findings, presented them to KURA
and determined that Campus Connection's continued membership in KURA hinged on the elimination of the procedures in question.
"The Campus Connection leaders did not believe they were doing anything wrong." Henderson said. "Their theology and practices are very closely related. I knew it would be tough, but I had some hope that they would see what needed to be done."
Past refused to change his organization's practices based on what he called totally untrue accusations.
They did not.
"These findings came about after the complaints of a few members and, from my perspective, after they (the committee) pooled information in an effort to advise the said. "It is hard for us to talk to a defense when these things are not true."
ers at KU. They no longer could use staff identification cards or Watson Library, participate in the division of student affairs staff development seminars or be included on the University's mailing list.
The group is still, however, a registered student organization at KU.
Upon expulsion from KURA, Paist and his wife Terrin lost their privileges as professional religious advises
Richard Augustin, an assistant payroll controller, was brought in as the new faculty adviser for the group.
"It is not a major time-consuming thing." Augustin said. "Damon more or less runs things. I make sure it is legitimate."
Spiritual Disillusionment
The Rev. Jim Musser, chairperson of the mediation panel and leader of Campus Christians, said the core problem with Campus Connection was the lack of information it gave to new members about its theology.
"They basically present themselves as a loving group, but they don't let members know their expectations until a meaningful relationship has been established," Musser said.
Once a relationship develops, members present their expectations in the context of "this is what it means to be a follower of Jesus," and if one does not act accordingly, he or she is not a Christian, he said.
"The person is then in a double-bind," Musser said. "They want to maintain their new relationships, but they may not want to go along with some of the other things, and they have to choose.
Cynthia Wimmer, a former member of the group, agreed. She said she had been overwhelmed by the initial anger and affection the group offered.
group confused, self-doubting and with a distrust of all religions.
"They were so nice," she said. "I didn't have any friends here, and all of a sudden there were 30 people wanting to be my friend."
Pabst said that some mistakes had been made in recruiting those who later complained but that Campus Connection had taken the suggestion the mediation panel and would now "let people know where we are headed."
"We tell people in classes or on the street that we are a non-demonational group that studies the Bible," he said.
The Rev. Jay Henderson does not think that is enough.
"As they begin coming to the group and the Bible studies, they should know that they are expected to become baptized a certain way and that confessions of their sins are needed to remain members," he said. "I think it all ties back in with deceptive recruitment."
New members are contacted daily by their mentors. That, coupled with various church activities, does not allow the student a chance to step back and think about all that is going on, Henderson said.
He said people emerged from the
Speaking of the mediation panel, Musser said, "No one could deny the effects of these methods on the students."
Musser said the process resulted in spiritual disillusionment.
Damon Pabst does not see things the same way.
"It is all about love," he said. "Our goal is to have a great relationship with God and follow the Bible.
"We don't tell anyone what to do. We tell them to read the Bible and come to their own convictions. We want people to understand how much Jesus loved them and realize the price he paid so we can be free."
Pabst said the church tried to avoid old traditions and rules created by men.
"We only want to follow the Bible," he said.
Campus Connection is evangelical and constantly tries to recruit new members by asking people to attend Bible studies. Pabst said
He described Campus Connection is an offshoot of the Kansas City Church of Christ, a branch of the Boston Church of Christ.
There have been complaints about affiliated groups on campuses from Harvard to MIT
Augustin said the church wanted to bring people closer to God.
"We are a family, a brotherhood devoted to following Jesus," he said. "We view people as souls, and we want them to go to heaven."
Augustin dismissed the charges against Campus Connection as ignoring
"You can't control the actions of everyone, and we don't try to." he said. "But when one of us runs away, we need to help others to efforts to keep them in the family."
PARKSIDE
"There are no handcuffs, though. We do everything we can to love them."
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Public Law 101-6 Designating the Month of March as
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"Women's History Month"
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center recognizes the contributions made by women.
9
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 4. 1991
9
Group's intense methods confusing
Experience with group leaves student questioning all religion
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan staff writer
When Cynthia Wimmer went to her first Campus Connection Bible study last semester, she had no idea it would be the beginning of a two-week journey that would leave her undefended and mistrustful of all relations.
Living off-campus her freshman
Wimmer, Wimmer, 19, decided that a
good way to meet people would be
to find a Christian student group.
She arrived at the University of Kansas with a strong religious upbringing. She had attended a Lutheran church and a Presbyterian church, where her mother was a chair director. In high school she was active in a student youth group called Young Life.
After attending several other group meetings where she did not feel comfortable, she was invited to attend a Bible study. It was September 13.
- The first meeting was a good experience. Everyone there was friendly.
The topic that evening was Satan: Who he is, why he can control us and why we are scared of him.
That night Wimmer called her mother in Tulsa, Okla, and told her how happy she was to have found a dog that she liked and who liked her.
What church are they with, her mother asked.
"Church of Christ," she said.
"Oh, good." her mother said.
"Oh, good," her mother said.
"In the next five days, Wimmer meet with a particular member of the group daily except during the weekend, which she spent at home in Tulsa.
When Wimmer's friend stopped by, she usually brought someone else. The first time it was Terrin Pabst, then a religious adviser for Campus Connection. The three women discussed discipleship. Pabst said that Wimmer had a special gift from God to help people and that she should use the gift to bring more people to God and the church.
■ The next Wednesday, Wimmer went to Kansas City for a church service. She and about 20 other recruits were taken to another room where Terrin Pabst's husband, Damon, a Campus Connection leader, taught a Bible study that
focused on God's plan for church members. She was not allowed into the actual service because she had not been baptized.
The next day, Wimmer, her friend and another member of Campus Connection discussed baptism. Wimmer learned that the group did not believe other church's baptisms were recognized by God and that "true baptism was to be basilic" this church. Further, anyone in the church could baptize a new member.
■ Friday night, Wimmer saw what a bantism was.
She went with members of Campus Connection to Clinton Lake about 11 p.m. They walked through the woods to the lake. Three men walked into the lake, and one held a flashlight over the other two while some words were spoken. The other was dunked under the surface as the groom cheered and sang.
- The next afternoon Wimmer's friend came by and asked whether she would like to join the church. Wimmer was not sure.
She was told that if a person had not "dispelled" another soul to Christ in the church, then they were not true Christians. Using this definition, "not true Christians" included Wimmer's mother.
The next day, after attending her first Sunday service, Wimmer went to a Bible study with his friend and Terrin Pabst.
In a two-on-one discussion, they told Wimmer that she needed to distinguish between Christians and non-Christians in her life and to let go of those who were not Christians. She said Christians were "keeping her from God."
Everything Wimmer was being told was reinforced with Bible verses. She began to doubt her judgments, but she continued to believe in the Bible, maybe they were right.
She called her mother that night and told her about the baptism and the church service. Her mother was taken aback.
"This doesn't sound like the right
"ch of Christ." she said.
Church of Christ," she said.
■ Two weeks after her first Bible study, Wimmer went to another service and was again taken to a room separate from the congregation.
After the lesson she went upstairs and stood by the door to the main hall.
The congregation was being
3. Participants are expected to adhere to group norms.
2. Participants in Campus Connection are expected to withdraw
2. Participants in Campus Connection are expected to withdraw from any significant 'non Campus Connection Christian' relation
4. Participants are to have daily contact with "discplays."
KURA'S Findings Against Campus Connection
1. Expectations are not clearly stated up front.
6. Participants are expected to recruit other students.
7. Participants are expected to contend their skin to people they have for a period of time, and when used against the skin they may inadvertently injure their current behavior.
8. Participants are expected to adhere to discipler's advice.
9. Participants are faced with life-affecting decisions over a one-to-four week period.
10. Participants are expected to adhere to group norms.
11. Participants receive an abundance of love initially. It is removed at any point of disagreement with discipulers.
12. The group demands conformity in exchange for love and acceptance.
13. Participants receive verbal assaults from disciplers, followed by reaffirmation of love for the student
14. Group leaders intimidate participants,
16. False reasons were given for contact.
instructed in the art of discipling.
They were talking about which verses to use, how to approach people and how to use examples and stories.
■ That night, Wimmer and her friend discussed sin. Wimmer was asked to recount every sin she had committed in her life.
- On Friday, Wimmer and Terrin Pabst sat on the hill facing Memorial Stadium
Pabst told her that the lesson that day would be rough and then began to talk about the crucifixion.
17. Discipler set up a leader's visit.
The next day Wimmer met with her friend, Terran Pabst and the wife of the leader of the Kansas City team to discuss the discussion of Wimmer's sins.
She was asked whether she had ever masturbated, whether she was homosexual or whether she had ever committed bestiality. Angered by the nature of their questions, Wimmer asked whether they were kidding and whether being prudent and that to be forgiven by God, she had to talk about it.
And they told her how much they loved her.
She vividly described Christ's death and began acting out the roles
of the crucifiers and Christ himself.
With each imaginary pound of the nail, Pabst said, "This is for you, Cynthia. This is for your sexual immorality; this is for your pride."
■ Wimmer went home the next day and told her mother and her family's preacher, who told her to think about some of the things that had happened.
Did Jesus turn his back on his disciples, he asked. Would God want you to turn your back on those you did? Or would he want you to try to help them?
She returned to Lawrence and told her friend and Paubst that she wanted out of the group. Paubst started crying. She told Wimmer that she loved him.
"I doubt that," Wimmer replied.
"How can you say you love me and tell me I am going to hell in the same breath?"
Editor's note: Damon Pabst confirmed that Cynthia Wimmer was involved with and recruited by Campus Connection. He said that some mistakes were made in her recruitment but that the procedures and lessons of the group were justified by the Bible.
Discipling is key to church's movement
Kansan staff writer
Recruiting system uses hierarchy to bring members under control of top Evangelis.
By Rick C. Honish
The Kansas City Church of Christ is part of the Crossroads/Boston Church of Christ movement that includes the Kansas City Church of Christ in Gainesville, Fla.
McKean was fired in April 1977.
A young evangelist named Kip McKean emerged from that church and went to Charleston, Ill., where he became a pastor for the Heritage Chapel. Membership in his church increased 900 percent in three years, so the church grew, so did controversy surrounding his methods of recruitment.
A letter of dismissal from McKean's sponsor, the Memorial Church of Christ in Houston, said, "Brother McKean has brought unbiblical practices, peculiar language and subtle, deceitful doctrines to
Charleston from the Crossroads Church."
McKean moved to Lexington, Mass., where he took charge of the Lexington Church of Christ. The name was soon changed to the Boston Church of Christ. McKean's recruiting success repeated itself in Boston. There were 750 baptisms in his first three years.
By February 1988, a congregation of more than 3,300 was attending services in the Boston Garden, home of the Celtics basketball team. There were affiliated churches in London, Paris and New York, as well as in Africa, Germany and Jamaica, among other countries.
The Crossroads Church of Christ disassociated itself with the Boston movement in 1986. Crossroads elders were called to resist and strongly totalitarian authority structure was developing and McKean was assuming the role of the Apostle Paul.
The system's nature is hierarchical. The newest members are discipled by more experienced members, and more experienced members are then discipled by top church members until the process reaches McKean, the absolute leader.
McKean's movement centers on a recruitment, or "disciping," system that calls for submission by new members to their "discipiers."
"The Evangelist will determine how far a congregation will go in encrypting by how consistently he implements the faith, in encouragement obedience and by
In a church bulletin released in August 1987, McKean described his role:
impartially carrying the instructions of God even when it is not the popular thing to do. . . The Evangelist must know where the church is in the eyes of God, where it is headed and what it will take to get where God wants it to be.
Mekan said that the Bible commanded men to have disciplining relationships and that "discipling is the only way you can be won to Christ in our generation."
The movement teaches members that baptism within the church is required for salvation and that other religious organizations are essential to this work. Only path to heaven is through the Boston Church of Christ movement.
Editor's note: Information for this article was gathered from magazine and newspaper articles.
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Monday, March 4, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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The governing body of KU graduate students voted by acclamation Friday to support the proposed restructuring of graduate governance in Student Senate.
Graduates want a restructured Senate
Kansan staff writer
By Michael Christie
About 20 people voted, and two graduate programs sent letters approving the bill.
Senate is scheduled to vote on the bill tomorrow, as it would have even if the Graduate Representative did not.
The proposed bill calls for the graduate affairs committee to be dissolved and for the graduate assembly to act in its place.
The approval came after the bill was changed to establish the graduate assembly as the head body for graduate students. The original bill proposed a separate University Committee head graduate student governance.
"This is now phasing from primarily an advisable body to an actual legislative, decision-making and, in my interpretation, powerful body," said Ruth Lentz, extrah, chairperson of the graduate assembly.
If the bill is passed, the Graduate Representative Assembly would be the only Senate body that had its own membership determined outside Senate domain.
Each graduate department may have a representative in the assembly.
Arlan Maltyb, chairperson of the senate graduate affairs committee, said that if the graduate
assembly were the Senate committee for graduate concerns, graduate students would have a larger voice in Senate because graduate senators could sit on other Senate committees.
This is different from other organisations' budgets, which the finance committee has the power to change.
Also, if the bill is approved in Senate, the graduate assembly would have authority to determine the budgets of graduate organizations. It would present the total budgets to the finance committee, which could approve the budgets in total or make recommendations for change.
Maltby said that although the finance committee and Senate could reject budget requests, change requirements would not be necessary.
Popularity of organically grown foods on rise
By Katie Chipman
Kansan staff writer
A trend in health awareness has caused a boost in business for natural food retailers in Lawrence.
store opened in 1974.
in business for natural food retailers in Lawrence.
Oread Organics, 622 W. 12th St., a grocery store that opens today, specializes in organic food and products.
Linda Gwaltney, manager of Community Mercantile, a natural food grocery store at 700 Maine St., said business had been expanding since the
Kristi Adrian, store manager, said. "There's a kristi for awareness. People need to know that"
Community Mercantile carries organically grown fruits, vegetables and meat.
"When we started, organic foods were hard to come by," she said. "Most of our produce came from California. We could only buy produce that could make the trip because organic foods are grown to eat, not to ship."
growing process to prevent insects from destroying the crops.
Some foods that are grown using inorganic methods are sprayed with preservatives before shipping to prevent dehydration. Many fruits and vegetables are sprayed with pesticides during the
Gwaltney said many people who shopping at Community Mercantile considered chemically treated agricultural products harmful to their health.
"Now 75 percent of all of our produce is organically grown," she said. "In the summer we get things from local farmers, and in the winter we still depend on the West Coast. There are some greenhouses in the area that are beginning to grow organic, so we could buy from them in the winter."
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Now KU can afford to dream in color.
If you thought that finding a color Macintosh system you could afford was just a dream, then the new, affordable Macintosh LC is a dream come true.
The Macintosh LC is rich in color. Unlike many computers that can display only 16 colors at once, the Macintosh LC expands your palette to 256 colors. It also comes with a microphone and new sound-input technology that lets you personalize your work by adding voice or other sounds
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 4, 1991
11
KU shares title despite defeat by Cornhuskers
By Mark Spencer
By Mark Spencer
Kansas tumbles to Nebraska
Kansan sportswriter
LINCOLN, Neb. - Despite yesterday's 85-75 loss to Nebraska, the Kansas basketball team is a Big Ten champion for the first time since 1986.
Sharing the crown with co-champion Oklahoma State, however, is not what the Jawhacks had in mind.
“It’s a lot of difference to me.” Kansas coach Roy Williams said. “It doesn’t lessen the significance of what this team has accomplished, but I’m greedy. That’s the best way to put it.”
Williams said that after Oklahoma State's 68-67 loss to Iowa State on Saturday, he was excited about the chance to win the title outright.
"It does say co-champion down there, though," he said. "There are six other teams that would love to change places with us."
Junior forward Alonzo Jamison said the Jayhawks' title hopes might have put them under too much pressure.
Kansas forward Mark Randall said that it did not matter to him whether the Jayhays shared the Big Eight title or if they won it outright.
"I guess we thought about it too much." he said.
"The conference means nothing to me right now," he said. "All that really matters is that we lost the ball game."
Kansas forward Mike Maddox said sharing the conference championship was better than not being a part of it at all.
VANSA'S
24
3
43
Kansas' Alonzo Jamison drives past Nebraska's Keliv Livelv.
LINCOLN, Neb. — Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams and his players knew Saturday night that they had the opportunity to become kings of the Big Eight Conference hill.
By S. J. Bailey
Kansan sportswriter
Oklahoma State, who had been tied with Kansas for the league lead going into the weekend, lost to Iowa State Saturday, leaving the conference crown to the Jayhawks for the taking.
"We thought about it all Saturday night," junior forward Alonzo Jamison said.
But yesterday, the Jayhaws saw an outright conference championship slip through their fingers as they were defeated by Arkansas Carnibakers 85-75 in Lincoln.
The first half was a disaster for the Jayhaws, who committed 20 overovers and found themselves at one time trailing by 13 points.
After the game, Williams and his players could not put a finger on what caused the comedy of errors during the first 29 minutes of play.
"We didn't do a very good job of taking care of the basketball early." Williams said. "I've never had a team have 20 turnovers in a half, and I think may have been a little too tight and wanted it too badly."
Sophomore guard Adonis Jordan also had trouble explaining the Jayhawks' tentiveness.
"I really don't know what it was," he said. "For some reason, we just couldn't hold on to the ball. We played good defense, but every time our defense got us the ball, we gave it right back to them."
16 Nebraska turovers in the first half, and a late scoring surge by senior guard Terry Brown and freshman forward Richard Scott were all that kept the Jayhawks from being bown out in the first half. At the intermission, the Jayhawks trailed by nine, 40-31.
In the second half, the Jayhawks committed only six turnovers but never could get the game's momentum to fully swing to their side.
Kansas pulled to within one point at the 11-25 mark when senior forward Mark Randall was fouled while driving to the hoop and was credited with a basket after a Nebraska player scored. The Lakers free throw made the score 55-54.
But that was as close as the Jayhawks would get as they made only two of 10 to fire throws during the last quarter, including eight consecutive misses.
Men's Basketball
The Kansas defense, which forced
“That’s pretty doggie big.” Williams said. “We had opportunities to make a lot of layups as well as free shots, but we did not make them either.”
Randall led the Jayhawks offensively with 17 points and 12 rebounds. Jordan and Scott chipped in 12 points each.
Kansas, 21-6 overall, finished the regular season as Big Eight champions with Oklahoma State, each ending with league records of
Tony Farmer was the high scorer for the Cornishers with 18 points and 13 rebounds. Rich King and Clifford Scales added 14 point each.
However, the Cowboys will receive
Kansas 75
Nebraska 85
Nebraska
| M | FG | FT | RA | F | A | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Lively | 3 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Reid | 32 | 3-10 | 4-5 | 5 | 2 | 10 |
| Moody | 22 | 1-0 | 4-5 | 5 | 2 | 14 |
| Scales | 33 | 5-9 | 3-4 | 5 | 1 | 2 |
| Ramsey | 34 | 3-8 | 3-4 | 5 | 1 | 2 |
| Harper | 31 | 6-0 | 6-7 | 13 | 1 | 18 |
| Hayes | 19 | 2-5 | 3-4 | 2 | 1 | 7 |
| Pitkowski | 18 | 4-8 | 5-7 | 2 | 1 | 13 |
| Owens | 6 | 1-2 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
| Crosswell | 1 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Percentages: FG. 48.3, FT. 74.3
point goals: 1-6 (Scales. 1-1, Reid. 0-1, Pawkiew. 0-1)
Blocked Shots: (King. 3 King. 2)
Turnovers: (2 King. 6 King. 4 Rams. 4)
Streams: (2 Streams. 5 Streams. 1)
Steals: (16 Rams. 4 Scales. Hayes. 2, Reid.
Moyer, Farmer 2) Technicals: None
Kansas
M M FG FT FT R A F Tl
Jamison 27 5.6 1.3 1.3 2 A 2 11
Maddox 21 2.5 0.4 1.4 1 5 3 4
Bendall 21 2.7 1.4 1.3 1 5 3 17
Bendall 21 2.7 1.4 1.3 1 5 3 17
Jordan 32 4.1 3.3 3.3 2 5 4 12
Richey 12 1.1 0.0 0.0 2 5 4 16
Wagner 6 0.0 0.0 0.0 0 1 1 2
Woodberry 1 1.3 0.0 0.0 0 1 1 2
Scott 1 1.3 0.0 0.0 0 1 1 2
Tunstal 10 1.1 1.0 0.0 0 0 2 3
Johanning 1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0 0 2 3
Percentages: FG. 52.9 FT. 53.6 Three-point goals: (Jordan) 18 (Matthew) 4 Blacked Stoles: 1 (Liamsham) Turnovers: 26 (Jamison 6, Randall 5, Brown 4, Maddox, Jordan, Scott Johanning 2, Richey, Woodbury, Turrall) Steals: 13 (Richie, Woodbury, Turrall) None, Richie, Richie, Scott) Techniques: None
Halttime: Kansas 31, Nebraska 40
Officials: Tanco, Lembach, Greene.
A. A. HALSTED
the No. 1 seed in the Big Lots-
tournament Friday because they swept Nebraska this season while Kansas split its two games with the Cornhuskers. The Jayhawks will be the No. 2 seed in the tournament.
Ramsdell earns victory over Golden Gophers
The Kansas baseball team defeated the Minnesota Golden Gophers 3-2 yesterday in the final game of a three-game series at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome in Minneapolis.
Kansas junior Rory Ramsdell picked up the victory for the Jayhawks in relief of junior Mike Massey.
Kansas junior Chris Moore and sophomore Jeff Niermeier went two for four at the plate, and one for six. The home run to pace the dawjahs.
In his first pitching performance of the season, Massey gave up no runs and one hit in four innings.
Yesterday's victory was the only Kansas triumph of the weekend as the Gophers defeated Oklahoma 11-11 on Friday and 9-3 on Saturday.
The Jayhawks, 4-5, will play host to Creighton at 2 p.m. tomorrow at Hogland-Munton Stadium.
No. 6 Syracuse trips ailing Hovas 62-58
These were a couple of distinctions Georgetown coach John Thompson could just as well have done without.
The Hoyas not only lost four straight Big East Conference
games for the first time, but they had to do it in front of the largest on campus crowd in NCAA his team the Carrier Dome in Syracuse, N.Y.
Sixth-ranked Syracuse won 62-58, but they did so in an unexpected manner yesterday. The Hoyas led 50-42 with 8:17 play, only to be outscored 12-2 and fall behind 54-52 with 4:27 left when Billy Owens hit a three-pointer for the Orangemen.
And the Hoyas had something to gain, too. Syracuse (26-4) already had clinched the Big East regular-season title.
Pistons beat Clippers Manning scores 31
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. — Joe Dumars scored 14 of his 26 points in the fourth quarter yesterday as the Detroit Fists ended their longest loss streak in five years with a win against the Los Angeles Clippers.
Danny Manning scored 31 points for Los Angeles, the NBA's third worst road team with a 52 record, or for the Clippers had more than 14.
The Pistons outscored the Clippers 29-18 in the third quarter and owned an 82-69 lead into the final period.
Manning then scored 11 points during a 16-4 run that pulled the Clippers to an 86-85 deficit with 8:18 left
From staff and wire reports
Cornhusker women edge past Jayhawks win conference title
Bv Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
Last week, Nebraska swim coach Ray Huppert said that the Cornhuskers would have to swim their best in every race if they were going to have chance to beat Kansas for the title. He Eight Conference championship,
A full-house crowd of Kansas and Nebraska swim fans saw the Huskers do just that Saturday in Robinson Natatorium during the final session of the Big Eight championship meet.
Nebraska won five of seven events and their second straight conference title with a score of 671.5 to Kansas' 646.
Iowa State finished the meet with 359 points, and Missouri had 225.5.
Michelle Butcher heard the roar of the Nebraska faithful three times when she won the 1.650 yard freestyle and the 500 yard freestyle and the 400 yard individual medley. She was the most valuable player for the meet.
Kansas senior and co-captain Lauri Hill said that nerves might have been a factor in Kansas' second-place finish.
"We wanted to win so bad in front of our home crowd and in our own
Swimming
pool," she said. "I think everyone gave all they could, but I know some of us were a little nervous about everything."
Hill, in addition to Michele Riffel,
Heather McKoberts and Krista Corda
son won the 400 freestyle relay and
the 320 freestyle. They both took a
3,25,76 in the last race of the meet.
Cordsen said that by that time the team knew it could not win the meet but that it wanted to go out strong by winning the relay.
She said the Jayhawks lost key races that could have made the difference in the meet's outcome.
"I think our attitude and enthusiasm was there for the meet," she said. "We kept our class. We just didn't swim up to our full potential."
Cordsen said she was already looking forward to the NCAA meet.
"We will have more individuals and more relay teams at nationalals than Nebraska, and I think we will meet with all of them at that meet." she said.
Hill said that the disappointment of losing the conference meet was difficult to bear but that the team remained strong.
SUMMER CAMP 1958
Kelley Kauzlarich, Liberty, Mo. senior, practices her diving.
22 42
Kansas' Terrilyn Johnson shoots over two Colorado players.
Julie Jacobson/KANSAN
Lady 'Hawks move to Big-8 final
Play OSU tonight
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
When Kansas sophomore center Lisa Tate approached the free-throw line, Colorado sophomore Mindy looked up at the clock and stared.
When Henry looked back to the board, an odd, blank gaze covered her eyes.
Only five minutes and 47 seconds were left in the game, and the Kansas Jayhawks were on fire. Kansas was leading by 12, and for the rest of the game, Colorado would not come any closer.
After defeating Nebraska 58-33
Saturday and Colorado 76-56 last
night in Salina, 10-11, secured its
first win over Biggie. Big
Eight Conference tournament.
Trailing 34-30 at the half, Kansas came back during the second half and out-shot the Colorado Lady Buffs 57 to 37 percent from the field.
While Kansas went to the boards 44 times, Colorado grabbed only 23 rebounds.
Colorado coach Coach Barry said junior guard Kay Hart Hart and sophomore guard Stacy Truft were injured during staff tries to, but could not contain.
"They (Hart and Trutl) had a quickness advantage on our guards," Barry said. "They were able to penetrate and score off of their first
Women's Basketball
shots.'
Hart was Kansas' power scorer. She went two of two from the three-point range, four of five from the two-point range. In 11 shots from the field for 22 points.
Truitt led the Jayhawks in rebounding with nine boards and also chalked up 22 points.
Barry said that Kansas did not use any surprise strategy and that the Jayhawks did not play differently than the Nuggets. James Colorado could not get an edge.
"Our defense really was the key for us," Kansas coach Marian Washington said. "Their front line is very big, very tough. We had to compensate. We've been working hard all year to block out and go to the boards."
Washington said that the team had been doing this more often than not.
No player for Colorado retrieved more than five rebounds during the game.
Washington attributed her team's victory to the fact that the players
The first half of the semifinal game was touch and go for both teams.
Probable Starters for Women's Basketball
Colorado gained the same lead during the second half but lost it within the first two minutes of play.
With three minutes left to play before halftime, the Buffs saw the biggest lead they would have over the Jayhawks for the entire game.
| Kansas | Pos. | Ht. | PPG | RPG |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Terrilyn Johnson | F | 5-11 | 9.9 | 9.6 |
| Tanya Bonham | F | 5-8 | 5.6 | 1.9 |
| Marthea McCloud | C | 5-10 | 6.1 | 5.3 |
| Stacy Truitt | G | 5-8 | 10.2 | 3.9 |
| Kay Kay Hart | G | 5-7 | 9.6 | 3.4 |
Oklahoma State
Jodi Fisher F 6-1 11.5 5.7
Shea Jackson F 6-1 5.6 5.1
Lisa McGill C 5-11 14.0 8.4
Althea Cox G 5-7 9.7 2.5
Liz Brown G 5-5 11.0 3.6
"She knows where she wants to go," Washington said. "And she gets there."
Melissa Unterberg/KANSAN
"We just tried to relax," Truitt said. "I told everyone to have fun."
now have a better understanding of what they are capable of doing than they used to.
One Colorado player who tried to prevent the Jayhawks from having too much fun was freshman forward Jamillah Lang.
Lang was the Buffs' leading scorer with 18 points, and with 20 seconds left in the game, he was one of two players to foul out. Henry was the other
The Jayhawks will challenge the Oklahoma State Cowgirls for the conference title at 7 p.m. tonight in Salina.
Kansas and Oklahoma State also battled for the title last year. Oklahoma State won 66-65.
If the Jayhawks should win, Kansas would advance automatically to the NCAA tournament at the University's championship competition for the national championship.
Oklahoma State defeated Missouri 84-76 Saturday in Salina during the first round of games and the Cowboys victory over Kansas State yesterday.
12
Monday, March 4, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
The Persian Gulf: After the War
Kuwaitis looking for news on captured, killed citizens
The Associated Press
KUWAIT CITY — From the rubble-filled streets of downtown to the living rooms of luxurious suburban homes, one Kuwaiti after another tells an eerily similar story: The Iraqis kidnapped my relatives.
Kuwaitis celebrating the end of Iraq occupation say their joy is tempered by the disappearance of thousands of their compatriots, many of whom taken in by the United States in U.S.-led forces liberated the country.
Iraq agreed to allied demands yesterday that it return civilian detainees and military prisoners of war. But many Kuwaitis, having witnessed and heard about countless acts of savagery by Iraqi troops, fear the worst for those missing.
Without solid information, rumors sprout and spread like weeds: The allies rescued the abducted and have taken them to Saudi Arabia. The Iraqi shot the captives before fleeing. The Kuwaitis were transported to Iraq prison camps in Rabadh and Basra.
None of those reports has been confirmed.
"The Iraqis went crazy the last few days before they fled," said Saad Al-Hashim, dean of education at Kuwait University. "They visited mosques, from their houses, from
cars. everywhere."
The assistant dean of the education department was among those abducted, said Al-Hashim, adding that he too was a target, not because he too was a position, but because he had a mini-van needed to transport detainees.
He said he was able to talk his way out of capture by telling the soldiers that the electric gate to his driveway would not open because of a power cut or capital. He did not mention that the gate could be opened manually.
Abdul Rahman Al-Awadi, the minister of state for Cabinet affairs, said Saturday that more than 8,000 Kuwaits had been hauled away between Feb. 21 and Feb. 23. 25,000 others were either killed or are missing after Iraq's seven months of occupation, he added.
However, he indicated that the figures were preliminary. Checks by journalists at hospitals, morgues and in interviews with Kuwaiti citizens suggested that the death toll was probably high and that no one had reliable figures on how many people had been abducted.
But if the abductees reached Iraq, there is a good chance they are alive and are not being tortured, according to Kuwaitis allowed to visit captured relatives in Iraq in recent months.
The Iraqis began abducting Kuwaiti immediately after they invaded on Aug. 2, citizens said. Initially, the Iraqis appeared to target people who had been in the government or the security forces.
Hani Shushtar said his brother, an army major, was detained Aug. 3 and taken to a camp outside Baghdad. Shushtar, a flight attendant with Kuwait Airways, flew several times to Iraq and visited his brother, who appeared to be in decent condition.
However, several other people told of relatives who had been tortured while they were detained inside Kuwait.
At the Al-Sabah Hospital, Hisham Al-Nisef showed visitors the corpse of young Kuwaiti men who had been tortured before they were killed.
Families of the missing Kuwaitis have been visiting the hospital, praying they would not find their loved ones in the morgue, said the doctor. With most of the dead bodies now claimed, the relatives of the missing have stopped coming and have begun to hope that a family reunion is near.
Iraqi troops flee Kuwait after pullout The Associated Press
"We could not move outside our bunkers because they kept hitting us around the clock," said one man who recently returned.
BAGHADD, Iraq — Thousands of Iraqi soldiers have begun pouring back into Baghdad following the shattering ground war in the south. Some tell stories of terror in the weeks of ceaseless allied bombardments.
U. S. military sources in Saudi Arabia said Saturday that surveillance photos showed the sudden pullout had plunged the southern city of Basra into chaos.
U. S. military officials said many Iraqi units offered little or no resistance, either surrendering or fleeing north.
Those who stayed found themselves pounded, even after they were ordered to withdraw from Kuwait in the midst of ground fighting — a fact that angered some.
"Even the cars, the bases which were taking back back were hit," said Zaid Taleb, a soldier in civilian clothes visiting a marketplace near Baghdad over the weekend.
PLO writhes under Arafat's support for Iraq
Analysis
Bv Mona Ziade
Associated Press Writer
NICOSIA, Cyprus - Hard time lies ahead for the Palestine Liberation Organization and its chairperson, Yasser Arafat, who supported Saddam Hussein in the Persian Gulf War.
The PLO's relations with most Arab leaders now are soured by hostility and distrust, and the movement itself has been shaken.
The Iraqi leader has been crushed and his survival is uncertain. The oil-rich Gulf Arab states have stopped the flow of money for the Palestinian
But, with the war over, Western and Arab leaders agree the time is
ripe for a new drive to settle the Palestinian problem, the root of conflict in the Middle East for more than four decades.
"All efforts should now be deployed with the view of resolving the Arab-Israeli conflict with the same rapidity as that which settled the gulf crisis, on the basis of international legality," declared Yasser Abed-Rabba, a member of the PLO's ruling Executive Committee in Tunis.
Achieving an Arab-Iraeli peace will be the main test for the "new world order" President Bush wants to establish.
That in itself is a political victory for the PLO, which for 23 years has warned there can be no peace in the Middle East. The Palestinian issue is resolved.
But the position of Israel's right-wing government has been hardened
by the war, and Arafat's backing of Saddam as the only Arab leader prepared to stand up to Israel has eroded support for peace negotiations among some moderates in the Jewish state.
In addition, there are differences among the allies concerning how to tackle the Arab-Israeli dispute. The United States broke off a dialogue with the PLO last May and shows no willingness to resume it.
But France's foreign minister, Roland Dumas, declared Thursday that the PLO was the only organization that the world's million Palestinians
Now the gulf states are cutting off their financial support of the PLO. Before Arafat gambled on Saddam, the PLO was getting some $43 million a month from the gulf states, much of which bankrolled the 3-year-old Pal-
estianian uprisings in Israel-occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip.
The deportation by the gulf states of many of the two million Palestinians who worked there has cut off another $8 million to $10 million a month in remittances.
Arafat years ago shrewdly made contingency plans for just such an emergency by investing an estimated $2 billion in Europe, Asia, Africa and the Middle East. But he still had to slash the PLO's annual $300 million budget by 35 percent.
Backing Saddam has left Arafat himself in a precarious position. Saudi Arabia, once the PLO's main donor, and other gulf states are not likely to forgive what they see as Arafat's betrayal until he is ousted.
The 15-member U.N. Security Council has adopted
13 resolutions since Iraq invaded Kuwait Aug. 2;
Copyright ©
U.N. resolutions against Iraq
Resolution 660, Aug. 2
Condemned Iraq's invasion of Kuwait and demanded that Baghdad withdraw its forces. The vote was 14-0, with Yemen not participating.
Resolution 661, Aug. 6
Imposed stringent sanctions on all trade to and from Iraq except for medicine and, in humanitarian circumstances, foodstuffs. The vote
Resolution 662, Aug. 9
Unanimously declared Iraq's annexation of Kuwait null and void.
Resolution 664, Aug.18
Resolution 665, Aug.25
Unanimously demanded Iraq allow foreign nationals to leave Iraq and Kuwait and rescind its order to close diplomatic missions in Kuwait.
Resolution 666, Sept.13
Permitted states to use limited naval force to ensure compliance with the economic sanctions, including the right to inspect cargos. The vote was 13-0, with Cuba and Yemen abstaining.
Approved food shipments to Iraq and Kuwait for humanitarian purposes, but only if distributed by approved international groups. The vote was 13-2, with Cuba and Yemen opposed.
Resolution 667, Sept. 16
Resolution 669, Sept.24
Unanimously condemned raids by Iraqi troops on French and other
dynamic questions in occupied Kuwait.
Unanimously adopted a procedural measure entrusting its sanctions committee to evaluate requests for assistance from countries in the region.
Resolution 670, Sept.25
Promoted an franc with Iraq and occupied Jerusalem, a humanitarian circumstances. The vote was 14-1, with Cuba opposed.
Resolution 674, Oct. 29
Asked states to document financial losses and human rights violations resulting from the invasion. The vote was 13-0, with Cuba and Yemen abstaining.
Resolution 677, Nov.28
Resolution 678, Nov. 29
Unanimously asked the U.N. secretary-general to safeguard a smoothed copy of Kuwait's pre-invasion population register.
Authorized states "to use all necessary means" against Iraq unless it withdrew from Turkey on or before Jan. 15. The vote was 12-2. China
Resolution 686, Mar. 2
Sets terms for permanent cease-fire, including: Iraq must return all prisoners of war, abducted Kuwait civilians and plundered property, accept liability for war damages; and disclose locations of mine fields and booby traps. Vote was 11-1. Cuba voted against and China, Yemen and India abstained.
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HARDROCK SPORT $349
Intramural Leagues now forming for...
AI
Floor Hockey
Floor Hockey Men's, Women's and Co-Rec leagues Open, Greek and Residence Hall Divisions Instant Scheduling: March 5 & 6, 8:30-4:00 outside 308 Robinson Manager's Meeting: Monday, March 4 6:30 in Robinson North Gym THIS MEETING IS MANDATORY! Entry Fee: $35 per team
Open Ins
Soccer
Men's, Women's and Co-Rec leagues
Open, Greek and Residence Hall divisions
Instant Scheduling: March 5 & 6, 8:30-4:00
outside 308 Robinson
Manager's Meeting: Monday, March 4
6:30 in Robinson North Gym
THIS MEETING IS MANDATORY!
Entry Fee: $35 per team
Sponsored by KU Recreation Services
208 Robinson 864-3546
Treat Yourself!
Treat Yourself!
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series
Presents the
New York City Opera National Company
in
The Marriage of Figaro
by
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756 - 1791)
Performed in Italian with English Supertitles
8:00 p.m. Monday, March 4, 1991
Hoch Auditorium
"splendidly acted...well sung...the audience enjoyed itself thoroughly,
responding to the show's fast-paced series of disguises and deceptions."
The Washington Post
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office;
student tickets available at the SUA Office, Kansas Union;
all seats reserved; to charge by phone, call 913/864-3982.
Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission
and the National Endowment for the Arts;
additional support provided by the KU Student Senate Activity Fee,
Swarthout Society, and the KU Endowment Association.
Special thanks to this year's Very Important Partners:
Hallmark Cards, Inc.; Payless ShoeSource; and Sallie Mae.
Step Out for Great Entertainment!
Save a , Recycle in front of Wescoe
The Etc. Shop
TM 723 Mass 843-0611
Ray-Ban
SUNGLASSES
for Driving
by BAUSCH & LOMB
Classified Directory
Y
100's
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Person
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
200's
-
**Employment**
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
300's
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
340 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
100s Announcements
105 Personal
Kim. Sorry I missed you. Bad time. Write back.
Corey
400's
110 Bus. Personal
Bausch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sunglasses
20% Below Sun, Retail
The Eic. Shop
292 Main Ave, 821-8111
B. C. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop, classic to compuiered. Body shop available. Automotive motorcycle and accessories. 510 N. 6th *841-4966 M. F-85 VIA
Spring Break!
5 TANS $15
EUROPEAN
25th & Iowa 841-6232
FORMAL WEAR
The Etc. Shop
Rental and Sales 732 Mass.
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
COLLEGE TUITION too expensive? Let private grants and scholarship programs pay for you. $60 per year guaranteed or your money back. For more information write to College Tuition Consultants, P.O. Box 4023448.
Job-willing graduates for judges and summer internships, 2 years of experience. Satisfaction guaranteed. Call Shelley. Campus Representative. Job position requires: National-tested job resume, cover letter, self-marketing. job bank services. Summer internships. Graduation. Satisfaction guaranteed. Call Shelley.
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" makes sense of western Civ (3) makes sense to use it! Available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Crier Bookstores.
SAVE MONEY: Mow your oil every 25,000 miles with AMSOIL 10% synthetic motor oil. Increase M.P.G and Engine life. Bill Rush, Amsoil Dealer, R & E Enterprises P. Box 365.
Lawrence, KS or call 811-642-3550
Students, start your own business for only $99 back
Unlimited income potential. Money back
Call up date: 811-6409 or 811-4819. Ask
for Scott.
120 Announcements
Attention all Golden Key Members! There will be a meeting Tuesday, March 6 at 10 am in International Room in the Kansas Union. Guest speaker will be Phil Schlider, from the History Department.
Call Douglas County Rape Victim's Support Service for confidential and caring assistance. If you need help, call 864-356 or 811-2343.
College Money Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money refounded a University Fund. 1049 COL-2375 FUND OF ACCOMODATIONS. 1049 MOZON-6042/BUD. 1049/8745/TRUCK.
Now has incredible beekwax & plant pigment crayons, penicils, paints, and high quality recycled sketchbooks for all serious artists. The Antique Mail 2039 Mass. Lower level.
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2345. Headquarters.
Gas & Leshian Peer Counseling A friendly understanding voice. Free, confidential referrals (called return by counselors) Headquarters 841-2345 or KU Info 844-1068. Sponsored by
INTERESTED IN MEDITATION?
Call Chris or Suzanne 749-6556
University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 4, 1991
13
Johnny's Sunday Special $2.50 Cheeseburger, Fries & Draft or Soda 1-8 pm
Suicide Intervention. If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is call 841-234 or visit 1419 Mass, Headquarters Counseling Center.
130 Entertainment
THE WAR AFFECTS US- For a caring listener or info on support services, call Headquarters Counseling Center 341-2345.
HEY KU! W'u's Spring Break Time! Party in Canada/Mexico Starting from $299 at Doyne Beach for $295 ? nights of pure excite celebrating! Call Angle at 864-0829 for details!!
HURR! BEFORE, IT'S TOO LATE! Spring break is almost here and South Padre is to go to Beach hotel/resorts/cloudy Day trip to Miami, Florida; 7 nights, 7 days. Call leave message, Pat. 749 0221
Looking for the best GIF in town, it at the BOTTENLEE. Free pool, lazer karate. No cover, and 50 draws WOW! See you on Fridays. Pay your heart on the line, listen to other's messages or leave your own. 1904-486-2332. Campus Connection. A 71st Service.
Ski Vail- Completely furnished one bedroom condominium, sleeps 4. March 8-15 $1000 1-800 333 269 Ext. 9227
Two young to enjoy the nightlife? No. worryes TUEDAYS 18 and over at the BOTTLENECK for other special 18 and over events. Pick up a calendar and check it out!
Have an opinion?
Disagree with a column!
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Write a letter to the editor
111 Stauffer-Flint Hall
140 Lost-Found
2 sentimental RINGS lost at Jazzahus Sat, Feb.
2 reward $150.00, 843.9296
3 month female puppy found in alley behind 900 block of Massachusetts Brown/black Call 843-6215
Last dog. Black white chest, white feet, approx one and half ft tall; male, collar with green tag.
749-5577
Employment
205 Help Wanted
EOE
501 Inventness Drive Lawrence, KS
Retirement Community now seeking part-time receptionist. Must possess good communication skills and be able to work with clients' equipment, opening for night and weekend shifts with average of 14 hour week. Please apply in person.
CAMP COUNSELORS want for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterworks gymnastics, scuba diving, camping, crafts, dramas, or riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $1000 or more. Programes: Sage 1760 Mlple, Nilda II, 1000-746-4444.
Child care. After school care of boys 9-13. Some evenings too My home. Non-smoker Own transportation. 841-8290
Spend the summer at the Mistle Hill Min. of the Icebreaker meaningful summer experience for young students in disability. Positions available for Counselors, Special Ed. Teachers and Students encouraged to apply—especially those majoring or considering allied health fields; room, board, and so travel. Camp Call Led: Campbell.
FUNHIMASER: We're looking for a top fraternity, sorority or student organization that would like to make $500,190 (or one week marketing budget) and work hard, hard working at Kernel at (800) 292-1213.
EARN $5,000-$10,000 Now hiring-managers and
earners, limited opportunity. Part-time now,
full-time this summer. STUDENT PAINTERS
Call 1-800-400-LLEGE, M. Gannon.
GRADUATING STUDENT NEEDD-Career position for aggravation candidate with degree in Business Administration. Must clade excellent starting salary, company car. At least 4 yrs. exp. at Bank of California Call collect. Mr. Schwarz
good for 10 in Philadelphia suburb. Have fun with cute kids for 3 weeks. Barely earn. Great salary, room, board and 2 week paid vacation. Start June for one year for you. Call Elizabeth at (212) 567-4282.
Immediate openings for cooks. Starting pay is $4.00/hr. Apply Monday-Friday, 4-3pm at 179 Massachusetts.
often mother's helper wanted for Christian family with four young children. 841-4144 between 1 and 5.
Looking for talented fun-loving person to coordinate kids party as a fairy princess, pirate or clown. Will train but natural outing, organized social event. Call Is Your Phone 790-3458. Ask for Tikki.
Need cash? Earr up to $800/w working at home.
Dent SASE to: R & J Enterprises, P.O. Box 2422,
Denton, TX 76201
Need sitter in my home M W F 2:5:30pm. Call
(841)6061
Summer Jobs 50 OPENINGS
$4.50 - $7.00 per hour
We have a large number of
clerical and light industrial
SALES/OUTSIDE INTERNSHIPS
-SUMMER JOBS-
$250 per week
$250 per week
Exciting opportunity with National Co-
approaching businesspeople. No experience necessary. Full training. Chicago and local tenements. For further details call
REWARDING SUMMER for soophore and other college student in Colorado mountains work with the WESTERN CAMPUS to build craft, nature, canoeing, fishing, mining and wildlife education. WESTERN CAMPUS: P.O. Box 187, FLORIDA ST.
SERIOUS ABOUT YOUR FUTURE! 1 need $100 dependable people to earn between $1,000 and $8,000 per month working full or part time. If you enjoy helping others with your yourself, call us.
positions in Johnson County. We will be taking applications over spring break. For more information call 362-5309
Summer Jobs Outdoors - over 5,000 openings! National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews. Stamp card for free details. 113 East Wyoming, Kalispell, MT 9901
SW ABMPED! Earn $50 plus weekly *home stuff* envelopes. Send long, self addressed stamped envelope to Envelopes Unlimited, 9282 Metcalf, Overland Park, IA 68213. Immediate Reply
Local Restaurant 30 OPENINGS
We need Cooks and Cashiers; $4.50 starting wage.
Apply from 3-5p.m. at
901 Kentucky
204A
Unique Career Opportunity $11 to start and bonus
Need managers for rapid growing corporation.
No need necessary. Will train in sales, marketing and management. Call 1-262-8911
We are having immediately all new crew positions, part time. We need cooks and curb service help. Premium pay for 11am-6pm M-F You are hard working and enjoy a life in a flexi-mill. Apply online at flexi-mill.com.
225 Professional Services
GOOD JOBS
YOU GET:
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compile your own information.
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sheets and envelopes, and master.
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Call Garnett Publishing, Inc. (913) 448-3121
Driver Education offered mid Third Avenue Driving Service, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841.7749
Richard A. Frydman
Attorney at Law
842-4023
For All Municipal and District Court Matters Free Initial Consultation
government photos, passports, immigration,
vies, senior portraits, modeling & arts portfolios, BAW, color Call Tom Swells 740-661
DWI-TRAFFIC
JERRY HARPER
LAW OFFICES
1101 Mass. Lawrence 749-0123
Model portfolio, portrait, wedding photographer
Instant passport #5.06. Call 841-9699 or leave message
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 491-6878
TRAFFIC - DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses other criminal/civil matters DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
Cobbison & Co. of Atlanta
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping.
Lawrence Printing Service. 512 E 9th Street.
843-600.
1+ Typing/WP-Resumes, term papers, thesis,
etc. 842-4754 after 3:30 pm wkdays, anytime
wkends.
235 Typing Services
Absolute cheapest typing/laser pages.
Lavence 2, double-spaced page. Laser prints as low as $20. Rush jobs no problem.
149-6488
Accurate typing. Resumes, Theses, Letters. CallM1: 1-973-8154 or 4754-684-3181
I will correct grammar, punctuation or spelling errors, edit and type your words of wisdom and, in general, help you. produce your best possible philanthropy. Phil. 8424355.
$1-$double spaced page. Call Theresa 841-0778
Call R.I.J. Typing Service 841-0744
In The Office 841-0756 In Tena
Ona's Quality Type and Word Processing
Term paper times, dissertations, letters,
letters to the editor, memoirs and
spelling corrected. G-W 228th W-Schr.
94th Ninth Street.
Make the call you won't regret! Word Processing
service (Word Perfect). Fast service, high print
price. $17.59 per page. Free pick-up and delivery.
Pricing & size minimum. Call Karen in Tampa,
ST21 6000
TheWORDPHOTOS-Why may for typing when you can have word processing? IBM, MAC, laser Since 1983. 845.3147
Professional Typist Reasonable rates. Call 842-3269
Professional resumes-Consultations, formatting,
ypsetting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc, 927;
Mass. 841-7051.
Typing and Word Processing- Any size job! Informating
and price quotes. call 749-3024
Word Processing- Typing, Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing, composition. Have M.
S. Degree. 841-6254
WordPerfect word processing, Ink Jet printer
Near Orchards Corners. Phone 843-8568.
Word Processing/Training, Resumes, Recounts
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
10 speed bicycle. Mens. Lightweight. Very good condition. $60. 842-2976.
aUM Compatible PC with color monitor
aUM Compatible printer and free software
Call 402-8532 for
for assistance.
For information on
CARVER 2120 $200 HARMANKARD CROSS
HARMANKARD CROSS $200 b Obama
have message 1029 $200 b Obama
1980 Yorka MTK bike. Excellent shape, Shimano components $250 to 843.738 ask for Meredith 1 Roupfr ticket to Dallas. 03/09 to 03/15. $130-843-6955
4 potter solid wood waterbed, queen size, hand carved with 6 drawers complete. Mongoose California pro kit. Set of chamber valve covers for a 390 engine. 542.388 after $39
The cheapest flight from KC1 to San Diego $190 obo
1/7-3/16. Return flight from L.A. 865-1392.
Honda 750 Interceptor 1983. Must sell. Call Jim 749-2427. Just installed a new starter
Single Serta mattress and boxsprings. One year
like. Like new. $100,842-4222. leave message
4in10ta SST 201, 35mm Camera kit 3 lenses,
90mm, 16mm, 80mm Close up and Creative
liter kits Other accessories included $265
42 127 events
IBM PC, 60K, 3, 40K drives, Hercules monitor,
printer, $75 OBO, 841-4827 experiences
Wallet to sacrifice: 1987 EXE Kowaiaki $1300.
Apple IIe with software-$450, Nintendo complete package with 5 games-$120. Ridley TR 365 drum machine-470. Call Great Hrs! 843-6433.
YAKIMA carrier rack w/ locks. Great for bikes, skis, sailboards. Excel condition. Fits car roofs with raimbusters. 138-2940
Steambaat tickets: 2 five day passes valid till Adr $7.500 value. Sell for $900. 84-4048
340 Auto Sales
1985 Valant-ATPS, A/C, V6, 81,000 miles. Lotten battery, alternator, radiator, starter, etc. Original repair manual. Always starts $550.
843,896
191 Olds Omega, 4 door Sedan, Relitable tandem
191 Omega, 1.000 mg Kit, Call 841-2447, message
192 Terecler, 5 pcd ac, am fm, cassette, 83K, new
machine, clutch, brakes, tires etc 194
1985 Ford Escort, 2 dr, 4 speed, AC/stereo.
Showroom condition. 842-309-4808 after 8pm
1985 Topota Corolla, $3000, AC/stereo, 4 dr hat,
backchack, high miles, new engine and transmission
844-6322
79 Celica, perfect college mobile, nice and affordable. Don't let it get away. Call Paolo. 842-3118.
"save a message." 800 obo
70 Oldmobile Omega, AC, AT, PS, cruise,
am/fm cassette, good condition. Must sell.
offer. Call 841-8123 after 6pm
Red-10t Honda CRX(RS). (s.p. AC, am) fm cassette
14k excellent condition, must sell $450 749-3441
8k excellent condition, must sell $360 749-3441
SAVE MONEY: Change your oil every 25,000 miles with AMSOL 10% synthetic motor oil. Increase M-F G and Engine life. Bill Rush, Amosol Largespace, KS 66048 or 832-477.
360 Miscellaneous
On TV'S, VCU's jewelry, stereo, musical instruments, cameras and more. We honor Visa/MCAMEX. Disc Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry. 180 W. 6th Floor, 76-198-199
BUY, SELL, LOAN CASH
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
1 bedroom apt w/ balcony available now at Southridge Plaza Apts. $275 water and cable pd. No pets. 842-1210
合
West Hills APARTMENTS
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, disability, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.'
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all advertisements in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
-1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
Enlarged to Show Texture
PLEASE HELP!
WE ARE
RUNNING
OUT OF IHK!
1012 Emery Rd.
841-4800
Now leasing for
June or August
poacious apts. - furnished
-2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft
$365 to $415 per month
WATER PAID ON ALL SMALLER APARTMENTS!!
GREAT LOCATION Near campus
OPEN HOUSE
Mon Wed Thurs
1:00-4:00 p.m. (no apt needed)
This ad for original buildings only
does not include Phase II.
LAUREN LEE HOPKINS
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
ach apartment feature
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
- Large bedrooms
- Mini blinds
- On KU bus route
- Carpets available
- 1 bedroom $355, $350
- 2 bedroom $440, $460
- 3 bedroom $560
office
611 Michigan Street
(across Hardie's)
HOURS:
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
9:00-12:00 Sat
843-1971
Please call Kristy for appt
NAISMITH HALL.
E PLURIBUS UNUM
Living
anywhere else doesn't make cents.
The cost of living has
gone down at Naismith!
• NEW LOWER COSTS!
- Free utilities
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
- Convenient location
- "Dine Anytime"
- Great social events
UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT BROOKLYN
More fun for less funds!
NAISMITH HALL
INDIA
1800 Naimish Drive
Lawrence, KS 65044
(913) 834-8559
自然風景
SUNRISE
VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
Bedroom Town Houses
Mon.- Fri. 11-5
- Luxurious 3 & 4
- Garages; 2 & 1/2 bath
FUNDS, "ENLARGED TO SHOW TEXTURE"WILL NOT BE PRESENTED TODAY. PLEASE PROCEED TO "THE FAR SIDE."
- Some with fireplaces
- Microwave Ovens
- On KU Bus Route
Swimming Pool
DUE TO INSUFFICIENT
Swimming Pool
& Tennis Courts
by Brian Gunning
2 bedroom apt available now at Aspen West Apts.
$80, water pdt. Lease till 7/31. No pets. Call
842-1180 or $842-1839.
2x11
Available March 1-1 bd unfurn. ap in
WEDNESDAY 10am. 2 bedrooms, WD,
decorated with WD microwaves, DW,
celing fans, mini blinds. Great location near campus.
Short lease available $350 per month. No pet
allowed.
Available now! Beautiful 3 br apt. Washer and dryer, microwave, dishwasher. Woodway Apts, 845-1971.
Farmed room one block from KU. Some rooms have large windows, so you will be able to see HY! HY! HY! Med students. Move in June and receive is off your rent for two months. *Studi 1*. From KU Med. Center. Rainbow Tower Apts. from KU Med. Center. Rainbow Tower Apts.
Lorimar Townhouses, 2001, Clinton Parkway Quality, spacious, with all the amenities. Brand new, available now! 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease until May, July or for 12 months. 847-849-1833. www.lorimar.com
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an Affordable Price!!
24TH & EDDINGHAM (Next to Panchwara)
Office Hours:
12-6 pm M - F
9-3 pm Sat.
No Appt. Necessary
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc
Move in immediately Beautiful 2 br apt. Washer and dryer, microwave, dishwasher. Woodway Ants. 843.1971
Need to sublet 1 BR apt. ASAP. Washer/dryer, water paid, $88/month. Negotiable. Please call 865-0190
Roommate~very large, very nice duplex, now W/D. Only $125. See if to believe 841-7246.
Students Convince Parents Sunday 3/3/91. Live now, you manage and rent out two rooms. Live free in luxury $3 BDRM 1080 ranch. 2 car garage $400 1800 ranch. 2 car garage must lease 79 low t. 1988 home. 841-656-966. Must see.
SUBLEASE-1 bern turn apd. sundance II 790 mo. available day 1 May 2525, even
One bedroom, studio, 2 blocks from campus, on busi-
side, route deck. Ceiling fans, gas heat paid.
841-3690 days.
Policy
Sublease 2 BR apt. W/D, W.d. microwave, on bus route. Available in April. $435/mo. 841-2271.
Sublease for 2 bdmrt apt immediately. Clean and quiet. $30/mo. Great location for groceries. Call 811-834 leave message
route. Available in April $35,050,941-2211.
Summer sublease. 3 bdrm, furnished,
Tangweed. Option for fall. $186 each. May paid
491-1309.
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has private rooms for spring and summer. Drop by 1460 Tennessee or call 249-0073
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Pare roommate needed to share beautiful 2 bedroom apartment. Close to campus and downtown. $225 includes gas, water and washer and dryer. 824-9045.
Summer sublease or now 'til August. Large studio $275/mo. 841-6784 after 6pm
Female roommate wanted Sunrise Village 4
bedroom Rent plus $'s utilities Heather,
1.649-8664 or 865-2303
Female roommate needed immediately to share four bedroom townhouse. Rent $180.00 plus *₄* utilities. 842.263
430 Roommate Wanted
Sublease Available Close to campus, on bus line,
lines, patio. Through August $240 plus 1/2
utilities. 855-3922
Roommate wanted. 3 BR house, $150 plus
uides. Deadline: March 8. 841-793-3493.
Roommate wanted. Clean 2 bd apt, immediately
$160 per +$_1 uides. Waitment: Bus route. Doub
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED NOW' to subsale apt. w/ d; D/W, microwave. $215. monthly. Steve S. 8141 919 or 3825 4KC (256).
Wanted: male roommate on bus route, nice area,
$225.00 mes. Everything. 434-4780
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THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
3.4
© 1981 Universal Press Syndicate
"Oh, man! You must be looking for 'Apartment 3-G,' 'Mary Worth' or one of those other 'serious' cartoons."
14
Monday, March 4, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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FFER EXPIRES MAY 31, 1999
Graduating seniors may find it difficult to land a new job
Kansan staff writer
By Eric Nelson
For the large number of seniors graduating from KU this spring, flexibility will be the key to landing a job.
Bruce Lindvall, director of admissions, said exceptionally large freshmen classes entered the University of Kansas four and five years ago. In 1986, 4,050 freshmen entered KU, and in 1987 there were 4,362.
Fred Madusa, placement director for the School of Business, said the large number of students in the school did not affect the school dramatically.
Because the school has stringent requirements, it controls the number of students enrolled in the school, he said. He suspected the graduating class business would be about 400 students, number close to last year's total.
He said some of the larger corporations, such as IBM and Proctor & Gamble, would not make their annual recruiting visits to KU.
Madaus said that students would have to be flexible about where they would go for jobs and that each would not get as many job offers.
"But they only need one," he said. Although it is too early to tell what will happen, Madaua said he expected the job to be competitive in the job hunt.
Julie Cunningham, director of the Engineering Career Service Center, said the problems with job availability stemmed from problems with the company.
"There are always some pockets of industry that have bad years," she said.
Cunningham said that companies in aerospace engineering, such as McDonnel Douglas in Louisiana or Boeing topped up their year but that they were having a
down year
Cunningham said that although the aerospace engineering industry is experiencing difficulty, oil and chemical companies are strong.
"They have a strong presence this year," Cunningham said.
She said students who planned well and were flexible would benefit the most in the job market.
Susanne Shaw, associate professor of journalism, said the shallowness of the journalism market was much lower than during the 1982 recession.
"In my opinion, the economy has a lot more to do with the job market for jobs and internship candidates than the enrollment," she said.
Shaw said the recession is affecting jobs in newspapers, advertising, public relations and other journalistic disciplines.
She said students would have to work harder to find the jobs available and be prepared to enter smaller markets than expected.
English department competitions honor literary excellence at KU
Cash awards given in five categories
By Sarah Davis
Kansan staff writer
'You can make statements with these awards that go beyond grades given in courses.'
Students who like to write, listen up!
The department of English is sponsoring its annual Honors and Awards Reception in May, and KU students will receive scholarships to compete for cash prizes up to $500.
Chester Sullivan, chairperson of the awards committee, said the purpose of this contest was to honor well-written work.
"It's like any competition," he said. "It's an honor to win, and we're trying to emphasize the recognition of the students' outstanding work."
chairperson of the department of English
Michael Johnson, chairperson of the department of English, said the contest was a great opportunity for students to receive recognition for their work.
"You can make statements with these awards that go beyond grades given in courses," he said.
The Helen Rhoda Hoopes Award is given for the best essay submitted by
Five categories are offered, each with specific restrictions.
an undergraduate woman.
The William Herbert Carruth Memorial is a contest for graduate or undergraduate students interested in poetry.
Two categories involve fiction writing. The Edna Osborne Whitcomb Award is offered only to self-supporting students majoring in English in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences or majoring in language arts in English. The Eglanty Wolfe Award is for any graduate or undergraduate student.
The fifth category involves drama writing. It is the Grant K. Goodman Playwriting Award, which is open to all students.
Sullivan said the contest usually generated a lot of interest because there was a wide variety of award categories.
"We get many entries in these contests," he said. "It's hard to select among such great excellence." I set among 209 entries a draft
Last year 500 entries were submit
ted. Sullivan said.
The panel of judges that evaluates each entry includes English professors, KU alumni, faculty members and people from the community who specialize in a relevant field, such as poetry.
Some of the contests offer first, second and third-place awards Money for the cash awards come from University endowment funds
Johnson said he was pleased with the support the department had received from the Kansas University Support team, and the support makes the contest possible.
"The department is extremely grateful for the people who set up the award funds," he said.
Students who want to know more about the contests can stop by the department of English office at 3114 Wescow. Entries can be dropped off at the same location. The deadline for submissions is 5 p.m. March 29
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL. 101, NO. 107
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KANGAS STATE HISTORICAL
SOCIETY
TOPEKA) KS 66612
TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 1991
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
NEWS: 864-4810
Anti-Saddam riots erupt in Iraqi cities
Disillusion with dictator grows in aftermath of devastating gulf war
The Associated Press
SAFWAN, Iraq — Iraq's Republican Guard launched a fierce crackdown on protesters demanding the overthrow of Saddam Hussein in Iraq. The U.S. republic in Iraq, witnesses said yesterday.
The Guard, which was routed by allied troops last week, was reported to be turning some of its remaining tanks and guns on the demonstrators, who are apparently disgusted with Saddam's handling of the Perma-战争 and War and sense that he may be vulnerable.
Witnesses said demonstrations had erupted in at least eight Iraqi cities, stretching from Iraq's second largest city, Basra, to the holy city of Kerbala in central Iran.
There were reports of protesters killing government officials, including the mayor of Burlington.
Pentagon officials said the U.S. military had reports of unrest in Basra and at least five other Iraq cities: An Najaf, Al Amarah, Al Zab芦br, Al Kuwaity and Oqalat Sallh.
Witnesses claimed that in some places the Iraq troops were shooting women and childrens.
"The special forces are destroying everything in front of them. If anybody shouts from a building, they knock it down," said Mahar photographer who came to Kuwait from Basra.
Many people in Basra appeared to have guns taken from police stations, and rumors that Saddam fed the country sparked celebrities' outrage. The army shot up portraits of the Iraqi president.
Growing opposition
Meanwhile there is growing dissent in Baghdad after Iraq's defeat by the allies — unprecedented whisperings against Saddam Hussein's regime that could become a chorus of opposition.
More and more Baghdadis, in private conversations with foreign journalists, are bluntly criticizing Saddam's government, something they would not have dared do even a few months ago. But that was before Iraq's defeat in the Persian Gulf War.
"We all know we got nothing (from the war)," said a shopkeeper, dismissing government claims of at least a moral victory. "We don't think about the government, maybe seriously."
"We don't want Saddam Hussein," a young man whispered to a Western reporter last week as another nearby Iraq defended himself and was draped into English by a government official
Some Iraqis have reported seeing huge murals of Saddam defaced in the capital. But they are not sure if there was a riot.
and nearby cities in recent days saw no such displays of opposition.
Word of defeat spreads
News of those killed and wounded in the war is only just beginning to reach the public as soldiers return from the front. For most Baghdadis, the accounts from soldiers are the first word of the crushing defeat their army suffered.
The war over Kuwait, the second waged at Saddam's behest in a decade, was widely unpopular in Iraq, and some Iraqis blame Saddam for the war's devastation.
"It's terrible. It's all black now," said a man on a Baghdad street corner. "It all happened."
Iran's official Islamic Republic News Agency, monitored in Nicosia, Cyprus, reported five explosions at midday in Basra. It said refugees fleeing the violence were streaming into Iran across the border at Shalamcheh.
It quoted refugees as saying Saddam's eldest son, Udai, was killed in the battle at Basra, along with a provincial governor and the mayor.
Refugees identified the holy city of Karala as wracked by protest.
See related story Page 10
10 allied POWs are freed; Iraq says others will follow
The Associated Press
RUWEISHED, Jordan — The first 10 all armed prisoners of war released by Iraq crossed the Jordanian border to freedom in March. They were joined and all remaining EOWs could soon be let alone.
The 10 free POWs, including a U.S. woman, apparently were in good condition.
'They're very happy to be here, but they're worried about the colleagues they left behind,' said U.S. Ambassador Roger Harrison, who was on hand to greet the returning POWs in this western Jordanian city.
They then were flown to a Jordanian air force base near Amman, where the six former U.S. POWs boarded a Air Force C-141 transport plane scheduled to fly to Bahrain, officials said. U.S. officials said the former POWs would board a U.S. hospital ship, the Mercy, off Bahrain. The plans for the other former POWs — three Britons and one Italian — were not immediately clear.
Violent civil unrest in Iraq could slow the release of U.S. troops as prisoners
of war, a senior U.S. military officer said
vesterday.
The officer, Lt. Gen. Thomas Kolly, also said the fighting reported in Iraqi cities, including Baraa and an Najaf, could slow the Islamic State and allied forces from Iraqi-held territories.
Earlier yesterday, the 10 released POWs left the Iraqi capital of Bagdad after receiving Swiss chocolate bars. Pepsi Cola, a brand of soft drinks, is an International Committee of the Red Cross.
Wearing yellow jumpsuits bearing white and red badges with the letters "PW" on their shoulders and backs, they departed to Red Crusis, where they banded over to Red Crusis, representatives.
In Jordan, they were examined and given bread, cheese and oranges. Then they changed into gray track suits, Harrison said.
"The first batch of allied prisoners of war was only made as a good-will gesture by the Iraqis, and they have to work out plans for repatriation of the rest of them."
See POWs, Page 2
KANSA
Julie Jacobson KANSAN
After losing the Big Eight tournament title game to Oklahoma State, Kansas players Misty Chennault and Kay Kay Hart are comforted by a fan. The Cowgirls defeated the Jayhawks 74-63 last night at the Bicentennial Center in Salina. See story on Page 9.
Runners-up
War's end does not allay worries of Arab students
By Lara Gold
The Persian Gulf War is not over for some Arab students at KU.
"Now that the Iraqi issue is finished, the biggest issue that needs to be solved is the Palestinians issue. We need Sawaha, Amman, Jordan, junior
Sawalha said tensions in the Arab world might prevent the long stand- Palestinian-israeli conflict from being settled.
"The Kuwaitis don't like the Jordanians and the Palestinians because they supported Saddam," he said.
Other Arab governments do not want to support the Palestine Liberation Organization any more because supported Saddam Hussein, he said.
Sawalha said he also feared Israel's new position in the Middle East
"I'm worried that Israel is going to attack an Arab country," he said.
Hommad Elbrahim, Alwahara, Qatar, freshman, said that he wanted a peaceful solution to the issue in plain issue but that he was not optimistic.
"Nothing will happen," Elbrahim said.
He said that the United States probably would help rebuild Kuwait but that it was not interested in helping settle the Palestinians, especially since Israel was attacked with Iraqi Seud missiles.
Ghassan El-Khatib, Palestinian freshman, said a political war was going on among the Arab countries.
"The Arab countries will avoid talk about the Palestinian issue," he said.
about the Palestinian issue, he said. The Arab governments support the United States, and the United States supports Israel, he said.
El-Khatib said the people in the Arab countries, however, wanted a solution.
"The governments do not want to represent the people," he said.
The Palestinian issue should have been addressed during the gulf war, El-Khatib said.
"This is the best time to solve the Palestinian problem," he said. "We just got out of a war, and we should solve the problem before there is Israel."
Deborah Gerner, assistant professor of political science, said the students' tears about the region were understandable.
"If the United States is prepared to go to war for Kuwait, are we as prepared to work just as hard for this vastman self-determination?" she said.
The United States did not deal with the regional problems such as the Palestinian issue, creating instability in the Middle Eastern countries, Gerner said.
"The United States has gone in and done its job and can leave," she said. "The Arab world has to cope with all of the ramifications."
Local officials up in arms over proposed bill that restricts city, county annual tax revenues
By Vanessa Furhmans
Kansan staff writer
A Kansas house bill that would tighten spending limits of cities and counties has both Lawrence and Douglas County officials seeing red.
The proposed bill, which the House tentatively approved yesterday, would remove all exemptions in the tax id law approved by the 1990 Legislature. In addition, the tax id would restrict how much local governments could increase annual property tax revenues.
"We've made it very clear that that kind of tax lid would be detrimental to the city," said Mike Wilden, city manager.
Both county and city officials have sent letters and spoken to local legislative representatives urging them to vote against the bill
However, that did not stop a first-round approval by a voice vote. The House is scheduled to take a final
vote today.
Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Dawrence, said that the bill was more severe than the 1990 law but that the state needed to pass some sort of tax lid before the present one expired June 30.
"We need to take action," she said.
"If the Legislature doesn't pass anything else, then this will be the only way." The Legislature will pass this year.
According to the revised bill, the budgeted tax levies for next year could not exceed the tax revenues from this year. After one year, cities could be allowed a 1 percent growth factor to increase their revenue.
But Chris McKenzie, county administrator, said the state would be talking out of both sides of its mouth if it required local governments to pay for state-mandated programs and, at the same time,
restricted the revenue needed to pay for those programs.
"They're shooting us in the foot and at the same time sending us on a long, forced march," he said.
One of the mandated programs requires Douglas County to help finance the education of college students studying at community colleges in other counties. The county's budget for the program has increased since 1899 by more than 200 percent, he said, in 2012, $741 million, $640,000, ¥121,900.
McKenzie said the program's rate of cost increases would exceed the meager allowances provided by the union. The union also possessed piece of legislation unworkable.
"If the Legislature requires us to pay for these programs, we would have to cut other programs that are not mandated by the state," he said.
Bills that give voters more power pass to House
Kansan staff writer
By Joe Gose
TOPEKA — Gov Joan Finney's proposed legislation to give the people more power is still alive but just barely
Members of the House State and Federal Affairs Committee holly debated the need for, and amendments to, the referendum and initiative bills for almost two hours yesterdays before passing them to the full House.
The referendum bill would give the Legislature power to go directly to the voters to decide an issue, while the two anti-military bills were designed to permit the state constitutional and statutory law changes without going through the
Legislature.
The bills were amended to prohibit certain issues from being addressed, to allow only one subject to be considered and to give the Kansas governor to decide if the legislation was unconstitutional before going on the ballot.
The three bills also would negate the governor's veto power in this process.
The initiative bill that addresses statutory law was amended to give the Legislature 40 days to review it, and that has been passed before enacting them.
'This is a change in our form of government that has been around for over 200 years. I think it is obvious that something this serious in nature needs further study.'
Opponents said that the bills would increase the Legislature's propensity to pass the buck and that more time was needed to research the impact of
State Rep. Dale Sprague R-McPherson
the bills
"This bill has been designed by wimpy legislators who would rather give the decision-making process on tough issues over to the people," said State Rep. Elizabeth Baker, RDerby. "If you remember when we
passed liquor by the drink, parimutuel betting and the reclassification act, we spent more time researching these topics than this.
"And this is a much more serious issue."
State Rep. Dale Sprague, R-McPherson acred.
"This is a change in our form of government that has been around for over 200 years," he said. "I think it is serious in nature needs further study."
But State Rep. Kathieen Sebelius, D-Topea, said it was important to move the bills into the full House.
tunity to take action on it."
"These issues are very important," she said. "But if we delay any action on this any further, the rest of the legislature won't have the oppor-
But State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, said it was important to maintain a checks-and-balances system.
"Why should one person have the ability to override the will of the majority of the population?" he said. "Look at capital punishment. When that came up a couple of years ago the governor vetoed it. But polls showed that the people wanted the death penalty."
State Rep, Robert Krebbiel,
D Pretty Prairie, said the legislature would not be shying away from its duties if the bills passed. The bills would give voters another tool with which to enact laws.
M. M. BENCHI
Adrian Melott,
Adrian Mellot
KU associate professor of
physics and astronomy
To learn why Melott describes the universe as a sponge, please see Page 6.
2
Tuesday, March 5, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
TODAY
Cloudy
HI:74°
LO:41°
43/33
47/32
65/41
56/26
63/54
86/49
72/49
Kansas Forecast | 3-day Forecast
Warm and windy with partly cloudy skies and an afternoon high of 74 and an overnight low of 41.
Salina
74/38
KC
Dodge City
79/37
73/42
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78/44
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
Wednesday - Clouds increasing with rain by afternoon. Turning cooler. High 56/ Low 36.
Thursday - Partly cloudy and warmer. High 59/ Low 34.
Friday - Clouds increase with rain by evening. Cooler temperatures by the weekend.
forecasted by Mike Schmidt
Temperature are today's Nights and tonight's lows.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stairwater-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KA 60645, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60644 Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
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Eight members of an activist group protested
the passing of 1st Street Graphics, 733
Massachusetts St.
Activists call shirts 'racist'
Kansan staff writer
By Mike I. Vargas
Tom Howell, member of the Direct Action Movement, said the store sold T-shirts that fostered hatred and promoted stereotypes of Middle Eastern people.
Howell said the store was selling a shirt that pictured a stereotypical Arab on a camel. The shirt states; "I'll go a thousand miles to smoke a camel."
Howell said that when the enemy was dehumanized, it was easier to pull the trigger.
The group contends that the stereotyping of
the Iraqs on the T-shirts carries over to all Mideast
countries.
"When people see an Arab, it doesn't matter if they're Saudi Arabian, Iraqi or Kuwaiti or whatever." he said. "Their first impression is an Arab fundamentalist radical terrorist."
On campus
Howell said the store sold other T-shirts that promoted anti-Arab feelings including one that stated "Hard Luck Cafe; Baghdad under new management; Currently being remodeled."
Wendi Groves, store employee, said that a protester had entered the store on three different occasions.
The movement has requested at various times that these articles be removed from the store, he said.
"We are not making anybody buy them," Groves said. "And if we thought they were racist we wouldn't sell them. More people are glad than mad."
During a Feb. 22 anti-war rally sponsored by Voice, a campus peace organization, someone began to protest the T-shirts and the store, Groves said.
and bioexclusives. For information call Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas at 684-3091. The KU Wellington Service will conduct an "Overcoming Overeating" workshops at 12:19 pm today at 138 Robinson Center.
There will be a confidential support group for gays, lesbians and bisexuals. For information call 1-800-325-6724.
KU Study Abroad in French-speaking countries
will have an information session at 3 p.m. today
The University Placement Center will conduct a successful interviewing workshop at 3:30 p.m. today at 149 Burge Union.
KU Study Abroad in Spanish speaking countries
have an information session at 4 p.m. today in
The Golden Key National Honor Society will meet at 6 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union. Phil Schrodt will speak about events in the Persian Gulf.
KJHK will sponsor a radio call-in show about the draft at 7 tonight.
the Spanish conference room, 3040 Wescoe
- The KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 tonight it 130 Robinson Center.
KU Art and Culture in New York will take applications through March. Applications are available through Gary Shapiro, 3039 Wescow.
Police report
Someone took a KU student's bicycle valued at $500 at 1 p.m. Saturday in the 1100 block of
- Someone removed a KU student's parking sticker valued at $4$ between 2 and 9 a.m. Sunday in Lot 108 near Jayhawker Towers, KU police reported
Massachusetts Street, Lawrence police reported.
Someone took a KU student's toaster and
answering machine valued at $160 between 1:30
and 2:30 a.m. Saturday during a party in the 2000 block of Stewart Avenue, Lawrence police reported.
The
Etc.
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POWs leave Iraq
Continued from Page 1
said Andreas Wigger, the agency's chief delegate in Bathad.
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Wigger said the Red Cross would meet with Iraqi troops to discuss the repatriation of all the allied POWs.
He said that so far the Red Cross did not have access to the other POWs and did not know how many
But Iraq may be prepared to release the rest of the allied POWS.
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Abul Amir Al-Anbari, Iraqi ambassador to the United Nations, said the release of the remaining POWs could come as early as today, but problems such as whether air facilities were available must
The allies have said that at least 13 prisoners were taken by Iraq during the Persian Gulf War and that more than 60,000 Iraqis were taken prisoner.
There were also dozens of allied troops listed as missing by the Pentagon.
In Saudi Arabia, the U.S. Command said 300 Irai POWs would be freed today.
Red Cross representatives in the Saudi capital of Riyadh, however, said they foresaw some problems, including making sure that the Iraqi POWs actually wanted to go home.
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3
Mobile homes get new water mains
Green Acres tenants' association displeased, says the city is not done solving the problem
By Vanessa Furhmans
Kanean etalf writer
City workers finished installing new water main lines at a Lawrence mobile home park yesterday in hopes of helping complaints about lack of water pressure.
However, several tenants of the Green Acres Mobile Home Park, 1045 E. 23rd St., said they still were not planning to replace their interest in replacing the water lines.
Members of the Green Acres Mobile Home Park Tenants' Association plan to attend the Lawrence City
'We just want to give them a big thank you for doing nothing.'
— LeRoy Taylor Green Acres tenant
Commission meeting tonight to give commissioners a progress report on the water pressure at the mobile home park.
"We just want to give them a big thank you for doing nothing," said
LeRoy Taylor, a Green Acres tenant
Rod Bremby, assistant city manager, said that the new 2-inch main lines should have begun operating yesterday.
But some tenants said last night that the new lines still could not be used because water meters had not been installed.
Joann Qandil, co-landlord of the Green Acres Mobile Home Park, said that the lines were ready to use and that several tenants already had
She said tenants had to notify the
water department if they wanted to hook up and then city workers would install a water meter.
But Brebmy said that it was not necessary for individual tenants to notify the water department because the water is usually included in the department included the entire park.
The tenants' association asked the City Commission on Jan. 8 to request that the Green Acres landlords replace the main line Commissioners in order to prevent a collision because they thought it was unclear whether there was a problem.
According to a city staff report, the reason for the poor water pressure was a 3-inch main line, which the officer said would allow to allow adequate water pressure.
The Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department last year advised residents not to drink the water because it contained a promoted the growth of bacteria.
Boe Eye, attorney for the tenants' association, said that association members also might ask the commissioners to revise the current city code, which calls for an adequate police force. The lot. The association also wants the commissioners to apply the code to the present case.
"There is something like a gap in the law protecting the rights of mobile home tenants." Eye said.
Several tenants had complained that they could not wash clothes or take showers because of the low water pressure.
Students propose women's art show to combat sexism
By Benjamin W. Allen
Kansan staff writer
A group of women student artists has raised a mild controversy in the art and design building with its efforts to have an art show dealing with women's issues.
The group, which has no formal name, posted notices two weeks ago for a meeting of all women attending the panting in an all women's art show.
Those notices prompted an anonymous response that said a fictitious all-men's art show had issued because it was considered sexist.
The debate of posted notes continued with another anonymous poster stating facetiously that sexism did not exist in the art world. But it was about the representation of women artists in national galleries.
The note said that 5 percent of the art shown in New York City's Metropolitan Museum of Art was created by women artists.
Combatting sexism
Lisa Puneda, Topeka senior and a group member, said the show and the controversy had forced the group to reconsider having an art show featuring only women artists.
This under-representation in the art world is what the women's art group is trying to correct by sponsoring a show open to all artists March 25 through April 7 at Garden, 438 F. Massachusetts St.
"We decided we all had some problems with separatism," she said. "It's been a heated debate in our group."
"There aren't too many opportunities for students to show their art work, and for women, the reality is we don't get shown."
Heather Campbell, Overland Park senior and a group member, said sexism in the art world was a problem.
"There are more women artists, but more men's work is shown," Campbell said.
"A group of friends got together and thought this would be a good idea," she said. "They just hap- tened to talk, and the whole idea is to have equity."
Calls for equality
'We decided we all had some problems with separatism. It's been a heated debate in our group.
Women calling for equal representation in the art world is not new.
- Lisa Purdon
Topeka senior and a group
member
The Guerilla Girls, who call themselves the conscience of the art world, are dedicated to combat racism and racism in the art world.
Last April, two members of a national women's group called the Guerilla Girls spoke at the Spencer Museum of Art.
Jeff Ridway, Lawrence graduate art student, said he thought he knew why the poster about cancelled Martin's men's art show had been put up.
"We all agree sexism is bad and that women often don't get a fair shake, but essentially what was done was to use discrimination to end discrimination," he said about the first poster.
"What would have happened with an all-white-male art show?" he asked.
"I don't disagree with the purpose of the show." Ridgway said. "We are all artists, and we need to be good at art, not good at good art, no matter who makes it."
He said he thought the poster about the all-male art show could have been misinterpreted as threatening because it resembled a ransom note made with cut-out letters.
Purdun said that the all-women's art show began as a simple idea but that it had become complex.
Janet Dreiling, registrar for the Spencer Art Museum, said she thought the current staff of the museum were working women artists in the museum.
"I don't feel we compromised," she said. "We just need to be out promoting ourselves. I just want people to see our work."
She said the primary concern of the museum was to obtain shows that best served the University, and the artists happened to be women.
"We don't separate the artist from the woman," she said.
P
Michelle L. Myers/KANSAN
Tony Knight, Wichita senior, attaches an Easter bunny to the side of a candle at Waxman Candles, 1405 Massachusetts St. The designs are made by stripping layers of colored wax and leaving molded shapes where needed. A wax cutout of a rabbit then is applied to the still-warm wax.
Hare attachment
Sexually transmitted diseases cause many kinds of problems
By Amy Francis
Kansan staff writer
It does not matter who the people are, what language they speak or what color their skin is. It is what they do that matters.
Anyone is capable of contracting a sexually transmitted disease if exposed to one.
But just as every person who contracts an STD is different, so is each case.
Some of the more widely known
curable STDs are gonorrhea,
syphilis, vaginitis and urinary tract
infection. The two most common are
Chlamydia and Human Papilloma-
virus, also known as venereal warts.
S.T.D.
Second of a five-part series
"Some people do not have the symptoms, typical symptoms," said Kathy Guth, charge nurse for the children's school and mental's child planning and STD clinic.
One of the problems with STDs is that people sometimes do not realize they have them.
Another problem is the difficulty involved in diagnosing an STD.
Henry Buck, gynecologist at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said, "It's not a nice, black-and-white issue.
"A lot of times it's in the latent phase. There is not a single test you can run to say you've got an STD or a tremendous amount of variation."
"You need to look down the road," Buck said. "It's not something you just come in right afterward for testing."
There also is variation in the amount of time it takes for an STD to develop.
"You can have bacteria and viruses there in lower doses and not have an infection."
could last six months or longer, while the period for syphilis could last from 10 to 90 days.
Guth said the HPV latency period
The types of treatments used and the amount of time needed for them also depend on the individual.
Buck said tetracycline usually was taken for seven to 10 days to cure Chlamydia. If the patient cannot use oral medicine, other medications are available.
Guth said Doxycycline was the usual form of prescribed tetracycline used to cure Chlamydia.
Buck said HPV lesions could be removed by lasers, freezing or chemical application. A topical anaesthetic or oral sedative usually is used to help reduce the discomfort caused by those methods.
Guth said that treatment did not necessarily last longer just because a person had a more advanced case but that sometimes it did.
Buck said the bottom line was that people should try to prevent the contraction of an STD.
Group will voice views in Topeka
By Eric Nelson
Kansan staff writer
Brad Eaden, an employee at Watson Library and classified senator, said classified employees were tired of being left until the end of the legislative session before being allotted any financing.
"We're usually left to the end of every legislative session when there is nothing left," he said.
Classified employees at KU are hoping their voices will be heard when they rally in Topeka this afternoon.
Peggy Baker, German department employee and classified senator, said, "We feel we're getting the leftovers."
Eden said the legislature seemed to focus on the issues of the baby-boom generation, like social security and health care.
"Legislators tend to focus on those issues to the exclusion of others," he said.
Carol Dressler, president of the classified senate, said that besides an 11.30 a.m. picket front of the Statehouse, eight to 10 classified employees would meet with legislators, including State Sens. Wint Winter Jr., R.-Lawrence; Gus Bogina, R.Shawnee; chairperson of the Ways and Means committee; and Christopher Lawrence, chairperson of Lawrence; and George Teagarden, D-LCYgne, chairperson of the Abpropriations committee.
Eden said that some legislators from western Kansas were removed from the needs of higher education and that many legislators were tired of hearing faculty and administration complaints.
"They're tired of it in Topeka," he said.
Dressler said the current financial situation for the University looked grim.
"What has happened to higher education is a great concern to all classified employees," she said.
Classified employee concerns focus on cost-of-living increases in salary, Dressler said. The national level is 6 percent. Gov. Joan Finney requested a $1½-percent increase at mid-year.
She said that the Legislature still had to pass the request and that even if it did pass, the increase would not be significant in paychecks until February 1992.
Eden said he doubted that the request would pass through the Legislature.
"Every time we get something, they want to take it back," Eden said.
Dressler and Eden said longevity pay, an added payment to employees who have been at their job for several years, would be eliminated.
Dressler said another program in jeopardy was the plan for reclassification of employee statewide, originally scheduled to be completed in June 1982.
"It would raise those positions to a salary level that was comparable with other states and in the private sector," she said.
Dressler said she expected more than 40 people to attend the rally.
She hoped some representatives from other places, including Emporia State University and the Regents Center in Overland Park, would attend. The group will carry letters from Fort Hays State University.
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Eden said that he doubted the day would lead to any change because of the current financial strain.
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Tuesday, March 5, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Proposed state budget plan may cause increased tuition costs and higher education spending cuts
The Kansas Legislature again this year faces serious budgetary shortfalls.And again this year higher education has become the target of budget cuts to reduce spending.
A House Appropriations Committee plan would cut spending for higher education in Gov. Joan Finney's proposed budget by $12.3 million.
To compensate for the loss, the committee approved a $7.3 million tuition increase. That translates into a 20 percent increase in tuition for out-of-state KU students and an 8 percent increase for in-state students. The extra money, which goes into the State General Fund, may benefit the state, but it could devastate some students' opportunities to further their education.
To further exacerbate the situation, the committee plans to cut an additional $3.2 million from the budget by eliminating or reducing state financed scholarships.
The University of Kansas would pay almost 30 percent of a $3.9 million cut in the Board of Regents proposed budget.
Other proposed budget cuts and the loss of the Margin of Excellence will cause long-term damage to KU and other Board of Regents institutions.
But higher education is an easy target for the Legislature. A large segment of the university population does not vote, at least in Kansas. University students are seen as coming from more affluent classes, and
therefore do not need as much money. And when faced with choices such as cutting the Social and Rehabilitation Services or the state highway fund, which accounted for nearly half the state budget, cuts in higher education become more appealing.
True, higher education must bear its load of spending cuts in difficult financial times. During the past four years tuition increases at KU have been consistent but have been fair. The University has delayed purchasing new equipment and starting new programs. KU took action to reduce enrollment increases when it knew the enrollment adjustment formula was going to change.
The measures were necessary to compensate for little or no increases in state financing. The Margin helped improve the quality of education during the first two years of the program, but the advances made will be lost without financing of the final year.
The University and its students will take responsibility for their part in reducing state spending. But greater efforts must be made to preserve financing for higher education.
Former Secretary of Commerce Harland Priddle touted higher education as one of the most important industries in the state. The Legislature must take action to preserve the effectiveness of the industry. But because higher education is an easy target, legislators may inadvertently do it irreparable damage by continuing to cut its financing.
Rod Griffin for the editorial board
Socialized medicine
Dramatic plan attacks state health-care inequities
The whole concept of "socialized medicine" is something that seems to evoke suspicion in many U.S. citizens. The fact remains that something has to be done to replace this country's existing medical system, which is unfair and inadequate.
State Sen. Doug Walker, D-Osawatomie, outlined a health-care proposal in the Legislature last week that would change radically the way medical care is provided in this state. Walker wants to see a system similar to Canada's, which guarantees health insurance for everyone.
The plan would provide preventive and primary health-care services for prenatal care, prevention of early childhood diseases, early detection of disease and other specified categories. For these services, a 21-member Health Care Commission would negotiate with medical care providers on reimbursement rates.
income tax surcharge based on individual income. Money also would come from a tax on the total payrolls of all private companies and a 10-percent tax on alcohol and tobacco products
The rest of Walker's bill proposes optional levels of coverage that people could buy from private insurance companies.
Financing for the plan would come from an
The bill certainly will raise questions and, as always, some resistance. Nevertheless, something has to be done now to alleviate a growing problem in this country.
No one can afford to play Russian roulette with their health, but this is what people are being forced to do. Health care seems to be a case of "pay up or give up." Unless people are prepared to join Walker and others in their attempts to improve the system, we will see more people falling victim to the severe limitations of the existing system.
Waker admitted last week that the chances of his bill passing this year were slim, but he is hopeful that something can be in operation within the next five years.
For the sake of those who cannot afford to be sick, the people of Kansas can only hope that Walker's hopes are realized.
Clare McGinn for the editorial board
IT'S MELTING.
BUDIG
MARGARINE OF EXCELLENCE
BUDGET
Fall 2-26-91
KANSAS HOUSE
APPROPRIATIONS
COMMITTEE
LETTERS to the EDITOR
Students can help KU
This week the students at KU will hear quite a bit of noise about "Students in HEAT." This statement begs the question, why should students be in HEAT? HEAT is an acronym for Higher Education Awareness Team. If students become aware of what is happening to higher education, it is clear they would not only be in HEAT, they should be rather steamed.
The House Appropriations Committee of the Kansas Legislature has proposed an 8 percent tuition increase for residents and a 20 percent tuition increase for non-residents. This itself is rather shocking, but also consider that this tuition increase will be coupled with an $8 million cut in current higher education financing in Kansas. This means students will pay $7.6 million in increased tuition and receive $8 million less in services next year. Yes, this means there will be no Margin of Excellence and even more crowded classrooms.
In other operating expenditures during fiscal 1989, KU was financed at 65 percent of its peer institutions, and this statistic has worsened since the mid-1990s. Students disturb all students at the University of Kansas. Should students just lie
down, roll over and let this happen?
No! Students can help the University receive the money it needs to remain competitive. However, student apathy must end if this University is to prosper. Students should stop by the Associated Students of Kansas' tables in the Kansas Union this week and write a letter to their elected officials, urging them to address the state's revenue crisis and to support higher education. Students need to talk to their parents, friends and neighbors and ask everyone they know to urge the Legislature to support higher education and KU. If students take the time, KU can become one of the finest institutions in the United States. But if students remain silent, they will continue to pay higher prices for continually underinforced University services.
Greg Hughes ASK campus director
Time for action is now
Students, the time to become politically active is now. Decisions are being made in Topeka that will have a severe impact on your life at KU.
The House Appropriations Committee has voted to increase the Board of Regents tuition recommendations for resident students from 3 to 8 percent and non-resident students from 10 to 20 percent. Because this money goes directly into the state's general fund, this is essentially a $7.3 million tax increase on students.
In addition to the tuition increases, the committee has voted to cut the
Regents budget by $12.6 million.
State scholarships and student wages are among these cuts. Ironically, the Legislature expects students to pay more for a lower quality product at a time when financial aid dollars are feeling
The Legislature justifies these tuition increases by using peer comparisons, but it fails to consider state differences in how students when making these comparisons.
The Legislature also must realize that between fiscal 1986 and fiscal 1991 resident tuition increased 55.7 percent. At the same time, the Consumer Price Index rose 21.5 percent. During the first year of the Margin of Excellence, tuition and other fees contributed more than $10.4 million, while the state contributed $9.4 million. Clearly, students have demonstrated their commitment to quality higher education in Kansas.
Students must act now to ensure the state's commitment to higher education. The proposed tuition increases and budget cuts will deny access to education, increase add and drop lines and crowded classrooms, decrease faculty retention and student numbers, equipment acquisitions, decrease student services and result in a decline in quality at KU.
Student, parent, faculty and alumni action is the only way to reverse this drop in financing.
Mike Schreiner student body president
U.S. media infected by a lack of criticism and competition
One of my heroes once said the press was the weak slat under the bed of democracy. Of course, this dated analogy by A.J Liebigh, long time wayward pressman for New Yorker magazine, is one of the most flattering things to be said about the U.S. media.
I think the phenomenon known as the "freest press in the world" can best be summed up by the phrase "manufacturer of consent." The power of the media to persuade and bambooze the American "booboisie," as HL Mencken called them (dare I save us), is well documented.
While no one can refute the stranglehold on public opinion, few, it seems, would question it either. The United States' blind faith in its information cultures' skepticism, wouldn't be as insidious if it were not for the mono-
Tim
Hamilton
Staff columnist
polization factor
Ben Bagdikian, dean of the School of Journalism at the University of California in Berkeley and journeyman media critic, has introduced me to the information market. Yes, information is a commodity with a price like any other. Thus the purveyors of this good/service operate most efficiently, i.e., they maximize profits, when they've got the mark cornered.
One year ago, the Washington Journalism Review said there were only 17 cities with competing papers.
meaning more than one paper that have separate news and advertising departments. Thus, we see that the emergence of the news business as lucrative investment has resulted in an unprecedented dearth of information outlets in modern society. Competition, however, is not the panacea for all of this society's media problems. Even if there were direct competition in every city, the media owners still would be more than 98 percent white, suburban stockholders.
If we have learned nothing else from the racial conflagrations of the 1960s, we should remember the crucial points made by the Kerner Commission. It stated that the main reason for the decade's social transformation was the media representation of minorities Modern news is geared toward that
'I think the phenomenon known as the "freest press in the world" can best be summed up by the phrase "manufacturer of consent." The power of the media to persuade and bambooze the American "booboisie," as H.L. Mencken called them (dare I say us), is well documented.'
which interests or benefits only one small segment of the United States.
A popular song says that poets, priests and politicians have words to thank for their positions. However, it has been publishers, such as John C. "The Mighty" Quinn, who present the words to the public.
Quinn, former head of the Gannett Quinn, has uttered quotations such as, "The press has nothing to fear but fear." The media have been more of a threat to the press than
monopoly." Both of these gems came during his acceptance of the 1987 William Allen White Foundation Award.
Until the addition of Media and Minorities to the curriculum as an elective at KU more than a year ago, KU journalism students had to discern for themselves any criticism of the school's curriculum being criticised made by the school's namesake. Ironically, at least this allows us to understand Quinn and
Paul Allen, another Gannett big cheese, when they execused themselves of the ghost of Frank Munsey accepting the foundation's award.
Is there a correlation between the fact that a school that maintains extremely close relations with and receives financing from the news industry offers no class on media criticism?
so decide for yourselves, journalism students, if and when a cry of insufficient whatever is heard in defense of the school, why the Gannet people don't dispatch one of their merry men or women of all shapes, sizes and colors to verse us in the blossomies of their detractors.
KANSAN STAFF
- Tim Hamilton is a Lawrence student in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
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AUDRA LANGFORD Business manager
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Managing editor
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General manager, news adviser
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Training Holly M. Neuman National sales mgr. Jennifer Claxton
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by David Rosenfield
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 are required.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be choreographed.
The Kenyan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kenyan newsroom, 111 Staffer/Fin Hall.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 5, 1991
5
Drug tampering cases revive old fears
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Kansan staff writer
Recent cases of over-the-counter drug tampering have prompted a major crackdown.
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"I've had a lot of calls at the store about that Sufaded mess," he said, "People want to know what they have the medicine in question."
Time-release Sudafed 12-hour capsules tainted with cyanide recently may have killed two people and one child in the city and Olympia areas of Washington.
Burroughs Wellcome Co., the maker of Sudafed, ordered a recall Sunday of about one million packages of the capsules. The company is advising customers to return the product to the store it was bought from if there is any question about the safety of the product.
Quring said that if there was any question about the packaging of a product bought at his store, including an e-reader, he should be returned immediately.
Over-the-counter medications are inspected as the packages are delivered to the store, he said. Any package that looks old or that bears marks of being tampered with is not put on the shelf for purchase.
The store is arranged so that the employees can view the entire store from the counter. Quiring said. There never has been a problem with any
tampering at the store.
"But you have to remember, there are so many products that you can't check them all," he said.
David Barry, Burroughs Wellcome vice president of research and development, agreed that nothing was tamper-proof.
"If you really try hard, you can always tamper with this product (Sudafed) or any product," he said.
John Baughman, chief pharmacist,
at Watkins Medical Health Center,
said the pharmacy did not have to
worry about over-the-counter package tampering
"We don't have anything that could be tampered with accessible to the phishers."
Federal authorities are investigating the two Washington deaths and are trying to determine whether there are any connections between the two that the separate purchases of theainted over-the-counter cold remedy.
In 1982, seven people died after taking cyanide-tainted Tylenol capsules in Chicago, and almost five years ago a cyanide-laced Tylenol capsule killed a New York woman. The killings never have been solved
In 1986, two people in south King County, Wash., died in a cyanide tampering case involving Extra-Strength Excedrin. Stella Nickell and another person held her husband and another person and is serving a 270-year prison sentence.
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
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Tuesday, March 5, 1991 / University Daily Kansar
KU physics prof tries to master the universe
1000N
Adrian Melott, associate professor of physics and astronomy, is an international scholar and Unitarian minister. He enjoys teaching the introductory physics course for non-science majors because he can share his passion for physics.
Melott helped create cosmic sponge model
By Benjamin W. Allen
Kansas staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Adrian Melott kicks off his boots, puts his feet on his desk, his hands on his head and leans back — way back — until he is almost horizontal, looking up.
"I do some of my best thinking this way," he said. "This is my research posture."
Melott, an associate professor of astronomy and physics at the University of Kansas
Whether he is looking up to see the cosmos, God or just the ceiling is anyone's guess. One thing is sure though: Melott's best thinking about the universe and how it was formed.
Melott's area of research is large-scale structures in the universe, or cosmology, which means looking at the universe as a whole. What he does on the job is try to picture what the universe looks like and how it got that way.
He may be uniquely qualified for that puzzle.
Not only does Melott have a bachelor's,
master's and doctorate degree in physics, he also has a master's in divinity and is a Unitarian-Universalist minister.
A diverse past
Melott spent seven years as a practicing minister after he received his degree in divinity from the Starr King School of Religious Leadership in Berkeley, Calif.
"It was the times," he said. "I was interested in being a generalist. I was student body president, and I was active in the anti-war movement — movement. Nestalia Storgt, Vietnam."
'1 was interested in educational reform,
and I wanted to work with people. All that led to
me being a teacher.'
However, he halfway through his career as a minister he began to drift back toward philosophy.
"G God spoke to me in a dream and said, 'do cosmology,' Melted as a smile touched me."
"No, really it was not sudden at all," he said. "It was really quite gradual."
A member of his congregation was teaching a course in general relativity at the University of South Florida in Tampa and Melott if he would like to audit the 1985.
"I did it, and I decided that if I was going to run on it, I might as well sign up for it," he said.
Three years later, Melott had taken every course the university offered for a master's degree.
He then went to the University of Texas at Austin and earned his doctorate in physics in 1967.
Since that time, he has had a postdoctoral position at the University of Pittsburg and an associate professor at the University of Pittsburgh.
city of Chicago. He also has been a Visiting Fellow at the department of astrophysics at Oxford University and a research visitor at Moscow University.
As Melott studied cosmology, he drifted away from active ministry. Today he rarely goes to services and performs about two marriages a year.
"I guess, formally speaking, I'm not really religious in a traditional sense." Melett said. "I'm interested in how the universe works and learning about it, and I would call that a religious activity — just as many things are."
A spongy universe
The problem in cosmology is trying to figure out where structures in the galaxy occur. This has been a major challenge.
In the big bang theory, all matter explodes outward in all directions. If it was a perfect explosion, the result would be an ever-expanding universe of uniformly distributed matter. But just by looking up into the sky, we can see that our universe form. It is what cosmologists call "lumyn."
Melott's research led him in 1985 to propose, with Richard Gott III of Princeton University, a picture of the universe now referred to as the sponge model.
In the sponge model, all the empty spaces of the universe are connected and so is the mass. The sponge model is one of the more recent models of the universe and is now a
Melott said ordinary objects were used to describe the universe.
"The purpose is to give people a picture they can associate with the theory," he said. "You don't need to give anything fancy to do that, just describing shape that people understand."
Formerly, two theoretical extremes describing what the universe looks like, the pancake and hierarchy models, were considered the most likely.
"Very approximately you can think of the pancake theory as big sheets of stuff collapses under pressure."
"The hierarchy theory imagines lots of little lumps in the early universe that coalesce into slightly bigger lumps that coalesce into slightly bigger lumps," he said. "A chain reaction that builds it up slowly from a smooth universe."
However, Melott said the observable universe seems to be somewhere between those two models. The sponge model is more closely related to correspond more closely with observable astronomical
data.
Melot works to understand the structure of what the universe looks like now, because that structure suggests what happened moments after the big ban and vice versa.
He explains the lumpiness of the universe as a result of the natural "noise" that existed just after the big bang. At that time, elementary particles were all that existed. "Noise" refers to the imperfections in a natural system.
He said any debate among Unitarians who are trying to define whether they were Christians or not probably would break down an argument about what a Christian was.
"It sounds really mind-boggling, but superclusters of galaxies may be the result of just noise from elementary particles after the big bang."
"Nothing is ever perfectly smooth," Melott said. "There are always little fluctuations, but I have been very careful."
Science and religion
Melott explains he always has had a combination of science and religion in his life, and they do not conflict with each other.
"Unitarians are all over the map." he said
"They can range from Christians to atheists. Let me put it this way: a fanatical Uitarian would burn a question mark on your front lawn.
"Or, what happens when you cross a Jehovah's Witness with a Unitarian? You get a guy that knocks on your door and doesn't know what to say.
"These jokes probably convey the nature of militarism - better than a long winded etude."
Internationally known
John Davidson, professor of physics and astronomy, was the chairperson of the department when Melott was hired in fall of 1986.
Davidson said Melott impressed the search committee, Oxford and his study, and his experience with Oxford and the Sorry
"He has immense international contacts," Dudson said. "He seems to know every生动情况."
"Basically he opened up a new area of physics for our department," he said. "He was instrumental in bringing Sergei Shandarin here."
Shandarin, visiting assistant professor of physics and astronomy from Moscow University, is an example of the internationalism Melott has brought to the University.
Shandarin said cosmology was a very active field of study.
"What cosmologists are trying to do is merge particle physics with galaxy formation," he said "The science about the largest clusters in the universe, with the science about the smallest things."
Shandarin recently has been hired for a permanent professorship.
Bruce Twarog, associate professor of physics and astronomy, said Melot's background was so broad that he brought a unique perspective to the department.
"He's very aggressive with his outside contacts." Twarog said. "He works a lot to bring outside people to the department. It gives us national and international prestige."
Davidson said Melot liked to teach the introductory physics class for non-science
"The students seem to love it," Davidson said. "Physics is usually that subject问题."
"Physics for poets," as the introductory course is called in the physics and astronomy department, has provided Melott with unexcited enthusiasm and to show his enthusiasm for the subject.
Twarog said Melotw owed students with a demonstration of angular momentum in which Melotw held weights away from his body and spun on a swivel chair.
As he pulled the weights in, his spun faster,
we see skaters spin quickly when they pull
their muscles.
Twarog said Melotl did not realize how fast he would spin and fell hard in front of the chair.
"It's the kind of stuff students love," Twarog said. "A faculty member injuring himself in front of the class."
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7
Nation/World briefs Brussels, Belgium
Food aid for Soviets restored
The 12-member European Community agreed in principle yesterday to restore more than $1 billion in food aid to the Soviet Union. The aid was supposed after a bloody crackdown in the rebellion.
"There are no more political obstacles in the way for the help," German Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher told reporters after a meeting of the EC foreign ministers.
The ministers issued a statement expressing satisfaction that Soviet authorities had not interfered with referendums conducted Sunday in Latvia and Estonia. Latvians and Estonians voted overwhelmingly for independence in the non-binding referendums.
"These results cannot be ignored," the ministers said. "We urge an early opening of a serious and constructive dialogue between the two sides in the U.S.S.R. and the elected Baltic authorities."
Jerusalem
Israel to release 12 prisoners
Israel this week will release 12 foreign prisoners who have been kept in Israeli prisons long after completing their sentences, a Prison Authority representative said today.
Officials refused to disclose the identity of the prisoners, but the daily Haaretz said they included members of the mainstream Fataf faction of the Palestine Liberation Organization and two Jordanian soldiers who infiltrated into Israel.
Haeretz said the 12 were among 40 foreigners held up to two years beyond their prison sentences in Israeli prisons. It said most were not housed and the others were from unspecified countries.
Haaretz said Police Minister Roni Milo had explained the delayed release of the prisoners was because of the Red Cross' inability to find a country willing to accept them. But the newspaper said the Red Cross had denied this allegation.
Grand Rapids, Minn.
Oil spill is one of state's worst
Crews worked yesterday to contain and remove an estimated 630,000 gallons of crude oil that leaked from a ruptured pipeline into a field and the Prairie River.
The break in the pipeline, which carries crude from Edmonton, Alberta, to superior, Wis., occurred near Grand Rapids, a town of about 7,200 people about 100 miles northwest of Duluth.
Kevin Faus of the Minnesota Pollution Control Authority and it was one of the five worst oil spills in Minnesota.
Another agency representative, Dave Plante,
said 630,000 gallons was a conservative estimate.
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 5, 1991
"Even if we get it back in the tankers, we're not sure we've got all of it." he said.
Roger Argument, general manager of Lakehead Pipeline Co. the company that owns the pipeline, said the spill was mostly contained. He estimated all the free-flowing oil would be cleaned up within three days.
From The Associated Press
Court refuses appeal of AIDS-related Navy case
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court today turned down the appeal of a Naval reservist removed from active duty because of his AIDS virus infection.
The Associated Press
The court, without comment, let stand rulings that the reservist, identified in court papers by the fictitious name John Doe, cannot sue Navy officials over the allegedly unlawful discrimination
Lower courts ruled that members of the armed services have no right to sue over employment or other wrongdoing.
Doe sued the Navy in 1868 after he was released from active duty and returned to inactive reserve ship.
By that time, he had a long history of military service dating back to his enlisting in the Navy in 1972. Doe served in the Navy until 1977 and enlisted in the Naval Reserve in 1981.
In 1985, Doe was made a temporary active duty petty officer based in Jacksonville, Fla., and had been employed by the
In July 1986, he was admitted to the naval hospital in Portsmouth, Va., because he had tested positive as a carrier of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV). A physical examination confirmed the presence of HIV antibodies but showed Doe was otherwise in good health.
Someone who tests positive for HIV antibodies has been exposed to the AIDS virus but does not test positive.
Tests determine whether a person was infected with the virus one time or if it a person still is infected with AIDS.
A month after his hospital stay began, Doe was returned to active duty. But a month later, he was told his active duty would be ended because of his
In his appeal to the Supreme Court, Doe said there was no evidence Congress intended to exclude military members from the protections offered in the 1973 anti-bias law.
infection
The Bush administration urged the justices to reject Doe's appeal.
Supreme Court refuses to limit punitive damages The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court yesterday refused to place limits on skyrocketing punitive damage awards as it uphold a $1 million penalty for an Alabama woman victimized by insurance fraud.
Business groups, the American Medical Association, the pharmaceutical industry and major news media companies urged the court to restrict or ban painful damages, saying mega-awards not only punish defendants unfairly but also international competitiveness for U.S. businesses.
By refusing to place limits on punitive damage judgments, yesterday's decision leaves matters where they have been — in the hands of state legislators, judges and juries.
Consumer advocates and lawyers' groups defended big punitive awards, arguing that the judgments helped keep dangerous products off the market and protected the public against corporate greed.
Peace in the gulf overshadows, doesn't resolve, other conflicts
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The end of the Persian Gulf War hardly means the world is at peace. There are more than two dozen conflicts occurring now, from Afghanistan to Mozambique to the lackless Kurds still fighting for a country of their own in the Middle East.
Conflicts come in varying degrees, ranging from the Soviet republics 'secessionist' efforts to all-out confrontations, such as the U.S. led coalition's against Iraq after that nation's invasion of Kuwait.
Groups of people on four continents are still trying to kill each other — or arguing vehemently over religious and ethnic differences, for power or justice. They are not simply because war has become a way of life.
The Soviet Union, more at peace with the capitalist world than ever before, is embroiled in
A major armed conflict is defined by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute as a prolonged combat between the military forces of two or more governments or of one government and organized armed opposition forces, involving terrorist groups or in response to increasing battle-related deaths of at least 1,000 persons.
ethnic conflicts that have cost hundreds of lives in the southern and central Asian republics of Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Uzbekistan. There has been violence, too, as the Kremlin cracked down on separatist movements in Lithuania and Latvia.
Another conflict of ethnic origin involves the Kurds, a stateless people who have been fighting for independent status in areas of Iraq. Iran and Turkey for decades. In 1980, Saddam Hussein was killed by an American helicopter. The Kurdish population on suspicion that they had supported Iran in the war, which ended that year.
In Afghanistan, where U.S. supplied rebels are warring against the Soviet supplied government, the superpowers have agreed in principle to stop the flow of weapons. The country has had 12 years of war and a million deaths, and the devastation has left five million homeless.
In Angola, the fighting is between the U.S. backed UNITA rebels and a leftist government. Talks to end the 16-year civil war are at an impasse.
In Northern Ireland, the Irish Republican Army struggle to end British rule continues, with the army now using an increasingly unsteady hand.
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KO on Wheels
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Are there changes you'd like to see in the bus routes or the bus system?
You are invited to come to a route hearing to present your suggestions
We are invited to come to a route hearing to present your suggestions on March 5th at 6:00 in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. Please sign up to attend the route hearing by filling out a suggestion form in the Student Senate Office,4th floor of the Kansas Union. Even if you cannot attend the route hearing,please fill out a suggestion form. We want your input!
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Tuesday, March 5, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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(The Etc. Shop came later)
2. Where can you see a complete line of 100% cotton pleated pants, shorts, shirts, rugbys, etc.?
Now KU can afford to dream in color.
Macintosh Color Packages Offer Ends March 8th,1991*
Macintosh LC Color Package includes:
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Apple i2" RGB Monitor
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**Price good while existing quantities last.** Offer open only to students enrolled in six or more credit hours of course work, full-time faculty members, or full-time staff who are directly involved in the administration, delivery, or support of the academic mission of the University of Kansas, Lawrence campus. Please obtain and read a copy of the requirements for purchasing Macintosh computer equipment under the terms of the Apple Higher Education Program. You may obtain a copy of the requirements from the KU Bookstore in the Burge Union. Payment must be made by check. The name of the person paying the equipment must be retained (name or the teacher's Check). No personal card or credit cards accepted. Have your Cashier's code match to "KU Bookstores". Student dives have already been applied on computer purchases.
Task force hopes convenience will improve campus recycling
Students who have classes in Wescue Hall may notice that the yellow barrels for collecting aluminum have been used to recycle cans has never been easier.
Kansan staff writer
By Katie Chipman
The six barrels in Wescoe were removed yesterday and replaced with 25 cardboard boxes as an experiment to the boxes of the KU Recycling Task Force.
The task force will determine whether the increased number of receptacles affects the number of cans that students in Wescoe recycle.
Phil Endacott, associate director of facilities operations, said, "We feel a lot of cans are going into the regular trash cans. If we increase the
convenience of the receptacles, we're hoping that this will be a diversion from cans going into landfills."
A recycling box will be placed next
every trash can on the four floors
of West
The boxes were donated to KU by Alcoa, a national producer of aluminum. The boxes are made of cardboard and have a plastic liner that is suited to be impervious to the phosphoric acids in colas, Endacott said.
He said that the yellow barrels cost $33 each and that the cardboard baskets cost $14.
He said that KU could not afford to put the yellow barrels everywhere and that the cardboard boxes might prove to be an affordable alternative.
Alimee Hall, student body vice president and member of the task force, said, "If the program works well we'd like to put them in every classroom.
Hall said that by combining the programs, recycling on campus
"The primary reason we're trying this pilot program is because of the waste that is occurring on campus. It's so easy for students to come out of class and throw their cans away. This will make recycling more convenient for students."
"The yellow barrels are a good visual reminder for students to recycle, and the cardboard boxes will make it easier," she said.
Student groups request more funds than Student Senate plans to give
Bv Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
Although Student Senate is scheduled to vote this week on a bill that would allocate $71,406 for student health services, it was rejected by the organizations at $132,507.
Last year, Senate allocated about $65,000 to student organizations.
Carl Damon, Senate treasurer, said many of the organizations were not familiar with the budget process thus made requests that were too high.
Some of the student organizations, he said, had requested money for activities that Senate could not finance, such as banquets or parties. In a list of recommended cuts, Damon said he would take out items that he thought conflicted with Senate rules and regulations.
A few groups have requested a substantial increase in money. The Organization of Adult Knowledge more than it was allocated last year.
Belinda Cook, president of the organization, said that the purchase of a computer, as well as an increase in the number of issues and mailings sent to his company's newsletter, necessitated the group's request for increased financing
Consumer Affairs Association was allocated $8,000 last year from Senate and is requesting $10,075 for the amount will be used to govt salaries.
Cynthia Ingham, Voice treasurer,
said that the end of hostilities in
the Middle East did not signify the need
for Voice to stop its activities.
Voice, an organization that promotes peace, is requesting $2,773 for next year. It did not request Senate approval for this year, its first in existence.
"We expect our activities in response to world events to be stepped up," she said.
The mentality behind war does not go away when war stops, Ingham said.
The Student Senate AIDS Task Force is requesting $2,974 for next year, an increase of $1,500 from this year's allocation of $1,474.
If Senate approves the finance committee's budget recommendations, the finance committee will have to trim $61,101 from the student organizations' requests. Senate is scheduled to vote on the budget bill tonight.
Required number of students not met to open a residence hall during break
Kansan staff writer
By Jonathan Plummer
Residence halls will not be open during spring break, leaving some international students to make other arrangements to stay in Lawrence.
Maria Thompson, student housing office assistant, said that only 33 students had signed up for housing during the break by yesterday's deadline. Forty-five are needed to keep a hall open for the week.
Thompson said that some students waited until the last minute to see whether the required number would sign up.
"People say they will sign up when the number hits 50," she said.
The office will give refunds today to the students who paid $80 to reserve spring break housing and other benefits. The college will mail that the hall will not be open.
Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said that student housing usually did not get the response to open a hall during spring break
"We typically get the required number to keep a hall open for Thanksgiving break and not spring break," he said.
The office staff tries to find housing for those who sign up for it if none is offered, he said.
Some end up going home with their roommates or stay at Jayhawker Towers, which are open over break, with other families. Stone said.
But Daphem Johnston, assistant director of foreign student services, said some students never signed up for the residence hall because they still would have to find another option if the hall was not opened.
"It is always a dilemma," she said.
"It it really inconvenient and unfortunate for people, because it almost causes you to come up with a continuance plan."
Johnston said that in the past, he had asked student housing to keep a hall open during all breaks because it would allow her a hall officially had been opened.
"They told me there is a risk involved," she said. "But the counterpart is that they have done it in order, and they have seen that it works."
"The argument that they always present back is dollars and cents, but it must be possible to keep something
"Usually we advise them to contact people or friends, or sometimes people from the community call us and tell us they are willing to take our advice. We also help we help students stay in a motel which, monetarily, isn't desirable."
Johnston said that she had not met with any students who would be left without a place to stay but that she students toward the end of the week.
Johnston said that the office of student housing could make it more clear to international students that there are not available during vacations.
For example, a student housing brochure sent to students in other countries this year said, "Temporary housing can usually be provided at a reasonable rate to students . . . who stay during some vacation periods." Student housing since has changed the brochure, she said.
open year-round We have an obligation as host to provide that basic need."
"My impression is that it probably is not clear to someone from a foreign country whose English is not perfected," Johnston said.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 5, 1991
Sports
9
Conference title eludes Lady 'Hawks
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
For the second year in a row, the Lady Jayhawks fought for and lost the Big Eight Conference title to Oklahoma State
Kansas was the victim in the 74-63 Oklahoma State victory.
The top-seed Cowgirls' senior center Liz Brown went on a shooting rampage 6 minutes into the second and put Oklahoma State ahead 53-45.
Within a 3-minute stint, Brownd added 13 points to Oklahoma State's score. After that stretch, Kansas would get no closer than four points.
Brown finished the game with 23 points to lead the Cowgirls and was named the Big Eight Conference
tournament's most valuable player.
"Brown's their leader," Kansas junior guard Kay K Hart said. "He was writing for her to start something. When she got on, she really got on."
Kansas coach Marian Washington said the early second half stretch was important to the Oklahoma State victory.
"This might have been Brown's best performance (in the tournament), and it came at the right time—for them." Washington said.
Oklahoma State coach Dick Halterman said Kansas came out fired up in the first half.
"Then Liz Brown took the game over and decided she was going to win for it us," he said.
In the first half, the lead bounced back and forth between the teams. With 4 minutes left in the half, Hart ended and put the Jahywha ahead 26-24.
Kansas maintained an edge over the Cowgirls until the last seconds before intermission
He said the team seemed more motivated, especially the four seniors on the team.
The first half ended with a 35-34 Oklahoma State lead.
Kansas hit 56 percent of its shots during the first half, and Oklahoma State shot 50 percent from the field.
With 20 seconds left, Brown controlled the ball until the 4-second mark and then scored the last basket of the half.
Halterman said the Cowgirls defense gained intensity after the half and started creating problems
for the Javhawks.
The Jayhawks' shooting average fell to 41 percent during the second half.
"I think we got a little impatient at the first of the second half," Washington said.
Sophomore guard Stacy Truitt scored 19 points for Kansas, and sophomore forward Misti Chenault scored 15.
Two of Truitt's free throws brought Kansas within seven points of the Cowgirls with 5 minutes left in the game.
charity stripe after she was fouled by Brown.
Kansas stayed within five points of
Oklahoma State until the last minute of
the game.
Then it was time for the Cowgirls to go the line, and they hit eight of theirs.
Washington said she told the Kansas team after the game not to be down about the loss.
She said she was hopeful that Kansas still might have a chance to attend the NCAA tournament, even though Oklahoma State was the only team that represented the conference last year.
Hart and sophomore guard Stacy Truitt were named to the all-tournament team.
Lady Jayhawks shut out opponents in third sweep
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas women's tennis team had shut out their last two opponents inside the Alvamar Tennis and Swim Club.
1980
The Jayhawks won their third consecutive dual by blanking Southern Illinois-Edwardsville. 7-0.
The Jayhawks won every match in straight sets to push their record to 8-3.
Because USIE did not field a No 6 or 3 no seeded duplex team, Kansas junior Renee Raychaudhurd did not play
Mike Truner/MACAR
Page Goings, Tulsa, Okla., junior, returns a serve during a doubles match against Southern Illinois-Edwardville. Goins, with teammate Eveline Hamers, defeated Kristin Becker and Melissa Borter 6-4, 6-2, yesterday on the tennis courts near Allen Field House.
"My shoulder could use the rest," she said. "Coach wanted to save me for spring break, anyway."
The Jawhacks that did play were never in danger of dropping a set to their USIE opponents.
Kansas senior Stacy Tockey, freshman Abby Woods and Juniors Page Goins, Laura Hagemann and Eveline Green victorious in singles competition.
The doubles teams of Hamers and Goins and freshman Buffy McLiney and Hageman were also victorious
Woods said that she took advantage of her lopsided match to work on the finer points of her game.
"I worked on being aggressive and putting the pressure on the other player," she said.
The Jayhawks will travel to Brigham Young on Saturday to begin a tough five-match spring break tour of Iowa against several top-ranked teams.
Stots said the Jayhawks would be ready for a tough match after the last three easy matches.
"Before we played these teams, we played a lot of top-20 teams like Texas. she said "I think were too many." The trip will give us more of a challenge."
Woods said Kansas was mentally ready to play tougher opponents.
"Even though our last few matches haven't been tough, our practices have been intense," she said. "I think we ready."
lacked some intensity early in the season.
Kansas coach Michael Center said that he was pleased with the recent play of the Jayhawks but that they
"I saw some people playing with a lot of confidence today," he said. We'll hit a string of tough matches over the course of two years one will be the Big Eight Conference.
KU Equestrian Club may get own horse after spring break
By Rick C. Honish
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid never had this problem.
The KU Equestrian Club does not have a horse.
Kansan sportswriter
But Jeff Smith, equestrian club president, said the club was closer than ever to getting one.
He said the KU Sports Club Council had approved the purchase of a horse that would be the club's own.
Smith said he had put some time into initiating the process that led to the University agreeing to buy a horse for recreational use.
"I researched the initial cost of a
"Now we have to wait for the University's bidding process to do its thing," he said.
horse and its monthly veterinary,
tack and farrier costs," he said. "The
care for a year came to $1800."
"A middle-aged horse in that price range would be great for our club," he said. "We could use the horse for competitions, lessons and riding."
A farrier shoes horses or treats them medically.
He said the horse would cost about $750 to buy.
Smith said that with the proper training and care, the club's horse would be able to compete in small races and beat horses worth much more.
Since the club's organization two and a half years ago, members have been riding 15 horses owned by the
Underberg said that the club wanted to find a middle-aged horse because it would be less impressionable.
A proposed bill would require NCAA to give teams due-process guarantees
"Older horses are set in their ways," she said. "They won't pick up the bad habits that riders with less experience can give them."
Joy Underberg, equestrian club adviser, said that she cared for the horses 10 months out of the year at the Triple J Arabians ranch.
"We use the Girl Scouts" horses to teach members of the equestrian club because they are very calm," she said.
Smith said he hoped to have a horse picked for the club after spring break.
Kaw Valley Girl Scout Council
The Assembly is considering a similar due-process measure. Both are backed by supporters of UNLV basketball coach Jerry Tarkanian, who has been involved in a long-running hassle with the NCAA.
CARSON City, NEV. — A Nevada Senate bill telling the NCAA to play fair with UNLV and other colleges embroiled in athletic disputes moved to the state Assembly yesterday for consideration.
SB202, introduced by Senate Majority Leader John Vergils, D-Las Vegas, requires the NCAA to hold recorded hearings, to rule quickly and to not block teams from competing without just cause.
An 11-year battle between Tarkanian, who was facing a two-year suspension for recruiting violations, and the NCAA ended in 1988 when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the NCAA was a private organization exempt from
The Associated Press
He said that he would feel a lot better if coaches and athletes were under oath when they gave information to
"This is not to protect anybody." Vergils said. "I'm doing it because I think it's a fair way to protect member institutions of the NCAA. The NCAA is not above extortion. They do it every day to their members."
Verglieds complained that the NCAA visits schools then takes its notes back to the Midwest and gives verdicts for the NCAA.
due-process guarantees.
He also said that the information could be rechecked against the verdicts.
Sen. Randolph Townsend, R-Reno, joked after the vote, and said that the Runnin' Rebels should be thrown out of the NCAA — so that they could play in the NBA where they belonged.
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo - George Brett expected this year to be different.
the veteran Kansas City Royals first baseman and three-time American League batting champion said worrying about his 1991 contract kept him up a few nights ago.
"No kidding, I was all worked up. My heart was pounding like the night before the seventh game of the World Series," he said.
Brett, 37, is anxious about ongoing negotiations to restructure his contract, a process that caused lingering illness last year.
"I'm not demanding to be the highest-paid player or anything even like that. All I'm asking for is that the club do the things they've said they'd do for me. Nothing else."
Although he won his third bating title last season, Brett's 1990 start was woeful, with a .200 average May 7. He blamed that on residual unhappiness over the contract talks.
Although Brett is bound to a guarantee $1.5 million contract for 1991, and the Royals hold options for two more years at that point, Brett's financial package already has made proposals to rework Brett's financial package.
"I've been in the organization 20 years. This is where I want to stay." Brett said. "It's in the contract I signed with M. Fogelman that I would be a Royals vice president when my playing career is over, and I'd love to keep a relationship like that.
Kauffman also indicated a desire to wrap up a buyout of the so-called lifetime real estate deal to acquire former coworker Avon Foegelman.
But Saturday, after the Royals second full squad spring workout, Brett said he was baffled about why negotiations were stalled
Brett said he wanted to secure a deal that would allow him to finish his career with the Royals.
"I thought the whole contract
"If my brother or my family caused Mr. K a problem for some reason, OK, I've got somebody else," Brett said.
Brett had been dealing directly with Kauffman, at Kauffman's request. But this week, Brett hired Los Angeles-based agent John Hobbs to present him. Brett's brother Bobby, previously acted as his agent.
thing would be done in January. The Royals had a couple of players (right fielder Danny Tartaball and left fielder Bobby Jackson) file about $14 million in revenue about a million dollars apart from the club's offer, "Brett said."
"A million dollars — and they both got settled with no problem," he said. "So, why is this thing with me so hard?"
Sports briefs
Jayhawks to take swing at No.15 Creighton
The Kansas baseball team will play at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium at 2 p.m. today against 15th-ranked Creighton.
The Jayhawks are returning from a three-game series with Minnesota. The Jayhawks won one game.
"We did some growing up over the weekend," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "I think people have to understand that we haven't beat a team of that caliber on the road, ever."
Today's game will be the first of five straight home games for the Jayhawks.
Bingham said that he was unsure of who would be the starting pitcher against Creighton because of the pitchers used Sunday in Minneapolis.
"We originally placed to pitch (Rory) Ramsdell on Tuesday and not pitch him on Sunday," he said. "We just decided we had to pitch the best two pitchers we had available, and that was him (Mike) Massey."
Kansas, 4-5 overall, will play Missouri tomorrow and Northern Iowa on Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Missouri forward Dough Smith scored just 13 points in the final home game of his career, but his mere presence helped his team achieve an 84-64 victory at Hammond Center last night.
Smith's jersey retired after Missouri victory
Missouri (17-10) got even for last season's 98-67 embarrassment at the hands of the Fighting Irish.
Smith was honored before the game by Missouri Gov. John Ashcroft, who presented a plaque to Kathryn Kutney and the audience looked on.
Anthony Peeler led all scorers with 25 points. Keith Tower paced Notre Dame (12-19) with 15.
While the Irish collapsed on Smith inside, the Tigers bombed away from the outside and scored a season-high 26 points. The Celtics helped by Smith and Peeler helped the
Tigers build a 32-20 halftime lead.
The Tigers pushed the lead to 37-22 as the second half began. And as Notre Dame continued to collapse on Smith, the Tigers continued to hit from outside, eventually building a 71-39 lead.
In a post-game ceremony, Smith was named Missouri's player of the year, and his jersey, emblazoned with a number 34, was retired. After the ceremony, Smith's teammates carried him from the court.
Men's team wins, loses at Drake Invitational
The Kansas men's tennis team split two matches at the Drake Invitational in Des Moines, Iowa during the weekend.
The Jayhawks were defeated by Minnesota 5-1 on Saturday.
Kansas freshman Rhain Buth was the only Jayhawk to win against the Golden Gophers.
Sunday, the Jayhawks defeated Drake 5-1.
Kansas seniors Craig Wildey and Jeff Gross, juniors Pat Han and Paul Garvin and Buth won in singles competition.
Doubles matches were suspended in both duals because the team scores had been determined.
The Jayhawks, 7-4, will play San Diego in Tempe, Ariz. on March 10.
Pitcher Ryan to discuss extension with Rangers
PORT CHARLOTTE, Fla. — The major league all-time strikeout leader could be back in 1928, bringing and news for American League hitters.
Nolan Ryan's agent said he expected to visit the Texas Rangers' spring training camp this week to discuss a contract extension.
Ryan is expected to start opening day against Milwaukee, becoming the 85th pitcher in history to appear in a game at age 44 or older
Rangers general manager Tom Grieve and Dick Moss, Ryan's agent, worked out a deal during last year's training camp for Ryan to receive $3.3 million this year, his third with the club.
From staff and wire reports
Big Eight title open to only one
Ann Sommerlath
POLYNESIA
Sports editor
The Big Eight Conference tournament begins Friday in Kansas City, and it's anybody's game this year more than ever. Every team in the conference has shown flashes of brilliance this season, and the usual top contenders are oddly scattered throughout the standings.
Proof of this parity lies in the seven-game spread between the 10 conference wins it took to share first place (note the word 'share') and the eight victories needed for last. This is the smallest margin in 11 years.
The Cornhuskers were wrapping up the winning season in school history against the conference-leading Jayhawks and were winning. And the mood was far more subdued than when Kansas is losing. The Jayhawks fans were louder and rowder than the Husker cheerleaders.
If fan support, attendance and overall atmosphere were the only things that determined a conference champion, Kansas would have won hands down. The Jayhawks easily defeated some of the fans in the conference. I went to Nebraska on Sunday and observed the atmosphere at the Devaney Center.
But enthusiasm obviously doesn't win games. Anyone would be hard pressed to tell exactly what the players are going for year. The numbers just don't add up.
Oklahoma — usually a strong title contender — is tied with Colorado for sixth in the Big Eight this year, ahead of Kansas State. Yet K-State beat the Sooners twice, once by 25 points when Oklahoma was ranked 22nd and in overtime by three when Oklahoma was ranked unranked. The Wildcats also split the series with Colorado, beating the Bucks by only one point in their first meeting and getting pounded by a 14-point margin in the second.
Colorado fared only slightly better during conference play, winning two more than the Wildcats. However, the Buffs swept Iowa State, supposed to be somewhat of a surprise at the beginning of the season. They also outlasted Kentucky with all but time, by a staggering 17 points. Colorado won against Kansas too — when the Jayhawks were ranked eighth. Explain that.
The Sooners, a perennial conference threat, were shut down early in league play by Colorado and Missouri after opening the conference season with a victory over — you guessed it — Kansas. They were swept by Nebraska, Iowa State and Kansas State. All would have been complete shocks in the past, until this season. Heck, even we were able to beat the Sooners this year for the first time in the last four meetings.
Iowa State, touted as the spoiler of the conference before league play began, fared below average in regular season Big Eight play. None of the victories were particularly impressive; no losses, except those suffered at the hands of the Jay-Hawks during a resisting rassling. That would be par for the course except for the preseason predictions.
Missouri's fourth place berth in regular season conference play is likewise unremarkable except for the Tigers' 20-point shucking of the Chargers, who look back at years past, when Missouri hit a at the conference title.
The big surprise this year has been the "Huskers, in fact. Nebraska only swept two series, to K-State and Iowa State. They split the rest. In the last regular season game, however, they though beat No. 10 Kansas by only 10 points, Nebraska trounced the Jayhawks. Unfortunately, the Cornhuskers' victory dashed the Jayhawks' hopes of an outright conference title and allowed Nebraska to finish third in the conference. It also relegated Kansas to the No. 2 seed in tournament play.
The top spot in the Big Eight at the end of regular season play this year is shared by Oklahoma State and Kansas. Though each team ended the season 10-4 in the conference, the top seed was determined by the Jayhawks' loss to Nebraska, whom Oklahoma State swept.
The championship title is up for grabs — and this time, only one team will win.
Ann Sommerlath is a St. Louis senior majoring in journalism.
10
Tuesday, March 5, 1991 / University Daliv Kansan
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* Breakfast Anytime
NO. MASSACHUSETTS 842-9017
BEAU'S
IMPORT AUTO
SERVICE
Complete Maintenance & Repair
On
European and Japanese
Autos.
CALL 842-4320
545 Minnesota
(Across the street from Vista on 6th.)
1801 MASSACHUSETTS 842-9637
Hours: Sun. & Mon. 11:9; Tues.- Sat. 11:10
MERCEDES-BENZ
TREK 800 TREK
The ideal bike for riding around town or taking those scenic paved roads you've always wanted to explore.
Value Packed ATB Fun - $279
SUNFLOWER
804 Massachusetts, Lawrence, 843-5000
Colony Woods
Hurry In Today!
Apartments
- Summer Leases Available
- 1 Bedroom $355
2 Bedroom 2
bath $425
- 3 Hot Tubs
- Indoor Heated Pool, Volleyball & Basketball Courts
- On Bus Route
- Near Restaurants,
Grocery Etc.
1301 W.24th (24th & Naismith) Lawrence,KS
842-5111
*Managed With The Student In Mind!
Spring for the classic Keds look.
Nothing gets you ready for spring like the comfort of Keds $ ^{ \dagger }$. It begins the moment you explore our new line of quality canvas or premium leather footwear. They're washable, durable and come in a variety of styles, colors and widths. Just look for the Keds $ ^{ \dagger } $ classic blue label.
1
Keds
ARENSBERG'S SHOES
One step ahead!
They Feel Good.
Open evenings 'til 8:30
Open Sunday 1:00 to 5:00
825 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence
Quality footwear for the whole family since 1968.
BUY A DOZEN ROSES, GET A DOZEN
FREE??
$6.95 selected colors while supplies last dozen
st
2.95 &up
95
$3.95
$2.50
- Arrangements $12.95 &up
$12.95 &up;
- Mixed & Pixie Bouquets $3.95
- Mylar Balloons
FLOWERS 4 LESS
Lawrence M-F 9 to 7
Sat. 9 to 5
Out: 8 to 9
Supp: 1 to 5
832-0700
Sun. 1 to 5
All Major Credit Cards Accepted
THINK GLOBALLY DRINK LOCALLY
Tuesdays
$2Imports $3 Burger Baskets
RENCHWARMERS
Southern Hills Mall 1601 West 23rd Street
Get a Slice of Great College Living
Discover college living that's a cut above the rest! When you come by and see our facilities, you'll get a taste of the best in college living, as well as a coupon good for a free Pizza Hut pizza. Any way you slice it, it's a great offer!
Pizza Hut
Pizza Hut Naismith Hall
1800 Naismith Drive 913/843-8559
Offer valid through April 15, 1991. Only one coupon per student.
— K.U. Student I.D. Required —
3
Printed on Recycled Paper
Torture in Kuwait leaves tragic legacy
KUWAIT CITY — As one mortar, locker after another swung open, the Kuwait doctor rolled out freezeframes of horror: skulls pierced by single bullets, sockets without eyes, a sword slashed and singer to torturers.
The Associated Press
"I want to cry for these people—blood, not tears," said Hisham Al-Nisef, one of many medical workers who have been left with the legacy of a murderer.
More than 300 corps, many mutilated, were dumped by Iraq's executioners at the casualty entrance of Al-Sabah Hospital during the seven months of occupation. A final spasm of killing came in the days before Baghdad's army scurried from the city.
With hands gloved in cellophane, the doctor pulled out the body of a handsome young man, mustache neatly trimmed and hair carefully parted. His broad chest had been broken. A hot iron and whipped with wires.
Another victim, whose identity was unknown, Hisham said, had lain in the morgue since Nov. 1, the Iraqis having forbidden his burial. The man's hands were bound in front of him. Cigarette burns had welded one arm. Teennails were ripped off. A bullet had neatly punctured the right side of his neck. His teeth were locked in a parting grimace.
How and why such atrocities were committed are the daily talk of Kuwait's survivors, still stunned by the ferocity of their Arab neighbors. And while virtually everyone here knows of a Kuwaiti killed or tortured,
In interviews with citizens since the city was liberated Feb. 26, people have spoken of torture by crucifixion, electric shocks to the genitals, severe injuries and macabre draining of blood arm cam captives for so-called 'blood donations'.
Sabah Al-Hadeed, a prominent surgeon at the Amiri Hospital, to which 38 of the executed were brought, said torturers would sometimes be accused of retiring from kneecaps or shoulders to inflict excruciating pain but not death.
Abdul Rahman Al-Awadi, minister of state for Cabinet affairs, estimated Saturday that more than 33,000 Kuwaitis were killed or missing over the seven months. These included some 8,900 hurled away by the retreating Iraqis as the allied armies surged toward the capital.
Children were not spared. Hisham said he knew of several who were killed for scribbling "Kuwait is city on the walls." The youngest was 9 years old.
Rapes and mutilations of women were frequently recounted, and employees of hospitals and hotels said Iraqi officers would come around periodically demanding to have their pick of the most attractive women and threatening reprisals if they were not produced.
Random killings were also reported. Sabah, who treated wounded Kuwaiti resistance fighters, stressed that many residents suffered from the attacks and confronting capricious Iraqi soldiers wielding life-or-death power.
Classified Directory
100's
200's
**Announcements**
105 Personal
110 Business
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
Empw...
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
Employment
235 Typing Services
100s Announcements
110 Bus. Personal
B. A. AUTO-MOTIVATE is your full service auto repair shop. Classic to computerized. Body shop available American motor vehicles (6656 M F 8.5 VBA Mastercare & disc passes cards). COLLEGE TUITION too expensive? Let private schools and scholarship pay your tuition. COLLEGE TUITION MANAGERED or your money back. For more information write to: College Tuition Consultants, P.O. Box 4024134
students, start your own business for only $19.95.
Unlimited income potential. Money back guarantee. Call anytime 841-8020 or 841-1469. Ask for Scott.
Bausch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sunglasses
20% Below Sug. Retail
The Etc. Shop
Spring Break!
5 TANS $15
FORMAL WEAR
The Etc. Shop
mental and Sales. 732 Mass.
SAVE MONEY: Money to charge your oil every 25,000 miles with AMSOIL 100% synthetic motor oil. Increase M.G. J and Engine fuel. Bill Rubin. Amsoil Oil. KS 6986 or call 823-4247. Box 365, NSK 6956 or call 823-4247.
EUROPEAN 25th & Iowa 841-6232
the exact scale of the atrocities is still in question.
FACULTY POSITION/ HEALTH PROMOTION University of Kansas Medical Center
MARILYN MONROE
Academic Position in Health Promotion Disease Prevention (HPDP). Department of Preventive Medicine seeks faculty member with doctoral degree and 5 years or more experience in developing programs in HPDP practice under教学
-
Merchandise
and/or teaching.
Call (913)588-2772.
EEO/AAE.
300's
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
400's
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
ADULT tapes for sale at MIRACLE VIDEO
1930, Jasper Hselln, 201. W41.7544.
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO REALLY LISTEN
120 Announcements
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters.
We're here because we care.
814-236-9440
www.themilitarychief.com
*College Money, Private Scholarships You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money refunded America's Forest Since 1891 (CU) $540.00 800-762-7455 Moor Mt. No.488218 B-1 890-7874-7455
1. a MasterCard: It's a calling card; 1.3. Free
forever! Last two days to签到; Wednesday
and Thursday 3.7. 17:0m-3pm ONLY at
the JAYHWA BOOKSTORE!
Call Douglas County Rape Victim's Support Service for confidential and care assistance. If you need help, call 844-256 or 841-2345
SPRING BREAK
---
Gay & Lebbaner Peer Counseling A friendly audience. Free access, confidential referrals (called return by counselors). Headquarters 841-248 or RU Info 844-506. Sponsored by
Now has incredible beeswax & plant pigment crayons, paints, pens, and high quality收敛器 kits for all serious artists The Antique Mall 800 Mascus Lower level.
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concern, call (312) 412-2458. Headquarters
- High quality beachfront accommodations for 7 acting nights.
• Round trip chartered motor coach.
• Free pool deck parties, activities, & promotions.
• Inter Campus Programs I D./Discount card.
• Inst staff for complete
DAYTONA BEACH
- All taxes, tips & service charges included
269
169 WITHOUT TRANSPORTATION
PAUL
Palm Tree
842-7694
ARRANGEMENTS BY INTERCAMPUS PROGRAMS
INCREASE YOUR READING SPEED AND COMPREHENSION! Tuesday March 19, 2016 at 10 a.m. Your students will register and pay 147 materials fee by 5pm March 18 at the Student Assistance Center.
INTERESTED IN MEDITATION?
Hyperbaric Surgery 709-825-6434
Call Chris of Susanne 749-6566
Suicide Prevention - If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is叫 841-256 or visit 1419 Maple, Headquarters
Johnny's
Sunday Special
$2.50
Cheeseburger,
Fries & Draft
or Soda 1-8 pm
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 5, 1991
11
THE WAR AFFECTS US-For a caring listener or info on support services, call Headquarters Counseling Center 811-2456
130 Entertainment
HEY KU! 14.3° Spring Break Time! Party in Cancun Mexico Starting from $89 or Doyaona Beach for $29? 7 nights of pure exclucation! Call Annie at 8a49-8079 for details!!
HURRY! BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE! Spring break is almost here and South Padre is the place to Go. Beach front hotels/condos, Day trip to Monte and more? 7 days, 7 nights. Call Leave
Looking for the best TGIF in town, it's at the BOTTENLEE Free PC book, larker karen. No cover, and 50 draws WOW! See you on Pradtys. Put your heart on the line, listen to other's messages or leave your own 1904-86-3233. 95 Campus Connection. A Connected Dating Service.
Ski Vail-Completely furnished one bedroom condo
dominium, sleeps 4. March 8-15 $1000
1.200.732.9900 EA1 9977
140 Lost-Found
You too to enjoy the nighttime! No wrestles TUESDAYS 18 and over at the BOTTENLEE Look for other special 18 and over events. Pick up a calendar and check it out!
sentinelmal RINGS lost at Jazhaus Sat, Feb.
Reward $150.00 843.5296
Found: i pair Pewter colored wire framed single vision glasses behind Sammerfield Hall. Please contact Chris at 894-1214.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
SALES/ OUTSIDE INTERNSHIPS
• SUMMER JOBS
• $50 per week
Exciting opportunity with National Co approaching business people. No experience necessary. Full training. Chicago and local tenements. For further details call
APPLICATION PROGRAMMER 1-2/3 to 1/4周日
$84-$109/mo convert existing PHOTO code of
Windows 7 into a Windows XP-like interface. Required. KU student working on degree in CEE or UCS, field of science, graphics experience beyond classroom, FOR graphic design, or other related fields. English Preferred. Exerpted. With mapping or statistical software Familiar w/ principles of programming such as HPGL or PoorScript, knowledge of PC architecture c., W = Window, I = Input, P = Printing and full details available at RS locations. Visit West Campus (801 2865) for transcript. Deadline 5:00 PM, March 12 1991
Retirement Community now seeking part-time receptionist. Must possess good communication skills and have great interpersonal skills for night and weekend shifts at 14 hours per week. Please apply in mid-July.
1501 Inverness Drive Lawrence, KS FOR
Summer Jobs 50 OPENINGS
$4.50 - $7.00 per hour
We have a large number of
clerical and light industrial
positions in Johnson County.
We will be taking applications over spring break.
For more information call 362-5309
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Coach swimming, canning, sailing, wrestling, gymnastics, soccer, art, crafts, camping, crafts, dramatics, or riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance, $120 or more. bldg B.Marc Sweepe IDB Maple, Mild.
*Spend the summer in the Catskill Mtn. of New York. Receive a meaningful summer experience working in a residential camp for persons with special needs. Participate in CALEA's Gold Leaders, and Program Leaders. All students encouraged to apply-especially those majoring or considering all health fields.*
*Season dates June 4th to August 28th. Good salary.
*Travel can be arranged. Call Camp Jena*
*914-434-2298*
*914-434-2298*
EARN $15,000 - $40,000 Now hiring managers and
assistants. Fulltime job at STUDENT PANINTERS.
Fulltime job at STUDENT PANINTERS.
*FUNDRAISING. We’re looking for a top fraternity, sorority or student organization that would like to make $40,150 a $1 per week marketing effort. Send resumes to the university office and hard work. Call Karen at (800) 359-2121.
GRADUATING STUDENT NEEDED-Career
position for engagement in job
placement management. Benefits in
include excellent starting salary, company car.
At our institution, you will be able to
perience a must. Call collect. Mr. Schwartz.
Immediate openings for cooks. Starting pay is
$149 a week. Monday-Friday, 5 am-4 pm at
729 Market Street, New York, NY 10018.
Live in mother's helper wanted for Christian family with four young children 841-414 between 1 and 5.
Looking for talented fun-loving person to coordinate kids parties as a fairy princess, clown Will brain but natural outgoing, organized party. Will train and help Call It My Party 749-385. Ask for Tina
Need Cash* Earn up to $600 wk working at home
Send SASE to: R & J Enterprises, P.O. Box 2422,
TX 76200
Need sitter in my home M W F 2:5:39pm. Call
841-4066
REWARDING SUMMER for sophomore and older college student in Goldfield mornings to work on a variety of projects including crafting rails, cains & canvases, fatting matte, and more. WESTERN CAMPUS, B-10, Box 147, FLORENSTANT WESTERN CAMPUS, B-10, Box 147, FLORENSTANT
SERIOUS About YOUR FUTURE? I need 1 dependable people to earn from $1,000 and $8,000 per month working full or part time. If you are willing to help them while helping yourself, call Gaf at 759-3280.
Summer Alder Outdoors - over 5,000 openings!
National Parks, Forests, Fire Crest. Stone stamp for free detail. 113 East Wyoming, Kalispell, MT.
59681
SWAMED! Earn $50 plus weekly home and stuff envelope. Send envelopes. Long, self-addressed stamped envelope to Envelopes Unlimited 9289 Mitchell, Suite 610, Overland Park, KS 65213. Immediate delivery.
Unique Career Opportunity
Https://www.uniquecareeropportunity.com
We are hiring immediately all crew positions, part-time. We need cooks and curb service help. Premium pay for 11am-mid M-F. M-P pay for 9am-7pm. Apply in person at Sonic Drive-In. 230 W.ith
Need managers for rapid growing corporation.
No exp necessary. Will train in sales, marketing and management. Call 1-623-8911.
225 Professional Services
JERRY HARPER LAW OFFICES
1101 Mass. Lawrence 749-0123
Driver Education offered third Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749.
TRAEFIC . DU'S
TRAFFIC - DUI'S
Fake IDs & alcohol offenses
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
Attorney
16 East 13th 842-1133
Government photos, passports, immigration visas, senior portraits, marvels & art portfolios/JAW, color. Call Tom Swells 79-1611
Richard A. Frydman
Attorney at Law
843-4023
For All Municipal and District Court Matters Free Initial Consultation
Model portfolio, portrait, wedding photographer
Instant passport $5.00 Call 841-9689 or leave
message.
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(911) 491-6828
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841.5716.
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping
Lawrence Printing Service 512 E 9th Street
843-6000
235 Typing Services
1-der Women Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scrivelines into accurately spelled and punctuated, gramatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843/263, days or evenings.
1+ Typing/WP-Resumes, term papers, thesis,
etc. 842-4754 after 3:30 pm wkdays, anytime
wkends.
Accurate typing, Resumes, Theses, Letters, Call
Mamiy. 1-933-883-4754 or 643-3181
A better price for word processing. Fast service and support. Contact RJL Systems Call R I J's Typing Services 841-9492 Term papers, legal papers, ect. calls after 9 p.m. Donna's Quality Tying and Word Processing. Call Donna's Services 841-9492
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, terms, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing list. Last pror-
tent date is June 14th.
Mt. 8a, mk. 5, F: S-8a, mk. 84, mk. 2424
I will correct grammar, punctuation or spelling errors, and type your words of wisdom and, in general, help you. produce your best possible papers. 842.62535
Make the call you won't regret! Word Processing Service (Word "fast"). Fast service, high print quality. 417.5 page Free pick-up and delivery minimum. Calen Kaven in Topeka, I-271 1:600
Professional Typist. Reasonable rates. Call
842-3203
Professional resumes-Consultations, formating,
typewriting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc. 927) 841-3051. Mass. 841-1071.
TheWORDTOCTORS- Why pay for typing when you can have word processing? IBM, MAC, laser. Since 1983. 843-3147
Typing and Word Processing- Any size job! Information and price quotes, call 749-3024
Word Processing Typing Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations. Applications. Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing, composition. Have
M. S. Dreene. 841-6234
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
4 poster solid water waterbed, queen size,
carved with 6 drawers complete. Mongoose
California pro kit. Set of climate valve covers
for a 150 engine. 542/368 after 5pm
Black Fender Guitar (Square) with maplewood neck, tenn. system and case. Excellent condition.
Only 8150. Call Mike. 749-6025 after 6pm.
**1989 Yorka MTM Bike.** Excellent shape, Shimano
components. Call 843 784-3615, Ask for Meredith
1 Roundtrip to Dallas. 03/09 to 03/15. $130
- 843-6955.
10 speed bicycle. Mens. Lightweight. Very goo
condition. 862. 842-2976.
Kenwood 1000 amp, CD, tape deck, tuner, 3-way speakers. Excellent condition $460 for all. Edora, 542-2022
Honda 750 Interceptor 1963. Must sell. Call Jim 749-5247. Just installed a new starter.
Steamboat tickets: 2 five day passes valid tl Apr
7. $350.00 sale. Sell for $200.00. 82-4084-
Cheapest flight from KCI to San Diego $190 obo.
3/7-1/6 Return flight from L.A. Beds 165-1392.
keyboard, printer and free software. Call 754-9239.
For sale: car mount YAMIAA YPH100 4000,
CARVER 2120 $280, HARMARKANK road
over 2120, $280, BAZOORA $60, ovev
Double Take
Wanted to sacrifice: 1087 EXP K500 Kawaii-*$1200*
Apple IIc with software+4K50, Nintendo complete package with 5 games+12K0, Rolf T31-56 drum machine+7H2, Call Circ Fh喊! *843-6413*.
Minolta SR101 35mm Camera Kit. 3 lenses
200mm, 165mm, 200mm Close up and Creative
filter kits Other accessories included $265
842 1727 events
340 Auto Sales
1989 Valant-AT-PSS, A/C, V6, 81,000 miles.
recharge battery, alternator, radiator, starter, etc. Original repair manual Always starts $550.
$435-886.
1885 Ford Escort, 2 dr. 4 speed AC/stereo
showroom equipment, 945 lbs after 80 min
1985 Toyota Corolla, $3000. AC/steerboard, 4 dr hat chuck, high miles, new engine and transmission 864-6323
1982 Tercel, 5 spd, ac, am/i/m cassette. iSK, new
transmission, clutch, brakes, tires etc. $1450
- 498-408.
78 Celica, perfect college mobile, nice and affordable. Don't let it get away. Call Pasio, 842-3118. Leave a message, $900 obo.
70 Oldsmobile Omega, AC, AT, PS, cruise, am/fm cassette, good condition Must sell Best offer. Call 841-6312 after 6pm
Red Hot HCXS HRX SIS, aP, acm, fm/ cassette,
68, excellent condition, must sift. ACM 749-3441.
SAVE MONEY: Make your oil every 25,000 miles with AMSOIL 10% synthetic motor oil. Increase M P G and Engine Oil Bill Rubens, Amsoil 10% Synthetic Motor Oil Bill Rubens, 965, Lawrence, KS 6904 or 6242 # KC
360 Miscellaneous
On TV's, VCK's, jewelry, stores, musical in-
cameras, cameras, and we. honor
Visa/MAC/MEM. Disc. Jayhawk Pawn & Jew-
1804 W. 8th 749-1919
NV. SELL LOAN CA
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
bedroom apt w/ balcony available now at Southridge Plaza Apts. $275 water and cable p.
no pets. 842.1160.
2 bedroom apt available now at Aspen West Apts.
$890. water pd. Lease t/ 7/31. No pets. Call
842-1160 or 842-1829
Available March 1 - 1 b unfurb api in new
room, 30 min. access to wifi. Available with Wi-Fi acces-
sory, iDEN accessory, DKE cefing fans, mum blinds. Great location near campus
Short lease available for $30 per month. No pet.
Available on-site.
available now' Beautiful 3 br apt. Washer and
driver, microwave, dishwasher. Woodway Apts,
849-197.
Farmed room one block from KU. Some utilities paid, off street parking.贝客 104-550-3692 Hey KU. Med students. Move in June 1 and receive $2 per your rent for 2 months. **Studio 1 and 2 bedrooms apt.** *Heal and water* *Paress from KU. Med Center. Rainbow Tower Aps*.
合
EQUAL
HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, age, ethnicity, status, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all ads advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis,
Move in immediately! Beautiful 2 bt apt. Washer and dryer, microwave, dishwasher. Woodway Apts. 843-197.
tommate--very large, very nice duplex, now
UYD Only $199.00 to balloon. 847-9746
Need to submit 1 BRI api. ASAP. Washer dryer, water paid, $300 month. Negotiable. Please call 865-0190
Summer sublease or now til August, Live
station $25,000; 841-6744 after 6pm
SUBLEASE-1 1-bedern turn air Sundance II $440 mo. available immed. Day $41-525, evenings 865-729
Sublease 2 BAp brt. DW, W/D; microwave, on bus route. Available in April: 435/mo. 841-2721.
anflower House Student Cooperative has private oems for spring and summer. Drop by 149 Tennessee or call 749-0871.
Sublase for 2 bdm apt immediately. Clean and quiet. $30/mo. Great location for groceries. Call 841-8314 leave message
Summer sublease. 3 bdrm, furnished,
Tanglewood. Option for fail. $186 each. May pay.
749-1209
I SWEAR, JAMAL, SOMETIMES I JUST DON'T KNOW IF CARRIE IS ON THE LEVEL WITH ME OR NOT.
- Pool & Volleyball
Open 10-5, M-F
2166 W.26th 843-6446
- Central air
Bedrooms
- Quiet location
- Close to bus route
- Small pets OK with deposit
* Inexpensive gas heat
- Small pets OK with deposit
1,2,3,4
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM (Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR. apartments at an Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
12-6 pm M - F
9-3 pm Sat.
No Appt. Necessary
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc
WRONG, BUT SOMEITIMES WHEN WE MAKE OUT HOME TO SHERIER-THING SHORT OR WAKE HER UP TO HOLD HER ATTENTION
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
Each apartment features:
ach apartment feature
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
- Large bedrooms
- Mini blinds
- On KU bus route
- Carpets available
1 bedroom $355, $350
2 bedroom $440, $460
3 bedroom $560
611 Michigan Street
(across from Hardee's)
HOURS:
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
9:00-12:00 Sat
843-1971
Written for rent
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
Please call Kristy for appt
- Volleyball Court
- Basketball Court
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Exercise Room
SHE NEVER LETS ON ANYTHING IS WARNING, BUT SOMETHING WHEN WE MAKE OUT I HAVE TO DO EVERYTHING SHORT OF WORK HER UP WITH ME.
- 3 Hot Tubs
- On Bus Route
$ 355 - $425
Models Open Daily
Mint - Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat 10-4 p.m. Sun 12-4 p.m.
SUN
$ 355 - $425
Sunset over a calm lake with trees and hills in the background.
842-5111
1301 W. 24th
SUNRISE VILLAGE
907 Centennial St
Mon.- Fri. 11-5
- Luxurious 3 & 4
Luxurious Town Houses Bedroom Town Houses
Bedroom Town Houses
• Garages: 2 & 1/2 bath
- Garages; 2 & 1/2 bath
- Microwave Ovens
- Some with fireplaces
- On KU Bus Route
- Swimming Pool
- Swimming Pool & Tennis Courts
by Tom Avery
841-8400
I MEAN I WANTED A RELATIONSHIP, NOT AN EPISODE OF "GREAT PERFORMANCES."
Y KNOW, COCKER, PARANOIA IS A WONDERFUL THING WHEN TAKEN IN MODERATION.
Lorimar Townhouses, 8811 Clinton Parkway,
Quality, space, with all the amenities. Brand
new, available now 2 & 3床rooms. Lease thru
May, July or for 12 months. 914-7489, 943-1433.
If you can read this ad, you're too smart to live in an apartment.
- Great social events
- It doesn't take a genius to see that Naismith is the smart place to live while you get an education.
- Computer Center
- "Dine Anytime"
- Free utilities
Wise up and make the move now!
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, KS 65044 (913) 834-8559
West Hills APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now leasing for
June or August
Spacious apts. furnished
and unfurnished
-1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
$280 to $335 per month
(water paid!)
-2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft
$365 to $415 per month
(water paid!)
**Great location**
**Near campus**
OPEN HOUSE
Mon. Wed. Thurs
1:00 - 4:00 p.m. (no app needed)
his ad for original buildings only-
1:00-4:00 p.m. (no apt needed)
This ad for original buildings only
does not include Phase II
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
- Policy
MARE ROUMBAT NEEDED NO'T to subasale apt. w/D, W. DW, microware 215/month Call Steve at 841-9149 or 381-4255 (KC).
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
430 Roommate Wanted
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
**commandanted** Clean 2 bd apt. immediately.
$180 mo plus $1 utilities. No deposit. Bus route
Partially furnished. Call 841-8314
Words set in All CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Centered lines count as 7 words.
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words.
Words set in All CAPS AND BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Wanted. male roommate on bus route, nice area,
$225.无息。 Everything. 43-870.
Female roommate needed immediately to share
four bedroom townhouse. Rent $180.00 plus ¼
utilities. 842 3623.
Blank lines count as 7 words.
Sublease Available: Close to campus, on bus line,
tennis, patio. through August. $240 plus 1₂
utilities. u65-3922
Female roommate needed to share beautiful 2 bedroom apartment Close to campus and downtown $23 includes gas, water and washer and dryer R42-90RS
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D.I.L.OW KANSAN POLICY
make checks payable to
KANSAN
19 Stauffer-Flint Ilai
Lawrence, SK 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
3. 5 Lesson
© 1991 Universal Press Syndicate
"You just take your victim, slip 'em into the flexo-tube, flip the switch, and the Mr. Colls o'Death takes over."
12
Tuesday, March 5, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
WHY GET IN H.E.A.T. OVER HIGHER EDUCATION?
BECAUSE:
- Tuition is recommended to increase 8% for in-state students and 20% for out-of-state students.
- The legislature has proposed a salary decrease, which woul cut KU employees' wages by $606,415
- The legislature wants to cut scholarships at all Regents schools, except for private endowments.
- KU will not receive $1,272,157 for enrollment-adjustment increases next year, and KU will lose $1,019,700 out of its budget for 1992.
- The Kansas legislature does not want to fund the third year of the Margin of Excellence.The Margin of Excellence, if funded, would bring almost $15 million to Regents schools.
Your tuition is going up, and state funding of KU is going down. If you think higher education is important or to find out what you can do to protect higher education, contact The Associated Students of Kansas (ASK) in the student Senate office.
Show your support for higher education!
RALLY FOR HIGHER EDUCATION 12:00 NOON WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6 WESCOE BEACH
Come out and join students in H.E.A.T. The Higher Education Awareness Team.
Course gives students a perspective on mental and physical disabilities
By Sarah Davis
Korean staff writer
Stephanie Young enrolled in a course that opened her eyes.
Young, St. Louis senior, is one of about 25 students in Adult Developmental Disabilities, a course that works with mentally and physically disabled people in the Lawrence area.
"I've always thought that mentally handicapped and retarded people were so different," she said "After working with them, you realize they're just like you. I've got rid of the stigma."
John Throne, courtesy professor of human development,
said students were in a position to teach disabled
David Fishman, Prairie Village senior, who is also in the class, agreed.
"I was so scared of retarded people before this course," he said. "It's completely opened my eyes."
The whole point of this class is that there are things that can be done, should be done and need to be done.
Throne also said it was important for college students to understand that disabled people were normal and had the ability to learn.
"These people are just like anyone else," he said.
"They can be emotional, fun filled, difficult, shy. I want students to learn that."
Throne said people with mental disabilities were normal except that they learned at a slower rate.
"It itdoesn't mean that you're not capable of learning," he said. "It just means that it will take longer."
The class divides into pairs of students who work with a mentally retarded erson toward the completion of a list of six objectives.
Rolin Steiner, Chicago senior, who is working with Young to teach their 27-year-old client how to balance a $30,000 loan.
"I've never had the opportunity to work with these kind of people," she said. "It's a great learning experience."
The students meet with their clients once a week. The goal for the clients is to speak, read and write their first names, last names, telephone numbers, addresses, birthdays and ages.
Students found working with the mentally retarded people was a learning experience.
of people," she said. "It's a great learning experience." The students not only work on the list of six objectives, but also have time for fun. They enjoy such activities as bowling, video games and going out for ice cream.
"I'm seeing that they're people too, and they can grow and benefit from this," said Angie Logan, Overland Park junior, who works with a 42-year-old woman. "It is rewarding."
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1.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
VOL.101.NO.108
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6, 1991
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Committee approves budgetary cuts
By Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA - The fiscal 1922 Board of Regents budget request continues to shrink at the expense of student programs.
After two hours of discussion yesterday, the House Appropriations Committee approved a subcommitteeposal for higher education financing.
The committee approved the removal of a program that provides
financial aid to students.
The program, Career Work Study,
helps off-campus employers pay students who would otherwise be unable to receive education at a Regent's university.
The Regents had requested almost $500,000 to continue the program.
"What we're doing here is raising tuition on students who have financial need, and we are taking away money to help them." Rep. Sheila Hochhauser, D-Mahat
'91 Kansas
Legislature
tan "It is highly unlikely that most of these employers are going to continue to hire these students if they
have to pay full salary."
But State Rep. George Teagarden,
D-LACygne, said it was necessary to
cut the whole program.
"When we looked at this budget, we made the cuts in the requested OOE (Other Operating Expenditures), Margin of Excellence and all the other programs that we've already named," he said. "What we did in turn was to ask the students to pay a little more of their fair share."
'I am not sure if the work study
program itself is the reason that employers hire students."
A motion to save the program was killed
The committee also amended the budget proposal to cut $47,000 from the Regents operating budget.
Stanley Koplick, executive director of the Regents, said the cuts would hurt.
"There's a few weeks left, so
h hopefully we can get it back," he said. "But if this budget goes through in April, it will roll back a number of good things we've been able to do. Hopefully, things will change."
The committee also approved a cut of $12,500 from the distinguished professor program and a total cut of $83,461 from the state scholarship program, the teacher scholarship program and the vocational scholarship program.
Picket power
FUND
BRO BENO
Poor Wages To
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Classified employees from KU and other Board of Regents schools chant, 'The cost of living is 6 percent; 1.5 won't pay the rent' during a protest on the north steps of the state Capitol in
Topeka. The employees were protesting Gov. Joan Finney's proposal for a 1.5 percent cost-of-living salary increase. About 80 classified employees participated in the protest yesterday.
Racial issues force review of city policy
By Vanessa Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
Mayor Shirley Martin-Smith announced last night that the city would establish policies to prevent discriminatory practices making discriminatory remarks.
Martin Smith's statement, which followed an hour-long executive session of the Lawrence City Commission, was prompted by an article by Chris Mulvenon, Lawrence police representative, in a recent issue of the Kansas Fraternal Order of Police magazine.
The article, a satire on the media's coverage of police affairs, criticized a Wall Street Journal reporter's inquiry into the deaths of several Douglas County American Indians. The reporter, Mulvenon wrote, was determined to link a serial killer to the deaths.
But Mulvenue's suggestion that the only "serial" in the Native Americans' deaths was a "cereal malt beverage" has sparked a cry of outrage from the American Indian community, particularly the parents of Christopher Bread, whose body was (found March 19, 1900).
pated in a news conference yesterday morning in response to Mulvemon's article, said the city would establish a plan immediately to improve relations with the American Indian community.
"The City Commission wants to acknowledge that we have a problem," she said. "We accept that we are working hard and we are working hard to solve it."
Martin-Smith, who also partici-
The policy will require all city employees to submit articles that they write to City Manager Mike Wilden to be reviewed, Martin-Smith said. In addition, the City Department has sent Kansas Fraternal Order of Police magazine renouncing Mulvenon's article.
The mayor also said the city would reprimand or ask for the resignations of any city employees who made slurs while representing the city.
"We want to make it clear there will be zero tolerance for racist remarks," she said.
See related stories Page 3
ROTC credit for college to face assembly's ballot
By Sarah Davis
Kansan staff writer
A decision on whether hours earned in ROTC courses should count toward a College of Liberal Arts and Sciences degree was referred to mail ballot last night during a meeting of the College Assembly.
"We need to summarize the arguments for and against the issue," he said.
Jim Carothers, associate dean of liberal arts and sciences, said the 661 members of the assembly probably won't be allowed to issue before the end of the semester.
A proposal submitted to the assembly Feb. 5 asked that ROTC courses not count toward a liberal arts and sciences degree.
The intent of the amendment was to bring the College into compliance with University of Kansas' anti-discrimination policies.
'if we lose our ROTC programs . . . then I think we are no longer effective in trying to work for a change.'
Del Shankel
Many students attended last night's meeting in support of counting ROTC courses for credit.
Todd Brace, Derby senior and member of ROTC, was one of those students. He said that not counting for credit could hurt innocent people.
Interim executive vice chancellor
"I definitely don't think it's fair to take away the credit," he said.
Brace also said students might choose to attend a different university if they were denied ROTC credit at KU.
"The University has a possibility of losing some very smart minds," he
said.
adheres to its policies."
Anne George, St. Louis junior,
agreed that KU could lose students.
But she thought students might steer
their way to safety if its policies
were not followed.
University policy states that students may not be denied the right of access to or participation in any University-sponsored or approved activity because of sexual orientation.
"I know KU has anti-discriminatory policies," she said. "I hope it
Eddie Lorenzo, undergraduate student representative, submitted the amendment to Assembly last month because he said the department of military science violated the University policy by prohibiting homosexuals and lesbians from completing ROTC programs.
vice chancellor, said, "If we lose our ROTC programs . . . then I think we are no longer effective in trying to work for a change."
Shankel and Frances Ingemann, chairperson of the University Senate Executive Committee, plan to travel to Washington, D.C., during spring break to present this issue to the National Association of State Universities and Land Grant Colleges, the Association of American Universities and the American Council of Education.
Del Shankel, interim executive
> See related story
Page 3
Iraqi unrest not U.S. affair, Bush says
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Bush administration said yesterday that it would steer clear of the civil strife that has hit Iraq following the gulf war and warned Iraq's neighbors to do the same. The Pentagon made plans to welcome home up to 15,000 veterans of the war during the next week.
Pentagon military sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, said 4,400 members of the Army's XVII Airborne Corps, including members of the 82nd Airborne Division, would be in the first group returning March 14.
President Bush hailed the troops as U.S. heroes and said home towns all across America would welcome them home soon.
Within a week of the initial return ceremony, up to 15,000 members of all service branches are expected to be back in the United States from the gulf area, said a senior Pentagon official.
Overall, Cheney has said it would take at least six months to take the full contingent of U.S. forces in the out of the region for reassignment.
In Kuwait, at least 10,000 foreigners, including Palestinian residents, are expected to be expelled for collaborating with Iraq during its bloody seven-month occupation, Kuwait officials say.
Sheik Ahmed al-Sabah, head of the main military-based resistance group and nephew to the rulling emir, said Kuwaitis should not single out any nationality. He said many among Kuwait's 350,000 Palestinian residents helped thwart Iraq blockades or performed other services.
There have been rumors of Palestinians being killed by Kuwaits seeking vengeance for relatives murdered by the Iraqi. But Col. Jesse L. Johnson, head of U.S. Special Forces working with the Kuwaits military in clearing the city, said he had no such reports.
That is the estimated number that helped the Iraqis, including looking for false identification cards at the houses of senior officials.
"It just the people who betrayed us will be expelled," said Sheik Ahmed, whose father, Sheik Fahd al-Sabah, was killed defending the Islamic State in first day of Iraq's invasion. "At least 10,000 people will be kicked out."
At the State Department, representative Margaret Tutwiler cautioned Iran and other outsiders to stay out of the conflict that had afflicted a dozen Iraqi cities.
"The United States respects and believes in the territorial integrity of Iraq, and we do not believe that other states should involve themselves in
Iraqi factions
Iraq's defeat in the gulf war will bring a power struggle among these factions;
Baathist Party, ruling party of Saddam Hussein; secular in outlook; most members are Sunni Muslim Arabs
Islamic Revolutionary Party Iraq, headed by Mohammed Bakr Hakim, in exile in Iran; members are Shite Muslim
Iraq Kurdistan Front, headed
Noshray Zebari; members are mostly Sunni.
Iraq Iran
Suadi Arabia
Egypt
Sudan
0 100 Miles
Beghdad
Iraq
umbrella
Saudi,
Baera
are Shine Muslim
Israel Kulanter Front header
Iraqi Salvation Movement, an umbrella group formed by opposition leaders with Saudi Syrian help; includes fundamentalist Muslims,
Kurds, pro-Syrian
Baathists,
Communists
SOURCE: Central
Intelligence Agency,
news reports.
Research by PAT CARR
Sunnis (Arab) Kurds (mostly Shilites
Sunni Muslim)
Sunnis and
Shilites Kurds and
Sunnis Christian
areas
Sunnis (Arab) Kurds (mostly Shlites Muslim)
Sunnis and Shlites Kurds and Sunnis Christian areas
3/5/91
against President Saddam Hussein had occurred inside Iraq, but that the United States and its coalition partners wouldn't get involved.
the internal matters of Iraq," she said.
Knight-Ridder Tribune News/ROY GALLOP
Defense Secretary Dick Cheney said significant unrest directed
28 journalists are thought lost and in danger in Iraq
The Associated Press
The journalists, from U.S. British and French news organizations, drove into Iraq from Kuwait to gather information on a reported rebellion against the President of President Sadam Hussein.
DHAHRAN, Saudi Arabia — Twenty-eight western journalists have disappeared in chaotic southern Iraq, and the U.S. military said yesterday that some were thought to be in danger.
The U.S. Central Command in Riyadh reported that 11 of the journalists left Kuwait for the southern Iraqi city of Basra on Sunday without a military escort and were thought to be in serious danger.
It said the 11 included four reporters from U.S. organizations: Neal Conan of National Public Radio, Chris Hedges of The Grapes, and Greg Lemoto and Tyrone Edwards of Cable News Network.
Bernard Gwertzman, foreign news editor of the New York Times, said the newspaper was working exhaustively to learn the whereabouts of Hedges and the other journalists.
In Paris, the French Foreign Ministry said another 14 French journalists had been missing in southern Iraq since Sunday.
A three-member crew from Britain's Independent Television News has also disappeared in southern Iraq, an ITN correspondent in Dhahran reported. He said the crew was in a convoy that tried to follow senior Iraqi military officers back to Basil after their meeting Sunday with allied commander Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf near the border with Kuwait.
France has asked the Soviet Union, which represents French interests in Iraq, to intervene with Baghdad to try to determine the cause whereabouts, presidential representative Hubert Vedrine said.
Sonia Goldenberg, executive director of the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists, said, "The situation is very unclear, but we are very concerned and would like to urge all parties in the region to help provide information of their whereabouts and help ensure their safe return."
5
2
Wednesdav. March 6. 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
WARNING
TODAY
Cloudy
HI:41°
LO:19°
50/39
49/35
42/16
38/22
65/50
84/59
78/64
Kansas Forecast
Mother Nature brings us back to reality today as clouds and much cooler temperatures slide into Kansas. Chance for a slight rain.
Salina 36/20 KC
Dodge City 42/22
30/20 Wichita 45/21
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
Thursday - Slight chance of rain. High 43/ Low 22.
Friday - Mostly sunny and still cool. High 46/ Low 25.
Saturday - Sunny and warmer. High 53/ Low 28.
forecast by Rockey D. Price
Temperatures are today's highest and tonight's lowest
The University Daily Kansas (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 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 $50. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
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Local briefs
Robbery suspect commits suicide
Barry D, Rush, 29, hanged himself in a Douglas County jail cell early yesterday morning, said Capt. Marvin Mason of the shefft's office.
Rush was found at 2:07 a.m. CPR was started immediately but to no avail, Malson said. Officers had arrived and everything appeared to be normal.
Rush was charged in connection with the Feb. 14 armed robbery of Sirlin Stockade, 1015 Iowa St., the Feb. 7 armed robbery of Taco Bell, 1408 W. 23rd St., and the Jan. 28 armed robbery of the same Taco Bell restaurant.
Rush's bond was set at $40,000, and he was awaiting his March 14 preliminary hearing, according to court records.
Rush also was charged in connection with the Feb. 2 attempted robbery of the assistant manager of Sirin Stockade.
Rush was charged with two counts of aggravated robbery, two counts of burglary, two counts of felony theft, one count of aggravated burglary, one count of attempted robbery and one count of misdemeanor theft.
Police arrest local man for 3 armed robberies
William D. Norris, 38, 132 KUenry St., was arrested early Monday morning in connection with three Lawrence armed robberies.
After being interviewed, Norris was charged with three counts of aggravated robbery and three counts of felony theft. Mulayan said.
While Norris was on the telephone talking to investigators, the police located him and had probable cause to bring him to the station for questioning. Malvernon said. Norris had been questioned in the investigation of the robberies.
Norris called the Lawrence police dispatch from a public telephone and requested to talk to investigators about another matter, said Chris Mulvenon, Lawrence police representative.
The charges are in connection to the robbery of Barnarti Locker, 3032 Iowa St. on; Saturday, the robbery of Hird's Retail Liquor Store, 601 Iowa St., on Friday, on; Pressie, and the robbery of Super 8 Model, 51 McDonald Drive.
Past equality of women addressed
From staff reports
Correction
■ The weekly calendar on Page 5 of Monday's Kansas included incorrect information. Rob Lindsted, a radio talk show host, author and lecturer, will not speak at McColum Hall tonight.
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Carol Karlsen wants to know if Iroquois women were once considered equal to Iroquois men.
Karlsen, professor of history and women's studies at the University of Michigan, was the third speaker in a four-part lecture series about women, work and family sponsored by the women's studies program. About 80 people attended the forum yesterday at the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union.
Kansan staff writer
Peter Mancall, assistant professor of history, said Kater research about women from the Iroquois American Indian Nation.
P
"It's a joining together of two previously separate fields: women's studies and Indian history." he said.
Karlsen said the fundamental question she was researching was, "Have there ever been egalitarian
She said the men and women of the Iroquois tribe once were on equal footing. According to historical records, Iroquois women used to have the power to choose the chiefs of the tribe, but the chiefs were always men.
"It was the Western phenomenon, the colonization by the Europeans, that led to the transition to subordination of American settlers."
She said research about the history of Iroquois women was difficult because most of the documents were written by white Anglo-Saxon males. The historical evidence she has found often contradicts itself.
Carol Karlsen, professor at the University of Michigan, speaks about Iroquois sex relations.
"There is a lack of clear and consistent historical background on Native American women," she said.
Karlsen said the difficulty of her research was complicated by the lack of Iroquois views about women in pre-colonial Mexico.
kept by Quakers.
Charlene Smith, professor of law at Washburn University, drove in from Topeka to hear Kar兰斯 speak. Smith specializes in women's rights and the legal history of women.
"I have a special interest in feminist theory in history, and of people of color," she said.
Police report
at $146 between 4 and 4:10 p.m.
Monday at Anschutz Science
Library KU police reported
Someone spray-painted words on a sidewalk between 9:50 p.m. Monday and 2:25 a.m. yesterday on the east side of the Art and Design Building, KU police reported. Damage to the sidewall totaled $45.
- Someone left a threatening message on a KU student's answering machine between 10:50 and 11 p.m.
Monday, KU police reported.
Someone took a KU student's unattended backpack and contents valued
Three books valued at $137 were taken from a KU student's room between Feb. 14 and Monday in the Lawrence police station. Street. Lawrence police reported.
- Someone slashed a KU student's car tire between 6 p.m. Friday and 9 p.m. Saturday in Lot 112 near Oliver Hall, KU police report.
■ Someone took a KU student's wallet and contents valued at $23 between 4:30 and 5:40 p.m. Saturday at the Center. KU police reported
A moped valued at $200 was taken between 12:30 a.m. Friday and 14 a.m. Saturday in the west bicycle rack at Joseph I. Pearson Hall, KU Distance to the bicycle rack totalled $50, and the moped was recovered.
KU Accounting Club and the Inter
On campus
KU Accounting Club and the Internal Revenue Service will conduct a volunteer income tax assistance workshop at 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. today on the fourth floor in the Kansas Union.
KU KWellness Center will have a stress-management workshop at 12:10 p.m. today at 138 Robinson Center.
■ The University Forum will have Steven Hamburg, KU environmental ambudsman, speak about "The State of the University's Environment" at 11:40 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
- KU Office of Study Abroad will have a general meeting at 12:30 p.m. today at 109 Lippincott Hall
conduct an interviewing workshop at 3:30 p.m. at 149 Burge Union.
OAKS will meet at 5 p.m. today at Ace in the Akavin Union.
Environs will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Big Eight Rooft in the Kansas University.
■ KU Gamers and Roleplayers will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Party Room in the Burge Union.
Amnesty International will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will have a workout at 6:30 p.m. today at 207 Robinson.
Human Services Committee will have a panel discussion about health care in the United States at 7:30 p.m. on Monday, March 25, at Campus Center, 1631 Crescent Road.
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will sponsor a workshop in honor of Women's History at the Fine Room in the Kansas Union
The Society for Soviet and East European Studies will present Sergei
Shandarind, KU professor and native of Moscow, speaking about What Happened to Perestroka?" at 7:30 tonight at yawkh Room in the building.
KU Students for Life and KU Pro Choice Coalition will have "Life Choices. An Abortion Forum" at 8 a.m. on Eight Eight Room in the Kansas Union.
Yohanna Shrader-Storm and Larry Carter will sing folk songs at 8 tonight at the Glass Onion, 624 W. 12th St.
KU Art and Culture in New York Program is still accepting applications through March. They are available at Garp Garih at 3009 Wesco Hall
Headmasters
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(913) 843-8808
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 6, 1991
Campus/Area
3
Herpes has not been forgotten by the many who suffer from its effects
By Amy Francis
Kansan staff writer
Herpes may have faded from recent conversations, but it has not faded from affecting people.
"We see a lot of cases of herpes," said Henry Buck, gynecologist at Watkins Memorial Health Center. "We have a high incidence of Papillomavirus (and Chlamydia."
Candyce Waitley, educator of the health education department at Watkins, said about 80 percent of the population was exposed to the herpes
virus by the time of adulthood. But only 15 to 30 percent had an outbreak of herpes.
Kathy Guth, charge nurse for the Douglas County Health Department's child and STD clinic, said an outbreak consisted of lesions or sorbs in a person's genital or mouth area. It can sometimes be painful, but if it is difficult or visible, the person might not realize the outbreak is occurring.
The frequency of outbreaks depends on the individual.
S.T.D.
Second of a five-part series
"Some people have it and don't have any symptoms for a long time." Guth said. "Some people's bodies can come out." They may not have any outbreaks."
Even though some might not have
an outbreak, they still could have the virus, she said. The virus can be dormant inside a person's body for years.
"Anytime that there is just a change going on, that can activate it," she said.
Stress, tiredness and a menstrual cycle are some of the changes that can activate the herpes virus, she said.
where the outbreak occurred. But the outbreak might not always be visible.
Buck said medication could be used to reduce the length of an outbreak and also decrease the number that occur.
Buck also stressed the prevention of the virus itself. The combined use of a condom and a spermicide containing nonoxynol-9 is a way to greatly reduce the risk of contraction.
Waitley said exposure to the virus did not mean a person would contract
herpes.
"If you kiss someone with herpes, you're not necessarily going to get her," she said. "If you have sex with someone you're not necessarily going to get it."
Guth said that because herpes was a virus, it could be contracted anywhere on the body where there was an opening in the skin.
"It can be gotten anywhere," she said. "It doesn't have to be sexual contact."
Slow but steady
pq.e
Alp Tiritoul, Istanbul, Turkey, senior, tests out his new mode of transportation, 'Copperhead,' a project for his Advanced Problems and Design class. Trittoulgo and Kim Hedden, Thayer, Mo., senior, built the machine and tested it yesterday near the Art and Design Building. Victor Papanek, professor of architecture and urban design, said his students were asked to build a mode of transportation that did not have wheels and did not require its operator to touch the ground.
Water fight still simmering
Steamed residents want better service
Kansan staff writer
By Vanessa Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
Tenants of a Lawrence mobile home park may soon have the water pressure that they have been fighting for.
Lawrence city officials said last night that they would arrange a meeting between the tenants association of Green Acres Mobile Home Park with E. 23rd St, and its landlord. The water on main lines would be turned on.
City workers installed the 3-inch main lines in the park last week to increase water pressure. However, residents complained last night at the City Commission meeting that the stations still had not been installed.
"As of tonight there's still no water," said Bill Carter, member of the Green Acres Mobile Home Park Tenants Association. "We invite you to the trailer park to take e firsthand look at the progress."
Members of the tenants association not only decried the lack of water pressure but also criticized the commission for not responding to their pleas at the Jan. 8 commission meeting.
However, Rod Bremby, assistant city manager, said the city staff had met with Wade and Joann Qandil, landlords of the mobile home park, several times since Jan. 8 to arrange the installment of the new lines.
"You just threw us out on the road like a dead cat." Carter said.
Bremby said that the lines were ready to be used but that the Qandils had said it was the tenants' responsibility to notify the city water department to hook up to the lines.
According to city staff reports, the previous 1-inch main lines had not provided enough water pressure for the mobile homes. Tenants complained that they sometimes had enough water sometimes to wash clothes or take showers.
Bremby contended that the Qandils were responsible because the city had an account only with the Qandils and not with individual tenants.
Mayor Shirley Martin-Smith said that although the city did not have any legal authority to force the Qandilis to install the water meters, it would arrange a meeting to resolve the dispute as soon as possible.
Discriminatory article incites area leaders
The problem escalated Jan. 21 when the Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department advised residents not to drink the water because the lack of pressure could induce the growth of bacteria.
By Lara Gold
Kansan staff writer
The last time Marilyn Bread saw her son Christopher was in church.
"Mama, I'm going to live a good life," he said.
But he didn't get to.
But he didn't get to Christopher Bread's body was found March 19, 1990, about a mile east of Lawrence on 15th Street.
"I hold the city officials responsible for allowing the destruction of our children. Where is the justice?" Marilyn said to about 45 people at a news conference yesterday at Haskell Indian Junior College.
The press conference was conducted in response to an article written by police representative Chris Mulvenon for a recent issue of the Kansas Fraternal Order of Police magazine.
In the article, Mulvenon wrote that a Wall Street Journal reporter came to Lawrence to inquire about the deaths of several American Indians in Lawrence and Douglas County. The reporter concluded in her article that the killings possibly were committed by a serial killer.
"But, if there was a serial murderer, by God, that reporter is ready with her shocking, riveting, never-to-be believed best seller," Mulvenon notes. "Only evidence pointing to serial in the deaths was cereal malt beverage."
Bread said the police should not assume that her son Christopher, 19, was a drunk.
"You don't know my son," she said.
Bread said the news media never mentioned that the American Indians who had died mysteriously since 1880 made contributions to their communi-
"They were fine young men," she said. "Publicly you have destroyed them. My son cannot be helped now, but you can help other young Indian men and women. You can stop labeling them as drunk Indians."
Community response
American Indian Deaths Under Investigation
Daniel Wildcat, president of the Lawrence Indian Center, organized the news conference to get answers to Mulvenon's article.
John Sandoval, 19- body found in Kansas River in April 1989.
"There is no room for racial prejudice within our public institutions." Wiladat said in a prepared statement. "Yet, time and time again, the law has not abolit unwittingly, that we have just such a problem in Lawrence."
Representatives from the Lawrence City Commission, Lawrence's Jewish Community Center, the local chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the Kickapoo tribe, the Gila Indians, the Lepidophron and the Haskell Student Senate also issued prepared statements.
Cecil Dawes Jr., 21-body found in Kansas River in October 1989
Steve Cadue, tribal chairperson for the Kickamoon tribe in Kaapsa, said
Christopher Bread, 19-body found a mile east of Lawrence on 15th Street on March 2. 1990.
Indian death unsolved investigation continues
By Mike I. Vargas
Kansan staff writer
The Douglas County Sheriff's Office has been investigating the death of Christopher Bread for more than a year.
About 1 a.m. on March 2, 1990.
Bread's body was found east of
Lawrence on 15th Street, according
to sheriff's records.
Last April, the sheriff's office requested assistance from the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, Sherif Loren Anderson said.
"We were running into a stone wall." Anderson said.
In the beginning of December, KBI suggested that the sherriff's office should interview people and ask more questions, he said.
In the middle of December, KBI offered assistance by placing four agents on the investigations of the three American Indians, he said.
Three officers from the sheriff's office and one officer from the
Lawrence police also are investigating the three deaths, he said.
There was a setback in the investigations because it was hard to contact people during the Christmas vacation, he said.
In January, a collision expert from the Kansas Highway Patrol constructed a hit-and-run scene from the Bread case, he said.
"We were able to generate some new leads," Anderson said.
In addition, the sheriff's office contacted Harvey Pratt, an artist with the Oklahoma Bureau of Investigation, he said.
Pratt interviewed the reporting parties and provided sketches of two people who were seen with a moped in the area where Bread's body was found, Anderson said. The two subjects presently are not suspects, but authorities want to talk to them for more information.
"Since then we have been devoted to continue to follow up on individuals," he said. "We have worked with the case and are still working on it."
"What the hell is happening in Lawrence, Kansas?" he asked.
race definitely was involved in the deaths of the American Indians.
Cadue said American Indians would not want to send their children to Haskell if something was not done.
Leo Barbee, vice president of the Ecumenical Fellowship, said the University of Kansas had seen a diminishing number of African-Americans returning because of racial problems.
"It will happen at Haskell if something is not done," he said.
Mayor Shirley Martin-Smith said the article was insensitive, inappropriate and unacceptable.
"We apologize for the article, which appeared in a recent issue of Kansas Police magazine," she said. "I think we were wrong about the community so much concern."
comment.
Mulvenon was unavailable for
Ann Weck, dean of social welfare and chairperson of the Lawrence Community Task Force on Racism, Discrimination and Human Diversity, said it was gathering information to ensure proper steps were taken.
"When circumstances like this occur, it is typical to claim that the remarks were unintentional and reflected no attitude of discrimination," she said. "However, the very act you do not realize the damage your remarks or actions have inflicted on another individual or group."
Bob Martin, president of Haskell,
said, "The loss of a child is unspeakable for any parent. For parents not knowing how their child died, this grief remains constant and insurmountable."
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Wednesday, March 6, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Give union help
Striking store employees need local customers to help cause by refusing to shop at Food Barn
Union members at 47 Food Barn stores in Kansas and Missouri, including the Lawrence store, have been on strike since Sunday. The strike stems from failed contract negotiations and from management's subsequent implementation of large cuts in pay and benefit for workers.
With the previous contract, the local Food Barn employed 15 KU students.
Lawrence should support the union's demand for fair contracts for the 2,500 affected Food Barn clerks and meat cutters in Kansas and Missouri. The best way to support this demand is by choosing not to shop at Food Barn.
Union members are hoping to win support by picking 24 hours a day in front of the 47 stores. Handbills stating reasons for the strike and asking customers to shop elsewhere are being distributed.
Union officials report that in the past six years, management has cut $48 million in wages and benefits to keep Food Barn in operation. Under the proposed contract, employees will lose an additional $27 million in concessions during the next three years. Management also has proposed eliminating health insurance policies for part-time workers, who make up more than half of Food
Barn's employees.
Food Barn says these concessions are necessary to remain competitive with other stores. But union members say Food Barn has lost money because of mismanagement, not labor costs.
Union members maintain that the contract is unacceptable and unfair. While the workers have sacrificed millions of dollars; management has not taken its fair share of cuts.
Members are not asking for wage increases, just that they keep the wages and benefits they had before the proposed contract.
All employees would suffer from the proposed cuts, but part-time workers, including KU students, who would have health benefits eliminated in addition to lower wages, would be affected the most.
The workers have done their part. Now it is time for management to make some concessions of its own and work with employees to develop a fair contract. Both sides have said the outcome of this strike ultimately will be decided by the customers
Lawrence should support union members by refusing to shop at Food Barn until an acceptable contract is signed.
Melanie Botts for the editorial board
Opening the field
Bill would help teacher shortage, add training
In an attempt to resurrect a dying job field, State Sen. Dave Kerr, R-Hutchinson, has proposed a bill in the Kansas Legislature that would provide an alternative and somewhat easier way for prospective teachers to earn their teaching certificates.
The proposal would loosen the requirements needed to receive a teaching certificate by not requiring additional college education. It would allow a college graduate with a degree in something besides education the right to earn a teaching certificate without having to return to school and earn the required education degree.
Instead, the prospective teacher would be able to earn a certificate through on-the-job training, primarily in the form of two-year internships and some classroom study. These internships would be supervised by a teacher, a principal and an instructor from a teachers' college.
A benefit of this bill is that it would help
alleviate the continuing shortage of teachers especially those trained in the areas of mathematics and science.
The proposal, if passed, would loosen the requirements needed to receive a teaching certificate by not requiring additional college education. It would allow a person who has graduated from college with a degree in something other than education to earn a teaching certificate without having to return to school and earn the required education degree.
By requiring a two-year internship program, the trainees would not be thrust immediately into a teaching position but would gradually learn the fine points that might not be taught in a classroom. A supervised, on-hand training experience would be an effective alternative and an excellent opportunity for prospective educators to learn their trade.
Brent Maycock for the editorial board
THE LOSER AND STILL
CHAMPION...
Troubled tabbies stalk abusers so keep your guns in a drawer
P
BAUG!?!
TOM MCNAMARA
Melanie Botts
Staff columnist
I thought I'd seen everything.
After all, Toonces the Driving
Cat is pretty amazing.
But then, the other day, I was reading the newspaper while still half asleep. All of a sudden, a headache came. All of a sudden, You Color Your Gun? May Be Feline Felon
I was sure it was just another inaccurate headline. But after reading the lead several times, I realized this was an attempt at the truth: Don't you hate it when you get shot by your cat?
Apparently, a Kansas City man was shot in the ankle last week while working on a car in his shop. The culprit? His cat! The cat, playing on a nearby workbench, pushed a loaded 22-caliber revolver onto the floor. The gun discharged, and the bullet hit the man in the right ankle.
Local police, who couldn't help but chuckle, remarked that they did not know what grudge the cat might have had against the man.
Nevertheless, the cat proved a pretty good shot.
My high school English teacher was one. He'd often snarl at the mention of cats and always said he'd drive over a cat that around one
After I stopped laughing, I began to ponder the underlying meaning of such a violent act. Was this intemational behavior on the part of the cat? Slowly I began to recall all the people I knew who professed strong dislike
Then there was that girl who answered my ad for a roommate. During a visit, she told me how much she just loved cats as she proceeded to slam her own cat in the refrigerator for jumping onto the counter.
for cats
And my neighbor from long ago — he used to swing his cat around by the tail screening. "Are you dizzy yet?"
As my memories became increasingly grotesque, I realized something. My favorite animal of all time had finally had enough of this unjust treatment. Anyone will admit that cat abuse has been allowed to run wild. How come it's always the dogs who get all the attention?
ular cat to resort to a gun. The grudge must have been a big one, and the owner surely will never tell. But I bet he's learned a good lesson.
So I began to admire this brave cat. Someone needed to take a stand against cat abuse and who better to do so than a cat itself?
So take this as a warning, all cat-haters: The cats are making a comeback. Clawing and shrieking no longer will do. Guns are the answer! Be kind to cats or suffer the embarrassment by taking it to a police officer that your cat hates you enough to shoot you doesn't say much for your character.)
I don't know about you, but I'm going to be especially nice to my cat the next time I'm home.
Who knows what drove this partic-
Melanie Botts is an Atchison senior majoring in journalism.
LETTERS to the EDITOR
Education is answer
I would like to respond to the editorial concerning fraternities and the IFC bylaw.
It seems to me this is the problem. We say that we prevent rape from happening, but prevention is only an exercise, and obstacles can be overcome.
Rape has been a popular subject as of late in the Kansan and various magazines. I guess we can verify this fact by comparing the variety of identity desiles all efforts of prevention.
The editorial reminded fraternities to stop abusing IFC regulations, which include the banning of open house parties in which "anyone off the street can come." It suggested using a roster to keep tabs on the guests invited "so that situations in which rape and accidents are likely to occur will not present themselves."
Statistics sav that women are three
times more likely to be raped by an acquaintance than a stranger, so this theory of excluding "anyone off the street" is invalid. Not only will the raping continue to occur, but the victims will now be considered
Rape will occur whether there are open house parties or not, rosters or not, booze or not. Because I've critiqued the board and its solutions to the problem, I think it's appropriate for me to make a suggestion.
Instead of taking away, by restricting fraternities freedoms, it is necessary to give. I'm talking about education. We're never going to be able to prevent rape, but we can help stop it by educating children at the earliest possible age and educating all adults to those who are committing the crime.
How does anyone learn if they're not taught first? It is necessary to educate now instead of waiting for the next accident to occur.
Diane Bosilevac Kansas City, Kan., senior
Inaccurate coverage
members of the Direct Action Movement.
I would like to take the time to clear up a few problems with the story concerning the arrest of five
It was reported that a man who attempted to gain entrance to the Army Recruitment Center was "shoved back" by members of the group. If you would like to view the video tape of the six o'clock WIBW news, I would be happy to provide it for you. It clearly shows that the pulling and shoving was done by the young man himself. You could see that all of those blocking the doorway were linked at the elbow and were in no position to do any type of shoving. We are a non-violent organization and some readers have questioned us about this incident.
It was stated that I was the person who organized this event. This is not so. We have made ever attempt to maintain DAM as a non-hierarchical
There were not 20 people blocking the doorway to the office. There were six people who participated in the symbolic blockade, with one member opting to leave when asked to do so by police. Five of us were then arrested. There were however, more people who stayed on-site site of the protest giving support to those who were arrested and we would like to thank them.
group. This event was not planned by me alone, nor by the five who were arrested. All members of DAM were integral to the planning and execution of this protest and credit should be given to one of them for their contribution.
Tom Howell Lawrence graduate student
We do thank the Kansan for being present at the event and for considering it newsworthy. We simply felt that we would be to be mentioned. Thanks once again.
Too good to be true
As I read the Mar. 4 articles about Campus Connection, it brought me back to early fall, to when I had my own experience with this spurious
My experience, fortunately, was not as severe as that of Cynthia Wimmer. I too was faced with the decision to be welcomed by a group of immediate close friends or face their rejection as I became closer to them. They said I would go to hell when I died if I did not join them, that they loved me and wanted what was best for me. They told me to end communication with my family so I could bring my new religious family
closer Everything they said was reinforced with Bible verses and warm smiles and hugs.
During the two weeks I spent with them, I rarely ate or slept. I was slowly pulled away from basic tenets of a Catholic upbringing. I did not know where to go or who to turn to.
After deciding that I could not handle the strain anymore, I finally told my 'disciplex' I would not speak with her or her group anyone.
I had to learn the hard way what was painfully common sense. Time and only time can show whether someone really loves you. Words are nothing unless they are substantiated by actions that only someone who really loves you can do. Know the difference!
Friendship is not immediate either, no matter how much we need it. Time is the true test. We are all young people who do not know how to temper our curiosity or our desire for success. Beware of those who offer something "too good to be true." Prick up your ears when a member of an organization asks you if you think your parents would disagree with your joining their group. They may mean to separate you from your
parents, the ones who have known you for more than 18 years, who can be the only ones who can help you get out of a jam, especially a financial
Finally, anything can be proved by using Bible verses if you use them in the right context. Think about it.
And Cynthia Wimmer, wherever you are, prayers with you.
Jennifer Ludlow
Wichita freshman
Professor is misquoted
In the Feb. 22 University Daily Kansan, your newspaper reports me as having said at my lecture the previous evening at the Spencer Art Museum. "Race should be looked at a science, as a truth and as a fact."
The central point I made in my lecture, and repeated several times, was the exact opposite. Race should not be looked upon as a science, as a truth and as a fact, but as an ideological development that came about as the result of certain economic and historical factors.
Arnold Ramnersad
Arnold RAMPersed Woodrow Wilson Professor of English, director of American studies, Prince- university
ton University
CHRIS SIRON
Editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
Editors
By Tom Michaud
RICH CORNELL Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
RICH CORNELL
News Melanie Matnes
Editorial Tiffany Harness
Planning Holly M. Neuman
Campus Jennifer Reynolds,
Sports. Ann Sommermelter
Photography Keith Thorpe
Graphics Melissa Unterberg
Features Jill Harrington
Business staff
AUDRA LANGFORD
Business manager
MINDI LUND
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Campus sales mgr. *Sophie Wheeh*
Regional sales mgr. *Carmen Drench*
National sales mgr. *Jennifer Claxton*
Production marshs. *Rich Harbarman*
Kade Studer
Marketing director... Gall Enbinder
Creative director... Cristy Hahs
Classified manager... Kim Crowder
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 Kinasa must have their contact information included.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photorecorded.
The Kanan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guestohns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanan newsroom, 113 Staffer-First Hall.
Home Remedies
HOLIDAY
WELCOME
BABY
MILLY
DAVID
HEY, WHAT'S THIS?
'MARCH 6 : NO CLASS, DUE TO
"NESS"
PROF. CALABRESE
KICK BUTT!!
YESSS!
ALTHOUGH I HOPE THE PROFESSOR FEELS BETTER...
THE BUMMER IS-
I COULD'VE SLEPT IN...
NUTS, I SHOULD'VE SKIPPED.
KICK BUTT!!
YESSS!
ALTHOUGH I HOPE THE
PROFESSOR FEELS
BETTER...
THE BUMMER IS-
I COULD'VE SLEPT
IN...
NUTS, I SHOULD'VE
SKIPPED.
...
1
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 6. 1991
5
Student Senate passes bill
Media bill, thought dead, is resurrected
By Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
Student Senate adjourned abruptly last night when it failed to reach a quorum after too many senators had left.
Before the adjournment, however, the media bill that seemingly was defeated last week was ruled passed, and the bill to reckon on its hidert for the next week.
Senate also passed a bill restructuring graduate representation in Senate.
The bill makes Graduate Representative Assembly the head graduate organization, consolidating power that before was distributed among three groups, Graduate Student Council, the Graduate Representative Assembly and the Senate Graduate Affairs Committee.
The proposed media bill, which was thought voted down last week, was actually approved, Senate members were told.
Aimee Hall, student body vice president, said she had been given incorrect information regarding the required vote for approval.
requirement last week, Hall ruled.
Senate also began to hear the budget recommendations for next year, but could not vote, because of the lack of a quorum.
The bill only needed a simple majority to pass and it met that'
It did, however, vote on several amendments to the budget proposed by the finance committee while senators were present to vote.
Senate voted to raise the proposed allocation of $184,116 to Legal Services for Students by $2,600 so the could inquiry could buy another computer.
Senate is scheduled to finish debate on the proposed budget tomorrow.
Motor-voter forms face House
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Voter registration forms could be attached to driver's license renewal and application forms, or could be filled out on election day if two bills before a House committee become law.
Lobbists and state officials told House Election Committee members yesterday that both registration processes would increase voter registration and participation in the state. The committee took no action on the
Rep. Anthony Hensley, D-Topeka, said Colorado, Arizona and Michigan already allowed people to register to vote when they apply for or renew their driver's licenses. Hensley said this "motor-voter" process had increased voter turnout in Michigan from 41 percent in 1974 to 60 percent today.
Some may argue that the new process will make lines at driver's license stations longer. Hensley said. However, he said people actually would save time because they can make one trip to register to vote and to receive a license.
Ron Thornburgh, representing Secretary of State Bill Graves, said Grayes opposed election day registration
because it would delay release of election results.
"I hate to put a time on it, but there would have to be about a week's delay in knowing what the results are until we could verify that the people who registered live here live they live and are who they say they are." Burton said.
Connie Stewart, representing the Kansas AFL-CIO, said some people argued that allowing election day registration would increase incidents of voter fraud. But statistics from Maine and Minnesota, where election day registration is allowed, do not support that argument, she said.
Rep. Sherman Jones, D-Kansas City, said he was concerned that election day registration would lead to special interest groups driving people to the polls and convincing them how to vote on certain issues.
But, Rep. Elizabeth Baker, R-Derby, said she drove people to the polls during every election and tried to convince them to vote for her.
"If I could get people registered to vote on election day, I would get buses and pass out my literature coming and going," she said. "And I can't imagine anyone not doing that."
Lectures recount schools' histories
Kansan staff writer
By Benjamin W. Allen
Professors of law and engineering recounted the histories of their schools last night during the penultimate lecture of the KU Heritage Lecture Series.
The lecture series is a celebration of the 125-year history of the University.
Michael Davis, professor of law, and James Maloney, emeritus professor of chemical and petroleum sciences, will be among people at the Spencer Museum of Art.
In his lecture, Davis concentrated on how the development of the law
school mirrored that of the state and the law profession.
He also talked about the first dean of law, James Green, whose personality still permeates the school.
Davis said the loyalty Green engendered in law students could be seen in the law school's athletic gymnasium, where the Green Machine, and the statue in front of Lippincott hall, which shows Green pointing the way for a student.
Davis said the early integration of Kansas could be seen in the early graduates of the law school.
The first African-American graduate from the law school received his
degree as early as 1887, nine years after the law school was founded.
Maloney wondered aloud how professional schools such as law and engineering had been added to the University.
"I often thought it was a subterfuge when people in the liberal arts weren't paying attention to their business," he said.
He said engineering was a newcomer among the professional schools and traditionally had reflected the practical needs of soci-
Maloney extolled the quality of engineering students, faculty and alumni in his lecture.
RALLY TODAY
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\*Tuition is recommended to increase 8% for in-state students and 20% for out of-state students.
*The legislature has proposed a salary decrease,which would cut KU employees' wages by $606,415
*The legislature wants to cut scholarships at all Regents schools, except for private endowments.
*KU will not receive $1,272,157 for enrollment-adjustment increases next year, and KU will lose $1,019,700 out of its budget for 1992.
*The Kansas legislature does not want to fund the third year of the Margin of Excellence. The Margin of Excellence, if funded, would bring almost $15 million to Regents schools.
Your tuition is going up, and state funding of KU is going down. If you think higher education is important, or to find out what you can do to protect higher education, contact The Associated Students of Kansas (ASK) in the student Senate office.
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Wednesday, March 6. 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Electrician Ron Denlinger installs conduit boxes at the KU Bookstore as part of its renovation.
Philip Meiring/KANSAN
KU Bookstore remodeling moves toward July 1 finish
By Patricia Rojas
Kansan staff writer
Mara Bechtold has answered "tons of questions" about blue books.
"I couldn't begin to count how many people have asked, said Bechtold, a supply clerk at the KU Medical Center."
Blue books are one of the many items that customers shopping at the Kansas Union Bookstore this semester are having trouble finding. The bookstore is undergoing Phase II of its renovation.
As a result, the items that were in the south section of the store have been incorporated into the north section. Some of the art supplies have been sent to the Burge Union, store manager Mike Reid said.
Phase II is the completion of the renovation project that began in February 1988. Phase I of the project, which included the completion
'Probably by the time people get used to where everything is, we will move it back to where it used to be.'
Mara Bechtold KU Bookstore
ect, which included the completion of the north end of the store. was finished in August 1898.
Before Phase 1 began, the bookstore had retail operations on the first three levels of the Union. The textbooks were on Level 1, the gifts and clothes on Level 2 and the Oread Bookstore on Level 3.
The main purpose of the renovation project was to consolidate all the store departments onto one floor. Reid
He said the main reason for Phase II was to match the south and north ends of the store.
Some changes being done in the south end include changing the carpets, repainting the walls and changing the windows.
Phase II of the renovation will cost about half a million dollars, Reid said. The store will use its own revenues to pay for the project.
The KU Bookstore is owned by the University of Kansas Memorial Corporation, a not-for-profit organization. The store has a specific fund reserved for expansions. Reid said.
The store began Phase II of the renovation in mid February to avoid interfering with the start of the school year. he said.
"We were going to do it last summer, but we ran too short of time," Reid said. "So we put it off one year. We plan to have it completed by July 1."
Bechtold said work at the bookstore this month had been very busy.
"There's been a lot of stuff that has been moved," she said. "Probably by the time people get used to where everything is, we will move it back to where it used to be."
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Nation/World
7
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 6, 1991
Nation/World briefs
Moscow
Baltics could gain independence
British Prime Minister John Major said Mikhail Gorbachev reassured him yesterday that under Soviet law, talks between Baltic authorities and the Serbimil could lead to a truce.
Major said during four hours of meetings that
he outlined Britain's dismay over the military crackdown in the Baltics that had left 22 dead since January 1945 in the European conventional weapons treaty.
PETER BROWN
Mikhail Gorbachev
Major said the bulk of his talks with the Soviet president focused on the Persian Gulf War and the need for a
lasting political settlement. Major said at a news conference that the Soviet Union agreed it was up to countries in the region to decide how best to guarantee their security.
San Juan, Puerto Rico
Spanish to be official language
Dealing a blow to Puerto Rico's statehood movement, legislators overwhelmingly approved a bill that made Spanish the sole official language of the Caribbean island.
The Puerto Rican Senate approved the bill by an 18-6 vote late yesterday, revoking the Official Languages Act of 1902 that designated both English and Spanish as the languages of the government.
The new law now returns to the Peorio Rican's House because it was amended to mandate that English continue to be taught in Puerto Rican schools.
Atlanta
Drug cuts heart failure deaths
A drug that relaxes blood vessels cut the annual death rate in half in patients with heart failure, which afflicts about 4 million Americans, a researcher reported yesterday.
Doctors have been using the drug and believed it was helpful, but they had not known how effective it would be at reducing the death rate, said Jay Cohn of the University of Minnesota.
In a study presented at the annual meeting of the American College of Cardiology, Cohn reported that patients with mild to moderate heart failure had a 10 percent annual death rate given the drug amapril, compared to a 120 percent annual mortality without Cohn said.
Seattle
More poisoned Sudafed found
A sixth suspect Sudafed 12 Hour capsule was found yesterday during examination of tens of thousands of capsules during the investigation three cyanide poisoning cases, an official告示。
"You can visually see that it was different from the other capsules." Food and Drug Administration representative Jeff Nesbit said from his Washington, D.C., office.
From The Associated Press
Michigan law requires education on abortion
The Associated Press
LANSING, Mich. — Children as young as sixth-graders will be told how to get an abortion without their parents' consent under a law requiring parental consent, officials said yesterday.
Department of Education officials writing the material that will be given to students said that some parents might object, but that the department has no choice but to comply with the law.
"I think it's going to be real tough," department representative Bob Harris said. "I think there are going to be an awful lot of parents who are going to wonder what's going on."
The law, set to take effect March 28, requires girls 17 and younger to have a parent's consent for an abortion. But minors can ask a probate judge to waive the parental consent if the judge finds that the minor is mature enough to make her own decision or that the waiver would be in her best interests.
The measure, initiated by Right to Life of Michigan, is being challenged in court by the Michigan chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union. A hearing on the ACLU's request for an injunction to block the law is set for Tuesday in Kalamazoo County Circuit Court.
The requirement that schools notify children in sixth through 12th grades of the law was added to
the bill during House debate, said Rep. Maxine Berman.
Berman, who favors abortion rights, said the provision was needed because teen-agers otherwise never would find out about the law until it was too late.
"They have to let youngsters know this so that hopefully they will think about it, although I doubt and of them will think about it," she said. Any effort to become a pregnant mother don't know this Jaws exists.
Right to Life accepted the amendment because it passed easily, said Barbara Listing, the group's president.
Some school officials might resent having to hand out information pertaining to abortion, she said.
"I think, too, parents will be concerned about having their children get the information," she said. "A lot depends on the form the schools use. I need to know the practical if children realize parents have to be involved."
Mary Ohlendorf, director of information and education for the Planned Parenthood League of Detroit, said the notification could clear up teenagers' misinformation about the law.
Taxes may bail out banks
Bill will have public pay for protection of deposits
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Support is growing for having taxpayers, rather than the banking industry, bear the extra cost of bailing out uninsured depositors in whose failure could unravel the financial system.
Sen. Donald W. Rieagle Jr., D-Mich, and chairperson of the Senate Banking Committee, yesterday introduced a broad bank-reform bill that, in the process, payers share the cost of the biggest bank救緑.
His bill would prevent the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., financed by banks' insurance premiums, from protecting deposits in excess of the $100,000 insurance limit after 1994.
However, the Federal Reserve could pay off uninsured保费 if it thought that it was necessary to prevent a contagious run on other insured companies by the dollar or some other financial emergency.
The proposal could prove politically toachy, especially with so many members of Congress being attacked by constituents for supporting a taxpaver bailout of the savings and loop industry.
Any money the central bank spend would have to be deducted from the annual revenues it forwards to the Treasury. So, in effect, taxpayers would bear the cost.
Sen. Alan Dixon, D-III, and a member of the banking panel, and Rep. Chalmers Wylie of Ohio, the senior Republican on the House Banking Committee, also have proposed plans for tapping the Federal Reserve to pay part of the cost of bank failures.
Under Riegle's proposal, the FDIC, and by extension the banking industry, would continue to bear most of the cost of so-called "too-big-to-fail" bank rescues.
For instance, in the collapse earlier this year of the Bank of New England, regulators attributed roughly $300 million of the $2.3 billion bailout price tag to the cost of protecting uninsured depositors. All deposits were declared safe because regulators had insured them throughout the economically depleted region.
The argument for spreading the cost of such bailouts is that the entire financial system and everyone who benefits from it, not just banks, pay the price.
"If what you're really talking about is an institution that's got so far out of bounds that it threatens to bring down the whole system, then maybe the cost of intervening there ought not to be charged for insurance fund per se, but ought to be charged against the government generally," Riegle said.
Riedle said other changes his bill would impose should make too-big-to-fail bailouts very rare. He would require regulators to crack down on banks that are so soon as their owners' capital is exhulted.
"The whole notion of restructuring the system is to avoid failures of huge banks" he said.
Riegle's position is supported by five banking industry trade groups, L. William Seidman, chairperson of the FDIC, and, at least tentatively, two large bipartisan congressional agencies.
Robert D. Reischauer, director of the Congressional Budget Office, told Riegle's panel yesterday that a good argument could be made that taxpaying employees pay the extra cost of protecting uninsured deposits.
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---
8
Wednesday, March 6, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Surgeon General asks brewers to restrict ads
■ Among those currently in college, between 240,000 and 360,000 eventually would lose their lives because of drinking.
Novello appealed to alcohol manufacturers and retailers to take a more responsible position in their marketing and promotion tactics during this year's spring break.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Surgeon General Antonia Novello took aim yesterday at binge drinking by college students and called on brewers to stop running promotions that appeal to underage drinkers.
money on booze than on books.
Alcohol was one of the leading causes of death among young adults. In 21 percent of all college dropouts,
"Unfortunately, spring break has become synonymous with excessive and binge drinking by our young people," Novello said.
Novello began her news conference by showing a videotape of throngs of drunken students clogging the streets during spring break three years ago.
"I want to say to our young people that it is time to put on the brakes with regard to their drinking," she said.
James Sanders, president of the Beer Institute, said manufacturers in the past had provided diversionary recreational opportunities during spring break, such as contests and team games, to emphasize away from drinking.
Novello said young people had been bombarded with advertisements that led them to think drinking was an acceptable rate of passage and a necessary path for them to follow.
The average student spent more
He said the brewers were unfairly blamed for the unruly behavior of students who lost control and that they could still stay away altogether this year.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 6, 1991
Sports
9
Grand slam wins game
Jay hawks
5
Jay hawks
11
Kansas sophomore Jeff Neimeier rounds third after a grand slam that beat the Creighton Bluejays at Hoodland-Maupin Stadium.
Three home runs give KU victory
Kansan sportswriter
By Mark Spencer
Kansas sportswriter
Kansas sophomore Jeff Neimeer's two home runs in his last two at bats gave the Kansas baseball team a 13-11 extra-inning victory against the Creighton Bluejays yesterday at Hogwlund-Maunin Stadium.
Kansas trailed the 11th-ranked Bluejays in 8 in the bottom of the ninth inning when Neimeier came to bat with two men on base.
"He beat me with a fastball on the first pitch," Neimeier said. "Then, he ended up hanging a curve."
Neimeier swatted the pitch into the left-field evergreens, forcing the game into extra innings.
Creighton answered in the top of the 10th inning with a three-run home run by Creighton catcher Ryan Martindale, his second of the day.
The Bluejays led 11-8 as Kansas came to bat, but Neimeier said the Jayhawks refused to give up.
"The whole inning before, when they scored three runs, I hoped I would get a chance in the 10th," he said.
In the 10th, Kansas senior Denard Stewart scored on a fielder's choice with the bases loaded.
The Jayhawks trailed 11-9 when Neimeier the吴 came true.
"I took a pitch that I maybe should have" it said. Neimeter said, "The second one was a fastball on the inside part of the plate."
Neimeier launched that pitch over the left field fence, sealing the victory for the Jawhaws.
He said he knew the two balls would leave the park as soon as he hit them.
"To get a chance to do that in two innings is incredible." he said.
Baseball
Neimeier's home runs overshadowed a fine pitching performance by Kansas freshman David Mever.
Meyer was relieved by sophomore Jim Walker with one out in the seventh inning. Walker was credited with the pitching victory.
After surrendering four runs in his first three innings, Meyer retired 10 of the next 14 batters he faced.
In the first inning, the Jayhawks scored three runs, but their early lead was erased when Creighton runs in the second and third innings.
Kansas regained the lead 5-4 in the sixth when sophomore left fielder John Wuycheck drilled a two-run run over the right center fence力
Creighton right fielder John Pivar put the Bluejays back on top 7.5 with a three-run dinger in the top of the eighth.
Creighton catcher Ryan Martin-dale's bases-empty home run in the top of the ninth gave the Bluejays an
8-5 lead and set the stage for Neimeier's late-game heroics.
Kansas coach Dave Bingham said that he was pleased with the way the Jayhawks battled back into the game when Creighton took the lead.
"We adjusted better in this game than we have before," he said. "In the middle innings, there was a time that we leu up.
performance at the plate.
"But a guy like Neimeire wouldn't let us give up, and neither would (David) Soul," Bingham said.
Soult scored three runs in a 3-for-4
"I'm very impressed with Meyer," he said. "As far as I am concerned, he's our third starter and we're looking for a fourth."
The Jayhawks are starting to locate some key personnel, Bingham said.
Bingham said the Jayhawks were maturing with every game.
"When things go bad in baseball, you can almost give up," he said. "The good ones will fight through it. The bad ones are pretty, but that what's we're doing."
The Jayhawks, 5-5, will play Missouri Southern at 2 p.m. today at Hogund-Maupin Stadium.
'Hawks prepared for Big 8
By Rick C. Honish
Sansan sportswriter
By Rick C. Honish
Diving coach Don Fearon said they all had buzzed their hair to carry on a Kansas swimming tradition.
The men's swim team coaches were sporting new haircuts when hey left yesterday for the Big Eight Conference championships in Lin-
"The team shaves every year, so we do too," he said. "It is just one more way to motivate the team."
The meet will begin tomorrow and will finish March 9.
Swimming
Although the team has not competed since Feb. 16 when it lost to Southern Illinois, Fearon said the team has been training intensely for this meet.
"As a team, we are pumped up and ready," he said. "I think we have a shot at the title."
Fearon said the time off from
competition would be a valuable asset to the team when it faced Big Eight rivals Iowa State, Nebraska and Missouri.
"The men have a little more muscle mass than the women, so they need a little more rest," he said.
Fearon said he expected freshman diver Tim Davidson to have a good meet
"He has beaten every Big Eight opponent he has faced this year in dual teams," he said. "This meet will be better, though, and a lot more can happen."
"If you miss on a dive, it opens the door for someone else, but that works both ways."
Fearon said Davidson had five quality dives and would not be hurt
by the added competition.
He said sophomore diver Jeff Mix, who qualified for the zone meets last year, also would be in top form for the Big Eight meet.
Senior co-captain John Easton said being out of Kansas' home pool would not affect the team.
Mix has been plagued by shoulder and lower back problems all season, but Fearon said he had recovered from the strain with chance at qualifying to do just that.
"Nebraska's pool is actually nicer than ours," he said. "It is bigger and decear."
Easton said the entire team was ready to challenge the favored Cornhuskers.
"There will be an adrenaline rush because it is the Big Eight meet," he said. "We will swim faster than we have all season."
Williams says media hoopla during tourney is ridiculous
By S. J. Bailey
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams is ready for the Big Eight Tournament on Friday at Kemper Arena. But don't ask him about all the media hoop surroundings the affair.
"I think it ridiculous to have mandatory practice, media coverage and press conference over there on Thursday," Williams said at a news conference last week. "I want to press conference this year, figured that one up by myself."
Kansas is scheduled for a public practice at 4 p.m. Thursday at Kemper, followed by a media session at 5 p.m.
Williams said he was not pleased that senior guard Terry Brown and junior center David Johanning would have to miss part of their afternoon classes to participate in the activities.
“It's just ridiculous that we've got presidents all over the country saying we're missing too much class time, and here I've got to takeguys out of class to practice on a court that doesn't care if we practice on.” he said.
Although Kansas was the only Big Eight school not to participate in the practice and media sessions last year, Williams said the team would be there to promote the tournament this year.
"When I got the sheet, the word mandatory was underlined on mine," he said. "I think some guys probably ganged up on (Kansas Sports Information Director) Doug Vance and said, 'Hey, why don't Williams bring Kansas over here?' I mean, I've been to Kansas City before. Our team played there last year, so I don't see any sense in going back."
Williams did say, however, that he had thought about not participating in the pre-tournament activities again this year.
"I will say this," he said. "We're going only because we only have two guys missing the last part of one room and the noon practice. I would not go."
Williams said the Atlantic Coast Conference, where he was an assistant coach at North Carolina for 10 conference tournament media events.
"You can go if you want to, and if you don't want to, you have to."
he said of the ACC guidelines.
"I can understand if we were playing in Timbuktu and the media out there didn't know anything about us. They would need to get more information on us to do their stories and promote the tournament. But I don't think the Big Eight Tournament necessarily needs our push."
Williams also said yesterday that junior forward Alonzo Jamison did not practice Monday or yesterday, and has not expected to practice today.
He said Jamison, who sprained an ankle in Sunday's game at Nebraska, probably would be ready for Friday's game.
"I had hoped to have him back today, but if I had to right now, he probably won't practice Wednesday either," he said. "I said 'I'm hoping by Friday he will be at at least 90 degrees.' That is not what he would not play. And that brothers us because there's not much time between now and Friday."
Kansas will take on the Colorado Buffaloes on Friday at 6:10 p.m. in the opening round of the Big Eight Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo.
The Associated Press
Iowa State coach questions Missouri's place in tourney
Iowa state coach Johnny Orr is not sure that it is. Missouri is on NCAA probation and barred from
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Iowa State will meet Missouri on Friday in the first round of the Big Eight Tournament, but is that right?
the NCAA Tournament, and the winner of the Big Eight Tournament will get the Big Eight's automatic bid to the NCAA.
If Missouri wins, the Big Eight will lose its automatic bid. That still would probably not keep the Big Eight's top three teams, Nebraska, Kansas and Oklahoma State, from getting at-large bids. But Orr points out that Kentucky, also on probation and barred from the NCAA Tournament, is not being allowed to compete in the Southeastern Conference Tournament.
FENCING
Joseph J. Lies/KANSAN
Eric Rieger, Fairway sophomore, practices lunges against Alex Burton, Overland Park junior. Burton teaches the Intermediate Fencing class, whbh he conducted outside yesterday near Robinson Center because of the warm weather.
Fair weather fencers
LSU's Shaquille O'Neal named best SEC player
Sports briefs
ATLANTA — Louisiana State's Shaquille O'Neal was named the Player of the Year on The Associated Press All-Southeastern Conference basketball team yesterday and Mississippi State placed two players on the team for the first time in 28 years. Greg Carter and Cameron Burns, two forwards who led Mississippi State to a share of the SEC crown with LSU, joined O'Neal on the first team along with Allan Houston of Tennessee and Litterial Green of Georgia.
Rick Pitino of Kentucky edged out Richard Williams of Mississippi State in the Coach of the Year voting.
TOWSON, Md. — Towson State won its second straight East Coast Conference championship, beating Rider 69-63 last night behind Devin Boyd's key three-point play with just more than a minute to play.
Towson is the first team to successfully defend its ECC title since St Joseph's in 1982.
Rider, Lawrenceville, N.J., led 59-85 on Mark Woolner's wpointer with 2:40 to go, but Roy tied the score on two free throws with 2:03 left and put the Tigers (19-10) ahead for good on a three-point play with 1:06 to go.
From The Associated Press
By Rob Wheat
Special to the Kansan
Last year in the NCAA finals, it seemed certain that pole vault Pat Manson would finally realize his dream of winning the NCAA national
He had come close several times before, having placed second twice and third once. Manson led the meet, and it was evident that the title would be won either by him or by one other candidate. This was Mason Mason University Mason University in Fairfax, Va.
as Bagila drained over the cross bar, it rattled on its pegs yet somehow managed to stay on. The final shot was from a distance of 18 feet 4 inches to Manson's IB-18%.
Once again, Manson had to settle for being an All-American.
A five-time All-American, Manson will have his final chance to face Bagula for the national title March at the NCAA Indoor Championship.
“This year, I haven't been jumping as high because I've had to work more on fundamentals,” Manson said. “My tendency is to go just wild back, but if I want to vault past college, I need to improve my technique.”
Manson's indoor collegiate vaulting record of 18, which he set in 1969, was shattered by Bagula this season with a 19-1/4 fall. Bagula the top-ranked vaulter in the nation and is ranked fifth in the world.
But this time the odds are against Manson.
Manson's other dream is to compete in the 1929 Olympics, which means making sacrifices, but there are concerns that he won't beat Bagula if he doesn't burn down the track.
Manson said that he understood the importance of technique, but that he would be tempted to mix both his old and his new styles.
"It's like losing the World Series," Manson said. "You're happy to be there, of course, but you're also there to win. I'll never have another college track meet again after this year."
'This year, I haven't been jumping as high because I've had to work more on fundamentals. My tendency is to just go wild down the track, but if I want to vault past college, I need to improve my technique.'
- Pat Manson
Kansas pole vaulter
Manson said he first became interested in pole vaulting because of the excitement of running down the track and climbing over it, then leaping high into the air.
This thrill-seeking urge continues to drive Manson. Two years ago, during a trip to Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, Manson suddenly decided to learn hang gliding. And his friends are repelling these robos days.
But pole vaulting, he said, is different now.
BENCHING
"I probably analyze my approach now more than I do some of my problems in class," said Manson, who takes classes such as Advanced Programming and has maintained names and has maintained a 3.6 grade point average.
Phil Bave/Special to the KANSAN
Five-time All-American Pat Manson practices for the NCAA Indoor Championships. He also hopes to compete in the 1992 Olympics.
When you run hard and get a little sloppy, you can still jump high." Manson said. "But then the potential is gone to jump super high."
But that doesn't mean having to choose between the national title and
He is making progress, he said,
and he believes in what he is trying to
accomplish.
That is probably why he came home elated after winning his fifth conference title two weeks ago at the Big Eight Indoor Championships in Columbia, Mo., after jumping 17-4-1. He wears a foot less than his personal best.
Pole vault coach Rick Attig said it was extremely important for Manson to stick to his plan so he would have a better showing during tryouts for the 1982 or 1986 Olympics as well as the European tour this summer.
Olympic gold. Attig said.
Manson also receives advice from former Kansas vaulter Scott Huffman, who is ranked in the top 10 worldwide and also hopes to compete
Attail is the United States national vaulting coach and is the main reason Manson decided to attend Kansas where he was not offered a scholarship.
in the Olympics.
Huffman has vaulted against Bagula several times on the Grand Prix circuit, a series of track invitations held throughout the year.
"we all call him Bag-man because his name is hard to pronounce," Huffman said. "He is one of the most famous people we ever seen, but Pat is really talented."
10
Wednesdav. March 6, 1991 / University Daily Kansar
Free Tax Advice
Free Tax Advice
Legal Services Available
Free with Valid KU ID
Appointment Necessary
148 Burge Union (913) 864-5665
B.C.R.
JUNKMAN and the Euphoria String Band
LIVE
8PM AT LIBERTY HALL
THURSDAY, MARCH 21
Tickets: $4 in advance
$5 at the door
Available at: Simple Goods, Liberty Hall
and Mass Street Music
Open 10am M.-Sat.
Open 11am Sun.
Good food for low
prices.
Glass Onion
12th & Indiana
Above Yello Sub
841-2310
Glory
Orion
CAFE AND ESPRESSO SHOP
Did You Know?
The Glass Onion...Healthful alternative cooking
with a unique menu including
with a unique menu including;
- 17 vegetarian items including several vegan entrees
- Our famous vegetarian chili
- Detectable new sandwiches, like our cold smoked turkey & swiss on rye
- Homemade soups
- Desserts such as carrot cake & Espresso - Mocha Brownies
We still offer a full line of specialty coffee and espresso drinks and a wide variety of triple thick shakes.
We have daily lunch specials for under $4.00 and a "late risers" weekend breakfast special.
Also, free live music performed weekly.
Spring Break
Swimwear Sale!
Entire Stock $19.90
regular
$48.00
HARPER'S
FASHIONS
835 Massachusetts
Have an opinion? Write a "letter to the editor"!
111 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kansas 60452
SPECIALIZE YOUR
TRANSPORTATION
SPECIALIZED.
HARDROCK SPORT $349
Try out the new Specialized Frame System (SFS). Pedal with little effort while you enjoy a bike that fits like a glove.
SUNFLOWER 804 Massachusetts, Lawrence, 843-5000
Get a Slice of Great College Living
Discover college living that's a cut above the rest! When you come by and see our facilities, you'll get a taste of the best in college living, as well as a coupon good for a free Pizza Hut pizza. Any way you slice it, it's a great offer!
Pizza Hut
Pizza Hut
Naismith Hall
1800 Naismith Drive 913/843-8559
offer valid through April 15, 1991. Only one coupon per student.
— K.U. Student I.D. Required —
Pizza Hut Naismith Hall
Illegal substances sometimes found after fire alarms
Drugs discovered were in plain sight
Printed on Recycled Paper
Kansan staff writer
When residence halls are evacuated during fire alarms, members of the housing staff check all the rooms to make sure residents have left.
But when checking the rooms, they sometimes find more than residents.
Occasionally the housing staff sees alcohol or illegal substances in a student's room during the checks, and an assistant director of student housing.
During the evacuation of the ball, room checks are a standard procedure. Long said. It is intended as a safety precaution.
The alcohol or illegal substance must be in plain sight of the person. If they were not reported, he said. The room checker cannot search closets or dressers.
KU police Lt. John Mullens said that, based on the report of an illegal substance seen in a room, police usually waited for residents to come back into the hall to ask the suspect permission to enter the room. If permission is refused, police are able to obtain a search warrant.
"In one out of 10 fire alarms we may run across a stolen traffic sign, alcohol or marijuana," Mullens said.
If the officer sees it in plain sight, the officer can seize the stolen property or contraband as evidence, he said.
Long said if alcohol was within clear view, the incident was documented and the resident met with the residence hall director about the policy violation.
Compared to cases of marijuana, there are far more cases of illegal possession of alcohol. Long said. And unless it was obvious, housing staff were not looking for contraband.
Comet sprouts tail surprises scientists
Astronomers startled by brighter Halley
NEW YORK — Halley's comet has unexpectedly flared up to become hundreds of times brighter than expected during its orbit through the outer reaches of the solar system, and astronomers can only guess why.
The Associated Press
The comet had lost its tail since its latest pass near Earth in 1986 and become an inert, potato-shaped, dry iceball almost 10 miles long. It was very faint even when viewed with powerful telescopes.
"To have something turn off and suddenly brighten up at this distance is unheard of," said Karen Meech of the University of Hawaii's Institute for Astronomy. She spotted the cloud Feb. 15 and measured its brightness at more than 1,000 times what the comet was expected to show.
But last month, when it was some 1.3 billion miles from the sun, astronomers saw that it had sprought a planet measuring about 180,000 miles across.
The brightening also was observed Feb. 12, when Hallev was about
midway between Saturn and Uranus, by Belgian astronomers Olivier Hainaut and Alain Smette, observing from a European Southern Observatory telescope in Chile. They measured the brightness of the comet was supposed to be.
Energy from the sun is thought to trigger such outbursts on other comets, so Hallay's behavior so far is rather startling, said Brian Marsden, associate director for planetary sciences at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Mass.
"This is much further than anything we've observed before," Marsden said.
Dust clouds, called comas, are generally produced around comets when solar energy vaporizes ice. When some dust blows off the comet nucleus
But the temperature at Halley's surface Feb. 12, would have been about 30 degrees below zero Fahrenheit in the European observatory said in a statement.
The Associated Press
NASA to go with scaled-down model for new space station
NEW YORK — NASA's space station, first proposed by President Reagan seven years ago, will be smaller and less ambitious than the originally envisioned. The New York Times reported yesterday.
Until last year, the plan called for a 500-foot, 300-ton space station housing up to eight astronauts. It was to be placed in space piecemeal by the shuttle in the mid-1980s and 1990s. The space station, not including operating expenses.
That plan was criticized as costly and defective.
Under the new plan, the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration would reduce the station's size to about 300 feet, lower its cost and cut it in half. The New York Times said.
Because of its reduced size, the work and living areas will be constructed largely on the ground. The buildings are tall and narrow in space, the newspaper said.
Dropped entirely from the station is a series of 10 or more external science experiments aimed at study, control and the heavens, the Times reported
Also eliminated are plans to make the outpost a staging area for voyages to the moon and Mars.
There's no place like...
Fine Beers
Great Foods
FREE STATE BREWING CO.
636 Massachusetts 843-4555
Open Mon.-Sat 11-midnight, Sun 12-11
Dear Chuck.
What's special about fresh beer? Totally special flavor. Brews like this month's John Brown Ale - Oatmeal Stout - or the Black & Tan. Not even imports can beat these Free State brews or Free State prices!
Do you really brew beer at the Free State? Sure do! The best cold beer, ale, & stout. Right here inside the renovated trolley barn at the top of Massachusetts.
Neither are we! It's fun being the first brewery in Lawrence since 1875. Free State is a cool place to hang out with friends for a little downtime.
So what's special about fresh beer?
But I'm not a beer snob...
What else is happening at the Free State? Everything! New Beers. Great daily menu specials. Free State's awesome dessert chef stays up late. And the Beer Garden is just kicking into gear for warm spring nights! See you there.
Thanks! Rich Deeter
Save a , Recycle in front of Wescoe
100's
Classified Directory
200's
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
The Etc. Shop 732 Mass,843-0611
100s Announcements
110 Bus. Personal
ADULT tarses for sale at MIRACLE VIDEO.
From 89.36 $109.10 Haskell N 81,24 N 81-7544
Bauch & Lembli, Ray-Ban Sunglasses
20% Below, Retail
B. A. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop. Classic to computerized. Body shop available. Automotive motorcycle repair and accessory services. Master's Degree. Master's Award & discover cards accepted. COLLEGE TUFF too expensive? Let private grants and scholarship pay your way. Receive over 125 financial sources. $800 GUARANTEED FOR COLLEGE TUFF. For college: To college Tuition Consultants, P.O. Box 402143.
A
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
FORMAL WEAR
The ELC Shop.
Rental Shelter 5203 Mass.
Graduate student want to communicate from Campus. Arefer P.R. 4, Call: 1631 1809 if interested.
400's
Habits, phobias, stress, anxiety, pain, smoking, weight and other disorders. Hypnotherapy Center. 842-7504.
'New Analysis of Western Civilization' makes sense of 'Western City'. Makes sense to use it! Available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Crier Bookskeeper.
SAVE MONEY: Save your oil every 25,000 miles with AMSOIL 10% synthetic motor oil. Increase M.P. E and Engine Ribil Bill Ramsey, Amsoil 70% Synthetic Oil Box 805, Lawrence, KS 60924 or ks924 60923
120 Announcements
- AIRWALK COURT*
* It’s a Masters in the Way it is! It’s Free forever. Last two days to sign up. Wednesday 3/6 and Thursday 3/7, 1:48pm-2:00m ONLY at the JAHWAK BOOKSTORE!
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters.
We're here because we care.
841-2345 1419 Mass.
Would please answer.
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concern, call 841-2345. Handquarters
Germa, call 811-204-7842. Headquarters
Counselor A friendly voice Free. confidential referrals calls returned by counselors. Headquarters KU RU info 864-3560 Sponsored by GLOSK
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 6, 1991
11
Johnny's
Sunday Special
$2.50
Cheeseburger,
Fries & Draft
or Soda 1-8 pm
Call Douglas County Rape Victim's Support Service for confidential and caring assistance. If you need help, call 864-3306 or 812-2345.
*College Money, Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money refunded. America's Finest! Since 1881 COL-UMBERTON MUNICIPAL UNIVERSITY, Inc. 1801 Molson, Mo 640281, 1-809-7437-888
Now has incredible beewax & plant pigment crayons, penels, pencils, and high quality recycled ketchupboc for all serious artists. The Antique Mall. 800 Mass. Lower level.
SPRING BREAK
DAYTONA BEACH
- High quality beachfront accommodations for 7 exciting nights.
- Round trip chartered motor coach.
- Free pool deck parties, activities &
- Free pool deck parties, activities, & promotions.
- Inter-Campus Programs I D /Discount card
- On-location staff for complete assistance
- All taxes, tips, & service charges included.
169
***
ARRANGEMENTS BY ATTURANTS PROGRAM
842-7694
INTERESTED IN MEDITATION?
Cash Deposit Expenses 749.0555
INCREASE YOUR READING SPEED AND COMPREHENSE
ON MARCH 19, 26 and
AUGUST 4, 20 from
Register and pay $17 materials by fsp on Monday. March 18 at the Student Assistance Center, 50 West 13th Street, New York, NY 10017.
Suicide Injuries You're not thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is call 841-2345 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
THE WAR AFFECTS US- For a caring listener or info on support services; call Headquarters Counseling Center 841-2345.
130 Entertainment
thursday or 3 to 4 o'clock. Write down every song you hear from 3 to 10: 4 to 10. Write down every fear. Shake Shakespeare, be the first call, be the second call. March 5, 2016. March 4, 2016. March 8, 2016. March 7, 2016.
HURRY! BEFORE! IT'S TOO LATE! Spring break is almost here and South Pond is the place to go. Beach boardings/condos. Day trips. Call leave. Leave. Leave. 7 nights, 7 days. Call leave. Message, Fax. 749-6221.
HEY KU! KU's Spring Break Time! Party in Cancun Mexico Starting from $399 and Daytona Beach for $235 'n' nights of pure exciting celebrating! Call Angie at 864-9290 for details!!!
Lawrence Info Center, content orientated BBS,
841-2732, 8, N, 1
To young to enjoy the nighttime? No worries.
TUESDAYS 18 and over at the BOTTENLEE
Look for other special 18 and over events. Pick up a calendar and check it out!
Looking for the best TIGH in town. It's at the face of Boca Raton, covered in cover and 20 draws. WOW! See you on Friday. Ski Val-Completely furnished one bedroom dormitory. sleeps 8. March 18 - $1500
140 Lost-Found
2 sentimental RINGS lost at Jazparus Sat. Feb.
2 reward $150.00 843-5296
Found : 1 pair Pewter colored wire framed single vision glasses behind Summerfield Hall. Please Chris at 684-1214.
Lost dog-Black white chest, white feet, approx one and half ft tall, collar with green tag.
749.5377
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
APPLICATIONS PROGRAMMER - t0 to t4/14年
$844.875 mnC convert existing FORTRAN code of
Windows-like interface. Required. KU student
work on degree in CCE or CS field science.
graphics experience beyond classroom. FORTRAN
good, verbal and written competence is
statistical software Familiar w/ principles of
languages such as HGL or PostScript
languages such as HPGL or PostScript
of PC architecture c c = Windows
applications and full details available at KS
Ave. West Campus (844.865) 12.11
transcription D昏 500 PM, March 12, 1991
Retirement Community now seeking part-time receptionist: Must possess good communication and have a Bachelor's degree in education, child care or weekend shifts with a average of 14 hour/week. Please apply in writing to Retirement Community at 262-307-5892.
1501 Inverness Drive Lawrence, KS
Lawrence, I
EOE
- **AMP COUNSELERS wanted for private**
- Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach:
swimming, canoeing, sailing, gymnastics,
camping, crafts, dramas, or riding.
Also kitchen, office, maintenance. $ salary 1000,
- campgrounds. 719 Maple Nild, NIU.
61003, 708-464-2244
Spend the summer in the Catkill Kitty. Mk of New York. Receive a meaningful summer experience in the community by participating in disabilities. Positions available for Counselors, Equal Opportunity Administrators and students encouraged to apply—especially those majoring or considering all health field experiences. Room, board, and some travel. Camp Call, Camp Jenkins.
ARN $ 45,000 - $ 410,000. Now hiring-managers and painters, limited opportunity. Part-time, now. Full-time this summer. STUDENT PAINTERS (Call: 848-40COLLEGE; M. Gannon).
Earn what you learn. Manpower is looking for a job in the office of the mission. We offer flexible hours, valuable training and business experience, plus, free use of a computer. We also have a sophomore or above, with at least a Average, and are computer familiar. Manpower need you to work 10-20 hours per week on IBM Personal System/2 on campus. For more information, call (800) 354-7960.
Excellent pay processing hand-made items for national company. Start immediately! Call 504-641-8003 Ext. 5844
FUNDRAISER- We're looking for a top fraternity, sorority or student organization that would like to make $80,000/$150 for a one week marketing program. Send resume to Hard Work Call (at 800) 923-2112.
GRADUATING STUDENT NEEDED-CAREer position for aggressive candidate with degree in business/personnel management. Benefits include excellent starting salary, company car. At least one previous summer house painting experience. Call collect. Mr. Schwartz. 1-800-COLLEGE.
Great job in Philadelphia suburb. Have fun with cute kids for 35 weeks hourly. Earn great salary, room, board and 2 weeks paid vacation. Starts with one year Call Eliate at (815) 625-4341.
Immediate openings for cooks. Starting pay is $4.00/hr. Apply Monday-Friday, 9am-4:30pm at 179 Massachusetts.
SALES/ OUTSIDE INTERNSHIPS
$250 per week
Exciting opportunity with National Co-
approaching business people. No experience necessary. Full training. Chicago and local territories. For further details call
Live-in mother's helper wanted for Christian family with four young children. 841-4144 between 1 and 5.
Looking for talented fun-loving person to coordinate kids parties as a fairy princess, pirate or crown train will burn natural outing, organized party. Will train you to call It Your Party, 749-3455. Ask For Tina
Need sitter in my home M W F 2:5:30pm. Call
841-6866.
REWARDING SUMMER for sophomore and junior students, children with children. Backpacking, horseback riding crafts, nature canning, rafting, martyrs, rock climbing, Western CAMP. P.O. Box 102, FLORISNANT, WESTERN CAMP. P.O. Box 102, FLORISNANT, WESTERN CAMP. P.O. Box 102, FLORISNANT, WESTERN CAMP.
Summer June Outdoors - Over 5,000 openings!
National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews. Stamp on free details. 113 East Wyoming, Kaisispell, MT.
59901
SWAMED: Earn $20 plus weekly at home stuffed envelopes. Send long, self-addressed stamped envelope to: Envelopes Unlimited 920 Metcalf, Suite 30, Overland Park, KS 65212 Immunified
Unique Career Opportunity
$11 to start and bonus
Need managers for rapid growing corporation.
No exp necessary. Will train in sales, marketing and management. Call 1-262-8911.
Work Study positions available: Spring, Summer and Fall. Call Judy at the School of Business 844-7558
225 Professional Services
School Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
Government photo, passports, immigration,
art portfolios, art portfolios,
BW color, call Tom Sewell.
Model portfolio, portrait, wedding photographer.
Instant, passport $5.00. Call 841-698 or leave
me a message.
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 480-6028
Richard A. Frydman
Attorney at Law
For All Municipal and District Court Matters Free Initial Consultation
TRAFFIC • DUI's
Fake IDs & alcohol offenders
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
Attorney
16 East 13th 842-1133
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-3716.
Trails & Distances
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping.
Lawrence Printing Service. 512 E. 9th Street
433-6000
235 Typing Services
1+ Typing/WP-Resumes, term papers, thesis,
etc. 842-4754 after 3:30 pm wkdays, anytime
wkends
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 842-363, days or evenings.
Absolute cheapest typewriter/laptop prints in Lawrence $10.00/double-page laser. Pages as low as $20. Rush join no problem 749-4648
I type test and accurate. $17.5 page 492-200.
I will correct grammar, punctuation or spelling errors, edit and copy your words of wisdom and, in the end, improve your best possible papers. Phil. 842-6255
Professional Typist. Reasonable rates. Call 842-303.
A better word for price work Fast service
$1-double space page. Call Therese 841-0766.
Call R.J.'s Typing Services 841-5942 Term
Professional resumes-Consultations, formating,
typesetting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc, 927]_
Mass. 841-1071.
Make the call you won't regret! Word Processing
Service (Word Perfect). Fast service, high print
price. $1.75 fee. Free pick-up and delivery
minimum. Call Karen in Topeka,
1271 6900.
Call R.J.'s Tying Services 8412-9494 Term paper, these discussions in the Dana's Quail'Y Typing and Word Processing term paper, these dissertations, Letters, term papers, and spelling corrected. G-W 2010 W.S.B. 31st ed., and spelling corrected.
Accurate typing, Resumes, Theses, Letters, Call Melan.
1-193-883-4754 or 864-3181.
TheWORDCTORS-Why pay for typing when you can have word processing? IBM, MAC, laser. Since 1883. 945-3147.
Word Processing/Typing: Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing, composition.
Have M.S. Degree. 841-6254
WordPerfect word processing, InkJet printer
Near Orchards Corners. Phone 843-8568
Typing and Word Processing - Any size job! Information and price routes, call 748-392.
X
305 For Sale
300s Merchandise
1800 Yokota MTN Bike. Excellent shape, Shimano components. $250 Call 843-8788 Ask for Meredith.
1 Roundtrip Mail to Dallas. 02/09 to 03/15. $130
843-6955
10 speed bicycle. Miles. Lightweight. Very good condition. $60. 842-292-65
4 potter solid water woodwater, queen size, hand carved with 6 drawers complete. Mongoose California pro filo Set of churner valve covers for a 500 engine. 543-8388 after 10m
Hick Fender Guitar (Square) with maplewid
from, stem and case. Excellent condition
only $150 Call Mike. 749-6925 at 3pm
Cheapest flight from KCI to San Diego $190 obo.
3/7-3/16. Return flight from L.A. Beds 185-1392.
- . black sunglasses, style: Westside Brand
• . black leather jacket, style: Westside Brand
for sale; car amp YAMIAA YP 1000 $400
$ARVRE 2120 $200; HARMARKONDCross
over $1500 KOZA $220 obe. Even
more prices!
For sale: Huffy Mountain Bike. Tire speeds and two wheels. F backpack. 749-805. leave message. Hadoop 750 Interpreter 183. Must call Call Jim 749-5247. Just installed a new starter.
Kenwood 100w amp, CD, tape deck, tuner, 3-way speakers. Excellent condition $450 for all. Eudora. 542-252
MiniSRT-201 36mm Camera Kit 3 lenses,
200mm, 150mm, 20mm Close up and Creative filter kits. Other accessories included $85
$82/177 evenings.
Waiting to sacrifice! 187 EXP K095 Kawasaki -$1200.
Apple iPhone with software -4004, Nintendo complete package with S games -4120, Roland TR-36 drum machine -4710, Call Chris fast! 943-4613.
950 Valiant-ATPS, A/C, V6, 81,000 miles. New battery, alternator, radiator, starter, etc. original repair manual Always starts $550
43-8866
340 Auto Sales
1982 Tercel, 5 spd, ac, am/fm, cassette, 83K, new transmission, clutch, brakes, tires etc. $1450.
749-4888.
1984 Honda Civic, 90K, $2500. 1985 Ford Escort,
90K, new engine, $1750. 843-7589 after 6pm.
80 Oldsmobile Omega, AC, AT, PS, cruse,
am/fm cassette, good condition. Must sell.
Best offer.
Call 814-8312 at 6pm
78 Celica, perfect college mobile, nice and affordable. Don't let it get away. Call Paolo, 842-3118. Leave a message. $900 obo.
new parts. Good condition. Asking $2900, 842-7576
88. Bug. 72 superstar. one ride, one good interior, 6 good steel belted Radials. Make offer.
942.1099
Red-Hot HDSI HRXS 1.5, s.p. ACm, fm cassette; 64x, excellent condition. must sell. 646-793-3441
SAVE MONEY: Change your oil every 25,000 miles with AMSOIL 10% synthetic oil motor. In-vented fuel. $38 per vehicle.
DRAKE R. & R. Interprises. P.O. Box 385, Lawrence, KS 66946 or call 822-4247
360 Miscellaneous
On TV's, VCK's, jewelry, stereo, musical instruments, cameras and more. We honor VCA/MEXC Disc Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry, 184 W.6th 749-1919.
BUY, SELL, LOAN CASH
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all ads advertised on this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
合
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, disability, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.'
1 bedroom apt w/ balcony available now at Southridge Plaza Apts. $275 water and cable pd. Nets. 842-1100.
available March 1 - 1 bd unborn it in new
room. Baby wipes, baby diapers with
friendship with D wipe kits, DVDs,
caming fans, mini blinds. Great location near campus.
Short leaves £50 per month. No pets.
2 bedroom apt available now at Aspen West Apts.
$860, water p. Lease tl 7/31. No pets. Call
642-8190 or 842-1899
Available now! Beautiful 3 br apt. Washer and dryer, microwave, dishwasher. Woodway Apts, 845-1971.
West West APARTMENTS
-1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
$280 to $335 per month
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now leasing for
2 bedroom apts. 930 sq ft
$365 to $415 per month
(water cold)
280 to $335 per month
(water paid!)
and unfurnished
Great location Near campus
Mon. Wed. Thurs.
1:00 A-4:00 p.m. (no appt needed)
This ad for original buildings only
does not include Phase II
LEARN THE A B C's of NAISMITH.
Affordable Living
Better quality living
computer center, dining anytime, and great social events.
We have our own
convenient location
Nais mith is close to campus, and on the bus route.
Naismith spells out a wise living move.
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Nailsmith Drive
Lawrence, KS 60444
(913) 834-8559
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM (Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR.
apartments at an
Affordable Price!!
BOOKS TO SHOW TEXTURE
I HAVE GECLOSED
TO PRESENT THE
MORE SERIOUS SIDE
OF THE CHARACTER
I HAVE ASKED
RACHEL THE MUTE
BLOFULLY
TELL US
THEIR
AND
HOMES
GOOD
Enlarged to Show Texture
Office Hours:
12-6 pm M - F
9-3 pm Sat.
No Appt. Necessary
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc
841-5444
VILLAGE SQUARE Apartments
close to campus spacious 2 bedroom laundry fac. & pool waterbed allowed
Apartment
A Quiet, Relaxed
Atmosphere
9th & Avalon
I REALLY JUST WANT TO MAKE MY LIFE HELPING AND LOVING OTHER
CLATE, ADD: MY FLOWER IS ON A BEAUTIFUL AREA RASALIC TO BUILD THE FIRST PLAZA THAT I WILL CREATE WITH RECENT BREAK-THROUGH CONDUCTIVITY AND FASHION INJECTORS
I WANT TO DO THIS FOR AWKON YEARS SOLD BY THE WOMAN WHO BROUGHT THE BUNNY SCIPPER INTO WORK FOR A FASHION STUDIO
I WANT TO DO THIS FOR AWKON YEARS SOLD BY THE WOMAN WHO BROUGHT THE BUNNY SCIPPER INTO WORK FOR A FASHION STUDIO
842-3040
Washer and dryer
-Microwave air
-Large bedrooms
-Mini blinds
On KU bus route
Carports available
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
h apartment features:
WOLF
611 Michigan Street (across from Hardee's)
1-bedroom $35, $350
2-bedroom $440, $460
-3-bedroom $560
office
by Brian Gunning
HOURS:
SERIOUSLY...
OH WELL.
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
9:00-12:00 Sat
843-1971
ALL NEW appliances, carpet, mini blinds and study area
2 Bedroom apartments available for Fall
Short Term Subleases Available Immediately
Please call Kristy for appl
3 Bdrm Townhouse.
Spacious 1,410 square feet
1/2 bath downstairs, Large full bath with
dressing area upstairs
Come and see our totally remodeled
1 Bdrm 6 month sublease
1 Bdrm 9 month sublease
2 Bdrm townhouse.
Roomy 1,290 square feet
1 1/2 baths. 6 month sublease
Some Summer Subleases too!
Hours: Mon-Fri 8-5:30
Sat 8-5
Call or come by today These won't last long!
200
meadowbrook
Hey! KU Med. students. Move in June 1 and receive 'y' on your for rent at 2 "studies." 1 and 2 bedmaits aps. *Heat and water paid.* Across from KU Med. Center. Rainbow Tower Apts.
Lorimar Townhouses, 3811 Clinton Parkway,
Quality, spacious with all the amenities. Brand
new office space. All in one for May,
July, or for 12 months. 814-7890, 843-1433
Move in immediately! Beautiful 2 car beaer
washer
Move in immediately! Beautiful 2 hr apt. Washer and dryer, microwave, dishwasher. Woodway Apts. 843-1971.
Need to sublet 1 BR apt. ASAP Washer/dryer,
water paid, $38/month. Negotiable. Please call
855-0190
ONE BLOCK FROM KANSAS UNION. For rent to seriose graduate school, upperclass student or RU employee. One BIR furnished no. Pets. Refs. $100. Furnished after furnished. £250. mth. 843-388 after 9am
South Point
1,2,3,4 Bedrooms
- Pool & Volleyball
- Quit location
• Bus to route bus
• Small pets OK with deposit
• Inexpensive gas heat
• Central air
2166 W. 20th 843-6446
Open 10-5. M-F
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
- Volleyball Court
- Basketball Court
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Exercise Room
- 3 Hot Tubs
- On Bus Route
$ 355 - $425
THE FAR SIDE
SUN
PALM LEAF
842-5111
1301 W. 24th
Models Open Daily
Mon. - Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 10-4 p.m. Sun 12-4 p.m.
Sublease 2 BR apt. DW, W/D, microwave, on bus
avail. Available in April $435, 841-2271.
Roommate-very large, very nice duplex, now
W/D, Only 8125. See it to believe, B41-2746.
WD only $12. See it to see it! 841-274-206
Sublease for 2 bdrm apt immediately. Clean and quiet. $600/mo. Great location for groceries. Call 841-3814. Leave message.
Summer sublease. 3 bdmr, furnished,
Tanglewood. Option for fall. $196 each. May paid.
499-1399
TIMELINE
SUNRISE VILLAGE
600 Gateway Dr.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.- Fri. 11-5
- Luxurious 3 & 4
- Microwave Ovens
- Garages; 2 & 1/2 bath
- Microwave Oven
841-8400
- Some with fireplaces
- Bedroom Town Houses
- On KU Bus Route
- On KU Bus Route
- Swimming Pool
- Swimming Pool & Tennis Courts
Summer sublease or now til August Large
*$275/month* 041-6743 after 6pm
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has private rooms for spring and summer. Drop by 1406 Tennessee or call 749-0871.
430 Roommate Wanted
Female roommate needed to share beautiful 2 bedroom apartment. Close to campus and downtown. $225 includes gas, water and washer driver. 842-9045.
Female roommate needed immediately to share four bedroom townhouse. Rent $180.00 plus $4. utilities: 842-2623
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED NOW! to sublease apt. w/d, D/W, microwave. $215/month. Call Sieve at 841-910-314 or 841-2255 (KC).
Roommate wanted. Clean 2 bd apt, immediately $180/mo plus 1$_t_ utilities. No deposit. Route parti-
ternally furnished. Call 841-8314
Sublease Available: Close to campus, on bus line,
tennis, patio. Through August. $240 plus 1₃
utilies. 865-3922
Summer sublease. Female roommate need to share condo, own room, carport, W/D microwave, pool, CA and more! $165.00 plus 3 units. Call Lotz, 865-294 or 843-7800.
Two female roommates won for 1981, four bedroom house. Nice neighborhood off W. 6th. 825 plus 4' utilities. Michelle. 864-1198.
Wanted: male roommate on bus route, nice area,
$250. Every day. Alarm: 817-260
By GARY LARSON
Xionn 36
© 1981 Universum Press Schutzkan
"Uh-oh, Lenny ... It's the slimelord."
12
Wednesday, March 6, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
You've Got It All At Dillons!
Open 24 Hours
Double Coupons*
7 Days A Week!
*Details In Store
from Our Meat Dept...
M
Double Coupons*
7 Days A Week!
*Details In Store*
Fresh Ground Beef 5 Lb. Chub-$6.40 each
$128 Lb.
from our Deli...
100% PURE
GROUND
BEEF
Wafered Ham
95% Lean Ham & Water Product
55
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from our Seafood Shoppe...
Wafered Roast Beef $399 Lb.
Uncoated Headless
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30-40 count
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Regular or Hot
Johnsonville Bratwurst or Italian Sausage Regular or Hot
Sun Chips Sun Chips
$199 Lb.
Frito Lay Sun Chips 7 oz. Original or French Onion
from our Bakery...
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220g Cracked Wheat 220g Cracked Wheat
89¢
Dillon's Cracked Wheat Bread 20 oz. Loaf
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Golden Ripe Bananas
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PLEASE VIEW LISTING FOR DETAILS.
TRY DILLON'S AUTHENTIC
C
Spring Arrangement $1299
CHINESE KITCHEN!
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Located in our Dillon Store at 23rd & Naismith in Lawrence
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Dillon's Authentic Chinese Kitchen Foods are cooked fresh on the premises every day. Our expert cooks are trained in traditional Hong Kong, Szechwan, and Cantonese style cooking. Dillons use only the finest, fastest quality meats, vegetables, spices and seasonings. We use only pure vegetable oil for cooking (no cholesterol). (No MSG added.)
$649
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Available in our Dillon Store at 23rd & Naismith in Lawrence OPEN DAILY 11:00 a.m. to 8 p.m. Call your order in today for fast pick-up PHONE:913-841-3366
from our Video Dept...
ARACONICCIA
Available This Weekend
CBS
FOX
VIDEO
Delbert McClintock is an ex-terminator with his own business, Bugs-Be-Gone. When a South American blood-sucking spider is unwittingly carried into town, it finds it way to Delbert's barn and breeds. Now it is up to Delbert to rid the town of the hungry horde.
"Arachnophobia"
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Dillons
FOOD STORES
Ad Prices Effective March 6-12, 1991.
Lawrence Dillon Stores Only.
Limit Rights Reserved.
V
NCAA SPECIAL SECTION
Kansas filled important role in shaping basketball's past
By Ann Sommerlath Sports editor
Sports editor
The game of basketball is a century old this year, and nowhere is that tradition richer than at the University of Kansas, the third-winning program in college basketball. It is appropriate that Kansas basketball history closely is with the first 100 years of the sport.
Kansas' basketball legacy begins with the origins of the game itself. In December of 1891, James Naismith invented a game that he dubbed "basket ball," while teaching at what is now Springfield College in Illinois.
Seven years later, Naismith, the "Father of Basketball," introduced the sport to the University of Kansas as a form of recreation to occupy the students between football and baseball seasons. Naismith, a former track star, became the school's first basketball coach, and, ironically, is the only Kansas basketball coach to compile a losing record (35-60).
The coach with the most victories in Kansas history followed Naismith as head coach of the 1907-1988 and 1919-1955 seasons. Forrest "Phog" Burr was named head coach, and was dedicated March 1, 1955, established a 592-191 record.
Allen's son, Robert Allen, played basketball for the Jayhawks from 1939 to 1941.
Robert Allen recalls his father's influence on the history of basketball.
"As a player, Dad told Mr. Naismith, 'I'm going to coach basket.
ball," but Mr. Naismith told him that you can't coach basketball, you can just play it." Robert Allen said. Then Mr. Naismith asked Dad to coach."
Allen also coached at Baker, Haskell and Central Missouri State, and including his record at Kansas, compiled a victory total of 746. This record is fourth only to Adolph Rupp (880), Henry Iba (767), and Edd Diddle (759). Rupp coached at Kentucky and was a member of the Kansas 1922 and 1923 Helms National Championship squads coached by Allen.
Under Allen, Kansas won Regional NCAA Championships in 1940, 1952 and 1953 and the national championship in 1952. Allen's 1922 and 1923 teams won the Helms Foundation National championships as well.
"Dad was well endowed with the desire to make basketball a major sport," Robert Allen said. "He founded the National Basketball Coaches Association and was its first president. He was one of three men that played for the NAA (National Athletic Association) — what is now the NCAA."
Allen also was largely responsible for many NCAA rule changes and is credited with being responsible for the NBA basketball in the Olympic Games.
"There is one thing for which he should be long remembered," Robert Allen said. "In 1932, he met with two men in L.A. and determined that they would be trained in the Berlin games in 1936. He went on to coach in Helsinki in 1952."
Dick Harp, who played under Allen from 1938 to 1940 at Kansas, was head coach from 1956 to 1963 and compiled a .596 winning percentage (121-83). Harp coached Wilt Chamberlin, who was a member of the 1974 team to the North Carolina 54-33 in triumph. The CAA title game in Kansas City, Mo.
Harp and former Jayhawk Dean Smith (North Carolina's current coach) are of two only five men to be selected in the NCAA Final four game.
Ted Owens succeeded Harp, registering a 348-182 record in 19 seasons. His team appeared in the Final Four in 1971 and 1974. Under Owens, the Jayhawks won six Bight regular season championships, eight conference event championship and appeared in the NCAA tournament seven times.
Larry Brown was the sixth coach at Kansas, and his winning percentage .754) is the best in the school's history. Brown played basketball at North Carolina under Smith. In five seasons at Kansas, his teams won one Big Eight Conference regular season title; no conference post-season titles; had five consecutive NCAA tournament appearances.
Current coach Roy Williams replaced Brown in 1988. He played as a freshman under Smith and spent ten years as Smith's assistant at his alma mater. The team was named coach of the year last year after compiling a 30-5 record.
Besides its prolific coaches, Kansas has been home to other influential figures in the history of basketball. Thirteen inductees to the Hall of Fame came from Kansas.
'Dad was well endowed with the desire to make basketball a major sport. He founded the National Basketball Coaches Association and was its first president. He was one of three men that organized the NAA (National Athletic Association) — what is now the NCAA.'
Robert Allen Son of Phog Allen
A. C. "Dutch" Lonborg was athletic director from 1950 to 1964 and helped organize the first NCAA tournament. He served as chairperson of a tournament committee and is a member of the Basketball Hall of Fame.
Kansas has had 41 All-American selections including Clyde Lovellette. Jo White, Wilt Chamberlain and, in 2003, Derek Johnson, the No. 1 draft choice in 1988.
Under Williams, Kansas has continued its excellent basketball tradition, tying Oklahoma State for regular-season Big Eight champions this year. The next few weeks only can enhance the Jayhaws' outstanding basketball legacy.
Super fan 'Captain Jayhawk' flys makes appearance on national TV
By David Mitchell
Special to the Kansan
At first glance he appears normal. Certainly, a Kansas City, Kan., senior, maintaining a 3.2 grade point average in the School of Journalism would seem to have better things to do.
"I feel psychotic," he said Feb. 7, more than 40 hours before the 3 p.m. tipoff time of the Feb. 9 Oklahoma State game.
However, a simple game of basket ball can change everything. Friends who are not as fervent in their work of Kansas basketball admit they do not even recognize him inside Allen Field House.
There are things to do, fans to organize. He is not a Kansas mascot. He is not a fricken lil leader. He is Joe Zielinski. Captain Jayhawk.
Zielinski can be seen behind the north basket in the field house. He is not hard to spot. He wears a cap. It occurs, it is a wall banner, but it has not touched a wall in more than three years. He also wears a basketball or what used to be a basketball. Now it is a helmet.
He is Captain Jayhaw, and he is seen. He has had more air time this season than some members of the Kansas bench. By his best estimate he has appeared in all but two of the Jayhawes televised home games. On national television in January on ESPN S's "Doubletakes."
Captain Jayhawk is little known, yet has become a tradition of Kansas basketball. In the late 1980s the "Hey" chant came into vogue in college basketball. Fans went flying into the air in arenas around the nation. The chants were lured by resounding cheers of "We're gonna beat the hell out you."
During the song one person is picked up by the arms and legs. When the band pushes the crowd screams, the audience goes on their fan of choice into the air.
This song sparked the conception of the original Captain Jayhawk.
Then, along with Curtis Marsh,
Leavenworth senior, the two freshmen set about their task. When
the Duke Blue Devils came to Lawrence in late February 1988, the duo decided to go all out.
Alex Logan, Iowa City, Iowa,
senior, said, "I saw that on TV(
1988), and I said, 'We've got to do
that!"
They succeeded. Logan bought a basketball and popped it just before game time. It quickly was sculpted as a helmet. Then there was the cap.
"We wanted to get on TV," Marsh said.
"I got the flag from a friend in Ellsworth and just never gave it
back," Logan said.
The Super Fans, as they called themselves, won immediate attention. Since 1988, they have managed to sneak into three yearbooks, the James and "The Cinderella Story"," the 1988 national championship video.
However, the 1990-91 season has marked the end of an era. Faced with a busy schedule, Logan has been forced to miss several games. At this season's opening late night practice, he and his helmet were passed on to Zielinski.
Zielinski is a veteran basketball fanatic. He got his start rooting for the Washington High Wildcats.
"I'd spend every Monday morning in the office explaining my actions," he said.
The waiting game
KU basketball has not cooled his fervor. For the Oklahoma State game, Zielinski arrived at 9:30 a.m. Friday at the field house. He pitched a three-man ten by himself and signed in. The Super Fans were seventh in line. He left for classes and returned at 1:30 p.m. He spent the rest of the afternoon studying and visiting with passersby.
At 5:30 p.m. he bluced his way into the varsity's closed practice. Former Jayhawks Kevin Pritchard and Rick Calloway were on hand. Zielinski was impressed, and Kyle of Jayhawkes were evoked and savored.
At 6 p.m. he returned downstairs.
Senior forward Mark Randall stopped by to visit. He is Zielinski's friend. Zelinski is his biggest fan.
at 6:30 p.m. Zielinski and Marsh left for dinner, returning two hours later. The cold weather forced them to move inside the Parking Facility, where they frisbee. At 9 p.M., Logan again history is relived. Captain Jayhawk is saved.
"We let them know we're behind them," Zielinski said. "And he lets us know we're not there for nothing."
"I don't mind that Captain Jayhawk gets all the attention," Marsh said. "As long as people know I'm the reason he flies."
At 10:30 p.m., Logan, Marsh and Zielinski went to a friend's party. When they returned before midnight, they were surprised to find the rest of the camp asleep. Logan departed, but a steady stream of friends later came and encouraged Marsh and Zielinski's vigil.
They played poker and Frisbee in the garage, but they grew restless amidst the quiet camp. They sang loudly; show tunes, country, rock 'n'
See SUPER FAN, Page 7
一
Philp Meiring/KANSAN
Hey!
Captain Jayhawk Joe Zielinski, Kansas City, Kan., senior, pumps his hat in the air during the Iowa State game. Zielinski took over the duties of Captain Jayhawk this season and has become a recognized figure at all Kansas home games.
Big 8 Men's Tournament match-ups.
All games will be played at Kemper Arena In Kansas City, Mo.
Missouri (4)
Friday
12:10 p.m.
Iowa State (5)
Sunday 1:10 p.m. Championship game
Kansas (2)
Friday
6:10 p.m.
Colorado (7)
Saturday
1:10 p.m.
Saturday
3:20 p.m.
Nebraska (3)
Okla. St. (1)
Friday
2:30 p.m.
Kansas St. (8)
Friday
8:30 p.m.
Oklahoma (6)
Numbers in parentheses represent tournament seeds.
Numbers in parentheses represent tournament seeds.
Split Big 8 title leaves Kansas seeded second
Parity could make '91 tournament tough for conference champions
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — In the end,
both failed. No 12 Oklahoma State
failed at Iowa State on Saturday
and then No 10 Kansas turned around
and failed Sunday at No. 15
Nebraska.
The Big Eight regular season title was split right up the middle. Give half to the Cowboys. Give half to the Jayhawks.
Let everyone contemplate how pleasant it would be to own 100 percent of the championship. Both finished with identical 21-6 overall and 10-4 conference records and were unbeaten all year at home. However, both failed in the clutch on their final road game.
Oklahoma State's hopes for the title in Eddie Sutton's first year as coach evaporated Saturday when Skip McCoy scored five straight points in the final 2:30 as Iowa State edged the Cowboys 68-67.
But Kansas, knowing a victory Sunday at Nebraska meant an outright title, missed eight straight free throws in the final decisive play. They capped a storybook regular season of their own with an 85-75 victory.
Because Oklahoma State beat Nebraska twice and Kansas only beat the Huskers once, the Cowards are the No. 1 seed in the Big Eight Tournament. The tournament begins Friday in Kansas City and ends Sunday in Oklahoma receiving the Big Eight's automatic bid to the NCAA tourney.
All teams are through with the regular season except Missouri, which finishes the year at home Monday against Notre Dame.
Friday's first-round games in the Big Eight Tournament are fourth-seeded Missouri (16-10, 8) against fifth-seeded Iowa State (12-18, 6) at 12:10 p.m.; No. 1 seed Oklahoma State (21-16, 4) vs. No. 8 seed Kansas State (13-14, 31) at 2:20 p.m.
No. 9 seed Ohio State (12-15, 7) Colorado (15-12, 9) and No. 3 seed Nebraska (24-6, 9) vs. No. 6 seed Oklahoma (16-13, 9).
Colorado put the ball in the air 61 times. They connected only 16 times. They made matters worse by sinking only four of 27 three-point attempts.
In Saturday's other Big Eight action, Kansas State erased a 10-point deficit and took Oklahoma into overtime, then beat the Sooners on their own home court 101-98; and Missouri scored Colorado 76-51 at home as the Buffaloes shot an appalling 26 percent.
"I'm disgusted with our play today," said Colorado coach Joe Harrington. "But overall, basketball at CU has improved."
Missouri seems to be picking up some late-season momentum even though the probation-bound Tigers are barred from the NCAA tourney.
"I thought we played outstanding on defense," said Missouri coach Norm Stewart. "Our offense wasn't efficient, but it didn't have to be."
Jamal Coleman had 15 rebounds as the Tigers led 51-38.
"Getting 15 boards is like scoring 30 points." Stewart said.
Doug Smith led Missouri with 23 points and had 13 rebounds. Shaun Vandiver's 17 points led Colorado.
'We wanted to be champions without saying co-champions. But Nebraska did a great job. We didn't do a good job of taking care of the basketball early.'
Roy Williams KU basketball coach
"That 90-day February was a drain on us all," Altman said. "For a team that was 211 going into the game it was a 76-48 loss." We showed a lot of determination."
Kansas State made it a season sweep of the Sooners with a come-from-behind effort over an Oklahoma team, which probably will be happy to end this year's nightmare. The victory snapped a six-game Big Eight losing streak for Kansas State and made a last-stplace finish in Dana Altman's first year as head coach a bit easier to swallow.
Jean Dearouillure had 20 points for Kansas State and Jire Wires had 15. Keith Amerson had 12 rebounds. Oklahoma got 32 points from Brent Price and 25 from Jeff Webster, somehow destroying a 10-point lead.
"We made some critical mistakes down the stretch," said Oklahoma coach Billy Tubbs. "We didn't put them away."
"We wanted to be champions without saying co-champions," said Roy Williams, who was looking for his first Big Eight title in three seasons at Kansas. "But Nebraska did a great job. We didn't do a good job of taking care of the basketball early."
Ironically, the two co-champions ended the regular season feeling as unhappy as anybody, except perhaps the roster team that shot 26 percent.
The Jayhawks had 20 turnovers while Nebraska took a nine-point lead in the first half.
"I've never had a team with 20 turnovers in the first half," Williams said. "We might have been tight. We weren't in sync on offense."
Tony Farmer scored 18 points for the Huskers, who were picked last in the preseason poll but they broke their own school record for season victories season by two. Kansas came within one point twice in the second half but ruined its chances at the free-throw line. While Kansas missed eight in a five-minute stretch, Nebraska hit seven of eight and took a 77-71 lead. Mark Randall led Kansas with 17 points.
Oklahoma State has not seen a basketball title since 1965.
"We wanted to win the Big Eight title outright and put pressure on Kansas," said guard Sean Sutton. "I have to give Iowa State credit. They came back and won the game. They obeyed." We also wanted to win the title on their home floor."
Iowa State coach Johnny Orr said Oklahoma State also deserved credit.
"We played some great teams and took some terrible beatings," he said. "But we came back in the toughest league in the country and won three or four last four games. I'm proud of them."
Byron Houston led Oklahoma State with 24 points and Sutton scored 18.
2
NCAA Special Section / University Daily Kansan/ March 6, 1991
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NCAA Special Section / University Daily Kansan / March 6, 1991
3
UNLV goes undefeated eyes second NCAA title
The Associated Press
FULLERTON, Calif. — Next goal.
Now that UNLV is the first team in 12 years to finish the regular season undefeated, it's on to the Big West Conference tournament and NCAA postseason tournament, where the top-ranked Runnin' Rebels are favored to defend their national championship.
After UNLV's 104-83 win over Fullerton State last Saturday, coach Jerry Tarkarian said the seemingly invincible Rebels were beatable.
"Anybody can be on us a given night; all it takes is one shot," Tarkanian said after UNLV (27.0) ran its winning streak to 38 games over two seasons. "When you get to the tournament, you have to be both good and lucky. I know we're good; I just hope we're lucky."
Despite continuing problems with the NCAA, UNLV is allowed to defend its title. At one point, the NCAA ruled the Rebels inelegible to play in the tournament, but it later changed the ruling and allowed them to compete this season and sit out next year's tournament.
The last teams to complete the regular-season undefeated were Indiana State, with Larry Bird, and Alcorn State in 1978-79. The last team to win a national championship with an national undefeated record was Indiana in 1976.
The Rebels were clearly the dominant team in last year's tournament, and they appear to be even better this season.
UNLV bleat its opponents by an average of 30 points. Its smallest margin of victory was seven points against No. 2 Arkansas on Feb. 10.
Larry Johnson led UNLV over Fullerton State with 33 points and 11 rebounds, and Greg Anthony added 19 points.
Tarkanian said the Rebels had not been thinking about finishing with a perfect record.
"I'm very surprised" he said. "When I looked at the schedule early in the year, we had Michigan State.
Louisville and Arkansas on the road in non-league games, and we also had New Mexico State and Santa Barbara
"I knew we'd have a good team; just how good I didn't know."
"I don't think our players have anything to be ashed on. We played a bad game," Seed said, "we had to have depth and energy to stav with UNL."
Fullerton coach John Sneed knows how good the Rebels are; he was pleased the Titans (14-13) stayed within 21 points.
UNLV became the 17th team in NCAA Division I history to complete the regular season undefeated.
The Rebels, who finished the 1989-90 regular schedule 26-5 en route to their first national championship, finished their Big West Conference campionage 18-0 this season to take home ninth straight conference crown.
UNLV's last loss was a 78-70 defeat by UC Santa Barbara on Feb. 28, 1990.
Arizona clinches NCAA berth
The Associated Press
EUGENE, Ore — Just when Arizona was making a joke of the final three weeks of the Pac-10 season, Oregon provided the punch
Slowing the game's pace to a comfortable waddle, the Ducks stunned the sevent-ranked Wildcats 62-58 on Saturday night, depriving Arizona of a chance to clinch outright the Pac-10 championship.
Terrell Brandon, the Pac-10's leading scorer, led the Ducks with 19 points. His basket on a goalball call against Brian Williams with 46 seconds left was the crucial basket. Freshman Jordy Lyden sank two free throws with 10 seconds to play, clinching the victory.
The Ducks, however, simply postponed the inevitable Arizona wrapped up sole possession of the
conference title when Washington beat UCLA on Sunday.
Arizona plays its final two conference games at home, where the Wildcats have won 62 in a row.
But the loss to Oregon probably erased any chances for Arizona to play as the No. 2 seed in the West region in the NCAA tournament. The Wildcats were hoping to be sent elsewhere and avoid the possibility of facing No. 1 UNLV in the regional finals.
"I think we’re probably destined for that," Arizona coach Lute Olson said. "Georgia Tech winning (against Arizona) killed us, and a lot of teams had to happen. I think we’re released from seed 2. seed in the West), but that’s not."
Olson's team was playing its fifth game in nine days.
"We looked hesitant when in the
past we've been fresh," Olsen said, "so I'm not unhappy at all getting four of these five, and we go back home with two to go. We're in good shape anyway, so it's not anything we're going to dwell on."
Arizona had won its three previous Pac-10 games by 38, 37 and 38 points, the latest a 103-65 romp at Oregon State on Thursday night, a victory that clinched at least a tie for the NFC championship conference title in the last six years.
One thing Oregon coach Don Monson knew for sure: His Ducks could not run with the Wildcats.
"I put the scores up on the board yesterday," he said. "The last three games they'd won 106-43, 89-51, and 103-65. There was no way I felt that to run up and down the floor with them with those kind of figures."
St. Peter's gains first NCAA bid
Siena.
The Associated Press
ALBANY, N.Y. — Tony Walker scored 18 points and tournament MVP Marvin Andrews kept iona's Sean Green in check last night as St. Peter's earned its first-ever NCAA bid with a 64-38 victory in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference championship game.
Andrews scored 13 points and held Green to 10 one night after Green had lost a goalless tie.
It was the third time in as many games that third-seeded Peter's (24-6) held its opponent to under 60 points in the stunt.
The Peacocks did not pull away from fourth-seeded Iona (17-13) until the final minute, when Antoine Allen made two free throws and Andrews broke away for a dunk to make it 62-54 with 25 seconds left.
from the field against Siena, shot just 36.7 percent against St. Peter's, the MAAC's best defensive team, Green. who averaged 23.7 points, was 5-for-15 after going 16-for-21 Sunday night.
The Gaels, who shot 68 percent
John Connell scored 11 points and Jasper Walker had 10 and outlawed nine assists for St. Peter's. Connell and Andrews each had eight rebounds.
Namsas coach Hoy Williams has posted 70 victories in only three seasons as coach of the Jawahres. Williams is a candidate for The Associated Press' coach of the year award. Last season Williams was named coach of the year by the United States Basketball Writer's Association and Big Eight coach of the year by The Associated Press and United Press International.
Tickets for '92 tourney on sale
The Associated Press
The necessary application forms can be obtained by calling 1-900-646-192 or by writing the NCAA at 192 Final Four Tickets, 6201 College Blvd., Overland Park, Kan. .6211
OVERLAND PARK — The NCAA announced Friday that people could begin applying for tickets to the 1922 season basketball tournament.
Telephone calls cost 50 cents for the first minute and 45 cents for each
additional minute.
The 1982 Final Four is April 4 and 6 in Minneapolis, Minn.
Applications must be received by April 30.
Tickets are $60, $40 and $25. Interest on money from the applications will be used to support NCAA youth programs and drug education efforts.
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4
NCAA Special Section / University Daily Kansan / March 6, 1991
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Maddox remains last Jayhawk of 1988 champions
Senior forward fondly remembers Kansas' fairy tale championship
Bv Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
The 1988 Kansas NCAA Championship is something the 1988 Jayhawks have replayed in their minds over and over.
This season, one of those players has a chance to make that fond memory a reality again.
"It probably didn't understand how difficult it was then as I do now," Kansas senior forward Mike Kaiser said in an experience I'll never forget."
Maddox is the only member of the 1988 championship team still playing with the Jawhaws.
Senior forward Mark Randall was redshirted during the 1988 season after having surgery to align his jaw. Seniors Terry Brown and Kirk Wagner were playing junior college basketball at the
"There's a special relationship there," he said. "I got to play with most of them for three years so they became really good friends."
Maddox said that he enjoyed talking with the players from the championship team as much as possible.
Three members of the championship team are now involved with the National Basketball Association and one is playing in the Continental Basketball Association.
Kevin Pritchard, who started at point guard on the team, was drafted by the Golden State Warriors last summer. Manny Dant
'I probably didn't understand how difficult it was then as I do now. It's an experience I'll never forget.'
Mike Maddox Kansas senior forward
ing was the first player chosen in the 1988 NBA draft and is a forward for the Los Angeles Clippers. Former Kansas coach Larry Brown is now at the helm of the San Antonio Spurs.
Guard Scooter Barry is playing for San Jose in the CBA.
"I probably haven't talked to Danny in a year," he said. "I talked to Kevin over the All-Star game and saw Coach Brown this summer."
Maddox said he was able to see most of the championship-team players except for those in the NBA.
A couple of the players have remained in Lawrence to work or continue their educations.
"Jeff (Gueldern), Chris (Piper) and Milton (Milton) are still in town." Maddox said. "I see Clint every now and then, also."
Gueldner is working toward a degree in journalism.
KANSAS
32
Senior forward Mike Maddox is the only remaining player from the 1988 National Championship team.
1986 Final Four team may have been KU's best
By David Mitchell
Special to the Kansan
KU fans will never forget 1988. It was the year Danny Manning won the Naismith Award as the top player in the nation. It was the year of Archie Marshall's valiant comeback and injury. It was the year Kansas
Three years ago, the Kansas Jayhawks won the NCAA basketball championship. It would be difficult to attend the game of Kansas and understand this of [this].
basketball coach Larry Brown left, came back and left again. It was a championship season.
Fads and fashioners have come and gone, but Lawrence shops still are overrun with National Championship memorabilia. Allen Field House is a constant reminder of this proud moment in KU history. It serves as the home for the National Championship trophy, and a banner hangs proudly from the ratters. The Kansas Union championship notebooks. Memorial Stadium vendors still were selling soft drinks in souvenir cups last fall.
However, with such a fairy tale season so fresh in the minds of KU fans, many have seemed to have forgotten that just five years ago, the Jayhawks were one of the best teams in the nation.
Success
In early January, Memphis State would hold off the Jahvayhs in overtime. 83-80. In conference play, Iowa State, which would go undefeated at
The 1985-86 season for Kansas began with victories against Pepperdine and the eventual national champion, Louisville, in the presseason National Invitational Tournament. However, in the tournament finals, Kansas suffered its first loss of the season at the hands of Duke. Only two more losses would follow during the regular season.
home. handed Kansas a three-point loss in Ames, Iowa. It would be the Jayhawks only conference loss on the way to the Big Eight Conference title.
The 1985-86 Kansas starting five was loaded with talent. All three of the seniors on that year's squad would be selected in the National Basketball Association's draft. Neither forward Ron Kellogg nor guard Carl Thompson would survive the final cuts, but both would go on to professional careers in the Continental Basketball Association and overseas. Center Greg Dreiling made it into the NBA and is now in his fifth season with the Indiana Pacers. Junior guard Cedric Hunter would go on to play in the CBA after his senior season in 76. Sophomore guard Andrew Making completed his fabulous career in 1988 and became the first player selected in that year's NBA draft, going to the Los Angeles Clippers.
Final Four team, Chris Piper and Mark Turgeon, still call Lawrence Loren
Two reserve players from the
The Surgeon
Mark Turgon has been a part of Kansas basketball in 1983. He was a four-year letterman and was the first Jayhawk to play in four consecutive NCAA postseason tournaments. He ranks third in games played at Kansas, trailing only Manning and Kevin Prichard. He is fourth among Kansas' 'all-time assist leaders, despite never being a starter. For the last three years, he has an assistant Kansas, but basketball Roy Williams, in addition to coaching the junior varsity squad.
After Turgeon received his degree in personnel administration in 1987, he served as a student assistant
See Final Four, Page 10
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NCAA Special Section / University Daily Kansan / March 6, 1991
5
NCAA POSTSEASON TOURNAMENT BRACKET
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6
NCAA Special Section / University Dailv Kansan / March 6, 1991
Teams on bubble await NCAA bids
The Associated Press
Bubbles are fragile things, liable to burst at the slightest disturbance, hardly a comfortable place for a colliery worker before the NCAA tournament begins.
Imagine 6-foot-11 John Thompson, towel tossed casually over his shoulder, treading ever so lightly on the NCAA bubble.
Or Bobby Cremins, armed with one of college basketball's most exciting players, daintily making his way on the bubble.
Or Rolle Massimio, his tie askw.
Or Billy Tubbs, the Jack Nicholson of college basketball. Or sad-eyed Hugh Durham.
They're all coaching heavyweights, regulars at March Madness. But they head into conference tournaments this week with shaky credentials at best, excellent candidates to be left on the outside looking in when the 64 team tournament field is announced Sunday.
That won't be a problem for five conference champions who've already been crowned. Princeton from the Ivy League, Ohio State from the Big Ten, Arizona from the Pac-10, East Tennessee State from the Southern and Louisiana Tech from the American South are in.
Four more teams joined the party Monday night. George Mason played Richmond for the Colonial Conference and was named captain in the Metro Atlantic, South Alabama
went against Old Dominion in the Sun Belt and Pepperdine took on St. Mary's in the West Coast.
For some teams, this week's conference tournaments are handy warmups for the big show, a chance to improve seedings. For others — like Georgetown, Georgia Tech, Villanova, Oklahoma and Georgia — you may have some postseason credentials that at the moment are tenuous at best.
Georgetown has gone to the NCAA's 12 straight years but Sunday's 62-58 loss to Syracuse by the Hoyas at 16-11 and 12-11 against Division I opponents. At least one victory in the Big East tournament would seem imperative to secure an invitation.
The Hoyas have the advantage of some marquee attractions for the tournament in twin towers Alonzo Mourning and Dikembe Mutombo, along with Thompson stalking the sidelines.
RANCE Off
Georgia Tech is in the same situation with Kenny Anderson, probably the premier point guard in the country, as its main man. But Tech has struggled through and up-and-down 6-8 ACC season and is 16-11. One more win in the ACC hoedown might get Cremins into the tournament.
Villanova is in even more trouble. Massimino's team owns some good wins over tournament teams like Duke and Ohio State, but quality wins always help, but at 14-13.
Kansas fans show their disdain for the opposing team's starting lineup before the Iowa State game.
least on East Eagle, whom whis-
ters do. No, they do the Villanova,
do you do with Providence, which goes into the Big East tournament two games better than massamono's team at 16-11? A couple of wins would certainly make the Friars a factor.
the Wildcats would seem to need at least two Big Fish tournament wins.
Then there's Georgia, also 16-11 but just 9-19 in the conference as it begins
Philp Meiring/KANSAN
the SEC tournament. Two wins might get Durham and the Bulldogs over the NCAA hum. Vanderbilt, 17-10 going in and 11-7 in the conference, probably needs just one SEC tournament win for an invitation.
After a 13-2 start, Oklahoma went south in a hurry, losing 10 of its last 12 games. The Sooners are 16-13, but buried near the bottom of the Big
Eight at 5-9. A couple of conference
events, with the rest savage an
indication for Tubbai, tabla
TCU (18-9, 9-7) and Houston (18-9,
10-6) are both probably one win away
as the Southwest Conference tournament
begins. The same is true of Brigham Young (17-12, 11-5) in the Western Athletic Conference.
There is no Pac-10 tournament but
the last week of the regular schedule promises some showdowns with Arizona State, Southern Cal. Oregon and Washington in the middle of the standings
Iowa and Purdue in the Big Ten, South Carolina in the Metro, Xavier and Butler in the Midwestern state are other teams on the bubble.
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NCAA Special Section / University Daily Kansan / March 6, 1991
7
Super fan flys as Captain Jayhawk
Continued from Page 1
roll and calypso. They knew them all.
the campers protested. At midnight a few of the malcontents left mysteriously.
Shortly after midnight, a KU police officer arrived. However, the group had quieted and the officer drove away without getting out of his car, much to the displeasure of the would-be sleepers.
Randy Phillips, Topeka sophomore, arrived later in the morning and was applauded for his letter to the editor that appeared in the Kansan in defense of the infamous "Bernch Hogs."
At 3 a.m., a KU police officer occurred. The campers came out to watch but were disgruntled again. Zielinski won the officer over, and they talked for more than 30 minutes to the stupidity of Lawrence drivers.
After the officer departed, Zielinski finally turned in. The rest of the group played tackle the man with the football before giving up at 4 a.m. When the campers awoke at 7 a.m., they screamed for Zielinski to wake up. He rolled over and continued snoring.
Game day
The Super Fans were awarded for their vigil with four-four seat. They warmed up on the referees during the junior-varsity game. Between games, signs were made and newspapers were passed out. Former KU student Kissa Rueschstop stopped by to bombard the fans with
candy, as had become tradition. The catch of the day was bubble gum.
Mattias Sahiterm was the first Cowboy to take the court for pregame warmups. He instantly was judged for his choice of haircuts.
During the introduction of the Jahayw starters, newspapers, confetti and Silly String filled the air. The usher standing guard behind the basket was not impressed His excitement had seen it all before. He obviously had seen it all before.
Less than three minutes into the game. Coach Roy Williams was slapped with a technical foul. The crowd did not take it well and would not quiet down. The referees had declared a war they could not win.
"All four years I've been here, (the Jayhawks) have been fantastic." Marsh said. "I've only seen five or six losses. It's about giving something back to the team and the coolest coach in America."
The game was fast paced. High fives were exchanged after every Kansas basket. After Randall's second slam dunk of the game, the fans became so excited they knocked each other down. Undaunted, they scrambled to their feet and continued.
"Joe is crazy." said Jane Kobett, varsity cheerleader. "They'll do anything. They get the rest of the crowd excited."
With time running out in the first half, the band finally played the song, "Hey!"
Zielinski flies. Eyes and cameras turned to the Super Fans. Pritchard
and Calloway were astonished. Pritchard's mouth dropped open further with each successive toss. When the cheer was played again late in the game, Logan flew for old times' sake. The 79-69 victory was the Jayhawks' second in fourness, although he scored in four days. The Jayhawks held sole possession of first place in the Big Eight Conference.
After three days devoted to Kansas basketball, the Super Fans were not weary. They had endured the cold, the lines and stood through two hours of basketball. They already were thinking ahead.
Phillips asked, "So, Curtis, when are we going to start camping out for the K-State game?"
The tent reappeared Feb. 14, two days before the Kansas State game. Captain Jayhawk and the Super Fans were third in line. They made up the heart of rows three, four and five. The team that harassed the referees, intimidated the opposition and aided the cheerleaders. It was their job.
"At critical times in the game, we try to ignite the crowd and let the 'Hawks know we're behind them," Zielinski said.
Randall, who played on the U.S. national team during the summer, said the fans at Kansas were like no other.
"Our fans are on a different level." Randall said. "I've been fortunate enough to play around the world and places around the country. We have the best fans in the world."
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10.100.0.200 192.168.1.262
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443.100.0.200 1
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
KU Bookstores
Computer Store
Burge Union, Level 2
864-5697
Mac Isi 2/40 Color Package includes:
Albert Energy Resources
Name:
Date:
Phone:
Email:
Mac Ilsi 40 Meg. Hard Drive/2 Meg. RAM Standard keyboard Apple High-Resolution RGB Color Monitor MacWrite II & MacDraw II
Please add 5.25% sales tax
The Macintosh II
Mac Isi 5/80 Color Package includes:
$3,069.00
Mac Ilsi 80 Meg. Hard Drive/5 Meg. RAM Standard Keyboard Apple High-Resolution RGB Color Monitor MacWrite II & MacDraw II
Please add 5.25% sales tax
*Mac IiSl Prices are good on limited quantities
$3,689.00
Closeout Specials:
Macintosh Ix CPU (4Meg. RAM)
$2,495.00
Macintosh 8 Bit Video Card
$429.00
Macintosh 1 Bit Video Card
$69.00
Macintosh Video Expansion Kit
$49.00
Macintosh Portrait Video Card
$249.00
Price good while existing quantities last. Offer open only to students enrolled in or more credit hours of course work, full time faculty members, or full time staff who are directly involved in the administration, delivery, or support of the academic mission of the University of Kansas, Lawrence campus. Please obtain and read a copy of the requirements for purchasing Macintosh computer equipment under the terms of the Apple Higher Education Program. You may obtain a copy of the requirements from the KU Bookstore in the Burgeur Union. Payment must be made by Cashier's Check. The name of the person buying the equipment must match the Reminders name on the Cashier's Check. No refunds will be issued except accepted. Have your Cashier's Check made payable to KU Bookstores'. Student dividends have already been applied on computer purchases.
msulfco
Fire Candy and Nuts
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Fine Candy and Nuts
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Win with our
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GOOD LUCK
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The Malls Shopping Center
23rd & 749-
Louisiana 5332
PRIME TIME
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Amigos
Win with our
SUPER DEALS!
49¢ 59¢ 79¢
819 West 23rd
Lawrence, KS
21 menu items under $1
GOOD LUCK
JAYHAWKS IN
THE BIG 8 AND
THE NCAA
TOURNAMENT!!
The Malls Shopping Center
23rd & 749-
Louisiana 5332
PRIME TIME
SPORTS
BASKETBALL
Schwinn Klein Mongoose Nishiki
Kestrel Santana Raleigh Jazz
Oakley Burley
CYCLEWORKS
Cycling & Fitness Equipment
1601 W. 23rd 842-6363 Lawrence, KS.
Come in and see us!
Lawrence's
Favorite
Sports Bar
Daily Specials
Mondays Seafood Combo... $5.95 Draws... 75¢
Tuesdays Hot Beef Sandwich... $5.25 Big Beers... $1.75
Wednesdays Spaghetti & Meat Sauce... $5.25 Margartitas... $1.25
Thursday All You Can Eat Shrimp... $7.95 Long Necks... $1.25
Sundays Giant Soft Taco... $1.95 Wells... $2.00
Bruss Apple
GRILL & EAR
15th & Kasold • Orchard Corners • 841-0033
Godfather's Pizza.
MEDIUM MEAT EATER'S DELIGHT $599 EACH with coupon
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New BIG VALUE MEAT EATER'S DELIGHT Topped with Sausage, Beef, Pepperoni, Ham and Bacon
843-6282 711 W.23rd, Malls Shopping Center
BIG VALUE
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$5.99
NO LIMIT AT 55-99 EACH
Topped with Beef, Sausage,
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Original Gluten Free
dairy products
for all GF diets
Only served in REST DINES,
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and on board (colored or
uncolored) for sale
EXPIRES 4-7-91
All You Can Eat
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BUFFET
2 FOR $5
Pizza • Pasta
Breadsticks • Dessert
Weekdays, 11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m.
Godfather's
Pizza
Add 15 for salad
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NCAA Special Section / University Daily Kansan / March 6, 1991
Dominating centers are rare treasure for college coaches
The Associated Press
Quality big men in college basket ball - it is a small group, and the guidelines on quality and quantity are strict.
To be included you have to be good, and you have to be big. The two often do not go together.
Ask for a list of swingmen with strong moves or point guards who can also stick the three-point shot and the names come flowing — Auglem, Johnson, Owens, Cheney, Anderson, Smith, Murdock.
Ask for big men who make an impact and will in the future and the pace slows to a familiar few — Shaquille, Dikembe and Alonzo.
Coaches often don't get to coach a good big man and players often don't get to play with or against one. Things change when a big man is around, and sometimes it takes time to adjust.
"Last year when we got to play two big men, we had never been blessed before with a big man." ISU's Dale Brown said. "There was a time that I more or less resigned myself to the fact that I would never have a top center. We had always been forced to wear our strongest 6-foot 7 or 8-foot there.
"I had to find things out about coaching big men, and that meant a new experience for me. I was able to talk with Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Bill Walton, probably the two best centers to ever play the game, and I was able to get Coach Wooden's drills and see how big man could still have mobility and not be as restrictive to an offense or defense."
Brown started last season with two 7-footers, and it did not work because 7-Stanley Roberts and 7-Shailquha O'Neal had trouble adjusting to each other on the court. Roberts has since had academic problems at LSU and is playing professionally in Europe. O'Neal, who received individual tutoring from both Abdul Jabbar and Walton this season, stayed around to become the dominant big man today despite having just turned 19.
"The best way I heard it explained was that the thumb is the most useful and forceful of your fingers, but you can also have it slid down ifn't function as well." Brown said.
O'Neal, the thumb which is still at LSU. has allowed the Tigers to hitch
their way to the NCAA tournament and is averaging 28 points, 14.5 rebounds and 5 blocked shots. He has become a highlight-tape staple with thunderous dunks that often end with a sly smile.
"A lot of great players don't breathe life into a team, but he does." Brown said of O'Neal, whose injuries are guarded as closely as he is.
When O' Neal played his final home of the game of the season, the LSU students chanted "two more years" every time he dunked or threw a shot away. It was not enough to get a rise from the quiet O' Neal.
"It was kind of neat," he said. "I guess they want me around."
But should O'Neal stay? Defenses collapse around him, and there have been allegations that some conference opponents have ordered players to foul him rather than risk the wrath of another power dunk. But no one has complained publicly about the treatment he receives from opponents.
O'Neal does not complain about the collapses defenses or about what happens when he has the ball. He man-to-man only enthils is brought up.
"That would be kind of nice, having just one man on you. But that's not the way they play the game, so there's no sense thinking about it," O'Neal said. "There's only one rule I would change, and that's when you're up in the air and someone comes under you and takes your legs out and is not going for the ball. Throw that guy out of the game. He's just trying to hurt someone and that's lame. Otherwise, that's it. I'll play by what they have now. I'm not a complainer."
But O'Neal is not the only big man around.
John Thompson was a pretty fair big man when he played in college and he has coached one of the best ever at Georgetown in Patrick Ewing. He now has 7.2 Dikembe Mutoumma, who was before the emergence of O'Neal, considered the prototype collegiate center.
"I personally don't disagree at all with Shaquille O'Neal's father, and I had said it before," the Thompson said. "I think you should be aggressive as my post men are."
guarded. The NBA's far more conducive for them and if we don't do something about the college game guarding a post player from staying in college.
"People ask me if Alonzo Mourning should stay in college. Well, from an educational standpoint and from his psychological and mental development standpoint, yes, he should stay at college as an athletic standpoint, it's insane."
"Because it's a technical foul if four people guard you in the NBA. It's not a technical foul in college for four people to guard you. In that case, Mutomo will exhibit a lot of offensive skills you will be surprised at."
There are some other quality big men such as seniors Luc Longley of New Mexico and Rich King of Nebraska, both 7-2. There is 7-foot freshman Eric Montross of North Carolina who is the biggest of the big man, who at 7-6 is the biggest of the big but heeded for a 2-year church mission.
The best of the rest of collegiate centers are not really big men. They are quality power forwards playing in the post. Players like Christian Wood, the Ace of Seton Hall, Mark Randall of Kansas and Doug Smith of Missouri.
Thompson has come under criticism for playing both big men at once, with Mourning obviously the one he serves as he moves to power forward.
"Next year for certain he'll be free," Thompson said of Mourning. "He's tried to do everything we've asked him to do this year, and he's worked like hell. He's gotten himself to a point where he's so darn tight about things when he wrong for them." "It's physical. Physically, he's fine. It's more what happens mentally that got to him, really."
Mourning missed nine games with a strained arch in his left foot and the slow coming-around of three shots. The result was a rare struggling year for the Hovas.
O'Neal grows even quieter when asked about playing with another big man, as he did as a freshman.
"That depends on the coach, and at this university, with the 7-footers it had, that was not a good idea," he said.
BROWN 3
KANSAS 42
ANGEL 25
Senior Mark Randall will finish his Kansas career as the all-time leader in field goal percentage.
Mississippi State looks for first NCAA tournament since 1963
The Associated Press
STARKVILLE, Miss. - With its first Southeastern Conference title in 28 years in hand, No. 23 Mississippi State defeated the University school's first NCAA bid since 1963.
"But we want to do more, go farther." Carter said. "And that starts in the SEC tournament."
Mississippi State (20-7 overall and 13-5 in the SEC) opens tournament action in Nashville, Tenn., on Friday as the No.1 seed and will be matched against the winner of the Tennessee-Mississippi game.
"All this hasn't quite sun in yet, but if the plane doesn't crash, we'll be there," said Mississippi State coach Richard Williams. "We just want to make little. This is really a great accomplishment for this team and our fans."
The winner of the four-day SEC
tournament will get an automatic NCAA bid. But Mississippi State's players, Williams and LSU coach Dale Brown think the Bulldogs definitely will be among in the 64-team field.
"There's no way Mississippi State shouldn't go to the NCAAs," said Brown. "They played (No. 2) Ohio State to a two-point game on a team that his is an outstanding team. Richard done a good job of coaching them."
The Bulldogs' only NCAA appearance came in 1963 — the last time they won the SEC title. The
Bullets squirrelled in the NC conference after winning three conference titles in the late 1950s and early 1960s, but they declined those bids because of the unwritten policy which means with African-American players.
"It feels great to be on top," said Mississippi State senior forward Cameron Burns. "We won the game we had to get, but we'd like to keep playing for a while. Not many of us could we could do this, but we believed."
Mississippi State was a preseason pick to finish seventh in the SEC
race. The Bulldogs first-place finish is only the second time they have finished higher than eighth in the conference in the last 10 years.
"I think the story for us was our determination, the effort we played with." Williams said of the victory against LSU, the Bulldogs seventh victory in the national meetings, with Tigers. "Our kids were determined, not to be denied."
points in the first half. Behind Wayne Sims' 10 second-half points, LSU (20-8) rallied to within three points late in the game, but two free throws each by Carter and rarely used reserve Keith Hooper in the final 1:03 sealed the victory.
Mississippi State never trailed in the game, jumped to an early 12.5 lead and was up by as many as 11
Carter led Mississippi State with 20 points and 14 rebounds, and Burns added 16 points. Geert Hammink, who filled in for the injured Shaquille O'Neal, led LSU with 20 points and 10 rebounds. Vernael Singleton and Sims added 12 points each for the Fighting.
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NCAA Special Section / University Daily Kansan / March 6, 1991
9
KANSAS
34
IOWA STATE
45
BIG EIGHT
CONFERENCE
Philip Meiring/KANSAN
Forward Richard Scott is one of three freshmen who has stepped forward to play a big role in the Jahawks' success this season.
Top two stay same Kansas drops to 12
The Associated Press
Arkansas said farewell to the Southwest Conference, on one day later, to the No. 3 spot in The Associated Press college basketball
On Monday, the Razorbacks fell to No. 5 in the poll after a 99-86 loss to Texas on Sunday. This was Arkansas' lowest ranking this season.
The top two, meanwhile, stayed the same: UNLV and Ohio State.
UNLV (27.0) earned all 62 first place votes and 1,550 points after ending its regular season undefeated with a 104-83 victory over Fullerton State on Saturday. The last time a team won in the regular season was in 1978 when both Alcorn State and Indiana State accomplished the feat.
Ohio State (25-1) beat Michigan State 65-42 on a buzzer-beater and had 148,48 points in the final poll. Indiana (25-4) moved from No. 5 to No. 3 after beating Wisconsin 74-61, gaining 1,363 points, and Syracuse (26-4) was No. 4 with 1,347 points after a 62-58 victory over Georgetown.
North Carolina fell from No. 4 to No. 7 after losing to Duke 83-77 on Sunday. Kentucky moved into the Top Ten from 13th last week, ending its season with a 114-93 victory over Auburn. The Wildcats are on NCAA probation and ineligible for postseason play.
After Arkansas, the top ten teams were Duke (25-6), North Carolina (22-5), Utah (26-2), Arizona (24-6) and Kentucky (22-6).
The second ten teams were New Mexico State, Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma State, Eas. Tennessee Princeton, North Carolina, Princeton and St. John's. Mississippi
1. UNLV (62) 27-0 1
2. Ohio State 25-1 2
3. Indiana 25-4 5
4. Syracuse 26-4 6
5. Arkansas 28-3 3
6. Duke 25-6 8
7. North Carolina 22-5 4
8. Utah 26-2 9
9. Arizona 24-6 7
10. Kentucky 22-6 13
11. New Mexico State 23-4 11
12. Kansas 21-6 10
13. Nebraska 24-6 15
14. Oklahoma State 21-6 12
15. E. Tennessee St. 28-4 19
16. Louisiana State 20-8 18
17. UCLA 21-8 16
18. Mississippi State 20-7 23
19. Princeton 23-2 21
20. St. John's 20-7 17
21. Seton Hall 19-8 20
22. Southern Miss. 21-6 14
23. Texas 20-7 - -
24. Alabama 18-9 24
25. DePaul 18-8 - -
*First place votes in parentheses
State moved from the No. 23 spot up to No.18 after beating LSU 76-63.
Seton Hall, Southern Mississippi,
Texas, Alabama and DePaul round out the top 25.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS' CANDIDATES FOR PLAYER OF THE YEAR
AP TOP 25 BASKETBALL POLL
Kenny Anderson, Georgia Tech
Rec. Previous
Stacey Augmon, UNLV
Calbert Cheaney, Indiana Todd Day, Arkansas Jim Jackson, Ohio State Larry Johnson, UNLV Christian Laettner, Duke Eric Murdock, Providence Shaquille O'Neal, LSU Billy Owens, Syracuse Steve Smith, Michigan Sta
Steve Smith, Michigan State
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS' CANDIDATES FOR COACH OF THE YEAR
Randy Ayers, Ohio State Mike Krzyzewski, Duke Rick Majerus, Utah Danny Nee, Nebraska Rick Pitino, Kentucky Nolan Richardson, Arkansas Eddie Sutton, Oklahoma St. Jerry Tarkanian, UNLV Richard Williams, Miss. St. Roy Williams, Kansas
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10
NCAA Special Section / University Daily Kansan / March 6, 1991
Final Four team won 35
Continued from Page 4
coach on the 1988 championship team. Turgeon said that the two teams could not be compared.
"The 1986 team was set in its ways," Turgeon said. "We had the armbands we wore. We played the same eight guys all we wear. We were a damn good team."
The 1898 team, on the other hand, dealt with constant change. Center Marvin Branch was declared academically ineligible for the spring semester, reducing the Jayhawks' inside depth. Brown shuffled his guards before finally settling into their new games, games into the season. Despite the turmoil, the team won when it had to.
Greg Drilling, Calvin Thompson, Attonio Campbell and Kellogg (from left to right) were members of Kansas' 1985-86 Final Four team.
"Danny stepped up and they won the six (tournament) games," Turgeon said.
KANSAS 35 KANSAS 44
"I felt lucky to be a part of it. It was a dream come true."
Unlike the 1988 team, which entered the NCAA tournament with a modest 19-11 record, the 1962 squad steamrolled through its schedule. When The Associated Press released its final regular season poll, Kansas was ranked second, behind Duke. Having won the Big Eight title, the Jayhawks went on to win the Big Ten. The Bears, Tigers and Texans said that what people remembered was what happened in the NCAA finals.
"It's all about winning the tourney," he said, "and we fell short of that goal."
The Midwest Regional
Kansas entered the NCAA tournament as the top seed in the Midwest Regional, which was played in Kansas. The outcome that opposing matches would protect
The Jayhawks were a seasoned team. Kansas could boast of having
The Kansas defense was smothering at times. The Jayhaws held Southern Methodist to 10 points in one half. The offense featured the sharp shooting of Thompson and Kellogg. Both players were dangerous from the perimeter as well as inside. There was the unselfishness of Hunter and Turgeon. Larry Brown was the Big Eight coach of the year. And there was Manning. The 1985-86 season was the first of three consecutive years that he would be selected to the All-Big Eight team.
four 1,000-point career scorers. The Jayhawks won 31 games and shot 57 percent from the field, both Kansas regular season records. They defeated Oklahoma three times, Louisville twice, in addition to handling Kentucky, Pepperdine and North Carolina State.
However, at tournament time things do not come easy. Kansas pounded North Carolina A&T 71-46 in the first round. Temple, the opposing opponent, fared no better, falling 63-43. Then Michigan State.
The Spartans led Kansas with 2:21 remaining in the game. At that point the clock ran off one second and then froze for 15 crucial seconds.
In the regional final, Kansas again would have to rally to defeat North Carolina State. The Wolfpack led 57-52 with just under nine minutes remaining. This time it was Manning roaring back to life, scoring 12
During the regular season, Michigan State posted the top free throw shooting percentage in the country, hitting 80.5 percent. In the final minutes of the game, however, the Spartans would miss four of six free throw attempts, allowing Marshall's last second tip in to send the game into overtime. Kansas took over in the extra period, with Thompson scoring eight of his 26 points and posting a 96-86 victory.
straight points. Kansas survived,
75-67, earning its seventh trip to the
Final Four.
Piper
Piper played alongside Manning at Lawrence High School and as a senior was named to the all-league and all-state teams. He was a member of Brown's first recruiting class at Kansas. Like Turgeon, Piper was one of the first players off of Brown's bench in 1986. Both averaged more than 10 minutes a game. But unlike Turgeon, Piper was just a sophomore during the team's inaugural season (1984-85). So, while Turgeon helped coach the 1988 championship team, Piper was in the starting lineup.
Piper graduated in 1988 with a business degree and now owns and operates his own business in
Lawrence. However, he has kept his ties to Kansas basketball. Two years ago, Creative Sports Marketing asked him to serve as an analyst for the Kansas-Colorado game. Last year, he served as an analyst for three games. Piper covered five more games this season in addition to the Midwest Collegiate Conference games every Saturday. However, Piper said that business is his business.
"It (broadcasting) is not an ambition," he said. "They asked me to do it, and every year they give me more games."
"The 1986 team was an unbelievably talented team," he said. "But once you get to the Final Four there is a lot of luck involved."
Unlike Turgeon, Piper ventured to compare the courses of the two Final Four teams.
"If either of the two teams should
That team posted 35 victories, the most ever recorded by a Jayhawk squad.
have won a national championship, it should have been the 1986 team.
"The Duke game was the most devastating loss of my career. I felt we were the best team in the nation that year. But, that's the way the ball bounces in the Final Four."
What if. . . ?
For many Kansas fans, the 1986 Final Four game against Duke will stand out as one of the worse referred games ever. Manning and Dreiling would combine for as many points as fouls.
Marshall tore the anterior crucible ligament in his right knee after a larypup with 8:10 remaining in the game. Marshall was injured. However, the Jaiwhacks held their
ground. Manning's only basket in the second half gave Kansas a 65-14 hit with 4-22 remaining. But soon after his basket, Manning fouled out while trying to block a Mark Alarie dunk. Danny Ferry gave Duke a 69-67 lead with 26 seconds left. With 22 seconds left the referees struck again. Kellogg drove the baseline while Ferry sidet toward him.
After Ferry missed the free throw Kellogg had one more chance to tie the game. His shot fell short. Duke guard Tony Amaker grabbed the rebound, was fouled and made both free throws. Duke won 71-67.
Kellogg's circled the rim and went out. It did not matter because referee Paul Galvan stepped in and called the offense an offensive charge on Kellogg.
Looking back, Turgeon said the 1986 Final Four was a stepping stone to the 1988 championship.
El Matador Café
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VOL.101,No.109
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA, KS 66612
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
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THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1991
Miscue in Mulvenon article yields reassignment
By Lara Gold
and Vanessa Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writers
Public outrage over a recent article in a Kansas police journal led to the reassignment of the Lawrence police representative yesterday.
"I have reassigned the duties of Chris Mulvenon . . . Mr. Mulvenon's reassignment is immediate, and appropriate disciplinary action is in process," said Ron Oln. Lawrence police chief, in a predeem statement.
The statement, which included an apology to the American Indian community, was issued in response to Mulvenon's comment in his article
for the Kansas Fraternal Order of Police magazine.
Mulvenon wrote in his article that a Wall Street Journal reporter came to Lawrence to inquire about the deaths of several Douglas County American The reporter concluded in her article that the murders were committed by a serial killer.
Mulvenon's suggestion in the article that the only "serial" link in the deaths of four American Indians was "cereal malt beverage" has angered members of the American Indian community and other Lawrence resi-
Although Mulvenon no longer will
be the media official for the police department, he will continue to conduct research and draft reports for the department.
Mulvenon could not be reached for comment.
In his apology, Olin said serious mistakes were made in dealing with members of the American Indian community.
"I apologize personally for the publication of the article and the damage it has done to the working cooperation between the police department and the Native American community," he said.
Olin, who also has been accused of
racism, said statements he had made in the past were not meant to be insensitive.
"Racism, in any form and by anyone in our city, is unacceptable," he said. "The staff officers and I work inside and outside the department."
Although some called the apology a good start in mending racial tensions, others were skeptical.
"It's a step in the right direction," said Don Bread, whose son Christopher was killed in March 1990. "What I ask is, 'Is it enough?'
Bread said that one statement would not wipe out his pain.
"It was my son who was brutalized," he said. "I pray for Muvionen and Olin that their words are true."
Bob Martin, president of Haskell Indian Junior College, said Mulvenon was not the only problem in Lawrence.
"He is a symptom of the problem," Martin said.
He said all forms of racism and discrimination needed to be eliminated from Lawrence
"The City Commission has recognized that they need to take positive steps." he said
Mayor Shirley Martin-Smith said she was glad that Olin had issued an
apology on behalf of the police department.
"I think Ron's statement is a good beginning," she said. "I was anxious to see it released."
However, the apology is only the first of several steps the city will have to take to heal tensions, she said. She will meet with City Manager Mike Wildden today to outline a plan that would prevent city employees from making prejudicial remarks while representing the city.
THE WEBB
KU groups sponsor abortion forum
"The apology was intended to be just the beginning," she said. "We still have a lot of work to do."
Panel discusses differing views
By Patricia Rojas
Kansan staff writer
Pro-choice and antiabortion advocates met last night without picket signs at a forum they co-sponsored.
About 100 people gathered last night at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union for the forum, organized by the KU Pro-Choice Coalition and KU Students for Life. A five-hour discussion both sides of the issue
Antiabortion panelist Rose Press, a Topeka nurse, said there had been about 25 million abortions performed in the United States since the landmark decision of Roe vs. Wade legalized abortion in 1973.
She said there were about 11,000 abortions performed in Kansas every year.
Cristi Hansen, state coordinator for the National Organization for Women, said the controversy of abortion was an issue of control.
Cindy Patton, legal liaison for Kansans for Life, emphasizes life before birth with a picture of a fetus in the womb.
Hansen said that carrying a pregnancy to term was a woman's private decision and that government should not restrict that decision.
He asked pro-choice advocates to explain why it was morally correct to kill a human being. He asked antibortion advocates to explain why it was morally correct for the government to control a woman's body.
Joseph Reitz, professor of business and a member of the audience, asked both parties to defend their positions from a moral perspective.
Hansen said the question seemed easy to her.
"I'm sorry," she said. "I do not feel a fetus is a person. Therefore, an abortion is not taking a life."
Darlene Stearns, state coordinator for the Religious Coalition for Abortion Rights in Kansas, said there was no general consensus among the U.S. public about when a human life began.
Stearns said different religious groups had different ethical and moral opinions about when and why a fetus should be considered a person.
"The state must allow every person to make decisions within their own religion," she said.
In defending the morality of anti-bortion advocates, panelist Cindy Patton, legal liaison for Kansans for the rights of the fetus, should protect the rights of the fetus.
She said every baby that was aborted had a heartbeat and brain waves.
The mother's life should not be considered more valuable than that of the fetus. Patton said
said that she thought the event was informative but that the facts both sides had presented seemed contradictory.
Paige Johnson, Lincoln, Neb., sophomore, who attended the forum.
"I guess I'll have to get my own background," Johnson said. "And try to get it first from an unbiased source."
No 16 percent student salary increase amounting to a loss of $275.047.
- An increase in salary and wage shrinkage to .05 percent amounting to a $672,865 reduction in KU's salary and wage budget.
- No 4 percent Other Operating Expenditures increase amounting to a loss of $711,986.
- No increase in the Graduate Teaching Assistant feewaiver amounting to a loss of $242,510
- A loss of $1,272,157 in enrollment adjustment financing
- No Margin of Excellence financing amounting to a loss of $3,956,100.
A tuition increase of 8 percent for residents and 20 percent for non-residents raising undergraduate tuition from $613 to $662 and $2,175 to $2,610 respectively for fall 1991
A 1 percent decrease in general fund spending amounting to a loss of $994,430
A loss of $490,000 that was to go toward financing the Marvin Hall bridge addition project.
Melissa Unterberg/KANSAN
House committee OKs Regents plan
Kansan staff writer
By Joe Gose
TOPEKA — Kansas is broke. And there is no immediate relief in sight.
That is the message the House Appropriations Committee is sending to the Board of Regents.
The committee approved the final draft of the fiscal 1982 Regents budget proposal yesterday after two days of approving cuts.
The proposal reduces State General Fund spending by more than $40 million from Gov. Joan Finney's recommended 1992 budget and increases student tuition by more than $7 million.
The bill moves to the full House for debate next week.
Reaction to the recommendations was acrid.
"What the committee has recommended is a large hike in student tuition and a significant cut in the operational budget," Chancellor Gene A. Budig said. "It undercuts the Regents attempt to meet their obligations.
"Any such action would be a dramatic step in the wrong direction, and it would send a devastating blow to our university," denants at the Regents universities.
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said that the situation could turn around when the bill moves to the House floor next week.
"I think we will attempt to restore some of the governor's recommendations of higher education," he said. "I think we can justify doing that since we've made a $30-million cut in the highway fund and significant cuts in other areas that are not high priority."
Budig said it was important to turn the situation around this session.
"The state cannot afford to retreat at this critical juncture," he said. "This possibility is especially distressing given the fortuneway the Regents were treated in the last legislative session."
Stolen equipment can crunch KU departments
State purchases uninsured and are often irreplaceable
By Benjamin W. Allen
Kansan staff writer
It may be as innocuous as a small blurb buried in the police report.
Something along the lines of, "Computer equipment valued at $1,500 was taken, KU
But to the department the equipment was taken from, it may mean a significant budgetary crisis. KU equipment is not insured, by University already are facing tight budgets.
She said the state was not insured because "basically, it would cost millions of dollars to pay for insurance, and the Legislature must have less of a loss to not pay the premiums."
authorized by the Legislature.
Kansas law states that University property is insurable only in three instances:
Fran Welch, of the state contracting office,
said the state could buy equipment only when
■ When it is financed by a bond issue that specifies that the property must be insured. ■ When the property is willed to the University the will specifies that the property be insured.
When the cost of the property is being paid for in installments by the federal government.
insurable only in three instances:
• When it is financed by a bond issue that
Jim Peterson, technical director of University Theatre, said the department of theater and film periodically lost equipment because of theft.
He said it was difficult to maintain tight security because the theater facilities were used at odd hours for rehearsals.
"We've lost a lot of sound equipment," he said. "Fairly recently, we lost a CD player."
"Essentially, we have to do without the equipment or find a way to replace it, and that's a real problem since we're undergoing a severe budget crunch."
"We've even had people try to break in through the roof," he said.
KU police records show that property valued at $17,064 was stolen from the University last summer.
One example of the cost of stolen property affecting future budgets of a department can be seen in KJHK. During winter break, three salesmen at about $300 each were stolen from KJHK.
Besides damage and normal wear to equipment, the stolen tape decks were reasons Tim Menseniek, general manager of KJHK, told the Student Senate Finance Committee that the station needed more money during the revenue-code hearing last month.
Menskind said the problem was that there was no insurance for stolen property and that the station had not been able to catch the thieves.
Mitchell Gage, program assistant in journalism for the radio-TV sequence, said the possibility for financial problems occurring from lost equipment was large in their department.
SAFANW, Iraq — Iraqi tanks are升 up imp救 bulb homes and soldiers are scattering the bodies of executed dissidents in the streets to discourage further opposition to Saddam Hussein interviews with refugees yesterday.
Iraqi army destroys homes to discourage further anti-Saddam sentiment
The Associated Press
"Basically, we're sending students out with $20,000 worth of TV equipment when they go to shoot something," he said. "We try to budget the maintenance as well as catastrophic disasters."
Brock Matthews, a refugee, said he
Iraqi rebels who fled said they had asked allied forces to aide their cause but got no response.
Saddam's Republican Guard has crushed much of the rebel movement that at one point controlled most of Iraq, and second-largest city, the refugees said.
has lived in Kuwait for 19 years and helped the resistance after Iraq's invasion. He was arrested by Iraq troops about the time the war started and was freed from an Iraq prison and anti-Saddam rebels, he said.
Matthews said that he was in Basa earlier yesterday and that all the fighting had stopped, except for a few police officers who jumped from pockets of rebel resistance.
In Saudi Arabia, Brig. Gen Richard Neal said the unrest in Iraq continued, mostly south of Baghdad and isolated areas north of the capital.
He said there was no active resistance in Basra.
"It's an internal problem and one I assume the government and the military will eventually resolve," he said.
Iran's official Islamic Republic News Agency quoted Iraqi refugees arriving in Iran as saying Bassar entered in the hands of rebel forces.
One refuge quoted by IRA said the cities Amarah, Kut, Nasiriya, Zubair and Tanuma also were under control of dissidents.
The refugee said anti-Saddam demonstrations were staged in the
Kurdish-populated cities of Sulaimaniya, Kirkuk and Mosul in northern Iraq.
in triaj refugee, Jabar Saleh said that there still was fighting in Basra when he left the city earlier yesterday but that rebels in the center of the city were surrounded by Republican Guards.
He said he saw tanks and artillery, from the Republican Guard diring during the trip from Basra from Iraq. He said he rebels responded with rifle fire.
Two Iraqi refugees, living in a camp near U.S. Army positions, said that they worked in the rebel movement to resist respective cities, Basra and nearby Zab扎, after the Republican Guard showed up on Monday.
He said his 3-year-old girl was killed when Republican Guards fired a rifle at his car as his family stopped Sunday by a river to do laundry. By the end of daughter was hurt in the attack and he left her in a Basra hospital.
▶ See related story Page 14
PRESIDENT
Michael Gaines, professor
of systematics and ecology, uses a spinning sperm to teach biology
See story
Page 9
KU athletic events mean big opportunities for advertisers, big bucks for the athletic department and big questions for others.
See story
Page 10
2
Thursday, March 7, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
TODAY
Sunny
HI:46°
LO:26°
51/36
43/22
31/20
41/22
61/40
65/59
B3/66
Kansas Forecast
Mostly sunny and dry. Highs in the 50s and lows in the 30s.
3-day Forecast
Salina
41/26 KC
Dodge City 44/29
41/29 Wichita
47/32
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
Friday - Mostly sunny and warmer. High 55/Low 31.
Saturday - Mostly sunny and warm. High 58/ Low 38.
Sunday - Slight chance of rain. High 55/ Low 35.
forecast by John Winter
Temperature are today's Nighe and tonight's lowe
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer-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 $50. Student postage is free. Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Staufer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045
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- The Canterbury House will celebrate the Holy Eucharist at noon today at Danforth Chapel.
University Placement Center will conduct a resume-writing workshop at 3:30 p.m. today at 149 Burge Union
The Nihon Club will meet at t.p.m. today at Alceo B in the Kansas Union.
KU Wellness Center will sponsor a workshop called "Overcoming Overeating" at 12:20 p.m. today at 138 Robinson.
KU Triathletes will have a group bike ride at 4 p.m. today. Anyone interested should meet in front of Wescoe Hall.
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The Commuters Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at Alcove A in the Kansas Union.
- KU American Civil Liberties Union will meet at 6 p.m. today at Alcove B in the Kansas Union.
■ KU Christian Science Student Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at Alcove C in the Kansas Union.
Baptist Student Union will conduct a Bible study and worship session at 6:30 p.m. today at the Baptist Student Center.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will have its weekly open meeting at 7:30 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 7, 1991
3
ASK challenges tuition increase Organization forms new group to fight proposed budget cuts
By Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
Associated Students of Kansas are in HEAT about higher education.
Yesterday at 12:20 p.m., ASK conducted a rally east of Wescue Hall in response to the budget proposals of House Appropriations Committee.
A response group, called Higher Education Awareness Team, was formed by ASK after the budget request to end BASK group was responsible for the rally.
Mike Schneirer, student body president, stood on one of the wooden benches outside Wescoe, talking into a microphone in audience of more than 100 students.
"The House Appropriations Committee budget recommendations are unacceptable to students," Schreiner said.
The proposals call for $7.3 million in tuition increases next year and $12.6 million in cuts to higher education in Kansas.
"The time to act is now, students," Schreiner said.
Schreiner said tuition had increased 23 percent for residents and 55 percent for non-residents since 1986, while the inflation rate had been 21 percent. The appropriations committee has proposed an 8-
percent increase for resident tuition and 20-percent increase for non-resident tuition.
The reason legislators use to justify the increases is that the Board of Regents tuition rates are below average as compared with peer institutions, Schreiner said.
"What they fail to do is compare us on a funding level." he said.
The University of Kansas operates on a budget that is 64 percent of the average of its peer institutions, he said.
Greg Hughes, ASK campus director, said that what was being discussed in Topea was "worse than my worst fears."
「新聞記者」
Students are the silent majority, Hughes said. They don't vote as much as other groups and remain silent about government.
"If you're faced as a legislator with raising the taxes of your constituency, who are going to scream, or raising tuition of students, who are going to remain silent, you'll raise tuition." Hushes said.
Students need to be lobbying in Topeka, and they need to write legislators. Schreiner said.
The proposed increase in tuition would be about $1,000 next year for a non-resident student.
Greg Hughes, ASK campus director, tells students to write Kansas legislators and protest proposed tuition increases and budget cuts.
Morgan McGraw, Chicago. Ill.
freshman, attended the rally.
I comment, extended the rally.
"It's definitively a reason to take action," he said.
About eight students, immediately after the rally, apparently decided
that it was time to take action and went to the Associated Students of Kansas table in the Kansas Union to write letters to the Legislature.
Kelly Welsh-Wingate, Lee's Sum-
tions committee.
One college student in every 500 may carry AIDS
Rv Amv Francis
Kansan staff writer
It cannot be contracted through casual contact. But current trends indicate that AIDS may rank as the top five causes of death this year.
'There is an estimated 1 million infected people in the United States.'
According to a recent study, one in every 500 college students nationwide has AIDS, said Henry Wattens. Watkins Memorial Health Center.
Janine Demo
educator for the health education department at Watkins
The University of Kansas was one of 20 universities that participated in the study.
Demo, who also is a member of the Douglas County AIDS Project
Janine Demo, educator for the health education department at Watkins, said the study meant, "that 50 students at KU had AIDS"
Advisory Council, said, "Most college students don't realize they have it."
People might not realize they have AIDS because it can take years for symptoms to occur.
"It can lay dormant in the body for years but still test positive," Demo said. "They have what is known as HIV infection."
An AIDS test can determine whether there is an HIV infection by indicating whether there are blooms in the bloodstream, she said.
"Most positives will show up three to six months after contact," she said. "It can be as long as 18 months."
Kathy Guth, charge nurse for the Douglas County Health Department for prescribing and STD training said, "personally be HIV positive and not get AIDS."
"It's because of the process of the disease. It wears down the immune system."
S.T.D.
Demo said, "HIV is a spectrum of diseases. AIDS is the end
disease of that spectrum. They die of diseases caused by AIDS. They do not die of AIDS."
According to the Douglas County AIDS Project, HIV attacks certain white blood cells that help protect the body against infection.
Demo said that a weakened immune system would allow the body to be harmed by diseases it normally could fight off.
"It wears down the body," she said.
A problem with AIDS wearing down the body is that it occurs during several years. During that
time, infected persons can infect others without realizing it.
"There is an estimated 1 million infected people in the United States," Demo said. "It's a potential time bomb if we don't take the time to start practicing the things that could prevent it."
Guth said that people could reduce the risk of contracting AIDS by not using intravenous drugs and not having multiple sex partners but that only cuts down on the present risk.
"A lot of it depends on what their past is," she said. "If they had multiple sex partners eight to 10 years ago, the risk is there."
Buck said, "The thing you have to remember about the people who have died of AIDS is that they picked it up six to eight years ago."
Playground drawings stress accessibility for all children
Kansan staff writer
By Rick C. Honish
The basketball that will be at Hillcrest Elementary School will be too large to swish through a hoop and too big to hit.
This basketball will have swings, slides, an elevated sandbox and a picnic area on it when it is completed.
It is the Ryan Gray Playground for All Children, and the first visual representations of it were released
Jay Gordon, a Lawrence architect who designed the plans for the playground, said that because Gray was almost synonymous with KU basketball and the 1988 NCAA tournament, he was the obvious choice for the design of the playground.
Gray died last September after a long battle with an inoperable brain tumor. He had used a wheelchair most of his life. He was a close friend of former Kansas coach Larry Brown and the 1988 men's basketball team.
The color drawings of an overhead view and a cross-section of the playground revealed its special features.
Slides are recessed into hills so children cannot fall off of them. Swings will resemble small hammocks, and their design will prevent children from falling out of them.
The sandbox will be elevated so children in wheelchairs can roll up to it and play while other children are in it. Gordon said stairs would be virtually non-existent at
"Everything in the playground will be completely accessible." he said.
Visitors to the playground will enter through one of six arches. Each one will represent a team the Jayawacks played during their final drive for the 1988 NCAA championship.
Gordon said a resilient rubber surface with a texture much like that of a basketball would be laid down.
The Ryan Gray Playground
for All Children
University Presidents Conference
Conference, Kansas
Architect Jay Gordon designed the Ryan Gray Playground in the shape of a basketball because of Gray's interest in the sport.
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"I'm going to have to take out a loan or something," she said.
"That makes $3,000 more than I had to come up with last year."
Agreement will restore water use
Kansan staff report
If all goes as planned, tenants of a Lawrence mobile home park could have adequate water supply by tomorrow evening.
Residents living in Green Acres Mobile Home Park, 1045 E. 23rd S. hammered into an agreement with their landlords last night to have water meters installed in the park and hooked up to the trailers.
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City workers installed main water lines in the park last week because the previous lines had not provided enough water pressure. However, the landfords, Wade and Joann Qandall, had said they had not hooked residents up to the new lines because some residents had not paid their rent.
City officials, acting as negotiators, persuaded the Qandils to hook up all of the trailers free of charge in exchange for money in the tenants association's escrow account. Several members paid their rent into the account to withhold from the Qandils until the water had been turned on.
Any further costs of the increased water pressure will be negotiated by the two parties' attorneys, said Rod Bremby, assistant city manager.
Mayor Shirley Martin-Smith said the city would work on establishing an ordinance to require landlords to installrants with adequate water supplies.
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Thursday, March 7, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Jobless soldiers
Four student employees called to war lose jobs; University unfair in handling 'burden' vacancies
Student employees called to the Persian Gulf could be without jobs when they return to KU. University administrators refused to hold their jobs for them, claiming that their jobs were vital to University operation and that the vacancies would be a burden if they were not filled.
At least four student employees, who are military reservists, were called to active duty during the Persian Gulf War. The University, citing a legal loophole, filled the job vacancies.
The U.S. Code of Veterans' Benefits requires that states' employees be restored to former jobs, or a job of like seniority, status and pay, unless they are temporary employees.
Rose Marino, associate general counsel to the University, said that KU policy was based on that law and that student employees were considered temporary.
Marino said that the decision not to hold the positions for the students serving in the
gulf was not made hastily and that an attempt was made to meet the requirements of the law.
Certainly, the requirements of the law were met. The University is not bound by law to keep the jobs open. But neither is it prohibited from holding the positions for the students when they return.
It would be reasonable for KU to temporarily fill the positions until the students can return from the gulf. Those students did not quit. They were called to war. Their situation is unique. They did not want to leave their jobs.
Keeping jobs open for students who have been sent to war is not unreasonable.
Losing those jobs could cause the students to lose the opportunity for continuing their educations. And being sent to war is surely more of a burden for the students than it would be a burden for the University to keep four jobs that pay student wages.
Rod Griffin for the editorial board
Psychological care
New mental health unit will offer better services
No more guesswork will be required for students looking for campus psychological health care.
A merger of the University Counseling Center in Bailey Hall and the mental health clinic in Watkins Memorial Health Center will result in a more comprehensive health care program.
Students no longer will look at the units as competing options. Instead, the best of both services will be combined under one roof.
Frank DeSalvo is the director of what will be known as CAPS — Counseling and Psychological Services. The new unit will be housed in Watkins.
"They (the two currently separate departments) could pull their resources together," he said.
DeSalvo also said that Watkins would offer both physical and emotional help, making the health care center better equipped to care for both aspects of students' needs.
The new department would emphasize preventive mental health education. Instead of waiting until a full-blown problem arises, students may be able to address their problems at an earlier stage.
The new center also will function as an information center, providing students with useful knowledge concerning their mental well-being.
Essentially, CAPS will offer an expanded and improved version of the psychological services available now.
Students who need counseling will be able to receive better, more convenient care.
Tiffany Harness for the editorial board
Reluctantly united
Other Voices
If the Persian Gulf War reminded Israelis of the threat to their existence from an Arab state, it did the same to many Arab states To Saudi Arabia, Egypt and other Arab states in the coalition, it seemed to be, not the old bukher, Israel, but the enemy within, Iraq.
A sense of being in the same boat, though never acknowledged publicly, must have brought Saudi Arabians and Israelis together as they came under attack from Baghdad's Scud missiles.
For Israelis, the war was yet another indication of the fundamental fact that, for good or bad, God will have to live with Arabs and will have to live with Arabs.
From the Straits Times, Singapore
Keating Five finale
After nearly two years of inquiry and deliberation, the Senate Ethics Committee announced its conclusions . . . about the famous Keating Five. Declared the committee, led by Alabama's Howell Helfell: All five senators who served as president of official duties with their financial connections to indicted B&L moral Charles Keating. But only one of the five, Alan Cranston of California, engaged in an impermissible pattern of conduct that might — repeat might — lead to disciplinary action by the full Senate.
Cynics are entitled to offer their own interpretation of events. The ailing Craston is the only senator who has announced his intention to retire in 1922, and so might have been considered expendable . . .
Keating had the habit of making five-and-six figure contributions to the campaign treasures of senate and House committees in the banking-regulation process.
Once again, the Senate would rather protect its own than sweep its house clean.
From the Providence (R.I.) Journal-Bulletin
The estimated 100,000 Muscovites who poured into the city's streets Sunday (Feb. 24) in a spontaneous demonstration of support for Yeltsin Veltiun ought to have been earning to hard line communists.
That didn't deter Mikhail Gorbachev from launching a rhetorical counterattack. The Soviet president ... angrily denounced ... Yeltsin and charged that he and his team were "were" being attacked by their unrestful attacks on the president and the central government.
The Moscow demonstration came a day after the Soviet government staged an official rally by
Kremlin distorts rally
After . . . Yeltsin appeared on nationwide television to demand that Mikhail Gorbachev immediately resign, hard line members of the Russian Republic's Supreme Soviet denounced . . . Yeltsin and called for proceedings to have him impeached.
about 40,000 party faithful, who halfheartedly chanted pro-Gorbachev and anti-Yeltsi slogans.
Gorbachieu, or his allies, to tarnish Yeltsin's image. The prep-
pension placed barely lettered slogans gave the lie to Kremin deplays of the rally as a spontaneous outpouring of popular will.
The pro-Gorbachev rally . . . was an embarrassment to the Kremmlin and a transparent effort by . . . Gorbachov or his allies to tarnish
The six-month diversion of war is over. The president can't afford to spend much time basking in the glow of his success. It's time to get down to the business of tackling what ails the country.
Time's a wasin'. Mr. President.
You showed your deftness in handling a foreign crisis. But domestic battles still rage — and your country is on the losing end.
From the News & Courier, Charleston, S.C.
From the Delaware County Daily Times, Primos, Pa.
MAGNETY Chicago Tribune
Meanwhile,
in another
desert bunker...
(YOUR NAME HERE) IN '92
DEMOCRATIC PARTY
PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN
H.Q.
Sports pay-per-view invasion strikes nerves of faithful fans
I really bothered Dale Read that he had to work during the Superbowl
Read, a Lawrence resident, works hard at a local convenience store and sometimes averages more than 50 hours a week. so annual events such as the Superbowl are special because he him a chance to relax and have fun.
Read had to miss the bowl this year because he couldn't afford to take off from work, but soon, he may not be able to afford to watch it at gill.
Television experts see pay-per-view as the way of the future, but NFL commissioner Paul Taglione said that the whole plan was experimental and that the Superbowl would not be touched until the year 2000.
The National Football League announced this month that it would introduce pay-per-view telecasts of regular season games possibly by 1982 and certainly by 1983. The Super Bowl, the league said, is not far behind.
Soon, even that will go the way of professional boxing.
Well, income tax also was introduced as experimental and the year 2000 is only nine years away.
Rob
Wheat
Guest columnist
Something closer than that far-off Superbowl is the 1992 Olympics, one of the few events that still can be seen without having to subscribe to cable, something that only half of America can afford to do.
package of Olympic events for pay-per-view in addition to the 150 hours of coverage they normally will offer and may provide a cable to see pay-per-view events.
NBC will offer a separate, select,
CBS has sold $50 million worth of Olympic coverage to Turner Broadcasting Network, in addition to $50 million of their earlier CBS sales to TNT, years earlier.
Why will sports soon be seen only on pay-per-view? Partly because of guys like Jose Canso.
To pay his salary, owners have had to squeeze about as much money out of fans through ticket prices as they could. But once television got into the act, there became an abundance of freachie "players" who could use to get "freachie" players.
Soon the monster the owners and television created began to get out of control.
When CBS began gobbling up sports more than two years ago, advertisers were paying high prices, and the economy was rolling along.
So, the network's executives happily wrote out a $1 billion check for the college basketball tournament
and another $1 billion for major league baseball.
Today advertisers are cautious, the number of viewers has leveled off, and the economy is rolling backward — right over CBS. They are stuck with more than $3 billion in sports programming.
The networks gambled on a ratings booster by paying high prices to television sports events. The owners took that money to the roulette wheel and bet they could build a winning team and best the players at whatever price.
In the end, it will be the fan that loses.
The networks now are turning to cable and pay-per-view services to bail them out, and soon discussion about last night's game will be limited to the country clubs and golf courses of America.
These games mean so much to the nation. For the prisoners and the hospitalized, sports are a chance to forget. For the working class, they're a chance to relax and have fun. They've overseas saw sports as a link to home.
There may come a time, if the nation wants to watch the World Series, the Final Four, or the Superbowl, it had better be ready to pay
Or maybe we will have to apply to see these shows, much the way we would apply for food stamps.
Rob Wheat is an Overland Park senior majoring in journalism.
Department of Defense should change its policies toward gays
The main topic for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is assembly meeting yesterday was the opening of the classes, should be counted for credit.
The action is in response to the Department of Defense policy that excludes homosexuals and those with homosexual tendencies from serving in the armed forces of the United States. This issue should be discussed further.
Eric
Patterson
Guest columnist
The policy of the Department of Defense that excludes homosexuals from service is discriminatory. It excludes a portion of society from service for what it believes or how it perceives the world to be much greater if the words "jew" or "Black" were substituted for "homosexual."
U. S. and coalition forces just defeated the Iraqi army and liberated Iraq, but their oppressive Iraq occupation. It is quite ironic that the freedoms for
which the armed forces of the United States fought and died to protect in Kuwait, such as freedom of choice, resistance to violence and want to help defend those freedoms.
Several people attending the meeting expressed the fact that a gay or lesbian was in no way hindered from taking an ROTC class. However, saying that one can take ROTC classes and not receive an officer's commission is similar to saying that one can take classes in the college or a professional school and not receive the degree.
Also, another fact to consider is that some may claim that ROTC is free and open to all, no matter what
'The outcry, I believe,
would be much greater if the words "Jew" or
"Black" were substituted for "homosexual."
their sexual orientations. Unfortunately, ROTC is under the jurisdiction and control of the Department of Health and Human Services these policies support discrimination.
This fact is truly aborrent. Discrimination in any form cannot be tolerated. If ROTC is to remain on college campuses much longer, swift and direct action must be taken. Elimination of ROTC credit coupled with direct appeals to peer institutions may help the moment of Defense and Congress may yield positive results. Something must be done.
Eric Patterson is a Tonganoxie senior majoring in American history.
KANSAN STAFF
CHRIS SIRON
Editor
RICH CORNELL Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
Editors
by David Rosenfield
AUDRA LANGFORD Business manager
Editor
News Melanie Mathes
Editorial Tiffany Harness
Planning Holly M. Neuman
Campus Jennifer Reynolds,
Pam Solner
Sports Aaron Comfortall
Photography Keith Trapp
Graphics Melissa Unterberg
Features Jill Harington
DRAKE ENGINFORD
Business manager
MINDI LUND
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
job descriptions
Jampa sales mgr. Carmen Shewhu
Regional sales mgr. Carmen Dresch
National sales mgr. Jennifer Claxton
Co-op sales mgr. Christine Muster
Production mgrs. Rich Harbarger
Marketing director. Katie Sander
Creative director. Katie Sander
Classified manager. Chrissy Hatsa
Kim Crowder
Letters should be 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 will not be contacted.
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, goose column and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staffer-Fin Hall.
Sketch
WELL, I'M OFF TO THE BEACH TO LIE IN THE SUN FOR A WEEK.
I'M STAYING IN TOWN. I'M GOING TO CATCH UP ON ALL MY FAVORITE WRITERS: DICKENS, TWAIN, LEAR, FROST, FAULKNER, NASH OATES, UPDIKE, McGinn, FHUNSU ASIMOV, KING, PARRISH, ETC.
ARE YOU GOING TO MISS ME WHEN I'M NOT HERE TO COMPLAIN ABOUT YOU READING TOO much?
YEAH.
SEND ME A POST CARD.
THAT WAY, YOU CAN COMPLAIN AND I'LL HAVE SOMETHING TO READ---AND WE'LL BOTH BE HAPPY!
A SAFE GREAK- HAVE ONE
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 7, 1991
5
Outlook grim for sabbaticals
By Eric Nelson
Kansan staff writer
After a study by an ad hoc committee, it appears that KK faculty would like more sabbatical-leaving opportunities.
Unfortunately, the state financial situation and proposed cuts in higher education do not present the best situation for additional financing of such programs, said Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs.
"That would be my judgment," he said. "The time
would not appear to be good."
Brinkman is chairperson of the University Committee on Sabbatical Leaves. He said the financial environment was inappropriate for the University of Kansas to ask for additional support for such programs.
Brinkman said KU's sabbatical-leave programs were a good opportunity for faculty.
Many Other schools do not have sabbatical programs as good as KU's, he said.
Mohamed Elhodiir, SenEx member, was the chairperson of the ad hoc committee.
He said the ad hoc committee's report proposed some possible changes in the sabbatical-leave process to the University Committee on Sabbatical Leaves.
One of the key proposals was that an appeal be made to the Board of Regents to remove the 4 percent limit on the percentage of votes required in a vote.
"We surveyed the faculty and we reported how the faculty felt about this," he said.
Eldhidir said that in light of the action in Topeka, it would not be timely to ask for additional resources.
Another proposal was to put more emphasis on sabbatical leaves that enhance teaching and teaching techniques, a suggestion approved by the University Committee on Sabbatical Leaves.
They suggested simplifying the application process to cut back on the paperwork. Elhodri said many applications were too extensive.
This suggestion was supported by the University Press, which agreed that comments should be limited to 10 pages.
The ad hoc committee also wanted the selection process altered. Instead of giving a request a direct answer, they wanted them to be ranked in order of merit.
"And then they would keep allocating until they ran out of money," he said. "The sabbatical leave committee didn't go for that."
Sexist attitudes dying slowly, speaker says
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Women are moving slowly but surely toward greater equality with men, said Liane Davis, associate professor of social welfare, in a lecture yesterday at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
"The pressure is on to prove that women did not come before men," Things are getting better, *Pid & Shameful VISION JET* NYT.
"Women are taking on traditional male characteristics but men are taking on traditional female roles. We are in an environment that needs more."
Davis' lecture, "Women's Unique History; Forgotten or Ignored?" was the first in the series "Nurturing Tradition, Fostering Change," which celebrates National Women's History Month.
"I don't think we were forgotten at all," she said. "I
think we were ignored."
Davis said there were inherent differences between men and women. Women have a more nurturing nature, while men are more protective.
"Men haven't done such a great job of running the world because of their aggressive nature," she said. "Women might not have done better, but I don't see how they could have done worse."
Davis said the sexist behavior of men toward women was fostered by society. The behavior may not be intentional, but it happens anyway.
Meera Srinivasan, Bombay, India, graduate student, said subtle manifestations of sexism, such as unnecessary overuse of sex toys, inappropriate attire, and
"it's a learned behavior, but it has symbolic significance." he said.
Senate race will feature 2 coalitions
Kansan staff report
Students voting in the Student Senate elections April 10 and 11 will have a choice between two tickets.
The deadline for presidential and vice presidential candidates to file for the coming Student Senate elections passed at 5 p.m. yesterday with only four people having filed for two tickets, said Tom Peer, elections commissioner.
Darren Fulcher and Alan Lowden filed on the Impact coalition, with Fulcher running as president.
Jason McIntosh and Giles Smith are running on the FACTS coition, with McIntosh as the presidential candi-
Yesterday at 5:02 p.m. in the office of student life, Poer pointed to the clock on the wall and said, "The student life there have only two candidates for president and vice president."
Last year, five coalitions made the race a busy and sometimes confusing one. Smith said that this year's smaller field would make the race exciting.
"I think people are going to pay a lot more attention to the candidates," he said.
Soviet professor claims changes only benefiting few
Kansan staff writer
By Jonathan Plummer
Perestroika, Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev's system of political reforms, has not so much stalled as moved into a slower, more intricate stage, a visited Soviet professor said yesterday.
The Society for Soviet and East European Studies sponsored Shandrin's speech.
Sergei Shandarin, a visiting professor of physics and astronomy and a native of Moscow, spoke to 17 people at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. "This was my first time I was an observer of changes in his home country."
Though freedoms have been instituted, the
majority of people have not been able to enjoy them or do not use them, Shandarin said.
"Not very many people gained from these changes," he said. "Animals in the zoo also like freedom, but they cannot survive in the wild. People never think freedom has another side."
People must not be disillusioned if the speed of the initial changes does not continue in the building 10.7A.
"People are very much impressed by the beginning and have made unjustified extrapolations,"
Just because they have new freedom of travel and study does not mean Soviet scholars will flee
the country, Shandarin said.
"Practical science doesn't belong to one country," he said. "Students in Moscow might suffer from an absence of good professors, but you can't judge on one year.
"Some of my colleagues have found that the United States is not paradise and that there are cultural differences, so the situation is far from at equilibrium."
J莉 Reed, Stillwater, Okla., graduate student, said she agreed that academics had become more
"There are quite a few more student exchanges, which promotes better understanding." she said.
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Apple introduces the Macintosh LC.
Like every Macintosh computer the LC is easy to set up and easy to master. And it runs thousands of available applications that all work in the same, consistent way—so once you've learned one program, you're well on your way to learning them all. The Macintosh LC even lets you share information with someone who uses a different type of computer—thanks to the versatile Apple® SuperDrive, which can read from and write to Macintosh, MS-DOS. OS/2, and Apple II floppy disks.
was just a dream, then the new, affordable Macintosh LC is a dream come true.
Take a look at the Macintosh LC and see what it gives you. Then pinch yourself. It's better than a dream—it's a Macintosh.
The Macintosh LC is rich in color. Unlike many computers that can display only 16 colors at once, the Macintosh LC expands your palette to 256 colors. It also comes with a microphone and new sound input technology that lets you personalize your work by adding voice or other sounds.
If you thought that finding a color Macintosh* system you could afford
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Exercise
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- $0 = -4 + x^2 + y^2 + 4y$
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Thursday, March 7, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Bicyclists park wherever they can during busy afternoons on campus
As the number of students who ride their bicycles to campus increases,riders are finding it harder to find a place to lock up during peak times.
By Jonathan Plummer
Kansan staff writer
"They should have more bike racks," said Kurt Singer, Orland Park parker. "They never seen as accessible by car."
Singer said he usually rode his bike to campins in the afternoon and sometimes had trouble finding a place to
Thomas Mulinazzi, transportation center research associate, said the campus transportation committee had noted an increase in bicycles on campus and had discussed creating new bike racks.
Jim White, Thayer senior, said he had trouble finding a place where he thought his bike would be safe. He has locked his bike, as many riders do, to the rail lining Jayhawk Boulevard.
"The general opinion is that they need more racks in the peak hours," Mulinazzi said.
1" sometimes worry about it because I have a lot of money in this bike, and the wheels and things are kind of expensive.
Maryls Lindsley, White City junior, said she came to campus early and did not have problems finding a place to study.
SAVE OUR EARTH!!! RECYCLE!!!!
"I really haven't had that of a problem," she said. "When I get here at 9 a.m. there's usually a space. The only time I ever had a problem is when I missed my morning class and had to try to find a spot by Fraser Hall."
UY
KU police Lt. John Mullens said it seemed some riders were not using the bike but were locking their bikes to it.
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"The rails are technically not like bike racks," he said. "I think if you took a survey you could probably find bike racks unused, like next to Hoch, beside the Art and Design Building and around Fraser."
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niversity Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 7, 1991
Nation/World
7
Nation/World briefs
Dhahran, Saudi Arabia
Total of 37 journalists missing
At least nine more journalists were reported missing yesterday, and U.S. news media executives called for U.S. troops to assist with the institution of the missing reporters is resolved.
A total of 37 journalists have been reported missing after venturing into the area to gather information on anti-government uprisings. Uncontirmed accounts from Iraq indicate that many of the missing might be in the custody of government forces.
In a letter to President Bush, the news media executives said, "Our position is that the United Government should make it clear to the Iraqis that the journalists' disappearance is now part of the cease-fire discussions with Iraq."
New Delhi. India
India's prime minister quits
Prime Minister Chandra Shekhar resigned in anger yesterday, accusing former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi of betrayal.
The resignation makes new elections a virtual certainty.
A veteran politician but a novice in the top circles of government, Chandra Shekhar lasted three months as head of a minority government.
Philadelphia
Firebail streaks across East
People from Maine to West Virginia reported a brilliant fireball in the sky early yesterday, offering descriptions ranging from a "boomerang" to the shape of a "boomerang" on its side.
"This was big," said Richard Haas, New
york state trooper. "I've seen shooting slars
and shots, and I know they're on the road."
People in West Virginia, Virginia, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Maine reported seeing the bright light, moving from west to east, during early morning.
Many witnesses said the object appeared to have a green-and-red tail and lit up the sky for about five seconds before it disappeared over the horizon.
What people saw most likely was a low-flying meteor that burned brightly from the friction of entering the Earth's atmosphere, said Walter Webb, manager of planetarium observations at the Charles Hayden Planetarium in Boston.
From The Associated Press
Mandela assault trial continues
The Associated Press
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — A key witness testified yesterday that an enraged Winnie Mar丝德 repeatedly punched him and threw her into the fire. Her homosexual relations with a white minister.
Kenneth Kgase told the Band Supreme Court that Mandela struck him again and again in the face, then lashed with a whip at Mandela's Soweto home in December 1988.
"She said we are not fit to be alive," Kgase told the court.
Kgase said he and the three others — Tabiso Mono, Gabriel Mekgye and Stompe Seipe — were then beaten by a group of Mandela's followers.
"After that there was pandemonium," he said. "I was myself punched by too many people."
Mandela looked composed as she sat with three co-defendants. Each has pleaded not guilty to four counts of kidnapping and four counts of assault in the case.
Four other defendants missing since before the trial have been accused of skipping bail.
African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela, Winnie Mandela's husband, was in court for part of the day but left before the most damaging testimony.
Mekwe also had been considered a key
tune-up for the team, and he was
been scheduled to test last month.
Kgase and Mono initially refused to testify, saying they feared for their lives. They changed their minds yesterday, but gave no reason for the reversal.
The trial was delayed as officials searched for him, but he had not reappeared by yesterday.
Seipei, 14, was found dead in early 1989. Jerry Richardson, the leader of Winnie Mandela's former bodyguard unit, was convicted of murders of his death and is appealing a death sentence.
On trial with Mandela are Xolisi Falati, Falatil's daughter Mompumeleo, and Johan Morgan. If convicted, their sentences could have been from a suspended sentence to the death penalty.
Mandela's lawyers have said she was away from her home during the incident and knew nothing about it. Some Black opposition leaders say the trial is political persecution.
Mandela's defense said earlier that the four alleged victims were not kidnapped but that they were removed from a Methodist Church home because of reports they were being sexually abused by a white minister, the Rev. Paul Verryn.
Kgase said that there had been a dispute about washing dishes at the church home and that he and the three others were taken away by Mandela's bodyguards.
He said they were told to confess to having sex with Vervyn and that Seipei was accused of
spying for the police and betraying four ANC supporters to police.
Kgase said Mandela joined the interrogation and described how Seipei begged Mandela to
"He was feeling pain." Kgase said. "He was pleading with Mrs. Mandela.
"Mrs. Mandela was humming a tune and dancing to the rhythm. All of a sudden I saw her having a sjambok," a traditional whip, he said, with me again. I was struck with a sjambok.
Earlier yesterday, Martin Connell told the court he examined Kgase, Mono and Mekgwe in January 1989 and discovered they had been beaten. He described the wounds in detail.
Pressed by the defense about whether the three had said if Mandela was present for the beatings, Connell said, "I remember he (Kgase) said she had struck him with her hand in the face and she said that he should not look at a chief."
Defense lawyers then challenged Connell about his friendship with Verryn and allegations of men sleeping together at Verryn's house.
Kgase later told the court that he shared a bed with Verryn and another man one night but that he had no knowledge of any homosexual activity at the house.
Connell said that people slept together because they were poor.
Gorbachev's treaty to preserve union approved by 8 of 15 Soviet republics
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Eight of the 15 Soviet republics tentatively approved Mikhail Gorbachev's proposed treaty to preserve the union, officials said. The agreement is mainly about how to put the document into effect.
The Russian Federation, by far the wealthiest and most populous republic, was among those signaling tentative agreement. Basic disputes remain between Soviet President Vladimir Putin and Russian President Boris Yeltsin, however on taxation ownership of natural resources and other issues.
document was an important political step.
Eduard Kovalev, a representative of the national parliament, said the draft was completed last Friday and was returned to Gerbera. He said it which make up about 20 percent of the document.
V. Stepanov, leader of the northeastern region of Karelia, said on television that the
"I think we have come closer to signing." President Nusultan Sultan bayarye of Kazakhstan said on the government's nightly national newscast.
"I wouldn't call it a victory," he said. "There is hard, serious work ahead."
Gorbachev hopes to complete his review and publish the document before a national referendum that he has scheduled for March 17 and billed as a vote on preserving the Soviet Union.
Six republics have refused to take part in the referendum or in drafting the treaty. Even those taking part in the talks and voting do not consider an idea of their legal meaning, Kovalay said.
"No procedure on signing the union treaty has been set," he said. "They are developing it as soon as possible."
The process reflects the tenuous nature of Soviet democracy. The national Supreme Soviet legislature has surrendered its law-making power, and he violated him the power to rule by decree.
The Russian government has not decided whether the treaty will be ratified by a simple majority or a two-thirds vote, said Sergei Oubkov, a parliamentary representative.
Yeltsin has not commented publicly on the latest treaty draft.
He said he could not sign an earlier, similar version because it did not adequately define the powers of the central and the republican governments.
Yeltsin wants the central government to retain control only over the ministries of defense, railways and energy. The functions and property of all other ministries, which own the bulk of the nation's industrial and natural resources, would go to the republics.
The latest draft, however, gives the central government control over all national security organs, including the armed forces, KGB, customs, border and railway patrol, together with all defense and related industries, foreign property now owned by national ministries.
The central government would have priority in setting foreign policy, but the republics could belong to international bodies and could con-
form a unilateral consular and trade treaties with foreign powers.
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Thursday, March 7, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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University Daliv Kansan / Thursday, March 7. 1991
9
Biology prof stretches teaching limits
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Legal Services Available Free with Valid KU ID Appointment Necessary
Students play Bio Jeopardy and learn cell structure, too
Michael Gaines, professor of systematics and ecology, explains mitosis to a Biology 104 class.
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Kansan staff writer
The classroom is a stage for Michael Gaines.
"I'm the king of educational sleaze," he said. "I try all the tricks in the book to get the students interested in biology."
"Some people would say that it's cheap entertainment, in other words, crass entertainment. I would argue with that. What your doing is delivering biology in a way that students find interesting."
Gaines, professor of systematics and ecology, uses everything from a Jebo leapard game show to classify by a make-believe Charles Darwin.
"We have this other game called Spin the Sperm, where we have this big sperm on a board," he said. "The student comes up and spins it and then it lands on a genetics problem and they have to work it out in front of the class. The students get a kick out of it.
"Some people would say that it's cheap entertainment, in other words, crass entertainment. I would argue with that. What you're doing is delivering biology in a way that students find interesting."
148 Burge Union (913) 864-5665
On the opening day of class, Gaines glided into the auditorium under a spotlight's glare. He was attired entirely in black.
His students call it education with a twist of theatrics.
Novel teaching methods
"It's drama," Gaines said. "The drama of biology is really important to me. You want to keep the students interested, and some people say that's entertainment. I don't really call it entertainment."
- Michael Gaines professor of systematics and ecology
Sabrina Simpson, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, she said thought Gaines was one of the best teachers she had ever had.
"He makes biology, which sometimes can be boring, a lot of fun, and I learn a lot," she said. "I think it's a really unique style of teaching. He's really personable to the students; he knows everybody by name."
Gaines takes snapshots of the more than 700 students. He studies the pictures until he memorizes the students' names.
"It's really effective in removing the anonymity of the students," he said. "It creates the illusion of a small classroom. You really can create an intimate atmosphere in Hoch Auditorium, which sounds like a contradiction, but it can work."
He has been developing his theatrical teaching technique since he started teaching biology at the University of Kansas 21 years ago.
"I feel it's my responsibility to challenge the students and get them involved in biology. Gaines said. He said that it is to make biology relevant to them."
Ron Willis, professor of theater and film, posed as Charles Darwin during the birthday celebration for Gaines' class last year.
Each year, Gaines throws a party to celebrate Charles Darwin's birthday. He produces an extravaganza for students and serves cake to everyone.
'Everything Mike does in class
creates a living presence about the subject matter in the minds of the students." Willis said.
"He does things to catch the students attention. It's communication through action."
Class often takes on a theatrical feel for Gaines, an amateur actor who played a town beggar in a local production of "Inherit the Wind."
"Teaching is like being on stage at the time," he said. "I think it's really theater. Everything has to be exag-gerated."
Although Gaines' teaching style is eccentric, it is not unheard of in the educational arena. Robert Hohn, professor of educational psychology, said teaching with theatrics was effective when used properly.
"The students can be focusing on the dramatics rather than the actual subject matter," he said. "But it can be good and effective when it attracts the students' attention and when it interests and motivates the students."
"In Mike's case, the dramatics create enthusiasm, which shows he has interest in the material. It works for him."
Gaines said he was aware of the fine line between acting and teaching.
"Just because you are the theatrical does not mean you're not demanding," he said. "You must have content to have theatres."
Legal Services for Students
Biology theme music
Gaines even plays music before each lecture to set the mood for the class, which this semester meets in a 20.a.m. each Tuesday and Thursday.
"Generally, the music that I play before class is connected to the theme, a biological theme, that I cover that day," he said. "The thing is very, very, and they try to figure out what the musical connection is to the lecture."
His two graduate assistants bring out a 4-feet-by-4-feet game board with three categories of biological materials, randomly pick a student to play.
One of the most popular segments of Gaines' class is the Bio Jeopardy game show, which is at 8:50 a.m. every Tuesday.
Mary McMullen-Light, graduate teaching assistant, worked alongside Gaines last summer in a high school enrichment program at KU.
Gaines played "Tiny Bubbles" by Don Ho when the class was studying respiration. When the lecture focused on proteins, he played "Chewburtons," and Jimmy Buffet and the theme music from "Hair." Hair is made of protein.
"He strikes a perfect balance between instruction and entertainment. He's basically a risk-taker." He never afraid to try anything new."
The contestant must answer the question by the end of a chorus from the television show's theme music. If the question is answered correctly, the contestant could win a free, large pizza from Mazto's, 2630 Loa Sta.
The prizes are really quite good.
Game show learning
Michael S. Gaines
B. S. in zoology from Tulane University, 1964; Ph.D. in ecology from Indiana University, 1970; Started teaching at KU in 1970
Born: January 18, 1943 Education:
Favorite musical group:
Rolling Stones
Last book read:
The Broken Chord by
Michael Dorris
the subject matter
Gaines' bottom line on being a good teacher:
1. Care about the students
2. Be enthusiastic about
3. Be organized and knowledgable about the subject matter
"If you care about the students, number one, then number two and three come naturally."
being a good teacher:
1. Care about the students
so the students are willing to take chances and come up in front of a group of 700 people, which does take some guts," Gaines said.
"The effect you can have as a teacher can be really profound. You don't realize until a student comes back to you 10 years later and tells you that you made a difference," he said. "That's what I'm trying to do—I'm really trying to make a difference."
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Thursday. March 7, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Advertising dollars aid KU athletics
Equal Opportunity Employer — M/F/H
Stadium signs generate nearly $350,000 a year
By Mark Spencer Kansan staff writer
Unlike thousands of crazed Jayhawk fans, Timothy Mobbyler, assistant professor of religious studies is disillusioned with the way he comes when he goes to Allen Field House.
"It used to be you could go over there and not get assaulted commercially," he said. "To my mind, it's excessive."
He also is appalled by Becerro Bencharmers and other brightly lit advertising strips above the exit ramps, postage-stamp size Vista restaurant ads on the front windows of contests and various paid commercial endorsements that blare over the loudspeaker during nearly every time out.
By Mark Spencer
"The cost of running an athletic program is very expensive," Helt said. "We look for ways to operate money, and are one way to enlist sponsors."
Kip Helt, Kansas director of sports marketing, said the field house was a hot advertising arena for merchants.
Miller and others may complain, but the Athletic Department says advertising dollars are too important to the athletic budget to be ignored.
"The success and winning program that the basketball team has is something sponsors want to be associated with." he said.
Helt said that advertising schemes that include exit-ramp advertising signs could be found in almost every arena in the country.
"We got the idea from Wichita State," Helt said. "The ultimate compliment is when other schools come here and say, 'We ought to start something like this.' It just shows you that it's not something unusual."
Miller is referring to Gatorade and. Pizza Hut logos on courtside advertising panels.
The marketing division is constantly looking for ways to increase revenue for the department.
***
An advertiser's arena
There are several levels of advertising with different benefits that a sponsor can purchase.
The 24 lighted signs placed over the exit ramps were installed this season and were well received by sponsors, Helt said.
Advertisements
"It was a two-month project to sell them all," he said. "The sponsors have been happy with them."
But the advertising scheme at the field house extends beyond exit-ramp signs.
Businesses can purchase corporate-sponsor status where they are guaranteed advertising space one floor in front of press room. Hell said.
Corporate sponsors also receive tickets, public address system announcements, parking passes, ads in Hogland-Maupin Stadium and exclusive ads in Memorial Stadium, Helt said.
"The stadiums and fields are very attractive to sponsors," he said.
Advertising from all of Kansas' athletic arenas generates nearly $350,000 annually, according to an
Monev talks
*trade-in deals figured in totals
Advertisements Quantity Price each Total
Outfield fence signs at Hogland-Maupin Stadium 30 $1,000 $30,000
Exit ramp signs at Allen Field House 24 $2,500 $60,000
Corporate sponsorships 5 $50,000 $250,000
The 24 field house exit-ramp signs cost $2,500 each and generate $60,000 each season. The 30 outfield fence cost $1,900 each, produce $30,000 more.
Corporate sponsorships provide more than $240,000, the representative said.
The five corporate sponsors this season are Mainline Printing, Pizza Hut, KU Bookstores, Gatorade and KLZR/KLWN.
For example, Parker said that Mainline printed the programs of Kansas athletic events to defray part of their corporate sponsor expense.
"We do some trade-out and donate o the Williams Fund, also," he said.
John Parker, president of Mainline Printing, said corporate sponsorship cost between $40,000 and $50,000 is required in raising package a sponsor purchases.
"They have different packages for different people." he said.
"If we have a TV station with a sign that costs $1,500, they might give us $1,500 in announcements," he said.
"It's the same thing as cash, but it's easier than us cutting them a check, and them cutting us one."
Knowing the limits
Amy Privite, of the NCAA legal affairs department, said Kansas could sell advertising space anywhere in the field house, including the playing field, under NCAA regulations
"There is nothing in the rules that would restrict that," she said. "That would be an institutional decision."
The chance of a logo appearing in the free-throw lane, however, is unlikely.
The executive committee of the Athletic Board, which includes Helt, Frederick and their staffs, determine the equipment for a proper manner in the field house.
'The cost of running an athletic program is very expensive. You've got to look for ways to generate money, and the ads are one way to entice sponsors.'
Helt said: "We're very sensitive to the location of a logo and whether it's
Kansas director of sports marketing
- Kip Helt
** **
Bob Frederick, athletic director, said corporate sponsorship was an additional revenue stream KU needed to tap.
"When you project scholarship costs, we can't keep up with just gate receipts and Big Eight revenue shares." he said.
The athletic budget, however, is not financed solely by these three revenue sources.
Last year, the Williams Fund solicited more than 3,400 donors and raised in excess of $2.7 million, one-third of its $8.1 million operating budget.
"All that money goes into the general athletic fund where it is divided among the sports," he said.
The Williams Fund is the annual fund-raising program of the KU athletic department and provides scholarships to more than 400 student athletes.
The increased advertisements are only an effort to build up more revenue for now and the future, not to have a lot of overexpenditures, Frederick said.
***
"We don't go into it just looking for ad space," she said. "By supporting Kansas University athletics, hopefully we're making that athletic team more confident and giving them a chance to do some things they couldn't do before."
Cindy Harris, manager of Gatorade Communications, said Gatorade viewed corporate sponsorship as a partnership with KU.
Helt said there were instances when arena advertising was used in exchange for the sponsor's product or services.
"We had an opportunity to have our scoreboard a long time before we did from a beer sponsor," he said. "It was the one we wanted." I sinon that we do it, and I agreed."
appropriate. We won't overdo it to the point where no one wants to be in there."
Frederick said he was unaware of any specific guidelines the committee followed in regard to how far the placement of ads would go, but the sponsor's product was definitely a consideration.
Helt said the NCAA's lack of concern for the amount of advertising in an arena did not mean KU was unconcerned.
"I would doubt that you will ever see any logos on the floor," he said.
"I can't see us going beyond the signs in the exits and the signs along the court," he said.
Frederick said the field house probably had reached its advertising capacity.
The NCAA does have strict regulations on the amount of advertising that can appear on team uniforms and equipment.
Privette said, "Any equipment, like baseball gloves, bats, footballs or basketball, is limited to the team as it is said to the general public."
Manufacturers of uniforms and warm-ups such as Nike and Champion are limited to a 1 inch by 1.5 inch square with their logo, Privette said.
in the arenas themselves, the NCAA draws the line only in championship competition situations.
"The concern is that a student athlete can't endorse a commercial product." she said.
"If there was ever a regional at Allen Field House, then the NCAA would not allow any advertising on
the floor," Privette said. "The NCAA has no limit on the amount of advertising in an arena otherwise."
Helt said that although there had not been many complaints that he knew of, the opinions of alumni, who were considered in the determining process.
"We take every letter or call that has a concern about our ads seriously," Helt said. "It hasn't reached the point where someone has said 'I like the Hawks, but I won't go to the game.'"
The field of dreams
Kansas baseball coach Dave Bingham said advertising dollars from corporate sponsorship had been the savior of his program.
"When I came into this program, our budget was not going to allow us to run a baseball game," he said. "We were next to last in the Big Bright Conference budget-wise. We knew we had to have more resources."
Now that advertising has been established on the outfield fence of Hoglund-Maupin Stadium, Bingham said it was an important factor in the resurgence of the Kansas baseball program.
"It has allowed us to push the level of our program a little higher," he said. "It has allowed us to go farther and farther." We, we just didn't have the money."
This season, the sports marketing department will sell 30 outfield fence signs, the limit for Bingham.
"You have to do it classy," he said. "We've tried to keep it to the point where the green fence is the dominant factor and a signboard sits on top.
"Go down to Oklahoma State. The signs are the dominant factor. Every inch of the fence is painted. With our way, you can keep the ballpark looking nice and still sell the advertising."
Not all ads appreciated
But for those like Miller, who do not understand, it appears that they will have to tolerate advertising at Kansas athletic events.
When asked about the increased advertising, several season ticket holders said they understood the reasons behind it.
Miller considers that unfortunate because the field house and other campus stadiums represent advertisements that cater to captured audiences.
"I don't have a TV because I don't want me or my kids to be bombarded with that mess," he said. "Why do we have to put up with it there?"
Miller said he realized the advertising dollars benefited Kansas athletic programs.
"I understand that it isn't KU athletics setting the trend for this," he said. "But I can't see how we're better off for it."
Any opposition to the increased advertisements notwithstanding, Helt said they were likely to remain in place next year.
"No pun intended, but it's just a sign of the times," he said.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 7, 1991
Sports
11
'Hawks suffer 13-2 thrashing
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas baseball team committed eight errors and collected only six hits in a 1:32 loss to Missouri South. The final win at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium
"I have no comment today," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said to reporters after the game. "You can write what you want."
Kansas junior Eric Stonecipher retired the Lions in order in the first innip, but then the wheels fell off the Javahacks' wagon
Missouri Southern catcher Bryan Larson doubled with one out in the top of the second. An error by Kansas second baseman Jeff Barkerling and a walk to Missouri Southern center field Tom Buchs loaded the bases.
The Lions added another run on lefthander Bob Kneepe's sacrifice fly.
A Stonecipher walk to Missouri Southern rightfiefer Tony Tichy pushed the first Lion run across home plate
Missouri Southern second baseman Tim Casper doubled home two runs and scored on an errant throw to third base by Kansas catar Garry
When the dust cleared, the Lions held a 5-0 lead after two innings.
Kansas senior Steve McGinness relieved Stonecipher and started the third inning without better luck.
McGinness walked the first three batters he faced before he was replaced by freshman Chris Corn.
Corn retired the first two Lion batters he faced, but Tichy drove in
Baseball
three more runs with a double to left field.
The five Jayhawk pitchers used in the game surrendered 11 walks and seven hits. Only five of the Lions' 13 runs were earned
While the Kansas defense was sputtering on the field, Missouri Southern left手ender Ken Grundt was the Kansas offense offside at the plate.
Grundt, a 6-foot-4 senior, allowed no runs and four hits in six innings. He struck out two batters and walked none.
Grundt said he concentrated on getting ahead in the count.
"I wanted my infield to make the outs," he said.
Grundt said that the game yesterday was the best one he could remember pitching in a long time.
"We haven't beaten them since I've been here, and I'm a senior now," he said. "They had an emotional come-from-behind winger yesterday, so maybe they were down a little bit today."
Berblinger continued his recent hot hitting and collected two singles in four at-bats
The Jayhawks scored two runs in the seventh inning off Lion relief pitcher Todd Casner.
The Jayhawks, 5-6, will begin a three-game home series against Northern Iowa at 2 p.m. tomorrow at Hoglund-Munroe Stadium.
G
Kansas relief pitcher Steve McGinnness faced only three batters before he was removed. The 'Hawks lost to Missouri Southern 13-2
'Hawks excel in tourney Coach pleased by women's performance in Utah
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
She was pleased by the results.
She was pleased by the results. Johnson said that she knew the team was talented but that she had been a coach for quite some time and had just started coaching the Jayhawks before their first tournament in St. George, Utah.
She said the team did not know what to expect either.
"It was the first tournament of the year," Johnson said. "We were just trying to get our game faces on."
Golf
Kansas finished fifth out of the 19 teams that competed in the tournament, which ran from Monday to yesterday.
"I was really pleased," Johnson said. "After the second round, we
were 14 strokes behind Oklahoma.
During the third round, we made up 12 strokes. We almost caught them."
Johnson said that the cold weather and constant 40-50 mph winds could have meant unfavorable results for Kansas but that the players did not let the weather get to them
"The girls were patient," Johnson said. "They realized it was not a perfect day or perfect conditions, but they stuck it out."
Oklahoma finished fourth at the tournament.
Johnson said that the Jayhawks knew what to expect in tournament
Johnson said she expected the Sooners to be one Kansas' toughest opponents in the Big Eight Conference.
plav
Johnson attributed Oklahoma's initial, large-margin lead over Kansas to the Jayhawks' chipping and putting mistakes. She said that the mistakes were pressure errors and that the more time the players spent playing, the fewer such errors there would be.
Two of Kansas' players ranked in the top 20 in the tournament. Junior Laura Myers' score took 11th, and her Martin was 17th after scoring 243.
Kansas freshman Holly Reynolds and junior Shelly Tripett's scores tied at 248, placing them 28th and 29th respectively.
Freshman Anne Huizinga placed 47th in the tournament.
The Jayhawks' next tournament will be the Peggy Kirk Bail Invitational from March 10 to 13 in Oviedo, Fla.
Ninety-nine players competed in the Classic.
Hockey club invited to ISU tournament
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas hockey club has bee invited to the Iowa State Invitation which will take place April 12-14 Junior Mark Adler said the team would decide whether it would make the trip when it returned from spring break.
The regular season came to a close last week for the team, which finished the year with a 10-5-1 record and won its division.
That record earned the team a spot in the Central States Collegiate Hockey Association championships in Des Moines, Iowa last weekend. Kansas played Drake in the semi-final game.
Drake became frustrated in the second period and racked up 22 minutes in the penalty box. Kansas took advantage of the situation, scoring six straight goals and ended the period with an 8-3 lead.
period before Kansas freshman Brian Kane added a goal and made the score 9-5.
Aler scored his third goal of the game, and sophomore Willie Zimber-off added two more, including the score of the game, and Kansas w12.5.
Drake scored two goals in the third
Zimberoff finished the game with four goals and three assists, and Adler had three goals
Kansas was not as successful in the championship game against Iowa State.
Down 4-0 at the end of the first period, Kansas tried to climb back into the game in the third period when Adler scored on a power play.
Zimberoff furthered Kansas' comeback with another power play goal, followed three minutes later by a second goal, making the score 4-3.
Although Kansas scored again, Iowa State added two scores of its own and won the game 6-4.
Freshmen provide pivotal bench support for Kansas
SPALDING
By S. J. Bailey
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas freshman Patrick Richey guards Clifford Scales
What a difference 12 months can make.
At this time last year, three members of the Kansas basketball team were showing their skills in high school gymnasiums and watching the Jayhawks power their way through the national rankings on television.
This season, they have had the opportunity to see themselves on television and have played an intergalactic role in raising rise into the national spotlight.
Freshmen Patrick Richey, Richard Scott and Steve Woodberry are making a smooth transition from high school to college basketball and Jayhawk fans why they were so high school recruited coming out of high school.
Under Coach Roy Williams, Kansas has been known for its depth and effort from players coming off the bench. But it is rare for any team, including the Jayhawks, to have three freshmen step into the forefront and be as crucial to a team's success as Richey, Scott and Woodberry have been to Kansas this season.
Through the regular season, each of the freshmen has played in all of the Jahayh's 27 games and has averaged double digits in minutes played. Furthermore, all three have scored in double digits two or more times and have averaged better than 45 percent shooting from the field.
Although their play might come as a pleasant surprise to some, Williams said he had no doubts the three have an immediate presence in and have an immediate effect.
"From the beginning, we've always known they were good players," Williams said. "But more than that, they are intelligent and great teammates." You don't do what you ask them to as a coach, and that's important. When you add
all that together, then they deserve to get a chance to play." And play they have.
Scott pleased with role
'I knew I would get the opportunity
For Scott, a 6-foot-7 forward, the frequent time on the floor has been a godsend.
to play, but the amount of time has kind of surprised me." Scott said. "It took some time to get used to the game and that made it easier to learn in game situations."
Scott is showing he is a fast learner, averaging 11.7 minutes, 5.6 points and 2.6 rebounds and shooting 32.8 percent in regular season games. He also has
S Scott signed with Kansas out of Little Rock Central High School in Arkansas during last year's early signing period. At Central, S averaged 21 points, 12 rebounds and 3 assists. He named a Class AA All-State performer.
scored in double figures four times this season, including a career-high 15 points in the Jayhawks' first meeting with Nebraska.
He also was ranked as the gibb best player in the country by Bob Gibbons of All-Star Sports Publications and Mike Bosek of his preseason All-America Top 150.
Scott said he thought the transition from high school to college basketball had been made easier by the rest of the Kansas coaching staff.
"I felt some pressure at the beginning of the season, but when you play so many games, you kind of get used to it," he said. "Coach Williams has a way of making you work hard in practice, and that takes some of the pressure off when you get into games."
Guard solid as backup
Another Jayhawk who has not shown signs of the tremendous pressure of major college athletics is 6-4 guard Steve Woodberry.
At Wichita South High School, Woodberry led the Titans to three consecutive conference championships and two state championships while losing only three games in his prep career. Last season he averaged 20.5 points and 10 rebounds a game for the Titans on his way to being named Naismith Player of the Year in Kansas.
This season, Woodberry has provided a solid backup at the point for starter Adonis Jordan. In 27 games, Woodberry has averaged 13.1 points per game and 5.6 percent from the floor, 50 percent from behind the three-point line and
74. 1 percent from the free-throw line.
14.1 percent from the free-throw line.
He also scored in double figures twice this season, including a career-high 11 points against Rider, and dished out 11 assists against Maryland-Baltimore County.
Woodberry said the biggest difference between the prep and college levels was the fierce competitiveness that existed in every NCAA game.
"The intensity they play with here is nothing like what it was in high school," he said. "It's been difficult to get used to, but I think I've been adjusting well and it has been getting better."
Richev honored by UPI
Patrick Richie, a 6-8 guard-forward from Lee's Summit High School in Kansas City, Mo., echoed Woodberry's sentiments.
"The intensity on the defensive end of the floor is one thing I've really had to get used to," Richey said. "You're always guarding people that are just as good as you, if not better, and the quickness of the players as well as the pace of the game have been a big difference."
He scored in double figures in three games this season, including 10-point performances against Maryland-Baltimore County and Iowa State and a career-high 15 points against North Carolina. Three points a game, shooting 46 percent from the field and 43 percent from behind the three-point line.
Like Scott and Woodberry, Riche has shown no signs of trouble adjusting to the higher level of competition. In his 27 games with the Jayhawks, he scored 35 points on a game and frequently has been the first reserve off the Jayhawk bench.
Based on his performance at Lee's Summit last season, Richey's play comes as no big surprise. He averaged 18.1 points, seven rebounds and five assists last season and shot 53 percent from the field.
Sports briefs
Manson, relay team head to NCAA Indoor
The Kansas track team will be represented today and tomorrow at the NCAA Indoor Championships in Indianapolis, Ind. by the 3,200-meter relay team and senior all-American pole vaulter Pat Manson.
KU's Randall, Brown named to Big-8 teams
KANAS CITY, Mo — Missouri center Doug Smith was the top vote-getter on the all-right team selected by players.
Byron Houston of Oklahoma State, Victor Alexander of Iowa State, Mark Randall of Kansas and Shaun Haverdin of Colorado also were named to the team in a poll of league players by The Kansas City Star.
Named to the second team were Stevie Wise of Colorado, Rich King of Nebraska, Terry Brown of Kansas, Anthony Peeler of Missouri and Jeff Webster of Oklahoma.
Three 'Hawks named to AP's all-Big Eight
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Here are the first team, second team and honorable mention Association Press all-Big Eight selections as chosen by a panel of sports writers and sports journalists from all over the country, name, school, class, height, weight and home town:
Doug Smith, Missouri, Sr.
6-10. 220. Detroit.
Byron Houston, Oklahoma State, Jr., 6-7, 235, Oklahoma City.
Mark Randall, Kansas, Sr., 6-9, 235, Englewood, Colo.
Shawn Vandiver, Colorado Sr., 6-10, 240, Bolingbrook, Ill. Victor, Alexander, Iowa
Victor Alexander, Iowa State, Sr., 6-9, 265, Detroit.
Stevie Wise, Colorado, Sr.
6-4, 200. Detroit.
Rich King, Nebraska, Sr., 7-2. 242. Omaha, Neb.
Anthony Peeler, Missouri,
Jr., 6-4, 203, Kansas City, Mo.
Jordan, Kansas
Adonis Jordan, Kansas Soph, 5-11, 160, Reseda, Calif.
Jeff Webster, Oklahoma,
Fresh., 6-8, 210, Midwest City,
Okla
Jef Wires, State; Terry Brown, Kansas; Darwyn Alexander, Johnny Pittman, Sean Sutton, Oklahoma State; Doug Collins, Iowa State; Clifford Scales, Bea Reid, Nebraska; Kermit Holmes, Oklahoma; Jamal Coleman, Melvin Booker, Missouri.
From staff and wire reports
12
Thursday, March 7, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
German professor enlivens classes with taste of culture
By Sarah Davis
Kenyon staff writer
Kansan staff writer
KU offers students a little slice of German life ...
Rolf-Peter Janz, professor of German at the Berlin Free University in West Berlin was invited to teach in a course on the University of Kansas this semester.
Janz, who arrived in Kansas on Feb. 17 to begin teaching, said he hoped that through his two courses, German Classical Literature and German Romantic Literature, students would have a fresh approach to German issues.
"My main idea is that they should exploit me and get information they feel is necessary for them." he said.
William Keel, chairperson of the department of German, said Yanz could broaden perspectives on current issues.
"He's able to keep us up to date on situations in the former East Germany," he said.
Yanz came to KU as a Max Kade distinguished professor, a position filled each spring since 1965 by a professor from Germany.
Keel said that the department of German kept a running list of posisitive candidate for the position and in terms of teaching and research in terms of teaching and research.
Most classes Yanz teaches in Germany have from 30 to 150 students, so he said he enjoyed his classical class, which has only six students.
"It's an opportunity to deal with the students more intensely and address them more frequently in a small class." he said.
He speaks mostly German during his classes, something he thinks helps students.
Brian Osborn, an Okmulgee, Okla,
senior, enrolled in Yanz's classical
literature class. agreed
“There’s a fringe benefit in that it helps you improve your German,” he
said.
Yanz said that he hoped that not only would the students in his classical literature class be able to grasp the language but that they would learn a little more about the culture and history of the period the course focuses on — the last decade of the 18th century.
"It's the history of literature, the history of ideas and the philosophy of the time," Yanz said. "I want them to learn something about the way of thinking about history during this century." A lot of impact for the 19th century.
Yanz said the literature, art and history of the past remained a model for looking at life today. The class is very interested why people look to these old models.
"Professor Yanz is a very dynamic and charismatic person," he said. Keel] said students could benefit
PETER TAYLOR
Henrich Quinnespool to the KANASI
Rolf-Fehr Janz explains an assignment to his literature class.
from contact with Yanz.
"It's good for our students to come in contact with methods and teaching styles of German professors," he said.
Allies leave Mideast with weapons variety
WASHINGTON — The Middle East arms bazaar is open for business after a brief time-out for the 42-day Persian Gulf War.
The Associated Press
The United States has announced plans to sell Egypt $1.6 billion in airplanes and bombs.
U. S. officials said some weapons shipped to the gulf for the war would be left for the Saudi hosts; and one official said that some Soviet-built aircraft from Iraq would be given to Syria, another member of the U.S.-led coalition.
The world was briefly stunned to see Iraq's massive arsenal and to hear of its nuclear, chemical and biological weapons programs. Revelations that Western companies and governments were responsible resulted in much head-shaking and some soul-searching.
The Iraqi bought Scud missiles from the Soviets, Exocet missiles from the French, cannons for chemical artillery from the Austrians,
computer technology from the Americans and gas centrifuges for uranium production from the Germans.
What all arms control agreements have in common is a significant flaw — an absence of any enforcement provisions.
The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, to which Iraq is a signatory, could not stop Baghdad from buying enriched uranium and trying to develop an enrichment capacity of its own.
The 14-nation Missile Technology Control Regime did not stop the Soviets from selling Iraq the Seud firing at Israel and Saudi Arabia
To bolster the treaties, the United States set up the Nuclear Suppliers Group to prevent the spread of nuclear arms. It joined the Australia Group to stop biological and chemical weapons, and it established the control regime to stop the sale of ballistic missiles.
Freshmen and Sophomores
Lambda Sigma Sophomore Honor Society and Owl Junior Honor Society,are now accepting applications for membership. Applications are available at the Organizations and Activities Center (Kansas Union), 129 Strong, and Nunemaker Center
Applications due by March 22,1991
Reading for Comprehension and S-P-E-E-D
Tuesday, March 19, 26 and April 2
3:30-5:30 p.m. (six hours of instruction)
Register and pay $17 materials fee by 5 p.m., Monday, March 18
123 Strong Hall
125 STRONG MALL
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Fries & Draft
or Soda 1-8 pm
*New Analysis of Western Civilization* makes sense of *Western Civ.* Makes sense to use it! Available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Crier Bookstores.
SAVE MONEY: Save your oil all 25,000 miles with AMSOL 10% synthetic motor oil. In D.O. P. O. and Engine Bill Ribbon. AmsoL Deskler. Bills Ribbon. Box 845, Lawrence, KS 60634 or call 66247 or 63247
120 Announcements
Quitting business sale continues at the Book End in Quantrill's Flea Market, 811 New Hampshire weeks 10-5.
It's a MasterCard! It's a calling card! It's Free
forward! Last two days on weekday, Wednes-
day and Thursday 7:17, am/pm ONLY at the
JAYHAWK ROONESTORE!
Call Douglas County Rape Victim's Support Service for confidential and caring assistance. If you need help, call 841-3506 or 841-2345.
*College Money* Private Scholarships You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money may be used for scholarships. LEGO SCHOLARSHIP LOCATORS. Box 1801, Moja McGOND 1802-1881 1-809-479-7453
Now has incredible beeswax & plant pigment crayons, pensils, paints, and high quality recycle stencils for all serious artists. The Antique Mall. 830 Bass. Lower level.
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2345. Headquarters.
6" cotton futon and hardwood frame starting from $169.95. Bobbi's Bedrooms.
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling. A friendly understanding voice. Free, confidential referrals called returned by counselors. Headquarters or KU into 841-3568 Sponsored by GLOSK
INCREASE YOUR READING SPEED AND
STUDENT ATTENDANCE
April 3, 2:30 - 5 pm. Six chairs of instructor,
Register and pay $7 materials by fep on Monday.
March 14 at the Student Assistance Center,
280 W. 6th St., Chicago, IL 60610.
INTERESTED IN MEDITATION?
Call Chris or Suzanne 740.2550
Suicide Intervention - If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is call 812-2545 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
THE WAR AFFECTS US-For a caring listener or info on support services, call Headquarters Counseling Center: 841-2345.
130 Entertainment
Four Iowa State girls are Daytona bound! If four Kansas women want to travel with us, call 519-292-176. Let's PARTY BOWDY!
FREE TRIP SHAKEPEARE TICKETS!
Listen to JIKH, 9.07 F.M., either Wednesday,
or Saturday from 3:38 to 4:00. Then, when you wake,
Shakespeare she buys the beat t叫 at 6:44-747 elt
The DJ the songs and get free tickets to the show
Tuesday, March 4 at the Hotellenc must Be 21 or
over
HEY KU! NU's Spring Break Time! Party in Caracun Caribbean-Starting from $399 and Daytona Beach for $299! Tahua of pure excite celebrating! Call Angie at 864 209 for details!!
Lawrence Info Center, content orientated BBS,
841-2752, N. 1
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 7, 1991
13
Johnny's UP & UNDER
UF & UNDER is available for Engagement Parties,
Birthday Parties, Pinning Parties and any other party possible.
842-0377
140 Lost-Found
2 sentimental RINGS lost at Jazzhaus Sat. Feb.
3. Reward $150.00 - 843-5296
Found: 1 pair Pewter colored wore framed single vision glass behind Summerfield Hall. Please contact Chris at 864-1214.
Found: Set of keys, in the vicinity of 17th and Vermont. Call 842-6327 to identify.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
APPLICATIONS PROGRAMMER'_b to 34 time
$804 $649. Convert existing FORTRAN file
to Windows interface. Required. KU student
Windows like interface. Required. KU student
technology/engineering programming in C and S
graphic graphics beyond classroom. FORTE-
NANT English. Preferred. Expert, with mapping or
statistical software familiar w. principles of
linguistics such as HPGL or PostScript.
languages such as HPGL or PostScript.
use and or programming. BS in CS or CEE.
use and or programming. BS in CS or CEE.
Ave. West Campus (844.365). Mount
Ave. West Campus (844.365). Mount
Ave. West Campus 5:00 PM, March 12. 1961
Educational Service.
BRANDON WOODS
Retirement Community is now seeking part-time receptionist. Must possess good communication skills. Requires a Bachelor's degree or equivalent of office duties. Opening for night and weekend shifts with average of 14 hours/week. Please apply in person.
1501 Inverness Drive Lawrence, KS EOF
SALES/OUTSIDE INTERNSHIPS
-SUMMER JOBS-
$250 per week
Existing opportunity with National Co-
approaching business people. No experience necessary. Full training. Chicago and local territories. For further details call
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camp. Teach swimming, encoring fishing, waterskiing gymnastics, ice skating, camp dancing, camping, crafts, dramas, or riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance $100 or more. Camp counselor $750. Seagel 8156 Nagle, Mlp. 1l, 6003-784-4244
EARN $5,000-$10,000 Now hiring-managers and
limited opportunity. Part-time now.
Full-time this summer. STUDENT PAINTERS
Inc. Call 800-COLEGE, Mr. Gannon.
Earn while you learn. Manpower is looking for students interested in earning great pay plus computer skills and business experience, plus use of the software and business skills, plus free use of the sophomore or above, with at least 8 average credits, as a College Intern to promote the sales of the IBM Personal System 2 on campus. For an interview, visit www.idb.edu/intro.
GRADUATING STUDENT NEEDED-NEEDER position for competitive candidate with degree in Business Administration. Please contact a competent starting salary company. At least 5 yrs of experience working as a person must call集 Call. Mr. Schwartz, a position must be held.
Great opportunity to earn part time $ Up to $15
per hour plus bonus. Teaching and/or insurance
experience preferred. 749-702.
Great job in Philadelphia subd. Have fun with kids cute kids for 35 hourly week. Earn great salary, room, board and 2 week paid vacation. Starts June 19. Call Elisabeth at 624-3621 624-3641
Immediate openings for cooks. Starting pay is $4.00/hr. Apply Monday-Friday, 9am-4:30am at 719 Massachusetts
International company seeks career minded individuals to train in the fashion and glamour industry. For interview, 1,233-6829
REWARDING SUMMER for sophomore and older college student in Colorado mountains work on the high country, crafts, nature, casoning, rafting many different areas. WESTERN CAMPUS. P.O. Box 101, FLORENSTAD, WESTERN CAMPUS. P.O. Box 101, FLORENSTAD, WESTERN CAMPUS. P.O. Box 101, FLORENSTAD, WESTERN CAMPUS. P.O. Box 101, FLORENSTAD, WESTERN CAMPUS. P.O. BOX 101, FLORENSTAD, WESTERN CAMPUS.
Summer Jobs Outdoors- over 5,000 openings! National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews, stamp send for free details. 113 East Wyoming, Kalispell, MT $990.
Unique Career Opportunity $11 to start and bonus.
Work Study positions available: Spring, Summer and Fall. Call Judy at the School of Business
Need managers for rapid growth cooperation
No exp necessary. Will train in sales, marketing
and management. Call 1-362-8911.
225 Professional Services
Driver Education served mid-Ithman Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtained, transportation provided. 841-7749.
Government photos, passports, immigration,
vies, senior maternity modeling & arts portfolios,
workshops, photography for Model portfolio,婚礼, wedding photographer.
Instant passport $50. Call 841-6961 or learn
www.ladypassport.com
Richard A. Frydman
Attorney at Law
123-456-7890
For All Municipal and District Court Matters Free Initial Consultation
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 401-6078
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence 841-5716.
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping
Lawrence Printing Service. 512 E. 9th Street.
817-460-6000
TRAFFIC - DUI'S
Fake IDs & alcohol offenders other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
Attorney
235 Typing Services
16 East 13th 842-1133
1-der Word Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-203, days or evenings.
1. Typing/WP-Resumes, term papers, thesis,
etc. M24754 after 3:30 pm wkdays, anytime
wkends.
Accurate typing. Resumes, Theses, Letters. Callery, 1-123-885-4754 or 654-381-381.
**11-double spaceided page. Call Themes 841-6798.**
Call R.J.'s Telling and Papering 841-5942.
Term papers, legal theses, etc. no calls after 9 p.m.
Donna's Quality Telling and Word Processing
Term papers, dissertations, letters,
letters from the University of Miami,
and spelling corrected and spelling corrupted
35 m, 39 h, 92 d/24
I will fast and accuse, punctuation or spelling errors, edit and type your words of wisdom and, in my opinion, produce your best possible Phi 8124s.
Professional Typist. Reasonable rates. Call 840-3200.
Professional resumes-C consultations, formating,
typeeting, and more Graphic Ideas Inc, 927 $^{1}$
Mass. 841-1071
TheWORDCTORS-Why pay for typing when you can have word processing? IBM, MAC, laser. Since 1883. 8433147
Typing and Word Processing--Any size job! Information and price quotes, call 749-3024.
WordPerfect word processing. Ink Jet printer.
Near Orchards Corners. Phone 843-8568.
Writing Processing Typing. Papers. Resumes.
Dissertation. Application. Also assistance in spelling grammar, editing, compartment. Have M.S. Degree. M16254.
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
Black Fender Guitar (Square) with maplewedge neck, trem. system and case. Excellent condition. Only 110. Call Mike 749-6952 after 5pm.
1. Lowe's sports rack, RK, U.S.A., CAMCEL 300-900
2. Sears backpacks, RK, U.S.A., CAMCEL 300-900
3. DNKY dark sunglasses, style: Westside; bracelet,
neck size, retail will sell for $48.00 at 840-6004.
4. TPC Dell laptop charger, style: Westside;
two wheels. Fiat500; kack 749-8007, leave message.
Kenwood xenon 400, CD tape deck, tuner, 3-way
switch, air conditioning 400, for all
Eufaura 4204.
MiniSET 260, 15mm Camera Kit 3 lenses,
20mm, 100mm, Close up and Creative filter kits Other accessories included $265
842/177 evenings.
Round trip air ticket to San Diego. Leaves MCI
1:30 Fri, March 8 Return Sun, March 17 $190 or
best offer. B4:51.01
Willing to sacrifice : 1987 EXPO Kawaiaki-$4100,
Apple iPhone with software-$460, Nintendo complete
package with 5 users-$140, Roland TD 390 drum
machine-770, Church Call last! (843) 461-03
EXPERT JEWELRY REPAIR AND DESIGN
Resumes that record of old jewelry and keep the records in the client's account. Jewelry expert repair staff can repair or sure your jewelry expert repair staff can repair or ensure your jewelry expert repair staff can repair or sure your jewelry needs expert care by master repairmen.
1-3 mays.
• Free estimates
- Free estimates
- Free jewelry cleaning and examination
anytime — no appointment necessary
Quality..
Quality... Since 1889
Marks
EWELERS INC.
817 Mass./843-4266
340 Auto Sales
1998 Valant-AT-PS, A/C, V6, 81,000 miles. Reef battery, alternator, radiator, starter, etc. Original repair manual Always starts. $550.
431 8866
1984 Honda Civic, 96K, $200, 1985 Ford Escort,
nationally new, 1,750, $143,759 after 8pm.
1681 Mitchells Corda, 5 sp.2 deck, hbk, several new parts. Good condition. Akingo $499.84 $427-500
761 Macon's Corda, 5 sp.2 deck, hbk, one good part. 72 Superbaite, one ram, one in good metal bed betel. Make offer. 842-1099
SAVE MONEY: Move your oil all 25,000 miles with AMSOIL 100% synthetic oil motor oil. Inventory Bill Rushal, Amrut Bharat, R. & R. Lawrence, R. & Box 365, Lawrence, KS 60496 or call 832-4274.
'90 Gidemonge Omega, AC, AT, PS, cruise,
am/fm cassette good condition. Must sell.
Best offer. Call 841-8121 after 6pm
On TV, VC's VRX, jewelry, stereo, musical instruments, cameras, and more. We honor Vixa/MC/AMEX Disc Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry, 184 W. Bath 728-1918.
360 Miscellaneous
Available now! Beautiful 3 br apt. Washer and dryer, microwave, dishwasher. Woodway Apts. 841-1971.
400s Real Estate
图
Available March 1- 1 db unairm apt, in building at Wellington Hill, 1034慧安路. Rd. Energy of Australia. Inquire. Fans faint. Fans faint. Great location near campus. Short lease available £350 per month. No pets.
405 For Rent
2 & 3 BR-Available in May or August.
Hotel laundry, microwave, patio or deck, laundry facility. Onsite Management. KU has route, off-street parking. Call to ensure your apartment for summer stay.
Nice 2 bedroom apt. Close to Student Union.
Washer/dryer hookup. Off-street parking.
No pets. 748-2919
Furnished room one block from KU. Some utilities paid, off street parking. No pets. 814-5600.
=
Bradford Square Apartments 501 Colorado
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, age, disability, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.'
Double Take
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper available on an equal opportunity basis.
Hey! KU Med. students. Move June 1 and
Hey! you rent for a rent on Moe. *Studio 1
and 2 bedrooms apt.* *Heat and water paid.* *Access*
*Center, Rainbow Tower Aps.*
891-936-863
Lorimar Townhomes, 3801 Clinton Parkway,
Quality, spacious, with all the amenities. Brand
new, available now. 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease thru
May, July or for 12 months. 847-843-7483.
*branched apartment. Two rooms and garage-
tables paid, has air conditioning and a fan.
*refer one lady, $123 a month. 147 Vermont (15th
and Vermont) 843-628
*1 & 2 BR apartments
*2 & 3 BR townhomes
---
Now leasing
spacious & comfortable
-Tennis courts on KU bus route gas heat & water paid (on apartments) TRAILRIDGE Call for an appt.
2500 W.6th
843-7333
South Drift
1, 2, 3, 4
Bedrooms
美式园林建筑
- Pool & Volleyball
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Open 10-5, M-F
- Close to bus route
• Small pets OK with deposit
• Inexpensive gas heat
• Central air
660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
2166 W.26th 843-6446
CHILL OUT, ANHISA.
I HEAR THERE'S BIG FUN TO
BE HAD IN TONGANOUE.
24TH & EDDINGHAM
Bedroom Town Houses
SUNRISE
VILLAGE
(Next to Benchwarmers)
- Quiet location
- Close to bus route
BROKE FOR SPRING BREAK AGAIN
this YEAR. LOOKS like I MOTT
GONNA MAKE IT OUT OF TOWN.
Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an
Luxurious 3 & 4
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc
Mon.- Fri. 11-5
- Microwave Ovens
No Appt. Necessary 841-5444
Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
- Garages; 2 & 1/2 bath
- Some with fireplace
- On KN Rue du Puy
Offerings Luxury: 2 PB
Bedroom Town Houses
12-6 pm Mon., Fri.
10-6 pm Tue. - Thur
9-3 pm Sat.
- Swimming Pool & Tennis Courts
DON'T KNOW, JANAL, THINK
I'LL JUST CATCH UP ON MY
HOMEWORK, THANKS
OH, YOU JUST NEED TO
GIVE THIS PLACE A CHANCE.
KANSAS IS A HOPPIN' STATE.
- On KU Bus Route
Move in immediately! Beautiful 2 br apt. Washer and dryer, microwave, dishwasher. Woodway Apts. 843-1971.
841-8400
Need to submit 1 BR apt. ASAP. Washer/dryer,
water paid, $38/month. Negotiable. Please call
851-6190
21 BR, 43 BR. Washer/sdryers on each unit, e-mail
mice, fireplaces, microwave, two full baths in
2 BR, on bus route, off street parking. Only 1 yr old.
Date: 749-1508
ONE BLOCK FROM KANSAS UNION For rent to one BLOCK from KANSAS UNION, upperclass student or RL employee. BH furnished. No pets. Refs. 840-385-1498. Furniture furnished. $600-mo. 840-385-1498 at 6 P.M.
Roommate-very large, very nice room, now W/D. Only $125. See it to believe. 841:7476.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
NAISMITH HALL.
anywhere else doesn't make
Living
cents.
The cost of living has
gone down at Naismith:
· NEW LOWER COSTS
- Free utilities
- "Dine Anytime"
- Great social events.
SUNSHINE
CITY OF BOSTON
More fun for less funds!
1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, KS 60444 (913) 843-8559
NAISMITH HALL
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
- Volleyball Court
- Basketball Court
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Exercise Room
R
Subbase for 2 birm apt immediately. Clean and quiet. $360/mo Great location for groceries. Call 841-3174 have message.
- 3 Hot Tubs
- On Bus Route
$ 355 - $425
Models Open Daily
Mon. - Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 1-4 p.m. Sat. 12-4 p.m.
Sublease b RPT bkpt. DW, WID, microwave, on bus route. Available in April, $450 maid. n-921-272.
Summer sublease b 3leave. furnished,
Option allowed for £18, each May paid.
700-190
842-5111
1301 W.24th
IF I HAVE TO SPEND THE NEXT WEEK WITH YOUR BARCAH, I'M LEAVING TRUNN
IF I HAVE TO WALK TO PADRE ISLAND.
by Tom Avery
ALL RIGHT, FINE, WELL JUST HAVE A GREATE TIME BORING EACH OTHER TO DEATH WITH SERIOUSNESS OVER VACATION.
Summer sublease or now 'til August. Large studio. $275./mo. 414-6784 after 6pm
ALL NEW appliances, carpet, mini blinds and study area
2 Bedroom apartments available for Fall
Summer sublease. Spacious 2 bd apt in
Meadowbrook Call 855-0992
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has private rooms for spring and summer. Drop by 149 Tennessee or call 749-0871.
Come and see our totally remodeled
Short Term Subleases Available Immediately
3 Bdfm Townhouse.
Spacious, 1,410 square feet
1/2 bath downstairs, Large full bath with
dressing area upstairs
1 Bdrm 6 month sublease
1 Bdrm 9 month sublease
2 Bdrm townhouse.
Roomy 1,290 square feet
1/2 baths, 6 month sublease
Some Summer Subleases too!
Call or come by today These won't last long!
Hours: Mon-Fri 8-5:30
Sat 8-5
Sun 1-4
842-4200
meadowbrook
YOUNG ELEMENTS
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
AIRPARTMENTS
each apartment feature
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas-fired air vent
- Large bedrooms
- Mini blinds
- On-KU bus route
- Carpets available
- 1 bedroom $35, $350
- 2 bedroom $440, $460
- 3 bedroom $560
office
611 Michigan Street
(across from Hardon's)
HOURS:
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
9:00-12:00 Sat
843-1971
APARTMENTS
Please call Kristy for appt
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
430 Roommate Wanted
- Policy
Roommate wanted. Clean 2 bd apt, immediately.
$180/mo plus $² t_2 utilities. No deposit. Bus route.
Partially furnished. Call 841-8314.
Female roommate needed to share beautiful 2 bedroom apartment. Close to campus and downtown. $25 includes gas, water and washer and dryer. 842-9045
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED NOW! to sublease apt. w/ d, W/ microwave. $21/month. Call Steve at 841-918 or 301-4255 (KC).
Wanted: male roommate on bus route, nice area,
$225.00 every. Everything. 434-4790.
Roommate wanted 3 RH house, 875, includes utilities. Available now. 841 6208. Leave message to roommate. Female roommate needed to share couch. Owe $2500 for microwave. CAM $1500 plus $15 per week.
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Centered lines count as 7 words.
Two female roommates wanted for 1991, four bedroom house. Nice neighborhood off W. 6th $250 plus $4, utilities. Michelle, 844-1156
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words.
Blank lines count as 7 words.
Classified Information Mail-In Form
- Prepaid Order Form Ads
are held on consecutive day insertions only No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
Blind box ads: please add $4.00 service charge.
Teartests are NOT provided for classified advertisements
Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
Deadlines
Deadline is on Monday at 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Deadline for cancellation is Monday at 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Words 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days
0-15 3.45 5.10 7.25 12.05
16-20 4.05 6.00 8.50 13.50
21-25 4.65 6.95 9.75 15.15
26-30 5.30 7.90 11.00 16.70
31-35 5.95 8.85 12.25 18.30
Classifications
105 personal 140 lost & found 305 for sale
110 business persons 205 help wanted 340 auto sales
120 announcements 225 professional service 360 miscellaneous
130 entertainment 225 typing services
Classified Mail Order Form
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate w
Address (phone number published only if included below)
Please print your ad one word per box:
| | | | | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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LOW KANSAN POLICE
LOCKES payable to:
191 Stuart-Fair Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
3-7
© 1991 Universal Super Sandworms
© 1991 Universal Press Syndex
"Hey, look . . . you knew when you married me that I was a non-working breed."
14
Thursday, March 7, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Save a , recycle!
EATS
1100 MAIA
LAURENNA KANANA
FARMINGTON, INDIA
TINPAN ALLEY
YES WE HAVE STUDENT AIR FARES!
New York $125 Paris $335
Madrid $389 Frankfurt $319
London $289
Scheduled carriers* Book an online
passes 12 TF from Kampala City Some
passes 13 TSF from Kampala City
passes 14 Student 15 Dual youth
hot passes, warm and study, stu-
passes
Evanston L 60201
1-800-475-5070
1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990
100
80
60
40
20
0
1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990
Fun Flowers To Go!
6 ROSES
$6 50
Program offers KU students a guide to spotting tornadoes
Number of Kansas Tornadoes from 1980-1990
Kansan staff writer
Che flower Shoppe
By Mike I. Vargas
Mixed Bouquet $4 50
KU is participating tonight in Severe Weather Awareness Week by conducting a program that will teach students how to recognize signs of a tornado.
Cash & Carry
The National Weather Service will present a Severe Weather Identification and Awareness Program at 7 tonight at the Apollo Room in Nichols Hall. The Douglas County Office is sponsoring the program.
On that day, the United States had its third worst outbreak, with 63 tornadoes in Kansas, Oklahoma, Iowa and Nebraska. Fortune said.
Bill Fortune, the warning preparedness meteorologist for Kansas, will teach basic severe weather spotter training through the use of slides and live footage from tornadoes that occurred March 13, 1990.
"The public will get a taste of what spotter training is about," Fortune said. "A person needs to be aware of what is going on around them."
Paula Phillips, Douglas County Emergency Preparedness assistant director, said the tornado season was over and the county touched down in Shawnee County.
There is a real threat from torna
does and thunderstorms, Fortune said. The average tornado winds start at a minimum of 80 mph, and some tornadoes have exceeded 250
Information about becoming a severe weather spotter for the Douglas County Emergency Preparedness Center is available at the program, Phillips said.
The peak months for severe weather are usually April, May and June, Fortune said. Kansas suffered from 88 tornadoes last year that caused hundreds of millions of dollars in damage.
1101 Massachusetts
841.0800 8:30 5:30 Mon Sat
At least 4,000 Palestinian and other suspected collaborators have been jailed since last Wednesday, when allied forces chased Iraqi invaders out of Kuwait, according to resistance officials staffing three police stations.
Tonight's program also will tell the
public where to go and what to do if there is a tornado. Fortune said.
"What we are giving them is nothing compared to what we got from the Iraqis," said Aziz Ghoulou, a resistance fighter in charge of a police station in the Abiya section of Kuwait City. "It feels good to bloody these bastards."
The Associated Press
KUWAIT CITY, Kuwait — Kuwait army and resistance personnel are beating scores of Palestinians suspected of collaborat- ing Iraqi soldiers, hospital and resistance officials said yesterday.
A Western diplomat said he was disturbed by the reports.
Palestinians have been burned with cigarettes, hit with typewriters and chairs and had their hands shattered. They are familiar with the beatings said.
The diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the government was afraid it could not control the retributions.
A 22-year-old Palestinian medical student at Mubarak Al-Kaber Hospital said five Palestinians with bullet wounds to the head or chest had been brought to the hospital since the Iraqi pullout.
Doctors said it was difficult to obtain details on the attacks because resistance and Army offensives had forced the treatment of their victims.
He said that since the pullout, he had treated between 35 and 40 Palestinians beaten by the resistance and the army.
"There is no way for us to protest," the medical student said. "We just do our jobs and keep quiet."
"Kuwait for seven months has been supported by the world community being victimized by Saddam Hussein," he said.
The Etc. Shop
723 Mass 843-0611
Ray-Ban
SUNGLASSES BY BAUSCH & LOMB
The world's first sunglasses
723 Mass 843-0611
SPECIALIZE YOUR
TRANSPORTATION
SPECIALIZED.
Try out the new Specialized Frame System (SFS). Pedal with little effort while you enjoy a bike that fits like a glove.
HARDROCK SPORT $349
SUNFLOWER 804 Massachusetts, Lawrence, 843-5000
THE YACHT CLUB Bar & Grill 840-9145
Big 8 Tournament Party Headquarters
Watch the games on our BIG SCREEN TV or one of our 621" TVs
THU Lunch: Admiral Salad $3.50
Dinner: K.C. Strip & Steak Fries $6.95
Drink: Well drinks $1.75 75¢ Draws
ERI Nacho Supreme $4.95
Buckets of BUSCH/BUSCH LT. $6.00
**SAT**
Lunch: Turkey Club $3.75
Dinner: Chx. Fajitas $6.50
THE YACHT CLUB
Lansdale, KS
SUN Cheeseburger, Fries & Draw O' Beer or Soda $2.50 (50¢ refills)
- * * Try our NEW Grilled Bratwurst served on a Kaiser Bun with melted Swiss * * *
KEX-M900
Premier $ ^{\mathrm {I M}} $ Exclusive Component Multi-Play CD Control Auto-Reverse Cassette with Supertuner $ ^{\circledR} $ IV $ ^{\mathrm {I M}} $ with TWIN IF, Digital Signal Processor and Detachable Face Security $ ^{\circledR}$
TRAMER Music by John Lennon Bass by Bob Dylan Drums by Billie Eilish Frequencies:
7.0 3.8 2.6 1.9 1.5 1.2 1.0
FEQ R
+12
BASS TRES FEQ FLAT
SRCE
F1 F2 F3 F4 DISP
Multi-Play CD Control:
• Disc Tile Memory / 72
• IP instant Track Programming
mage. 3T2, track K 16
maze Programmatibility
Track Disc Trace
Random Play (Magazine)
Audible Floor Forward Fast
AMPS (Audition, Maga
zone Program Selection)
Tuner Section
* Supernatural IV* + with
* High-Speed Quart-LP, EL*
* Electronic Timer*
* Extended AM Band*
* Extended AM Band (18 FM
+ 6 AM) Presets*
* Best Stations Memory BG*
* UpDown Seek with Local
Seeking (4-Level
Selectable)
* Built in PNS (Pulse Nose
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* Supernasonic Switch
Three-Source DSP System
Caselet Section:
- Full Logic Control
- SLK Head with PCOC2
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- Dual Azumir Tape Head
- Radio Interf (HF)
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- Music Search
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**Station:** Volume-Balance Bass, Dual Amp Bass
**Digital Direct Optical Link**
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**CADEM (Convolutional ZOOF DAC) w/o Double Step Neural Shaping**
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VOL.101, No. 110
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAI
KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL
SOCIETY
TOPEKA, KS 66612
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1991
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Executions fail to quell Iraqi opposition
The Associated Press
Saddam expels foreign reporters as attention focuses on dissension
SAFWAN, Iraq — Forces loyal to Saddam Hussein executed scores of opponents in a single day, but the Iraqi leader has not succeeded in crushing the opposition movement, Iraqis from the south of the country said yesterday.
In this mine-strewn and war-ragged corner of Iraq now occupied by allied forces, several local residents urged President Bush to stop the attack at least long enough to tonne Saddam.
There was confusion over the extent of Republican Guard control of Basra, Iraq's second-largest city just 22 miles from here. One man who left Basra yesterday morning said Saddam's top fighters were now in Iraq, and their said they controlled only certain districts.
The U.S. government said Wednesday that it appeared that Iraqi forces were back in control of Basra after Republican Guard units unsuppressed Saddam riots.
Residents reported demonstration
Wednesday in Rinara and just south of
lighting in the area.
Karbala and Najaf, both Shiite Muslim holy sites northwest of Basra up the valleys of the city.
"Every day the opposition becomes bigger," said a local farmer who left Basra early yesterday to walk home with his family. He identified himself only as Hassan.
Hassan said there was also opposition in the southern towns of Samaneh, Nasiriyah, Diwaniyah, Muthena, Amarah and Shemonya.
Hussein Ali Kazem, 22, a student and farmer who left Basa on Wednesday, said an anti-Saddam protest by about 1,000 people earlier Wednesday was followed by the public execution of about 400 opposition members.
In other news, Iraq is expelling all foreign reporters as the focus of world interest turns to internal dissent and the government's efforts to quell it.
The Iraqi government made no announcement of the decision, but yesterday state-run
Representatives of news organizations in Baghdad said their reporters and crews had been attacked by militants.
Baghdad Radio accused the Western press of
invasion and the economic gain achieved by the Iraqi and the Arab
"They offer you a delicious plate of lies mixed with facts and poison mixed with reason." Baghdad Radio said.
Government officials in Baghdad indicated privately that the move was aimed at giving a rest to exhausted Information Ministry officials who monitor foreign reporters.
Iraqi officials in previous years have invited large groups of journalists to cover events in Baghdad, and then asked them to leave days later as the Information Ministry officials assigned to accompany them grew haggard.
But some reporters speculated that the move might foreshadow a government crackdown on dissent, or at least indicate a shift in power. They were no longer in the government's interest.
The expulsion followed reports from outside Iraq quoting refugees and dissidents describing rebellions against the Iraqi government.
Cheney: soldiers may return soon probably faster than first planned
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — U.S. troops will be streaming home from the Persian gulf at a pace of 5,000 a day barring a new outbreak of fighting, Defense Secretary Dick Cheney said yesterday. Freed U.S. prisoners of war will return almost immediately, and Sunday ceremony at Andrews Air Force Base near Washington, the Pentagon said.
Cheney, in an interview, outlined chances for a far speedier return for most of the 540,000 U.S. troops that had been disclosed, one that could be accomplished by the daily 4 date President Bush has set as the goal of celebration for our returning troops.
The defense secretary disclosed the plan as Pentagon representative Pete Williams said all the U.S. POWs who had been held by Iraq would be returning on a single
plane within a few days, perhaps as early as Sunday to the Maryland base outside the capital. Twenty-one American POWs have been released.
Meanwhile, Secretary of State James Baker was flying to the gulf area to explore what White House press secretary Martin Fitzwater called a new chance, a opportunity to move toward a broader Middle East bridging Arab-Israeli differences.
En route, Baker told them he would be willing to meet with Palestinian Arabs in Israel after talks in Saudi Arabia with his foreign minister, and his foreign minister, Prince Saud.
Tribute honors gulf casualties
Baker indicated that he wanted to get Israel and the Palestinians talking with each other and see if Israel and the Arab community could build confidence-building steps toward peace.
Fort Riley memorial service prompts prayers, tears and feelings of pride
FORT RILEY — After three single rifle shots sounded, a lone trumpet played the slow, mournful refrain of *British Foot Soldier*.
By Sarah Davis
Kansan staff writer
"Taps" at Fort Riley yesterday in tribute to its 18 soldiers who died in the Persian Gulf War.
More than 1,700 people, including friends and supporters of the troops and the family members of four dead soldiers, hanged on the base, silently listening.
On a day filled with mixed emotions of pride and sadness, many tears were shed.
Maj. Sap Rizzo, clad in army fatigues, stood isolated from the crowd. After the tribute he took off his uniform and wiped the tears from his eyes.
He stood on a stage backdropped by a 40-foot U.S. flag, flanked by flags representing each state.
Col. Gary L. LaGrange, installation commander, was one of six people who spoke in honor of the men and women who served in the war.
LaGrange read the names of the soldiers who died and said they would always be remembered.
"Today we gather under this flag, under God, to honor those soldiers who served their country for us." LaGrange said. "We sent them away under our flag, and today we remember their office, their love and their courage."
"We will never forget," he said.
"May God bless each and every one of you."
A prayer urging family members of the deceased to have the strength to continue was conducted along with the army for the armed forces and the country.
Col. Marion Pember, Fort Riley post chapain, said, "We are honoring and remembering those who died, and for some of us, that is all we can do. I have the sense of loss and grieving for the family members."
He said that people were eagerly awaiting the arrival of the 175 lst Infantry Division soldiers who were
'Today we gather under this flag, under God, to honor those soldiers who served their country for us. We sent them away under our flag, and today we remember their sacrifice.'
- Col. Larry LaGrange installation commander
expected to return home tonight.
They are expected to arrive at Forbes Field at 7 onight and be taken to the airport for a welcome home ceremony.
"I have a sense that the American people are behind this and ready to welcome the soldiers back," Pember said.
Pfc. Siec Owen said that she was looking forward to the troops coming home but that she did not want to forget those who had died.
"I pray for their families," she said. "It was very sad. My heart goes out to the soldiers. God bless them — they died for a good cause."
Owen, a petite 21-year-old, was in the gulf for five months and arrived back in the United States on Jan. 20.
"I'd go back急 if I had to," she said. "This is my country and I fight for it, but I'm glad to be home and glad to be safe."
During his speech, Pember said that many people did not understand why Operation Desert Storm was necessary.
"Those we honor today are great Americans because they were willing to die for a cause in which they believed. They brought our world closer together than ever been. The greatest voices for peace are those we honored today."
Even though the support of many soldiers was answered with death, Pember said they would never be used for their courageous efforts in the war.
"The mind is filled with questions that seem to have no answers," he said.
ALPHANEMBILLA
]
Above: Chaplain Lt. Colonel Thomas Decker leads the invocation at the beginning of a memorial service at Fort Riley to honor the 18 soldiers of the 1st infantry Division (Mechanized) who gave their lives in the Persian Gulf War. An M-16 covered by an infantry helmet stands in tribute to those soldiers. Left: First infantry division troops sing a hymn in memory of their fallen comrades.
Bias-related crimes may be registered for the first time
By Katie Chipman
New federal regulations asking police officers to specify whether crimes were bias-related may show an increase in the numbers of hate crimes reported, Lawrence police Stg. Kevin Harmon said.
Kansan staff writer
Harmon said that next year police officers would classify bias-related incidents in the new category, which would include racial crimes as well as crimes committed against gay and lesbian people.
KU police Lt. John Mullens said, "We have had reports of harassing phone calls, but no physical violence against gays and lesbians. We've had incidents of criminal damage don’t to property as well."
“An example of a hate-crime might be the KKK spray-painting. That looks to me like a hatecrime.”
Mullens said an example of a bias-related crime against gays and lesbians occurred last October when an information booth on Jayhawk Boulevard was vandalized. The booth had displayed posters celebrating National Coming Out Day.
Mike Sullivan. treasurer of
GLSOK, said, "Violence isn't increasing, but awareness of it is."
Sullivan said he thought GLOSK was creating an atmosphere in which gay and lesbian people felt uncomfortable, reporting crimes against them.
He said the violence that did exist made gay and lesbian people more aware of the changes that were taking place in education that needed to be taught.
"There is an increase in violent acts and discrimination, but not all crimes are violent," he said. "There's passive discrimination against gay and lesbian people as well."
KU graduate to return from Persian Gulf, pregnant wife awaits him in Leavenworth
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Kansan staff writer
Bill Sheehy, 1988 KU graduate, is coming home from the Persian gulf.
Sheechy's wife, Marcia, does not think he could come home soon enough.
"I just hope he gets here before the baby does," she said.
The Sheehys, who now live in Leavenworth, are expecting their first child any day.
Their baby was due last week, she said. Her husband is due home today.
"We have no idea exactly when Bill will get here because that's the way it goes with the military," she said.
He already has had one delay on his journey back to Kansas from Saud Arabia, Kuwait and Iraq, he says. The return have been nested on camus.
Marcia Sheehy
But getting Sheehy home before
'I just hope he gets here before the baby does.'
the baby is born was not something that either of the expecting parents had planned on. After Sheeby was sent to the gulf Aug. 6, Marcia prepared to have the baby, which she is a girl, without her husband.
"We sure didn't expect him to be home so soon," she said. "I wasn't going to believe it until he came home."
Dave Platt, resident director of Joseph R. Pearson Hall, said he lived on the same floor with Sheehy at JRP for two years and was a mascot with him for three years. Sheehy was the big Javahawk mascot for four years.
"It looks like the timing might
work out perfectly for the baby and Bill." Platt said.
Marcia said they met on campus at the University of Kansas when she was visiting from Kansas State University.
Besides being the Jayhawk mascot and a floor director at JRP, Sheeby was also an Army ROTC commander.
Rosalie Fulks, records clerk in the Army ROTC department, said she remembered Sheehy vividly.
"When I was at the games, Bill would be all dressed up as the Jayhawk and he used to see me and yell, 'Rosalie, Rosale! real loud to embarrass me.' she said. "He was a lot of fun around here."
Fulks said she was thrilled to hear that Sheehy was expecting his first child and that he was coming back to the United States.
2
Friday, March 8, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Economists predict jobless rate will continue to rise
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — America's jobless rate is expected to keep climbing in the months ahead, despite hopes that the end of the Civil War might prompt a rebound in the sluggish U.S. economy.
"Businessmen are going to be very leery about rehiring until they have a better feeling about the long term," said Peter Radek in an economist with National Westminster Bancorp, of New York.
Private economists will get their first comprehensive look at economic activity for February with today's release of the Labor Department's unemployment report.
In advance of the report, most analysts predicted the rate would climb to 6.3 percent or 6.4 percent from January's rate of 6.2 percent.
A rate of 6.3 percent would the nation's highest since May 1987, when joblessness was still falling from the last recession of 1981-82.
An increase in the jobless rate would continue a trend that began last June, when unemployment rose to 18.2 per month at a relatively low 5.3 per month at a relatively low 6.4 per month.
cent. During that period, more than 1 million Americans have joined the unemployment rolls.
Now that the Gulf War has end, many analysts and Washington policymakers are anxiously waiting to see whether consumers start buying homes and cars again from our nation out of its economic slide.
Last month the unemployment report was so bleak — the rate went up and the economy lost 230,000 jobs — that the Federal Reserve moved within the hour to lower interest rates.
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan told Congress on Wednesday there were faint signs that the U.S. was suffering after the war ended last week.
Citing Greenspan's optimism on the economic outlook, analysts don't expect that kind of quick response today.
Even if confidence does pick up, economists say, it's unlikely that businessmen would embark on mass new hiring.
"Since this recession is in all likelihood a shallow one, we're not going to be lifted out of it very rapidly." Radford said.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuart Flint-Flint, 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 $50. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauber-Fint Hall, Lawrence, KA 60045
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Applications are available at the Organizations and Activities Center (Kansas Union), 129 Strong, and Nunemaker Center
Applications due by March 22,1991
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Student Senate approves budget for next 2 years
Senate vote to allocate $71,406 for student organizations and is scheduled to decide the distribution of that money after spring break.
Kansan staff report
Student Senate voted last night to approve its budget for the next two years, leaving approximately $39.193 allocated for each of the next two years.
The total Senate budget next year will be $1,151,025.
Graduate student organizations will receive $11,600 more than in the proposed budget.
Two amendments were made to the Senate finance committee's proposed budget.
The executive coordinator of Graduate Student Council will continue to be a paid position, with Senate allocate $3,000 a year for it. The editor of the newsletter will receive $3,000 annually from Senate, and the newspaper will receive $5,000
for production costs.
Legal Services for Students will receive an additional $2,600 annually in addition to the proposed $14,181. Additional computer workstation.
Before Senate finished discussion on the budget, Mike Schreiner, student body president, cautioned Senate about amending the budget to increase allocations to groups, making the unallocated fund smaller.
Schreiner said Senate needed to consider the amount it was leaving for next year's legislature to allocate for special projects.
"The projected enrollment will probably stay the same or go down, so future Senates can't count on the windfall if we got," he said.
The Senate bases its budget on the projected enrollment for the next year. But that amount can change if the government's greater or smaller than projected.
Absence of rain in Lawrence causes increase in grass fires
By Mike I. Vargas
Kansan staff writer
Rich Barr, Lawrence fire marshall, is keeping his fingers crossed for rain during sorrine break.
With more than 13 grass fires in February, Lawrence has had a higher incidence of the fires compared to previous years. Barr said.
Although grass fires within the city limits have been relatively small, property has been at risk, he said. Some of the February grass fires were in residential areas and were 40 to 50 feet away from houses.
Barr said frequent grass fires indicated that dry conditions existed where other combustible materials were at risk, materials such as wooden shingles that have not been treated with a fire retardant.
But if there is no precipitation in the following weeks, the Lawrence fire department may consider place
"If we get spring showers, it will alleviate the problem significantly," Barr said.
ing a ban on permits that let residents burn their organic matter, he said. With dry conditions it is easier for contained fires to get out of
The current trend of higher-than-average grass fire incidents will persist if it does not rain, Barr said. People throwing lit cigarettes from their car windows can cause fires in these dry conditions.
Karl McNorton, manager of information systems at the Kansas fire marshall's office in Topeka, said that even if there was no wind, the grass fire could create a draft of hot air and had the same effect as wind on a fire.
Grass fires can spread rapidly on windy days, he said.
Grassland fires are difficult to fight because the heat is intense and the smoke is thick. Last the year only the death of a firefighter in Kansas was a crime, but the fire, McNorton said. The firefighters were overcome by heat exhaustion
On campus
- Lawrence Coalition for Peace and Justice will have a peace vigil at noon Sunday at South Park, 12th and Massachusetts streets.
KU Triathletes will have a group run at 1 p.m. Sunday. Anyone interested should meet in front of Wescoe Hall
- The Lawrence Region Men and Women's Widowed Group will meet at 7 p.m. March 15 at the Lawrence Public Library, 709 Vermont St.
KU Art and Culture in New York is accepting applications. The applications are available through Gary Shapiro at 3039 Wescoe.
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Sean Flanagan, Lawrence resident, sends out a gift of music with his saxophone to collect donations for an electric guitar and amplifier. Flanagan, part of a newly formed band, The Cool Cats, said he hoped to have a top 40 hit in three months and a hit album within a year. Flanagan played yesterday on Wescoe Beach.
Police report
A KU student's pouch and its contents valued at $188 were taken between 7:30 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. Wednesday at Jackson Center, KU police reported.
A KU student's wallet and the contents valued at $2.50 were taken between 7:30 and 10:15 p.m. Wheethens Center Institute KU police reported.
Stereo equipment valued at $400 was taken from a KU student's car between 9 p.m. Tuesday and 9:15 a.m. Wednesday in the 1000 block of
Lawrence Avenue, Lawrence police reported. Damage to the car totaled $50.
Unknown suspects removed a Budweiser display sign valued at $250 between 6:30 p.m. Tuesday and 7:27 a.m. Wednesday from the center fence at Quigley Field, KU police reported.
A KU student's property valued at $27 was taken from his coat between 10:30 p.m. and midnight Tuesday at Center KU police station.
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Number Position Begin Date End Date hour rate
PARK POSITIONS
9 Park Heart 3/11/19 9/13/19 4.25
9 Park Heart 5/20/19 9/13/19 4.25
Mount Linden 3/11/19 9/13/19 5.00-4.00
Lusbatiat 3/11/19 9/13/19 4.50
Mach Ast. Air 5/20/19 8/23/19 4.50
Mach Cardiff 5/20/19 10/19/19 4.00
Campground Marine Supervisor 4/19/19 10/19/19 4.25-4.50
Campground Att 4/19/19 10/19/19 4.25-4.50
Marina Att 4/19/19 10/19/19 4.25-4.50
Tark Range 4/19/19 10/31/19 8.00
GOLF COURSE POSITIONS
1 Golf Course (must be Kansas Certified Law Enforcement Officer)
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RELICION POSITIONS
1 Coe Manager 4/22/19 9/27/19 4.50
1 Coe Workers 4/22/19 9/27/19 5.50
7 Day Camp Counselor 5/20/19 9/29/19 4.25
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1 Bad Oil 4/15/19 9/29/19 4.25-4.40
2 Scrambleray 4/15/19 9/29/19 4.25
1 Pool Manager 5/13/19 9/29/19 6.00-6.75
1 Pool Head Mgr 5/13/19 9/29/19 5.20-5.95
1 Pool Head Guard 5/13/19 9/29/19 4.70-5.45
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1 Beach Ast. Mgr 5/13/19 9/29/19 5.20-5.95
1 Beach Head Guard 5/13/19 9/29/19 4.70-5.45
1 Beach W.S! 5/13/19 9/29/19 4.25-5.00
Annual fee of Dear Bear Restaurant, Downtown Courtyard, Buster Bay 8.22 A 200 F. 27th Street, Tampa, FL
Apply at Dept. of Human Resources, Shenawae County Courthouse, Rm B-22 A, 200 E. 7th Street, Topeka, K64034
Equal Opportunity Employer — M/F/H
University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 8, 1991
Campus/Area
3
Proposed budget cuts eliminate student jobs
By Benjamin W. Allen
Kansan staff writer
The jobs of 125 KU students could be in jeopardy because the House Appropriations Committee's proposed budget for higher education in Kansas does not include a Career Work Study program.
Julie Cooper, of the student financial aid department, said a budget with no Career Work Study program would cost $180,000 to employers as well as students.
"It was intended as an incentive for employers to hire students in career areas in which the students were studying," she said.
Sixty-five employers participate in the program, which pays for one-half
of the student's wages when they work outside the University of Kansas, she said. The employers pay the other half.
"Many employers couldn't pay to get the skill level they do with students." Cooper said.
"Many of these students would have to take a service-oriented job rather than career-oriented."
The Lawrence Arts Center, 200 W. Ninth St., employs four students through the program.
Lisa-Marie Rousseau, education program director of the center, said the program allowed the center to meet its goals and helped the center run smoothly.
Rousseau said that the center
worked on a tight budget and that the loss of the program would not allow them to employ as many students.
Leslie Casson, Topea senior, works at the center through the program and said it had provided her with an invaluable opportunity.
"It allowed me to support myself while I finish my degree and it gave me practical experience in the field
— art administration — I am interested in," she said.
"I realize that probably overall there aren't that many students in work study. That — the program — may seem like a small amount from the total budget, but it's critical for those students."
University agrees on plan outlining landfill cleanup
By Vanessa Fuhrmans
$250 per week
Exciting opportunity with National Co approaching business people. No experience necessary. Full training. Chicago and local termites. For further details call
Internepreneurs. Be your own boss. Make big
ursks selling sunglasses. No inv. req. Write P.O.
20, Duplante, GI 97892
S苏HAUTING STUDENT NEEDED-Career
position for aggressive candidate with degree in
economics. Send resumes to Eisenhower
excellent startling salary, company car at
Milwaukee. Call Collett, Mr. Schwartz,
COLLEGE. Call Collett, Mr. Schwartz.
Jewish job in Philadelphia suburb. Have fun with kids for 15 hours weekly. Earn great salary, room, board and 2 weeks paid vacation. Starts March 9 for year. Call Elizabeth at (215) 423-8480.
Great opportunity to earn part-time $ Up to $15 per hour plus bonus. Teaching or insurance experience preferred. 749-7202
immediate clothing sales position available with a Leezex company Weekends only, good more some travel, expenses paid and a variety of offers. Mail resume to 460-863-3833 between June 11th Module Friday.
International Company seeks career minded individuals to train in the fashion and glamour industry. For interview, 1-223-8299
REWARDING SUMMER for sophomore and junior students in the camp, with children, backpacking, horseback riding, crafts arts, canoeing, 170 min., WESTERN CAMP. P. O. Box 1275, FLORIDA, SANTA ANA, WESTERN CAMP. P. O. Box 1275, FLORIDA, SANTA ANA.
Unique Career Opportunity
Used managers for rapid growing corporation
to exp necessary. Will train in sales, marketing
and management. Call 1-822-8911
Work Study positions available: Spring, Summer and Fall. Call Judy at the School of Business: 847538
225 Professional Services
Driver Education offered third Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. #71479
Government photos, passports, immigration,
vacas, senior portraits, modeling & arts
portfolios./H&W. Call Tom Swells 749-1611
Richard A. Frydman
Attorney at Law
843-4023
Model portfolio, portrait, wedding photographer
Instant passport $5.00 Call 841-9689 or leave message
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 491-6028
Prompt contraception and abortion services in
Ireland. 1031-2000.
TRAFFIC - DUIS'
Fake IDs' and alcohol offenses
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
Attorney
16 East 13th 842-1133
Thesis Dissertations
copying, hardbinding and gold stamping
lawrence Printing Service. 512 E 9th Street
235 Typing Services
d- women Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, gramatically correct pages etier quality type 84283, days or evenings.
i: Typing/WP- Resumes, term papers, thesis, etc.
942 4754 after 3:30 pm wkdays, anytime wkends
Absolute cheapest typing in Lawrence
H1.00 double-spaced page. Rush jobs no problem.
749-4648
Accurate typing, Resumes, Theses, Letters, Call Melay,
1-913-825745 or 864-38118
TheWORDDOCTORS—Why pay for typing when you can have word processing? IBM, MAC, laser. Since 1983. 843-3147.
*Professional resumes-Consultations, formating,
typesetting, and more*. Graphic Ideas Inc, $927_{1}$
Mass. 843-107.
Professional Typist. Reasonable rates. Call 842-1230
type test and accurate. # 115 pages # 924-1060.
I will correct grammar; punctuation or spelling errors in my words of wisdom, and in general, help you produce the best possible papers. Phil. # 842-6250
A better price for word processing. Fast service H-1 double space page. Call Therese A4 87476
Typing Services 8419549
paper issuing实验室 8419549
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
paper terms, papers, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Laser print-
ting and spelling corrected. 2201-G W 29th St. M.
THA, 8a m.-8p m.; F S-8 a m.-3p m. 842-2744.
300s
Merchandise
typing and Word Processing--Any size job! Information and price quotes, call 748-3024
305.For Sale
Word Processing/Typing: Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing, composition.
HW S. Dugge. 841-6254
Word Processing-Spelling checked $1.10 pg
2-source 843-4658
more. $90 to retail, will sell for $45; or 83.094494
for sale. Haltie Mountain hike. Ten speeds and
trail conditions. $179.000. Kennedow Jumbo
Kennedow jumbo, CD, tape deck, timer-3 way,
mountain condition. $400 for all
adults. 142 demo.
Black Fender Guitar (Squire) with maplewood neck, treem, system and case. Excellent condition. Only $130. Call Mike. 749-6252 after 6pm.
UNNY black sunglasses, style: Westside. Brand new, $90.00 retail, will sell for $45.00: 843 0604.
Mini SRT-201 35mm Camerat Kit 3 lenses,
200mm, 100mm, 200mm. Close up and Creative filter kits. Other accessories included $865
8472/1729.
to sarcifice : 187 EX69 Kawakai -$1200,
Apple Ile with software -$400, Nintendo complete
package with 5 games -$420, Roldan TPR-30 drum
machine -$410, Call Chris! Ft. 833-843-
340 Auto Sales
1984 Honda Civic, 90K, $200, 1985 Ford Escort,
98K new engine, $1750, $43-758 per 8pm.
1841 Mitsuhisa Cordia, 5 spd. 2pph, hbk. several new parts. Good condition. Asking $850. 842-7567
88 Bug. 72 Superbetele, one good in-game good steel beetle Hadats. Make other $295.
10 Oldsmobile Omega, AC, AT, PS, cruise,
am/fm cassette, good condition. Must sell.
Best offer.
Call 841 8312 after 6pm
HBU, SELL TO NCSUCH
On TV's
instrumentals,
cameras and more. We
honor VIA/MCAME Disc Jayhawk Pawn &
Jewelry, 18W. 6th 749-1919.
360 Miscellaneous
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
BUY SELL LOAN CASE
合
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it ally to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, national origin, familial status, or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our lawyers are hereby advised that advertising in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
If you can read this ad, you're too smart to live in an apartment.
It doesn't take a genius to see that Naismith is the smart place to live while
you get an education.
NAISMITH HALL
- Free utilities
the move now!
- Computer Center
- "Dine Anytime"
Available now! Beautiful 3 br apt. Washer and dryer, microwave, dishwasher. Woodway Apts, 843-197.
1800 Naismith Drive
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 843-8559
Available March 1 - 1 bd unfurn. in app, new building at West 8th Street. Email: esther@seattledepartment.dk, dressing fans, mini blinds. Great location near campus. Short leases £50 per month. No pets.
Wise up and make
2 & 3 BR-Available in May or August. Available for campers, microwaves, palet or deck, laundry facility. Onsite Management, KU has route off street parking. Call to reserve your apartment for summer vacations.
Farnished room one block from KU. Some utilities paid for street parking. No pet 100; no bikes; no snowboards. Utilities paid, air conditioning and a fan Perlone lady $25 a month. 147 Vermont (118) $25 a month.
Bradford Square Apartments 1039 Colorado
Nice 2 bedroom apt. Close to Student Union.
Washer/dryer hookup. Off-street parking.
No pets. 789-259.
Great 1 bdmpt for rent. 1 block from Union.
Must see to appreciate. Call Kristen at 865-9010
Leave message.
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
- Volleyball Court
- Basketball Court
- Exercise Room
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- 3 Hot Tubs
A FOLK TROLL IN THE SUMMER
$ 355 - $425
- On Bus Route
Models Open Daily Mon - Fri 10.6 p.m
Sat. 10-4 p.m. Sun 12-4 p.m.
1301 W.24th
842-5111
Come and see our totally remodeled
2 Bedroom apartments available for Fall
ALL NEW appliances, carpet, mini blinds and study area
Short Term Subleases Available Immediately
3 Bdrm townhouse.
Spacious 1,410 square feet
1/2 bath downstairs, Large full bath with
dresser area upstairs
2 Bdm townhouse.
Roomy 1,290 square feet
1 1/2 baths, 6 month sublease
2 Bdrm townhouse.
1 Bdrm 6 month sublease
Some Summer Subleases too!
Call or come by today These won't last long!
15th & Crestline
Hours: Mon-Fri 8-5:30
Sat 8-5
4200
meadowbrook
West Hills APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now leasing for
APARTMENTS
Spacious apts. - furnished and unfurnished
$280 to $335 per month
(water paid!)
-1 bedroom ants. 735 sq ft
2 bedroom apis. 950 sq ft
$365 to $415 per month (water paid!)
Bedroom Town Houses
Near campus
OPEN HOUSE Mon. Wed. Thurs
SUNRISE VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
1:00-4:00 p.m. (no appt needed)
This ad for original buildings only does not include Phase II
M
Mon.- Fri. 11-5
- Luxurious 3 & 4
- Garages; 2 & 1/2 bath
Bedroom Town Houses
Carservoir 2 & 1/2 bath
- Microwave Ovens Some with fireplaces
- Some with fireplaces
- On KU Bus Route
REMEMBER:
BUY BAKIN BOTTOMS
WITH BREAK
RIGHTS
deers
WOODWAY
by Brian Gunning
- Swimming Pool & Tennis Courts
Each apartment features
841-8400
EVERYBODY HAVE A BELIEVE IN THEM.
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas-heat, central air
- Large bedrooms
- Mira high rise
- On Kla has route
-3 bedroom $560 office
611 Michigan Street (across from Hardee's)
THINGS TO I'LL NEVER
HOURS;
Enlarged to Show Texture
FROM 12:49
GET 24 PAKES
CONDOMS (KU HEALTH)
(CENTER)
I. O. FROM
THE CAR'S RUNNING!
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
9:00-12:00 Sat
843-1971
Please call Kristy for appt.
CONDOMS
CENTER)
5. BUY FACE I.D. FROM
VINNY AND GUOJO ($200)
6. PICK UP QUN AS
INSURANCE WHEN
MEETING VINNY AND
GUOJO
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Offering Luxury 2 BR.
(Next to Benchwarmers)
24TH & EDDINGHAM
Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
12-6 pm Mon., Fri.
10-6 pm Tue. - Thur.
9-3 pm Sat.
No Appt. Necessary
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
1,2,3,4
South Dinky
- Pool & Volleyball
- Quiet location
- Close to bus route
- Close to bus route
- Small pets OK with deposit
- Inexpensive gas heat
Open 10-5, M-F
2166 W.26th 843-6446
Now leasing for summer & fall 1991
spacious & comfortable
*studios
*1 & 2 BR apartments
*2 & 3 BR townhomes
TRAILRIDGE
-3 Pools
- Tennis courts
-on KU bus route
gas heat & water paito
(on apartments)
TRAILRIDGE
THE FAR SIDE
Lentimer Townhomes, 3801 Clinton Parkway,
Quality spacetime, with all the amenities. Brand new
furniture, large tile flooring, May July, duly
or for 12 months 841/7694 843-1434,
dryer and dryer, microwave, dishwasher, Woodley
Need to sublet 1 BR apt. ASAP Washer/dryer, water paid, $380/month. Negotiable. Please call 865-0190
Hey! KU Med students. Move in June 1 and receive 2 off your rent for 3 months *Student 1 and 2 midwife gps. Heat and water paid *Across the room. Rainbow Tower App 913-851-9631
2-1 BR, 4-3 BR. Washers dryer in unit, each unit faucets, microwave, fireplaces, 2 full baths in a br, on bus route, off street parking. Only 1 yr old. Call today! 749-1566
Roommate~very large, very nice duplex, now
W/D. Only $125. See it to believe. 841-7476.
Sublease b/Apt hRpt. W/D, W/monica, on bus
ONE BLOCK FROM KANSAS UNION For rent to senior graduate school, upperclass student or NI employee. One BR furnished + no Pets. Refs. 850. Water fitted (lurished) $250/ml 831 after 6PM
route. Available in April $45/mo. ...
Summer sublease in summer bldd, furnished,
Tanglewood. Option for fall. $106 each. May pay
794 109
OPEN HOUSE Saturday, March 2
Completely Furnished
Reserve Your Home Now! We offer
1·2·3·4 Bedroom Apartments
Completely Furnished
12*2*3 Bedroom Apartment
Designed with you in mind!
Go to...
Kentucky Place - 74
1310 Kentucky
hanover Place - 841-1212
-Custom furnishings
-Designed for privacy
-Private parking
-Close to shopping & KU
-Many great locations
-Equal opportunity housing
1310 Kentucky
Sundance - 841-3255
Tanglewood - 749-2415
Campus Place - 841-1429
Orchard Corners - 749-4226
WASTECHAFTY
842-4455
Summer sublease or now '11 till August Large studio £275/mo. 841-6748 after 6pm
Summer sublease. Spacious 2 bd apt in
Meadowbrook Call 865-0992.
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has private rooms for spring and summer. Drop by 148 Tennessee or call 794-0871.
430 Roommate Wanted
Female roommate needed to share beautiful 2 bedroom apartment. Close to campus and downtown. $225 includes gas, water and washer and dryer. 849-9045
Roommate want 3 BH house 875 includes utilities. Available now 814-6500. Leave message to roommate. Share condo room. Own room, carport, WL plus 1s. Call Lot. Len. 809-6800 or 814-6500.
Two female roommates wanted for 1981, four bedroom house. Nice neighborhood off W. 6th $25 plus 1 unit.; Michelle. 864-195.
CHINESE HANDCUFFS
By GARY LARSON
CHINESE
HANDCUFFS
3. 8
Houdini's final undoing
10
Friday, March 8, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Tired of your music?
or that CD wasn't what you thought it would be?
Suffer no more-trade 'em in at the Love Garden
Love Garden Sounds
936 1/2 Mass. St. (upstairs) 843-1551
VISIONS
an optical dispensary
VISIONS an optical dispensary
- Apparel - Bolle sunglasses - Micro-Edge
20%OFF
Bollé sunglasses & apparel Thursday, Friday & Saturday Only (March 7-9)
806 Massachusetts
Lawrence
841-7421
areas they may have heard in class, but the fresh perspectives are here."
CHAINS FIXED FAST
Kizer
Cummings
jewelers
833 Mass · Lawrence, KS
Theater conference will offer students chance to audition, attend workshops
EATS
1205 MASSA
LAURENCE RANNAH
7457 YOUNG, TURNING, TURBINI
Two KU alumni also will speak during the conference: Mike Robe, who wrote and directed the recently aired ABC miniseries, "Son of the Morning Star," and Gigi Gibson Bolt, the director of the theater division of the New York Council on the Arts.
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 6 PM-ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191
THE DOORS (R) SAT 9:00-2:15
EVE 4:45, 7:15, 9:45
HILCLEST
925 IOWA SAT 8:40-9:45
EVE 5:15, 7:30, 9:45
HE SAID
SLEEPING WITH PG.13 SAT 9:00-2:15
EVE 5:15, 7:30, 9:45
THE ENEMY (R) SAT 9:00-2:15
EVE 5:15, 7:30, 9:45
THE HARD WAY (R) SAT 9:00-2:15
EVE 5:15, 7:30, 9:45
SCENES FROM
A BROOKLYN SAT 9:00-2:15
EVE 5:15, 7:30, 9:45
SILENCE OF
THE LAMBS (R) SAT 9:00-2:15
EVE 5:15, 7:30, 9:45
CINEMA TWIN
3110 IOWA SAT 13:00
EVE 5:00, 7:15, 9:45
DANCES
WITH WOLVES (PG.13) SAT 9:00-2:15
EVE 4:55, 8:00
WARRIOR SAT 9:00-2:15
EVE 5:00, 7:30, 9:45
SHOWERS FOR TODAY ONLY
"We have a really good turnout of theater community coming, and I think that's going to be a really strong component of the conference," she said.
Three-day regional event during break focuses on theater history, sharing of ideas
The 12th annual conference will be from March to June at Holiday Inn at the Crown Plaza in Kansas City, MO.
About 300 people are expected to attend the conference, which emphasizes the theater history. Several KU professors and students will be involved as well.
Ron Willis, professor of theater and film, will make a presentation on introductory theater classes.
By Sarah Davis Kansan staff writer
Marilyn Heath, assistant to the chairperson of
meetings in film, said the conference was highly
regarded.
"The key thing is that it is a professional conference where people share similar goals and information," he said. "It's the coming together of theater people."
the three-day event is broken down into two
The Mid-America Theatre, conference, which occurs during spring offers of students a opportunity to present theatrical works, theater, and music.
Students who have not signed up but want to attend the theater conference may pay $20 to enroll at the conference. For more information, a person can contact the KU department of the theater and film.
parts. First, there will be presentations from people representing nine states. Four different areas will focus on theater history, directing symposium, children's theater and creative drains, and theater workshops, which will take place simultaneously and simultaneously during the weekend.
Today
Start Spring Break with
Friday Afternoon Club
No Cover
50¢ Draws
Free Pool and Ping Pong
She said about 200 students from several states, including KU students, had signed up to audition. Students also are invited to attend workshops that will be offered in such areas as preparing to perform, jobs and internships, and vocal challenges.
The second part of the conference consists of auditions. More than 20 summer theater companies.
"They're looking for people to be in plays this summer," Heath said.
"All theater students will benefit from most of these workshops," Heath said. "It exposes them to
Brittlerade
Tues 3-12 Forbidden Pigs
Wed 3-13 Stumpwohopt
Thurs 3-14 Picadors
Fri 3-15 Kill Whitey
and The Pedal Jets
Sat 3-16 Homestead Grays
Saturday March 9 Great Reggae with New Riddim
Brazilian airliner seized over Amazon jungle; officials suspect gunmen are drug traffickers
Sunday March 17
St. Patrick's Day Bash
featuring the
Spanic Boys
from Milwaukee with
special guest
Nick Cosmos
Don't Miss It!
The Associated Press
BRASILIA, Brazil — Police said three passengers who commanded a Brazilian airliner yesterday were stealing the plane — they were stealing it.
"For a hijacking, there have to be hostages," federal police representative Joao Martins said. "This was armed robbery."
Police Chief Romeu Tuma said a connection was possible and he was
The border zone is a natural growing spot for epadu, an Amazonian plant similar to coca and the source of cocaine.
Police said the gunmen might be Colombian drug traffickers, who operate virtually unimpeded along the nearly 1,000-mile, largely unpatrolled Brazil-Colombia jungle border.
Three passengers on TABA Airlines Flight 835 pulled out guns and seized the plane over a remote corner of the Amazon jungle.
The gunmen forced the pilot to land in the jungle town of Sao Gabriel da Cachoeira near Colombia, and four other passengers aboard.
The gunmen then took off with the
Tuma said Colombians had been organizing epadu harvesting in the area. Brazil's federal police have made sporadic anti-drug raids there.
$1.2 million plane, an 18-seat twin-turboprop.
undertaking a rigorous investigation.
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VOL. 101, No. 111
KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TOPEA, KS 66612
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING:864-4358
MONDAY. MARCH 18, 1991
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
KU lobbies in D.C. against Defense's policy on ROTC
Administrators fight exclusion of homosexuals from reserves
By Eric Nelson
Kansan staff writer
Two KU administrators journeyed to Washington, D.C., during spring break to lobby for a change in a Department of Defense policy regarding discrimination in the ROTC program.
The trip by Frances Ingemann, chairperson of University Senate Executive Committee, and Dei Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor was spurred by the conference's anti-discrimination policy and the discrimination against homosexuals and bisexuals in ROTC
Ingemann said the two met with aides of the Kansas Congressional delegation Monday and Tuesday. The aides included staff from the offices of Sen. Bob Dole, Rep Jim Slattery, D2 district, and Rep Jan Meyers.
They met directly with Sen. Nancy Kassebaum.
The two also met with national organizations, including the American Association of Universities, the National Association of State Universities and Land Grant Colleges and the American Council of Education.
"I think we accomplished our purpose, which was to make people aware of the issue." Ingemann said. "I think we were well-signed."
Ingemann said that at least one of the national organizations said it would survey its members to see if discrimination was a national concern and would be interested in a group effort to combat the policy in Washington
"When one institution goes there, it doesn't make much impact," she said.
Ingemann said possible ways of ingmanng the policy were discussed during the trip. During the trip it was noted that the policy was not a change to the Defense policy, so it could be changed directly by the department.
Policy also could be changed by a directive from the president, similar to the way Harry Truman handled
racial guidelines during his presidency.
She said that ROTC was valuable for the state and the nation and that restriction of credit for ROTC programs, an initiative being voted on by the College of Art and Sciences Assembly, could pose problems for the University.
"If we do that it basically means eliminating ROTC on the campus," she said "The University is in a conflict there is a contract with the military."
One of the guidelines in the contract is that credit be received for the ROTC programs, Ingemann said.
But Eddie Lorenzo, Kansas City, Mo., senator, who made the motion for the college assembly vote, said the college should not have to offer credit for ROTT, co-founder.
He said that KU's contract with the Navy was vague but that he interpreted it to mean that no individual school nor the college was mandated to participate in the programs. The University may offer credit in some form, however.
"As long as it counts for graduation for something, the University is in compliance with the contract," Lorenze said.
Ingemann said an additional problem concerned the Board of Regents resolution passed in February supporting ROTC programs at Regents schools. Regardless of any decision made by KU and its individual schools and the college, the Regents would have the final decision regarding policy.
KU has had a good relationship with the Regents in the past and would not want to jeopardize it, she said.
Lorenzo supports the efforts of the administration but said he was skeptical of the intent in his actions. "I think this is just a show to detract attention from the local policy," he said.
Ingemann said that now the administration would have to wait and hope that Washington officials would work with them so that other universities step forward.
Meanwhile, KU will continue pushing for a change. This includes a nationwide day April 10 to combat the policy, Ingemann said she had received a letter from officials from the University of Wisconsin urging for a unified national effort opposing the policy.
"This is not something that gets changed overnight." she said.
ASK uses vacation to lobby Congress
By Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
The allocation of federal money, for higher education is supposed to take place in Congress this year, and members of Associated Students of Kansas spent some time in Washington, D.C., during spring break to lobby Kansas congressional members.
The Education Act of 1965 is to be reauthorized, which means Congress will decide the amount of federal money allocated to post secondary, higher education for the next five years and also the form of the money — grants or loans.
With the exception of Sen. Nancy Kassebun, who sits on a committee that will deal directly with the act before Senate votes on it, the Kansas congressional bill only when they vote on it.
Greg Hughes, ASK campus director, Mike Schreiner, student body president, and two other ASK members spent three days meeting with representatives and their aides.
Hughes said that the meetings with the representatives were important but that the representatives' aides were targeted
because they often gave information to the representatives.
tives and senators, but any real serious discussion was with the president, in which speciality was education," he said.
Hughes said that the KU group only met with one representative
Allen Pickert, Snellville, Ga., senior, said the KU group was not able to meet with other members of the House because they were in committee meetings.
"That was kind of discouraging, but their aides are the ones who study the issues," he said.
The ASK members had two main goals in mind — more federal money in grants than loans and a penalization for institutions that have a high default rate on student loans, Pickert said.
Proprietary schools, or trade schools, receive federal money by the provisions of the education act. Some of these schools have high default rates, upward of 35 percent, Pickert said.
Most voters support united Soviet Union
Currently, there is no provision in the law that cuts federal money to such schools.
"I think there is going to be some movement in the direction we wanted," Pickert said.
The Associated Press
MOSCOW - Millions of people voted yesterday on a landmark referendum on whether to preserve the fracturing Soviet Union. Violence prevented some people from casting votes and lured to the polls with scarce goods.
Hanging in the balance in the first referendum in Soviet or even Russian history was not only the fate of this vast country and its more than 100 ethnic groups, but also the future of Mikhail Gorbachev.
The Soviet president lobbed heavily for approval and predicted victory in the referendum, which asks citizens to vote to stay together in a renewed federation.
Public opinion polls had indicated it would pass, giving Gorbachev the popular mandate he seeks to crack down on separatists.
Unofficial preliminary results showed more than 94 percent of voters in four regions of the Central Asian republic of Kazakhstan voting "yes." Two-thirds of the voters in the Far East city of Kharkov also approved the referendum, election officials said.
He has been pushing for the referendum since December to bypass democratically elected legislatures in the republics that he contends are dominated by nationalist extremists.
Gorbachev wanted to appeal
directly to the people to restore national unity shattered by sometimes violent ethnic, legal and political disputes.
The country, however, already is so divided that six of the 15 Soviet republics, or 10 percent of the 200 Russian states, refused to vote on the referendum.
Violence in Moldavia yesterday reflected the fractures.
Hundreds of nationalist Moldavians, aided by police, enforced a local boycott by blocking access to the seven polling stations the Red Army set up in the republic's capital, Bucharest. A spokesman, dendent Petran Petruca said The nationalsists beat ethnic Russians and Ukrainians who tried to vote
Moldavia is among the six republics whose parliament decided not to hold a referendum. The others are the Baltic republics of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia, plus the Caucasus republics of Georgia and Armenia.
A smiling Gorbachev declared himself confident of victory as he voted near his home in southwest Moscow.
He told reporters the issue was larger than his political future.
"It is the fate of the people, of hundreds of peoples, of such a great nation," said the civilization," said the Soviet leader, as his wife, Raisa, stood at his side.
MAKE MORE O'S Miller
REVERE SERVING THIS OF BILLY SPAN
A great day to be Irish
Bonner Springs residents show their pride as their float passes the judging stand in the St. Patrick's Day Parade. Yesterday's parade, which included 80 floats, was the biggest in its four-year
Timothv Miller/KANSAN
history, said Hank Booths, parade announcer. Proceeds from the parade will go toward construction of the Ryan Gray Playground for All Children.
Tuition-increase proposal headed for House debate
Kansan staff writer
This week will be a busy one for those interested in keeping higher education financing alive.
The financing bill that the House Appropriations Committee sent to the House is scheduled to be debated on the house floor tomorrow. If approved, it will move to the Senate Means Commission later in the week.
One of the most controversial parts of the bill is the recommended tuition increases at Board of Regents institutes and area legislators do not approve of.
"I don't think the Legislature should get into the business of raising tuition." said State Rep Betty Jo Browne. "D-Lawrence 'we haven't before.'"
She said the Regents already had a proposal to raise tuition during the next three years.
"It's almost criminal, it's gross," he said. "There's no defense for that at all.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R Lawrence, agreed.
"You might as well have students write out two checks at tuition time
One to their college and one to parks and recreation or some other program that is being cut."
At the University of Kansas next
at, residents would pay an additional
$49 for a total of $662, and non-
residents would pay an additional
$435 for a total of $2.610.
Tutition information from the peer institutions, when compared to KU's tuition, reinforces Wisdom's statement. The amounts have been computed to reflect the cost of a full-time undergraduate student each semester.
"We noted that resident tuition is generally 9 percent below peers, and non-resident tuition is roughly 30 percent below peers." he said. "Our students in this program close this gap between Kansas institutions and peer institutions."
State Rep. Bill Wisdom, vice chair of the appropriations committee, said Regents schools still would be available, even with the increases.
In addition, admissions personnel at the peer schools confirmed that a would increase next fall by an amount yet determined, except where noted.
At the University of North Carolina tuition is $917.25 for residents and $2,782.70 for non-residents.
At the University of Colorado, arts and sciences students pay $921 (resident) and $4,500 (non-resident), business and engineering students pay $1,062 (resident) and $4,633 (non-resident), and pharmacy students pay $1,069 (resident) and $4,102 (non-resident).
■ At the University of Oregon residents pay $982.50, and non-residents pay $2,862.
At the University of Oklahoma, tuition is based on a per-credit-hour fee, as well as the level of the credit hour. The lower-level-class rate is $46.45 and $138.15 while the upper-level rate is $49.45 and $154.85 for residents and non-residents respectfully paid for certain number of hours. Tuition for 15 hours is competitive with KU at all levels.
■ At the University of Iowa, residents will pay $976, and non-residents will pay $2.235 next fall.
Unexplained violence racks Kuwait
The Associated Press
KUWAT CITY — A series of slayings and beatings of Palestinians, Iraqi, Kuwaitis and other people is rocking this newly liberated country and raising questions about who is in control.
"Who is in charge?" asks a Kuwaiti army major. "I don't bloody well know."
Before Iraq's invasion in August, Kuwait was one of most stable countries in the Persian Gulf region. But the Persian Gulf War disrupted every facet of life, and the recently returned government so far appears weak and unable to assert its authority.
Somebody is killing, beating and abducting Palestinians and other third country nationals. Somebody else is gunning down Kuwaiti army and resistance fighters manning checkpoints throughout the city.
It is difficult to tell just who is responsible.
The men had been shot between the eyes, they were blindfolded and their hands were tied behind their backs.
Hospital officials said that since Feb. 26, when Iraqi troops fleed Kuwait, more than 45 bodies of non-Kuwaitis had been delivered to U.S. hospitals.
Doctors said that most of the 15 bodies dumped at Mubarak al-Kabaree Hospital shared similar traits.
doctors said. Of them,12 were Palestinians; three were Iraqis.
In the Palestinian neighborhood of Hawali, several families interviewed over three days said they were missing sons or husbands.
"Now I won't let my boys leave the neighborhood," Matma Mahmoud said, pointing to her six sons.
One boy, lyd Khomana, a 13-year-old Palestinian, disappeared with three friends from a gasoline line several days after liberation, according to his aunt. His body was found March 2 with a bullet in the head, according to his death certificate.
Addu Rahman阿-Awadi, the minister of state for cabinet affairs, said fleeing Iraqis left an estimated half-million weapons in the country.
Thousands more Palestinians, Kuwaitis and members of other groups have been incarcerated, but few officials know or acknowledge them.
Scores of Palestinians, Iraqis and Jordanians have been brought to hospitals with what doctors describe as torture wounds.
Also since liberation, Ministry of Justice officials have said that 20 Kuwaiti soldiers and resistance fighters had been killed while manning checkpoints around the city, mostly in drive-by shootings.
▶ Related stories, Page 6
The Associated Press
Rebels claim that Iraqi government massacred citizens
NICOSIA, Cyprus — Rebels claimed yesterday that government forces massacred thousands of people in napalm attacks that left the burned bodies of women and children strewn along a highway in southern Iraq.
State-run newspapers in Baghdad also reported scenes of destruction in two southern cities, saying the bodies of hundreds of people killed by anti-government rioters were on the streets or stacked in hospitals.
On Saturday, in his first address since the Persian Gulf War ended in an informal cease-fire, Saddam Hussein maintained that his forces had crushed the Shite Muslim south and would defeat Kurdish guerrillas in the north.
Rebel leaders in Damascus, however, claimed that fighting still was raging across the country.
0
2
Monday, March 18, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Food Barn workers continue their strike
Kansan staff report
Local Food Barn employees continued to strike yesterday after the management's extension of the deadline for strikers to return to work.
"We were given an ultimatum to go back to work noon on Friday or be permanently replaced," said Mike Simmons, picket captain for the Lawrence Food Barn store, 1900 W. 23rd St.
"Friday they postponed the ultimatum for sometime in the near future." Simmons said. "They didn't give any definite date."
"We've accomplished what we wanted to do. turn away the regulations," Simmons said. "A lot of them who know the employees who are on
strike refuse to cross the picket line." Local managers declined to comment
Food Barn employees went on strike March 3 to protest the management's new contract proposal.
Mike Charles, union steward for the local store, said only one of the store's 12 employees who went on vacation was present during the strike, the store employed 40
Charles said he and other union members would continue to strike until the management decided to dismiss them or until Food Barn went broke.
"They are trying to entice people to buy by selling at very low prices," he said. "They can't afford to do that for very long."
Police report
A radar detector valued at $150 was taken between 11:30 p.m. Friday and 6:00 a.m. Saturday from a car in Lawrence County to the Good Drive Lawrence police reported.
Heatherwood Drive, Lawrence police reported.
■ A car stereo, speakers and amplifier valued together at $600 were taken between 3 and 5.20 a.m. Saturday from a car in the 2100 block of
A car stereo and cassette amplifier valued together at $500 were taken between 10:30 p.m. Friday and 10 a.m. Saturday from a car in the 1900 block of Heatherwood Drive, Lawrence police reported.
The University Daily Kansan (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staircase-Fint 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 $50. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
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Satellites and computers aid ecologist in search
After the computer is given digital information about known prairie lands, it then can use information from satellite pictures to identify similar types of natural areas.
"The numbers from the computer represent a reflection of objects on the earth." he said.
With the help of satellites and computers, a KU ecologist is looking for unspoiled natural areas in the Amazon rainforest to preserve them for the future.
Kansan staff writer
By Katie Chipman
Amigos®
Lauver has developed a method of finding natural areas by using satellite imagery and a computer.
"My job is to find the best examples of undisturbed prairies, forests and wetlands," said Chris Nielsen, a professor at the Kansas Biological Survey.
Lauer said the Kansas Biological Survey was in charge of administering the Kansas Natural and Environmental Resources which allows it to recommend
Lauer said the data from the satellite also could be used for resource management, research, public education and for making environmental impact assessments.
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"We hope we can integrate conservation planning with development programs," Lauer said. "We're doing a survey now for the Kansas Department of Transportation. They want to build a highway from Wichita to the southeast part of the state."
"High-quality sites are pretty much the way we think the land looked before it was settled by the Europeans," he said. "We call the land remaining pieces of natural heritage."
The state hopes to preserve those sites for future generations through a system in which land will be protected to agree to protect the area, he said.
areas that are ecologically important.
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Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 18, 1991
3
25
Area runners take to the trail for the Second Annual Shamrock Shuffle along the levee just north of the Kansas River Bridge. Ted Oritz bested a field of 176 runners in the 5-kilometer run to take
And they're off
first place in the overall male division with a time of 16 minutes, 14 seconds. Carol McFall claimed the overall female division, finishing at 19:20.
Muslim students want holy month to help all Arabs
Kansan staff writer
By Lara Gold
As Muslims around the world participate in the holy month of Ramadan, some KU Muslim students hope this period of atonement and forgiveness will ease tensions in the splintered Arab world.
"Ramadan will increase the chances for peace," said Hamed Ghazali, president of the Muslim Student Association.
Ramadan, which began yesterday, is a month-long period of daytime fasting and extra prayers. Mohammed, the Muslim prophet, is to the Koran his revelations to the Koran, the sacred book of Islam, during this time.
"We pray for God to help us and to help humanity." Ghazali said.
He said the daytime fasting was not the challenge of Ramadan.
"We cannot utter any bad word against anyone else or mistreat anybody else." Ghazali said.
The extra kindness will help Muslims, who are split over the gulf war, understand each other. he said. Muslims who normally do not per-
ticipate in daily prayers do during Ramadan, he said.
The Lawrence Islamic Center, 1300 Ohio St., which usually serves about 20 Muslim students, is expecting 40 to 50 more for prayer during Ramadan. There are about 150 Muslim students at KU, Ghazali said.
Muslims have a three-day celebration at the end of Ramadan, he said.
"It is almost equivalent to Christmas," Ghazali said. "There are parties and picnics; people give presents."
Riad Badhdadi, Damascus, Syria, graduate student, said the purpose of fasting during Ramadan was to establish equality in Muslim society where everybody is doing and feeling the same thing.
"Spiritually, you have to make yourself feel really good. You have to deal with people. You have to be generous," he said. "I hope this month will take off some hard feelings from the war.
Unique collection gives KU rare look at Irish culture
"Hopefully, it will put all parties in a state where they are more gentle and forgiving to establish peace."
University could become national center for Irish studies
Bv Beniamin W. Allen
Although many students chose to study Irish culture by quaffing green beer on St. Patrick's Day, KU may soon be one of the best places to study Irish culture on a more serious academic level.
Kansan staff writer
The Spencer Research Library is now cataloguing a unique collection of Irish literature from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
The O'Hegarty collection, which was purchased by the University of Kansas in 1939, is the personal mug of P.O. Hegarty, the first Irish postmaster.
"This has the potential to make KU a national center for Irish studies," said Richard Clement, assistant special collection librarian and director of the library.
Clement said the reason the collection never had been cataloged was because cataloguing was an complex and time-consuming task.
"It's relatively easy to get money to buy books, but it costs a lot of money to catalogue them," he said.
O'Hieargy, who was postmaster from 1922 to 1945, collected materials ranging from works of W.B. Years, an Irish playwright and poet, to
political pamphlets distributed on the streets of Dublin.
Clement said the wide range and unique nature of the materials in the collection made it one of the best collections in the nation.
Harold Orel, professor of English who teaches a humanities course on Irish culture, said the O'Hegarty collection was a primary asset to the University's special collections and the University as a whole.
"The collection has a great many rare items," he said. "O'Hegarty was a kind of book pack rat. To put it in context, he was an avid book collector."
Orel urged the students of his humanities class to use the collection for their research papers.
He said many of the items in the collection were of an ephemeral nature, such as leaflets from the trees. The trees are extremely difficult to find anywhere else.
O'Hegarty was involved in the volatile politics of his age by being a secret member of the Irish Republic, an organization of a magazine for the organization
He was fired from his position in the British postal service after he refused to sign a loyalty oath to Charles II, and men after the 1961 Easter rebellion.
the collection of books as a retirement fund that he could sell off later in life.
Clement said O'Hegartv looked on
KU was the only interested buyer of O'Hegarty's library after his death. Clement said.
"I'm the Irish national library wasn't willing to buy them but thought that they should be given the collection by me," she said. "To this day they are not too happy."
Clement said the collection remained largely unavailable for 30 years until the Department of Education started to finance the cataloging process.
The grant provided $178,000 in 1990 and $152,000 this year, and Clement said negotiations with the department probably would yield an equal amount next year.
The cataloguing process involves entering information about the books into the Online Computer Library System. The system allows worldwide can search for materials.
Once one library enters information about a book into the online system, it makes cataloging the book much easier for other libraries members because they can simply access the information from the system.
He said the reason the federal government was financing the project was because 60 percent of the buildings had never been catalogued before.
Operational changes cut costs Watkins trims staff, cross-trains to avoid health fee increase
By Amy Francis Kansan staff writer
Although Watkins Memorial Health Center has not asked for an increase in the $69.50 student health fee in its budget for the next fiscal year, it has had to make changes to compensate.
The budget for next year is expected to increase from $4.4 million to $4.7 million. But that amount may change if a salary increase for civil-service employees is passed by the council or the director of Watkins. Most of Watkins' staff would be affected.
"They will pass one, but I don't know how much," he said.
At a meeting to review the budget, which was
made available to the march, participants responded pos-
sibly to the budget.
"I'm for what they're doing. It seems to be rather effective and efficient," said Carl Damen, Student Senate treasurer, who reviewed the budget. "The budget is sound."
Keith Nitcher, University director of business affairs, said, "I think the business operation has been very good."
Some of the changes that Watkins has made with its business operations has involved its staff.
Strobl said, "The main thing we've done is reduce the number of staff."
one reason for the push to reduce the size of Watkins' staff is that salary and salary-related costs this year amounted to $3.3 million, 75 percent of Watkins' budget, he said.
In the past 10 years Watkins has reduced its staff by 17 percent, Strobl said. It did not renew two physicians' records.
"I'd love to have 10 more doctors, but if we can't afford it, we cannot afford it," he said.
The staff has been reduced about as much as possible. Strobi said. Sometimes Watkins has been left short of staff when many of its staff members have been ill or taken to the hospital, so for the smaller staff and eliminate any unneeded positions.
It is used in areas such as the X-ray department that have a low student demand for their services. Although only one person may be needed to operate a department, restrictions on how many hours a person can work created the need for more than one person being able to attend class. Strobil said. Cross training is used throughout Watkins.
Students are charged for certain lab tests and for X-rays. There is also a greater cost for medication from the pharmacy because of the rising cost of medication. Strobil said Watkins would not increase its $3 filling fee on medications.
Watkins also has tried to cut costs by asking staff members to consider a nine-month employment option, he said. An employee would work during the nine months classes are in session but not during the summer. No salary would be paid during the summer, but benefits such as insurance would be maintained.
Although there is no planned student fee increase,
there have been some increased costs to students in
the school.
Residence halls closed for break cause problems for some students
By Jonathan Plummer
Kansan staff writer
Sima Wahla, Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, sophomore, said she was lucky to find a place to stay this spring break.
Wahla said that she had signed up to stay in the residence halls during spring break but that the office of student housing announced that a hall would not be open.
Waha lah it it was the second year she had signed up to stay in a residence hall and found that a hall was not
Student housing policy this semester was that 48 students must sign up for housing before a hall would be opened. Students must attend stairs.
"The impression is always that the dorm will be open." Wahla said. "But this is my third semester here, and I knew that it probably would not be open. I applied, but I also made other plans."
On the day before spring break, Wahla said she called her friend Bishakha Bhattacharya, India sophomore who lives at Jayhawker Towers, to ask if she will stay with her. The towers stay open during all breaks.
But Wahla's contingency plan also fell through when the friend she was going to go home with found her parents had changed their plans and would not be able to take in Wahla.
"I called Bishakha and she said OK." Wahla said.
"Otherwise, I would have been in bick trouble."
Bhattacharya said that Wahla's problem was not an isolated one and that she had moved from a residence hall to the towers because of problems she had finding a place to stay during breaks.
"There is a need to keep a dorm open," she said. Gwurder Kapur, Singapore senior, said finding housing during breaks was a problem many international students faced.
He said that he had lived in the towers since he came to the University of Kansas but that he knew at least a few people who were there.
"It is one of the factors that students do not take into account, but it's a major problem; it's a bit of a problem."
David Friend, Great Britain graduate student, said that he had not experienced difficulty in finding a place to spend the break but that he could understand how other students could have problems.
"I managed to have a place to stay in Lawrence," he said. "I mostly just asked around, and luckily I found some English students who were not staying in their apartment.
"You've got to ask around in order to sort of survive. I suppose it would be more difficult to those who have trouble with the language or no friends."
Do you make too much at your present job?
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If you are qualified for any of these positions, apply today! Applications are available at the SUA Office and at the Organizations and Activities Center, both located in the Kansas Union. Applications must be returned to either location by March 28. Any questions? Call the Jayhawker Yearbook Office at 864-3728.
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4
Mondav. March 18. 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Presidential race
Bush's failure to deal with domestic problems could give Democrats a chance in '92 election
The campaign trail to the U.S. presidential election in 1992 already has begun. President Bush is off and running.
President Bush is off and running again, but someone should tell him to slow down. It looks as though the Democrats have opted to sit this one out.
Perhaps no one in the Democratic Party has put it in such a crass way, but judging from the party's overall attitude about the '92 election, they might as well.
Some polls taken after the war in Iraq ended showed that the president now has close to a 90 percent approval rating from U.S. citizens. Many Democrats are saying that there is no chance for their party to gain the presidency in '92.
The polls are certainly discouraging for the Democratic Party, but by no means should it give up so easily.
Bush may have succeeded in the Middle East and in the diplomatic area of his office.
but he has not succeeded in domestic matters. Working people all over the nation are feeling the bite of an ongoing recession. Small towns across the nation are dying. Homelessness in the United States continues to increase daily. The ever-growing budget deficit has forced state governments and the federal government to make large cutbacks in the area of health care for the poor and elderly.
The list of problems inside the United States goes on and on. One person cannot be expected to conquer all of them, but Bush hardly has declared war on any of these tragedies.
The Democrats should choose a strong contender to run against Bush in '92. Not only would they have a good chance of winning by focusing on domestic issues, but they also would be contributing to an essential part of democracy — the freedom to have a choice.
Carol Krekeler for the editorial board
Reducing oil-dependency
GM's plan to build electric cars is a good one
General Motors Corp. announced early this month that it would produce an automobile that did not burn fuel and therefore would not emit noxious fumes into the atmosphere.
GM is taking an important step toward producing the first commercially available electric car. Producing alternatives to gasoline-powered automobiles needs to become a high priority for the nation.
The electric car, the Impact, is a two-seat sports car that runs on 32 10-volt batteries.
Production of the Impact could begin as early as next year, which would mean that a 1993 model could appear in dealer showrooms a year from this fall.
GM said the new model would comply with increasingly strict federal and state clean-air and fuel-efficiency standards.
GM selected a plant in Lansing, Mich., as the production site. Although the car is experimental, it will be produced in a plant that can turn out 25,000 cars a year. This would be the company's most ambitious
venture in electric vehicles
After the oil shocks of the 1970s, many companies started programs to develop domestic alternatives to gasoline, but most companies did not follow through with plans because oil prices declined.
What may keep alternative fuel projects alive this time is the new drive from the public to clean up the environment and decrease air pollution.
The United States also will be reminded for the next couple of years of the uncertainty of some oil sources. Even though the United States has begun its military pullout from the Middle East, the Persian Gulf will continue to be blackened from burning oil wells.
Before the electric car can help reduce U.S. dependence on oil and reduce tailpipe emissions, consumers must be willing to switch to the unfamiliar — a car that does not run on gasoline. If GM can produce an economical and attractive car that is fuel-efficient, now is the time to make the switch
Amy Zamierowski for the editorial board
MARVEL Chicago Tribune
STALIN
Pacifistic view angers reservist
Today is Feb 27, 1991, the time
is 9:16 p.m., and it is my 45th
day in Saudi Arabia as a
soldier from the United States of
America.
I regretfully need to inform you that you are wrong. I do not believe in
Today I received some copies of the University Daily Kansan. I had not read the Kansan since my reserve unit was activated on Nov. 21, 1900. I was so excited that I nearly ripped the paper in half. My excitement soon turned to anger as I read through the papers.
The article that angered me as I read through it was Dave Wakefield's dissertation on the "New World Order." I am glad Wakefield gave credit to all the Americans who have died for our country to preserve the rights and freedoms we have all become accustomed to.
But then Wakefield went on to explain his philosophy of how economic sanctions and embargoes would make nations interdependent economically and unite them. He then went on to reject President Bush's deployment of U.S. troops to intervene in this crisis. He stated that he believed that months or even years of embargo and sanctions would have happened even before than to use a show of force. His reasoning was that if you cut off their economic stability, you could stop them, meaning less killing.
Kristy
Rohr
Guest columnist
nuclear armament, violence or unnecessary displays of aggression. But you have not spent seven consecutive nights in chemical protective attire. You did not see SCUD missiles blow up 500 feet above your head. You did not live with the fear of a sniper in your compound. You are not here to see the emaciated enemy prisoners of war who have no shoes, who have not eaten for weeks, and who have not had proper medical attention for life-threatening ailments. You do not have to hear the sounds of helicopters bringing food to the hospital. You don't hear the reports of the children of Kuwait who were slaughtered before their parents' eyes. You do not have to live in of being 32 miles from the Iraqi border.
Can you in all honesty say that economic sanctions and embargoes are going to stop a man who has nothing to lose and a lot of wealth to gain if he can take over Kuwait? Do you really believe that these restrictions would have stopped him from using mustard gas on his own people.
or from killing innocent children?
in the six months of anticipation before the declaration of war, we had embargoes and sanctions against Iraq. All that it seemed to do was increase the risk of spying and the spread of terrorism that Saddam Hussein carried out.
It is with an uneasy conscience that I must deal with everyday weighing of my actions, but one thing I have no problem deciding is that I am an American. I am proud to serve in the Armed Forces of the United States. And I firmly believe that our presence here in the Persian Gulf is well worth it. If it saves one person's right and freedom, then it has made me a former FCU member. I do believe that waiting for economic instability to occur while genocide occurred was the answer in this situation.
It is my hope that one day nations will not need to be greedy for wealth and power but instead that we may all live in true unity and stability, and may come together and not be governed by interdependent economics.
Kristy Rohr is a Lawrence junior majoring in cellular biology. She is currently on active duty in Saudi Arabia.
Bush talks tough, but war on crime needs action
As Bush pointed out in a speech to some prosecutors and judges, some soldiers were safer in the Middle East than in North America, making the streets of their hometowns
Now that we've shown that we can win a war with Iraq, President Bush has called upon America to win the war on crime.
So Bush said we must show the same moral force, determination and fortitude as we did in freeing Kuwait to free our cities from crime.
As a city dweller and an occasional crime victim (one armed robbery, one unarmed mugging, three burglary victims) I call for freeing our cities from crime.
THE SUNDAY NEWS
Bush talked about how we need a "real death penalty." I'm not sure what that means. We're executing someone who is really dead when we bury them,
But it isn't clear to me how Bush and his administration plan are going about it. When two young men stuck a gun to my nose, I didn't even consider displaying any determination or moral force, and I doubt if they would have been impressed. More likely, they would have shot me in the nostril. So there are times when it is better to restrain your moral force, lose your wallet, but retain your nose.
Mike Royko
Syndicated columnist
If not, they have legitimate grounds for an appeal. But we've discovered that while execution satisfies the statute, it does not do much to reduce the murder rate.
He also implied that we coddle criminals too much, letting them appeal their sentences and use "technicalities" to avoid punishment. If that's the problem, then the solution seems simple enough: Abolish the appellate courts and the state and let the courts do the work. We might, we would do away with courts entirely and let the cops dish out punishment at the station house.
But the knee-jerk liberals would mean about that, so we're stuck with our present system, which brings us to another problem — not enough prison space for all of our criminals. That's why they get out early.
There's a solution to that, though. President Bush should tell Congress that he wants to raise everybody's health insurance coverage and can help local governments
build more prisons.
Or he can take a more direct approach to launching a war on crime — using methods that have proven highly effective.
In every city, the cops know which general areas have the highest crime rates. They can even tell you which blocks are the most dangerous. In some cases, the police offices are used by the well-armed street gangs and the crack dealers.
So why mess around with writs, warrants, judges, juries, appeals and the rest of the paper work? It's like diplacy. There comes a time when the talking stops and the stomping starts.
We have the planes, we have the keenly intelligent bombs, the profoundly intellectual missiles and the pinpoint precision. So why not send them in to take out — a fine phrase, "take out — parts of the Bronx in Chicago and all the other high-crime sections of the big cities?"
Some might call that harsh. But he us be realistic. Presidents and other politicians have been taking tough about crime for decades. They said we should hang the varmints high, lock them up and throw away the clues in their minds of innocence. Why some have even gone so far as to say that we should kick ass.
But America must have the world's most stubborn criminals. They simply refuse to heed the hard words of their commander in chief. Why, some of them won't even listen to their own moms.
Of course, there are those dreamy-types who have theories about crime and its causes. They talk about the unemployment and busted families.
Fortunately, we've been blessed with Republican presidents who didn't buy any of those bleeding-heart theories: Nixon, Ford, Reagan, Bush. They know why a criminal is a threat. Beetle. Beetle. Beetle that's why. And there's no sense in throwing money atborn criminals, even if they haven't been born yet.
So it's just the luck of the draw that more born criminals grow up on the West Side of Chicago and drop out of school when they're 16 than grow in New England and go to George Bush's old prep school.
Anyway, our president says the answer is moral force, and he must be right.
But if that doesn't work, move way out to the suburbs. Most of his friends did.
Mike Royko is a syndicated columnist with the Chicago Tribune.
LETTERS to the EDITOR
City, KU police racist
This is concerning the ongoing racism in both the Lawrence police department and the KU police department.
After the comment made by former Lawrence police representative Chris Mulvenon in a recent edition of a Kansas Fraternal Order of Police magazine, there again is no doubt about the obivious problems in our city and University police departments.
For the last 10 years and more, we have been hearing city commissioners and the chief of police say we have no racial problems in Lawrence. Three American Indians have been murdered in the past four years. Poor people in trailer courts have been denied access to water. Homes of African-American people have been badly damaged because of the color of their skin. Yet, according to city officials, Lawrence has no racial problems.
On the political front, we have a city commissioner running for reelection, saying he opposes an ordinance that would allow at least one minority group a little protection from discrimination. We have a mayor saying that all statements made on racial matters must be cleared by the city manager before going to the media, which does nothing except hide the problem even more from public view. It does nothing to correct the attitudes of city officials, which is the source of the problem.
Let's face it people, until we remove these city officials who believe in and continue to support racism and discrimination. We need to take the ground for future riots, and the whites will remain supreme.
I think that Ron Olin and Chris Mulvenon from the Lawrence police department, as well as John Mullens from the KU police department, should be released from their positions immediately, before their racial attitudes destroy the entire community.
Frederick M. Markham Lawrence resident
KANSAN STAFF
Editors
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Editor
RICH CORNELL
Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Editors Business staff
News Melanie Matthes Campus sales mgr. Sophie Wohbe
Editorial Tiffany Harness Regional sales mgr. Carmen Dresch
Planning Holly M. Neuman National sales mgr. Jennifer Claxton
Campus Jennifer Reynolds Co-op sales mgr. Christine Musser
Pam Sollier Production mgrs. Rich Clarston
Sports Ann Semmertlah Kate Stader
Photography Keith Thorpe Marketing director. Gail Einbinder
Graphics Melissa Unterberg Creative director. Christy Hahs
Features Jill Hamington Classified manager. Kim Crowder
AUDRA LANGFORD
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JEANNIE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas should not include their phone numbers.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kanzan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanzan newroom, 111 Staffer-Fin Hall.
Loco Locals
WHAT'S IN THE VASE?
ROD...
WHAT'S IN THE VASE?
ROD...
BACK FROM CANCUN...
GASP!
ASHES?!?
DID HE DRINK THE WATER?
CAPPER, GET ME SOME BACTINE!
THE SUNBURN SERVES JUSTICE!
SO I SOLD THE STRIP TO A MEXICAN COMPANY...
BACK FROM CANCUN--
>GASP!
ASHES?!?
DID HE DRINK
THE WATER?
CAPPER,GET ME
SOME BACTINE!
by Tom Michaud
THE SUNBURN SERVES JUSTICE!
SO I SOLD THE STRIP TO A MEXICAN COMPANY...
University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 18. 1991
5
CALENDAR
Monday
■ KU triathletes will meet at 7:30 p.m. at Alcove A in the Kansas Union.
Recycling Task Force will meet at 5:30 p.m. at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union
Hispanic-American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Accounting and IRS will have a volunteer income tax assistance workshop at 6 p.m. in the Kansas Union.
There will be a meeting about study and work programs in Ireland at 11:30 a.m. at Alcove D in the Kansas Union.
**KU Tai Kwai Do Club will have a**
**work at 6:30 p.m. at 207 Robinson.**
**University Placement Center will**
**have a workshop about beginning the**
**job search at 3:30 p.m. in 149 Burge**
**Union.**
Tuesday
University Placement Center will have resume-writing workshops today, Wednesday and Thursday at 3:30 p.m. at 149 Burge Union
VOICE will meet at 7 p.m. at 1204
Oread Ave.
KU Fencing club will meet at 8:30 p.m. at 130 Robinson.
There will be a confidential support group for gays, lesbians and bisexuals. For information, call 843-2591 or 843-3691 or Headquarters at 843-2591.
Wednesday
Academic Computing Services will have a seminar called "Vector Programming on the VAX 9000" at 10 am at auditorium in the Computer Center.
KU Accounting Club and IRS will have volunteer income tax assistance meetings at 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. at the Kansas Union.
Society for East Asian Studies will meet at 7:30 p.m. at Dyche Auditorium.
KU Pro-Choice Coalition will meet at 7 p.m. at the International Room in the Kansas Union
- Applications for KU's Japan Summer Institute in Lawrence's sisterity, Hiratsuka, Japan, are being offered. The available are in 259 Lippincott
- Applications for KU Study Abroad Program's summer and academic year/semester are now being offered. Applications are available in 203 Lippincott
- PRSSA will meet at 7 p.m. at 202
Stauffer-Flint.
■ Women's Resource Center will have a workshop called "GullTips: Are Women Frequent Fliers?" at 7pm at the Pine Roof in the Kansas City area.
KU Study Abroad in Spanish-speaking countries will have an information session at 3 p.m. in 3040 Wescoe.
■ KU Study abroad in French-speaking countries will have an information session at 4 p.m. at 205 Wescoe.
Thursdav
**Women's Resource Center will have a workshop called "Women It Is Littl A Man's World!" at 7 p.m. Pine Room in the Kansas "kans
Lawrence Area Draft Counseling Network will meet at 4 p.m. at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
■ KU Equestrian Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union.
Undergraduate Philosophy Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the Malott Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Bioethics Club will meet at 7 p.m. at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union.
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Monday, March 18, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
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SHOW YOUR KU SPIRIT JOIN
Get involved with the University and the Football program by participating in the 1991-92 Crimson Crow
KU CRIMSON CREW!
This is a great experience for anyone interested in Public Relations, Communications, Marketing, or other related fields.
All interested freshmen, sophomores, and junior are asked to attend an informational meeting in room 135 Parrot Athletic Center;
KU
THURSDAY, MARCH 21 AT 5 P.M.
Any questions, call the Football Office at 864-3393.
Kansas Alpha Chapter
Sigma Alpha Epsilon presents
HARMONY IN A WORLD OF DIFFERENCE
A Workshop on Cultural Diversity, Prejudice Reduction and Coalition Building Saturday, March 23, 1991 Kansas Union 8:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. Admission Free • Registration Limited
Yes, I will attend the Harmony in a World of Difference workshop sponsored by Kansas Alpha Chapter, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Saturday March 23, 1991. I understand that registration in this course will come first, served basis.
Address
City State Zip
Erie Green/Affiliation Phone #
Mail to: hcarney in a World of Difference, cnw Sigma Alpha Episcopi,
1301 W. Campus Park, Lawrence, KS 66042
Mail to: Harmony in a World of Difference, c/o Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Together we can make a world of difference.
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Oil spills into Santa Monica Bay
About 55,000 gallons of light oil lipped yesterday into Santa Monica Bay, glazing five square miles of water after a tanker apparently pierced an underwater pipeline with its anchor.
The closest oil to shore was a mile from the Chevron USA Inc. refinery in El Segundo, said Chevron representative Tom Richart.
Thirteen skimmers and boom-towing boats were sent to contain the spill, but Richard said there was not much they could do because the fuel was too light.
Three oil-soaked birds were recovered from the bay for cleaning, said Lt. Reed Smith of the state Department of Fish and Game.
By dawn, oil had stopped leaking from the 7,100-foot pipeline, situated 60 feet underwater and connecting the Chevron refinery to an unloading mooring one mile offshore, officials said.
Johannesburg, S. Africa At least 15 killed in violence
At least 15 people died in scattered violence yesterday, including four killed before a peace rally that drew more than 2,000 supporters of a leading antiwar group, police said.
Six people died in fighting at a hostel, and five died in other incidents, police said.
The violence occurred despite peace meetings last week between Inkatha and the rival African Union.
Inkatha conducted the rally in Alexandra township, which is in Johannesburg, as part of what it called its effort to stop violence in the tense community.
Armed group members wearing red headbands symbolic of inkatha gathered at the rally site yesterday morning under the gaze of soldiers, many carrying automatic riffles.
Muscat, Oman
Iran to resume Saudi relations
Iran's foreign minister said yesterday that his country soon would resume diplomatic ties with Saudi Arabia, ending one of the Islamic world's most pressing issues, the official Oman News agency reported.
The report came after a surprise three-hour meeting between the Iranian minister, Ali Akbar Velayati, and his Saudi counterpart, Prince Saud al-Faisal.
Relations between the two states broke off in April 1988. They had collapsed after Saudi security officials battled rioters during the annual Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca in August 1987 and 275 Iranians died. Each country blamed the other for causing the disaster.
LIMA, Peru — With the death toll from cholera already above 300, the possibility of an extended shutdown of water and electric service has health officials fearing the epidemic could quickly spread.
Peru facing epidemic water service shutdown
The Associated Press
From The Associated Press
Most of Lima's 7 million people awake Saturday at the faculties dry house of emergency work at the clinic.
The city's electric company cut off power in poor sections of Lima yesterday for repairs on ruins.
It was not known how long either of the shut-
downs would last, but lack of water or electric
council power would mean it would be hard.
More than 71,000 cholera cases have been reported in Korea, with 308 confirmed deaths. The number of new cases has increased.
Cholera, a bacterial infection that causes serious diarrhea and dehydration, is spread by contact with contaminated feces, often on food and in water.
Medical experts said the water cutoff will make it harder for people to wash and cook food properly. Unaffirmed tooths are particularly worrisome because they can lead to the disease, said a Health Ministry representative.
A representative for the water company said workers must remove large amounts of debris from intake pipes, and it was not known how long that would take. Most water company workers should be given higher pay, but the representative said nonstrictive workers and managers could remove the debris.
The electrical cutoff was ordered so the utility Electrolitra could make emergency repairs to towers. It is not known how long repairs will take because Electrolitra workers are expected to begin a strike today to demand the government respect labor contracts. President Alberto Fujimi annulled all contracts in August as part of a severe austerity program.
The water company said 85 percent of Lima's residents have running water in their homes. The city is also building a new water treatment plant.
Without electricity, the pumps that move water to the roofs of multistory buildings cannot work. So even when there is water in street mains, there may be no water in apartments.
Some 70 percent of Lima's water comes from the Rimac River, which flows out of the Andean coastal plain. The other 30 percent comes from wells, most of which feed into the main water plant.
Ban lifted in Israeli cities
But many Palestinians lose jobs in Tel Aviv, Haifa; employers, tired of waiting, hire Soviet immigrants
The Associated Press
JERUSALEM — Nearly 300,000 Arabs from the occupied territories tried to return to jobs in Israel yesterday after authorities lifted a ban on their employment. The Arabs found their jobs taken by Soviet Jewish immigrants.
Tel Aviv and Haifa had been closed to Palestinians since the start of the Persian Gulf War, when the occupied territories were put under curfew to prevent pro-Iraq unrest.
Brig. Gen. Fredy Zach, deputy government coordinator in the territories, said Tel Aviv and Haifa were reopened as part of a gradual post-war return to normalcy. Jerusalem, off-limits since an Arab stabbed four women to death March 10, also was reopened.
He added that precautions were taken to prevent violence. Only Palestinians registered with the Israeli employment service were allowed in and they had to undergo a security check before entering. Another, a military government rep-
residentative, said 20,000 Arabs came in from the West. Bank and 9,000 from the Gaza Strip.
"We are talking about many thousands of 'breadwinners who bring home food, and their need for food is met.'"
The number of Arabs entering Tel Aviv and Haifa yesterday was well below the 45,000 allowed back to other parts of Israel last week. Many Arabs left for the United States called in the occupied territories to support Iraq.
The Palestinian underground and Hamas, an Islamic fundamentalist movement, called for the strike in leaflets, condemning aggression against Iraq by the United States and its allies.
Ordinarily, more than 100,000 Palestinians have jobs in Israel. But since last fall, when a surge in Palestinian violence coincided with an influx of immigrants, many of the jobs have gone to Soviets.
Shmuel Ozenboy, a military government rep-
Jewish garage owner Danny Levy said he replaced his five Arab workers with six Soviet Jews.
"The problem with the Arabs is that they came in late because of security issues upsetting the work schedule." Levy told Israel army radio "So I gradually cut them out and absorbed immigrants in their place."
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APPLE
Karen Hutchinson Pianist
Premiere of Donald Keat's Piano Sonata [1961], and Jacques Casterede's
Hommage à Thelonius Monk
Hommage a Thelonius Monk [Commissioned by the Marguerite Long Competition in Paris, 1983, following the death of the great African-American jazz pianist in 1982]
"A born virtuoso temperament, full of flair and dash." San Francisco Chronicle
"First class"
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For further information, please call 864-8016. Sponsored by the Office of Minority Affairs, Music Department Minority Affairs Committee of Student Senate, Student Senate Women's Student Union, UJIMA, Black Men of Today, and the Black Student Union.
Black Student Union Ms. Hutchinson's accommodations courtesy of The Eldridge Hotel.
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 18, 1991
7
Jayhawks win frigid slugfest
Bv Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
A five-run fifth inning keyed the Kansas baseball team to a 12-8 victory against the Northeastern Illinois Eagles yesterday afternoon at a game.
Kansas coach Dave Bingham said that the weather was not a factor in yesterday's game.
As the temperature dropped, the wind began blowing out to left-center field, contributing to a combined five home runs in the game.
"With our baseball team, sometimes it is," he said. "I would like to get back to the point where it isn't."
The Jayhawks led the Eagles 43 heading into the home half of the fifth when Kansas second baseman Jeevon Watson hit of his two home runs in the game.
Singles by Kansas designated hitter Kent Mahon, centerfielder Chris Moore and third baseman Gerry McNeill. The Jays won the Jawahkeys to a 9-3 lead.
The Eagles answered with one run in the top of the sixth on a base-empty home run by rightfielder Steve Carpenelli.
The Jayhawks appeared to have control of the game despite the home run, but disaster struck Camara in the top of the seventh inning.
The Kansas third baseman was charged with four errors in the inning as the Eagles scored four runs off one hit, pulling to within one run of the
Baseball
Javhawks. 9-8
Kansas managed to stop the Eagles' charge, however, scoring two runs in the bottom of the seventh inning and triple and a Moore sacrifice fly.
Berblering slammed his second saes-empty home run in the top of he eight inning, giving the 'Hawks 12-8 victory.
Berblering said the Jayhawks were gearing up for their big Eight Conference opener next weekend against Kansas State.
"We're getting better, but there's some things we need to work on this week." he said.
Kansas junior Mike Massey pitched 6% in innings in picking up his second victory of the season against no losses.
Massey was charged with eight runs, four of them earned, struck out three Eagles and surrendered seven hits.
Kansas sophomore Joel Bacon retired seven of seven batters in a perfect relief pitching performance.
The Jayhawks were 6-2 during spring break, including a victory against national powerhouse Texas in Austin.
Emporia, 118. will play host to the Emporia State Hornetns at 2 p.m. tomorrow at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
24
Kansas' Gerry Camara dives to first base safelv, avoiding Northeastern Illinois' John Clarco. Kansas won yesterday's game 12-8.
Victory advances Jayhawks to Sweet 16
By S. J. Bailey
Kansan sportswriter
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Look out Sweet Sixteen. Here come the Kansas Javwhaws!
For the first time since it won the NCAA championship in 1988, the Kansas basketball team advanced to the regional of the NCAA tournament with a 77-64 victory against the Pittsburgh Panthers on Saturday night at Freedom Hall in Louisville, Ky.
The Jayhawks, the third-seeded team in the southeast region, entered the round of 16 and will play in Charlotte, N.C. on Thursday against the Indiana Hossiers, by field marshal. coach Bobby Knight.
Although the southeast region was not considered one of the strongest brackets, the road to Charlotte was not an easy one for the Jawhaws.
Kansas had to shake off peeky New Orleans 55-49 in the first round Thursday afternoon before earning the NL duel with Pitt in the second-round.
And for the first half of the game,
that's exactly what it was — a duel.
Kansas bolted out of the starting gate, jumping out to a 14-2 lead in the early minutes of the game. After a 9-2 Pitt run closed the gap at 16-11; Adonis Jordan nailed two three-points on consecutive Kansas possessions, increasing the Jayhawk margin.
But long-range jumpers would become the norm as the Panthers stormed back behind the accuracy of their three-point shooters. With the Jayhawks in control 22-15, the Panthers' next five baskets from the floor came from behind the three-point line. Tim Glover's trey with 38 seconds remaining in the half gave Pitt its first lead at 32-31.
Comparisons of KU teams abound
After a Terry Berry free throw tied the game at 32-32, Richard Scott hit a jumper at the buzzer and gave Jayhawks a two-point halftime lead.
Bv S. J. Bailev
Kansan sportswriter
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Whether they're called underdogs or overachievers, one thing this season's Kansas basketball team must be called from here on out is one of the top 16 teams in the nation.
Now that they have entered the Sweet 16, the Jayhawks want to forget about the early exit the 30-5 Jayhawks made from last year's NCAA tournament at the hands of UCLA.
But comparisons of this year's team and last year's team continued to abound at Saturday's postgame press conference after the Panthers lost to the Packers. Panthers for the right to enter the round of 16 in Charlotte, N.C.
Senior forward Mark Randall said he thought the loss of last year's seniors, paired with the addition of this year's new players, gave the Jayhawks an entirely different look.
really compare this team with last year's team," he said. "This year, it has been a matter of coming together and understanding that we are a good basketball team when we are taught things that have been taught to us.
"More than that, it's having the desire to go out and win. I'm not going to say that last year's team didn't have that, but I know this year's team works just as hard, if not harder, because we wanted to come out and do something that year's team did not accomplish.
"I've said all along you can't
Sophomore guard Adonis Jordan echoed Randall's sentiments.
"We've already accomplished a lot this year that last year's team didn't accomplish," Jordan said. "We had a better record last year, we beat the Raptors best we beat Missouri twice, and now we're going to the Sweet 16."
Coach Roy Williams said that he thought the two teams' levels of talent should not be compared but
that the situations each faced going into the tournament had obvious differences.
"Last year's team had so much pressure and expectation at the end of the season that it really bothered them," Williams said. "They may have been too good for their own good if I can say that kind of thing because they were so conscious of what other people thought."
"This year's bunch, for the most part, cares more about what I think and what the coaching staff thinks. They work for themselves and for the coaches and, frankly my dear, don't give a lot about what everybody else thinks, and I think that is a great quality to have.
"I've called them overachievers, but I can tell you one other thing they can be called, and that is a competitive bunch of kids," he said. "They win prizes, and I think they are the best anyone can describe these kids."
"I congratulated our team for getting the ball down the court and getting the shot before the half," Kansas coach Roy Williams said. "I think that was something positive for us. I'm not going to say that was the reason, but it meant, but it was something I could drag on them about at halftime."
In the second half, the Kansas offense began to click. With the Panthers up 37-36 at the 18:08 mark, Terry Bury drilled two consecutive three-pointers and gave Kansas the lead for good.
Brown, who ended the first half with four points on one-for-seven shooting, finished with 22 points, including four three-pointers.
Adonis Jordan added 16 points on six-of-eight shooting from the field, including four of five three-pointers. Alonzo Jamison also provided an extra 9 points pulled down five rebounds and scored all of his 13 points in the second half.
"When I missed the shots in the first half, I was thinking, 'Oh no, not again.'" Brown said. "In the second half, I got all of my confidence back. I knew the game was close and we needed some points. Those two threees kind of turned the game around."
"I always write three things up on the board before every game, and the first one today was, 'play the most aggressive defense ever,'" he said. "He made our team remembered that and really got after them defensively."
Kansas' defense also sparked, limiting the Panthers to 38 percent shooting from the field and forcing 11 turnovers.
Defense also was one of the keys to the Jahayhacks 55-49 victory against the New Orleans Privateers on Thursday.
Williams said the defense, which had been the catalyst for the Jayawhaks' performance all season, was the key to the Kansas victory.
The Privateeans came into the first-round contest leading the nation in rebounding margin with 9.5 boards as game more than their opponents.
The Jayhawks knew they would have to be tough on the glass to stop the Privates. But they also would have to be prepared for a slow-tempo, low-score game, much like the Nets' win over the team from the Big Eight Conference.
"They played a lot like Kansas State." Mike Maddock said after the game. "They sagged a lot on defense, and made it hard to get the ball inside. It was kind of an ugly game. We played us, we played K-State this season."
Ugly might have been an understatement. At halftime, the two teams were tied at 26-26, with no player on either team scoring more than six points. In the second half, the New Orleans looked better, Kansas not 37 percent from the field while New Orleans looked frozen, shooting only 23 percent.
For the game, the Jayhawks shot their lowest percentage of the season, 41 percent, and had their lowest output this season with 55 points.
"The kind of game played out there today did not surprise me," Williams said. "Their style of play fit in perfectly with what usually gives us problems. Throughout the season we could be great or ugly, even in the heat." If you want to play today, but I think we got what we wanted down the stretch."
What they got was a break. The play came with Kansas up 52-49 and Alonzo Jamison at the free throw line with 59 seconds remaining. Jamison made the first and missed the second, but Steve Woodberry came back. Jamison rebound. Secondes later. Adrian Jonis sank two free throws, securing the victory that put the Jayhawks in the second round.
Mike Maddox led the Jayhawks with 12 points and six rebounds, and Mark Randall added 10 points and eight rebounds.
Kansas falls to Nebraska in Big Eight
By S. J. Bailey
Kansan sportswriter
KANAS CITY, Mo. — There was a bit of dea vu awaiting the Kansas basketball team at this year's Big Ten tournament at Kemper Arena.
Similar to last year, the Jayhawks emerged victorious in the opening round, but were ousted by a team that had won for the tournament championship.
Last season, the Jahyahs cruised past Iowa State 118-75 in the first round before being upended by the Oklahoma Sooners 95-77 in the semi-
This year, Kansas, the No. 2 seed in the tournament behind the Oklahoma State Cowbys, defeated the Colorado Buffaloes 82-76 and advanced to the second round match-up against the Nebraska Cornhuskers.
Mark Randall led Kansas with 10 points and 9 rebounds, and Adonis Jordan and Terry Brown each added 15 points.
Nebraska proved to be too much for the Jayhawks as Kansas was down 87-83 in a game in which Washington had been termed questionable at best.
Even a gag order preventing coaches from commenting on the officiating not sufficiently stop them, and Williams from expressing his disgust.
"I felt totally helpless," Williams said after the game. "I don't want to take anything away from Nebraska or the great feelings they are enjoying right now to comment on three questions." He had to be dictators out on that court.
Terry Brown led the Jayhaws with 17 points, and Adonis Jordan and Mark Randall contributed 14 and 13 points respectively.
KU swimmer honored at Big 8
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
Sophomore swimmer Shawn Stevens was honored as the outstanding performer at the Big Eight Conference swimming and diving championships that took place March 7-9 in Lincoln, Neb.
Stevens played a big part in helping the Jayhawks to a second-place finish in the meet by winning three individual events.
During the first day of competition, Stevens and sophomore Troy Reynolds won individual events. Also, the 400 medley relay team of Stevens, seniors Jeff Stout and John Easton, and junior Eddie Riddle won its race.
The second day of the meet began with the Kansas 200 team team setting Big Eight, school and Bob Devaney Scoorts Center records.
Nebraska's 601 medley relay team was disqualified from the event, and at the end of the day, Kansas led in scoring. 188-184
The team, consisting of Stout, Riddle, Stevens and sophomore Robert Townsend, swam the race in front of the second place finish and the records, the team
Swimming
qualified for the NCAA meet
Stevens concluded his streak of wins on the last day of competition when he won the 200-yard breaststroke at the Big Eight conference record.
Kansas scored 590 points at the meet, the most ever scored by a Kansas team at the Big Eight conference championships, but it was not enough to ward off the perennial power of Nebraska. The Cornhuskers won the conference title for the 12th consecutive year.
After he was named outstanding athlete of the meet, Stevens said he was surprised by his success, especially after making a key decision as quick to praise the team's effort.
Stout won the gold medal in the 100-yard backstroke, and Stevens won his second title, winning the 100-yard breaststroke.
"We came together really well, and I think at the top we dominated," he said.
Stevens said he thought the team was only a few swimmers away from
The conference coaches recognized Kansas coach Gary Kempf as the 1991 Big Eight coach of the year. Kempf said the honor was nice, but that it was really a tribute to the athletes and the entire coaching staff.
winning the meet
"This is the best team race we had in 10 years," he said. "We just run out of power at the end. But we didn't run out of heart or effort."
Sophomore qualifies for championship meet
Senior Kelley Kauzlarich and sophomore Tim Davidson competed in zone meet diving championships yesterday in Favetteville, Ark.
Divers must qualify among the top five finishers at the zone meets to compete in the NCAA championships.
Davidson finished fifth on the 3-meter board with a score of 456.75. He will travel to Austin, Texas, on the 28-30 for the NCAA championships.
Kauzlarich did not qualify.
Women's teams tumble on trip through desert
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas began the week with a 0-9 loss to Brigham Young and a 1-6 loss to Tennessee in Provo, Utah. The Jayhawks then lost 1-8 to Utah in Salt Lake City and 0-9 to Arizona State in Phoenix.
The Kansas women's tennis team fell four times to top-tranked teams during a spring break trip to Utah and Arizona.
The losses snapped the Jayhawks' four-match winning streak.
The Jayhawks' luck, however, appeared to change against Grand Canyon on Friday.
All of the Kansas players were leading their opponents in the second sets of their singles matches when rain suspended the game.
Kansas junior Page Goins said the Jayhawks benefitted from plaving the tougher teams.
The rainout against Grand Canyon was a frustrating end to the trip. Golns said.
"It was hard to keep our morale up, but knowing they were good teams helped." she said.
Kansas junior Renee Raychaudhuri said the Jayhawks played with confidence.
"It would have helped if we could have finished the last match," she said. "We like to think we won it, though."
"I don't think anyone has played as tough a schedule except maybe Oklahoma State," she said.
"In Utah, the altitude was hard to adjust to, but in Arizona, we all hit well," she said. "It was good us. We all improved each day."
Raychaudhuri said the tough competition would help the Jayhawks prepare for Big Eight Conference play.
Kansas attends NCAA track championships Kansan staff report
The NCAA indoor track championships were conducted in Indianapolis on March 10 and 11.
Kansas was represented at the meet by all-American pole vaulter Pat Mason and the men's 3,200-meter relay team. Manson, Aurora, Colo., senior, finished the place with a jump of 18 feet 1/4 inch.
Istvan Bagula of George Mason
University won the event and an event
NCAA indoor meet record with a
ump of 19 feet $ \frac{3}{4} $ inch.
Seniors Stacey Smielcala and Donie Anderson, Sophomore, James Teal and freshman Dan Waters ran the 3,200-meter relay in 7:29.57 and fin-
Georgetown won the event with a time of 7:19.86.
Both Manson and the relay team returned to Lawrence with all-American honors. To finish all-team, a top six finish must be recorded.
The Kansas men's and women's track teams will open their outdoor seasons in the Alumni Meet on March 23 in Lawrence.
8
Monday, March 18. 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Reading for Comprehension and S-P-E-E-D
FUN
STUFF
Boxers
Bolo Ties
Sunglasses
Watches
Jewelry
Novelty Lingerie
Etc.
The
Etc.
Shop
Clothing & Accessories
For Men & Women
Sunglasses
Corporate
732 Mass 843-0011
Tuesday, March 19, 26 and April 2
3:30-5:30 p.m. (six hours of instruction)
Register and pay $17 materials fee
by 5 p.m., Monday, March 18
123 Strong Hall
123 STRONG HALL
SAC
GY 9044
FREE PIZZA! BUY ONE & GET ONE FREE
I
SPECIAL COUPON
PYRAMID PIZZA
MONDAY MANIA
Buy Any PYRAMID PIZZA & Get
The Second Pizza (of equal value)
FREE!
Honey available at
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PYRAMID PIZZA
MONDAY MANIA
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842-3232
14th & Ohio, Lawrence, Kansas (under the Wheel) A Lawrence tradition since 1978
PYRAMID
PIZZA
We Pile It On!
- Pool & Volleyball
Now leasing 1,2,3, & 4 bedroom apts for Fall & Summer
- Small Pets OK with deposit
South Pointe Apartments
- Inexpensive gas heat
- Quiet location
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- Close to bus route
2166 W. 26th 843-6446 Open 10-5, M-F & Sat 12-5
We can give you a summer job that will take you places. Places like Los Angeles, San Francisco, Dallas, New York and Miami just to name a few. Affiliated Services, Inc., an agent for Mayflower Transit is looking for hard working individuals with a sense of adventure to fill summer positions in our household goods fleet.
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For More Information Attend A Free Seminar
Date: Wednesday, March 20, 1991
Place: Burge Union Building, Pioneer Room
Time: 7:00 p.m.
Call 1-800-332-2604 to register. You do not need to register to attend, but it would be appreciated.
Affiliated Services, Inc.
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Maryland Moyer Transfer, and the ship and office services and service modes of Maryland Transfer Inc.
P.O. Box 107 Indiana, Indiana, 46205-1227 CE Item # MC-2944. Printed in USA © 1911 Maryland Transfer Inc.
New The1991 LSAT Be Prepared. Kaplan Is.
Take the LSAT course that gets more students into law school than other books, tutors, or prep courses combined. Your future in law rests on the next call you make. CLASSES NOW FORMING
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Both exams will be given on March 27,1991
7-10 p.m. in room 301 Snow
To participate you must register in 405 Snow
COPIES OF LAST YEAR'S COMPETITION ARE POSTED OUTSIDE 405 SNOW
by noon, March 27, 1991.
The
Etc. 723 Mass
Shop
Ray-Ban
SUNGLASSES
BANGLADESH
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The
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Shop
B.C.R.
JUNKMAN and the Euphoria String Band
L I V E
8PM AT LIBERTY HALL
THURSDAY, MARCH 21
Tickets: $4 in advance Available at: Simple Goods, Liberty Hall
N
JUNKMAN and the Euphoria String Band
LIVE
8PM AT LIBERTY HALL
THURSDAY, MARCH 21
Tickets: $4 in advance Available at: Simple Goods, Liberty Hall
L I V E
8PM AT LIBERTY HALL
THURSDAY, MARCH 21
Tickets: $4 in advance Available at: Simple Goods, Liberty Hall
& Mass Street Music
$5 at the door
60 oz. pitcher for 3 bucks.
$3 60oz. Pitchers 2 for1 Burger baskets Every Monday
at
BENCHWARMERS
Southern Hills Mall
1601 West 23rd St.
841-9111
Y
100's
Classified Directory
男 女
*Announcements*
106 Personnel
110 Business
112 Attendance
124 Announcement
128 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
200's
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
100s Announcements
105 Personal
SWM, 27, seeks special lady for long term relationship. If you are a single woman, 18-30 and also seek someone special, then tell me about yourself. Pip-O P.O. 442442, Lawrence, KS
110 Bus. Personal
FORMAL WEAR
The Etc. Shop
Habits, phobias, stress, anxiety, pain, smoking, weight and other disorders. Hypnotherapy Center. 8427594.
B. A. AUTO MOTOMATI is your full service auto repair shop. Classic to computerized. Body shop available. Motorcycle motorcycle repair and accessories 510 N. 6th #486 - 6. VISA. Accessories 510 N. 6th #486 - 6. VISA.
Bausch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sunglasses
20% Below Salem, Retail
The Etc. Shop
731 Mass, 843411
The ETC, Snap
Rental and Sales. 732 Mass.
Graduate student want to commence from KC area. Prefer M-8-4. Call 181-3650 if interested.
Those crazy people at Pyramid Pizza are letting you buy any Pyramid Pizza & get the second Pizza (of equal value) FREE!
MILK CHOCOLATE
BUY ONE PIZZA
& GET THE SECOND
ONE FREE!
300's
Monday Mania
Honey available at request for additional cost.
for additional cost.
(limited lunch delivery area)
Also, try our Colomba Frozen
-
842-3232
14th & Ohio
(under The Wheel)
400's
PYRAMID
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
DO YOU FEEL SECURE?
ARE YOU SAFE?
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" makes sense on Western Cowt! makes sense to use! Available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Crier Bookstores
CAPPUCINO CRIME IS UP. ARE YOU PROTECTED OUR COMPLETE LINE OF DOCUMENTS? HAVE AN IMPORTANT PERSONAL SECURITY PRODUCTS WILL PROTECT BOTH YOU AND YOUR SONS. DO YOU KNOW YOUR PERSONAL VIOLATION? FOR A CATALOGUE SEND $2.00 ALONG WITH
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CAMPUS SECURE CONCEPTS
128 WINDING WAY
BATTLE CREEK, MI 49017
Make a SPECTACLE of yourself.
The Ete. Shop sunglasses
SUNGLASSES
The Etc. Shop
120 Announcements
Clothing & Accessories
For Men & Women
Sunglasses & Costumes
732 Masa. 843-6011
Call Douglas County Rape Victim's Support Service for confidential and caring assistance. If you need help, call 844-3506 or 841-2845.
*College Money, Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money refunded. America's Finest! 1081; CBL 1081; American Express 1081; Box 1081, MO 648021 1-800-797-4583
EARTH MOTHER ARTS
Now has incredible beeswax & plant pigment crayons, paints, and high quality recycled sketches for all serious artists. The Antique Mall. 800 Mass. Lower level.
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2345. Headquarters.
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling. A friendly way to voice. Free confidential referrals (called referees by counselors). Headquaters KU Info 843-306 Sponsored by GLOSK
INCREASE YOUR READING SPEED AND COMPREHENSION! Tuesday morning 19, 26 and Wednesday morning 30, 27. Register and pay $47 materials fee by iPam Day March 18th at the Student Assistance Center.
Suicide intervention - If you're thinking about suicide, are you are concerned about someone who is ill? 841 842 1419 1419. Headquarters Counseling Center.
THE WAR AFFECTS US-For a caring listener or info on support services, call Headquarters Counseling Center. 841-2945.
University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 18, 1991
9
130 Entertainment
Lawrence Info Center, content orientated BBS.
841-2752, N, 1
140 Lost-Found
Found | pair Pewter colored wire framed single vision glasses behind Summerfield Hall. Please contact Chris at 864-1214.
contact Carsm at 864-1234
Lost Dog, Small, blond, looks like terrifier with pink collar. Call 841-7534
Found. Set of keys, in the vaccinity of 17th and Ver-
Found: Set of keys, in the vacinity of 17th and Vermont. Call 842-6527 to identify.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Seeking students and grads to fill many positions.
Airline will train. Excellent salary and travel benefits. 303-441-2455.
Bartender needed weekends. Apply in person 7-10 pm TR Sat. Just a Playhouse, 800 W. 29th (behind McDonald's). Must be 21.
Retirement Community now seeking part time receptionist. Must possess good communication skills, ability to work in a team and be confident: Opening for night and weekend shifts with average of 14 hour/week. Please apply in person.
1501 Inverness Drive Lawrence, KS FOE
GOOD JOBS Are found with great resumes! Get that new job with a quality resume written & produced by professionals.
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Call Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(913) 448-3121Leave message after 5
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camp. Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics, team sports, camping, camps, drama, or riding. Also kiteboarding, offence maintenance $100 or more. Campfire, Heater, 765 Mildle, NHP, IL 6009, 780-464-2444
Caregivers need now. Trust Community Services (TCS) needs caring individuals to provide care for the children and families with widesite respite care to families who are involved in the constant care of a disabled child or elderly person. TCS also provides respite care and are in need of people who can work变频ers. Please call 842-3190 for an application.
Earn while you learn. Manpower is looking for students interested in carrying out pay plus career training and business experience, plus free use of the computer and business experience, plus a sophomore or above, with at least a B average and are computer familiar. Manpower needs you to have a Bachelor's degree in IBM Personal Secretary 2 on campus. For IBM Personal Secretary 3 on campus.
FAST FUND RASING BRAIN $1000 in just one week. Earn up to $1000 for your campus organization. Plus a chance at $600 more! Need help? Call 1-800-932-6258. Ex: 504
Great job in Philadelphia suburb. Have fun with each of 53 hours weekly. Earn great salary, room, board and 2 weeks paid vacation. Nartsa Music School Call Eliseah at 624-342-6461.
Immediate hotel sales position available with a Lenoxa company. Weekends only, good money some travel, expenses paid and a variety of benefits. 138-365-8035 when betum 6pm Monday-Friday
Unique Career Opportunity $11,000 start and begin
BOWHARDING SUMMER for sophomore and junior high students with children. Backpacking, borehose hiking with children. Cascading, ratting, many outdoor programs. BOOK OUT: WESTERN GAMES. P.O. Box 162, FLORIANSTAR
Need managers for rapid growing corporation
No exp necessary. Will train in sales, marketing
and management. Call 1-262-8911
225 Professional Services
Driver Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
DWI-TRAFFIC
DWI-TRAFFIC
JERRY HARPER
LAW OFFICES
1101 Mass. Lawrence 749-0123
Government photography, passports, immigration,
vies, senior portraits, modeling & art portfolio,
photographer, wedding photographer
Model portfolio,婚礼,wedding photograph
passport $5.00 Bai 841 6900 or
email passport $5.00 Bai 841 6900
Richard A. Frydman
Attorney at Law
842.4039
For All Municipal and District Court Matters Free Initial Consultation
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 400-6028
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence, 841-916.
Theme & Dessertations
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping
Lawrence Printing Service. 512 E 9th Street
843-4000
TRAFFIC • DUI'S
Fake ID$ & alcohol offenses
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
Attorney
16 East 13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
1-dier Women Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribble into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of later quality. #843-262, days or evenings.
843-754, *Pursues*, term papers, thesis, etc. #843-754 to 3.30 p.m. anytime, awkly ends.
Absolute cheapest typing in Lawrence.
$1.00 double-spaced page. Rush jobs no problem.
749-648.
Accurate typing, Resumes, Theses, Letters, Call Melay,
1-913-8457-4754 or 848-3181.
W- I Typing Services 814.946 Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters, manuscripts and word processing Dana's Quality T typing and Word Processing Term paper, thesis, dissertations, letters, manuscripts and word processing G-W 2018 W- I Writing and spelling corrected
Tn. b, ma. s-p, P: S-b, ma. s-p, 842-2744
Type fast and accurate. $1.75 page. 542-1606
I will correct grammar, punctuation or spelling errors, edit and type your words of wisdom and, in general, help you produce your best possible papers. 84-6235
Professional Typist Reasonable rates. Call 842-3203.
Professional resumes-Consultations, formating, typesetting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc. 927] Mass. 104-1701.
TheWORDTOCTORS-Why pay for typing when you can have word processing? IBM, MAC, laser. Since 1983. 943-3147
Typing and Word Processing - Any size job! Information and price quotes, call 749-3024
WordPerfect word processing. Ink Jet printer
Near Orchards Corners. Phone 843-8568
Word Processing/Typing: Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing, composition.
HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254
Word Processing-Spelling checked. $1.00 pg
2-space. 843-4638
300s Merchandise
Black Fender Guitar (Squire) with maplewood neck, trem. system and case. Excellent condition Only $150 Call Mike. 749.6025 after 5am.
Kenwood 100w amp, CD, tape deck, tuner, 3-way speakers. Excellent condition. $450 for all Eudora, 542-2023
Pentax ME Super 35 mm camera. Lens, case filter, flash included, excellent condition. $160
841-2966
340 Auto Sales
186 Mitchell Shipyard Corda. 5pil. 2door, hbk several new parts. Good condition. Asking 942.875 7407
88 Bug. 72 superbase. one run. one in good steel light beld钢铁. Make off. 842 099
'80 Oldsmobile Omega, AC, AT, PS, cruise, am/fm cassette, good condition. Must sell. Best offer. B41 841-8321 after 6pm
360 Miscellaneous
BUY SELL LOAN CASH
On TV, VTVs. jewelry stereo, musical instruments, cameras and more. We honor Vi/MAC IMEC Disc Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry. 180 W 67th, 28-1910
370 Want to Buy
Vanted: VGA monitor and/or VGA interface card or IBM compatible. Call 847-8904
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
合
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, nationality, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all advertising in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Furnished room one block from KU. Some utilities paid, off-street parking. No pets. 841-5500.
Nice 2 bedroom apt. Close to Student Union.
Washer/driver hookup. Off-street parking no.
Nets. 748 2019
South Quarter
Open 10-5, M-F
2166 W.26th 843-6446
- Small pets OK with deposit
* Inexpensive gas heat
* Central air
- Pool & Volleyball
1,2,3,4 Bedrooms
- Close to bus route
Available March 1 - 1 bld urant upn in new room
Must have a front door and two windows, DW backpack,
DW backpack, DW backpack, DW backpack, DW backpack,
mim blinds. Great location near oor park.
Short lease limits 130 per month. No pet.
For more information call (800) 525-9467.
2 & 3 BR-Available in May or August,
winter or spring. Use of microwaves, patio or deck, laundry facility. On Site Management, KU has run, off street parking. Call to reserve your apartment for summer occupancy.
Apple Lane Apartments
2111 Kasold
948 4990
Bradford Square Apartments 901 Colorado
2111 Kasold
843-4300
...
Now accepting reservations for fall leases!
Free cable
Quiet studio
Water paid
Pool
Close to KU bus route
West Hill
APARTMENTS
and unfurnished
-1 bedroom apts, 735 sqft
June or August
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
*New leasing for*
*use on August*
2 bedroom apts. 930 sqft
8365 to $415 per room
$280 to $335 per month
(just visit www.ibm.com)
Furnished apartment. Two rooms and garage
$125 bills paid, has air conditioning and a fan.
Prefer one lady. $123 a month. 147 Vermont (15th
and Vermont) 143-6328
Mon. Wed. Thurs
s out for original buildings only
does not include Phase II
1:00-4:00 p.m. (no appl needed)
This ad for original buildings only
OPEN HOUSE
(water paid)
2 bedroom units 950 sq ft
Great location Near campus
Quail Creek Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Accepting reservations for fall leases!
Close to KU bus route
...2,3 Bedrooms
...Free cable
...Water paid Pool
Quail Creek
for fall leases!
SUNRISE VILLAGE
Edukous 3 & 4
Bedroom Town Houses
studios
*1 & 2 BR apartments
*2 & 3 BR apartments
1991
*2 & 3 BR townhomes
Garages, 2 & 1/2 bath
- Microwave Ovens
- Some with fireplaces
- On KU Pue Route
Enlarged to Show Texture
- Swimming Pool & Tennis Courts
841-8400
- On KU Bus Route
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon - Fri 11-5
Bedroom Town Houses
* Garage; 2 & 1/2 bath
Great 1. bell opt for rent. 1 block from Union.
Must see to appreciate. Call Kristen at 865-0100
Leave message
- Microwave Ovens
- Some with fireplugs
Hey! KU Med. students. Move in June 1 and
hey! KU med. you rent for 2 month's. *Studios,
1 and 12 bedrooms apt.* *Heat and water* *Across
Crowd Area, Rainbow Tower Apts.*
+819-3936
- Luxurious 3 & 4
ENLARGED TO SHOW TEXTURE
spacious & comfortable
-3 Pools
- Swimming Pool
(on apartments)
-Tennis courts
-on KU bus route
-gas heat & water cold
TRAILRIDGE
LEARN THE A B C's of NAISMITH.
Naismith now has lower than ever prices.
Affordable Living
2500 W.6th 843.7295
Better quality living
We have our own computer center, Dining anytime, and great social events.
JAKE, WHAT'S TODAY'S DATE?
Convenient location.
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Drive
Lawrence, KN 66044
(913) 843-8559
Naismith is close to campus, and on the bus route
Naismith spells out a wise living move.
Summer sublease 3 bdmr, furnished,
Tangledown. Option for fall, $186 each. May pay.
749 1309
玉世
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
Summer sublease. Spacious 2 bd apt in Meadowbrook. Call 965-4902
- Volleyball Court
- Basketball Court
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Exercise Room
SUN
- On Bus Route
- 3 Hot Tubs
$ 355 - $425
Models Open Daily
Mon.- Fri. 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 10-4 p.m. Sun 12-4 p.m.
842-5111
1301 W.24th
by Brian Gunning
20
Lorimar Townhouses, 2001, Clinton Parkway Quality, space, with all the amenities. Brand new available now 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease until May, July or for 12 months. 841-7493. 841-7493.
ONE BLOCK FROM KANASAN UNION. For rent to serious graduate student, upperclass student or KU employee. One BR furnished no. Pets. Reits. Water furnished. Water furnished. $250/month. 843-816-moon 49 per month.
2-1 BR, 4+ BR Washers; dishwashers in each unit, microwave, fans, microwaves, fireplaces, 3 full baths in 3 br. on basr line, off-street parking. Only 1 yr old. Call today! 749-5068
1·2·3·4 Bedroom Apartements
OPEN DAILY 1-5 PM.
Roommate-very large, very nice duplex, now
W/D) W/12pcs. See it in 812: 747-246
Roommate Sublease - BH furnished apartment,
willing to work, drafting table, $125,
negotiable 812-296
Reserve Your Home Now We offer Completely Enriched
Offering:
Designed with you in mind!
*Courthouse renting*
• Custom furnishings
• Designed for privacy
• Private Parking
• Close to shopping & KU
• Many great locations
• Equal opportunity housing
1310 Kentucky
Sundance - 841-5255
Tanglewood - 749-2415
10th & Arkansas
Sundance - 841-3255
7th & Florida
Hanover Place - 841-1212
Kentucky Place - 749-0445
Campus Place - 841-1429
1145 Louisiana
Orchard Corners - 749-14226 15th & Kasold
842-4455
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM (Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an Affordable Price!! Office Hours: 12-6 pm Mon., Fri. 10-6 pm Tue.- Thur. 9-3 pm Sat. No Appt. Necessary 841-5444
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc
430 Roommate Wanted
- Policy
Female roommate needed to share unique space in BDR apt for next year | T7-490-6153
Female roommate needed to share unique space in BDR apt for next year | T7-490-6153
Utilities. Available now 841-6383. Leave message
Summer sublease. Female roommate needed to share condo. Own room, carport, W/D. Utilities. Available now 841-6383. Leave message
Utilities. Loc Lots 841-6383 or 845-7870
A roommate needed immediately! $187.50 plus part utilities. March rent paid. On bus route. 843-4780
Summer sublease. Large studio. $275/mi.
841-7688 after 6pm
Sunflower House House Conservato has private
room and summer. Drop by 1496 Tennessee or call 749-0871
Blank lines count as 7 words.
Classified rates are based on customer
Female roommate needed to share beautiful 2 bedroom apartment. Close to campus and downtown. $225 includes gas, water and washer and driver. 842-9945
Blind box ads: please add $4.00 service charge.
Tearsheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements.
Two female roommates wanted for 191, four bedroom house Nice neighborhood off w. 10th $25 plus 4 stairs. Michelle. 841-195
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
Classified Information Mail-In Form
Words set in All CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words
Centered lines count as 7 words
- Prepaid Order Form Ads
Tear sheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements.
Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 hours.
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
Blind box ads, please add $50 (0) to your charge
Deadlines
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
Classifications
Classified Rates
Words 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days
0-15 3.45 5.10 7.25 12.05
16-20 4.05 6.00 8.50 13.50
21-25 4.65 6.95 9.75 15.15
26-30 5.30 7.90 11.00 16.70
31-35 5.95 8.85 12.25 18.30
Deadline is on Monday at 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Deadline for cancellation is Monday at 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Classified Mail Order Form
105 personal 140 lost & found 305 for sale
110 business personalis 205 helped 340 auto sales
120 announcements 225 professional service 360 miscellaneous
130 entertainment 295 typing services
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wa
ABS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST T:
Date bid be:
Total days in paper ___
Amount paid ___
Classification ___
DILLOW KANSAN POLICY
University Daily Kanan
191 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Okay, who's it gonna be?...
Whooooooooo's it gonna be?...
Monday, March 18, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
10
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642 Mass. 749-1912
MR. & MRS. BRIDGE 5:15, 8:15
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MR. & MRS. BRIDGE 5:15, 8:15
ALICE 5:45, 8:45
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Intramural Wrestling Tournament
STUDENTS WORK ABROAD
118 126 134 142
150 158 167 177
190 Heavyweight
TOURN
Weight Classes:
Entry Deadline Thursday, March 21, 1991 at 5:00 p.m.
Matches will be held on Tuesday, March 26 and Wednesday, March 27
Room 207 Robinson will be available for practice March 21 and 22 from 7 to 9 p.m.
Sponsored by KU Recreation Services
208 Robinson 864-3546
THE
UNDERGROUND
MUSIC EXCHANGE
BUY - SELL - TRADE
New and Used CDs, Records & Tapes
Tapestries, Incense, Posters, Tie Dye
3 Records or Tapes $10
CDs $8
15 E. 8th Subways now only $3-$8
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99¢ VIDEOS
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Video Department
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25th and Iowa (Next to Food-4-Less)
842-7810 Hours: 9-9 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
10-6 p.m. Sun.
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Take a Walk on the Boardwalk.
According to Bicycle Guide magazine, Bianchi's Cross-Terrain fitness bicycle is "the go-anywhere, do-anthing bicycle."
It's also a great value, featuring a Bianchi SuperSet 2 frame, chrome-moly-porte, SunTour XE/XCM components, Bianchi Advantage-XT tires, Hi-Wire, Top Pull durailerau, AccuShift Plus, Express shifter, Gel saddle, and Ritchey keys.
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1
VOL. 101, No. 112
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL
SOCIETY
TOPEKA) KS 65812
TUESDAY, MARCH 19, 1991
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
NEWS:864-4810
Bush orders Iraq to pay war costs
President also wants to cut arms sales to area
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Bush yesterday demanded that Iraq pay war reparations for its environmental terrorism and said he wanted to cut arms sales to the Middle East. Yet, the administration also announced new steps to underwrite sales of military goods.
Bush, just back from postwar talks with leaders of Britain, France and Canada, compared notes with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton from a trip to the Middle East and Moscow.
The president said he wanted to build on a feeling of good will in the aftermath of the war against Iraq to calm the turmoil in Lebanon, reconcile Arab-Israeli differences and find a solution for the Palestinian problem.
But he said, "I don't think the American people ought to think that you can wave a wand and solve all three of these very difficult problems at once."
However he added, "I think the longer one waits to take any initiatives, the danger is things revert back to a status quo. And I think that will be unacceptable."
The United States and its allies in the Persian Gulf War are conducting talks at the United Nations this week on conditions for a permanent cease fire.
"Broadly speaking, people know what is required." Bush said "I would like to see us
reduce the flow of weapons into the area . . . Iraq must pay reparations or pay damages. The more one looks at the environmental terrorism that they embraced . . . the more the world understands that they have got to do something about that."
He said Iraq was a wealthy nation that spent its money on weapons and aggression.
"Now we've got to see that they use their resources for helping their own people."
The president spoke at a White House ceremony where he received a humanitarian award for his "moral courage and unshake- ment" presented by Nobel laureate Eileen Wiseel.
Separately, the White House said Bush would seek congressional approval allowing the Export Import Bank, a government agency that handles U.S. foreign military sales by U.S. companies.
White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater said the program did not conflict with Bush's goal of reducing the spread of arms to the Middle East.
"We're not talking about cutting off all arms sales," he said. "We're talking about a balance and a stability in the region, but we can't do that without reductions, sometimes you have to build up."
See related stories Pages 3, 7
Iraq says revolt crushed
The Associated Press
NICOSIA, Cyprus Iraq claimed yesterday that it had crushed the revolt in the south, but an official in Washington said the fighting continued there and that a separate insurgency in northern Iraq was gaining ground.
Leaders of the southern rebellion, speaking in Syria, reported new fighting near alKut, 100 miles southeast of Bagdad, while Kurdish guerrillas involved with the other uprising said they were holding onto gains in northern Iraq.
Neighboring Iran declared yesterday a day of mourning for what it called the destruction of Muslim shrines by Saddam Hussein's loyalists.
Iran supports the Shiite Muslim rebels in Iraq's predominantly Shiite south, and its official news agency Sunday quoted Iraqi refugees as saying Saddam's Republican Guard was using napalm to crush the southern rebellion.
Kurdish rebels said the Iraqi army was using virtually every weapon it had — helicopters, bombs, rockets, tanks and artillery. The back of the back of the rebellion in northern Iraq.
None of the claims could be verified independently because Iraq has prevented Western reporters from covering the fighting.
However, an official in Washington, State Department deputy representative Richard Boucher, yesterday confirmed some of the rebel claims.
He said that there was heavy fighting between government forces and Kurdish dissidents and that the rebels appeared to be in control of large portions of predominantly Kurdish areas of northern and northeastern Iraq.
Fighting also is continuing in the south along the lower Tigris and Euphrates rivers and in the vicinity of Shia holy cities, Boucher said.
STATE OF KENTUCKY
MICHIGAN
Kid cuffing
KU police officer Burdel Welsh explains the procedure for handcuffing as Erik Houk (left) and Wynton McCurdy receive hands-on experience. The children are members of
a class taught by Nancy Golden (center) at the Hilltop Child Development Center, 1314 Jayhawk Blvd. Welsh spoke to the class yesterday.
New beer sales debated
By Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — A hearing on legislation that would allow non-alcoholic beer to be sold in grocery and convenience stores Sundays turned into a special interest debate about what the legislation's real aim was.
The Senate State and Federal Affairs Committee heard testimony yesterday from proponents and opponents of a bill that would allow the sales, but the committee took no action.
Non-alcoholic beer is less than 0.5 percent alcohol, but a federal law allows the beverage to be labeled as non-alcoholic
John Webb, owner of Webb's Fine Wine, 800 W. 23rd St., said that alcoholic cereal malt beverages were not much stronger than the
beverages addressed by the bill and that the bill should call the beverage what it really was — a cereal malt beverage.
"Is 'near beer' a big enough factor in the market to change our policy on Sunday beverage alcohol sales?" he asked. "Maybe this is just another special-interest attempt to get their foot in the door on Sunday sales of all alcohol beverages in grocery stores, convenience stores, gas stations and bait shops?"
Tuck Duncan of the Kansas Wine and Spirits Wholesalers Association Inc., left little doubt as to what would be necessary in would like to see this bill take.
"We have testified in previous years that a policy of uniformity would be desirable and that rather
than specify certain products for sale at certain locations on certain days, all products at all locations on days should be permitted "said."
Brebecca Rice, legislative counsel for the Kansas Retail Liquor Dealers Association, requested that the committee amend the bill to allow liquors to be open on Memorial, Labor and Independence days as well as election days.
"If a person cannot remember to buy enough on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday, they should not be drinking the stuff," he said.
But the Rev. Richard Taylor of Kansans for Life At Its Best! requested that the committee kill the bill.
SMSU campus crime report ruling will not have immediate KU effect
Kansan staff writer
Victoria Thomas, general counsel at the University of Kansas, said KU would continue to follow the guide by the U. D. Department of Education.
A federal judge's ruling last week that Southwest Missouri State University may not withhold campus crime reports from the public will have no immediate effect on KU, University officials said yesterday.
The Department of Education abides by the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974, also known as the Buckley Act, which prohibits universities from releasing students' educational records.
Southwest Missouri State officials had argued that crime reports were considered educational records
under the Buckley Act and did not release them.
KU police release campus crime reports, but names and other information that could identify the students involved is blacked out.
The federal judge's ruling in Missouri concluded a lawsuit filed in January 1960 by Traci Bauer, editor of southwest Mississippi State University.
Bauer contended that she should have access to the crime reports according to the state's open records laws.
In a 49-page ruling released Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Russell Clark of Springfield, Mo., wrote that withholding the criminal investigation could prevent a person from contain names and other personally identifiable information, was unconstitutional.
A representative of the U.S. Department of Education in Washington, D.C., said yesterday that his office was reviewing the ruling to decide what action, if any, it would take.
KU police Lt. John Mullens said any policy changes in his office depended on whatever action the University General Counsel took.
He said that if the University followed the ruling in the Southwest Missouri State case, KU police would be charged with killing students in campus crime reports.
"It takes time to mark all that stuff out, and it may speed up the process," he said. "But it is immaterial to the role or the other as long as it is legal."
Residents' appeal may not be enough to spare building from wrecking ball
By Vanessa Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
The Lawrence City Commission will have the last word tonight on a much-disputed proposal to demolish an Oread neighborhood building
The commission will conduct a public hearing at 7 tonight on an appeal to foreigners.
Three residents who own neighboring property filed the appeal last month after the Lawrence Historic Resources Commission permit to demolish the 19th-century house.
Marci Francisco, one of the neighbors who filed the appeal, said the demolition permit was inappropriate not only because the building was within a historical environment but also because the present property owner had not filed for the permit.
A previous owner applied for the demolition permit last summer. The application required a new building permit.
'I'm the one who has taken the bull by the horns, and now I'm receiving the flak.'
— Doug Compton owner of house at 1042 Ohio St.
Doug Compton, bought the property in January.
"He never even applied for it," Francisco said. "They're asking the City Commission to grant a permit based on someone else's application."
But city officials contend that the sale of a property does not invalidate a permit. Instead, the permit simply is transferred to the new owner.
Francisco said she hoped the commission would establish a precedent during the public hearing to require current property owners to reapply for demolition permits.
Opponents of demolition argue that
A new multi-unit complex proposed by Compton would alter the neighborhood's appearance, Francisco said.
although the house at 1042 Ohio St. is not listed on a historic register, it is within the environs of houses listed on both the state and national historic registers.
"He certainly has made an effort to use materials that would conform to the rest of the neighborhood," she said. "But the overall layout was too complex to comply with the rest of the neighborhood."
Compton said his new building plan called a structure that resembled neighboring buildings.
Compton, who has renovated other buildings in the Oread neighborhood, said that the property at 1042 Ohio St. was unsalvageable.
"This house has been a problem for several years," he said. "I'm the one who has taken the bulb by the horns, and now I'm receiving the flak."
58g
The house at 1024 Ohio St. is the subject of an appeal to prevent its demolition.
2
Tuesday, March 19, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
TODAY
Sunny
HI:66*
LO:46*
57/38
51/39
50/32
61/45
66/33
75/63
81/61
Kansas Forecast
3-day Forecast
Sunny and warm turning cloudy at night. High 66/ Low 46.
Thursday - Partly cloudy and warm. High 60/ Low 39.
Wednesday - Windy with chance of rain. High 62/ Low 43.
Salina
65/40
KC
Dodge City
65/44
70/39
Wichita
68/42
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
Friday - Partly cloudy with rain by evening. High 65/ Low 43.
forecast by Mike Schindel
Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows.
Ask the editor
Have a question or comment about the Kansan's news coverage? Rich Cornell, managing editor, will take
telephone calls to answer your questions from 2 until 6 p.m. today. You can reach him at 844-8310.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 660-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 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 $50. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
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148 Burge Union (913) 864-5665
Your environmentally conscious University Daily Kansan is printed on recycled paper with soybean ink Now, please recycle it once again.
Attention All Juniors Omicron Delta Kappa National Leadership Honorary
Candidates must have demonstrated superior leadership in one of the following areas:
*Scholarship *Athletics *Creative and performing arts
*Campus government, social, service, and religious activities
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN CHANCELLOR'S OFFICE Deadline is March 22
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Freshman died from overdose
An overdose of pain medication was the cause of the death of Marni B. Wagner, a Chicago, ill, freshman who died Feb. 22.
Kansan staff report
Laurance Price Jr., Douglas County coroner, who performed the autopsy, said yesterday that the overdose probably was accidental.
He said that Wagner, 20, was suffering from an intestinal illness. She took an overdose of Propoxyzoic, a medication for abdominal pain.
The results of the autopsy were released last week.
Man arrested for bearing all in nude protest
A man was sitting naked in the second floor lobby of the Douglas County Law Enforcement Center. A woman is being detained streets, at 2:18 p.m. Saturday.
Sgt. Kevin Harmon, Lawrence police representative, said Bedient told police he was rebelling against the United States.
Shawn Bedient, 21, refused to put his clothes on and was arrested on a charge of lewd and lascivious behavior. police said.
Bedient later told police that he also was making a statement against the present condition of the environment.
Tom Porter, city prosecutor, said the date of Bedient's first court appearance would be set tomorrow.
On campus
The KU Wellness Center will sponsor a workshop called "Overcoming Overeating" at 12:10 p.m. at 139 Robinson Center
■ KUGAR will meet at 6 p.m. in the southwest lobby of the bobm. in the Union street.
■ The Kit Chess Club will have a 7 p.m. at Parkville, at Parkle in the Kansas Union
Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders will conduct an eating disorder support group at 7:30 p.m. at 20 Watkins Memorial Health Center.
Applications for KU's Japan Summer Institute in Lawrence's sister city Hiratsuka, Japan, are now being submitted. Applications are available at 203 Lippincott.
- Applications for KU Study Abroad Programs, summer and academic year/semester, are now being offered. Applications are available at 2% Lippapp.
There will be a confidential support group for gays, lesbians and bisexuals. For information call Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas at
The KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 p.m. at 130 Robinson Center.
Melissa
Karen Hutchinson, world-renowned pianist, will play at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Fellowship-winning pianist plays it again at University
By Katie Chipman
Kansan staff writer
Karen Hutchinson, an internationally acclaimed pianist who will play at KU tonight, said. "People are asking me how to hide my mistakes well."
Hutchinson will make her second appearance at the University of Kansas at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. She first came to KU in February 1980 and performed in a recital for the month. She commemorated the month by playing music written by African-American composers.
Her performance tonight will consist of works by Mendelssohn, Debusy, Prokofiev, Donald Keats and Chopin. Her composer, Jacques Casterdeer.
Hutchinson said that she had been playing the piano since she was 6 years old and that she had
her first recital at age 7. Her teachers said she was a child prodigy.
Early in her career, Hutchinson studied with various artists, including the French pianist Philippe Entremont, the Cuban-American virtuoso Jorge Bolet and the U.S. composer Keats.
She gave her first professional recital at the age of 8 and has regularly played in concert since the age of 14.
"I don't think I missed out on being a kid. If I did, then it was that I missed out on being average." He said. "If I was 15 and that made up for it."
Hutchinson has toured in Eastern Europe and has performed with symphonies in Poland and Czechoslovakia, as well as in Western Europe and the United States. Her recitals have been broadcast
on radio by stations across the United States.
Since her last performance in Lawrence, Hutchinson has been studying in France and touring in the United States. She also auditioned with Leonard Slatkin at Carnegie Hall.
Hutchinson often plays for children's groups and at performing arts schools.
"I tell them to strive for excellence, not for mediocrity. Mediocrity will get you nowhere." she said.
Christopher Hepp, assistant professor of piano, said. "She's a very strong pianist. . . She is a very assertive and decisive player."
Hutchinson has been the recipient of many honors and awards for his work at the National Endowment for the Arts. Soto Rectalitaria Fellowship in 1988.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 19, 1991
Campus/Area
3
IMPACT
Vice-President
GREG MUCHES
ALAN LOWDEN
Make on IMPACT
Vote for
DARREN
FULCHER
ALAN
LOWDEN
IMPACT
Vice-President
DARREN FULCHER
ALAN LOWDEN
Liz Mendez, Student Senate minority affairs committee chairperson, prepares for the kickoff of the impact coalition campaign.
Campaign fever heating up
By Michael Christie
Campaign fervor is at KU
Both coalitions for Student Senate are stepping up their campaigns to increase students' awareness of the coalitions and to make their names fresh in students' minds when elections are conducted April 10 and 11.
Although Jason McIntosh and Giles Smith, Facts coalition presidential and vice-presidential candidates, conducted their campaign kickoff and began putting up posters and distributing buttons before spring break, the next three weeks are crucial, they said.
"We want to make sure that we can capture the interest of students," McIntosh said.
Student interest is a goal of both coalitions.
didate on the Impact ticket, said, "Impact will paint the town of Lawrence
Impact began the task of gaining name recognition this week by putting up campaign posters and by conducting last night's campaign kickoff at the Kansas Union for candidate members and their supporters.
Fulcher said each Senate candidate in his coalition had made a list of 20 people who might support Impact
From that list, between 1,000 and 1,200 letters were sent out inviting potential supporters to the Impact rally.
Facts is planning a fund-riser tonight at the Jazzhaus, $92\frac{1}{2}$ Massachusetts St., at which the band Id Xplosion will play. McMhont said.
A goal of the Facts coalition is to get people involved in the race who
normally would not participate in Senate, he said.
A survey that Facts distributed before spring break will help the coalition target potential voters, Smith said.
The coaition wants to get more freshmen and sophomores involved, he said. This will benefit Senate in an effort to experience beople will be involved.
The survey, passed out before spring break, asked students what issues they thought Senate should address. If either they voted in the last election,
McIntosh said the survey showed that students who voted did so on name recognition or because of issues they felt strongly about.
Another concern of both coalitions is graduate student involvement in the campaign.
Fulcher said that Impact would run a full ticket, with 52 undergraduate candidates and 12 graduate candidate students involved. The graduate students involved was difficult.
McIntosh said that the recent Senate vote to restructure graduate student government should help to ensure graduate student involvement.
"Regardless of the outcome, we need to get more graduate students involved," he said.
However much their coalitions want to spread their names across campus, they are limited in some ways by the new elections code.
The code limits the size and number of posters that can be placed on bulletin boards. It also prevents signs from being placed elsewhere on campus and the use of sidewalks as advertising space.
Election commission says voluntary spending limit more constitutional, fairer to coalitions
Kansan staff writer
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Student Senate election campaigns do not have mandatory spending limits this year for the first time in their history at KU.
The election commission recommends spending limits, but the only limits candidates must follow are those they set for their campaigns.
The Student Senate Elections Commission decided in February that Senate elections should have voluntary spending limits with spending recommendations instead of mandatory limits.
Coalitions and independent candidates must submit budget limits to the commission that will be published. The commission's limits their limits may be fined $10 to $50.
In past years, Senate election campaigns had mandatory limits. Ken Collier, faculty member of the elections commission, said the mandatory limits had not worked in the past.
"Very few, if any, coalitions abided by the mandatory limits last
Student Senate Elections
vear." he said
"We thought it would be better if the elections commission was imposing as few rules as possible. This year we wanted to start out by assuming that people will do things right without being told what to do."
Collier said the commission did not see a way to avoid switching to voluntary spending limits.
"We would have been in violation of the constitution, in the opinion of the University Council," he said. "But I can't believe the constitutional issue is not being raised on other campuses."
He said he did not know of any other schools that had voluntary limits.
'We thought it would be better if the elections commission was imposing as few rules as possible. This year we wanted to start out by assuming that people will do things right without being told what to do.'
-Ken Collier elections commission member
Tom Poer, elections commissioner, said that now would be the ideal time to try the voluntary limits. This is the first year of the commission, and the Senate elections code was revised this year.
Darren Fulcher, who is running for student body president, said his coalition, Impact, planned to abide by the school's constitution set by the elections commission.
"The commission came down to the conclusion that this would be the best way to do the limits," he said. "The recommended spending limits are a way to make fair campaigns."
Poer said he heard that both coalitions were planning to abide by the recommended spending limits.
"If the recommendations are followed by both coailations this year, then both coailions will be on fair merits. But if there was still a mandatory limit."
"In the past, there was a lot of lying on the final expenditure statements," he said. "I think the recommended limits for this year are plenty for a Senate elections campaign."
Alan Lowden, vice presidential candidate on the impact ticket, said he thought the voluntary limits recommended limits were followed
KU professor seeks top slot at Marshall
The Facts coalition could not be reached for comment.
By Eric Nelson
Kansan staff writer
A KU professor has been selected as one of eight finalists for the presidency of Marshall University in Huntington, W. Va.
H. George Frederickson, Edwin O.
Stone distinguished professor of公
事 administration, is one of the
most influential in the large Uml
ublications officials said Friday.
He spent the weekend in West Virginia and had an informal off-camp meeting Sunday with the selection committee.
C. T. Mitchell, director of University Relations at Marshall and search committee member, said the process began in July after then-president Dr. P. Nitzschke to become the President of the University of New Hampshire.
The committee of 15 chose the eight candidates from about 68 applicants, he said.
An information leak
Frederickson said a leak, in which someone gave the eight names to the university's newspaper, forced the university to release the names and contact the candidates.
He said some candidates might withdraw now that their confidentiality had been lost.
"I'm not upset by it, but I'm not real pleased," he said. "I think Mr. Mitchell did the right thing."
Frederickson was a candidate for president at Florida Atlantic University in Fall 1989 but withdrew from the race.
He withdrew in part because of the negative press he received in Florida
based on decisions he made while president of Eastern Washington University from 1977 to 1987.
"There was a reporter in Fort Lauderdale who did extremely negative stories on every candidate who got the job." Frederickson said.
The rumors filtered to KU where the University Daily Kansas printed a story in which the reporter only heard of the work as an administrator, he said.
"My colleagues and friends were absolutely stunned," Frederickson said of the Kansan's story.
He said he spent more than 10 years at Eastern Washington and left with the honor of president emeritus.
"That's a great, great honor," he said. "They wouldn't do that to someone who failed at his job."
Looking ahead
"It's an interesting place," he said. "It has a lot of character."
With the past aside, Frederickson said he felt good about the visit to West Virginia and the Marshall camp, with its mixture of old and new.
Frederickson said the job would be a challenge because the school was not as stable as KU and was continuing to grow and change.
"It is also in a state that has had a declining population and a weak economy for quite some time," he said.
Although the population distribution is similar to Kansas in that there is no dominant city, Frederickson said West Virginia had greater illiteracy and a lower graduation rate.
"He has a delightful sense of humor," Mitchell said. "I don't find that too often. I was personally impressed with Dr. Frederickson."
Frederickson received rave reviews from Mitchell.
By Lara Gold
Students hope Baker's talks lead to peace in Middle East
Kansan staff writer
"I don't think it made a difference for peace in the Middle East," said Ghassan El-Khatib, Palestinian freshman.
Arab and Jewish students at KU are skeptical but remain optimistic that Secretary of State James Baker's talks with Arab and Israeli leaders last week will resolve the longestanding Arab-Israeli conflict.
He said he thought that Israel was the strongest power left in the Middle East after the Persian Gulf War and that it would make him a make concessions to the Palestinians.
Steve Jacobson, Israel coordinator for Hillel, said Baker's talks were a noble effort.
"I don't necessarily think it will bring about a solution or peace," he said. "What most people don't understand is how much issue is one aspect of the problem."
He said that Baker's efforts had changed the tone in the Middle East and that the opportunity for Arab negotiate with each other was ripe.
Jacobson said the Arab-Israeli conflict began long before the Palestinian issue.
"Israel needs to take the opportunity on one front to talk with Arab countries and on another front to sit with a Palestinian delegation," he said.
Samer Sawalha, Amman, Jordan junior, said that if Israel recognized
"We must learn from the past that Middle Eastern politics has its own agenda," he said. "It does not dictate who is in power." Baker's Western-style diplomacy."
Hamed Ghazali, president of the Muslim Student Association, said the Palestinian issue should be an isolated issue in resolving the conflict.
Ghazali said, however, that all countries in the Middle East needed to revamp their government structures and listen to the people's wants.
"The people want their independence," he said.
"The only way I could see a long-lasting peace is through democracy," he said.
Wayne Spritz, Overland Park junior, said he was optimistic about the peace talks but skeptical a solution could be reached.
Sarah Zavett, Oak Park, III., senior, said conflicting emotions on the Arab and Israeli sides may hamper any prospects of peace.
"I appreciate Baker's effort," she said. "I am an optimist. I think there is a solution."
"I think if Israel agrees to give the land back to the Arabs, then the Arab countries could make a peaceful agreement," Sawalha said.
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He said he would like to see the West Bank and the Gaza Strip returned to the Arabs.
the Palestinian's right to a homeland, then Arab countries would recognize Israel's right to exist.
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Tuesday, March 19, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Election strategies
All coalitions and coalition members participating in Student Senate elections this spring must challenge themselves to improve the quality of elections. Here are some suggestions for doing so: Present issues that matter. Make your best effort to confront the needs of the students, faculty and staff on this campus and to develop solutions to their problems.
- Encourage students to vote by presenting issues that matter rather than offering silly incentives or by making empty promises. Students surely will vote in greater numbers than in past years if coalitions base their campaigns on the resolution of issues people on this campus care about.
on coalitions that focus their energy on denigrating their opponents instead of improving their own platforms. Coalitions' time will be far better spent presenting well thought out solutions to problems facing the University.
- Keep your campaigns clean. Do not waste your time ripping down other coalitions' post. Such practices will not reflect well
College is the place for future politicians to learn how to conduct campaigns based on improving the quality of life for their constituents. Coalition members should strive to set high campaign standards so that they will learn how to win elections via their ability to help people.
College politicians have the opportunity to put in practice values sorely lacking in U.S. politics today — fairness, honesty and the desire to do what is right.
Debbie Myers for the editorial board
Homosexuals in church
Denomination right in disallowing restrictions
In a society that condemns, ridicules and rejects homosexuality, it is difficult to find a place to turn.
Religion, a logical sanctuary, has offered no acceptance and even has discriminated by disallowing gays and lesbians as participants in conregressions.
In a historic move, a committee of the Presbyterian Church (USA) recently proposed that the church disavow its rejection of homosexuality and sexual relations outside of marriage, and that active homosexuals be allowed into the ministry. Citing a Christian ethic of decency, the committee said that sexual relationships of genuine equality and mutual respect should not be automatically condemned when they occur outside of marriage
The recommendation may cause controversy among the denomination's 2.9 million
members, but it will force them to recognize homosexual relationships. Acceptance may be a long way off for many people. But the church not only has recognized the issue but has embraced the reality and normalcy of homosexuality.
Gays and lesbians should have the same opportunities for worship as heterosexuals. To prohibit someone from exercising his or her right to worship based on sexual preference not only violates basic human rights but also a principle this country prides itself on. The Presbyterian Church (USA) has taken a step in the right direction.
With a little time and some common sense, other religious establishments should follow in its footsteps.
Juli Watkins for the editorial board
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LETTERS to the EDITOR
Group defines its stand
I would like to thank Brian Doyle for his constructive criticism of our new organization, the Oread Society, in his guest column. "New student group contradicts itself, needs to stand," the landmark, March 4, 1991.
In the tradition of meaningful dialogue, I would be happy to clarify the purpose of the Oread Society. We are simply a conservative organization desiring to represent an under-represented group in our community. University of Kansas. It is unfortunate that some might think the sole purpose of a group such as ours is to
"shut up" our liberal counterparts. On the contrary, we wish to engage them is a dialogue where everone's views may be heard. Undoubtedly, we all wish to make America a better place for all of its people. Simply to refuse to communicate because we have differing views on how to carry
out that task is to deny a deeply rooted American tradition.
The way in which Doyle puts forth his concerns demonstrates to me the fear he has in letting a conservative organization challenge the hegemony of the liberal voice at KU. He is right, however, in saying that starting a new group is nothing new. What is important here is the front of God, the media and everybody and put forth views which may not be "politically correct."
Obviously, one of those views concerns the recent radical activism on campus. Unfortunately, Doyle makes the assumption that because we don't like protests, we are compromising them. Had Doyle taken the time to engage in a dialogue with either me or any other member of the Oread Society, he would have discovered our true concern. In fact, we must be aware of the fact that we made aware of individual concerns. However, it seems as if the recent anti-war protesters are simply out of touch with mainstream attitudes.
As President Bush's approval rating approaches 90 percent, it is hard to imagine that the majority of Americans are proud of what this country has done in coming
to the defense of a peaceful nation. In fact, all five political analysts in the McLaughlin group — liberal and conservative alike — awarded President Bush an A (plus) for his handling of the situation. The truth of the matter is that if we had waited any longer to start the ground war, more blood — not less — would have been shed.
Does any of this mean that we condemn protest? Absolutely not. Would we restrict protests if we had the power? No. We merely wish to point out, despite what the media tells us, that these demonstrators are in the minority. This fact becomes quite apparent when one realizes that the media reports exceptions not norms. As for the contradiction in our words, the light is on. Let's not waste time dwelling on such important matters so we can concentrate on working together to solve the big problems.
One last item — don't write us off simply because we are conservatives. It would be unfortunate if we refused to look past ideological labels and failed to examine the rationale of each group's arguments.
Foreign student myth belied by realities
Robert Schaffer Hoxie sophomore
K U has about 2,000 international students from 100 different countries. They represent one of the most valuable educational resources ever available to any university.
These foreign students are a source of valuable information about the world, and their input could educate many Americans about the future global competition for world markets and power.
Both the University and the foreign students make a great effort to make this cultural exchange possible. However, many KU administrators, faculty and students do not realize the potential of this large multinational segment of the KU community. Consequently, there are no coherent policies to take full advantage of this international environment.
The following are some of the most common misconceptions that prevent KU from realistically dealing with its foreign students:
Myth: Foreign and American minority students have similar problems.
Reality: KU is a good university, but other institutions around the world also excel in many areas of professional training. Most foreign students choose to come to the United States because they are interested in human rights and has an enormous cultural, political and economic influence on the world.
■ Myth: Foreign students come to KU just to study and are not interested in the United States.
P. V. KUROCH
Fernando
Aracena
Guest columnist
Reality: These two groups of students have little in common. Recruitment and retention are major concerns among minorities, but not among foreign students. Because these international students have left their countries to live and study abroad, one safely may assume that it is not an issue to them how many other students from their countries they will find here. Except for some international refugees, foreign students come to experience the United States by their own choice.
Racial tensions and intolerance in the United States are issues that have to be tackled by the American people. It would be inappropriate for the international guests to get involved in the problems of their American hosts. It also would be inappropriate for students of a foreign field at the University to make any foreign student a participant in a problem in this country.
Most foreign students come to the United States with the intention of treating all Americans as their
Awareness programs that confuse the concerns of American minorities with those of the foreign students in these countries may misinform the misinformation of the community.
**Examples**
* Myth: Since foreign students don't complain, they probably don't have any concerns.*
Reality: Foreign students think of themselves as guests in this country, and therefore, they often don't consider it appropriate to voice complaints. However, improvements could be made in the following areas:
- Temporary housing is uncertain and many foreign students don't have the option to go home for vacations.
A large portion of the community has limited information about the specific benefits provided by interactions with foreign students.
Many foreign students arrive at Many with little information about American culture. This can cause unnecessary misunderstandings between American and foreign students.
Even though foreign students don't voice their concerns about these and other problems, there is room for them. The international Council will work on
Many new foreign students are assigned to the same residence hall. Ironically, even though McColm Hall is culturally diverse, these new students may have more trouble feeling meaningful intercultural relationships — clustering of nationality groups often occurs there.
- Many foreign students find some of the policies of the Applied English Center questionable.
these and other suggestions:
A concentration of foreign students in any one dormitory should be avoided as much as possible.
An ongoing orientation program designed specifically for new foreign students should be financed and supported. Internationals have to be aware of the characteristics of American culture as soon as possi-
It is important to have an informative campaign to explain to the American students and the local community of having an international campus.
- The personnel of the Office of Foreign Student Services are very efficient, professional and helpful.
However, they need more support and resources to undertake most of these improvements.
Most foreign students do not have enough time to deal with long-term political processes that might bring changes about. However, we are confident that the various offices and departments that work with foreign students will become acquainted with these issues.
Most international students feel privileged to study in an institution with the stature that the University of Kansas has. However, their experience could be further enriched for their own benefit, as well as for the university's University College. **Fernando Aracena** is chairman of International Students Affairs, an office of the International Students Association.
Other Voices
War bills extravagant
While New York City plans what it says will be the mother of all ticker—tape parades, there is a paper blizzard of another sort in Washington. More than 100 bills have been introduced in Congress to bestow benefits on returning veterans. The amount of these bills should be made into contetti and shipped to New York City, where tape-ticker is scarce.
You'll find plain political optimism: U.S. Rep. Charles Rangel, D-New York, would pay each of the 530,000 troops in the gulf theater a $10,000 bonus. Other proposals would increase education aid, lift insurance and other benefits to small-business loan program; and provide health care services and readjustment counseling.
Most bills aren't so blatant a run on the treasury as Rep. Rangel's bonus plan, but only a quarter of them remain. Among worthy provisions:
An increase in the unemployment compensation for a discharged soldier to 28 weeks for civilian workers gets, up from 13 weeks.
An increase in the amount of wages exempt from federal taxes. All enlisted pay during any month in a war zone would be exempt.
- From the State, Columbia, S.C.
Labor warv of treaty
A treaty that brought Mexico in with the United States and Canada to form a free-trade zone spanning a continent clearly would be in the best interests of all three — the more so with the economic integration of the European Community, planned for 1992.
Organized labor in the United States, fearing short-term competition for jobs as manufacturing following low initial labor costs across the southern U.S. border, is working to head off authority for negotiations for a U.S.-Canada Mexico free-trade agreement.
Labor's opposition is short-sighted for several reasons. First, for every job created south of the border following a free-trade agreement, a consumer with the means to buy goods from north of the border would be simultaneously created. Second, with Mexico's relaxing of restrictions on foreign investment that has already taken place, manufacturing in Mexico will inevitably increase to compete with U.S. industry, free trade agreement or not. If U.S. money doesn't do it, capital from somewhere else will. It is as inevitable as was the industrialization of the Pacific Rim.
From the Albuquerque (N.M.) Journal.
KANSAN STAFF
CHRIS SIRON Editor
RICH CORNELL Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
AUDRA LANGFORD Business manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
MINDI LUND Retail sales manage
Editors
Business staff
Editors Business staff
News. Melanie Matthes Campus sales mgr. Sophie Wehbe
Editorial. Tiffany Harness Regional sales mgr. Carmen Dresch
Planning. Holly M. Neuman National sales mgr. Jennifer Claxton
Campus Jennner Reynolds, Co-op sales mgr. Christine Mussel
Sports. Ann Sommerville Production mgrs. Rich Hamberger
Photography. Keith Thorpe Marketing director. Gail Embinder
Graphics. Melissa Unterberg Creative director. Chrisy Haha
Features. Jill Harrington Classified manager. Kim Crowder
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 will not be contacted.
Guest questions should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
Sketch
The Kauan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest column and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kauan newsroom, 111 Staffer-Flall Hall.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 19. 1991
5
Watkins fills fourth, final doctor opening
With a private practice and women's center background, Strother hopes to become involved in outreach programs
By Amy Francis Kansan staff writer
Watkins Memorial Health Center filled the last gap on the physician staff when Myra Strother began work yesterday.
"This pretty much catches us up with the physicians," said Jim Boyle, assistant director of Watertown. "I think we back at capacity."
Jim Strobil, director of Watkins,
said Watkins had hired four doctors to fill three positions this year.
Two people work part-time for one position. One position is temporary
carriers Joeyoey, chief of staff,
returns to military duty at Travis Air Force Base in northern California.
Boyle said Strother also balanced the ratio of female and male doctors. There are now five nurses and six male doctors at Walkin'.
"We have a lot of female students that request female doctors," he said. "We also have male students that request female doctors."
But it may take a little time before Strother is performing all
A. E. H. H.
the duties of the job, he said.
"She needs to learn our facility and referral process," Boyle said. "It will take her a while to facilitate herself to the process. We're fortunate to get physicians in active practice. It's actually not a hard transition for them. They just need to learn the new people."
Medical Center in Kansas City, Mo., for about a year, then at a private medical practice for more than a year.
Strother said she had worked in the women's center at Baptist
"I enjoyed my job that I was at," Strother said. "It's always a little scary to leave something you like more, but I'm ready, like more. I enjoy student health."
"The full range of medical care is what I want to do. I'd like to get involved in an outreach program."
Boyle said that Strother was offered the job in January but that she was unable to begin work until yesterday because of contractual agreements with her former employer.
"Obviously, we would have liked her to start in January, but that wasn't possible," he said. "Almost has a contractual agreement."
The interviewing process for doctors began in July with 21 applicants. Boyle said all of the new students had been interviewed from that interviewing process.
"We got a lot of high quality candidates," Boyle said. "It's a good situation to be in. We had to choose between good folks."
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Kansas stff writer
It is the time of year when students begin scrambling for next year's housing, and this year they will have another option.
Kansan staff writer
The Housing Options Made Easier program matches elderly Douglas County residents with other people, including students, who are willing to share housing. The program is sponsored by Douglas County Senior Services, 745 Vermont St., and the Older Women's League.
Hilda Enoak, president of the Kaw Valley chapter of the Older Women's League, said the program was created in September to help the elderly stay in their homes instead of moving into nursing homes.
"The greatest concern of many older Americans is being put in a nursing home," she said. "There are many frail elderly people in the area who want desperately to stay in their homes, where the students come into play."
Enoch said the program tried to match students, or anyone else in need of cheaper housing, with elderly people who needed chores done around the house. The elderly person must be older than 60.
"Lawrence is an ideal place to try this program because it is a university town," she said. "And with tuition going up, there are students on very tight buges who really need a place to live with cheap rent."
Betty Dutton, a member of the Older Women's League, said the program was a localized version of a program to keep the elderly in their homes.
"It's better for the elderly and for the state to keep them out of the nursing homes," she said. "Because it takes a lot of money to home, it is a big drain on tax money."
The goal of the program is to prevent premature placement of the elderly in nursing homes, Dutton and others. The only one of its kind in the area
"We help people retain their independence and dignity as long as possible," she said.
Sandy Strand, director of community services at Douglas County Senior Services, said another service of the program besides home sharing helped keep the system in place it began in September about 200 people have used the service, she said.
"Volunteers help on a rotating basis with leaf raking, snow shoveling and things like that," Strand said. "It helps people be more independent at home so they don't have to move to a nursing home."
Along with the home-sharing program, which began in January, and chore services, the program also offers general information about programs for the elderly in the Douglas County area.
Anyone interested in participating in the program should contact Douglas County Senior Services.
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Tuesday, March 19, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
(2)
Philip Meiring/KANSAN
Easy does it
almost an hour yesterday setting the units on concrete foundations. After installation of connecting ducts, pipes and wiring, the units will be used to add additional cooling power to the building.
Moscow selects new Soviet ambassador to U.S.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Viktor Kompliekov, a veteran Soviet diplomat with a hard-line reputation, is to be the new Soviet ambassador to Washington, Bush administration officials said yesterday.
Kompleklet, a 88-year-old specialist in U.S. and Latin American affairs, will succeed Alexander A. Bessmertynkh. Bessmertynkh was promoted to foreign minister after the Ukrainian parliament last year after warning that conservatives could be pushing the Soviet Union toward dictatorship.
The appointment of Komplektov to ambassador strengthens the recent conservative trend in Moscow. In addition to Shevardnadze, some of
President Mikhail Gorbachev's most liberal advisers were quit while conservatives were growing in authority.
Complektow held various posts in the Soviet Embassy in Washington. In Moscow he was director of the U.S. department in the foreign ministry from 1978 to 1982, when he moved into the White House, deputy minister for foreign affairs.
Despite his long background in U.S. affairs, Komplektow was shifted to deal with Latin America while he was a liberal, and was later as a liberal, a foreign minister.
Secretary of State James Baker said at a news conference Friday night in Moscow that U.S.-Soviet relations had passed through a difficult period. He credited Gorbachev with attempting to arrange a dialogue with leaders in the independence-minded Baltic Republics and with supporting the secession Soviet economy toward a Western-style market system.
In the months ahead, Baker will be looking for Soviet support in trying to arrange Arab-Israeli negotiations for continued help in dealing with
The administration officials who disclosed the selection of Komplektov did so on the condition that they not be identified by name. They said the United States had accepted the appointment of Komplektov yester-
what humourless and as a hard-liner,
even occasionally polemical," a U.S.
official said.
"He is generally viewed as some-
Komplektov's wife, Alla, is a senior executive at Intourist, the official Soviet travel bureau.
Traditionally, the Soviet ambassador provides a critical link to Moscow. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Anatoly Dobrynin, working closely with former adviser to the president Kissinger, was one of the most influential foreigners in Washington.
But since then, U.S.-Vietnam diplomacy has been conducted more formally. Secretaries of State George Shultz and Baker developed close working relationships with Shevardnadze.
No clear winner emerges in vote of Soviet people
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev and his maverick rival Boris Yeltsin both emerged yesterday from the first referendum in Soviet history able to claim victory.
In the non-binding election conducted Sunday in 11 time zones across the Soviet Union, Gorbachev won overhelming support with the majority of the population for preserving a renewed federation.
But partial returns showed Yelisin winning on a question that has been opposed by Gorbachev — creating a strong presidency for the Russian federation and filling it by direct election.
Yeltsin, who was elected chairperson by Russia's legislature in May and is known as the Russian president, is in danger of losing that job. Hard-lime members of Russia's Congress are planning a no-confidence vote on March 28. However, even if Yeltsin lost that vote, he would be strongly favored in a popular election.
Gorbachev's referendum won by margins of 70 percent to 95 percent in seven of the 15 republics including the Ukraine, Byelorussia, and in the five republics of Central Asia: Kazakhstan, Tataristan, Russia, and Kyrgyzia. There were no final totals for Russia and Azerbaijan yesterday.
Local counts were running strongly in favor of the union in the Russian countryside and in many cities, but the latter included holdings of Moscow and Sverdlovsk.
Six independence-minded republics refused to conduct the referendum and the majority of their voters appeared to stay away from polls in Communist Party and military bases.
Less than a 50 percent turnout renders an election invalid under Soviet law.
But officials claimed 600,000 voted in Latvia and 652,000 in Lithuania, with a 97 percent yes vote in Lithuania. The turnouts were less than the required 50 percent but still higher than expected because both republics voted strongly for independence several weeks ago.
In Lithuania, the count could be accurate only if there were at least 200,000 no votes, said parliamentary representative Harris Subacius.
Both republics reported wide-spread ballot-stuffing Sunday. Voters' names were not checked against registration rolls.
There is no tradition in the Soviet Union of politicians publicly announcing victory or conceding defeat.
The results reported by election officials and news media reflected confusion.
Gorbachev first proposed the referendum in December as a means of pressuring leaders of the 15 Soviet republics into signing a new union treaty to preserve central control over politics and the economy.
The main referendum question did not mention the union treaty, however, and was so vague that even Gorbachev's allies were not sure how to translate an electoral victory into policy.
In the meantime, Yeltsin and the leaders of the next three largest Soviet republics have worked together to power from the central government.
The Baltics conducted their own referendums and voted overwhelmingly for independence: 91 percent in Lithuania, 74 percent in Latvia and 78 percent in Estonia. Georgia, also boycoting on Sunday, was expected to approve independence in a referendum later this month.
Gorbachev campaigned heavily in favor of the main referendum question, and after casting his ballot in February, he strengthened the Russian presidency
He called the Russian presidency dangerous, but he said he would respect the opinion of the Russians in the decision to declare the highest population of the republics.
Yeltsin said Friday that introducing the post of president of Russia would help strengthen the sovereignty of the republic.
"We feel that the president of Russia should be elected not by a narrow circle but by the citizens of the republic — all the people," he said, urging leaders throughout the Soviet Union to face direct election
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Nation/World
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 19, 1991
7
World briefs
Motion made in Mandela trial
Prosecutors in Winnie Mandela's kidnapping and assault trial charged yesterday that she helped abduct and beat three other men in 1988 and that one of the victims disappeared.
Johannesburg
Prosecutor Jan Swanepoel asked to introduce testimony that Mandela was involved in earlier incidents similar to the four cases in which she has been charged.
"To say what Mrs. Mandela might have done in October or November is not one of the issues." Bizos said. He accused the state of trying to bolster a faltering case.
Chief defense attorney Goerge Bizos argued that related evidence could not affect Mandela's trial, even if she were found guilty of the current kidnapping and assault charges.
Justice M.S. Stegmann said he would rule on the state's motion today.
Dhahran, Saudi Arabia
General may shine with 5th star
The secretary of the Army has discussed making Persian Gulf War hero Norman Schwarzkopf a five-star general, a rank last awarded more than four decades ago.
The secretary, Michael Stone, said yesterday that he also was considering making Schwarzkopf, a four-star general, the Army's chief of staff. But Mr. Stone decided resisted with the Pentagon and White House.
"I did discuss it with Gen. Schwarzkopf when I was in Riyadh," Stone said while visiting an Army post in Dhahran.
A four-star general is the highest U.S. military rank, but a few famous battlefield leaders have been awarded a fifth star.
The last to reach the elite rank was Gen. Oman Bradley in 1950. Others include Gens. Dwight Eisenhower, Douglas MacArthur, George Marshall and Henry "Hap" Arnold.
Oslo, Norway
Happiness could be the law
Mayor Arne Nilsen wants to grumpify illegal in his island community of Sund.
Nilsen told an Oslo newspaper that he would propose a resolution at a township council meeting today requiring 5,000 Sund residents to be happy and think positive, while banning crankiness.
"Unless the other council members are in a bad mood, I expect a majority in favor," the Dagbladet wrote.
"Sund residents are not abnormally gloomy but get caught up in negative and sad things, rather than seeing all there is to be happy about," he said. "I am trying to do something about it."
Irascible islanders will not be prosecuted. But Nilsen said the lighthearted edict might jolt them into better spirits. The proposal excludes sukers in a house, such as the brokenhearted, the report said.
From The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — An angry Congress is about to decide what teeth to put in its threat to countries that have not fully delivered on pledges to help the United States pay for the Persian Gulf War.
U.S. allies slow to pay pledges for war effort
With tens of billions of dollars at stake, the only question appears to be whether to send the equivalent of a warning letter or a burly thumbbreaker to collect the money.
Congress should settle this week on language in war-financing legislation lawmakers expect to send to President Bush. The options range from a vague warning of "pay up, or else" to an arms-sale ban against countries that have promised more than they have delivered.
The Associated Press
“Our allies have a moral obligation to pay their share of the cost of this war,” said Rep. Jim Chapman, D-Texas, who sponsored the provision approved by the House March 7. “The American people have already paid with their lives, their troops, their will and their commitment.”
Last Thursday, the Senate Appropriations Committee without discussion endorsed a prohibition on arms sales to countries that have not fully lived up to their pledges.
“If the promisor nation has money to buy arms from us, it can first use that money to fulfill its pledge to help defray some of our costs,” said the report accompanying the Senate bill.
The measure, co-sponsored by Rep. Carl Pursell, R-Mich., gave contributing countries until April 15 to pay up — the same deadline Americans face for their income taxes.
Although the House provision does not state what action Congress might take, Pursell talked earlier in the month about requiring trade negotiators to take appropriate action. That represented a clear direction of trading giant Jasper which so far has delivered $1.3 billion out of $10.7 billion in promised help.
In the House, much of the debate focused on Japan and Germany, economic powers often singled out for criticism by lawmakers. So far, the hulls has押金了 $6.8 billion in aid and paid $3 billion
"Our European allies as a whole are 40 percent dependent on that region, and Japan is more than 65 percent dependent on that region" for oil, said Alvaro Morales. "And yet our allies are not paying their fair share."
The Senate ban on arms sales would hit hardest in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, which together have requests pending for modern U.S. weapons totaling $1 billion.
Saudi Arabia has made good on $6.1 billion out of
$16.8 billion it has promised, while the United Arab
Emirates has paid half the $4 billion it has pledged.
Bush to ask Congress' consent for Federal loan of $25 billion
The Associated Press
"They took our plan and improved it," Seidman said. "The fact that we're actually borrowing money and raising funds to pay it back at the same rate as the taxpayers, to all of those who want to protect the taxpayers."
However, if the banking industry deteriorated beyond expectations and was incapable of repaying the loan through premiums, taxpayers could bear the loss. That is because any loss suffered by the Federal Reserve would reduce the Fed's earnings, forwarded every year to the Treasury.
WASHINGTON — The Bush administration plans to ask Congress this week to authorize up to $25 billion in borrowing from the Federal Reserve if needed to replenish the government fund insuring bank deposits, according to a letter made available yesterday.
Bank premiums — currently at 19.5 cents per $100 of deposits — at a cap of 30 cents.
Disclosure of the administration plan came in a letter, dated Friday, from Treasury Undersecretary Robert R. Glauber to FDIC Chairperson L. William Seidman.
Glauber told Seidman that the borrowing plan would be included in the administration's broad plan to overhaul the banking system. Frank Annunzio, D-DIII, told members of his House Committee that institutions yesterday that he expected the administration to forward a draft of its legislation late today.
The borrowing plan would provide even more than the $1 billion requested three weeks ago by Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Chairperson L. William Seldman. The plan seeks to avoid a bankruptcy for FDIC fund by having banks repay the loan through insurance premiums charged by the fund.
Seidman has said he intended to borrow up to $10 billion under his agency's existing authority while Congress debates the measure. Without the borrowing, his fund, which sank to $8.4 billion at the end of 1905, could run out of money by the end of this year, according to projections from both the Office of Management and Budget and the Congressional Budget Office.
In addition to the $10 billion it can borrow, the FDIC currently has a $5 billion line of credit with the Treasury. As a backup, Seidman had requested a loan of $2 million in authority without specifying the source.
The FDIC would pay interest to the Federal
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Ms. Hutchinson's accommodations courtesy of The Eldridge Hotel.
3
Tuesday, March 19, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
CLAS requires new-student advising
Program intends to answer questions and make enrollment process easier
By Sarah Davis
Kansan staff writer
College of Liberal Arts and Science students new to KU this semester are required to attend advising meetings to emphasize their adaptation to the University.
"My goal is that students who are new to the college will feel less apprehensive and more sure of themselves during the advising and enrolling process," said Pam Houston, director of the college undergraduate services office.
"What we're trying to do with this program is to help them with the transition between orientation and placement and main enrollment and advising."
Students who do not attend the meetings will be penalized by not receiving the dean's stamp necessary for enrollment.
"I realize it's a very harsh penalty." Houston said. "But we felt that it was really going to help the stucco builders we decided to make it required."
There will be 12 meetings during the week, each lasting 50 minutes, in which about 600 students will participate. All required to attend only one meeting.
During the meetings, staff from the Advising Support Center will clarify basic course requirements, explain the KU timetable and catalog, introduce the Advising Support Center and clarify advising period procedures.
Houston said she also wanted to alert students to the availability of the services office, which could help clear up misinformation.
"One of the reasons for these meetings is to encourage students to contact us when they have questions or need assistance working to decrease this problem."
Another problem occurs when students and their advisers have different expectations of each other, she said.
"If we help get those expectations clear, then the advising session will be more productive, and the students will be more prepared." Houston said.
Leann Piche, Leavenworth sophomore, said that before the meeting she had hoped to gain a better relationship with her teacher, she needed to take for her major.
"I thought it went pretty well," she said after the meeting. "I answered some questions I had about my major."
Bill Sharp, advising assistant, led yesterday's meeting and said he thought it could be beneficial.
"With any luck, this will alleviate any possible problems," he said. "It shows that the college is doing its best in getting out this information."
He said that an advising program such as the new one was becoming more necessary for large universities.
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Houston said the idea for the meetings came from the University of Toledo in Ohio, which has a similar program.
She said she hoped to continue the advising program next year, when more new students could participate.
"If things go well this week and we get good responses, we'll do it in the fall," she said.
Bill Sharp, an advising assistant, addresses new students in a required pre-enrollment meeting.
Kansas lawmakers pass four appropriations bills
TOPEKA — Lawmakers moved to state government operating yesterday, passing a total of four appropriations bills, while Gov. Joe Biden signed the law the only significant piece of legislation passed in the 1991 session.
Legislators returned to Topeka after a long weekend and continued work on moving appropriations bills through the process to finance state government. Each house passed two spending bills.
The Associated Press
Kansas borrowers. The bill allows banks in Colorado, Oklahoma, Missouri, Nebraska, Arkansas and Iowa to borrow money if there is a reciprocal agreement.
Finney signed into law a bill that allows limited interstate banking yesterday, a measure that she said ensured capital would be available to
"Today we move to reform and modernize Kansas banks law." Finney said after she signed the bill. "As we join the other states of the union in this endeavor, we will be able to meet tome Kansens' needs first."
The House gave first-round approval yesterday to two budget bills financing 17 state agencies, while the Senate approved two bills that would provide money for another 17 agencies.
One bill contained the Department of Health and Environment's budget, in addition to $100,000 in state finance-based family planning programs.
Rep Kent Campbell, D-Miltonvale,
offered an amendment to remove the
money. It failed 39-80, with other
House members arguing that the
programs helped prevent teen-age
pregnancies.
They also said that workers in such programs were not allowed to counsel teen-agents or to give them information without their parents' permission.
Other House members said that the programs were morally wrong
because they did not tell teen-agers that they should abstain from sex until they were married.
"I don't know how your Bible reads, but my Bible reads that it is a sin," Rep. Lee Hamm, D-Pratt, said of premarital sex.
While lawmakers voted on the floor to spend money, a House committee began work on a plan to raise $2000 for property tax relief
The Senate passed and sent to the House an appropriations bill for the department of Commerce that kept intact the Kansas Technology Enterprise Corp., despite Finney's recommendation to abolish it.
The bill, which passed 337, also would keep the Economic Development Initiatives Fund alive, although it was not a major part as well. Money the state receives
from the Kansas Lottery and taxes on pari-mutuel bets on dog and horse races will go to the fund.
The Taxation Committee has before it a plan to raise money to pay for a decrease in property taxes by increasing income taxes by about 10 percent, raising the sales tax from 4.25 percent to 4.5 percent, and eliminating some sales tax exemptions and imposing the tax on some services.
Judge allows adoption by homosexuals
The Associated Press
KEY WEST, Fla. — A county judge yesterday declared unconstitutional a 14-year-old state law that prevented homosexuals from adopting children
The American Civil Liberties Union of Florida challenged the law on behalf of a AIDS activist whose application last month诱拐 a "special needs" child was rejected because he was gay.
Monroe County Circuit Judge M. Ignatius Lester ruled that the law violated the constitution of 1986 and required protection and due process.
"The statute suffers from the trite notions of homosexuals' unsuitability as fit parents and evidences discrimination through archaic stereotypes associated with homosexuals." Lester said in his 22-page ruling.
"Homosexuals have been proven to be capable, loving parents whose sexual orientations are unbiased by their children," he said.
The ACLU said New Hampshire was now the only state that explicitly forbade homosexuals from adopting. Lester's ruling invalidates the adoption ban in Monroe County could persuade other judges in Florida to follow his lead.
"I think it will open the door to lesbians and gay men throughout the state of Florida who want to adopt and will have a positive impact nation-wide," said William Rubens-below, who co-founded the AGU's Lesbian and Gay Rights Project in New York.
The lawsuit was filed on behalf of Edward Seebol, 53, a 23-year resident of Key West Hydropark DBS Help Inc. a support group.
"Everyone in the state ganks by utilizing the full resources of all its citizens." Seebol said in a statement yesterday. "But most important of all are the children who will be the real winners as they may find homes."
Seebel has been a court-appointed guardian for several years, helping mentally and emotionally injured people through the court system.
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DAVID GERGEN • EDITOR-AT-LARGE • U.S. NEWS AND WORLD REPORT
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DAVID GERGEN • EDITOR-AT-LARGE • U.S. NEWS AND WORLD REPORT
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DAVID GERGEN • EDITOR-AT-LARGE • U.S. NEWS AND WORLD REPORT
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THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
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TUESDAY, MARCH 19, 1991
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 19, 1991
9
Tattoo You
Skin art expresses individuality
Dragon
In popular literature, a character with a tattoo is usually dangerous, rebellious and maybe has a mean streak.
"When I first got it I would look at it a lot," she said. "But just yesterday I went to take a shower and I saw it and went 'Whoa.'"
Winter said she sometimes forgot that she had the tattoo.
By Jonathan Plummer Kansan staff writer
But the tattoo is no longer the sole domain of the tough, biker-in-leather type. Some KU students said their tattoos were artistic statements, another way of presenting themselves to the world.
"I am a cat lover, and this is my personal expression of how I feel," she said. "To do it as a sign of rebellion is not at all."
For seven months, Leigh Winter, Chesterfield senior, has had a daut虏 of a black cat on her calf, created from a design she drew herself. Her tattoo is not a sign of rebellion, but a sign of who she is, she said.
Winter said she would be getting another tattoo this week, this time one with her own design of two Siamese cats.
Jamie Mavec, Olathe senior, also said she was thinking about getting another tattoo.
"It's addictive," she said. "Once you get one, you want to get another one."
"They say, it's kind of like eating potato chips," she said. "Once you have one, you want another one."
On her shoulder, Mavec has a tattoo of a Chinese dragon she
designed from a picture she had seen and admired. She said she was thinking about getting another tattoo on her arm, but wanted to make the designs matched.
"I'm looking for something Oriental," she said. "I want everything to be unified."
Mavec said a popular idea about tattoos, that the decision to get one comes in haste, was not true in her case, as she thought about it for a
Laura Moriarty, Lawrence junior,
said her decision to get a tattoo was
made in less time.
"I just knew I wanted one, and I thought about it for a week," she said. "But I like it, and I have never negretted it."
Mortariy said her parents threatened to cancel a trip she planned to Yugoslavia last year unless she got the tattoo removed.
Moriarty said few people told her that they did not like her tattoo.
"They whipped up a plastic surgeon and told me I couldn't go unless I got it removed," she said. "But I could see." She then wore my tattoo. They got over it.
On her calf, Moriarty has a tattoo of a peace dove similar to one drawn by painter Pablo Picasso. Moriarty said the artist who drew her tattoo was not impressed by his fellow artist's work.
"The guy said, 'What is that?' and I said, "It's a dove by Picasso" and he said, "Who is that?" she said. "He said, 'Let me show you a real dove' and he showed me these pictures of big doves with rats in their mouths."
Jamie Mavec, Olathe senior, shows off her tattoo of a Chinese dragon that she designed herself.
"I used to volunteer at a nursing home, and all the old people there loved it," she said. "And now I work with them. And you can be my keeper me about it." At its own level, "it's ours."
Although some pain was involved in getting the tattoo, Moriarty said it was less than she thought it would be.
"The guy who put it on said that he sometimes gets men cry or you pass out," she said. "But he said women usually don't flinch."
Eric Black, Overland Park sophomore, said he tried to put the pain in perspective.
"It hurt just a little," Black said. "But you have to go in there thinking it's a needle, so there's some pain involved."
Black said that the picture he wanted, a scarab beetle that appears on a Jimi Hendrix album cover, was made up of a bad art world music it up.
"I looked around to a lot of places, and 'a' lot of them were pretty creepy," he said. "But at the place I had been before, I was further forward and said he could it."
Many people were interested in the design, even if they did not know what a scarab beetle was. Black said.
"I try to show it off," he said.
"Most people want to look at it, but I usually have to tell them that it's a scarab. The reason I like mine is because people see it and say, 'Totally bogus tattoo.'"
[Tattoo of a crab on someone's arm].
Keith Thorpe/KANSAN
Eric Black displays his scarab beetle tattoo.
Tattoo choice may stay under skin for lifetime
By Jonathan Plummer
Kansan staff writer
If you are thinking of making a statement with a tattoo, make sure it is a statement you can live with for a lifetime. a dermatologist recommends.
Lee Bittenden, a Lawrence physician, said he saw patients about once every two months who wished to have
"For people thinking about this, I would say give this some very serious thought because it is much easier to understand."
Sometimes small tattoos in places where the skin is not taut can be removed by removing the skin and stitching it.
But usually removal is done through a process called dermabrasion, where the skin is sanded with a tool equipped with a diamond frize, which spins at 20,000-30,000 revolutions a minute.
After the area of the tattoo is anesthetized, a one inch section is blocked out with gauze and sprayed with a solution that freezes the skin, making it hard and easier to sand.
The process, which takes about 45 minutes, sands out some of the pigment of the tattoo, and more comes out in the healing process, which takes four to six weeks.
"A tattoo should be considered something you will have for the rest of your life," he said. "Because if you have it removed, it will leave you with a permanent mark."
Ceddie Fischer of Fineline Tattoos in Topeka, agreed that the decision should come after a lot of thought.
Fischer said that those who decide to get a tattoo should be sure to check out how sanitary the artist was working. "I was not very happy," he said.
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Man killed during drug deal was informant, sheriff says
The Associated Press
PITTSBURG, Kan. — A man who shot, was weighted with chains and a cinder block and thrown alive into a water-filled strip mine pit was a drug informant for the Crawford County authorities confirmed yesterday.
Sheriff Linn Fields would not provide further details during a news conference, saying it might endanger jobs and law enforcement officers.
Steven Boyce, 34, of Parsons, was killed last week in a drug deal
authorities said went sour
Troy D. Johnson, 26, and Shawn D. Winkfield, 25, both of Pittsburgh, were each charged with one count of first-degree murder. They were being held without bond yesterday pending a preliminary hearing next week.
Boyce was shot in the hand and the lower back with a 44-caliber Magnum, Undersheriff Sandy Horton said.
Horton said that police found the gun in Winkfield's home and that Boyce was shot execution style in a drug deal that went bad.
No drug charges had been filed against Johnson and Winkfield, authorities said.
The victim's body was found last Tuesday in a 35-foot pit near Arma, in southeastern Kansas near the Missouri border.
An autopsy found that he died of drowning.
Boyce had a history of criminal offenses in Labette and Crawford counties, as well as in Utah and Kentucky, court records indicate. Boyce also had been convicted of theft and burglary.
Rebel attacks bombard Colombia, groups become increasingly violent Bombing of gas pipeline torches forest, injuring 30 peasants
The Associated Press
BOGOTA, Colombia — Rebels set off powerful bombs at a gas pipeline south of the capital, and the resulting fireball torched the surrounding forrest in the township, injuring 30 peasants, the oil company said yesterday.
Two bombs containing a total of about 1,100 pounds of dynamite exploded alongside the pipeline 30 miles south of Bogota on Sunday, according to the oil company Ecopetrol and the state governor's office.
The rebels also blew up an electrical tower in Tibu, near the Venezuelan border. The tower supplied energy to a pumping station along the Cano-Limon Crude oil pipeline, which transports 230,000 barrels a day from fields in eastern Colombia to Caribbean ports for export.
Authors blamed the Simon Bolivar Guerrilla Coordinator, a new umbrella organization that includes two rebel armies, the National Liberation Army and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia.
In January, the two rebel groups began their biggest offensive in 30 years of anti-government attacks. Three other rebel groups have laid down their arms after talks with the government in the past year.
In other violence, four guerrillas, three police officers and a civilian were killed during a rebel attack yesterday on the town of Candelaria.
In the northeastern province of Santander, five rebels were killed in two clashes yesterday, the Defense Ministry reported.
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
Mike Turner/KANSAN
Helena Hafstrom, Stockholm, Sweden, freshman, walks down crumbling stairs on the west side of Wescoe Hall. Mike Richardson, director of facilities operations, said that deteriorating sidewalks and stairways were ongoing problems around campus and that workers repaired stairs year-round.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 19, 1991
Sports
11
Bo knows he won't be with the Royals
The Associated Press
HAINES CITY, Fla. — Bo Jackson, one of the most recognized athletes in the world, was released by the Kansas City Royals yesterday after the team determined his injured imp play allowed him to play baseball this year.
The Royals will ask for wavers on Jackson this morning, and any team can claim him for $1 in the waiver that ends at 2 p.m. EST Friday.
"This action is taken with deep regret," Royals General Manager Herk Robinson said. "The entire organization is deeply appre-
cative to Ro for his contributions to the club. We wish him and his family the very best of health and success."
Steve Joyce, the Royals team physician, said Jackson had a fracture/dislocation of his left hip. The injury sustained in the Los Angeles Riders' game on Jan. 13 resulted in cartilage damage in the hip socket.
Robinson said the Royals would pay one-sixth of the $2,375,000 contract Jackson agreed to in February. Jackson would have made the full amount of his contract only if he was on Kansas City's opening day roster.
"We felt this was the cleanest
manner in which to handle this and was probably the most equitable to all involved." Robinson said in a report at the Royals training complex.
"We got nearly $2.5 million involved in a situation like this," Robinson said. "Finances do enter into a situation like this."
The Royals notified Jackson's agent, Richard Woods, of their decision.
Jackson was examined by James Andrews earlier yesterday in Birmingham. Ala
Robinson said the Royals were not crazy about Jackson playing football.
He said if Jackson had played in winter leagues he might have been the greatest player to wear a uniform.
Jackson completed the fourth year of a $7.4 million five-year deal with the Los Angeles Raiders in 1990.
"it's tragic that this happened." Robinson said. "Bo played a vital and exciting role in the development of sports in this country."
Joyce said he felt strongly that Jackson should not play baseball this year. Other doctors consulted by the Royals thought there was a possibility Jackson might play again, but Joyce said he believed that it was
highly uncertain.
"We were guided very closely by our team physician, Dr. Steve Joyce." Robinson said. "Steve feels very strongly that it is not in Bo's best interest to play baseball — at least in 1991."
Robinson said different doctors gave different time frames for when Jackson would be able to play again.
"Don't count me out." the 28-year-old Jackson said at a brief news conference with Andreas of the Alabam Medical and Orthopedic Center.
See Jackson Page 12
JACKIE BENNETT
Heather Berlin, Liberal freshman, practices the javelin throw near Memorial Stadium.
Track team heads outdoors
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
Yesterday's sunny skies and cool temperatures helped create nearideal conditions for the Kansas men's and women's track teams first outdoor practice of the 1991 outdoor season
The teams were in Memorial Stadium preparing for this weekend's alumni meet.
Kaiser said the field events now would include the javelin, the discus and the shot put.
Track
Kansas Relays manager and assistant jump coach Davis Kaiser said that different conditions, different events and longer distances characterized outdoor track competition.
"We threw balls inside that weighed a little more than the javelin," she said. "That helped us
Freshman javelin thrower Heather Berlin said that the athletes involved in the throwing season work on indoor season working on technique.
to build strength."
Berlin said that the change from indoor to outdoor competition was not that drastic.
the footwork will be a little quicker outside because of the difference in surface," she said.
Kaiser said that many of the distances in the sprinting events were longer outdoors because outdoor tracks were longer.
"The indoor tracks are smaller." he said. "So the only way to run a 100-meter dash inside be to go around curves."
Besides lengthening the indoor 55-meter dash to an outdoor distance of 100 meters, there also is a 10,000-meter event, a 400-meter intermediate hurdles event and a 110-meter hurdles event.
Kaiser said the hurdlers had to develop more rhythm to run the 110 meters.
outdoor race compared to only five or six indoors." he said.
"There are 10 hurdles in the
"The longer distances make outdoor track a little more endurance oriented," he said. "Just because you are quick off the block does not mean you run a fast 100-meter. There is an extend 43 meters that has to be covered."
Weather will also have an effect on outdoor results, Kaiser said.
"I think the sprinters do a little better on the hotter days, and the distance runners do better on cooler days," he said.
The teams train for all kinds of weather, though, Kaiser said.
"If we go to Drake and it is cold and rainy, then that is what we have to run in," he said.
The only squad that will not yet practice outside is the jump squad. Kaiser said that until the weather was more predictable, that squad would stay in the Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
"They use some expensive equipment," he said.
Crew excels in Texas regatta
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas Crew coach Rob Catloth said he was pleased with the teams' results at the Heart of Texas Regatta during spring break in Austin, Texas.
Kansas finished second overall. The women's varsity team took first place in the Women's Collegiate Basketball Tournament. Eight for the ninth consecutive year,
The men's varsity team finished fourth in the Men's Open Eight. Kansas took both the second and fourth places in the Mixed Collegiate Eight, a race in which men and women row in the same boat.
"For us, it was a preparatory race," Calthead said of the crew's first regitation of the season. "This was a learning experience for us."
Mike Armbruster, Stilwell senior, said this was Catlath's new strategy. The team has a different training schedule this year, and Kansas will be gearing more for the championship races.
Ambruster said he was happy with Kansas' results, especially because teams like the University of Texas could be on the water all year.
did what they were expected to do. There were no disappointments.
Kansas has not peaked yet, Catloth said, and he does not expect them to do so for a while.
"We knew that we were the underdogs going into the race," Armbruster said.
Calitth said hard work and increased strokes per minute would give Kansas the chance to give the Wisconsin crew a real competition.
He said that with increased time on the water, Kansas would improve and do better than it did in the regatta last week.
He said that Kansas trained for 200-meter races and that because the regatta was only a 1000-meter race, Kansas had fewer strokes per minute than its competition. Catloth said the 200-meter races would separate the good crews from the bad crews.
Catloh said that Kansas' finishes at the regatta were strong efforts and that the races were close and exciting. He said the team was trying to build confidence in how it would race later in the season.
"You develop through the season," Catloth said.
Netters beat Vols for a second time
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
In early February, the Kansas men's tennis team shocked the collegiate tennis world with a 54 victory in fifth-ranked Tennessee Volunteers.
Now in mid-March, the collegiate tennis world is buzzing again.
Kansas upset Tennessee for the second time this season during a four-match spring break trip through Arizona and California.
The Jayhawks went 2-2 during the trip, in which they faced four of the country's best teams.
The Jayhawks began the week in Tempe, Ariz., at the Penn National Collegiate Invitational against Arizona State.
The Sun Devils swept all six singles matches and defeated the Jayhawks 6-0. Doubles matches were successful, but the team score had been decided
Kansas rebounded the next day with a 5-4 victory over San Diego.
Kansas senior Jeff Gross and junior Rafael Rangel were the only Jayhawks to win their singles matches. Kansas trailed San Diego by one point, but Kansas pulled out the victory by sweeping all three doubles matches.
"The character of the team was really brought out during that match." Kansas freshman Rhain Buth said.
In the final match of the Invitational, Kansas victories by Gross. Juniors Rangel and Patrick Hani tied
Kansas seniors Craig Wildey and Chris Walker knocked off the Vols No. 1 doubles team of Brice Karsh and Tim Jesup.
Tennessee 3-3 heading into the doubles matches.
Kansas junior Paul Gavin and Rangel sealed the victory for the Jayhawks with a 6-3, 5-7, 6-4 victory over the Knicks at DeLoaye de Ploy and Fabio Silberberg.
"We beat the number five team in the country, and this time they had their number one guy," he said.
Gross said the second victory over the Volunteers was better than the first.
Brice Karsh, Tennessee's No. 1 singles player, did not play against Kansas in February.
The Jayhawks concluded the spring break trip against the California-Irvine Antateurs in Irvine, Calif.
The team score was tied at 3-3 heading into doubles matches, but the Jayhawks dropped two matches and losd 5-3.
A scheduled match with Pepperdine in Malibu, Calif., was rained on Saturday, the day before the Jay hawks returned to Lawrence.
Buth said the trip was productive for the Jayhawks.
"It was a great experience to play the top-ranked teams," he said. "It magnifies your weaknesses, but when time it helps you work on them."
The Jayhawks, 9-6 overall, will play host to Missouri on April 2, in the Big Eight Conference season opener.
Team says play is not up to par
Kansas junior Shelly Triplett tied for 36th with a total of 247.
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas women's golf team finished seventh in the 19-team Peggy Kirk Bick Invitational golf tournament during spring break in Owia, Froli.
She said she did not think the team had been playing up to its potential.
After the tournament, junior Laura Myers said she knew the team could do better.
"I wouldn't say that I was disappointed, but I know we're not where we should be," she said.
"I need to work on putting to get consistency." Myers said. "That consistency will help my game and build team cohesion, that will help the team's plaving."
Myers was Kansas' top finisher in the tournament. She tied for eighth with a three-round total of 238, seven additional champion Kim Cayce of Duke.
Myers said that the team did not seem to have the same level of confidence that was present last year.
She did not know why the lack of confidence had arisen, but Myers said it might have been the loss of confidence in her staff as well as recent changes to the team.
She said that regaining confidence was essential and that they needed to motivate each other.
Golf
But she did not think that any of the teams in the tournament played as well as they could.
"We've got a lot of work to do"
Triplett said. "I'm a better player
than I have been playing."
"All of the scores were high," Triplet said. "We need to get scores low. We have five girls who should be shooting in the 70s."
Other Kansas players in the tournament were freshman Holly Reynolds and junior Laura Martin, who finished 31st and 33rd with scores of 245 and 246. Sophomore Cathy Reinebock finished 84th with a total of 276.
Kansas' next tournament will be April 5. Triplets said she hoped the next two weeks would allow the Kansas players to get their priorities straight and to concentrate on their games.
Duke finished first in the tournament, but Tripplet said that if Kansas had played the way it could have, the Jayhawks would have beat Duke.
"I think these last two tournements we've been telling ourselves it's still early," Triplett said. "You get involved in school. You've got to decide which is more important, and it's hard to know what is important at the time. Right now, golf is important."
"They were not out of reach," Triplett said.
Bowling teams place in sectional tournament
The Kansas bowling team competed in the National Bowling Council Sectional Roll-Off in Topeka during spring break.
The Topeka sectional was one of five sectionals held nationwide involving the top 64 teams in the country.
The women's team placed fifth behind Wichita State, Nebraska-Lincoln, Mankato State and Nebraska-Omaha.
tournament with a 187 average.
"The good news is we did fairly well, but we would have liked to win it," Kansas coach Michael Fine said. "It was exciting to be invited."
Joe Donniever averaged 207 pins a game and led the men's team to a sixth-place finish. Wichita State won the men's tournament.
Sports briefs
Dykstra faces possible probation for gambling
CLEARWATER, Fla. <- Philadelphia centerfielder Lenny Dykstra does not know that baseball commissioner Fay Vincent will put him on probation as reported yesterday by a newspaper, but such a ruling sounded fine to him.
Amy Gentz led the team in the
"No comment," was Dykstra's response to a Philadelphia Daily News report that Vincent had placed him on probation for one year.
Dikstra has admitted in court that he lost more than $78,000 in illegal, high-stake poker games.
Dykstra met Saturday with Vincent and was told he would not be fined or suspended on the basis of his testimony last week at a federal trial.
Patrick McEnroe beats Boris Becker 6-1, 6-4
KEY BICAYNE, Fla. — Patrick McEnroe did something yesterday that his brother has done only one. He beat Boris Becker.
The younger McEnroe, enjoying the best year of his career, upset the second-ranked German 6-1, 4-2 in the international players Championships.
Becker has a 6-1 career record against John McEnroe, and he beat Patrick in four sets when they met in the semifinals of the Australian Open
in January. This time, though,
Becker struggled from the start.
In his last tournament, the 24-year-old McEuroce lost to his brother in three sets at the finals of a tournament in Chicago. He has improved his ranking to No. 45 from No. 120 at the start of the year.
Becker tried to get back into the match against McEnroe when he broke serve in tying the second set 4-4. But he double-faulted on the next pitch, and The U.S. citizen then served out the match at love, finishing with an ace.
CBS fouls out with coverage
CBS's unprepared, biased and witless color commentator brought to Kansas' first-round tournament game about as much as could be accomplished by a budget microwaveable burrito.
---
Just keep Bill Walton far, far away.
Indigestion and disbelief.
Until that afternoon, I had been a fan of Walton from his playing days with Boston. I enjoyed watching him play and admired his comeback from Boston Fan. I'm a hard person to turn away from an old Celtic player.
Chris
Oster
Associate
sports editor
But his color work during the tournament has been without merit. His commentary during the Kansas-New Orleans game was misleading and consistently slanted in favor of the Priveteers.
I found myself needing a fix of Bob and Max. Chris Piper and Gary Bender would do. May be even Jean Paul DellaCamera.
Wake up. Bill.
Had you bothered to read the media guide or glanced at some of the pre-game statistics, you may have noticed that Randall is the team's second-leading scoring. He has earned an em in down town, Mr. Walton.
From the outset, he beated the play of Kansas. Most offensive comments were comments he made about Mark Randal. When a New Orleans player Randall. Randall. Walton would discount Randall's effectiveness as a post player.
Seemingly unprepared, Walton seemed to try to learn about Kansas as the game progressed. Early on, Mike Daddox dropped in a few plays before the free throw line. So who is Kansas' team leader? Daddox, of course.
Despite the accepted dominance of the powerhouse New Orleans team, Kansas did pull out the victory and way to meet Pittsburgh on Saturday.
Haltime now, and the game is tied at 26. So who should win the game? According to Walton, the stronger and more talented New Orleans team should take this one. Whoa. Look out Vegas, here come the Privateers.
So. Bill, who's your pick? Pitt or Kansas. No pressure, eyes closed, no peeking. Of course, Pitt.
I was happily unable to catch Walton's call of the game on Sunday, but have been informed that he was a bit less slanted in his commentary. Maybe a CBS executive caught the Kansas game and decided that rooting for one team or the other presented a problem.
Now to switch from the smaller problem to the larger one. What is CBS trying to do with its NCAA coverage?
After forking over billions and billions for the rights to broadcast the tournament, CBS has proceeded to butcher games by attempting to catch the last "exciting few moments" of every game. The continuity of any one game is shot and fans are left hanging, wondering if and when they might see the rest of their original game.
The network has acted like a kid with a new toy — whipping out its split-screen gadgetery once in a while to entertain those in the audience using 153-inch screens with four-games-at-one coverage.
I want my ESPN. The cable network may not have been great at pulling the big names for color, but they were able to come up with their designs and had respect for the teams and the fans come tournament time.
Even with Dick Vitalte rambling and Jim Valvano doing his best to sound like Vitalte, ESPN still would be my choice to show the games. Not only is their game coverage better, but also who whips CBS in the studio, as Chad Wainwright of the staff are less giddy and more entertaining in their wraps.
Now, back to you. Bill
With Walton covering the Indiana—Florida State game, a Seminole player was late coming out of the locker room after halftime, the victim of stomach cramps. Walton, who missed the game, player stick something down his throat, puke it up and come out and play basketball.
Sounds like Walton's commentary style lies somewhere along the same line.
Chris Oster is a Topeka senior majoring in journalism.
12
Tuesday, March 19, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Injury ends Jackson's stint with Royals
Continued from Page 11
But if Jackson does come back in baseball, it will not be with the Royals.
Andrews did not give a specific diagnosis of the hip injury that has kept Jackson out of spring training with the Royals.
Reports have said that Jackson may have avascular necrosis. Medical experts said avascular necrosis generally did not arise from a sudden attack or injury and develop, but it is potentially disabling as the blood flow to the bone is cut.
Andrews said that it was a significant injury and that blood flow to the heart was weak.
Andrews declined to elaborate when referring to reports that Jackson might have avascular necrosis.
"There has been no collapse of his hip joint." Andrews said. "That's the reason we're putting him on
crutches."
"We're in a protective phase at this point," said Andrews, who left open the possibility that Jackson might be able to play football for the Raiders.
"Andrews might think Bo be able to a make a little quicker return than Steve," Robinson said. "We might re-evaluate by the middle of the year and see if there has been any regeneration of cartilage and bone. There may be differing opinions where one doctor says no strenuous activity for 15 months and another says 10."
"I know deep down I'll be back playing baseball this year," said Jackson, who is still on crutches.
would be able to return to professional sports in the future.
"don't want to speculate," Raiders coach Art Shell said in Hawaii at the NFL meetings. "The doctor gave me some name of the injury. It was a slight dislocation with rest he had been doing. With rest, he's supposed to be able to play."
"Where's Elvis?" he asked jokingly.
Jackson arrived with his agent in a limosine. As he got out, he acted surprised at the gathering of reporters and cameramen.
When questioned about his health, Jackson said he was fine, and then hobbled into the office of Andrews, an orthopedic specialist.
The fast, powerful tailback-out
fielder — the only man to win college
football's Heisman Trophy and base-
ball title — has not been able to compete athletically.
since he injured his hip when tacked from behind Jan. 13 in the Raiders' playoff game against the Cincinnati Bengals.
"Don't mess with me now. Don't mess with me now." Jackson said, as he left Kansas City on Sunday night
Some reports even raised the possibility that Jackson's injury might bring a premature end to the career of a star athlete in the history of sports.
Last year, Jackson hit a career-high 272, with 28 home runs and 78 RBI, but he played in only 111 games. He spent 21 days on the disabled list in July and August after he injured his shoulder diving for a ball hit by Deion Sanders of the New York Yankees. Before the injury, he hit three consecutive home runs in the game.
Tyson prevails in disputed seventh
The Associated Press
LAS VEGAS — Mike Tyson, rocked in the sixth round, beat Razor Rudock in the seventh round last night when referee Richard Steele stopped the fight after a flurry of punches the fight on the ropes but did not drop him.
Ruddock turned his hands up and looked at Steele in disbelief that the fight was over, then bodyguards stepped in and into the ring and a mellee broke out.
Chaos reigned for several seconds.
Chaos reigned for several seconds. Tyson knocked Ruduck down in the second round and again in the third. Ruduck, however, came on in the sixth and had Tyson in trouble with two hooks and a right hand.
In the seventh, action slowed until Tyson landed a six-punch combination with both hands that sent Rudolf's arms ripped and ropes and Steele stop it at 2:23.
When order was restored in the ring and the time was announced, there were thunderous boots from the more than 15,000 in an outdoor area.
Several minutes after Steele stopped the fight, security men were still pitching people from the ring.
The fight was marked by thunder-
ous punches from both men as they
tried to end it from the outset. It was
a brutal fight, and by a lot of Glocking and grabbing.
Twelve seconds into the second round, Tyson, winning for the third time since his upset title loss to James "Buster" Douglas 13 months ago, secured a flash knockdown with a left hook to the head.
Ruddock bounced up, signaled he was not hurt and took the mandatory eight-count
Murad Muhammad, Ruddock's promoter, shouted. "We get a rematch or we go to court."
Wilt Chamberlain honored by 76ers
The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA — Years after Wilt Chamberlain stopped playing basketball here, the Philadelphia 76ers honored the Hall of Famer by retiring his jersey last night.
In a pre-game ceremony before the Sixers played the Orlando Magic, the 54-year-old Chamberlain appeared on court to watch as his No. 13 jersey was lifted to the Spectrum's rafters.
The jersey now hangs alongside those of Billy Cunningham, Hal Greer, Bobby Jones and Julius Erving.
Chamberlain became teary-eyed during the ceremony after the crowd gave him the second of three standing ovations.
"It's been a long time coming, but good things come to those who wait," he said.
His voice choked up a bit as he thanked Philadelphia, his parents, former teammates and others involved in his career.
"I learned all my basketball in this great City of Brotherly Love," Chamberlain said.
NBA Deputy Commission, Russell Grank said Chamberlain wrote the NBA record book and wrote it in indelible ink.
Chamberlain set almost 100 individual NBA records that still stand. He was the league's second-leading career scorer and was voted to the NBA's 35th anniversary all-time team in 1980.
Chamberlain played for the 76ers from 1953 to 1968. In 1967, he led the Sixers past his former teammate Francisco Warriors, in the finals.
Just stop and
Listen to "Think About It" when you want to hear all sides of an important issue.
Voice your opinion on that issue and call in during the show.
"Think About It"
Tonight's Topic: R.O.T.C.
5024 7639
What's stopping you? "Think About it!" A radio talk show every Tuesday night at 7pm on KJHK 9.07 FM.
KJHX 90.7 FM
IF YOU'RE PREGNANT AND YOU NEED HELP
For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and talk with you.
FREE PREGNANCY TESTING.
Hours:
M,W,F,1-3p.m.
M-Th 6-8p.m.
Sat. 10-12p.m.
843-4821
204 W.13TH
SPECIALUZED.
SPECIALIZE YOUR
TRANSPORTATION
SPECIALIZED
O
Try out the new Specialized Frame System (SFS). Pedal with little effort while you enjoy a bike that fits like a clove.
HARDROCK SPORT $349
SUNFLOWER 804 Massachusetts, Lawrence, 843-5000
Southern Hills Mall
1601 W. 23rd St.
841-9111
a
Take two of these and sleep thru the morning.
Tuesdays: $2 Import beers and $3 Chicken baskets
BENCHWARMERS
110 Bus. Personal
SWIM, 27, seeks special lady for long term relationship, if you are a single woman, 18-30, and also someone with experience, tell me about her response. Please I p.O. Box 42422, Lawrence, KS 60044
105 Personal
Classified Directory
Bauch & Lemb, Ray-Ban Sunglasses
20% Below Sung, Retail
The Etc. Shop
779 Mass Ave, 81411
B.C. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto
b. C. B. AUTO
Habits, phobias, stress, anxiety, pain, smoking, weight and other disorders. Hypnotherapy Center, 842-7549
100s Announcements
FORMAL WEAR The Etc. Shop
Make a SPECTACLE of yourself. The Ete. Shop sunglasses
Summer Cash
Clothing & Accessories
For Men & Women
Sunglasses & Costumes
732 Masa. 843-0611
Put ATGT on your resume before you graduate
1991 First Marketing Opportunities Available
AT&T is seeking ambassadors, sales oriented students to participate in our seven day on-campus marketing program selling AT&T products and services. Hours are:
Monday - Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
Saturday 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
Must be available 1-2 weeks prior to the start of classes. We need:
AT&T STUDENT CAMPUS MANAGER
To be responsible for overall event implementation, daily management and training of student group Requires strong relationship with students related experience a plus. Must be available to attend National Training on August 1, 3-1991.
AT&T ASSISTANT STUDENT
CAMPUS MANAGER
- No Experience Necessary
To manage a group of students on a daily basis and assist with overall event implementation. Sales/leadership experience 4 years.
AT&T STUDENT
REPRESENTATIVE/
CAMPUS GROUP
SUNGLASSES
The Etc. Shop
You Must: Be At Least 21 Years Old Have A Good Driving Recon Be Ambitious
We can give you a summer job that will take you places. Places like Los Angeles, San Francisco, Dallas, New York and Miami just to name a few. Affiliated Services, Inc., an agent for Mayflower Transit is looking for hard working individuals with a sense of adventure to fill summer positions in our household goods fleet.
1991 Fall Marketing Opportunities Available
To find out more about these great opportunities, call 1-800-5921-212 or resume to us at www.aiisec.com/us. Tshirn, 15th St., 14th Floor, Philadelphia, PA 19128. Equal Copy. Employer.
To act as our on-campus representatives. Must be outgoing and sales-oriented.
- Free Training
- Excellent Earnings Potential
- Scholarships For Top Earners
- Meet Interesting People
- Excellent Earnings Potential
* See The Country
MAYFLOWER
TRANSIT
Call 1-800-332-2604 to register. You do not need to register to attend, but it would be appreciated.
$100 Door Prize
Random Drawing
You Must Be At Least
- See The Country
Midwest Mall, Midwest Mall, and the ship service included and service made at Midwest Mall, Inc.
P.O. Box 107, Indiana, Indiana, 46207-0120. CEE MJC8344. In the U.S.A. by 1911 Midwest Mall, Inc.
Affiliated Services, Inc.
For More Information Attend A Free Seminar:
Date Wednesday, March 20, 1991
V
Place: Burge Union Building, Pioneer Room
Time: 7:00 p.m.
TERRIFIC
TUESDAY
$$SAVE BIG BUCKS$$
PYRAMID
PIZZA
"We Pile It On!"
BUY A LARGE 2
TOPPING PIZZA AND
A LITER OF SODA
FOR ONLY $8.95
PLUS TAX.
PYRAMID PIZZA
Also, try our Colomba Frozen Yogurt!
Open 11a.m. to LATE (Limited Delivery Area)
842-3232 14th & Ohio (Under The Wheel
(Under The Whee
*New Analysis of Western Civilization* 'makes sense of Western Civ' makes sense to use it! Available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Crier Bookstores.
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters.
We're here because we care.
841-2345 1419 Mass.
We are always open.
USE IT or LOSE IT
10
TANS
$25
7
TANSF
$20
EUROPEAN 25th & IOWA 841-6232
120 Announcements
EARTH MOTHER ARTS
*College Money, Private Scholarships You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money refunded America's Finished 1081. COL MSCU, Columbia University, Inc. LOS 1081. HOP, Mo 648201, 1-800-749-5734
Call Douglas County Rape Victim's Support Service for confidential and caring assistance. If you need help, call 844-3506 or 841-2345.
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2345. Headquarters.
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counsel. A friendly understanding voice. Free, confidential referrals calls returned by counselors. Headquarters for RU Info 844-5306 Sponsored by GLOSK
EARTH MOTHER ARTS
Now has incredible herbaceous & plant pigment crayons, pencils, paints, and high quality recycled sketchbooks for all serious artists. The Antique
Hey Laura, you bioethical wonder! Don't forget the annual rights discussion March 21, in the Governor's Room at 7:00. Invite your friends! Dr. Zhivago
Suicide Intervention. If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is call 841-2345 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
THE WAR AFFECTS US-For a caring listener or info on support services, call Headquarters Counseling Center 841-2345.
130 Entertainment
Lawrence Info Center, content orientated BBS,
841.7523.8 N. J. 1
140 Lost-Found
205 Help Wanted
200s Employment
Seeking students and grads to fill many positions Airline will train. Excellent salary and travel benefits. 303-441-2455.
**Found Lost Dog Small, blond, looks like terrifier with pink collar. Call 842 7354**
**Set of keys, in the vacinity of 17th and Vermont. Call 842 6526 to identify**
Retirement Community now seeking part-time receptionist positions. Please have general knowledge of office procedures. Opening for night and weekend shifts with average of 14 hours/week. Please apply in person.
1501 Inverness Drive Lawrence, KS EOF
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camp. Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterbathing, gymnastics, swimming, camping, camps, crafts, dramatics, or riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $1000 or more. Contact: 768.748.1730; 768.748. NHL, ID. 8003.748-46424.
Caregivers need now to Trinity Community Services (TCS) needing caring individuals to provide care for the elderly and those who videote reap care to families who are involved in the constant care of a disabled child or elderly person. TCS volunteers are in need of people who can work varied hours. Please call 842-3599 for an application.
Earn what you learn. Manpower is looking for students interested in earning great pay plus commission. We offer flexible hours, valuable training and business experience, plus free use of a laptop, phone and computer system, sophomore or above, with at least 4 Average, and are computer familiar. Manpower needs you as a College Rep to promote the skills of the experience that pays, call Lori at 749-2800.
FAST FUND-RASING PROGRAM $100 in just one week. Earn up to $100 for your campus organization. Pitch a chance at $60 more. (This program works!) No investment needed. Call us: 212-553-4232.
Graduate assistant: Student Financial Aid is seeking a graduate assistant to assist primarily with the CASHE Scholarship Search Program. This is a half-time position. The monthly salary is $4200 plus any additional application, application, and names, addresses, and telephone numbers of 3 references to Daisie Del Buno, Associate Director, Student Financial Aid. Applicants should contact EOEo at 58 may 2014 pm 21:30. EOEo AA
Great job in Philadelphia suburb. Have fun with 2 cute kids for 35 hour weekly. Earn great salary, room, board and 2 weeks paid vacation. Starts with one year Call Elias at (822) 643-3411.
Immediate clothing sales position available with a Lenox company. Weekends only, good money, some travel, expenses paid and a variety of options. 800-283-3653 from baram. monday-Friday
International Company seeks career minded individuals to train in the fashion and glamour industry. For interview. 1-232-6829.
Need money fast! Make up to $125.00 a day trimming photographs. No experience necessary! 1-800-695-2729
Unique Career Opportunity $11 to start and bonus
Need managers for rapid growing corporation.
No exp necessary. Will train in sales, marketing
and management. Call 1-623-8011
Work Study positions available: Spring, Summer and Fall. Call Judy at the School of Business. 864-7558.
225 Professional Services
Driver education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver license obtainable, transportation provided; 841.7449
Government photos, passports, immigration,
viasa, senior portraits, modeling & arts portfolios/BAW. color. Call Tom Swells 749-1811.
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 19, 1991
13
Richard A. Frydman
Attorney at Law
842-4023
For All Murder Cases
For All Municipal and District Court Matters Free Initial Consultation
dodel portfolio, portrait, wedding photographer
instant pass $5.00. Call 841-9689 or leave
message
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(931) 400-6928
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
TRAFFIC - DUI'S
Fake ID & Alcohol offenses
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
Attorney
16 East 13th 842-1133
JERRY HARPER LAW OFFICES
1101 Mass. Lawrence 749-0123
235 Typing Services
i-Der Women Word Processing. Former editor transforms your writings into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 845/363, days or evenings.
Absolute cheapest (in Lawrence in hardcover-styled paper) Rasp jobs no problem 9/46-146
Accurate typing, Resumes, Theses, Letters, Call Melany, 1-913-8534-754 or 864-3181.
Conduct, subelectric, heating, lighting, battery
spelling and spelling corrected. 201 W G 25th St. M.
TH. 8a m. 4p m.; P- S 8a m. 3p m. 842 2744.
I will correct grammar, punctuation or spelling errors, cell and type your words of wisdom and, best of all, produce your best possible papers. Phl 412-6535.
Professional Typist. Reasonable rates. Call
842 3203.
Ka's professional word processing. Accurate and
affordable. Call after 1:00 pm. 841-4345
Professional resumes-Consultations, formating, typesetting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc. 927. Mass. 841-7517.
outerfect word processing, Ink Jet printer
Near Orchards Corners. Phone 843-8568
TheWORDCTORS- Why may for typing when you can have word processing? IBM, MAC, laser since 1983. 843-3147
Word Processing Typing, Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing, composition. HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254
Word Processing-Spelling checked $1.00 pg
2share R33-4638
300s Merchandise
1987 Honda Elite, 60cc, red, reliable and inexpensive transportation, $250. Call 749-2018.
MiniIntel SE COMPITER for TSA. Less than yr old, 1 mile. RAM, 20-mg, HD, mouse. Call Scott at 864-600-913 or (913) 441-6057
305 For Sale
Pentax ME Super 35 mm camera. Lens, case
filt, flash included, excellent condition, $160
841-266.
'80 Oldsmobile Omega, AC, AT, PS, cruise,
am/fm cassette, good condition. Must sell. Best
offer. Call 841-8321 after 6pm
1081 Mitsubishi Corolla Dacia 52,4 room hbk, several new parts. Good condition. Asking BM 842-7567 80-7567 80
360 Miscellaneous
Hillel
בא
Available March 1 - 1 bd unfurn aip in new building at Wellington, 1004 Effelwyn. Rd Energy efficiency certification fans, mini blinds. Great location near campus. Short lease pay $35 per month. No pets.
Thursday, March 21
Executive Board Mtg.
7 p.m. Hillel House
Friday, March 22
Shabbat Dinner
6 p.m. Hillel House
R.S.V.P. by March 21
8:30 p.m. Naismith Hall
合
Events of the Week
Wednesday, March 20
Comedy Sportz
Benefit Show
9:30 a.m. Network Hall
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
8:30 p.m. Naismith Hall only $4
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all advertisements on this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or an employment discrimination.'
Passover Seder reservations due
Saturday March 28
South Drive
1, 2, 3, 4
Bedrooms
Saturday, March 25 Little Brothers & Sisters movie. ".Jungle Book"
4 p.m. KS Union
For rides and more information
call 864-2948
- Pool & Volleyball
& Vehicley
• Quiet location
• Close to bus route
• Small pets OK with deposit
• Inexpensive gas heat
• Central air
2166 W.26th 843-6446
HUV, SELL, LOAN CASH
On TV. VCX,珠宝, stereo, musical instrumented车库 and more. We honor VIA/MCA/UMC, David Pawn & Hawney, 108 W. dh 728,1919
Bradford Square Apartments 501 Colorado
2 & 3 BR-Available in May or August,
micro brans, disposals, firefighters/fire-
line menus, rentals for office space,
site Management, KU hua run, off-street parking.
Call to reserve your apartment for summer
Nice 2 bedroom apt. Close to Student Union.
Washer/dryer hookup. Off-street parking. No pets.
749-2919
Farnished room one black from KU. Some utilities paid, off street parking for nos. 44-105 $8.00. Two rooms on KU. Utilities paid, our two are rented and a faire preach last 12$ a month (144 Vermont) $1.75.
Great 1 dbm apt for rest. 1 block from Union
Must be to appreciate. Call Kristen at 865-010
Leave message.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM (Next to Benchwarmer)
Wanted: VGA monitor and/or VGA interface card for IBM compatible. Call 842-8094.
24TH & EDDINGHAM
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR.
apartments at an
Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
12-6 pm Mon., Fri.
10-6 pm Tue. - Thur.
9-3 pm Sat.
No Appt. Necessary
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
Boy? XU Med. students. Move in June 1 and receive $y for your on rent for 2 mids. *Studio 1 and 2 beamer aps! *Heat and water paints *Acress and Clementine. Center, Rainbow Tower Apts. 931-893-963
4-5 bedroom house available April 1. $800 per month.
2 blocks from KU on Kentucky. Days
913-321-140, Craig
Lormar Townhomes, 3801 Clinton Parkway
Quality, spacious, with all the amenities. Brand
new available. 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease thru
May, July or for 12 months. 841-789-8433.
**new apartments**
21 BR, 44 BR. Room
each unit, ceiling
micros, firewaves, full 2 baths in
it, on bus route, off street parking. Only 1 yr old.
Call 750-1586.
370 Want to Buy
TRAVEL
1. **Namibia** - The largest country in Africa, Namibia is known for its vast savanna and diverse wildlife. It also has a rich cultural heritage with traditions like the Namibian Kwazulu Natal and the Zimbabwean Southern Rhino.
2. **South Africa** - South Africa is renowned for its stunning landscapes, including deserts, mountains, and rivers. It also offers excellent opportunities for outdoor activities such as hiking, fishing, and safaris.
3. **Tanzania** - Tanzania is one of Africa's most popular travel destinations. It offers breathtaking scenery, including the Ngorongoro Crater, Lake Victoria, and Mount Kilimanjaro. The country's diverse wildlife, including lions, zebras, and elephants, are a major attraction.
4. **Botswana** - Botswana is known for its beautiful coastline, rich biodiversity, and warm climate. It offers numerous parks, including the Serengeti National Park and the Kruger National Park, as well as opportunities to experience traditional Botswanese culture.
5. **Zambia** - Zambia is a landlocked country located on the eastern side of Africa. It offers a mix of natural beauty, including the Masai Mara National Reserve and the Kimberly Desert, as well as cultural experiences like the Swahili Festival.
6. **Mozambique** - Mozambique is an island nation in southwestern Africa. It offers a unique blend of natural beauty and cultural richness, including the Great Zimbabwe River and the Great Rift Valley.
7. **RSA** - RSA is a sovereign country located in southern Africa. It is known for its natural beauty, including the national park of Kgalagere National Park and the Kalahari Desert.
8. **Ethiopia** - Ethiopia is a country located in northwestern Africa. It offers a variety of natural resources, including water, minerals, and agricultural products.
9. **Ghana** - Ghana is a country located in west-central Africa. It offers a mix of natural beauty, including the Volta River and the Savanne Forest.
10. **Angola** - Angola is a country located in southwest Africa. It offers a diverse range of natural resources, including oil, gold, and diamonds.
These countries offer a wide range of attractions and activities, making them ideal travel destinations.
WHERE EVERYTHING MATTERS
ACHET 411
each apartment features
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
- Large bedrooms
- Mini blinds
- On KU bus route
- Carports available
- 1 bedroom $335, $350
- 2 bedroom $440, $460
- 3 bedroom $600
office
611 Michigan Street
(across from Hardee's)
HOURS:
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
9:00-12:00 Sat
843-1971
Please call Kristy for airtime
WOODWAY
Bedroom Town Houses
841-8400
- Garages; 2 & 1/2 b
- Microwave Ovens
- Some with fireplaces
- Luxurious 3 & 4
400s Real Estate
- On KU Bus Route
- Swimming Pool
Now leasing
SUNRISE VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
- Microwave Ovens
Accepting reservations for fall leases!
spacious & comfortable
-3 Pools
*1 & 2 BR apartments
*2 & 3 BR townhomes
-3 Pools
-Tennis courts
-on KU bus route
-gas heat & water paid
(on apartments)
TRAILRIDGE
...on KU bus route
...studios
405 For Rent
for summer & fall
09.09.09-09
2500 W.6th
Quail Creek Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
四
(on apartments)
(Call for appointment)
843-7333
...Water paid .
...townhomes
...Free cable
...2,3 Bedrooms
Now Leasing for Fa
Mon - Fri 11-5
Real
...2,3 Bedrooms
- Swimming Pool & Tennis Courts
Apple Lane Apartments
...
Now accepting reservations for fall leases!
NJ BLOCK FROM KANSAS UNION For rent to serious graduate school, upperclass student or KI employee. One BR furnished. No pets. Refs. $300-$438. 8143-389 6 with Water furnished. $250/mo. 8143-389 6 with Water furnished.
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Water paid
Summer Sublease-1 BR furnished apartment,
next to Union. Dishwasher, drafting table $325,
negotiable. B41-2966.
Free cable
Come and see our totally remodeled 2 Bedroom apartments available for Fall.
2 Bdm townhouse.
Roomy 1,290 square feet
1/2 baths, 6 month sublease
3 Bdrm Townhouse.
Spacious 1,410 square feet
1/2 bath downstairs, Large full bath with
dressing area upstairs
Pool
Roommate~very large, very nice duplex, now
W/ D. Wills #23. See it in见你. 841-746-
SUMMER SUPER BASEASE with option for fall, in Sun-
shade H. Supersion 2 BH, furnished, paid.
$250-$350 per month.
ALL NEW appliances, carpet, mini-blinds and study area
Close to KU bus route
Short Term Subleases Available Immediately
Some Summer Subleases too!
15th & Crestline
Hours: Mon-Fri 8-5:30
Sat. 8-5
Call or come by today These won't last long!
Sun 1-4
424-4200
meadowbrook
Double Take
OPEN DAILY 1.5 PM
Reserve Your Home Now!
We offer
Completely Furnished
Completely Furnished 21344 Bedroom
BEDRING:
-Custom furnishings
-Designed privacy
-Private Parking
-Close to shop and KU
-Many great locations
-Equality opportunity housing
Offering
Designed with you in mind!
Go to...
Hanover Place - 841-1212
ARE YOU SURE YOU
KNOW WHERE THIS PAR-
TY IS, JAMAL? WEVE
BEEN DRIVING AROUND
FOR AN HOUR.
NO, I BOT IT.
IT SHOULD BE JUST
AROUND HERE.
Kentucky Place - 749-0445
Sundance - 841-5255
Sundance - 841-3235
7th & Florida
Tanglewood - 749-2415
Campus Place - 841-1429
1145 Louisiana
Orchard Corners - 749-4226
151.505.151
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
- Volleyball Court
842-4455
- Basketball Court
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
MARRIAGE
- 3 Hot Tubs
- Exercise Room
NAISMITH HALL. Living
Models Open Daily
Mon. - Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 10-4 p.m. Sun 12-4 p.m.
842-5111
1301 W.24th
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
- On Bus Route
The cost of living has gone down at Naismith!
• NEW LOWER COSTS!
• Free utilities
• "Dine Anytime"
• Convenient location
• Great social events
anywhere else doesn't make cents.
IT SHOULD'VE BEEN
"JUST ABOUND HERE" ABOUT
TWENTY-FIVE MINUTES AGO.
NUMBER. WHY DON'T
NUMBER. WHY DON'T
$ 355 - $425
YOU CAN BE HERE
GIVE IT UP, JAMAL.
I WANNA SHOW UP THERE
BEFORE SUNRISE.
by Tom Avery
ANH, THAT'D BE
TOO EASY, TRUST
ME; I KNOW WHAT
I M GONG, ANWYN
More fun for less funds!
VOLKSWAGEN
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Drive
Lawrence, KS 60044
(913) 834-8559
Summer sublease 3 bdrm. furnished.
Tanglewood. Option for fall. $186 each. May paid.
249-1309
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has private rooms for spring and summer. Drop by 148 Tennessee or call 749-6971.
West Hill APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now leasing for
June or August
aculous apts. furnish
pacious apts. - furnished and unfurnished
-1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
$280 to $335 per month
(water paid)
OPEN HOUSE Mon. Wed. Thurs
-2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft
$365 to $415 per month
Summer sublease. Large studio $275/mo
841-6784 at 6pm
1.00-4.00 p.m. (no app needed)
This贴 for original buildings only
does not include Phase II
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
- Policy
430 Roommate Wanted
A roommate needed immediately! $187.50 plus part utilities. March rent paid. On bus route. 843-4706
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
Words set in BOLD face count as 3 words.
Summer sublease. Female roommate needed to share condo, hire room, carport, W/D microwave, pool, CA and AMP$165 plus ½s. Call Lon. 854-6500 or 843-7800.
Two female roommates wanted for 1991, four bedroom house. Nice neighborhood off W. 6th. $250 plus *u* utilities. Michelle. 844-1105.
Words set in ALE CAPS count as 2 words.
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words.
Words set in All CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Centered lines count as 7 words.
Female roommate needed to share unique space for BDR apt for next year. Call 749-6415. Roommate wanted 3 BR house. $75, includes utilities. Available now. $413,000. Leave message. Share beautiful house new campus. Non-smoker. Share beautiful house $8 per month. 1/5 utilizers. 814-4075.
Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only.
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Make checks payable to
University of Kansas
University of Kansas
Lawrence, KS 60045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1994 Universal Press Syndicate
"Oh, professor . . . Did I tell you I had another out-of- head experience last night?"
14
Tuesdav. March 19. 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Demonstrators in Germany cry for relief from economic woes
The Associated Press
LEIFZIG, Germany — More than 70,000 people gathered in eastern German cities last night in demonstrations reminiscent of 1989 pro-democracy protests. But this time they were demanding an end to their economic misery.
Protests against communism help bring freedom, not prosperity, to East Germany, said those who marched in this city considered the birthplace of the East German revolution.
"Misery. Our lives are misery," said Claus Paetzold, a chemical factory worker in Leipzig. "We stood here in the fall of 1989 to put down a dictator, and now we are in another kind of dictatorship. We are victims so that people can live better in the West."
Rally organizers said that between 50,000 and 60,000 people gathered for the Leipzig
The demonstrators were receiving a series of Monday night protests, first begun in Leipzig, which helped overthrow the east's rebellion and pave the way toward reunification.
Elsewhere, more than 20,000 rallied in Chemmitz, and thousands more protested in Schwerin, Cottbus and Loebau.
This time, demonstrators were demanding that Bonn take swift steps to stop eastern Germany's dramatic economic climate. They vowed to continue the revived protests each Monday until the troubled regional economy improves.
In central Leipzig, several hundred people
"We hope through peace prayers to contribute to the changes so necessary and that the street protests will remain peaceful," said the Rey. Christian Fuehrer.
attended a prayer service at the Nikolai
institution in September 1982, and instructions
began in September 1983.
People in eastern Germany are becoming restless as their living standards drop and they lose their jobs, while the better times promised by politicians from western Germany show no sign of arriving.
COUPONS
O
Fantastic Sam's
the Original Family Haircutters
$6.95
Precision Hair Cut
By a professionally trained stylist
Reg. $9.00 (styling extra)
"You don't have to pay
a lot to look good!" offer expires 4-8-91
23rd & Louisiana
749-1976
S
NATURAL WAY
Natural Fiber Clothing
15% OFF Jewelry
Largest selection of earrings in Lawrence
Exp. 4/199
820-822 Mass.
841-0100
Drs. Pohl & Dobbins
831 Vermont
FREE CONTACTS*
One pair of disposable
contacts to present
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B & L Renu
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coating and oil
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* WITH COUPONS
Dr. Charles Pohl
841-2866
EXPIRES 5/31/91
Dr. Kent Dobbins
843-5665
1st street graphics
FREE
Personalized lettering with purchase (limit 6 letters per garment) on the following:
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• Jerseys by Russell
• Tank Tops & Tees in neon & all other colors
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Huge selection of KU shirts
Border Bandido
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Texas Burrito
(No Limit)
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VIDEO BIZ
9th & Iowa 749-3507
2 Video Tapes and VCR
One Night Rental
$5.99
EXP. 4/291
• 3 video tapes
• 2 days
Only $3.99!
COMICORR
* GAMES * COMICS
* MINIATURES * OPEN GAMING
15% off coupon
841-4294 not valid with any other discounts
1000 Mass. St. Suite B, Open Sundays, & weekdays until 7:00
ONLY $2.27
1/4 lb. Cheeseburger,
Fries, &
16 oz. Soft Drink
·701 W. 23rd Street:
Limit four per coupon-Void with any other offer-Expires 4/2/91
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get FREE installation!
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University
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Fri & Sat 11:00am-2:00am
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733 NEW HAMPSHIRE
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Highlights
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7 TANS $20
or
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25th & Iowa • Holiday Plaza • 841-6232
Give. WE'RE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE American Heart Association
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Above Yello Sub
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KIEF'S RECORDS
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PIZZA Shoppe
6th & Kagaio
Westridge Shopping Center
FREE DELIVERY!
842-0600
ROUNDTABLE
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Large • $9.95 + tax
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AEROBIC STUDIO
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AND THE FINISHING TOUCHES
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842-0600
ONE HOUR UDK
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30% OFF FILM DEVELOPING
With this coupon, receive 30% OFF the regular price for developing and printing (of C-41 Processing only) at One Hour Moto-Photo. Not valid with any other promotion. One roll per coupon.
2340 IOWA
Expires 4/1/91
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DEVELOPING
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LARGE PIZZA
With 1-TOPPING
1 for $7.95 + tax
2 for $13.95 + tax
Extra toppings only. 95 each
NOT VALID WITH OTHER OFFERS
MEDIUM PIZZA
With 1-TOPPING
1 for $5.95 + tax
2 for $9.95 + tax
Extra toppings only. 95 each
NOT VALID WITH OTHER OFFERS
LARGE PIZZA
With 1-TOPPING
1 for $7.95 + tax
2 for $13.95 + tax
Extra toppings only .95 each
NOT VALID WITH OTHER OFFERS
MEDIUM PIZZA
With 1-TOPPING
1 for $5.95 + tax
2 for $9.95 + tax
Extra toppings only .95 each
NOT VALID WITH OTHER OFFERS
BURGER SPECIAL
Tuesday 5pm-Close
1/2 price single hamburgers
3201 W.6th St.
749-2466
no place hopes like
SONIC
1015 E.23rd
842-7000
Enjoy a Full Meal Buffet
for $1.00 off
All You Can Eat!
(Expires 3-24-91)
2554 Iowa
841-SMOKE
BUM STEER BBQ
40
VOL. 101, No. 113
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL
SOCIETY
TOPEAK, KS 66612
ADVERTISING.: 864-4358
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20, 1991
(USPS 650-640)
Spring arrives and delights students
NEWS: 864-4810
121224
ASSIST
Roe Klein/KANSAN
Members of the KU Sailing Club, (from left) Steve Sides, Brady Smith and David Cooley, try to sign up new members. The club provides members with an opportunity to sail every weekend.
By Patricia Rojas Kansan staff writer
Steve Sides fought the wind as he tried to arrange the sail in his boat in front of Strong Hall yesterday
"The weather couldn't be better for us to do this," said Sides, Cape Girardeau, Mo., freshman. "It's perfect."
Sides and a friend were recruiting people for the KU Sailing Club. They had planned three weeks ago to be outside yesterday, and a high of 64 degrees made their chosen day ideal for their purpose.
'I was afraid I'd come back and it would be snowing out here. But all of a sudden it got warm again. It's beautiful.'
Spring officially starts at 9:02 tonight
Emily Schmidt Wichita sophomore
The weather this week is expected to remain mild with highs near 76 degrees, said Eric Baoy, Lee's Summit, Mo., Junior. Boyd works at the KU Weather Service She said that this kind of weather was not unusual in Kansas but that it was unseasonable.
The normal Kansas weather in March has highs in the 50s, she said.
The sunny weather yesterday seemed to have come at an ideal time for Sides not so for janel Wortsteinburg S C. gradate student
"I wish it were spring break." Merrel said as she sat under a tree in front of Watson Library
Merrel said she liked studying outside whenever the weather allowed it.
"It's almost like having a reward for studying," she said. "Sometimes it is harder because it is distracting. Sometimes I come here and sit, and I don't necessarily study."
Among those who were outside yesterday not necessarily studying was Mark Sudermann, Wichita junior.
"Girl-watching on campus is always good," said Sudermann, who was playing Frisbee with two words in front of Waston yesterday.
"It's about time spring arrived," he said. "We were itching to get outside."
For Emily Schmidt, Wichita sophomore, the sun took away some of her fears.
Schmidt, a member of the Kansas crew team, was in Austin, Texas, during spring break for a rowing competition.
She said one of her teammates had telephoned her parents in Kansas City last week and had heard the weather was getting cold here.
"I was afraid I'd come back and it would be snowing out here," she said. "But all of a sudden it got warm again. It's beautiful."
Schmidt was outside yesterday studying for a biology test.
"It's hard to get something done when the birds are singing and the sun is shining, but I'm trying," she said.
Schmidt added, "It's hard to make school your first priority when it is so nice outside. But school doesn't matter what the weather is."
Bob and Tom
Adam Ellenbogen (left). Aaron King and Montana Baldwin enjoy the weather and study.
Senate votes to ban arms sales to allies
Unpaid war debts spur action
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - The Senate voted yesterday to ban arms sales to Saudi Arabia, Germany and other U.S. allies until they deliver all the money promised to help the United States pay for the Islamic Gulf War.
The prohibition, opposed by the Bush administration, was included in a measure to provide $42.6 billion toward the war effort. The bill was approved 98-1, with no separate vote on the arms-sale ban.
Defense Secretary Dick Cheney told Congress that protecting U.S. allies in the Middle East took prece- nance, but his effort to embargo on arms sales to the region.
"I think certainly caution is in order here, but I think our first concern out to be work with our security team is that House Foreign Affairs Committee.
Several members of the panel expressed concerns about possible US sales of weapons to Egypt, Israel and Saudi Arabia as well as Syria. Other other nations such as Syria would pursue the Soviet Union for arms.
"The new world order isn't very new at all," said Rep. Sam Geidenson, D-Conn. "We have ended this war and we're leading this charge with a new arms race in the Middle East."
Cheney warned against leaving Egypt, Israel and other nations unprotected and said arms assistance for the allies would allow a
minimal U.S. ground presence in the region.
After the vote, the Senate debated a measure to provide $5.2 billion for war assistance to Israel and Turkey, stepped-up security by the Secret Service and scores of other programs.
The house passed its own versions of both bills March 7; the two chambers will have to work out compro-
siding the measures to President Bush.
The House approved a weaker, unspecified threat that Congress may consider appropriate action if itaid falls short of promised levels
Congressional frustration with the U.S. allies is high because of the huge amounts of money that are at stake. For $64.5 million in promised assistance to a billion has arrived, according to the Senate Appropriations Committee
Not one of the six countries that pledged substantial amounts of help. Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Germany, Japan and South Korea, has delivered its pledge in full. All six countries plan to buy U.S. weapons this year and would be affected by the ban.
In a letter distributed to congressional leaders, the White House Office of Management and Budget said the proposed prohibition would place unnecessary and inappropriate constraints on the sales.
Hostages may be released in Mideast
Lebanon newspaper predicts freedom
The Associated Press
BEIRUT — A newspaper said today that Western hostages in Lebanon will be freed this week, including all six U.S. citizens thought held by pre-iranian factions. It said the U.S. prisoners would be in Syria on Saturday.
The Page 1 report in the conservative Ad-Diyar newspaper comes amid intensified cooperation by U.S. forces at securing the hostages' release.
The longest-held hostage, Associated Press chief middle East correspondent Terry Anderson, 43, was seized March 16, 1985.
The Ad-Diyar report said the U.S. citizens would be freed Friday at an unnamed hotel in Beirut in the presence of Interior Minister Salah al-Syriya of Oryxia's military intelligence in Lebanon, Brig. Gen. Ghazi Kenaan.
The newspaper, which did not name its sources, said the U.S. citizens would then be taken to Damascus and handed over to the U.S. ambassador to Syria, whose army controls three-quarters of Lebanon.
The report came just a few hours after the pro-Iranian Shiite Muslim group holding two U.S. hostages reiterated its preconditions for their release and Israel cited new efforts to secure the hostages' release.
The group, The Islamic Jihad for the Liberation of Palestine, demanded that Israel release a Shite cleric it kidnapped in southern Lebanon in 1989 – Sheik Abdul Kabib as well as other Muslim prisoners.
Ad-Diyar, which is based in Christian East Beirut, does not have a record of accurate reporting on the 13 Westerners missing in Lebanon, who include four Britons, two Germans and an Italian.
The newspaper said its sources were close to people interested in the release of the Western hostages.
By Jonathan Plummer
Kansan staff writer
Although the new fall KU timetables have a new look on the front, there are still advertisements on the back of the train. Some were some controversy in the past.
Earlier this semester, the University Senate Executive Committee voted against future use of advertisements in timetables, and last semester some people thought an advertisement for bar soap, which showed a woman in shorts and a halter top, was sexist.
Roger Cook, a customer service employee at American Passages Inc., of Seattle, which prints the timetables, said complaints about the advertisement had occurred at other schools.
The SenEx recommendation was presented to Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, and the Board of Trustees who have not acted on the proposal vet.
"The ad caught more than one feminist's eye," he said. "But the University had approved that."
Ads are placed in an individual school's publication only after they are reviewed and approved by that school. Cook said.
Cook said the company followed set guidelines before choosing advertisements, barring liquor and cigarette ads, for instance.
"Some people have trouble with Sports Illustrated if there is a Black man on the cover," Cook said.
He said the company had received comments on other advertisements, such as a magazine subscription ad it placed in some publications.
Rich Morrell, University registrar,
said the advertisements that appeared in the timetable were approved by a KU committee.
But predicting what people will find offensive is not always easy.
"Some schools have a problem with the ad for Playboy or Penthouse," he said.
This semester, Morrell said, no ads featuring pictures of people were offered to the committee by the publisher.
Joint action may curtail ROTC woes
By Eric Nelson
Kansan staff writer
At their first meeting since KU officials lobbied in Washington, the Senate Executive Committee yesterday discussed future steps to combat ROTC discrimination against homosexuals and bisexuals.
Debate included what action should be taken April 10, when national action has been requested by the University of Wisconsin-Madison to protest the discrimination. SenEx discussed what the University of Kansas' role should be in a national movement.
Frances Ingemann, SenEx chairperson, made the Washington trip during spring break with Del Grosso to interim executive vice chancellor.
She said that if KU acted as a national leader in a movement to change the policy, the KU ROTC program could be in jeopardy.
Group effort
With the military reducing programs nationwide, KU could be cut
if it was seen as a solo menace. Ingemann said a group of universities fighting together would be more prudent and effective.
"It became obvious to me when we were talking to people that there was a need for a joint effort," she said.
Ingemann said she already had written the other Board of Regents schools and inquired about their situations.
She also planned to contact the Kansas congressional representatives in a couple of weeks.
"I think you have to keep bringing the issues to people's minds," she said. "It's very easy for something to be forgotten in the shuffle."
National protest
Shankel said the trip reaffirmed his position that the ROTC situation should continue to be handled at a higher level of university associations and legislators.
Ingemann received the information about the nationally coordinated effort protesting the Department of Defense policy from Michael Olneck, a professor at Wisconsin-Madison.
Ceremonial observance
If the University decides to take action April 10, it could turn out to be a busy day at KU. Also scheduled for the 10th are the Student Senate elections and a symposium of honors to honor KU's 12th anniversary.
Jacob Gordon, presiding officer of the University Council, said he hoped the Board would have the ROTC issue should coincide with the national effort.
Ingemann said a KU observance of the national protest possibly should take place on another date so as not to conflict with the anniversary symposium. But she said she is in favor of an annual effort against the policy.
One possible solution discussed was to make KU's observance of the day ceremonial. Ingenmann said that he would present his plans to proceed with their own plans.
Pat Watrey, Student Executive Committee chairperson, said, "We could resuelve our action and sup- pensionary International Coordinated Day of Action."
SenEx was unsure of the extent of activities that could take place April 10 but agreed to let the debate continue at tomorrow's Council meeting where decisions could be made. Ingemann said.
But SenEx members also discussed the fact that if the two events coincide, it can be appropriate to use a pistonium focuses on the future of KU.
Jamie Howard, co-director of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, said that the group was making plans for April 10 but that nothing
She said one possibility was an informative gathering outside Wescoe Hall without a protest.
Howard said it was unfortunate that April 10 was a busy day at KU.
"Even if it is a busy day, it is very important to the gay and lesbian community," she said.
1
2
Wednesday, March 20, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
太阳
TODAY
Rain
HI:67°
LO:48°
54/39
54/37
57/40
60/31
60/49
80/60
78/68
Kansas Forecast
We'll see a chance of showers, possibly a thundershower, during the morning hours. By afternoon, the rains will give way to partly cloudy skies.
Salina
64/44
KC
Dodge City
67/46
66/40
Wichita
65/45
3-day Forecast
Thursday - Mostly cloudy and mild. High 64/ Low 45.
Friday - Partly cloudy with a chance of late day showers. High 68/Low 50.
KU Westher Service Forecast: 864-3300
Saturday - Cloudy, chance of showers. High 66/ Low 47.
forecast by Rodney D. Price
Temperatures are today's nights and tonight's lows.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KA 60645, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan 60044 Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118
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What is Women's History Month?
As it has been traditionally considered, history has focused on political, military, and economic leaders and events. This approach has virtually excluded women, people of color, and the mass of America's ordinary citizens. To the children of those ignored groups, history has come to be seen as remote and lifeless, a tale having little
bearing on their own lives. By expanding the focus of history to include the choices of human beings.
bearing on their own lives. By expanding the focus of history to include the stories of women's lives, whether they reflect everyday life experiences or their roles in the major events of our nation's history, we gain a deeper understanding
nation's history, we gain a deeper understanding and appreciation of American history
his information provided by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. 118 Strong Hall
Double Sausage Sandwich
... Some like it hot.
Owner's Special
MISS. STREET DELI
641 MASSACHUSETTS
Two hot smoked Sausage split, grilled and placed on a French hard Roll. Garnished with sautéed green peppers, onions and mushrooms. Smothered with two thick slices of aliage cheese. Gently apply mayo and herbalism.
Th
Double Sandwich
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Lambda Sigma Sophomore Honor Society and Owl Junior Honor Society, are now accepting applications for membership.
Freshmen and Sophomores
Applications due by March 22,1991
Applications are available at the Organizations and Activities Center (Kansas Union), 129 Strong, and Nunemaker Center
WE NEED YOUR HELP!
PRESENTING:
THE 39th ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL OF NATIONS
The International Students Association invites you to an informational meeting
Centennial Room, (6th floor Kansas Union)
Wed., March 20, 6:30 p.m.
We will give out application forms, and give more info about this great tradition at KJ. Represent your country in a day-long exhibition of culture
Saturday, March 23 9 am-3 pm Anschutz Pavilion
Dance for Heart
All proceeds go to the American Heart Association
$ 1 entrance fee, tickets on sale
at Union and Wescoe Beach.
Do you keep losing your shorts?
Now you don't have to worry with the NEW GLOW-IN-THE-DARK Boxers Only $11.95 Available in stock
The
Etc.
Shop
Clothing & Accessories
For Men & Women
Sunglasses
Costumes
MCUSA AM EXP DISCOVER CARD
732 Mass. 843-6011
The Etc. Shop
GRAND OPENING
Ray's Party Shoppe
Holiday Plaza (25th & Iowa) • 842-4499
Pepsi 2-liters 89¢ (limit 2)
• Ice • Coolers • Cigarettes • Books
Davis Retail Liquor
Your Easter Wine Headquarters
- Sutter Home . . . . . . all types 750 ml $3.99
- Inglenook ... all types 4.0 lit. $8.99
- Robert Mondavi . . . . White Zinfandel 1.5 lit. $7.99
*Michelob . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dry, Reg., Light Case $12.99
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 20, 1991
3
Local crime rate increase shown in KBI stats
By Mike I. Vargas
Kansan staff writer
Serious crime at KU and in Lawrence increased significantly last year, according to Kansas State statistics released during spring break.
The KBI reported that violent and property crimes on campus increased 15.1 percent, from 832 in 1989 to 958 last year.
The University of Kansas' totals include only crimes reported by the KU police.
KU police Lt. Lt. Mullens said property crimes, which are burglary, theft and motor vehicle theft, were the primary reason for the increase
At the KU Medical Center, the crime rate decreased 7.3 percent, from 273 in 1989 to 253 last year.
The KR1 also reported that violent and property crimes in Lawrence increased 28.9 percent, from 3,643 in 1989 to 4,696 last year.
Lawrence's totals include only crimes reported by the Lawrence police.
techniques between the agencies.
Crime statistics are a small indicator of the police department's performance. Olin said. There soon will be Lawrence police officers reporting.
rather than violent crimes, which are murder, rape, robbery and aggravated assault.
In addition, the number of serious crimes in Lawrence are so small that a small increase would change the percentages dramatically, he said.
Ron Olin, Lawrence police chief, said that Lawrence police statistics reported an 18.5 percent increase and a 30.2 percent decrease in the discrepancy in the reporting
KBI CRIME STATS
1989 1990
Lawrence police 3,643 4,696 +28.9%
KU police 832 958 +15.1%
Douglas County sheriff 4,895 6,015 +22.9%
KU Medical Center 273 253 -7.3%
KU and Lawrence police reports contributed to the KBI's report of a 22.9 percent increase in crime in Douglas County. Other agencies that reported in the county include the Douglas County Sheriff's Department and the Eudora and Baldwin City police departments.
+28.9%
+15.1%
+22.9%
-7.3%
Information obtained through KB1
THE MIXE CHELLAH
Cease-fire starts fire in market for cards
3 companies offer Desert Storm cards
I will accept your feedback as soon as possible.
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Desert Storm trading cards are hotter than ever since the ceasefire. area dealers said.
JOHNE
CUELLAR
Jeff Dolezal, owner of JD's Baseball Card and Sports Nostalgia Shop, 1420 W. 23rd St., examines cards from the Operation Desert Storm collection.
Bob Palm, who works at Sports Collectibles in Overland Park, said that on the open card market, the President Bush card was selling for $5 and the Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf was going for $10. Topps Co. has the only set of Desert Storm commemorative cards on the market right now, he said.
'A lot of people are buying them to put them on a shelf so they can bring them out for their kids and show them what Desert Storm was like.'
Ron Klein/KANRAN
Bob Ralph Sports Collectibles
"The cards are selling really hot," he said.
The store has set the price of the complete 82-card set at $14.95, Ralph said. The store is selling the cards only in complete sets.
The Topps Co. has stopped printing the Desert Storm war set and is planning to issue a new Desert Storm surrender set, he said.
"A lot of people are buying them to put them on a shelf so they can bring them on their kids and let them use its desert Storm was like," Ralph said.
Jeff Dolezal, owner of JD's Baseball Card & Sports Nostalgia Shop. 142W. 123rd St., said sales of the Topps cards were stronger than those of the fire-Dolezal's store has carried the cards since early February.
"Topps was on the ball with the Desert Storm cards," he said. "They were the first ones with the idea, and now other companies are trying to follow with their own line of cards."
Dolezal said that Triple A Sports and the Upper Deck Co. planned to release their own line of war cards when the cards had not been issued yet.
"Any other companies who try to get out Desert Storm cards any
time after July 4 will be sleeping with the cards," he said. "The hype will be over by then."
Jill Blakeley, owner of The Press Box To Too in Mission, said she planned to carry the two other companies' war cards because it would provide a portion of the profits would go to aid people affected by the war.
She said she planned to follow the companies' example and give a portion of her profits from the companies that were effected by Operation Desert Storm.
"I don't carry the Tops cards now, and I refuse to because I don't believe in padding your hands with experiences of human life." Blackley was silent.
Ellis Hayden, owner of Elli's
Coins & Collectibles, 1023
Massachusetts St., said he received
the first shipment of the Topps
cards Monday and was trying to
get the other companies' cards.
"I just put the Topps cards on the shelf, and I plan to sell them for $1 a pack," he said.
NCAA procedures challenged by bill
Both sides debate due process rights
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — A National Collegiate Athletic Association official confirmed yesterday that seven Kansas schools' membership could be jeopardized if the Legislature enacts a law giving them special protection from NCAA enforcement procedures.
However, Steve Morgan, associate executive director of the NCAA, said Executive Director Dick Schultz did not mean as a threat a recent comment by a Kansas State athlete that Kansas schools could be kicked out of the NCAA if such a law were passed.
Morgan testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee, opposing a bill sponsored by Sen. Wint Winter, R-Lawrence, and six other senators.
The bill would require the NCAA to observe nationally all due process rights accorded individuals by the U.S. and Kansas Constitutions when enforcing its rules and regulations. There is doubt a state law could be enforced nationally, but Kansas perhaps could enforce it because the
NCAA headquarters is in Mission.
Kansas members of the NCAA are the University of Kansas, Kansas State University, Wichita State University, Emporia State University, Pitsburg State University, State University, Pittsburg State University and Washburn University.
Those testifying against the measure said they thought the NCAA provided an adequate level of due process and were coming that would provide more.
Those testifying in support of the bill, including former KU track coach Bob Timmons, said the NCAA did not provide even the most basic rights of due process, such as the right to confront accusers, the right to accused to be present at hearings and the right to public hearing
They also said that reform would come only through pressure applied by such legislation.
Schultz was quoted as saying the seven Kansas universities that are NCAA members could have their memberships terminated if legislation such as that under review was passed.
Commission backs house's demolition
Kansan staff writer
By Vanessa Fuhrmans
The days of a turn-of-the-century house at 1042 Ohio St. are numbered.
That was the conclusion of a pumu hearing last night when the Lawrence commission voted 41-3 against demolition of the Gread neighborhood building.
Commissioner Mike Randle cast the dissenting vote and said the loss of the house would have too significant an effect on the neighborhood.
"Quite frankly, there is some sloppiness in our system that we need to tighten up," said Mayor Shirley Martin-Smith.
Although the City Commission ruled that the demolition of the house was appropriate, it did agree that the city's demolition permit application process needed some revision to ensure that demolition opponents would have adequate notice of pending permits.
The hearing was prompted by an appeal filed by three Oread neighborhood residents asking the commission to overrule a certificate of authorization issued by the Lawrence Historic Resources Commission in January.
Opponents of the demolition contended that the city's demolition permit policy was too open-ended because no time limits existed for permits and applications for demolition permission were not required to be filed by the property owners.
Marci Francisco, one of the neighbors who filed the appeal, questioned how the demolition permit automatically had been transferred to the new owner. Doug Compton, when the owner had not applied for the permit.
A developer who was interested in buying the property applied for the permit in July.
"If the applicant indeed wasn't the owner, then the city's arguments that the demolition permit could transfer responsibility does not apply." Francisco said.
Linda Finger, city planner, agreed that the City Commission should establish time restrictions on a permit's validity. But she contended that permits applied strictly to pieces of property instead of to a property owner.
"The permit is simply on the property," she said. "To apply it to the owner possibly opens room for discrimination."
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Wednesday, March 20, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The facts of crime
Though Missouri case will not change KU rule more information from police can help students
A federal court decision last week forced the Southwest Missouri State University police to release its crime reports to the public, but it is unlikely to cause KU police to include more information on its reports.
KU police and the University of Kansas misinterpret two 1974 federal statutes, claiming that police reports are the equivalent of student academic records and, therefore, must be kept confidential. The University and KU police now require that a report given to the public include neither crime location nor victim identification.
Reports from campus police are no different than those of city police departments, which are required by law to include identification and location.
No one here has challenged in court the department's authority to cover up crime information. Current and past staff members of the University Daily Kansan have failed to do so, as have concerned students and parents.
So U.S. Department of Education guidelines that direct this University and most
others to treat crime reports with the same privacy as academic records probably will stand. The Southwest Missouri ruling ensures only that crime reports be made public. The inclusion of identities and locations remains open to interpretation of the 1974 laws.
In addition to last week's suit brought by the editor of the student newspaper at Southwest Missouri State University, two cases are pending against Southern Arkansas University and Murray State University in Kentucky.
The three cases could set precedents that move in the right direction. Concerned parents, other students and the media should not be prevented from learning the locations and victims of crimes. Complete information would allow the public to know more about crime on campus, perhaps preventing further incidents similar to those reported.
Students could make informed choices when determining whether a campus was a safe place to live rather than relying on image-conscious University officials for information.
Rich Cornell for the editorial board
'Motorvate' voters
Registration proposals may remedy poor turnout
With every passing election come the cries of another poor voter turnout. To address this situation, two bills have been proposed in the Kansas Legislature concerning additional registration periods.
One proposed alternative would allow citizens to fill out voter registration forms on Election Day before they vote. The combination of registering and voting on the same day would make the entire process easier and less time-consuming for the voter.
Another proposed option is the "motor-
voter" process. Voter registration forms would be attached to the driver's license renewal and application forms. Again, the process would become a lot easier for the voter.
By offering additional registration periods, the likelihood of higher voter registration and participation would increase. Arizona, Colorado and Michigan already have laws similar to the "motor-voter" proposal.
Many people claim they cannot take time off from their busy schedules to register to vote. Others give the excuse that they did not know when or where to register to vote. By providing registration alternatives, the proposed bills would simplify the voting process and would eliminate the basis of these excuses
Opponents of the bills argue that the alternative methods would lengthen the already tiresome lines at driver's license offices and would delay election results. These arguments, however, are petty and do not take into consideration the purpose of the bills: to increase voter participation. An increase in voter participation would result in more accurate and representative elections.
Brent Maycock for the editorial board
Broader understanding of people stems from basic security of self
people always told me that college would broaden my horizons. Last semester, I found out exactly what that meant.
Just so you'll have some idea of my perspective, I'll tell you a little about my background: I'm a straight, Catholic, 19-year-old freshman from a small town. Needless to say, an良性gam community doesn't exist there.
Thus, I can honestly say that I was slightly surprised when my roommate told me she was a lesbian. I thought about it for a couple of days and was maybe a little uncomfortable during that time.
Then I realized I was being rather stupid. I had lived with her for almost four months and had never been the slightest bit uncomfortable, so why should I start now? She obviously knew that I was straight and, condescendingly, homemosexuals do not come out to me and see. So there really was no problem.
Before long, her new love interest moved in with us. The only problem that has caused is deciding who gets in contact a shower first. Not a major issue.
The relationship that my roommates have is one to be envied by people of all sexual orientations. They are passionate toward each other, yet they're also best friends
Melissa Butler
Staff columnist
I think maybe the reason I can understand their feelings, even though I don't share them, is I'm secure about myself and my sexual attitude toward others always reflect your attitude toward yourself.
If children were brought up to believe they were worth something, maybe they would treat others the same way, and the biases such as racism, sexism and homophobia wouldn't exist.
I think insecurity lies at the root of all prejudices. The sad thing is that this self-doubt begins at birth and later causes prejudice and hatred.
Yes, maybe I'm being a bit idealistic, but I still believe that the root of
'The relationship that my roommates have is one to be envied by people of all sexual orientations.'
all prejudices starts at a young age, and, if dealt with then, problems would decrease.
Self-doubt closes the mind and makes people unwilling to try to understand anything that is different. Instead, they just strike out blindly. The thing these people don't comprehend is that different is not always bad. If you take the time to get acquainted with others, judgment on them, no one can say you are being unfair if you disagree with them.
If you simply judge by appearance, whether it be race, sex, sexual orientation or any other number of things. You cannot know the effort it takes to present them.
Maybe if people would open their minds before they open their mouths, the world would be a better place for everyone.
- Melissa Butler is a Humboldt freshman majoring in theatre.
MUSEUM Chicago Tribune
STOCK MARKET
Bible passages show qualities for secret of effective writing
w when I decided to become a published writer, I asked myself the question, "What constitutes effective writing?" Although books on English composition and on journalism gave me the technical answers, I discovered elsewhere that writing had an intangible dimension, untouched by formal study. On this dimension I will reflect.
Ndomby
Fhunsu
Staff columnist
I must warn you, however, that I am talking only about effective writing, nothing else. I warn you because the matter I will discuss here involves the Bible, a portable library that has suffered much rejection because of its religious nature. Nevertheless, it will help to understand that this book is, to me as a writer, what any excellent textbook would be to a chemist, an engineer, or a professor. It is a guideline and source of inspiration for professional excellence. So, in the spirit of the "openness" that we so eagerly endorse at KU, allow me to use the Bible.
In my search for the secret of effective writing, I discovered that the Bible was a treasure chest of precious literature. The Song of Solomon, for example, matches in resources and impact the works of the masters of romantic verse. One of the best short stories of all time was told by Jesus. Only 500 words long, the story of the Prodigial Son is a magnetizing account using imagination, feeling and caring. And, as the New York Times put it a few years ago, "the greatest news story
ever written is the Sermon on the Mount." What a pity that the Nobel Prize in literature did not exist while Jesus was still on earth!
But what was Jesus' secret? The answer, as I observed it, shook and liberated me. Jesus was a thinking, feeling and caring person. He was at odds with the accepted bigotry of the society of his time. He felt deeply enough about the poor, the uneducated, the outcast, the foreign, the physically sick, the mentally ill, the bereaved and even the women caught committing adultery to reach out and identify with them without judging them. And we read of instances where the nice bureaucrats and demagogues of those days disapproved of this creativity.
Obviously, Jesus was a people person. And let's remember, people are not statistics in a university, government department, church or social club; they are flesh and blood entities with dreams and hopes and feelings. But these dreams are often mercieslily murdered by thoughtless attitudes, words and actions. Yet, we sometimes refuse to face the reality of our society because such reality demands action and produces guilt in
our selfishly comfortable lives. "Who cares?" is a popular problem-solving strategy.
Our writing, needless to say, will never be stronger or deeper than we are as persons. The effective writer knows how to live with intensity and feeling. He or she is a risk-taker who is able to take time to think, feel, believe, speak and act outside the boundaries of egoism, conformity. The published writer cares deeply about persons and conditions and cares deeply enough to respect the integrity of the readers, without whom he or she would be out of business.
Effective writers care enough to have it right. They weigh the consequences of their ideas and words. They know that words (which are crystallized thoughts and the tools of the trade of a writer), when nailed to paper, become alive and immortal. It is this meticulous, sincere and time-consuming attention to what and how we write that produces lives copies that breathes life into the readers and into the affairs of the planet.
We see, then, that effective writing is a serious business and a heavy responsibility. My appeal, therefore, is for excellence. Excellent writing and excellent living go hand in hand, and this is what our already confused and hurting world needs most today.
Ndomby Bhunus is a freshman in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
LETTERS to the EDITOR
Inaccessible Robinson
ics.
Robinson Center should do more to facilitate its use by all students. This semester each student paid a $169 campus fee, $9 which is deemed the "recreation service fee." Admittedly, this is a bargain for an athletic facility's membership, but my experiences and interest in such facilities and scheduling at Robinson could be more accommodating.
One day about 4 p.m., I went to Robinson after class to play basketball. The goals on the second court from the north were raised, making it impossible to play basketball there. I told the court this was not to be used for basketball when the wooden center partition was down during aerob-
Soon, people doing aerobics occupied the two south courts, and cheerleaders or a drill team occupied the far north court, and we were left without a full court to play on. At the time we left the courts, about 25 people were waiting to play basketball.
A smaller gym down the hall was open, and the goals were lowered so that only half-court games could be played. I was told that this was done because the size of the gym was too small for safe full-court games. After looking at the smaller gym, I could see that this was true.
Not content with playing 3-on-3 half-court basketball, I decided to get a quick workout on the stationary bikes in the weight room near Robinson's west entrance. Then, at 4:45 p.m., there were two other students, including using a stationary bike and the other using a weight-lifting machine.
Seconds after I got on a bike and began pedaling, I was told by a woman who said she was a physical education instructor that the weight rooms were closed until 5 p.m. because classes were still in session. The fact that only two other people were in the room made no difference.
During the week, the weight rooms are open for all students from 6:15 a.m. to 8:15 a.m., and from 5 p.m. to midnight. More than 26,000 students attend this university. But for most of the time that Robinson is open during the week, the weight room can be used only by those enrolled in certain physical education classes.
Robinson must balance the needs of all students who have the privilege to use it. The facility is there for every student to use, and when it is possible, scheduling should be arranged so that every student can make use in activities he or she likes. Some steps should be taken to do this.
Andrew Jones Ulysses law student
KANSAN STAFF
CHRIS SIRON Editor
RICH CORNELL
Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
AUDRA LANGFORD Business manager
JEANNE HINES Sales and marketing adviser
MINDI LUND Retail sales manager
Editors Business staff
News. Melissa Matthes Campus sales mgr. Sophie Wheehue
Editorial. Tiffany Harness Regional sales mgr. Candace Drensch
Planning. Holly M. Neuman National sales mgr. Jennifer Claxton
Campus. Jennifer Reynolds. Co-op sales mgr. Christine Musser
Pam Sollier Production mgrs. Rich Harbarger
Sports. Katie Stader Photography. Keith Thorpe Marketing director. Erik Ginkelhner
Graphics. Melissa Unterberg Creative director. Chris Haysite
Features. Jill Harmington Classified manager. Kim Crowder
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 may use a different format.
misc include taxes like hikethown, or faulty or fault postion.
Guest tables should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be
The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Staffer-Finall Hall.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 20, 1991
5
Senate budget not ready yet
Midterms hold up finance committee
By Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
The final part of a long budget process is not going as fast as it originally appeared it might for the Student Senate Finance Committee.
The finance committee has managed to stay ahead of schedule in recommending the allocation of student money for the next two years, but it is having trouble finishing the process.
"I think that midterms really hurt us," said Troy Radakovich, finance committee co-chairperson.
Radakovich said that the committee was not behind schedule but that reaching a quorum had become a problem.
Senate rules and regulations require that Senate complete the
budget process by the end of March.
Arlan Mattyt, committee member, said the numerous meetings from the beginning of the semester to spring term and frazed the committee members.
"The way it is packed in, the meetings at the beginning were intensified," he said. "I don't think it is a big deal." The other girls when they need to be done, it's fine.
Student organizations that are requesting financing from Senate next year presented their requests to the finance committee in meetings conducted before the break, but the committee has not voted on recommended allocations to the organizations.
A meeting last night was the first time the student organization budgees were discussed by committee members. The committee discussed how it might catch the requests, which exceed the amount Senate
voted to allocate to all student organizations by about $40,000.
Maltby said he thought the committee's budget recommendations would be made by the next meeting.
The committee has completed its recommended Senate budget for the next two years, and Senate has approved the budget for next year. The finance committee now must be assembled in such a manner it will recommend be allocated to the individual student organizations that request financing annually.
A scheduled meeting Monday evening failed to produce a quorum, which means the committee could not meet. No one was not enough members, were present.
The meeting had been scheduled at the beginning of the semester, along with more than 20 other meetings that the committee has conducted.
The committee is scheduled to meet next Tuesday.
On campus
KU Accounting Club and the IRS will conduct volunteer income tax assistance workshops at 9 a.m. and p.m. on the fourth floor of the Kansas
■ KU Wellness Center will conduct a stress management workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson.
KU Study Abroad in Spanish speaking countries will have an informational session at 3 p.m. at 3040 Wescoe Hall.
KU Study Abroad in French-speaking countries will have an informational meeting at 4 p.m. at 2055 Wescoe.
Bacchus will meet at 4:30 p.m. at the large conference room in Watkins Memorial Health Center
Ammestry International will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
- Applications for KU's Japan Summer Institute in Lawrence's sisterity, Hiratsuka, Japan, are now available. Applications are available at 203 Lippincott.
- Applications for KU Study Abroad Programs for the summer and academic year/semester, are now available.
- Applications are available at 203 Lippincott.
KU Tae Kwon Do Club will sponsor a workout at 6:30 p.m. at 207 Robinson.
Society for East Asian Studies will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the auditorium in Dyce Hall.
The Women's Resource Center will conduct a workshop titled "Gull Trips. Are Women Frequent at Gull Trips?" at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union
PRSSA will meet at 7 p.m. at 202 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Police report
A KU student's backpack and values at $28 were taken between 5:30 and 6:10 p.m. Monday at Woolls Hall Law, KU police reported.
A KU student's wallet and contents valued at $262 were taken between 11:30 and 11:37 a.m. Monday
in the lobby of the Art and Design Building, KU police reported.
A KU parking officer's two front tires were punctured between 9 p.m. Sunday and 7:30 a.m. Monday in the 100 block of Pineone Drive, Lawrence police reported. Damage to the car totaled $20.
Mellon fellowships awarded to five Kansas students
The Associated Press
MANHATTAN, Kan. — A KU student and two Kansas State University graduates were among five winners from Kansas of Mellon Fellowships in the Humanities, school officials said.
KU's Margaret Baptist, Leawood senior, was one of the fellowship recipients along with K-State's Mark Schmeller and Amy Brooks, both of Hays, who won the prestigious scholarships for history and English respectively, a statement released yesterday said.
Kansas State had one previous Mellon winner in 1987.
The other Kansans were Yeon KU of Salina, a Yale senior, and Rebecca Ruhlen of Baldwin City, a May 1990 graduate of Trinity College.
Only 12 Mellon Fellowships were awarded in the Midwest, according to a Kansas State release.
The Mellon Fellowship provides a cash stipend of $11,500 plus tuition and fees for one year of graduate study. The fellowships are renewable for a second year, plus a stipend is available for those continuing work for dissertations.
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Speaker says U.S. plans for future need attention
By Benjamin W. Allen
Kansan staff writer
Political pundit David Gergen said that the United States needed to address its long-range future and that the nation could learn lessons from the military and the Persian Gulf War.
Gergen, the featured speaker of the Vickers Memorial Lecture Series, spoke to more than 250 people last night at the Kansas Union ballroom.
Mike Kautsch, dean of journalism,
introduced Geren and described
him as "one who is consistently both
thoughtful and thought-provoking."
Gergen, an editor-at-large for U.S. News and World Report, is an analyst for public television's "MacNeil/Lehren NewsHour," a frequent commentator on National Public Radio's "All Things Considered" and has held positions in the Nixon, Ford and Reagan administrations.
Gergen said he was concerned about race relations in the United States and how the nation increased the high production of high-tech equipment.
he said.
"When we are dependent on another country, that spells trouble,"
Gerger said that African-American men faced a dismal future and that it was "not something we can tolerate in the future of America."
He went on to say the military had taken stock of itself and improved remarkably since the Vietnam War.
"We need to learn that what's good for the U.S. military can be good for the United States," Gergen said.
He said the integration and higher education of soldiers were two strengths that the general population should strive to emulate.
Gergen said one of the things returning soldiers should do was go into schools and talk to students, providing them with role models.
Charity Hastings, Lawrence High School senior, said that she agreed with much Gergen had to say and that she thought the plan of soldiers returning to school was an excellent idea.
Gergen said the soldiers returning from the gulf were modern-day heroes.
A tree with a house at the bottom.
"They should be honored, not ony for winning the war, but for showing us what we can really be," he said.
EARN COLLEGE CREDIT THIS SUMMER
THE WILLIAM R. HOLLYWOOD STUDIO
WHEREVER YOU ARE!
Consider Independent Study if you'd like to earn college credit this summer. Independent Study through correspondence may make it possible for you to:
- continue working toward your KU degree while living elsewhere
- lighten your course load during fall and spring semesters
- **begin your course date during this and spring semester**
- **continue to progress toward a degree while working full-time**
- earn credit without restrictions on class time and place
- complete degree requiremente
- take a course not offered on campus in a particular semester
- make up prerequisites if you have transferred from another institution
COURSES OFFERED
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Check with your adviser before enrolling for correspondence courses to make sure that the credit you expect to earn applies toward degree requirements. You have up to nine months to complete an Independent Study course. If you wish to receive credit by the end of the summer semester, you should enroll by April 15.
For more information or to request a course catalog call 864-4440 or stop by Student Services in Annex A—just north of the Kansas Union. You'll see the sign.
WATKINS
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
The University of Kansas HIV/STD Education Committee presents
"AIDS and the 1990s: New Hope, Greater Challenges"
a lecture by RICHARD KEELING, M.D.
Free Admission
Tuesday, March 26, 7 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom
Dr. Keeling, chairperson of the American College Health Association's Task Force on HIV Infection and AIDS, is a nationally recognized consultant and authority on HIV infection and has published numerous articles and books on the subject.
March is National Nutrition Month
Interested in being a peer educator?
HIV/STD
Peer EducationTraining
Ann Davis, Registered Dietitian, can help give you answers to your questions about weight loss/gain or eating disorders. Call 864-9575 for an appointment. Contact Watkins business office 864-9520 for charge information.
Seminar
Centennial Room Kansas Union Saturday, March 23 12 noon to 4 p.m.
Call 864-9570 to sign up.
Cancer Support Group
Can 804-9570 to sign up.
Sponsored by the KU
HIV/STD Education Committee
mar. 26, Apr. 9,
Apr. 23
6:30-8:30 p.m.
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Kansas Union
Welcome to all KU students who are in any way affected by, concerned about cancer.
We Care for KU.
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Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students
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Nation/World
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 20, 1991
7
World briefs
Kuwait
Emir takes Cabinet resignations
Kuwait's Cabinet resigned yesterday in a move intended to bring in new officials as the nation rebuilds from nearly seven months of captaincy, the emirate's U.N. ambassador said.
Abulhasan said the new Cabinet should be named in about a month. The first step is step in order, which is "increasing" in order.
Ambassador Mohammad Abulhasan said the prime minister submitted the resignations, which were immediately accepted by the emir, Sheik Jaber al-Ahmed al-Sabah.
He declined to speculate whether the Cabinet reshuffling was in response to demands by some Kuwaitis for greater democracy. The ruling family abolished Parliament in 1986.
Taxpayers must pay even more
"When you have martial law, you need to change the government to cope with the critical situation that is now facing Kuwait," said Abulhasan.
Senate and House negotiators took less than 15 minutes yesterday to agree to pump an additional $30 billion of taxpayer money into the investors in failed savings and loan associations.
Washington
The bills passed earlier by the House and Senate each provided the $30 billion. They differed only on a few comparatively minor details.
The compromise bill will go to the two chambers for final approval after this week. Presented by the Republican Party.
But members of the negotiating committees were no more enamored of the legislation than they and other lawmakers were when the bills originally passed the House and Senate. Memorandums addressed are wary that the public perceives the bailout as just another Washington scandal.
Washington
Economy gets mixed reviews
Consumer prices, benefiting from the biggest monthly decline in gasoline prices in almost five years, edged up just 0.2 percent in February, the Labor Department reported yesterday.
Separately, the Commerce Department said that construction of new homes and apartments, which had been in a nose dive, shot up 16.4 percent last month.
While the Bush administration hailed both reports as harbingers of a quick end to the recession, Wall Street was decidedly less upbeat.
From The Associated Press
Noriega co-defendants convicted in drug case
The Associated Press
MIAMI — Jurors yesterday convicted two codefendants of Manuel Noriga of plotting with the deposed Panamanian leader to trade M-16 automatic riffles for cocaine.
Brian Davidow and William Saldarriga were convicted of conspiracy to import cocaine and
distribution with intent to import. They became the first co-defendants of Noriega to be convicted in the case.
The two each face up to 40 years in prison. U.S. District Judge Willey However has concluded sentencing for May 14.
PETER S. HUNGER
The case against Davidw, 29, a Miami real estate salesman, and Saldarragia, 14, a Colombian importer, revolved around the ill-fated voyage of the luxurv Krill in March 1986.
Noriega will be tried in June on the same counts, as well as
on the same counts, as well as 4 *Mauro* nobilea
ne co-defendants have reached plea agreements.
were murdered in Medellin, Colombia, days before the yacht was raided.
The government's star witness, Amet Paredes,
testified the conspirators had plotted the Krill's voyage with Norgea in a series of meetings in London. She also stressed the group by speaker phone, Paredes said.
Colombian police seized the Krill as it prepared to leave an offshore island with 700 pounds of cocaine stashed in hidden compartments. Two of the men who allegedly helped organize the deal
The deal involved trading 1,000 automatic riffles for the cocaine, possibly to the M-19 Colombian guerrilla group through the Medellin drug cartel, according to the government.
Noriega supplied the weapons, Saldariraja was to handle the loading of the cocaine in Colombia and Davidwau was to sell some of the drugs when he was out. The drug dealer was to get a share of the profits, Profades treasured.
When the trial began, the government's key witness was expected to be Ramon Navarro, a confessed drug trafficker who brokered the Krill deal. But he was killed in a car crash the night of opening statements, before he could testify. Navarro's death is still listed as an open homicide case, but police have said there is no evidence of foul play.
The defense attacked Paredes' credibility, noting that he had been offered a sentence of zero to 10 years for cooperating, instead of the 95 he was facing under the indictment.
Soviet price hike revealed
Shoppers told to expect a surprise at the market The Associated Press
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — President Mikhail Gorbachev yesterday ordered price increases for next month on many foods and consumer goods to bolster the crinkled Soviet economy.
Prices for heavy nait of an i will be lifted, the head of the Soviet price committee was quoted as saying. Some of the items have remained at the same price since the 1960s.
An official said some prices would rise tenfold.
In his decree yesterday, Gorbachev ordered the long-dreaded price hikes to take effect April 2, the official news agency Tass报要. Transactions with Russia prices also will rise. Tass said
will rise, Tass said. Mihkaili Gorbachev
A pound of beef will quadruple in price from
a ruble ($1.80) to about four rubles ($7.20).
A quart of milk will go from 36 kpeeps (58 cents) to
50 kopies (80 cents), according to the reformist newspaper Komosomisakaya Pravda. A loaf of bread, the staple of the Soviet diet, will triple from the current 20 kopies (32 cents) to 60 kopes (96 cents).
Some scarce goods, such as cars, electronics, wine, beer, cagnac, wood and construction materials, will increase by as much as 10 times, said the company's state price committee. Vaycheslan Senchagov.
PETER C. HENRY
The increases stem from cuts in huge government subsidies to farmers and manufacturers and are aimed at bringing the prices of goods closer to the real costs of producing them, said Senchaguy.
Children's goods will become three times as expensive, he said, in part to discourage small businesses from buying.
But prices for vodka, coffee, fuel and other everyday goods will remain the same. Senchagov said in an interview yesterday in the Workers Tribune newspaper.
Production of almost all food and many consumer goods has become unprofitable, he said. The increases are an important and necessary element of the transition to a market economy
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KU STUDENT BIOETHICS CLUB "ANIMAL RIGHTS VS. HUMAN RIGHTS "
Thursday, March 21st Kansas Union--Governor's Room, 7:00 p.m.
For more information call: Shawn 842-7060
NOMINATIONS WANTED
NOMINATIONS WANTED The Comission on the Status of Women is now accepting nominations to honor outstanding women students, faculty, and staff for the WOMEN'S RECOGNITION PROGRAM on April 23,1991. Nominations accepted in the following categories:
following categories
*Women's Hall of Fame
*Women's Hall of Fame
*Outstanding Woman Teacher
*Outstanding Woman Teacher
*Outstanding Woman Staff Member
*Outstanding International Woman Student
*Outstanding Nontraditional Woman Student
*Outstanding Woman Student in Athletics
*Outstanding Woman Student in Leadership
*Outstanding Woman Student in Student Services
Outstanding Woman Student in Community Service
*Outstanding D
Headmasters 809 Vermont 843-8808
Nomination forms available at the Emily Tayler Women's Resource Center, 118 Strong Hall. NOMINATION DEADLINE:
Commission on the Status of Women is a student group funded by Student Senate
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Wednesday, March 20, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Plaques feature historic buildings
FIT KIT
Mike Turner/KANNAN
By Katie Chipman
Garrell Stein, Smithville, Mo., freshman, and Julia Tibbettts, Lansing freshman, read some of about 100 posters taped to the walls of the
WORK ARED
Powerful posters
Campus buildings that have historical significance soon will be recognized by bronze plaques along Jay hawk Boulevard.
Kansan staff writer
Small concrete foundations for the plaques were placed on campus during spring break. However, the plaques have not been placed on them.
pedestrian tunnel beneath Naimshi Drive. The posters concerned rape and the unification of women.
Derek Williams, Fredricksburg, Va., sophomore, speculated on what the structures would be used for
"Maybe it's a sundial," Williams said.
Seven markers to be displayed
Jim Mathes, assistant director of landscape, said that 10 foundations for the plaques had been built. The buildings that will feature plaques have historical significance.
Cindy Calvin, Chanute senior, said,
"It could be a place to tie your shoe."
He said there would be one in front of Bailey Hall, which used to be called Bailey Barn.
"Bailey was named after a chemistry professor." Mathes said. "The building used to be a chemistry lab. But before it was built, the architect had asked me to design all over the East Coast to find someone who knew how to build a laboratory."
"Spooner was turned into an art museum in 1924, and a skylight was installed in the roof to have better lighting." she said. "However, the natural light damaged the art, and they had to redo the roof."
Wiechert said Spooner had been the library before Watson Library was built.
Mathes said the building used to have 18 chimneys for ventilation needs. The chimneys were removed and reconstructed, remodeled for the School of Education.
the information for the brochure,
said Spooner Hall was the oldest academic building on campus and
the most architectually significant.
Greg Wade, campus landscape architect, said the Historic Mount Oread Fund had supplied the plaques to help people discuss about the historic buildings.
"The plaque will give the name of the building, the architect and the year it was built." he said.
Sandra Wiechert, who researched
Wade said other buildings that would feature plaques included the St. John's Snow, Marvin and Slauster-Fint Balls, Watson and Hoch Auditorium.
The Society For East Asian Studies Presents Kurosawa's
(Japanese with English subtitles)
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TONIGHT 7:30 p.m. DYCHE AUD.
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APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN CHANCELLOR'S OFFICE Reading in March 23
Do you want to be a
Student Senator?
Applications are in 316 Strong Hall.
Applications are due TODAY at 5:00 p.m.
NO late applications will be accepted!
Kansas Alpha Chapter
Sigma Alpha Epsilon presents
IN A WORLD OF DIFFERENCE
HARMONY IN A WORLD OF DIFFERENCE
A Workshop on Cultural Diversity,
Prejudice Reduction and Coalition Building
Saturday, March 23, 1991
Kansas Union
8:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.
Admission Free • Registration Limited
Yes, I will attend the Harmony in a World of Difference workshop sponsored by Karma Alpha Chaper, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Saturday, March 23, 1991.
I understand that registration is limited to a first-come, first-served basis.
Address
City State Zap
Living Group/Affiliation Phone #
Mai to: Hertmeyer in a World of Difference, c/o Sigma Alpha Epithema,
1301 W. Carpus爬, Lawrence, KS 66044. (843-625-823)
www.carpus.edu
Together we can make a world of difference
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 20, 1991
9
Panel discusses solutions to Middle East problems
Knowledge of past may be key
By Lara Gold
Kansan staff writer
The Palestinians and the Jewish people both have been persecuted for centuries and both are entitled to their own homeland, said a professor on a panel discussing the future of the Middle East.
"For Jews, they have been a disa-
pora of people. To attack Zionism,
to attack Israel, to attack the Jewish
people," said Daniel Breslauer,
professor of religious studies. "The Pa-
estians, like the Jews, are dispensed.
They, too, need a symbol of their
unity."
Breslauer was one of four panelists last night at Haskell Indian Junior College.
"Why fight over this little bit of land without realizing this little bit of
land is a concrete symbol of a larger reality?' Breslauer said.
Mohamed El-Hodri, professor of economics, said Arabs and Jews should read about their history so they can learn how much they had in common.
El-Hodiri said the economics of the oil industry needed to be addressed in the region.
"Oil is important to the West now."
he said. "It should be preserved."
El-Hodiri said the price of oil should be high so people would think before they used an abundance of it.
The Palestinian and Israeli conflict and the West's dependency on Middle Eastern oil are problems that need to be solved, he said.
Nick Peroff, political scientist at the University of Missouri at Kansas City, gave a U.S. perspective of the "involvement" in the Middle East.
"If the Middle East was the center for growing brocoli, we wouldn't have been involved there," Peroff said.
"One working way is to look at world power politics." Peroff said.
But he said oil was not the only reason for military involvement in the Persian Gulf.
He said George Bush wanted to knock Saddam Hussein out of power because Saddam attacked a sovereign nation.
K Steve Kelly, a U.S. businessman who was in Kuwait during the Iraqi invasion, said he thought the U.S. military involvement was justified.
"We have won the war," Kelley said. "We now have to win the peace."
He said Palestinians and Israelis needed to find a solution that was just and equitable for both sides.
Kelley said he was optimistic that Bush's vision of a new world order would succeed in solving the problems in the Middle East.
Meeting curbs cult deception
Hints distributed to sidestep tactics
By Rick C. Honish Kansan staff writer
Avoiding cult deception was the message at a meeting at McCollum Hall last night.
The Rev. Vince Krische of the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, the Rev. Jim Musser of Campus Christians and Cynthia Wimmer, a former member of Campus Connection, spoke to 25 students about their experiences with various religious groups and gave advice on how to recognize and deal with their various tactics.
Krische said a task force was developed about a year ago in an effort to promote cooperation and awareness of the KU carusms organizations on the KU carusms
"Part of being a professional means being accountable to your peers and having been accredited by some higher authority," he said. "People can trust that the person is capable of do what is expected of them."
Krische said the task force formed a mediation panel after complaints
were received about Campus Connection, a fundamentalist religious organization active on the KU campus.
The panel concluded that Campus Connection's methods had violated various guidelines, and they were expelled from the task force, known as the Kansas University Religious Advisers.
Wimmer said she wanted to speak at the meeting because she wanted people to know what could happen to them. The drama involved with lecivine groups.
"I can't say that what this group was doing was wrong, but it hurts people," she said. "Try it if you want, least know what it is all about."
Musser said things to watch out for included strangers asking about one's spiritual life, the group's openness to its willingness to answer questions.
A list of seven tips for avoiding cult deception was handed out to people at the meeting.
"If a total stranger asks you questions about your religious beliefs, they should be more than willing to answer yours." he said.
Musser said people should not attend Bible studies with strangers
and should be wary of instantaneous friendships.
"You don't need to be skeptical of everything and everyone, but use common sense," he said.
Krische said the simplest thing to do if asked to a Bible study by a stranger was to say "no."
After the meeting, Rob Vilardi, Long Island, N.Y., freshman, said that he attended the meeting because he was interested in religion, and he knew how to deal with people on campus who had invited him to Bible studies.
"You kind of want to believe people are really that friendly," he said. "But when they are, they usually have a hidden motive."
Dawn Meisenheimer and Carrie Richardson, resident assistants at McCollum, organized the meeting. Richardson said a questionable religious group had been meeting in McCollum.
"We have removed people from the hall for pressuring residents to go to Bible studies," she said.
Richardson said she wanted to expand on the ideas expressed at the meeting, organizing programs for the meeting free from restrictions. ASU to recognize questionable groups.
The Power of Macintosh Offer ends May 4th,1991
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Wednesday, March 20, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Human Development Golf 1 general chemistry
ATHLETIC TRAINING INSTITUTE Human Development Golf 1
Elementary/Secondary School Curriculum Development and Evaluation Introduction to Educational Research Small Business Institute
Reporting
DESIGN OF WEIGHT TRAINING PROGRAM
American Literature II Introduction to art
CORRECTIONAL TREATMENT OF DRUG ABUSE Introduction to Astronomy: Cosmology
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PHYSICAL THERAPY CLINICAL
Junior Composition with Business Emphesis Villages Workshop ETHNIC AND RACE RELATIONS AMONG YOUTH PROBLEMS IN PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Advanced Legal Research
Domestic Relations
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Introduction to Economics COST ACCOUNTING
European Civilization II
PUBLIC SPEAKING
Organization and Management PUBLIC SPEAKING LD Practicum-Elementary/Secondary
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INTRODUCTION TO SOCIOLOGY
Systems
Intermediate Algebra
BD Practicum-Elementary/Secondary
Scientific Method in Nursing Introduction to Word Processing Principles of Accounting I Social Work: Human Sexuality
BD Practicum-Elementary/Secondary Statistics for Business and Economics
History of the Modern Middle East
European Civilization II World Views and Moral Values
microcomputer techniques
ENJOYMENT OF MUSIC
Low-fire Clay
Nutrition
Machine Shorthand III
Legal Terminology
Junior Composition
Introduction to Business
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Freshman Composition
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY Cultural Anthropology INTERNSHIP
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INTRODUCTION TO BIOLOGY
COBOL theory of communication PROGRAMMING
What can you do in Topeka this summer?
If you'll be in Topeka this summer, you can enroll at Washburn University and get a required course or two out of the way. During the summer session, Washburn offers a number of
Business Policies Radiation Therapy Clinical III Bill of Rights for Teachers
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If you'll be in Topeka this summer, you can enroll at Washburn University and get a required course or two out of the way. During the summer session, Washburn offers a number of junior and senior level courses in addition to the basics everyone needs, and Washburn credits can be transferred to other schools.
Take advantage of convenient class times — during the day or in the evening — that fit your summer schedule. With Easy Enrollment, you can avoid waiting in lines and drowning in paperwork.
Start making your plans for summer now. Take a closer look at Washburn University's 1991 Summer Session.
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Basic Concepts in Psychology elementary/middle/secondary school principalship Survey of Japanese Literature
MICROCOMPUTER APPLICATIONS IN PE
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black and white photography
Psychology of Adjustment
human anatomy
Government of the United States
2 Introduction to Alcohol and Drug Abuse
Junior Composition Tennis with Teaching Emphasis
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Modern English Grammar
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Introduction to Geology Karate 1 and 2
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PHYSICAL THERAPY PROCEDURES II Introduction to Geography Basic Health Care
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U. S. HISTORY II
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early childhood/kindergarten education
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Landscape Race and Ethnic Group Relations
supervision and staff development in schools Skin and Scuba Diving SCHOOL FINANCE AND BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 20, 1991
11
Marcy Simon, Lenexa sophomore, sells daffodils to Eli Richardson, Augusta sophomore.
Flower sale to help cancer society
Student awareness group sells daffodils to promote education
By Amy Francis
Kansan staff writer
Selling daffodils is how the campus group Forming Awareness of Cancer Through Students is participating in cancer awareness month's contest for the American Cancer Society.
The daffodil sale started yesterday and will continue from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. today on the fourth floor of the Kansas Union.
The flowers will be sold tomorrow at Watkins Memorial Health Center, where information about cancer also will be handed out, said Candyce Waitle, health educator at Watkins and adviser for FACTS.
The flowers cost 50 cents each or can be bought in a bunch of 10 for $5.
'I think for cancer patients, they look for a lot of hope.'
— Kristi Strain chairperson of the fund-raiser
grams and patient services
Kristi Strain, chairperson of the fund-raiser, said the daffodil was being used because it was the first flower of spring and a sign of hope.
"I think for cancer patients, they look for a lot of hope," she said.
This is the first year FACTS has sponsored the fund-raising event, Strain said. But this is also the first time she's existed at the University of Kansas.
American Cancer Society, said the society had sponsored similar fundraisers for more than three decades.
"It originated in Canada 31 years ago," she said.
Pam Harris, special events coordinator for the Mission chapter of the
The dafidofis have been sold for seven years in the Kansas City area, she said. The fund-raiser occurs nationwide in March and April.
Strain said that because this was the first time FACTS had sponsored the fund-raiser, the group did not have a specific goal.
"We have a lot of hopes but no expectations," she said. "We didn't want to set too much of a goal because we just didn't know."
FACTS hopes to sell the 500 daffids the American Cancer Society provided. The money raised from the sale will be given to the society and will be used mostly in the Lawrence area, Strain said.
The money also will be used for such things as grants to the KU Medical Center and motel rooms for
cancer patients who must travel to receive cancer treatment but cannot afford a room, she said.
Strain said FACTS started fundraising activities earlier than yesterday. They sent letters to greek houses and KU faculty members asking them to buy daffodils for local hospitals and nursing homes.
There was no response from the faculty, she said, but the response from the Greek houses was good.
"We were really surprised by how much support we got," Strain said.
Lawrence Memorial Hospital received some of the flowers that were donated.
Allyson Leland, director of volunteer services at the hospital, said the hospital received about 800 dakafilids yesterday from the various people who donated to FACTS. The flowers were in rooms 'rooms and at nurses' stations.
Food Barn accuses strikers of slander
The Associated Press
the company mismanaged finances.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Food Earn Inc. said affairs by striking employees to slash the grocery chain's business amounted to slander.
Food Barn representative P.A. Rawalatt attacked union claims made during a recent rally in Topeka that
"Their allegations are getting way out of line." Rawalt said. "It's a tactic used to put fear into the consumer, but the first with the consumer, . . . the battle should be between the union and the company."
Jerry Helmick of the United Food and Commercial Workers Local 576 said the strike that began March 3 had reduced business by 75 percent. Rawalt placed that figure about 19 percent.
Food Barn, with stores in Kansas and Missouri, dispatched less than
one-fourth of its normal stock to stores last week, Helmck claimed. He said the drop cost about 30 Kansas City warehouse employees their jobs.
Rawalt said Monday that food Barn would conduct a news conference tomorrow to respond to the union's allegations.
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Wednesdav March 20. 1991 / Universitv Dailv Kansan
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Weekdays 7am-6pm Saturdays 8am-4pm
Have you ever considered a career in Research or Teaching at a College or University?
The Graduate School of the University of Kansas would like to invite you to attend a special informative meeting. Information about graduate education, financial aid and options will be provided.
Come with your questions & curiosity... Friday, March 21, 4:00p.m. to 5:00p.m Kansas Room, Kansas Union
DONALD C. MURRAY
SHOW YOUR KU SPIRIT JOIN
KU CRIMSON CREW!
Get involved with the University and the Football program by participating in the 1991-92 Crimson Crew.
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or other related fields.
This is a great experience for anyone interested in Public Relations, Communications, Marketing, or other related fields
All interested freshmen, sophomores, and juniors are asked to attend an informational meeting in room 135 Parrott Athletic Center:
THURSDAY, MARCH 21 AT 5 P.M.
Any questions, call the Football Office at 864-3393.
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Yugoslavia's army stays out
Pressure increases on Serbian rulers The Associated Press
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia — The army ended several days of ominous silence by declaring yesterday it would not permit Yugoslavia's battles against Serbia to dissolve in civil war. Pressure increased on Serbia's ruling Communists.
Slobodan Milosevic, the reclusive hard-line leader of Yugoslavia's largest republic, came under a harsh attack when he made a rare public appearance before a hand-picked audience at Belgrade University.
"Serbia has never been so hated in other parts of the country and in the
world as it is under your rule," one student said. A recording of the closed meeting was broadcast on a youth radio station.
March 9, army tanks rumbled through Belgrade to shore up Miloescic's rule after two died in violent clashes between police and about 100,000 anti-Communist pro-
testers. The tanks wounded the next day.
But last week he failed in three attempts to have the country's eight-person federal presidency, which formally commands the armed forces, declare a nationwide state of emergency.
The military high command statement yesterday appeared to lessen, but not eliminate, the possibility the army would intervene in the country's ethnic and political strife
There has been intense speculation about whether it would intervene on the side of Serbia in Serbia's dispute with Yugoslav republics over the future of the nation.
"The Yugoslav army . . . shall not interfere in the political agreements about the future of the country," said a spokesman for the government by the official news agency Tanjug.
But under no circumstances would the army permit inter-ethnic, inter-epublic and inter-party bickering or civil war, it said.
The statement also demanded that all republics catch up in late contributions to the military budget and send conscripts. The northern republic of Slovenia has stopped sending recruits.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 20, 1991
13
Jackson bids farewell to Royals and says he will play again
The Associated Press
HAINES CITY, Fla. — Bo Jackson said yesterday he had no bittersweet toward the Kansas City Royals for playing with a confident friend he would play baseball again.
Jackson bid an emotional farewell to his teammates one day after the Royals announced they were giving him his unconditional release and suffered in January while playing football for the Los Angeles Raiders.
"They felt that they had to do what they did as a business aspect of baseball," said Jackson, sitting back in his chair. "There are a lot of teams I would like."
to go to. Whether decides to pick me up, if I'm picked up, I'll play for. If not, I'll try out for somebody, and I'll make the team."
Jackson said he would spend the summer with his family and continue his rehabilitation.
"I still have my home, my family," Jackson said. "Business deals down the road. Starting a family business, building a community, being dependent on baseball at this point."
"I love the sport. I love to play until it'm 70, but that's not possible," he said. "I won't pull a Palmer and try to come back when I'm 45. When the man upstairs says it's over, it's over."
Jackson said he had no regrets about playing both football and baseball.
"Hell, I may go out and take up flying," he said. "I've got plenty of time. I'll take up a third sport.
"Seriously, this summer I plan on,
doing my rehab and finish up my
schooling at Auburn. A burden has
been lifted off my shoulders as far as
took me to school (to quick).
When I do come back, watch out.
Katie, the door."
Jackson said he was not stunned by his release.
He said he had taken comfort in his family and particularly from his wife, who is a psychologist.
"It's not that bad," said Jackson, who was near tears when he talked about teammates he were particularly close to. "I thought I was going to be fine." My depression and sit around the house did not take baths and drink beer all day.
"But I would love to come back to Royals Stadium and knock down that new scoreboard in left field."
Jackson, the 1985 Heisman Trophy winner who played four years for the Royals, was being given his unconditional release following an examination Monday by physician James Andrews in Birmingham. Ala
"Don't count me out," Jackson said in Birmingham. "I'll be back
playing baseball this year."
As in football, Jackson was capable of mind-boggling performances on the baseball field, but his inconsistency in both the outfield and at the plate sometimes seemed to hurt the Royals more than help them.
Fans at Baseball City still talk about the marmomath home run Jack honin in 1867 that was still climbing over the tail scoreboard in left-center.
Jackson won a starting fieldjob with Kansas City that year — less than a year after he was a fourth-round draft choice in June 1986.
Jackson seemed to thrive in high visibility situations. In 1988, he hit a
home run in his first All Star game after getting the most fan votes in the American League. Last year, he hit three home runs in a game against the New York Yankees and drove in seven runs but was stopped from taking a fourth time when he hurt his shoulder while diving for a fry ball.
In 1988 he became the first Royals player to hit 25 home runs and steal 25 bases. In 1989 he did it again
But Jackson had 638 strikeouts in 1,837 at bats. He was a disappointment as a center fielder and was moved to left, where the knock on him was that he routinely failed to hit the cutoff man.
Jayhawk 10
Emporia State second baseman David Martinez throws past Kansas outfielder Chris Moore during a rundown in the Jahawys' 10-9 victory over the Hornets at Houlund-Maupin Stadium.
Narrow victory saved in ninth by Jayhawks
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
"This game centers around how you perform on the mound." Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "We just pitched itbad in the ninth."
The Kansas baseball team built an eight-run lead over Emporia State during eight innings and then held on for dear life in the ninth for a 10-9 victory yesterday afternoon at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
Emporia State's late-game surge of runs was the only serious threat to the Jahavins during the game.
After Emporia State scored two runs in the first inning, Kansas left-hander David Meyer and right-hander Daniel Anderson exceeded the Hornets' until the ninth.
For his strong performance, Meyer credited Bingham's advice given during a first-inning visit to the mound.
"Cook came out and said I should get on my front foot more," Meyer said. "I have a little problem with my mechanics every now and then."
Meyer used a variety of pitches to keep the Hornet batters off balance
"It was good to get back in the groove," Meyer said. "We went down to Texas over spring break, and my buddies helped us to see some movement back in it."
from that point. He raised his record to 2-1 by burying only four hits in the five innings he pitched
Stoneciphe relieved Meyer in the sixth inning and continued to frustrate the Hornet batters through the eighth.
Baseball
Stonecipher said he enjoyed pitching in relief instead of in his usual role as a starter.
Stonecipher struck out four and gave up no runs or hits in three innings.
While Hornet batters struggled, the Jayhawks were blasting Emporia State's pitching with 10 runs and 12 hits.
"I guess I don't think as much then," he said. "I got my curve over, and they didn't have much of a chance."
Kansas designated hitter Mike Bard was three for four and scored
two runs as Kansas took a seemingly commanding 10-2 lead into the top of the ninth.
The Hornets sent 12 men to the plate in the inning as Kansas pitchers Chris Corn and Joel Bacon were charged with a combined six runs.
Kansas right-hander Jim Walker, who pitched 9% innings Saturday, was brought in to stop the Hornets' run-scoring flurry.
Emporia State shortstop Anthony Deli scored on a sacrifice fly to center field, and the Hornets found themselves behind 10-9 with runners on first and second bases and two outs.
Walker, however, sealed the victory for Kansas by forcing Emporia State right fielder Jeff Lopp to ground out to second base.
Bingham said he was somewhat encouraged with the Jayhawks' performance despite the Hornets seven-run ninth inning.
Softball team goes 12-4 in tournament
"Our kids were more positive today than what I saw over the weekend," he said.
The Jayhawks, 12-8, will travel to Manhattan on Friday.
Kansan sportswriter
By Lana Smith
The softball team is getting lots of playing time.
If Kansas softball is your sport of choice, March is sure to bring you happy days.
Kansas went 3-2 against the three ranked teams they played.
During spring break, Kansas challenged 11 teams and finished with a record of 12.4 at the Texas A&M University in College Station, Texas.
15. Central Michigan lost to Kansas 32.3, as did ninth-ranked Ohio 40 and 0.1. Third-ranked Arizona defeated the Jayhawks 2.3 in 12 innings
Kansas junior Camille Spitaleri said she thought the Jayhaws played well against the teams.
Despite that loss, Spitaleri said that the team was eager and that she anticipated good results from the
"We looked like a top 20 team, and we played like one." Spitali said.
However, she said it would be poor judgment on Kansas' part if the Jayhays thought they had nothing to improve.
She pointed to the Kansas-Sam Houston State game, which Kansas lost, say the Jayhawks played well for the first four innings and then fell into neutral. Sam Houston State came back and won.
Spielera that hitting was that area Kansas has been trying to better because at times in Texas the Jay-ers are not as strong as it should have been.
next tournament.
"I think now that we beat Texas A& M, our confidence is way up there," Spitaleri said.
Spitialer and junior Shelly Sack led the Jayhawks in hitting, batting .326 and .391 respectively.
Sack hit two home runs and picked up three pitching victories.
Spitaleri had three doubles, two triplets and a home run.
Kansas freshman pitcher Stephani Williams went 5-3 during break, and sophomore Jill Bailey went 3-1 on the mound.
Big Eight coaches disciplined
Williams said that she was pleased with Kansas' results in Texas.
"As a team, we played together really well," Williams said. "We came together."
As for队 improvements, Williams said hitting and pitching were key areas to work on because she needed more equipment to be tougher than the last one.
Williams and Spitaleri are two of five Jayhawks who will be playing in their home state when Kansas plays in the Bud Light Invitational conducted tomorrow through Sunday in San Jose. Calif.
During the tournament, Kansas will face two more ranked teams, fifth-ranked Arizona State and No. 19 Massachusetts.
Spitaleri said she thought Kansas would be ranked after this tournament.
The Associated Press
Williams was also optimistic
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Onehea coach was suspended and four others, including Kansas coach Roy Williams, reprimanded for comments they made about officiating during this year's Big Eight basketball tournament, league commissioner Carl James said yesterday.
"A lot of California teams out there are really tough," she said. "If we play really intense, we should do well."
James suspended Iowa State coach Johnny Orr for the first game of the next basketball season. The disciplinary action was in response to Orr's comments about officiating in the Iowa State-Missouri game March 8 at the Big Eight tournament in Kansas City, the league said.
The coaches receiving reimpriments were Williams, Missouri coach Norm Stewart, Colorado coach Joe Harton and Nebraska coach Danny Nee.
Orr also received a reprimand
"These codes request that coaches model common courtesy, fair play and sportsmanship while treating all persons with dignity and respect."
"The Big Eight Conduct Code and the National Association of Basketball Coaches Code of Ethics include the principles of honoring all professional relationships with athletes, colleagues, officials, media and the public by basketball coaches," James said in a statement.
Under conference regulations, coaches, players and game administrators are not permitted to give comments about officiating at the games.
The conference would not disclose the coaches' specific comments about officiating.
Feb. 27 for his comments about officiating in the Iowa State-Missouri game three days earlier.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Universities should have independent control of all athletic revenue, including income from shoe contracts for coaches, and players should be intelligible if they are not on course to graduate in five years, a private commission declared yesterday.
Commission says universities should take control
The report by the Knight Foundation Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics also said that schools should adopt no-pass, no-play policies with its recommendations to be verified by outside auditors.
College athletes are brought in, used and then discarded like so much rubbish on the scrap heap of humanity, said the Rev. Theodore Hesley. The Dame's son is a graduate of the University of Notre Dame and co-chairperson of the commission.
The NCAA currently has a satisfactory progress rule based on a "banking of hours" concept where an athlete must average 12 hours a term
or 24 hours an academic year to be eligible.
The "banking" concept differs from the commission's proposal in that it allows an athlete to store up hours through summer school or during the regular term. This allows athletes to take easier or fewer courses to concentrate on sports and make up the credits later.
Fourteen of the commission's 22 members are current or former college presidents. The panel said the academic administrators needed to take direct action of their athletic programs, requiring student athletes to get an education and making sure finances of the athletic programs were controlled by the university, not the coaches or athletic directors.
"We would love to put the sleaziness of intercollegiate athletics to rest today," said Hesburh.
The commission will continue to operate for another year to push its proposals.
"We are not going away," said
William C. Friday, former president of the University of North Carolina and the other co-chairperson of the commission. "This is not a report that will be put away and gather dust."
While the commission members and the report were blunt in describing the problems of collegiate athletics, complaining that many have been excluded from team network contracts and private fundraising, no institutions were named.
Hesburgh, when asked to name some of the worst offenders, replied, "That's the easiest one in the world to duck."
"We sense that public concern about abuse is growing. The public appears ready to believe that many people are not meeting their goals not through honest effort, but
And that's just what he did.
"At their worst, big-time college athletics appear to have lost their bearings," the commission report said.
The Knight Foundation, which put up some $2 million for the commission and the study, is one of the nation's largest foundations.
through equivocation; not by hard work and sacrifice, but by hook and crook," it said.
It is independent from Knight-Ridder, Inc.
The commission found that academic and financial problems were so deep-rooted and long standing that they must be understood to be systemic. It also said they could no longer be swept under the rug or kept under control by tinkering around the edges. And because these problems were so widespread, these much promise for restoring intercollegiate athletics to their proper place in the university.
A university president, it said,
could not be a figurehead whose
leadership applied elsewhere in
the country but not in the athletics
department.
Inexperienced men's team not quite up to par
CANADIAN GOLF
Matt Gogel, Tulsa sophomore, practices chipping golf balls out of a sandtrap and onto the green. The golf team practiced yesterday afternoon at Alvamar Golf Course.
The fairways at Alvamar are still hay-colored, but the greens are as green as the Kansas men's golf team.
Four sophomores and seven freshmen make up the bulk of the team this season. The starters for the team are freshman Jeff Moeller, sophomore Gogel and Brad Bruno and Kansas' lone starting senior, Len Johnson.
By Rick C. Honish Kansan sportswriter
"Hopefully I can lead by example," he said.
Johnsen said his goal on the team was to play as well as possible.
If last week's tournament results are an example of what lies ahead for the Jayhaws, then a successful year on the links is probable.
The team had not been in a tournament for more than three months when it traveled to Orlando and Tampa during spring break. The two tournaments the team competed in while there were the first in 1991 for the second in 2013, they earned the fifth spot for the Jayawhaks and traveled with the队.
Gopel placed eighth overall with scores of 74, 74 and 72. Johnsen and Bruno tied for 15th. They both had stroke totals of 224.
Kansas tied with South Alabama for sixth place at the Tampa tournament. Both teams had scores of 891 Mississippi won with a score of 883.
In Orlando, the Jayhawks compete against, among others, top-five teams Arizona and North Carolina. Kansas finished fifth and beat 20th-ranked New Mexico and 13th-ranked State. Arizona won the tournament.
Golf
Kansas coach Ross Randall said that victory had been within reach until the last nine holes.
"On the last nine we had trouble on two holes, numbers 13 and 14," he said. "We lost nine shots on those holes."
Both holes were over water, and the birdies the team scored after those holes were not enough to make a double bogleys suffered at 13 and 14.
Brad Bruno had the low score for the team, shooting 76, 73 and 72. He recorded a 10 on the 13th hole the last day. Randall said that if Bruno had played the par 4 hole two over instead he could have won the tournament.
the unshaken sophomore redeemed himself on the last three holes, shooting three consecutive 100s and four doubles with an overall 221 and 123 place.
Randall said he was pleased with the team's play at both tournaments but added that there were many aspects of the team's performance.
"If we are going to be a better team, we will need more help from our fourth and fifth guys," he said.
The team needs to improve its mental play as well, Randall said.
"Playing more tournaments gets you mentally sharp," he said. "A month from now we will be doing a lot better."
14
Wednesday, March 20, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
ADVERTISE IN THE DAILY KANSAN FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS
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March 28, 1991 7:15 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
$8 advance tickets available at SUA box office or Wescoe Beach
All proceeds benefit the National Prevention of Child Abuse
featuring
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UNI UNION ACTIVITY
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$50 $50 MONO
Have you had mononucleosis within the last month?
If so your plasma could make a valuable.
For additional details call Steve Hawkins
Lawrence Donor Center
814 W. 24th-Corner of 24th & Alabama
Classified Directory
I
100's
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
Bio Entertainment
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
200's
Employment
Empo... 205 Help Wanted 205 Professional Services 235 Typing Services
U
Merchandise
100s Announcements
105 Personal
SWM, 27, seeks special lady for long term relationship, or be a single woman, 18-30, and also seek someone else special, then tell me about her. Reply to P O Box 424524, LAWRENCE, KS
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
110 Bus. Personal
Bausch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sunglasses
20% Below-Sale, Retail
The Etc. Shop
731 Mass Ave, New York, NY 10016
B. A.C. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop. Classic to computerized. Body shop available. American motorcycle repair and ac servicing. Auto body repair. VISA Mastercard & Discover cards used
FORMAL WEAR
·The Etc. Shop
Rental and Sales. 732 Mass.
Habits, phobias, stress, anxiety, pain, smoking,
weight and other disorders. Hypnotherapy
Center. 842.7504
Trailridge residents, we appreciate you. The winning numbers are: 1116, 1032, 1008, 1064, 1137.
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" makes sense of Western Civ. "Makes sense to use it." Available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Crier Bookstores.
THEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY LISTEN
Call in or drop by headquarters.
We're here because we care.
841-2345 1419 Mass.
We are always open.
A
400's
Make a
Make a SPECTACLE of yourself.
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
The Etc. Shop sunglasses
---
Clothing & Accessories
For Men & Women
Sunglasses & Costumes
732 Mass. 843-0611
The Etc.
Shop
VISA-MC-AMLEXP-DISCOVER CARD
Put AT&T on your resume before you graduate
1991 Fall Marketing
Opportunities Available
AT&T is seeking ambitious, saxed onedent students to participate in our seven day on campus marketing program selling products and making a strong financial flexible with hot compensation and bonuses. Must be available 1-2 weeks prior to the class. We need:
AT&T STUDENT
CAMPUS MANAGER
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concern,
caf1-841-2345. Headquarters.
120 Announcements
AT&T ASSISTANT STUDENT
CAMPUS MANAGER
To be responsible for overall event implementation, daily management and training of student group. Requires strong leadership ability. Prior management sales related experience a plus. Must complete August 1-3, 1991 National Training on August 1-3, 1991
To manage a group of students on a daily basis and assist with overall event implementation. Sales/leadership experience
To find out about these great opportunities, call 1-800-5212-121 or send resume to CDT. A&T Recruitment.
CDT RECRUITMENT
PA 19102. Equal Copy. Employer.
To act as our on-campus representatives Must be outgoing and sales-oriented.
AT&T STUDENT
REPRESENTATIVE/
CAMPUS GROUP
Quitting business sale continues at the Book End in Quinnell's Fife Market, 811 New Hampshire, weekends 10-5.
Call Douglas County Rape Victim's Support Service for confidential and care assistance. If you need help, call 844-356-031 or 844-2345
Now has incredible beewax & plant pigment crayons, paints, and high quality recycled sketchbooks for all serious artists. The Antique Mall 830 Mass Lower level.
College Money. Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money may be paid by the college. 1881 COLLEGE LEGISLATURE CLOCATIONS. 1881 COLE LEGISLATURE CLOCATIONS.
Joaquin, Mo 64921-1880: 1-800-879-7455.
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling A friendly
gauge understanding. Free, confidential referrals
called return by counselors. Headquarters
or RU Info 841-5960. Sponsored by
GLOSK
Hey Laura, you bioethical wonder! Don't forget the animal rights discussion March 21, in the Governor's Room at 7:00. Invite your friends! Dr. Zhivago
Sailing team is looking for skiers and crews for race. Come to meeting tonight, 7p.m. Kansas City. Parforos A & B & Olympic Sailor Norm Kaskie will talk. Anybody is welcome.
Suicide Intervention. If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is call 841-2345 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
THE WAR AFFECTS US-For a caring listener or info on support services, call headquarters Counseling Center 841-2545
GLSOK
Spring Dance
Friday, March 22
9 pm - 1 am
1st floor Burge Union
Gay and Lesbian
Services of Kansas
more information cal
Want a tune-up for the Hill
Tournament? Enter the Eudora
Old-Timers Tournament on
Saturday, March 23, 1991, at
10:00 a.m., weigh in 7:00-9:00.
Enjoy fee $7.00. For
Attention Wrestlers!
Brian Kraus at 542-2184 (work) or 749-0297 (home).
Football player running
130 Entertainment
A.L. Left Inane and Sideshow live at the
OUTH, Thursday, March 28. m 45, all ages,
no alcohol. The Outside is located 4 miles east of
Mason. on 10th St.
Lawrence Info Center, content orientated BBS,
841-2732, N, 1
.Johnny's
UP & UNDER is available for parties. 842-0377
M
140 Lost-Found
Found. Lost Dog. Small, blind, looks tree with pink collar. Call 841-3754
Found. Set of keys, in the vacuum of 17th and Vermont. Call 841-6527 to identify
Lost: Gold clip on earring Friday before Spring Break. If found please call 749-3569.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
AIRLINES HIRING
Seeking students and grads to fill many positions:
Airline will train. Excellent salary and travel
benefits. 309-441-2455.
is accepting application Wednesday and Thursday for job opportunity with work weekdays) and donates money. Must be at least 18 yrs old and able to work through November 1. Apply at Marina in Clinton State University.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesdav. March 20.1991
15
Retirement Community is now seeking part time reception. M欠possess good work skills and a desire to develop centres. Opening for night and weekend shifts with average of 14 hour/week. Please apply in
BRANDON WOODS
1501 Inverness Drive Lawrence, KS EOE
CAMP COUNSELORS for private Michigan boys/girl summer camp. Teach swimming, sailing, watercoloring, gymnastics, rock climbing, camping, crafts, dramas, or riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance $120 per hour. Camp counselor, Steiger, 768 Maple NIL, IG, 8003 784-4444
CITY OF LAWRENCE
1901 SUMMER LORD
Caregivers need now. Trinity Community Services (TCS) provides caring individuals to provide care for the elderly and those who reside in vitese care families who are involved in the constant care of a disabled child or elderly person. TCS has staff who are in need of people who can work varied hours. Please call 802-3190 for an application or visit www.trinitycareers.com
The City of Lawrence is recruiting for various summer jobs, including recreation, playground, swimming, special populations, concerts, maintenance, and chemical operations. Applications are available at www.lawrence.gov/Services, Room 210, City Hall, 6th & Massachusetts, Lawrence 516 6004 6E40
Local Restaurant 30 Openings
We need Cooks, and Cashiers
Cashiers
• $4.50 Starting Wage
Apply from 3-5p.m. at
901 Kentucky 204A
Earn while you learn. Manpower is looking for students in earning great pay plus commissions and business experience, plan, treat use of the computer or alarms, with at least 8 a.m. average. Req's: Bachelor's degree in Business Administration or alarms, with at least 8 a.m. average.
and are bpompeptid tamarin. Manpower needs you as a CollegeRep to promote the sales of the IBM Personal System 2 on campus. For experience that pays, call Lon 748-2000.
FAST FUND-RAISING PROGRAM $1000 in just your campus. Earn up to $1000 for your organization. Pla n a chance at $600 more. Need 932 628 Ext. 50. Call 932 628 Ext. 50.
Graduate assistant. Student Financial Aid is seeking a graduate assistant to assist primarily with the CASHE Scholarship Search Program. Monthly salary is $820.00. Full-time position. The monthly salary includes application, resume, and names, addresses, and telephone numbers of 1 references to Daine Deline, Associate Director, Student Financial Advisor, by 5:00 p.m. on March 21, 2019. EEO AA
Great job in Philadelphia suburb. Have fun with kids for 15 minutes hourly. Earn great salary, room, board and 2 weeks paid vacation. Starts on May 4 for one year. Call Alizabat at (62) 483-3469
Immediate climate sale positions available with a Lenexa company. Weekends only, good money, some expenses and paid a variety of benefits. 914-523-8888 beween 5pm - 10pm Monday-Friday
Need money last? Make up to $125.00 a day trimming photographs No experience necessary 1.80-695 7789
International Company seeks career minded individuals to train in the fashion and glamour industry. For interview, 1,222-8029
PROGRAM ASSISTANT-10 hour-week. $844 for 12 months. Assist students and faculty in the program. Req's BSPD and SAS on maintenance such as SPSN, Systa, saskatchewan. 123 Locus on microcomputer training. Requires advanced level of skills in psychology or computer perimental design. Bachelor's degree in an application area. Psychology or compscience is desirable. Experience in appearance will also be considered. Application for all materials must be received by April 3, 1991. Seeks a full-time position in recommendation to Mrs H. Karpowitz, Department of Psychology, 46 Fraser, Universitatschule, Lewis, KS 65076. EO/A Employment.
Break Spring back and still no summer job?
Average making 440 week while gaining career experience for your resume 441-124
Unique Career Opportunity $11 to start and bonus
The Lync Opera of Kansas City is hiring
a Master's Degree in Business Administration
and pay incentives. No experience needed.
Provide a smart t-street Thursday evening,
starting at 8:30 am. Req. a master's degre-
ed from more information, call Lucy At the Lync.
www.lyncopera.com
225 Professional Services
Need managers for rapid growth cooperation.
No exp necessary. Will train in sales, marketing and management. Call 1-362-8911.
Work Study positions available. Spring, Summer and Fall. Call Judy at the School of Business, 864-7558.
Driver education Offered mid Third Ward Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
Government photos, passports, immigration,
archival modeling and arts portfolio.
BJAW, BJAW, Model portfolio, wedding photography
Model portfolio, wedding photography
Passport 15.00 Call 841-8698 or leave
Richard A. Frydman
Attorney at Law
843-4923
For All Municipal and District Court Matters Free Initial Consultation
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(315) 491-6080
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping
Lawrence Printing Service. 512 E. 9th Street
843-4000
Thesis & Dissertations
TRAFFIC - DUI'S
Fake IDs & alcohol offenders
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
*d-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scripts into accurately spelled and punctuated, gramatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 853263 days or evenings
Absolute cheapest typing in Lawrence.
$1.00 double-spaced page. Run jobs no problem.
499-648
A better price for Word Processing. Fast service.
$1.00/double-spaced page. Call Therese, 841-0776.
Accurate typing, Resumes, Theses, Letters, Call Melany, 1-913-4756-4754 or 864-3181.
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary:
$1.25/double-spaced page. Call Mrs. Mattila
10am 4pm, 841-1219.
Call R.J.'s Typing Services 841-5942 Term papers, legal, theses, ect. No calls after 9 p.m. Dennis's Quality Training and Word Skills
Doena's Quality Typing and Word Processing.
Term paper, letters, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Laser print-
ers, fax machines. Fax machines M-241, M-241,
8a.m. 5m, f-8a.m. 5m, f-8a.m. M-241.
I will correct grammar, punctuation or spelling errors, edit and type your words of wisdom and, in general, help you produce your best possible papers. Phil 842 6355
K's professional word processing. Accurate and
callable. Call after 1:00 pm. 841-6345
Professional typist. Reasonable rates. Call
842-3203.
Professional resume. Consultations. Interviews.
professional resumes-Consultations, formating,
typeeting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc, 927
Mass. B41-1071.
THEWORDOCTOBER Why pay for typing when you can have word processing? IBM, MAC, laser. Since 1883, 843-3147.
WordPerfect word processing, Ink Jet printer
Near Orchards Corners. Phone 843-8568
Process Working/Typing: Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing, composition.
Have M.S. Degree. 841-6254
Word Processing-Spelling checked $1.00 pg
2-space. 843-4638
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
1987 Honda Elite, 50cc, red, reliable and inexpensive transport, $350. Call 749-2918
1698 Mia MT. Bike, Excellent condition, w/ lock
250 obc Bab, Call 749-398, ask for Peter.
For sale: movie theater components. Screen, projector,
sound system. $2000. 811-637-6167.
Golf shoes. Brown leather Foal-Joy Classics. Size 9M. (Paid $140). Used once. Sell for $50. Phone 814-7609
Macintosh SE COMPUTER for SALE. Less than 1 year. 1 meg. mpeg, 20 meg HD, mouse, software. Call Scott at 8641 or 6410 / 1341/ 6497.
Pentax ME Super 35 mm camera. Lens, case,
filter, flash included, excellent condition $160
841-2966
SONY Video 8 CCD-V11 Handycam with tripod, lenses, battery pack and tape. Virtually new, worth $5000 will sell for $1500. 823-1031.
tense, battery packs and tape. Virtual now,
worth $300 will sell for $190; 823-1031.
Specialized Mt. bike, 6 months old, black. Krypto
lock included. Sizes 06, 850-2349 (v msg).
TREK 156-Shimano 105, Matrix Wheels, road bike, like new, Jason 165197.
340 Auto Sales
18.14 Mitsuishi Citys Cardinal, 5:24, 2 door, hbk, several new parts, Good condition. Ask 8259. 822-7570
18.18 Honda Civic Wagon. 98,00 miles, beautiful 8634 after 132pm
360 Miscellaneous
BUY, SELL, LOAN CASH
On TVs, VC8's jewelry, stereo, musical instruments, cameras, and more. We honor them by offering Shawn Pown & Jewelry, 1804.W 8th.749191 For sale: 18月身 Body Boutique
Hillel
ח�يل
8:30 p.m. Natsmith Hall
Thursday, March 21
Executive Board Mtg.
7 p.m. Hillel House
Friday, March 22
Shabbat Dinner 6 p.m. Hillie House R.S.V.P. by March 21
Passover Seder reservations due!
Saturday, March 23 Little Brothers & Sisters movie, "Jungle Book"
4 p.m. KS Union
For rides and more information
call 864.2048
call 864-3948
370 Want to Buy
Wanted: VGA monitor and/or VGA interface card for IBM compatible. B42 842-0004.
Available March 1-1 bd unn api, in new
packages. 040 Emory Kel. Energy efficiency
with WD video recording, fans, min hinds. Great location near campus.
Short length & £50 per month. No pets.
4-5 bedroom house available April 1. $800 per month. 2 blocks from KU on Kentucky. Days 913-321-1440, Craig.
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
2 & 3 BR-Available in May or August, 3 BR-Available in September, disposals, refrigerator/freezer, dishwasher, laundry room, site management, KU bus route, off-street parking. Call to reserve your apartment for summer vacations.
Big sunny 1 bedroom apt available now thru July
for next year. 2 blocks from campus
$725/month. 840-9601. Leave message.
Bradford Square Apartments 503 Colorado
Extremely nice, spacious, 32-inch brownie towware
/garage. 2 female non-smoking roommates needed,
year lease beginning August and/or summer
sublease. B212 is utilities. Kerr's B207F*
合
Nice 2 bedroom apt. Close to Student Union.
Washer/dryer hookup. Off-street parking. No pets.
748-2919
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, national origin, or an intention, to make a reference, limitation or discrimination.'
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all ads advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
Hey! KU Med. students. Move in June 1 and receive t' $2 off your rent for 2 months. *Study 1 and 2 beamer aps! *Heat and water paid " across the room. *Cain.Rain Tower Apts 813-981-863
Lorimar Townhouses, 3801 Clinton Parkway Quality, spacious, with all the amenities. Brand new. available now 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease until May, July or for 12 months at 847.849-7433. 847-849-7433
Great 1 bdm apt for rent. 1 block from Union.
Must see to appreciate. Call Kristen at 863-9010.
Leave message.
ONE BLOCK FROM KANSAS UNION. You
to serius graduate school, upperclass student or
RU employee. One HR furnished, pets. Rets.
Furnished. Water furnished. $260/mo.
843-389 after 6pm
No leasing. Extra size, spacious two-bedroom apartments with all kitchen appliances, including dishwashers and refrigerators, blinds and blinds. Low witties, pool and lot swim. Quilt master bedroom. SPANIS Crest APAF MN145 816-488
Double Take
2-1 BR, 4-3 BR Washers dryers in each unit, fire fans, microwave, fireplaces, 2 full baths in a BR on bus route, off-street parking Only 1 yr old Call today: 749-1566
South Quint
- Pool & Volleyball
1,2,3,4 Bedrooms
- Small pets OK with deposit
- 2166 W.26th 843-6446
- Inexpensive gas heat
Open 10-5, M-F
close to campus spacious 2 bedroom laundry fac. & pool waterbed allowed
VILLAGE SQUARE Apartments
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
9th & Avalon
842-3040
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM
Offering Luxury 2 BR. apartments at an
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngtt., Inc.
No Appt. Necessary
841-5444
Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
SUNRISE
VILLAGE
SUMMER SUBLEASE with option for fall, in Sundance II. Spacies 2 BR furnished, private pool. Call 865-281-7, leave message.
10-6 pm Tue. - Thur.
9-3 pm Sat.
660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.- Fri. 11-5
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished 1 and 2 bedroom apts. Ibk from KU with off street parking. no pets. 84-5000.
Sublease large one bedroom apt. Close to campus, on bus route, microwave, dishwasher, jacuzzi and pool. Call 841-9114.
- Luxurious 3 & 4
- Bedroom Town Houses
- Microwave Ovens
- Some with fireplaces
- On KU Bus Route
- On KU Bus Route
- Swimming Pool
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
Swimming Pool & Tennis Courts
YOUNG WOMEN ENERGY GROUP
841-8400
GOLF CARE SERVICES
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
- Large bedrooms
- Mini blinds
- On KU bus route
- Carports available
- 1 bedroom $355, $350
- 2 bedroom $440, $460
- 3 bedroom $560
611 Michigan Street
(across from Harddee's)
HOURS:
4:00-6:00 Tue - Fri
9:00-12:00 Sat
843-1771
Please call Kristy for appt.
Now leasing
1991
for summer & fall
spacious & comfortable
HEV GUNS, I THOUGHT "NO HOLD UP, BEN HAWKEN,
WHAT WAS THE HOLE UP?" FASHIONALLY,
WHAT WAS THE HOLE UP?
-3 Pools
*2 & 3 BR townhomes
FASHIONABLY LATE, MY FOOT
JAMAL HAD US SO LOST WE
WERE EVEN LOOKING ON
THE OTHER SIDE OF TOWN.
-5 Pools
-Tennis courts
-on KU bus route
(on apartments)
(Call for appointment)
gas heat & water park
(on site)
on KU bus route gas heat & water paid
TRAILRIDGE
(Call for appointment)
TRAILRIDGE
田.田.田.田.田
843-7333
2500 W.6th
...
2111 Kasold 843-4300
Apple Lane Apartments
Now accepting reservations for fall leases!
Free cable
Pool
Water paid
REALLY? OH, MAN, I'M
SORRY. WHY DIDN'T YOU
CALL FOR DIRECTIONS?
Close to KU bus route
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OH, NOT THAT LONG.
JAMAL SAID CALLING
WAS "TOO EASY."
苹果
Accepting reservations for fall leases!
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished rooms with shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilities paid. 1 bk from KU with off street parking. No pets. 841-500-3500
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2111 Kasold
843-4300
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Kentucky Place - 749-0445
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Sundance - 841-5255
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Campus Place - 841-1429
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841 6784 after 6pm
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ZOD'S
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"No, no, no! ... That regular rock! Me need Phillips!"
16
Wednesday, March 20, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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VOL.101,No.114
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL
SOCIETY
TUPEKNVA KS 66612
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1991
(USPS 650-640)
Iraqi planes that risk flight will be destroyed,Bush says
NEWS:864-4810
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Bush warned Iraq yesterday that the United States would shoot down any more Iraqi warplanes that take off, underscoring the hard-line stand the administration has adopted in the absence of a formal cease-fire in the Persian Gulf War.
Bush's comments came after an Iraqi Su 22, a Soviet-made, swept-wing bomber, was downed by an F-15 jet fighter from Tikrit in central Iraq hometown of Tikrit in central Iraq.
Meanwhile, U.S. forces continued to hold the southeastern portion of Iraq, keeping Iraqi troops out, destroying military equipment they find and retaining a nice bargaining chip to encourage progress toward an acceptable formal end to the war, a senior military officer said.
Even though 85,500 U.S. troops have left the gulf in the three weeks
since hostilities were suspended, U.S. forces remain on alert for any change in Iraq's military posture and the situation with Pentagon officials said yesterday.
U. S. F-15 fighter jets constantly are飞行 patrols over Iraqi airspace, while AWAWS early warning for any combat aircraft taking wing
White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater said yesterday's incident, which was the first air engagement since fighting ceased Feb. 27, did not mean a broad resumption of hostilities.
"We're not re-engaging, 'Fitzwater said. "We're simply proceeding with the cease-fire as we outlined it to the Iraqs. We have every expectation that they won't try it again, but if they do, we're still there."
Asked if there were plans to contact the Iraqi government. Defense
Secretary Dick Cheney said, "I think they got the message. . . . The incident with the plane should be a reminder to the Iraqis that the cease-fire agreement means what it says."
Negotiations at the United Nations in New York as well as among diplomats in Washington are expected to result in a resolution recognizing the 1963 border between Iraq and Kuwait and authorizing a force along it said Richard Boucher, State Department representative.
Formally, military officials refer to the current situation as a suspension of hostilities, a conditional state dependent on Iraq fulfilling a number of conditions, such as the return of hostages.
Iraq disputes that border and had seized some territory in the area of the city of Aleppo.
Iraqi Army fights Kurdish rebels
Caspian Sea
Syria
Kirkuk
Iran
Tikrit
Baghdad
Basra
U.S. shoots down Iraqi warplane
Kuwait
Persian Gulf
0 200 Miles
Map area
Knight Rider
Tribune News
Resolution would bring formal end to gulf war
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The United States is insisting that Iraq's remaining stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons be destroyed as part of a new U.N. resolution for a permanent ceasefire in the Persian Gulf War, U.S. officials said yesterday.
The U.S. demand was contained in a draft resolution circulated by the State Department among the four other permanent members of the Security Council, the officials said.
Jacques Poos, the foreign minister of Luxembourg and president of the European Community, said the draft would be distributed to the 10 other council members today.
"We hope it can be adopted within the next few days," Poos said after meeting with Secretary of State James Baker. Poos declined to divulge details of the meeting.
Though Iraq's chemical and biological weapons plants were virtually wiped out by bombings during the war, stockpiles of the lethal weapons are believed to have survived.
The Bush administration, in negotiating terms of the resolution, wants to make sure Iraq's capability to use such weapons is erased. One way under consideration is having the United Nations supervise the destruction of the stockpiles.
The State Department, through representative Richard Boucher, called on Iraq to provide a detailed report on how it is complying with such U.N. requirements as the return of seized property and the payment of war damages.
House restores programs
The negotiations were conducted at the United Nations in New York as well as among diplomats in Washington.
Millions will go toward education
Bv Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA - Higher education financing in Kansas won a minor battle yesterday in its struggle to stay alive.
The House approved the fiscal 1992 appropriations budget proposal for the Board of Regents institutions after restoring $16 million to six program requests that previously had been trimmed or cut.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig said he was pleased with the action, however.
The $16 million is less than half of what was cut from Gov Joan Finney's recommended budget. Moreover, it would not be used to finance the Margin of Excellence nor would it eliminate tuition increases
"We are encouraged by the actions of the House of Representatives today," he said in a prepared statement yesterday. "We have made a clear and concise plan to amend funds, and we are pleased that the Legislature is beginning to
address them."
Financing would be restored to student wage increases, enrollment adjustments and Other Operating Expenditures as well as other provisional expenses.
Legislators debated the amendment to restore the $16 million for almost two hours before passing it 69-52
State Rep John Solbach. D-State, introduced the amendment.
"If we do not put the funds into these institutions that are necessary now, we could do far more damage down the line," he said. "We're asking for 40 percent of the cuts that were made be put back into this system as a way to express our priority with regards to higher education."
some programs."
State Rep. Sandy Praeger, R Lawrence, said that tuition increases were too much to ask of the students they received something in return
"We are taxing students and putting that money into the State General Fund, and we're not using it for education," she said. "Students are willing to absorb this tuition increase only if the state is willing to restore
But two Johnson County Republi cans strongly opposed the amend ment
State Rep Robert Vancurum, R-Overland Park, said that the students should pick up the tab instead of the taxpayers.
"To support a $16 million increase at this time means we are going to have to seriously look at how we are going to pay for it," he said. "Are we going to put a tax increase on the backs of taxpayers? Or are we going to give students to come with a reasonable increase in tuition?"
State Rep. Kerry Patrick, R-Leawood, said the issue was not financing but education reform.
"This amendment does nothing in and of itself to improve education in Kansas," he said. "We spend more in our nation on education than any other nation, but our students are at the bottom. The problem is not in Kansas, it's that the educational establishment has failed us."
The bill will go before the House for final action today before moving to the Senate Ways and Means Committee.
State fines ex-party treasurer
Rv Vanessa Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — The Kansas Public Disclosure Commission yesterday fined the former treasurer of the Douglas County Republican Central Committee for failing to file campaign finance reports.
Phil Bradley was fined $1,500 because he did not file expenditure reports by the deadlines, which were July 11 and Oct. 29, said Carol Williams, executive director of the Public Disclosure Office.
The commission's decision to fine Bradley was the first since the Legislature ruled in 1988 that the Public Disclosure Commission could issue civil fines for failure to report companions can issue fines up to $5,000.
"I think this will get the word out that the commission considers this to be a serious problem," said Dennis S. Riddle, counsel for the Public Disclosure Office.
'If the question is, "Has a lesson been learned here?" the answer is obviously ves.'
- Dennis Prater
Bradley and his attorney, who were scheduled to testify before the commission yesterday afternoon, met instead with Prater before the hearing to settle the penalty privately.
Public Disclosure Office.
The commission ruled that Bradley intentionally had not filed the reports, because he also did not have a lawyer. Nov. 2 notice that he had failed to file.
The commission sent a formal complaint to Bradley on Dec. 21. It
"If the question is 'Has a lesson been taught?' your answer is obviously yes. Praeter
too, was returned unclaimed.
Bradley filed the reports Feb. 8 and resigned as treasurer a week later, after the public disclosure office told him that he would ask for his resignation. Prater said.
"It was for the same reason we tend not to get doorknobs fixed or the pain peeling on the side of the door." "It was just pure precrastination."
Mary Horsch, representative for Attorney General Bob Stephan, said the attorney general's office had decided it would not file any criminal charges against Bradley for missing the report deadlines.
However, William Skepnek, Bradley's attorney, said that Bradley's failure to file the reports before the deadline had not been intentional.
"The attorney general thought that the fine the commission issued today was penalty enough to make sure the action won't happen again," she said.
The Beatles.
Julie Jacobson/KANSAN
Corey Rittmatter and Barry Schraae of Sportzport, a comedy group, perform a skit about a brother and sister fighting over the car as a part of a benefit performance at Nalsimhall Hall. Story on Page 5.
Spring break dream vacations turn to nightmares
Bv Beniamin W. Allen
Kansan staff writer
Angie Daschb thought the advertisement sounded like a good opportunity.
Dasbach, Lee's Summit, Mo., sophomore, said that she said a Student Travel Services advertisement in the Kansan that promised an enterprising student the chance to earn a spring-break trip as well as commissions if the company organized the旅 localy for the company.
But, as it turned out, she was wrong.
"So I decided to sell two trips." Daschab said "Daytona and Cancun. I went around putting up posters and ads in the paper."
Daschad said that after Christmas break her contact had left the travel company and that the company knew nothing about the arrangements she had made.
"A week before we were supposed to go they still didn't know anything," she said. "I
She said that she continued to call but that the company did not have specific details, such as location or phone number.
couldn't get definite answers from them."
Dasbach said that as the deadline for the trip neared, she received irate calls from the people she had sold the trip to. Of the 19 people who bought trips to Cancun, Mexico, only six went.
Scott Smith, a representative of the company, said that the flight the KU students were scheduled for was canceled and that the company decided to cancel the entire trip.
"People were calling and yelling at me," she said. "I even had lawyers calling me."
She said the travel company told her that her commissions would be given to her when she reached Cancun. But she said she did not trust them.
"I didn't go because by March 8, I just about had a nervous breakdown," she said.
"Several people insisted on going," he said. "We made every possible arrangement to accommodate us."
"We rely on our suppliers," Smith said of the airline. "If they don't come through then it hurts."
Smith said he was unaware of any additional
n. — Angie Dasbach Lee's Summit, Mo., sophomore
'I didn't go because by March 8, I just about had a nervous breakdown.'
costs the students were charged.
Shea Friedel, Chicago sophomore, was one of the few students who persevered and went to Cambridge.
"They charged us an additional $80 for the new flights they arranged for us." She said.
She said the students received none of the benefits the company had promised. They were supposed to stay in a beach-side, four-star hotel, she said.
"The beach was rocks," she said. "What we got was a run-down rented condominium, and they were dumps. They didn't provide the money to and from the airport as they nominated."
Dasbach said the 33 students who went to Daytona were equally disappointed.
Dasbach said she had not been paid by the company and was in the process of taking legal action.
They switched to three different hotels, and they did not get the benefits as promised, she said.
Friedel said that she had told the credit card company to withhold payment for the trip.
"The free parties, free alcohol, discount cards for local bars and establishments — they got nothing," she said.
"I spent from the middle of December, and I'm still working on it," she said. "My homework had to be pushed aside, and I could hardly get any sleep."
Daschab said she had spent a lot of time dealing with the unsatisfied, irate students.
She said she knew that she probably would have to pay at least $400 but that the credit card company would charge $150.
"We had to make the best of it," she said. "I will never go through a student travel company again. They will screw college students over any chance they get."
Participants in tonight's Kansas-Indiana basketball game in Charlotte, N.C., expect a tight matchup.
"They play aggressive man-to-man defense, and offensively they are patient." *Roy Williams, Kansas coach.*
"It's going to be a very physical game, no doubt. There will be bodies flying everywhere." - Eric Anderson, Indiana forward.
---
For more on the game,
scheduled to begin about
9 p.m. on channels 5 and
13, see Page 12.
2
Thursdav. March 21. 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
SUN
TODAY
Sunny
HI:69*
LO:47*
51/36
48/36
51/28
57/39
62/39
80/50
82/70
Kansas Forecast
Temperatures climb across the state today. Possibly a thundershower during the afternoon and evening. High 69/ Low 47.
Sailna 69/48 KC
Dodge City 67/46
72/47 Wichita
70/48
3-dav Forecast
Friday - Partly cloudy. 30% chance for rain. High 65/ Low 39.
Saturday - Cloudy. High 59/
Low 36.
Sunday - Mostly cloudy and mild. High 64/ Low 45.
KU Weather Service Forecast; 864-3300
forecast by Greg Zamaripe Temperatures are today's Highs and tonight's lows.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stairfer-Fint 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 $50. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118
Shutter Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60045
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■ KU Study Abroad will conduct a general information meeting at 9:30 a.m. at 3 Lioncott.
( )
Canterbury House will celebrate the Holy Eucharist at noon in the Danforth Chapel.
On campus
■ KU Fitness Center will sponsor an "Overcoming Overcatering" workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson.
■ Nihon Club will meet at 1 p.m. at
Amnesty International will sponsor a letter-writing session at 4 p.m. at Alcove B in the Kansas University.
KU Triathletes will sponsor a bike ride at 4 p.m. Anyone interested should meet in front of Wescoe.
KU American Civil Liberties Union will meet at 6 p.m. at Alcove B in the Kansas Union.
Commuters Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. at Alcove A in the Kansas City area.
KU Gamers and Role-players will meet at 6 p.m. at Alceve D in the Kansas Union.
Baptist Student Union will conduct a bible study, worship and singing at 6:30 p.m. at the Baptist Student Center.
KU Christian Science Student Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. at Alcove C in the Karsas Union.
Champions Club will meet at 7
Champions Club will meet at 7 p.m. at the Kansas Union.
KU Student Bioethics Club will meet at 7 p.m. at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union.
**Women's Resource Center will sponsor a "Women: Is It Still a Man's World?" workshop at 7 p.m. at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.**
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union.
The Society for Soviet and East European Studies will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union.
■ The Jayhawk Audubon Society will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the Presbyterian Manor, 1429 Kassidt St.
Undergraduate Philosophy Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the Malott Room in the Kansas Union.
■ KU Equestrian Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Democrats will meet at 8 p.m. at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Fencing club will meet at 8:30 p.m. at 130 Robinson Center
- Applications for KU's Japan Summer Institute in Lawrence's sisterity Hiratsuka, Japan, are now being accepted. Applications for KU Study Abroad Prgrams, summer and academic year/semester, also are being accepted. Applications are available in 203 Lippincott.
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9
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Have an opinion? Write a "letter to the editor"! 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kansas 66045
All proceeds go to the American Heart Association
Dance for Heart
Saturday, March 23 9 am-3 pm Anschutz Pavilion $1 entrance fee,tickets on sale at Union and Wescoe Beach.
We Want To Be Fair
The Kansan prides itself on its reputation for accuracy and fairness.
When we do make a mistake,we make a correction as soon as possible. We always print corrections in the same place so people know where to find them-on Page 2, near the On Campus Calendar.
Sometimes we make mistakes and no one tells us. That is what this advertisement is meant to correct.
We are asking you to help us by pointing out mistakes we might have made. We also would like you to share with us your suggestions for improving our news coverage
This advertisement will appear in the Kansan on a regular basis as a standing invitation to our readers to help us keep the record clear and fair.
Please call us at 864-4810 or send your comments to:
Kansan editor
111 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
We look forward to hearing from you.
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842-3232
14th & Ohio "Under The Wheel"
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 21, 1991
3
Students say GTAs' accents a problem
By Eric Nelson
Kansan staff writer
Although KU's guidelines for the English proficiency of teaching assistants are more stringent than other Regents schools, there are other factors that can change KU officials and students said.
The student advisory committee proposal, which was tabled last month, is on today's agenda.
The proposal would increase the minimum score on the tests of spoken English taken by foreign instructors at Board of Regents schools from 220 to 240. This already is a KU requirement.
Kim Stroup, McPherson junior, said communication problems with teaching assistants still remain.
She said that some courses were difficult enough to understand without fighting a confusing accent by an instructor and that she would
prefer classes in which she could understand the instructor.
"Then I could concentrate more on learning the lab instead of learning his accent," she said. "If KU is at the top, I think we need to improve a little more."
Stroup said she realized it must be frustrating to instructors who were knowledgeable but unaware of the issues.
Michele Wilkerson, Leawood junior, has had a similar problem.
When she was a freshman, she changed Calculus 115 sections because of a communication problem.
"I couldn't even follow him in class," she said. "I was just教学 myself."
Wilkerson said she felt fortunate to be able to switch to an English-speaking instructor.
switch to an English-speaking instructor
"A lot of people felt that way in the class."
"A lot of people felt that way in the class," she said. "I was just lucky to switch."
Shane Mane, Enid, Okla, junior, said that.
although he had not had any troubles with foreign instructors, he could understand how problems could surface.
"I can't believe they are saying Kansas is better than the other Regents schools," he said. "I'd hate to see what the other Regents schools are like."
Chanin Nephoke, Thailand graduate teaching assistant in economics, said problems could have been avoided by using
"I think the main problem may be pronunciation," he said. "I think we have a problem, but I'm not sure."
Charles Himmelberg, chairperson of the math department, said that since KU increased the minimum test score requirement in 1984 he had not had many complaints.
He said problems were more likely to arise from teaching ability. Some poorer speakers would receive no complaints because they are good educators.
Some students also used the accent of instruction an exert at the beginning of a lesson. Students are taught the accent
Despite the lack of complaints, he said there was room for improvement. The math department used a summer program through the Applied English Center last July for the first time. It was used to improve English and give teaching strategies.
Raymond Ammar, chairperson of physics, said his department also had its own guidelines along with strict enforcement of the University's policy.
Prospective GTAs must pass a teaching presentation before they enter a class room. Ammar said. In a limited capacity, the department has four English programs with the Applied English Center.
"Certainly, individual departments should feel free to impose more stringent guidelines," she said.
Lecturer explains reasons society values nature
Nature's worth determined by aesthetics and because of its benefits to humanity
By Katie Chipman
Kansan staff writer
At the first day of a two-day symposium on humanities and the environment, a professor from Marymount University found different ways that society values nature.
Mark Sagoff, professor at the University of Maryland Institute for Philosophy and Public Policy, spoke at a symposium in Washington Javahw Room in the Kansas Union.
Sagoff spoke about the humanistic perspective of natural resource management by relating the children's book, Charlotte's Web, to reasons why people want to save the environment.
The book is about Charlotte, a spider, who saves a barnyard pig, Wilbur, from being slaughtered. That did Wilbur represented nature.
"How do we differ from Charlotte, who saved Wilbur even though he did nothing for her?" he asked.
"If a spider can treat a pig as a friend, we should be able to treat a forest, estuary or any other thing in the same way."
Sagoff said that the first way society considered nature valuable was in an instrumental way.
"We view nature as being valuable by measuring how it benefits us, and if it serves a purpose."
He said the second value was aesthetic, in which nature was an object of perception and admiration.
"The third the moral value. We may regard an object with love and affection," he said. "Therefore we take an interest in its welfare."
Sageoff talked about whales and the different ways that society perceives the sea.
"Two centuries ago, white oil fetched a very good price. Now electric cars are cheaper and we are concerned," he said. "Are we concerned about saving the whales?"
"Iinstrumental value has gone down and the aesthetic and moral values have grown."
1980
Justin Palmer, graduate student in philosophy who attended the lecture, said, "Sagoff's basic argument isn't just the environment. It's an ethical argument about how we should think about ourselves.
"There's one tradition that tends to say that human nature is evil and bad. Sagoff's tradition is one that's better because human beings do have innate goodness."
Mark Sagoff speaks about citizen involvement in environmental problems while John Clark listens.
Senate backs Western Civ modifications
By Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
By a vote of 49.5, Student Senate voted last night to support recommended changes in the Western Civilization curriculum.
The recommendations cover three areas: a wider range of reading materials with more individual instructor autonomy, the inclusion of various issues left out of the Western Civilization course, such as the history of women and civil rights, and broader training of instructors.
The Student Senate Minority Affairs Curriculum Subcommittee is scheduled to present a proposal containing the desired changes to the Western Civilization Program Committee tomorrow.
Pat Warren, Senate Executive Committee chairperson, said the recommendations deserved Senate support.
"If KU is going to continue to preach diversity, we're going to have to start to teach diversity," he said.
In other action, Senate voted to approve four bills totaling $6,003, including financing for Gay and Lesbian Awareness Week speakers and start-up expenses for two student organizations.
Senate voted to allocate $4,850 for four speakers during GALA week, April 14. 120- half of the money will be used as an honorarium for Holly Hughes, a performance artist who was embried in the National Endowment for the Arts controversy last year.
Hughes lost an NEA grant because her work dealt with issues such as lesbianism, but she was awarded a new grant this year.
Following the controversy, Hughes has become highly sought after. Her commitment to perform during GALA Week came after members of the group from Kansas met with her in Minneapolis and persuaded her to appear.
Senate also voted to allocate $265 to Slightly Older Americans for Freedom, which sponsors a Senate campaign debate; $445 to the Chinese Student and Scholar Association, a new organization; and $443 to finance the ninth annual Music Therapy Student Association Symposium.
Soviet scientists begin water study
By Benjamin W. Allen
Kansan staff writer
Two visiting Soviet scientists collaborating with the U.S. Geological Survey to study ground water contamination continued Lawrence's ties with Soviet Union.
Professors Stanislav Kraynov and Valentin Goldberg are members of the Soviet equivalent of the U.S. Geological Survey and are collaborating with Michael Thurman, an organic geochemist with the survey.
Thurman, who is also an affiliate faculty member of the University of Kansas, said the purpose of the Soviets' visit to Lawrence was to begin joint research efforts in geochemistry and ground water protection.
He said the main goal of the meeting was to write a protocol of what research they intended to do.
The first step of the process will be to write a paper examining ground water problems in the Soviet Union and the United States that would be published in science journals in both nations.
During the next three to five years, the scientists want to write other papers specializing on their particular interests and create a glossary of geological terms so the scientists of the two nations can communicate easily and organize research seminars and workshops between the two groups. Thurman said.
Goldberg said that cooperation would improve research into the protection of ground water and that
Both Soviet scientists spoke through interpreter Galina Kargina, who is from the Soviet Union.
Soviet professor Stanislav Kraynov
'As experience shows. It is easier to prevent pollution than it is to clean polluted water.'
he was particularly interested in the influence of agricultural activity on the purity of ground water.
Fertilizers, pesticides and herbicides can run off the field or crop they are applied to and contaminate plants.
Ground water can become contaminated from a variety of sources, the scientists said. Agricultural chemicals, waste disposal and industrial discharge were three of the sources of contamination they cited.
Both nations make extensive use of ground water as a source of drinking water. That is why studying how to protect that resource was an important task, he said.
The two nations use different methods to protect ground water from becoming contaminated, he said. The task of the joint cooperation is to learn the most effective methods each nation employs.
"As experience shows," he said, "It is easier to prevent pollution than it is to clean polluted water."
Krayovny said the most important method of controlling ground water contamination was preventive measure.
Study abroad stifled by war, though advisers stress safety
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Kansan staff write
Sharon Miller wanted to study art in France this summer, but she is not going now.
"I'm not sure why, but not enough people signed up to go," the Lawrence graduate student said.
The July trip was offered through the department of art and design but was canceled because of lack of interest.
Miller said she wanted to go on that particular trip because it focused strictly on art.
"Language was not important on the art and design trip." she said. "Speaking French was not an issue."
Miller has been looking into other study-abroad trips to other European countries offered by KU's study-abroad program. Some of the programs have language requirements.
"I also want to go to Spain," she said. "But I'm afraid I don't know enough Spanish to qualify."
Mary Debicki, director of study abroad, said interest in study-abroad programs was low during the Persian Gulf War because of terrorism fears. But interest has picked up since the cease-fire.
"There is still plenty of space left on every trip," she said. "But it's filling up real fast now, and I think the cease-fire has a lot to do with it."
The KU study-abroad program is recruiting students who may want to spend time studying abroad. McMeley said. Some programs have flexible deadlines and other deadlines have been extended.
"That program is open to students across the nation, and we want KU students to get to go to those places if at all."
"The Costa Rica program is booming right along," McMeley said. "But there are some wonderful places to go that have openings right now that are normally very competitive."
The International Student Exchange Program, of which it is a member, has openings in Malta, Hong Kong and Taiwan.
"Even if the deadline has passed, we can still get a student into the program if the student is really motivated and really wants to go."
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Mark McMeley, study-abroad adviser, said there were fewer people signed up for study-abroad programs this year than at the same time last year.
"Safety is a concern from time to time regardless, if there is a war," he said. "People should not be afraid to go abroad because you could be in just as much danger walking across Jayhawk Boulevard as studying abroad."
He said enrollment had increased in regions far from the Middle East, such as Canada and Latin America.
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Thursday, March 21, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Reporting crimes
Rape should be reported in order to help society begin to understand and try to end the problem
five women reported they were raped during this year's spring break rush
on Padre Island. The incidents made the reality of the violent crime crystal clear:
One out of every four women will be the victim of rape or attempted rape.
Although rape education is no longer a taboo topic, the blame and fault of the crime tend to weigh heavily on the victim's shoulders.
The result is that fewer than 10 percent of rapes are reported.
And sadder still, fewer than 1 percent of the reported raps end in a prosecution.
But the decision to report a rape must be left up to the victim.
The director of the Douglas County Rape Victim Support Service said the rape victim might gain a sense of control by reporting the crime.
On a larger scale, reporting rapes may help
society dissolve some of the myths about rape so that it can help the victim instead of fostering ignorance.
According to FBI statistics, a woman is 20 times more likely to be raped in the United States than in Japan and 13 times more likely to be raped here than in England.
Seventy-five percent of rapes are committed by people the victim knows
We must understand that a rapist doesn't look like a rapist. The assailant can't be spotted across a room. There are no safe havens from rapists. No one is immune.
We must realize that a rape victim is always the victim.
And don't think for a second that rape doesn't happen on this campus.
The University Information Center offers crisis intervention 24 hours a day at 864-359-3011.
The Douglas County Rape Victim Support Service can be reached through Headquarters at 841-2345.
Tiffany Harness for the editorial board
Exxon to pay fine
Restitution is weak but sets example for future
E xxon Corp. last week agreed to pay a federal fine of about $1 billion to be applied to cleanup and restoration for
the damage caused by the Exxon Valdez oil spill.
The tanker ran aground March 24, 1989, on a reef in Prince William Sound, spilling about 11 million gallons of crude oil.
After the extent of the damage became clear, Exxon agreed to plead guilty to three criminal charges that the company negligently discharged crude oil into navigable waters and killed migratory wildlife.
By handing down a large fine to Exxon, the federal government set a good example to show other corporations that they will be responsible for negligence that leads to environmental disasters. But Exxon's punishment is relatively light.
While the $1 billion settlement is the largest single amount ever paid as a result of environmental damage, Exxon chairperson Lawrence Rawl said the payments would have virtually no effect on the company's financial performance.
The company will be able to deduct $900 million of the fine as a tax write-off. The remaining $100 million portion of the fine is the only part that cannot be deducted.
Because paying the $1 billion is intended as a punishment to Exxon, the fine should have some effect on the corporation.
The punishment would have a greater effect on Exxon and make a stronger statement to other corporations if more of the $1 billion was not tax deductible.
But Exxon should be praised for reaching an agreement with the government without going to trial. Instead, the company could have chosen to pay a team of lawyers for a lengthy and costly court battle
While the fine is an appropriate step, the federal and state governments still could be tougher on companies responsible for environmental disasters. By making it clear that corporations will not get away with carelessness concerning the environment, perhaps companies will educate themselves on preventing disasters instead of only cleaning them up after they occur.
Amy Zamierowski for the editorial board
FLAXMAN university Daily Kansan
NEW MEMBERS OF
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Man violates woman's space, now fear replaces innocence
Memory of averted attack returns with warm Spring weather
The last thing I thought about that day was that I might be attacked.
After working long hours as a waitress in Louisiana, I wanted to escape the heat and indulge in a southern tradition: crab fishing. Tot put, we caught a net and a net, I went to the spot locals claimed was the best crabbing in town.
The river was bustling with activity. Above the humming of insects and the chorus of birds, speed boats filled with skiers roared by, breaking the shimmering water into ripples of white-capped waves.
I
Suddenly it was very quiet on the river. A deathly silence. The skiers had left. The birds stopped chirping, the humming insects became still.
I didn't notice him at first
The trick with the crabs was incredible. I wanted to learn it. I didn't think twice about talking to him.
A man was crabbing beside the river bed. He looked so big, I remember thinking. At 6-feet-4 and with massive hands, he could swiftly pick crumbs out of his net and flip them into a pocket, without getting pinched once
But a shadow fell across my path. "Na, you know, it's been a long time since I came to me as a woman," he drawled, coming at me with his huge, looming body.
Elicia
Hill
Staff columnist
I should have.
After two hours of small talk and fishing, my bucket was brimming with squirming crabs. I stood up to go.
Fear surged through me. The kind of numbness fear that glues your tongue to the roof of your mouth.
My blood reed.
I was alone. Almost
"Oh God, God no. " I screamed silently. As swiftly as he had caught the crabs moments earlier, those massive hands caught me
Then, as if I was watching in a front row seat, I heard myself talking. Fast.
Like a drowning victim who thrashes at the water, I struggled to be free. But those hands were strong
"If you do this, I hate you. I won't be your friend anymore." I'll never crab with you again." I babbled, hoping that he wouldn't notice the insanity of what I was saying since I didn't know him at all.
Somehow, the words managed to accomplish what my strength could not.
"Oh no, I want to crab with you every week," he said. "You're my friend. Promise me you'll come back."
"Clean, sure." I lied through
clinched teeth. "Sure, you go now
before I get to help you to get home."
I walked backward to my car with
The last thing I was thinking that day was that I might be attacked. And although I thought about reporting it to the police, I didn't.
the bucket of crabs sloshing over my shoes. He followed me up to the car.
"You d better not lie to me. If you are I'll just take you now."
Don't run . . He could still get you
Just smile . Put the key in the lock
A few more inches
As soon as the key slid into the ignition slot, I floored it.
The last thing I was thinking that day was that I might be attacked. And although I thought about report, I didn't think it would report it because nothing happened.
Nothing, except that my life was changed. Now, whenever I go anywhere alone, I'm not alone. Fear is my companion. I'm on guard. Aware.
And for six years I have been haunted every spring with this thought: When the weather gets warm and the birds sing and the insects hum and the river shimmers in the sunlight, just maybe another woman will decide to go crabbing "at the best spot in town."
Maybe a man will be crabbing there, too.
A man . . with massive hands.
■ Elicia Hill is a Lawrence graduate student.
St. Patrick's Day in Ireland isn't just about crack
I has taken me a few days, but I have, at last, gotten over the culture shock of St. Patrick's Day in the United States.
I have lived in Ireland for more than 20 years; my parents are Irish, my friends are Irish, and coming from Belfast, I have had plenty of opportunity to ponder nationalism and identity. But I have never seen anything as bizarre or foreign to me as St. Patrick's Day over here. I think it is about time that somebody told you a few truths.
For a start, St. Patrick was a non-drinking, non-fighting man of the church — an archbishop no less — and, horror of horrors, he was French. Basically, the story goes that little Patrick was wandering through the French countryside chewing some garlic and generally minding his own business when, all of a sudden, some hairy oats interested him. He handed Patrick into a bag and sold him into slavery. So it was that poor Pat found himself on a hillside in Ireland looking after a whole load of sheep. They didn't speak a word of French and his baiting was definitely not up to scratch, so Patrick turned to God for company.
Clare
McGinn
Staff columnist
Bernardine
Well, the man upstairs pulled a few strings for Patrick, and he found himself back in France training to be a priest and determined to return to Ireland to bring Christianity to the heathens and the sheep. Well, they need it because they were up to all sorts of evil things like drinking alcohol, cursing, fighting and fighting (the heathens, that is, not the sheep). So, Patrick worked his way up the promotion ladder and, sure enough, the day came when Bishop Koch launched a highly successful "Just Say No" campaign, which involved kicking the snakes out of the country and any other drunken lout who would not convert to Christianity.
So how would St. Patrick view the carrying on that goes on in the United States in his name? Believe me, we don't. We believe in behavior in Ireland. On St. Patrick's
Day at home, things are extremely low-key. We do not drink beer — let alone green stuff — until our brains are floating in it. Real Irish people have a healthy respect for alcohol, and therefore we pace ourselves throughout the year instead of saving up for one unholy binge March 17.
We do not dress up in green, sport gaudy plastic shamrocks and jig down the roads shouting "Top o' the morning to ye." Most of us do not have red hair and freckles. We never say "Sure an 'beggarrh," "ST. Patrick and the saints in heaven preserve us" or "To be sure."
None of us, when sober, have ever seen a leprechaun, the little people or the banshee, and nobody in Ireland had seen one. We have bage — except in a dare emergency!
However, I have discovered that there are some other unusual things to contend with if you are from Northern Ireland and find yourself trying to make conversation with people over here. For example, at a party or in a bar, the usual “Do you come here often?” or “What’s your sign?” is replaced by that searching come-on, “Are You Protestant or Catholic?” followed by the romantic inquiry, “Do you support the IRA
terrorists?" and, my favorite,
"What's the solution to the struggle
in Ireland?"
So I frequently get embroiled in inadequate but complicated explanations to the effect that what is happening at home is not a religious war but more a conflict over national identity. I do point out that social conditions and the class structure also are significant factors, but primarily the majority of people really lack political education, leaving the political and terrorist extremists to make the headlines and keep the pot boiling.
By the time I've finished my lecture, the guy who is used to "I'm Virgo so you must be Capricorn" has either fallen asleep or decided to bore me with his personal philosophies on life and the universe.
On St. Patrick's Day in the United States, things are made a lot easier in the "getting to know you" department. All that is necessary is one of those "Kiss Me, I'm Irish" buttons, which in normal circumstances would read, "Kiss Me, I'm Desperate."
The strangest and most dangerous thing for native Irish people in America concerns a linguistic difference which, if they are not careful,
can land them down at the police
station with a lot of explaining to do.
The word in question is "crack."
OOO LAH LAH
WARREN
In Ireland, North and South, this means having fun, laughing and pure enjoyment. It has nothing to do with drugs whatsoever. But here if I was to say, "Why don't we go to a party for some crack?" or "How's about some crack?" or "I had great crack last night with my friends." I am quite liable to build myself a reputation as some sort of drug fiend.
I have a friend living in Boston who was driving back from a party one night when she was stopped by a
traffic cop. Well, he was obviously a friendly sort of chap and, after pointing out that Marie had been driving a ted too quickly, he struck up a conversation with her. When he discovered that she was from Ireland, he asked her what she had been up to in the States.
"Oh I've had nothing but crack since I got here!" Marie replied. The poor guy was shocked that such a healthy-looking, nicely spoken girl should have been so quickly corrupted and, after a lecture on the drug scene in the United States that lasted the best part of an hour, Marne was able to go on her way. She's never used that word again.
So remember that "When Irish Eyes Are Smiling", which, by the way, is an American song, it is not because it is St. Patrick's Day. Nor has it anything to do with fairies, leprechauns, shilahlues, pots of gold at the ends of rainbows, shamrocks, green beer, or corned beef and cabbage, which are that we have found a place where the crack is good — Dublin!
Clare McGinn is a Belfast, Northern Ireland, exchange student majoring in American literature.
KANSAN STAFF
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by Davld Rosenfield
Letters should be type, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas
Great columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be shortened.
The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Staffer/Fell Hall.
Sketch
FOR MY POLITICAL SCIENCE CLASS, WE HAD A GROUP PROJECT ON DEMOCRACY!
THE TEACHER SPLIT US UP INTO GROUPS OF FOUR...
ONE GUY IN MY GROUP WOULDN'T DO ANY WORK...
ONE GUY COULD NEVER BE REACHED BY PHONE...
AND THE THIRD GUY KEPT TRYING TO DROP OUT AND JOIN ANOTHER GROUP!
FINALLY, I TOLD THEM THAT IF THEY DIDN'T SHARE UP, I'D HAVE TO BREAK THEIR JAWS...
SO WHAT DID YOU LEARN ABOUT DEMOCRACY?
I LEARNED THAT I'D MAKE A GREAT DICTATOR...
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 21, 1991
5
Hillel benefit aids Soviet Jews and repair of war-torn Israel
KC comedy troupe puts on act at KU
By Lara Gold
Kansan staff writer
KU Hulli used the talent of an improvisational comedy troupe from Kansas City to help raise money and awareness for the United Jewish worldwide program to help settle Soviet Jews and repair warorn Israel.
Members of ComedySportz donated their time last night and performed for about 150 people at the cafeteria in Naismith Hall.
Marla Adler, chairperson for KU's United Jewish Appeal, said ComedySport was a great way to attract awareness and support for UJA
"Three hundred thousand to 400,000 Soviet Jews are expected to come to Israel this year," she said. "The money is not there to help
'Three hundred thousand to 400,000 Soviet Jews are expected to come to Israel this year.'
Appeal
— Maria Adler chairperson for KU's United Jewish
resettle them because of the war repair."
Adler said it cost $1,000 to settle each Soviet Jew in Israel.
Part of the money collected also will be distributed in the Kansas City area for youth groups and for Soviet settlement in the area, she said.
"UJA is a worldwide program that helps needy Jews." Adler said.
She said that she was approached by Sandy Hill, general manager for Naismith Hall, after Israel was attacked by Scud missiles, and asked
what she and the residence hall could do to help.
Hill donated the use of NaiSmith's cafeteria and free refreshments for the students.
"I've been working there for about a year," said Lewis, Prairie Village sophomore.
Lewis said his performance last night was special because it helped raise money for a cause he supported.
"Not a lot of people know what UJA is," he said. "By doing something like ComedySportz, it will hopefully raise awareness."
She said that Hillel members Jay Lewis and Corey Rintmaster were the link that brought ComedySportz to the University of Kansas.
Rittmaster agreed.
"Anything that brings attention to UJA is important," he said, "Helping the resettlement of Soviet Jews has always been a concern of mine."
Correction
Police report
A hood ornament valued at $05 was taken from a KU student's car between 1 and 4:45 p.m. Tuesday in Allen Field House KU police reported.
A bicycle valued at $475 was taken between 9:30 and 11:45 a.m. Tuesday from the bike rack on the north side of Haworth Hall, KU police reported.
A telephone valued at $133 was
taken between 2 p.m. Friday and 9:30 a.m. Tuesday from the second floor of JKHK radio station, KU police reported.
A KU student's car tires were punctured between 5 a.m. March 7 and 9 p.m. Saturday in Lot 71 near the Allen Field House, KU police reported. Damage to the car totaled $200.
Because of a photographer's error, a Page 11 photo caption in yesterday's Kansan was incorrect. Douglas Slawin, of St. Louis, was pictured buying daffodils in the Kansas Union.
Because of an Associated Press error, a Page 5 story in yesterday's Kaman was incomplete. James Goldberg, graduate, received Mellon Fellowship.
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Women: Is It Still A Man's World?
In Honor of Women's History Month
Discrimination not only denies women opportunities, it makes them invisible in some
Discrimination not only denies women opportunities, it makes them invisible in some arenas. Why is there such an under representation of women in decision making positions? Come to this program and explore the concept of "glass ceiling" for women in management, business, education, health care, women and the origin of that role in early 20th century service sector.
Thursday, March 21, 1991
7:00-9:00 p.m.
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Facilitator: Dr. Angel Kwolek-Folland Assistant Professor, History Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center,118 Strong Hall. For more information, contact Kohana Gargesh at 864-3552.
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Thursday, March 21, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Officials say Libyan facilities are yielding weapons and gas
Libya builds chemical plant
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Libya is building a new plant to produce chemical weapons and also has been making large amounts of poison gas at another facility once thought to have been destroyed by fire, U.S. officials say.
The new facility is near the existing poison gas factory at Rabta, a town about 60 miles southwest of the Libyan capital of Tripoli, one official said. Heavy production of poison gas has been reported in Rabta since last summer, he added.
The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, declined to say how far the Libyans have come with the second plant.
"There is convincing evidence that Libya is continuing its chemical weapon program and may have
begun construction of a second chemical warfare agent production plant in addition to the one operating at Rabta," said Rear Adm. Thomas A. Brooks, director of naval intelligence.
Brooks, whose comments appear in testimony prepared for a closed hearing earlier this month of the Senate's Services Committee, did not elaborate.
Libya keeps insisting the plant at Rabta produces medicines. Western reporters were invited to tour the plant in January 1990 but were not allowed in after being taken to the complex. They reported seeing surface-to-air missile batteries, tanks and soldiers around the complex.
Libya announced last March that arsonists had set fire to the plant at Rabta, and accused Israeli, U.S. or
German agents of setting the blaze
German companies were the main
responsible for the operation.
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The White House initially said it had concluded that the plant had been rendered inoperable by the fire. But intelligence officials subsequently revealed that the fire was a result of a firewall breach by Moammar Ghadhafi to preclude any possibility of a U.S. bombing attack to destroy the facility.
setback with a production accident in 1988. It then resumed small-scale production, stopped again for a while, and as of last summer, it was making large amounts of poison gas, the official said.
The United States bombed Libya in 1986 to retaliate for what it said was a Libyan-backed attack on a German night club, in which a U.S. soldier killed. U.S. officials say Libya sponsors Palestinian terrorist groups.
Ghadiaha announced earlier this month that the Rabta plant would reopen within three months to produce medicine.
Libya said earlier this year that it was seeking European help to repair and operate the Rabta facility.
But the U.S. official said the plant never had stopped operating completely. It began making small amounts of poison gas but suffered a
Germany, in particular, has put in place strict export control laws to prevent German companies from selling equipment and substances to countries such as Iraq and Libya.
But U.S. officials predicted Libya would have trouble getting help in light of heightened sensitivity generated by revelations that European companies had with regard to its chemical, nuclear and biological weapons capability.
U. S. officials said Libya also possessed Soviet-made short-range missiles, which it eventually might use to deliver chemical weapons.
Mandela defense attempts to discredit police's words
Defense lawyer Hendrik Kruger, while questioning police Col. Chris Osthuizen, charged that police fabricated a confession by the driver, John Morgan. He claimed that Morgan was assaulted by police after being arrested and threatened what if he did not sign the confession.
The Associated Press
Two of the officers allegedly involved were pointed to court by the defence.
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — The defense in Winnie Mandela's trial on kidnapping and assault charges claimed yesterday that police hit her driver to try to force him to incriminate Mandela.
Oosthuizen denied that Morgan the police fabricated his skitgen
"I know of no assault on the
accused," he said.
Mandela, wife of African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela, and three co-defendants are charged with kidnapping and assaulting four young men in December 1988. Her chief bodyguard was convicted last year of killing one of the four, Stompie Seipei.
He said that he drove the bus that picked up the four young men but that they were not abducted and that he knew nothing about any assaults.
Mandela says that she is not guilty and was not at her home when the alleged incident took place. Morgan is one of the co-defendants.
men were taken to her house and beaten.
It said the four victims were picked up and dropped on the floor. Two of the victims have testified that they were dropped on the floor after being beaten and kicked.
it said she questioned Seipel about charges that he was sleeping with a white church minister.
The statement, parts of which were read aloud by Oosthuizen, said Mandela was present when the four young
Kruger also charged that police offered not to prosecute Morgan and promised him money, housing and a wife. Mr. Oshuizhen said that was not true.
Under questioning from the state prosecution, Oosthuizen said Morgan's statement did not say Mandela used a whip on the four young men. State witnesses have testified that she shipped the four.
Ambassador says Saddam lied
Iraqi denied plan to invade Kuwait
The Associated Press
Breaking an eight-month public language, the U.S. envoy told the
WASHINGTON — Ambassador April Glaspie said yesterday that Saddam Hussein had lied to her in July by denying he would invade Iraq. But that was not realizing that Saddam would go through with the attack anyway.
Senate Foreign Relations Committee that she repeatedly had warned the Baghdad government that its grievances against Kuwait would have to be addressed.
And in a meeting July 25, Saddam sounded conciliatory and asked Glasple to deliver to President Bush the message that Iraq had no intention of invading its oil-rich neighbor, she said. A week later, Iraqi troops stormed into Kuwait.
"It was deliberate deception on a major scale," Glaspie told a packed hearing of the Senate committee.
She added that Saddam had made an extraordinary miscalculation.
Glaspipe has been criticized by many analysts and Democratic politicians for statements to Saddam that they say could have been seen as a green light to invade Kuwait. In particular, they have cited an Iraqi transcript in which she was quoted as saying the United States had no opinion on Arab-Arab conflicts.
How to solve banking crisis a controversy
But Glaspie disputed the accuracy of the transcript, saying it was selectively edited.
The Associated Press
The 317-page bill, issued six weeks after the Treasury Department's equally voluminous study of the financial system, would reduce government guarantees to the wealthiest depositors, break down traditional walls between banks and other businesses and provide for earlier intervention by regulators in ailing banks.
WASHINGTON — The Bush administration yesterday sent Congress a telephone book-sized bill overhauling the nation's banking system, but braced for a tough fight over key elements of the proposal.
The Financial Institutions Safety and Consumer Choice Act of 1991 also would lift remaining restrictions on interstate banking, consolidate the regulatory bureaucracy and bolster the dwindling government deposit insurance fund with a $25 billion line of credit for the Federal Reserve.
Even before the bill was written, however, top Democrats in Congress objected to key parts. The chairpersons of the House and Senate banking committees, Rep Henry B. Gonzalez of Texas and Sen Donald W. Riegle Jr of Michigan, have proposed striped-down legislation that would replenish the FDIC, curb deposit insurance and tougher regulatory oversight of banks.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursdav. March 21. 1991
7
Nation/World
Dhaka, Bangladesh
Female prime minister sworn in
Khaleda Zia was sworn in yesterday as the first female prime minister of predominantly Muslim Bangladesh in the first peaceful transition of power since the nation was formed, 20 years ago.
Zia, the 45-year old widow of an assassinated president, said that improving the economy and restoring law and order would be her government's highest priorities.
Zia took the oath of office from acting President Shaibahuddin Ahmed at the presidential palace in a 2015 ceremony.
Retired LL. Col. Mustafizur Rahaman is the new foreign minister and the Finance Ministry will be led by him.
The caretaker president will now be in charge of the Defense Ministry
Also sworn in were 11 ministers and 21 junior ministers who will constitute Zia's Cabinet.
Moscow
Violence continues in Lithuania
Soviet "black beret" commanded open fire on a small bus carrying Lithuanian border guards, wounding at least one, the Lithuanian government press office said yesterday.
Meanwhile, nearly 1,000 miles away in Georgia, Georgian and Ossetian groups that have been fighting pitched battles with shells, grenades and bombs have also been involved in the Soviet news agency Tass reported yesterday.
However, there were also reports of continued violence in the South Ossetia section of Georgia, with a nurse and a boy injured in an attack on a bus driver. The bus passengers reportedly were taken hostage.
The shooting in Lithuania began when the Lithuanian bus approached a roadblock set up by
the black beret rope on a street in Vilnius and refused to stop, the Lithuanian government said. Soviet jeeps chased and fired at the bus until it stopped, the statement said. Six men fled.
One of the six showed up at the Lithuanian parliament building with a gunshot wound to the thigh, the statement said. He was rushed to a hospital and identified as one of the other five border guards were not known.
Washington
Walesa welcomed with debt relief
President Bush welcomed Polish President Lech Walesa yesterday with the news that the United States would forgive 70 percent of the debt Poland owed to the U.S. government.
"We want your economic transformation to succeed and your new democracy to flourish and we call on other nations to follow our example." Walesa in a ceremony on the White House lawn.
Wales, speaking in Polish and using an interpartial language, reduced a major part of Poland's debt burden.
"Your personal involvement in this course has for Poland a historical dimension," he told Bush.
Walesa closed his remarks with a few words in English, "God bless you, Mr. President. God bless America."
Walesa said Poland was becoming a country of new economic opportunity and invited the United States to participate. Bush said Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had assured an investment mission to Poland this summer.
The United States and other Western nations agreed Friday to reduce Poland's debt to their governments, which totals **33.5 billion**, by at least 50 percent. The U.S. share of the debt is **$9.9 billion**.
"The United States worked long and hard to achieve that unprecedented agreement, and we
encourage other creditors to join us in going beyond that 50 percent level." Bush said. "We certainly shall. We will reduce your indebtedness a full 70 percent."
The White House said the presidential action would have the effect of increasing to 52 percent the total reduction in Poland's combined debt to Western governments.
Key West, Fla.
Cuban pilot seeks asylum in U.S.
A defecting Cuban pilot flew an unarmed Soviet-built jet into Boca Chica Naval Air Station near here yesterday, Navy officials said.
"The plane landed at 11:50 a.m. local time. We looked at a MIG-27." Chief Petty Officer Tara Zucker
The Navy identified the pilot only as a 38-year-old officer seeking political asylum, Donegan said.
Ensign Robin Perkins said the pilot had radioed his intentions, was allowed to land without incident and was being interviewed by government officials.
Fishing vessel snags Soviet sub
Warsaw. Poland
A small Polish fishing boat netted a big catch — a Soviet submarine, the Polish news agency PAP reported.
The submarine ran into the boat's nets on the baltic Sea Monday night, in about 25 miles north of the Baltic Sea. The sailors were unable to recover.
When a Polish navy helicopter and a gun boat arrived, the submarine came to the surface and
The fishing boat was not so lucky. Its damage was estimated at 100 million ilots, or about $13 million.
From The Associated Press
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9
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Rising food costs may be hard for Soviets to handle
By Patricia Rojas
Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev's increase in food prices may be good medicine for the Soviet economy. But the country can immediately digest.
Kansan staff writer
"People are living on a daily basis," said Sergei Shandarin, a visiting Soviet professor of physics and astronomy. "They don't have time to think about the remote future.
"I expect to see some demonstrations because of this increase."
'People are living on a daily basis. They don't have time to think about the future.'
Ground beef, milk and bread prices are among those items whose prices will increase in the Soviet Union beginning April 2, as a result of Gorbachev's economic measures announced yesterday.
Shandarin, who arrived at the University of Kansas in August 1988, said he thought Gorbachev's price increases might help the Soviet economy in the long run by generating more national income.
"Most of the people will be hurt with this," Sandarin said. "And if the economy doesn't improve, people will lose hope."
The measure, however, will not satisfy the immediate needs of the Soviet people. he said.
Roy Laird, professor emeritus of political science, said that about two-thirds of the problems in the nation were related to food scarcity.
"If they can solve the food problem, most of their other problems will be alleviated." he said.
— Sergei Shandin visiting Soviet professor of physics
But the food shortage is complex and difficult to solve, he said.
"Part of the problem is that the production of food in the last decade has not kept up with the population growth." Laird said.
Another shortcoming is the Soviet infrastructure. Many of the fresh products have not been stored in poorly storage facilities and poorly constructed roads, Laird said.
He said that often 40 percent of the total production of goods, such as livestock and vegetables, was wasted before it reached the consumers.
Shandarin said that although Gorbache's measures eventually might ease some of these economic failings, there still were many other problems either — including serious environmental, social, ethnic and political ones.
"Unfortunately life has many sides, not only the economic." Shandarin said. "It's like someone who can tell you what's bad and can't just prescribe one medication."
A
Hair undone
Kelly Campbell, Overland Park sophomore, tries to control her hair during a gust of wind. Strong southerly winds, gurgling up to 40 mph, brought temperatures in the 70s yesterday but created difficulties for those who chose to study outdoors. Unseasonably warm weather is expected to continue today with temperatures rising again into the 70s.
Cookbook to bring fiction to the kitchen
Recipes will have literary connection
Kansan staff writer
By Sarah Davis
Kaeran staff writer
It all started with some very mus tardy and vinegar deviled eggs.
When Katherine Braun visited her sister a couple of years ago, she dined on deviled eggs, which were inspired by the novel "Sometimes a Great Notion" by Ken Kesey, which her sister had read.
That was when Braun decided to sponsor a contest that involves finding food in literature. Her intent is to teach students from the reference libraries their rexipes.
"I want to collect all these references to food that are in literature and then match them up with recipes. Braun said it, "I want to literate it." Literate it, he mustardy and vinegar deviled eggs — that will be my entree!"
through her Santa Monica, Calif. company, the Katherine Braun Co., which specializes in technical writing for attorneys.
Braun sent letters and fliers announcing the contest to English departments at universities across the country, including the University of Kansas.
Braun is sponsoring the contest
For the most outstanding example of food she is offering a $100 prize
So far, out of the 30 entries she has received, the most unique example was from a student in Maryland. A character in the play "Volpone" by Ben Johnson is trying to seduce a girl who wants to eat her, prepare for her of "heads of parrots, tongues of nightingales and brains of peacocks and ostriches."
She also received an example from the novel "Ulysses" by James Joyce that involved a man who "liked thick giblet soup and nutty gizzards, stuffed roast heart, liver sliced, fried with crust crumbs and grilled mutton kidneys."
Because these recipes might be a little difficult to create, Braun said she hoped to find some really creative cooks.
She said she had received some examples that really could be duplicated, such as liquers, New Orleans cocktails, a reference to bacon, kale and milk.
Braun has received only two entries from KU. One of these entries was from Kathleen McGee, who sent a reference from a play.
"I think it will be difficult to execute, but a unique way of approaching a cookbook to try to completely invent a recipe that follows a reference in literature," she said.
Braun said that she was looking forward to putting together the cookbook and that she planned to organize it by literary categories such as Shakespeare, detective and contemparary U.S. fiction.
ent periods in history, so it's great," she said.
Ellen Redding Kaler, graduate teaching assistant in Kalen, sent a reference involving a man chewing on a greasy porkchop.
She said the idea of finding food references was interesting to people in the English field because of their interest in literature.
I'm getting literature from differ-
"She's got a built-in audience with all us literary types," she said. "It sounds fun. It's fiction in the kitchen."
All examples must appear in a fictional work and be written in English. The deadline is Sept. 1, and entries should include the author's name, the title of the work, and photo where the food reference and the photo where the food reference is found. The food reference should be highlighted.
Participants may enter more than once. Send entries to the K.B. Company, 1121 14th St., Santa Monica, CA 90403.
Iowa, Kansas regents approve student exchange
The Associated Press
AMES, Iowa — A reciprocal instute tuition agreement between Iowa and Kansas has been approved by the Iowa Board of Regents.
The student exchange agreement, approved in January by the Kansas Board of Regents, allows two undergraduate students and a graduate student to complete an all-in Kansas occupational therapy program at in-state tuition rates.
Likewise, five undergraduate
from Kansas will enroll at Iowa's
Missouri State University.
College of Liberal Arts at the resident in-state tuition rate of $1,952 Students would have to apply for directly to the respective programs.
Iowa Regents deputy executive director Robert Barak said yesterday that the costs of the reciprocal program were about equal.
Kansas is able to send two more students because it is not as expensive to train students in actuarial mathematics or equational therapy education, he said.
Barak said he and his counterpart
in Kansas initiated the proposal in the year ago while attending a meeting.
The program was to be called a reciprocity agreement, but board president Marvin Pomerantz of Des Moines suggested a name change.
"In the past, board policy has resisted reciprocity with other states. he said. If we'd call it "unfair," then reciprocity, I would feel better."
To be eligible for the waiver of out-of-state tees, a student must demonstrate that he or she satisfies the
residency requirements of the respective home state, maintains a full-time continuous enrollment and satisfies academic progress.
The agreement becomes effective July 1 and remains in effect until June 30, 1993. The agreement will continue for successive one-year periods, and the state to terminate the agreement, according to a report to the Regents.
There will be a waiting list should additional students choose to participate, the report said.
Find anything and everything you ever wanted in the Kansan classifieds. *Job *Car *Shelter
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10
Thursday, March 21, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Students learn to teach math in different form
by Sarah Davis
Kansan staff writer
Five buckets full of tiny, plastic shapes — orange squares, green triangles, yellow hexagons — await used.
In small groups, students took turns arranging the blocks to form shapes.
These students were not kindergarten-
ers. UU students learning a new form,
of reading.
About 30 students are enrolled in Modern Elementary Mathematics, a course that teaches math to students who want to become elementary teachers.
That is where the blocks come in. They are visual, hands-on form of multiplying.
Students use the shapes to generate pattern sequences. When they figure out the pattern, they can predict what the final outcome will be.
For example, by adding a triangle to each side of the pattern, they learn that the sequence increases in multiples of three.
"The idea of sequence is a basic concept of math," said Judy Roitman, professor of mathematics, who teaches one of the sections of the course. A graduate teaching assistant teaches the other section.
Roitman said the block method
was one of many she taught in the class to help education majors better understand math so they could relate it to children more easily.
"The purpose of this class is to teach math that people will do in elementary school." she said. "I'm using this because patterns are a very important part of the curriculum now starting in kindergarten."
Children grasp more when learning is fun. Roitman said.
"Wouldn't you rather get on the floor and play with blocks?" she said. Stacey Smith, Shawnee senior who is in the class, agreed.
"If they start out using this in younger grades, it's good because they can relate to shapes better than to numbers," she said. "It's fun because it's hands-on experience, and they learn it easier."
Jenny Anderson, Omaha, Neb.
senior, said that although learning math using the blocks herself was hard to grasp, a child might benefit from the technique and not even know they were learning.
Anderson said she enjoyed learning the block method.
"I've learned more in the class in how to teach math and relate it to children on their level," she said. "I just all board and book. It's hands-on."
MISCHIEV
Water wars
Delta Chi members Adam Rhoades, Omaha, Neb., freshman; Greg Kendall, St. Louis sophomore; Scott Lubert, Olathe freshman; and Chris Ball, Springfield, Mo., junior, prepare to launch a water
Julie Jacobson/KANSAN
balloon at members of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house. In the spirit of friendly competition, the two fraternities have issued official declarations of water-war.
By Amy Francis
Kansan staff writer
The thought of air pollution has emerged in many people's minds as the images of black smoke clouds inuwait oil fields flash on TV screens.
At extremes, air pollution can seriously affect people's health. But Lawrence residents, lacking burning oil fields or heavy industry and being surrounded by rural areas, are not faced with high-level pollution.
information for the Kansas Department of Health, said, "Overall, I think the air quality in Kansas is rather good."
Greg Crawford, director of public
Lawrence Magee, physician at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said that there was no way a person could escape completely from air pollution.
"I think you need to watch out for it pretty much whenever there are automobiles," he said.
Those bothered by pollution usually are vulnerable to it in some way, such as having asthma. Short-term problems of bronchial spasms, a runny nose or shortness of breath are possible reactions.
Low levels of air pollution are not a problem for most people, he said.
Magee said reactions in the throat and eyes could occur in anyone. A person's throat can become sore or itchy. The eyes can become irritated Scar tissue on the lining or the blockage of ducts around the eyes can occur in chronic cases, he said.
Over-the-counter eye drops can be
used to help with the irritation. But if it continues, a person should see a physician about the problem, Magee said.
Lee Bittenbender, a local dermatologist, said that low levels of air pollution did not pose a threat to a person's skin.
"I would say for the most part there is not a problem of air pollution adversely affecting the skin," he said.
Air pollution actually can help a person's skin if it blocks some of the ultraviolet rays that harm the skin. But that is a minimal benefit that can be gained in other ways, Bittenbender said.
Air pollution may cause a person to feel uncomfortable or dirty, but normal washing is all that is needed, he said.
cause serious problems, but the results were not as clear as short term problems.
"We can accomplish that same end by using a good sunscreen," he said.
Higher instances of lung or heart problems may result because of carbon monoxide in the body, he said.
Magee said long-term exposure to high levels of air pollution could
"It basically keeps your body from carrying enough oxygen in the blood." he said. "The main part of entry is through the mouth, nose and lungs. A lot of people choose to wear masks or filters."
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Four days and three night Orlando, Florida
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The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts
New Directions Series presents the urban bush women
Jawole Willa jo Zollar; Artistic Director
A Mid-American Arts Alliance Program
8:00 p.m.
Wednesday, March 27, 1991
Liberty Hall
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box
Office and at Liberty Hall Student tickets available at the SUA Office. Kansas Union all seating is general admission to charge by phone call
This performance is partially underwritten by AT&T
Special thanks to this year's Very Important Partners:
Hallmark Card, Inc;
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and Sailie Mae.
Step Out For Great Entertainment!
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Open opening 10:40 to 8:30
Open Sunday 1:00 to 5:00
COUNTY BROADCAST
Open Horse Show
April 28 at
For more information call Jeff at 841-7059
April 28 at Douglas County Trailrider Arena
Sponsored by KU Equestrian Club
INTRAMURAL VOLLEYBALL
Volleyball
Men's Open
Entries Open - Tuesday, March 26
Entries Close - Wednesday, March 27
Entry Fee: $25 per team
Co-Rec Open
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Mandatory Manager's Meeting:
Monday, March 25 at 6:30
Monday, March 25 at 6:30
in 202 Robinson
Sponsored by KU Recreation Services 208 Robinson 864-3546
Jorge Serrano Elías is ...
a) Right-wing businessman recently elected President of Guatemala
b) Former Contra leader assassinated on the streets of Nicaragua
c) Former Chicago Cub great elected to the Hall of Fame
d) All of the above
Come find out at :
Rice and Beans Dinner
Thursday, March 21st at 6pm
Ecumenical Christian Ministry
Ecumenical Christian Ministries
1204 Oread
Movie: "Romero" starring Raul Julia
SUNSHINE GLOBAL SUPPORT
Latin Amercian Solidarity
Peace through Solidarity
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 21, 1991
11
Arms treaty delayed, U.S. will not bend
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The United States is not prepared to compromise with the Soviet Union on any elements of a treaty to eliminate conflicts in Europe. Bush administration officials told Congress yesterday.
Problems have arisen with the treaty on Conventional Forces in Europe primarily because the Soviet Union has insisted that about 5,000 pieces of Soviet equipment not be counted.
The United States and 20 other signatories to the treaty, which was signed Nov. 19, disagree with Moscow on their interpretation.
"The CFE treaty is the key to unlocking not only valuable cuts in conventional arms but also progress on other fronts," said SEN Joseph Biden, D-Del., at a Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee hearing.
The deadlock over CFE contributed to the postponement of a Moscow summit between President Bush and Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev.
"Both the Kremlin and the White House take the position that the Moscow summit should not occur until a START treaty can be completed," Biden said, referring to a treaty to cut long-range missiles.
But the administration has said it cannot finish START until CFE is completed.
The big sticking point on CFE is whether the Soviets have the right to exempt from the treaty equipment of other countries in order to defense and strategic rocket forces.
@
Timnthv Miller/KANSAN
Roof-top repairer
Jerry McCormick, Baldwin City resident, prepares materials used in shingle replacement. McCormick was part of a three-person crew replacing the roof shingles at 1646 Tennessee St. yesterday. Co-worker P.J. Karlin said they had been working on the roof for three weeks and expected to finish the job yesterday.
Black Panther publication makes comeback after 20-year absence
The Associated Press
OAKLAND, Calif. — Twenty years after the Black Panthers shocked some Americans with their militant lemands for equality, the radical group's newspaper is making a comeback.
"The Black Panther is Back!" read the announcement for yesterday's unveiling of the first edition of the newspaper published by former party members.
The revived newspaper, subtitled Black Community News Service, is a
quarterly, but otherwise much the same as the old Black Panther, which was circulated weekly under the leadership of Huey P. Newton.
With a headline of "The Struggle Continues," the new Black Panther contains some of the fiery rhetoric for which the old paper was known.
"In the cities where we live, the Black community is being destroyed by the plagues of drugs, unemployment .. legalized police terror and murder, and systematic and pervasive institutional racism designed to
destroy our community," the lead editorial said.
Landon Williams, a former member of the group's central committee, said not much has changed.
The Black Panthers were founded in 1966 by Newton and Bobby Seale in Oakland. At its peak, the Panthers were a national organization that ran food programs and schools for ghetto youths, taught defense against violent attacks and served as a counterpoint to the pacifist side of the civil rights movement.
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STERCRAFT offers a wide variety of furnished apartments in numerous locations near campus. Whether you prefer to live alone or with 1,2, or 3 roommates, we have a home for you. We offer Studios, 1, 2, 3, and 4 bedroom apartments, 2 and 3 level townhomes, all designed with you, the K.U. student in mind.
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5:10, 7:15, 9:45
SHIPWRECKED (PG)
5:00, 7:15, 9:35
PERFECT WEAPON (R)
4:45, 7:05, 9:20
KING RALPH (PG)
4:40, 7:05, 9:30
CLASS ACTION (R)
4:35, 7:20, 9:40
HOME ALONE (PG)
4:50, 7:00, 9:25
Crown Cinema
BEFORE 6 PM-ADULTS $3.00
( LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS - $3.00
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191
THE DOORS (R)
SAT 4:45, 7:15, 9:45
HILLCREST
925 IOWA 842-8400
HE SAID,
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SAT 4:55, 7:15, 9:30
THE HARD WAY (R)
SAT 5:00, 7:15, 9:30
GUILTY BY SUIS-
PICION (PG-13) EVE 5:00, 7:15, 9:45
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WITH WOLVES (PG-13) EVE 5:45, 8:00
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THE DOORS (R) SAT, 9:00 2:15
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It's Your Favorite Film KU!
Voted - Best Film - Oscar Von Jayhawk Awards
Now See it on the Big Screen - Again!
"Star Wars is the most elaborate, most expensive, most beautiful movie serial ever made. It's fun and funny.
-Vincent Canby, NY Times
Oscar Von Jayhawk Awards Night - March 21, 7:00 p.m.
Star Wars Saturday Matinee - March 23, 4:00 p.m.
12
Thursday, March 21, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Hoosiers mirror Kansas style
By S. J. Bailey
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — When the Kansas basketball team faces Indiana tonight for the right to advance to the championships of the southeast region, it might find it is playing a carbon copy of itself.
Kansan sportswriter
"Peace through Solidarity"
The second-seeded Hoosiers, 29-4 and Big Ten Conference co-champions, play nearly the same type of aggressive defense and efficient defense that has made the Jayhawks successful throughout the season.
Kansas coach Roy Williams said yesterday that he thought the Hooliers' most dangerous weapon was their versatility.
"They play aggressive man-to-man defense, and offensively they are patient and shoot over 50 percent of the ball." That was said. "That's a great deal of balance."
Williams likened Indiana's tough defensive assault to that of Big Eight Conference co-champion Oklahoma State.
But the Hoosiers could present problems for the Jayhawks on the offensive end of the floor.
"We haven't played anyone that does the things offensively, like back screens and all, that India does." he said. "The team that we played that has done most of that is ourselves in practice."
Sophomore guard Adonis Jordan said he did not think the two teams' similar playing styles would make a difference for the game any more difficult.
"We're just going to go out and prepare hard, the same way we have in our other 90 practices this season," Jordan said.
Indiana forward Eric Anderson said he thought the game would be an exciting match-up for the fans as well as the players and coaches.
"It's going to be a very physical game, no doubt," Anderson said. "There's going to be a lot of cutting and screening going on. There will definitely be bodies flying everywhere. It could get pretty rough."
Anderson, a junior forward who has averaged 14 points and seven rebounds a game this season, is only one weapon in the Hoosier arsenal. Sophomore forward Calbert Cheaney averaged 21 points a game on his way
Probable Starters
Kansas
F-Alonzo Jarnison(6-6)
F-Mike Maddox(6-7)
C-Mark Randall(6-9)
G-Terry Brown(6-2)
G-Adonis Jordan(5-11)
Indiana
F-Eric Anderson(6-9)
F-Calbert Cheaney(6-6)
C-Matt Nover(6-8)
G-Greg Graham(6-4)
G-Jamal Meeks(6-0)
"I don't talk a hell of a lot about coaches, but I'll tell you one thing.
to be named first team all-Big Ten to the coaches and the media. Despite his own team's talent, Indiana coach Bobby Knight said he respected the way Williams had motivated his players this season.
He's the kind of guy that if he had played or coached under me, I'd sure as hell be proud," Knight said. "He's a little bit charming in across many in years of coaching."
Williams had similar accolades for Knight and his coaching achievements.
"I have so much respect for him that when I lay in bed at night, I'm trying to think of ways I could be doing something, because I know he's over there in the other room thinking of ways to beat us."
Williams said he thought the match-up of himself vs. Knight might have been blown out of proportion by the media.
"I know that it's not just me against Coach Knight," he said. "I might be in a little better shape than he, is he's probably a little more aggressive, but Roy Williams is not playing Bobby Knight."
The Kansas-Indiana game will begin about 30 minutes after the Arkansas-Albama game at about 11 a.m. on CBS (local channels 5 and 13).
Bob Knight continues to reign in center court
By S. J. Bailey
Kansan sportswriter
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — It is 2:40 p.m.
Ten minutes ago, Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams finished his tour of duty with the throngs of media people who have descended upon Charlotte Coliseum for the NCAA southeast regionals.
Alabama coach Wimp Sanderson and Arkansas coach Nolan Richardson served their 30-minute sentences with the news media earlier in the day. Only one question remains in the minds of the dozens of reporters hovering around the Coliseum media room: Where is the coach of Kansas' next opponent, the second-seeded Indiana Hoosiers?
Anxious chatter quickens as the minutes pass 2:41 2:42
At 2-4 24, the idle chitchat is broken by an ominous sound.
game against Florida State got started at 10:14, so I thought maybe the whole year was running behind me. "I wanted to want to do anything to disrupt that."
Enter the clown prince of college coaches Hoosier field marshal Bobby Hosier
"We have been here on time, but the NCAA rule book states that all games should start before ten o'clock," the voice began. "Our last
"Jesus, it would be tough to catch a fly ball in here," he quips, wincing as he tries to field questions that seem out from under the interview lights.
A brash honesty
He's bras, he's bold, and he says whatever is on his mind. Love him or hate him, you must admit that Bobby Knight is a man of fierce honesty who's not afraid to say what he thinks.
For example:
'Other than Dean Smith, I have more respect for Bobby Knight than any other coach in basketball. You don't need me to praise the things that Bobby Knight has done.'
■ On star forward Calbert Cheaney learning the Indiana system: “He’s doing well, but he’s got a ways to go yet. He has to learn to read defenses better. He has to do a better job playing defense” . rebound
Roy Williams Men's basketball coach
better . . . block-out better
Damn, come to think of it, there's a
lot of things he's got to do better."
On ways the NCAA could save money: "You'd better hope I never get in charge of anything. I'd start charging the press to go to games. I really burn your asses. Those would have the high-priced tickets for you guys."
On the NCAA rule book: "We ought to scrap it and start all over again and something concrete back and kick it all understand what the hell is
expected of us and what we can and cannot do."
Outrageous but respected
The Knight mystique is unlike that of any other coach. He has alienated star players, thrown chairs across the playing floor and offended nearly every journalist that he has come across. But Knight also has won three NCAA championships, an NIT title and the Pan-American and Olympic gold medals. Most recently, Knight was selected for induction into the National Basketball Hall of Fame this year.
"Other than Dean Smith, I have more respect for Bobby Knight than any other coach in basketball." Williams said. "You don't need me to praise the things that Bobby Knight has done."
And how. In his 20 years with the Hoosiers, Knight has built a record of 459-152, a 751 winning percentage. He also was honored as the AP and
See KNIGHT, Page 13
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- Extended wear, gas permeable, inted, astigmatic, bifocal, & disposable contact lenses & supplies
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- HMO, Medicare, BCBS, & other insurance
* Doctors in the office for free consultation
Doctors in the office for free consultation
Dr. Charles Pohl 841-2866
831 Vermont
Dr. Kent Dobbins 843-5665
Get in on the action.
Kansas vs. Indiana
Live on the big screen t.v.
and
Live Music with INTERFACE
Every Thursday
$1 Chicago-style
Hot Dogs $125 Long Necks
BENCHWARMERS
Southern Hills Mall
1601 W. 23rd St.
841-9111
(shoot)
Want to place an ad? Call 864-4358, 8am -5pm
Battle of the Bands
The Backsliders
Baghdad Jones
Kill Whitey
The Mood
(formerly The Broken Penguins)
March 28, 1991 7:15 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
$3 advance tickets available at SUA box office or Wescoe Beach
All proceeds benefit the National Prevention of Child Abuse
featuring
from
MTV
MUSIC TELEVISION®
ZBT
ΣΔT
MISTER BUY
SUK
Special thanks to:
Maxx Sound
BTS Lighting
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 21, 1991
Sports
13
Kansas to face Cardinals
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas women's basketball team will play the University of Louisville in the National Women's Cup at 1 p.m. today in Amarillo, Texas.
This will be the second time Kansas has played in the NWIT. In the Lady Jayhawks beat Minnesota but lost to Kentucky and Drake.
Tonight's NWIT game will be the first time the Lady Jayhawks and the Lady Cardinals have played each other.
The Lady Jayhawks completed their regular season with a record of 18-12 overall and 7-7 in the Big Eight Conference. They finished second to Oklahoma State in the Big Eight Tournament.
The Louisville Lady Cardinals won a school record 23 games this season. They lost nine games and finished with a record of 9-5 in conference play.
Freshman forward Gwen Doyle was the Lady Cardinals' leading score in 22 games. She scored in five games and had two 30-point outlues.
Probable Starters for Women's Basketball
Kansas sophomore guard Stacy Truitt led the Jayhawks in scoring with an average 10.6 points a game. Truitt was named to the post-season
| Kansas | Pos. | Ht. | PPG | RPG |
|---|
| 23 Terrilyn Johnson | F | 5-11 | 9.6 | 9.5 |
| 20 Tanya Bonham | F | 5-8 | 5.5 | 1.8 |
| 54 Marthea McCloud | C | 5-10 | 6.3 | 5.7 |
| 21 Stacy Truitt | G | 5-8 | 10.6 | 4.0 |
| 33 Kay Kay Hart | G | 5-7 | 9.6 | 3.3 |
| Louisville |
|---|
| 42 Angie Johnson | F | 5-11 | 4.7 | 5.1 |
| 43 Gwen Doyle | F | 6-0 | 17.3 | 8.5 |
| 34 Nell Knox | C | 6-0 | 12.6 | 5.6 |
| 20 Tuonisia Turner | G | 5-6 | 8.7 | 2.5 |
| 20 Ronnie Huntsinger | G | 5-8 | 7.5 | 3.5 |
all-tournament team, and she was designated honorable mention all- Big Eight by the Big Eight coaches.
Junior forward Terrilyn Johnson was the Lady Jayhawks' leading rebounder for the year. She went to the boards for double digits in 13 games and had eight double-doubles, which were games in which she both scored and rebounded in double digits.
Averaging 9.6 points a game, Johnson tied with junior guard Kay Kay Hart as the Jayhawks' second leading scorer.
If Kansas defeats Louisville, the team will go on to face the winner of the Notre Dame-Santa Clara game at 8 p.m. tomorrow. Should the Jayhawks lose, they would meet the loser of that game at 2 p.m. tomorrow.
Area merchants eye 'Hawks
Tournament wins could translate into lucrative shirt sales
Kansan staff writer
KU students will not be the only ones eagerly watching the Jayhawks games in the NCAA men's basketball tournament.
If the team enters the Final Four, area merchants say they will begin to stock shirts commemorating the event.
Monica Feiter, assistant manager of merchandising at the Kansas Union, said they were hard worked with the hats with the AMA tournament since last week.
Because renovation has limited space in the bookstore, the store also is selling shirts on the fourth floor of the union, she said. Until the Jayhawks' fate is determined this weekend, the bookstore will only be
selling shirts bearing the NCAA logo.
The bookstore had offered only one type of shirt last week, but when Katie was seventy, a second shirt quickly was ordered.
"We needed to take advantage of the winning streak, and they said they have been selling well," Feiter said.
Mike Swalm, assistant manager of the Jayhawk Bookstore, said the store would begin to sell NCAA shirts if Kansas entered the Final Four.
"The generic tournament shirt isn't very popular. In fact, we still have some from last year," he said. "It's not that we're not confident we going to win, but we are playing Indiana, and they're a good team."
"But when we make the Final Four, we will have shirts, and when we win the championship, we will have a plethora of styles."
Gear for Sports, a Lenexa sporting goods manufacturer, will produce shirts for both bookstores as well as
many area shops if the 'Hawks make it to the Final Four.
"If Kansas wins their game Saturday, we will be in production by 9 p.m. Saturday, and stores will have the goods by Sunday," said Scott Durham, production planning manager for the company.
As of yesterday, 14 of the 16 schools still in the tournament had made plans to produce shirts if they should get into the Final Four. Durham said.
Merchants from as far away as St. John's University in New York to the University of Nevada-Las Vegas have contracted with the company.
"The fever builds," he said.
"There are some schools that didn't really look like they had a chance that have called us in the last few days. Other schools, like UNLV, have called them. The number of students. RU called a few days ago."
Durham said that although he and his staff were working long hours this time of year, he still was rooting for Kansas in the tournament.
RELAY
Pat Manson, Aurora, Colo., senior, gets a lift from Brad Feldkamp, Kansas City, Mo., junior.
Track teams shift seasons
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
Memories of this year's NCAA indoor championships are still vivid. Track athletics as a part of outdoor sports.
Junior Jason Teal, a member of the relay team, said many members of the nine other teams at the meet were runners from Kenya and Ethiopia.
Senior all-American pole vaulter Pat Manson and the four-member 3,200-meter relay team competed March 10-11 in Indianapolis against some of the greatest track athletes in the world.
"We couldn't warm up on the track we ran the race on. Teal said." We had to warm up in a separate atmosphere.
"It has really become a world-class meet," he said. Teal, along with freshman Dan Waters and seniors Daniel Rivieri and Brendan Smiley, faced unfamiliar obstacles to the way to becoming American and the fifth best U.S. collegiate relay team.
Also, the team did not run immediately after the warm-up. Smiedala said.
"We had to stand and wait in an entry tunnel for about fifteen minutes before the race," he said.
When the team did run its first race, it was a preliminary. Two teams would be eliminated, leaving three to win.
The Jayhawks squeaked by in the preliminaries, placing eight, but it was enough to get them into the finals.
"For these guys to run twice in two consecutive days and do what they did was just amazing," Manson said.
In front of 13,000 fans in the Hoosier Dome, the team seared 4.5 seconds off their preliminary time and finished fifth in the final race, earning all-American honors as well.
Manson, the team captain, won all-American honors in his fourth consecutive trip to the indoor nationals. He said the meet was different from previous NCAA competitions.
"This year, being my last, I wanted to go in and have some fun and come out healthy," he said.
The qualifying height was raised at this year's meet to reduce the number of vaulters. Manson said there were 32 vaulters at last year's meet, but a four inch reduction in qualifying height reduced the number to 16 this year.
Manson soared over the bar on his first two jumps and then buckled down for a run at the championship. His final vault of 18-6 was good enough for his second conversion record finish.
His final vault of 18-6 was good enough for his second consecutive second-place finish.
"The first year I was surprised at just being there," he said. "This year I was laughing every time I cleared a bar. It was fun."
Manson said that he wanted to win an indoor championship but that he was happy with his career at
"I came here because I thought it was the best vault program in the country, and I still do." he said.
Manson has one more shot at a national title, and the road to the outdoor championships begins March 23rd at the Alumni Meet in Memorial Stadium. The meet will begin on Monday for the season for the men's and the women's track teams.
Knight
Continued from Page 12
UPI Coach of the Year in 1975, 1976 and 1989, and has been named Big Ten Coach of the Year six times.
The effort Knight demands on the court only can be rivaled by the effort he demands off the court. All but three of his four-year athletes have completed degrees, a graduation rate of nearly 95 percent.
season is structured to place the importance back on the student part of "student-athlete."
Knight said he thought the NCAA needed to look into the wav the
"I don't think a game on a weeknight should ever be allowed to start past an oclock local time," he said. "You have to be careful." Teams are required to play
every weekend so they don't have to miss class. I also think you should be required to play over Thanksgiving and Christmas break to avoid missing more class time. There are a lot of things that could easily be done."
Despite his tough-guy image, some of Knight's players see him in a much
Jackson's days as a sports-card commodity may be ending
I'll take a bite of the cookie.
A. D.
different light
"Most people won't believe this, but it's fun playing for Coach Knight." Cheaney, a sophomore said. "I don't really like the game and yells at us all the time, but he really isn't like that. He just wants you to play hard."
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
B jackson's wait-and-see stance on his career-threatening hip injury has the sports memorabilia industry known for his value as a sports collectible.
A national advertising figure and beloved two-sport athlete, Jackson was released Tuesday by the Kansas City Royals because of a hip injury he sustained while playing football with the Los Angeles Raiders.
"When they announced the severity of his injury, everyone was looking to sell instead of buy his card," he said. "My guess is there will be an attractive impact and then some other people wait and see how he does."
Before the injury, Jackson was a top-selling athlete in local sports memorabilia stores. Now, a few days after his injury, he still is.
His comeback would have a significant impact on the value of his sports trading cards, T-shirts, autographs and other collectibles, according to local and national sports memorabilia experts and dealers.
Despite doctors' opinions that his athletic career is over, Jackson has vowed to return to professional sports at a later date.
Dona Brown, owner of Brown's Baseball Cards in Topeka, said Jackson's injury spurred some speculative interest among her customers.
"It would depend if the injury is career-ending or if he comes back," said Rich Klein, price guide analyst for Dallas-based Beckett Publications, a national company producing price indexes for sports cards. "If he enters the level in either football or baseball, the prices may not be affected at all."
Joe Delfolez, owner of JD's Baseball Card and Sports Nostalgia Shop, 1420 W. 23rd St., said that local interest in Jackson's cards had
It is too early to know about Jackson's future as a collectible commodity, he said.
"He's one of the hotter players we have," she said. "He definitely sells in the top five."
increased since his release from the Royals.
"Around here, there won't be any slack off period unless Bo signs with the A's," he said. "Then, it's anybody's guess what will happen."
Joe Ward, manager of Sportstuff in Wichita, said Jackson collectibles were the hotest sellers in Wichita.
"On posters, T-shirts, cards and whatever else, he sells more than Michael Jordan, Barry Sanders and Joe Montana," he said.
Because of Jackson's local appeal, a drop in his card value would hurt the dealers near Kansas City, where his cards are worth more money than Beckett and other national price guides list them for. Ward said.
For instance, the latest issue of Beckett's Baseball Card Price Guide lists Jackson's 1987 Fleer rookie card price at $22.50. The latest Beckett's Football Card Price Guide lists his 1988 Tornos rookie card price at $16.
The Tops Chewing Gum Co., one of the nation's top producers of baseball and football cards, is also a sportsman's future as a trading-card figure.
Like area dealers and collectors, the company's decision about Jackson hinges on whether the injury will be minor or major. Mr. Boyle of Topps public relations.
Ward sells the same cards for $30 and $25 respectively, and will continue to do so as long as they sell at that price.
"The baseball card for this year is already out," he said. "My guess there would be a football card this season because they are being produced now."
A commemorative set might be produced if Jackson is forced out of sports for good. Boyle said.
"But, if there is a special set, we wouldn't know about it yet," he said. "That would still have to be discussed."
Klein said that he and the other experts at Beckett believed that Jackson's nationwide popularity would take a while to wear off.
"His cards sell," he said. "He's Bo."
BOY
Ebokin
ko jackson
KC
FLEER
Royal Sox
Pictured clockwise from left is a lifesize cardboard cutout, autographed balls and collector's magazine, and Jackson's 1987 Fleer rookie baseball card.
Sports briefs Tyson's suit to block title bout thrown out
NEW YORK — Mike Tyson's lawsuiting seek to block sanctioning of next month's heavyweight title bout between Evander Hollyfield and George Foreman was dismissed yesterday in a federal court.
Judge John Martin Jr. of the Southern district of New York said in Tyson's suit against the World Boxing Association, World Boxing Council and International Boxing Federation and officers of those organizations that a champion has one year within which to defend his title against the leading available contender. During that period, he may make a voluntary defense against any boxer rated on the ten 10.
Holfyfield will fight Foreman, ranked third by the WBA and IBF. April 19 in Atlantic City.
Tyson had sued after claiming he was entitled to a rematch with Buster Douglas after Douglas knocked him out in February 1980. Instead, Douglas fought and lost to Hollyfield.
NFL owners modify rules, interpretations
The proposal by Jerry Seeman, the league's new supervisor of officials, clarifies a rule that has been one of the most controversial since it took effect in 1978.
KOHALA, Hawaii — NFL owners modified the controversial “in the grasp” rule yesterday in a way that should give quarterbacks such as John Elway and Randall Cunningham more leeway to scramble.
"If a quarterback is scrambling from the pocket and one man gets his hand on him, he's not down," Seaman said. "It takes effect only when the man is being held up and there are other defenders around to grab him."
Seeman said the competition committee, which proposes the rules, reviewed the tapes from 31 "in the grasp" situations during the 1981 season. Of those, he said 20 were plays on which the quarterback would have been called down under the old rules.
But only eight would be whistled dead under the new one, he said.
"We don't want to see the play stopped when a guy is in the hands of a defender and still can throw the 40 yards downfield," said Seeman.
From The Associated Press
14
Thursday, March 21, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
U.S. falls behind technologically
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The United States, which a decade ago had a commanding lead in high technology, is now losing to foreign competitors in a number of fields considered crucial to the country's economic future and to national security, a group of executives said yesterday.
The Council on Competitiveness, a nonprofit organization made up of top leaders in business, education and labor, reviewed the U.S. position in 94 technologies judged to be critical over the next decade.
It said that in about two-thirds of the critical technologies, the United States was still either the world most competitive with the best in the world.
But in one third of them, the council said U.S. companies were so far behind that they either were no longer a factor in market or works
were judged to be so weak that they were expected to fail, hopelessly to succeed.
The council said this was a disturbing turnabout from a decade ago, when the United States would have been judged to be the leader in virtually all of the 94 technologies surveyed.
Among the technologies placed in the lost column were silicon production and the sophisticated robots used in factory automation.
Also listed in the lost category were two technologies — display materials and computer memory chips — considered vital for development of high definition television. Companies in the United States, Japan and Europe have already started building this dollar market by developing the next generation of televisions.
---
The council said the United States should not be lulled into complacency
"America's performance in the gulf should not be interpreted as a sign of unassailable U.S. technological strength," said George Fisher, the chairperson of the council and the chief executive officer of Motorola Inc. "We are losing leadership in too many areas of high technology."
by the success of U.S. weapons in the Persian Gulf War, noting that many were developed in the 1960s and 1970s, when the United States still enjoyed a commanding lead in high technology.
The report, which took two years to prepare, said that U.S. owned consumer electronics companies practically had been eliminated by foreign competition, while the U.S. share of the machine tool industry had slipped from 50 percent of the world market to 10 percent, and the once-dominant industry was now a distant second to the Japanese on world markets.
said.
"Even such American success stories as chemicals, computers and aerospace have foreign competitors close on their beels," the council
The report found that of 17 critical technologies identified in the field of electronic components, U.S. companies were ranked as weak or losing in only two - microprocessors and magnetic information storage.
The report did list some success stories, most notably in the information field, where U.S. companies were judged to be strong or competitive in technologyologies listed, ranging from data retrieval to artificial intelligence
The council's report, "Gaining New Ground: Technology Priorities for America's Future," made several recommendations to the Bush administration, industry and universities to recapture the technology lead.
"Pioneering research and Nobel prizes are not enough," the council said. "Unless ideas can be pushed, palletized from the laboratory to the market, they would have standard of living and, ultimately, national security will be at risk."
99¢
Color Copy Sale
March 18th through 28th.
All 8 1/2"x11" and 8 1/2"x14"
Color copies are only 99¢
kinko's
the copy center
901 Vermont Street • (913) 843-8019 • 7 am - Midnight
520 West 23rd Street • (913) 749-5392 • 24 hours.
The University of Kansas
Department of Music and Dance
Presents the
Friday & Saturday,
March 22, 23.1991
Murphy Hall KU
14th Annual Jayhawk Invitational
Jazz
Festival
Friday, March 22
KU Jazz Combo I
KU Jazz Singers
Music Bowman with
KU jazz Ensemble I
Saturday, March 23
The Notables
Frank Martooba
Bob Bownan and
Peter Erskine with
KU Jazz Ensemble I
featuring
Peter Erskine Drums
Mavis Rivers Vocals
Frank Martooba Duo
Bob Bownan Bass
"The Notables". Ottuft Air
Force Base Jazz Band
Concerts Nightly at 7:30 p.m.
Crafton-Preyer Theatre Murphy Hall
Tickets for the evening concerts are available
after February 15 at the KU Band Office: 214
Murphy Hall, or at the door; general
admission tickets are $5; reservations can be
made by calling 913 864 3367
Where else can you get a fill-up for $1.69?
Where else can you get a fill-up for $1.69?
SANDWICH
GET ANY REGULAR 6" SUB FOR ONLY $1.99.
1720 W. 23rd St.
SUBWAY
842-4782
Offer good at participating stores only. KAY
Not good in combination
with any other offer.
Offer expires 4/09/11
100's
**Announcements**
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
Classified Directory
T
100s Announcements
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
200's
105 Personal
男女厕所
Chris - I miss you so much. I love you and the girl more than anything in the world. Give me big kisses for me I love you bunches and bunches.
Andrea
Mark's silking it!
SWM. 27, we special lady for long term relationship. If you're a single woman, 18-36 and also seek someone special, then tell me about her. P to P. O. H. 442442, Lawrence, LS
110 Bus. Personal
Bausch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sunglasses
20% Below Salem, Retail
The Etc. Shop
772 Mass., 834-601-0
B. C. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop. Classic to computerized. Body shop available. American motorcycle repair and accessories. 814-64166-64165. 81 VRS.
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters
Where here because we care.
8413 515 1491 Mass.
Waiden Road.
Make a SPECTACLE of yourself. The Etc. Shop sunglasses
---
The Etc. Shop
Clothing & Accessories
For Men & Women
Sunglasses & Couture
732 Maaas. 843-0611
VISA-MC-AM.EXP-DISCOVER CARD
Thrifty Thursday
Only $3.49 for a small pizza.
(add tops only .75)
CARRY OUT only except for orders of 2 or more.
PYRAMID
PIZZA
842-3232
GOODEVERY THURSDAY Also, try our Colombo Frozen Yogurt!
-
14th & Ohio "Under the Wheel"
400's
300's
Merchandise
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
A
*New Analysis of Western Civilization* *makes sense of western Cairn* *Cakes make sense to use it!*
Available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Crier Bookstores.
Habits, phobias, stress, anxiety, pain, smoking,
weight and other disorders. Hypnotherapy
Center, 842-7594
FORMAL WEAR
The Etc. Shop Rental and Sales. 732 Main
END
GUILT
Forgiveness improves one's life.
Andre Sakhrov said: "Guilt hardly improves one's judgment."
Lutheran Campus Ministry
by students and for students
1204 Oread
843-4948
Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m.
25¢
DRAWS
Every Thursday only at THE MAD HATTER 704 New Hampshire Come watch the Jayhawks TONIGHT on our BIG SCREEN TV!
TANS
$20
USE IT or LOSE IT
120 Announcements
EUROPEAN 25th & IOWA 841-6232
10
TANS
$25
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT-Fishers
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT-Fishers
Board & Board Over 600 openings. No experience necessary. Male or Female for page employment. Call 1-800-9124-5000. 84007 Seattle WA 9124-5000. 84007 Seattle WA 9124-5000.
ALL BOOKS--50% OFF
Quitting business—say goodbye to the Book End, in Quintail's Fire Market, 811 New Hampshire. Call Douglas County Rape Victim's Support Service for condemnation assistance. If you are a victim of a crime, call 612-2455. **College Money:** Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money will be given to the college LEGE SCHOLLARSHIP LOCATORS, Box 1081, Box 1091, McMurdo 640200. **MOTHER ARTS**
**MOTHER MATH ARTS**
Now has incredible beeworthy & plant pigment crayons, pencils, paints, and high-quality recyclable materials and art supplies. The Antique Mall, 800 East, Lower level.
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling A friend, understanding voice. Free, confidential referrals called returned by counselors. Headquarters or AU Info 844-3060. Sponsored by GLOSO
For an anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2345. Headquarters
Hey Lara, you biotechal 'wonder' Don't forget the animal rights discussion March 21 in the Governor's Room at 7:00. Invite your friends! Dr Zhivan.
State of Kansas
Board of Regents
Notice of Hearing on Proposed Traffic
Regulations at the University of Kansas
State of Kansas Board of Regents
A public hearing will be conducted in Kansas on April 12, in the Parking Department conference room, 1019 Irving Hill Road, University of Kansas, Lawrence, concerning the adoption by the governor of a new traffic and parking on the roads, streets, driveways, and parking facilities at the University of Kansas. The following is a summary of the issues addressed. While certain sections of the regulations have been remembered and reorganized, the only substantive changes in the regulations are noted
1. General Regulations. The current regulations specify who is subject to those rules and regulations governing the campus, permit, and hours of access to the central campus; how hours the central campus is controlled to 7:45 am; and hours the central campus is controlled to 7:45 pm.
2. Definitions. The current regulations specify, for the purpose of these regulations, the definitions of student, faculty, staff, visitors, dormitory visitor and motorcycle parking and motorcycle parking. The proposed amendment will encourage those with handicap access to register such information with the Parking Office.
5. Student, Faculty, and Staff Parking. The cur-
rent permit for parking permits may be obtained
and applied, and procedures for new employees.
The proposed安排 would drive the plan
implementable.
3. Visitor Parking. The current regulations specify conditions under which visitors may legally park at the University of Kansas. No amendments are proposed.
4. Parking Permits. The current regulations establish procedures pertaining to parking permi- and the types of permits available. The provision of parking permits could be issued on a weekly basis.
6. Permit Fees. The current regulations specify the fees charged for parking permits. The proposition is that the rate for temporary permits from $10 to $25 can be applied to parking facility cards. Medical permits will sell at $49.
7. Control of Parking Locks and Zones. The current regulations specify times and locations for parking restrictions at the University of Kansas. The rules allow vehicles to be parked on yellow zones from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. at 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Meters rates would be increased from 2.3 to 3.3 miles per hour. Temporary parking restrictions on sections of lot 167 Jolifille will be changed to 21 red 12als. Lot 31 Yellow will be designated for KJKH staff West Camp sites who have blit red 12als.
8. Violations. The current regulations specify violations for which a vehicle may be ticketed and the cost of such violations. No amendments are needed.
9. Payment of Fees for Violations. The current regulations specify the method and procedure for payment of violation notices, late payment, what constitutes excessive violations and consequences under the provisions of the amendment procedures. No amendments are proposed.
10. Appeal of Violation Notices. The current regulations establish the procedures for appeals against violations of parking area. No amendments are proposed.
11. Statutory Authorization. The current regulations establish the authorization of the Board of Parking and traffic on the University of Kansas campus and to establish muxes fees for violations of the regulations. No amendments are proposed to the provisions regarding the opportunity at the hearing to present their views concerning the adoption of the proposed amendment; no amendments may be submitted prior to the hearing. Written comments or a request for a copy of the proposed regulations and a copy of the financial statements of the institution may be submitted to Edfyna Gilbert, Associate Dean, College Office. University of Kansas, Strong Hall.
GLSOK
Spring Dance
Friday, March 22
9 pm - 1 am
1st floor Burge Union
Gay and Lesbian
Services of Kansas
Ted D. Ayres General Counsel
Suicide Intervention - If you're about thinking about or are concerned about someone who is call 812-245 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center.
Take a studyake and go on an Adventure! "Storm down the Illinois river for two days of exploration," says SUA. "Join SUA as we travel to Tahquamenon, April 19-21. $28.00 includes 2 nights lodging in cabins on the river 2 days canning and six meals. For details, call 866-3477. Get away from the books before you begin."
THE WAR AFFECTS US-For a caring listener or info on support services, call Headquarters Counseling Center: 841-2345.
130 Entertainment
LI. Allow Infease and Sideshow live at the
Allouche, Thursday, March 28, 16, all ages, no
exemption. Located on 4 miles east of
Mossion on 13th St.
**advance Information**中心, content oriented BBS.
Lawrence Info Center, content orientated BBS,
841-7525. 8. N. J.
Johnny's UP & UNDER
is available for Engagement Parties, Birthday Parties, Pinning Parties and any other party possible. 842-0377
140 Lost-Found
Found. Lost Dog Small, blond, looks like terrier with pink collar. Call 842-7354.
Lost: Gold chip on clothing Friday before Spring Break. If you call 748-3608.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Caregivers need now to Trinity Community Services (TCS) need caring individuals to provide care for the children in need. We provide videos reside care to families who are involved in the constant care of a disabled child or elderly person. We also have care and are in need people who can work varied hours. Please call 843-3159 for an application or contact us.
in accepting applications Wednesday and Thursday, March 20 and 21 for students (attend a job interview) with at least 18 yrs old and able to work through November 1. Apply Marina in Clinton State.
AIRLINES HIRING
Seeking students and grades to fill many positions. Airline will train. Excellent salary and travel benefits. 303-441-2455.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girl summer camps. Teach swimming, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics, archery, golf, hiking, camping, crafts, drama, or riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $1000 plus any More & RM2. Marge Siegel 7663. Maple ND
CITY OF LAWRENCE 1991 SUMMER JOB
The City of Lawrence is recruiting for various summer jobs, including outdoor day program internships, special populations, concessions, maintenance, and clerical positions. Applications must be submitted to the Office of Services. Room 210, City Hall, 6th & 7th Floor, Lawrence. Wisconsin 66044 M/E/H
Graduate Student: Student Financial Aid is seeking a graduate assistant to assist primarily in the student time position. This is a half time position. The monthly salary is $12,000 plus benefits including application, resume, and name, address, and contact information. Graduate Assistant: Associate Director, Student Financial Ad. to Strong Hall. All materials must be received by September 30th.
Earn you while learn. Manpower is looking for students interested in earning great pay plus commission. We offer flexible hours, valuable training, and a one-on-one personal computer. If you are a full-time student, sophomore or above, with at least a B average, and are computer familiar, Manpower needs you to work on the computer of the IBM Personal System 2 on campus or experience that pays, call Lora at 249-7800.
Great job in Philadelphia suburb. Have fun with kids for 3 days of weekly hours. Earn great salary, room, board and 2 weeks paid vacation. Starts in April for one year. Call Elizabath at (1) 825-462-3430.
Immediate clothing sales position available with a Lease company. Weekends only, good money some travel, expenses paid and a variety of duties. Please call Vince Johnson 911-3853 - 8537
International Company seeks career minded individuals to train in the fashion and glamour industry. For interview, 1,223-6829
KU School of Education seeks: Program Instructors (4) teach high school students in summer session and (1) teach undergraduate students in American society, 2. English, mathematics, and 4) biology (chemistry, degree, teaching experience, and experience working with culturally diverse students). Prior experience (1) coordinate residence hall staff and live in residence hall Degree required Peer Tutor counsel, and supervise high school students. At least junior level status in college required. Experience as instructor in
Need money fast? Make up to $12.00 a day for trimming photography. No experience necessary!
GOOD JOBS
PROGRAM ASSISTANT - 10 weeks week. $844 for 12 months. Assist students and faculty in the use of computer analysis programs such as SPSF, SPSS, DSPT, diflase, 121 Lotus on microcomputers and other comparative programs. Requires a master's degree or equivalent in permanent design. Bachelor's degree in an appropriate field such as psychology or computer science. Prior experience will also be considered. Applicable to deadline: all materials must be received by April 15th. Recommendation for recommendation to: Demis H. Karpowitz, Department of Psychology, 62 Fraser, University of Washington,KS, 65053. EO/UA Employer.
POSITION AVAILABLE. A local miliary warranty needs to hire a U. student to work every other night, and weekend duties includes: answering the calls of students with the public. This individual needs to be neat, have good communication skills and desire to work in an office environment as a salary, furnished apartment and paid utilities. The position is open beginning May 15th. For additional information, interview, call 843-1212 or ask for Larry or Furry.
Spring Break over and still no summer job?
Average writing $450 week while gaining career experience for your resume. 941-1224
GOOD JOB'S Are good with great resumes! Get that new job with a quality employee & produced by professionals.
*Professional writers & editors*
compile your own information.
*25 resumes, matching blank cover
sheets and envelopes, and master.*
*Total cost: Only $35 Reprints made
later for less.*
**FREE INFO**
Call Garnett Publishing, Inc. (913) 448-3121Leave message after 5
SUMMER CAMP JOBS IN MICHIGAN
11
-Counselors
-Office
-Kitchen
-Maintence
Lake of the Woods for Girls Geenwoods for Boys
INTERVIEWS ON CAMPUS
TODAY, 12:00-5:00pm and
Wed., March 27th, 8:30am-2:00pm
110 Burge Union
No appointments needed
$$ SUMMER JOBS $$
The Lytic team is hiring telemarketers for a fun-filled summer of great pay and incentivize. No experience necessary, but enthusiasm is a must! Sunday-thursday evenings, starting in May and running through July with an opportunity, call Lacy at The Lyric: 814-471-4933
Unique Career Opportunity
$11 to start and have
Need managers for rapid growing corporations*
*marketing and management. Call 1-269-8111*
Wanted: Part-time babysitter for nine month old
children in need. Apply to make money while studying, call 834-0714
Work Study positions available: Spring, Summer and Fall. Call Judy at the School of Business.
225 Professional Services
School Education offered thru Midwinter Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license accepted, transportation provided, ed. 841.7749
Government photos, passports, immigration;
vies, senior portraiters, modeling and arts portfolios/B&W color Call Tom Swells 749-1611
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 401-6678
Need an Attorney?
CALL RICHARD A. FRYDMAN 843-4023 / free initial consultation
15
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 21, 1991
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping.
Lawrence Printing Service. 512 E. 9th Street.
843-4600.
Thesis & Dissertations
TRAFFIC • DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctated, gramatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-265, days or evenings.
Accurate typing, Resumes, Theses, Letters, Call Melany,
1-913-883-4754 or 864-3181.
price for Word Press. Fast service.
$10.00 cheap-spaced page. Call Thereas. 844-6776.
Absolute cheapest typing in Lawrentw
cheap-spaced page. Rush job no problem.
790-4648
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary.
125 double-space page. Call Mrs. Matilla
132 double-space page. Call Mr. Matilla
Call R.J.'s Typing Services 841-5942. Term pumps, legal, theses, ect. No calls on 9am.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Lasser print-
ing services. F.S. 841-5942. Mt. 84-18, m. 84-2744
Mt. 84-18, F.S. 84-18, m. 54-8274
K's professional word processing. Accurate and affordable. Call after 1 a.m. ppm: 841-6345.
Professional Typist. Reasonable rates. Call
842-3203.
Professional resumes-Consultations, formatting, typesetting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc, 921) $^1$ Mass. 841-1071.
WordPerfect word processing. Ink jet printer.
Near Orchards Corners. Phone 843-8568.
Word Processing Typing Papers. Resumes.
Word Processor editing, formatting, spelling, grammar editing, editing. Have
spelling, grammar editing.
Word Processing-Spelling checked $1.00 pg
2-space, 843-4638
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
1989 MiaT. Mt. Bike. Excellent condition, w/ lock.
$250 obo. Call 749-595, ask for Peter.
For sale: movie theater components. Screen, proe-
ctor, sound system. $7000. b161331.8768.
1986 Yamaha FZ.600, $1900, Call 864-8242
1987 Honda Elite, 50cc, red, reliable and inexpensive transportation $250, Call 749-9618
GOVT SUPPLUS | Sleeping bags, backpacks,
tens, camouflage clothing, wet weather gear,
clothes for hiking. Wear warm gear.
CARHARTT WORKEAR Mint Sat-5: 14-37 274 St. Marys Surplus Sales. St. Marys, KS.
Golf shoes. Brown leather Foot-Joy Classes. Size 8W (Paid $140) Used once for $50 Phone
Macintosh SE COMPAT. FOR SALE. Less than 1 yr old. 1 mgd. RM-30 mgd. mouse, software Call Scott at 864-610 or (913) 441-6657
SONY Video 8 CCD-V1 Handyband with tripod,
lenses, battery pads and tape. Virtually new,
worth $500, will sell for $1500. 832-1031.
lock included. $230 oo obo. 865-3694 (l msg).
TREK 560-Shimano 105, Matrix Wheels, road
bike like. new.Jason 865-1597
Specialized Mt. bike, 6 months old, black, Krypto
William Walters Bike Store 1012 E. Washington Blvd. 850-943-3700
340 Auto Sales
Seniors and grad students! Ford's college grad program can help you buy a new car or truck. For details, call Bill E. 843-3500.
360 Miscellaneous
1984 Misukish Corda, 5 spd.2 pool, bkb, several new doors. Part goods. Answering: Asking 8296, 842-7507
1984 Honda Civic Wagon 89.00 miles. beautiful.
864-6322 at 10pm
1985 Mitsubishi Precise. 39,000 miles, 2 dr, stick.
sony stereo. $3400. 943-7598 after 8pm
NY SELL TODAY
For sale: 8 month Body Boutique membership
150, 644-8724 mornings, 842-273, leave message
On TV, VCS. vcky, jewelry, sterne, musical instruments, cameras and more. We honor Visa/MCAMEX. Disc. Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry, 1804 W. 6th 749 1919
4-5 bedroom house available April 1. $800 per month.
2 blocks from KU on Kentucky. Days
913-321-1440. Craig.
Hey KU Med. students. Move in June 1 and receive *h* your off for the rent at 2 months. *Studio 1, and 2 bedroom gals.* *Heat and water paid.* *Across The Campus, Rainbow Center Tower Aps.* 913-891-9633
Great 1 bdmr apt for rent. 1 block from Union.
Must see to appreciate. Call Kristen at 865-0010.
Leave message.
Now leasing. Extra nice, spacious two bedroom apartments with all kitchen appliances, including dishwashers and refrigerators, and blinds. Low utilities, low bus. queue.理财 complex $10.00. SPAINISH CREAT APART
Hillel
חליל
ONE BLOCK FROM KANASIS UNION. For rent to serious graduate school, upperclass student or RU employee. One BR furnished. No pets. Refs. $60. Water furnished. $250/mo. 8349-8348 after PM.
Lorimer Townhomes, 3801 Clinton Parkway
Quality, spacious, with the all amenities. Brand
new. Available now. or 2 3床rooms. Lease thru
may or for 12 months. 81-749-754, 84-143-143.
405 For Rent
For rides and more information,
call 864-3948
Available March 1 - 1 bd unifant, apt in new
room. Packaged with WD wickors, DW warm,
ceting firm, big bright. Great location near campus.
Short items available $35 per month. No pets
Big sunny 1 bedroom apt available now thru July
Option for next year. 2 blocks from campus.
$275/month. 942-9021. Leave message.
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
2-1B RR, 4-3B WRS.hrs (drivers in each unit, ceil-
ing route), on road of street parking.) 1 yr old;
2-2B RR, 4-3B WRS.hrs (drivers in each unit, ceil-
ing route) on road of street parking.) 1 yr old;
400s Real Estate
合
All real estate advertisin in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, disability, or intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all advertisements on this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
2 & 3 BR-Available in May or August,
dishwashers, disposals, refrigerator frezer,
stoves, microwaves and other kitchen
management. KU has bus route, off-street park
space Management your apartment for summer
or fall 780-156.
Female roommates need for next school year.
Beautiful 3 BR house, 2 car garage, newly redecorated, furnished, nice neighborhood, W/D,
seasonal outdoor furniture. Non-smokers
$180 plus. 964-638-6480
Bradford Square Apartments 501 Colorado
Events of the Week
Thursday, March 21
Executive Board Mtg.
7 p.m. Hall House
Friday, March 22
Shabbat Dinner
6 p.m. Hall House
R.S.V.P. by March 21
1991
Now leasing for summer & fall
spacious & comfortable
sussover Seder reservations
morning, March 23
Friday, June 14
movie, 'Jungle Book'
4 p.m. KS Union
*2 & 3 BR townhomes
-5 Pools
-Tennis courts
-on KU bus route
gas heat & water paid (on apartments)
TRAILRIDGE
2500 W.6th
843-7333
South Quite
- Pool & Volleyball
1166 W.26th 843-6446 Open 10-5, M-F
- Quiet location
- Close to bus route
- Small pets OK with deposit
- Inexpensive gas heat
- Central air
Nice 2 bedroom apt. Close to Student Union.
Washer/dryer hookup. Off-street parking. No pets.
789-2919
Swan
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall
Extremely nice, spacious. 3 bins. townhouse tow/wage. 2 female non-smoking rooms needed, year lease beginning August and/or summer lease. $210. 4% utilities. Kerr 843-6062.
Special
Summer sublease. 3 bdmr, furnished,
Tangweled. Option for fall. $198 each. May paid.
749-1309.
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Summer sublease. Large studio. $275/mo.
841 6784 after 6m
- 1-2-3 bedroom apts.
Summer sublease with option to take over lease in
fall. Brand new 2 bedroom 1 female roommate
wanted $180/bed. Call Jalvim. 841-149
www.jalvim.com
24TH & EDDINGHAM
Swan Management
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1288
- Gravstone
Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an Affordable Price!
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Office Hours:
12-6 pm Muni, Fri.
10-6 pm Tue. - Thur
9:30 am - 5:30 pm
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc
9:55 pm Sat
No Appt. Necessary
841-5444
Accepting reservations for fall leases!
WOODWAY
APARTMENTS
APARTMENTS Each apartment features:
CINEMAS
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
- Large bedrooms
- Mini blinds
- On KU has remote
- Carpet available
- 1 bedroom $355, $350
- 2 bedroom $400, $460
- 3 bedroom $560
office
611 Michigan Street
(across from Hardye's)
HOURS:
4:00 noon - 7:00 a.m. Friday
9:00-12:00 Sat
843-1971
Quail Creek Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Please call Kristy for appt
...on KU bus route
...studios
...townhomes
...2,3 Bedrooms
...Free cable
...Water paid .
...Pool
...Pool
SUMMER SUBLEASE with option for fall, in Sundance II. *Sponacious 2 BR*, furnished, private pool. Call 805 261, leave message.
749-1288
SUNRISE
VILLAGE
TOWN OF MIDDLEBURY
600 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.- Fri. 11-5
Bedroom Town Houses
- Microwave Ovens
- On KU Bus Route
- Some with fireplaces
- On KH Road Residence
841-8400
- Swimming Pool & Tennis Courts
- Garages; 2 & 1/2 bath
- On KU Bus Route
- Swimming Pool
Sublease large one bedroom apt. Close to campus, on bus route, microwave, dishwasher, jacuzzi and pool. Call 841-9114.
Sublease May-August 1, 1 Br, CA, DW,
Washer/dryer, walk to KU. Small pet OK, $350
month. 841-1890.
Garages, 2 & 12 ba
Microwave Oven
- Microwave Ovens
- Some with fireplaces
- Luxurious 3 & 4
Apple Lane Apartments
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished rooms with shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilities paid. 1 bib from KU with off street parking. No pets. Bk1-5000
Sublease for summer. 2 bedroom. $255/month. 2 levels 1½ bath. Water free. Laundry available. 841-7071.
Summer and Fall leasing. Pursified 1 and 2 bedroom apts. 1 bikk from KU with off street parking. no pets. B41-5000.
2111 Kasold
843-4300
...
Now accepting reservations for fall leases!
Free cable
Quiet studios
Water naid
Best
Close to KU bus route
2 Bedroom apartments available for Fall
ALL NEW appliances, carpet, mini blinds and study area
Come and see our totally remodeled
Short Term Subleases Available Immediately
3 Bdrm Townhouse.
Spacious 1,410 square feet
1/2 bath downstairs, Large full bath with
dressing area upstairs
2 Bdm townhouse.
Roomy 129 square feet
1 1/2 baths. 6 month sublease
1 Bdrm 6 month sublease
Some Summer Subleases too!
Call or come by today These won't last long!
15th & Crestline
Hours: Mon-Fri 8-5:30
Sat 8:5
Sun 1-4
4200
meadowbrook
If you can read this ad, you're too smart to live in an apartment.
It doesn't take a genius to see that Naismith is the smart place to live while you get an education.
- Free utilities
Enlarged to Show Texture
- Computer Center
- Great social events
* "Dine Anytime"
- Great social events
Wise up and make
NAISMITHHALL
the move now:
1800 Naismith Drive
Lawrence, KS 66044
913-834-8550
TO SHOW TEXTURE
ENLARGED
Hi, THERE, QIXIE!
OH, HI, PEACHING
HOW WAS YOUR
SPRING BREAK?
OVER BOOK&DI? DO YOU THINK I'M GOING TO WALK TO KANSAS?
REALLY GOOD! I MANAGED
TO WRITE MY THEsis AND
STILL HAD TIME FOR A
Movie! BUT I HEAR THAT
JAKE AND ADDison REALY
HAD A GOOD TIME IN CANCUM
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
- Volleyball Court
by Brian Gunning
- Basketball Court
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Exercise Room
- 3 Hot Tubs
- On Bus Route
SUN
$ 355 - $425
Models Open Daily
Mon. - Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 10-4 p.m. Sun 12-4 p.m.
842-5111
1301 W.24th
Two non-smoking females needed for sublease
starting May 15 (Date negotiable) in
Meadowbrook. Best resented at $140 and $180
uits;洗衣; and cable paid and Fouls call
212-679-3000.
Summer sublease Nice 3 BR with dishwasher
*der/ver AC* Call 860-1655
OPEN DAILY
Reserve Your Home Now!
We offer
Completely Furnished
Designed with you in mind!
Offering:
*Custom furnishings*
*Designed for privacy*
*Private Parking*
*Close to shopping & KU*
*Many great locations*
*Equal opportunity housing*
Go to...
Hanover Place - 841-1212 14th & Mass
Sundance - 841-5255
7th & Florida
Kentucky Place - 749-0445
1310 Kentucky
Campus Place - 841-1429
1145 Louisiana
7th & Florida
Tanglewood - 749-2415
10th & Arkansas
TOoth & Kasdon
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
430 Roommate Wanted
Orchard Corners - 749-4226
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
Poney
New York, NY 10022-3848
Words set in All CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
- Policy
A roommate needed immediately! $187.50 plus part utilities. March rent paid. On bus route.
843-4780
Female roommate needed to share unique spaces BDR apt for next year. Call 749-645-162.
Sherable beautiful house new campus. Non-smoker. 16-month host $0.50 deposit. 1/8 utilities 841-4678.
Summer sublease. Female roommate needed to share condo, own laptop, carport, W/D microwave, pool, CA and more $165.00 plus utilities. Call LonLon. 865-6900 or 843-7812.
Blank lines count as 7 words.
Bank lines count as 7 words.
Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only.
Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only.
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any
Tear sheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements
Blind box ads: please add $4.00 service charge
Telephone are NOT provided for appointments.
- Prepaid Order Form Ads
Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
Deadlines
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansas.
Deadline is on Monday at 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Deadline for cancellation is Monday at 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Words 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days
0-15 3.45 5.10 7.25 12.05
16-20 4.05 6.00 8.50 13.50
21-25 4.65 6.95 9.75 15.15
26-30 5.30 7.90 11.00 16.70
31-35 5.95 8.85 12.25 18.30
Classifications
105 personal 140 lost & found 305 for sale
110 business personalls 205 help wanted 340 auto sales
120 announcements 225 professional service 360 miscellaneous
entertainment 295 services
Classified Mail Order Form
370 want to buy
405 for rent
430 roommate wa
Address (phone number published only if included below)
| | | | | |
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ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FI
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LOS ANKS POLICE
Make checks payable to:
University Daily Kansas
Lawrence, KS 66045
By GARY LARSON
THE FAR SIDE
© 1991 Universal Press Syndicate
5-21
© 1991 Universal Press Syndicate
WE ACCEPT:
VISA MASTER CARD
URANUS EXPRESS
"We're in luck, Zorko!"
16
Thursday, March 21, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
CORNUCOPIA
A RESTAURANT & BAR
- Now Offering -
• Authentic Southwestern Cusine
• Fresh Seafood Everyday
• Daily Drink Specials
• Breakfast Anytime
1801 MASSACHUSETTS 842-9637
Hours: Sun. & Mon. 11:15 Tues. Sat. 11:10
KU STUDENT BIOETHICS CLUB "ANIMAL RIGHTS VS. HUMAN RIGHTS "
Thursday, March 21st Kansas Union--Governor's Room, 7:00 p.m.
For more information call: Shawn 842-7060
Have you ever considered a career in Research or Teaching at a College or University?
The Graduate School of the University of Kansas would like to invite you to attend a special informative meeting. Information about graduate education, financial aid and options will be provided.
Come with your questions & curiosity... Today, March 21, 4:00p.m. to 5:00p.m Kansas Room, Kansas Union
VENICE JAMES LONGMAN
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
864-SHOW 864-SHOW
SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
March 22-24
WALT DISNEY'S'
The Jungle Book
Jungle Book
Friday and Saturday 7:00 and 9:30pm Sunday matinee: 2:00pm
Tickets $2.50, at the SUA Office, Kansas Union Movies shown in Woodruff Auditorium
...
Godfather's Pizza
MEDIUM MEAT EATER'S DELIGHT $599 EACH with coupon
100 YEARS OF AFTER SMITH
New BIG VALUE MEAT EATER'S DELIGHT
Topped with Sausage, Beef, Pepperoni, Ham and Bacon
BIG
VAIL
MENU
843-6282 711 W.23rd, Malls Shopping Center
MEDIUM MEAT EATER'S DELIGHT
$5.99
NO LIMIT AT $5.99 EACH
Toppeed with Beet, Saucepe, Pepperoni, Ham and Bacon
Original Deli Dish for Boiled Crust, Ham and Pizza
Godfather's Pizza
www.godfatherspizza.com
freshly baked in our downtown stone oven
dressed on clean, crisp crust
EXPIRES 4-7-91
All You Can Eat
LUNCH
BUFFET
2 FOR $5
Pizza • Pasta
Breadsticks • Dessert
Weekdays, 11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m.
Add 5¢ per guest
per hour during busy
weekdays from 1:30 p.m.
to midnight.
EXPIRES: 4-7-91
Heavy Topping Original or Golden Crust
PICK ONE
MEDIUM
BIG
VALE
MENU
$4 OFF
Any Large Pizza
Godfather's Pizza
need 15 yrs of exp
or prfgr
to receive ready
food from us at
9:30 a.m to 5:30 p.m.
saturday through sunday
1.74
$5.99
Call today with
bursary 1000 lines
free dinner
Bachelor's degree offered
Bachelor's degree offered
$17 for car insurance
Godfather's
Pizza
NO LIMIT AT 55 FACH
CHOOSE HOPPER
* Choose Looper on Cupper
* Deluxe * Meal Fresh's Delight
* Garden Delight
$3 OFF Anv Medium
Original Court Daily,
For Funeral Credits, and 14
Godfathers' Pizza
with Sunday FREE cracks or
a half price pizza, wine, or
cream of mushroom or cream of
mushroom. All fees are due.
EXPIRES: 4-7-91
New scientist to join KU's entomology staff
By Sarah Davis
The KU department of entomology will be gaining its first female faculty member.
Kansan staff writer
Deborah Smith, currently a research scientist at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, will join the 10-member KU faculty in the fall as an assistant professor of entomology.
Entomology is the scientific study of insects
"I'm looking forward to coming to Lawrence," she said. "I've been impressed with how friendly they've been in the entomology department."
She will arrive in June with her 39-month-old son and her husband, also an entomologist, who will join the research team as an adjunct assistant professor
William Bell, chairperson of the department of entomology, said Smith was the top candidate of about 25 from around the world.
"This is the last hire we're going to make for some time," he said. "We hired the best person for the job. We're positive of that."
He said that he was glad Smith would be working at KU and that he expected her to be a positive role for other women working in the sciences.
"We've been trying to hire females and minorities for some time," he said. "But there are not many women in entomology."
Smith said that historically few women had been involved in entomology.
"I have gotten the impression that they have a good attitude and a commitment to increasing the number of women in their department," she said about KU's entomology department.
Smith will be working in the area of insect population and in molecular systematics, which is the study of evolutionary relationships through
DNA
"Kansas has always been very strong in systematics," she said. "I'm hoping to add to its already strong program."
Currently, only 14 universities in he country do research in molecular systematics.
Steve Ashe is director of the entomological museum in Snow Hall where Smith's laboratory and office are located. You should be an important addition to the staff.
Bell said he hoped Smith's research would bring new discoveries in her field.
"She will be the core for the development of the molecular systematics program here," he said, explaining that famous already for her work."
"We hope that for the department, she initiates a very active program in molecular systematics, and for the department she will be a leader in this field," he said.
Serbian leader takes back his presidential resignation
The Associated Press
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia — A Serbian leader withdrew his resignation yesterday as head of Yugoslavia's presidency, in a move that could help end a deadlock over the collective leadership of the patchwork nation.
Borisaj Jovic had announced Friday that he would leave the eight-member federal presidency after failing to persuade other members to declare a nationwide state of emergency.
Serbian officials and their allies pressed three other representatives on the council to quit. They had threatened to leave the council without a quorum.
But yesterday, Serbia's Parliament refused to accept Jovic's resignation. Jovic accepted the Parliament vote and said he would serve on the presidency until his one-year term as chairperson expired May 15.
Control of the council rotates among the representatives from the six republics and two autonomous provinces that make up Yugoslavia.
Croatian representative Stipe Mesic, whose republic is bitterly at odds with Serbia, is scheduled to chair the presidency after Jovic.
'It's for you to decide and I will
respect any decision. Jovie told the legislature moments before it voted to impose a $75 fee on the airline.
Jovic's return to the presidency ensures that the council will continue to function. It is also likely to mean the resumption of the bickering among Serbia and the reformed republics of Slovenia and Croatia.
The two westermost republics seek a loose federation of states in Yugoslavia and have threatened to secede from the union if they fail.
But Serbian leaders, who are closely allied with some of the nation's military chiefs, seek to maintain a strong central government.
The Serbian Parliament is dominated by the Socialist Party of Serbian ruler Slobodan Milosevic, but it has been criticized for having put pressure on the Parliament.
Some members were worried that Jovic's withdrawal from the presidency could lead to civil war by the Russians. A statement from rumble.com deleted the republics.
Although the opposition holds 56 of Serbian Parliament's 250 seats, only 17 deputies voted for Jovic's resignation.
Army troops were called in for about 24 hours following the unrest. After continuing protests in Serbia, Jovic - a close ally of Milosevic - asked the other president members to declare a state of emergency across the nation.
Milosevic, who took over Serbia's Communist Party in 1967 and was confirmed as president of the republic in December popular elections, has faced the biggest challenge of his career as a series of protests the past two weeks.
When a majority of presidency members refused his call, Jovie announced his resignation.
He told Parliament yesterday that the presidency's refusal to accept emergency measures was aimed at paralyzing the Yugoslav army and fostering a peaceful settlement of the Yugoslav crisis and avoiding civil war.
Jovie also denounced the federal government of Premier Ante Markovic, a champion of market-oriented economic reforms.
Yugoslavia's 24 million peop.
are divided among 24
ethnic groups and three
major religions. The
nation has three official
languages, written in
both the Russian
(Cyrillic) and Latin
alphabets.
Glienocica
On March 9, two people died and 120 were injured in clashes between police and about 100,000 anti-Communist protesters.
Yugoslavia's 24 million people
Yugoslavia:
Population: 1.9 million
Language: Slovenian
Alphabet: Roman
Croats 3%
Other 8%
Slovenes 89%
Population: 4.6 million
Language: Croatian-Serbian
Alphabet: Roman
Croats 77%
Serbs 12%
Other 11%
Scandinavia
Population: 9.3 million
Language: Serbo-Croatian
Alphabet: Russian
Muslims Serbs 85%
3%
Other 12%
Bosnia and Herocovina
Population: 4.1 million
Language: Serbo-Croatian
Alphabet: Russo
Serbs —Muslims Croats —Other—
40% 32%
10% 18%
Kosovo
(Province of Serbia)
Population: 1.6 million
Language: Serbo-Croatian
Alphabet: Russian
Serbs 77%
Albanians 13%
Other 10%
Fragmented land of the southern Slavs
Austria Hungary
Map area Asia Africa
Italy Slovenia Ljubljana Zagreb Croatia Volvodina Romania
Bosnia-Hercegovina Belgrade Serbia Sarajevo Montenegro Kosovo Bulgaria Adriatic Sea Dubrovnik Skopje Macedonia Italy Albania Greece Tyrrhenian Sea
Population: 1.9 million
Language: Macedonian
Alphabet: Russian
Macedonia
Macedonians
Albanians
20% 67%
13%
Montenegro
Montenegro
Population: 600,000
Language: Serbo-Croatian
Alphabet: Russian
13% 18%
13% 69%
18%
Muslims Other
Arbs 19% 54%
Hungartians 27%
Other
19% 54%
27%
54%
Vojvodina
(Province of Serbia)
Population: 2.0 million
Language: Serbo-Croatian
Alphabet: Russian
Recent history
1918: Following Austro-Hungarian defeat in World War I, formed as Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes
1929: King Alexander I names country
Uygoslavia, begins dictatorship
1934: Croatian terrorists assassinate
Alexander
1941: Army overthrows pro-German government; Germany, Italy invade; Josis Tito organizes resistance army
1945: Becomes communist republic under Tito
1948: Soviets break diplomatic relations
1955: Relations with Soviets resumed
1974: Nine-member presidency created to lead after Tito's death
1980: Tito dies
1990: Four of Yugoslavia's six republics elect non-communist governments
SOURCE: Yugelisella Yearbook, Europa
Yearbook. World Book; Research by PAT CARR
VOL.101,No.115
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL
SOCIETY
TOFKEA: MS 86612
FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 1991
83-65
'Hawks hammer Hoosiers
NEWS: 864-4810
March madness continues to consume the University of Kansas. Last night, the Kansas basketball team moved into the Southeast Regional championship game by thrashing the Indiana Hoosiers 83-65 at the Charlotte Coliseum in North Carolina. The Jayhawks advance to the NCAA tournament final eight for the first time since 1988, when the team went on to defeat Oklahoma to capture the NCAA championship. Kansas' next opponent, the Arkansas Razorbacks, defeated Alabama 93-70 last night to gain a ticket to the title game. It is scheduled to begin at 3:40 p.m. and will be televised on channels 5 and 13. See stories and game photos on Page 13.
NORDEST
KU students flood Javhawk Boulevard after Kansas' 83-65 victory against Indiana. KU police blocked off part of Javhawk Boulevard.
Crowd celebrates basketball victory
By Jonathan Plummer and Patricia Rojas Kwanan staff writers
' We did it! ' We did it! ' he shouted,
' We killed them. This is the best.'
Gerry Breaux ran across Jayhawk Boulevard patting shoulders and shaking hands with strangers
Breaux, Rockford, III, senor, was one of about 300 people who crowded together in front of Wescue Hall after last night's Kansas victory, shouting "Let's go. Hawks!" and "We want Arkansas!"
Famed line the street like a receiving line, slapping the outstretched hands of passengers crammed into passing cars. Others simply shouted fists in the air joyfully greeting strangers.
Darrin Johnson, Kansas City, Mo. senior, said he arrived at Wescoe about the time the game ended.
KU police said traffic on Jayhawk Boulevard was blocked around 10:55 p.m. when cars began jamming the street.
"When I got here, there were about
to 20 people," he said. "the crowd
was like a lot of them."
Johnson said that the crowd was
'This is awesome. I didn't think they would win by as much as they did.
Jeff Hamilton Topeka junior
"If they win against Arkansas, it is going to be crazy" he said
not as big as the one that celebrated Kansas 1888 NCAA championship but that the excitement was there.
Jeff Hamilton, Topeka nomor who was celebrating in front of Wescoe, said the Jayhawks impressed him yesterday.
Planes collide; 27 feared dead
"This is awesome." Hamilton said. "I didn't think they would win by as much as they did. This is by far the best game I've seen this year."
Jessica Sparlin, Lenene freshman, said she and her sister. Nancy, who was visiting from New York, heard from her room at Watkins Scholars Hall up
"There was a lot of yelling," she said. "We just went nuts. It's a lot of fun."
The Associated Press
The Navy listed the crews as missing but there was little hope any of the crew members from the downd P-3 Orions survived.
SAN DIEGO — Two Navy submarine-hunting planes collided yesterday, and all 27 people aboard were feared dead in cold, choppy waters 60 miles off Southern California, authorities said.
The allweather planes were engaged in an anti-sabu marine warfare training exercise when they inched in bad weather, authorities said.
"I think we have to be realistic here," said Senior Chief Petty Officer Bob Howard, a Navy public affairs officer at North Island Naval Air Station. "It is very out of there. We're talking about what apparently is a mid air collision . . . two aircraft. I would say it would be very grim."
He said the accident occurred over the Pacific Ocean about 60 miles southwest of San Diego.
Search and rescue teams spotted some debris from the planes but found no signs of life.
A Navy helicopter crew flying in the area and sailors from the destroyer USS Merrill all reported a ball of fire and loud explosion at about 4:30 a.m., Howard said during a briefing at North Island Naval Air Station.
The collision occurred as one P-3 Orion was arriving to relieve the other, which had just completed its part of the exercise. Howard said, "We unanimously uncontact how much contact the pilots had before the crash, he said."
Two U.S. Navy planes collide
Two Navy P-3 Orions collided in the air during a training mission off California's coast.
P-3 Orion
Length: 117 ft.
Crew: 10 to 14
Enlarged Area Calif.
Barstow
Los Angeles
Two Navy planes collide
10
Palm Springs
San Diego
9 30 Miles
Regents unsure of tuition increase
By Eric Nelson
Kansan staff writer
Not knowing the future actions of the Legislature as regards higher education financing, the Board of Education may in setting tuition rate increases.
The Regents were to decide whether to increase tuition for Fall 1992, but instead of planning for the new academic year, assisting on the coming academic year.
"Its seems to be changing moment to moment," Ray Hauke, director of planning and budget for the situation at yesterday's meeting.
A House amendment yesterday
reinstated $16 million for higher education in the state. But to receive $7.3 million of the money, the Regents would have to increase tuition by 20 percent for out-of-state students, 8 percent for in-state students and the largest Regents schools and 3 percent at the smaller schools.
For Fall 1991, the Regents originally planned to increase in-state tuition by 3 percent. The originally tuition out-of-state students was 10 percent.
Pittsburgh State University. Both schools are close to state lines, and enroll many students from neighboring states.
Robert Creighton, Regents chairman, said the large tuition increases were a special concern for the University of Kansas and
He said that if tuition were too high, neighboring students paying out-of-state tuition would be discouraged from enrolling.
Creighton said a three-tiered tuition schedule would be a possible solution.
The rates would be divided into three categories: in-state rates, out-of-state rates, and a rate for neighboring states, Creighton said.
The middle rate would serve as a compromise between the higher
out-of-state tuition and lower instate fees.
Regardless of future action, the Regents were optimistic about the action on the House floor.
"I was very pleased with the action taken yesterday because it is what I consider a breakthrough," Creighton said.
Stanley Koplik, executive director of the Regents, also was optimistic.
Koplik said that it was a good building block and encouragement, but that the Regents would have to wait for an outcome before any decisions concerning the budget could be made.
House approves education finance bill
By Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — What representatives giveth, senators taketh away.
That appears to be the scenario as the House approved the higher education financing bill yesterday after it was submitted to the Board of Regents institutions.
well as addressing the Regents systemwide budget bill, the full committee is broken into subcom- mitted work on individual Regents institutions.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig testified yesterday before the subcommittee that will review the KU budget.
The Senate Ways and Means committee will begin work on the bill today, and indications are that the tax increase, cuts will be made again.
Although he focused on KU's present budget concerns, he also called for full financing of Gov. Joan Finney's recommended budget, which would pump an additional 824 million into the Regents system.
'91 Kansas Legislature
“If the state has a true commitment to higher education, the means will be found to correct the current course and place us back on a course that will strengthen higher education and enable it to contribute more fully to the economic, social and cultural future of Kansas," he said.
Budget said that if the governor's recommended budget was fulfilled, unclassified employee salaries, the Margin of Excellence and classified employee salaries would be modified to what the House restored.
However, State Sen. Jim Allen, R-Ottawa, a member of the subcommittee, said there was little chance of finding the $18 million, much less of financing the governor's recommendations.
"I think we probably will cut some of what came over from the House," he said. "Specifically, the $16 million."
Allen said that the Senate Ways and Means committee had been cutting state budgets 2 to 3 percent
and that it would continue to do so until tax increases provided more revenue.
"The revenues are not there right now, and until the revenues are forthcoming, we have to operate from within our budget," he said. "When the revenues are there, and if they are there, then there will be a boost at the end of the session to build the universities back up."
But Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, said he hoped the House's $16 million restoration bill will be in the budget at session end.
"I hope the action taken by the House today will be sustained," he said yesterday. "I understand the state's financial position, but I think that the way to strengthen our condition is through education."
Unemployment numbers soar; recession may be worse than expected
WASHINGTON - The number of people filing new claims for unemployment benefits shot up to an eight-year high of 519,000 in the week ending March 9, the government said yesterday in a report viewed as a blow to hopes for a quick end to the recession.
The Associated Press
The Labor Department said initial claims rose by 45,000 from the previous week, hitting the highest level since the 546,000 filed during the first week of January in 1983. That was at the tail end of the last recession, the steep 1981-82 downturn.
Bush administration officials and Federal Reserve Chairperson Alan Greenspan have expressed the hope that a quick end to the Persian Gulf War, by providing a boost to consumer confidence, will help to ensure that the current recession will be short and mild.
However, private economists said yesterday's report on jobless claims was not an alarming sign.
"This suggests that more people are being laid off and it signifies a continuing weakening of the economy," said Samuel Kahan, chief economist at Fuji Securities Inc.
Chicago.
Kahan cautioned that the initial jobless claims report can be volatile from week to week. But he noted that the four-week claimunas has been moving higher since December.
Paul Getman, senior economist at Regional Financial Associates, said a number of U.S. industries — from airlines to food and clothing — were stressing with thousands of layoffs occurring.
mistic about the end of the recession.
He said that some analysts, lured by gains in the stock market, have been overly_pati-
The new jobless claims report was viewed as especially worrisome because it provided one of the first looks at how the economy was performing in March. Some economists said they expected the broader jobless report for the month to take another turn for the worse.
In a further gloomy assessment of the economy, the Chamber of Commerce said yesterday that its latest survey of 8,390 businesses nationwide found that more businesses were planning to fire workers than to hire them through August of this year.
The number of businesses forecasting that they would have to fire employees rose to 21.7 percent versus 17.8 percent expecting to be hiring workers.
The survey also found that 33.9 percent of the businesses expected their sales would decline in coming months versus 35.3 percent forecasting an increase in sales.
This marked a deterioration since the chamber's last survey in September. At that time, 18 percent of businesses expected to lay off workers and 28 percent were expecting a sales decline.
---
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.101,No.115
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING:864-4358
KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL
SOLITIEN.
TUPEA, KS 64112
FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 1991
83-65
NEWS: 864-4810
'Hawks hammer Hoosiers
March madness continues to consume the University of Kansas. Last night, the Kansas basketball team moved into the Southeast Regional championship game by thrashing the Indiana Hoosiers 83-65 at the Charlotte Coliseum in North Carolina. The Jayhawks advance to the NCAA tournament final eight for the first time since 1988, when the team went on to defeat Oklahoma to capture the NCAA championship. Kansas' next opponent, the Arkansas Razorbacks, defeated Alabama 93-70 last night to gain a ticket to the title game. It is scheduled to begin at 3:40 p.m. and will be televised on channels 5 and 13. See stories and game photos on Page 13.
WONDERFUL
KU students flood Javhawk Boulevard after Kansas' 83-65 victory against Indiana. KU police blocked off part of Javhawk Boulevard.
Crowd celebrates basketball victory
Bv Jonathan Plummer
and Patricia Rojas Kansas staff writers
Gerry Breaux ran across Jayhawk Boulevard patting shoulders and shaking hands with strangers
"We did it! We did it!" he shouted.
"We killed them. This is the best."
Breaux, Rockford, III. senor, was one of about 300 people who crowded together in front of Wescoe Hall after last night's Kansas victory, shouting "Let's go, 'Hawks!' and 'We want Arkansas!'"
Famined the street like a receiving line slapping the outstretched hands of passengers crammed into passing cars. Others simply shouted, fists in the air joyfully greeting strangers.
KU police said traffic on Jayhawk Boulevard was blocked off around 10:55 p.m. when cars began jamming the street.
Darrin Johnson, Kansas City, Mo. senior, who he arrived at Wescoe
"When I got here, there were about
to 20 people. he said "the crowd
had been out."
Johnson said that the crowd was
'This is awesome. I didn't think they would win by as much as they did.
Jeff Hamilton Topeka junior
"If they win against Arkansas, it is going to be crazy" he said
not as big as the one that celebrated Kansas 1988 NCAA championship but that the excitement was there.
Jeff Hamilton, Topeka junior who was celebrating in front of Wescot, said the Jayhawks impressed him yesterday.
Planes collide; 27 feared dead
"This is awesome." Hamilton said,
"I didn't think they would win by as much as they did. This is by far the best game I've seen this year."
Jessica Sparlin, Lenene freshman,
said she and her sister, Nance, who
was visiting from New York, heard
of a student in her room at Watkins
S scholarship Hall.
"There was a lot of yelling," she said. "We just went nuts. It's a lot of fun."
The Associated Press
The Navy listed the crews as missing but there was little hope any of the crew members from the downed P-3 Orion survived.
SAN DIEGO — Two Navy submarine- hunting planes collided yesterday, and all 27 crew aboard were feared dead in cold, choppy waters 60 miles off Southern California, authorities said.
The all-wear planes were engaged in an anti-submarine warfare training exercise when they coiled in bad weather, authorities told.
"I think we have to be realistic here," said Senior Chief Petty Officer Bob Howard, a Navy public affairs officer at North Island Naval Air Station. "It is very cold out there. We're talking about what apparently I would air-collision . . . two aircraft. I would say it would be very grim."
Search and rescue teams spotted some debris from the planes but found no signs of life.
A Navy helicopter crew flying in the area and sailors from the destroyer USM Herrill all reported a ball of fire and loud explosion at 10 a.m., Howard said during a briefing at North Island Air Naval Station.
He said the accident occurred over the Pacific Ocean about 60 miles southwest of San Diego.
The collision occurred as one P-3 Orion was arriving to relieve the other, which had just completed its part of the exercise. Howard said, "We were uncertain how much contact the pilots had before the crash, he said."
Two U.S. Navy planes collide
Two Navy P-3 Ortons collided in the air during a training mission off California's coast.
P-3 Orion
Length: 117 ft.
Crew: 10 to 14
Enlarged Area Calif.
Barstow
Los Angeles
Two Navy planes collide
10
Palm Springs
San Diego
Miles
Regents unsure of tuition increase
Rv Eric Nelson
Kansan staff writer
Not knowing the future actions of the Legislature as regards higher education financing, the Board of Regulatory Affairs in setting tuition rate increases.
The Regents were to decide whether to increase tuition for Fall 1992, but instead of planning for it, they were instead focusing on the coming academic year.
"It seems to be changing moment to moment." Ray Hauke, director of planning and budget for the situation at yesterday's meeting.
A House amendment yesterday
reinstated $16 million for higher education in the state. But to receive $7 3 million of the money, the Regents would have to increase tuition by 20 percent for out-of-state students, 8 percent for in-state students and the largest Regents schools and 3 percent at the smaller schools.
For Fall 1991, the Regents originally planned to increase in-state tuition by 3 percent. The originality of this decision out-of-state students was 10 percent.
Robert Creighton, Regents chairman, said the large tuition increases were a special concern for the University of Kansas and
Pittsburgh State University. Both schools are close to state lines, and enroll many students from neighboring states.
He said that if tuition were too high, neighboring students paying out-of-state tuition would be discouraged from enrolling.
Creighton said a three-tiered tuition schedule would be a possible solution.
The rates would be divided into three categories: in-state rates, out-of-state rates, and a rate for neighboring states. Creedton said.
The middle rate would serve as a compromise between the higher
out-of-state tuition and lower instate fees.
Regardless of future action, the Regents were optimistic about the action on the House floor.
"I was very pleased with the action taken yesterday because it is what I consider a breakthrough," Creighton said.
Stanley Koplik, executive director of the Regents, also was optimistic
Koplik said that it was a good building block and encouragement, but that the Regents would have to wait for an outcome before any decisions concerning the budget could be made.
House approves education finance bill
By Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — What representatives giveth, senators taketh away.
That appears to be the scenario as the House approved the higher education financing bill yesterday on Tuesday, and the Board of Regents institutions.
As well as addressing the Regents systemwide budget bill, the full committee is broken into subcommittees to work on individual Regents institutions.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig testified yesterday before the subcommittee that will review the KU budget.
The Senate Ways and Means committee will begin work on the bill today, and indications are that it will increase, cuts will be made again
Although he focused on KU's present budget concern, he also called for full financing of Gov. Joan Finney's recommended budget which would pump an additional $824 million into the Regents system.
'91 Kansas Legislature
"If the state has a true commitment to higher education, the means will be found to correct the current course and place us back on a course that will strengthen higher education and enable it to contribute more fully to the economic, social and cultural future of Kansas." he said.
Budig said that if the governor's recommended budget was fulfilled, unclassified employee salaries, theMargin of Excellence and classified employee salaries would be related to what the House restored.
"I think we probably will cut some of what came over from the House," he said. "Specifically, the $16 million."
However, State Sen. Jim Allen, R-Ottawa, a member of the subcommittee, said there was little chance of finding the $16 million, much less of financing the governor's recommendations.
Alen said that the Senate Ways and Means committee had been cutting state budgets 2 to 3 percent
and that it would continue to do so until tax increases provided more revenue.
"The revenues are not there right now, and until the revenues are forthcoming, we have to operate from within our budget," he said. "When the revenues are there, and if they are there, then there will be a boast at the end of the session to build the universities back up."
But Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor, said he hoped the House's $16 million restoration package be in the budget at session end.
"I hope the action taken by the House today will be sustained," he said yesterday. "I understand the state's financial position, but I think our way to strengthen our economic condition is through education."
Unemployment numbers soar; recession may be worse than expected
WASHINGTON — The number of people filing new claims for unemployment benefits shot up to an eight-year high of $190,000 in the week ending March 9, the government said yesterday in a report viewed as a blow to booes for a quick end to the recession.
The Associated Press
The Labor Department said initial claims rose by 45,000 from the previous week, hitting the highest level since the 546,000 filed during the first week of January in 1983. That was at the tail end of the last recession, the steep 1981-82 downturn.
bush administration officials and Federal Reserve Chairperson Alan Greenspan have expressed the hope that a quick end to the Persian Gulf War, by providing a boost to consumer confidence, will help to ensure that the current recession will be short and mild.
"This suggests that more people are being laid off and it signifies a continuing weakening of the economy," said Samuel Kahan, chief economist at Fuji Securities Inc. in
However, private economists said yesterday's report on jobless claims was not an alarming sign.
Chicago
Kahan cautioned that the initial jobless claims report can be volatile from week to week. But he noted that the four-week period of claims has been moving higher since December.
The Putnam, senior economist at Regional Financial Associates, said a number of U.S. industries from airlines to hotels stresses stress on stress stress with thousands of laufs occurring.
He said that some analysts, lured by gains in the stock market, have been overly optimistic about the end of the recession.
The new jobless claims report was viewed as especially worrisome because it provided one of the first looks at how the economy was performing in March. Some economists said they expected the broader jobless report for the month to take another turn for the worse.
In a further gloomy assessment of the economy, the Chamber of Commerce said yesterday that its latest survey of 8,390 businesses nationwide found that more businesses were planning to fire workers than to hire them through August of this year.
The number of businesses forecasting that they would have to fire employees rose to 21.7 percent versus 17.8 percent expecting to be hiring workers.
The survey also found that 33.9 percent of the businesses expected their sales would decline in coming months versus 35.3 percent forecasting an increase in sales.
1
This marked a deterioration since the chamber's last survey in September. At that time, 18 percent of businesses expected to lay off workers and 28 percent were expecting a sales decline.
2
Friday, March 22, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
TODAY
Cloudy
HI:59'
LO:33'
52/39 57/34
64/37
61/45 48/29
69/44
B5/69
Kansas Forecast
Mostly cloudy with a chance for showers. Cooler. High 59/ Low 33.
3-day Forecast
Saturday - Cloudy. High 62/
Low 37.
Salina 52/30 KG
Dodge City 54/34
54/32 Wichita 57/35
Sunday - Mostly sunny. High 66/ Low 38.
Monday - Mostly sunny. High 68/ Low 42.
forecast by Michael Gonow
Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer-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 $50. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
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1. 市场概况
随着技术的进步和消费者需求的不断变化,电子产品市场呈现出新的趋势。以下是电子产品市场的相关数据:
- **收入**:电子产品的总收入约 857.6 亿美元(2023 年)。其中,智能手机、平板电脑、笔记本电脑、电子书阅读器等收入排名前列。
- **利润**:电子产品的净利润约为 45.7 亿美元(2023 年)。其中,手机、平板电脑、电子书阅读器等利润排名前列。
- **增长率**:电子产品的年增长率保持在 2.5%至3%之间,是电子产品市场的重要特征。
- **竞争格局**:电子产品市场竞争激烈,品牌知名度高,市场份额稳定。
- **政策影响**:政府出台了多项政策,鼓励电子产业的发展,如补贴、税收优惠等。
2. 关键问题
- **技术挑战**:电子产品的技术挑战主要包括芯片短缺、数据安全等问题。
- **供应链问题**:电子产品的供应链可能受到供应链中断、原材料价格波动等因素的影响。
- **用户需求**:电子产品的用户需求越来越复杂,个性化、个性化、个性化等需求成为主要趋势。
- **市场规模**:电子产品的市场规模越来越大,市场渗透率不断提高。
- **竞争格局**:电子产品的竞争格局面临调整,品牌知名度和市场份额 continue to grow。
3. 发展策略
- **技术创新**:加强电子产品的技术创新,提升产品质量和性能。
- **合作与联盟**:加强与国际企业、行业协会的合作,建立全球化的合作平台。
- **投资与发展**:加大对电子产业的投资力度,支持新企业的成长。
- **品牌建设**:强化品牌建设,提高品牌知名度,吸引更多用户。
- **消费者教育**:加强对消费者的教育,提高电子产品的使用率和满意度。
4. 未来展望
- **持续创新**:电子产品将继续采用最新的技术和研发方法,不断推出创新的产品和服务。
- **国际化**:电子产品将逐渐向国际市场拓展,扩大销售渠道。
- **市场竞争力**:电子产品将继续保持竞争力,满足消费者的需求。
- **可持续发展**:电子产品将继续采用可持续发展的生产方式,减少对环境的负面影响。
---
**作者简介**
李颖颖,博士研究生,电子产品设计领域专家。
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 22, 1991
3
Program will teach education for deaf
By Amy Francis Kansan staff writer
The year of preparation is almost complete for the graduate program in deaf education at the University of Kansas Medical Center, and the program director said it would be ready for the fall semester.
"it's going to be a real quality program," said Barbara Laetke-Stahlin, director of an professor at the university's program in computer science to get ready for next year.
The program is designed to teach students how to teach people with hearing impairments, she said. Early childhood deafness, elementary deafness and secondary deafness will be the educational levels of study.
All the areas of study will include special education classes, she said. One-third of the program is supposed to focus on special education because students with special needs also have a disability such as blindness or mental retardation.
'We're going to be looking at all ways to communicate with deaf children.'
— Luetke-Stahlman program director
Uluetke-Stahliman said that one of the strong points of the program was that it would teach students how to teach others to use sign language as well as how to talk.
"We're going to be looking at all ways to communicate with deaf children." she said.
Larry Marston, associate professor of speech, language and hearing, said, "Signing is usually very helpful in teaching sign language to spoken language is more difficult."
The program is designed to last two years for full-time students and five years for part-time students. But the program has largely moved to a part-time student.
"Almost all the classes, if not all of the classes will be offered after 4 o'clock," Luetke-Stahman said. "We are positioned to the working person."
The classes will be divided between the Med Center, the Lawrence campus.
The original deaf education program started at the Med Center in 1949, said Luekte-Stahlman. It closed in March 1899.
"There was just a decision being made as to either to operate the ship or not."
The decision to bring back the program was made last year. Luekte-Stahlman said she was hired as director in August.
The program's renewal was due in large part to the community, she said. There are 10,000 deal residents in the area near the Med Center.
A committee comprising community members involved in deaf education helped plan the new curriculum, she said.
"The whole university is very aware of the deaf community," Lueket-Stahlian said. "There was a significant interest in the commun-
"The teachers of the deaf that are out there are very excited about the curriculum," she said.
PENNY LEE
Sians of life
Veterans get homecoming in Lawrence
Kim Wasinger, Hays sophomore, waters African violets at Pence Garden Center and Greenhouse, 15th and New York streets. Michelle Cusumano, greenhouse manager, said business had increased steadily with the advent of spring. Recent shipments of trees, shrubs and perennials have been popular sellers.
Soldiers glad to exit gulf area
By Patricia Rojas
Kansan staff writer
It was a welcoming home of veterans by veterans.
Members of the local Veterans of Foreign Wars post conducted a reception yesterday for technical sergeants Steve Klopfenstein and Stephen Lawrence veterans of the Persian Gulf War who came home last week.
Both veterans, members of the 190th Air Force Unit, said they were pleased they had been sent to the Middle East.
Klopfenstein said he thought many of the soldiers who were not deployed to the gulf during the war were disappointed to stay home.
"If I had been the guy to stay behind, I would've been really hurt," he said. "I think very, very few people didn't want to go."
When the U.S. soldiers first arrived in the gulf region in August, the Saudi soldiers did not understand what was happening, Klopfenstein said.
"They thought they were being invaded," he said "When they found out we were there to protect their country, they couldn't have been nicer to us. They were as curious about us as we were about them."
Klofenstein said that what impressed him most about the Saudi soldiers was their religious integrity. Most Saudi soldiers pray at least five times a day. When it was prayer time, they stop what ever they were doing.
"They had rules to follow, and those rules would not be broken for
'When they found out we were there to defend their country, they couldn't have been nicer to us. They were as curious about us as we were about them.'
- Steve Klopfenstein technical sergeant
anything." he said.
"You got used to it," he said. "There was no use in getting upset. It was just the way it was."
Often the bus that transported him from his post to the Air Force base where he worked would be late because the Saudi soldiers on board had stopped to pray for about 20 minutes.
Groves said the U.S. soldiers had to watch their actions carefully to ensure that they did not offend the Saudis.
"A hand gesture over there can get you in trouble." Groves said
He said he learned that the Saudis considered it rude to sit down and cross one's legs while showing the bottom of one's shoe.
Despite the cultural differences, the Saudi and U.S. soldiers worked well together, he said.
Legislators ask Bush to stop military ban
"I think what we've done is what we needed to do," he said. "It's time for us to get out and let them take care of it."
However, Groves said he thought now we must pull out of the Middle East.
Kansan staff writer
By Lara Gold
President Bush should end the military's ban on gay and lesbian enlistment after an estimated 50,000 gay and lesbians served in the Persian Gulf War. 40 House members said in a letter to the president.
"While enduring the same hardships of war as their non-gay colleagues and making the same sacrifices, gay and lesbian service members must hide an integral part of themselves." stated the letter.
The letter was distributed by Rep. Gerry Studds, D-Mass, who is an acknowledged homosexual.
The number 50,000 is based on the
theory that 10 percent of the U.S. population is homosexual, and therefore, according to the letter, 10 percent of the 560,000 uniformed men and women who served in the war would have been gay or lesbian
Janie Simms, representative for the assistant secretary of defense for public affairs, said she could not confirm whether gays and lesbians were enlisted in the military and had served in the war.
The letter said many gays and lesbians had enlisted in the military and had been concealing their sexual orientation.
"We submit that discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation is as important as any other difference."
of race," the legislators said in the letter. "The only difference is that gay people cannot be detected simply by the color of their skin."
Mike Sullivan, co-director for Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, said the military's ban on gays and lesbians is problematic and blatantly discriminatory.
"Their (the Defense Department) own studies have disqualified that statement," he said.
Sullivan said the president needed to take action to end the discrimination.
"He said there was no room for any discrimination in this country," he said. "I would like to see him back that up. It's long overdue."
The Human Rights Campaign, a gay and lesbian lobbying group based in Washington, D.C., has been appointed by the Department of Defense's policy.
Karen Friedman, deputy legislative director for the Human Rights Campaign, said that the president had called for an end to all discrimination but that the military still was fighting against gays and lesbians.
"The military thinks gays and lesbians would be bad for morale," she said. "They say homosexuals are likely to be blackmailed."
Friedman said the gay and lesbian community nationwide was trying harder to effect a change in the
military because of the positive climate after the United States and the allied forces won the war.
The Department of Defense study shows that gay and lesbians are as well-suited or better suited as their heterosexual counterparts for military training. The department asked a study titled "Gays in Uniform: the Pentagon's Secret Report."
"It is hypocritical," Friedman said. "On one hand all these gays and lesbians can risk their lives for our country, but when they come back they are treated like dirt and without dignity."
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
Regents put improved-English program on hold
By Eric Nelson
Kansan staff writer
After the Board of Regents tabled the student advisory committee's proposal for improving English proficiency for foreign instructors last month, a action was expected at yesterday's meeting.
But after the smoke from the debate cleared, the motion was tabled for another 90 days.
The motion calls for the minimum qualifying score on the Test of Spoken English to be raised from 220 to 240 out of 300. It also calls for a one-semester probationary period for candidates failing the exam and a review committee of three faculty members and at least one student
when hiring faculty.
The 240 minimum score and one-seme-
tration probationary period are already KU require-
Del Brinkman, vice cemployer for academic affairs, gave a presentation on behalf of the
He said that although the University of Kansas had implemented the proposed guidelines, the situation still was not perfect.
"We still have an isolated problem, but overall, things have improved," he said.
issues needed to be identified on each campus. He said that although the guidelines were
Brinkman said that to find solutions, specific issues needed to be identified on each cane.
working well at KU, how they would affect other schools would vary from campus to campus.
John Breazeale, executive vice president for academic affairs at Wichita State University, was concerned with the proposal and its applications for foreign instructors at Wichita State.
Wichita State has recorded more complaints from students because of inadequate English skills than any other Regents school. In the past year, 67 complaints have been filed.
Breezeale said Wichita State's pool of instructors to choose from would be cut in half if the minimum English test score were raised
to 240.
Other Wichita State officials suggested that reasons other than the lower minimum test score were causing the problem. They requested further study of the situation.
Regent Donald Slawson, of Wichita, suggested that more time should be taken with the issue because it could result in the loss of faculty.
The issue was eventually tabled, but support for the proposal and its implementation for Fall 1991 was made clear.
Robert Creighton, Regents chairperson, said that many times established guidelines resulted in positive action.
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Friday, March 22, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Police brutality
Public scrutiny will not remove police violence; recruits need education about when to use force
T the long arm of the law has reached too far.
The recent nationwide focus on police brutality has turned up some alarming figures. In some large cities, such as Dallas, as many as 2,000 complaints were filed during a five-year period from 1984 to 1989. One only can guess how many more have gone unreported out of fear.
The issue has entered the spotlight because of the recent beating of Rodney King, a motorist who was stopped by Los Angeles police officers for speeding. A video tape of the incident, filmed by a private citizen, showed officers beating King with clubs and shocking him with stun guns.
The beating left King with nine skull fractures, a shattered eye socket and cheekbone, a broken leg, a concussion, injuries to both knees and nerve damage that left his face partly paralyzed.
Of the at least 21 officers who were at the scene, only four have been indicted. One of the officers involved was a graduate of the Kansas City, Kan., Police Academy and a former Shawnee officer.
The Midwest is not without incidents of police brutality. A television crew videotaped
Kansas City police officers assaulting a suspect last year. Other cases made the news as well.
Last week the U.S. Attorney General said the Justice Department would review all police brutality complaints from the last six years and determine if patterns such as race and location exist. But studies do not automatically change policies and actions.
Local police departments need to start at square one and require stricter standards from recruits. The training process must include instruction on how officers should deal with difficult arrests. Guidelines also need to specify when force can be used and to what degree. When officers are accused of brutality, a thorough investigation should be made of the incident by an outside law enforcement agency.
Police officers are charged with an important responsibility to uphold the law. When they step beyond the boundaries of their authority, the public's trust of law enforcement is severely weakened.
The police must not become judge, jury and executioner. And it's a community's responsibility to demand limits.
Stacy Smith for the editorial board
Laughable policy
Start drug enforcement at home,not in Bolivia
T The U.S. government has proposed a backward method to fight the war on drugs.
Last week, a Bolivian government official announced that the U.S. government would spend $33 million to train 500 Bolivian soldiers for anti-drug operations. The program, agreed to by both countries last May, is designed to stop the illegal cocaine trade between traffickers in Bolivia and the United States.
The effort is there, but the execution is all wrong. The result of training Bolivian soldiers to fight the drug lords in their country will not stop cocaine trafficking for any significant amount of time. The more likely result: Traffickers will find other places to do their dirty work and continue to rake in
addicts' money.
The U.S. government should take the $33 million and put it toward anti-drug education programs in U.S. schools. Teaching U.S. children how to cope with the problems that life presents will result in their ability to resist drugs even if the temptation lies before them.
The U.S. government's latest approach in battling the country's drug problem is laugable. It is about as realistic as a dieter's attempt to remove all of the food from his or her home. It is time for the U.S. government to realize that drugs always will be around. The real challenge is to make U.S. citizens strong enough and smart enough to oppose them.
- Editorials reflect the opinion of the University Dailly Kansan editorial board. Editorials appear in a box on the left side of the page. Editorials reflect the majority opinion of the board but not necessarily the opinion of the editor.
Carol Krekeler for the editorial board
Opinions expressed in guest and staff columns and cartoons are solely those of the author or artist. Views expressed in columns and cartoons are not necessarily shared by the Kansan.
BAM!
Buckner 3/9
"I've Fallen and
I can't get up!"
Let's forget the mustache, what Iraq needs is stability
“T
ell me if I'm wrong."
Slats Grobnik said.
"But when this war was
going on, didn't we want to yank off Saddam's ears, bash in his nose, feed him to the hyenas and even pull out his mustache one hair at a time"?
The proper term is "take him out." But, yes, it was generally accepted that his demise would be no great loss to the human race.
Yes, there are foreign policy experts who think that, all things considered, it would be preferable for Saddam's group to retain control of Iraq and to put down the various corrections that are now breaking out.
"That's what I thought. Then how come I'm reading that some of our Washington deep thinkers say that the only thing might be for him to stay in power?"
"I don't get it. He's still a rotten guy, ain't he?"
Oh, yes. Despicable, loathsome, cruel, murderous, totally without conscience or remorse or any weakness with it. He even cheats on his wife, the cad.
PETER M. CUNNINGHAM
The Shites. Saddam is a Sunni, although it's rumored that he isn't very devout and is probably a closet Muslim. He doesn't even say, "Alah bless you."
"Then why ain't we cheering for the Iraqis who are trying to have a revolution against him?" Like all Muslims, he knows kinds of Muslims that Saddam isn't.
Mike
Royko
Syndicated
columnist
"Whatever. If these people got the guts to rise up against him, how come
we're not on their side, maybe slipping them some ammo, or at least saying that we'll give a million dollars reward to anyone who brings us his mustache, including the lip, plus a trip to Disney World?"
Because we don't want to see Iraq destabilized. And if the Kurds were able to become autonomous, with their own separate country, and if the Shites, who are in the majority, would be destabilized, and that would lead to further destabilization of the entire Arab world.
"Who cares if Iraq gets destabilized? They didn't care if they destabilized Kuwait. And why shouldn't the Kurds have their own country, though they'd be smart to change their name. Kurd. It sounds like sour milk."
You have to look at the big picture. It is feared that if the Kurds broke away and Saddam's party was overthrown by the Shites, then it would open the door for Iran to take partial or even total control of Iraq. And because of its recent weakness it would put Iran in a much stronger position to spread its fanatical Islamic fundamentalism to the Arab world, which is its goal.
"Wait a minute. You mean now we got to worry about Iran taking over Iraq? And that Iran is a bigger problem to us than Iraq?"
Oh, yes. it is been a major problem
of the Shah of Iran, who was our
spiritual leader.
"I remember him. Wasn't he kind of a mean guy? Secret police torturing and bumping people off?" Stealing the right? Kind of a bully and a crook?
True. But he was our bully and crook. Anyway, that's why we sort of supported Iraq in its eight-year war with Iran, because Iran hates us and Iraq was trying to prevent Iran from taking their fundamentalist revolution
"So what would happen if Iran all of a sudden decides to invade Iraq? Now that we wrecked Iraq's army, it is now that we have invaded that, whose side are we on? Iraq's?"
It's unlikely that Iran would do that, but some experts have said that, yes, we would have to support Iraq. It would be in our national interest and it would be necessary to prevent destabilization of the Mideast.
"Hey, that would be something.
Then I had to stop hating Saddam for a while and start hating the guy then, and I don't even know his name."
Mike Royko is a syndicated columnist with the Chicago Tribune.
Spring break is best spent far awav from familv members
W that I have to tell you is of such great importance to your sanity and general
♥ your sanity and general welfare that the government is planning to send this column to every residence hall, fraternity and sorority house across the United States to ensure the message is spread.
The message is as follows: Never, ever (not even if you're threatened with something really terrible like a poetry reading by Brigitte Nielsen) or parents that you have no plans for breast cancer results are not pretty. Yes, my friends, I am a survivor of a spring break spend with parents.
This is my hellish tale.
"Camping," my dad said beaming,
"The whole family is going campin
My whole notion of camping in Kansas had consisted of pitching a tent in a wheat field and bass fishing in a manmade lake. Nonetheless,
I am very grateful to you.
Matt
Walsh
Staff columnist
Dad passed around a brochure for a campsite that looked like the Midwest version of a redwood forest.
"I'll be great," he said. "This trip will bring the family together!" Everybody seemed to warm up to the idea, even my mother, who made it happen. I was resisting that there would be a mail within a 20-mile radius of the campsite.
I think everybody had different expectations about the trip. My mom thought we all "camp out" in a backyard or on the beach behind it. Both of my brothers thought we were going to go bear hunting and eat off the land. My
father seemed to think he was not only going to catch the bear with his sons, but also build a log cabin with trees he chopped down himself. I would either freeze or stave to die or have one of Dad's trees fall on us.
The big day came, and we all squeezed into the family roadster. We were all decked out in matching L.L. Bean camping outfits my mom had ordered for just such an occasion. Along the way I experienced the true meaning of that "family closeness" Dad had mentioned. The back-seat of the car looked like packed sardines on vinyl, and my brother's elbow had found a permanent resting place deep in my side. Then the dreaded car songs began. The only songs my entire family knows all the words to, however, are television jingles. After the 300th round of the "Brady Bunch" theme, we pulled up to Big Bob's Great Plains Wonderful
World o' Nature Campsite and Souve nir Shop.
"Well, I'm sure it was a lovely park, before that darn fire wiped out my yard," she said.
Possibly detecting our disappointment — my mother was crying — Dad tried to brighten our outlines.
We pulled up to our campsite and tested our tents on the ground to be set up.
"Dad, I'm really sorry that cologne I bought for Christmas is so bad," she said.
I bought you for Christmas is so bad, "i gasped after inhaling the air. "Oh, yeah," my friend smiled sheepishly. "I found out at the registration office that we're two girls now." You can only smell it on windy days.
My father had attempted to divert attention away from this fact by calling my brothers over to see up the Army Bullet outlet at the Army Surplus.
After seeing the outhouses pro-
used every 50 miles along the path, I thanked God I'm a man. When you're a guy on a camping trip and nature calls, all you have to do is unzip the tent and remember to wear shoes the next morning.
Dinner was an event. Dad forgot the camping stove, and my mom was sure someone had been cremated on the complementary grill. After a delightful feast of hot dogs grilled on the car's cigarette lighter, my father (who was now nicknamed "idiot" by my mother) informed us that he'd miscupped the sleeping bags and that we were one short. Dad knew at this stage in his popularity not to ask Mom to share breakfast with me. Old Faithful" for a reason. I opted to just go without and sleep in the car. All the while I was thinking how lucky I was not to be at the beach in Padre or Cancun, burdened with all those scandally cold beauties jogging on the beach and
having to go from party to party for a whole week (subtle sarcast).
The next morning, after Pop-Tarts cooked on an open lighter, Idiot called the family together for a group hug. Drawing the line, I said, "Dad, I know this is your job," but they say too many of these may lead one of your children to grow up, buy a rifle and attain a copy of the president's travel itinerary."
It worked. I got out of the clutches of the group hug, and it gave Mom more time to sew her vooodoo doll in Dad's likeness.
I hope I have shed some light on the importance of making outside plans on school breaks. It's great to spend quality time with family, but too much may be hazardous to your health. Have fun over your future breaks. I'll be somewhere in the Southern Hemisphere if I can help it.
Matt Walsh is an Emporia freshman planning to major in journalism.
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Features | Jill Harrington Classified manager. Kim Crowder
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the university signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas will be asked to use their email addresses.
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the Kenyan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest column and tannons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kenyan newroom, 113 Staffer Flint Hall.
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A SECRET STUDIO
University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 22, 1991
5
KU students turn into class clowns
Bv Jonathan Plummer
Kansan staff writer
THE BROOKLYN COLLEGE
Green, white, violet and black balloons bent into the shapes of animals are piled up three-deep in the center of the room.
Tena Santauilia explains the art of forming balloon animals to Shelly Calkins, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore. Six KU students participated in a training session last night to learn the art of clowning.
Magic foam animals disappear, then reappear in a velvet bag.
People are singing a song about animals, using their arms to imitate an elephant's trunk or a swan's neck. Claws are in training.
Clowns are in training.
Six people, all KU students, took their first lessons in becoming a clan, pirate or fairy last night from Tena Santaularia, owner of It's Your Party, 1601 W. 23rd St.
Though about 24 people answered her ads, she narrowed the pool, she said
Santaularia said that she had performed as a clown at children's parties for eight years but that demand was great enough for her to advertise for help.
Shelly Calkins, Kansas City, Kan,
sophomore, said one of the reasons
she was inspired to answer the an-
drew a trip to the circus she made two
"I got to meet all the clowns and thought that was really neat," she said. "I got balloons and all their autographs. It was really cool."
Though she has worked with children before, Calkins said she was still a little intimidated by the training at a children's party, for an hour.
"The hard part is thinking up things to do," she said. "With children you have to fulfill all their hopes and expectations. I have to be everything to them, and I'm only Shelly. I have to be a celebrity."
Rachel Crosby, Overland Park freshman, said that because she had been a camp counselor she already had experience with children but that
learning to bend balloons into the shapes of animals would take some work.
"Most of us have good ideas, but we have to learn the kind of stuff you don't already know," she said while twisting a long, green balloon.
lor, said the secret to keeping children harrow was to stay a little lazy.
Senate coalitions field 13 graduate candidates
Kansan staff writer
"They like a little goodness; they like you to play around," he said. "They like it when you are serious, but they love it when you can do something hysterical."
Bv Michael Christie
The Student Senate elections April 10 and 11 promise to be somewhat historic, as not every graduate student will vote for Senate will win automatically.
Thirteen candidates will battle for the 12 graduate seats April 10 and 11.
Last year, only nine candidates ran for 12 seats, assuming a victory. Currently, only 10 graduate senators sit in Senate, leaving two spaces vacant.
The Facts coalition has six graduate candidates, along with a full slate of 52 undergraduate candidates. Offer offers seven graduate candidates and a full undergraduate ticket.
"Another aspect of the campaign is the people behind the issues," he said.
Darren Fulcher and Ai Lowen, Impact executive candidates, picked the impact ticket so that it included a group of student leaders, Fulcher said.
The Impact platform calls for a minority recruitment and retention program that would involve mostly students.
The program calls for minority students on campus to recruit and be mentors to new minority students.
"We believe you can't preach
diversity unless you practice it." Pulcher said at the Impact kickoff
Jason McIntosh and Giles Smith head the Facts coalition. Their platform calls for increased access to formation at the University of Kansas.
Brett Siwak, St. Louis senior, said he was having better luck.
The Facts plan includes a note-taking service for students in large lecture classes.
Other universities, such as Stanford University, have similar programs. McIntosh said.
"I'm getting good at it," he said while crafting a balloon fish. "But a fish is pretty easy. I can turn out those fish."
Better access to information also should include more information regarding closed classes during enrolment, he said.
Both coalitions touch on similar issues with the rest of their platforms, such as the campus environment, safety, graduate issues and state issues regarding the University.
McIntosh said that the Senate needed to be more careful with the money it allocated because enrollment increases like the ones in the early 1980s probably would not hap- ne. But the Senate said the fund cannot be counted on to grow.
Siwak, also a former camp counse-
"Those days are over," McIntosh said.
On campus
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will sponsor a spring dance at 9atight at the Party Room in the Burge Union.
Geography Colloquium will meet at 3:30 p.m. today at 1712 Hall W.
The Arkansas Bear production will be presented at 7 tonight and at 10:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Saturday at Schoolhouse School, 530 W.Slow Road, Sawyer.
KU Wellness Center will sponsor "An Introduction to Lifting Weights" workshop at 4 p.m. today at the Weight Room in Robinson Center.
- Jayhawk Audubon Society will conduct a field trip at 8 a.m. Saturday to either Clinton Lake or Lone Star Lake. Anyone interested should meet leader Phil Wedge at the Sunnyside parking lot on the KU campus
- Voice will meet at 10 a.m. Saturday at Ecumenical Christian Ministries. 1204 Oread Ave.
KU Gamers and Role-players will meet at 2 p.m. Saturday at the
Applications for KU's Japan Summer Institute in Lawrence's sisterity, Hiratsuka, Japan, and for KU Study Abroad programs, summer and academic year or semester, are available at 203 Laincott.
■ The Lawrence Region Men's and Women's Widowed Group will go to Crown Center for the play "Death Trap" and a private buffet at the Blue Ribbon Cafe. The bus will leave Worth, Georgia, Sunday from Dillons. 900 W. John 81
Frontier Room in the Burge Union.
■ The Kiok literary and art magazine is accepting submissions of fiction, poetry, photographs and drawings. Submit them to room 400 in the Kansas Union or call 864-5223 for more information.
KU Art and Culture in New York program is accepting applications through March. The applications are from Gary Sharp at 3039 Wescote
Find anything and everything you ever wanted in the Kansan classifieds.
Corrections
graph in yesterday's Kansan was misidentified. The subject on the left was Marc Garlett.
- Because of a photographer's error, a subject in a Page 1 photo.
■ Because of a reporter's error, a Page 3 story in yesterday's Kansan included incorrect information. The department of art and design's July program in France has not been canceled.
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Friday, March 22, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
POLICE DEPT.
... If they kill me I will rise again in the people of El Salvador...
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African children haunted by rapid spread of AIDS
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Rapid population growth and the explosion of AIDS cast a bleak shadow over the health of Black African children, a government report said yesterday.
As many as 10 million sub-Saharan children under age 10 are expected to see one, or both of their parents die during this decade, and infant death rates may rise by 50 percent in some countries, the report said.
the Agency for International Development.
Malnutrition is the most important factor in early African childhood deaths. Some 30 percent of children between 12 months and 23 months old suffer from malnutrition, said the report by Health and Human Services Secretary Louis Sullivan and Ronald Roskens, administrator of
Sullivan and Roskens, in the request of President Bush, led a U.S. delegation on a trip to seven African countries in January. They visited the Ivory Coast, Malawi, Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa, Uganda and Zimbabwe.
Their report recommends continued emphasis on U.S. aid to spur broad-based economic growth in the country and health programs can be sustained.
"Health assistance is a key adjunct to broader assistance programs. Healthy people produce healthy, stable and productive nations," the report said. "Programs to improve the health of African people should, therefore, be undertaken simula-
neously with broader assistance initiatives."
This year, the United States is devoting $800 million to the Development Fund for Africa, which represents the bulk of U.S. development aid to Africa.
The report said U.S. aid for health strategies also could be used more effectively, such as by focusing on sustaining primary health care systems, increasing immunization coverage, fighting malaria and training Africans in health management.
Also needed are additional interventions to encourage behavior changes, encourage marketing of condoms, and support research on other ways to stop the spread of AIDS, the report said.
Government debt up $26.1 billion
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The government sank $2.1 billion more in debt in February, but the month's red ink was 29.9 percent less than during the same period of fiscal 1990, the Treasury Department said yesterday.
The additional debt in February followed a $1.76 billion surplus in January and boosted the deficit to $1.38 billion for the first five months of the fiscal year.
The Bush administration projects this year's gap will reach a record high.
The total so far this year is 13.4 percent more than at the same point
last year and above the previous record of $221.1 billion set in the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, 1986.
Revenues in February included $8.9 billion in allied contributions to offset U.S. expenses in the Persian Gulf War, the report said. Those contributions total $14.2 billion during the fiscal year that began Oct. 1.
The United States' major allies have pledged $4.5 billion to help the United States pay for the war. The Senate Appropriations Committee said Wednesday the allies had delivered $25.6 billion so far.
Although the Treasury statement does not break down spending for specific purposes, overall defense
spending was up 6.3 percent, to $124.1 billion, during the first five months of fiscal 1991 compared with the same period last year.
Spending in February totaled $93.7 billion, 6.6 percent less than in the same month last year. Outlays so far this fiscal year reached $147.8 billion, 7.7 percent more than was spent during the first five months last year
Mandela's defense accuses police officer of forcing testimony
Receipts in February totaled $67.7 billion, 3.7 percent above those of the previous February. For the year so far, revenues were $417.8 billion, up 6.2 percent from the same period of fiscal 1990.
The Associated Press
Defense attorney Hendrik Kruger spent a second day trying to show that co-defendant John Morgan implicated Mandela against his will.
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — A police officer testing in Winnie Mandela's kidnap and assault trial denied yesterday that he coerced a co-defendant to provide evidence against Mandela.
Wednesday, Krüger accused police of assaulting Morgan and forcing him to sign a fabricated statement. The allegations yesterday while cross-examining police LI, Andries de Klerk, who arrested Morgan shortly after the alleged kidnap and assault of four young men in December 1988.
De Kierk testified that Morgan cooperated with police after his arrest and told authorities he caused an assault at Mandela's house.
He said Morgan also pointed out the houses of various people wanted for questioning in the case.
Kruger said that Morgan did not point out the houses to the police and signed the statement unwillingly. He also interrogated on the day of his arrest.
he also accused de Klerk of attempting to get Morgan to implicate Mandela.
De Klerk denied the charge and said Morgan merely was asked what he knew of the circumstances of the case.
Mandela and three co-defendants have pleaded not guilty to four counts each of kidnap and assault. They are accused of abducting four young men from a home in Sweto in December 1988 and beating them in Mandela's home.
Cholera cases in Peru jump 70 percent, hit 535
The Associated Press
LIMA, Peru – In just one week the death toll from Peru's cholera epidemic has jumped more than 70 percent to 335, in a crisis compounded by a health workers' strike and a wave of dwindling medical supplies.
A Health Ministry spokeswoman blamed the sudden increase in part on a campaign waged by President Alberto Fujimori to urge people to eat ceviche, a popular raw fish dish, and warns not to eat uncooked seafood.
Health experts have said shorehugging fish, which feed near pipelines pouring untreated sewage into the sea, might be contaminated. The warnings caused a drastic falloff in sales of fish and angered the fishing industry.
The Health Ministry on Thursday reported 88,748 cholera cases since late January, with 25,804 people hospitalized. The mortality rate was 1.9 percent and the epidemic began, registered 1.3 percent over the past week.
Ministry figures released March 14
had put the number of cholera-related deaths at 308 and said 71,188 people had contracted the disease
Conditions for those afflicted with the disease were precarious in financially strapped Peru. The cholera epidemic began in late January and is first in the Western Hemisphere since early this century.
Cholera patients in Lima government hospitals were without treatment because of a week-old pay strike by health workers. And the Health Ministry spokeswoman said that 60 percent of the women were running out of antibiotics and dextrose solutions, used for dehydration, a symptom of cholera.
She said a 20-ton donation of medicine from Argentina that arrived Tuesday would keep the hospitals going for a few days, but the government was hoping for medications from the United States.
A U.S. Embassy spokesman said Washington was considering a
In late February, the U.S. government sent 35 tons of medicine and equipment including dextrose solu-
intravenous tubes and serum bottles. Several dozen nations have sent medicines since the epidemic began.
Former Health Minister Carlos Vidal resigned March 15 over differences with Fujimori on how to handle the cholera epidemic.
Both the president and his fisheries minister have repeatedly eaten ceviche before television cameras. They were in ninety recommendations.
The Health Ministry spokeswoman said powerful fishing companies had pressured Vidal to resign after his failure in uncooked fish caused sales to plumage.
Exporters say sales are likely to fall by 10 percent this year. Sales of fishmell as well as trozen and canniform food bring in $900 million a year.
But the new health minister, Victor Yamamoto, is also suggesting the population not eat raw fish, the spokeswoman said.
She claimed Fisheries Minister Felix Canal had been hospitalized for four days after developing cholera
symptoms and attributed his illness to eating ceviche in an unhygienic market in a slum area.
A Fisheries Ministry spokesman, however, denied reports the minister had been ill, calling the accounts "gossip from the newspapers."
Jenny Vasquez, of the Pan American Health Organization, attributed the sudden rise in the death toll to the spread of cholera in rural areas.
News reports say the epidemic is out of control not only for lack of medicine but also because of poor roads, which make little for drivers to reach rural areas and for residents to reach a hospital in time.
A cholera patient can die within five hours if not treated.
The epidemic, which is part of a pandemic that began in 1961 in Southeast Asia, first hit Peru's northern coast and has spread the full length of Peru's 1,400 mile coastline, as well as into Ecuador and Colombia.
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Nation/World
University Daily Kansan / Fridav. March 22, 1991
7
World briefs ila, Philippines
Manila, Philippines
Marcos allowed to return home
President Corazon Aquino said yesterday her government would allow Imelda Marcos to return to the Philippines — but she would face charges if she did.
"Once the charges are filed, she will be able to determine these charges and defend herself. Aqua sold."
Aquino said Philippine officials would file charges against Marcos as part of an effort to recover money allegedly stashed in Swiss banks in 2015, his husband, former President Ferdinand Marcos.
Marcos applied for a passport in New York yesterday, saying she wanted permission to bury her husband's remains in their homeland. She said the department announced Marcos would be allowed to return.
James Linn, Marcos' lawyer, said Marcos was pleased Philippine authorities said she
Washington
Poland cancels visa requirement
Poland's President Lech Walesa announced yesterday that U.S. citizens would no longer need visas to visit his country and appealed to them to do business in his economicallystrug-
Walesa came to Capitol Hill to ask for help as his country attempts to transform its economy from a state-controlled enterprise to a free-market system.
"As of the 15th of April, there are not going to be any visas for all Americans coming to Poland." Walesa said. "No problems for their families; they will be freely open to all American citizens."
Walesa gave no more details. The State Department said it was unaware of the change in visa status, but officials said it would ease travel.
London
Government abolishes poll tax
Prime Minister John Major's government yesterday announced the death of the poll tax, an unpopular local government levy, in an effort to curb the activities of his former mentor, Marraigre Thatcher.
"The public has not been persuaded that the charge is fair." Environment Secretary Michael Browne said.
The tax sparked a riot in London a year ago, and campaigns of organized disobedience cost the Conservatives two formerly "safe" seats in special Parliamentary elections and threatened to drag them to defeat in the next general election.
From The Associated Press
92 Senegalese soldiers die in Saudi air crash
The Associated Press
DHAHRAN, Saudi Arabia — A Saudi transport plane crashed yesterday while trying to land in bad weather aggravated by smoke from burning Kuwaiti oil fields. Ninety-two Senegalese soldiers and six Saudi crew members were killed, officials said.
Three Senegalese soldiers survived the crash but were reported as being in critical condition.
The Senegalese soldiers were part of the U.S.-led allied force deployed in the Persian Gulf War. The early morning crash occurred near their base in northern Saudi Arabia, where the soldiers, who were all Muslims, were returning from a pilgrimage to Mecca, officials said.
"The plane crashed while trying to land because of bad weather and poor visibility resulting from the clouds of smoke from the oil wells set ablaze in southern Pakistan, the ruler of Iraq," an official statement said.
The plane, which had flown from Jiddah,
crashed while trying to land at Ras al-Mishab.
which is on the coast near Khafij, just south of the Kuwait border, said a Saudi military official, who said that there was no evidence of any hostilities.
Medoune Fall, Senegal's defense minister, said an eight-day period of national mourning had been declared in Senegal.
Senegal's Defense Ministry said the 92 Senegaleens soldiers would be buried in Saudi Arabia, so that they could be close to Islam's holiest shrines at Mecca and Medina.
Fall said the soldiers had "fallen on the field of the faith, thousands of kilometers from home, where they had gone to defend peace and justice."
The soldiers were part of a 90-member Senegalese contingent belonging to the coalition that drove Iraqi forces from Kuwait in a six-week offensive that ended in a cease-fire Feb. 28.
Japan to pay $5.7 billion
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Japan will make a $7.5 billion contribution to the allied war effort in the Persian Gulf today as an initial installment on its $9 billion pledge for 1991, the White House said yesterday.
The announcement, which came shortly after Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Nakayama opened social talks is one of several determined to overcome recent strains in relations.
The ill feelings stemmed largely from differences over the Persian Gulf War. Secretary of State James Baker, posing for pictures with Nakama Academy in the Department, brushed aside edges of riffle.
Baker said he didn't believe there was any relationship more important to the United States
But Japan's financial contribution to the gulf war has been the subject of contradictory reports.
The Japanese Embassy said Tuesday the country's $9 billion pledge for 1911 already had been fulfilled. But White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater said the $7.5 billion promised for today was the first installment and that the remaining $3.3 billion would be delivered relatively soon.
U. S. officials said before yesterday's meeting they hoped Nakayama's visit would ease the widespread feeling in Tokyo that Japanese offi- cessals consulted adequately at the time of the gulf crisis.
There have been complaints in the Japanese media that senior U.S. officials seem to have had
Germany raises questions about price of gulf war The Associated Press
The Associated Press
BONN, Germany — Germany raised questions yesterday about how U.S. officials had calculated the allies' share of payments for the Persian Gulf War.
Germany's request for a full accounting of costs may intensify the U.S. debate over whether the allies are trying to withhold money they pledged earlier.
Dieter Vogel, representative for Chancellor Helmut Kohl, said Finance Minister Theodor Waigel would go to Washington on Monday and Tuesday.
He said Germany wanted to discuss how the UK government assessed the total costs of the pipeline.
Of $54.5 billion pledged to help the United States finance the war that ended Iraq's occupation of Kuwait, Washington has received $25.6 billion.
The administration was disappointed that Japan's contribution to the allied effort in the gulf war was insufficient.
time for consultations with other allies but not Japan, a major importer of gulf oil.
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The University of Kansas Theatre and the Department of Music and Dance Present Gilbert and Sullivan's Comic Opera
The PIRATES OF PENZANCE
or (The Slave of Duty) Directed by
8:00 p.m.
April 3-4 & 6-7, 1991
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale in
the Murphy Hall Box Office;
student tickets available at
the SUA Office, Kansas Union;
all seats reserved; to charge by
phone, call (913) 864-3982.
Partially funded by the
KU Student Senate
Activity Fee.
This production is an
associate entry in the
1992 American College
Theatre Festival XXIV.
Battle of the Bands
The Backsliders
Baghdad Jones
Kill Whitey
The Mood
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March 28, 1991 7:15 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
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I'll be there. I'll be there. I'll be there.
The Associated Press
Joseph J. Lies/KANSAN
Checkmate
Brian Cunningham, junior, and Carl Harris, senior, both of Wichita, take time out to enjoy the weather while engaging in intellectual head-to-head combat. Cunningham and Harris played their match outside the Rock Chalk Bar, 618 W. 12th St.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Food Barn Inc. and the union exchanged broadsides yesterday, with the company claiming the union was muddling and the union showing videos of unopened food tossed in store trash bins.
Food Barn war heats up
Union claims anger company
Both sides called press conferences within one hour of each other to refute allegations and state their postures.
The company said that since the strike began March 3, business dropped by 18 percent the first week, and by 20 percent the next week and 3 percent last week.
Frank Delliso, strike coordinator for the United Food and Commercial Workers union Local 576, maintained that business at the 47 Food Barn
stores in Missouri and Kansas had plummeted by 67 percent overall.
P. A. Rawalt, Food Barn vice president of human resources, said that it was normal practice to throw away food that had not been sold and that without seeing the video he could not believe whether the amounts were unusual.
"Food Barn is in trouble, and it is troubles of its own making." DeRiso said. "They can't give away groceries, much less sell them."
DeRiso also displayed what he said were photographs of store managers
A videotape, DeRiso said, was taken of seven stores from March 15 through Tuesday. It showed cartons of milk and other packaged foods, along with produce items, in store trash containers.
transporting meat and produce in their unrefrigerated personal cars to Food Barn stores.
Rawait called the union's tacities "distortions and fabrications" that unnecessarily scare and mislead them. When they called the union they were elected to serve."
DeRiso said he did not have an exact number of those who defied the strike. But 1,362 assistance checks had been issued to strikers who had signed a roster at picket lines and had not returned to work, he said.
Company officials said 1,048 employees, about half of the 2,112 workers represented by the union, had crossed picket lines.
"We have no intentions of selling, but if this thing drags on . . . we are prepared to sell stores if we have to," Rawalt said.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 22, 1991
9
Panhellenic awarded for programs
Kansan staff report
The KU Panhellenic Association was recognized for its work in improving relations between chapels and the university, the group announced Wednesday.
Lisa Garney, Panhellenic president, said the Mid-American Panhellenic Council Association, an organization that comprises cities in 20 states, awarded them an honorable rank for Greek relations and programming.
The group made the presentation at its annual conference March 2, she
said.
Groups such as Greeks Advocating Mature Management of Alcohol and Greeks for Responsible Education Enhancing Cultural Sensitivity are unique, she said.
Garney said the association won the award on the strength of its special programs.
Panhellenic's next step, Garney said, was to try to extend cooperation between the association and groups such as Black Panhellenic and Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas beyond the leaders of the groups.
"For things to be convergent at the top, people at the top have to work together, or the other members of the group won't support what you're doing," she said.
Mike Sullivan, GLOSK treasurer,
sa heip helped KU Panhellenic would seek to acquaint its members with the issues of all groups.
"The leadership of Panhellenic has been open to me personally and made me more aware of what they are doing," he said. "The leadership has been very positive, but it needs to go farther."
Senate task force discusses plans for improved lighting
Kansan staff report
Last night the Student Senate task force on public safety heard plans for campus lighting that facilities and equipment are scheduled for the next several years.
The most immediate plans, scheduled to be implemented next year, are for lighting along West Campus Road and the path between the parking lot south of Memorial Stadium and the east side of Strong Hall.
Greg Wade, facilities and planning landscape architect, said the task force needed to realize the length of campus lighting improvements.
"From the time that something is
identified as a priority to get funding takes about two years," he said. "We've been working on some phase of campus lighting since about 1984."
Some funding for campus lighting is coming from the Legislature.
The task force discussed how much student-fee money would be needed to alleviate some of the financial burden on students. About $849,000 would be needed to finance new lighting that facilities operations considers important.
Such a fee is not being proposed by any Senate committee or individual senator. Such a proposal is needed before a fee could be instituted.
Arraignment is scheduled for armed robbery suspect
Kansan staff report
A Lawrence resident charged in connection with three local robberies was scheduled for an April 12 arraignment during his preliminary hearing yesterday, said Martin Miller, assistant district attorney.
William D. Norris, 38, 1324 Kentucky St., has been charged with three counts of aggravated robbery and three counts of felony theft.
Norris is charged in connection
with the Feb. 28 armed robbery of Super M 801, 515 McDonald Drive, the March 1 armed robbery of Hird's Retail Liquor Store, 601 Kasold Drive, and the March 2 armed robbery of Barnhart Liquor, 3023 Iowa St.
Miller said that a trial would be set at the arraignment.
In each robbery, the suspect had a long object, which police think was a pump shotgun, concealed under a blanket.
KU may protest against ROTC discrimination
Kansan staff report
KU's role in a national day of action to protest ROTC discrimination against homosexuals and bisexuals will be left undecided until the next University Council meeting April 4.
University Council deferred action yesterday on whether the University of Kansas should participate April 10 in a national protest urged by the University of Wisconsin-Madison. The Council voted to delay action until the Aug. 16 Hoe Committee on Discrimination in ROTC makes its recommendation.
Although the extent of KU's participation in the protest remains unclear, Frances Ingemann, Senate Executive Committee chairperson, did locate the KU campus to educate with other universities to combat ROTC discrimination.
Ingemann received a letter about the nationally coordinated action protesting the Defense Department policy that included the use of Olinnek, a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 22, 1991
9
Panhellenic awarded for programs
Kansan staff report
The KU Panhellenic Association was recognized for its work in improving relations between chapel and university, during the group announced Wednesday.
Lisa Garney, Panhellenic president, said the Mid-American Panhellenic Council Association, an organization that comprises councils in 20 countries, armed them an honorable mention for Greek relations and programming.
The group made the presentation at its annual conference March 2, she
said.
Groups such as Greeks Advocating Mature Management of Alcohol and Greeks for Responsible Education are sensitive. Sensitivity are unique, she said.
Garney said the association won the award on the strength of its special programs.
Panhellenic's next step, Garney said, was to try to extend cooperation between the association and groups such as Black Panhellenic and Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas beyond the leaders of the groups.
Mike Sullivan, GLSOK treasurer,
said he hoped KU Panhellenic would seek to acquaint its members with the issues of all groups.
"For things to be convergent at the top, people at the top have to work together, or the other members of the team to support what you are doing," she said.
"The leadership of Panhellenic has been open to me personally and made me more aware of what they are doing," he said. "The leadership has been very positive, but it needs to go farther."
Senate task force discusses plans for improved lighting
Kansan staff report
Last night the Student Senate task force on public safety heard plans for campus lighting that facilitates and schedules for the next several years.
The most immediate plans, scheduled to be implemented next year, are for lighting along West Campus Road and the path between the parking lot south of Memorial Stadium and the east side of Strong Hall.
Greg Wade, facilities and planning landscape architect, said the task force needed to realize the length of campus lighting improvements.
'From the time that something is
identified as a priority to get funding takes about two years," he said. "We've been working on some phase of campus lighting since about 1984."
Some funding for campus lighting is coming from the Legislature.
The task force discussed how much student-fee money would be needed to alleviate some of the financial burden of improved campus lighting. The task force recommended to finance new lighting that facilities operations considers important.
Such a fee is not being proposed by any Senate committee or individual senator. Such a proposal is needed before a fee could be instituted.
Arraignment is scheduled for armed robbery suspect
Kansan staff report
A Lawrence resident charged in connection with three local robberies was scheduled for an April 12 arraignment during his preliminary hearing yesterday, said Martin Miller, assistant district attorney.
William D. Norris, 38, 1324 Kentucky St., has been charged with three counts of aggravated robbery and three counts of felony theft.
Norris is charged in connection
with the Feb. 28, 28 armed robbery of Super 8 Motel, 515 McDonald Drive, the March 1 armored robbery of Hird's Retail Liquor Store, 601 Kassold Drive, and the March 2 armored robbery of the Barnhart Liquor, 3032 Iowa
Miller said that a trial would be set at the arraignment.
In each robbery, the suspect had a long object, which police think was a pump shotgun, concealed under a blanket.
KU may protest against ROTC discrimination Kansan staff report
KU's role in a national day of action to protest ROTC discrimination against homosexuals and bisexuals will be left undecided until the next University Council meeting April 4.
University Council deferred action yesterday on whether the University of Kansas should participate April 10 in a national protest urged by the University of Wisconsin-Madison. The Council voted to delay the action, said Ad Hoc Committee on Discrimination in ROTC makes its recommendation.
Although the extent of KU's participation in the protest remains unclear, Frances Ingemann, Senate Executive Committee chairperson, did advocate that KU combine sports with other universities to combat KOTC discrimination.
Ingemann received a letter about the nationally coordinated action protesting the Defense Department policy earlier this week from Michael Olneck, a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
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Whenever there's not a band on stage, THE JAZZHAUS plays the best in recorded jazz, blues, reggae and rock.
Friday & Saturday March 22 & 23
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THURS. 'TIL 8 P.M., SUN. NOON-4 P.M.
CYCLE WORKS
1601 W. 23rd
CYCLING AND FITNESS
842-6363
THE ROLLING STONES
SOME GIRLS
including
Miss You/Beast Of Burden/shattered
Respectable
When The Whist Comes Down
Far Away Eyes/Just My Impression
PINK FLOYD
ANIMALS
Including
Pigs On The Wing/Dogs/Sheep
E RECORDS BEST VALUE SERIES
THE OUTFIELD
PLAY DEEP
Including:
Your Love/Say It isn't So
All The Love In The World
I Don't Need Her/Everytime They Cry
BEST
VALUE
SERIES
BEST VALUE SERIES
good thru 3/27/91
$9.99 CD
$5.49 cass.
Also Available:
SANTANA • Greatest Hits
JOURNEY • Escape
STEVIE RAY VAUGHN • Texas Flood
REO • Hi-Infidelity
and more!!!
STREETSIDE RECORDS
Independence 478-3748 • Overland Park 381-2676 •
Bannister 763-8411 • Lawrence (913)842-7173 •
Watts Mill Center 941-3970
Visit Streetside Records' newest store located at 9200 Metcalf Rd.
in Overland Park • 381-0292
Be sure to put your Money
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Buffalo Soldiers may have their day
Holiday planned for July 1992
Kansan staff writer
By Patricia Rojas
Every time Gen. Colin Powell sits
on the podium, a troop of官兵 Soldiers wait
"They look at me and make sure that I will never forget the courage and the determination of African-Americans who defied all odds to fight for their country." Powell, chairperson of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, wrote in a letter to Sen. Nancy Kassebaum last month.
Powell's watchers are images in a painting hanging on a wall. But they once were living men who served in the 10th Cavalry Regiment during the settlement of the West.
The Buffalo Soldiers
On July 28, 1866, Congress passed an act allowing African-Americans to enlist in the U.S. Army. The 9th and 10th Cavalry Regiments and the 24th and 25th Infantry Regiments resulted from the act.
Those four all-African-American
figures known as the Buffalo Soldiers
Kassebau introduced a joint resolution in the Senate last month to remove the 1996 law.
Buffalo Soldiers was the name the Kiowa, Cheyne and Apache tribes of the West gave to the four African-American regiments.
Solders Day. Forty-four senators, including Sen. Bob Dole, are co-sponsoring the resolution.
Cmdr. Carlton Philip, Navy officer at Fort Leavenworth, said there were several theories about the origin of the name.
Some people think the African-American soldiers' hair reminded the American Indians of the buffaloes. Philot said.
Others believe that the Black soldiers were confused with buffaloes as they approached the Indian settlers and wearing bison coat, he said.
A third belief, perhaps the most accepted, is that the term developed from the respect American Indians had for the buffalo and for the Black soldiers, Philpot said.
Philip is supervising the construction of a commemorative monument in Fort Leavenworth, where the 10th anniversary of the monument will feature a 6-foot tall monument will feature a 6-foot
A tribute
bronze statue of a Buffalo Soldier on a horse between two ponds.
The monument will be inaugurated July 28, 1992, in Fort Leavenworth. Powell developed the idea for the monument while stationed in Fort Leavenworth in 1982 as a brigadier general.
Powell wrote in his letter to Kassie-
baum that while jogging in Fort
Leavenworth, he noticed two gravel
alleys named 9th and 10th Cavalry
who were so wonderd whether the
post paid some other tribute to
the Buffalo Soldiers.
"And so I looked around some more," he wrote. "And on the entire post all I could find to commemorate the loss of three soldiers in the Army were those two alleys.
"That was a situation that I believed had to be changed."
The joint resolution to designate July 28, 1992. Buffalo Soldiers Day probably will pass the Senate in June, said Derek Schmidt, staff member at Kassbaum. It is likely that the senators will approve the bill unanimously.
In his letter to Kassebaum, Powell wrote about the Buffalo Soldiers that adorn the walls of his Pentagon office:
"They remind me of my heritage and of the thousands of African-
Americans who went before me and who shed the blood and made their sacrifices so that I could be chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff."
Hollowell, Fort Leavenworth resident, served in the U.S. Army from January 1936 until he retired in August 1964.
A pleasant comparison
Chief Warrant Officer Harry Hollowell, 76, was one of the Buffalo Soldiers who served in the 10th Cavalry during integration of the U.S. Army in 1962.
He spoke without anger about the time when African-Americans could not command the troops in the U.S. Army.
"What weaver did was the order of the day at that time." Hollowell said. "The guidelines that were stipulated in the treaty were the same policies of the military."
He said it was pleasant for him to compare today's Army with the one he joined in 1936.
"It is credited to the people who fit seem to eliminate any regulations or policies that discriminate toward any of its subjects." Holt writes, "and the black, the brown, the green and other. We're all God's children."
Theft higher during spring break
By Mike I. Vargas
Kansan staff writer
Historically, when students are out of town during spring and winter breaks their possessions are targeted by criminals, and this break was no exception. said Sgt. James Warren. Lawrence police representative.
"There are less eyes and ears to get in a thief's way," Harmon said.
While members of two KU sororities were enjoy spring break, five mountain bicycles valued together at $2,370 were taken from their storage sheds, according to Lawrence police reports.
Police think the two burglaries are related because of the similar methods of entry, Harmon said.
third floor, which could have been accessed from the roof of the hall's cafeteria.
Besides the sorority and Oliver Hall burglaries, a video camera valued at $1,025 that was used by the KU swimming and diving teams was taken from a Robinson Center storage area during spring break.
In another incident, two residence hall rooms in Oliver Hall were burglarized during spring break, according to KU police reports. An electric typewriter, a videocaster recorder and other items, valued together at $1,317, were taken from the rooms.
Don Fearon, KU diving coach,
said the team used the camera to
analyze weaknesses in divers' and
swimmers' form.
The perpetrators gained access through the windows of the rooms, according to KU police reports.
Frank Harwood, residence hall director at Oliver Hall, said the burglaries occurred on the the
KU police Lt. John Mullens said that the five burglaries on campus were reported during spring break but that other crimes might not have been reported yet.
these beds belong to Chi Omega,
1345 West Campus Road, and
Gamma Phi Beta, 1339 West Camp-
house, which are next to each
other.
Makeup ingredient may be dangerous The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A consumer group said yesterday that some sunscreens and cosmetics contain an ingredient that could promote cancerous skin tumors, and it called on the government to halt their sale.
"Ironically, some sunscreen lotions that consumers apply to prevent skin cancer may increase the likelihood of forming cancerous skin tumors," said Mary Ellen Fise, product safety director for the Consumer Federation of America.
Oscar Romero
Celebration of Rememberance and Action
March 23
The federation said more than a dozen cosmetic products have been soild containing uraconic acid, which it said has the potential in sunlight to promote the growth of tumors by suppressing the immune system.
9:00-9:45 am Welcome and Keynote by Mary K. Meyers
10:00-11:30 Workshop on Liberation Theology by Don Murphy, S.J.
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12:30-2:00 The Present Situation in El Salvador
2:00-4:30 Movie: "Romero" starring Raul Julia
4:45-5:30 Mass
6:00-6:30 Candelight Procession
6:30-7:30 Celebration of Christ-Like life at ECM
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Do you make too much at your present job?
Despite the lousy pay and long hours, you'll still have the satisfaction of knowing you're part of a great KU tradition.
Business Manager Assistant Editor Photo Editor
If you are qualified for any of these positions, apply today! Applications are available at the SUA Office and at the Organizations and Activities Center, both located in the Kansas Union. Applications must be returned to either location by March 28. Any questions? Call the Jayhawker Yearbook Office at 864-3728.
JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK
University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 22, 1991
Arts and Entertainment
11
Sentimental performances may reap Oscars
THE SPORTING REPUBLIC
Kevin Costner, left, and Graham Greene, on the white horse, may ride home with Academy Awards on Monday night for their directing and acting efforts in the epic "Dances with Wolves."
Award
The Oscar award is 13.5 inches tall and weighs 8.5 pounds. It is cast in Britannia metal and electroplated with gold. It costs about $200.
By David Small
Special to the Kansan
The 63rd annual Academy Awards will be broadcast Monday night to more than a billion television viewers worldwide.
Why wait until Monday?
Live, from the University of Kansas — the 1990 Guide to the Oscars — the individuals and films that will take home the 8-pound, 13-inch tall statuettes (as well as a look at the nominees who deserve to win but will not, and some of the films and performers snubbed from nominations)
The 4,830 member Academy of Motion Picture Art and Sciences awards ceremony usually begins with the category of best supporting actress — as good a place as any to begin Oscar predictions.
★
Lorraine Bracco deserves the Oscar for her compelling portrayal in "GoodDellas" of a woman who not only manages a man, but also his life.
Whoopi Goldberg, however, is on the comeback trail following a series of film disappointments ("Burglar," "Telephone" and "Jumpin' Jack Flash"). She will receive the sentiments that she is "missing in the 'Ghost' as a charlatan psychic who helps Patrick Swaze's character, a ghost, out of a bind
★
The best supporting actor award will mimic the supporting actress category and will honor another emotional favorite.
Al Pacino, a previous ninniee (but never a winner), will take the prize home for an almost unrecoognizable performance as Big Boy Caprice in the Disney extravaganza "Dick Tracy."
It is Joe Pesci who should walk off the stage with the Oscar for his dynamic portrayal of an out-of-conference Sicilian mobster in "Good Callas."
Finding the best actress of 1990 is a difficult task, but Julia Roberts makes the choice one steeper.
Roberts's "cuties" performance in the mega-hit "Pretty Woman" contributed to the success of the film, but he did not receive any company as her fellow nonnéeses.
Perennial award-winner and nominee Neryl Streep offers yet another diverse experience for the viewing audience in "Postcards from the Edge." It was not, however, on a par with past endeavors.
Kathy Bates ("Misery"), Joanne Woodard "Wood," and Mrs. Bridges" and Anjela Huston ("The Grifters") are the real contenders.
Joanne Woodward will win out to her rousing portrayal as the repressed wife of an attorney in post-Depression Kansas City.
★
Gerard Depardieu's performance as the swashbuckling title character in "Cyrano de Bergerac" is the hands-down winner for the best actor category. The voters, however, will pick an actor in a foreign-language film
Jeremy Irons' sardonic Claus Van Bulow (from "Reversal of Fortune") will give Robert D尼ro's performance in 'Awakenings' a run for its life, and he will also provide for his uplifting portrayal of a man who, through the wonder of modern
medicine and hope, experiences life after years of no animation.
A challenger vs. a champ – Kevin Costner's directorial debut for “Dances with Wolves” is magnificent and provides strong competition to best veteran director Martin Scorsese for his vibrant yet disturbing look at life in the mfaf (“Good-Fellas”).
Commercialism always has stuck its foot in the door of the Academy Awards but never to the extent it has this year. The nominations of Julia Roberts (beast actress), and "Ghost"
And the winner of the best picture of 1990 is . . . "Ghost?"
★
No.
for best picture, are blatant examples of Academy voters being swayed by box office receipts. The presence of Jerry Zucker's fantasy on the ballot crowded out such deserving films as "Avalon" and "Mr. and Mrs. Bridge."
Awakenings" is based on the real-life accounts of Oliver Sack's work and his success in achieving what was thought to be unachievable: Offering "life" to patients stricken with the "sleeping epidemic" of AIDS. The film Williams are a remarkable team guided by an extremely capable Penny Marshall. The film's story, however, tends to drag.
The third installment of the Corleone epic, "The Godfather, Part III," is a disappointment and inferior to its predecessors. While parts I and II were not well received in 1972 and 1974 respectively, 1990 will not be the year for part III.
Martin Scorsese's "GoodFellas," an adaptation of the novel "Wise Guys," is the best film of 1990. This sordid tale of Henry Hill's ascent and descent into the mob is the most realistic gangster movie ever to appear on screen. The ensemble cast of Robert De Niro, Ray Liappa (Hill), Joe Pescio, Lorraine Bracco and Paul Servino tells the story of a mafia family's involvement in crime (cinema) in the 1969 Luthana heist) and their downfall from drug trafficking.
"Dances with Wolves" is just the sort of movie Academy voters like to crown as best picture — a film with epic beauty and a cause. Kevin Coster directs himself and a fine supporting cast in a depiction of the Sioux Indian way of life, for once offering a look at the American Indian from the American Indian's point of view.
The Oscar will go to this film because the Academy will not be able to resist the socially conscious message Costner gives or the accomplishments of a first time director (a 1980s best picture, "Ordinary People," which was Robert Redford's directorial debut).
Friday
CALENDAR
Jayhawk Invitational Jazz Festival, 2 p.m., Murphy Hall, free.
■ "The Jung Book," SUA Movie, 7 and 9:30 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union, $2.50.
Jazz Festival, Concert, 7:30 p.m.
Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall,
halls at 214 Murphy Hall.
Caribe, 9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck,
737 New Hampshire St., $5.
**Jbeat the 'Clock'** 9:30 p.m., *The Beat* 98% of Massachusetts Street, $1.30 each on the Roads.; **SUN Movie midnight**, Woodford Theater, Kansas City; **National** $2.50.
Saturday
■ Jayhawk Invitational Jazz Festival, all day, Murphy Hall, free.
■ Jazz Festival Concert. 7:30 p.m.
Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall,
hallitc at 214 Murphy Hall.
- "Star Wars," SUA Mobile, 4 p.m.
* "Woodland Auditorium," Kusano Press,
3 p.m.
* "The Jungle Book," SUA Mobile, 7 p.m.
* "Kusano Press," Adventure Island,
Kusano Press, 2:50 p.m.
L.A. Rambers and Black Cat Bone,
9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New
Hampshire, $3.
Sunday
**Beat The Clock**, 9:30 p.m. *The Jazzhaus, 928/2 Massachusetts*, $3
"Revenge of the Nerds," SUA Movie, midnight, Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union, $2.50
■ "The Jungle Book," SUA Movie, 2 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union, $2.50
**Inge Theatre** “Pot-Pouri”
“Cloud Nine” 8 p.m. Inge
Theatre, Murphy Hall, tickets at Murphy
Hall Box Office
Tad and Paw, 9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., advance tickets $8.
Monday
- SUA Gallery, Jazz & Blues Photographs, through Saturday, Kansas Union. free
**inge Theatre** “Pot-Pouri Productions”; “Victims of Dame” 8 p.m. *Inge Theatre*, Murphy Hall, tickets at Murphy Hall Box Office.
*"Housekeeping," SUA Movie, 7 p.m.
Wooldrift Auditorium, Kansas Union, $
*Iinge Theatre "Pet-Pourier Productions"
*"The Tears of The Gods," 8 p.m. Iinge Theatre, Murphy Hall, tickets at Murphy Hall Box Office.
Open Mike, 9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., free.
Tuesday
Treat Her Right and Mongol Beach Park, 9:30 p.m. The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. $4.
Wednesday
"Housekeeping," SUA Movie, 7.pm. Woodruff Audition, Kansas Union, $2 New Directions Series, Urban Bush Women, 8 p.m., Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St, tickets at Murphy Hall Box Office and SUA Office.
**Inge Theatre** “Pot-Pouri Theatre” “The Story in Frank,” 8 p.m. Inge Theatre, Murphy Hall, tickets at Murphy Hall Box Office.
Visiting Artists Series: Yoshi and Brenda Ishikawa, bassoon and piano, 8 p.m. Swallowback剧院 Hall, free.
■ "The Earth is not Fragile," SUA Lecture, James Lovelock, 8 p.m., Kansas Union Ballroom, free.
New Duncan Imperials and Goober and the Peas, 9:30 p.m. The Bottleneck 737 New Hampshire St., $3.
Thursday
**Inge. Theatre. "Pot-Pourri. Productions." The Colored Museum. 8 p.m., Inge. Theatre, Murphy Hall, tickets at Murphy Hall Box Office.**
■ "Housekeeping;" SUA Movie, 7 p.m.
Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union, $2.
Battle of the Bands featuring MTV VJ Pauly Shore, 7.15 p.m., Hoch Auditorium, tickets at SAU Office.
Sons of Rex, 9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., $3.
KU theater series to stage five plays
Arts and Features Briefs
"Pot-Pourri Productions," the University Theatre's annual series of student-directed plays, will be staged Sunday through March 29 in the William Ingle In theatre in Murphy Hall.
Five dramas will be presented this year, with a different play offered each night except for one play that will run both Thursday and March 29. Dramas in the 1991 "Pot-Pourri Prodromus" are.
"□Cloud Nine," a political farset in Africa in 1880 that looks at often-hypocritical Victorian morality, directed by Sarah Becker, theater doctoral student, to be presented Sunday.
■ "Victims of Duty," a mysterious story of a man's journey into his own mind, directed by Ken Willard, the author's student, to be presented Monday.
■ "The Tears of God," a lyrically romantic play about a strong Appalachian family and their land, directed by Rick Mundy, the theater doctoral student, to be presented Tuesday.
one story in Frank," a tale that weaves realism, absurdity and ritual into the story of a Kansas family told through the eyes of a young man, written by KU graduate Marcus Richey and directed by John Abrahamson, Holton senior, to be presented Wednesday.
- "The Colored Museum," a series of scenes with acerbic humor that observe how African-Americans look at themselves and their values, directed by LeWan Alexander, instructor of theater and film, and Andrew Turner, Lenexa senior, to be presented Thursday and March 29.
Festival features guest jazz artists
Jazz-fusion drummer Peter Erskine and vocalist Mavis Rivers are headlining the 14th Annual Jayhawk Introductory Festival at KU Campus and tomorrow.
Along with the daytime sessions in Murphy Hall, the festival will feature evening jazz concerts at 7:30 p.m. in the Arts Pavilion. Attendees will ensembles and special guest artists.
Rivers, who has had a long career as a jazz vocalist, will be featured in an online lecture of bass I, conducted by Dan Gailey, assistant professor of jazz studies.
Erskine has been involved with many jazz-fusion ensembles, including Weather Report. whose album was distributed to, a Grammy Award.
He will be in concert tomorrow night also with KU Jazz Ensemble I.
night, also with KU Jazz Ehsemble I. The annual jazz festival will also offer students the opportunity to attend school and college jazz ensembles and the Strategic Air Command jazz band from Offutt Air Force Base in Nabla, Omaha.
General admission tickets for the jazz festival are $5 and on sale at the KU Band Office, 214 Murphy Hall.
Troupe to present belief-based works
The Urban Bush Women, led by artistic director Jawarya Wille Jo Zollar, will perform as part of the KU New Directions series at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
Founded in 1984 by Zollar, a Kansas City, Mo., native, Urban Bush Women uses movement, live music and a cappella vocalizations to preach about the importance of people's transformation of suffering into the bittersweet joy of survival.
Urban Bush Women presents works rooted in African-American folklore and religious traditions while performing choreography created by Zollar in collaboration with her company.
Joining the seven-member company for the KU performance will be Junior "Gabu" Wedderburn, a Jamaican drummer and reggae artist who leads the New York-based group Ancient Vibrations.
tickets for the concert are on sale at Murphy Hall Box Office and Liberty Hall, and student tickets also are available at the SUA office in the Kansas Union. All tickets are general admission.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
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Friday
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Saturday
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Friday
Live Music
Friday
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Friday
$2 All-you-can-eat Taco bar
$1 sex on the beach and Killer Kool-aids
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Razorbacks and Rebels to advance in tourney action
The Associated Press
Third-seeded Kansas (25-7) will meet top-seeded Arkansas (34-3) in the Southeast Regional final Saturday at Charlotte, N.C. The Razorbacks advanced with a 93-70 victory against Alabama.
At the West Regional in Seattle, Terry Dehre scored 28 points and Seton Hall contained Arizona's big front line for a 81-77 victory. The third-seeded Pirates (25-8) will play undefeated UNLV, an 83-60 winner over Utah, for the regional championship on Saturday.
"If we can play as well as we're capable of playing, we're going to Indianapolis," Seton Hall coach P.J. Carrino said. "I don't care who we're playing."
Seton Hall used a collapsing, double-teaming defense to overcome Arizona's "Tuscon Skyline" of 6-4. Rocks and 7-foot restive Ed Stokes Rooks and 7-foot restive Ed Stokes
Williams scored 21 points, but Rooks got only 12 and Stokes was held to two. Chris Mills had 20 points for the Wildcats (20-7).
"They were so resilient tonight, so mentally tough," Carlesimo said of his Pirates. "We really got a lift from us and we went into it got into foul trouble in the first half."
by Matt Muehlebach. Dehere made his first free throw with 3.8 seconds remaining to clinch the victory.
Trailing 80-77. Arizona got the ball in the closing seconds. But Matt thick missed a three-point shot with 4:49 left. He could not rebound the rebound and Dehere was fouled
Todd Day scored 31 points and Lee Mayberry found his shooting touch in the second half as Arkansas broke open a game with Alabama.
Mayberry, 0-for-4 from the field in the first half with one point, scored 15 in the second half as the Razorbacks pulled away. He scored seven of Arkansas' first nine points after intermission as the Razorbacks increased their three-point halftime lead to 49-43.
"My shot felt good in the first half. It just wasn't going in." Mayberry said. "But my teammates told me to keep shooting it. That gave me a lot of confidence. When I kept shooting it, they started falling."
The loss continued Alabama's frustration in the regional semifinals. Although the Crimson Tide (23-10) has reached the six final of the last six years, they've lost all five times.
"We hung in there for 25 minutes, but then turnovers began to mount. Their double-teams really got to us." Alabama coach Wim Sanderson Alabama
"I'm just sorry we weren't able to give a better game tonight. Maybe one of these days, we will."
James Robinson, whose practice time was limited by a bad left knee, scored 21 points for Alabama. Robert J. Dahl and Melvin Cheatman in the Tide.
The 23-point loss was Alabama's worst of the season and matched the Tide's worst defeat ever in the NCAA tournament, a 73-50 opening-round
loss to Lamar in 1983
UNLV's basketball machine switched tacics from a bombs-away offense to an inside muscle game and beat Utah both ways to surge to a third straight NCAA West Regional final.
The defending national champions, still perfect at 33 and 2 ride a 44-game winning streak, methodically, sometimes savagely, took apart Utah 83-66 last night to set up a revenge match Saturday against Seton Hall.
Several of the Rebels were on the team Seton Hall hiliumilized 84-61 in the West Region at Denver in 1989
"It doesn't help us that we beat them two years ago," said Senat Hall coach P J. Carlosmo. "They'll want to get back at us more."
Brawny Larry Johnson wasn't on that UNLV team, but he is dominating it now. Johnson scored 23 points, most of them from the inside, before leaving with UNLV up 83-62 with 2:18 left.
UNLV showed again that it can win any way it chooses.
Anderson Hunt, who finished with 12 points, sank three three-pointers and Stacey Augem, who wound up with 15 points, hit two bombs in the first half as UNLV took a 41-35 halftime lead.
Colorado advances to NIT final four
The Associated Press
BOULDER, Colo. — Stevie Wise scored 23 points, including five during a key 17-2 second-half run, to lead Colorado to an 81-75 victory against Arkansas State last night in theInvitation Tournament quarterfinals.
homa in the semifinals Monday night.
The Buffs, now 18-13 in a season that is rapidly improving after eight years of losing records, advanced to the NIT final four in Madison Square Garden where they will face Okla-
Arkansas State's Indians (23-9) finished their season in Colorado as they did three years ago, when the Indians visited Colorado State in Fort Collins in a third-round NIT game and lost 64-49.
After using a 15-2 run to close the first half and trail at intermission by only 41-40, the Indians moved out in front in the second half, leading 56-54 with 12:26 to go.
Colorado's Asad Ali then scored a basket to tie it at 56 and Billy Law took advantage of the first of four straight turnovers by Arkansas State to drive the length of the court for a 58-56 lead.
Wise hit a 3-pointer after the Indians' second turnover and followed the third turnover with a shot from the lane for a 63-58 lead.
Randy Robinson cashed in on the fourth Indians' turnover with a layup and a free throw for a 66-56 lead.
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1997
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 22, 1991
13
Jayhawks slam-dunk Hoosiers
INDIAN
3
22
Kansas guard Sean Tunstall shoots over Indiaa's Eric Anderson during an 83-65 Jayhawk victory against the Hoosiers.
By S. J. Bailey
Kansan sportswriter
CHARLOTTE, N.C. - The people of North Carolina are accustomed to being blown away by tropical storms.
But not one of the 23,287 fans at Charlotte Coliseum last night could have foreseen the destructive force of Hurricane Kansas.
The Jayhawks mauled the second-seeded Indiana Hoosiers 83-65, thrusting themselves into the Southeast regional championship game tomorrow against the Arkansas Razorbacks.
Kansas' long-range bombers assailed the Indiana defense in the first half, hitting seven of 13 from behind the three-point stripe. Senior guard Terry Brown hit two three-pointers and sophomore guard Adonis Jordan added another and put Kansas up 16-4 at the 16-29 mark. Two more threes by junior guard Sean Tunstall increased the Jayhawk lead to 26-6 less than three minutes later.
Kansas needed less than four minutes to storm out to a 13-2 lead. That was as close as the Hoosiers would get to the Jayhawks until the final buzer sounded 36 minutes later.
The Kansas defense also came up big in the first 20 minutes, limiting Indiana to only 27 points on 37 percent shooting from the field. The tenacious defensive assault also came from nine first half HSO turnovers.
But the most dangerous weapon Kansas pulled out of its bag of tricks was its rebounding, both on the offensive and defensive ends of the floor. At the intermission, the Jayhawks had out-bullied Indiana 28-17 on the boards, including a 15-6 margin on the offensive glass.
"We weren't shooting well, and they had free reign on the boards." Hoosier forward Eric Anderson said. "He drilled us in every phase of the game."
That might have been the understatement of the evening. At half-time, the scoreboard read Kansas 49, Indiana 27.
"The referee came over about five minutes into the game and said there was a screw loose in the floor."
Indiana coach Bobby Knight said. "I said to him, "Then why don't we start this again tomorrow?" I think that was the best suggestion I had in the entire first half."
Kansas continued to pressure the Hoosiers, and took a 24-point lead at 53-29 with an Alonzo Jamson running past than a minute into the second half.
Then, Indiana freshman sensation Damon Bailey decided to take the game into his own hands. During the next five minutes, Bailey scored 12 points, cutting the Jayhawk margin to 16 at 62-46 with 13:18 remaining.
But Kansas would not falter. Although their shots would not come as easily as they did in the first half, the Jayhawks continued to harass Indiana, forcing four misuses in consecutive Indiana possessions. Kansas also would hold Indiana forward Calbert Cheaney, who scored 17 first half points, to only six in the second half.
With the score 71-55 with 5:34 remaining, Indiana began putting the Jayhawks on the free throw line for one-and-one situations. The strategy worked as freshman forward Richard Scott and senior forwards Mark Randall and Mike Maddox would miss each the front end of the one-and-one on three consecutive possessions.
After the game, Kansas coach Roy Williams praised his team's effort on the boards as well as on the defensive end of the floor.
But the Hoosiers would get no closer than 13 as the Jayhawks sank eight of their last 10 free throws to secure the 18 point victory.
"We played a tremendous game defensively and forced them into a lot of turnovers with our pressure," Williams said. "Our big guys also did a great job rebounding and getting us a lot of second-shot opportunities."
Brown led the Jayhawks offensively with 23 points, including 18 in the first half. Tunstall poured in 15 and Johnson added 14 points and 10 rebounds.
Cheaney scored 23 points for Indiana, and Bailey finished the game.
Tomorrow, the Jayhawks will meet the No. 1 seed in the Southeast
Kansas
Kansas 83 Indiana 65
| | FG | FT | R | A | F | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Jamison | 7-10 | 0-0 | 10 | R | 2 | 14 |
| Maddux | 2-4 | 0-1 | 2 | 5 | 3 | 11 |
| Brown | 4-1 | 0-1 | 6 | 3 | 1 | 11 |
| Brown | 7-10 | 5-6 | 6 | 1 | 4 | 13 |
| Jorday | 3-10 | 3-4 | 2 | 1 | 11 | 11 |
| Jorday | 3-10 | 3-4 | 2 | 1 | 11 | 11 |
| Woodberry | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 11 |
| Tuntilt | 4-9 | 5-4 | 3 | 1 | 15 | 8 |
| Tuntilt | 4-9 | 5-4 | 3 | 1 | 15 | 8 |
| Scott | 4-9 | 0-1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 8 |
| Scott | 4-9 | 0-1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 8 |
Percentages: FG: 45.6, FT: 59.1, Three- point goals: 8-20 (Maddox 0, Blue 4.9, Jordan 2, Richey 0,川立 Tunstall 2-4) Stealth: 1.2, Turnovers: 9- Stealth: 7.1
Indiana
Anderson 3-8 0-5 4 0 4 6
Cheaney B-14 4-5 6 1 4 23
Nover 0-4 0-0 3 0 0 0
G. Graham 1-4 0-0 1 1 1 2
Jones 0-1 1-2 0 0 1 1
Reynolds 3-3 5-5 5 1 1 11
Bailey 9-1-4 0-0 5 2 120
Hight 0-2 0-0 1 1 1 0
P. Graham 0-2 0-0 1 1 1 0
Percentages: FG. 43, FT. 76, TD. 3, Three-point
ball. FG. 20, FT. 21, TD. 16, Three-point
ball. 25) Blocked shots: 6 (Anderson,
Cheaney, Heaney, Bailey 3). Turnovers: 17.
Steal. Technique: none. 7. Shoots:
10.
region, the Arkansas Razorbacks, whose "40 minutes of hell" approach allowed them to wax Alabama 93-70 southeast regional semifinal contest.
Officials: Cloughery, Chauvin, Scagliotta
A: 22.287
The Razorbacks' big guns, Lee Mayberry, Todd Day, and Oliver Miller, continued their scoring surge against Alabama. Day led all scors at 31 points, while Mayberry and Miller led 16 and 15 points, respectively.
"Arkansas just goes out and annihilates people," Williams said. They just go out and toy around in the park so impressive to me. Ipat.jl's scary.
The Kansas-Arkansas game will be broadcast on CBS tomorrow at 3:40 p.m., the winner of that contest will be selected. Four next weekend in Indianapolis.
NCAA Tournament Scoreboard
Southeast Regional
Southeast Regional
At the Charlotte Coliseum, Char
lotte, N.C.
Arkansas 93, Alabama 76
Kansas 83, Indiana 65
Regional Championship
Kansas, Oklahoma
Arkansas, Kansas 3:40 p.m.
West Regional
At the Kingdom, Seattle
*Seton Hall* 81, *Arizona* 77
UNLV 83, Utah 66
Regional Championship
Saturday, March 23
Honor Hall vs. UNLV, 0.63 p.m.
East Regional
North Carolina (27-5) vs.
At the Meadowlands Arena, East Rutherford, N.J.
North Carolina (2-10) &
Eastern Michigan (26-6), 6:32
pm today
Temple (23-9) vs. Oklahoma State (24-7), 30 minutes after
Regional Championship
Sunday, March 24
Temple-Oklahoma State winner vs.
Eastern Michigan
winner, 12:00 p.m.
Midwest Regional
At the Silverdome, Pontiac, Mich
Ohio State (27-5) vs. St. John's
(22-8), 6:40 p.m. today.
Duke (28-7) vs. Connecticut
(20-10), 30 minutes after first
game.
Regional Championship
Sunday, March 24
Duke Connecticut winner vs. Ohio
State-St. John's winner, 3 p.m.
Rebounds key to'Hawks' victory
Kansas' game plan to overpower Hoosiers on the backboards pays off
Kansan sportswriter
By S. J. Bailey
first half."
Kansas dashed out to a 49-27 halftime lead, mainly because of its total domination of Indiana on the backboards.
CHARLOTTE, N.C. All season,
long, Kansas basketball coach Roy
Williams has impressed upon his
team the importance of rebounding.
At no time was this lesson more appropriate than in last night's 83-65 dismantling of the Indiana Hoosiers.
"We knew going into the game that 'rebounding was going to be a big factor,' senior forward Mark Randall said. "I don't know exactly what the team is going to do, but rebounds played a major part in our jumping out to such a big lead in the
At intermission, Kansas had outrebounded the Hoosiers 28-17, including 15-6 on the offensive end of the floor.
Senior forward Mike Maddox said he thought he knew the reason the Jayhawks controlled the glass as effectively as they did.
"I think it had a lot to do with our jumping ability and great athleticism." Maddox said with a wry smile. "Actually, it's one of the things we thought we could do well against them. They've had as many problems as they have, but this year we have. We thought whoever could control the backboards would win the game, and we were determined to go out and do it."
'They were extremely aggressive on the boards and aggressiveness is a comatrot of confidence.'
Bobby Knight Indiana basketball coach
"they came out very assertive and ready to play." Knight said. "They were extremely aggressive on the boards and aggressiveness is a compatriot of confidence. When you are that aggressive and that determined, good things are going to happen for you."
Indiana coach Bobby Knight said determination played a large part in the Jahayhaws' success on the glass.
Hoosier forward Eric Anderson said the Jayhawks' relentless pursuit of the ball took its toll from the opening moments of the game.
"We got hit on the boards pretty hard," Anderson said. "From the very beginning, they really came out and attacked us while we were kind enough to get in the ball. We didn't get a body on the floor, and they just outmuscled us."
Alonzo Jamison did the most damage for the Jayhawks as he pulled down 10 rebounds, including seven from the offensive glass.
"They weren't blocking out as well as I thought they would." Jamison said, acknowledging the opportunity to crash the boards and get some second-chance points.
ANS
Kansas' Mark Randall, left, is congratulated by Indiana coach Bobby Knight after the Jahways' victory in Charlotte, N.C.
'Hawks win initial round
Rv Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
However, Kansas improved its accuracy in the second half and finished the game having shot 55 of 72. That is a 44 percent from the free-throw line.
The Kansas Lady Jayhawks advanced to the second round of the National Women's Invitational Tournament after defeating the Louisville Lady Cardinals 71-66 yesterday in Amarillo, Texas.
The Lady Jayhawks' success at
The Lady Jayhawks trailed 31-24 at the half after shooting only 44 percent from the field and 53 percent from the free-throw line.
Women's Basketball
Sophomore forward Misti Chien-
nault went six for six from the line
and finished the game with 11
points for Kansas.
the free-throw line was a major factor in winning the game. They stepped up to the line 37 times and hit 26 of those attempts.
Kansas junior forward Terrilryn Johnson hit five of her seven attempts and also finished the game with 11 points.
Louisville freshman forward Gwen Doyle led the Lady Cardinals with 15 points and eight rebounds.
During the first half, Louisville hit 23 percent of its shots from the field and finished the game shooting 38 percent.
Sophomore forward Marthea McCloud was Kansas' leading scorer with 14 points.
Johnson was the Lady Jayhawks'
leading rebounder after grabbing nine rebounds.
Sailing club attracts students
Santa Clara defeated Notre Dame 81-65 last night in another first-round NWIT game.
Kansas (19-12) will play the University of California-Santa Clara at 8 tonight
By Rick C. Honish
Sailing on a sea of green is not what most skippers look forward to, especially when it is green grass.
The KU Sailing Club, however,
spent two days on the front lawn of
Strong Hall on Tuesday and Wednesday
with two of the club's boats. They
w weren't selling them, but the boats
were rigged and ready to go.
Kansan sportswriter
Scott Tellman, a member of the club, said the club was giving out information and recruiting new members. He said that having the boats out drew many people to the club's table.
"There have been a lot of people
About 15 of those people attended a meeting Wednesday night in the Kansas Union, along with 15 regular members, to meet the club's coach, Norm Castle, and learn about its goals and its boats.
stopping by to see what is going on," he said.
"We want to move our boats from Shawnee Lake to Clinton so we can be closer to the camps," he said. "We also are trying to raise money to buy another 420, and we would like to make it to nationals within five
Castle is in his first year as the volunteer coach for the club. He said
The club owns one 420. It is a 4.2-meter sailboat that is used in many collegiate-level races.
years."
Castle is presently trying to qualify for the 1992 Olympics. He has teamed up with a sailmaker from Dallas, and that boat is ranked second in the nation.
"The 420 is the stepping stone for the 470," Castle said. "And the 470 is the Olympic-class boat."
This weekend the club will send four members to the University of Northern Texas for a 13-tem regatta in Athens, with "The Mother of All Regattas."
Team faces Big Eight series
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas baseball coach Dwayne Bingham knows one of the teams that will qualify for this year's Big Eight Conference post-season tournament.
"I'm putting Kansas in," he said.
"I'm an optimist."
The Jayhawks' post-season quest begins at 7 tonies in Manhattan and continues through the season.
All the Big Eight schools except Colorado, which does not field a team, will play each other in a series of gameweeks with the best teams at the end of the season will play in the Big Eight Tournament in Oklahoma City.
"Obviously, as long as there's a possibility to extend our season, we're going to try and do it," Bingham said.
The Jayhawks narrowly missed the tournament last year. They entered the last series of the season after losing to Missouri in order to finish fourth.
Kansas dropped out of contention
after losing its third game of the series, 1-10 in 10 innings. The Jayhawks finished in fifth place behind Iowa and Iowa State, who tied for fourth.
Entering Big Eight play with a 12-8 record tonight, the Jahawks' competitive level appears stronger. Before entering Big Eight play last year, Kansas was 11-12 against nearly all the same opponents.
"We've been knocking on the door," Bingham said. "I believe we'll make it."
The Jayhawks will face a K-State team that is 16-9 and led by last season's Big Eight Coach of the Year, Mike Clark.
Clark, in his fifth season with K-State, is the Wildcats' winsest baseball coach and led them to a second place conference finish last
He said his team had experienced sporadic pitching this season.
"I think KU's been more consistent with their starters." Clark said. "We need quality innings from our starters."
The Jayhawks will start right-hander Curtis Schmidt (1-2, 5-0 ERA) right-hander Mike Massey (2-0, 3.74 ERA) and left-hander David Meyer (2-1, 3.33 ERA) pitch the doubleheader tomorrow.
ers or we're going to be in trouble."
The Wildcat pitching staff has notched a 5.00 team ERA this season. Kent Hipp (4-1, 1.71 ERA) and Sean Pederson (3-1, 4.50 ERA) have been K-State's leading hurlers.
Clark said that the Jayhawks' improvement had been matched by improvements across the entire league.
“Iowa State’s overall record is poor, but they’ve knocked off a team we’d said. “KU has beaten two ranked teams, and we’ve knocked off three.”
It is important for the Wildcats to start the Big Eight season with victories against the Jayhawks, Clark said.
"With such a balanced league, it's going to be a real dogfight," he said.
Only Bo's doctor knows for sure
The Associated Press
Bo Jackson's future should not be judged by doctors who haven't seen his medical reports, his agent said.
"All of these quacks around the country have not examined Bo's records and have no idea what they're talking about," Richard Woods, Jackson's agent, said yesterday from Mobile, Ala.
Woods said the only person with all of Jackson's medical records regarding his hip injury was Jim Andrews, Jackson's personal physician from
An Alabama medical center where Jackson was examined this week said the two-sport star would be tested again in 30 days. It said it would not comment on Jackson's condition until then.
Birmingham. Ala.
Andrews, who has Roger Clemens, Jack Nicklaus and Charles Barkley among his patients, was not immediately available for comment, but told USA Today in yesterday's editions, "I think it is really hard to make. Maybe it's 20 years dealing with this type of athlete, but I have that intuition."
14
Friday, March 22, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Prof ponders ecological problems
By Katie Chipman
Kansan staff writer
Modern environmental problems can be traced back to the 17th and 18th centuries, a KU history professor told about 60 people yesterday at a lecture in the Kansas Union.
The lecture was part of a two-day symposium on humanities and the environment that ended yesterday.
Donald Worster, professor of history, said the rapid expansion of population and technology that began during the Industrial Revolution led to unprecedented environmental harm.
Ending materialism is the goal
He said that examples of the ecological damage done by modern
culture occurred during the Persian Gulf War.
"This war was known as the first environmental war, where damaging the environment has been a deliberate move of aggression," he said, referring to the oil spilled into the ocean during the war.
He said that one-fourth of the world's species would be at risk of extinction within the next 20 years because of humanity's lack of foresight.
"The more we think we have things under control, the more we are
Worster said that aerosols containing chlorofluorocarbons were an example of a modern invention that seemed benign at first but was later discovered to be harmful to the environment.
bombarded with surprise," he said.
"The suprise is that we're not only destroying ozone, but the destruction is much faster than we thought," he said.
Worster said that too many people today expected maximum satisfaction from everything
"We can't find any culture that
materialism has dominated, until the modern age," he said.
He said that people in a materialis-
tic culture believe the environment con-
trols them.
Worster said that the new culture might call for new technology and economics, but that people always would be materialistic at some level.
"It's an illusion; not one of us can turn something dead into something that lives," he said. "As a historian, I will see the world simply undo what we've become."
Andrew Debicki, director of the Hall Center, said, "I think that the answer must come out of the countries that hold power now."
Journal sponsors symposium to explore issues
By Benjamin W. Allen
Kansan staff writer
The Kansas Journal of Law and Public Policy was designed to reflect the cutting edge of public policy decisions and to demonstrate the effects of laws rather than to analyze them
The symposium, "Environmental Policy: The choices for 1996," is a series of loosely structured talks and question-and answer periods
A spring symposium, sponsored by the journal, will do just that.
'It brings together all those people who are highly regarded in their fields. When you have a symposium like this it educates students about the cutting edge of issues.'
Reginald Robinson
- Reginaid Robinson associate law professor and advisor to the journal
The topics covered in the series are international environmental policy, domestic environmental policy and the workplace environment.
Karl Kuckelman, law student and a staff member for the journal, said today's session about the workplace
environment was generating a lot of interest because it featured John Kennedy, general counsel for Johnson Controls Inc., a company involved in a Supreme Court decision Wednesday.
expose workers to lead
Since 1982, the company's battery division had a fetal protection policy that barred women from potentially hazardous jobs. As a result, women have been ineligible for top-paying jobs in the company.
Kennedy will speak today about employers' perspectives on fetal-protection policies.
Keckelman said that the journal and symposium were put together by
law students but that both were intended to encourage as much interdisciplinary involvement as possible.
"The idea is to pick a hot topic and have the ultimate people come and debate the issues," he said about the symposium.
Reginald Robinson, associate professor of law and adviser to the journal, said the symposium offered a great educational opportunity.
"It brings together all those people who are highly regarded in their fields," he said. "When you have a symposium like this, it educates students about the cutting edge of issues."
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
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•March 24th•Sunday
NICK COSMOS
•March 26th•Tuesday
THE LOVE SQUAD
proceeds benefit
Lawrence Special Olympics
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842-4782
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FRIDAY
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SATURDAY
FISH BOWLS $2.00
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SUNDAY
Blue
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Classified Directory
942 Mass. 841-6966
200's
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
100's
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
Services
400's
Employment
235 Typing Services
Merchandise
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
320 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
A
300's
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Real Estate
4.05 For Rent
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Announcements
105 Personal
Mark's silking it!
Mars's standing back on our fabulous year. All I
Steve, Looks back on our fabulous year. All I
steve.
Michelle's 21
ALEXANDRA SCHUMANN
Love ya! Mom and Dad
110 Bus. Personal
EAC EXAMS! Improve memory and recall, enhance concentration, education and study skills, boost self-confidence, gain NCA audio support, call *841 9351* or *841 9351* on the Stress Management Center.
Bausch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sunglasseer
20%, Below Sug. Retail
The Etc. Shop
732 Mass., 843-6011
B. C. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto shop. Classic to computerized. Body shop available. American motorcycle rentals and are located in New York City. Mastercard & Discover cards accepted.
The Etc. Shop
Rental and Sales: 732 Mass
DO YOU FEEL SECURE?
ARE YOU SAFE?
CAMPUS CRIME IS UP - ARE YOU
PROTECTED OUR COMPLETE LINE OF
PERSONAL SECURITY PRODUCTS WILL
PROTECT BOTH YOU AND YOUR
PERSONAL VIOLATION FOR A
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CAMPUS SECURE CONCEPTS
128 WINDING WAY
BATTLE CREEK, MI 49017
CSC
Habits, phobias, stress, anxiety, pain, smoking, weight and other disorders. Hypnotherapy Center. 842.7594
Kansas City Strip, a gay Men's nudist group-for more information, write P.O. Box 2256, Kansas City, Mo. 64133
"New Analysis of Western Civilization" makes sense of western Civl Cv! "Makes sense to use it!" Available at Jawhask, Oread & Town Crier
Make a
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Clothing & Accessories
For Men & Women
Sunglasses & Contours
732 Mairi. 843-0611
VISA-MC-AM.EXP-DISCOVER CARD
120 Announcements
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT-Fibers
Workdays per week: 8-12 hours
Over 800 openings. No experience
necessary. Male or Female. For 64 page empl
yment applications call 357-844-8088.
800th Street, Waukee WA 98124-Satisfaction
Quitting business sale continues at the Book End, in Quantrill's Flea Market, 811 New Hampshire, weeks 10-5.
Call Douglas County Rape Victim's Support Service for confidential and care assistance. If you need help, call 844-3506 or 841-2345
Now has incredible besswax & plant pigment crayons, paints, and high quality recycled akebelskops for all serious artists The Antique Mall 200 Mass. Lower level.
EARTH SPRINGS | Living Myth Through Ritual Workshops. Tuesdays, April 9-18 2:00 introductory lecture April 2. 7:30 pm. Lamplighter books, 10 E Nith.
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2345. Headquarters.
Gay & Lesbian Peer Consulting. A friendly understanding voice. Free, confidential referrals (calls returned by counselors). Headquarters for RU info 844-3060. Sponsored by LENA
SPRING into HEALTH with MASSAGE: Recover from stress and injury so you can really enjoy the season. Call Bruce at Lawrence Massage Therapy at 814-663-1062 go fly a kite.
Survive Intervention - If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is ill, 841-2943 or visit 1419 Mass., Headquarters Counseling Center.
Take a study break and go on an Adventure!!!
Storm down the Illinois river for two days of canoeing excitement! Get a group of friends and a boat to sail up the river at 12:45, 18:26, 18:50 incandescent 2 nights lodging in cabins on the river 2 days canoeing and six meal. For more info call SSA at 864-3477. Get away from the rain!
SUA
THE WAR AFFECTS US- For a caring listener or info on support services, call Headquarters Counseling Center. 841-2345.
♪
now accepting tapes for Day on the Hill
submit tapes to the SUR Box Office
Monday April 8 at noon.
level 4 Kansas Union
Area talent mag
Tapes must be in by Monday, April 8 at noon.
月
GLSOK
Spring Dance
Friday, March 22
9 pm - 1 am
1st floor Burge Union
Gay and Lesbian
Services of Kansas
月
For more details, call the SUR Office 864-3477
130 Entertainment
ALL, Left Inseam and Sideshow live at the
AULHOUSE, Thursday, March 28, 86, all ages,
no alcohol The outhouse is 4 miles east of
Mass. on 15th St.
Lawrence Info Center, content orientated BBS.
140 Lost-Found
Lost: Gold clip-on earring Friday before Spring Break. If found please call 749-3569.
Johnny's UP & UNDER
is available for Engagement Parties, Birthday Parties, Pinning Parties and any other party possible. 842-0377
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Seeking students and grads to fill many positions.
Airline will train. Excellent salary and travel benefits. 303-441-2455
Babysitter needed immediately. After school care-Monday through Friday, 3:00-5:00 p.m.
References: 843-3147
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girl summer camps. Teach swimming, canning, sailing, watergyming or basketball; campfire camps, camping, crafts, dramas, or riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. $100 or less. Mail resume to: Campfire, 769 Maple, MN, IL 60038-740-4244.
CITY OF LAWRENCE
1991 SUMMER JOBS
Earn while you learn. Mamposo is looking for students interested in earning great pay plus commission. We offer flexible hours, valuable training and mentoring programs. You can also personal computer. If you are a full-time student, sophomore or above, with at least a B average, and are computer familiar. Mamposo needs you to be able to use Microsoft IBM Personal System 2 on campus. For experience that pays, call Lort 749-2800.
The City of Lawrence is recruiting for various summer jobs, including outdoor day program training, special populations, concessions, maintenance, and charmed services. Applications go to Lawrence Services, Room 210, City Hall, 4th & Massachusetts, Lawrence, SK 66444. EO
Graduate student. Student Financial Aid is required. Please bring your resume with the CASIH Scholarship Search Program. This is a half-time position. The monthly salary is $1,980. Position requires application,姓名,resumes and names, addresses, and contact information for the position. Buono, Associate Director. Student Financial Aid will hold all Hall. All graduation must be received by November 25th.
ALPINE SPRING
SUMMER CAMP JOBS IN MICHIGAN
-Counselors
-Office
-Kitchen
-Maintenance
Lake of the Woods for Girls Geenwoods for Boys
INTERVIEWS ON CAMPUS
Tues., March 26th, 12:00-5:00p
Wed., March 27th, 8:30am-2:00p
110 Burge Union
No appointment needed
Great job in Philadelphia suburb. Have fun with 2 cubs for kids of 35 weekly hours. Earn great salary, room, board and 2 weeks paid vacation. Starts for one year. Catered at Elizabeth (12) for one year.
International Company seeks career minded individuals to train in the fashion and glamour industry. For interview, 1-732-6829
KU School of Education seeks: *Instructor programs* (4) teach high school students in summer session m 1 to 6; (5) government/family issues in summer session m 2 to 5; (6) biology, chemistry, degree, teaching experience, and experience working with culturally diverse students; (7) coordinate residence hall staff and live in residence hall. Degree required. Peer Tutor (8) provide course and supervise high school students. At least minor level status in college required. Course curriculum includes description and application forms available at Upward Board, 608 Bailey Hall. Send letter of application, transcript, contact information, and three references to Chris Sykes, Upward Board, University of Kanaan College, Lawrence, KS 6903 (ks6903-8430) EDU SA.
Need money fast! Make up to $125.00 a day trimming photographs. No experience necessary. 1-800-695-2789.
Need responsible non-smoking girl for babysitting.
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday mornings
8:30-11:30. Call 843-2589.
POSITION AVAILABLE: A local mortuary needs to hire a K.U. student to work every other night and weekend. Duties include: answering the phone calls of patients and working with the public. This individual needs to be neat, have good communication skills and desire to work in an office environment as a salary, furnished apartment and paid utilities. The position is open beginning May 18th. For additional information and an interview, call 843-1212.
PROGRAM ASSISTANT-10 hour-week. $4444 for 12 months. Assist students and faculty in the computer analysis program such as SPSS, the BIOS, DLMS, SPSS, SPTS, dBASE, 123 Lotus on microcomputers and other comparable programs. Requires a Master's degree or equivalent in permanent design. Bachelor's degree in an appropriate field such as psychology or computer science. Must be enrolled in application will also be considered. Application deadline: all materials must be received by April 18th. Applicant must have a demonstrated level of recommendation to: Demina H. Karpowitz, Department of Psychology, 428 Fraser, University of Kansas, LAKES, KS 60040 EOAA AA
Spring Break over and still no summer job?
Average making $450/week while gaining career experience for your resume 811-1242.
Work Study positions available: Spring, Summer and Fall. Call Judy at the School of Business.
864-7588
University Daily Kansan / Friday. March 22. 1901
15
$$ SUMMER JOBS $$
The Lytic Opera of Kansas City is hiring a Marketing Director and Pay incentive. No experience necessary, but a Bachelor's degree in Marketing, starting in May and running through July For more information, call LUCY the Lytic, 718-532-4099.
Unique Career Opportunity
811 to start and bonus
Need managers for rapid growing corporation.
Work with students in marketing, marketing and management. Call 1-262-891-1.
Wanted: Part-time babybissiter for nice 6 month old baby in our office on Mass, close to campus, make sure you are comfortable.
Wanted: Part-time babystetter for once 8 month old baby in office on Mass, close to school, make money while studying. call 843-0174.
225 Professional Services
Need an Attorney?
CALL RICHARD A. FRYDMAN
843-4023 / free initial consultation
TRAFFIC - DUI'S
Fake IDs & alcohol offenses
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
Driver Education offered thru Midwinter Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7499
Government photos, passports, immigration,
vias, senior portrait modeling & arts portfolios. B2W.W. Mail No. 194111
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn & Abortion Services
Call (800) 376-5933
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 491-6878
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scrubbed into accurately spelled and punctuated, gramatically correct pages of letter qualification type. 843-263, days or evenings.
1+ Typing/WP: letters, resumes, term papers,
etc. 842-4754. 3:30-10:30 pm wkdys, anytime
wkends.
A better price for Word Processing. Fast service
0.00*double-spaced paper. Call Theresa. 841-0776.
Absolute cheapest typing in Lawrence
0.00*double-spaced paper. Rush jobs no problem
Accurate typing, Resumes, Theses, Letters, Call Melan,
1-413 8-153 4754 or 864 318-31
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary.
$1.25 double-spaced page. Call Mrs. Mattila
4am, 6pm, 8:12, 12:19
Call R.I. J's Typing Services 841-924 Term Sheet
Dona's Domain Typing and Word Processing
Term paper, themes, dissertations, letters,
letters, and spelling corrected. G-W 2100 W.S.
Schenck and spelling corrected. G-W 2100 W.S.
I will correct grammar, punctuation or spelling errors, edit and type your words of wisdom and, in
passion, apply your best possible papers. Phi 842-625
His professional word processing. Accurate and
affordable. Call after 1:00 pm. 841-4345.
information. Call first. Pip on OTR.
Professional Typist. Reasonable rates. Call
842-3203.
Professional resumes-Consultations, formating typesetting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc, $ 921^{7}$
WordPerfect word processing. Ink Jet printer. Near Orchards Corners. Phone 843-6568.
Word Processing/Typing: Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing, composition. Have M.
S. Degree. 841-6254
305 For Sale
1986 Yamaha FZ 600, $1900. Call 864-8242.
1987 Honda Elite, 50cc, red, reliable
space 514 flame, Call 842-2302, leave message.
For sale: movie theater components. Screen pro
1986 Yamaha F Z 600, $1500. Call 849-6242.
1986 Honda Elite, 50cc, red, reliable and inexpensive transportation. $900. Call 744-29018.
Computer: T1858 Printer, IBM PC mount 20 MEG Hard Drive, $4! Floppy, $12 K Ram, near new spare $4, Call 8422-2022, leave message
sive transportation $200 Call 749-2521
1990 Miata Mt. Mile. Excursion, w/ lock
$250 obo Call 749-9528, ask for Peter
1983 Honda V45 Interceptor 750 and accessories,
12,000 miles, mint condition. $2100. Larry.
841-4365.
GOVT SURFUN! Sleeping bags, backpacks, tens, camouflage clothing, wet weather gear, boots. GOLF CLUBS WORKWEAR Mon-Sat 5-14:37-27.384 St. Mary's Surf Sales. St. Mary's, KS. Golf clubs. Brown leather Foot-Joy Classics. Size (M) $padded (14). Used once for $6. Phone
For sale: movie transfer compound; Screen, projector, sound system. $2000. 816-531-4769
For sale: Skiing rowing machine. Good condition. $100.00. 749-4527
SONY Video 8 CCD-V11 Handycam with tripod, battery packs and tape. Virtuality new, worth $300, will sell for $150, $231-103.
Macintosh SE COMPUTER for SALE. Less than 1 yr old, 1 meg RAM, 20 meg HD, mouse, software. At sai48 at 66 14 66 10 or 913 41 46 657.
Specialized Mt. bike, 6 months old, black, Krypton lock included. i20308 obs. 885-3949 (vm msg).
TREK 60-Shimano 105, Matrix Wheels, road bike, like new. Jason 865-1597.
340 Auto Sales
1986 Mitsubishi Corda, 5 spd. 2厢 hbk, sewk several new goods. Condition asking, *Asking 8390* 842-7570
Honda Civic Wagon, 98,00 miles, beautiful 842-2790 $7,490
18928 Mitsubishi Precise. 39,000 miles, 2 dr. stock,
5gyer aero. $490,478-798 after 80m.
80 'Ruby Conv' Good, body, clean interior, runs good!
Best reasonable offer. 749-3418.
Seniors and grad students! Ford's college grad program can help you buy a new car or truck. For details, call Bill 843-3000.
360 Miscellaneous
On TVs. VCR's, jewelry, stereo, music instruments, cameras and more. We honor Visa/MCAMEX Disc. Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry, 108 W. 14th 791-1919.
For sale. 8 month Body Boutique membership
1854. 864-724 mornings; 842-275, leave message.
VOLKSWAN
400s Real Estate
4-5 bedroom house available April 1 $800 per month
2 blocks from KU on Kentucky. Days
931-321-1494, Craig
=
Available March 1- 1 bd unair up, in new baskets. See details. Available March 2- 3 bd unair up, with DW backpacks (D W backpacks, microwave, DW, ceding fam, mini binds. Great location near campus. Short lease拿 $35 per month. No pets.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper available on an equal opportunity basis.
Big sunny 1 bedroom apt available now thru July.
Option for next year. 2 Stocks from campus
$72/month. 842-9211. Leave message.
Bradford Square Apartments 501 Colorado
2 & 3 BR-Available in May or August,
dishwashers, refrigerators, microwave,
guest room, patio or deck, laundry facility.
On site Management, KU bus route, off-street park.
Call to ensure your apartment for summer
availability.
Nice 2 bedroom apt. Close to Student Union.
Washer/driver hookup. Off-street parking. No pets.
748 2919
Extra nice, spacious, 3 bbm lowhouse w/ garage. 2 female non-smoking rooms needed, year lease beginning August and/or summer lease. B120 5% utilities. Kerr 437-6062
Roommates rooms wanted for next school year.
Beautiful 3 BR house, 2 car garage, newly redecorated, furnished, nice neighborhood. W/D, and much more. August rent free. Non-smokers.
Great 1 bdmrt apt for rent. 1 block from Union.
Must see to appreciate. Call Kristen at 865-0010.
Leave message.
KU - KM. students. Move June 1 and
receive $1.0 off your rent for 2 months. *Studio 1,
and 2 bedroom aps.* Heat and water paid. *Across*
KU Med. Center, Rainbow Tower Apts.
Lorimar Townhomes, 381n, Clinton Parkway,
Quality, spaceous, with all the amenities. Briant
available now. 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease until
May, July or for 12 months. 847-8483-7453
2. 1 BR, 4.3 BR. Washers/drivers in each unit, fireplaces, microwaves, fireplaces, 2 full baths in a br. on bus route, off street parking. Only 1 yr old. Call: 784-1566.
Nice 1 bedroom apt close to the Union. No pets.
Deposit and references required. Off street parking.
749-2919
New leasing for fall semester, 1 and 2 bedrooms
Aspen West Apartment $305 for bedroom, $755
bedroom. Ceiling fans, water paid. Walk to campus.
Call 842-1168 or 842-1839
New leasing 1 and 2 bedroom beds at southfremont Plaza Apt. 1538; bedroom 275; bedroom starts at $35, 10 month lease. Water and cable paired remodeled kitchen, new carpet. Call 461-180-6192.
ONE BLOCK FROM KANSAS UNION . For rent to serio graduate school. upper-class student or HI turned up. HI turned up. bqse 299. water turned up. EK mo 841-388 after 5 P.M.
SUMMER SUBLEASE with option for fall, in Sundance II. Spacious 2 BR, furnished, private pool Call 865-2816. leave message.
Sublease large one bedroom apt. Close to campus on bus route, microwave, dishwasher, jacuzzi and pool. Call 841-9114
Sublease May-August 1 1 Br, CA, DW,
Wather/driver, walk to KU. Small pet OK, $550
mary. 841-1800.
Summer sublease, 2 bedroom, $12/bath free,
summer laundering, available $22/month.
Maryfield Mall Fall leasing Furnished 1 and 2
bedrooms in KLU from $10 afst. park space,
no pet, no KLU
South Point
- Pool & Volleyball
- Quiet location
- Close to bus route
Open 10-5, M-F
- Central air
- 2166 W.26th 843-6446
- Small pets OK with deposit
EDDINGHAM PLACE
VILLAGE SQUARE
Apartment
A Quiet, Relaxed
Atmosphere
close to campus spacious 2 bedroom laundry fac. & pool waterbed allowed
VILLAGE SQUARE Apartments
24TH & EDDINGHAM
9th & Avalon
842-3040
Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an Affordable Price!!
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
No Appt. Necessary
841-5444
Summer Sublease-1 BR furnished apartment, next to Union. Dishwasher, drafting table $235, negligible $41-266.
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished rooms on shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilities paid 1 bib from KU with off-street parking. No bids: 841-500.
9-3 pm Sat.
Summer sublease, 3 bdmr, furnished,
Tangweled. Option for fall: $106 each. May paid.
748-1099
Summer sublease Large studio. $275/mo.
841-4784 after 6pm
Summer sublease with option to take over lease in
fall. Brand new 2 bedroom, 1 female roommate
wanted, $100. Call Jalynn, 841-1149.
SUNRISE VILLAGE
Now Leasing for Fall Mon.-Fri. 11-5
- Luxurious 3 & 4
- Luxurious 5 & 4 Bedroom Town Houses
- Bedroom Town Houses
- Garages: 2 & 1/2 bath
- Garages; 2 & 1/2 bat
- Microwave Ovens
- Microwave Ovens
- Some with fireplaces
- Come with inplace
- On KU L Bus Route
- Swimming Pool & Tennis Courts
- Swimming Pool
841-8400
- On KU Bus Route
- Swimming Pool
TREE OF LIFE
WOODWAY
2111 Kasold 843-4300
Pool
Apple Lane Apartments
49
611 Michigan Street (across from Hardee's)
Each apartment features Weather and driver
Please call Kristy for appt
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fr
9:00-12:00 Sat
843-1971
WEST HILL APARTMENTS
Now accepting reservations for fall leases!
3 bedroom $560 office
Water paid
2 Emery K
841-3800
*new leasing for*
June 6
August 5
1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
$280 to $335 per month
-2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft $365 to $415 per month
Close to KU bus route
Summer sublease. Nice 3 BR with dishwasher, washer/dryer, AC. Call 865-1655.
Spacious apts. - furnish
and unfurnished
1:00 - 4:00 p.m. (no apt needed)
This ad for original buildings only
does not include Phase II
Enlarged to Show Texture
Free cable
Great location
OPEN HOUSE
1 bedroom ants. 735 sq ft
---
Summer sublease 4 bedroom furnished apt. Pool at complex, Sound Callage #85, 469-382.
Two bedroom sublease May 15 to 15, no payment. 803-398 or 798-219. Ask for Jennifer.
Two non-smoking females needed for sublease starting May 15 (Date negotiate) inquiries should be presented at $140 and $180 plus ½ utilities. Water and cable paid. Pool. Call: 985-8293.
Near campus
*1 & 2 BR apartments
*2 & 3 BR townhomes
Mon. Wed. Thurs
(water paid!)
-2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft
Now leasing for summer & fall
Now leasing for summer & fall 1991
spacious & comfortable
$280 to $335 per month (water paid!)
*1 & 2 BR apartments
Near Campus
- 3 Pools
- Tennis courts
- on KU bus route
-gas heat & water paid
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for fall leases!
Accepting reservations
Quail Creek Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
TRAILRIDGE
2500 W.6th 843-7333
...on KU bus route
...studios
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Short Term Subleases Available Immediately
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Some Summer Subleases too!
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Hours: Mon-Fri 8-5:30
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meadowbrook
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Hanover Place - 841-1212 14th & Mass
Kentucky Place - 749-0445
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430 Roommate Wanted
A roommate needed immediately* $187.50 plus part utilities. March rent paid. On bus route, 437-478.
Call now for summer sublease Female room-mate at Orchard Corners. Call anytime at 842-3026
speciale roommate needed to share unique spacious 3 BD apt for next year. Call 749-6453. Share beautiful house near campus. Non-smoker, student 18/month, $60 deposit, 1/5 utilities.
Summer sublease. Female roommate needed to share condo, own room, carport, W/D, microwave, pool, CA and more $155.00 plus utilities. Call Lealt. 855-0590 or 855-7020.
By GARY LARSON
© 1991 Universal Press Syndicate
"Look at this shirt, Remus! You can zip-a-dee-doo-dah all day long for all I care, but you keep that dang Mr. Bluebird off your shoulder!"
16
Fridav. March 22, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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FREDERICK HARRIS
Just a touch up
Skip Cook. Kennedy Glass employee, puts some finishing touches on the window trim of the new Douglas County Bank that
is under construction at the corner of Ninth and Tennessee streets. Cook said he would be working on the site for two more weeks.
Juvenile hall could be a costly risk
Financing of project discussed at forum
By Vanessa Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
The financial risk of playing host to a regional juvenile detention center in Douglas County emerged as a primary concern last night during an informational forum on local juvenile detention
Nearly 50 people attended the panel discussion sponsored by the League of Women Voters. The discussion was designed to explain a plan to build a regional juvenile detention center in Douglas County
Douglas County was one of four counties selected as sites for regional juvenile detention centers when, in 1989, the Legislature enacted a law
requiring the separation of juvenile offenders from adult offenders by Jan. 1, 1993. The other host counties are Crawford, Finney and Trego
"Dealing with this project is like dealing with a bowl of Jell-O," said Chris McKenzie, county administrator. "We don't have a whole lot of confidence that our partners at the state level are going to stay with us."
Although a juvenile detention center in Douglas County would reduce the amount of time and money the county spends transporting criminal offenders to other counties, how much the state and surrounding counties will contribute to the project's financing remains unclear.
Mckenzie said that according to the present state plan, the state would pay only 6 percent of the construction expenses of the $1.5 million building and of the $500,000 in annual operating costs.
The parenists urged Douglas County residents to write to legislators to support a Senate bill due to appear before the House this spring. According to the bill, the state would finance the construction of the juvenile detention centers, leaving the operating costs to the counties
Jean Shepherd, Douglas County district judge, said that the county no longer could rely on alternatives to the state's law for services and in-house detentions to
compensate for the lack of detention services because detention caseloads had doubled since 1986.
"We've always been good with coming up with alternative resources, she said. Now we can't be as good as our native. We're really against it."
But McKenzie said the plan would backfire if the dentation center became too much of a burden for Douglas County taxpayers.
"Having a juvenile detention center in Douglas County makes excellent sense," he said. "But asking Douglas County residents to take up all of the risk of hosting a regional detention center does not make excellent sense."
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL. 101, No. 116
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
MONDAY, MARCH 25; 1991
ADVERTISING:864-4358
40)
'Hawk fans go wild for Roy's Boys
Thousands greet team at Forbes and field house
NEWS: 864-4810
By S. J. Bailey Kansan staff writer
Nearly 14,000 Jayhawk fans were dancing to the Field House Rock on Saturday night as they waited for the Kansas men's basketball team to return from its triumphant weekend in Charlotte, N.C.
An estimated 5,000 fans mobbed Forbes Field in Topeka when the Jayhawks' chartered plane touched back home in the Sunflower场.
The eager crowd then sped back to Allen Field House to await the arri-
tance.
About 11:30 p.m. Jayhawk Time, the team marched through the tunnel and made its way to center court, and mass hysteria erupted through the waves of Kansas (ans). As hundreds of fans rushed the team at center court, a voice boomed through the loudspeakers, scolding.
"This is exactly what we told you
not to do. It is exactly what Roy
wil not to do. The Jayhawks do not
wil not to do.
It was minutes before the crowd quieted enough to let the players spin.
"Dick Vitale said we wouldn't beat Indiana, and we beat them by 20," a euphoric Adonis Jordan shouted to the crowd. "Then we were down to Arkansas by 12 and we beat them by now we're going to the Final Four."
"There are a lot of things we like to keep in the family that we don't tell the press." Williams said. "But I'm going to let you on a secret. Before the game, I told the team it wasn't going to be 40 minutes of hell — it was going to be 80 because we were gonna be there too."
Coach Roy Williams told the Allen crazies once again that the field house was the best arena in the country.
8
Jayhawk victory fosters frenzy for Final Four shirts
VIRGINIA
We're in!
By Lara Gold
Kansan staff writer
Paul Herpich waited for more than a half hour for a T-shirt with the "Ar" slashed out of Arkansas.
Kansan staff write
"This shirt is a little extra special," said Heriph, Lawrence sophomore. "They had already beaten four of us last night. We were the first to beat them.
Larry Liber, Lawrence resident,
bought Final Four T-shirts for his
wife, his brother-in-law and himself.
"I didn't think we had a chance."
Heriph was one of about 700 people who were in and out of Jayhawk Spirit, 935 Massachusetts St., yesterday, buying Final Four and KU memorabilia following the men's basketball team's 93-81 win against Arkansas on Saturday for a berth in the NCAA Final Four tournament.
"I didn't think we had a chance," he said referring to the Final Four.
Christina Shirel, Jayhawk Spirit employee, said people had been in line for the 'Arkansas' T-shirts all day.
Around Lawrence, other retailers were experiencing the same sort of
The store estimated it sold more than 1,000 T-shirts yesterday.
"We are bringing them down every five to 10 minutes," she said.
Tom Wilkerson, owner of Jayhawk Spirit, said the store had been packed since it opened at 8:30 a.m. yesterday.
March 30-April 1, 1961
Indianapolis, Indiana
FINAL
FOUR
The store usually opens at noon on Sunday.
"There have been a million phone calls today to see if we are open," he
People also were buying KU sweatshirts, hats, pencils, post-cards, sweatpants, pompons and more.
Coach Roy Williams raises his fists in victory Saturday as the 'Hawks secure a spot in the Final Four.
response to KU's victory
many paragary, supervisor of gifts and clothing at the KU Bookstore in the Kansas Union, said the bookstore had been busy all day.
Patrick Turner, co-owner of Prairie Graphics, 2317 Ponderosa St., said yesterday that the store had sold more than 2,000 T-shirts since Saturdays.
"We got in 172 shirts," she said.
"We've probably sold about 100 of them."
Prairie Graphics had outdoor Tairn stands at 9th and 11th, 23rd and Naismith, 23rd and Haskell, and 23rd and Alabama streets, he said.
She said the store would stay open later if customers were still there.
Muggy said yesterday that the store had sold more than 150 Final Four T-shirts since it opened.
"The second the game was over we started printing," Turner said.
"People are buying everything and anything that has Kansas on it," she said.
"Anything that is associated with Kansas and anything associated with basketball is selling," he said.
Bill Muggy, manager of the Jay hawk Bookstore, agreed.
Kansas will face North Carolina, and Duke will battle UNLV in the semifinals beginning at 4:40 p.m. Saturday.
NCAA Roundup
Fans crowd in front of Wescoe Hall and celebrate the win.
Ticket Distribution
Information on who is eligible to receive Final Four tickets and how and where to get them.
See Page 8.
Jubilant KU fans familiar to police
By Mike L. Vargas
Kansan staff writer
Local authorities expected the swarm of fans on Jayhawk Boulevard, where beer-drinking, bottle-rocket dodging and shinnying up street light posts were part of Saturday's campus celebration.
The celebration was a result of the Jayhawks' 93-81 victory against the Arkansas Razorbacks on Saturday, which placed the KU men's basketball team in the NCAA Final Four tournament.
Local authorities were better prepared for jubilant fans this year than they were in 1988, said James Denney, KU police director.
In 1988, when the Jayhawks headed to and eventually won the Final Four, KU police had to deal with medical emergencies that occurred during campus celebrations, Denney said. During Saturday's campus celebration, there were no serious medical emergencies.
'All in all, considering the activities and the excitement, the cleanup was nominal. Next week, if things go well with the team, we will have a tremendous cleanup.'
Bob Porter assistant director of plant maintenance
To make the celebration safer than in 1988, KU police began setting up a command post in a parking lot south of Marvin Hall 20 minutes before the event.
KU police officers were strategically placed throughout campus, he said.
Two Lawrence police officers on motorcycles patrolled the perimeters of the campus, and two Douglas nurses assisted KU police, Denney said.
In addition, the Douglas County Ambulance Service positioned one ambulance at the corner of Jayhawk Boulevard and Poplar Lane and another at the corner of 11th and Mississippi streets.
Rob Kort, Douglas County Ambulance Service assistant supervisor, said ambulances arrived five minutes before the game ended, because in 1988, ambulances had a difficult time getting past traffic and responding to medical emergencies on campus.
In 1988 celebrations, many serious head injuries occurred when people fell from moving cars. Kort said, they also posed a threat to reckelers.
But this year, vehicle traffic was blocked off along Jayhawk Boulevard between the Chi Omega founders Road to prevent vehicle accidents.
Although KU police were in charge of maintaining safety and preventing traffic jams, facilities operations was in charge of the cleanup.
Bob Porter, assistant director of plant maintenance, said there were beer cans and bottles everywhere in the house wrapped around trees and shrubs.
"All in all, considering the activities and the excitement, the cleanup was nothing more. We thought we could go well with the team, we will have a tremendous cleanup."
NICOSIA, Cyprus — Iraq yesterday denounced U.S. terms for a permanent Persian Gulf War cease-fire, and opposition groups said troops battled anti-government protesters in the streets of
The Associated Press
The opposition groups also described renewed fighting in cities of the Shite Muslim south, where government soldiers earlier appeared to have gained the upper hand.
A permanent cease-fire has not been signed yet, and the United
States said it would not agree to one unless Iraq destroyed all its chemical, biological and nuclear materials under U.N. supervision.
Money shortage causes shelter to close
There was no further word yesterday on the government changes announced a day earlier three weeks ago signed by Saddam Hussein.
Dissident groups, meanwhile, claimed that rebellion continued to rock the war-battered country from the Kurdish north to the Shiite south, as well as in the capital.
By Vanessa Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
Mounting debts and a shortfall in finances have forced a local homeless shelter to shut down.
The Salvation Army Safe House, 924 New Hampshire St., will close April 1 because it has incurred about $70,000 in debts and failed to a consistent source of financial support, the Salvation Army's advisory board announced Friday.
"It's a real tragedy," said Pete Hermes, a volunteer worker at the Safe House.
Salvation Army officials estimate that more than 350 people have taken part in the exercise.
Salvation Army cites $70,000 in debts
Jeanne Blankenship, who also works at the Safe House, said the shelter's 19 beds were full every night.
Richard Zinn, chairperson for the advisory board, said the shelter's shutdown would have a serious impact on how many homeless problem in Lawrence.
in January 1990
Zinn said that the decision to close
"The shelter tried to drive a wedge into the pattern of the homeless," Zinn said. "Those people aren't just the problem. These people are from right here."
The annual operation cost for the
"We feel we can provide the necessary help," Zinn said, "but the funding just hasn't been there."
the shelter was based on the recommendations of a task force established to find possible solutions to the shelter's financial crisis.
The shelter relied on city and state grants and United Way donations last year, but a sound base of financial support never was established, Zinn said. The Salvation Army had hoped for larger donations from the city and United Way this year but did not receive additional money.
Safe House was about $100.000.
The Salvation Army created the Safe House to provide both permanent shelter and offer residents transitional counseling.
The advisory board announced that the Salvation Army would still provide an emergency shelter program by allowing people to live in a small apartment adjacent to the gymnasium at the Salvation Army building on St. Zinn said that about 10 people could live at the emergency shelter.
4.
The emergency shelter, which opened in 1986, was designed to give homeless people temporary shelter during especially cold weather.
2
Monday, March 25, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
KU AND LAWRENCE EVENTS
CALENDAR
Monday
KU Triathletes will meet at 8 p.m. at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Accounting and IRS will conduct a volunteer income tax assistance workshop at 6 p.m. on the fourth floor of the Kansas Union.
Hispanic-American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
KU KWELNESS Center will sponsor a
10 am, 12 pm at Robinson Center.
12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center.
John Wundler will speak about "Anti-Chinese Violence in the American West" at 7:30 p.m. at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. The Graduate Association of Students of history is sponsoring event at 6:30 p.m. Club Hall meet at 6:30 p.m. at 207 Robinson Center.
Tuesday
KU Wellness Center will sponsor an "Overcoming Overeating" workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center
Union
■ Voice will meet at 7 p.m. at 1204 Oread Ave.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 d.m. at 130 Robinson Center.
University Placement Center will conduct an interview-preparation workshop at 3:30 p.m. at 149 Burge
Academic Computing Services will sponsor a Unix Socket programming seminar at 7 p.m. in the Computer Services Facility auditorium.
There will be a confidential support group for gays, lesbians and bisexuals. For more information Services of Kansas at 864-3091.
Wednesday
KU Wellness Center will sponsor a stress-management workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center.
University Placement Center will conduct an interviewing workshop at 3:30 p.m. at 149 Burge Union.
KU Accounting Club and IRS will sponsor volunteer tax assistance workshops at 9 a.m. and at 6 p.m. in the Kansas Union.
Environs will meet at 6 p.m. at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union
■ KU Tae Kwon Do Club will sponsor a workout at 6:30 p.m. at 207 Robinson Center.
Bacchus will meet at 4:30 p.m. at Watkins Memorial Hospital Earth.
KU office of study abroad will conduct a general information meeting at a 1 a.m. at Lippincott. Student Organization will have a general meeting at 3:30 p.m. on the first floor of Bailey Hall.
Thursday
University Placement Center will conduct a resume-writing workshop at 3:30 p.m. at 149 Burge Union.
p.m. at 130 Robinson Center.
KU Nutrition Center will conduct an overcoming overseeing workshop at 12:10 p.m. at 130 Robinson.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30
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MATHEMATICS PRIZE COMPETITION
4 3 2 1 4 3 2 1 4 3 2 1 4 3 2 1 4 3 2 1 4 3 2 1 4 3 2 1 4 3 2 1 4 3 2 1 4 3 2 1 4 3 2 1 4 3 2 1 4 3 2 1 4
Junior Level: Open to all undergraduates of non-senior standing.
Second Prize-- $40
First Prize-- $75
Senior Level: Open to all undergraduates.
First Prize-- $100
Second Prize-- $50
Both exams will be given on March 28,1991 7-10 p.m. in room 301 Snow To participate you must register in 405 Snow by noon, March 27, 1991.
COPIES OF LAST YEAR'S COMPETITION ARE POSTED OUTSIDE 405 SNOW
Treat Yourself!
New Directions Series presents the
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts
Tickets on sale in the
Murphy Hall Box
Murphy Hall Box
Office and at Liberty
urban bush women
Hall; Student tickets
A Mid - America Arts Alliance Program
Hall, Student tickets
Jawole Wole Jo Zollar. Artistic Director
Adult American All-American Program
8:00 p.m.
available at the SUA
Wednesday, March 27, 1991
all seating is
admission to charge
by phone call
914-2832
Liberty Hall
Partially funded by the
Mid-America Arts
Alliance through the
Kanias Arts Commission
and the National
Endowment for the Arts;
additional support
provided by the KU
Student Senate Activity
Fee. Swarthout Society,
and the KU Endowment
Association
This performance is partially underwritten by
Special thanks to this year's Very Important Partners: Hallmark Card, Inc. Payless ShoeSource: and Sallie Mae.
Step Out For Great Entertainment!
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 25, 1991
3
Local unions support Food Barn strike
By Patricia Rojas
Kansan staff writer
Members of six local labor unions rallied yesterday afternoon in South Park, 11th and Massachusetts in, support of Food Barn strikers.
About 30 people, including strikers and former customers of Food Barn, are killed in a trucking accident.
Analyze, reassure, business manager of the local Plumbers' and the strikers at yesterday's only that his office backed them 100 percent.
"My family used to shop at Food Barn, but they won't be going back until you go back." Peslee said. "If we were not going to go better, they re-wrong."
Doris Parker, Lawrence resident,
carried a picket sign displaying old
cashed checks made out to Food
District. The district wrote,
"I used to shop at Farm Awn."
"I've been shopping there since the doors opened," Parker said. "I'm just appalled at what they're doing to the people."
Food Barn's labor union went on strike March 3 to protest the management's implementation of a new contract that requires a $9 million-a-year reduction in wages and benefits.
'My family used to shop at Food Barn, but they won't be going back until you go back. If the management thinks it's going to get better, they're wrong.'
Dwayne Peaslee business manager of the local Plumbers' and Pipeffters' Union
Charles said he thought business at the local store was down 30 to 40 percent.
Mike Charles, union steward for the local store, 1900 W.23rd St., said that 10 of the local employees were on strike. Before the strike, the store employed 40 people.
Local Food Barn representatives have not commented on the strike since it began about three weeks ago.
tative of Food Barn's union, criticized the managers of Food Barn Inc., yesterday at the rally for portraying their company as community-minded.
Jerry Helmick, business represen-
"To be community-minded, you're going to have to be fair to your own employees.
"We're not asking for pay increases or benefit increases. All these people are asking for is not to work and they presently have." Heilmick said.
He said Food Barn Inc. was dragging the employees' standard of living down to poverty levels.
"There's a lot of them who are having to pull their children out of college after this semester," Helmick said.
He said that the union had announced to the management their willingness to negotiate but that the company had not reacted.
LOCAL UNION 78
AMERICAN FEDERATION
INTERNATIONAL
DEPARTMENT OF GRAVY MILITI
"What I foresee in the future is either Food Barn to训动 acting like an ostrich and pull their head out of the sand, or they better sell their stores to someone that knows how to operate the business," Helmick said.
Members of local labor unions discuss the current strike by Food Barn employees: (From left to right) Jim Seeman, Sheet Metal Workers Union; Dwayne Peaselee, Central Labor Council; F迪rorne, local chapter president of the Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers Union; Tom McCall, local chapter president of the American Federation of Grain Millers; and Jim Briggs, also of AFGM. About 30 people attended a rally yesterday in South Park in support of striking Food Barn employees.
MARCUS MORRIS
Blow me awav
Syd Rodway, St. Louis junior, plays a solo during a Jazz Ensemble I performance. The group's performance Saturday night was the final to the 14th Annual Jayhawk Invitational Jazz Festival, which began Friday. The festival included clinics and performances by jazz singer Mavis Rivers, pianist Frank Mantooth, bassist Bob Bowman, drummer Peter Erskine and the U.S. Air Force Notables.
Finney attempt fails to give people power
Kansan staff writer
By Joe Gose
TOPEKA — Gov. Joan Finney's vehicle to republican bail wall on the honeys on Friday.
Three resolutions, two which would have given voters the power to enact laws and constitutional amendments, and one which would not.
did referendum power,
did not receive the two-
thirds majority vote
needed after receiving
tentative approval Thursday.
A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
Finney, who had retracted an earlier threat to veto all appro
Joan Finney
on her desk if the resolutions were not passed, attacked Republican leaders.
"House Republican leaders abandoned their own party platform to use this vehicle to attack me personally," she said. "They are apparently more interested in beating up on a Democrat governor than in doing what is in the best interest of the people of this state.
"The actions of the Republican House leaders on this issue demonstrate that, in fact, the people could conduct the business of this state more effectively after all."
But State Rep. Tim Shallenburger, R-Baxter Springs, who introduced an amendment to give the people the right to reject tax increases, said the failure of the Democrats to pass the amendment rendered the resolutions impotent.
"Some of us tried to get an amendment on here to give the people what they really want
— the ability to address the tax problems that we have in this state," he said. "I think the 63 bleeding hearts on this bill are guilty of providing to the citizens what they want."
Finney, however, said that voters should examine the Republican agenda and hold them responsible for the failure of the resolutions.
"I can only hope that the people of this state will hold Republican obstructionists accountable for their games and that the majority of legislators can find the wisdom and courage to dedicate the few weeks left of this session to becoming part of the solution," she said.
10-K walk will tackle AIDS
Bv Amv Francis
Kansan staff writer
The Douglas County AIDS Project and Health Care Access are organizing a fundraiser for April, but they are not doing it alone. Organizations from KU and Lawrence are helping, too.
Stamp Out AIDS-Walk For Health is a 10-kilometer walk planned for April 13. Its goal is to raise awareness about AIDS and raise money for DCAP and Health Care Access, said David Douglas, a member of DCAP.
The goal for the walk is to raise $12,000.
Mike Sullivan, director and treasurer of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, said that GLSKOH its own goal for the registrar was sponsoring this week in the Kansas Union.
"We'd like to get at least between 10 to 20 walkers," he said. "When the walk actually takes place, we're also going to have volunteers along the walk."
The participants will not have an entry fee but are asked to raise at least $30 in pledges. The proceeds will be divided between DCAP and Health Care Access.
The walkers will have four hours to complete the route, which starts in South Park, continues through the KU campus and ends in South Park. There will be rest stops during
The Lawrence Parks and Recreation department is co-sponsoring the walk.
the route where walkers can drink water and eat
Kathy Fode, superintendent of recreation for Parks and Recreation, said, "We feel strongly about AIDS and about health. That is something we want to do." It is something that is a community project.
The department will provide chairs, chairs and electricity. It also will open the park's restrooms for the walkers' use, Fode said.
Douglas said use of the equipment was not the only benefit of having the parks and recreation facilities available.
"It adds a lot of credibility," he said.
The Lawrence Public Works department will provide orange vests for the safety monitors to wear during the walk, Douglas said.
The walk will be one of the final events of AIDS Awareness Week, which starts April 6.
“This week is designed to raise funds,” he said. “This walk will probably be the primary
After the walk a party will be sponsored in the park for the walkers. Douglas said he hoped DCAP could get local merchants to donate supplies for the party.
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Monday, March 25, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Jayhawk spirit
KU and Lawrence communities unite to fulfill tradition of honorable collegiate basketball
Congratulations, Jayhawks! Final Four once again!
Kansas overcame the odds, the experts and the No. 2 and 3 teams in the country and returned to the promised land of college basketball for the first time since the 1988 championship season.
The Jayhawks combined hard work with a lot of guts and fought their way back into the national limelight. But most importantly, they did it with a tremendous amount of class.
No trash-talking opponents. No bragging about what they had accomplished. Just good, solid, hard-nosed basketball, all the while displaying the attitude of champions.
And regardless of the outcome of this weekend's Final Four, that is exactly what this team is in the minds of Jayhawk fans everywhere — champions.
The support has been evident throughout the year, but the frenzied celebration that followed Saturday's victory against Arkansas was incredible. Thousands of Jayhawk fans crowded Jayhawk Boulevard in front of Wescoe Hall, voicing their appreciation. Between 5,000 and 6,000 fans showed up at
Forbes Field to welcome the victorious 'Hawks home. And once the 'Hawks arrived in Lawrence, they were met by a capacity crowd at Allen Field House.
Surprisingly, there was little damage and very few incidents, making the celebration a fairly safe one.
One of the most important factors adding to the campus safety was KU police. They did not have an easy job trying to control the crowd. However, instead of being omnipresent and domineering, as one might expect under those circumstances, they merely provided balance between madness and safety, and they allowed the fans to enjoy the moment without letting things get completely out of hand.
Appreciation also goes out to the members of KU facilities operations who had to clean up the boulevard after celebration. Although it was a weekend, the mess was cleaned up quickly and campus was back to normal in a short period of time.
It was a great weekend to be in Lawrence and a great weekend to be a Jayhawk.
Brent Maycock for the editorial board
Polish economy
Western nations help relieve Poland's huge debt
T the decision by Western creditor nations to relieve Poland of $17 billion in debts will do more than simply boost the Polish economy.
Poland, Eastern Europe's most indebted nation, owes other nations $33.3 billion and has been calling for debt relief for more than a year. The alleviation of the debt will help Poland move from a centralized economy to a market economy. The change strengthens democracy in an Eastern bloc country that had been dominated by communism.
The Paris Club, an informal group of creditor nations led by the United States, offered to reduce Poland's debt. The annual payments to Paris Club nations now will be only $600 million rather than $3 billion. The debt reduction would help speed the dismantling of Poland's former economic system.
This reduction is a much needed relief for the impoverished Polish government.
The open market economy also will encourage foreign investment.
Last week, President Lech Walesa announced that U.S. citizens no longer would need visas to enter the country beginning April 15. Easing the restrictions should encourage U.S. tourism in Poland, thus boosting the economy. Although U.S. citizens may not flood Poland any time in the near future, it is a valuable opportunity for the United States.
Allowing U.S. corporations to settle in Poland would benefit both sides economically. Additionally, the United States stands to gain a new position in the formerly Soviet-controlled region.
Juli Watkins for the editorial board
Police chief to blame
The videotape shows something terribly wrong in Los Angeles. A pack of police officers beat senseless an African-American man who failed to yield the right of way.
The men who beat Rodney G. King are savages, not officers of the law. Their job is to serve and protect the citizens of Los Angeles — all the citizens, regardless of race. Instead, they justified everyone's worst fears of police power.
Other Voices
Obviously they were not properly trained, and their superior officers must be held accountable for that. They are being training with Police Chief Daryl Gates.
Firing Gates won't be easy. He isn't accounted to the mayor. His job is protected by Civil Service, one of the reforms that stemmed from the widespread corruption that riddled the Los Angeles police department 60 years ago. The chief is defiant in the face of citi-ness, and he has the backing of the Fraternal Order of Police.
But let's replay the videotape again in slow motion. Police officers hit King more than 50 times.
They stomped him, too. His right hand was smashed. He has fractures at the base of his skull.
And now the department has released records of the computer traffic between the cops at the scene and cops elsewhere.
Getting Gates won't solve this problem. But Gates must go, not just to send a message to the department but to police officers throughout the United States, in the Charleston (W. Va.) Daily Mail
Speech is guaranteed
More than 100 white students at a high school in Duncan, S.C., have been suspended for wearing the Confederate flag or protesting the principal's decision to ban the flag at the school.
If there was ever any doubt that a flag could be a potent, even inflammatory, symbol, consider the following:
A professor at the University of Wisconsin-River Falls burned a small U.S. flag in class to illustrate the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that flag-burning was a protected form of speech. A few days later, about 250 students waved flags and sang the national anthem outside the
professor's classroom.
Could there be two more graphic lessons in the meaning of the First Amendment, and why attempts to tighten its limits are so often futile? In the South Carolina school, which is 23 percent Black, the principal doubtless thought he was doing the right thing by enforcing the school's dress code, which prohibits, among other things, "racially intended or provocative" garments.
The wearing of the Stars and Bars was, at best, insensitive. To many Blacks, and to many whites as well, the Confederate flag represents slavery and bigotry. Even so, the Supreme Court has ruled that it is constitutional to wear a civilisation, is constitutionally protected. Ditto, the River Falls flag-burning.
But the First Amendment wouldn't mean much if it protected only those opinions with which everyone agreed. The best antidote to disagreeable speech is more speech. Gerson's critics made that point well by waving their own flags. We suspect that was the lesson he intended to teach in the first place.
From the Milwaukee Journal
FLAXMARY UniversityDaily Kansan
IT'S REALLY QUITE SIMPLE,
MR. BOGGS. YOU DEPOSIT YOUR
MONEY HERE, WE'LL HOLD
IT FOR AWHILE-HOW LONG
ISN'T IMPORTANT-THEN
WE'LL LOSE IT-HOW WE
LOSE IT DOESN'T MATTER.
THE GOVERNMENT-THAT
IS, YOU-WILL REPAY THE
LOST MONEY, AND WE'LL
GIVE IT BACK TO
YOU-WITH
INTEREST,
OF COURSE.
Community Policies
Savings and Loan
1. We are not responsible for
lost or stolen money.
2. We are not responsible for
money not lost or stolen.
3. It is our policy not to
concern ourselves with the
behaviour of your money
after we take it from you.
Thank you,
Mgmt.
WITH INTEREST?
Hmmm...
IT'S REALLY QUITE SIMPLE,
MR. BOGGS. YOU DEPOSIT YOUR
MONEY HERE, WE'LL HOLD
IT FOR AWHILE-HOW LONG
ISN'T IMPORTANT-THEN
WE'LL LOSE IT-HOW WE
LOSE IT DOESN'T MATTER.
THE GOVERNMENT-THAT
IS,YOU-WILL REPAY THE
LOST MONEY,AND WE'LL
GIVE IT BACK TO
YOU-WITH
INTEREST,
OF COURSE.
GIVE YOUR WITH INTEREST, OF COURSE.
WITH INTEREST?
Hmmm...
Mary Elizabeth Debicki Director, office of study abroad
LETTERS to the EDITOR
KU's sister university in Japan — another KU: Kanagawa University — is sponsoring a fabulous 5½-week program this summer. It will feature an opportunity to understand how Japan does business and to learn from the study of the language, from beginning to advanced levels.
The Art and Design program you thought was canceled? Not at all. A meeting will be conducted at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 27, in room 315 of the Art and Design Building (the building of artists, conducted in English, will take place in France and Italy and will offer KU credit.
Study abroad urged
Contrary to previous reports, all of our summer and academic year programs are still going on, although recruiting for some of them has been slow. The world is such an exciting place now, don't let an opportunity to go abroad while you are still a student. I think we need an idea how many KU grads I meet who tell me they regret not having taken advantage of the opportunity.
When David Gergen, editor-argee of U.S. News and World Report, spoke at KU last week, he ended by urging students to take time during college to study in a foreign country and learn the English language. KU's office of study abroad has existed for more than 20 years to facilitate this process.
'The core of the issue is to what extent the religious groups follow what they all claim as their standard, the Bible.'
Bible most important
I was a member of the group for more than two years and left for reasons related to my personal relationship with the doctrine taught in the Bible, not because of the practices of the group. I therefore knew full-well the expectations imposed on members.
It is sad to see a highly reputable publication such as the University Daily Kansan used as an instrument of propaganda the way it has been regarding its coverage of the religious group Campus Connection.
While some of the findings and statements printed in and supported by the Kansan are dangerous half-truths, many are outright lies used to claim a clown, emotionalized one-ided story of religious corruption.
As far as expectations are concerned, the clear message is to follow the Bible to the letter, not picking out nice, comfortable scriptures on which to form a pretty little group that holds chip and Coke movie parties on Friday night. The Bible requires total commitment, and any doctrine that teaches less is watered down
The purpose of this letter is in no way to promote Campus Connection, nor does it know that I am writing. It is simply a reaction to the lies perpetrated by the "religious advisers" and printed, unquestioned, by the Kansas. The core of the issue is: To what extent do the religious groups follow what they all claim as their standard, the Bible? After all, if the Bible is true, that is the standard that will matter in the end.
Andrew H. Johnson Glenview, Ill., senior
Parade was political
In some ways, Lawrence's 1991 St. Patrick's Day parade resembled an amateurish, scaled-down version of the U.S.S.R.'s May Day parade. Otherwise, this Lawrence event has
'By placing an armored vehicle and a unit of military soldiers before the official start of the parade, the St. Patrick's Day parade committee lost sight of the original meaning of this holiday.'
left at least a few people puzzled with its unclear vision, somehow correlating the U.S. military victory in the Persian Gulf with the ethnic and religious aspects of this Irish holiday. To some other people familiar with the parade committee's regulations, a gross violation has been committed by mixing political ideologies with the festivities.
By placing an armored vehicle and a unit of military soldiers before the official start of the parade, the St Patrick's Day parade committee lost sight of the original meaning of this holiday. Instead, the attention of this group was focused toward the recent Pentagon War and its cease-fire hoopla.
A more military presence in this event makes this maneuver designed by the parade committee a political
action, even though they deny this accusation. The participation of militia in this parade is not a regular occurrence. It appears that the committee has failed to eliminate politically motivated displays.
It seems that a message of political nature has been made, because of the short time span between the ceasefire and the military's participation in the parade. Any militaristic appearance in this event conveys the message, perhaps mistakenly, that this parade has become another vehicle to legitimize U.S. military presence in sovereign nations. Meanwhile, the committee could be manipulating the parade's main focus by vague defining the meaning of a political action.
Angus T. McWhorter Lawrence resident
Parade brings surprise
Last Sunday afternoon I went out on my front lawn to relax and watch the St. Patrick's Day parade.
I had looked forward to the floats, music and general good cheer. Although the day was cool and overcast, there was a steady stream of children lining the curb looking for the first glimpse of the first float, fire engine or green anything. One of them, a young boy, yelled out, "I see writing!" as light became in the way off distance, barely visible, a brightness flashing that could only mean a parade.
But it approached so slowly. The kids were in a frenzy of anticipation. The lawn chairs were positioned and camera poised, but for what we were still unsure. A giant Leprechau, beauty queen or a trio of fiddle players with pointed ears?
We stretched and squinted, trying in vain to be the first to identify what would be at the head of parade. Someone said, "it's green!" and we looked around. It was loud, surrounded by and covered with people in coordinated costumes.
No.
What came down Seventh Street leading the St. Patrick's Day parade had nothing to do with Fredland raincoats, a long black boot skots and camouflaged costumes.
They needed no banners to announce who they were. It was clear from the tools—guns —they carried strapped to their backs. And just to make sure we wouldn't confuse them with the Boy Scouts, they brought a tool called a knife and the size of the ones they carried individually, mounted on its front.
As it passed, bareley squeezing between the parked cars, a young boy asked his mother, "Mom, why are they in the parade?"
David Lowenstein
Lawrence graduate student
KANSAN STAFF
CHRIS SIRON
Editor
RICH CORNELL Managing editor
TOM EBLEN General manager, news adviser
News...Melanie Matthes
Editorial...Tiffany Tammess
Planning...Holly M. Neuman
Campus...Jennifer Reynolds,
Pam Solner
Sports...Ann Summers
Photography...Keith Thorpe
Graphics...Melissa Unterberg
Features...Jill Harrington
AUDRA LANGFORD Business manager
business staff
Campus sales mgr...Sophie Wehbe
Regional sales mgr...Carmen Dresch
National sales mgr...Jennifer Claxton
Co-op sales mgr...Christine Musser
Production mgr...Rich Hambarger,
MINDI LUND
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Marketing director Gail Einbinder
Creative director Christy Hahs
Classified manager Kim Crowder
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number of writers affiliated with the University of Kansas
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be whorescheduled.
The Kenyan reserves the right to reject or editi letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kenyan newsroom, 113 StafferFlint Hall.
Loco Locals
LOGICALLY ONE
MUST REFLECT...
WHOA! STOP!
LOOKIE HERE...
LOGICALLY, ONE MOST REFLECT... WHOA! STOP! LOOKIE HERE...
WHAT'S THIS?
DOODLES!
MY LECTURE ISN'T BORING YOU, I HOPE, ADAM?
LOGICALLY, ONE MOST REFLECT...
WHOA! STOP!
LOOKIE HERE...
WHAT'S THIS?
DOODLES!
MY LECTURE ISN'T BORING YOU, I HOPE, ADAM?
AND THIS!
IS THIS ONE A RENDERING OF MOI?
Well...
WELL, YOUR SKETCH
MAY NOT MATCH
SOME OF THE ARTISTS"
IN HERE, BUT AT
LEAST YOU'RE NOT
GOOFY LOOK 'N!
HEY. PERSONAL EXPRESSION!
ANARCHY NEAH, I'M HIP.
WHAT'S THIS?
DOODLES!
MY LECTURE ISN'T
BORING YOU, I
HOPE, ADAM?
by Tom Michaud
AND THIS!
IS THIS ONE A
RENDERING
OF MO1?
WELL...
WELL, YOUR SKETCH
MAY NOT MATCH
SOME OF THE ARTISTS"
IN HERE, BUT AT
LEAST YOU'RE NOT
GOOFY LOOK N'.
HEY. PERSONAL
EXPRESSION!
ANARCHY!
WEAH, I'M
HIP!
University Daily Kansan / Mondav. March 25, 1991
5
$4 million may be allotted to KU
Kansan staff writer
By Eric Nelson
A large chunk of the $16 million reinstated to the financing of higher education through a House amendment would filter to KU if it survives legislative obstacles.
Lindy Eakin, associate vice chancellor for administration and finance, said the University of Kansas is working to improve
"This is everything we asked for except the Magistrate, and they haven't addressed salaries." he said.
Eakin said financing for faculty and classified employees' salaries was an issue the Legislature would face later in the session. Gov. Joan Finney placed salaries under a category separate from
the Regents budget.
The largest amount of money for KU would come from enrollment adjustment, Eakin said. The $1.27 million received would compensate for past increases in enrollment.
KU also would receive $242,510 for graduate teaching assistant fee waivers out of the $500,000 allocated to the Regents system. But Eakin said the figure was deceiving because it did not represent new money to the KU budget but rather the amount of money saved.
Eakin said that the amendment was encouraging but that he was still worried about what could happen if it was repealed.
"They're in much more of a cutting mood than the House is right now," he said.
Eakin said the situation seemed to be one that would require more state budget cuts or higher taxes for the state to finance projects.
Del Shankel, interim executive vice chancellor,
said he was also pleased to see the House put $16
million into the Regents budget, $4 million of it for
KU.
But he agreed that KU's work was far from done. "We have meetings with Sen. Winter and others," Shankel said. "We are trying to urge people to write letters to their senators."
Shankel said that if tax increases were necessary to finance higher education, it would be an initiative supported by the administration. He also reported that the factiona Fuhrmans contributed information to this story.
ASK organizing to fight cuts in Regents budget
By Michael Christie Kansas staff writer
The next few weeks in Topeka are critical for KU's future, and Associated Students of Kansas will be asked to provide their input.
Greg Hughes, ASK campus director, said that ASK would spend this week organizing ed so it can lobby the Senate effectively about financing the seven Board of Regents institutions.
"We're going to try and target students in key districts." he said.
Johnson County is one of those districts, Hughes said. Many KU students come from the area, and it
has influential residents.
Another plan targets parents of Kansas honor students.
Mike Schreiner, student body president, said it was important for parents of honor students to lobby the Legislature because they represented a diverse section of the public.
"These are the kinds of students we want to keep in the state." he said.
A Senate Ways and Means subcommittee is working on higher education legislation. It is considering eliminating proposed tuition increases for next year and cutting $16 million that the House
recently voted to restore to the Regents budget. Hughes said that the combined budget cuts were "unacceptable."
Publicity focuses on recycling awareness
The Legislature will have its hands tied with the budget if no new revenue comes in, flushes said.
Schreiner said that he received the impression from talking to state senators that higher education was a priority but that the state did not have the money to finance it.
"What we have to do is continue advocating a revenue-generation plan," he said.
By Katie Chipman
Kansan staff writer
The task force has been making posters and fliers to display on campuses for publicity about Recycling Week, which begins today.
"Our first priority is to get people to utilize the recycling baskets available on campus," Gottschall said. "We're going to flood the room with publicity and imprint the message in people's minds."
The task force will have an information table in the Union and will use the information booth outside of Stauffer-Flint Hall to inform students about reusing resources.
were recycling a lot of newsprint but that they could recycle more aluminum.
"When you reuse a product, it saves energy and resources," she said. "It assures the product will be safe." When it doesn't, there's useless and cumbersome."
"I think we're lucky if we are recycling half of the aluminum cans from the students on this campus," she said.
She said that the publicity on campus was to encourage people to think about what happens to their waste.
Gottschalk said that students
"We want people to take the information back to their homes and use it there, too," she said.
Tina Haladay, co-chairperson of the task force, said that the idea of the awareness week was to make people realize that there were consequences to throwing things away.
"The little things add up," she said. "It seems like no big deal for one person to throw something away, but when everyone on campus throws something away we have a problem."
"We hope that the publicity will make people see things more globally with a wider perspective."
---
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"The shortest distance between
points is a straight line."
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Meet the Author Harris Stone Professor of Architecture
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will be signing his books at the Mt. Oread Bookshop
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Wednesday, March 27, 1991 11 a.m.-1 p.m.
"This is a beautiful book, by turns philosophic and practical, and rooted in the problems of living with historical architecture in the present. It should be read by architects, academics—in short, by all people who are interested in architecture." —Nicholas Adams, Professor of Art History, Vassar College
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6
Monday, March 25, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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First law symposium is a success
By Benjamin W. Allen
Kensan staff writer
The first symposium sponsored by the Kansas Journal of Law and Public Policy turned out exactly as its organizers intended.
David Summers, symposium director for the journal, said, "Everything came together perfectly (feelings) and I pleased with the way things went."
Speakers discuss environmental policies
The symposium, designed to promote an interdisciplinary environment in which to explore the effects of laws on public policy, was conducted Thursday and Friday in Green Hall.
"It was a wonderful opportunity to listen to the brightest minds talk about one of the most timely subjects of the day," Summers said.
Experts in the fields of international environmental policy, domestic environmental policy and the workplace environment gave a series of talks based on papers to be published in the journal.
The talks included question-and answer periods and open discussion of the talks.
The symposium, "Environmental Policy: Choices for 1990s," featured speakers ranging from the general counsel of the Environmental Protection Agency to John Kennedy, general counsel of Johnson Controls, a company involved in a rulong of the Supreme Court last week.
aurete Manville, law student and editor-in-chief of the journal, said,
"As it turned out, the timing could not have been better.
"But even if the Supreme Court had not decided the case last week, just to meet and talk one-on-one with one of the principal players of a case before the court would be a tremendous opportunity."
Manville said the journal and symposium were designed to promote
"Physically, the law school is isolated. and sometimes I think it is
mentally, too," she said. "The law impacts people as they live in society."
Manville said questionnaires asking for comments on the symposium or suggestions on how to improve it and finding nothing but glowing remarks.
Summers said he was looking forward to seeing the first issue of the journal printed.
"The only downside were remarks saying that it was a shame more people didn't come to the sessions," she said.
Manville said the first issue of the journal would be available by June 1.
More than 90 people attended the session that featured Kennedy.
THE HAWK OF THE OVERWATCHING EAGLE
"If we do a good job of editing, it will be an excellent journal," he said.
Wildcare director Nancy Schwarting releases a red-tailed hawk into the wild, north of Clinton Lake. The hawk was released Saturday from the Wildcare unit after recovering from gunshot wounds to its wings sustained in January.
Free bird
Student in Wisconsin says woman was raped
The Associated Press
MADISON, Wis. — A student who said he called police to report a sexual assault on a college fraternity lawn said that about eight peoplehood吓和 watched the woman engaged in sex and did not intervene.
"The people were being quiet, they were saying, 'Shhh, let them be,'" said the student, who said he watched the March 10 incident on the lawn of a house in Wisconsin's Chi Phi fraternity at the university of a neighboring fraternity.
In an interview with The Associated Press, the student said he called police after the woman and man got up from the lawn.
"It didn't seem like she knew what was going on," he said. "I ran up to her after the police arrived and said, 'You're the one who did it?' I taxed a lawyer, she just stared."
The student, a member of the Theta Fraternity, spoke to the AP on the condition he not be identified. He said he feared possible retribution from the man involved in the incident.
Police said they had not identified the man and had not determined if it was a case of sexual assault.
Chi Phi fraternity president Benjamin Schomburg told the AP earlier that several people watched the incident from inside the frat house, where about 209 people were attending a beer party, but that they did not intervene because they did not think it was an assault.
The 18-year-old woman told police she was sexually assaulted.
The Associated Press
"The girl was not resisting at all.
She showed absolutely no signs of
resisting." Knudsen said.
Julie Knudsen, 21, a student, said she was one of seven people from the fraternity party who watched the man and woman for two minutes.
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — Residents of three University of Virginia fraternity houses seized in a drug probe will now pay their rent to the U.S. government, and their rooms to drug searches, authorities said.
The student said he decided to call police after watching the woman get up.
11 Virginia students arrested on drug charges
"If anyone feels they cannot live within that atmosphere, they can
"It just wasn't apparent that it may have been a sexual assault until she was standing on her own all that well. She wasn't speaking."
leave," U.S. Marshal Wayne Beaman said of the new regulations.
CHRISTIAN MICHAEL BANK
The houses, operated by local chapters of Phi Education, Delta Upsilon and Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternities, were raided late Thursday by federal marshals and local police station. Eleven people were arrested.
Justice Department officials said
Meanwhile, at a news conference Friday, police displayed a dozen partly filled sandwich bags containing frozen meats and nomenic mushrooms, one bag of LSD
the seizure was the first involving college fraternity houses. Beaman said the alumun groups that owned the seizure challenged the seizure in federal court.
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Nation/World
University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 25, 1991
7
World briefs
Moscow
Grenades, rockets exchanged in Soviet Georgian villages
Heavy fighting was reported in the South Ossetia region of Soviet Georgia during the weekend, with militants in the ethnic dispute exchanging grenade and rocket fire. Tass, the Soviet government's news agency, said yesterday.
Shells were fired at the regional capital of Tskhinvall on Saturday night, the official news agency reported. Yesterday, residents were beaten in two South Ossetian villages, and homes were set ablaze in two other villages, it said.
Washington
Violent crime numbers rise, personal, household thefts fall
The number of U.S. citizens victimized by violent crime rose to 2.3 million last year even as the total number of personal and household crimes fell by 1 million, according to Justice Department estimates released yesterday.
According to the National Crime Survey, which the Bureau of Justice Statistics has been compiling since 1973, combined personal and household crimes, not including homicide, declined by 3 percent to 34.8 million.
But the vast majority of the 1 million fewer crimes, almost 937,000, were personal larcenies that did not include any contact with the victim.
victim
From The Associated Press
U.S. base may be set up in gulf
Troops to come home after cease-fire signed The Associated Press
The Associated Press
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia — The United States is closer than ever to establishing a permanent military headquarters on Arab soil, the U.S. commander of Operation Desert Storm said.
The headquarters would meet a longstanding U.S. aim to have a land base in the Persian Gulf — a goal Arab governments have blocked for many years.
The U.S. commander, Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf, also told reporters that as soon as a permanent cease-fire was signed, the remaining U.S. troops in the gulf would go
nome. And he said the United States did not intend to have permanent ground forces in the region.
A member of Schwarzkopf's staff said the general's statements were significant because they were the further evidence that spelling was being used on those three issues. The staff officer spoke on condition of anonymity.
Schwarzkopf said that U.S. logistics troops could be in the gulf as long as eight to 10 months to help load up equipment but that the vast majority of soldiers would be home before
Nearly 100,000 of the 540,000 U.S. troops sent to the gulf to help drive Iraq from Kuwait already have departed, the Central Command said.
Iraq's government newspaper, Al-Jumhour
iya, yesterday denounced the permanent cease-fire terms as attempts "at usurping Iraq's sovereignty, mortgaging its will and holding its wealth hostage."
The United States said it would not sign a permanent cease-fire accord unless Iraq destroyed its chemical, biological and nuclear weapons in response to the attacks of the weapons, among other conditions.
Since Kuwait was liberated Feb. 27, some U.S. forces have begun helping the Kuwaitis rebuild their nation, which was footed and occupied during the seven-month Iraq occupation.
Other U.S. soldiers are occupying part of southern Iraq, where they are keeping an eye on Saddam Hussein's troops.
Mali troops fire on regime protesters
The Associated Press
ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast — Soldiers fired on
Ivory Islands of pro-democracy protesters in Mali
yesterday, killing at least seven people, then
wounding 16. The wounded were from getting
help, witnesses said.
Opponents of the current regime said that government troops had killed nearly 150 people in three days of protests in Bamako, Mali's capital. State radio reported that 34 had died.
"The capital is running with blood," said Parkinson, an employee at the city's Gabriel Hospital.
Witnesses said that only several thousand protesters took to the streets of Bamako.
yesterday, far fewer than on the previous two days when they were tens of thousands. There was no news from other towns, where less violent demonstrations were reported Friday.
Witnesses, also speaking on condition of anonymity, said soldiers cordoned off hospitals so that wounded protesters could not get treatment.
There has been unrest in the West African nation since January. The latest protests broke out Saturday, when students began demanding the resignation of President Moussa Traore.
Trore seized power in a military coup in 1968, eight years after the country gobbled up France from Japan.
self as civilian president of a one-party state in 1979.
Traore yesterday told France-Info, a local radio station, that he would not step down. He added that he was not against political pluralism and was willing to hold early elections, but he gave no date for the adoption of these reforms.
"The army is faithful to me," he said in an interview with the station. "The government will not resign, because I am not the elected of opposition. I am the elected of the people of Malia."
He dismissed the opposition's reports of the death toll as fantastic.
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8
Mondav, March 25. 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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AMERICA-SOVIET FILM INITIATIVE
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5 films presented by a Soviet delegation
---
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Final Four determined
The Associated Press
North Carolina and Duke, whose campuses are just a long jog apart, will be sharing a new neighborhood next weekend in Indianapolis.
The Atlantic Coast Conference rivals advanced to the Final Four yesterday.
North Carolina held off tenacious Temple 75-72 for the East Regional championship, ending Dean Smith's longest absence from the Final Four and making him the first coach to get there in four different decades.
The Final Four
The Hoosier Dome Indianapolis, Indiana
Kansas
Saturday,
March 30
4:39 p.m.
Championship game
Monday April 1
8:10 p.m.
UNLV
Saturday,
March 30
30 minutes after completion of first game
North Carolina
Duke
Duke defeated St. John's 78-61 for the Midwest title, joined UCLA and Cincinnati as the only schools to compete in consecutive Final Four appearances.
The Blue Devils (30-7) will play top-ranked UNLV (34-0) in a rematch of last year's championship game, a 103-73 rout by the Runnin' Rebels. North Carolina (29-5) meets Kansas (26-7) in a pupil-teacher showdown between Dean Smith and his former assistant Roy Williams.
UCLA's John Wooden for most career victories in the NCAA tournament. Smith's tourney record is 47-21; Wooden's was 47-18.
Saturday, UNLV (34-9) used an early second-half sprain to eliminate Seton Hall (25-9) in the West Final and advanced to the Final Four.
UNLV's Larry Johnson scored 30 points, including 10 during his team's game.
Augment and Greg Anthony were chosen for the all-West team along with Terry Dehere of Seton Hall and Brian Williams of Arizona.
Anthony said he thought it would take a better defensive effort for the Rebels to win two games in the Final Four.
KU taking ticket applications
By Jonathan Plummer
Kansan staff writer
From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. today the
athletics ticket office will accept
applications for the lottery of KU's
first official tickets to the NCAA Final Four.
The 66 students who filled out pre-application forms in February learned yesterday that their tickets would be waiting for them in Indiana.
Diana Miller, athletics tickets manager, said that applications made today must be completed by a currently enrolled student and that each student was eligible for only one ticket.
Of the 3,000 tickets allotted to the University of Kansas by the NCAA,
The applications received will be put into lottery, with 75 percent of the tickets, or about 325 tickets, going to a national auction all Sports tickets she said.
500 are earmarked for students, she said. The remainder go to the travel party, the Chancellor's group, faculty and staff, Miller said.
Those whose applications are chosen will have to pick up their tickets in person with their KUID at theapolis Hoisterdome next weekend.
The tickets are 600 and include admission to both semifinal games as well as the
Darryl Uffelmann, Leawood senior, said he and his roommate went to the office in February to apply for tickets for the Big Eight Conference Tournament and simply checked another box making them
Miller said that the original application period for tickets was in February but that only 66 people filled out applications. All those students were told to notify the office when they would not be using their tickets.
Yesterday afternoon, his roommate got the call saying their ticket applications had been approved.
"The first thing I said was 'Now we have to find a way to get there,'" Uffelmann said.
People immediately began offering him money for his ticket, Ullmann said, but because he must pick up the ticket in Indianapolis personally before Saturday's game, selling it would be difficult.
"I'n sure I could get a lot for it,
'it's mean, but go bucks
Najab in Egypt"
Uffelmann said that he did not know where his seat would be in the 37,500-seat Hosserdome or whether he and his roommate would be sitting in the same section but that those considerations were secondary.
"I'll sit anywhere," he said. "I'll sit on too, I'll sit in the rafters"
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 25, 1991
9
Kansas returns to Final Four
Kansan enortewriter
By S. J. Bailey
CHARLOTTE, N.C. - They're
baaaack!
When the Kansas basketball team defeated Kansas State in 1988 to advance to the NCAA Final Four, a stunned nation gasped in disbelief.
Saturday, basketball fans across the country once again found themselves wide-eyed and open-mouthed. Kansas, trailing by 12 at halftime, shook off Arkansas' vaunted "40 minutes of hell" and disbanded out their own en route to a 93-81 whipping of the top-seeded Razorbacks.
The Jayhawks, the 1991 Southeast Regional champions, earned their third trip to the Final Four in six games and was named Carolina on Saturday in Indianapolis.
"At Friday's press conference, I was asked how we were going to respond to 40 minutes of hell, and I said we were going to be there," a jubilant coach Roy Williams said. "We'll have to have to look very far to find us."
From the opening minutes, it was obvious that neither team would have won. The first round went to
Arkansas' run-and-gun offense took control on five Kansas turnovers and sprinted to a 17-6 lead behind the ball in the Arsenal's迎箭s Isaiah Morris and Todd Day.
Junior forward Alonzo Jamison hit his next three shots, igniting a 16-5 run that tied the game at 22 with 8 minutes remaining in the first half. Senior guard Terry Brown gave the Jahayhs their first lead at 29-27 with his three-pointer at the 5:57 mark before the bottom dropped out.
Razorback faithful, used to such scoring outbursts, settled into their seats and waited for the rout to begin. He was a bit shy about to get stuck in Charlotte's web.
Five more Kansas turnovers keyed a 13-0 Bazback run that left the Jayhawks trailing 47-35 at the intermission.
March 30-April 1, 1991
Indianapolis, Indiana
EINAL
FOUR
"Going into that locker room, we were pretty down on the way we had
played," sophomore guard Adonis Jordan said. "Then we realized that if we started doing the things that got back from us, the chance to get back in the game."
With that on their minds, the Jayhawks returned to the floor with a vengeance.
Eight straight Kansas points, including two Brown layups and a Jamison three-pointer, forced Arkansas coach Nolan Richardson to call a timeout only 2 minutes into the half against the Karazek back cut to only four.
"When Terry hit those two layups and Alonzo hit that three, I started saying to myself, 'Oh, man, we've got them now.' " Jordan said.
Kansas continued to chip away at the Razorbacks' lead. Sean Tunstall's two free throws at the 16:06 marked tie the game again at 51. But with the score knotted at 56, Arkansas went on a 6-1 run to put the Razorbacks up 62-57 with 11:51 remaining.
Then it was Arkansas' turn to fold. An 8-0 run put the Jayhawks on top 65-21, a lead they would continue to build on until the final buzzer declared them regional champs 8 minutes later.
As the players look turns climbing a ladder to cut a strand of the net, the realization that they were going to Indianapolis began to sink in.
"We did it," screamed a euphoric Richard Scott as the team dogpiled each other at halfcourt. "We're going to the Final Four!"
Kansas
Jamison, who efforts earned him the region's Most Outstanding Player
Kansas 93 Arkansas 81
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | F | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Jamison | 18 | 11-14 | 3-5 | 3 | 2 | 4 | 26 |
| Maddux | 22 | 3-4 | 2-5 | 4 | 1 | 2 | 8 |
| Randall | 27 | 4-2 | 2-4 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 6 |
| Brown | 24 | 5-2 | 2-4 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 6 |
| Brown | 34 | 3-9 | 8-10 | 6 | 3 | 3 | 14 |
| Richey | 5 | 0-1 | 0-0 | 6 | 3 | 0 | 0 |
| Woodberry | 16 | 1-4 | 4-4 | 4 | 1 | 0 | 6 |
| Tunstall | 18 | 4-7 | 4-4 | 4 | 1 | 0 | 11 |
| Wagner | 16 | 3-4 | 4-4 | 4 | 1 | 0 | 11 |
| Wagner | 16 | 1-5 | 1-2 | 3 | 0 | 2 | 3 |
| Johanning | 16 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 3 | 0 | 2 | 0 |
Percentages: FG-5, FG-1, 79, T8, Three-point
ball: 3-12 (Jamison 1, Tunstart 13, Brown
1, Jordan 14, O-3) Blocked shots: 1 (Wood-
er, Turnovers) 2 (Wooder, Brown, Tunstart)
3 (Brown, Brown, Tunstart, Scott)
6 (Brown 2, Jamison, Randall, Jordan,
Stewery) Technicals: none.
Day 34 15 8-19 6-7 4 1 4 26
Morris 15 14 1-19 1-1 5 1 11
Miller 34 7-11 2-3 9 1 1 16
Mayberry 34 1-9 1-2 9 1 3 7
Bowers 20 1-4 0-0 0 4 2 3
R murray 25 1-4 0-0 0 2 2 14
Burr 15 1-4 0-0 0 4 2 5
Fletcher 5 1-1 0-0 0 0 0 0
Wallace 5 1-1 0-0 0 2 1 2
Percentages: FG. 43,84 FT. 66,73 Three-points:
Miller. 25; Walcott. 25; Walcott. 54 All-backed: 6
(Day 3, Murry 2, Murry 1) Turnovers: 16 (Day
3, Miller 3, Morris 2, Bower 2, Hueray 2,
Malicey 3, Malicey 4) Turnovers: 4 (Day 2,
Malicey 4, Tech 4) Home: 4 (Day 1,
Herkins: 47, Kansas: 34, Kansas:
Officials: Crowley, Pavia, Croft.
A. 22 717
award, was the big man for the Jayhawks as he finished the game with a career-high 26 points and nine rebounds. Jordan pumped in 14, while Brown and Tunstall each added 11.
Todd Day, who was held to only five points in the second half by a swarming Kansas defense, scored 26 of 31 zorackos. Oliver Miller added 16.
AZORBACKS
25
The Jayhawks will face North Carolina, where Williams spent 10 years as an assistant under coach Dean Smith, Saturday at the Indiana Hoosier Dome in Indianapolis. He will be televised at 4:40 p.m. on CBS.
Kansas forward Mark Randall looks for an open teammate as Arkansas defenders Todd Day (left) and Oliver Miller apply pressure.
Halftime speech sparks Kansas to victory
Kansan sportswriter
By S. J. Bailey
After coming back from a 17-6 deficit early in the first half, a 13-0 Arkansas streak late in the period left the Jayhawks trailing by 12 at
But Kansas came out smoking in the second half, forcing the Razorbacks backs through 20 minutes of Jayhawk bells on its way to a 93-81 victory and a
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — The situation appeared bleak for the Kansas basketball team at the intermission of Saturday's regional championship game against the Arkansas Razorbacks.
trip to Indianapolis for the Final Four.
After the game, media and fans alike speculated on what coach Roy Williams told his team to give them the edge during the second half.
"The coaches told us that they had to be in Indianapolis anyway for a coaching convention and that they were going to leave us in Lawrence if we didn't get our act together." Obama forward Richard Scott said.
Anything else?
"It wasn't anything bad," senior forward Mark Randall said.
forward Mark Randall said.
"He told us we needed to keep
attacking them because we were getting too casual with the ball. In the first half we were throwing the ball away entirely too much, and Arkansas was getting a lot easy steals and easy buckets at the other end."
So, with those words of wisdom,
Williams sparked his team to . . .
"I can't repeat exactly what he said," junior forward Alonzo Johnson said, "but more or less what he told us is that we needed to come out and do the things that got us here."
Wait a minute. Is that all?
nis Jordan said. "He said the only type of team that could beat a team like Arkansas was one that played with noise."
"Coach Williams told us that we would just have to go out and play with poise," sophomore guard Ado-
Let's get this straight. Four players, same question, four different answers. What's the story, Coach?
"I didn't throw any chairs or curse anybody, but I will admit I was very agitated because we weren't very strong with the ball," Williams said. "We talked about boxing out and we came back to the gym and we ball in front of us. Those were three things in the first half I thought we did not do."
Whew, sounds like you said a
mouthful. Coach.
"Let's not be sitting in here at the end of the game with this feeling we have right now because we know we didn't play our best."
And play their best was what they did in the second half, as the Jayhawks earned the opportunity to play like a team of greats before the battle for the NCAA title.
Zo is best in regional tournament
By S. J. Bailey
By S. J. Bailey
Kansan sportswriter
CHARLOTTE, N.C. - Zo knows MVP.
His performance against the Razorbacks, coupled with a 14-point, 10-rebound effort in the Jayhawks' 83-65 victory over the Indiana Hooers on Thursday, made Jamison a worthy recipient of the award.
Asked after the 93-81 Arkansas game whether that had been his best performance of the season, Jamison replied with a grit. "It definitely upets me with a grit."
With a sterling 26-point, nine-rebound performance in Saturday's regional championship game, junior forward Alonzo Jamison was voted the region's Most Outstanding Player by the journalists in attendance.
Kansas coach Roy Williams added, "I'd say it was."
Jamison dominated the inside against the Razbacks, driving to the basket and laying the ball off the glass at will.
"I was going up with the pump fakes, and they weren't going for them." Jamison said. "So I just took the ball up and in. Most teams would try to foul me because of my free throw percentage. It seemed almost like they were scared to foul me. I don't know why."
Jamison also contributed his second pointer of the season.
"I'm two-for-two in tournament play now," he said. "I guess I only need about 101 more to catch up with Terry."
Aside from his offensive prowess, Jamison's defensive effort against Arkansas' Todd Day was one of the keys to stopping the Razorbacks' running-and-gunning in the second half.
"What we tried to do was keep fresh bodies on him all the time," he said. "It was a team effort really. Patrick Richey and Steve Woodberry also did a good job shutting him down."
As outstanding player, Jamison headed the southeast region's All-Tournament Team, along with fellow Adonis Jordan and Terry Brown.
Brown was a key player in the Thursday victory against the Hosiers, scoring 23 points on seven of 16 shots, including four of nine from behind the three-point stroke. To this end, Brown and two steals against the Nazoracks.
Arkansas' Todd Day and Oliver Miller rounded out the region's All-Tournament squad.
Kansas takes third in NWIT
Rv Lana Smith
Kanean sportswriter
The Kansas Lady Jayhawks defeated the University of Houston 69-67 and took third place in the National Women's Invitational Tournament on Saturday in Amarillo, Texas
Kansas returned to action in the second half, trailing 36-30 after shooting only 29 percent from the field.
The Lady Jayhawks never went to the free-throw line during the first half, but they were 15-19 at the line after intermission.
Houston went to the line 38 times
and scored on 22 of its attempts
Kansas junior forward Tanya Bonham went 8 for 10 from the line, and sophomore guard Stacy Truitt打五 of her six free-throw attempts.
Truitt was the Lady Jayhawks' leading scorer and rebounder with 15 points and 12 rebounds, but she fouled out of the game.
Bonham and junior forward Terri
lvn Johnson each scored 14 points.
Sophomore center Lisa Tate scored 10 points for the Lady Jayhawks before she ran into foul trouble and exited the game as well.
Friday night, Kansas lost to Santa
The Lady Jayhawks led the entire game until the 12-minute mark in the second half. However, Kansas had a lead over Santa Clara at the 5-minute mark.
Clara (Calif.) University 58-57.
Kansas sophomore center Lisa Tate led the Lady Jayhawks in scoring with 18 points and nine blocked shots. She tied the NWIT record for blocked shots in a game. Tate's season total was 82, a Kansas single-season record.
The Lady Jayhaws finished the season 20-13 overall.
Swim team members
Sports briefs
compete in NCAA meet
Pranger, who has qualified for the NCAA meet each of her three years at Kansas, swam the preliminary 100-yard butterfly in a time of 55.22 minutes and won all finals. She finished fourth in the concolation race and 12th overall, an
Kansas was represented at the NCAA women's swimming and diving championships by junior Barb Pranger and two relay teams. The meet was in Indianapolis from Thursday to Saturday.
Pranger also competed in the 200-yard butterfly, but she did not qualify for the finals. Her time of 2:05.04 was the 23rd- best overall.
improvement over her 16th-place finish at last year's meet.
Freshmen Krista Cordsen and Michele Riffl, sophomore Aimee Brainard and junior Heather McRoberts swam a time of 1:34.72 in the 200-yard freestyle relay. It was the 17th-best time, one shy of the top 16 that compete in the consolation or championship finals.
The 200-yard medley relay team, did not qualify for the finals either.
Softball team improves record after invitational
The Jayhawks played in five games before the rain set in and forced the last day of play to be canceled. They defeated Sacramento State 3-1, Massachusetts 5-0 and Creighton 3-1.
The Kansas softball team improved its record to 15-6 after playing in the Bud Light Invitational last weekend in San Jose, Calif.
Kansas lost 5-1 to Arizona State and 4-0 to California.
Kansas baseball team ties with K-State in Big Eight series
Rv Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
MANHATTAN — Kansas first baseman Jie Niemier drove in eight runs and junior right-hander Eric Stonechip struck out 10 in a 17-13 Jayhawk victory over Kansas State yesterday afternoon.
"The league is so balanced, I see a lot of these two-and-two series happening," he said. "If someone can win series, they'll be in good shine."
"These were two evenly matched teams," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "A couple of plays either one or both would usptw or we could have swept them."
The victory gave Kansas a split in the four-game Big Eight Conference series.
Kansas defeated the Wildcats in the first game of Saturday's doubleheader 11-3, but it lost the second in a back-to-back. It was 3-2 in 10 innings Friday night.
In yesterday's game, Niemeier and left fielder Gerry Camara's back-to-
KState coach Mike Clark said the series was a preview of the rest of the conference season.
The Jayhawks added four more runs in the fourth with a sacrifice fly by designated hitter Mike Bard and three RBI singles by catcher Garry Schmidt and third baseman Kevin Marozas.
back bases-empty home runs gave Kansas a 2-0 lead after two innings
An RBI triple by shortstop Craig Wilson and an RBI double by left fielder Brian Culp made the score 6-3.
The biggest Jayhawk blow was
Meanwhile, Stonecipher gave up only one run to the Wildcats as the Javahwaks led 6-1 after four innings.
Kansas regained its five-run lead in the top of the sixth as Niermeer plated his second and third RBI of the day with a center-field single.
in the fifth, K-State's offense began to heat up
The Jayhawks' five-run advantage, however, turned into a three-run deficit after the Wildcats scored eight runs off six hits in their half of
Undaunted, Kansas charged back into the lead by outscoring the Wildcats 9-2 in the eighth and ninth innings.
Niemeier's second grand-slam home run of the season in the eighth.
In a workhorse effort, Stonecipher threw 178 pitches, but he said he was never in need of relief.
"Before the game, I knew I had to pitch the whole game," Stonechip said. "Coach stuck with me because he knows I don't tire out that easily."
Bingham said the Jayhawks were going to live and die by Stonewall's pioneers.
"He tested me there in the sixth," he said. "I almost took him out, but I decided not to because that was the game plan."
Niemieer's five hits for the day tied a school record, and his eight RBIs broke the old record of seven, set in 1988 by Steve Dowling.
Camera, playing in the outfield for the first time this season, went 8 for 16 in the four-game set with two home runs and eight RBI.
During the weekend, Camara raised his batting average 130 points to .352
The Jayhawks, 14-10, play Wyoming at 7 tonight at Hogland-Maupin Stadium in the first of a three-game series.
5 20
Kansas first baseman Jeff Niemier beats Kansas State centerfielder Blair Hanneman to first base despite pleas from K-State second baseman Van Torian during the Jayhawks victory yesterday.
10
Mondav. March 25. 1991 / University Daily Kansan
KJHX
Hear the difference NEWS
Affiliated with ABCNEWS * 90.7 FM
MARCH 25-29
RECYCLE
RAWII
- Stop by info tables in Ks Union
- Keep up the good work! Since August, KU has saved:
★ 75,500 lbs. Paper:
▶ 650 trees.
★ 5,500 lbs. Aluminum:
- Check for bulletins across campus
***In Honor of Women's History Month***
WOMEN'S FILM FESTIVAL
WOMEN'S FILM FESTIVAL
> 3.4 million cans
BREAKING OUT OF THE DOLL'S HOUSE
The issues of female identity, friendship, and love are explored as Jane Fonda stars as Nora in an edited version of Ibsen's classic A Dolly House.
7 p.m., THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1991
JAYHAWK ROOM, KANSAS UNION
FREE ADMISSION!!!
AMERICAN PARADE: WE THE WOMEN Narrated by Mary Tylery Moore, this historical account of the women's movement analyzes feminism and vividly describes how she who brought to it the forefront of american politics.
THE AUTOBIORAPHY OF MISS JANE PITTAM
With an Emmy award winning performance, Cecily Tyler
brilliantly portrays Miss Jane Pittam. The fictional Black
woman's life spanned the century from the Civil War to
the beginning of the early 60s. Civil Rights Movement and was Led with great dignity, strength and purpose.
Sponsored by The Commission on the Status of Women with special assistance from SLA
RECYCLING AWARENESS WEEK
mission on the Status of women is a student organization funded by Student
Bulk Prices!! Oread Organics
Natural Food Market Hours: 9am to 9pm Daily
GRAND OPENING MARCH 23-30 $ ^ {\circ} $
- Healthy Snack Foods
BULK
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- Beans & Grains & Flours
- Organic Coffee & Teas
- Organic Coffee & Teas
- Whole Grain Bread
- Fruit: Apples, Pears, Oranges...
- Milk Cheese, Yogurt & More...
- Tons-o-Frozen Food
- Soy Food!
- Vitamins & Supplements
- Health & Beauty Section
- Vitamins & Supplements
10% OFF ANY PURCHASE
OREAD ORGANICS
10% ONE-DAY PRINTING
Not valid with other offers or discounts.
Expires 4/15/91.
12th & Oread & Indiana • Next to the Yello Sub • 841-3543
BUFFALO BOB'S
EST. 1971
SMOKEHOUSE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
SMOKEHOUSE LAWRENCE KANSAS
HOG
HEAVEN
RIB SPECIAL
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Full Slab
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All dinners include Tater Curl Fries,
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719 MASSACHUSETTS
الله
Where the weekends start on Monday. . .
S
$3 60 oz.
Pitchers
Burger baskets
2 for 1
BENCHWARMERS
Southern Hills Mall
1601 West 23rd Street
841-9111
Classified Directory
100's
200's
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional
Services
235 Typing Services
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
307 Want to Buy
110 Bus. Personal
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
ACE EXAMS: Improve memory and recall, enhance concentration, creativity and study skills. Develop and teach autonomous brain machine Call 844-201-0033 for service Hypoxia and Stress Management Center
100s Announcements
105 Personal
Merchandise
Bauch & Lomb, Bay-Ban Sunglasses
20% Below Sung. Retail
The Etc. Shop
732 Mass. 843-601-8
P
SWM, 27, seeks special lady for long term relationship. If you are a single woman, 18-30, and also seek someone special, then tell me about her. Please P.O. B. Box 44242, Lawrence, KS 6004
MARK DAVIS
300's
Mark's silking it
Happy Birthday!! Bird, Dork Olivia, Gallbladder!
B. C. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop. Classic computerized. Body shop available. Automobile motorcycle repair and accessory. 30 N. nth #481-6455 M. F. V-ISA. S200.
Love, Carol & Jennie
Habits, phobias, stress, anxiety, plim, smoking, weight and other disorders. Hypnotherapy Center. 840-7504
CASH FOR COLLEGE. Over $100 million in scholarships and grants unclaimed each year. For information on how you may apply, visit www.college.edu/scholarships, 816 Augsburg St., Martinville, VA 28128.
Kansas City strip, a gay Men's nudist group-for more information, write P.O. Box 22556, Kansas City, Mo. 64113.
FORMAL WEAR
The Etc, Shop
Rental and Sales. 232 Main
'New Aesthetics of Western Civilization' makes sense of Western Civil's *Makes* sense to use it! Available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Crier bookstores.
Recycling got you out of sorts? We can help! Simple Goods General Store, 735 Mass
eating pizza
Monday Mania
BUY ONE PIZZA
& GET THE SECOND
ONE FREE!
Now has incredible beekeeping & plant preservation.
Now has encyclopedic editions of sketcher books for all serious artists. The Antique Beekeeping Museum is a must-visit.
We may end up paying for the state's budget crisis I encourage you to join the Kansas Association of Independent Business, build a membership base and sponsor problems in the work place. But we need you! We need you to contribute to your great salary—a small investment in your great salary—write me a sign-up card Eddam S. Schramm 1140 W. 75th St., Chicago, IL 60611.
842-3232
14th & Ohio
(under The Wheel)
Those crazy people at
Pyramid Pizza are
letting you buy any
Pyramid Pizza & get
the second Pizza (of equa-
tion) FREE!
Gay & Leibman Peer Consulting A friendly voice. Free, confidential referrals returned by counselors. Headquarters for RU AUI 844-3006 Sponsored by GILOZ 841-298
ULASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT-Fibrarians.
BASKER & SUMMER Over 8,000 appointments. No experience required. Over 8,000 appointments. No experience required. Managed menu, sent to M. D. L. Research, 8048, Seattle. WA 98124-Satisfaction
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2345. Headquarters.
EARTH SCHOOLS Living Myth Through Ritual
Workshops. Tuesdays, 9 April - 9 May 28. Free
inductory lecture April 2, 7: 20 pm, Lamplighter
books, 10 E Ninth
EARTH MOTHER ARTS
Those crazy people at
PYRAMID
BREWERY
all Douglas County Rape Victim's Support Service for confidential and caring assistance. If you need help, call 864-3506 or 912-2456.
Honey available at request for additional cost.
(limited lunch delivery area)
also, try our Colombo Frozen
SPRING into HEALTH with MASSAGE! Recover from stress and injury so you can really enjoy the season. Call Bruce at Lawrence Massage Therapy at 841-662-1662 to fly a gite.
College Money, Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money will be used to America's Finance 100! COLLEGE JEEK SCHOOL. Since 1901 COLLEGE JEEK SCHOOL. Owner: John D. McQuire, Mo 64028-1881. Tel: 879-879-7455.
120 Announcements
Take a study break and go on an Adventure!!!
Storm down the Illinois river for two days of camming experience! Get a group of friends and family to watch you and your boat. 19-21$) 8-12$ includes 2 nights lodging in cabins on the river, 2 days camming and six meals. For more information call us at 864-3477. Get away from the weather.
Rainbows and DeMollies welcome any members
Call Vickie at 841-4115.
Survive Intervention. If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is叫 841-2345 or visit 1419 Mass, Headquarters Counseling Center.
Suffering from abortion? Write HeartsRestored, Box 94, Grinnell, KS 67738. Confidential response/material will follow
value) FREE!
A
SUA
now accepting tapes for Day on the Hill
Area talent mag
submit tapes to the
Level 4 Kansas Union
account (tapes to the
SUA Box Office
Level 4 Kansas Union
♪ ♩
Tapes must be in by Monday. April 8 at noon.
For more details, call the SUR Office 654-3177
130 Entertainment
ALL, Left Inseam and Sidewheel live at the HALL, Thursday, March 28, 56, all ages, no alcohol. The Outhouse is 4 miles east of Mass. on 15th St.
Lawrence Info Center, content orientated BBS.
841-7522, N. J.
140 Lost-Found
Lost: Gold clip on earring Friday before Spring Break. If found please call 749-3569.
200s
Employment
205 Help Wanted
Seeking students and grades to fill many positions
Airline will训. Excellent salary and travel benefits, 303-441-2455
Babysitter needed immediately After school care-Monday through Friday, 3:00-5:30 pm. References please: 843-3147.
`\AIMP COURSELORS Wanted for private Michigan boys/girl summer camps. Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterwiking, gymnastics, basketball, camp activities, camping, crafts, dramatics, or riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. $120 per hour. Email: loreen.765, MlpId. N!_ 1, 6003, 704-4644-21
SUMMER CAMP JOBS IN MICHIGAN
-Counselors
-Office
-Kitchen
-Maintenance
Lake of the Woods for Girls
Geenwoods for Boys
INTERVIEWS ON CAMPUS
Tues, March 26th, 12:00-5:00pm
Wed, March 27th, 8:30am-2:00pm
110 Burge Union
No appointment needed
Conventure Store Clerk-$4.25 hr, Weekend shift,
cash register experience. Apply in person at Phillips 66. Desoto Short Store. 1-883-3053.
EARN $4.500 - $10.000. Now hiring-managers and painters, limited opportunity. Part-time not offered. LIMITED OPPORTUNITY. Call 1-883-3053. Mr. Gannon.
GRADUATING AT CAREER NEEDDED- Career position for aggravate student with a degree in college excellent start up salary, company car. At position with
Great job in Pittsburgh suburb. Have fun with 2 cute kids for 35 hour week. Earn great salary, room, board and 2 weeks paid vacation. Starts on January 1 for one year. Call Elizabeth at (213) 847-6200 or visit www.pittsburgh.edu.
International Company seeks career minded individuals to train in the fashion and glamour industry. For interview, 1,233-6829.
Looking for adventure? Be a nanny! Go to interesting places. Earn good money for a year Templeton Nanny Agency 842-4431
- We need Cooks, and Cashiers
• $4.50 Starting Wage
Apply from 3-5p.m. at
901 Kentucky 2014 A
- Need money last? Make up to $125.00 a day trimming photographs. No experience necessary.
1-400-655-7298
- We need Cooks, and
Local Restaurant 30 Openings
901 Kentucky 204A
GOOD JOBS
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Call Garnett Publishing, Inc.
(913) 448-3121Leave message after 5
Need responsible non-smoking girl for babysitting.
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday mornings
8:30-11:30. Call 843-2599
Unique Career Opportunity $11 to start and bonus
Spring Break over and still no summer job?
Average making $450/week while gaining career experience for your resume 841-1224
POSITION AVAILABLE. A local miliary secretary to hire a K. U. student to work every other night and weekend. Duties include: answering the calls of business clients and writing with the public. This individual needs to be neat, have good communication skills and desire to earn a salary, furnished apartment and paid utilities. The position is open beginning May 19th. For additional information and an interview, call 843-1213 and ask for Larry.
Need managers for rapid growing corporation.
No exp necessary. Will train in sales, marketing and management. Call 1-652-8911
Attorney
Wanted:
Need part-time babysitter for nine 6 month olds.
Prepare and supervise on Monday to campus, make images during study, calling 843-1850.
Work Schedule: available online
Work Study positions available. Spring, Summer and Fall. Call Judy at the School of Business 944-7588
225 Professional Services
16 East 13th 842-1133
TRAFFIC - DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
Driver Education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver license obtainable, transportation provided. 841.7749
Government photos, passports, immigration, visas, senior portraits, arts & art portfolios/BAW, color Call Tom Swells 794 1611.
Need an Attorney?
CALL RICHARD A. FRYDMAN
843-4023 / free initial consultation
CALL RICHARD A. FRYDMAN 843-4023 / free initial consultation
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 481-6878
Prompt contraception and abortion services in
1 swepre. B41.SJ16.
Thesis & dissertations
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping.
Lawrence Printing Service 512 E 9th Street.
843-400.
DWI-TRAFFIC
JERRY HARPER
LAW OFFICES
1101 Mass. Lawrence 749-012
235 Typing Services
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 8423.303 days or evenings.
1+ Typing-WP. letters, resumes, term papers.
etc 842-4754, 3:30-10:30 pm wkdys, anytime
wkends
A better price for Word Processing. Fast service
$1.00 double-spaced paper. Call Resher: 841-976-0768
Absolute cheapest (taping in Lawrence
paper) cost. Rush job no problem.
749-6483
Accurately typing, Resumes, Theses, Letters, Call Melany,
1-193-883-4754 or 864-3181.
Call R.J.'s Typing Services 841-5942. Term papers, legal theses, ect. No calls after 9 p.m.
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary.
$1.25 double-spaced page. Call Mrs. Mattila
10am 6pm, 841-1219
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, terms, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Laur print-
ing materials available at:
88-421-3500, M-584, 84-3274, 84-3274,
84-3274, M-584, F-858, F-858, F-858,
I will correct grammar, punctuation or spelling errors, edit, and type your words of wisdom and, in general, help you produce your best possible papers Phil. 842 62535
K's professional word processing. Accurate and affordable. Call after 1:00 pm. 341-6345.
Professional Typist. Reasonable rates. Call 842-2003.
Professional resumes-Consultations, formatting, typesetting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc, 9271
Mass., 841 107.
WordPerfect word processing. Ink Jet printer.
Near Orchards Corners. Phone 843-8568.
Word Processing/Typing: Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing, composition.
Have M. S. Degree: 841-6254
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
1983 Honda V4 Interpreter 750 and accessories,
12,000 miles, mint condition $2100 Larry,
841-4365.
FUTON SALE
6" Futon and Hardwood Frame
169 $ ^{95} $
Complete (while supplies last)
Betbis Bedroom
2429 Iowa #G • Lawrence, KS 66047
913-842-7378
GOVT'S SURPLUS! Sleeping bag, backpacks,
clothing袋, camouflage clothing, wet weather gear,
combat, headband and Speedlite Boots. Also
CARHARTT WORKWEAR. Monat 5-9
3-16; Workwear. Monat 7-10.
Specialized kit, 6 months old. Black Keypad,
included. $203.00 obs. $204.36 (mw) TV
TREK 560-Sihimara 10, Matrix Wheels, road
bike, like new. Jason 865-1997.
University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 25, 1991
11
1987 Honda Elite 65cc, 6cc, red, reliable and inexpensive. Motorcycle. ID53. Call 749-2918.
Computer: TI 855 Printer, IBM PC mono, 20 MEG Hard Drive, $4\frac{1}{4}$ Floppy, 512 K Ram, new near $5\frac{1}{4}$ Drive, Call 2202, leave message.
$3 share Drive CALL $2.822; leave message.
$4 share Drive CALL $1.976; leave message.
Tuner 100, DCD CD 10 CD player 25, DRM500 Cassette deck $30, Cerwin Vega D-7 speakers $200-all in excellent condition. Will sell separate
340 Auto Sales
1881 Mitsuhishi Corda, 5.1pp, 2oo lb, bkk, several new parts. Good condition, Ask $2950, 842-7670
1884 Honda Civic Wagon, 98,00 miles, beautiful, 864-3527 for $2.400.
1989 Mitsubishi Precipe 39,000 miles, 2 dr. stick,
$400, $340, 843-758 after 8pm.
360 Miscellaneous
Seniors and grad students! Ford's college grad program can help you buy a new car or truck. For details, call Bill Lee. 843-3500.
On TV's. VCR's jewelry, stereo, musical instruments and cameras and we. Honor wwe. Jewelry, 10W. 4th Bk. Pawn & Jewelry, 10W. 4th Bk. 749-1919 For sale: 8 month Boutique Member package. $35.00
For sale: 8 month Body Boutique membership
$150. 864-4720 mornings. 842-2753, leave message.
Events of the Week
Hillel
הליא
Events of the Week
Tuesday, March 26
"Judaism and Homosexuality"
Discussion with Rabbi Sharyn Henry
7 p.m. Hilliell House
Friday, March 29
First night Passover Seder
lift host Hilfie
Saturday, March 30
2nd night Passover Seder
with L.J.C.C.
Reservations required!
call Hilliell by *1*
For rides and more information. call 864-3948
370 Want to Buy
2 Plane tickets to Chicago over Easter
week-+600 a piece or best offer. Call 823-7042
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
2-4 bedroom rooms and duplexes. Available June
1, No sorry, not pick. Dick at 843-8971/843-1601.
1-2-3 bedroom apartments near campus.
Available June 1. Sorry, no pets. Dick
842/8071/843-1601
4-5 bedroom house available April 1. $800 per month 2 blocks from KU on Kentucky. Days 913-321-1440, Craig.
Bradford Square Apartments 100 School Street
Available March 1 - 1 bd unair ap, in new wifi wlan kit. (Not available with WD books, microwave, DW ceilings, min blinds. Great location near campus. Short lease allowance $35 per month. No pets.
Big sunny 1 bedroom apt available now thru July
Option for next year. 2 blocks from campus
$75/month. 842-9012. Leave message.
& 2 & 3 BR-Available in May or August,
mature residents, disposals, refrigeration services,
warehouses. Contact us at www.masterstay.com
site management. KU bus route, off-street parking,
furniture. Visit your apartment for summer
or fall 740-156.
Nice 2 bedroom apt. Close to Student Union,
Washer/dryer hookup. Off-street parking.
No pets. 748 269 103
Great 1 bdm apt for rent. 1 block from Union.
Must see to appreciate. Call Kristen at 865-0100.
Leave message.
Female roommates need for next school year. Beautiful 3 BR house, 2 car garage, newly redecorated, furnished, neighborhood, W/D. Kitchen is large and functional. No smokers. 810 tuxes & umus. 864-6380
Female needed for summer sublease. Own room and bath. Close to campus. 843-2498.
Extremely nice, spacious. 3 dbm townhouse/w
garage. 2 female non smoking rooms needed,
year lease beginning August and/or summer
basement. $120, $3 utilities. Kerrs 845-0626
Hey! KU Med. students, Move in June 1 and offer a $2 rent for 2 months. *Studio 1, and 2 bedrooms 1* + Heat & Water paid. *4 Acre Bedroom Center, Rainbow Tower Agents 811-983-6063*
LEASE NOW FOR FALL. Room 3 or 5-plus DR bus on line bus. Basement, garage. C/A/W/D hookup. no. Pets. Lease & refs. req $440/mo and up. Negotiable. #873-776 after
LEASE NOW FOR FALL. Extra nice 2 BR duplex,
in good location. Extra large MRU; garage;
launch/storage. nice yard. No pets. Lease &
moving fee. Furnished. Bills $850. myno.
meuble $738/179 for rent.
合
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, citizenship, national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper available on an equal opportunity basis.
SUMMER SUILEASE. Immaculate room bedroom, awesome wood floor; D/W W/D look up, spacious closets, campus/downlook location, no $420/month (neg). 865-3800.
Sublease large one bedroom apt. Close to campus.
on bus route, microwave, diathwasher, Jacquzi and pool.
Call 841-9114.
Sublease May-August 1 1 Br, CA, DW,
Washer/dryer, to KU. Small pet OK, $350
a month 841-1800.
Summer sublease, 2 bedroom, 1/2 bath, fire,
water laundering available $25/month. Call
415-863-0280 for details. Furnished 1 and 2
bedroom apts a bikk from KU on oof street,
no pets. 841-550-8630
Lorinar Townhouses, 881 Clinton Parkway
Quality, spacious, with the all amenities. Brand
available now. Available in 2 3 bedrooms. Lease ther
May, July or for 12 months. 819-7494. 843-1433.
2- BR, 4- BR, BAR. Washers/dryers in each unit, fire fans microwave, firefilters, 2 full baths in BR, on bus route, off street parking. Only 1 yr old. Call today: 749-1556.
New Apartments
Nice 1 bedroom apt close to the Union. No pets. Deposit and references required. Off street parking. 749-2919.
Now leasing. Extra nice, spacious two bedroom apartments with all kitchen appliances, including gas range, dishwasher, refrigerator and blinds. Low utilities, pool and bay rafters. Quest complete $150.00 SPANISH CREATE APARTMENT $299.00
Now leasing for fall semester, 1 and 2 bedroom
apens. Aspen West Apennies $30 for bedroom, $875
2 bedroom. Ceiling fans, water paid. Walk to campa-
nion. Call 842-1890 or 842-1839
New leasing 1 and 2 bedroom units at Sapirthouse Plaa Apt. 153. Bedroom $72, 2 bedroom starts at $35. 10 month lease. Water and cable paid. remodeled kitchen, new carpet. Call 842-1166.
ONE BLOCK FROM KANSAS UNION. For rent to serious graduate school, upperclass student or KU employee. One BR furnished. No pets. Reis. $150. Water furnished. $250/mo. 834-389 after 6pm
Spacius 30 w. bedroom, 47. $5ules for summer or somer: 108 w.床架, 82-746-800 or 81-579-799
SUMMER SUNDER LACE WITH option for fall, in sunroom: 108 w.床架, 82-746-800, private pool. 605-821-256, leave message
Pool & Volleyball
- Pool & Volleyball
* Quiet location
* Close to bus route
* Small pets OK with deposit
* Inexpensive gas heat
* Central air
2166 W. 26th 843-6446
Open 10-5, M-F
VILLAGE SQUARE
Apartments
A Quiet, Relaxed
Atmosphere
close to campus spacious 2 bedroom laundry fac. & pool waterbed allowed
9th & Avalon
842-3040
ALYRIA NORTHWEST HOSPITAL
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished rooms with shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilities paid. 1 bk from KU with off street parking. No pets. 841-3500
WOODWAY
APARTMENTS
each apartment features:
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
- Large bedrooms
- Mobility unit
- On KU bus route
- Carpets available
1 bedroom $355,$450
2 bedroom $440,$460
3 bedroom $560
office
611 Michigan Street
(across from Hardoe's)
HOURS:
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
9:00-12:00 Sat
843-1971
Please call Kristy for more.
Please call Kristy for appt
Summer apt. sublease available 2 rooms - close to camp on Tennessee Call Michelle B2-8794. Summer Sublease-B 1-888-farm furniture, dining table, drafting table, $35; negotiable B1-296.
spacious & comfortable
*studios
*1 & 2 BR apartments
*3 & 8R townhouses
Now leasing for summer & fall
Summer subservice with option to take over base in fall. Brand new 2 bedroom. 1 female roommate wanted. $180/month. Call Julynn, 841-1490.
Apple Lane Apartments
Summer sublease. Nice 3 B1 with dishwasher,
washder/ dryer, AC Call 865-1655.
In addition, we have Bed and Bath.
2111 Kasold
843-4300
washer/dryer, AC Call 865-1645
Summer sublease 2 month housed at apo. Pet
Shelter 2 month housed at apo. Pet
865-4392
-3 Pools
-Tennis courts
-on KU bus route
-gas heat & water paid
(on apartments)
(Call for appointment)
TRAILRIDGE
Now accepting reservations for fall leases!
843-7333
Free cable
404
Water paid
Close to KU bus route
Accepting reservations for fall leases!
Quail Creek Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
on KU bus route studios townhomes 2,3 Bedrooms Free cable Water paid Pool
SUNRISE VILLAGE
660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon.- Fri. 11-5
Bedroom Town Houses
841-8400
- Garages; 2 & 1/2 bath
- On KU Bus Route
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall Special
- Microwave Ovens
- Luxurious 3 & 4
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM
- Some with fireplaces
- Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an
- Swimming Pool
8 Tennis Courts
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
Swan Management
(Next to Benchwarmers)
841-5444
Special
Affordable Price!!
S
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
Office Hours:
12-6 pm Mon., Fri.
10-6 pm Tue. - Thur.
9-3 pm Sat.
- 1-2-3 bedroom apts.
- Gravstone
LOOK, TOTO? ANOTHER TORNADO IN KANSAS!
NO, IT ISNT, DOROTH?? IT'S JUST THE 1991 KANSAS JAYHAWKS?
ENLARGED TO SHOW TEXTURE
- 1-2-3 bedroom p.m.
Open House M-F 1-5 p.m.
2512 W. 6th S
12 w. 0th St.
749-1288
Georgetown Apartments
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
- O. Site MGT-Holidome
Enlarged to Show Texture
U Bus Route-Holidome
On Site MGT./Reliabla 24 hour Maintenance
24 hour Maintenance
• Wired for TV/Mini Blind
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
* Fenced pool area with
Tanning Deck & Barbeque
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
- Low Security Deposit
- 10 of 12 Month Leases
- Low Security Deposit
- No pets
Office Hours: M-F 1:5-00
WKNDS - BY APPT.
630 AM
Call about our Summer Special
630 Michigan 749-7279
West Hills APARTMENTS
and unfurnished
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now leasing for
June or August
actious apts. - furnished
1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
$280 to $335 per month
2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft
$365 to $415 per month (water paid!)
Great location Near campus
OPEN HOUSE
is ad for original buildings only-
Mon. Wed. Thurs
1:00 -4:00 p.m. (no appt needed)
This ad for original buildings only-
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
does not include Phase II
- Volleyball Court
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Basketball Court
- Exercise Room
- 3 Hot Tubs
- On Bus Route
SUN
- 3 Hot Tubs
Models Open Daily
Mon. - Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 10-4 p.m. Sun 12-4 p.m.
If you can read this ad, you're too smart to live in an apartment.
$ 355 - $425
842-5111
1301 W.24th
by Brian Gunning
If you can
It doesn't take a genius to see that Naismith is the smart place to live while you get an education.
- Computer Center
- Free utilities
- "Dine Anytime"
Wise up and make the move now!
1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, KS 66424
(913) 843-8559
NAISMITHHALL
Summer sub-lease 1 bdmr, furnished apt. Aug-18.
Call evening 8:45a to inform 9:49m for more.
Two bedroom sublease May 15-Aug 15, no deposit.
Summer sublease 2 bedroom with washer/dryer and microwave. Months and rent negotiable. Call Jil. 841-3790
non-sitting females needed for sublease
starting May 15 (Date negotiable)
in Mendowbrook, Hent rented at $10 and $180
per month and cable and cable paid. Pool (
insurance, 96/628)
OPEN DAILY 1.5 PM
1-5 P.M.
Completely Furnished
Reserve Your Home Now!
We offer
Completely Furnished
2·3·3 Bedroom Apartmenta
Designed with you in mind!
Offering:
•Custom furnishings
•Designed for privacy
•Private Parking
•Close to shopping & KU
•Many great locations
•Equal opportunity housing
Go to...
Sundance - 841-5255
C&F
Kentucky Place - 749-0445
1310 Kentucky
Hanover Place - 841-1212 14th & Mass.
Tanglewood - 749-2415 10th & Arkansas
Orchard Corners - 749-4226
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Campus Place - 841-1429
1145 Louisiana
TOUH & KNISSLEY
WASTERLAKE
842-4455
430 Roommate Wanted
A roommate roommate, on bus route, through July, $20 a month plus utilities. Nice apt. 843-3628. Call now for summer sublease. Female roommate. Orchard Corners Call anytime at 842-3628.
Summer sublease. Female roommate need to share condo. Own room, carport, W/D, microwave, pool, CA and more! $165 plus 5% utilities. Call Lori: 855-690-043 or 843-7880.
Share beautiful house near campus. Non-smoker.
student. $165/month. $50 deposit. 1/5 utilities.
841-4678
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Words set in Bold Count as 3 words
Words set in Bold Each word as 3 words
Three Bedroom for summer sublease. Please call 749-3477, economical.
- Policy
Blank lines count as 7 words.
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Classifications
105 personal 140 lost & found 305 for sale
110 business persons 205 help wanted 340 auto sales
12 announcements 225 professional service 360 miscellaneous
13 entertainment 295 yinying services
Classified Mail Order Form
370 want to buy
405 for rent
'30 roommate wan
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Classification ___ L
DLOW KANSAN POLICY
Make checks payable to:
191 Stauffer Fint Hall
Lawrence, RS 60455
GO HAWKS!
Good luck in the 1991 NCAA Tournament!
The Hawk is the place to watch your team win in the NCAA tournament games.
It could only happen at... THE HAWK
A Campus Tradition Since 1920
1920
12
Monday, March 25. 1991 / University Daily Kansan
STUDENTS WORK ABROAD
STUDENTS WORK ABROAD
Work up to 6 months in Britain, Ireland
France, Germany, Jamaica, New Zealand and Costa Rica. Council's Work Abroad Pro
gains the only one of kind in the U.S. cuts
through at the end week.
Call for FREE brochures on work programs,
discount air fares, language courses and more.
Council Intl (Educational Exchange
(U.S. Sponsor of the Inf' Student I.D. Card)
CounciTravel
Chicago, IL 312-951-0585
Evanston, IL 708-475-5070
RAINBOW TOWER
APARTMENTS
• Studio. One & Two Bedrooms
• Heat and Water Paid
• Heated Indoor Outdoor Pool
• Jacuzzi & Sauna
• Exercise Spa & Laundry
• Restricted Entry System
• Underground Parking
• Furnished & Unfurnished Apts.
• Across from KU Med Center
• Excellent I-35 Access
Now Pre-Leasing
for Fall
831-9363
39th and Rainbow
Kansas City, Kansas
66103
CouncilTravel
APARTMENTS
• Studio, One & Two Bedrooms
• Heat and Water Paid
• Heated Indoor Outdoor Pool
• Jacuzzi & Sauna
• Exercise Spa & Laundry
• Restricted Entry System
• Underground Parking
• Furnished & Unfurnished Apts.
• Across from KU Med Center
• Excellent 1:35 Access
Now Pre-Leasing for Fall
831-9363
39th and Rainbow
Kansas City, Kansas
66103
Now Pre-Leasing for Fall
831-9363
39th and Rainbow
Kansas City, Kansas
66103
Find anything and everything you ever wanted in the Kansan classifieds.
SUPER
MID-SEMESTER
SPECIAL
ONLY
$58 STUDENTS
UNLIMITED MEMBERSHIP
NOW THRU MAY 16!
Eshliebe
WORKOUT CENTERS
first visit free!
Eshliabe WORKOUT CENTERS
first visit free!
842-BODY 2223 LOUISIANA
Award helps student aim high
Scholarship goes toward flight lessons
M
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Kansan staff writer
Ron Drake always has wanted to be a pilot.
Drake, Golden, Colo., junior, will be able to get closer to his dream, thanks to a new scholarship at the University of Kansas.
The Willis A Waas Memorial Scholarship is a $500 award given each spring to a KU student working toward a private pilot's license. The award goes directly toward the cost of flight lessons.
Ron Drake, Golden, Colo., junior, stands by a Cessna 150 trainer plane. Drake is the first recipient of the $500 Willis A. Waas Memorial Scholarship, which is awarded to a student earning a private olgt's license.
Drake is the first recipient of the scholarship.
"I have always planned on having a career in aviation," he said. "This scholarship will help me obtain my license faster than if I didn't have the money from the award. It will really accelerate my learning."
Drake, a member of the KU flying Club, said that he already had been working on his license but that it was time to move. "Because if case flight lessons were expensive
Flight lessons cost about $50 an hour. A private pilot's license requires 40 hours of instruction.
"I had to take fewer lessons because of the cost," Drake said. "It was going to take me a long time to get my license. With the scholarship money, I hope to have my license by the end of the school year."
Drake's flight instructor, John Roper, Kansas City, Kan. senor and president of the KU Flying Club, said he would see Drake win the scholarship
"I wanted to do something in memory of Dad, to make him live on," she said. "He always wanted to help others fly."
Was died in 1987 in a small plane crash caused by a mechanical failure. Loethen, who has a private
"Ron has been working with me toward his license for a while," he said. "He deserved it."
The Waas scholarship was created last fall by Andrea Waes Loethen, a 1980 KU graduate, in memory of her father, a 1951 KU graduate
plot's license, donated $10,000 of the settlement from her father's accident to establish the scholarship
To qualify for the scholarship, the applicant must be at least a part-time KU student have a current flight medical certificate and have at least five hours of flying time with an instructor, she said.
the scholarship money stay with KU students.
Loethen said she was pleased to see
Since the scholarship winner's night instructor is also a KU student, the money stays with KU people, the students I've liked that KU meant a lot to him
SELL IT FAST IN THE DAILY KANSAN
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24th and IOWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS (913) 842-1544
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(formerly The Broken Penguins)
March 28, 1991 7:15 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
$8 advance tickets available at SUA box office or Wescoe Beach
All proceeds benefit the National Prevention of Child Abuse
featuring
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAI.
VOL.101,No.117
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1991
(USPS 650-640)
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
NEWS:864-4810
Three attacks reported near KU
Women report two incidents of rape, one of sodomy during weekend
Kansan staff writer
By Mike I. Vargas
Two incidents of rape and one of sodomy were reported between Friday and Sunday to the Lawrence police.
Lawrence police said a woman was sodomized after she was grabbed from behind and pulled into a yard in the 1700 block of University Drive while walking to a party early Sunday morning.
The woman managed to escape, said Sgt. Kevin Harmon. Lawrence police representative. The woman motioned to a motorist to stop and was taken to a friend's home, where she called the police
She was treated and released from Lawrence Memorial Hospital with minor facial injuries. Harmon said.
About a half an hour earlier, in a separate incident, a woman was raped in the 1700 block of West 24th Street, according to Lawrence police reports.
The suspect was the woman's boyfriend, Har mon said.
In a third incident, a 14-year old girl was raped early Friday morning in the 300 block of Missouri Street, police said.
The girl knew the suspect, Harmon said KU police Lt. John Mullens said four rapes were reported to KU police in 1988, one in 1989 and none in 1990.
Li Mark Brothers, Lawrence police crime analyst, said 11 raps were reported to the Lawrence police in 1988. 16 in 1989 and 24 in 1990
These figures also include reports that were
found not to be rapes after police investigation.
It is difficult to determine whether there was an increase in the number of rapes or an increase in the number of raps being reported. Brothers said, "Everyone is worried," and Nelson person feel comfortable in reporting it to the police.
But not many people are comfortable. Only one out of 10 of the raps that occur are reported to anyone, including police, counselors, friends or hospitals, according to the pamphlet "Surviving Rape and Sexual Assault in Douglas County" from the Douglas County Rape Victim Support Services.
Barbara Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center at the University of Kansas, said that rapes were so infrequently reported because many women were embarrassed and did not want to admit they were victims of the crime.
What to do if you have been raped
1. Get to a safe place.
3. Seek medical attention. RVSS can meet you at the hospital.
2. If you want confidential help contact the Douglas County Rape Victims Support Service through the KU Information Center or Headquarters.
4. You have the choice if you want to report the rape to the police.
5. Seek some kind of counseling whether it be from a professional or from someone you trust.
Call KU Information at 864-3506 or Headquarters at 841-2345 for more information or crisis intervention
Information. Sarah Russell, director RVSS
Refugees say Iraqi army tactics harsh
The Associated Press
SAFWAN, Iraq — Employing brutal tactics, the Iraqi military has recaptured every large city in southern Iraq, according to resistance fighters and refugees who fled to U.S. military outposts yesterday seeking food, shelter and political asylum.
Tired mumy and dirty the refugees said they had escaped from Bassu Najal Nasiriya and other southern cities as Saddam Hussein's troops crushed units of Iraqis, including helicopters and heavy artillery.
The official Iraq news agency, monitored in Cyprus, reported yesterday that Vice President Taha Yasin Ramadan had visited Syria and argued reconstruction efforts to wipe out traces of the rebellion
The rebels in the south, made up mostly of Shiite Muslims, have lost control of all the larger cities and towns that they controlled as recently as March 15, the refugees said.
In other developments yester day;
Fighting continued in northern Iraq, where Kurdish rebels reported numerous casualties from assaults by forces loyal Saddam.
-Iraq, in a letter to the U.N. secretary-general, accused Iranian military units of crossing the border, firing on Iraqi soldiers and siding with rebels in the south. The letter cited 13 border incidents that allegedly took place earlier this month.
—Jordan's King Hussein flew to Damascus, a country, to meet with President Hafez Assad after seven months of strain caused by their conflicting forces on the gulf crisis. Syria sided with the U.S. led coalition; Jordan tilted toward Saddam.
The Pentagon denied a report
in the Washington Post that U.S. heavy armored units drove 60 miles north to the Euphrates River valley over the weekend in a significant repositioning apparently aimed at intimidating Sadam Pentagon representative Pete Williams said the movement of the repositioning of troops that has been going on in recent days
Refugees said Republican Guard troops, Saddam's best trained and most loyal soldiers, patrol the streets in tanks, giving young men a stark choice: Join the army or be killed.
"They keep 7,000 prisoners at a university (in Basra), and they shoot about 50 to 100 everyday," said Khalif Rheem, one of 26 Iraqi soldiers who surrendered yesterday to U.S. forces occupying Mosul. "He was on a war-battered tow on the Iraqi Kurdish nation."
The claims could not be independently confirmed. Iraq has not allowed foreign journalists to visit the troubled cities since the uprings by Kurds in the north and Shites in the south began last month in the aftermath of the Persian Gulf War.
Refugees claimed that soliders were distributing poisoned oranges and bread in Basra.
"I'm sure it was not the burns from a normal fire." Tahar said. "They were blistering very badly and in a very strange way."
Makki Jaffar Tahar, a physician, said he treated several young girls that apparently were shaken up in napalm attack at Naif hospital.
In fighting in northern Iraq, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan said many people died in the oil center and two in government air raids.
See Nation/World briefs Page 7
U.S. may profit on gulf war if allies pay all their pledges
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The United States could turn a profit on the Persian Gulf war if allied pledges are paid in full and the war's costs are determined by a strict standard, congressional budget analysts said yesterday.
But congressional budget officials, citing the short duration of the war and the unexpectedly low losses of equipment, said the cost of Operation Desert Storm would be closer to $40 billion.
Pledges from allies, including the gulf countries, Japan and Germany, now total $4.5 billion, of which some $28.6 billion has been paid in cash or services, according to the latest tally.
If that figure proves accurate, the government may not need the $15 billion in taxpayer dollars appropriated last week by Congress in a bill that awaits President Bush's signature. In fact, the Treasury could wind up with money left over.
But it all depends on what is counted in the tally for the war.
There is broad agreement that the costs should include the tab for moving troops and equipment to and from the Persian Gulf; for lost airplanes, tanks and other military equipment in a munition, missiles and bombs.
There are other costs, however that are in dispute. For example,
should the Pentagon be able to claim higher fuel costs because of the war's effect on oil prices? Or should we wear wear and tear on equipment?
And what about money doled out to allies as compensation or rewards for their help? Some $7 billion in past military debt from Egypt has been forgiven. Israel is receiving an additional $650 million, and Turkey stands to receive $200 million extra.
But yesterday, after a $3\frac{1}{2}$-hour meeting with Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady, German Finance Minister Theo Waigel promised that Germany's full pledge would be nailed by Thursday.
In Tokyo, Japanese Prime Minister Toshiki Kaufa said his country would not boost its war pledge to make up for $400 million lost through changing currency exchange rates. In January, the Japanese pledgeed it 17 trillion yen, but Japan's yen has weakened since then, making the pledge worth only $8.6 billion.
The prospect that the United States could reap a windfall from the war already has angered the Germans, who have pledged $6.5
One official said Congress was operating at a disadvantage because it had to rely on incomplete Pentagon estimates.
KANSAS
HAWKS
Hanging out by the pool
Dan McGurk, (left), Leawood, sophomore; Dan McKernan, Emporia, junior; and Chris Bird, Atchison, sophomore, combine warm weather enjoyment with a Jayhawk victory celebration by wading in a pool at
Bird's house, 1431 W. 19th St. yesterday. Bird said they planned to watch the Kansas-North Carolina game from the pool Saturday if the weather permits.
Computer Center detects viruses
By Patricia Rojas
Kansan staff writer
Never trust a computer that plays "Yankee Doodle Dandy."
Yankee Doodle is one of two computer viruses that infected the Novell server at the Computer Center last week. The other is the Stoned virus.
Herb Harris, assistant director of users services at the center, said the Novell server was infected sometime between Thursday and Friday. Staff members who used the computers on those two days detected the virus.
The Novell server is the network that supplies software to and connects the Zenith computers in the environment allowing them to share programs.
The Yankee Doodle virus appears to have come from Bulgaria, he said. It affects programs that run under MS-DOS operating systems. Zenith and IBM computers both use MS-DOS systems.
Harris said Yankee Doodle affected programs that used extensions EXE, COM and OVL., including WordStar and WordPerfect word-processing programs. This type of virus does not affect text or data files but program files. The virus hides on hard disks or floppy disks.
It sometimes plays 'Yankee Doodle Dandy' on the computer's sound system. Its presence also may be evident in the system's functioning.
"The computer just appears to lose
its mind," Harris said. "It just sits there catatonic."
Harris said that although the Stoned Virus did not seem destructive in nature, it could wipe out material on an entire disk. This type of virus often hides in the floppy disk's directory.
Stoned Virus tends to show a sign on the screen that says, "Your PC is stoned."
Computer center employees have disinfected the Novell server, Harris said. However, the viruses may not have been exterminated.
"The people who used our lab last Thursday or Friday and put in a floppy disk that had programs in it got it," he said.
Greg Bryant, software analyst at the computer lab in Learned Hall, said the engineering lab had had both viruses in the past couple of weeks.
The engineering computer lab is the only one that has reported the presence of the Yankee Doodle and the Stoned viruses to the center.
He said that the viruses were more of a nuisance than a hazard.
However, the virus also might have spread to any computer system on campus that has access to the Norvell server through its network.
People who want information on how to disinfect disks from Yankee Doodle and Stored病毒 should call their consulting services at 864-0410.
Committee approves proposal to cut $12.5 million from higher education
By Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — It is deja vu all over again.
The Senate Ways and Means Committee is working on the higher education budget bill that passed through the House last week and the bill is taking a worse beating than the House committee administered.
The committee approved a tentative recommendation to cut an additional 2.3 percent, or $12.5 million, from the bill that the House passed.
In addition, the committee decided not to mandate a tuition increase
If these two measures stand, almost $20 million would be cut from general use financing.
recommended by the House. The increase would bring a million to $100 billion.
State Sen. Wint Winter, R-Lawrence, said it was time to start talking about financing higher education rather than cutting it.
"Kansas has always had a long tradition of supporting higher education," he said. "Now is not the time to abandon the very sector of our economy that will provide the hope and direction of the future of our state."
The committee should acknowledge the key role of higher education and be willing to make the tough decision and provide additional revenue.
"I don't think the Regents have been treated all that bad by the State General Fund," he said. "I would venture to say that tuition has not increased 39.17 percent in that same four years."
But State Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Shawnee, said that general support for Regents institutions had more than 39 percent in four years.
State Sen. Frank Gaines, D-Daugusta, added that the Regents had failed to implement a plan that could cut down on wasteful spending.
"I'm convinced there's a substantial amount of disorganization out there," he said.
However, Winter said the problem did not justify cutting the budget.
"That doesn't mean that what you do to solve that problem is cut the quality of education for the students; that problem is to not cut the Regents budget but to tell them to adopt a system-wide plan."
6
2
Tuesday, March 26, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
Sunny day
TODAY
Rain
HI:75°
LO:53°
48/35
58/35
69/46
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58/40
84/67
79/68
Kansas Forecast
Partly cloudy, rainy, warm and windy with thunderstorms in the afternoon. Turning cold later in the week.
Salina
74/48 KC
Dodge City
74/46 78/56
Wichita
84/54
3-day Forecast
Wednesday - Windy and rainy, turning colder through the day. High 67' low 39.
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
Thursday - Partly cloudy, rainy, windy and cold. High 46/
low 28.
Friday - Sunny and warmer. High 52/ low 34.
forecast by Mike Schirkel
Temperatures are body's Hight and tonight's low.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 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 $50. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
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Costs soar for Horvath in city race
Kansan staff report
City Commission candidate Paul Horvath has jumped ahead of his competitors in both campaign contributions and to public disclosure records for the second campaign period.
Financial reports for the period from Feb. 15 to March 21 show that Horvath received contributions totaling $4,120; only $1,000 more than Bob Schuchman in came second with $2,699.1.
Horvath, who had a sixthplace finish in the Feb. 26 primary, also outspent the other five candidates, with $4,394.43 spent on advertising, printing and mass mailings. Again, Schumc came in a distant second with $1,387.13.
Other candidates who filed reports yesterday were John Nalandian and David Penny. Nalandian received $3,245 spent $6,031.97. Penny received $1,640 and spent $1,659 3.
Although the public disclosure reports were due yesterday afternoon, candidates Toni Browne and Katherine McDonald were not filed as of 5 p.m., yesterday.
State public disclosure laws require candidates to list individual receipts and expenditures exceeding $50.
Local man wins $2 million jackpot
Howard Wilburn was tired when he left work Wednesday. He needed to release stress.
By Patricia Rojas
Wilburn, a 43-year-old Lawrence resident, won $2 million in Wednesday's Lotto America jackpot. Kansas Lottery officials released his name yesterday.
"I thought to myself, 'God, if you ever intend for me to win this, today would be a good time.'"
"I thought I'd do something really crazy," he said. "I decided I'd play the lottery.
Kansan staff writer
Wilburn said he had played the lottery almost every Saturday since 1868. Last week, he changed his ways and began working at a bank.
Wilburn, a claims representative in the Topeka office of the Social Security Administration, said he found out Thursday night from the newspaper that he had a winning ticket.
"I had to reread it several times that night and also in the morning," he said.
"I even worked overtime on Saturday," Wilburn said.
"I guess I wasn't certain that this was really happening and that I wasn't still in bed dreaming."
But it still did not seem to sink in.
Wilburn waited three days to notify lottery officials of his winning ticket because he had planned to watch Kansas play Saturday against Arkansas and did not want to attend. From KU in 1975 with a bachelor's degree in history.
He said he did not know yet what he planned to do with the money.
"I think the worst thing I can do is think that all my financial problems are solved," he said. "It's nothing to sneeze at, but if I start to think that this makes me financially stable for the rest of my life, I could get in trouble."
Wilson said he wanted to expose the pros and cons on different options before making any decisions.
DONALD L. DAVIS
Wilburn said he wanted to explore the pros and cons of different options before making any decisions.
Karnan Loharry
3-20-91
HOWARD WILBURN
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High w. Walter
Howard Wilburn displays his $2 million check.
siblings with the people at work and my employer,"
His mother, Brixton Marie Williams.
His mother, Birdie Mide Wilburn, said he also had promises to keep. She said she son had promised he would take her to San Diego and Washington, D.C., someday. Her son, however, seemed confused by his mother's
Who will be year for the 20 years?
Will he continue to buy his weekly lottery ticket?
"I don't remember promising," he said. "I remember telling her how wonderful those places were."
Birdie Mae Wilburn answered him. "Well, it’s too bad because that is what you have to do."
After paying taxes on his prize, Wilburn will receive $76,000 a year for the next 20 years.
"If I say 'yes,' it may sound greedy," he said. "But yes."
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
Costner's 'Dances' trots off with 7 Oscars
The Associated Press
Kathy Bates, the demented recluse in "Misery," and Jeremy Irons, the senator of Fortune, won Academy Awards for best leading performances.
"Dances," which had led with 12 nominations, also won for sound, original score, film editing, cinematography and Michael Blake's screenplay adapted from his own novel.
Costner won an Oscar for his debut as director in charge of the big-budget spectacle, which became a classic. But when it was laughed at by the industry.
Whoopo Goldberg, the fake psychic who surprises herself by contacting the dead in "Ghost," and Joe Pesci, the maniac mobster of "GoodFellas," won Owcsr for supporting performances.
"Ghost!" also won an Oscar for original screenplay.
Comedian Billy Crystal enceled the show, starting off with a musical tribute to the five best picture nominees for the 63rd annual ceremonies.
The University Placement Center will conduct a workshop called "Beginning the Job Search" at 3:30 8 Burgee Union
On campus
The KU Wellness Center will conduct a workshop called "Overcoming Overeating" at 12:10 p.m. in 138 Robinson Center
The KU Chess Club will meet at 7 at Parlor C in the Kansas Union.
KU Gamers and Role-players will meet at 6 p.m. in the southwest lobby of the Burge Union.
is accepting fiction, poetry, photographs and drawings submissions in 400 Kansas Union until Friday. ■ The Commuters Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. at Alceve A in the Kansas Union
The KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 p.m. at 130 Robinson Center.
disorder support group at 7:30 at 20 Walkins Memorial Health Center. The HIV Foster Child will meet at
The Women's Resource Center will sponsor a workshop called *Ink in World Peace* at 7 tonight, the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders will conduct an eating
Police report
There will be a confidential support group for gays, lesbians and bisexuals. For information call Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas at 864-3091.
A naked KU student was dribbling a basketball at 2:20 a.m. Sunday on the sidewalk of Jayhawk Boulevard, a student said friends dared him to do it.
A KU student was struck in the face between 1:30 and 2 a.m. Sunday
A KU student's car was scratched between 11:15 and 11:40 p.m. Sunday in L16 near the Kansas Union, KU to damage. Damage to the car totaled $300.
in the 500 block of Locust Street, Lawrence police reported.
■ A television valued at $400 was taken from a KU student's residence between midnight and 1:39 a.m. Sunday in the 2300 block of Hawthorne Drive, Lawrence police report
A KU police roi helmet valued at $85 was taken at 12:05 a.m. Sunday in Lot 112 near Oliver Hall, KU police reported.
A fire alarm was pulled at 8:25 p.m. Saturday on the sixth floor of McColm Hall, KU police reported.
Three suspects climbed a locked chain fence and entered Memorial Hall on p. m. Saturday, KU police reported.
A stop sign valued at $60 was taken before 3:30 p.m. Saturday from Jayhawk Boulevard and 14th Street, KU police reported
A KU student was hit in the mouth
at 2:09 a.m. Saturday in front of Green Hall. KU police reported.
Items valued at $335 were taken between 9:55 and 11:45 a.m. Friday from an KU student's unlocked residence KU police reported.
A book bag and its contents valued at $210 were taken from a KU student's unlocked car between 10 p.m. Thursday and 8 a.m. Friday in the 1200 block of New York Street, Lawrence police reported.
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COLLEGE ASSEMBLY ELECTION
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences (CLAS) College Assembly, the governing body that determines CLAS academic policy, has over 100 vacant seats reserved for undergraduate student representatives. If the number of nominees is less than or equal to the number of vacancies, all nominees become representatives through appointment. All CLAS undergraduates are encouraged to become a part of the decision-making process.
NOMINATION FORMS:
Available at the Undergraduate Services Office 106 Strong Hall
NOMINATION FILING DEADLINE:
Friday, April 5th, at 5:00 p.m.
ELECTION DATES:
April 10th & 11th
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 26, 1991
3
Royalties pay for KU programs
By Eric Nelson
Kansan staff writer
When KU students, faculty, alumni and fans buy Final Four memorabilia this week, they are supporting Tulane and its endearings in Indianapolis.
Royaltyals from KU merchandise are put back into the University of Kansas and used for endowments and scholarships, said Mike Reid, director of the KU Bakkiores and director of licensing for the University.
Reid said that the money received for royalties had increased annually and that this year's figures already needed last year's total by 100 percent.
Currently the fund has $157,000, but Reid said he expected the total to be near $200,000 by the end of the fiscal year in June. In 1988, the last year the Jayhawks won the NCAA basketball championship, the total was $119,267.
"So we're looking at more scholarship money than we have ever in the past." he said.
Reid said that because the fiscal year was ending soon, he expected much of the royalties from increased sales, stemming in part from KU's tournament success, to be unavailable until next year.
The case was similar in 1988 and 1989. Total royalties in 1989, $203,000,
exceeded the total in 1988.
When received, the royalties are distributed: 25 percent to the Kansas and Burge Union scholarship fund, 35 percent to the Williams Educational Fund and 40 percent to the general scholarship fund and Kansas University Endowment Association, Reid said.
He said that there were more than 300 licensees with the University but that only 25 could use NCAA logos.
"They can say 'NCAA.' "
"These companies can sell things that say 'Final Four,' " Reid said.
The royalties are collected from the manufacturers by an independent agency called the Collegiate Licensing Company.
Mike Swalm, assistant manager of the Jayhawk bookstore, said that he had nothing against the concept of royalties but that he wished the University would handle the collection of royalties.
"Because then I would know all the money is going to the University," he said.
Swalm said he did not like having a third party, such as the Collegei Licensing Company, take a cut from the royalties.
Reid said the University currently was investigating the costs of collection.
"That may happen in the future," he said.
But if KU did what the outside company currently does, it might not be necessary. The office expenses could of staffing and office expenses could equal the cost of using the company.
Reid said that although some universities collected royalties on their own, most used the Collegiate Licensing Company.
Todd Seymour, president of the Endowment Association, said the endowment money was placed in the general scholarship fund and was reported to the office of student financial aid.
Jerry Rogers, director of the office of student financial aid, said that if Reid's figures were accurate, the cost of his tuition would be for scholarships seemed significant.
Reid said that many companies would want licensing row that KU was headed to the Final Four but that it was too late to obtain a license.
"You should have been in progress before now if you wanted to be a licensee and reap the benefits of the Final Four," he said.
NCAA CHAMPIONS
1952 KU 1988
KANSAS
KU fans at Javhawk Spirit, 935 Massachusetts St.. shop for the latest basketball products.
KU officials ask store to stop problem shirt sales
Kansan staff writer
Bv Jonathan Plummer
A local company has agreed to stop producing a T-shirt like the ones worn by the Jayhawks after their victory Saturday.
A similar shirt was being sold by
Jayhawk Spirit, 935 Massachusetts St., until Sunday.
While celebrating their success against the Arkansas Razorbacks, many players wore a shirt that had the word "Arkansas" with the letters
Mike Reid, director of licensing for the University of Kansas said he called Tom Wiesentner, owner of Jayhawk Stadium, and asked him to stop printing the shirt.
"They were very cooperative." Reid said. "Jayhawk Spirit had not received approval to produce that work of right now, it is not being printed."
Wilkerson said Reid thought the shirt did not represent the image of sportsmanship that KU tried to uphold.
"They felt the shirt did not present the school in the best taste, and upon their wishes, we stopped making the shirt." Wilkerson said.
He said he sold about 500 shirts before Sunday.
it," he said. "But we are taking lots of time to explain to people why we are no longer selling the shirt."
"If we could print that shirt we would because a lot of people want
"We're doing exactly what they say," he said.
The store is still on good terms with the licensing department, Wilkerson said.
Chuck Norris, said his brother, Rick, Lawrence freshman, bought him one of the shirts on Sunday. Chuck said he received many admiring comments on it when he wore it to his junior high school yesterday.
"A lot of people asked me where got it," he said. "I told them you can't get them anymore."
KU researchers looking to the yew tree for solutions to cancer
By Sarah Davis
Kansan staff writer
Forest depletion may save some people's lives.
That is, if the trees are yews, and the people have cancer.
Taxol, an anti-cancer drug, can be derived from the thin, reddish bark of the yew tree, found in the northwestern United States. The drug has been found to stop the growth and migration of ovarian cancer, who subsequently advanced ovarian cancer. In some cases the tumor may disappear eventually.
Gunda Gueza, associate professor of medicinal chemistry and biochemistry, are collaborators, are part of the team that led the project.
"We are taking the taxol molecule and altering the structure to improve activity so that it will be a strong anti-tumor agent," said Georg, who has been researching this area since 1989. "This is a relatively new drug so there's a lot of work that needs to be done."
Taxol, discovered in 1971, has made important contributions to the treatment of ovarian
'We all know people who have died of cancer so it's a good area to work in. Hopefully, we will make a contribution to the field.'
cancer, which is responsible for the deaths of 12.000 women each year.
Researchers at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore have found that taxol reduces the size of ovarian tumors by half in 40 percent of whom for whom other means of therapy bad failed.
Because of the increase in the need for the drug, the trees are being threatened with extinction. It takes six to eight yew trees to one patient, and the trees are slow-growing.
When the bark from the tree is removed, the tree dies, so scientists are trying to find taxol in the bark.
- Gunda Georg associate professor of medicinal chemistry
"The problem is that there's not much material out there." Georg said. "And you
The drug is also expensive. One kilogram costs about $200,000, and to get that kilogram, 9,000 kilograms of the tree's bark must be taken.
can't treat people without the access of many trees."
But Georg said research needed to be done regardless of the cost.
"If you think of all the diseases we have nowadays, many are treatable, but a disease like AIDS or cancer is a challenge," she said. "Many drugs and drugs or improve on leads we already have."
Taxol is effective only in some patients and can cause side effects, such as allergic reactions, reduction of the white blood cells and damaging effects to the nervous system.
The next step for researchers will be to test taxol on other forms of cancer. Presently, the only human testing of the drug has been on those who have advanced ovarian cancer.
Taxol will be tested for use on several types of cancer, including colon, breast and some ovary.
Georg said the research would be especially interesting to women because the next clinical trial would be on breast cancer.
Eyup Akgun, a research assistant from Erzincan, Turkey, who is working with Georg, said he hoped the research would show positive results against other forms of cancer.
The KU team is sponsored through the
National Bank of Ukraine and supported
with KU's 60,000 last year. do research
Although this is just the beginning of taxxil research, Georget Hearn to see some advances available in next.
"We all know of people who have died of cancer, so it's a good area to work in," she said. "Hopefully, we will make a contribution to the field."
Desire to help local homeless still exists
By Lara Gold
Kenyan staff writer
"To me it emphasizes the problems we have in this country as far as social problems Elliott, Overland Park senior.
The shutdown of the Salvation Army Safe House is not thwarting KU students from helping Lawrence's homeless.
Elliott participated in the Homeless Campaign, a philanthropic project sponsored by Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity in February. People donated their time to the project by staying in cardboard boxes in front of Watton Library, hoping to depict the plight of the homeless and raise money for the Salvation Army Safe House and emergency shelter.
Elliott said the United States had spent too much money on the Persian Gulf War and that it would invest money at home.
Mark Chapman, Leawood junior and Homeless Campaign participant, agreed.
"I think we need to look at the problems in our own backyard," he said. "I feel sorry for the homeless people who used the Safe House. I'm sorry we couldn't raise more money."
The Safe House, 924 New Hampshire St., will close Monday because it is about $70,000 and the agency shelter will remain open.
The Safe House, which provides housing, counseling and job skills training, relied on city and state grants and United Way and private donations.
Barb Smith, executive director for Douglas County United Way, said the organization $850 would help the Salvation army this year.
She said that the United Way was having a board meeting to discuss Lawrence's homeless release a statement today.
About 350 Lawrence people are homeless, according to Salvation Army statistics.
"We are concerned about the number of people who will be out on the streets," Smith said.
John Churchill, corps administrator for the Salvation Army, said that 16 people currently were living in the Safe House and that a maximum of 10 people could live in the emergency shelter after the Safe House closed.
But Churchill was optimistic that there was a future for the Safe House or another type of shelter.
"We are hoping something will happen." Churchill said. "Someone in the community will respond."
Mike Wilden, city manager,
said the city had donated $8,000
to the House since it
opened in Jan. 1990.
"We can't fully fund them," he said. "It's difficult to do."
Randy Manvitz, co-chairperson for the Homeless Campaign, who had not realized that a Safe House's financial troubles
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Tuesday, March 26, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
U.S. policy in Iraq
U.S. troops don't belong in Iraq's civil chaos; Bush's goal was met when Saddam left Kuwait
The Bush administration should stick to its guns and not use them again
against Iraq, as it has threatened to do if Saddam Hussein uses chemical weapons to quash the numerous civil uprisings in his country.
In a speech to anxious U.S. citizens after the Jan. 15 deadline for war in the gulf had come and gone, Bush reinforced his administration's purpose for attacking Iraq by saying, "The liberation of Kuwait has begun."
The government should stand by its original objective to free Kuwait, which it justified on the claim that Kuwait was a small, defenseless country being raped and pillaged by a fireman aggressor.
News reports have surfaced already that Saddam has used acid, napalm and chemical weapons to crush rebel forces.
The United States still controls the airspace above Iraq.
U. S. fighter pilots recently shot down an Iraqi plane.
U. S. and allied troops are positioned to conduct a second ground campaign.
The United States must not allow itself to be dragged into a civil war in Iraq. Kuwait is free. The United States accomplished its
It is understandable that the United States wants to maintain a presence in Iraq until a formal end to the war is reached, but the reported 100,000 U.S. and allied troops that are occupying 15 percent of Iraq must be diminished soon.
original mission. Now it must refrain from violently influencing events in the region.
Saddam has enough to keep him busy in his own country without waging another campaign against Kuwait. His forces have been depleted. The United Nations is pressuring him to pay war reparations and to destroy his chemical-weapons stockpiles.
Kurdish rebels control most of northern Iraq. Shiite Muslims are creating chaos in the south. Much of Iraq is obliterated. Hussein is weak.
If the United States' true purpose for entering into a war with Iraq was to liberate Kuwait and not to depose Saddam or stabilize the region in its favor, it must leave the region now that the job is done.
Considering Iraq's political condition, it could take months formally to end the war. U.S. forces must not be trapped in Iraq during this time. The longer they remain, the more tempting it will be for the United States to become involved in Iraq's problems.
Debbie Myers for the editorial board
Persian Gulf War
Allies should keep promises to pay costs of war
- romises. promises.
P Out of $54 billion promised war assistance from our allies, $25.6 billion has arrived.
An angry Congress, wielding its great power to suppress the Bush administration's protestations, has given an ultimatum: Pay the United States by April 15 or it will ban arm sales to its allies, which include Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Germany, Japan and South Korea.
It was the only reasonable course of action, although some did not agree.
Defense Secretary Dick Cheney contends that the Middle East needs military weapons to promote peace in the region and to ensure continual stability and protection.
At the same time Bush said he intended to cut arms sales to the Middle East, he announced that he wanted the Export-Import Bank, a government agency, to underwrite up to $1 billion in foreign military sales by U.S. companies. White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater argued that the program did not conflict with Bush's goal of reducing the spread of arms to the Middle East.
"We're not talking about cutting off all arm sales," he said. "We're talking about a balance and a stability in the region . . . sometimes you've got to make reductions, sometimes you have to build up."
A build-up of weapons in Iraq, creating a Middle East superpower, is what embroiled the United States in the Middle East in the first place. Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have requested a grand total of $19 billion for U.S. weapons. But, as of now, Saudi Arabia has delivered only $6.1 billion of the $16.8 billion it promised to pay for war reparations, and the United Arab Emirates has paid only half the $4 billion it pledged.
If they have the money to buy U.S. arms, they should use that money to help fulfill their promise and defray U.S. war costs.
And then there is Japan. Japan has paid $1.3 billion out of the $10.7 billion it promised
$1.5 billion out of the $1.67 billion it promised Japan, one of the world's leading industrial and trading nations, imports 65 percent of its oil.
It still receives U.S. military protection and aid under the mutual defense treaty. The United States is getting the short end of the stick.
Fair weather friends lose credibility, and in the long run breaking promises only will harm them. Congress had no choice but to take the action it did. Faced with our nation's large deficit and problems at home that demand immediate monetary attention, the United States should be able to rely on its allies' promises.
Jennifer Schultz for the editorial board
Heed the call
College students have a responsibility to recycle
This week, the KU community is presented with an excellent opportunity to step up its recycling efforts.
The Recycling Task Force is sponsoring Recycling Awareness Week, which began yesterday. The task force's intent through this event is to increase awareness and availability of recycling on campus.
Kris Gottschalk, co-chairperson of the task force, said the most common reason students did not recycle was a lack of convenience. To make recycling easier, the task force has peppered the halls of Wesco Hall with aluminum can recycling boxes. If the boxes prove successful, the task force will add them to other campus buildings.
Though the task force's work to increase
Since August, KU students and faculty have recycled 75,500 pounds of paper and 5,500 pounds of aluminum. Though these figures may seem great, consider that the United States generates an estimated 160 million tons of solid waste each year, most of which is recyclable.
the convenience of recycling is commendable, it should not have to go to such great lengths to get students to do what has become their environmental responsibility
Recycling awareness, or more appropriately, recycling responsibility, begins with college students. They are the ones who will inherit this world, and they should be made to take responsibility for it.
Melanie Matthes for the editorial board
OPERATION DESERT STORM EXPENSE
U.S. DEBT
"...what is that strange noise?"
...What is that Strange Noise?"
Language bans detrimental to free societies, individuals
Suppression of speech fails to change sentiments, feelings
I was watching TV the other day and this piece comes on CNN about Brown University expelling a student for the words the student chose. I think the gist of the issue stemmed from obscene and racist slurs by a student in a particularly articulate moment in class.
Since then there has been discussion about banning language that has been deemed inappropriate, offensive or lacking meaning. I have no idea what the specific punishments are or whether they involved washing out his mouth with soap. What I do know, and am compelled to tell you as a master of the obvious, is that this is inherently undemocratic.
I prefer to have all the cards on the table, all the dirty laundry hung out and everyone free to speak as they will. I am fortunate to have come to a university that feels the same way somewhat.
But no, you might say, rules of this kind are necessary to avoid situations such as the one we have here at KU, where discrimination manifests itself in events similar to that at Brown. This policy would decrease discriminatory language through fear of retribution.
I can't imagine what it would be like if I hadn't had access to all the different speakers I've heard here. Even harder to imagine is the difference a language policy would have made, if the people who I've
Tim Hamilton Staff columnist
Not. First of all, I think it's obvious that it doesn't necessarily follow that actual feelings of a person change just because he or she isn't allowed to express them. In the best-case scenario, this policy will result in more latent sexism and racism just as repression can result in deviation and perversion. And, in the worst case, thought control.
listened to hadn't been able to use exactly those words that they had.
Would the Rev. Louis Farrakhan,
Sergio Ramirez and Arkady Chevchenko have said what they said?
Would Hunter S. Thompson, Allen McCormick or William S. Burroughs even have been allowed on the premises?
Would Jello Biafra, Willie Brennan and Donald Woods have been here warning of the encroaching police state in this and other countries? Certainly there was enough of an armed group to keep Woods into sharing a mildly profane threat against the Both regime off-stage.
I'm also sure that the policy would accomplish its goal of decreasing derogatory comments (where would the letters section be?) with a corresponding effect of isolating, concentrating and reinforcing the pockets of true hatred. They're still there, but the picture is rosy.
Believe it or not, I've had discussions with students and professors that haven't been tempered one bit because of my sex, skin color or gender. Of course, I've had discussions that were influenced by these factors.
The former were, by far, much more informative. And, as a master of the obvious, I know that we are here to think, if not learn, even if that interferes with our studies (or our thin skin).
Language bans not only reinforce
'I think it's obvious that it doesn't necessarily follow that actual feelings of a person change just because he or she isn't allowed to express them.
the authoritarian/police state mentality that pervades our national institutions, but draws dangerously near to that philosophy that holds any specific acknowledgment of racial, gender, or orientation is discrimination per se.
I find the mentality behind such a control of language curiously similar to that which fostered the "support cultural diversity" buttons of years ago. We can learn to place faith in the ability of language to affect, if not dictate, reality.
I think it is obvious that this is not the case. You know, a rose by any other name, etc. Both "uses" of language were well intentioned; they attempted to contribute toward a goal, and they failed. Ever, I think both theories are invalid because of their attempt to equate language with reality.
I think that if a truly tolerant, eclectic society is to be realized, it will result from an environment where people from widely divergent populations of this planet (such as this campus) are encouraged, allowed and empowered to speak or write exactly what they wish — where every person's speech is recognized to be as appropriate, legitimate and significant as that of everyone else.
Tim Hamilton is a Lawrence student in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
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Editors Business start-up
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Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas are required.
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The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 113 Staffer-First Hall.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesdav. March 26, 1991
5
KU, Japan exchange program to be completed this summer
THE MASTER OF THE WORLD
Mary Elizabeth Debicki encourages students to go to Japa
At least 11 students from KU planning to attend institute
By Nedra Beth Randolph Kansan staff writer
"The people of Hiratsuka want to show us the hospitality in Japan that Kansas people showed them while they were here," she said. "We want to see the friendships grow between the two communities."
Debicki said she was worried for a while that the summer program to Japan might not be filled. The program needs 10 students to make the trip, and up to 30 can go. The program now has 11 students enrolled, and Debicki said she would like to see more students enroll.
The office has extended the enrollment deadline, until the end of April.
"Students should realize that this program offers so much more in a short period of time than if they went on their own or read a book about it," she said. "It's a much better way to go in-depth to observe a culture."
The first student exchange between Lawrence and its Japanese sister city, Hiratsuka, will be complete this summer.
began recruiting only last fall. Most programs have at least a full year to recruit.
Nancy Mitchell, assistant director of study abroad, said one of the reasons so few students had signed up for the program was that the office of study abroad
"Those who have applied are very eager to go." Mitchell said. "And they will have the time of their lives."
Another reason some students may have been reluctant to sign up was that the original cost of the program was $3,200, she said.
Kevin Gangel, Louisburg senior,
said he signed up for the Summer
Institute in Japan because the semes-
sional course offered by these pro-
grams did not fit his schedule.
"That was just too much for most KU students," Mitchell said. "After we reduced the price to $2,650, it made it comparable to other summer programs. There were more applications after the price was reduced."
"I hope to go to Japan to teach English at a university after I graduate," he said. "This will give me a chance to experience Japon before I commit a year and two of my life. I learn all I can about the country."
The exchange will culminate when the Inaugural KU Summer Institute in Japan is conducted at Kamagawa University in Hiratsuka, Japan.
Mary Elizabeth Debicki, director of study abroad, said the people of Hiratsuka were awaiting the arrival of KU students this summer.
There will be an informational meeting about the Summer Institute in Japan at 7 p.m. Thursday at the Purpose room in McColm Hall.
The first part of the exchange occurred when 23 students from Kanagawa University came to the University of Kansas on Feb. 18 to study English and learn about culture or states or weeks. The Japanese student will leave Lawrence and return to Japan on Saturday.
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6
Tuesday, March 26, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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EDUCATION COMMITTEE
Art students organize exhibit for downtown's Love Garden
By Benjamin W. Allen
Kansan staff writer
A group of KU art students have, with a little initiative, put together an off-campus exhibition at the Love Garden, 93%$^{1}$ Massachusetts St.
The group has no official title or sponsor; it is merely a loosely knit group of students interested in displaying their artwork.
In its early planning stages, the show was conceived as a women's art show to combat poor representation of women artists in galleries.
The controversy caused by the idea of a solely women's show subsided when the group decided the show would be open to all students.
and one of the organizers of the show said the show was a great opportunity for students.
Lisa Purdon, Tecumseh senior.
"The whole reason was to get our work off campus, where the general public could see what we're doing," she said.
Purdon said that the display area was not up to gallerist standards but that the space was more usable.
"All kinds of people walk through here," she said. "All ages and all types, and they like what they see.
"People are interested in the work
request to talk about it. To me,
this is important."
Michael Gorman, Kansas City, Mo. junior, and one of the artists in the group, Nate Foster.
exhibition was enjoyable
Gorman said, "It's always fun to get your stuff up. You get a chance to share it with everybody."
Entries for the show were chosen by Lymne Green, owner and curator of the gallery, Artists En Masse, 803% Massachusetts St.
The exhibition will be displayed until April 7. A reception will be from 7 to 9:00 p.m. Friday at the Love Garden.
Purdon said the show was a learning experience for all the artists and volunteers who worked to put it together.
“It’s good to go off on your own, take risks, make mistakes and maybe learn something” she said.
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Nation/World
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday. March 26. 1991
7
Nation/World briefs
Beirut
Hostage release effort made
Syria, Iran and Lebanon are cooperating to gain the release of the Western hostages, Prime Minister Omar Karami said in an interview published yesterday.
Karami told the conservative Beirut daily AL-Ilaw that Lebanon did not exercise any power or influence over the kidnap groups. But he said the police had a duty to enforce laws against kidnapping.
"This is our stance. So far we have no information, and I believe there is a Syrian-Iranian-Lebanese cooperation to ease up matters," he said without elaborating.
Washington
Cruise missiles to be removed
The U.S. European Command is poised to remove the last batch of ground-launched cruise missiles from Europe, as called for under the Treaty on Missile Defense and Treaty, the Pentagon announced yesterday.
Sixteen of the missiles will be removed Tuesday from Comisio Air Station in Italy and are destined for destruction at the Davis-Coast Base in Arizona, a Pentagon statement said.
The IRNF Treaty required the first-ever ever
class of weapons from U.S. and Soviet inventors.
The treaty deadline for the elimination of the weapons is May 31, 1991.
The missiles will be transported to the United States aboard Air Force aircraft, the statement
United Nations
Iran supporting Shiite rebels
A letter to the U.N. secretary-general from Iraqi Ambassador Abdul Amir al-Anbari cited 13 border incidents that allegedly took place in Egypt and Jordan, as well as Syria and infiltrators crossing from Iran into Iraq.
No casualties were reported in any of the incidents, all of which accompanied the Shite Muslim rebellion that swept southern Iraq after the Iraqi defeat Feb. 28 by the allied coalition.
Al-Anbari stopped short of directly linking the Iranian actions with the Shiite rebels, saying only that the Iranians were backing individuals and groups infiltrating from Iran, a Shiite-dominated nation.
From The Associated Press
Mandela co-defendant says police forced his statement
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — One of Winnie Mandela's co-defendants tested yesterday that police tortured him with electric shocks and forced him to sign a statement implicating Mandela in the kidnapping and assault of four people.
The Associated Press
John Morgan was the first of the four defendants to testify in the highly publicized trial, which opened Feb. 4. It is not known whether the other defendants will testify.
Defense attorney Hendrik Kruger spent the bulk of last week questioning police in an attempt to discredit the statement they said Morgan made. Portions of the statement said Mandela was present when four young men were beaten in her Soweto home in December 1988.
Morgan denied police testimony that he made the statement voluntarily after his arrest in February 1989. In court yesterday, he said police Col. Chris Oosthuizen offered him a house, a car and money if he would say Mandela was involved in the assaults.
because Oosthuis threatened him with electric shocks if he refused. He said police had tortured him with shocks the previous day.
Morgan said he eventually signed the statement
Mandela, Morgan and two other defendants pleaded not guilty Feb. 11 to four counts each of kidnapping and assault. Prosecutors said they were motivated by allegations that the victims had homosexual relations with a white church minister that one of them, Stompe Seipel, was a police spy.
Sepei was later killed and Mandela's former
guard, Jerry Richardson, was convicted in his deed.
Mandela has acknowledged the four alleged victims were taken from a Methodist Church home to her house, but she said it was to protect them from a minister's sexual advances.
Mandela said she was out of town when the young men staved at her house.
Oosthuizen testified last week that Morgan volunteered to help police.
Yesterday morning, before Morgan testified,
pardon Capt. Dempsey also told the court that
pardon Capt. Dempsey also told the court that
Cabinet bans rallies in Moscow
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — President Mihail Gorbachev's Cabinet yesterday banned rallies in Moscow for the next three weeks, fearing that unhappiness would spread. Gorbachev's chief rival could boil over in violence.
Boris Yeltsin's position as chairperson of the Russian Federation parliament is to be tested at an extraordinary session of that parliament scheduled to start Thursday.
Several groups, led by the anti-Communist movement Democratic Russia, have scheduled a mass demonstration to support Yeltsom tovorow. The government denies democracy forces, already has granted a pledge.
A similar rally on March 10 drew about 500,000 people to Moscow and tens of thousands more into streets in other cities, the biggest demonstration since the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution.
Hard-line members of the Russian republic's parliament, which is known formally as the Congress of People's Deputies, called the session after Yeltsin demanded that Gorbachev resign in an appearance on Soviet national television last month.
An emergency Cabinet meeting approved a resolution banning all marches, demonstrations, picketing and rallies in the Soviet capital, the state news agency Tass said.
Yeltsin's plea came as Gorbachev was attempting to muster support for last week's national referendum to preserve the union. The two leaders accused each other of fomenting civil war and intimidated personal power with the referendum, which passed with nearly 77 percent approval.
Yeltsin criticized the March 17 referendum as ambiguous but welcomed Russian voters' approval of a second question that created a new Russian presidency.
Yesterday's order for the Interior Ministry, KGB and other security agencies to prevent any gatherings on city streets from March 25 to April 15 went beyond a previous ban and showed clear apprehension that demonstrations could turn violent or threaten government authority.
Many commentators speculate that Yellsin will run for the new presidency if he loses the no-conti-
The Cabinet instructed Moscow city and district officials, Interior Ministry and KGB security police "to take all necessary measures to ensure strict compliance with the resolution and (to ensure) the order and safety of the population." Tass paraphrased the order as saving
Gorbachev last year issued a decree banning demonstrations in the center of Moscow, but Moscow city officials mostly ignored it. Yesterdays apparent appeared to carry more enforcement power.
The order also will cover the initial period of steep price increases on nearly half of all consumer products, due to take effect April 2 as part of a general price reform
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Talk to concern future of AIDS student options
Richard Keeling is making his third visit to KU as a speaker about AIDS. He will lecture to students and faculty at 7 tonight in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
By Amy Francis
Kansan staff writer
me's a repeat performance for KU," said Janine Demo, health educator for the health education department at Watkins Memorial Health Center. "We filled the ballroom the last time he was here. We hope we can do that again."
Keeing-betterraar of the American College Health Association's Task Force on HIV Infection and AIDS. Keeing also helped write the second edition of "AIDS on the College Campus."
Keeling will talk about HIV-AIDS, what people can expect from it in the future and what students can do individually and as a group to help prevent the spread of the virus. she said.
"He uses a slide presentation with him," Demo said. "Every time I hear him, I learn something."
Henry Buck, chairperson of the HPV American College Task Force and a gynecologist at Watkins, said that Keeling also would talk about behavior related to the prevention of prevention and how alcohol was related to sex.
"What we're talking about is the HIV prevention," he said. "He's a dynamic speaker. He kind of gears his talk to who he's talking to."
Demo said that Keeling's experiences at the University of Virginia added to his lectures.
"He has worked with AIDS patients in his own university's setting," she said.
Buck asked Keeling to give the lecture but said the decision to invite Keeling was made by the HIV-STD Education Committee, which is sponsoring the lecture.
JOHN POPPINS
Timothy Miller/KANSAN
Bubbly fun
Michelle Edson, Overland Park sophomore, blows bubbles in Marvin Grove as part of an exercise in her theater improvisation class. Edson's instructor, Beth Larson, said the purpose of the exercise was to teach students to be more creative.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 26, 1991
Features
9
Road warriors: Students break monotony with spontaneous trips
Boulder Chicago Indianapolis Lawrence St. Louis New Orleans Austin Ft. Lauderdale for road trips
By Lara Gold Kansas staff writer
The intoxicating smell of adventure inspires them to pack up the car and leave.
Kansan staff writer
For most people who love to take road trips, spontaneity, little money, an overpacked car and good friends are the keys to success.
Jason Leoen, Northbrook, Ill., sophomore, made some peanut butter-and-jelly sandwiches and headed for Charlotte, N.C. to see KU play in the NCAA Southeast Kansas University's basketball tournament.
"It was pretty spontaneous," he said. "We got free tickets." Lobb and two of his friends left Wednesday morning and drove for 16 hours.
"I didn't take any money," Loeb said. "I broke in my new Discover card and ate Amoco Food Shop meals."
Loeb has taken road trips to other KU basketball games in the last three years.
However, this road trip was a once-in-a-lifetime thing.
"We just went crazy and berserk during the game," he said. "I am a tremendous, tremendous sports fan."
Loeb said the road trip to Charlotte was an extended spring break.
Spring break road-trip mania will continue for Lobeb if he goes to Indianapolis for the Final Four, which he plans to do if he gets tickets.
Some road-trip enthusiasts didn't go to the game. Instead, they went to hear and see more than 400 live hands.
Ramon García, a KU graduate from LeoTi, drove with three of his friends to Austin, Texas, this fall. The trip is South by Southwest Music Festival.
Last spring break, Garcia and his friends drove 360 miles out of their way while going to Florida, because they didn't have a map.
"The drive down was pretty uneventful," he said.
But, Garcia said, half the fun and one of his road-trip rules is never take a man.
"We didn't use a map this time," he said. "But we didn't get lost."
Garcia's rules for road-tripping:
- Always pack the car to capacity.
- Take barely enough money to survive on.
- Always make sure you know someone where you end up so you can sleep on their floor.
Never use a map, because it's
- Find a convenient, all you-can eat place and make the people sorry you stoned there.
"The best thing about this road trip was first, getting out of Lawrence and second, the music we got to bear," Garcia said.
He said that more than 7,000 people attended the festival and that more than 400 bands played.
"It's been a hell of a weekend," he said. "It's fun to hit the road with a duffel bag and just enough money to live on."
Greene has road-tripped to Elvis' house, Graceland, in Memphis, Tenn.; to Mar迪 Gras in New Orleans; Boulder and Aspen, Colo.; Dallas, Madison, Wis.; and St. Louis.
Ben Greene, Wilmette, III., junior,
agreed.
"Mardi Gras was the most fun," Greene said.
Dean Harris, Northfield, Ill., junior, said he and Greene had a blast when road triped to Boulder on the spur of the moment
"We were both sitting around bored and decided to take off," he said.
It was a Friday afternoon and nothing was going on in Lawrence. Greene and Harris decided that skiing was in their future.
More road-trip memories for KU students are likely en route.
"Colorado is definitely the hot spot," Harris said. "You just shoot down I-70 all the way."
"Going to the Final Four in Indianapolis would be the ultimate road trip." "Harris said. "It would be better than skiing in Vail with 50 inches of fresh powder."
All the road-trippers agreed that hanging out with friends makes a road trip worthwhile.
Greene and Harris said they were trying to get tickets to the NCAA Final Four in Indianapolis to see the KU basketball team in action.
Top ten things to bring on a road trip:
10. Late night driving tunes to keep you awake. Good ones to try are the Red Hot Chill Peppers, Living Colour and Concrete Blonde.
9. A copy of Jack Kerouac's "On the Road" and Hunter S. Thompson's "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas."
8. A cooler with tons of beer. Food is optional. If you do bring food, nothing healthy.
7. Sunflower seeds. Food that makes you work and stay awake.
6. Atomic Fireball jawbreakers. They keep you awake because the roof of your mouth starts to peel off.
5. A camera for taking embarrassed blackmail photos of your roadtipping friends.
4. A sleeping bag so you can crash on someone's floor.
3. A brick to put on the gas pedal in case you don't have cruise control
2. Sunglasses because road-trippers are always cool.
1. Credit cards. You never know what you can buy at a gas station.
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10
Tuesday, March 26, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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KCTV-5 thrilled with 'Hawk fans
Allen Pickert did not realize he would be on television when he walked to campus yesterday.
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Kansan staff writer
Pickert, Snellville, Ga., senior, was one of several KU students who were stopped in front of the Kansas Union by a KCTV 5 sports reporter who teamed to do a spot promotion for the Kansas basketball team and the station.
"Somebody just grabbed me to do it," he said. "It was fun."
Pickert looked into the camera and said his name and that he planned to root for the Jayhawks in the Final Four, going to watch it on KCTV, Channel 5.
Leif Lisec, KCTV-5 sports reporter,
said he was at the University of Kansas covering a spring football practice when the station called him on two-way radio and asked him to on some spot promotions for the station.
"I was up here Saturday for the rally, and I was up here Sunday for the press conference with Roy," he said. "It's been great up here."
Lisee, a 1985 KU journalism graduate, said he was glad to be in Lawrence covering the Final Four frenzy.
KCTV-5 will be on campus all week doing Final Four stories and (lining up) for the 2016 season.
featureting Pickert, Lisee said. The promotions will run during newcasts and station breaks this week.
Chuck Prewitt, KCTV-5 camera operator, said this season was his first experience with Kansas basketball ordered the rally on campus Saturday.
Prewitt said he was surprised to see how supportive the KU students were of the basketball team during the rally on campus and at Allen Field House when the students welcomed the team back to Lawrence.
"It was great. It was wild," he said. "The whole thing is real exciting."
"The students have been very well behaved, except when somebody threw a water balloon in my truck that was on campus," he said with a grin.
Valisa Smith, KCTV-5 reporter,
also was on campus yesterday doing
Final Four frenzy stories, Prewitt said.
Patti DeWalt, KCTV-5 marketing director, said KU's success this season was a big story because this was the first time KU had made it to the Final Four.
Pam Freund, executive producer of KCTV news, said the station planned to have a news crew on campus every day this week
"We are always happy to see those Javhayks do well," she said.
Committee praises team protection bill
The Associated Press
TOPEKA- Two days after the KU basketball team won a trip to the Final Four, a Senate committee endorsed a bill to give Kansas its final protection from the National Collegiate Athletic Association.
Winter said that he was "99 percent certain" the measure would pass in the Senate but that the House could possibly peets for passage in the House.
The action of the Senate Judiciary Committee yesterday sent the measure to the Senate for floor debate. The measure was endorsed unanimously on a voice vote.
The committee endorsed the measure with little discussion. It has heard testimony from NCAA officials, who said seven Kansas universities' memberships would be appropriately if the measure passed
Sen. Wint Winter, R-Lawrence and committee chairman, is the principal sponsor of the measure, which would require the NCAA to observe all due process rights accorded by the federal and state constitutions in enforcing its rules and regulations.
weekend before we pass this?**jokeen D. Dave Kearn, a Hutchinson Republican, referring to KU's loss in North Carolina next Saturday
"I was surprised by the strength of the testimony and the unanimity of feeling on the Senate committee," Winter said.
"Should we wait until after this
He said he hoped passage of the bill by the Senate at least would send a message to the NCAA.
The bill is one similar to a measure passed by the Nebraska Legislature, although Winter said that bill required the NCAA to observe due process rights only and not other constitutional rights.
Supporters of the measure said the NCAA did not provide even the most basic rights in its investigations, such as the right to confront accusers and the right of the accuser to be present at hearings.
"There is a real problem," Winter said.
Kansas members of the NCAA are KU, Kansas State University, Oklahoma State University, Fort Hays State University, Pittsburgh State and Witsburg State.
"I think we ought to do something about it," added Sen. Paul Fleeciano, D-Wichita.
Jayhawks spring into football practices
A stronger, faster, more experienced team takes the field
9
80
Tight end Mark Smith drills during the Javhawks' first practice
By Mark Spencer Kansan sportswriter
Kansas football coach Glen Mason used a visual aid at yesterday's media session at the Adams Alumni Center to show reporters the improvement of the Jayhawks have in his three seasons at the helm.
First, he gave an example from three years ago.
"I didn't happen to think about this until I sat down to eat lunch, and I looked across at Gordon Docking. Mason said to the about 5-foot-11, round Kansas City television sportscaster." "Please, stand up Gordon."
As Docking got to his feet, Mason said, "Not to embarrass Gordon, but that was the size of our defensive linemen."
Next, Mason gave an example of the present
"Stand up, Gilbert (Brown)." Mason said to the Jayhawks' 6-foot-3, 295-pound starting defensive tackle who stood next to Docking. "Now, that's what we're expecting to play Big Eight football with. In all due respect, Gordon, you might have one beck of a Big Eight swim, but you wouldn't be worth a damn as a defensive lineman."
Mason's stronger, faster and more experienced Kansas football team began three weeks of spring football drills yesterday afternoon.
The Jayhawks will put 75 scholarship players, the most in Mason's tenure, on the field for spring drills this season.
"When I first got here, all I thought about was survival." Mason said. "Now, rather than survival, we're looking toward accomplishment."
Mason will emphasize five areas during the spring drills: Evaluation of talent, experimentation with existing offensive and defensive schemes, conditioning, fundamentals and making the team better as a whole.
New NCAA restrictions this season limit the Jayhawks and other schools to 15 practices in 22 days during the ten. Ten of the 15 practices are in pads.
Cornerback Hassan Bailey said he was eager for spring practices.
"Everyone is competing against each other," he said. "It's great competition that carries over into the specialty when the freshmen come in."
Quarterback Chip Hillary, who is coming off the best sophomore passing season (129 of 224 for 1,730 vards)
Mason on:
■ Defense: "We must make major improvement on the defensive side of the ball. As far as I am concerned, consistency is the key. You can look back, and there are times when we have played awfully well, but we have given up too many big plays. We must get better in pass defense, and lastly, the turnovers we've been able to get on defense have almost been nothing. We must get better in that situation." ■ Offense: "We're going to work very hard on diversification and a reduction of our talent we have. My biggest criticism of last year's offensive team was ability to score when we had scoring opportunities. We're going to experiment and work very hard on that."
■ The kicking game: "This year we have got to take our kicking game from the level of just trying to get by to the level where it can win for us. We must do a lot of work on these (narrower) goal posts we've been forced to use."
■ The 89th season: "Someone else, Coach, could help your program arrived yet?" My answer to that question is no. But I can tell you, it's probably an overused term about the light at the end of the tunnel, but we can see that light now. That light is there, now its our job to make sure we get there."
Defensive linemen Gilbert Brown and Dana Stubblefield: "The key word here is potential. If these guys can achieve what they want, they will be the best pair of defensive tackles in the league, hands down."
■ Spring football in general: "I think the players are excited about spring practice from the standpoint they know we have to have a good spring practice to achieve anything next year. . . . I've never seen a guy have a bad spring practice and have a good fall."
in KU history, said he expected the Jayhawks to develop their passing game more during the spring workouts.
"The thing that resisted me before is lack of experience," he said. "Since the fall, we have come together as a unit, and that's going to make it easier to throw."
The practices will culminate in the annual spring game on April 13 at Memorial Stadium. Kick off is tentatively scheduled for 1 p.m.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 26, 1991
11
1991 Final Four special for 'Hawks
By S. J. Bailey
Kansan sportswriter
Every college basketball player dreams of playing in the Final Four and getting a shot at a national championship.
But for many members of the Kansas basketball team, this year's trip to Indianapolis holds even greater meaning.
Senior forward Mark Randall knows exactly what Maddox is speaking of when he talks about feeling like a part of the team. Randall was a medical redshirt and watched from the sidelines in 1988 as Kansas achieved college basketball's ultimate goal.
"It's a great feeling," Maddox said after Saturday's game. "Personally, I think this is a bigger accomplishment than 1988 because I'm more a part of this team. I never expected to go through all of this again."
"I can't even compare this feeling to 1988," Randall said. "It means a great deal to me because I am more a part of this team. This year, I got a chance to work at a charging here and there, and actually something to help us get here."
For senior forward Mike Maddox,
it is a chance to relive the excitement
and emotion of the Jayhawks' 1988
national championship.
Randall said he was grateful for the opportunity to get his chance to play in the Final Four.
"I'm truly thankful to all my teamsmates because every one of them has played a big part in all of this," he said. "This is my senior season, and I am going to go out and lay it on me I'm going to go out and lay it on the every time I ever out on that court."
Senior guard Terry Brown said he thought the trip to Indiana wilks. o give the Jayhawks the attention that had been denying them all season.
"We beat Pitt, Indiana and then Arkansas, which was supposed to be the No. 2 team in the country." Brown said. "Maybe now we'll start home respect, and people will start taking a little more about Kansas."
"This feeling is亿惩ablewild." Tunstall said. "Two rings would definitely be a substitute for those first two years."
The excitement of the NCAA tournament also has been a thrill for the three Jayhawks playing in their first year of collegiate competition.
Junior guard Sean Tunstall, who was not eligible the past two seasons because he did not meet NCAA requirements regarding eligibility, said the chance to play for a national championship would begin to make up for the two long years of waiting to take the court.
Freshman forward Richard Scott said beating the Razorbacks was especially sweet because he played
for Little Rock Central High School in Arkansas last year.
"My friends from Arkansas didn't think we had a chance, and now I can go home in the summer and brace them that we beat Arkansas," Scott told me. "I can't get big Raizoback fan, too. I can't wait see what he about to say this."
Freshman guard Steve Woodberry said this season's trip to the Final Four was extremely unexpected.
"I knew I'd be going sooner or later, but I didn't think it would be my first year," Woodberry said. "It's a great feeling knowing I'm going my freshman year."
Freshman guard/forward Patrick Richey said this year's success gave him confidence about the future
"It would be really difficult to go to the Final Four each of my seasons here, but you never know." Richey with a grin. "Anything's possible."
Oddly enough, Coach Roy Williams might have the only reason to dread playing in this year's Final Four. The semifinal match-up pits him against his long-time mentor and friend at North Carolina, Dean Smith.
"I'm going to be disappointed at the end because one of us is going to lose a game," Williams said. "But at the same time, I'm going to be happy because one of us is going to be in the finals."
Fans await results of ticket scramble
Kansan sportswriter
By S. J. Bailey
Hundreds of eager Jayhawk fans will be on the edge of their seats this morning, and the Kansers will not even be playing until Saturday.
About 800 students and faculty will find out at noon whether their names were picked in the lottery to receive tickets to the Final Four in Indianapolis this weekend.
Diana Miller, ticket manager,
said the ticket office received 794
applications for Final Four tickets
between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. yesterday.
There are 434 tickets available,
and they will be distributed to students through a lottery system.
ticket office after noon today to find out whether they had received tickets.
Diana Kirkwood, Lawrence resident, took student applications at the Allen Field House ticket office yesterday afternoon. She said that although the office was extremely busy, especially near lunch and closing, the job was well worth the aggravation.
"The students were very excited, but they were also politic and very friendly," Kirkwood said. "We got tired, but at the end we had enough that the team won. It really is an enthusiastic kind of job."
Scott Beaven, Kansas City, Mo,
graduate student, said he waited
in line for about 15 minutes to fill
out the application.
"This is my only shot at getting a ticket, Beaven said. "I was there last week and had to abbreviation but, I think I need to be there in person for this one."
Jayhawks lose to Wyoming in 10 innings
Bv Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas baseball team dropped a 7-6 decision to the Wyoming Cowboys in 10 innings at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium last night.
Trailing 6-3, the Jayhawks scored three runs in the bottom of the ninth and fourth inning.
The Cowboys' designated hitter, Brett Featou, scored the winning run in the 10th when Wyoming rightfielder Steve Hazlett's grounder up the middle bounced freakishly high off the pitching mound.
"I thought this was a great college baseball game," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "If we could play like this every night and give ourselves a chance to win in the eighth, ninth and 10th innings, I'd be happy."
six innings.
"I thought those two kids did a wonderful job," Bingham said. "They really got better tonight."
Kansas junior Jory Ramsdell scattered 10 hits in seven innings, and sophomore Joel Bacon struck out eight boy batters in three innings of relief.
The Jayhawks were shut out through six innings, partly by crafty pitching by Wyoming left-hander Brian Grassnick and partly by a strong wind blowing in from center field.
These two factors and five Cowboy runs put the Jayhawks down 5-0 after
At this point in the game, Grassmick had struck out six Jayhawks, but the strong wind had kept several Kansas blasts in the park.
("Jeff) Niemeyer crushed two, and "Gerry (Camara)也击 all well one." Bingham said. "Niemeyer hit one of the screws, on the screws, and it stayed."
Graswick caused the rest of the Jayhawks' early-game offensive woes.
Kansas designated hitter Mike Bard said, "Their left-hander had great stuff, pitche4 well, and we had to play catch-up."
Kansas scored two runs in the seventh and one in the eighth, in pulling to within two of the Cowboys, 5-3.
After the Wipming added one in the top of the ninth, Kansas first baseman Niemeyer sliced the Wipming to right-center two-二BIB double to right-center field.
Kansas sophomore John Wuycheck, pinch-hitting for Camara, drove in Niemeyer and tie the game at six with a sharp single to left.
After the Cowboys scored a run off of Hazlett's bounce, the Jayhawks went down in order in the bottom of the tent.
Kansas, 14-11, and Wyoming, 12-5, will play again at 7 tonight at Hogland-Maupin Stadium.
10
Kansas shortstop David Soult dives past Wyoming first baseman Barry Goldman, hosting a throw.
Team hungry for next season
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriters
Twenty-one is the number most college students look forward to, whether anticipating a birthday or a big win at blackjack.
This year, the Kansas women's basketball team reached that number in victories.
when the season started, we wanted to do more. "Kansas junior guard Kay Kay Hart said. "We lost both players." The season, I'm pleased about that."
Despite the fact that Hart had greater expectations for the Lady, she "21-13 season finish," she said, many improvements in the team.
However, Hart also noticed an inconsistency in Kansas' play, especially at the National Invitational Tournament.
She said the Lady Jayhawks' second-place finish in the Big Eight Conference and third-place finish in the NWIT served to make the team even hungrier for victories next year.
"The best improvement has been in individuals being able to step up and use us help," Hart wrote. "We have a team that anyone can get hot."
"There were a few times when we ran out of gas," Hart said. "We need to be more consistent. We would have won the NIT hands down if we would have played like we did in the Big Fight."
Hart said she hoped continued weight training and playing together this summer would increase Kansas's consistency.
"If you look at the Big Eight next year, you have to look at us," Hart said.
Kansas assistant coach Mitch Shea also thought Kansas would be able to get the Big Eight title next
Women's Basketball
"They know how and when to assert themselves in tough situations," Shea said. "They learned how important it is to compete for position." (Marian) Washington said we've already won if we played hard.
"I want this team to be proud of what they've accomplished this year," Shea said. "I think we showed, once we got outside of conference play, we could be successful. They were focused, and we wanted to go into next year with want to go into next year with the attitude to be the team to beat."
Shea said a Kansas winning season would be possible next year if the Lady Jayhawks continued to win. But for errors made in each game,
The strength McCloud talked about was displayed Saturday in Amarillo, Texas at the NWIT, when Kansas came back from a 16-point deficit at the half and beat Houston 69-67. The victory provided the Lady Jayhawks with the third-place finish.
Junior forward Tania Bonham said increased patience during games would help Kansas seize more victories next year.
"We're going to take the Big Eight title," McCloud said. "We have everyone coming back. We'll have the strength and the death."
Bonham said that rushing plays caused the Lady Jayhawks to lose when they should have won.
Sophomore forward Marthea McCloud said Kansas would be the team to beat next year.
Kansas led for most of its NWIT game against Santa Clara, which
'We're going to take the Big Eight title. We have everyone coming back. We'll have the strength and the depth.'
All of the players said they hoped the season and tournament play would give them the experience they needed for next year.
— Marthea McCloud Kansas basketball player
took first place in the tournament. However, Santa Clara grabbed the lead during the second half and beat the Lady Jayhawks by one point.
Kansas will be the only Big Eight team not to lose a player, and the team will have five players returning as seniors next season.
Junior forward Danielle Shareef said this leadership base and positive attitudes would make a force to reckon with in the future, something the team grasped a better understanding of this year.
"We get into a rush, and things get out of place," Bonham, said. "We can't get comfortable when we get a lead."
Shareef said the national competition and games against ranked teams such as Virginia and Oklahoma State made the Lady Jayhawks more knowledgeable about their game.
"We knew we had a good squad," Shareef said. "We had good attitudes, but every game we played our potential better. Everyone is balanced, and we have been playing team-oriented ball."
"We learned a lot," Shareef said. "We played a lot of pressure games."
49ers All-Pro signs 2-year contract with L.A. Raiders
The Associated Press
EL SEGUNDO, Calif. — Ronnie Lott, left unprotected by the San Francisco 49ers being an All-Pro last season, has signed a two-year contract with the Los Angeles Raiders as a Plan B free agent.
Lott said yesterday at a news conference that the contract was not guaranteed and that he would move into a safety to strong safety with the Raiders.
Originally drafted as a cornerback by the 49ers with the eighth overall selection in 1981, Lott switched to free safety in 1985.
"I've always been committed to winning." Lott said. "If that means playing strong safety, if that means playing cornerback, if that means bringing water to my head coach, that's what I'm going to do."
Lott, 31, has been one of the NFL's premiere defensive players for the past 10 years and was a starter on the championship teams with the 49ers.
Lott was sideline late last season when he strained both knees, and it was feared he had damaged ligaments. But he returned to the lineup during the playoffs and was one of the dominant defensive players for the ninth Pro Bowl, where he showed no effects of the knee injuries.
"The knees are feeling fine," he said. "I've been able to play a little basketball in addition to rehab work.
"That (the knees) was the main reason I had to play in the ProBowl. I just wanted to show people I could play this game and play it effectively."
Lott earned $800,000 in his final year with the 49ers and was scheduled to make $1 million in 1991. It thought that he will earn slightly more than $1 million a year with the Raiders.
"I feel it's going to be a new challenge, not only to play a new
position but to wear the silver and black," he said. "Growing up as a kid, always emulated the Jack Tatum. He's a great former Raider defensive hacks."
"I'm going to come in here and play hard, play with enthusiasm and try to fit in . . . I've got my work cut out for me."
Assuming he's healthy, winning a job would seem to be the least of Lott's worries.
"We'd like to welcome the great Ronnie Lott to the Raider organization." Raiders coach Art Shell said, "We're going to work hard, I said, 'Something's wrong here.'"
"I don't know how much speed he's lost. We feel he can help our football team, and that's why he's here."
Mike Harden played strong safety and Eddie Anderson free safety for the Raiders last season. Harden was named to the All-Star team, beaten by the team in the Flags B system.
"We've got a couple of hard-hitting guys (Lott and Anderson) who can knock the ball loose from people," Shell said with a smile.
Lott acknowledged that he offered to take a $200,000 pay cut, staying at his 199 salary, to remain with San Francisco, but that still was not able to afford the jobs, who already shouldle the biggest payroll in the NFL.
Lott said he understood their decision and harbored no ill feelings.
"They wanted me to play one year and then possibly get involved in the organization," Lott said. "I've told people that if I was in their shoes I have done the same thing, based on the philosophy of the organization."
"You've got to be objective about it. Looking at the overall picture, I don't sit here and say, 'Man, they did the wrong thing.' If I was a general manager, I might have done the same thing.
True fan's Final Four wish list
---
Chris
Oster
Associate
sports editor
Dear bald guy.
It went something like this:
At the start of this year's NCAA tournament, I thought about what would make a perfect Final Four and what list to jolly old St. Dick (Vitale).
OK. First of all, could you please send Kansas to Indianapolis? It would, of course, be the right thing to do.
For this year's Final Four, I was wondering if you could please let me have my way with things in regards to which teams make it to Indianapolis. If you do, I promise never to bag on a sports commentator again.
Do it for Mark Randall. Who else deserves it more than Kansas' hardworking, under-appreciated post man? Randall already has been cheated out of his chance once and certainly has earned another trip.
Randall was a redshirt in 1988 when the Jayhawks won it all, and he was denied last year when Kansas, one of the top teams in the nation, fell in the second round. Have given him another shot at a ring. Give him another shot at a ring.
Do it for Terry Brown, whose talents as a player have for so long been ridiculed as one-dimensional. Brown has grabbed enough defense and developed enough on defense and developed enough to deserve a shot in the big dance.
Brown has to be there for the three-point shotout anyway. Why make the poor guy go to Indianapolis for just one night of bombing?
Or for Mike Maddox, who needs one more ring to represent the second degenerated disk in his back. "I need that," he said of any of Vegas's concealed remarks.
For Kirk Wagner, who has received little credit in his two years at Kansas, and yet has been there through the injuries and the bench that Kansas a valuable rebound here and some tough defense there.
Give Adonis and Alonzo and the rest of the non-seniors a shot this year to get comfortable. More than likely they'll be back soon, so give them a chance to get some confidence.
And for Coach Williams, who has,
for the third straight year, taken a
team given no pre-season respect
placed it among the nation's best.
For the man who inherited a program with the baggage of an NCAA probation and who packed those bags with victories and marched up the annual rankings. It's time he put those bags on a plane for Indianapolis.
Now, when you draw up the other brackets, I'd appreciate some sort of consideration for justice.
Bring in the Tar Heels. North Carolina has been too good for too long, and Dean Smith has caught more hell for not getting back to the Four than a coach of his ability and integrity should have to endure.
Smith may be nearing the end of his coaching years, and if that is so, try to get him there as often as possible. Anyone who would send us Roy Williams deserves as much success and glory as could be reaped.
While you're at it, send Duke. This is a sort of penance for me, as most Duke victories are rather difficult to stomach. But if anyone deserves another shot at UNLV, its the Blue Devils. Last year's embarrassing final should give them plenty of fire to throw at Tarkkanian.
Plus, you can't be too upset seeing Duke lose for the fourth year in a row in the Final Four.
My last request is easy. Make sure Vegas is there. If justice is to be done, it's required.
Picture it. The team that was denied a chance to defend its national championship (Kansas) plays underdog to the team that whined its way back into a previously denied chance to defend its title (UNLV).
Oh, I guess you figured out my picks to make the finals. But justice must be served, and it is the only way.
Sure, North Carolina probably deserves another title under Smith. But he probably would not be too upset losing to Williams in the semis, and it is imperative that Kansas meet Vegas in the final.
And for the finals? Well, I'll let you make the decision, but don't you just have to go with the underdogs?
A truly unbiased fan
P.S. How come that has a New York accent?
■ Chris Oster is a Topeka senior majoring in journalism.
12
Tuesday, March 26, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
EATS
1105 MASS
LAUREL, KENNELTON
TASTY, TENDER, TAILING, TORONTS
TINPANALLEY
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Kizer
Cummings
jewelers
833 Mass . Lawrence, KS
We've Move!
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U.S.
DISABLED AMERICAN VETERANS Thrift Store--- OPENING SOON DONATIONS NEEDED
**Adviceable Clothing**
*Appliances*
*Furniture*
*Misc. Household Goods*
**FREE PICKUP** **CALL 749-4900 or**
Bring by: 1601 W, 23rd, Suite 116 S/S of Southern Hills Mall between 9 and 4
- Appliances
FORTENDRIN CLUB
Open Horse Show
April 28 at
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Sponsored by KU Equestrian Club
Douglas County Trailrider Arena
For more information call Jeff at 841-7059
The City Commission field of candidates may have narrowed to six since the Feb. 26 primary, but the prominence of the future growth and development of Lawrence has not diminished.
Kansan staff writer
The last in a series of candidates' forums last night again zeroid on in the candidates' views on various accomplish responsible development.
City's six candidates discuss area growth
The forum was the last before the April 2 election that will elect three candidates.
Questions posed by a Lawrence Chamber of Commerce panel included topics such as the city's tax abatement policy, a proposal to build larger Mart store and possible subsidies to the city's 21-percent poverty rate.
Asked whether preserving downtown as the city's primary business center would stifle commercial growth, the growers agreed that the two could co-exist. But they dffered on ways to maintain that co-existence.
By Vanessa Fuhrmans
Kenese staff writer
was large enough that downtown would not be threatened by commercial shopping centers in other parts of the city.
Dudley said, "In a community as vibrant and growing as ours, there is room for expansion."
Paul Horvath agreed, saying, "As Lawrence expands residentially, its shopping needs to move right along with them."
Both Toni Dudley and Bob Schulte said that the city's growing population made commercial expansion necessary. Schulte said Lawrence
"It's credible because we're following Plan 95," he said. "We've been following it ... and it's working." He added that a lot of development already.
Bob Schumm said that adhering to Plan 95, a plan outlining the development of Lawrence until 1995, would be impossible. "We still suffer from new shopping districts."
But David Penny said he would prefer a large shopping center, such as a suburban mall, because smaller shopping centers would not thrive.
"The fallout of this is that they are going to be strips because they don't have the mass or the pizzac." he said.
John Nalbandian also said he was not opposed to a larger shopping center, adding that a mall probably would not be larger than an expanded Wal-Mart store, which the candidates unanimously supported.
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RETURN BY: MONDAY, APRIL 1, 5 p.m.
Convenient Food Mart
munch on these daily specials!!
bananas 33¢/lb.
lettuce 49¢/head
red delicious apples 49¢/lb.
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If you have a taste for
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RUN FOR THE BORDER!
If Unique entertainment is what you want, then Club Alpha is what you have been waiting for! One night that relives the Prohibition era Speakeasy Games, food, drinks, and prizes. A live jazz and dinner Club last year we gave away a VCR
cash bar
games food prizes
April 6, 1991 Saturday
7:30 p.m.
Lawrence-Holiday
Lawrence, Kansas
Lawrence
advance tickets available
$10 per person $18 per couple
*admission for party & Club Alta
contact member of the Faculty
843-2572 ♦ 841-2050 ♦ 842-8886
ALPHA
alpha phi alpha fraternity, inc
ALPHA
Classified Directory
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
-Derreen James
200's
男女卫生间
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Contact Services
235 Typing Services
100s Announcements
you see a special lady for long term relationship. If you're a single woman, 18-30, and also seeming someone, then tell me about help. Reply to P. O. Box: 422422, Lawrence, KS 75092.
USE IT or LOSE IT
JB-You're the best big little brother a sister could have. Happy Belated 29th B-day. Love, Beck & Brian
110 Bus. Personal
Cruise SHIP JOBs
$300-$1000/wk Call for FREE info. 1-800-955-5611
105 Personal
7 TANS $20 1 TA $
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
390 Want to Buy
EUROPEAN 25th & IOWA 841-6232
300's
400's
ACE EXAMS! Improve memory and recall, enhance concentration, creativity and study skills. Prepare for visual brain machines. Call 841-3431. Lawrence Hypnosis and Stress Management Center.
Bausch & Lomb, Ray-Anton Sunglasses 290 West Bell Road Repair Office 723 The Etc Shop 723 Main Street B.C. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop. Classic to computerized. Body shop available. American motorcycle repair and acclimatization school. VISA, Mastercard and Discover cards accepted.
Merchandise
Real Estate
405 Fee Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
会
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters.
We're here because we care.
841-2345 1419 Mass.
We're always open.
CASH FOR COLLEGE. Over $100 million in scholarships and grants goes unclaimed each year. If you may apply to send name and address to us, please contact 818. August St. Martinville, Va. 24121
Habits, phobias, stress, anxiety, pain, smoking,
weight and other disorders. Hypnotherapy
Center. 842.7594
Kansas City Strip, a gay Men's nudist group-for more information, write P.O. Box 2556, Kansas City, Ma. 64113.
Rental and Sales. 732 Mass.
PYRAMID
PIZZA
"We Pile It On!"
TERRIFIC
TUESDAY
$$SAVE BIG BUCKS$$
BUY A LARGE 2
TOPPING PIZZA AND
A LITER OF SODA
FOR ONLY $8.95
PLUS TAX.
PYRAMID
PIZZA
Also, try our Colombo Frozen Yogurt!
Open 11a.m. to LATE (Limited Delivery Area)
842-3232 14th & Ohio (Under The Wheel)
*New Analysis of Western Civilization* makes sense of *Western City*. Makes sense to use it! Available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Crier Bookstores.
120 Announcements
Recycling got you out of sorts? We can help! Simple Goods General Store, 735 Mass.
ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT-Fiberless-
Solar System Installation (over 8,000 openings. No experience needed.) Install an energy-manual system, begins 85 to M & L, Hossee, 8400, Seattle WA 98124-5374
www.hossee.com WA 98124-5374
Call Douglas County Rape Victim's Support Service for confidential and caring assistance. If you need help, call 844.306 or 841.2435
**College Money.** Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money refunded America's Fined. Since 1881, COL $50,000,000. Minimum Bail. Boc. Inst. 1891, Boc. Inst. 1891, MBO 640821, 1-800-775-4754
Now has incredible beeswax & plant pigment crayons, penicillins, paints, and high quality recycled skincare for all serious artists. The Antique Mail R0M Mass Lower level.
or anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2434, Headquarters.
EARTH SPLINTS Living Myth Through Ritual Workshops. Tuesdays, April 9-18. May 26. Free introductory lecture April 2. 7:30 pm. Lamplighter books, 10 E Nith.
Gay & Lesbian Peer Consulting. A friendly understanding voice. Free confidential referrals called by counselors. Headquarters for RU Info 804-386-2500 Sponsored by GLSOK
crisis. I encourage you to join the Kansas Association of Public Employees, KAFE biosyst辩 argue that we should be encouraging union membership, and sponsor a free hot lift bus uniform in the work place. but we need you久待a small investment in a better future. Write me for a sign-up card Ed Schamle 14W HW 6951-7203.
Rainbows and DeMollays welcome any members.
Call Vickie at 841-415.
SPRING into HEALTH with MASSAGE: Recover from stress and injury so you can really enjoy the season. Call Bruce at Lawrence Massage Therapy at 841-962-662 go fly a kite.
Suffering from abortion* Write HeartRestored
Box 94, Grinnett, KS 67738 Confidential
response/material will follow
Suicide Intervention. If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is叫 841 2345 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
Take a study break and go on an Adventure! "Storm down the Illinois river for two days of canning excitement!" Get a group of friends and eat in. Visit our website at 192.81$ 192.81$ includes 2 nights lodging in cabins on the river 2 days canning and six meals. For more info call MAU @ 8434 747. Get away from the weather.
THE WAR AFFECTS US-For a caring listener or info on support services, call Headquarters Counseling Center. 841-2345.
130 Entertainment
AL, Left Inseam and Sideshow live at the
OUTH, Thursday, March 29, 65 all, ages,
no alcohol. The Outside is 4 miles east of
Mass. on 15th St.
lawrence Info Center, content oriented BBS,
401-729-5300 N. 1
140 Lost-Found
Lost: List on-carring Friday before Spring Break. If found please call 749-3569.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Seeking students and grads to fill many positions.
Airline will train. Excellent salary and travel benefits. 303-441-2455
Babysitter needed immediately After school care-Monday through Friday, 3:00-5:30 p.m.
References: 843-3147.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/ girls summer camps Teacher: Joshua Koch, summer camp, riffery, archery, tennis, golf, sports camps, camping, crafts, dramas, or riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. $1200 or more. #RibBacon, Maree 7165, Maple NP, Male.
Conventure Store Clerk-$4,250 for Weekend shift,
cash register experience. Apply in person
at the Conventure Store location.
EARN $5,000-$10,000 - Now hiring-manager &
management associate this summer. STUDENT PAINTERS
are needed.
Local Restaurant 30 Openings
- We need Cooks, and Cashiers
Cashiers
- $4.50 Starting Wage Apply from 3-5p.m. at 901 Kentucky 204A
GRADUATING STUDENT NEEDD-Career position for aggressive candidate with degree in business/personnel management. Benefits include excellent starting salary, company car. At summer暑夏 summer house painting experience a masters. Call collector, M. Schwartz, 1-800-4LEGGE.
Great job in Philadelphia suburb. Have fun with 2 kids for 35 weeks. Hearty meal, earn great salary, room, board and 2 week paid vacation. Starts July 17th. Call Elizabeth at (642) 926-3461.
International Company seeks career-minded individuals to train in the fashion and glamour industry. For interview, 1-232-6289
Live in sister/nanny for two school age children.
Job begins in August. Single mom is professional student. Wage/salary negotiable. References required. Mail 843-7219 after 4pm.
Looking for adventure? Be a nanny! Go to interesting places. Earn good money for a year. Temple Tennant Agency 842-444-743
Need responsible non-smoking girl for baby-sitting.
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday mornings
8:30-11:30. Call 843-2589
Spring Break over and still no summer job?
Average making $450/week while gaining career experience for your resume. 841-1224.
Part-time evening shifts for food service wanted.
Avnely at front desk. 180 Naimith Drive.
Need money last? Make up to $21.00 a day trimming photographs. No experience necessary.
1-400-695-7789
Summer-- MAIL MALE ATLETES
Counter-Attempt positions available in Top Nose boy
Juggle. Tightly control body, Windchair,
Rogers, Ropes and Pineconeing.
Ear, Woodshop, Photography. Upper Classman
Woodworking.
SUMMER CAMP JOBS IN MICHIGAN
A beautiful landscape with a lake, trees, and a bridge.
-Counselors
-Office
-Kitchen
-Maintenance
Lake of the Woods for Girls Geenwoods for Boys
INTERVIEWS ON CAMPUS
INTEGRITY ON CAMPUS
Tues., March 28th, 12:00-5:00pm
Wed., March 27th, 8:30am-3:00pm
110 Burge Union
No appointment needed
Travel from Texas to Montana working on a wheat harvesting cow. Guaranteed monthly wage and bonus on board and room. Family experience required. 931-569-4649. Experience not required. 931-569-4649.
Unique Career Opportunity
Work Study positions available: Spring, Summer and Fall. Call Judy at the School of Business. 864-758
225 Professional Services
1101 Mass. Lawrence 749-0123
Wanted. Part time babysitter for nine 6 month old baby in our office on Mass, close to campus, make money while studying. call 843.0174
Need managers for rapid growing corporation.
No exp necessary. Will train in sales, marketing
and management. Call 1-822-8911.
JERRY HARPER
LAW OFFICES
Driver education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841.7749
Government photos, passports, immigration,
visas, senior portraitings, modeling & arts portfolios./B&W color. Call Tom Swells 749-1611
PURVALLEY
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 491-6678
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
TRAEFIC·DOIL'S
Copying, hardstanding and gold stamping
Lawrence Printing Service. 512 E 9th Street.
841-4600
16 East 13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
1. der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your entries into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages. letter-quality type. 864301. days of evenings
Typing/WP: letters, resumes, term papers,
etc. 842-4754; 3:30-10:30 pm wkdys, anytime
wends
A better price for Word Processing. Fast service
$10.00 space-spaced paper. Call Theherd: 841-6776
Absolute cheapest typing in Lawrence
practice paper. Rush jobs no problem
79-4648
Accurate typing, Resumes, Theses, Letters, Call Melan.
1-913-8753-4754 or 864-381-381
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary.
$1.25/double-spaced page. Call Mattila
10am-6pm, 841-1219
...o J. S. Tying Services 8419-5942 Term papers, thesis, dissertations, letters, manuscripts and spelling corrected. Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing. Term papers, thesis, dissertations, letters, manuscripts and spelling corrected. G.W. 2010 G.W. 2010 W.G. 2010
K's professional word processing. Accurate and affordable. Call after 1:00 pm. 841-6345.
Professional Typist. Reasonable rates. Call 842-3203.
Professional resumes-Consultations, formating,
typesetting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc, 927 $1
Mass., 841-1071.
Mass. 843-7017
WordPerfect word processing, Ink Jet printer
Near Orchards Corners. Phone 843-8568
Word Processing Typing; Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing, composition. HAVE M.
S Degree. 841-6254
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
1983 Honda V45 Interceptor 750 and accessories,
12,000 miles, mint condition. $2100. Larry.
841-4365.
1986 Yamaha F'Z 600. $1900.Call 864-8242
1986 Yamaha FZ 600. $1900. Call 844-4242
1989 Bianchi Premio 12 speed. Like new. $300.
749-0483
FUTON SALE
6" Futon and Hardwood Frame
Complete (while supplies last)
Bottis Bedroom
2429 Iowa #G • Lawrence, KS 66047
913-842-7378
Computer, TIT 85 Printer, IBM PC mono, 20 MEG Hard Drive, D+. Flipy, Ship 8, Near, near New York. Offer valid for sale. Demon PAMXO int. amp. TBU 70 Tuur $100. TU0 81D CD player. TBU $7,6Mm Cassette deck $30. C cerwin Vega D-3 Speakers $200-all in equipment Will sell separately.
For sale: movie theater components. Screen, pro-
jector, sound system. $200.00; $163.8179.
For sale: Skiing rower machine. Good con-
dition. $100.00; 749-457.
GOVT SURPLUS! Sleeping bags, backpacks,
cauzione clothing, coatings wet weather gear,
combat helmet, and Speeddelle Boots. Also
used in Surpluses 107-34274, 147-37244, St. Mary's Surgical Sales, St. Mary's, MS.
Specialized MI, bike, 6 month old, black Krypton
lock included, $2500 obo. 865-3944 (mv马)
University Daily Kansan / Tuesdav. March 26. 1991
13
TREK 560-Shimano 105, Matrix Wheels, road bike, like new. Jason 865-1597.
340 Auto Sales
10. 86 Mitchells Corda, 5 spcd, 2 door, hbk, several new goods. Condition好。Burgess 825-7977 843-6522 Honda Civic Wagon, 98,000 miles, beautiful 8632 at 10pm. $2,400.
1989 Mitsubishi Precipe. 39,000 miles. 2 dr, stick.
sony stereo. $480. 745-879 after 8pm.
1989 Red Honda Civic hatchback. AC, stereo, 22K,
one owner, factory warranty, clean, great gas
mileage. MO evenings 749-257.
360 Miscellaneous
Seniors and grad students! Ford's college grad program can help you buy a new car or truck. For details, call Bill Lee. 843-5000.
BUY, SELL, LOAN CASH.
For sale: 8 month Boutique membership
1064.844-720 mornings; 1064.825, leave message
On TV's, VCX's, jewelry, stereo, musical instruments, cameras and more. We honor Visa/MC/AMEX. Disc. Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry. 108 W. 4th 749-1191
Hillel
בִיר
**Events of the Week**
Tuesday, March 26
"Judaism and Homosexuality"
Discussion with Rabbi Sharyn Henry
7 p.m. Hilliell House
Tuesday
First night Passover Seder
with host families
Saturday, March 30
2nd night Passover Seder
with L.J.C.C.
Reservations required!
call Hillel by Tuesday, March 26
For rides and more information call 864-3948
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
1-2-3 bedroom apartments near campus.
Available June 1. Sorry, no pets. Dick
842-897/843-1601
2-8 bedroom houses and duplexes. Available June 1. Sorry, no pets. Dick at 842-8971/843-1601.
in marples. Available in fall or summer on 12 month lease, DW, low incentives, off street parking, close to campus. No pets. Deposit. 842 87948. Ata for Tracy to leave message.
2 bdm triplex available mid May D/W, disposal
W/D hookups, very nice inside and out
$400/month. 842-5223
Available March 1-1: 800 unarmy apt in new building at Winston Hills 1048 Emery Dr. Energy development, daw cellware, DW cellware, farming farm, mini beds. Great floor space. Short tests min. blinds $32 per month. No money required.
Basement apt for quite graduate student. No pets. Live alone, good morals, non-smoke, take care of apt. Off street parking. Individual rate. $200 plus room. Insured inquiries. Incuries 8413727 weeks, weekends.
Big sunny 1 bedroom apt available now thru July Option for next year. 2 blocks from campus 875/month. 842-901. Leave message.
EQUAL
HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
合
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all advertisements in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
All real estate advertisement in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on racial color, religion, sex, handicap, language, sex, color or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.'
Bradford Square Apartments 501 Coltsdale
2 & 3 R-B-Available in May or August, on campus. Enroll in microwaves, pain of coat, laundry faculty. Onsite Management, KU bus route, off-street parking. Call to reserve your apartment for summer vacations.
Nice 2 bedroom apt. Close to Student Union.
Washer/dryer hookup. Off-street parking. No pets. 749-2519.
Check out Berkeley Flats. Studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Close to campus and downtown.
$300/145/mo. Call 845-2116.
Excellent Location: 1 block to a campus, 2 bedroom in 4+ iples, dishwashers, WD hookup, CA. pcs. available. June 1. $60. At 1341 Ohio. Call 842-4242
Extremely nice, spacious, 3 bd. townhouse to/wardage. 2 female non-smoking rooms needed, year lease beginning August and/or summer lease. $120, % utilities. Kerr 843-6562
Female needed for summer sublease. Owen room and bath. Close to campus. 943-2498.
Female roommates need for next school year.
Beautiful 3 BR house, 2 car garage, newly redecorated, furnished, nice neighborhood. W/D,
smokers. Smoke-free. Non-smokers.
810 plus $1 units. 843-6384
Great 1 bdmr apt for rent. 1 block from Union.
Must see to appreciate. Call Kristen at 865-0100
Leave message.
Great location for KU and downtown. Studio apt with gas and water费 $300,册号 641-2591. Hey! KU Med. students. Move in June 1 and rent it on the 2 four years of *Studi. 1 and 2 bedrooms aps.* Heat and water pay. *Across* Campus. Bedroom. Rainbow Tower Apts. 918-931-8931.
LEASE NOW FOLE FALL HOME 3 or 5+ plur du bus on趴座. Basement, garage, CAB/W hookup. No pets. Lease & refs. req./$40/mo and up. Negotiate 8737-738 for
LEASE NOW FOLK Full. Extra nine 2 BR bupas in good location. Extra large MHI; garage; laundry; storage; nite yard No piles & Lease & resu, rep couple or亲子 family fret $360/mo
Lorimar Townhouses, 2001 Clinton Parkway,
Quality, space, with all the amenities. Brand
new, available now 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease thru
May, July or for 12 months. 841-748-8430.
MAKE IT EASY ON YOURSELF! Summer
sublease form . 2BR apt. May pad Cable pd. Option
for fall. Very close to house. 843-4742
2 14 B-1B 4 WBs. washers/dryers in each cell, unit
4 WBs. on bus line, off street parking) only jr. id.
2 14 B-1B 4 WBs. washers/dryers in each cell, unit
Nice 1 bedroom apt close to the Union. No pets.
Deposit and references required. Off street parking:
749-2919.
New leasing. Extra nice, spacious two bedroom apartment with balcony, central air, gas pump, car garages and blinds. Low utilities, pool and bus route. Quit compr $100.00 SPANISH CHEAP APARTMENT
New leasing for fall semester, 1 and 2 bedroom
Aspen West Apartment. $80 for 1 bedroom, $375
2 bedroom. Ceiling fans, water paid. Walk to camp
Call: 841-1690 or 841-1839.
No leasing & 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Southbridge Plaza. Apt. 18a,床租; $75.2 bedroom starts at $35. 10 month lease. Water and cable paid remodeled kitchen, new carved. Call 821-196-
ONE BLOCK FROM KANSAS UNION. For rent to serious graduate student, upperclass student or RU employee. One BIR furnished. No pets. Betts, 210-756-9843. Water furnished. $250/roo-1831 after 6pm FRI.
VILLAGE SQUARE Apartments
A Quiet, Relaxed Atmosphere
close to campus spacious 2 bedroom laundry fac. & pool waterbed allowed
9th & Avalon
842-3040
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM (Next to Benchwarm)
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an
Offering Luxury 2 BK apartments at an Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
12-6 pm Mon., Fri.
10-6 pm Tue. - Thur.
9-3 pm Sat.
No Appt. Necessary
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
...
Apple Lane Apartments
Free cable
Water paid
2111 Kasold 843-4300
JN
Now accepting reservations for fall leases!
Pool
COASTAL RESERVE
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now leasing for
1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
Spacious apts. Furnished
Quiet studio
SUMMER SUBLET 1 bed apt., 2nd floor. Walk to
KU and downtown. $265/mo. gas & water paid.
^-^-569 about 4:30
$280 to $335 per month (water paid!)
Close to KU bus route
SUMMER SUBLARE
the new bed,
awroom, awesome wood floor, DW, DW W look up,
spacious chairs, campus downstairs, location, not pets.
$420 month (reg). .865-3000
WOODWAY
APARTMENTS
Sapienza 3 bedroom, $475. Sublease for summer
~ sooner 1806 W. 27, w. 463-403 or 81-5797
2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft $365 to $415 per month
$365 to $415 per month
Great location Near campus
SUMMER SUBLEASE June 1 4 bedroom towhede. Sunrise Village. $185 each negotiable. 794-290.
West Hill APARTMENTS
APARTMENTS
chk apartment feature
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
- Large bedrooms
- Miracle room
- On KL bus route
- Carports available
- 1-bedroom $355, $450
- 2-bedroom $440, $460
- 3-bedroom $560
office
611 Michigan Street
(across from Harden's)
HOURS:
4:00 - 7:00 - Fri
9:00 - 12:00 Sat
843-1971
pacious apts. - furnished and unfurnished
841-8400
- Garages; 2 & 1/2 bath
- Microwave
SUNRISE VILLAGE
LIFE TREE
Bedroom Town Houses
1:00-4:00 p.m. (no appt needed)
This ad for original buildings only
does not include Phase II
- Microwave Ovens
- 660 Gateway Ct.
Now Leasing for Fall
Mon - Fri. 11-5
- Luxurious 3 & 4
OPEN HOUSE Mon. Wed. Thurs.
- Some with fireplaces
- On KU Bus Route
- Swimming Pool & Tennis Courts
Now leasing
for summer & fall
1991
*1 & 2 BR apartments
*2 & 3 BR townhomes
Please call Kristy for appt.
spacious & comfortable
- 3 Pools
- Tennis courts
on KL bus
TRAILRIDGE
-gas heat & water paid
-on KU bus route
(on apartments)
(Call for appointment)
03. 04. 05. 06
Georgetown Apartments
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Fenced pool area with
- 2500 W.6th 843-7333
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
- On Site MGT./Reliable
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
Call about our Summer Special
Double Take
Tanning Deck & Barbeque 10 or 12 Month Leases
- No pets
- 24 hour Maintenance
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
Office Hours: M-F 1-5:00 WKNDS - BY APPT.
630 Michigan 749-7279
HI, FOAX. I SEE
YA FINALLY MADE
IT TO BEN'S
SHINDIG.
WATCH YOUR
STEP, THERE, YOU
SEEM A LITTLE
PLASTERED.
HEY, COCKER,
WHERE'S CARRIE?
- Low Security Deposit
Sublease large one bedroom apt. Close to campus,
on bus route, microwave, dishwasher, jacuzzi and
phone 841-9114
- 10 or 12 Month Leases
Office Hours: M-F 1-5:00
Summer subside 2 bedroom, 14th bath,
Summer subside inland availability. $228/month.
Call Fall leaving. Pursued 1 and 2
bedroom from KU with of street parking,
nets. pbi. 845-719-3600.
Summer apt. sublease available 2 rooms -close to campus on Tennessee. Call Michelle. B32-60744
Summer sublease with tie-up to take over lace in band. New brand 1 new bedroom, 1 female roommate
Summer sublease. Nice 3 BR, with dishwasher, washer/driver AC. Call 866-252-9611
Sublease May-August 1. 1 Br, CA, DW,
Washer/der, walk to KU. Small pet OK, $350
mile. 841-1800.
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished rooms with shared kitchen and bath facilities. Must utilise paid. 1 bit from KIU with off-street parking. No pets. 841-5000.
HERE SHE COMES NOW!
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall Special
S
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
Swan Management
- 1-2-3 bedroom apts.
- Gravstone
Open House M.F. 1-5 p.m.
2512 W 6th C
OPEN DAILY 1-5 PM.
Open House M.F. 1-5 p.m.
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1288
Reserve Your Home Now We offer
- 2 • 3 • 4 Bedroom Apartments
-Customer furnishings
-Designed for privacy
-Private Parking
-Close to shopping & KU
-Many great locations
-Equal opportunity housing
IF I REMEMBER CORRECTLY, I
SPILED SOMETHING ON HER AND,
SHE'S CLEANING UP RIGHT NOW.
SHE'S NO ANGHE, THOUSHE IS
ANGHE.
Designed with you in mind!
Go to...
Hanover Place - 841-1212
14th & Mass.
Kentucky Place - 749-0445 1310 Kentucky
Sundance - 841-5255
7th & Florida
Tanglewood - 749-2415
Campus Place - 841-1429
1145 Loncoln
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Orchard Corners - 749-4226
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
- Volleyball Court
- Basketball Court
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Exercise Room
SUMMER IS COMING
- 3 Hot Tubs
- On Bus Route
842-5111
1301 W. 24th
$ 355 - $ 425
Models Open Daily
Mon. - Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 10-4 p.m. Sun 12-4 p.m.
$ 355 - $425
Summer sublease 4 bedroom furnished apt. Pool at complex, Salance Call: Angela 865-4392
Summer sublease 2 bedroom with washer/dryer room. Months and rent怒敢.Call Angela J81-847-3798
by Tom Avery
HEYDIDJOOGEMTALLA
DATSTUFFOFFYERSHIRT?
TALK ABOUT SLURRED SPEECH. YOU'RE BROOMING A REAL LUSH, COCKER.
Summer sub-lease 1 bdrm, furnished apt, June-Aug. Call evenings 843-6194 for more info.
LEARN THE ABCs of NAISMITH. Affordable Living
Naismith now has lower than ever prices.
Better quality living
Convenient location
We have our own computer center, Dining anytime, and great social events.
Naismith is close to campus, and on the bus route Naismith spells out a wise living move.
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Drive
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 843-8559
Two bedroom sublease May 15 Aug 15, no deposit. 842-3040 or 749-2881. Ask for Jennifer
Quail Creek Apartments 2111 Kasold 843-4300
Accepting reservations for fall leases!
on KU bus route studios townhomes 2,3 Bedrooms Free cable Water paid Back
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has rooms available for summer and fall. Call 749-8071 or drop by 1468 Tennessee.
430 Roommate Wanted
Roommate now. Very nice, very large. W/D. Pets OK. See to believe! Only $125. 841.2746.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Summer Sublease: Female wanted to share 4 bedroom (ownhome) Option for fall. $180/mo., $19.00 deposit. Call Gina. 749 1500
Female roommate wanted for 1981, must be non-smoker, quiet, interested in studies. Call 844-684-5067 through the summer. Move to today but pay through the summer. Room size is 24'x30'. Roommate now. Very neat, very tidy. W.D., P.O. Box 1223, San Francisco, CA 94122.
- Policy
A roommate requires on bus route, through July. $80 a month plus utilities. Nice. a4-874-5897 Call now for summer usable. Female room. 642-931-4874 Orchard Gowers. Call anytime at 642-931-4874
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words.
Words set in All CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Summer sublease. Female roommate needed to share condo own, room carport, rooftop, microwave, pool, CA and more $155 plus 4% suites Call Lark; 853-0990 or 853-2067
Three Bedroom for summer sublease. Please call 749-3477, economical.
Classified Information Mail-In Form
Tearsheets are NOT provided for classified advertisement.
Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only. No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any key.
No refunds on cancellation of pre paid classified advertising
Blind box ads: please add $4 00 service charge.
- Deadlines
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
Deadline is on Monday at 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Deadline for cancellation is Monday at 4 p.m. 2 days prior to publication.
Words 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days
0-15 3.45 5.10 7.25 12.05
16-20 4.05 6.00 8.50 13.50
21-25 4.65 6.95 9.75 15.15
26-30 5.30 7.90 11.00 16.70
31-35 5.95 8.85 12.25 18.30
Classifications
105 personal 140 lost & found 305 for sale
110 business personal 205 helped want 300 auto sales
120 announcements 225 professional service 360 miscellaneous
120 entertainment 255 typing services
Classified Mail Order Form
170 want to buy
05 for rent
30 roommate want
Phone Address (phone number published only if included below)
Please print on the back of this card.
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST F
Date ad begins
Total days in paper
Amount paid
Classification
THE FAR SIDE
OLO KWANSA POLICY
University Daily Kansas
191 Sausfer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KG 6045
By GARY LARSON
Jason 3.26
Saving on transportation costs, some pioneers were known to head west on covered skates.
14
Tuesday, March 26, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
ATHLETIC TRAINING INSTITUTE Human Development Golf 1 Reporting Reading in Content Areas general chemistry Elementary/Secondary School Curriculum Development and Evaluation Introduction to Educational Research Small Business Institute DESIGN OF WEIGHT TRAINING PROGRAM CORRECTIONAL TREATMENT OF DRUG ABUSE
American Literature II
introduction to art
CORRECTIONAL TREATMENT OF DRUG ABUSE Introduction to Astronomy: Cosmology
Introduction to art
PHYSICAL THERAPY CLINICAL I
Composition with Business Emphasis Villages Workshop ETHOIC AND RACE RELATIONS AMONG YOUTH
Composition with Business Emphasis Villages Workshop ETHNIC AND RACE RELATIONS AMONG YOUTH IN PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Advanced Legal Research
Domestic Relations
PROBLEMS IN PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
PROBLEMS IN PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Advanced Legal Re
introduction to telecommunications
Introduction to Economics COST ACCOUNTING
Marketing
European Civilization II
Organization and Management PUBLIC SPEAKING LD Practicum-Elementary/Secondary
Management Information
Scientific Method in Nursing Principles of Accounting I SC
INTRODUCTION TO SOCIOLOGY
Systems
Intermediate Algebra BD Practicum-Elementary/Secondary Statistics For Business and Economics
auction to Word Processing Work: Human Sexuality
History of the Modern Middle East
European Civilization II World Views and Moral Values
ENJOYMENT OF MUSIC Low-fire Clay
Understanding Language Problems Classroom Reading Instruction
in Non-Native Speakers
Machine Shorthand III Legal Terminology Junior Composition Introduction to Busi-
EPIC Freshman Composition
Theory/Practice of Teaching Writing
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY Cultural Anthropology INTERNSHIP Fantasy Film
Introduction to Physics
COBOL THEORY of communication PROGRAMMING
Tennis 1
Aging and Sexuality
Special Projects in Box Office/P.R.
INTRODUCTION TO BIOLOGY
Beginning Spanish I
Business Policies Radiation Therapy Clinical Ill Bill of Rights for Teachers
Educational Planning for LD ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY
What can you do in Topeka this summer?
If you'll be in Topeka this summer, you can enroll at Washburn University and get a required course or two out of the way. During the summer session, Washburn offers a number of junior and senior level courses in addition to the basics
Business Finance
If you'll be in Topeka this summer, you can enroll at Washburn University and get a required course or two out of the way. During the summer session, Washburn offers a number of junior and senior level courses in addition to the basics everyone needs, and Washburn credits can be transferred to other schools.
Take advantage of convenient class times — during the day or in the evening — that fit your summer schedule. With Easy Enrollment, you can avoid waiting in lines and drowning in paperwork.
Start making your plans for summer now. Take a closer look at Washburn University's 1991 Summer Session.
WASHBURN UNIVERSITY
1700 COLLEGE
TOPEKA, KS 66621
Elementary Jazz 1
Elementary Jazz 1 Gender and Communication Theories of Personality
For more information, call the Washburn Admissions office Toll-Free 1-800-332-0291, Ext. 625, or (913) 295-6625.
COUNTY OF MIDDLEBURN
PRODUCTION CREW
Art of the 20th Century
Metropolitan Criminal Justice
Statistics
Principles of Economics II U.S. History I
Educational Planning for BD
teaching math/microis in elementary school systems analysis internship College Algebra
Developing Person
Biology of Behavior FOUNDATIONS IN EDUCATION
Drug Abuse and Criminality
Interaskhip in Law Enforcement
introduction to biology lab
Swimming 1
International Economics Aqua Exercise
CRIME AND JUSTICE ON FILM
Investments
Investments
WEIGHT TRAINING
Principles of Accounting II
Basic Concepts in Psychology elementary/middle/secondary school principalship Survey of Japanese Literature
microCOMPUTER APPLICATIONS IN PE
Golf 2
Psychology of Adjustment Survey of Japanese Literature black and white photography human anatomy Teaching Health and PE in Elementary School
Teaching Health and PE in Elementary School
Government of the United States
Speech and Language Development
Introduction to Alcohol and Drug Abuse
Junior Composition Ten with Teaching Emphasis
Introduction to Geology Karate 1 and 2
Modern English Grammar
Legal Environment of Business Creative
advanced social studies
OF EXCEPTIONAL STUDENTS special projects in acting/directing
Creative Writing
Swimming 2
Anthropology of Human Sexuality Teaching Science in Elementary School Writing
Behavior
Basic Health Care Orientation to Human Services Introduction to Geography Modification
SCHOOL LAW
Mathematics for Elementary Education I U.S. HISTORY II
Choreography For Drill Teams AIDS/STDs Education for Teachers painting the landscape Race and Ethnic Group Relations
early childhood/kindergarten education
Radiology Equipment Operation painting the landscape Race and Ethnic Group Relations
INTRODUCTION TO MICROBIOLOGY LAB Young Adult Literature Update
INTRODUCTION TO MICROBIOLOGY LAB Skin and Scuba Diving supervision and staff development in schools SCHOOL FINANCE AND BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
International Social Work; Child Welfare
Business Methods of Teaching Child Dance
4
√
VOL.101, No.118
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING:864-4358
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27, 1991
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Hailstorm leaves path of dents, cracks
226
We can make a difference
Look for us in the Yellow Pages
Farn Rureau Insurance
Sudden storm drops golf ball-sized hail
A cyclist rides through water at 25th and Haven streets while a bus waits to be pulled from the mud. All 20 KU on Wheels buses in service received damage.
By Jonathan Plummer and Patricia Boias
Kansan staff writers
Though yesterday's sudden hailstorm only lasted about 10 minutes, that was plenty of time for many students and businesses to sustain damage to their property.
Walburn said the storm left dent in the roofs and home of about 400 cars that were parked outside.
"I guess we're going to have a hell of a hail sale," said Larry Walburn, sales manager of Jim Clark Motors, 2121 W. 29th Terrace.
"It didn't matter whether it was a $6,000 or a $30,000 car," he said. "It did spare any of them it was."
Walburn said the company's insurance agent would have to assess the damage done to each car.
Jared Treul, an employee at the Paradise Cafe, 722 Massachusetts St., said the hail broke skylights in the apartment.
"The alleys were like a flowing river; Massa-
chusets Street was like a flowing river. Treul
Jacques."
Kyle Pettle, general manager of Dos Hombres, 815 New Hampshire St., said customers were forced inside from the restaurant's patio, and one of the decorative lights on the patio was shattered.
On campus, buildings and cars did not fare much better.
Bob Porter, assistant director of facilities operations, said that 30 minutes after the storm, there were about 24 calls from buildings all over campus.
"We've got windows broken out and blown out, root leaks and floods," he said. "We've had calls for punctured roots and water backing up floor drains."
An emergency crew will fix reported damages. Porter said.
Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said he would know today the full damage done to reside-
David Platt, director of Joseph R. Pearson Hall, said several windows that were not protected by fire ledges, such as those in the main lobby and in stairwells, had been cracked or broken.
Security crews at JRP* checked for broken windows last night and put up signs warning users about the threat.
of cracks in windows, most calls were from students whose cars had been damaged.
"In fact, my car was parked in front and had the side win-dow broken," he said. "Another car in the front had the en-tire bent."
Jessica Gremmel, Wichita freshman, whose car was parked in front of Elsworth, said that she did not plan to repair the car.
"My car is just something I can go somewhere in, so it makes no difference to me," she said.
She did not have her Chrysler Reliant K repaired when it sustained half damage, four years ago, and she did not plan to repair it.
Platt said that though he had received a few calls
Scott Radford, owner and manager of Allied Body Shop.
23rd Street and Haskell Avenue, said that because most steel in new cars was light, the panel of a car damaged by hail failed to close.
Radford said that at his shop, replacing the roof of a mid-sized car such as a Chevrolet Beretta would cost about $700. Customers began calling before the storm ended, Radford said.
"We've had a lot of calls. people have been calling their insurance agency and then wanting to set up appointments." he said. "We have appointments starting two weeks from today."
KU Weather Service provided the following information about the storm.
Lawrence yesterday about 4:30 p.m.
- Wind gusts of 59 miles per hour and golf ball size hail hit
The storm was caused by a warm, moist air mass from
Gulf of Mexico that contrasted with a dry air mass from
Mexico.
- The temperature yesterday was a record high 85 degrees but dropped by more than 20 degrees in a half hour when the storm moved in. The normal high for this time in March is 58 degrees.
- Lawrence received about two inches of precipitation from the storm.
- Funnel clouds were reported over Eudora, and some areas near Lawrence reported baseball size hail
Kansan reporters Katie Chipman and Mike Vargas contributed information to this story.
ALEXANDRA DUCK
ROBERT DUCK
Ivan Huntoon, Prairie Village sophomore, and Sandy Wilder, Montevallo, Ala., freshman, smear each other with mud after the storm.
AUGUST 1975
Oliver residents cavort in the water after rains filled the retaining pond west of the hall. Storms brought two inches of rain to Lawrence.
Storm brings fun in the mud to Oliver
By Patricia Roias
Kansan staff writer
She said she heard people playing outside in the mud and decided to take a closer look. Closer was too
"I am cold, and I have mud in my mouth," said Jeanie Cooper, El Dorado sophomore.
Shivering, muddy bodies filled the lobbv in Oliver Hall yesterday.
"It was fun, but it was cold," she said as she cleaned the mud from behind her left ear.
Cooper was one of about 100 students who ended up in a muddy drainage area west of Oliver yesterday after a halftornst h Lawrence.
'it's an Oliver tradition. This is what college is all about.'
Joe Kurtzman Shawnee junior
close. Four muddy bodies grabbed and dragged her.
"I was screaming and yelling my head off to let me go," Cooper said.
happening, "Hogarth, Chicago freshman, said, "Then my friends sort of attacked me. It was fun, but at first I was mad."
Joe Kurtzman was among the muddy grabbers dragging others to the hole.
"First they put mud all over me," she said. "Then they threw all in."
"They were clean, and they were laughing," Kurtzman, Shawnee who had gone were out here risking pneumonia; they were out there laughing at us."
"I just went out to see what was
Kurtzman said this was the third time he had played mud games at silver. The drainage area behind the bank was also a stormy place. Every time there is a storm it gets
flooded, he said.
A mud flood now means football to most Oliver residents.
"It's an Oliver tradition," Kurtzman said. "This is what college is all about."
Kent Hayes, Fort Scott senior, described the start of muddy yesterday.
"We started playing football," Hayes said. "Run and dive and catch the ball. People started going out, running to the mud fight. Then we had a mudslide."
And soon they also had a muddy hall.
Children of poorest families are denied food so rent can be paid, hunger report reveals
WASHINGTON — One in eight
the United States doesn't
get enough sleep.
The Associated Press
Those 5.5 million children who do go hungry come from the poorest families. These families spend so much of their income on housing that they can afford an average of only 88 meals per meal for each meal, according to the Food Research and Action Center, which released the report yesterday.
These children are far more likely to get sick and miss school than are youngsters who do have enough food according to a childhood hunger study.
The door-to-door survey was conducted in seven areas that reflected the needs of the community.
According to Executive Director Robert Fersh, the nutrition advocacy group's three-year, million-dollar survey of 2,335 randomly selected families paints a disturbing picture of the day-to-day struggle of low-income households to maintain a nutritionally adequate diet.
"It shows that shelter costs dominate the budgets of most households, leaving little money for food and other necessities," he said. "It shows that people cannot afford those with a member employed full time, cannot escape hunger."
overall low-income population.
The organization said it was the most rigorous and comprehensive study of childhood hunger ever conducted in the United States.
The people surveyed came from families whose annual income was 185 percent of the federal poverty level or less.
The government's poverty level in 1990 for a family of four was $12,700. Families of four at 185 percent of poverty would earn $23,495.
The 185 percentage figure was used because it is the one used to determine eligibility for free school lunches and food stamps.
Court shifts on coerced confessions
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A deeply divided Supreme Court yesterday veered dramatically from its previous decisions banning all coerced confessions as evidence in criminal trials.
By a 5-4 vote, the court said using such confessions may be a harmless error if other trial evidence is sufficient to convict the defendant.
But the justices, in a patchwork of shifting coilings, uphold rulings that require a new trial for him with killing his 11-year-old daughter.
The five court members who said
She said the decision would not allow for coercion to be used to obtain a confession, but added that
Anne Dayton, KU associate professor of law, said she was concerned about the decision.
"I'm sort of skeptical that a confession of any kind can be harmless," she said. "You're creating a situation where there really isn't any reason not to use coercion to get a confession."
coerced confessions sometimes could be used were Chief Justice William Rehnquist and Justices Sandra Day O'Connor, Antonin Scialia, Anthony Kennedy and David Souter.
coercion still happened
"It happens. It doesn't happen very often," she said. "At some point it goes beyond questioning. At other times it is not a product of their own free will."
"Police officers are like everybody else. You have a few bad apples in the barrel, and this can happen."
In a series of decisions dating back to 1884, the court has said confessions are coerced if not made freely, voluntarily and without compulsion or inducement of any court.
- Kansan reporter Amy Francis contributed information to this story.
1
2
Wednesday, March 27, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
TODAY
Partly Cloudy
HI:57°
LO:32°
54/37
60/47
59/30
48/26
61/40
80/55
82/69
Kansas Forecast
A slight chance of lingering showers in the morning. Skies will be clearing in the afternoon.
High 57/ Low 32.
3-day Forecast
Thursday - Sunny and cooler. High 57/ Low 27.
Salina 54/31 KC
Dodge City 55/33
58/33 Wichita 66/35
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
Friday- Mostly clear and cooler. High 50/ Low 30.
Saturday - Mostly clear and slightly warmer. High 57/ Low 35.
forecast by Robert Cos
Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 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 $50. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118
Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kno. 66045.
Headmasters 809 Vermont 843-8808
723 Mass 845-0611
The Etc.
Shop
Ray-Ban
SUNGLASSES
for Driving
IN MEMORIAL LAND
729 Mass 845-0611
1.75
Rings Fixed Fast!
Kizzy Cummings
JEWELERS
833 Mass-Lawrence, KS
We've Moved!
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
We've Moved!
IMMANUEL
LUTHERAN
CHURCH
University Student Center 15th and Iowa Easter Services
*Thursday, March 28
5:30 student saeder meal
7:30 maundy
*Good Friday
noon service
7:30 tenebrae
*Easter Sunday
6:30 sunrise, 7:30 breakfast
8:30 and 11:00 Festival Services
("Jesus) was delivered for our offenses and raised again for our justification."
DISABLED AMERICAN VETERANS Thrift Store--- OPENING SOON DONATIONS NEEDED
M
- Serviceable Clothing • Appliances
• Furniture • Misc. Household Goods
FREE PICKUP CALL 749-4900 or
Bring by: 1601 W, 23rd, Suite 116 S/S of
Southern Hills Mall between 9 and 4
Ray Poteet SCHOOL BOARD
Ray Poteet
Listens, Then Acts!
Political adv. paid for by Potteet for School Board, Lisa Gav. treas
POWER PLAYS
**DO YOU WANT TO KNOW HOW TO MAKE YOUR OWN DECISIONS FOR YOUR CAREER AND**
**SERVICES?**
**ACCEPT RESPONSIBILITY FOR YOUR OWN DECISIONS, REGARDLESS OF THEIRE**
**OUTCOME.**
Wait, the word "OUTCOME" is on the right side of the second line.
The word "DECISION" is on the left side of the second line.
Let's check the first word again.
"DO YOU WANT TO KNOW HOW TO MAKE YOUR OWN DECISIONS FOR YOUR CAREER AND"
"SERVICES?"
Yes, it's "DO YOU WANT TO KNOW HOW TO MAKE YOUR OWN DECISIONS FOR YOUR CAREER AND"
"SERVICES?"
Decision-Making Skills for Women
"DO YOU KNOW HOW TO IDENTIFY THE BARRIERS OR OBSTACLES THAT MIGHT PREVENT YOU FROM ATTAINING A SPECIFIC GOAL? YOU MIGHT SET FOR YOURSELF?"
Tuesday, April 2, 1991
7:00-9:00 p.m.
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR, AFRICAN & African AMERICAN STUDIES
AND ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR, COMMUNICATION STUDIES
SPONSORED BY THE EMILY TAYLOR WOMEN'S RESOURCE CENTER 118 STRONG HALL
Facilitator; Dr. Dorothy Pennington
Pine Room, Kansas Union
SPONSORED BY THE EMILY TAYLOR WOMEN'S RESOURCE CENTER 118 STRONG HALL FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT SHERRILL BOWSING AT 864-3532.
--stress management workshop at
12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center.
University Placement Center will
conduct a resume writing workshop
at 3:30 p.m. at 149 Burge Union.
School of Education Student
Workshops at 3:30 p.m.
at the first floor of Bailey Hall.
KU Gamers and Roleplayers will
Schlotzsky's
Sandwiches • Soups • Salads
$1.00 off
Sunday Special Every Sunday get any sandwich with chips & a medium drink
On campus
23rd & Louisiana
843-7002
KU Accounting Club and IRS will sponsor volunteer income tax assistance workshops at 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. on the fourth floor of the Kansas Union
KU Study Abroad will sponsor a general information meeting at 11 a.m. at 109 Lippincott Hall.
meet at 6 p.m. at the Party Room in the Burge Union.
KU Wellness Center will sponsor a
KU Dr. Seuss Club will meet at 7 p.m. at Alcove A in the Kansas Union.
- Environs will meet at 6 p.m. at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
KU Gamers and Roleplayers will
KIOSK Literary and Art Magazine
is accepting fiction, poetry, photograph and drawing submissions at 400 Kansas Union. The deadline is Friday.
♫
KU Flying club has rescheduled its Fly-in for Saturday at the Lawrence Airport. Anyone interested in airplanes is welcome.
Fantastic Sam's
the Original Family Haircutters
Spring Specials!
Perm Plus $24.95
reg. $32.50
- Shampoo
Precision Cut $6.95
- Precision Cut
Long hair extra
- Shampoo
- Conditioning
- Rinse
Staffed with professionally trained sylists!
You Don't Have To Pay Alot to Look Good!
23rd & Louisiana
749-1976
Starting in May open Sundays 12-5!
Quick cash.
100
Lawrence Pawn can help
Lawrence Pawn can help you get a quick, short term loan in exchange for your valuables!
Treat Yourself!
There is no easier way to get a loan with **no credit check!**
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts
Lawrence Pawn & Shooter Supply
718 New Hampshire
843-4344
New Directions Series presents the
urban bush women
all searing is general
commission to charge
my phone. call
0132 8932
jawole Willa Jo Zollar Artistic Director
Murphy Hall Box
Office and at Liberty
Hall. Student tickets
available at the SUA
Office, Kansas Union
all seating is general
immissions to charge
on phone, call
This performa
A Mid -Amerca Arts Alliance Program
8:00 p.m.
Wednesday, March 27, 1991
Partially funded by the
Mid-America Arts
Alliance through the
Kansas Arts Commission
and the National
Endowment for the Arts,
additional support
provided by the KU
Student Senate Activity
Fee Swabtout Society,
and the KU Endowment
Association
Liberty Hall
This performance is partially underwritten by
V
special thanks to this year's
Very Important Partners
Hallmark Card, Inc.
Payless ShoeSource
and Sailie Mae.
Step Out For Great Entertainment!
Meet the Author
Professor of Architecture
Harris Stone
will be signing his books at the Mt. Oread Bookshop
Wednesday, March 27, 1991 11 a.m.-1 p.m.
OREAD
BOOKSHOP
"This is a beautiful book, by turns philosophic and practical, and rooted in the problems of living with historical architecture in the present. It should be read by architects, academics—in short, by all people who are interested in architecture."—Nicholas Adams, Professor of Art History, Vassar College
"This intelligent and beautifully written essay is one of the most remarkable texts I have encountered for a long time..." —Kenneth Frampton, Director, Graduate Program of Architecture. Columbia University
also available: Workbook of an Unsuccessful Architect,
Monuments and Main Streets
Hands-on Hands-off
Experiencing History Through Architecture
Harris Stone
BOB SCHUMM
AN INDEPENDENT VOICE AT CITY HALL
We support Bob Schumm for City Commission, for his dedication to diversity and to the quality of life in Lawton.
and to the quality of life in Lawrence.
Linda Bailey
Neva Entrikir
Neva Entrikin
Kelly Havden
Eleanor & George Woodyard
Dr. & Ms. Raymond Schlagerer
Keith & Janet Meyer
John & Shirley Reese
Lance Rake
Bill Tuttle
John Tollefson
Larry & Peggy Johnson Keith & Leanna Mc Reynolds
Ann & Norm Yetman
Keith & Leanna Mc Reynolds Mike & Marlys Harder
Jim & Cara Connelly
A. C.
VOTE BOB SCHUMM APRIL 2nd.
Keeping Lawrence a great place to live!
Ad paid for by committee to elect Bob Schumm, Win Campbell Treasurer.
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday; March 27, 1991
3
A road trip: Fans headed east to Indy
434 win tickets for Final Four
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportwriter
No need to worry. Jayhawk fans ya-
know, represented in Indianapolis this weekday.
Indianapolis, Indiana
March 30-April 1, 1961
FINAL
FOUR
If the emotion students display, when they saw the winners of the Final Four ticket lottery is any indication, the residents of Indiana better be forewarned and North Carolina fans had better be prepared.
FINAL
4
WINNERS
High fives, hugs and hollers were in abundance yesterday at Allen Field House as students located their names on the winners' list, and the excitement probably will not stop until Kansas plays its last game.
Robert O'Neil celebrates with Jennifer Dixon after finding out he is one of 500 students who will not get a ticket to the Final Four.
It might not even end then.
The lawsuit goes on.
Joel Karman, Niles, Ill., junior, threw open the east doors at the field house and ran out screaming
"I'm going." Karman yelled with his hands raised in the air. "I won! I won! I couldn't find my name on the map, kept saying, 'Where are the KS?'
Karman was one of the estimated 434 students selected in the lottery.
Chris McGowan, Omaha, Neb,
senior, said he was more than a little
nervous when he approached the
hallway to a house. He held a
house. His heart dropped when he
spotted the name "Chris McGoran"
on the list. His last name is spelled
with a "w." not an "r." Could it be a
misprint?
in Jacobson/KANSAN
Lance Johnson, Lakewood, Colo., sophomore, said he would not rest until he actually got to Indianapolis and saw the Jawhavas play.
"I could not sleep last night," Johnson said. "I'm so psyched. Now, I'll have problems studying."
Several Kansas fans said they planned to cash in favors owed by friends who live in the Indianapolis had not planned that far ahead.
senior, and Michelle Strader, Girard senior, were excited when they saw their names.
Then, Tubbs looked at Strader and asked. How are we going to find a bridge?
Roommates Sherrie Tubbs, Colby
Tubbs and Strader signed up for tickets on a whim and had not talked to the owner.
they won.
Unfortunately, not all diehard Jayhawk fans received tickets.
Susan Evans, Wichita junior, said that she was disappointed that her name was not on the list but that she could cheer the team on from Lawrence.
Donna Kirkwood, Lawrence resident, was in the ticket office at the field house to confirm students' tickets.
Robyn Hazlett, Topeka sophomore.
still was optimistic about going to the game even though she was not a lottery winner.
"I'm still hoping to get tickets from my parents." Hazlett said.
An alternate list with 100 names was posted beside the winners' list. Kirkwood said people on that list would receive tickets if winning tickets were not confirmed by 4:30 p.m. yesterday.
More Final Four coverage Page 13
Bicycle registration can protect against thievery
By Mike I. Vargas
Kansan staff writer
The increase in bicycle thefts can be attributed to warmer weather, said Sgt. Kew Harmon, Lawrence police representative. More thefts are occurring because more students are bringing their bicycles out of winter storage.
Every spring Lawrence police see more reported bicycle thefts, Harmon said. But there are ways that students can protect their bikes.
For 25 cents students can get a Lawrence bike license that registers the bicycle's serial number, brand, color and model number, he said.
"It's the cheapest form of inşur.
ance for a bike that you can get," Harmon said.
On the average, Lawrence police recover one bicycle every two days, he said. But the majority of the bikes cannot be traced back to the owners because the bikes have never been registered.
Whenever a stolen bicycle is recovered, the evidence officer checks the serial number with the National Crime Information Center, Harmon said. The center is a clearhouse for lessons and reports of stolen property.
KU police Lt. John Mullens said that in 1990, 71 bicycles were reported stolen to KU police, resulting in a loss of more than $24,000.
Students also can take preventive measures by investing about 5 percent to 10 percent of the value of their
'I've seen $700 bikes on campus with a $2 padlock. Those locks can almost be pulled apart.'
— John Mullens KU police lieutenant
bicycle on security, he said.
"I've seen $700 bikes on campus with a $2 padlock." Mullens said. "These locks can almost be pulled apart"
Case-hardened chains and padlocks should be used to deter the thief who uses a concealable bolt cutter, he said.
The theft steals for monetary gain and goes after the most expensive bikes. Mullens said.
Seniors get chance to evaluate KU
Interviews assess general education By Eric Nelson
Kansan staff writer
After receiving grades at KU for the past four years, seniors are now given the opportunity to give KU a grade.
As part of the 1988 Board of Regents mandate, KU faculty members are interviewing about 100 seniors to assess general education. The project, conducted by the office of academic affairs, began in September 2010 and strong Hall and will conclude tomorrow. Students involved receive $25.
The senior interviews are part of three assessments being done by the University of Kansas, said Duncan E. McNerney, chancellor for academic affairs.
The interviews will examine the success of general education and required courses. The other areas
being assessed are individual majors and basic education, such as English and math.
"This is the first time this general educational assessment has been done here," Shulenburger said.
The general education study investigates required programs at KU. These are courses in the biological sciences and natural sciences.
Shulenburger said the project would include 40 faculty volunteers. Each 45-minute interview is conducted by three faculty mem bers.
He said the results would be supplied to the different academic areas for review.
The University has 11 goals with the interviews including appreciation of the arts, capacity for critical thinking, increased capacity for innovative thinking and to gain a greater understanding of the enhanced awareness of differing
values, needs and customs
Deb Teetner, director for institutional research and planning, said that before the interview, students were asked to fill out a survey, a fourth component of the study. The survey is a part of a larger project designed to explain the goals of KU are and how well they are be are met.
The office of institutional research and planning is helping academic affairs with the project, she said.
Teeter said student turnout had been excellent with only one student missing an appointment Monday. He said the shift was in part to the financial incentive.
Kimberly Carballeira, Prairie Village senior, said the incentive was helpful in getting her to participate.
"But I was also interested to see what it was all about," she said. "I would have come if I wouldn't have been paid, but it helps."
D. W. B.
Yockey ends reserve work, begins journey back to KU
KANSAN File photo
By Amy Francis
Kansan staff writer
After almost two months of being away from home and work, Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, is coming home.
Yockey, a member of the U.S. Air Force Reserves, left Feb. 2 to report for active duty at Travis Air Force Base in northern California.
"I're really anxious to get home." Yockey
really I really miss my family. I miss my job at
Watson.
"It will be interesting to get back to plan for the summer and fall."
Jim Strobl, director of Watkins, said. "We
are very, very delighted to get him back."
Yockey said he planned to start his 1,560-mile drive back to Lawrence as soon as he was released from active duty at 3 p.m. today.
Strobil said Yockey called him at 8:45 a.m. yesterday to say he would be leaving California.
"I'm going to drink a lot of coffee and
hopefully stay awake," she said, jokingly.
He said that his drive would be made longer by the lack of radio reception in some areas but that he would listen to his cassette tape at home. He plans to be back in Lawrence by Sunday.
Although Yockey said he was eager to return to Lawrence, he said things have not been bad at Travis, where he worked in an intensive care unit.
"I've had a great time," he said. "I tell you, mail was the most incredible highlight of my life."
Strobl said Yokeley would be back to work at Watkins as early as Monday or Tuesday
Although it was not a highlight for him to have his birthday, Feb. 27, in California, he said he was excited when he received birthday cards and letters.
Letters about events at Watkins also were sent, be said.
"It sounds like things have been going
He also has been watching the Jayhawk with team and said he thought the team would win.
Randy Rock began work Feb. 11 to help help the gap left by Yockey's departure. Strobi said Rock would continue to work at Watkins until mid-summer.
Strobl said the decision whether to keep Rock would be made in the summer.
Having Rock at Watkins also will help when Yockey attends an educational convention the second week in April. The convention will help Yockey meet the 150 required hours of continuing education that are needed every three years for physicians, Strobl said.
pretty well." he said.
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Wednesday, March 27, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Lebanese hostages
U.S. should demand return of Western hostages in Lebanon; premier wants release of prisoners
Today there is a good chance that one of many Western hostages in Lebanon is sitting in a hollow, isolated cell clinging to thoughts of family or friends as the only means of keeping some kind of sanity.
Today there is also a good chance that thoughts of the prisoner will not cross the minds of many people living in the Western world.
Unlike the prisoners of war who were captured and released in the Persian Gulf War, the hostages in Lebanon are not prisoners of a formal war. Rather, they are victims of a cold war between the Western world and Middle East nations.
Omar Karami, the premier of Lebanon, recently expressed his interest in releasing six U.S. citizens, three Britons, two Germans and one Italian held in the country. On Sunday, a Beirut daily newspaper printed that the premier wanted the release of the 12 prisoners to be on the front burner for the Lebanese government.
rresident Bush should feel just as obligated to the hostages in Lebanon as he did to the prisoners of war in Iraq. If the U.S. POW's had not yet been released by Saddam Hussein's forces, one only can wonder what kind of pressure U. citizens would be putting on the government to demand their release. It is probably safe to assume the
The Boy Who Cried Wolf-1991
Hostage Release!!
FILMMAN
universities of japan
outry of U.S. citizens would keep Bush awake at night.
U. S. citizens should pressure Bush to work for the release of the Western hostages in Lebanon. People are people, and the hostages in Lebanon should not be forgotten just because they are not victims of a romanticized war.
At no other time in President Bush's political career has his diplomatic credibility been so high. Bush should capitalize on the Kuwaiti crisis and work with the Lebanese government to free the hostages.
Carol Krekeler for the editorial board
Alcohol sales
Kansans should be able to buy liquor on Sundays
A new bill going before the Legislature packs about as much punch as a shot of mineral water.
The bill would allow non-alcoholic beer or "near beer" to be sold in grocery and convenience stores on Sundays. The non-alcoholic beer actually contains alcohol, though it is less than 0.5 percent. It is considered a non-alcoholic beverage by federal law.
There is no reason to allow this kind of beer to be sold on Sundays while continuing to ban the sale of beer that contains 3.2 or greater percent alcohol. Cereal malt beverage is cereal malt beverage no matter what percentage of alcohol it contains.
If the proponents of the bill were interested
in the revenue aspects of this bill, then 3.2 and 5 percent beer should have been included.
This may be the first step toward liquor retailers someday being able to sell all forms of alchohol beverages on Sundays.
Many states allow the sale of alcoholic beverages on Sunday.
The Kansan editorial board members are Juli Watkins, Stacy Smith, Brent Maycock, Amy Zamierowski, Melanie Botts, Tiffany Harness, Rod Griffin, Chris Siron, Rich Cornell, Melanie Matthes, Clare McGinn, Elicia Hill, Jennifer Schutz, Debby Myers and Carol Krekeeler.
Other businesses are able to sell their wares Sundays, therefore liquor retailers should have the same opportunity to sell theirs. If the sale of alcohol conflicts with some people's religious principles, then those people don't have to buy alcohol. Just give those who would like to sample the spirits on Sunday the right to do so.
Brent Maycock for the editorial board
HURRY UP! IT'LL TAKE HOURS UNTIL WE GET A BUZZ FROM THIS STUFF.
LET'S JUST GET A COUPLE BOTTLES OF VANILLA EXTRACT
NEAR BEER
PARTIAL BEER
CLOSE BUT NO OGNA BEER
AL MOST BEER
NOT QUITE BEER
NO REAL BEER SALES ON SUNDAY
MICHAUD © 1991
Memorabilia yields big profits
Jeff Dolezal strained to see the truck through the cloud of dust it created five miles away.
Even before it arrived, the 11-year-old slammed his money down on the counter of his father's drugstore last week's shipment of baseball cards.
Less than a dollar would buy him more than just cardboard cards. It would bring him closer to his heroes and would allow him to share in their dreams.
Baseball cards and autographs were especially cherished mementos in Dolezla's small, western Kansas town. Dadium was hundreds of miles away.
Today, Dolezel owns a baseball card and nostalgia shop on 23rd Street and still cogently awards oppor-tions to gain new cards or autographs.
But this time it's for profit.
It is no longer a child's bobby when a 13-year-old boy is taken to court in Illinois because he accidently bought a car with his parents' money of $1,200 because of a clerk's error.
The once innocent hobby of collecting photographs and signatures, which would later be treasured and saved in scrapbooks, has become big business. Such things now passed the flicker of the past as keepsakes but as investments.
Rob
Wheat
* Guest columnist
It's no longer out of love for a player that kids demand that the star sign dozens of items in much the same way that they were designed for the floor of the stock market.
A football autographed by Bo Jackson can be bought only for about $150. But last week, basketball star Wren Grettek had to pay almost half a million dollars for the rare Honus Wagner base ball card.
It's no longer in pursuit of a dream when a few professional autograph dealers recruit kids to obtain signatures for them, arming the children with lies about sick brothers they have in the hospital.
There are even new rules to the collecting game: Don't have the player sign it specifically to you, but don't and don't let too many people touch it.
Why? You'll destroy the card's resale value.
Better save the autograph in a safety deposit box at your local bank
How much would you pay for an autograph? How about your life?
so you can exchange it later for a new car or a college education.
Last summer, a magazine article reported, Oakland's *a* star *Jose Canseco* was signing autographs outside of Arlington Stadium when a man in a white shirt was railing by crazed fans hoping to a glimpse of the famous hitter.
The boy began to turn blue before a few sportswriters finally noticed and hurriedly forced the crowd back.
Unfortunately, it now seems that athletes are getting caught up in this perverted monopoly game, charging fans at card shows anywhere from $5 to $10 to sign a hat, poster or baseball card.
Part of the reason they do this is to discourage the few fanatics who pester them at hotel lobies at 3 a.m. or bother them at their homes, but this is not the case for former Cincinnati Reds star Pete Rose.
In his first card show since he was released from prison, Rose happily signed everything put in front of him three hours = for $20 autograp
Everthing, that is, except for base ball bats. They cost $50.
Rob Wheat is an Overland Park senior majoring in journalism.
War spirit doesn't dispel problems at home
Since the beginning of Operation Desert Storm in January, President Bush's overall popularity rating has soared. The latest results show that his popularity is still in the mid-80 percent range and that his approval rating on foreign policy issues is above 90 percent.
However, as people realize we are entering a steep economic recession, Bush's popularity in domestic and especially in economic issues has declined. The approval rating for his economic policy now stands at 42 percent.
Have these problems been noticed in the past? Yes. The budget was in trouble long before Desert Storm occurred. We've had a serious trade deficit for years. Unemployment was rising before the 2nd Airborne flew
Why the sudden split opinion about Bush? It's probably because people are no longer swept up in the storm of patriotism that co-existed with Operation Desert Shield and Operation Desert Storm. Now that the euphoria of war has faded, a lot of people are noticing other problems that, strangely enough, were there long before Saddam Hussein sent his troops into Kuwait.
to Saudi Arabia.
The sad truth is that the problems we face now are the same ones we faced when George Bush came into office, when Saddam invaded Kuwait and when allied forces began Desert Storm attacks. Only in Iraq, from its war victory high, we find that these problems have been magnified.
Congress was glad to support this war, but now it is bickering about how to pay for it. There is even disagreement about where in the budget the cost should be placed. And almost no one in Congress wants to the one to cut financing for the important program to pay for the war.
The main culprit for the blooming of old problems stems from the almost tunnel-vision concern for the Persian Gulf War. The main person
behind this move is George Bush. Was he trying to rally U.S. support for our troops and for his New World Order? Certainly. After all, that's one of his main concerns. Is Bush trying to dispel the wimp image? Maybe. That's one problem that people probably never will know. Did Bush use this crisis to direct the public's attention away from such domestic concerns as inflation, unemployment and the federal deficit? I don't know, but I can't help noticing the coincidence.
Some historians have said former President Franklin Roosevelt took advantage of, or even encouraged, United States involvement in World War II as a means of trying to end the last effects of the Great Depression on the U.S. economy. Many wars around the world have occurred at times when governments were having economic trouble. These wars supposedly get economies moving again. But that has yet to happen this time.
One other interesting point is Bush's popularity. Strong when he first entered office, it had been declining steadily until last August.
'The sad truth is that the problems we face now are the same ones we faced when George Bush came into office,'
It increased when our first troops went over to the Gulf but started dropping again. Then, the day after allied troops began the war, Bush's popularity hit an all-time high. Is this the reason we went to war? Not officially, but the coincidence shouldn't be overlooked.
Waving flags and Desert Storm rhetoric will not solve the savings red ribbons cannot finance the budget or mangle up the trade deficits.
Patrick Brungardt is a Leavenworth senior majoring in political science.
One thing is certain, though. As the euphoria of victory wears off, the public is beginning to realize just how many problems we have and how they have increased during the past few months.
Other Voices
Minorities increase
The figures for the 1990 census are now out, and they have many observers buzzing about the size of their country in the nation's ethnic makeup.
Non-Hispanic whites continue to be the predominant group, but whereas they were 80 percent of the population 10 years ago, they are now 75 percent. Minorities increased their share from 20 percent to 25 percent, primarily because of shifting immigration patterns. African-Americans experienced relatively modest growth; but with 12 percent of the population, they remain the largest minority group. However, Hispanics are catching up rapidly, now constituting 9 percent of the decade (a doubling) was among Asians, who are now 3 percent of the population. And American Indians are nearly 1 percent.
From the Providence (R.I.) Sunday Journal
We are concerned that civil wars and intervention by neighboring countries may divide Iraq and turn it into another Lebanon. If civil wars expand, it is possible that the country may be divided in two parts. This part will be ruled by the Kurds, the middle part by the Hussein administration and the southern part by the Shites.
It's up to the Iraqi people to decide how they will post-Hussein Iraq politics. The internal disturbances may be the labor pains needed to create a new system. However, turning Iraq into another Lebanon must be avoided by all means. Such a situation will not only expose Iraq to the danger of not being able to maintain its territory, but it will also add a new factor of instability to the balance of power in the area.
From the Asahi Shimbun, Tokyo.
Plea for unity in Iraq
CHRIS SIRON
Editor
RICH CORNELL
TOM EBLEN
KANSAN STAFF
MARIS SIRON
Editor
HITH CORNELL
Imaging editor
JEANNE HINES
General manager, news adviser
AUDRA LANGFORD
Business manager
MINDI LUND
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Editors
Ms. Melanie Matthes
Tiffany Harmess
Holly M. Neuman
Jennifer Reynolds,
Pam Solner
Ann Sommerlath
Kaite Stader
Marketing director
Gail Einbinder
Creative director
Christy Hahs
Classified manager
Kim Crowder
Business staff
Campus sales mgr...Sophie Wehbe
Regional sales mgr...Carmen Dresch
National sales mgr...Jennifer Claxton
Co-op sales mgr...Chrisine Musser
Production mgrs..Rich Harshbarger
In "OMNI" it
NOTES THAT
INTERCOURSE FOR
CHIMPANZEES
LASTS ONLY
THREE SECONDS.
Every Boom-
Three Seconds.
Wow! Boom
Warren Deatty
Action.
No. It Only-
Boom
It only lasts
Three seconds.
BOOM
NOT EVERY
THREE SEC
BOOM
STOP IT.
It should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's
name, address and telephone number. Writers affiliated with the University of Kansas
include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be
applied.
Kansans reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be
borrowed to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Loco Locals
IN 'OMNI' IT
NOTES THAT
INTERCOURSE FOR
CHIMPANZEES
LASTS ONLY
THREE SECONDS.
DOOM
WHAT?
...EVERY-BOOM-
THREE SECONDS.
WOW!...BOOM
WARRENDEATTY
ACTION.
NO.ITONLY-
BOOM
...EVERY- BOOM-
THREE SECONDS.
WOW!...BOOM
WARREN DEATTY
ACTION.
NO. IT ONLY-
BOOM
IT ONLY LASTS
THREE SECONDS
BOOM
NOT EVERY
THREE SEC-
BOOM
STOP IT.
MICHAELS COP
3/27
IT ONLY LASTS
THREE SECONDS
DOOM
NOT EVERY
THREE SEC
DOOM
STOP IT.
by Tom Michaud
BOOM BOOM
BOOOOOM
BADA BOOM...
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 27, 1991
5
Local briefs
New members elected to three-year positions
New members to both the Faculty council and Athletic Commission (reserve)
The votes were tallied Saturday with 411 ballots counted for the Faculty Council election and 378 ballots for the Athletic Committee election. The representatives will serve three-year terms.
The new members of the Faculty Council are: Carl Burkhead, engineering; Alice Downs, fine arts; Ted Frederickson, journalism; Robert Friauf, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences; Paul Friedman, college; Rachel Miller, libraries; Lynn Nelson, college; Harold Orel, college; Alfred Rodriguez, education; Daniel Spencer, business; Ellen Sward, law; William Tuttle, college; and Bedru Yimer, engineering.
The new members of the Athletic Committee are: Sharon Bass, journalism; and Renate Mai-Dalton, business.
KU professor is finalist for Marshall presidency
A KU distinguished professor has been named a finalist for the position of president at Marshall University in Huntington, W.Va.
H. George Frederickson, Edwin O. Stene distinguished professor of public administration, will be one of four to five candidates invited back for official campus interviews, said C.T. Mitchell, director of University Relations at Marshall and search committee member.
He said the next phase of the process would take place in early to mid-2015.
A couple of candidates from the original eight finalists have withdrawn from the race and the official announcement of final candidates has not been made yet, Mitchell said. The committee is sure of two of the final candidates, but still is debating on who the other finalists should be.
"I can assure you Dr. Frederickson will be among them," he said.
"He made an extremely good impression here."
After official campus interviews, the committee will then recommend about three candidates to the State Department, which will make the final decision.
"I'm sure our search committee will be in a position before May to make a recommendation to our Board of Trustees." Mitchell said.
Frederickson was unavailable for comment.
From staff reports
City adopts policies on ethics and drugs
By Vanessa Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
In one of its last meetings before the election of a new commission, the Lawrence City Commission last night adopted two major policies affecting city employees and elected officials.
The commission unanimously approved a revised city drug and alcohol policy and adopted a resolution establishing a city ethics policy
- two issues the commission had been working on for more than a year.
"This is a refinement of all of our discussions that we have had in the last year," said Commissioner Bob Walters of the ethics resolution.
The resolution, which includes recommendations from various commissioners and board members, prohibits elected and appointed officials from participating in an action where they may receive a direct financial gain.
Although the commission last month stopped short of turning the policy into law, it also voted unanimously to draft an ordinance to remove commissioners and board members from office if they violated the resolution.
Dave Corliss, city management analyst who drafted the resolution, suggested that the commission should delay a year to see if it met the city's needs.
"Ethics is not something you pass along in a resolution," he said. "It's an issue that you will constantly be revisiting."
The commission also voted to distribute a copy of the ethics policy and state statutes regarding ethics to all commissioners, advisory-board members and newly appointed officials.
In other business, the commission approved and adopted revisions to the city's drug and alcohol policy. The revisions, recommended by a mayor's task force on substance abuse, added several stringencies.
The primary revisions included screening all city employees instead of just public safety employees for substance use.
Senate votes to deny funding for Helping Hands Daycare
By Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
It appears that Helping Hands Daycare will not receive Student Senate financing for next year, after an attempt to overturn a previous ruling failed in the Senate finance committee last night.
John Robertson, graduate senator, spoke to the committee on Helping Hands' behalf. In a finance committee meeting in February, Helping Hands was ruled out of order because it was a practical duplication of the services provided by Hilltop Childcare.
Senate allocates money to Hilltop, and Senate rules and regulations prohibit two organizations that prosecute crimes from receiving money from Senate.
"Obviously, we're suggesting that it's not a duplication of services," Robertson said.
Carl Damon, Senate treasurer,
said Helping Hands members had
met with him and other Senate
members last week. The Helping Hands
supporters were told that they would
have to show that they were making
the center as efficient as possible.
The information the group provided to the finance committee did not contain this information, Damon said.
"I think that each of you needs to realize that there is a real need for them."
Greg Hughes, finance committee member, said the center provided a service to a limited number of students.
Other supporters of Helping Hands were present at the meeting, Belinda Cook, off-campus senator, said the group whether the center was a duplication.
"I think this (Helping Hands) is a knee-jerk solution to the problem," he said.
The center currently has financing to continue operating for the rest of the semester. It requested $19,200 and $370,000 in night灯光 lowered that request to $10,788
In other action, the committee finished discussion on the student organizations' budgets for next year. If it votes today as committee members discussed, the total organization budget for next year will be $70,871.
Racin'to Indy
IN THE KANSAS 24
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A Series of Public Service Announcements to Promote Citizens' Participation in Their Government.
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Stalls, stores short on TP after victory
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Whenever the Kansas basketball team wins, toilet paper seems to disappear from stalls and stores in Lawrence.
Kansan staff writer
Dennis Constance, Oliver Hall custodial supervisor, said that when the Jayhawks won important games, such as the game against Arkansas on Saturday to gain a spot in the Final Four, toilet paper was taken from the residence hall's restrooms and used during celebrations on campus.
"Based on past experience, I will be more prepared again if this happens."
Alan Zarley, Oliver custodian who worked after the celebration last week, said 64 rolls of toilet paper were taken from the hall.
Matt Harrah, Kansas City, Mo. freshman, said that immediately after KU won, all the toilet paper on his desk was of Joseph P. Pearson Hall was gone.
"Most of the guys went on a ram-paper," he said. "All the toilet paper canisters were broken open and every single roll was taken.
"The whole first floor of the hall was TPed," Harrah said. "And we took the leftover rolls to the rally and drove it up to a pretty wild crowd on first floor."
Dave Platt, director of JRP, said this was the first time the hall had been TPed in the year he had been there.
Platt said he would not be surprised if more rolls disappeared if KU won in the Final Four.
Terry McWilliams, store director of Checkers Foods, 2300 Louisiana ST, said he was sure his store had a big customer base, but it's strung around campus Saturday.
"Some of our workers who are students said they saw toilet paper that was sold at our store," he said. "We do a lot of student business in toilet paper."
Josie Lewis, a check-out clerk at Checkers who worked from noon to 8 p. Saturday, said students bought lots of alcohol and toilet paper.
"People better stash the toilet
four," she said again in the Finne
"四," she said.
Students and toilet paper fill a tree in front of Wesco Hall during a celebration after Kansas defeated Arkansas 93-81.
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Nation/World
7
Nation/World briefs Seoul, South Korea
Turnout for general election low
A record low number of voters turned out yesterday for the first local elections held in South Korea in 30 years. Officials blamed apathy and a campaign marred by scandal.
President Roh Tae-woo said the election had been the fairest in the nation's 42-year history and called it a sign that democratic reform, begun when he took office in 1988, was taking
Yet Rob himself did not vote. The election in his home district was uncontested due to a lack of candidates, another example of general apathy.
Preliminary results showed 52.6 percent of the 24 million vote voters cast ballots. Final tally is
South Korea has not had local elections since the military government in power abolished the ruling party.
Bamako. Mali
Military dictator is overthrown
Soldiers overthrew Mali's military dictator yesterday after days of rioting and promised to replace Gen. Moussa Traore's "bloodthirsty and corrupt regime" with a multiparty democracy.
At least 59 people were reported killed in violence after the overnight coup, including two top Traitor supporters who were burned to death and another who landed West African nation for 23 years.
"The army will no longer meddle in politics." The players wore Toumari. Toumer pledged in a radio broadcast:
Traore's whereabouts were not known, though state radio said he was under arrest. Military sources said Traore was imprisoned with his family.
Washington
The Bush administration said yesterday that the Persian Gulf War would cost far more than the $4.5 billion billed by allies, denying that United States might make a profit from the conflict
U.S. will not profit from war
White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater said the cost would be greater than the contributions by a considerable amount, but the cost of staffing is high. There are numbers all over the place," he said.
President Bush said, "I'm afraid it's not going to be any cheaper . . . than original estimates," though he did not specify which projection he had in mind.
Cosmanauts low on food, water Two cosmanauts running low on food and water must run their dirt yesterday to investigate equipment problems that have kept them from getting provisions.
Moscow
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 27, 1991
Viktor Afanasyev and Musa Manarov are not in immediate danger but will have to dip into emergency food and water rations next week unless an unmanned cargo ship carrying the supplies can dock with the Mir, said Anatoly Yeromenko, a representative for the Soviet Mission Control Center. The cargo ship has failed twice to dock.
The equipment failure is the latest in a series of problems plaguing the Soviet manned space program, which for decades has been a source of national pride. For the past 24 years, missions have suffered from docking equipment malfunctions, human error and budget cuts.
From The Associated Press
Airplane carrying 129 hijacked by Pakistanis
The Associated Press
SINGAPORE — Four Pakistani hijacked a Singapore Airlines jet carrying 129 people yesterday and demanded the release of prisoners in their custody. The prime Minister Prime Minister Bruniz Khurat, police said.
Police said the 118 passengers and 11 crew members aboard the airbus A310 were safe more than six hours after it landed at Changi International Airport at 10:15 p.m. en route from Malayay.
A government representative said two crew members suffered minor injuries but he refused to elaborate.
Police sources said the hijackers also demanded enough fuel to fly to Australia and demanded that the Pakistani ambassador come to the airport for talks. The hijackers said they would release everyone on board if the ambassador met their demands, sources said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Malaysian police in Kuala Lumpur, the capital
of Malaysia, arrested a man on charges of being
beef or chicken; they identified the beef or
chicken as being used to identify the beef.
Officials at the U.S. Embassy in Kuala Lumpur said they were checking to determine if Americans were on the plane.
An intuitives spoke on condition of anonymity. Police in both countries said Flight SQ171 had left Singapore earlier than 40-minute time to Singapore. There is a lot of shuttle traffic between the Southeast Asian nations.
All officials spoke on condition of anonymity.
About five hours after the plane landed, police in
Singapore issued a statement that said, "The four Pakistani hijackers who took control of SQ17 have demanded the release of a number of persons said to be detained in Pakistan. The hijackers, who turn to members of the Pakistan People's Party, demanded to see the Pakistan ambassador."
Asif Ali Zardari, husband of Bhutto, was among the people they wanted freed, the statement said.
Zardari and other members of Bhutto's leftist party face trial on charges that they were involved in the Aug. 22 killings of 28 supporters of a rival party.
Zardari, 38, has been jailed since October, charged in the kidnapping and extortion of a Pakistan national British citizen who wanted to set up a financial institution. He was charged with murder in February.
Bhutto has maintained her husband's innocence, saving he is being used to punish her.
The 37-year-old former prime minister was dismissed by President Ghulam Ishqa Khan in August on charges of corruption, political inpti-
tion and abuse of power. She was later defeated at the polls.
Her party contends that hundreds of supporters have been arrested since her 20-month-old governors' ban.
Malaysian police expressed surprise at how the hijackers could be armed because they said security at the airport in their country had been breached January, when the Persian Gulf War started.
Countries plan war's end
Security Council to vote on formalizing cease-fire The Associated Press
UNITED NATIONS — The United States and the four other Security Council members with veto power reached broad agreement yesterday on a plan to strengthen and the Persian Gulf War. Western diploms said.
The resolution demands the destruction of Iraq's chemical, biological and nuclear arms under U.N. supervision and would maintain the U.N. trade embargo on conventional arms purchases by IRAQ. Conventional arms purchases could be permitted only on the basis of genuine need, diplomats said.
The five permanent council members — the United States, Britain, China, France and the Soviet Union — are expected to meet again today to put the finishing touches on the draft resolution.
It could be presented to the other 10 Security Council members today or tomorrow for discussion. A vote could occur this weekend but was considered more likely next week.
The draft resolution would clear the way to convert the current cease-fire into a formal end to hostilities, after which foreign troops would withhold supplies. U.N. sation—national economic embargo would be lifted.
Diplomats said there was still some disagreement regarding a provision that would call on the Security Council to approve and guarantee the 1983 agreement between Kuwait and Iraq as sought by Kuwait.
Broad agreement was reached on the resolution after the Soviet Union卸掉了 its objections to provisions including the destruction of chemical and other weapons, duiomats said.
China's exact position was not known, but Western diplomats said the Beijing government was not expected to cast a veto and might abstain. China abstained from the Nov. 29 resolution authorizing military force to expel Iraq from Kuwait.
The Soviets still oppose some provisions, including a plan to attach a percentage of Iraq's future oil revenues and designate them to a U.N. fund to pay compensation to Kuwait and other nations, the diplomats said.
China reportedly sought linkage between destruction of Iraq's chemical and unconventional arms and the destruction of those arms in other countries in the region.
The proposal to call on all states to recognize the 1963 boundary between Kuwait and Iraq would be unprecedented in the history of the Security Council, as its members expressed objections. Western diplomats said
They said the council action could have implications for other nations with boundary disputes.
U. N. military observers would guarantee the border, diplomats said.
The resolution does not call for a permanent cease-fire, but it sets the conditions Iraq must meet before a permanent end to hostilities can be achieved.
It demands that Iraq fulfill all previous U.N. resolutions, including provisions requiring it to return all Kuwaiti captives and prisoners of war as well as gold, currency, art works, aircraft and other property seized during the occupation of Kuwait.
Non-aligned nations were working on a draft resolution that would call for lifting all economic sanctions.
The council already has lifted restrictions on food shipments and promised to view liberally the use of electrical generating equipment, water purification equipment and gear needed to improve health conditions in Iraq.
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Tickets: AVAILABLE ON WESCOE AND AT THE SUA BOX OFFICE
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10
Careless behavior helps AIDS spread
Kansan staff writer
By Benjamin W. Allen
Even though many college students know about AIDS and how to prevent it, few actually take necessary precautions, a national authority on HIV infection said last night.
Richard Keeling, chairperson of the American College Health Association's Task Force on HIV Infection, spoke to more than 150 people last night in the ballroom of the Kansas Union.
He said self-esteem and communication skills in intimate situations were necessary to change students' sexual behavior.
His main point was to go beyond merely educating students about the use of condoms to a more fundamental solution: modifying sexual behavior.
"We need students to be able to say, 'My life, my health, my future are more important than what will happen in the next 15 minutes,' " he said.
His speech mapped the progress of his ADHD and engaged in conversations toward the disease.
He said that the idea that the disease was an urgent and immediate crisis had largely passed and that he believed it would be a corrierment was just around the corner.
Although he said AIDS now was perceived as a manageable chronic disease, he said that about 180,000 people now had AIDS and that by the end of the decade 1 million people
Keeling said 40 to 50 people now at the University of Kansas probably could not wait for a vaccine.
would be infected with HIV.
He said one of the reasons students did not take precautions was that they did not think they were in a high-risk group.
"We are so good at stereotyping groups at risk, we think we can't get it since we're not part of that group." he said.
Keeling used a slide show to display advertisements indicative of how sex and alcohol often are linked and how the messages the ads sent were ones of promiscuity without consequence.
He said that the drive to be accepted in society pushed students to conform to the messages they were receiving from advertisements and popular culture.
"Did you ever hear of Tom Cruise stopping and debating about safe sex with his potential sex partner?" he said.
Patrick Dilley, Oklahoma City, Okla., graduate student and a member of the HIV-STD Education Committee, said the speech matched the committee's peer education program, which is designed to educate students so they will change their sexual behavior.
"It was a good lecture because the educators learned as much as students about what was the real problem; behavior," Dilley said.
VENUS ENU
Richard Keeling discusses how ads affect attitudes about AIDS.
Michelle L. MyersiKANSAN
Editor in chief.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesdav. March 27. 1991
9
Prof studies German program
By Sarah Davis
Kansan staff writer
A questionnaire designed to help students achieve better results in first-year German courses has been devised by Henry Fullenwider, associate professor of German, and a colleague in Helsinki, Finland.
"Our wish is that every student entering the University would have some foreign language background," said Fullenwider, who administered the course to all KU students enrolled in German 104 at the end of last semester.
His colleague, Anu Virkkuun,
director of the language center at the
University of Helsinki, gave the Finnish-version of the survey to students in Helsinki but has not yet tabulated the results.
Results: Placement could be better
Fullenwider said his results showed that the placement system at KKM would be helpful.
"The assumption is that two years of high school German ought to be equivalent to college German," he said. "A great number of KU students are false beginners. The great majority of them have had German
in the classroom before.
"We were completely certain that the background of these students would vary."
The survey asks students open-ended questions, such as why they are studying German and what they taught and easy in the German language.
"The feedback is much more difficult to analyze because obviously you get a large range of responses," Fullenwider said. "I was very satisfied with the responses. The students
really telling me what they believe
Tom Adams, Warrensburg, mo.
sophomore, was one of the students
in German 104 last semester who
wrote a poem about their mairie
might help immerse the course.
"It can't hurt," he said. "Student input would do some good."
Fullenwider he found that many students already had known the German language when they came to KU, and students were unsophisticated about English and German grammar.
Parking may make Lied events cost more
By Katie Chipman
Kansan staff writer
Don Robertson, parking board chairperson, said the extra money was needed for maintaining the center's parking lot.
When the Lied Center is completed in 1993, students can expect some training.
"We have to cover maintenance costs," he said. "The lines must be painted, and the snow has to be scraped off in the winter."
But Jacqueline Davis, director of
the center, said not all concerts would have the additional cost.
Events in the Concert Series and events that KU students are involved in will not be affected, she said.
"Nop-University events that are on a large scale will have the additional fee," she said.
Donna Hultine, assistant director of parking, said the University currently charged patrons of certain events for parking.
"We pre-empt certain lots for events, like basketball," she said.
Hutline told the charge for events parking was $2 per vehicle, and the fee for events at the center probably would be the same.
"We charge the group that sponsored the event."
Hultine said no parking charge was applied to events at Hoch Auditorium because of problems with student parking.
"The problem with that is that Hoch is in the academic core and if we pre-empotted the lots around that area, it would make parking for
students difficult." she said.
Robertson said that when the center was built, its parking would be consistent with that on the rest of the campus.
"Until this year, all the lots on West Campus were yellow. Now there will be a mix of zones," he said.
Robertson said that in addition to blue-, red- and yellow-permit parking zones, there also would be meters on the sidewalk or a park when picking up concert tickets.
[The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences (CLAS) College Assembly, the governing body that determines CLAS academic policy, has over 100 vacant seats reserved for undergraduate student representatives. If the number of nominees is less than or equal to the number of vacancies, all nominees become representatives through appointment . All CLAS undergraduates are encouraged to become a part of the decision-making process.
COLLEGE ASSEMBLY ELECTION
NOMINATION FORMS:
NOMINATION FILING DEADLINE:
Friday, April 5th, at 5:00 p.m.
Available at the Undergraduate Services Office 106 Strong Hall
ELECTION DATES:
April 10th & 11th
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THE UNIVERSITY OF KANATIA
"the earth is not fragile"
the Environmental Studies Program, SUA Forums,
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both lectures free and open to the public
10
wednesdav March 27,1991 / University Daily Kansan
'Severe storms team' savors rough weather
By Lara Gold
Kansan staff writer
Joseph Heim wanted tornadoes to come through Lawrence last night.
"I've never seen a tornado before," said Heim, Clarence, N.Y., graduate student. "It's almost like a meteorologist's high."
Heim is one of about 20 meteorology students in the Severe Storms Chase Team, a club that goes out in the field and documents severe weather conditions.
"I have always loved the weather since I was a little kid," he said. "I'm looking forward to it."
a tornado happens when a warm front meets a cold front and they begin swirling around each other. The two forces push against each other and cause the funnel-shaped downward extension.
Rodney Price, coordinator for the chase team, said the group was thrilled about the change in weather yesterday afternoon.
"Two tornado watches in our area. We are all fired up." he said.
The group breaks up into teams, videotapes and photographs weather changes and documents the times the changes occurred, Price said.
"We take notes and observe thunderstorm development to know what to look for when forecasting," he said.
But, more importantly, he loves being outside during severe weather conditions.
"There is a thrill of being out there when a hailstorm comes through," he said.
Price said that everyone on the team had been looking forward to spring because of tornado season.
Matt Foster, president of the group, said the combination of water and heat turning into vast amounts of energy was phenomenal.
"This is Mother Nature at her best," he said.
Tornadoes touch ground in Kansas
The Associated Press
HUTCHNSON, Kan. - Multiple tornadoes were reported on the ground in Reno County between Hutchinson and Nickerson early yesterday evening, including one that was estimated to be a half-mile wide.
The National Weather Service reported a tornado on the ground
three miles west of Abbyville, southwest of Hutchinson.
One house was reported destroyed in Abbeyville, and five people were reported injured. One home was destroyed in Willowbrook. None of the injuries were reported to be serious.
THE RELIEF
Larry Walburn, sales manager of Jim Clark Motors, 2121 W. 29th Terrace, examines hail damage to a 1991 Chrysler LeBaron. Walburn said yesterday's hailstorm would substantially reduce the market value of most of his inventory of cars.
Storm's damage
Neighbors' efforts stop fire caused by lightning bolt Kansan staff report
Two Lawrence men extinguished a fire in their neighbor's garage after a lightning bolt pierced a hole in the roof. Though the root about 5.p.m. yesterday
Mark Riley, 1618 Northwood Drive,
said he was at home when he saw fire
through his neighbor's garage windows
dows after lightning hit the roof.
Riley said he and another neighbor, Randall Conrad, 1624 Northwood Drive, fought the fire with a garden knife. The fire was out five minutes before the fire was out.
A Lawrence fire truck arrived just afterward. Riley said.
Capt. Don Knight of the Lawrence Fire Department said the lightning broke a rafter apart and caught some cardboard boxes on fire.
The house at 1619 Northwood Drive suffered some minor water damage because the outside water spilled into the fire was broken, Knight said.
Jessica Pennewell, owner of the house, said she was driving home from work when she saw the fire truck in front of her house.
Conrad said he was looking at hail damage to his car when he saw a red and orange explosion above the roof, followed by a load boom.
Karen Hickey, 1625 Northwood Drive, said she was watching television when the lightning struck next door and knocked her off her couch.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 27, 1991
11
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Wednesday, March 27, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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Professor's book examines experiences of visionaries
By Sarah Davis
Kansan staff writer
In her forthecoming book, "Encou-
nering Mary," Sandra Zimdars-
Swartz, associate professor of religious
studies, provides insight into the
experiences and interpretations of
visionaries who claim to have been
visited by apparitions of the Virgin
Mary.
Zimdzars-Swartz, currently the only person at the University of Kansas specializing in appariations, has been researching the subject since 1982.
"I've always been interested in theories of history," she said. "And I really got interested in appariums of Lourdes (France) for a conference."
Her book, due out the first week of May, is split into two parts. First, she examines the religious experiences of the visionaries and then looks at the experiences of those who have the experience by others involved, such as the community members.
"I look at the process from going from personal religious experience to theology and how that process works," she said.
"I look at how the different groups interact with the visionaries. There's a variety of communities who are interested in the visionary experience, and that what's I try to examine in the book."
Zimdars-Swartz investigated six main regions around the world where
'Mostly people feel like they've gotten special favors, like they've gotten healed.'
-Sandra Zimdars-Swartz associate professor of religious stud-
people have been involved in visionary experiences from the mid-19th century to the present: Lourdes and La Salette in France; Fatima, Portugal; San Damiano, Italy; Garabanova, and Medjugorje, Yugoslavia.
In these areas, people or visionaries have received messages, usually positive ones, from the Virgin Mary.
A 1988 case in Lubbock, Texas, that Zimdars-Swartz discusses in her book, involved a rossy group that received a message saying that the Virgin Mary would perform a miracle Aug. 15 that year.
On that day, people saw sun miracles, such as the sun as a holy communion and Jesus and Mary in the clouds.
Zindars-Swartz, along with her husband, traveled to Texas, as well as many other major sites in the country. She had never seen any apparitions.
Rather, she said, she was interested in others' experiences.
"The interesting thing is, do they attribute it to the Virgin Mary and why?" she said. "I find it a fascinating phenomenon.
"Mostly people feel like they've gotten special favors, like they've gotten healed."
Father Vince Krische, director of the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, said these kinds of experiences have a tremendous impact on many people.
"if something good comes out of it, then it's beneficial," he said. "They are very strong aware of what must be done to counteract those things in life which empty us of our inner peace."
He said that those who come back from the sites take the events seriously.
“There’s a lot of skepticism that builds up around these things.” Krische said. “But nobody ever comes back and says it’s a farce.”
Robert Minor, chairperson of the department of religious studies, said that Zimdars-Swartz's research in this area was becoming more of an interest to scholars who study these phenomena.
"I think she has established herself internationally as a researcher and scholar in visionary experience, those among those surrounding Mary," he said.
Do you make too much at your present job?
Despite the lousy pay and long hours, you'll still have the satisfaction of knowing you're part of a great KU tradition.
Business Manager Assistant Editor Photo Editor
If you are qualified for any of these positions, apply today! Applications are available at the SUA Office and at the Organizations and Activities Center, both located in the Kansas Union. Applications must be returned to either location by March 28. Any questions? Call the Jayhawker Yearbook Office at 864-3728.
JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 27, 1991
Sports
13
Game has bizarre twist for Jayhawk Elstun
By S. J. Bailev
Kansan sportswriter
Like father, like son
Gene Elstun was the co-captain of the Kansas basketball team that battled North Carolina for the national championship in the 1957 Final Four in Kansas City, Mo.
Davis Lowe
This season,
his son Doug, a junior guard for the Indianapolis-bound Jayhawks,
will get the chance to face the Tar Heels in the Final Four for the right to
NCAA championship game
Coincidence? Maybe. But that is not the only bizzare twist to this story. Elstun came to the Jayhawks last year as a transfer from, you guessed it, North Carolina.
Where's Rod Serling when you need him?
"I think it's kind of ironic that we're playing North Carolina and that my dad played them in a similar situation in 1957," Elstun said. "The night he told me he could shake me from following in his footsteps.
"But he lost to them. Hopefully I can change that, and we'll win."
Winning is one thing Elstun has
seen a lot of in his years at North Carolina and Kansas.
Elstun practiced with the Jay-hawks last season but could not play because of NCAA transfer rules. This season, he has been sparingly in 12 games, scoring nine points in 36 minutes of play.
The situation was the same at North Carolina. Elstun walked on the 1987-88 Tar Heel quad after graduating from Shawne Mission West High School, where he was an All-State senior in his junior and senior years
He said the decision to leave Kansas for North Carolina was not an option.
"I was close to coming to Kansas, but they didn't recruit me that much," he said. "Then Carolina came along, and I couldn't ask for anything better than that." He talked about basketball than I did when I was down there."
During his time at North Carolina, Elstun played in 12 games as a reserve for the Tar Heel varsity team. He became close friends with Kirk Cousins and Eliot, Hubert Davis, Rick Fox and King Rice while at North Carolina.
Elstun said the decision to leave North Carolina came after many hours of difficult reflection.
"I thought I could play a lot more than I had been given the opportunity
to play," he said. "They have a lot of great players, and even if you are great, which I'm not by any means, but I want to see much playing time as you like."
KANSAS
31
27
19
42
34
21
8
10
3
24
13
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Elstun said he still kept in contact with his Tar Heel pals, who have had a few things to say about this weekend's match-up.
Gene Elstun is in the top row, fourth from the left. Elstun was a member of the 1956-57 Jayhawks.
"There's been a lot of talk going on back and forth," he said. "King (Rice) called me the other night and said, 'Doug, we've been looking at all the scouting reports, and we can't find a way to step you.' He told me he didn't want me scoring 30 points against them."
Elstun's reply: "I told him to make me go right."
Elstun's father, Gene, said that there was no way he could make Doug go to his alma mater after he graduated from high school, but that he was delighted when Doug became a Javawk.
"The decision to go to North Carolina was totally his own," he said. "I told Doug he had to do what was best for him, and I didn't want to pressure him at all. I was happy when he decided to come to Kansas because he would be closer to home and we could see him play. There might have been a little pride, but again, it was his decision."
He also said he understood the
excuement and anxiety his son had been experiencing waiting for game time to arrive.
"I remember we were all very excited," he said. "We enjoyed the environment and the feeling we were made to feel." In a world ofetry. The game has changed so much
that I don't know if I fully realize the extent of the hype today, but I told Doug to sit back and enjoy it while he laughed at it was a one-in-a-life time thine.
For Doug, the opportunity to play for Dean Smith and Roy Williams is one he never will forget.
"They are both great coaches with picture-perfect programs." he said.
picture-perfect programs," he said. "I'm very fortunate to have played both places, and I appreciate that. I know that you're a great means right now, but in a few years I'll be able to look back and see how lucky I really was."
Bo won't say die just yet
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Bo Jackson vowed yesterday to overcome what he called a serious hip injury and again play both baseball and football.
Jackson went on a television blitz, appearing on the morning shows of NBC and CBS. For two hours, to criticize doctors who had predicted his playing days were over.
"Not if, but when I come back, they will be out there with their feet in their mouths." Jackson said during appearance on NBC-TV's "Today Show.
"No one knows me better than me
James"
Andrew was of Bristolshire.
Jackson expressed annoyance at those who speculated publicly that a hip condition that developed from the skull would not permit him to play again.
in the paper."
"They have nothing else to do with
him or the car, or getting their
own pups!" said
"They should be trying to find the cure for the common cold and not be sick."
"They're trying to get their names
Jackson conceded during his NBC appearance that the hip injury suffered while playing for the Oakland Raiders in a postseason NPL playoff game on Jan. 13 was serious. But he said, "There have been players who had the same injury and in six or more months, they were playing again."
Jackson said the examination given him by the Kansas City Royals before they put him on waivers last week was cursory and that Andrews' opinion that he would play again was based on a more thorough examination and consultations with other doctors.
"If he says I will be back on the field playing. I have confidence in him and his profession that I will be back on the field playing." Jackson said during his appearance on ABC TV's "Good Morning America."
Jackson also said he wanted to continue playing both football and baseball despite warnings his coach had shortened by pursuing the two sports.
Of limiting himself to just one
sport, Jackson said during his appearance on CBS's "This Morning." "If I did that I would be living someone else's."
"I want to do what I have been doing for the past four years."
Jackson said there were two motives for the Royals' putting him on waivers. "They were bitter, and they have been bitter about me because of the strike, and the salary they thought it was the best business deal at the time."
Jackson, interviewed in Kansas City, said rather than being angry that every team let him clear wavies and move on because he was now a pie agent.
The Royals, by releasing Jackson,
hoped to cut their $2,375,000 million
salary obligation this year to just
$400,000.
"I was hoping it would happen so I could choose the team I want to play for." he said.
Of the New York Yankees apparently changing their minds about claiming him, Jackson said, "Who can say that?" The brenner seriously these days?*
Indiana scalpers offer last-minute tickets to those willing to splurge
The Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS — Basketball fans still can buy tickets to the Final Four. All it takes is a lot of cash scaling is legal in Indianapolis.
Yesterday's editions of the Indianapolis newspapers had more than 300 ads in the classified section, including several businesses renting from $100 to $2,000 each.
March 30-April 1, 1961
Indianapolis, Indiana
FINAL
FOUR
"We have four phone lines going constantly," said Dave Brusslan, president of Preferred Tickets and Tours, which had the largest advergence among other classified sections and another 3 by-4 inch ad in the sports section.
Ticket agencies had the largest ads and reported a brisk business.
"We're selling tickets from $200 to $2,500 each," said Brussel. He estimated he had "thousands" of tickets available.
"We mainly get them from people who get to buy tickets through the Nets."
won't come," he said. "We've done this for several years. This year it's a lot more fun because there are a lot more tickets available. There were very few tickets available last year in Denver."
The elimination of Indiana and Ohio State from the tournament did not cause a major decline in ticket demand. Brussel said
"The only effect it had was to lower the price we paid for tickets. Some people held their tickets too long and
it cost them money." he said. "But the demand is pretty good. And having two teams from North Carolina is good for business. Duke and North Carolina both have a fantastic following, just like Indiana."
Those with tickets are being advised to be prepared for extra security because of the possibility of attackers in response to the Persian Gulf War.
Spectators will be prohibited from bringing emergency pagers, cameras, video recorders, televisions, radios, coolers, bottles, cans and other containers. PurSES and hand-held metal detectors and hand-held metal detectors will also be used to check spectators as they enter the Hoosier Dome.
Officials will open the gates three hours before the start of Friday's public practice sessions, Saturday's opening semifinal game and Monday's championship contest to allow fans to pass through the extra security.
Softball team earns ranking of No.13
By Lana Smith
Kansan sportswriter
Haack said he hoped the Jayhawks' reward would serve as a motivating tool to do more.
The Kansas women's softball team got the news yesterday, and coach Kalum Haack was pleased to say his team was ranked 13th in the nation.
"Everyone is going to play sky high against us," Haack said. "We have to get mentally prepared to work, or it will be hard to be success."
"I's harder to get there than it is to stay," Haack said. "I told them all of the weights, running and hollering they have endured has paid off."
And despite Kansas' ranking,
Haack said his team would have to
concentrate and be sharp for seven
innings.
So far this season Kansas has played in three tournaments: the Texas A&M Invitational, the Houston Classic and the Bud Light Invitational. Haack said the combination of teams helped Kansas obtain its ranking.
Haack said that Kansas was still not the caliber of team that could go out and win without practicing.
Out of the 21 games that the Jayhawks have played, eight of their opponents were nationally ranked, and five were ranked regionally.
Washburn, a Division II team, beat Kansas last year. However, Haack did not think the Ichabods would be current when they played the Jayhawks.
ful and win. Our key is between the ears."
Senior outfieldier Jessica Hennig said the team's strategy was using strong pitching and defense to keep other teams from scoring.
Hennig said that she was pleased with Kansas's performance in the California tournament, but she thought the team could have hit better off of nationally-ranked Arizona State.
Kansas will face Washburn at 3 p.m. today in Topeka.
Kansas junior outfielder Tay Saxy said she also thought that the Jayhawks should have done better against the ranked teams, but that they beat the teams they should have.
"There are always things you could do better." Hennig said.
Kansas runner competes abroad
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
About 185 athletes from around the world were in Antwerp, Belgium, for the Junior World Cross Country Championships.
Cox ran the 8-kilometer course in 26 minutes, 11 hours, 17 minutes, and finished 40th overall.
Among them was the top U.S. finisher, Kansas freshman Michael Cox.
"Until the U.S. makes changes in
20
"I didn't think people my own age would be that much better than me," he said. "I knew they would hurt, but these guys were really good.
"Some guys are really professional athletes," he said. "They don't go to school and some don't work. They just run."
Cox said the athletes from Africa dominated the field.
He said that the trip over-
him what international competition was all about.
Michael Cox
its training programs, we'll never be able to compete with the Africans," he said.
Cox began his trip to Antwerp in February when he won the U.S. trials in Tallahassee, Fla. He ran that course in 26-20.
His time earned him a spot on the six-man U.S. team.
Cox flew to Belgium on March 7. The U.S. team toured Antwerp, Belgium, and Switzerland. Between the tours, Cox ran and did his best to acclimate.
The race took place March 24. Cox said he had never seen anything like what happened at the start. He said all the racers went into gates that resembled cattle chutes.
"Instead of 'runners, on your marks,' a big rope went up and everyone took off." he said. "We were ready to get to position. It was just nuts."
Cox estimated that there were 30,000 to 35,000 spectators at the race.
It was not a typical start, Cox said.
Cox said the course snaked through a dredged-out river bed that looked like a salt flat. There
were five or six man-made hills on the course, but Cox said the worst part was the large patches of sand on the course.
"It really takes all the spring out of it," he said.
Cox said he ran the first mile in about 4:30.
"I got real tired with that raw pace." he said.
Even with the fierce pace, Cox managed to improve his Tallahassee time by 9 seconds.
Kansas coach Gary Schwartz, who went to Belgium as the senior women's coach, said that Cox did not run the race of his life.
"He was up against the best in the world in his age group," Schwartz said. "The experience can only aid in his confidence."
Ox carried in Lawrence late Monday night, but there was little time for him to rest. He began walking to his dorm room in the team's outdoor season yesterday.
He called his experience in Belgium very educational.
"I think it will help out with my competing here," he said. "After running against him, it was intimidating to run against the big schools here.
sports briefs
Women's tennis team to start Big 8 season
The Kansas women's tennis team will open the Big Eight Conference season today against Kansas State in Manhattan.
The Jayhawks finished fourth in the conference last season with 81 match points and a 4-3 record.
"It's critical we play as hard as we can in these matches," Kansas coach Michael Center said. "Each match counts as an individual point, and it's hard to make them up in the conference tournament."
Kansas' No. 1 singles player, Eveline Hamers, is doubtful for the match against the Wildcats because of an injured knee, Center said.
"I would hope we have the upper hand, even without Eveline," Center said. "We still need to go out and prove it."
Severe weather forces baseball postponement
Heavy rain and hail forced the postponement of yesterday's Kansas-Wyoming baseball game.
The two teams will try to play two games today at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m.
Kansas lost to Wyoming 7-6 in 10 innings Monday night.
Tyson-Ruddock rematch to take place in June
NEW ORLEANS — The work demands a match between Mike Tyson and Donovan "Razor" Ruddy. Don King, Don King, and he's happy to oblige.
The Associated Press
"Even the world will not take Richard Steele again," Muhammad said after he and King announced the June 28 rematch yesterday at the Fox Television association. The site again will be The Mirage in Las Vegas.
One thing the world also demands, according to co-promoter Murad Muhammad, is a different referee.
Steele's decision to stop the scheduled 12-round fight in the seventh round on March 18 touched a storm of controversy. There was a
Both promoters said that the rematch would be bigger financially than the first fight, which they said was a success. It also will be shown on King Vision pay-per-view television.
brawl in the ring, and Steele was kicked before being led away by security guards.
"Razor Ruddock will make in two non-title fights than Michael Spinks made fighting Tyson". Muhammad said. Spinks got $13 million for his first-round knockout loss to Tyson in 1988.
Tyson laced a series of head shots that staggered Ruddock in the seventh round and sent him backward. Steele suddenly turned his back on him and motioned that the match was over.
Ruddock was down in the second round, although tape showed he went down when he lost his balance, and then broke his leg before rallying to stagger Tyson late.
"There are two schools of thought about stopping the fight," King said. "I'm of the school that thinks he did the right thing."
Tyson talked about a rematch immediately after the fight.
"Tyson said, 'It didn't count, because he ain't dead,' King said. "Many people thought the fight was over," Ms. Chadwick said, a lot of activity in the ring. What we're trying to do now is present one of the most exciting fights ever put
before the public, because here's a man who stood toe-to-toe with Tyson for seven rounds."
There also will be three championship bouts on the card, King said.
Julio Cresar Chavez of Mexico, the International Boxing Federation and World Boxing Council junior welterweight champion, might fight Lorette Garza of Sacramento, Calif., the World Boxing Association champion, or he might defend his title against Rafael Pineda of Colombia.
Julian Jackson of the Virgin Islands will defend the WBC middle-weight title against Dennis Milton of New York.
UNLV player wins Eastman
LAS VEGAS - Senior forward
Larry Johnson of UNLV was named
winner of the Eastman Award as
college basketball's top player yes-
A junior college transfer, Johnson helped UNLV to its first national championship last year when he led the team in rebounds and 2.1 assists per game.
The award is not accepted by me.
Johnson is the 17th winner of the award, voted on annually by the National Association of Basketball Coaches. Last year's winner was Lionel Simmons of La Salle.
*This year, the undefeated Rummin'
Rebels are bidding for a second
straight title with Johnson averaging
10.8 rebounds and 3 assists per game.
it's accepted by my coaches, my family and, most important, my teammates." Johnson said.
"It isn't just me getting the award, it's the whole team. That's the way we look at it. It's one of the reasons we've been so successful."
UNLV coach Jerry Tarkanian praised Johnson.
"Nobody in this room knows how unselfish this guy is," he said. "He absolutely doesn't know how many points he had after the game. The only concern with Larry is whether win or lose.
"In two years he hasn't complained once about not getting the ball. Sometimes he goes 7-8 minutes. You know he's mad. I'm the one who gets mad, not him."
From The Associated Press
University Dailv Kansan / Wednesdav. March 27. 1991
15
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1990 Midrange ACE, 240er, great gas mileage
MO evenings 740-235.
Seniors and grad students! Ford's college耕
program can help you buy a new car or truck.
For sale: 1982 Nissan Stanza, 100k miles, good condition. $1500 obo Call 864-6352
360 Miscellaneous
On TV's, VCK's and music in instruments, cameras and more We honour MA/c/MCEM Disc Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry, 180 W. 6th 749-1919
370 Want to Buy
We will provide private airplane transportation for two people to the Final Four games in exchange for two tickets to the game. We will pay for the two tickets. Ron Allen, TZN 172-977/KZI
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
8 bedroom rooms and duplexes. Available June
Sorry, no pets. Dick at 842-897-8431/843-1601.
1-2-3 bedroom apartments near campus
Available June 1. Sorry, no pets Dick
642-897/843-1601
2 Bedrm apt available for summer sublease
$350/month negotiable. 865-4166.
2 BH kit to prepup. Available in fall or summer
12 month lease, DW, low utilities, off street
parking, close to campus. No pets. Deposit Call
422-6784 at Tracy for a tryout or leave message.
2 bdrm triplex available mid May. D/W disposal.
W/D hookups, very nice inside and out.
400/month. 842.3321.
APARTMENTS: Small, large Walk to KU Medical Center. Newly decorated, furnished or unfurnished Quiet, secure building, many exits 816-391-3928
Available March 1-1 | hd wall units *ap* in new building at WEST BIRD 1014 Emery Kd. Energy Center (210) 635-8796. See fax for fans, min blinds. Great location near campus. Short heatless costs $30 per month. No pets.
Basement iap qf to quite graduate student. No pets. Live alone, good morals, non-smoker, take care of apt. Off street parking. Individual rate. $200 plus insurance. Inquiries only 841-3572, weekends.
Bradford Square Apartments 533 Colorado
BIG 1 bedroom for sublease. Available June
with option to renew in fall. Pool, balcony, close to
campus. Rent negotiable. 942-8356
Available in August, August,
dishwashers, refrigerators or refrigera-
tors, microwaves, patios or deck, laundry facility
Management. KU has route to off-campus
KU residence. KU your apartment for a summer
or fall 750-156.
Nice 2 bedroom apt. Close to Student Union.
Washer/dryer hookup. Off-street parking. No pets.
749-2019
Check out Berkeley Flats. Studio, and 2 bedroom apartments. Close to campus and downtown.
$900 $415/mo. Call 843-2116
Female needed for summer sublease. Own room and bath. Close to campus. 843-2498.
Extremely nice, spacious. 3 berm townhouse w/
garage. 2 female non smoking rooms needed,
year lease beginning August and/or summer
baseboard $120. 5 utilities Kerr 843-0562
Female rooms welcome for next school year.
Beautiful 3 BR house, 2 car garage, newly redecorated, furnished, nice neighborhood, W/D,
residential, free Wi-Fi. Non-smokers plus 1 unit, plus 846 sqft.
Excellent Location, 1 block to bedroom, 2 bedroom in 4ip, pluck dishwasher, WD hookup, CA, no pets, available June 1. $860. At 1341 Ohio. Call 842-4242
Great 1 bdmr apt for rent. 1 block from Union.
Must see to appreciate. Call Kristen at 865-0010.
Leave message
Great location for KU and downtown. Studio ap-
tie with gas and water supplies $100; call 845-211-821.
Hey! KU Med. students. Move in June 1 and
take $2 off your rent for 2 months. *Studio,
1 and 2 beamer aps. *Heat and water *Across.
Room A, Center Rainway Tower. Apts.
813-981-8363
LEASE NOW FOI FOR FALL Roamy n 3 or plus 1B duplex on bus line. Basement, garage. CA/W D hookup. No pets. Lease & reef. refs $40/mo and up. Negotiable. 83-7438 after 5.
LEASE NOW FOIL FOR ALL. Extra two BR 28 bupes in ap good location. Extra large MRJ; garage; laundry/storage; nice yard No pets. Lease & lease no extra fees. Bundle $950. mmo 8435-7736 if less.
Lorimer Townhouses, Clinton Parkway
350 E. 1st St., near Riverfront. Newable now. 2 & 3 baths. Lease until
January. MUST BE REMAINING TO GET IT WORKED! ME USE IT EASY ON YOU'RE! SUMMER!
sublease turn 2 hrg. May pad CDs.ption ID
www.lorimertownhouses.com
Apple Lane Apartments
2111 Kasold 843-4300
Now accepting reservations for fall leases!
Quiet studios
**blackieken Place Apc:** 3 bmrh airlift app,久等 for August; 1years, 1years washer/dryer, microwave fan, 2 weeks, 1 year lease, no wifi, bedding; 4years, 4777 days, weekends; 841-8219 daytime.
Apple
**New apartments**
1 BR, 43 BR. 2 BR
celling fans, microwaves, fireplaces, 2 full baths in
bath on bus route, off street parking. Only 1 yr old.
all tull now! 749-1566
Nice 1 bedroom apt close to the Union. No pets. Deposit and references required. Off street parking. 749-2619
Pool
Now leasing. Extra nice, spacious two bedroom apartments with appliances including dishwasher, central air, central air and blinds. Low utilities, bus and bus route. Quiet property $110.00 SPANISH CHEST APARTMENT $249.00 SPANISH CHEST APARTMENT
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, national handicap, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.'
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
合
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper available on an equal opportunity basis.
Now leasing and 2 bedroom apartments at Siprith Place Apt. 153, rented床室, 27$ bedrooms start at $350 to month lease. Water and cable paid remodeled kitchen new cared. Call 841-781-8960
Water paid
Now leasing for fall semester, 1 and 2 bedroom
apes. Aspen West Apartment $300 for bedroom, $752
bedroom. Ceiling fans, water paid. Walk to camp.
Call 842-1690 or 842-1893
OPEN HOUSE: Saturday, March 30th, 9:30 to 12:30. Welcome for last August; 8 bldm luxury apartments 1 yrs old, washer/dryer, microwave, ceiling fan, oven, pet beds, no pets. Marks Place Apts. 113, Kentucky.
Spacious 3 bedroom, $475. Sublease for summer or
soonest 108 W. 27, 842-463 or 841-579.
SUMMER SUBLUEE. Immaculate two bedroom, awesome wood floor; DW W/Dook up, spacious spaces, campus downtown location, no pets. $240/month (one), 965-3000
SUMMER SUBLET. 1 bed apt, 2nd floor. Walk to KU and downtown! $285/mo., gas & water paid 841-6961 after 4:30
SUMMER SUBLEASE June 1 4 bedroom townhome. Sunrise Village $185 each negotiable 79-2493
Sublease May August 1 1 Br, CA, DW,
Washer/dryer, walk to KU. Small pet OK, $350 a
month. 841-180
SUMMER SUBLEASE Two bedrooms, very close to campus. Call 749-4084
Summer sublease, 2 bedroom, $1₂, bath, free water, launderer available. $225/month. Call Mark 841-7071
Sublease 2 HDR apt, close to campus From May
15, 2013. Rentals $450, 450; Moins
Calvien 62, 890. Mrr. 402, 492.
Close to KU bus route
Summer and Fall fall. Furnished rooms with shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilities paid. 1 bikk from KU with off-street parking. No pets. 841-5000
Summer apt. sublease available 2 rooms -close to
campus. apt. Tanzanite. Cal. Michelle, 823*G74.
Summer Sublease-1 Br apt, near Union. Hard-
wood floors, high ceilings. Must see! 841-1748,
afternoons.
Summer sublease with option to take over lease in fall. Brand new 2 bedroom. 1 female roommate wanted. $180. Call Jaliyan. 841-1149
Summer sublease. Unfurished 2 bedroom apt. 2 blocks from campus on Ohio. 855-0807.
South Dunkin'
- Pool & Volleyball
- Quiet location
- Small pets OK with deposit
- 2166 W.26th 843-6446
- Inexpensive gas heat
- Central air
- Close to bus route
Summer sublease. Nice 3 BR with dishwasher.
washer/drv, ACR 865-1655.
close to campus spacious 2 bedroom laundry fac. & pool waterbed allowed
Open 10-5, M-F
VILLAGE SQUARE
Apartments
A Quiet, Relaxed
Atmosphere
Summer sublease. 4 bedroom furnished apt. Pool at complex, Sundance. Call Angie. 853-492
9th & Avalon
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Summer sublime 2 bedroom with washer/dryer and microwave. Months and rent-recall. Call
Summer sub-lease 1 bdmr. apt adj. June-Aug. Call evenings 843-8194 for more info.
Summer sublease. Studio apt in Traitridge. Call 855-3519
842-3040
24TH & EDDINGHAM
Offering Luxury 2 BR.
apartments at an
Affordable Price!!
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Office Hours:
12-6 pm Mon., Fri.
10-6 pm Tue. - Thu
9:30 am - 5:30 pm
9-3 pm Sat.
841-5444
Tree of Life
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
-Washer and drys.
-Microwave
-Gas heat, central air
-Large bedrooms
-Mini blinds
-On KU bus route
-Carports available
1-bedroom $355, $350
2-bedroom $440, $460
3-bedroom $560
office.
611 Michigan Street
(across from Hardie's)
HOURS:
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
8:00-12:00 Sat
843-1971
Please call Kristy for appt
SouthPointe Apartments
1 or 2 Bedrooms available Please Call 843-6446
for summer & fall
New Leasing
spacious & comfortable
Now leasing
from company & fall
*1 & 2 BR apartments
*2 & 3 BR townhomes
-3 Pools
-Tennis courts
on KU bus r
gas heat & water paid
(on apartments)
00. 00.00.00
TRAILRIDGE
Quail Creek Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Summer sublease at Sundance. Studio, completely furnished. Available May 21, 1991 thru Aug 10, 1991. Call evening, 845-736-6955.
on KU bus route studios townhomes 2,3 Bedrooms Free cable Water paid
Georgetown Apartments
Pool
Accepting reservations for fall leases!
---
Two bedroom sublease May 15-Aug 15, no deposit.
842-3040 or 749-2881. Ask for Jennifer.
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
* Fenced pool area with
Tanning Deck & Barbeque
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
- On Site MGT./Reliable
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
Double Take
- Penced pool area with Tanning Deck & Barbeque
- Low Security Deposit
- Call about our Summer Special
- No pets
West Hills APARTMENTS
Spacious apts. - furnished
630 Michigan 749-7279
Office Hours: M-F 1-5:00 WKNDS - BY APPT.
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
now leasing for
June or August
apts. - furni
-1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
$280 to $335 per month
(water paid!)
(water paid!)
2 bedroom apts. 930 sq ft
$365 to $415 per month
Great location Near campus
Near campus
THANKS FOR HAVING US, BEN.
IT WAS GREAT
NO PROBLEM YOU GUYS. BE
SAFE, OKAY?
SURE,
SEEYA!
$503 to $413 per month
(water paid!)
OPEN HOUSE
Mon. Wed. Thurs
does not include Phase II
1:00-4:00 p.m. (no appt needed)
This ad for original buildings only-
Boardwalk apartments
1 & 2 Bedrooms Showing Units Daily 9 - 6
- Clean & well maintaine
- Large closets & living space
- Water & trash paid
- 2 on-site bus stops
- 2 on-site bus stops
- Laundry room- 50¢
W&D
- Unfurnished with
- Walk to grocery
524 Frontier
OPEN DAILY
1-5 P.M.
OOH, NAMHTY PLEASANTRIES! YOU TOLD ME EAALER TOIHNIGHT YOU THINK BENE'S A REAL. JEKK YOU'RE LUCKY I'M THE ONLY ONE WHO HERS YOU TALK OUT OF BOTH SIDES OF
Completely Furnished
Reserve Your Home Now! We offer
Designed with you in mind!
- Custom furnishings
- Designed for privacy
- Private Parking
- Close to shopping & KU
- Many great locations
- Equal opportunity housing
HOW MANY?
Hanover Place - 841-1212 14th & Mass
Kentucky Place - 749-0445
Go to...
JEEZ, COCKER, WAS JUST BEING POLITIZ. SO, CLAM UP YOURE REALLY DRUNK.
Sundance - 841-5255 7th & Florida
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall
Tanglewood - 749-2415
10th & Arkansas
Orchard Corners - 749-4226
Campus Place - 841-1429
1145 Louisiana
- 1-2-3 bedroom apts.
I'M WARNING YOU, COOKER,
I WOULDN'T BURN THAT GRIDGE IF
YOU WANT ME TO FORGIVE YOU
FOR THE TOTAL JERK YOUVE BEEN
- Gazebo
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
S
Special
Swan Management
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
I'M NOT THAT DRUNK. I STILL HAVE EYES AND EARS, Y'KNOW.
MARIA MURDO'S SIDE
3 Bdrm Townhouse.
Spacious 1,410 square feet
1/2 bath downstairs, Large full bath with
dressing area upstairs
1-2-3 Bedroom apts.
Open House M-F 1-5 p.m.
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1288
Subleases Available Immediately
- Graystone
Furnished Studios 500 sq. feet 435 sq. feet
by Tom Avery
2 Bdmr townhouse.
Roomy 1/290 square feet
1/12 baths, available May 1st
Some Summer B垒estoiled too!
Newly remodeled apartments
- Two bedroom apartments
- two with fireplaces
- Purchased studio apartments
- One bedroom apartments
15th & Crestline Dr.
Hours: Mon 8:50-3:20
Sat 8-5
Sun 1-4
200
meadowbrook
If you can read this ad, you're too smart to live in an apartment.
It doesn't take a genius to see that Naismith is the smart place to live while you get an education.
- Free utilities
- Free utilities
* Computer Center
* Great social events
* "Dine Anytime"
Wise up and make the move now!
NAISMITHHALL
1800 Naitsmith Drive
Lawrence, KS 66044
913)834-8559
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has rooms available for summer and fall. Call 749-0871 or dray by 1965 Tennessee.
*1, 2, 3 & 4 Bedroom
- Garages (Vill.)
- Tennis Court, Pools
- Free Cable T.V. (Pl. & Terr.)
- Luxuous Town Hom
& Apartment Living
- & Apartment Living
On Bus Route
- On Bus Route
• Close to Campus
THE FAR SIDE
Sunrise Place 9th & Michigan
- BRAND NEW 2 Bdrm. at Vill
841-1287 or 841-8400
Mon. - Fri. 10-5
Sat. - Sun 1-4
Sunrise Village 6th & Gateway
--female roommate wanted for 190. must be non-smoker, orient, quieted to studies. Call 864-6853
In & Gateway
Sunrise Terrace 10th & Arkansas
Open House Daily
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
Volleyball Court
- Basketball Court
- Exercise Room
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- 3 Hot Tubs
- On Bus Route
842-5111
Models Open Daily
Mon. - Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 10-4 p.m. Sun 12-4 p.m.
SUN
$ 355 - $425
1301 W.24th
430 Roommate Wanted
A roommate requires on bus route, through July, $80 a month plus utilities. Nice. apt 843-7826. Call now for summer sublease. Female roommate. O'Reard Cheshire. Call anytime at 842-9363.
Female roommate wanted for 1961, must be non-smoker. Furnished at campus. Female roommate wanted for summer sublease. Furnished at campus Place- great location. $180 mo. $1.5m. Utilities. Please call Michelle
tooommate now. Very nice, very large, W/D, Pets
k. See to believe! $125.847-2746
*stay home needed for 3 bedroom house sale, $1450 per month*
*space rooms, patio, balcony on bus route, fireplace, 1/2*
*spacious room, patio, balcony on bus route, fireplace, 1/2*
Roommate wanted to share three bedroom duplex with basement. Hair real and unaltered. Close to 1st floor of apartment.
Roormate needed immediately. Clore to campus 4180/mo plus utilities. 841-4535.
Summer Sublease Female wanted to share 4 bedroom townhouse for fall $180/mo.
Three Bedroom for summer sublease. Please call
787-4977, economical.
By GARY LARSON
BOMB
SQUAD
"Well, it's a delicate situation, sir. ... Sophisticatedo
firing system, hair-trigger mechanisms, and Bob's wife just left him last night, so you know his mind's not into this."
16
Wednesday, March 27, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Open 24 Hours
You've Got It All At Dillons!
KU Final Four
T-Shirts
Available At All Three Dillons Stores
Dillons Salutes Roy Williams The KU Basketball Team!
from Our Meat Dept...
Cook's Bone-In Shank Half Ham
(Ham & Water Product)
99¢ lb.
&
ins &
eam!
Cook's Bone-In $119 Butt Half Ham LB.
from our Deli...
Double Coupons*
7 Days A Week
*Details in Store
POTATOES
Dinners Here!
FILM REALS
PREMIUM
Easter Ham Dinner
Order Early & Receive A FREE 8" Baked Apple Pie
One Whole Dillon Classic Boneless Ham, 2 Lbs.
Mashed Potatoes, 2 Lbs. Gravy, 1 Lb. Salad
Of Customer's Choice, 2 Lbs. Green Beans, 1 Package
Pan Rolls (12 count)
Substitution: Bruces 40 oz. Sweet Potatoes For
Baking
from our Seafood Shoppe...
$2599
Fresh Whole King Salmon $499 Lb.
Super Savings At Dillons...
Coca-Cola Classic, Diet,
Caffeine Free
Diet or Sprite
12 Pack, 12 oz. Cans
And Selected Coca-Cola Products
Del Monte
Green
Beans
16 oz. Can,Whole
$289
2/$1
Birds Eye Cool Whip 8 oz. Lite, Extra Creamy or Regular
99¢
Dillon's Cream Cheese 8 oz. Package
69¢
7-Up And Diet 7-Up 2 Liter Bottle
75¢
Dole Pineapple
20 oz. In Juice-Tidbits,
Crushed, Slices
or Chunks
69¢
from our Bakery...
WISPER
1970
IYROLLS
FAN ROLLS
BEST CLOSED IYROLLS
Dillon's Fresh Pan Rolls 15 oz. White or Wheat Rolls Buy One At The Regular Price Get One FREE!
from our Produce Dept...
California Strawberries 79¢ Pint
Easter Lilies Various Sizes
from our Flower Shop...
Ceramic Bunny Arrangement $1999
$699-$1999
150
TRY DILLON'S AUTHENTIC
CHINESE KITCHEN!
HOT CHINESE FOOD TO GO
Szechwan Beef
Quart Size Serving,
Served With Steamed Rice
$629
Located in our Dillon Store at 23rd & Naismith in Lawrence
Combination Plate
Kung Pao Chicken, 2 Crab
Rangoons, Pork Fried Rice
$369
Dillon's Authentic Chinese Kitchen Foods are cooked fresh on the premises every day. Our expert cooks are trained in traditional Hong Kong, Szechwan, and Cantonese style cooking. Dillons use only the finest, freshest quality meats, vegetables, spices and seasonings. We use only pure vegetable oil for cooking (no cholesterol). (No MSG added.)
Egg Roll
Ea. 99¢
Available in our Dillon Store at 23rd & Naismith in Lawrence
OPEN DAILY 11:00 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Call your order in today for fast pick-up
PHONE: 913-841-3366
from our Video Dept...
WB
Available This Weekend
PRESUMED
INNOCENT
WB WARNER HOME VIDEO
"Presumed Innocent"
Rusty Sabich is a dedicated prosecutor who becomes a prime suspect when his beautiful colleague, with whom he had an affair, is found brutally murdered. Now the system that he fought to uphold has turned on him. His career, his family, even his life are in the balance.
"Till They're Home Again."
Dillons FOOD STORES
Ad Prices Effective March 27-April 2,1991. Lawrence Dillon Stores Only Limit Rights Reserved.
]
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
T THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE T UNIVERSITY OF KANSAKS
VOL.101,No.119
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1991
(640) -603-
Kurdish rebels seize Iraqi camp while citizens face starvation
NEWS:864-4810
The Associated Press
ZAKHO, Iraq — Kurdish rebels yesterday claimed they had seized a government-held air base and camp in northern Iraq but said there were signs Saddam Hussein's forces were preparing for an assault on a key rebel-held city.
A statement from the Kurdistan Democratic Party said the Iraqi army was massing forces in Saddam's hometown of Tikrit to attack ISIS. The U.S. government, Kikuk, which was jailed by the insurgents,
The statement, sent to The Associated P. R. E. Society, vialex, could not be caerified independently.
Saddam has been struggling to quell rebellions in the north and south that flared after his defeat by the allies in the Persian Gulf War. The fighting halted with a cease-fire a month ago.
President Bush said yesterday that it was unlikely that Saddam would remain in power for long because the Iraqi people were fed up with him.
“There’s enough dissent and disorder, but it appears the Iraqi citizens are trying to do something about this,” he told reporters in Bethesda, Md.
The rebels also said they seized a government camp at Faardyta, on the road from Daman.
Kurdish leaders reported gains in northern Iraq — but also heavy casualties. They said guerrillas overran an Iraqi air base near Kirkuk on Tuesday and captured two Soviet-
made warplanes, a MIG-21 fighter and a Soviet made Sukhoi bomber.
They said the two installations were among that government forces controlled in part.
The Kurdistan Democratic Party said in a statement issued in London that the attack on the Khalid military air base was launched to stop the bombing of rebel held areas.
The statement said that more than 1,000 people were killed in the past week in air attacks on the northern cities of Kirkum, Kefri, Dohuk, Kalar and Tuz Khormatu.
The Kurds said they feared a new threat starvation. The only supply route now open is to Erbil, where the Kurds say.
In southern Iraq, where Saddam's forces largely have succeeded in putting down rebellions by Shite Muslims, hunger was causing desperation among thousands of refugees fleeing into allied-controlled areas.
In the Iraqi border town of Safwan, food riots broke out yesterday as Saudi Arabian food trucks arrived.
"We tried to be organized, but the people are just too hungry," said Maj. Youssef Ali Albouri of the Saudi military "They see the food, and they go crazy."
No serious injuries were reported in the
At the United Nations, a new Security Council resolution would hold Iraq liable for the environmental have caused by tactics such as dumping millions of gallons of oil in the Persian Gulf and setting Kuwait's oil wells alight.
rioting.
The permanent members of the Security Council - the United States, Britain, France, China and the Soviet Union - meet in private to refine their checklist of conditions the Baghdad government must meet before a permanent cease-fire is approved.
Moscow police quell activists
Under the measure, Iraq would have to let U.N. experts destroy its chemical, biological and nuclear weapons.
Yeltsin supporters dispersed at Kremlin shortly before Russian parliament meets
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Police moved quickly today against pro-democracy activists backing Boris Yeltsin in a key political battle, dispersing several dozen just hours before a rally in defiance of a central government ban.
About a dozen police rush crowd of 75 demonstrators pushed them down the street and Kremalin At least six detained.
The scuffle occurred shortly the Russian republic's parli convened at the Kremlin for a session at which Yelain, Pere Mikhail Gorbachev's chief rieveto face a no-coffe vote.
His followers planned to three-week ban on street demos imposed by Gorbán cabinet Monday and demon overwhelming public support later in the day with a huge adjacent Manzeh Square.
However, authorities said sands of police and Interior MI troops, armed with rubber knives, would block the mar path.
Before they were dispersed to the demonstrators chanted "You
Fears of a bloody confront gripped Moscow yesterday, cially after two dozen armored cles were sighted at a military three miles from the city center
New enrol simplifies
By Jonathan Plummer
Starting this fall, one check dall.
When enrolling at the end of semester, students may order passes, all sports tickets or all tickets and then pay for them in fall with the same check or card they use for their tuition.
David Hardy, director of Orgns and Activities, said the ce was part of a program that evally would make it possible for fents to pay for all KU servic one time.
years. The options table will be in Strong Hall rotunda for the enrollment period, Hardy said.
"This is a project that we been working on for the past fi six years." he said.
However, students are not req to buy tickets or bus passes or day of their enrollment appointn he said. Those who do not sign u ticket or bus passes this spring have to go to individual offices in fall to buy them, he said.
Watkins plai
March 30-April 1, 1961
Indianapolis, Indiana
FINAL HOUSE
Yeltsin", and held aloft the white, blue and red flag of independent Russia as well as signs that read, "Yeltsin is the hope of the Russian." Yeltsin was one of the leaders.
In Search Of...
Help Wanted 40
DRAWSER & BENEFITS
OTHER SERVICES FOR
women who require
sweet life for
alternatives to pregnancy,
breastfeeding, breast milk,
baby care & woman well-being.
Contact & Email: Doris
+1-827-577-3000
DRIVERS
CRETE CARRIER CORP
NEEDS QUALIFIED
ROAD DRIVERS
BENEFITS
(810) 237-1199
ALCOHOL SERVICE
OWNER OPERATOR
*Sk me pm i DAL*
*Sk me pm i DAL*
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TO QUALIFY:
VTOTATE or WRITE or USER
SAYING OF SEVERITY score
Help Wanted
JIMMYTOR PORT TERMINAL
MUTINE COMPANY
520-894-1357
MUTINE COMPANY
520-894-1357
LAMPHOLM FLASH FIRE SERVICE
COMPANY
520-894-1357
COSTUME MANAGER
COMPANY
520-894-1357
PARK RANGER
CLAY COUNTY BARBELL INFILTRATION
applications $1,500 per hour
in your yard. Req.
or overhaul in your yard. Req.
or overhaul in your yard. Req.
or overhaul in your yard.
NEWELER
EMBRACE METAL
EMBRACE METAL
embrace metal to BOX
PARK RANGER
CLAY COUNTY BARBELL INFILTRATION
applications $1,500 per hour
in your yard. Req.
or overhaul in your yard. Req.
or overhaulk in your yard.
PARK RANGER
CLAY COUNTY BARBELL INFILTRATION
applications $1,500 per hour
in your yard. Req.
or overhaulk in your yard. Req.
or overhaulk in your yard.
DRIVES
Anna & KOLL
Oliv/Nipon
OMRITV LANE
AUTO PARTS SOLUTIONS
shop/mart Some where
Made in India Delhi KSS
Bangalore Maharashtra
NEW YORK PEPSI CO
welcome int pepsi co
welcome int pepsi co
welcome int pepsi co
INNENEEL BEVERLY MADAM
welcome int pepsi co
welcome int pepsi co
LAKESWAR TECHCENTRE F W
welcome int pepsi co
welcome int pepsi co
LABORATORIES TO BUK
XOXO CHOO CHOO
LABOR 500 600 WA
With print $10.99
New year $10.99
ROSEWOOD QUALITY MINIMIZER
Country to care
$ AVON $
BROWN FOOTERS & TOWNS
DOWNTOWN BOUNDARY
DRIVE-OFFS
DRIVE-OFFS
DRIVE-OFFS
3 DAYS OFF
Must be
repetitual
with 24-hour
insurance.
LABOR
RESPONSIBILITIES FOR THIS
DELIVERY MUST BE
ACQUIRED FROM THE
ASSISTANCE REPORTS
ON UR RULES
LABOR
RESPONSIBILITIES FOR THIS
DELIVERY MUST BE
ACQUIRED FROM THE
ASSISTANCE REPORTS
ON UR RULES
Employment Tabloid
PART TIME
CITY
REPRESENTAIVE
( international ) stationery
Made in China
Made in Japan
Made in Korea
RV & WWII military vehicles
military aircraft
in countries where they are not
used
RV & WWII military vehicles
military aircraft
in countries where they are not
used
RV & WWII military vehicles
military aircraft
in countries where they are not
used
DREWWAY SALES
time to post:
8am - 7pm
address:
900 WATERLOO RD, BOSTON, MA
phone:
(212) 654-7300
website:
www.drewway.com
MARTIN LEE
military vehicles
military aircraft
in countries where they are not
used
MARTIN LEE
military vehicles
military aircraft
in countries where they are not
used
BETTY HILL
military vehicles
military aircraft
in countries where they are not
used
MACHINE ENGINEER
manufacture of
engineering products
on behalf of
the manufacturer.
engineering for a
company, employing
often the entire workforce.
work on behalf of
a company, employing
often the entire workforce.
SKILLS FOR:
machining, cutting,
drilling, milling,
sanding, polishing,
and other metalworking
techniques.
computer-aided design,
planning, and simulation
of mechanical systems.
programming, debugging,
and testing software.
designing, prototyping,
and manufacturing complex
components of machinery.
maintaining and repairing
industrial equipment and machinery.
managing operations in an
industrial setting.
developing new technologies
and processes for industrial applications.
integrating different technical disciplines to create innovative solutions.
ALEXANDRA CUNNINGHAM
FACULTY OF ENGINEERING
MASSACHUSETTS UNIVERSITY
PARK SUMMIT, MASS.
212-654-0930
MAINtenance Engineer
manufacture of
engineering products
on behalf of
the manufacturer.
engineering for a
company, employing
often the entire workforce.
engineering for a company, employing
often the entire workforce.
work on behalf of a company, employing
often the entire workforce.
machine learning, machine
vision, and robotics techniques.
software development, testing, and
monitoring of machine learning algorithms.
implementation of artificial intelligence
technologies in industrial automation.
designing, prototyping, and manufacturing complex components of machinery.
managing operations in an industrial setting.
developing new technologies and processes for industrial applications.
Skokie person between
6th Street and 10th.
Gym on the left,
Church on the right.
Office at 12th.
Milwaukee City
Street, Milwaukee
City.
career. Must be years or older.
THE MANSAS CITY STATE
PART I TIME, notation in-
troduction of time units for
& utilizing them in the truine
of measurement
PART II LINEAR, notation in
introduction of linear units for
and utilizing them in the truine
PART III QUANTIFICATION, notation in
introduction of quantifiable units for
and utilizing them in the truine
EMPLOYMENT
APPLICATION
REQUESTS
EMPLOYER
$ ROUTE INVERS $
BEER TIME
BROOKLYN BREWERY
DOWNSIDE MOTORSPORTS
BRYAN'S WINE
METROPOLITAN CENTER
TOYO ROAD
ROCKVILLE PARK
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MAJOR A. S.
ventrue, bea-
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LOWEAN 1916
SCALER'S
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Restaurant operations of
their warehouses for
throat wine service, orders
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gold with cognac purity
gin with cognac purity
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RESTAURANT
North, look, please
for pamphlet even if it
not written on the menu.
postage with airmail or
fedex from DENMARK.
MO, WWW.
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South, look, please
for pamphlet even if it
not written on the menu.
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R S H A L U N T E R
waffle & mandarin roast bread &
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RETURN 844.5721
Learning to write more
using letter-score mode.
The rules to bring out the
variety of sounds in writing.
with practice and advice.
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MASSACHUSETTS
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fire station in Linton,
New York with the Rural
Auction office located at
180 W. 45th St.
LONDON BORNEO
BURNSY R.A.T.
supports the help parked in
go Cary County parkland
or property managed by
the Burtsy R.A.T.
supports the busing
fortress built by
BURNSY R.A.T.
BURESY R.A.T.
proves the school
program in Linton, New York.
provides private transportation
for residents of Linton, New York.
can carry over $25,000 to
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Help Wanted 403
restaurant
1205 SE HOUGE COUNTY
DEVELOPMENT
**INTRODUCTION/OVERVIEW AFTER**
**THIS PAPER**
*Department of Computer Science*
*Oakland University*
*Chairperson & Co-Chair*
*Dr. Owen T. Dixon*
*Director*
*Cell Phone: 855-234-7000*
**REFERENCES**
*The Business Environment*
*Introduction to Business Analytics*
*Introduction to Data Analysis*
*Introduction to Information Systems*
*Introduction to Machine Learning*
*Introduction to Natural Language Processing*
*Introduction to Artificial Intelligence*
*Introduction to Robotics*
*Introduction to Cognitive Robots*
*Introduction to AI Applications*
*Introduction to AI Technologies*
*Introduction to AI Services*
*Introduction to AI Education*
*Introduction to AI Research*
*Introduction to AI Technology}
*Introduction to AI Technology*
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pharmacy/computer
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Evaluation for 3
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KC
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212.914.3870 Mt. Laurence 69
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protects our living countryside from human activity.
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Maintains the health of the environment.
Aims to improve community well-being.
MAKES MORAL
promotes environmental sustainability.
Supports local businesses.
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Enhances community spirit.
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3 times weekly sell positions
on mobile and desktop
wireless and coaxial
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business area shrimp,
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of the day. FREE PRICES.
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an advertis ing supplement to the University Dally Kansan
---
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL. 101, No. 119
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1991
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(פסקה-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
The Associated Press
ZAKHO, Iraq — Kurdish rebels yesterday claimed they had seized a government-held air base and camp in northern Iraq but said there were signs Saddam Hussein's forces were preparing for an assault on a key rebel-city.
A statement from the Kurdistan Democratic Party said the Iraqi army was massing forces in Saddam's hometown of Tikrit to attack on the northern oil city of Kirkuk when it fell.
HIRKU, which was seized by the insurgents. The statement, sent to the Associated Press in Nicosia, Cyprus, by telex, could not be confirmed independently.
Saddam has been struggling to quell rebellions in the north and south that flared after his defeat by the allies in the Persian Gulf War. The fighting halted with a cease-fire a month ago.
President Bush said yesterday that it was unlikely that Saddam would remain in power for long because the Iraqi people were fed up with him.
"There's enough dissent and disorder, but it appears the Iraqi citizens are trying to do something about this," he told reporters in Bethesda, Md.
Kurdish leaders reported gains in northern Iraq — but also heavy casualties. They said guerrillas overran an Iraqi air base near Kirkuk on Tuesday and captured two Soviet-
made warplanes, a MIG-21 fighter and a Soviet-made Sukhoi bomber.
The rebels also said they seized a government camp at Faardiya, on the road from Dohuk to Mosul.
They said the two installations were among
that host that government forces controlled
part of the area.
The Kurdistan Democratic Party said in a statement issued in London that the attack on the Khalid military air base was launched to stop the bombing of rebel held areas.
The statement said that more than 1,000 people were killed in the past week in air attacks on the northern cities of Kirkuk, Kefri, Dokhar, Kalar and Tuz Khormatu.
The Kurds said they feared a new threat starvation. The only supply route now open is around the northern town.
In southern Iraq, where Saddam's forces largely have succeeded in putting down rebellions by Shiite Muslims, hunger was a key factor in the deaths of refugees fleeing into allied controlled areas.
In the Iraqi border town of Safan, food is broken up yesterday as Saudi Arabian food vendors begin to sell it.
"We tried to be organized, but the people are just too hungry," said Maju. Youssef Ali Albourd of the Saudi military "They see the food, and they go crazy."
No serious injuries were reported in the
At the United Nations, a new Security Council resolution would hold Iraq liable for the environmental havoc caused by tactics such as dumping millions of gallons of oil in the Persian Gulf and setting Kuwait's oil wells alight.
rioting.
The permanent members of the Security Council - the United States, Britain, France, China and the Soviet Union - meet in private to refine their checklist of conditions the Baghdad government must meet before a permanent cease-fire is approved.
Under the measure, Iraq would have to let U. N. experts destroy its chemical, biological and nuclear assets.
Moscow police quell activists
Yeltsin supporters dispersed at Kremlin shortly before Russian parliament meets
MOSCOW — Police moved quickly today against pro-democracy activists backing Boris Yeltsin in a key political battle, dispersing several dozen just hours before a plenary audience of a central government ban.
A dozen police rush crowd of 75 demonstrator pushed them down the street. Kremlin. At least six detained.
The scuffle occurred shortly the Russian republic's parliament convened at the Kremkin for a session at which Yeltsin, Pre Mihalik Gorbachev's chief rife decided to face a no-coffee vote.
His followers planned to o three-week ban on street demitions imposed by Gorbat cabinet Monday and demon- tize the new law later in the day with a huge r adjacent Mesh Square.
Before they were dispersed the demonstrators chanted "Y
However, authorities said sands of police and Interior M troops, armed with rubber bands, would block the mar path.
Fears of a bloody confront gripped Moscow yesterday, when armor cles were sighted at at three miles from the city cent
New enros simplifies
By Jonathan Plummer Kansan staff writer
march 30-April 1, 1961
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA
FINAL POINT
Starting this fall, one check all.
When enrolling at the end semester, students may ord passes, all sports tickets or a tickets and then pay for them fall with the same check or card they use for their tuition.
David Hardy, director of Org
ations and Activities, said the c
was part of a program that e
ally would make it possible f
dents to pay for all KU servi
one time.
Watkins pla
However, students are not rec to buy tickets or bus passes on day of their enrollment appoint he said. Those who do not sign up may have to spend a spirin to go to individual offices fall to buy them, he said.
The options table will be Strong Hall rotunda for the enrollment period, Hardy said.
"This is a project that we been working on for the past f six years," he said.
Yeltsin," and held aloft the white, blue and red flag of independent Russia as well as signs that read, "We are the Russians" and "Communist."
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CAREER RESOURCE CENTER...
Bailey Hall, Rm. 116 864-3931
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Employment Tab Thursday, March 27, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL. 101, No. 119
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1991
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(0323 653-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Kurdish rebels seize Iraqi camp while citizens face starvation
The Associated Press
ZAKHO, Iraq — Kurdish rebels yesterday claimed they had seized a government held air base and camp in northern Iraq but said there were signs Saddam Hussein's forces were preparing for an assault on a key rebel-held city.
A statement from the Kurdistan Democratic Party said the Iraqi army was massing forces in Saddam's hometown of Tikrit to kill Kabul and Baghdad, which was seized by the insurgent Kutuk.
The statement, sent to The Associated Paperhouse, said that Telex, could not be confirmed independently.
Saddam has been struggling to quell rebel
President Bush said yesterday that it was unlikely that Saddam would remain in power for long because the Iraqi people were fed up with him.
ions in the north and south that flared after his defeat by the allies in the Persian Gull War. The fighting halted with a cease-fire a month ago.
"There's enough dissent and disorder, but it appears the Iraqi citizens are trying to do something about this," he told reporters in Bethesda. Md
Kurdish leaders reported gains in northern Iraq — but also heavy casualties. They said guerrillas overran an Iraqi air base near Kirkuk on Tuesday and captured two Soviet-
made warplanes, a MiG-21 fighter and a Soviet-made Sukhoi bomber.
The rebels also said they seized a government camp at Faardiya, on the road from Dohuk to Mosul.
They said the two installations were among the last that government forces controlled in northern Korea.
The Kurdistan Democratic Party said in a statement issued in London that the attack on the Khalid military air base was launched to stop the bombing of rebel held areas.
The statement said that more than 1,000 people were killed in the past week in air attacks on the northern cities of Kirkuk, Kefu, Dokhan, Kalar and Tuz Khormatu.
The Kurds said they feared a new threat *starvation* the only supply route now open is into Aleppo.
In southern Iraq, where Saddam's forces largely have succeeded in putting down rebellions by Shite Muslims, hunger was a strong factor in the lands of refugees fleeing into allied-controlled areas.
In the Iraqi border town of Safwan, food riots broke out yesterday as Saudi Arabian food trucks arrived.
"We tried to organize, but the people are just too hungry," said Major Youssef Ali Albourd of the Saudi military "They see the food, and they go crazy."
No serious injuries were reported in the
rioting.
At the United Nations, a new Security Council resolution would hold Iraq liable for the environmental havoc caused by tactics such as dumping millions of gallons of oil in the Persian Gulf and setting Kuwait's oil wells alight.
The permanent members of the Security Council - the United States, Britain, France, China and the Soviet Union - meet in private to refine their checklist of conditions the Baghdad government must meet before a permanent cease-fire is approved.
Moscow police quell activists
Under the measure, Iraq would have to let U.N. experts destroy its chemical, biological and nuclear weapons.
Yeltsin supporters dispersed at Kremlin shortly before Russian parliament meets
MOSCOW — Police moved quickly today against pro-democracy activists backing Boris Yeltsin in a key political battle, dispersing several dozen just hours before a pl rally in defiance of a central ment ban.
About a dozen police rush crowd of 75 demonstrator pushed them down the street near Kremlin. At least six detained.
The scuffie occurred shortly the Russian parliament's parliom convened at the Kremlin for a session at which Yelian, Pre Mihak Gorbachev's chief rive to face a no-coff vote.
His followers planned to d three-week ban on street demons imposed by Gorbak cabinet Monday and demon chants reported to court (later in the day with a hail ad juceanate Manjeh Square.
However, authorities said sands of police and Interior Mini troops, armed with rubber fists, would block the mare path.
Fears of a bloody confront gripped Moscow yesterday, clally after two dozo armored cars drove them three miles from the city center
Before they were dispersed to the demonstrators chanted "Ye
New enrol simplifies
By Jonathan Plumme
Kansan staff writer
Starting this fall, one check do all.
When enrolling at the end of semester, students may order passes, all-sports tickets or all tickets and then pay for them it fall with the same check or card they use for their tuition.
David Hardy, director of Organizations and Activities, said the chair was part of a program that evily would make it possible for dents to pay for all KU service one time.
However, students are not reqi
to buy tickets or bus passes on
day of their enrollment appointm
he said "Those who do not sign up
are going to be expiring in
have to go to individual offices
in fall to buy them, he said.
"This is a project that we I been working on for the past five six years," he said.
The options table will be in Strong Hall rotunda for the en enrollment period, Hardy said.
Watkins plan
March 30-April 1, 1961
Indianapolis, Indiana
FINAL FOOTBALL
Yeltsin," and held aloft the white, blue and red flag of independent Russia as well as signs that read, "Yeltsin is the hope of the Russian
**PLEASE DO NOT MISS THE TRUCK.**
Internships offer students valuable work experience
By Allison Burgess
and Bill Leibengoo
Special to the Kansan
Have you ever wondered what makes an employer choose one applicant as opposed to others?
Interests are one of the best forms of experience available, and for those students who are serious about competing in sports or games they are an essential part of their educations.
In addition to improving your resume, internships can give you a feel for the field itself and let you see if it's the right one for you.
If you are a student who has already decided on a major, it's probably a good time to think about getting an internship. As a rule, it's never too early to start, but most schools recommend that students take a foreign course of courses in their major before applying.
"Working inside the place and learning about the internal functions of the staff helped me realize this is the right field for me." she said.
In some cases, internships can be used for course credit, others for a regular wage and some are strictly voluntary. If you decide to apply for a credit internship, make sure you check with your respective school first.
Karen Burdick, Harrisonville, Mo.
juniar, said her work experiences last
summer with an advertising firm gave her an
edge that many students lack.
Finding out about internships possibilities is easier than you might realize.
First, students should contact someone in
their department. These contacts can tell you what internships are available, and they can inform you where to get additional information about the internships. Students can also get help at the Student Employment Center, 1 Strong Hall, the University Placement Center, 110 Burge Union, and the Career Resource Center, 116 Bailey Hall. In addition, there is information available at Watson Library.
You should get the name of a company's personnel director from these sources, and then gather information to send to him or her.
Some companies will request a copy of a student's transcript, so it's a good idea to keep one on hand. The student will need to send a resume, cover letter and references. It's also a good idea to send work samples if possible. A student should make himself as available as possible; try to make it easy for people to interview you.
County companies will send a reply even if they choose not to interview an applicant. Always write a follow-up letter, even if the company sends you a rejection letter. It's good etiquette, and it's another opportunity for them to be in front of the person who does the hiring.
Students gain confidence from working with professionals, and internships provide students with work samples to show prospective employers.
Most importantly, however, internships give students practical experience that will give them an advantage in competing for jobs. It is not unusual for companies to hire students who have worked for them as interns.
When interviewing for that important job, you need to be prepared. Let the KU Bookstores help.
Dunn Good
Resume Guide
PATON
Careers
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 27, 1991 Employment Tab
VOL.101.No.119
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1991
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(וסעיף-640)
.NEWS:864-4810
Kurdish rebels seize Iraqi camp while citizens face starvation
The Associated Press
ZAKHO, Iraq — Kurdish rebels yesterday claimed they had seized a government-held air base and camp in northern Iraq but said there were signs Saddam Hussein's forces were preparing for an assault on a key rebel-held city.
A statement from the Kurdistan Democratic Party said the Iraqi army was massing forces in Saddam's hometown of Tikrit to launch an attack on the northern oil city of Erbil.
The statement, sent to The Associated Press in Nicosia, Cyprus, by telex, could not be confirmed independently.
Saddam has been struggling to quell rebellions in the north and south that flared after his defeat by the allies in the Persian Gulf War. The fighting halted with a cease-fire a month ago.
President Bush said yesterday that it was unlikely that Saddam would remain in power for long because the Iraqi people were fed up with him.
"There's enough dissent and disorder, but it appears the Iraqi citizens are trying to do something about this," he told reporters in Bethesda, Md.
They said the two installations were amorous, that they government forces controlled in northern Norway.
The rebels also said they seized a government camp at Faardyia, on the road from Marrakech.
made warplanes, a MIG-21 fighter and a Soviet made Sukhi bomber.
The Kurdistan Democratic Party said in a statement issued in London that the attack on the Khalid military air base was launched to stop the bombing of rebel held areas.
The statement said that more than 1,000 people were killed in the past week in air attacks on the northern cities of Kirku, Kefri, Dohuk, Kalar and Tuz Khormatu.
In southern Iraq, where Saddam's forces largely have succeeded in putting down rebellions by Shite Muslims, hunger was a major factor. The war against refugees fleeing into allied controlled areas
The Kurds said they feared a new threat *starvation*. The only supply route now open is on the southern side of the city.
In the Iraq border town of Safwan, food rucks broke up yesterday as Saudi Arabian food workers returned.
"We tried to be organized, but the people are just too hungry," said Maju Joussef Al Abourt of the Saudi military "They see the food, and they go crazy."
No serious injuries were reported in the
At the United Nations, a new Security Council resolution would hold Iraq liable for the environmental havoc caused by tactics such as dumping millions of gallons of oil in the Persian Gulf and setting Kuwait's oil wells alight.
The permanent members of the Security Council – the United States, Britain, France, China and the Soviet Union – meet in private to refine their checklist of conditions the Baghdad government must meet before a permanent cease-fire is approved.
Moscow police quell activists
Yeltsin supporters dispersed at Kremlin shortly before Russian parliament meets
rioting
Under the measure, Iraq would have to let UA experts destroy its chemical, biological and nuclear weapons.
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Police moved quickly today against pro-democracy activists backing Boris Yeltsin in a key political battle, dispersing several dozen just hours before a plenum against a central ® mand ban
About a dozen police rush crowd of 75 demonstrators pushed them down the street and Kremnil. At least six detained
The scuffle occurred shortly the Russian republic's parli convened at the Kremini for a session at which Yellain, Preik Mihak Gorbachez's chief rife to face a no-coff vote.
His followers planned to d three-week ban on street demions imposed by Gorbale cabinet Monday and demon tioned in June. Fort later in the day with a hau adiantate Manne Sourae.
However, authorities said
sands of police and Interior Mi-
troops, armed with rubber 1
fingers, would block the mare path
Fears of a bloody confront gripped Moscow yesterday, clally after two dozen armored vehicles from the east three miles from the city center
Before they were dispersed to the demonstrators chanted "Ye
New enrol simplifies
By Jonathan Plummer
Kansas staff writer
Starting this fall, one check do all.
March 30-April 1, 1961
Indianapolis, Indiana
FINAL FOLIO
When enrolling at the end of semester, students may order, pass, all-sports tickets or alttickets and then pay for them in fall with the same check or cr card they use for their tuition.
David Hardy, director of Orga-tions and Activities, said the cha was part of a program that eve-ly would make it possible for dents to pay for all KU service one time.
"This is a project that we h been working on for the past five six years," he said.
Watkins plan
However, students are not required to buy tickets or bus passes on day of their enrollment appointment he said. Those who do not sign up for the program have to apply in fall to go to individual offices in fall to buy them, he said.
The options table will be in Strong Hall rotunda for the en enrollment period, Hardy said.
Yeltis," and hold aloft the white, blue and red flag of independent Russia as well as signs that read, "People are People" and "Communities are Commun."
Mock interviews helpful in preparation
Bv Carev Pratt
Special to the Kansan
The University Placement Center in Burge Union offers various services that assist students in their preparations for obtaining a job. I took advantage of the mock interview, an experience which I found to be very helpful. My session is conducted as a real interview, but in the mock interview you have the benefit of being video taped.
I had never realized that the opportunity of a mock interview existed. The idea of viewing myself on video tape while receiving constructive criticism or valuable suggestions was an interesting concept and I thought that it would be very helpful to me. I knew that if I were to have any characteristics that should be avoided, this was the time when I would find out. I was absolutely right.
The mock interview was easily arranged. I stopped by the Placement Center, 110
Burge, and very simply signed up for an appointment. This same procedure could also be accompanied with a telephone call. The appointment was scheduled for a week later. I advise that you expect and plan for a similar time frame.
I was told to wear clothes that I would wear in a professional interview. In other words, wear a suit. The idea is to view a video tape where you are dressed and acting as if in a real interview situation. The objective is to become comfortable in that dress and to become aware of any negative habits you might have, such as jiggling the change in your pocket or bouncing your crossed leg.
I advise that you feel comfortable in what you wear and how you look. This is not the time to make changes to your appearance.
For instance, don't part your hair differently if at the interview you are unsure of how it looks. All throughout the interview you will pat your head self-consciously to make
sure your hair is OK. This action will be distracting and the interviewer will only remember you as the person who kept playing with his or her hair.
In my personal experience, I learned never to wear lipstick. I'm not comfortable wearing lipstick, and during the interview, I had become very paranoid about having it on my teeth. I was so nervous about this that throughout the interview, I kept running my tongue across my teeth. After viewing the video tape, I realized that this action itself was more distracting that anything else that could have happened. I'm glad I found this out in the mock interview.
The mock interview has since had a great effect on what I have worn and how I have acted in interviews that have really been important to me. Being comfortable with different types of clothing is more confident. Test your comfortability level with a mock interview; you won't
regret it.
In addition to learning about my idiosyncracies that the video tape had shown to me, the interviewer conducting the mock interview made very helpful suggestions about questions she had asked me during the session. Her questions consisted of those that were commonly asked by many professional interviewers. Not only was her ad-hoc approach well suited with them to answer a question, but the interview with her prepared me to have a response to those common or sometimes awkward questions.
Prepare for such questions as: What would you like to tell me about yourself? What are your long-range and short-range goals? or, what Do you consider to be your greatest strengths and weaknesses? Do you want the opportunity to help the interview Center will help you develop positive answers to these and many other interview questions.
Strong interview skills impress most hiring employers
Bv Christina Kainz
Special to the Kansan
A good job interview is often the key to getting a job. Knowing how the interviewer weighs such aspects as grade point average, extra-curricular activities and character traits can help you have a successful job interview.
Norman Jacobs, former personnel
Although each interviewer may not look for the same qualities in an interview candidate, some professionals offered some guidelines.
manager of Coopers and Lybrand in
to show self-confidence during the interview
"If you don't believe in yourself, no one
will believe either. be said." This is your
chance to prove yourself.
Jacobs said that he was not too concerned with a student's GPA as long as it was above a 2.5 on a 4.0 scale. Like Jacobs, he was also interested in Prestestrel Concrete in Chicago, said GPA was not a big concern, although he warned that students should "know their
stuff." Obviously a student should have a higher GPA in courses related to the major.
Both Jacobs and Goodmiller stressed the importance of extra-circular activities. Interviewers look for well-rounded individuals with a variety of interests.
"What you do in your spare time tells people who you are." Jacobs said.
Goodmiller said he looked for candidates who demonstrated a willingness to learn as well as flexibility. A company is making an investment in you by hiring you and it wants to be sure it will benefit from this
decision.
"Plan your career goals and make sure you can fit into your career goals," Jacobs said.
"Don't be opinionated. The shortest interview I ever gave was to an applicant who made a snide remark about a university in Boston. I informed him I had graduated from that particular university. The interview was over."
Interviewers are human too. The bottom line is to be prepared, know what you want and go after it with confidence.
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110 Burge Union
Employment Tab Thursday, March 27, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.101.No.119
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1991
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(0315650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Kurdish rebels seize Iraqi camp while citizens face starvation
ZAKHO, Iraq — Kurdish rebels yesterday claimed they had seized a government-held air base and camp in northern Iraq but said there were signs Saddam Hussein's forces were preparing for an assault on a key rebel-held city.
The Associated Press
A statement from the Kurdistan Democratic Party said the Iraqi army was massing forces in Saddam's hometown of Tikrit to arrest Kirkuk, which was seized by the insurgent Kirkuk, that was seized by the insurgent Kirkuk, which
The statement, sent to The Associated Press, could not be verified by telelex, could not be cannified independently.
Saddam has been struggling to quell rebel
lions in the north and south that flared after his defeat by the allies in the Persian Gulf War. The fighting halted with a cease-fire a month ago.
President Bush said yesterday that it was unlikely that Saddam would remain in power for long because the Iraqi people were fed up with him.
"There's enough dissent and disorder, but it appears the Iraqi citizens are trying to do something about this," he told reporters in Bethesda. Md
Kurdish leaders reported gains in northern Iraq — but also heavy casualties. They said guerrillas overran an Iraqi air base near Kirkuk on Tuesday and captured two Soviet
made warplanes, a MIG-21 fighter and a Soviet-made Sukhoi bomber.
The rebels also said they seized a government camp at Faardyda, on the road from Dadaib.
They said the two installations were among the last that government forces controlled in Iraq.
The Kurdistan Democratic Party said in a statement issued in London that the attack on the Khalid military air base was launched to stop the bombing of rebel held areas.
The statement said that more than 1,000 people were killed in the past week in air attacks on the northern cities of Kirku, Kefri, Dohuk, Kalar and Tuz Khormatu.
The Kurds said they feared a new threat starvation. The only supply route now open on the other side of the island was through
In southern Iraq, where Saddam's forces largely have succeeded in putting down rebellions by Shite Muslims, hanger was among thousands of refugees fleeing into allied camps.
In the Iraqi border town of Safan, food riots broke out yesterday as Saudi Arabian food companies staged a coup.
"We tried to be organized, but the people are just too hungry," said Maj. Youssef Al Albourd of the Saudi military "They see the food, and they go crazy."
No serious injuries were reported in the
rioting.
At the United Nations, a new Security Council resolution would hold Iraq liable for the environmental havoc caused by tactics such as dumping millions of gallons of oil in the Persian Gulf and setting Kuwait's oil wells alight.
The permanent members of the Security Council - the United States, Britain, France, China and the Soviet Union - meet in private to refine their checklist of conditions the Baghdad government must meet before a permanent cease-fire is approved.
Moscow police quell activists
Under the measure, Iraq would have to let U. B. experts destroy its chemical, biological and nuclear weapons.
Yeltsin supporters dispersed at Kremlin shortly before Russian parliament meets
MOSCOW — Police moved quickly today against pro-democracy activists backing Boris Yeltsin in a key political battle, dispersing several dozen just hours before a plrally in defiance of a central government ban.
About a dozen police rush crowd of 75 demonstrator pushed them down the street Kremilin. At least six detained
The scuffle occurred shortly the Russian republic's parli convened at the Kremlin for a session at which Yeltsin, Pre Mikhail Gorbachev's chief rival convened to face a no-conf vote.
His followers planned to d three-week ban on street demons imposed by Gorbak cabinet Monday and demon jacket for later in the day with a burge adjacent Meshu Square.
However, authorities said sands of police and Interior Mint troops, armed with rubber knives, would block the marsh path.
Fears of a bloody confront gripped Moscow yesterday, cally after two dozen armored vehicles headed to the city center three miles from the city center.
Before they were dispersed to the demonstrators chanted "Ye
New enrol simplifies
By Jonathan Plumme.
Starting this fall, one check do all.
"This is a project that we he been working on for the past five six years." he said.
When enrolling at the end of semester, students may order passes, all-sports tickets or all-tickets and then pay for them in fall with the same check or cr card they use for their tuition.
David Hardy, director of Orgations and Activities, said the chas was part of a program that eveally would make it possible for dents to pay for all KU service one time.
However, students are not requi-
to buy tickets or bus passes on
day of their enrollment appointment
he said. Those who do not sign up
in class will be in office when
have to go to individual offices in
hall to buy them, he said.
The options table will be in Strong Hall rotunda for the en enrollment period, Hardy said.
Watkins plan
Indianapolis, Indiana
MARCH 30-April 1, 1967
Yeltsin," and held aloft the white, blue and red flag of independent Russia as well as signs that read "American people" and "Communists, stop robbing"
A firefighter pulls a log into position.
SIGI+helps students make career choices
By Beth Stopperan
Special to the Kansan
So what do you want to do with your life?
This question has been posed to almost every college student at one time or another. Many have no idea how to answer it. Making decisions, however, is an unavoidable part of college.
Choosing a major may be the hardest decision a student must make. This process, however, is made easier through self-assessment tests. There is no better way to find out what career you are most suited for than to check your interests and identify what you want from a job, the search for a major is made much easier.
Self-assessment tests vary in length, complexity and accuracy. There are two fairly simple self-assessment tests offered at the University of Kansas that a student can interpret with relative ease: the System of Interactive Guidance and Information (SIGI) and the Self-Directed Search.
SIGI is a computer test composed of eight sections that gather information about a student's values, interests, activities and skills. SIGI is helpful not only in providing students with useful knowledge but also provides lists of jobs that match an individual's particular wants and needs.
The Self-Directed Search is a series of lists containing statements such as "I write poetry or stories well," and "I am a good writer." The number of words calculated when the test is completed and a
three-tetter code is issued. The code is chosen from six possible themes: Realistic, Conventional, Enterprising, Interactive, Creative, Unconventional, and them to jobs for which they may be suited.
Although all self-assessment tests have a margin of error, they can help students get a general idea about what they want to major in. Brian Eggenberger, a graduate student working at the Career Resource Center and ideas as to which test was more accurate.
"I think the SIGI is more accurate," he said. "It takes into account your values and personality — a person as a whole, not just pieces."
Eggenberger also said that both tests do not give the answers, more answers, or guidelines to follow.
Both SIGI and the Self-Directed Search can be taken at the Career Resource Center in 116 Bailey Hall. They are free to KU students who take advantage of this service, and are especially helpful to those in the process of making career decisions.
In addition tro taking self-assessment tests, the Career Resource Center recommended talking to people working in the fields you are interested in. They may be able to give you insight on a career that is impossible for any test to provide.
Although these tests are time consuming to take, they are easy to interpret. They offer an organized way of deciding on a major, and even though they do not make decisions for you, they can point you in the right direction.
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Universit Dalv Kansan / Thursday. March 27, 1991 Employment Tab
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL. 101, No. 119
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1991
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(0315 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Kurdish rebels seize Iraqi camp while citizens face starvation
The Associated Press
ZAKHO, Iraq — Kurdish rebels yesterday claimed they had seized a government-held air base and camp in northern Iraq but said there were signs Saddam Hussein's forces were preparing for an assault on a key rebel-built city.
A statement from the Kurdistan Democratic Party said the Iraqi army was massing forces in Saddam's hometown of Tkrit to attack on the northern oil city of Kirkuk which is hostile to the government.
The statement, sent to The Associated Press in Nycus, Cyprus, by telex, could not be credited.
Saddam has been struggling to quell rebellions in the north and south that flared after his defeat by the allies in the Persian Gulf War. The fighting halted with a cease-fire a month ago.
President Bush said yesterday that it was unlikely that Saddam would remain in power for long because the Iraqi people were fed up with him.
"There's enough dissent and disorder, but it appears the Iraqi citizens are trying to do something about this," he told reporters in Bethesda, Md.
Kurdish leaders reported gains in northern Iraq — but also heavy casualties. They said guerrillas overran an Iraqi air base near Kirkuk on Tuesday and captured two Soviet-
made warplanes, a MIG-21 fighter and a Soviet-made Sukhoi bomber.
The rebels also said they seized a government camp at Faardtaa, on the road from Dhahran.
They said the two installations were among the last that government forces controlled in the city.
The Kurdistan Democratic Party said in a statement issued in London that the attack on the Khalid military air base was launched to stop the bombing of rebel held areas.
The statement said that more than 1,000 people were killed in the past week in air attacks on the northern cities of Kirkuk, Kefri, Dohuk, Kalar and Tuz Khormatu.
The Kurds said they feared a new threat starvation. The only supply route open is into the village.
In southern Iraq, where Saddam's forces largely have succeeded in putting down rebellions by Shite Muslims, hunger was causing desperation among thousands of refugees fleeing into allied-controlled areas.
In the Iraqi border town of Safwan, food
ranks broke out yesterday as Saudi Arabian
foods went up in demand.
"We tried to be organized, but the people are just too hungry," said MaJ. Youssef Ali Abourat of the Saudi military "They see the food, and they go crazy."
No serious injuries were reported in the
At the United Nations, a new Security Council resolution would hold Iraq liable for the environmental havoc caused by tactics such as dumping millions of gallons of oil in the Persian Gulf and setting Kuwait's oil wells alight.
rioting.
The permanent members of the Security Council - the United States, Britain, France, China and the Soviet Union - meet in private to refine their checklist of conditions the Baghdad government must meet before a permanent cease-fire is approved.
Moscow police quell activists
Under the measure, Iraq would have to let U.N. experts destroy its chemical, biological and nuclear weapons.
Yeltsin supporters dispersed at Kremlin shortly before Russian parliament meets
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Police moved quickly today against pro-democracy activists backing Boris Yeltsin in a key political battle, dispersing seven hours before a plrally in defiance of a central government ban.
About a dozen police rush crowd of 75 demonstrator pushed them down the street Kremlin At least six detained.
The scuffle occurred shortly the Russian republic's parli convened on the Kremkin for a session at which Yellin Sin. Pre Mikhail Gorbachev's chief rieflected to face a no-confrontation.
His followers planned to $ \textcircled{4} $ three-week ban on street demons imposed by Gorbache cabinet Monday and demonized by police in court ($ \textcircled{5} $ later in the day with a huge adiacent Manez shuare
Before they were dispersed to the demonstrators chanted "Ye
Fears of a bloody confront gripped Moscow yesterday, cally after two dozen armored helicopters dropped three bombs from the air.
However, authorities said sands of police and Interior Mur troops, armed with rubber knives, would block the marte path.
Yeltsin," and held aloft the white, blue and red flag of independent Russia as well as signs that read, "Yeltsin is the hope of the Russian
New enrol simplifies
Starting this fall, one check do all.
David Hardy, director of Orgations and Activities, said the chair was part of a program that eve ally would make it possible for dents to pay for all KU service one time.
By Jonathan Plummer Kansan staff writer
When enrolling at the end of semester, students may order passes, all-sports tickets or all-tickets and then pay for them in fall with the same check or card they use for their tuition.
"This is a project that we he been working on for the past five six years," he said.
However, students are not required to buy tickets or bus passes on day of their enrollment appointment he said. Those who do not sign up have to go to individual offices in it to fall to them, he said.
The options table will be in Strong Hall rotunda for the en enrollment period, Hardy said.
Watkins plan
March 30-April 1, 1961
Indianapolis, Indiana
FINAL
PORT
Center gives students career advice
By Gordon Gilges
Special to the Kansan
Even the calmest people have felt a wave of panic wash over them. It was suddenly time for them to decide what they wanted to do with their life. It's a decision that no one can make for anyone else. But, if they needed some help, they could have gone to the University of Kansas Counseling Center to help tell you what to do, but they are hopeful that they can help you decide for yourself. That's what they are there for — to help.
From the moment I first approached the receptionist in the Counseling Center, I could tell that this staff took its job of help with very very very seriously. They were also very friendly.
My main contact was with Carrie Winterton a junior staff counselor who was in charge of the project.
She had a few minutes and I was able to ask her a few questions about te Counseling Center, the counseling process and the people who use it.
Q: If you had an auditorium full of students with questions in some kind of career counseling seminar, what would be the first thing you would tell them?
A: "Basically, we just try to encourage them to make their own decisions, so if they were going to come into the Counseling Center for services, we would have them probably take some interest inventories to understand how their interests compare with the interests of the people who are acting in those fields. We would assess their fields. We would assess their values, what activities they are interested in and we try to put together a picture of that person."
what they should do. We just help them to come to their own conclusions. What I would recommend to students that are undecided about a college major is to start trying to collect information about themselves."
"Ultimately, we don't ever tell students
Q: Do you have many people that come in and don't really seem to have a solid grasp of it?
A: "Yes. I think if a person comes in to see a career counselor we try to find out their functional skills — like if you've taken Career and Life Planning. But one-to-one counseling is a more personal experience than taking classes or doing a workshop. We offer individual counseling and sometimes we've had career groups. Sometimes we offer seminars and talks on career decisions."
Q: So you don't really stress graduating in your years? I know that's a goal for a lot of people.
A: "It is a goal for a lot of people, but we've had some people come in for career counseling who are starting up their junior or senior year and are just realizing that maybe this isn't the field that they want to go into. If they are undecided and they're not sure what they want to do, it may take them five or six years, but that's OK. We try to tell them that it is OK and a career plan will be made. You'll your field for five, 10 years and realize that maybe you want to go back for an MBA or something like that and go into a different field or maybe work up in your field. So I try to help my clients realize that they have many options open to them and what they need to do is assess what their skills are, what they value and what they would like to be doing in their work.
"I think people have stereotypes about certain occupations and once you go out and talk to the people in the fields, you get a clear picture of what the average salary is like, what the working conditions are like, how much school you have to go through to get where you want to go. It's just good to know that you're not going to go into that field because that informational interview may end up being a good connection for a job later on.
Q: What do you say to someone who is really stressed out about these types of
A: "Sometimes when you're struggling with your future and thinking about 'What do I want to major in,' it can interfere with other aspects of your life. Sometimes when people are undecided career-wise, they are undecided in other aspects of life. Sometimes when people are having career indecisiveness they also may have personal issues that they want to focus in on too. I think it's important for students to balance out their student role, their social role and the other roles in their life."
Q: How involved do you think students are with any or all of the counseling services?
A: "It depends. I don't know about any other counseling services, but when people come in for career counseling, they come in for one session.
"I think career exploration is a very personal experience. I don't think you can provide advice to someone as to what they should do with their life. So I don't think we ever tell people 'Go into this field because it's right for you.' We encourage them to come to their own conclusions based on information they've collected,
15 COMMONLY ASKED QUESTIONS DURING AN INTERVIEW
1. How would you describe yourself?
2. Why did you choose your field of study?
3. What motivates you to put forth your greatest efforts?
4. "What are your greatest strengths and weaknesses?
5. What subjects do you like least?
Why?
6. What classes do you wish you had taken, but did not have the opportunity to do so?
8. Do you think your grades are a good indication of your academic achievement?
7. Where do you see yourself five years from now?
9. What activities have you partici pated in during your college years?
12. What have you learned from your mistakes?
11. Are you willing to relocate? Are you willing to travel?
13. What major problem have you encountered, on the job or in school, and how did you deal with it?
14. How do you work under pressure?
15. What is the level of commitment you want to put into your jobour company?
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2. 下列说法中错误的是 ( )
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL. 101, No. 119
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1991
(0335930-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Kurdish rebels seize Iraqi camp while citizens face starvation
The Associated Press
ZAKHI, Iraq — Kurdish rebels yesterday claimed they had seized a government-held air base and camp in northern Iraq but said there were signs Saddam Hussein's forces were preparing for an assault on a key rebel-held city.
A statement from the Kurdistan Democratic Party said the Iraqi army was massing forces in Saddam's hometown of Tkrit to kill them. The Kurds, who were killed at Kirkuk, which was seized by the insurgents,
The statement, sent to the Associated Patterson University, the texl., could not be satisfied, and immediately
Saddam has been struggling to quell rebel-
ions in the north and south that flaree outa his defeat by the allies in the Persian Gulf War. The fighting halted with a cease-fire a month ago.
President Bush said yesterday that it was unlikely that Saddam would remain in power for long because the Iraqi people were fed up with him.
"There's enough dissent and disorder, but it appears the Iraqi citizens are trying to do something about this," he told reporters in Bethesda. Md
Kurdish leaders reported gains in northern Iraq — but also heavy casualties. They said guerrillas overran an Iraqi air base near Kirkuk on Tuesday and captured two Soviet-
made warplanes, a MIG-21 fighter and a Soviet made Sukhoi bomber.
The rebels also said they seized a government camp at Paardyafta, on the road from Dammam.
They said the two installations were among the last that government forces controlled in Iraq.
The Kurdistan Democratic Party said in a statement issued in London that the attack on the Khalid military air base was launched to stop the bombing of rebel held areas.
The statement said that more than 1,000 people were killed in the past week in air attacks on the northern cities of Kirkuk, Kefri, Dohuk, Kalar and Tuz Khrmatu.
The Kurds said they feared a new threat starvation. The only supply route now open is across the border.
In southern Iraq, where Saddam's forces largely have succeeded in putting down rebellions by Shiite Muslims, hunger was causing desperation among thousands of refugees fleeing into allied-controlled areas.
In the Iraqi border town of Safan, food riot broke up yesterday as Saudi Arabian
"We tried to be organized, but the people are just too hungry," said MaJ. Youssef Alibour of the Saudi military "They see the food, and they go crazy"
No serious injuries were reported in the
rioting.
At the United Nations, a new Security Council resolution would hold Iraq liable for the environmental harm caused by tactics such as dumping millions of gallons of oil in the Persian Gulf and setting Kuwait's oil wells alight.
The permanent members of the Security Council - the United States, Britain, France, China and the Soviet Union - meet in private to refine their checklist of conditions the Baghdad government must meet before a permanent cease-fire is approved.
Moscow police quell activists
Under the measure. Iraq would have to let U.N. experts destroy its chemical, biological and nuclear weapons
Yeltsin supporters dispersed at Kremlin shortly before Russian parliament meets
MOSCOW — Police moved quickly today against pro-democracy activists backing Boris Yeltsin in a key political battle, dispersing several dozen just hours before a planned airlift of a central ment ban.
About a dozen police rush crowd of 75 demonstrator pushed them down the street and Krennil. At least six detained.
The scuffle occurred shortly the Russian republic's parli convened at the Kremlin for a session at which Yeltin, Pre Mikhail Gorbachev's chief rivet decided to face a no-confidence vote.
His followers planned to $d$ three-week ban on street demos imposed by Gorbache cabinet Monday and demonized the act, but fort(?) later in the day with a hau adiacent Maneh square
Before they were dispersed to the demonstrators chanted "Ye
However, authorities said sands of police and Interior Mini troops, armed with rubber fists, would block the marche path.
Fears of a bloody confront gripped Moscow yesterday, cally after two dozen armored soldiers entered the city three miles from the city center.
New enrol simplifies
By Jonathan Plummer
Kansan staff writer
Starting this fall, one check do all.
When enrolling at the end of semester, students may order passes, all-sports tickets or all-tickets and then pay for them in fall with the same check or card they use for their tuition.
David Hardy, director of Orgations and Activities, said the cha was part of a program that eveally would make it possible for dents to pay for all KU service one time.
"This is a project that we he been working on for the past five six years." he said.
However, students are not required to buy tickets or bus passes on day of their enrollment appointment he said. Those who do not sign up will be given a ticket in offices we have to go to individual offices in fall to buy them, he said.
The options table will be in Strong Hall rotunda for the en enrollment period, Hardy said.
March 30-April 1, 1967
Indianapolis, Indiana
FINAL FOUL
Watkins plan
Yeltsin," and held aloft the white, blue and red flag of independent Russia as well as signs that read "Yeltsin is the hope of the Russian people" and "Communists, stop run
...
Students find needs at career resource center
By Ikuko Tokunaga
Special to the Kansan
How many occupations can you name?
How much do you know about each occupation? How could you decide on your career when you know very little about it? Why don't you try to know some more about your career? How and why would someone (CRC) seem to be the ideal place at KU to start gathering information about careers.
The CRC is located in 116 Bailey Hall and is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. during the week. Along with many books and files and a computer analysis, the CRC is staffed by career resource specialists to assist students. Students can stop by the center without previously making an appointment.
The CRC has an extensive library with more than 1,000 books concerning careers, from the general to te very specific. Students can look for helpful books according to their majors, location of jobs and many other categories. The books about careers in government, internships and summer jobs are also available.
For those who have just started career research, The Occupational Outlook Handbook, published by the U.S. Department of Labor and Statistics, is the best reference. The handbook describes 250 occupations in detail. It gives quite lengthy explanations of each occupation and its responsibilities, employment, necessary training and qualifications, job outlook and earnings. It also gives information about related occupations and source.
of additional information. Students can usually get good overall ideas in their fields of interest and it is useful to explore them further. They may also search for potential possibilities when searching for potential possibilities.
Those who have pretty clear ideas about their careers can find about 300 specialized career files valuable. These files contain addresses of contacts within each occupation when the students wish to obtain more information in their interested fields.
"Job satisfaction seems more important than mere earnings for many students when choosing a career," said Marcie Gilland, a career resource specialist.
Gilliland said that some of the most frequently asked questions by students were about required education and training. The CRC is ready to answer those questions by preparing the files of requirements for all graduate and undergraduate students; information is very helpful for the students when choosing and changing majors.
Career decision is one of the most critical issues for college students. Some students take it so seriously that they are afraid to make a decision. However, the students have to keep it in their minds that this is not the only occasion to decide one's career.
"An average American changes a job three to five times in the lifetime," Gilland said. "When you are looking for a career, don't go after trends."
The most important aspect in deciding a career remains individual values. Asking oneself, "What is important for me?" is the key question to find a right career.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 27, 1991 Employment Tab
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL. 101, No. 119
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1991
(සිංගා-640)
ADVERTISING:864-4358
NEWS:864-4810
Kurdish rebels seize Iraqi camp while citizens face starvation
The Associated Press
ZAKHO, Iraq — Kurdish rebels yesterday claimed they had seized a government-held air base and camp in northern Iraq but said there were signs Saddam Hussein's forces were preparing for an assault on a key rebel-held city.
A statement from the Kurdistan Democratic Party said the Iraqi army was massing forces in Saddam's hometown of Tikrit to launch an attack on the northern oil city of Kirkuk.
The statement, sent to The Associated Press in Nicosia, Cyprus, by telex, could not be confirmed independently
Saddam has been struggling to quell rebel
ions in the north and south that flared after his defeat by the allies in the Persian Gulf War. The fighting halted with a cease-fire a month ago.
President Bush said yesterday that it was unlikely that Saddam would remain in power for long because the Iraqi people were fed up with him.
“There’s enough dissent and disorder, but it appears the Iraqi citizens are trying to do something about this,” he told reporters in Bethesda, Md.
Kurdish leaders reported gained in northern Iraq — but also heavy casualties. They said guerrillas overran an Iraqi air base near Kirkuk on Tuesday and captured two Soviet-
made warplanes, a MIG-21 fighter and a Soviet made Sukhoi bomber.
The rebels also said they seized a government camp at Faardiya, on the road from Dohuk to Mosul.
They said the two installations were among the last that government forces controlled in nearly all of the country.
The Kurdistan Democratic Party said in a statement issued in London that the attack on the Khalid military air base was launched to stop the bombing of rebel held areas.
The statement said that more than 1,000 people were killed in the past week in air attacks on the northern cities of Kirkuk, Kefri, Kohdur, Kalar and Tuz Khrmatu.
The Kurds said they feared a new threat starvation. The only supply route now open is on the mountain.
by British border, they said. In southern Iraq, where Saddam's forces largely have succeeded in putting down rebellions by Shite Muslims, hunger was causing desperation among thousands of refugees fleeing into allied-controlled areas.
In the Iraqi border town of Safawan, food rifts broke up yesterday as Saud Arabian food markets closed.
No serious injuries were reported in th
"We tried to be organized, but the people are just too hungry," said MaJ. Youssef Ali Albourt of the Saudi military "They see the food, and they go crazy."
rioting.
At the United Nations, a new Security Council resolution would hold Iraq liable for the environmental haves caused by tactics such as dumping millions of gallons of oil in the Persian Gulf and setting Kuwait's oil wells alight.
The permanent members of the Security Council - the United States, Britain, France, China and the Soviet Union - meet in private to refine their checklist of conditions the Baghdad government must meet before a permanent cease-fire is approved.
Under the measure, Iraq would have to let U.N. experts destroy its chemical, biological and nuclear weapons.
Moscow police quell activists
Yeltsin supporters dispersed at Kremlin shortly before Russian parliament meets
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Police moved quickly today against pro-democracy activists backing Boris Yeltsin in a key political battle, dispersing several hours before a planned rally in defiance of a central government ban.
About a dozen police rush crowd of 75 demonstrator pushed them down the street Kremnil. At least six detained
The scuffle occurred shortly the Russian republic's parli convened at the Kremlin for a as session at which Yeltish, Pre Mikhail Gorbachev his chief rievected to face a no-coffect voted.
His hispans planned to $c$ three-week ban on street demos imposed by Gorbache cabinet Monday and demon tearing off a counter (later in the day with a hugh ri adianten Marge Square.
However, authorities said sands of police and Interior Mid troops, armed with rubber 18's, would block the mart path.
Fears of a bloody confront gripped Moscow yesterday, clinally after two dozen armored trucks ran into three rules from the city center.
Before they were dispersed the demonstrators chanted "Ye
New enrol simplifies
By Jonathan Plummer
Starting this fall, one check do all.
When enrolling at the end of semester, students may order passes, all sports tickets or all tickets and then pay for them in fall with the same check or cr card they use for their tuition.
David Hardy, director of Orgations and Activities, said the chas was part of a program that eve ally would make it possible for dents to pay for all KU service one time.
However, students are not required to buy tickets or bus passes on day of their enrollment appointment he said. Those who do not sign up will be unable to arrive in offices have to go to individual offices in fall to buy them, he said.
The options table will be in Strong Hall rotunda for the en enrollment period, Hardy said.
"This is a project that we he been working on for the past five six years," he said.
Watkins plan
March 30-April 1, 1961
Indianapolis, Indiana
FINAL
FOLLOW
Yeltsin," and held aloft the white, blue and red flag of independent Russia as well as signs that read. "Yeltsin is the hope of the Russian people" and "Communists, stop run-
MISSION:
The Resume:
The Earlier
the better
by Chris Hor n
The resume is a summary of the bits and pieces of who you are, your work experience, and relevant activities. Every college student will not only need to know how to pr epare a resume, but prepare one well. Even if you are not thinking about graduation or getting a job now, the more you know about what goes into the resume, and how it is constructed, the better prepared you will be.
How is my resume viewed? Companies may go through thousands of resumes from time to time. The average employer scans the typical resume in only 30 seconds; this is the amount of time you have to sell yourself to a prospective employer. A single misspelled word can be a probable cause for a company to throw your resume out, and many companies will do just that.
If your resume is prepared in a proper and attractive manner, you will have a better chance at getting that first interview. Your resume is the key to getting your "foot in the door" of a company.
What is a resume? The resume is a polished written summary of your work experience, education, and relevant activities. How you organize this data is critical and needs to be arranged in a professional manner.
Helpful resume hints By Ted Walker
Every student will have to get a job someday. Are you ready? Will you be? What have you done that might make you beneficial to an employer? The resume will tell the story. There is no best way to write a resume. It should suit you and the information you want to present. Here is help to get started writing a first resume. This is not the only way, but an example of a good way. Make sure the information is correct and truthful. Good spelling and grammar are always important.
We will start at the top of the page. You are going to put your full name. Below this your address will follow. If you have more than one, such as a home and a school address, you may opt to use both. Your name can be centered and in bold type to be easily noticed and read.
Next comes your "objective." This section is optional. Your objective tells the employer what you are looking for in terms of position or job.
"Education" is the next section you need to fill. Starting with the most recent, list the colleges or universities attended. Inform the employer of your degree or degrees, major and date of graduation. No grade point average is necessary unless it is outstanding. It is up to you.
The employer will want to know what "experience" you have. Inform them of your past employment also keeping the most recent job first. Include internships and jobs you have had that make you better qualified for the position desired. Inform the employer briefly of what your job entailed and the time frame in which you worked there.
What "activities" were you involved in? List in order of importance the things you are and have been involved in. They will probably be things you were involved in while attending the university. Clubs, sports, committees, and hobbies are all applicable for this section of your resume. It is up to you.
The final section is "references." There are several ways of han ding references. Many times they are put on a separate sheet. Then the resume reads, "References available upon request," or "References furnished upon request." When including them on the resume they go at the bottom. Select three references and put their name, position, company, address, and phone number in column form.
Keep your resume on one page. Try to leave politics and religion out of your document unless there is a reason for it being there. Do not use information that will date your resume. Do not mention money. White paper is always safe when printing a resume. Keep your high school information in high school.
Every resume you submit to a certain employer should be made to fit that certain employer. Therefore, it is a good idea to compose your resume on the computer. You can save it on a disk, retire it and revise it at any time. You only have to put down most of the information once using a word processor.
8
Employment Tab Thursday, March 27, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.101,No.119
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1991
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(0313650-640)
- NEWS: 864-4810
Kurdish rebels seize Iraqi camp while citizens face starvation
The Associated Press
ZAKHO, Iraq — Kurdish rebels yesterday claimed they had seized a government-held air base and camp in northern Iraq but said there were signs Saddam Hussein's forces were preparing for an assault on a key rebel-held city.
A statement from the Kurdistan Democratic Party said the Iraqi army was massing forces in Saddam's hometown of Tikrit to attack Kirkuk, which was seized by the insurgent.
The statement sent to The Associated Press Fax line was: *lexis, could not be confirmed independently.*
Saddam has been struggling to quell rebellions in the north and south that flared after his defeat by the allies in the Persian Gulf War. The fighting halted with a cease-fire a month ago.
President Bush said yesterday that it was unlikely that Saddam would remain in power for long because the Iraqi people were fed up with him.
Kurdish leaders reported gains in northern Iraq — but also heavy casualties. They said guerrillas overran an Iraqi air base near Kirkuk on Tuesday and captured two Soviet-
"There's enough dissent and disorder, but it appears the Iraqi citizens are trying to do something about this," he told reporters in Bethesda, Md.
made warplanes, a MiG-21 fighter and a Soviet-made Sukhoi bomber.
The rebels also said they seized a government camp at Faardiya, on the road from Dohuk to Mosul.
They said the two installations were among
the most that government forces controlled in
partly because of their proximity.
The Kurdistan Democratic Party said in a statement issued in London that the attack on the Khalid military air base was launched to stop the bombing of rebel held areas.
The statement said that more than 1,000 people were killed in the past week in air attacks on the northern cities of Kirkuk, Kefri, Dokh, Kalar and Tuz Khormatu.
The Kurds said they feared a new threat starvation. The only supply route now open is on the main road from Tebay to Kuwait.
In southern Iraq, where Saddam's forces largely have succeeded in putting down rebels by Shite Muslims, hunger was a major factor. Many refugees fleeing into allied-controlled areas.
In the Traji border town of Safan, food cook broke up yesterday as Saud Arabian food industry
"We tried to be organized, but the people are just too hungry," said MiaJ Youssef AlBourt of the Saudi military "They see the food, and they go crazy"
No serious injuries were reported in the
rioting.
At the United Nations, a new Security Council resolution would hold Iraq liable for the environmental harm caused by tactics such as dumping millions of gallons of oil in the Persian Gulf and setting Kuwait's oil wells alright.
The permanent members of the Security Council - the United States, Britain, France, China and the Soviet Union - meet in private to refine their checklist of conditions the Baghdad government must meet before a permanent cease-fire is approved.
Under the measure, Iraq would have to let UA experts destroy its chemical, biological and nuclear materials.
Moscow police quell activists
Yeltsin supporters dispersed at Kremlin shortly before Russian parliament meets
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Police moved quickly today against pro-democracy activists backing Boris Yeltsin in a key political battle, dispersing several dozen just hours before a plenum session of a central gerrn bon.
About a dozen police rush crowd of 75 demonstrator pushed them down the street Kremnitj At least six detained
The scuffle occurred shortly the Russian republic's parli convened at the Kremlin for a session at which Yeltsin, Pre Mikhail Gorbachev's chief riven to face a no confoe voted.
His hispans planned to c three-week ban on street demions imposed by Gorbane cabinet Monday and demon inmiting public support f later in the month ri adiacent Mignz Square.
However, authorities said
swards of police and Interior Miu-
troops, armed with rubber j
would block the marр path.
Fears of a bloody confront gripped Moscow yesterday, clalty after two dozen armored cars drove three miles away from three miles from the city center
Before they were dispersed to the demonstrators chanted "Ye
New enrol simplifies
By Jonathan Plummer Kansan staff writer
Starting this fall, one check do all.
When enrolling at the end of semester, students may order passes, all-sports tickets or all-tickets and then pay for them in fall with the same check or cr card they use for their tuition.
David Hardy, director of Orgations and Activities, said the chair was part of a program that eveally would make it possible for dents to pay for all KU service one time.
The options table will be in Strong Hall rotunda for the en enrollment period. Hardy said.
"This is a project that we he been working on for the past five six years," he said.
However, students are not required to buy tickets or bus passes on day of their enrollment appointment he said. Those who do not sign up tickets or bus passes this spring we have to go to individual offices in fall to buy them, he said.
March 30-April 1, 1961
Indianapolis, Indiana
FINAL FOIL
Watkins plan
Yeltsin," and held aloft the white, blue and red flag of independent Russia as well as signs that read, "Yeltsin is the hope of the Russian people" and "Communists, stop run
(1)
IMPOSSIBLE
The Cover Letter by Erick Roeder
The cover letter precedes the resume and usually is the first communication you will have with your prospective employer. There are several things that can be done to give the best possible impression. There are some things that go without saying, such as using perfect grammar and spelling. Some companies have been known to throw away resumes that contain any spelling errors. One little mistake could lose an interview and possibly a future career, so be sure your cover letter is mistake free.
Although there is more than one way to write a cover letter, there is one format that is widely accepted and will work for almost any situation.
or almost. This format is much like that used in standard business letter. Start in the upper left corner of the page with your name and address single spaced, then double space and give the company's name and address.
Double space again and then write your salutation. It is best to write to a person's name whenever possible, so if you know it, use it. If you do not, it is not necessary to use "sir" or "madam". After your salutation, double space one more time and you are ready to start the body of your letter. The body consists of three single spaced paragraphs with double spaces between them.
between them.
In the first paragraph, briefly introduce yourself and tell how you became interested in the position. Tell how you heard about the job, and if you have a connection, this is the place to let them know. If you have met the person that you are writing remind them that they have met. It is always best to have them know you as an individual.
In the second paragraph of the body, relate yourself to the position that you are applying for. Tell why you want the job. In a recent interview with Stephen L. Reeder, an IBM financial executive that hires Northwestern MDAs, he stated that this section should "only include specific skills that are relevant to the job." Reeder said "the cover letter doesn't sell me on a person, but it can turn off. The resume should do the selling." So do not go on and on about your good qualities. Just briefly tell about experience that relates to the job.
often tell about experience that relates to the job.
The third paragraph simply tells when you are available to interview, and it is important to make yourself very available. If the company is faraway, tell them that you are planning a trip to that area. If you really want that interview, tell them that you can provide your own transportation.
After the third paragraph, double space and close with "Sincerely." This is the generally accepted way to close a business letter and should be used in almost every situation.
The follow-up letter by Chris Horn
One important part of the interview process that oftentimes may be overlooked is the courtesy correspondence and follow-up letters.
The courtesy correspondence includes sending a brief follow-up letter about two weeks after sending the resume. This letter serves two main purposes: to make sure the resume was received, and most important, to let the company know that you are sincerely interested in obtaining an interview.
Even when an interview is not obtained, a follow-up letter should be written. It informs the company that you wish to keep your resume on file. You may wish to apply for a job with the same company in the future and the follow-up letter leaves a good impression. The follow-up letter is a professional courtesy and should not be overlooked. Many times an interview is not obtained because a company has no openings and is not necessarily a reflection of a weak resume.
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 27, 1991 Employment Tab
9
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.101.No.119
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1991
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(640) -3003
NEWS:864-4810
Kurdish rebels seize Iraqi camp while citizens face starvation
The Associated Press
ZAKHO, Iraq — Kurdish rebels yesterday claimed they had seized a government held air base and camp in northern Iraq but said there were signs Saddam Hussein's forces were preparing for an assault on a key rebel-held city.
A statement from the Kurdistan Democratic Party said the Iraqi army was massing forces in Saddam's hometown of Tikrit to block on the northern oil city of Kukuk, which has been
The statement, sent to The Associated Press in Nicosia, Cyprus, by telex, could not be confirmed independently.
Saddam has been struggling to quell rebellions in the north and south that flared after his defeat by the allies in the Persian Gulf War. The fighting halted with a cease-fire a month ago.
President Bush said yesterday that it was unlikely that Saddam would remain in power for long because the Iraqi people were fed up with him.
"There's enough dissent and disorder, but it appears the Iraqi citizens are trying to do something about this," he told reporters in Bethesda, Md.
Kurdish leaders reported gains in northern Iraq — but also heavy casualties. They said guerrillas overran an Iraqi air base near Kirku on Tuesday and captured two Soviet-
made warplanes, a MIG-21 fighter and a Soviet made Sukhi bomber.
The rebels also said they seized a government camp at Faardaay, on the road from Dadao.
They said the two installations were among the last that government forces controlled in northern Iraq.
The Kurdistan Democratic Party said in a statement issued in London that the attack on the Khalid military air base was launched to stop the bombing of rebel held areas.
The statement said that more than 1,000 people were killed in the past week in air attacks on the northern cities of Kirkuk, Kefri, Dokir, Kalar and Tuz Khormatu.
The Kurds said they tearied a new threat
starvation. The only supply route open is
opened by the militants.
In southern Iraq, where Saddam's forces largely have succeeded in putting down rebellions by Shite Muslims, hunger was causing desperation among thousands of refugees fleeing into aided controlled areas.
In the Iraqi border town of Saltan, food raids broke out yesterday as Saudi Arabian forces entered the city.
"We tried to be organized, but the people are just too hungry," said Majse Youssef Ali Albourt of the Saud military "They see the food, and they go crazy."
No serious injuries were reported in the
At the United Nations, a new Security Council resolution would hold Iraq liable for the environmental harm caused by tactics such as dumping millions of gallons of oil in the Persian Gulf and setting Kuwait's oil wells alight.
rioting.
The permanent members of the Security Council - the United States, Britain, France, China and the Soviet Union - meet in private to refine their checklist of conditions the Baghdad government must meet before a permanent cease-fire is approved.
Moscow police quell activists
Yeltsin supporters dispersed at Kremlin shortly before Russian parliament meets
Under the measure, Iraq would have to let U.N. experts destroy its chemical, biological and nuclear weapons.
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Police moved quickly today against pro-democracy activists backing Boris Yeltsin in a key political battle, dispersing several homes and hours before a plrally in defiance of a central 'ment ban'
About a dozen police rush crowd of 75 demonstrators pushed then down the street Kremlin At least six detained.
The scuffle occurred shortly the Russian republic's parli convened at the Kremlin for a session at which Yeltsin, Prebikh Al Gorbachev's chief rival expected to face a no-conflate
His followers planned to d three-week ban on street demions imposed by Gorbac cabinet Monday and demon fter the weekend fortier later in the day with a huge adjacent Manea square.
However, authorities said
sands of police and Interior Mi-
trops, armed with rubber j
would block the marital path.
Before they were dispersed to the demonstrators chanted "Ye
gripped of a bloody confront
fears Moscow yesterday.
Two dozen armor
cages were signaled three
miles from the city center
New enrol simplifies
March 30-April 1, 1961
Indianapolis, Indiana
FINAL FOLLOWER
By Jonathan Plummer Kansan staff writer
Starting this fall, one check do all.
When enrolling at the end of semester, students may order passes, all sports tickets or all tickets and then pay for them in fall with the same check or card they use for their tuition.
Watkins plan
David Hardy, director of Orgations and Activities, said the cha was part of a program that eve ally would make it possible for dents to pay for all KU service one time.
"This is a project that we he been working on for the past five six years." he said.
The options table will be in Strong Hall rotunda for the en enrollment period, Hardy said.
However, students are not required to buy tickets or bus passes on day of their enrollment appointment he said. Those who do not sign up will have to attend spring in a go to to individual offices in a fall to buy them, he said.
Yeltsi,” and held aloft the white, blue and red flag of independent Russia as well as sign that read, “We are Communists.” people “at Communist so roun
Grads give job-hunting advice to seniors
Bv Brian Wolf
Kansan sportswrite
Recently hired graduates and soon-to-behired graduates use any outlet possible in finding that first job.
To help find the perfect job, students will use a variety of ways to help them.
Jay Gould, a May 1990 KU advertising graduate, learned about his job with KZKC Channel 62 through an internship he had with the company during school. Gould originally learned about his internship through the KU Ad Club.
Gould offered advice to job hunters.
"Make an appointment in order to meet the person you will be interviewing with in our office."
give you a good overview of the company and there is less anxiety between both of you than if you were in a real interview. Then in a couple of weeks, set up a real interview with that person if that company still appeals to you."
Some graduates tend to utilize other options to find a job. Rob Mall, a Business Administration graduate, was able to use the Business Placement Office, 125 Summer Avenue, for three different internships. Those internships helped him get a job after graduation.
"In my opinion, make use of the Placement Center," he said. "They can help you design a resume that will be in proper form and enable you to get that interview."
"One other thing, don't limit yourself to one certain job. Send a lot of resumes out to different companies. If you should get an interview with a company you're really not interested in, go ahead and interview with them. The practice will help."
Mall said he thought that every college student, or anyone else looking for a job, needed an advantage over other job hunters.
"All I can say is use every available outlet," he said. "Use the Placement Center, use people you know in different companies and even use the classifications in the newspapers. Use anything that will get you that job."
heavily on past work experience in order to get a job. Dan Wilkus, Mission senior majoring in Civil Engineering and Meteorology, used the Engineering's Career Services Center to get one internship and networking to get two others.
Students who are nearing graduation rely
"One thing I think is important is to talk to your professors in order to get on with companies," Wilks said. "Sometimes a professor will be a consultant with a company that could be hiring, and with a recommendation, you might have an edge over other applicants. Another thing that I think is important is to begin internships early. The more experience you have, the better job you will have after graduation."
Groups provide minorities with opportunities
Bv Russ Hancock
Preparing for the future is something that all students will eventually have to contemplate. But for this year's graduating seniors, the decision is quickly approaching as they embark on life after KU. For many, that includes vacationing, taking some time off or graduate school. Some bypass those options tough and prepare to enter Corporate America. Reports are wide ranging in timing according to availability and one of the hardest hit groups are those pursuing careers right out of school.
Special to the Kansan
Looking for a job is a long, time-consuming process that, at times, might discourage a graduate to pursue a career. Though reports are stifling in relation to
college graduates, they are even more for specific groups looking for employment. Minorities, handicapped and women are such groups that must deal with discrimination and inequality in order to find a job. With so few known resources, certain programs are seen as networks that help those particular groups with job availability and, in addition, all of the components that go into finding employment.
Throughout the Kansas City area, there are a variety of groups that offer assistance to individuals.
"Our group is a center for independent living and working with those individuals with disabilities," B.J. Cooper said. "We try to be an advocacy program in the community that helps individuals with the available resources necessary to find a
job."
Cooper is the Information and Referral Specialist for Whole Persons, which is located at 6301 Rockhill Road in Kansas City.
Cooper explained that a lot of what her organization did was directly related to the need of helping people find jobs and integrate themselves into the mainstream of the job market, one of the most important aspects of her organization was the feedback that it gave.
"The greatest difference that we have is that we reinforce positive feedback to the individual. We are a catalyst for that, and it also motivates the individual, and their needs," she said.
Although Whole Persons deals solely with people who are handicapped or have
disabilities, there are organizations that are available for other select groups. Two such groups are the Urban League of Kansas City and the Women's Employment Network. By their titles, it would indicate that these groups are targeted at certain groups, but that is false.
"Our mission is to assist low or no income women who want to better themselves and their life," said Nina Jones, Associate Director of the Women's Employment Network at that group. At that group we want to work with women and deal with the barriers they face."
Similar to the goal of Whole Persons, the Women's Employment Network deals with the women individually and tries to build
See GROUPS, Page 14
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Employment Tab Thursday, March 27, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
OLSTN Temporary Services
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.101,No.119
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1991
ADVERTISING: 864-14358
(וּרָדְשׁ-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Kurdish rebels seize Iraqi camp while citizens face starvation
The Associated Press
ZAKHO, Iraq — Kurdish rebels yesterday claimed they had seized a government-held air base and camp in northern Iraq but said there were signs Saddam Hussein's forces were preparing for an assault on a key rebel-bed city.
A statement from the Kurdistan Democratic Party said the Iraqi army was massing forces in Saddam's hometown of Tikrit to attack on the northern oil city of Kirkuk, where a Kurdish
The statement, sent to The Associated Press in Nicosia, Cyprus, by telex, could not be confirmed independently.
Saddam has been struggling to quell rebellions in the north and south that flared after his defeat by the allies in the Persian Gulf War. The fighting halted with a cease-fire a month ago.
President Bush said yesterday that it was unlikely that Saddam would remain in power for long because the Iraqi people were fed up with him.
“There’s enough dissent and disorder, but it appears the Iraqi citizens are trying to do something about this,” he told reporters in Bethesda. Md
Kurdish leaders reported gains in northern Iraq — but also heavy casualties. They said guerrillas rirkilled on an Iraqi air base near Kirkuk on Tuesday and captured two Soviet-
made warplanes, a MIG-21 fighter and a Soviet-made Sukhoi bomber.
The rebels also said they seized a government building in Kandja, on the road from Dohuk to Mosul
They said the two installations were among the last that government forces controlled in noth
The Kurdistan Democratic Party said in a statement issued in London that the attack on the Khalid military air base was launched to stop the bombing of rebel held areas.
The statement said that more than 1,000 people were killed in the past week in air attacks on the northern cities of Kirkuk, Kefri, Dohuk, Kalar and Tuz Khormatu.
The Kurds said they feared a new threat
starvation. The only supply route now open is
through the road to Amman from Aleppo.
In southern Iraq, where Saddam's forces largely have succeeded in putting down rebellions by Shite Muslims, hunger was a major emotion among thousands of refugees fleeing the war.
In the Iraqi border town of Safwan, food riots broke out yesterday as Saudi Arabian food trucks arrived.
"We tried to be organized, but the people are just too hungry," said Maju. Youssef Ali Albourt of the Saudi military "They see the food, and they go crazy."
No serious injuries were reported in the
rioting.
At the United Nations, a new Security Council resolution would hold Iraq liable for the environmental hailstorm caused by tactics such as dumping millions of gallons of oil in the Persian Gulf and setting Kuwait's oil wells alight.
The permanent members of the Security Council - the United States, Britain, France, China and the Soviet Union - met in private to refine their checklist of conditions the Baghdad government must meet before a permanent cease-fire is approved.
Moscow police quell activists
Under the measure, Iraq would have to let U.N. experts destroy its chemical, biological and nuclear weapons.
Yeltsin supporters dispersed at Kremlin shortly before Russian parliament meets
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Police moved quickly today against pro-democracy activists backing Boris Yeltsin in a key political battle, dispersing several dozen just hours before a planned attack on the audience of a central § mentan ban.
About a dozen police rush crowd of 75 demonstrators pushed them down the street Kremlin. At least six detained
The scuffle occurred shortly the Russian republic's parli convened at the Kremkin for a session at which Yellin, Pre Mikhail Gorbachev's chief rival decided to face a no-conflict
His followers planned to c three-week ban on street demions imposed by Gorbak cabinet Monday and demon tinguing public support f later in the month adjacent Mongue Square.
Before they were dispersed to the demonstrators chanted "Ye
However, authorities said sands of police and Interior Mi troops, armed with rubber knives, would block the mart path.
When enrolling at the end of semester, students may order passes, all sports tickets or all tickets and then pay for them in fall with the same check or cr card they use for their tuition.
Fears of a bloody confront gripped Moscow yesterday caily after two dozen armored cars arrived at the city center three miles from the center city.
David Hardy, director of Orgations and Activities, said the cha was part of a program that eve ally would make it possible for dents to pay for all KU service one time.
"This is a project that we he been working on for the past five six years," he said.
Match 30-April 1, 1961
Indianapolis, Indiana
FINAL
POINT
However, students are not required to buy tickets or bus passes on day of their enrollment appointment he said. Those who do not sign up will be compelled to enroll in a course have to go to individual offices if fall to buy them, he said.
Starting this fall, one check do all.
New enrol simplifies
The options table will be in Strong Hall rotunda for the en enrollment period, Hardy said.
Watkins plan
By Jonathan Plummer
Kansan staff writer
Yellsin," and held aloft the white, blue and red flag of independent Russia as well as signs that read, "Yellsin is the hope of the Russian people" "Communists, stop running the people's lives."
100
Volunteering students gain work experience
Volunteer work is way to get foot in door
By Jeannette Mueller Special to the Kansas
Special to the Kansan
Experience is one of the most marketable assets to have when looking for a job. And it may be easier to find than originally thought.
Excellent experience can be gained from working in a professional setting as a volunteer. Volunteering in the area of the career you may want to pursue is the most practical way of getting experience when it comes to building relationships with volunteers are paid, most are unpaid, but the experience is equally important to an employer.
The stereotypical idea of a volunteer does not apply here. The long list of volunteer jobs include financial services, marketing, advertising, work in district court, education, health services, computer programming as well as many others. Almost all volunteer agencies are an agency in need of skillful help from a knowledgeable college student.
The volunteer is expending time and effort which is greatly appreciated, and in return the agency or organization can answer questions, give referrals, and sometimes aid in career related decisions.
Lanaea Heine, director of the Roger Hill United Way Agency in Lawrence, said she placed 371 students this year and that a large percentage of them were seeking employment experience.
While working in an established professional setting, the volunteer is able to see and experience what they do not learn in the classroom.
Volunteering is becoming more and more important to corporations and industry. As public perception is increasingly important, they are beginning to view it as an integral part of their company structure. Large companies such as Lipton and Hallmark have both pledged their support to volunteering nationwide. Lipton, after its 100th birthday, held nationwide volunteer fests, employees at Hallmark are encouraged, but not required, to volunteer in the community. After the volunteer pledges 50 hours in a six-month period, the company donates $200 to that organization.
"If the community is strong, then the community will grow. Gil Olover, direc- tor of personnel at Hallman."
Companies will look favorably at a student who has proven that they believe in what the company believes in. Not only do they have an account with a dedication to the community they live in.
Just as it is now "in" to be environmentally conscious, volunteering is now considered stylish. Knowledge, education and experience never went out of style. Added together, the mix of qualities to take in an organization are necessary next guy and get you the job. Sell yourself, your talents and support the community that helped you. Volunteer for experience.
Mary O'Neill
Jim Midkiff/Special to the KANSAN
Nancy Mah, Topeka junior, is one of many students who volunteers to get career experience. Mah is a volunteer at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 27, 1991 Employment Tab
11
VOL. 101, No. 119
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1991
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(640) -629-0303
Kurdish rebels seize Iraqi camp while citizens face starvation
NEWS:864-4810
The Associated Press
ZAKHO, Iraq — Kurdish rebels yesterday claimed they had seized a government-held air base and camp in northern Iraq but said there were signs Saddam Hussein's forces were preparing for an assault on a key rebel-held city.
A statement from the Kurdistan Democratic Party said the Iraqi army was massing forces in Saddam's hometown of Tikit or back on the northern oil city of Kukuh, which
The statement, sent to The Associated Press in Nicosia, Cyprus, by telex, could not be confirmed independently.
Saddam has been struggling to quell rebellions in the north and south that flared after his defeat by the allies in the Persian Gulf War. The fighting halted with a cease-fire a month ago.
President Bush said yesterday that it was unlikely that Saddam would remain in power for long because the Iraqi people were fed up with him.
"There's enough dissent and disorder, but it appears the Iraqi citizens are trying to do something about this," he told reporters in Bethesda, Md.
Kurdish leaders reported gains in northern Iraq — but also heavy casualties. They said guerrillas overran an Iraqi air base near Kirkuk on Tuesday and captured two Soviet-
made warplanes, a MIG-21 fighter and a Soviet made Sukhoi bomber.
The rebels also said they seized a government camp at Faardiaa, on the road from Damascus.
They said the two installations were among the last that government forces controlled in Iraq.
The Kurdistan Democratic Party said in a statement issued in London that the attack on the Khalid military air base was launched to stop the bombing of rebel held areas.
The statement said that more than 1,000 people were killed in the past week in air attacks on the northern cities of Kirkum, Kefri, Dohuk, Kalar and Tuz Khormatu.
The Kurds said they feared a new threat salvation. The only supply route open is now across the border from Turkey.
In southern Iraq, where Saddam's forces largely have succeeded in putting down rebellions by Shite Muslims, hunger was a major threat to the thousands of refugees fleeing into allied-controlled areas.
In the Iraqi border town of Sarafan, food
inks broke up yesterday as Saudi Arabia
begins to reopen its borders.
"We tried to organize, but the people are just too hungry," said MaJ. Yousef Ali Albouri of the Saudi military "They see the food, and they so crazy."
No serious injuries were reported in the
rioting.
At the United Nations, a new Security Council resolution would hold Iraq liable for the environmental harm caused by tactics such as dumping millions of gallons of oil in the Persian Gulf and setting Kuwait's oil wells alight.
The permanent members of the Security Council - the United States, Britain, France, China and the Soviet Union - meet in private to refine their checklist of conditions the Baghdad government must meet before a permanent cease-fire is approved.
Under the measure, Iraq would have to let U. experts destroy its chemical, biological and nuclear weapons.
Moscow police quell activists
Yeltsin supporters dispersed at Kremlin shortly before Russian parliament meets
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Police moved quickly today against pro-democracy activists backing Boris Yeltsin in a key political battle, dispersing several dozen just hours before a plea — a distance of a central 'peace' ban.
About a dozen police rush crowd of 75 demonstrator pushed them down the street and Kremiln At least 6 detained.
The scuffle occurred shortly the Russian republic's parliom convened at the Kremlin for a session at which Yeltsin, Prep Mall Gorbachev's chief rival expected to face a no-confidence
His followers planned to c three-week ban on street demensions imposed by Gorbache cabinet. Monday and demon-strated the ban later in the day with a huge re-adjacent Menzh Square.
Before they were dispersed to the demonstrators chanted "Ye
However, authorities said sands of police and Interior Mi troops, armed with rubber t bullets, would block the marm path.
Fears of a bloody confront gripped Moscow yesterday, cially after two dozen armored trucks attacked the city three miles from the city center.
Starting this fall, one check do all.
By Jonathan Plummer
Kaneen staff writer
When enrolling at the end of semester, students may order passes, all-sports tickets or all-tickets and then pay for them in fall with the same check or card they use for their tuition.
David Hardy, director of Orga-
tions and Activities, said the chs
was part of a program that eve-
ally would make it possible for
dents to pay for all KU service
one time.
"This is a project that we he been working on for the past five six years." he said.
However, students are not requi-
to buy tickets or bus passes on
day of their enrollment appointme
he said. Those who do not sign up
will be required to spring in
have to go to individual offices
in fall to buy them, he said.
The options table will be in Strong Hall rotunda for the en enrollment period, Hardy said.
Watkins plan
Match 30-April 1, 1961
Indianapolis, Indiana
FINAL
POINTS
Yeltis," and held aloft the white, blue, and red flag of independent states. "I read it." Yeltis is the hope of the people" and "Communists, stop run
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SIGI-
Shelly Dillard, Des Moines junior, takes the SIGI test to help her in choosing a career.
Campus centers offer many helpful services
Special to the Kansan
You know that the last thing you want to do on most days is trudge up that hill again, but just one extra afternoon may open wondrous doors of opportunities. Whether you know exactly what field you want to work in or are just exploring the territory, the university has a rich source of facilities to help you.
The Career Resource Center may be the best starting point, especially if you are not sure about the field you're interested in. The center can help you from point A to point Z. It has materials to help you figure out the careers you're best suited for. The center has books about job search issues and career-related jobs. There are even books that list specific internships available to you throughout the United States.
By Monica Rhett
Your next step should be one or both of the Placement Centers. The University Placement Center is located in the Burge Union and the Business Placement Center is located in Summerfield Hall. Both are fully equipped with an experienced staff and many materials to help you learn what's available.
If you've caught yourself thinking it's time to stop spending summers lounging under the sun, it's probably time to take the step in the search for your future career.
There are three main resources on campus designed specifically to help students take the first step. They all have trained and experienced staffs and an abundance of materials available to make your search easier.
These placement centers have compiled huge amounts of material offering information about internships and opportunities made available to students in the job place.
Also, the next time you are in Watson Library ask the librarian to show you the various books it has about internships and other employment opportunities.
Then, just across the street, the Student Employment Center is located in Strong Hall. This center offers a rich source of information and opportunities available to students throughout the year.
Lastly, if you are interested in acquiring materials pertaining to internships or other
SIGI + Eight Steps
1. SelfAssessment Realizing what you want from a job.
12
2. Search: Finding what occupations you might enjoy.
3. Information: Questions about various aspects of a job are answered.
4. Skills: Learning what skills might be needed for a particular job.
5. Preparing: A look at typical preparation paths to any occupation in the SIGH library.
6. Coping: Discover solutions to practical issues such as time, money, and worries about the job.
7. Deciding: Making a choice best for you.
8. Next Steps: Planning short-term strategies that will put your career plan in action.
Employment Tab Thursday, March 27, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
career-related employment opportunities you may contact the National Society for Internships and Experiential Education. This organization can send you information about its various publications available. It can be reached by writing to 3509 Haworth Drive, Suite 207, Raleigh, N.C., 27609 or by calling (919)-787-3263.
So the next time you're willing to sacrifice an afternoon of Donahue and Oprah, just pick up your phone and call the office in your school or one of these places, or just drop by. You may be amazed by the opportunities waiting for you. But remember, only you can take that first step.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.101,No.119
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, MARCH 28; 1991
(0315650-640)
NEWS:864-4810
Kurdish rebels seize Iraqi camp while citizens face starvation
The Associated Press
ZAKHO, Iraq — Kurdish rebels yesterday claimed they had seized a government-held air base and camp in northern Iraq but said there were signs Saddam Hussein's forces were preparing for an assault on a key rebel-held city.
A statement from the Kurdistan Democratic Party said the Iraqi army was massing forces in Saddam's hometown of Tikrit to launch an attack on the northern oil city of Raqqa.
The statement, sent to The Associated Press in Nicosia, Cyprus, by telex, could not be confirmed independently
Saddam has been struggling to quell rebel
President Bush said yesterday that it was unlikely that Saddam would remain in power for long because the Iraqi people were fed up with him.
lions in the north and south that flare out and his defeat by the allies in the Persian Gulf War. The fighting halted with a cease-fire a month ago.
"There's enough dissent and disorder, but it appears the Iraqi citizens are trying to do something about this," he told reporters in Bethesda, Md.
made warplanes, a MIG-21 fighter and a Soviet made Sukhoi bomber.
Kurdish leaders reported gains in northern Iraq — but also heavy casualties. They said guerrillas overran an Iraqi air base near Kirkuk on Tuesday and captured two Soviet-
The rebels also said they seized a government camp at Faardya, on the road from Doha.
They said the two installations were among
that government forces controlled in north
north.
The Kurdistan Democratic Party said in a statement issued in London that the attack on the Khalid military air base was launched to stop the bombing of rebel-held areas.
The statement said that more than 1,000 people were killed in the past week in air attacks on the northern cities of Kirkum, Kefri, Dohuk, Kalar and Tuz Khormatu.
The Kurds said they feared a new threat stirvation. The only supply route now open is across the border.
In southern Iraq, where Saddam's forces largely have succeeded in putting down rebellions by Shiite Muslims, hunger was causing desperation among thousands of refugees fleeing into allied-controlled areas.
In the Iraqi border town of Safwan, food
ranks broke out yesterday as Saudi Arabian
food officials sent a message.
"We tried to be organized, but the people are just too hungry," said Maju Youssef Ali Albouri of the Saudi military "They see the food, and they go crazy."
No serious injuries were reported in the
At the United Nations, a new Security Council resolution would hold Iraq liable for the environmental harm caused by tactics such as dumping millions of gallons of oil in the Persian Gulf and setting Kuwait's oil wells alight.
rioting.
The permanent members of the Security Council - the United States, Britain, France, China and the Soviet Union - meet in private to refine their checklist of conditions the Baghdad government must meet before a permanent cease-fire is approved.
Under the measure, Iraq would have to let
N. experts destroy its chemical, biological intracr
Moscow police quell activists
Yeltsin supporters dispersed at Kremlin shortly before Russian parliament meets
MOSCOW — Police moved quickly today against pro-democracy activists backing Boris Yeltsin in a key political battle, dispersing several dozen just hours before a planned strike,istance of a central jprent bon
About a dozen police rush crowd of 75 demonstrator pushed them down the street Kremlin At least six detained.
The scuffle occurred shortly the Russian parish's parch convened on the Kremlin for a session at which Yelisin, Pim Mikhal Gorbachev's chief rijv expected to face a no-conflict
His followers planned to c three-week ban on street demitions imposed by Gorbak cabinet Monday and demon fighter Borat later in the day with a huge r adjacent Manez Square.
However, authorities said sands of police and Interior Mir troops, armed with rubber knives, would block the marsh path.
Fears of a bloody confront gripped Moscow yesterday, cally after two dozen armored vehicles came to the city center three miles from the city center
Before they were dispersed to the demonstrators chanted "Ye
New enrol simplifies
By Jonathan Plummer Kansan staff writer
Starting this fall, one check do all.
When enrolling at the end of semester, students may order passes, all-sports tickets or all tickets and then pay for them in fall with the same check or card they use for their tuition.
David Hardy, director of Orgations and Activities, said the chas was part of a program that eve ally would make it possible for dents to pay for all KU service one time.
Match 30-April 1, 1961
Indianapolis, Indiana
FINAL
FOUR
"This is a project that we he been working on for the past five six years," he said.
However, students are not requi-
t to buy tickets or bus passes on
day of their enrollment appointment
he said. Those who do not sign up
this spring have to go to individual
office in fall to buy them, he said.
The options table will be in Strong Hall rotunda for the en enrollment period. Hardy said.
Watkins plan
Yeltis," and held aloft the white, blue and red flag of independent Russia as well as signs that read, "Yeltis is the hope of the Russian people" and "Communists, stop ruining the people's lives."
Students face real anxieties
A man pulls a log over the road. Two people are standing nearby.
Bv Christina Wesolik
Special to the Kansan
They will look at my resume and laugh
They will look at me and laugh
Glenn said she also suggested that people should take advantage of the mock interview that the Placement Center offered.
I will forget everything before I go in.
I will have food caught in my teeth.
Being knowledgeable about the company and yourself will help to build your self-confidence prior to the interview and will help relieve a portion of your stress.
These are just a few fears KU students have about interview. Anxiety is a normal reaction to something as stressful as an interview. The interview is a time for you to put your best foot forward and make sure you get the job done. You very difficult to do when you are scared that your hands are going to shake throughout the entire interview.
What can be done to alleviate anxiety about having an interview? Terry Glenn, director of the University Placement office, advice to help combat interview anxiety.
Be prepared for the interview. There are certain things you need to do before the interview.
Research the company. Know everything there is to know about the company before going into the interview. How large is the company? What are some of its major accounts? These are just a few of the accounts that should know prior to the interview.
■ Know your goals. Where do you want to be in six months? Where do you want to be in 10 years? What do you want to do with your life?
Interviewing DO's and DON'Ts
What should I wear to the interview?
- dress appropriately for the position you are interviewing
- dark colored suits are best
- wear blue jeans
How do I answer questions?
- emphasize the recent aspect of your qualifications
- emphasize skills which are transferable
- take your time before answering
Is it okay to have questions written down?
- have them in your head, if you are more interested in writing for their company
How do I end the interview?
- wait until the interview makes the first move to end the interview and be sure to thank him or her for his time
- make the first move to end the interview
Now that we have investment interviewers have interviewed new people. They take nerves into account. You will not be penalized if your hands shake as long as you are prepared. The next time you have an interview, be confident, be prepared and do not be afraid. Knowing that you have done everything possible to prepare for the interview will help you to relax and put your fears behind you.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 27, 1991 Employment Tab
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.101,No.119
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
(0315 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Kurdish rebels seize Iraqi camp while citizens face starvation
The Associated Press
ZAKHO, Iraq — Kurdish rebels yesterday claimed they had seized a government held air base and camp in northern Iraq but said there were signs Saddam Hussein's forces were preparing for an assault on a key rebel-held city.
A statement from the Kurdistan Democratic Party said the Iraqi army was massing forces in Saddam's hometown of Tikrit to launch an attack on the northern oil city of Kirkuk.
The statement, sent to The Associated Press in Nicosia, Cyprus, by telex, could not be confirmed independently
Saddam has been struggling to quell rebellions in the north and south that flaree amid his defeat by the allies in the Persian Gulf War. The fighting halted with a cease-fire a month ago.
President Bush said yesterday that it was unlikely that Saddam would remain in power for long because the Iraqi people were fed up with him.
"There's enough dissent and disorder, but it appears the Iraqi citizens are trying to do something about this," he told reporters in Bethesda, Md.
Kurdish leaders reported gains in northern Iraq — but also heavy casualties. They said guerrillas overran an Iraqi air base near Kirkuk on Tuesday and captured two Soviet-
made warplanes, a MIG-21 fighter and a Soviet made Sukhoi bomber.
The rebels also said they seized a government camp at Faarday, on the road from Dammam.
They said the two installations were among the government forces controlled in northern Iraq.
The statement said that more than 1,000 people were killed in the past week in air attacks on the northern cities of Kirku, Kefri, Dohuk, Kalar and Tuz Khormatu.
The Kurdistan Democratic Party said in a statement issued in London that the attack on the Khalid military air base was launched to stop the bombing of rebel held areas.
The Kurds said they feared a new threat the only supply route now open is overtaken by insurgents.
In southern Iraq, where Saddam's forces largely have succeeded in putting down rebellions by Shite Muslims, hunger was causing desperation among thousands of refugees fleeing into allied-controlled areas.
In the Iraqi border town of Safan, food runs broke out yesterday as Saudi Arabia had joined the war.
"We tried to be organized, but the people are just too hungry," said MaJ Youssef Al Abouri of the Saudi military "They see the food, and they go crazy."
No serious injuries were reported in the
rioting.
At the United Nations, a new Security Council resolution would hold Iraq liable for the environmental harm caused by tactics such as dumping millions of gallons of oil in the Persian Gulf and setting Kuwait's oil wells alight.
The permanent members of the Security Council - the United States, Britain, France, China and the Soviet Union - meet in private to refine their checklist of conditions the Baghdad government must meet before a permanent cease-fire is approved.
Under the measure, Iraq would have to let UA experts destroy its chemical, biological and nuclear assets.
Moscow police quell activists
Yeltsin supporters dispersed at Kremlin shortly before Russian parliament meets
MOSCOW — Police moved quickly today against pro-democracy activists backing Boris Yeltsin in a key political battle, dispersing several hundreds of hours before a pla-
rally in defiance of a central ban
About a dozen police rul crow of 75 demonstrator pushed them down the street Kremilin At least six detained.
The scuffie occurred shortly the Russian republic's parl convened on the Kremlin for a session at which Yellsin, Pr Mikhail Gorbachev's chiefriv expected to face a no-cowl
His followers planned to a three-week ban on street demos imposed by Gorbai cabinet Monday and demos later. The court will later in the day with a huge adjacent Menzang Square.
Before they were dispersed t the demonstrators chanted "Yo
Starting this fall, one check do all.
When enrolling at the end of semester, students may order passes, all-sports tickets or all tickets and then pay for them in fall with the same check or card they use for their tuition.
However, authorities said sands of police and Interior MI troops, armed with rubber knives, would block the mar path.
David Hardy, director of Organations and Activities, said the chir was part of a program that eveally would make it possible for dents to pay for all KU service one time.
Fears of a bloody contrain gripped the mobry yesterday, cilyly after two dozen armored cars rushed to the scene three miles from the city centre.
"This is a project that we he been working on for the past five six years." he said.
However, students are not required to buy tickets or bus passes on day of their enrollment appointment he said. Those who do not sign up will be required to apply in spring we have to go to individual offices in fall to buy them, he said.
The options table will be in Strong Hall rotunda for the en enrollment period, Hardy said.
By Jonathan Plummer
Kansan staff writer
Watkins plan
March 30-April 1, 1961
Indianapolis, Indiana
EINAT
FOUR
Yellins, and held aloft the white, blue and red flag of independent Russia as well as signs that read, "We are people" and "Communists, stop run
THE CITIES WERE IN A STORM THE NEXT DAY, AND A FOREIGNER RAN OUT TO WASH A LOG. IT WAS A STEALTH MISSING.
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Continued from Page 10
up their self esteem along with their presentation to a potential employer.
"We provide a safe environment to discover more about themselves," she said. "It is to show also that women can work with women."
The Women's Employment Network provides a "classroom" setting for the women. It is very strict and precise, but most importantly, free.
"It is a classroom type of setting, geared with a work atmosphere. The women have homework assignments and must be present 13 out of the 15 sessions. We do this so that they get a feeling of what the real working world is like." Jones said.
Throughout all of the proposed agencies and organizations that are there to help graduates, they stress the importance of working on the individual's self-esteem.
"Our program's objective is to work with students," she said. "We have many programs that apply, including a summer job program specifically for college students in April."
She said the Urban League was a Human Service Delivery System to improve life. One of the main facets that is available is
"One thing that we emphasize to the women is that they have the resources within and that they can rely on themselves if nothing else." Jones said.
Laura Roffin, Vice-President of Administrative Services explained the importance of the Urban League and its contributions in reference to graduates.
The Urban League of Kansas City is one such agency that is applicable to anyone. It is an organization to serve anyone and everyone in search of assistance.
"One of our better opportunities is the Career Marketplace. It is, like the name indicates, a place where potential employees can find out about one another," Roffin stated.
their job search and job training area
There are probably many skeptics when thinking of an employment agency or network. However, these groups are proven successful and very resourceful.
"We have an 81 percent placement rate," Jones said. "We can help open the door because of the number of contacts we have in the Kansas City area."
"I have Multiple Sclerosis and a teacher," Cooper said. "My self-esteem was so low. I came here as a volunteer and I feel if anyone comes through here, they are much better off and definitely willing to work."
Of all the soon to be graduates, some will have many offers, others will have none, but the one factor that the three speespeakers had in mind was the idea of attitude and flexibility.
It might be rather hard for some to swallow the idea of difficulty in relation to minorities and women but Cooper said she thought it hard it could be for people with disabilities.
"Attitude is one of the biggest barriers." Cooper said. "One has to feel really good about themselves and project that positive feeling onto a potential employer."
With these available resources, and many others like them, the 1991 KU team was able to have very few problems in contacting and beginning their pursuit of the American dream.
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14 Employment Tab Thursday, March 27, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.101, No. 119
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1991
(0315650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Kurdish rebels seize Iraqi camp while citizens face starvation
The Associated Press
ZAKHO, Iraq — Kurdish rebels yesterday claimed they had seized a government held air base and camp in northern Iraq but said there were signs Saddam Hussein's forces were preparing for an assault on a key rebel-city.
A statement from the Kurdistan Democratic Party said the Iraqi army was massing forces in Saddam's hometown of Tkrit to kill it, and northern oil city of Kirkuk, which was saved by the
The statement sent to the Associated Permanent Mission in Nicosia, Cyprus, by telex, could not be carried.
Saddam has been struggling to quell rebel
lions in the north and south that flared after his defeat by the allies in the Persian Gulf War. The fighting halted with a cease-fire a month ago.
President Bush said yesterday that it was unlikely that Saddam would remain in power for long because the Iraqi people were fed up with him.
"There's enough dissent and disorder, but it appears the Iraqi citizens are trying to do something about this," he told reporters in Bethesda, Md.
Kurdish leaders reported gains in northern Iraq — but also heavy casualties. They said guerrillas overran an Iraqi air base near Kirkuk on Tuesday and captured two Soviet-
The rebels also said they seized a government camp at Faardya, on the road from Dumfries.
made warplanes, a MG-21 fighter and a Soviet-made Sukhoi bomber.
They said the two installations were among the last that government forces controlled in
The Kurdistan Democratic Party said in a statement issued in London that the attack on the Khalid military air base was launched to stop the bombing of rebel held areas.
The statement said that more than 1,000 people were killed in the past week in air attacks on the northern cities of Kirkuk, Kefri, Dohuk, Kalar and Tuz Khormatu.
The Kurds said they feared a new threat survival. The only supply route now open is over the Sinai Desert.
In southern Iraq, where Saddam's forces largely have succeeded in putting down rebelbios by Shite Muslims, hunger was a major factor. The influx of refugees fleeing into allied-controlled areas
In the Iraqi border town of Sarfan, food brought out yesterday as Saudi Arabian food trapped in Iran.
"We tried to organize, but the people are just too hungry," said Maj Youssef Alibour of the Saudi military "They see the food, and they go crazy."
No serious injuries were reported in the
rioting.
At the United Nations, a new Security Council resolution would hold Iraq liable for the environmental hail caused by tactics such as dumping millions of gallons of oil in the Persian Gulf and setting Kuwait's oil wells alight.
The permanent members of the Security Council - the United States, Britain, France, China and the Soviet Union - met in private to refine their checklist of conditions the Baghdad government must meet before a permanent cease-fire is approved.
Under the measure, Iraq would have to let U.N. experts destroy its chemical, biological and nuclear weapons.
Moscow police quell activists
Yeltsin supporters dispersed at Kremlin shortly before Russian parliament meets
MOSCOW — Police moved quickly today against pro-democracy activists backing Boris Yeltsin in a key political battle, dispersing several dozen just hours before a planned strike against a central government ban.
About a dozen police rur-crowd of 75 demonstrat- pushed them down the stree Krenlin At least detained
The scuffle occurred shortly the Russian republic's pan convened at the Kremlin for a session at which Yeltsin, P.Mikhail Gorbachev's chief officer to face a no-roade
His followers planned to three-week ban on street denctions imposed by Gorbán Monday and demo militants later in the day with a huge adiacent Manezh Square.
However, authorities saits
sands of police and Interior N
troops, armed with rubber
gloves, would block the ma
path.
Fears of a bloody contro gripped Moscow yesterday, cally after two dozen armor trucks from the city sent three miles from the city cent
Before they were dispersed the demonstrators chanted "Y
By Jonathan Plummer Kansan staff writer
Starting this fall, one check all.
When enrolling at the end of semester, students may order passes, all sports tickets or all tickets and pay for them in fall with the same check or card they use for their tuition.
David Hardy, director of Orgns
tions and Activities, said the cct
was part of a program that evi-
ly would make it possible for
dents to pay for all KU servic
one time.
"This is a project that we been working on for the five six years." he said.
However, students are not req to buy tickets or bus passes on day of their enrollment appointmnt he said. Those who do not sign up have to go to individual offices in fall to buy them, he said.
The options table will be in Strong Hall rotunda for the enrollment period, Hardy said.
Watkins plan
March 30-April 1, 1967
INDIANAPOLIS, Indiana
FINAL FOOTBALL
Yeltsin," and hold aloft the white, blue and red flag of independent Russia as well as signs that read. "Yeltsin is the hope of the Russian people" and "Communists, stop running the people's lives."
Last night an organizer of threelike
100
First Impressions are everything... so make them on a Macintosh.
Terminal Device
The first impression you make on a company is your resume. Make it a lasting impression. Make it with a Macintosh. The Macintosh Classic is now on sale at the KU Bookstore Computer store, Level 2 Burge Union.
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864-5697 Prices subject to availability. Offer open to students enrolled in at or more credit hours of course work, full time faculty members, or full time staff. You may obtain a copy of the requirements from the KU Bookstores. Payment must be made by cashiers check. Student dividends have already been applied on computer purchases. Other restrictions may apply.
15
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 27, 1991 Employment Tab
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL. 101, No. 119
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1991
ADVERTISING; 864-4358
(640-640)
Kurdish rebels seize Iraqi camp while citizens face starvation
NEWS:864-4810
The Associated Press
ZAKHO, Iraq — Kurdish rebels yesterday claimed they had seized a government-held air base and camp in northern Iraq but said there were signs Saddam Hussein's forces were preparing for an assault on a key rebel-held city.
A statement from the Kurdistan Democratic Party said the Iraqi army was massing forces in Saddam's hometown of Tkrit to launch an attack on the northern oil city of Qaysu, near Kirkuk.
The statement, sent to The Associated Press in Nicosia, Cyprus, by telex, could not be confirmed independently.
Saddam has been struggling to quell rebellions in the north and south that flared into his defeat by the allies in the Persian Gulf War. The fighting halted with a cease-fire a month ago.
President Bush said yesterday that it was unlikely that Saddam would remain in power for long because the Iraqi people were fed up with him.
"There's enough dissent and disorder, but it appears the Iraqi citizens are trying to do something about this," he told reporters in Bethesda, Md.
Kurdish leaders reported gains in northern Iraq — but also heavy casualties. They said guerrillas overran an Iraqi air base near Kirkuk on Tuesday and captured two Soviet-
made warplanes, a MIG-21 fighter and a Soviet-made Sukhoi bomber.
The rebels also said they seized a government comp at Faardya, on the road from Damascus.
They said the two installations were among the government forces controlled in the area.
The Kurdistan Democratic Party said in a statement issued in London that the attack on the Khalil military air base was launched to stop the bombing of rebel held areas.
The statement said that more than 1,000 people were killed in the past week in air attacks on the northern cities of Kirkus, Kefri, Kohur, Kalar and Tuz Khormatu.
The Kurds said they feared a new threat starvation. The only supply route now open is on the western side of the city.
In southern Iraq, where Saddam's forces largely have succeeded in putting down rebellions by Shite Muslims, hunger was a major factor in the rebellion, and refugees fleeing into allied controlled areas.
In the Iraq border town of Saifan, food
rats broke out yesterday as Saudi Arabia
banned them.
"We tried to be organized, but the people are just too hungry," said Major Youssef Ali Albourt of the Saudi military "They see the food, and they go crazy."
No serious injuries were reported in the
rioting.
At the United Nations, a new Security Council resolution would hold Iraq liable for the environmental haevice caused by tactics such as dumping millions of gallons of oil in the Persian Gulf and setting Kuwait's oil wells alight.
The permanent members of the Security Council - the United States, Britain, France, China and the Soviet Union - meet in private to refine their checklist of conditions the Baghdad government must meet before a permanent cease-fire is approved.
Under the measure, Iraq would have to let
U.N. experts destroy its chemical, biological
and nuclear weapons.
Moscow police quell activists
Yeltsin supporters dispersed at Kremlin shortly before Russian parliament meets
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Police moved quickly today against pro-democracy activists backing Boris Yeltsin in a key political battle, dispersing several dozen just hours before a planned invasion of a central government ban.
About a dozen police rushed the crowd of 75 demonstrators and pushed them down the street away from the Kremlin. At least six were detained.
The scuffle occurred shortly before the Russian republic's parliament convened at the Kremlin for a special session at which Yeltsin, President of Ukraine, Gorbachev's chief rival, was expected to face a no-confidence vote.
His followers planned to defy a three-week ban on street demonstrations imposed by Gorbachev's cabinet Monday and demonstrate against him for later in the day with a huge rally in adjacent Manezh Square.
However, authorities said thousands of police and Interior Ministry troops, armed with rubber truncher, would block the marchers' path.
Before they were dispersed today,
the demonstrators chanted "Yeltis.
Fears of a bloody confrontation gripped Moscow yesterday, especially after two dozen armored vehicles bombed the city center three miles from the city center.
New enrollment simplifies tie
By Jonathan Plummer
Kansan staff writer
Starting this fall, one check does it all.
When enrolling at the end of this semester, students may order bus passes, all-sports tickets or all-arts tickets and then pay for them in the fall with the same check or credit card they use for their tuition.
David Hardy, director of Organizations and Activities, said the change was part of a program that eventually would make it possible for students to pay for all KU services at one time.
"This is a project that we have been working on for the past five or six years."
However, students are not required to buy tickets or bus passes on the day of their enrollment appointment, he said. Those who do not sign up for an appointment in spring will have to go to individual offices in the fall to buy them, he said.
The options table will be in the Strong Hall rotunda for the entire enrollment period, Hardy said.
Watkins plans
March 30-April 1, 1961
INDIANAPOLIS, Indiana
FINAL FOOTBALL
Yellinsin," and hold aloof the white, blue and red flag of independent Russia as well as signs that read, "Yellinsin is the hope of the Russian people" and "Communists, stop running the people's lives."
TRESPASSING.
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Employment Tab Thursday, March 27.1991 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL. 101, No. 119
THE STUDENT NEWSAPHER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1991
ADVERTISING:864-4358
(0315 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Kurdish rebels seize Iraqi camp while citizens face starvation
The Associated Press
ZAKHO, Iraq — Kurdish rebels yesterday claimed they had seized a government-held air base and camp in northern Iraq but said there were signs Saddam Hussein's forces were preparing for an assault on a key rebel-held city.
A statement from the Kurdistan Democratic Party said the Iraqi army was massing forces in Saddam's hometown of Tikrit to force Kurds to move on no other route. Kirkuk, which was seized in November
The statement, sent to The Associated Press in Nicosia, Cyprus, by telex, could not be confirmed independently.
Saddam has been struggling to quell rebel
lions in the north and south that flared after his defeat by the allies in the Persian Gulf War. The fighting halted with a cease-fire a month ago.
President Bush said yesterday that it was unlikely that Saddam would remain in power for long because the Iraqi people were fed up with him.
“There’s enough dissent and disorder, but it appears the Iraqi citizens are trying to do something about this,” he told reporters in Bethesda. Md
Kurdish leaders reported gains in northern Iraq — but also heavy casualties. They said guerrillas overran an Iraqi air base near Kirkuk on Tuesday and captured two Soviet-
The rebels also said they seized a government camp at Faardyla, on the road from Damascus.
made warplanes, a MiG-21 fighter and a Soviet-made Sukhoi bomber.
They said the two installations were among the that government forces controlled in northern Kyrgyzstan.
The Kurdistan Democratic Party said in a statement issued in London that the attack on the Khalid military air base was launched to ston the bombing of rebel held areas.
The statement said that more than 1,000 people were killed in the past week in air attacks on the northern cities of Kirkuk, Kefri, Douk, Kalar and Tuz Khormatu.
The Kurds said they feared a new threat *starvation*. The only supply route now open is across the border to Turkey.
In southern Iraq, where Saddam's forces largely have succeeded in putting down rebels by Shite Muslims, hunger was a major factor. A group of refugees fleeing into allied-controlled areas
In the Iraq border town of Safwan, food
broke out yesterday as Saudi Arabian
foodmen tried to buy it.
"We tried to be organized, but the people are just too hungry," said MaJ. Youssef Albourt of the Saudi military "They see the food, and they go crazy."
No serious injuries were reported in the
rioting.
At the United Nations, a new Security Council resolution would hold Iraq liable for the environmental havoc caused by tactics such as dumping millions of gallons of oil in the Persian Gulf and setting Kuwait's oil wells alight.
The permanent members of the Security Council - the United States, Britain, France, China and the Soviet Union - meet in private to refine their checklist of conditions the Baghdad government must meet before a permanent cease-fire is approved.
Under the measure, Iraq would have to let U.N. experts destroy its chemical, biological and nuclear assets.
Moscow police quell activists
Yeltsin supporters dispersed at Kremlin shortly before Russian parliament meets
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Police moved quickly today against pro-democracy activists backing Boris Yeltsin in a key political battle, dispersing several dozen just hours before a planned invasion of a central government ban.
About a dozen police rushed the crowd of 75 demonstrators and pushed them down the street, away from the Kremlin. At least six were detained.
The scuffle occurred shortly before the Russian republic's parliament convened at the Kremlin for a special session at which Yelsin, President Mikhail Gorbachev's chief rival, was invited to face a no-confidence vote.
His followers planned to defy a three-week ban on street demonstrations imposed by Gorbachev's cabinet Monday and demonstrate overwhelming public support for him in the rally, with rallies in adjacent Manegh Square.
Fears of a bloody confrontation gripped Moscow yesterday, especially after two dogs armored vehicle trucks in front of three miles from the city center.
However, authorities said thousands of police and Interior Ministry troops, armed with rubber trunches, would block the marchers' path.
Before they were dispersed today, the demonstrators chanted "Yeltsin,
Yeltsin," and held aloft the white, blue and red flag of independent Russia as well as signs that read, "Yeltsin is the hope of the Russian people" and "Communists, stop ruining the people's lives."
Last night, an organizer of today's main demonstration went on national television to appeal for peace.
"If... you come across barriers or forceful prevention of the movement of marchers, we ask you to show restraint and compose, not to give in to possible provocations and to refrain from any use of force." Arkady N. Murashov advised Yeltsin supportors.
Police signaled their determination to enforce the ban by sealing off Red Square last night and breaking up a small pro-Yeltsin demonstration in City Council headquarters earlier in the day, hauling away several.
That and today's scene near the Kremlin were reminiscent of how dissidents were treated in pre-Gorbachev years.
Yeltsin, who chairs Russia's parlament, is under attack from a hard-line faction of Communist lawmaker Vladimir Putin and popularists of the 15 Soviet republics.
The hard-liners bent on ousting him succeeded last month in calling the special session after Yeltis accused Gorbachev of rolling back democratic reforms, demanding that the Soviet president resign.
New enrollment option simplifies ticket buying
Kansan staff writer
By Jonathan Plummer
Starting this fall, one check does it all.
When enrolling at the end of this semester, students may order bus passes, all sports tickets or all arts tickets and then pay for them in the fall with the same check or credit card they use for their tuition.
Hardy David, director of Organizations and Activities, said the change was part of a program that eventually would make it possible for students to pay for all KU services at one time.
"This is a project that we have been working on for the past five or six years," he said.
The options table will be in the Strong Hall rotunda for the entire enrollment period, Hardy said.
However, students are not required to buy tickets or bus passes on the day of their enrollment appointment, he said. Those who do not sign up for the spring will have to go to individual offices in the fall to buy them, he said.
Jacqueline Davis, director of the fine arts concert series, said that although she expected the change to be a selling tickets was not the main goal.
If there is a lottery for all sports tickets, students who signed up for them during spring enrolment will receive a $100 gift card to get them in the fall. Hardy said.
In the spring, students who no longer want the services they signed up for in the fall can go through a series of online lessons removed from their enrollment.
Those who have late enrolments and sign up for tickets have as good a chance in a lottery as those who have earlier appointments, he said.
"With the series ticket, we want to encourage as many students as possible to take the opportunity to see performances at affordable prices," she said.
Susan Wachter, assistant athletic director, worked with Hardy on the project. She said the Athletic Department had been working for about five years on the idea to simplify the process.
DST 020
Chevette belonging to Jan Price, an employee of the department of counseling psychology, and a 1986 Buick Century belonging to Sheryl Williams, a librarian at Spencer Research Library. Both cars had major damage, but no dollar estimates were available.
Facilities operations employees work to remove a fallen tree from two cars parked on Memorial Drive near Snow Hall. The tree fell yesterday when high winds gusts at speeds of up 80 mph. KU police Lt. John Mullens said the tree landed on a 1984 Chevrolet
Hail storm leaves marks
Student hit twice in two years; insurers encourage customers to file their claims
Kansan staff writer
By Nedra Beth Randoiph
Kansas staff writer
Jennifer Magnani could not believe it happened to her car twice in two years. But it did.
Magnani's 1990 Hyundai Excel was caught in sight the hail storm and received extensive damage to the hood and roof. It was the second time her car had been damaged in a hail storm, she said. Her car was in Colorado the first time it was damaged.
"It's pretty well banged up this time," said Magnani, Evergreen, Colo., freshman.
The red two-door car was parked on the top level of the Jayhawker Towers parking garage when the storm struck Lawrence.
"I really wished I had parked it under the top level," she said. "It's
a big pain claiming it through insurance. But I plan to anyway."
United Services Automobile Association, an insurance company with home offices in San Antonio, Texas, has set up a catastrophe appraisal station through Eilena Bueck at the old Eilena Suaru building, 1116 W. 23rd St., to assess hail damage to Lawrence cars.
Christal Walz, USAA service representative, said she received the first hall-damage call from Lawrence at 4:20 p.m. Tuesday and then another of the first call, more than 25 other calls clogged the USAA claims lines.
"We've had so many calls from Lawrence, Kan., that I can process the claims really fast now since I've had so much practice." she said.
the Lawrence Bus Co., B3T Pennyse,
vania St, said the buses that were
caught in the hail storm sustained
by Hurricane Ike were glass window
and aluminum roofs.
"I have no idea how much monetary damage was done," he said. "Some of the damage is just cosmetic, but it will help the extent that the buses will leak."
Chris Ogle, general manager of
Tom Oakson, sales manager at Ellena Honda, 2854 Four Wheel Drive, said most of their inventory was caught in the storm. The canvas canopy in front of the sales office was torn to shreds.
"The cars look like they were hit by a ton of golf balls," he said. "We have quite a bit of damage here."
Oakson said that in the nine years since he had been in the car business, he had never seen damage
from a hail storm such as he saw Tuesday.
All of the other dealers in the auto plaza also sustained extensive hail damage, he said.
David Tackett, Farmers Insurance Group district manager, said his adjusters were working overtime.
"We're all answering the phones just as fast as we can." he said.
He said that as of noon yesterday, his office had recieved more than 500 calls about hail damage.
Tackett said hail-damage coverage was carried under comprehensive damage coverage.
"Don't be afraid to call and report the damage if you've paid your premium. Tackett said he doesn't know what is what you carry insurance for."
Storms damage campus buildings, trees
By Katie Chipman
Kansan staff writer
The KU campus has survived the storms that have plagued Lawrence for two days but not without heavy damage to buildings, trees and vehicles.
Several buildings were damaged yesterday because of the wind velocity, which averaged 39 miles an hour during the windiest part of the day.
Bob Parker, assistant director of facilities operations, said the wind had knocked down several trees and dislodged circulation ventilation from the roofs of both Wescoe and Fraser hills.
to students because of the broken ventilator that was living on the edge of the roof.
The west entrance to Fraser was barricaded
Lonnie Welsh, assistant director of construction at facilities operations, said the ventilation unit was installed.
He said that when the wind died down, the ventilator would have to be removed from the roof and repaired but that the wind was too strong for facilities operations to retrieve it at the time.
KU police Lt. John Mullens that several of the Continuing Education buildings were evacuated for two hours yesterday when a tree was uprooted and fell into some power lines.
"KP&L cut the power off and cut the tree out of the power lines, and then they evacuated
some buildings because they were having some problems with the wind." Mullens said.
Mullens said that several trees fell in front of Watson Library and the Military Science Buildin
He said that one tree near Jayhawk Boulevard was broken at the trunk and fell across Memoria
The tree hit and damaged three cars, Mullens said.
Jan Price, owner of one of the cars, said, "I thought the car was totalled last night because of a broken front windshield."
"The roof is crushed, and on the driver's side, the doors are smashed in," she said. "Basically, it doesn't matter."
Watkins plans to extend hours Monday if Jayhawks advance to the championship game
March 30-April 1, 1961
INDIANAPOLIS, Indiana
FINAL
FOLI
By Amy Frank
Kansan staff writer
Saturday's basketball game will determine a lot of things for KU. One is whether Wakkins Memorial Health will stay open all night Monday.
Jim Strobel, director of Watkins,
said Watkins would remain open from
8 a.m. Monday until 10 p.m.
and before the Jayhawks won Sat-
turday's game.
If the team loses, Watkins will close at its regular time, 10 p.m. Monday.
If the team wins, Randy Rock, a physician at Watkins, and two nurses
will be working at Watkins. A person to operate the lab department and a person for the X-ray department will be on call, he said.
Rock was chosen to work during the extended hours because he was scheduled for Monday anyway, he said.
He said he was not worried about working all night.
"It's been done before," he said.
"If we're busy, that won't be a problem."
Jim Boyle, assistant director of Watkins, said the health center would not need to be open later than usual Saturday because people would wait
Watkins' experience from 1988, when the team won the national championship, prompted the idea of extending Watkins' hours.
to see the results of Monday's game. "I think people are going to hold off on the celebration," he said.
Charles Yockey, chief of staff, said in a telephone interview, "We had a tremendous number of students years ago who got hart, some severe.
When the team won the championship, more than 30 students were treated at Walkins through an anti-bullying campaign. People also were treated the next day.
Watkins was open 24 hours a day then, Yockey said.
Many students also had lacerations. he said.
Watkins used almost all of the crutches and braces it had because ankle sprains were the most common injuries. Vockee said.
"In 1988, it was the first experience, with that type of situation," he said. "I certainly didn't expect it. We had to pay to predict what would happen."
"Some of the lacerations were pretty deep," he said. "There was a lot of broken glass up on Jayhawk Boulevard.
"It's great to celebrate, but I hope people keep things in perspective."
Mike Chapman, physical therapist at Watkins, who also remembers the last championship night
"We had a lot of sprains and strains from the accident." he said. "We were really low on everything after that."
Watkins will be more prepared this year, he said.
"We'll probably be checking out to make sure we have enough braces on our teeth."
More Final 4 coverage Page 13
2
Thursday, March 28, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
TODAY
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LO:28'
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46/28
46/28
66/51
76/45
86/70
Kansas Forecast
For most of today the sky will be overcast. Winds will be fairly calm compared to yesterday.
High 57/ Low 28.
Salina 56/27 KC
Dudge City 55/28
56/28 Wichita 60/30
3-day Forecast
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
Friday- Partly cloudy and cooler. High 50/ Low 26.
Saturday - Partly cloudy and warmer. High 55/ Low 29.
Sunday - Sunny and warmer.
High 64/ Low 35.
forecast by Brian Lowing
Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday; March 28, 1991
3
Four bands to battle at Hoch
Music performances to be mixed with the comedy of MTV's Pauly Shore
By Nedra Beth Randolph
The Battle of the Bands will have more than just music.
This year's show, at 7:15 tonight in Hoch Auditorium, will feature comedian Pauly Shore from MTV as well as four local bands. Shore is the host of a show called "Totally Pauly", which airs at 3:30 p.m. daily on MTV.
Joe Litvag and Laura Rubin, St Louis, Mo., juniors, coordinated the event with SUA. Litvag said this was the second year for the Battle of the Bands at the University of Kansas
"I'm anticipating a sellout this year," he said. "And with Pauly Shore, it's highly possible."
Shore's comedy act during the Battle of the Bands will be the kickoff of his college comedy tour, Litvag said. MTV will tape "Totally Paired" today at Wesco Hall and Shore's performance tonight at Audio Hotto-
"There will be a whole week's worth of shows from KU and Lawrence taped while Pauly is here." Litvag said.
Scott Iverson, recreation coordinator for SUA, said he helped bring Shore to campus.
"We've had big draws here at the University of Kansas before," he said. "This one should be a real crowd-pleaser."
Along with Shore, the audience will see 30 minutes of music each from four bands: Kill White, The Backsiders. The Mood and Baghdad Joner
Dave Learned, bass player for Baghdad Jones, said his band was invited late last fall to play at the Battle of the Bands.
He said he hoped his band would
gain some good exposure from the show.
"If people go to bars, then they have probably seen us before," he said. "But with the Battle of the Bands, others who haven't seen us before might get to. And it would be great if we were on MTV."
Zeta Beta Tau and Sigma Delta Tau are co-sponsoring the event with SUA. All proceeds will go to National Prevention of Child Abuse and the Parents of Parents Anonymous. Tickets cost $8 in advance and $10 at the door.
Finance committee passes organization budget
The Student Senate Finance Committee voted last night to approve its recommended budget for student organizations for next year.
The total recommended budget for student organizations is $70,846. The committee was charged with cutting almost $64,000 from the requests.
Senate is scheduled to vote on vote
on legislation ending a budget process
that blocks new government programs.
Kansan staff report
The committee recommended that three groups receive no financing from Senate for next year. They
included Consumer Affairs, a Lawrence consumer organization which requested $10.075 for next year, Commuter's Club, which requested $1.375, and Helping Hands Day Care, which requested $19.800.
Finance committee members said that their recommendation for Consumer Affairs was based on their perception that the group did not do anything that Legal Services for Students did not do.
Commuter's Club requested money for a newsletter. In lieu of that, the committee recommended that the
Organization of Adult Knowledge Seekers, an organization for nontraditional students, use part of its newsletter to provide information for commuters.
Helping Hands Day Care's request of $19,800 was ruled out of order on the grounds that the center provided the same service as the Hilltop Child Development Center.
In other action, the finance committee approved six bills totaling $12,672. Those bills will be voted on in Senate next week.
One bill would allocate $4,500 to help pay honoraria for four speakers at a conference sponsored by Black Men of Today on April 19 and 20.
The committee voted to recommend that Senate allocate $4,698 for a powwow that the Native American Student Association will sponsor April 20.
The other bills will finance free movies during finals, the last issue of Culture Shock, the annual Art on the Screen festival and promotion of Secure Cab
Timothy Miller/KANSAN
A Ukrainian Easter egg rests in a display case in the third-floor lobby of Watson Library. The egg is part of a collection put together by Michael Palij, a retired KU librarian. Other Ukrainian artwork is included in the collection.
One good egg
By Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
If platforms decide elections, KU students voting in Student Senate elections will not have a wide range of candidates, whether to vote for Facts or Impact.
However, Darren Fulcher, Impact presidential candidate, said students needed to look beyond the issues and see the people in the coalitions.
Jason McIntosh, Facts presidential candidate, said that both issues and policies should be considered.
"The quality of Senate depends on the people involved in it," he said.
McNishot said Facts have a diverse group of students, including international students and student leaders living groups and professional schools.
Michael Sullivan, co-director of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, said that he was approached by both coalitions' leaders but that he had committed to run on the Impact ticket.
Kathryn Price, Wichita freshman, is running on the Facts coalition for a Nunemaker seat. She said she thought McIntosh and vice president candidate Giles Smith were open to new ideas.
Fulcher asked him first to run as a Senate candidate, and he did not consider changing when Facts approached him, he said.
"I really respect that Darren has made the effort to get representatives from many student groups on campus." Sullivan said.
Fulcher said Impact had candidates from all across campus, including fraternities, sororities, residence balls and minority groups.
we've been able to get a mixture of people who represent KU". Fulcher said. "My plan was to get a mixture that the coalition was diverse."
The coalitions present similar platforms. Campus safety in the form of fire drills and other safety measures both groups. The environment and conservation also are issues that both
Student Senate Elections
groups have said they would deal with.
Both Impact and Facts address issues of graduate students, such as research assistants' fee waivers and increasing graduate representation in student government. Both coalitions also listed minority concerns and cultural diversity as issues they wanted to take on.
The structure of Senate will allow it to address the issues both coalitions have in common, and both coalition's leaders have said that they merely would step up involvement in those issues.
Facts and Impact each have one unique platform issue.
Impact has proposed a minority recruitment and retention program that would attract minority students and involve them in the University
Fulcher said 10 to 15 students would be charged with writing letters and assisting the offices of admissions and minority affairs in recruiting minority students to the University.
Facts has proposed a professional note-taking service for lecture classes. Students would pay about $14 a semester to use the service, which would provide typed copies of lecture notes. McIntosh said.
The program could be in place as early as next fall. he said.
Melntosh said a trial program in five classes could be instituted in the fall.
Final Four increases absentee voting
The note-takers would be students who had taken the class before and prepaRED for it.
Lawrence resident Linda Davis enters the voting booth near the west entrance of the Douglas County Courthouse, 12th and Massachusetts streets. Davis was casting an absentee ballot the coming city elections because she will be in Indianapolis for the NCAA Basketball Tournament on Monday, which is election day.
Indy-bound fans fulfill civic duties
By Vanessa Fuhrmans Kansan staff writer
Last-minute trips to Indianapolis to catch the Final Four fever have some Lawrence voters taking care of civic duties a little earlier than
Absentee voting for the April 2 election has stepped up this week because of the exodus to Indianapolis, county officials said.
"We've had a real run today," said Patty Jaimes, Douglas County clerk, yesterday. "And they all are heading in that direction."
Jaimes said she was worried that other registered voters going to Indianapolis would not return on time Tuesday to vote in the election, diminishing what she estimates will be a 25 to 40 percent voter turnout.
Sherry Benda, who works in the Allen Field House ticket office, said that 3,000 NCAA tickets would be sold to Lawrence residents included. About half of the tickets will go to contributors to the Williams Fund.
Jaimes said that to fill out an absentee ballot, a registered voter would have to apply for and sign an absentee ballot and return the ballot by April 2.
"Sometimes people have the per-
ception that they will have to stand
in line to vote," she said. "They
have to get out of here within
five minutes."
Although the deadline for applying for an absentee ballot is noon Monday, Jaimes said those with absentee ballots would have to file before they left.
"They'll want to file Friday because they should be out of town by then," she said.
April 2, Lawrence voters will elect three people to the City Commission and four people to the Lawrence district school board. Voters also will be asked about a construction to widen 5th street between Monterey Way and Wakarus Drive.
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4
Thursday, March 28, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Live executions
TV station's lawsuit makes sense: Media should be permitted to broadcast convicts' executions
imagine being able to turn on the television and see a convicted felon being executed.
and see a convicted felon being executed.
A California news station is pressing its state court system to rule that TV news crews have a right to tape and televise convicted felons' executions in San Quentin's gas chambers.
It may sound pretty gruesome, but the logic behind the station's civil lawsuit makes perfect sense. The news media in this country should have the right to cover any event in which state policy is being carried out. Because the death penalty is a policy approved by some state governments, the media should be able to cover public policy as it takes place in those states.
This does not mean that television stations necessarily must broadcast an execution. But the media should be able to tape an execution so that they can judge whether what is now going on behind closed doors is newsworthy.
Some people may argue that they do not
want to see executions on the 10 o'clock news all of the time. But executions simply do not happen all of the time. California has not executed a prisoner since 1967. And, when they do it again, if they televise it, people have the right to change the station or turn off their televisions. Other citizens may want, and deserve, the right to make a completely informed decision on whether they agree or disagree with their state's public policy on the death penalty.
Michael Schwarz, the current affairs director of the California station involved in the suit, eloquently summed up why executions should be televised: "Why is it that the ultimate act of criminal justice should suddenly be taken behind closed doors? This is being done in our name, on our behalf and with our money, and therefore we have a right to see it."
Carol Krekeler for the editorial board
Women's rights
Hazardous jobs are now an option for women
Women should not be banned from jobs even if the workplace contains hazards.
The U.S. Supreme Court supported this idea in a unanimous ruling last week, saying that employers may not bar women from jobs that expose them to toxic substances.
This decision will affect millions of female workers nationwide and more than a dozen major U.S. corporations. Because of concerns about lawsuits, the companies have maintained "fetal-protection" policies.
The decision resulted from a lawsuit filed against Johnson Controls Inc., a large manufacturer of automobile batteries with a St. Joseph, Mo., plant. The company had a policy that banned women from jobs that exposed them to lead.
The policy applied to all women regardless of their age or plans to have children. Women who could prove they were sterile could be exempted from the policy.
The company's policy was so broad that it affected virtually all women, regardless of their childbearing plans. The policy could
have been used by the company to prevent women from working at the plant.
Johnson Controls' mandatory policy caused some women to transfer to jobs that usually paid less. To keep her high-paying job at the St. Joseph plant, one employee underwent sterilization.
Some women may not plan to have children, but they should not have to be sterilized to prove it.
Also, although studies suggest that lead exposure could cause miscarriages, birth defects or slow development, the court rightfully concluded that responsibility rested with the mother, not the employer, to consider the future welfare of the child.
But before women work at a hazardous job, they should have to sign a form to make certain that they are fully aware of the risks they may be taking.
Even if women choose not to apply for these types of jobs after knowing the risks, at least they now have the freedom of choice.
Amy Zamierowski for the editorial board
The Kansan editorial board members are Juli Watkins, Stacy Smith, Brent Maycock, Amy Zamierowski, Melanie Botts, Tiffany Harness, Rod Griffin, Chris Siron, Rich Cornell, Melanie Matthes, Clare McGinn, Elicia Hill, Jennifer Schultz, Debbie Myers and Carol Krekeler.
MARLEY Chicago Tribune
COACH DOESN'T CHEW ON HIS TOWELS ANYMORE—NOT SINCE THE KNIGHT COMMISSION REPORT CAME OUT.
MKANELEY Chicago Tribune SUPPORT GORB
LETTERS to the EDITOR
Parade wasn't political
Although St. Patrick's Day is more than a week past, I thought I should write in response to the letters submitted by Angus T. McWhorter and David Lownenstein. I was kind of disturbed about the ideas expressed by them. I am a serving member of the U.S. military, and part of that job is supporting the free speech and ideas of the people. However, stating that Lawrence's St. Patrick's Day parade was politically motivated this year is not only misleading, but ludicrous.
The Kansas Army National Guard has kept a station in Lawrence for a number of years. Presently, the Lawrence armory is the home of two mechanized infantry companies. The people serving in these companies, including myself, are members of this community, and needless to say, the National Guard plays an integral part in Lawrence. Yes, the National Guard marched in the St. Patrick's Day parade with an element of infantry soldiers and an armored personnel carrier as they have before at the request of the parade committee. No, McWhorter, this was not a first-time occurrence. Somehow, I have a feeling it was not politically motivated
Yet, maybe you have a point. Maybe we should eliminate KU football and basketball games because they make a political statement with the ROTC color guards that begin them. Maybe we should not have a professional team or parade or professional sports event because of its political statement.
Maybe we shouldn't be so political
Brandon K. Devlin Lawrence sophomore
Bible groups help some
Rev Jim Musser's comment that people should not attend Bible studies with strangers and should be wary of instantaneous friendships in the Kansan's March 20 article "Meeting curbs cult deception" reminded me of my own experiences with stangers and Bible study groups when I first arrived here from Indonesia in 1989.
While mailing a letter at the post office, I conversed with a stranger and somehow got invited to a Bible study, and later attended services at the church he went to. Through this Bible study group and the church, I came to know several people from different nationalities who are my good friend. I have I have at least seven Bible study groups of various denominations and campus groups, and I have come to a conclusion that people who attend such occasions are mostly nice, kind, friendly and caring people, and are
far from manipulative. Those I call my best friends are from this group of people
These friends never pressed me to join their groups or to adopt their theological views. They never said anything when I did not feel like attending Bible study or going to church. I just said "no" whenever I felt they were too eager to get me involved in a group activity that I was not keen on, and they respected my decisions.
Had I been afraid to accept that Bible study invitation from a stranger and was wary of instantaneous friendship, I would not have had to make someone who have brought me much happiness and fun during my stay here
Naturally, it is always wise to be wary of strangers. But, according to my experiences, one should not be too suspicious of the Bible study stranger. It is fortunate that some people have been hurt while becoming involved with some Christians who are worth getting to know.
Lisa Lim City, class
Arkansas can take joke
"We're going to Indianapolis!" shouted a jubilant Bob Davis over the Jayhawk Network. With (fewer than 10 seconds) to go in the game, Lawrence knew the Big Blue was going to the Final Four again.
Shortly after Saturday's game, T-shirt printers began running off shirts that said things such as, "On the road again," and, "The race is on." Among those was a T-shirt proclaiming Kansas the Southeast Regional Champs. After this shirt appeared, the University of Kansas demanded that these shirts no longer be printed, refused to license these shirts, and threatened to revoke the license of anyone printing or selling them. In response, I am, of course, referring to the T-shirts that displayed the name Arkansas with the "Ar" circled and crossed out. The rationale I received for the ban was that the University felt it bagged on Arkansas too much.
If Arkansas had won the game, I think T-shirts in Fayetteville, Ark. would have said something similar. Perba Kansas with an "Ar" spray painted in front. Now tell me What's behind it? Arkansas is integrity, because I have seen other places where "Ar" was crossed out from Arkansas.
Ong such place was at the intersection of Sixth and Arkansas streets. Someone put tape over the "Ar" on the street sign.
If we want to bring integrity into the argument, then items depicting a victorious Jayhawk standing on a severely beaten Wildcat also should be removed from store shelves. Add to that bumper stickers that read, "Have you kicked your Wildcat today?"
'I want KU to win this title as much as the next fan, but what's wrong with having some fun?'
Oh, now you tell me, "But that's just in fun." OK, how about the bumper stickers that read, "Jayhawk in trunk" or "God created Kansas but subcontracted Missouri?" Are those in fun? So were the altered Arkansas shirts. They were just in fun. Is it fair to jab fun with schools only in the Big Eight Conference and be passive with the schools in other conferences? I'm not saying these schools are asking us to jab at them, especially because they would jab at us if we were in their shoes.
"Rut we're better than that."
Really?" I don't think anyone in the NCAA is any better than anybody else. The minute you start telling people you're above the Arkansas T-shirt, they begin to test you in other places. They will job at you in other ways. Eventually, they will bring your ego back to earth and reality. KU is no better than Arkansas. Yes, we play a game of half or half or did, but what if Arkansas had had as good a second half as their first? How many times could KU beat Arkansas? Play enough games and the two probably would come out about even, thank you, law of averages.
I don't want anyone thinking I don't appreciate the hard work that Roy Williams and the Jayhaws have done I remember in 1988 after KU was put on probation, I almost crested because I knew my Hawks weren't going to defend their title. I also have been hoping for another national title I missed the victory in 1988 because I was a freshman in junior college. I want KU to win this title as much as the next fan, but what's wrong with having some fun? The University could have told the printers to stop printing after this weekend. That way everyone would have a chance to get the Arkansas shirts, and then with no more printed, they would have become KU collectibles. But instead, KU became worried that Arkansas might be offended? As President Harry Truman once said, "If you can't stand the heat, stay out of the kitchen."
I think KU should ask itself a very important question. Is it saying it will take it but not dish it out? Personally, I don't like being around people who will take it but won't dish it out. After a while, I quail association with them and then boring or because they feel too important to make a joke.
Maybe KU needs to dish it out once in a while.
KANSAN STAFF
Michael A. Breen Coffeyville senior
CHRIS SIRON
Editor
RICH CORNELL
Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
AUDRA LANGFORD
Business manager
MINDI LUND
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing adviser
Editors Business staff
News ... Melanie Matthes Campus sales mgr... Sophie Whebe
Editorial ... Tiffany Harness Regional sales mgr... Carmen Dresch
Planning ... Holly M. Neuman National sales mgr... Jennifer Claxton
Campus ... Jennifer Reynolds, Co-op sales mgr... Christine Musser
Pam Sollin Production mgrs. RICH Harrison
Sports ... Ann Sommersliter Katie Stader
Photography ... Keith Thorpe Marketing director Gail Embinder
Graphics ... Melissa Unterberg Creative director Chrisy Hahs
Features ... Jill Harrington Classified manager. Kim Crowder
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words. They must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. Written affiliated with the University of Kansas must include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansas reserve the right to reject or edit letters, goon columns and canvons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Stuaffer-Flint Hall.
By David Rosenfield
Sketch
AH, THIS IS WHAT UNIVERSITY LIFE IS ALL ABOUT—
SITTING IN THE SHADE OF A 100-YEAR-OLD TREE,
CONTEMPLATING THE GREAT ISSUES OF THE DAY!
SIGHE IT'S HARD TO CONTEMPLATE
THE GREAT ISSUES OF THE DAY
IN THE AGE OF THE FRISBEE...
THWACK
you!
YO!
HEADS UP,
BABE!
YO!
HEADS UP,
BABE!
THWACK you!
OH HOW GOOD IS THIS!!!
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 28, 1991
5
On campus
University Placement Center will conduct a workshop titled "Better Resumes" at 3:30 p.m. at 149 Burge Union.
■ Kliosk literary and art magazine will accept fiction, poetry, photograph and drawing submissions until Friday at 400 Kangas Union.
KU Wellness Center will sponsor a workshop训 “Overcoming Overcaring” at 12:10 p.m. at 138 Robinson Center.
KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 p.m. at 130 Robinson Center.
Foreign Student Services and
Legal Services for Students will conduct a tax workshop for foreign students at 9:30 a.m. at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union
KU Study Abroad in Spanish speaking countries will have an informational meeting at 4 p.m. at 3040 Wescoe Hall.
Canterbury House will celebrate
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will conduct its weekly open meeting at 7:30 p.m. at the Pioneer Room in the Kansas Union.
**Amnesty International will sponsor**
the American Union at Alcove B in the Kingston Union.
the Holy Eucharist at noon at Dan-
forth Chanel
Baptist Student Union will have a 30 p.m. at the Baptist Center.
Champions Club will have a club meeting at 7 p.m. at the Kansas Union.
■ KU Christian Science Student Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. at Alcove C in the Kansas Union.
KU Study Abroad in French speaking countries will have an informational meeting at 3 p.m. at 2055 Wescoe.
KU Gamers and Role-Players will meet at 6 p.m. at Alcove D in the Kansas Union.
KU Astrology will meet at 7 p.m. at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union.
■ KU American Civil Liberties Union will meet at 6 p.m. at Alcove B in the Kansas Union.
Police report
Correction
Quick cash.
Lawrence Pawn can help you get a quick, short term loan in exchange for your valuables!
There is no easier way to get a loan with no credit check!
occurs when the updrafts of a thunderstorm begin to rotate violently and the funnel then begins to approach the ground.
A fire alarm was pulled at 4:56 a.m. yesterday in the second floor lobby of Joseph R. Pearson Hall, KU police reported.
100
Because of misinformation given to a reporter, the explanation for the way a tornado occurs was incorrect in yesterday's Kansan. A tornado
student's car was broken between 10 p.m. Sunday and 8:15 a.m. Monday in the 1600 block of Edgehill Road, Lawrence police reported. Damage to the car totaled $25.
The left rear taillight from a KU
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Sunday 1:00 pm - 4:00 pm
Every Wednesday:
March 27-30 April 3-4
Sonny Kenner
April 5-6
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39th Band R&B Jam Session.
Student Night, show I.D. no cover
Nace Bros. Band John Paul & The Hell Hounds
Nace Bros. Band
Filter Kings
April 12-13 Kevin May, Deconaires April 19-20 Caribe
Great Live Music 6 Nights a Week! must be 21
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ON THE ROAD TO THE FINAL FOUR
CONGRATULATIONS HAWKS...
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Valid KU ID and Proof of Age
Saturday Dance Lessons 8 to 9 p.m.
Live Broadcast with KFKF 10 p.m. to midnight
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Thursday, March 28, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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1
Prof wins award for translations
Kansan staff writer
Bv Sarah Davis
One day last year, Maggie Childs realized that her 10-year scholarly research had transformed into a personal quest.
"My own frustrations and resentment to powerlessness was equivalent to their trauma," Childs said, referring to the people in her book.
Childs, chairperson of the department of East Asian languages and cultures, was working on translating a book of Japanese stories about nuns discovered that her own personal struggle was about feeling powerless.
Her book, "Rethinking Sorrow," due out next week, earned the Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission prize for the translation of Japanese literature from the department of Japanese at Columbia University in New York City. Child's book was a best-seller in the country, and she will go to New York on Wednesday to pick up her $1,000 prize.
Her book consists of stories that examine how the nuns and monks chose their professions. Through the teachings of the professors, the idea of Buddhism is taught.
Childs said that one of the ideas
taught in the book was the importance of transience, the idea that everything changes. She also said she would like to enjoy what they already have.
"The whole teaching of Buddhism is that we only suffer because we expect our desires to be fulfilled." she said. "So Buddhism teaches you to eliminate your desires so you don't suffer."
Although the book was a personal search for her, she said other people could find it.
"I think a lot of people will read it and appreciate it because it's about people that seem very real," Childs
said.
"I'm proud of this book," she said.
"Translating takes some creativity and talent."
"We get to know the common people's feelings," she said.
Fumiko Yamamoto, associate professor of East Asian language and cultures who read and gave organizational suggestions to Childs, said the book was designed for a wide audience.
Childs said, "I tried to make it easy for someone who doesn't know Japanese to read it and enjoy it. I think that's an important objective."
JAYHAWKS!
GO
JAYHAWKS!
Best wishes from
Jason McIntosh-Pres.
Giles Smith-V.P.
David Staker-Tres.
FACTS
BALKERVILLE
A Coalition for the 1991 Student Senate Elections $ ^{27} $
To read on our beach,
you have to book in advance.
Call 1-800-FINDS NU (in Illinois, call 708/491-4114) or mail this coupon. Think or Swim!
Preregister by mail; we'll save you a seat (and send you a readlist list).
TENNIS
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Name
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Interested in Early Childhood Education?
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The Department of Human Development and Family Life is having an informal advising meeting with seniors and faculty advisors for students interested in this major to ask questions about the program and student teaching possibilities at the University of Kansas.
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TONIGHT!
March 28, 1991 7:15 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
$8 advance tickets available at SUA box office or Wescoe Beach
All proceeds benefit the National Prevention of Child Abuse
featuring
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Nation/World
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 28, 1991
7
Nation/World briefs
Singapore
Four Pakistani hijackers killed
Commandees burst into a Singaporean jetliner on the airport tarmac yesterday and killed four Pakistan hijackers minutes before the hijackers would start slaying passengers, officials said.
The attack on the hijackers, who were armed with knives and explosives, ended a nearly nine-hour ordeal for the 126 passengers and crew, who included three U.S. citizens. Two commandos and two crew members were slightly hurt.
Police said the hijackers, who seized the plane on a flight to Singapore from Malaysia, were identified as a number of people detained in Pakistan and a thousand of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto.
Washington
Bush disputes general's claim
In an embarrassing public flap, President Bush yesterday disputed Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf's claim to have urged further fighting to cause great destruction in Iraq's army at the time Bush ordered a cease-fire in the Persian Gulf War.
Bush said all hands had been in total agreement that the time had come to halt, but Schwarzkopf remembered it differently, and the foundation had been, you know, continue the march.
Schwarzkopf, the highly acclaimed architect of the allied victory against Iraq, told an interviewer that history would second-guest him. A day before his opening an escape route for fleeing Iraq forces,
The White House and Pentagon moved swiftly to challenge the general's version of events, as related to television interviewer David Frost. In a written statement, Defense Secretary Dick Cheney said Schwarzkopf had raised no objection to terminating hostilities.
Further, Cheney said both Schwarzkopf and Gen Colin Powell, chairperson of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, were consulted and made the recommendation to Cheney and to the president that the U.S. had achieved its military objectives and agreed that it was time to end the campaign.
Beirut
Some hostages could be released
A Lebanese newspaper reported yesterday that some of the Western hostages held in Lebanon would be released for Easter.
words in Arabic and did not give further details. It was unclear whether the report, which said diplomatic sources expect the release of some of the books published at the time referred to the Western Easter or Sunday or the Orthodox Easter on April 7. Lebanese often celebrate the whole week in between.
The missing Westerners are six U.S. citizens,
four Britons, two Germans and an Italian.
The longest held is the U.S. journalist Terry Anderson, 43, chief Middle East correspondent for The Associated Press. Anderson was kidnapped March 16, 1985. **Press**
Governor of Virginia eyes '92 presidential campaign
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Virginia Gov. L. Douglas Wilder, the nation's first African-American to be elected governor, authorized supporters yesterday to raise money for a possible campaign for the 1992 Democratic presidential nomination.
Wilder was yoy about his intentions, saying repeatedly he planned to complete his term as governor, which runs through 1994. But he said he was aware that he was in gauging support for a 1921 presidential run.
With President Bush enjoying record postwar popularity, the Democratic presidential field is virtually empty. "There is a great deal of fathery as far as Democratic candidates are concerned."
In just over a year as governor. Wilder has ruled out raising taxes to erase a $2 billion budget shortfall, instead generating some criticism at home by laying off state workers and cutting spending for education, transportation and other services.
These same actions have brought him praise on the national level, however, as he has advocated a Democratic Party that sheds its liberal tax-and-money policy. His supporters in what he refers to as a "New Mainstream."
Wilder said he would be taking that message on the road this summer after the Virginia Legislature.
"I am not a candidate . . . I have not jumped in," Wilder said.
But he acknowledged that he did not discourage supporters from making the important first step toward a Wilder presidential run.
the Wilder for President Exploratory Committee filed organizational papers with the Federal Election Commission yesterday, including a letter from Wilder authorizing the fund. A commission representative said that under agency regulations, the letter was considered a formal declaration of a Wilder candidacy, whether or not Wilder intended it as such.
Wilder, 60, is considered a long shot for the nomination but is often mentioned as a strong possibility for the vice presidential slot on the Democratic ticket. For now, he is the best-known Democrat to take a formal step toward entering the race.
Former Massachusetts Sen. Paul Tsongas has said he would run for president. He is the first Democrat to announce such intentions, although he has not officially entered the race.
Tsongas a visit to Iowa, whose caucuses will be the first test of the 1992 campaign, helped him make up his mind. He met with party activists and legislative leaders Monday and Tuesday.
"I needed a live audience in a state that was new to me to get the reaction," he said.
His similarities to Michael Dukakis, another Greek-American liberal from Massachusetts, are a liability. Tsongas acknowledged.
He said that he also expected questions about his health. Cancer forced him from the Senate in 1985 after one term, but Tsongas said he had recovered fully.
Tsongas, 50, a partner in a Boston law firm, described himself as a pro-business liberal. He vowed to build voter confidence in the Democrats' ability to handle the economy.
Tsongas filed a declaration of candidacy with the Federal Election Commission last week. The commission by law will not recognize Tsongas as an official candidate until he reposes raising $5,000.
Former South Dakota Sen. George McGovern, who lost in a landslide to Richard Nixon in 1972, is the only other Democrat who has said he was too much for Clinton to forget Gore JR. D-Tern., said he was thinking about it.
Other Democrats mentioned as possible candidates include Sens. Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia, Lloyd Bentens of Texas and Bob Krierey of Nebraska; House Majority Leader Richard Gephardt of Missouri; and Mario Cuomo of New York and Bill Clinton of Arkansas.
Hospital to give spousal benefits to gay, lesbian domestic partners
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — A New York hospital will provide spousal benefits to partners of its gay and lesbian employees, becoming the largest private employer in the United States to do so.
Among other things, they would have to make sworn statements that they were each other's sole claimant.
Montefiore, based on the Bronx, is the largest private business in the country to recognize gay relationships, according to the American Civil Liberties Union.
It is "the most significant step for the domestic partnership movement to date. It also marks an important step forward for the equal rights of
lesbians and gay men," said William B. Rubenstein, director of the ACLU's Lesbian and Gay Justice Center.
Montefiori Medical Center, which has about 9,000 employees, said Tuesday that gay couples would be eligible for such coverage as long as they were married. But the numbers are similar to those of heterosexual married couples.
The change is also significant because the trend among cost-conscious private businesses is to stay in line with their own business models.
"Montefiore has a long history of equal and fair treatment of all employees. We see this policy as a part of our commitment to the principles of equity." said hospital representative Barbara James.
Janes said the new rule would apply only to couples that were unable, by law, to marry.
Several cities let homosexual couples register as domestic partners, although the recognition does not necessarily carry the legal benefits of marriage.
Among such cities are San Francisco, Seattle,
Mapsapalco, Hollywood, Calif., Santa Cruz,
Cruz, Pasadena.
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Spring Fashion Section
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Wednesday
April 17
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
8
Thursdav. March 28, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 28, 1991
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GLSOK support group has success from start
By Lara Gold
Kansan staff writer
Since it was started two months ago, Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas' confidential support group has relieved many fears and concerns among gay, lesbian and bisexual students who do not feel comfortable going to GLOSK meetings, its coordinator said yesterday.
"A lot of people who are gay and lesbian and bisexual don't have the support from their families," said丹姆趴, support group coordinator.
He said that about five people came to the first meeting, which was Jan. 29. Now 10 to 15 people come weekly.
"The feedback I've gotten has been positive," Dunlap said. "I've seen about four to five people who have faced challenges with uncomfortable with their sexuality.
Dunlap credits the success of the support group to the facilitators from the University Counseling Center who lead it each week.
Marcie Gilliland, support group facilitator, said the group had discussed coming-out issues during the meeting. He said were now discussing relationships.
"Society doesn't create a place for them to go on a date," she said. "Everything has to be secretive."
Gilliland said the secrecy caused added stress for gays, lesbians and
bisexuals because society had not yet wanted to accept their sexual orientation.
The meetings are confidential, and anyone who wants to attend can contact the GLSOK office at 864-3091 headquarters at 841-2345. Gililland said.
Mike Sullivan, co-director of GLSOK, said he was not surprised by the success of the support group.
"I expected it to succeed because we identified the need for one," he said.
Sullivan said that giving support to the gay, lesbian and bisexual community was one of GLSOK's goals. GLSOK came up as a coup, GLSOK can reach more people.
Jamie Howard, co-director of GLSOK, said the group had eased the pressures for gay, lesbian and bisexual individuals able to express their sexuality openly.
"Being in an oppressed group, you need support," she said.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday. March 28, 1991
11
Skateboarders rebel against prohibition of use on campus
Bv Mike I. Vargas
Kansan staff writer
About 20 skateboarders continue to skate frequently on campus despite the five-month-old ordinance prohibit skateboarding on the KU campa.
"I am not going to stop skating on campus," said Jeff Linden, Rockford, Ill., sophomore. "The next day we were playing I was skating on campus again."
Linden said that the $2 ticket he received last semester had made him more cautious of the police.
He said that now, when he saw the police, he kicked up his skateboard and carried it inside a building.
Linden said that he and others continued to disobey the ordinance because skateboards provided transportation to class.
Between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m. on
school days, students should be allowed to use a skateboard as a form of transportation. he said.
Trick and freestyle riding on a skateboard or any other form of transportation during those hours is illegal. A threat to pedestrians, Haiden said.
But such a proposal probably would not pass because of the stigma associated with skateboarding, he said.
The skateboarding ordinance was proposed in August, after a KU student was hit in the head by a skateboard while she was sitting in the cafeteria area behind Wescoe Hall.
Eric Smoyer, Kansas City, Mo. freshman, said KU pedestrians had been hurt from bicycles and mopeds, too.
Smoyer said he and his friends
continued to ride skateboards on the ground in light of the ordinance was disciplinary.
"With all the people that were drinking during the block party on Saturday, they had to stop me for asking and ask me to leave." Smover said.
Since the ordinance, there have been virtually no complaints. Mulettes
KU police Lt. John Mullens said that before the ordinance, KU police received two of four complaints a tideboard rideers scaring pedestrians.
Sidewalks are intended for pedestrians, Mullens says. Laws against bicycle riding on sidewalks have existed for more than 20 years.
Skateboard riding and roller-skating on the street have been illegal for many years.
Senate committee hears testimony on proposed parental notification bill
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — A woman whose teenage daughter had an abortion more than a year ago told a legislative group that she still mourned for her grandchild.
"She's alive in my heart." Carolyn Matlock of Madison told the Senate Federal and State Committee. "She should be here today."
"It still hurts my daughter," she said of the abortion.
The committee is hearing testimony on a bill that would require doctors to notify parents if their children are going to undergo an abortion.
Others supporting the measure said the bill focused on parental rights and responsibilities.
"The state has an important interest in protecting parents' rights."
Artie Luces, a former House member, told the Senate State and Federal Affairs Committee.
Lucas was heavily involved in an effort to pass a parental notification bill last year, a measure that failed. He was defeated for re-election in 1990.
The committee bill would require doctors to give 24 hours notice to at least one parent if a girl 17 years or younger sought an abortion. The bill includes a provision that allows a child in danger of death is afraid to tell her parents if a court rules that such a judicial bypass is constitutionally necessary.
Lucas said before the hearing that he did not expect the bill to pass this session, which has less than three percent of the floor for him. He hoped the bill could be passed by the
Senate before the Legislature adjourned.
"We want to get it passed through one house," Lucas said before test-tiving.
Supporters of the bill decided on a two-year strategy, he said, to give them a chance to identify those candidates that would be educated before next session.
"We're trying to learn to be a little more effective." Lucas said.
Lucas was the first person to testify in the hearing room, which drew about 100 people. Opponents to the committee asked Lucas not to act on the committee may act on the bill.
Bob Rumels, lobbyist for the Kansas Catholic Conference, said the bill would reduce not only abortions, but also the number of teen-age pregnancies in the state.
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Thursday, March 28, 1991 / University Daili Kansan
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Plus a pre-show pep rally for the basketball team!
Basketball means money
By Eric Nelson
Kansas staff writer
CBS donates $1,000 for every TV appearance by team
As long as KU continues to play in the NCAA tournament, the University will receive $1,000 in scholarship money for each appearance.
March 30-April 1, 1961
Indianapolis, Indiana
FINAL
FOUR
Kansan staff writer
As part of CBS's contract with the NCAA, Chevrolet donates $1,000 in scholarship money to participating schools. The money is given under the name of the most valuable player.
Doug Vance, KU sports information director, said that the CBS program had lasted for five to 10 years, and that although similar programs might exist, it was the only one he was aware of.
The University of Kansas has appeared on television several times this year, but only during the tournament has it appeared on CBs, he
The team has played four games on the network and is guaranteed at least one more.
Vance said that the basketball team was the only KU team benefiting from the program but that if the KU football team appeared on television, it could benefit from a similar program.
"That's a possibility," he said. "It just depends on your success and marketability as a team."
Endowment Association, said the money was sent to the association.
Dale Seuferling, associate vice president for the Kansas University
"It comes with no strings attached," he said. "We then report the funds available without regard to where they came from."
The office of student financial aid makes decisions regarding allocations to students, Seuflering said.
"It's left up to the institution to decide." he said.
Suferingl said that upon receiving the scholarships, the Endowment Association sent a letter of thanks to the player being honored by the gift, the player being honored by the gift.
John Seariff, director of public relations for the association, said that the money was part of the General University Fund and that Mr. Seariff had been unrestricted. It is not designated for a specific use or department.
"We notify the basketball office when they come in and ask them to make sure their team is ready."
Food and liquor sales go up during basketball tourneys
By Benjamin W. Allen Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Jayhawk fans may not be thirstier than normal, but the sheer number of them migrating to bars to watch basketball has created a greater demand for the college beverage of choice: beer.
The fans seem well behaved, too. No bars contacted said fans had gotten out of control last week after the Kansas Arkansas game, and they said they did not expect it would be different Saturday.
'Pretty much it's been business as usual, except times 10.'
Steve Wintrey, manager for Kansas Sports Bar and Grill. 701 Massachusetts St., said the extent of the problem was loud KU fans.
Winfrey said that the majority of drinks sold were beer and that it
"My ears were ringing late into the evening," he said about Saturday's game.
Steve Winfrey manager of Kansas Sports Bar and Grill
"Pretty much it's been business as usual, except times 10," he said.
was sold in quantum amounts.
as usual, except times 10," he said.
Katie Murray, manager of Molly McGee's. 3229 Iowa ST., said customers on game days did not necessarily drink or eat more than other days.
"Some people are so intent on the game they're not ordering beer after beer, there's just more people so sales go up," she said.
Jim Morey, associate manager of The Brass Apple, 3300 W. 15th
St., said the ratio of alcohol sales to food sales did not change during game days.
"People usually come in, get a table, have a drink and order lunch." he said "But as soon as game starts food sales tend to stop.
“Generally, 65 percent of sales are food and 35 percent are alcohol, and there is not much fluc- ing that. The amount just goes up.”
Kent McDonald, manager of Bubweer Beer distributing, said the company ran out of beer to distribute regionally last weekend, and it was hard to tell whether it was better of the game or the nice weather.
"Still, it was nothing compared to a KU-K-State football weekend," he said.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 28, 1991
13
Kansas continues to prepare for Final Four
Randall ignores Sports Illustrated cover jinx Hawks strive for respect of media, opponents
By S. J. Bailey
Kansan sportswriter
As Saturday afternoon's Kansas-North Carolina game draws nearer, it's time to get caught up on interesting Jayhawk news tidbits.
For openers, senior forward Mark Randall graces the cover of this week's edition of Sports Illustrated.
"I didn't even know about it," Randall said to reporters at Tuesday's news conference.
When asked about the jinx associated with being on the Sports Illustrated cover, Randall responded. "I don't believe in that stuff I happens. I'm going to think you jinked us since you asked me that."
Randall also will join some of college basketball's top athletes when he competes in the Orlando All-Star Classic from April 10 to 12.
Houston Coach Ron Koehler 8 to 6 Kansas coach Roy Williams will
March 30-April 1, 1961
Indianapolis, Indiana
FINAL
FOUR
coach the West team in the competition.
Other players scheduled to compete include North Carolina State's Rodney Monroe and Chris Cordiani, Colorado's Shaun Vandiver, Iowa State's Victor Alexander and Nebraska's Rich King.
In other Final Four news, senior guard Terry Brown was invited earlier this season to participate in
the three-point shooting competition Sunday in Indianapolis.
"I think I've got just as good a shot of winning the thing as anybody else," Brown said. "It's going to come down to who can get off to the hottest start and who doesn't get nervous."
However, Brown said that if the Jayhawks beat North Carolina and advanced to the final Monday, he would skip the shootout Sunday.
"I think that I will have more important things on my mind if we beat North Carolina," he said.
Finally, Williams said he was never so happy to have to postpone his golf game another week.
When asked what he would have said if someone had told him at the beginning of the season that he would be conducting a pre-Final appearance, Williams said. "I'd have thought you were Looney Toons."
By S. J. Bailey
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas basketball team has been trying all season to gain the respect of the media as well as the other teams throughout the nation.
But the fact that most people still consider them to be the underdog in this weekend's race for the national title is just fine with them.
After posting a 26-7 record and advancing to their third Final Four in six years, many of the Jayhawks thought they deserved to be mentioned along with the top teams in college basketball.
Williams said he had to keep reminding the Jayhawks that the best team in college basketball was already the one that captured the crown.
"We might be the long shot," Kansas coach Roy Williams said, "but sometimes long shots come in."
"In 1893, I don't think the best team was North Carolina State," he said. "In 1984, I don't think Georgetown was I thought we (North Carolina)
'We might be the long shot, but sometimes long shots come in.'
— Roy Williams
Men's basketball coach
were, and we didn't even make the Final Four. In 1985, I don't think Villanova was, and in '88 I don't think Kansas was.
"But in the record books, it says they're champions, and that's what counts."
that being the underdog really didn't mean much at this stage of the tournament.
“At this time of the year, you really don’t care who you play,” Randall said. “As long as you’re still playing, you’re happy.”
"Underdog or not, I think we're playing some of the best basketball in the tournament right now," he said.
Junior forward Alonzo Jamison agreed.
For some of the Kansas basketball players, the lack of recognition by the other teams in the tournament provides motivation in itself.
"I'm sure Arkansas didn't think we would have a chance of beating them," senior forward Mike Maddox said after the Jayhawks defeated the Razorbacks to claim their spot in the Final Four. "I just want to thank Oliver Miller for providing us with the information. I don't know if you saw the headlines, but he knew something to the effect that Kansas would take a beating. It looks to me like Arkansas was the one that took the beating."
Williams said he thought a team could go as far as it wanted to if it did the things that made it successful and truly believed in itself.
'Hawks lose game to Wyoming team
"When kids believe in what you ask them to do, and they want the same things, they are going to make sacrifices that are going to make those who accomplish." Williams said. "I believe that's what this team has done."
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas baseball team lost its second straight game to the Wyoming Cowboys 7-6 at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium last night.
The Cowboys beat the Jayhawks by an identical 7-6 score Monday night,
"We have not put together nine innings all year," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "We've had a team that program coming out and playing every day."
The rally was cut short, however, when Kansas pinch hitters Kent Mahon and John Wuycheck were set down in order.
Kansas entered the bottom of the ninth trailing the Cowboys 7-5.
Kansas first baseman Joe Niermeier reached base on an error with one out, bringing right fielder Denard Stewart to the plate.
"I didn't think we were good hit ting-wise." Bingham said.
Stewart lashed an RBI-triple to right field, and the Jayhawks were within one run, 7-6, with a runner on third.
He also said some of the Jayhawks' difficulties were due to Wyoming's
pitcher. "I'll give their kid credit. He mixed up his pitches well, but it seems we're waiting for one guy to do it for us."
That one guy could be Niemeier.
that one guy could be Niemier.
Continuing his red-hot hitting, Niemier drove in two runs with a home run and a double last night.
Niemeier leads the Jayhawks with seven home runs and 42 RBI, eight short of the Kansas single-season record.
Despite his recent streak, Niemeier said he was more concerned with the Javahwks' success.
"We've been losing our concentration with bad at-bats in the middle innings," he said. "If you put it all on one play, it's easy to get beat on one play."
Although the Jayhawks are not playing to their capabilities, Wyoming has had a lot to do with the Jayhawks' last two losses, Niemeyer
"That team is very well coached," he said. "No doubt about it."
The Jayhawks, 14-12, will conclude the three-game series against Wyoming at 2 p.m. today at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
Hawks 16
Kansas pitcher Curtis Schmidt hurts during his first complete game of the year, a 7-6 loss to Wyoming at Houlund-Maupin Stadium.
King's holiday could be issue in selection of Super Bowl site
The Associated Press
AUSTIN, Texas — Several Texas civil-rights activists want the NFL to reject Houston's bid for the 1993 Super Bowl unless Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday is recognized as a state holiday.
League representatives said team owners would be aware of the status of Texas' King holiday, but there is no evidence to recognize the slain civil-rights leader
"Nationwide, the Martin Luther King holiday is not a criterion in evaluating Super Bowl bids," league officials Greg Aiello said in New York.
North Dakota Gov. George Sinner is expected to sign a bill today making it a state holiday there, leaving only Arizona and New Hampshire or optional holiday in memory of King, who was assassinated in 1968.
A King holiday became an issue in Super Row bowl site selection when Commissioner Paul Tagliaucci recently pulled the 1993 Super Bowl from
"In my opinion, we're basically no different than Arizona," Salas said.
NFL owners are scheduled to meet with Tagliabu in Minneapolis in May and may discuss Houston's bid then, NFL representative Reggie Roberts said. He said a decision on where to conduct the 1995 Super Bowl probably would not be made until next year.
Mario Marcel Salas, co-chairperson of the Martin Luther King Jr. March Committee in San Antonio, has not satisfied with the arrangement.
"We're not asking for the state to named after him," the Rev. R.A Calhoun said.
In Texas, King's birthday is observed jointly with Confederate Heroes Day on the third Monday in January. State offices remain open at Union cremation, and people who take the day off must give up another state holiday.
Coaches: Texas should win NCAA swimming championship
The Associated Press
AUSTIN. Texas — Opposing coaches said yesterday that Texas should win its fourth consecutive NCAA men's swimming and diving championship, longhorn coach Eddie Reewe would only say, "We're one of the ones that can win the meet."
Texas outscored Southern California and Stanford for the NCAA championship last year.
Swimming
The three-day meet opens today at the Texas Swim Center, home of the Longhorns, who have been ranked No. 1 all season.
Reese said he thought only Texas,
Phoenix after Arizona voters last November defeated a referendum reinstating the naid state holiday
"I don't think anybody else can do it," he said at a news conference.
Southern California and Stanford had a chance at the 1991 title.
Southern California coach Peter Daland said Texas, 9-0 this season, should win the championship.
"Shoulda, woulda, coulda," Reese responded
and their relays are possibly better than they've ever been and they have two scoring divers.
Daland said, "I think Eddie should face that kind of pressure, especially because they've won the title three years in a row, and they're home,
"That doesn't mean he (Reese) will win, but he should win," Daland said.
He added, "I wouldn't say we were going to win. If I had to put money, I would have to put third."
Michigan swimming coach John Urbanchael said. "My pre-meet forecast was Texas, USC, Stanford, Tennessee, then the rest of us."
"Only Texas can beat Texas," Urbanchka said.
Reese said, "We're not worried about winning the meet. The thing
that it worried about is whether we go fast . . . it's no fun to put four or five hours a day on the line, then not go fast. because fast is fun.
Daland said, "The mystery team has to be Stanford . . . they could be absolutely terrific, and they could be good, and they could be average.
Among the swimmers that will be at the meet are Mike Bowman of Michigan, world record-holder in the 200-meter breaststroke and 1900 U.S. national champion, Whtarton of Southern California, former world record-holder in the 200
"Tennessee is another team that is a wild card team."
and 400 individual medlev.
Other swimmers that will be at the meet: N Anthony Nesty of Florida, 1901 world champion in the 100 butterfly; Art Woridt of Iowa, former world record-holder in the 400 freestyle; and Melvin Stewart of Tennessee, world record-holder in the 200 butterfly.
Kansas swimmer, diver in NCAA competition
in Austin, Texas, at the NCAA men's swimming and diving championships.
Kansas freshman diver Tim Davidson and sophomore swimmer Zhawn Stevens will begin competition today
Stevens is coming off a successful Big Eight Conference meet where he won three individual events and was named the outstanding performer at the meeting.
Sports briefs
Davidson competed two weeks ago in the zone meet in Fayetteville, Ark., and finished fifth in the three-meter board competition with a score of 25.4. He top five finishes from each zone to compete in the diving championships.
O'Neal voices intention to remain at Louisiana
The meet will last through Saturday.
SAN ANTONIO, Texas — Shaquille O'Neal, who could be the No. 1 pick in the 1991 NBA draft if he decides to leave Louisiana State early, said he was fairly sure that he would remain in school at least another year, the San Antonio Express-News reported yesterday.
Underclassmen have until May 12 to declare their availability for the job.
O'Neal, who at 7-foot-1, 280 pounds is being touted as basketball's next great big man, led the nation in rebounding this season with 14.6 a game. He also averaged 27.7 points and five blocked shots a game.
O'Neal said the hairline fracture he sustained in his left fibula late in the season had mended.
"I don't think I am ready yet," he said. "Right now, I'm leaning toward staying at LSU. I'm pretty sure about it."
He said he realized he could risk losing millions of dollars if he suffered a career-ending injury in college.
O'Neal told the Express-News that jumping to the NBA was tempting.
O'Neal was an all-state basketball player at San Antonio Colei High School, leading the team to the state championship in 1989.
The lottery to determine the order
of the winners is May 19, and
the draw itself is June 8.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A Boeing 737 jetliner carrying the UNLV basketball team made an unscheduled landing at Kansas City International Airport later afternoon after a pilot's decision to refuel.
UNLV basketball team stops briefly at KCI
The America West aircraft was carrying 140 passengers when it landed at KCI on 5:38 p.m. CST.
"Abnormal weather conditions resulted in a pilot's judgment to refuel the aircraft," said Daphne Pincott, an air traffic controller for America West communications for America West.
Winds of 63 mph were recorded at KCI before the unscheduled landing, said a representative from the National Weather Service.
The jetlin departed Las Vegas at 1:10 p.m. and did not arrive in Indianapolis until 8:30 p.m., one hour behind schedule.
"They landed at 5:38 p.m. in Kansas City and were on their way by 6:20 p.m." Dicino said from his home in Phoenix. "The weather was nice, but it was very sunny to thing to do. If the weather wasn't so bad, they would have never stopped.
“It’s called a technical stop. We felt we had to stop and refuel in case we had to circle Indianapolis. We took that precaution.”
From The Associated Press
WATERLOO COUNTY BOAT CLUB
Julie Jacobson/KANSAN
River rowers
The Kansas crew prepares to launch a shell for an early morning practice was preparing yesterday for competition this weekend in St. Louis. The crew, which had to fight strong head winds and currents, sponsored by Washington University.
14
Thursday, March 28, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
LA TROPICANA
LA
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BAR & GRILL HOT SHOTS 19 & UP ADMITTED
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623 VERMONT
LSAT GMAT MCAT GRE
The Test Is When? Classes Forming Now.
STANLEY H. KAPLAN Take Kaplan Or Take Your Chances
1012 Massachusetts Lawrence,Ks. 66044 842-5442
Classified Directory
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105 Personal
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103 Entertainment
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
200's
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205 Help Wanted
225 Professional
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235 Typing Services
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105 Personal
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Brian-Yan we've cultured me -Simpions, Miami Vice, You-Pooh- never-lawers你, you love, Kati
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
A
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Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
S W M. age, 42 *S' 11'"* 215 lbs, brown eyes and hair sees
and knows like country life, dances at animals,
and feeds on handcapped Writen
Box 44213, Lawrence, Kansas. 60044.
SWM, 27, seeks special lady for long term relationship. If you're a single woman, 18-30, and also seeking someone special, tell me about you. Reply to P.O. Box 44254, LAWSK,爵士
110 Bus. Personal
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY LISTEN
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We're always open.
ACE EXAMS! Improve memory and recall, enhance concentration, creativity and study skills, boost self-confidence with iTech audio hypossis and Stress Management Center.
Bausch & Lomb, Bay Ran Sunglasses
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The Etc. Shop
792 Mass. 843-6461
B. C. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop. Classic to computerized. Body shop available American motorcycle repair and acquire vehicles. 5 VISA, Mastercard & Discover cards accepted. CASH FOR COLLEGE Over $100 million in scholarships and grants unclaimed each year. For information on how you may apply, visit www.bcautomotive.com/vices, 88 August St., Martinsville, Va. 24112
CRUISE SHIP JOBS
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FORMAL WEAR
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The Etc. Shop Rental and Sales: 732 Mass.
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Every Thursday only at THE MAD HATTER 704 New Hampshire Come watch the Jayhawks TONIGHT on our BIG SCREEN TV!
Ha'is's, phobias, stress, anxiety, pain, smoking weight and other disorders (Hypnotherapy Center, 842-794)
KC Strip, a gay Men's nudist group-for more information, write P O. Box 2256, Kansas City, Mo 64113.
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"; makes sense of Western City; makes sense to use it! Available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Crer Bookstores
Notice: Any information from individuals who were not identified by the police between citizens and police or between citizens and security personnel during Actions of Injection or Homicide may be collected and submitted by solicited and requested to contact J. Horace Williams.
USE IT or LOSE IT
7 TANS $20
10 TAN $24
EUROPEAN 25th & IOWA 841-6232
Not just for Biker Babe anymore?
Temporary Tattoos
The Etc. Shop
722 Mass. 843-0611
The Etc. Shop
732 Mass. 843-0611
Recycling got you out of sorts? We can help! Simple Goods General Store, 735 Mass.
WEIGHT PROBLEM? Whether you want to lose weight or gain muscle, Pathway guarantees an more attractive offer for summer. Call 1-800-479-8921.
We will provide private airplane transportation for two people to the Final Four games in exchange for two tickets in the game. We will pay for the two tickets. Ron Allen, Nilen 172.297/KZC
Thrifty Thursday
PYRAMID
PIZZA
PYRAMID PIZZA
Only $3.49 for a small pizza.
(add tops only .75)
CARRY OUT only except for orders of 2 or more.
14th & Ohio "Under the Wheel"
GOODEVERY
THURSDAY
120 Announcements
ALASKA SCHOOL EMPLOYMENT-Financials
ALASKA SCHOOL EMPLOYMENT-Financials Board & Board! Over 8,000 openings. No experience necessary. Male for Female. For 624 page emplpy application. Call 1-800-955-2222. ASA 84088, Winston Salem WA 98214-Satisfaction 84088, Winston Salem WA 98214-Satisfaction
842-3232
Also, try our Colombo Frozen Yogurt!
$College Money, Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money will be guaranteed for $150. 181 COLLEGE LEGISLABIAL LACRIMAT COBRA LOCAL BOOK. 100,169. Inge Mol. 6402 1801. 1800 479-729.
EARTH SPLINTS Living Myth Through Ritual Workshops. Tuesdays, April 9, May 28. Free introductory lecture April 2. 7:30 pm, Lamphager Book 16. E North
Rainbows and DeMollies welcome any members.
Call Vickie at 841-4115.
Call Douglas County Rape Victim's Support Service for confidential and caring assistance. If you need help, call 864-3506 or 841-2343.
We may end up paying for the state's budget crisis. I encourage you to join the Kansas Association of Public Employees KAFE laborists argue that our state should union membership, and sponsor a taut full hot line for problems in the work place. But we need you! Dues are $61 a month depending on your gross salary—a small investment in a better future. 124 W. 19th St. & 41 B. Lawrence, KS 65006
Gay & Lesbian Peer Consulting A friendly understanding voice Free, confidential referrals called return by counsellors Headquarters for RU Info 841 3560 Sponsored by GLOSX
For an anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2343. Headquarters
SPRING INTO HEALTH with MASSAGE! Receive from stress and injure, so you can enjoy the season. Call Bruce at Lawrence Massage Therapy at 460-696 - then a fite) a kit
ALL ROWS, 70% OF F
Quitting business sa续 continuous at the Book End,
in Quanttril's Flea Market, 811 New Hampshire
weekends 10-5
Johnny's
Sunday Special
$2.50
Cheeseburger,
Fries & Draft
or Soda 1-8 pm
Safeguard from abortion! Write Heart Restored.
Box 44, Grindle. NS 67283. Confidential
www.heartrestored.com
Suicide Intervention - If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who call 841-234 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
THE WARP AFFECTS US - For a caring listener or info on support services, call Headquarters Counseling Center, 841-234.
TIME TO LLOSE THE WINTER PUGGED! GOOD
lasting, natural, nutritionally balanced Pathway
means more energy, no hunger, money-back
guarantee for you. Call for information.
TO FINAL VICTORY
Join our Road to Final Victory
Maundy Thursday Eucharist 7 p.m.
Good Friday Tenebrae Services at Good Shepherd and
TO
Trinity Lutheran / 30 p.
Easter Resurrection
Easter Mass (And thanks Jayhawks,
for exciting exhalation)
by students and for students
1204 Oread 843-4948
Lutheran Campus Ministry
130 Entertainment
Lawrence Info Center, content orientated BRS
841-7528. B. N. 1
140 Lost-Found
Found: Pair of eyeglasses with case, before Spring Break in Wakefield. Call 749-5485 to identify
Johnny's UP & UNDER is available for Engagement Parties, Birthday Parties, Pinning Parties and any other party possible. 842-0377
205 Help Wanted
200s Employment
Seeking students and grads to fill many positions
Airline will train. Excellent salary and travel
benefits. 303-441-2455.
CHILDCARE WORKER Residential facility for adolescent boys. Full-time and summer positions. Child care, after-school and daycare, dual transportation. Training/experience in find a place. We drug test needed to PO. Contact us at (800) 254-3171.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camp. Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, water gymnastics, lacrosse, soccer, camping, craft drama, or riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $1000 or more. mB & M.B. Matric. 1865 Mild, NMP.
Convenient Store Clerk- 64-25/hr Weekend shift cash register experience applied. Apply in person at Phillips 66. Desoto Short Stope - 1-863-5033
diviashian is involved in working Friday, Saturday, Sunday projects at a major racing facility in the Midwest. In lieu of sellers, ubers, hostesses, gate attendants, and parking personnel if asked to apply at Manhasset.
Summer-, ATT MALE ATHLETES
Camp in Campus at Tennessee, Tenn. WBJ. Beatles Camp in Campus at Tennessee, Tenn. Beatles Camp in Campus at Tennessee, Tenn.
Ropes, Rope and Pioneering, Tecumseh to Ear, Woodship, Photography Upper Classmen
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The Math Department is accepting applications for the position of math tutor Maik Inti and matriculate students to tutoring students with wide range of abilities in a variety of math topics. Applicants must have completed a minimum of five hours of calculus, have strong command of algebraic techniques and skills in application skills. If you are interested in applying to this position, please contact
Great job in Philadelphia suburb. Have fun with
cute kids for 35 weeks hourly. Earn great salary,
room, board and 2 week paid vacation. Starts
for one year. Call Carla Elizabeth at (215) 625-3461.
625-3461
GRADUATING STUDENT NEEDED-Career position for aggressive candidate with degree in business/personnel management. Benefits include excellent learning salary, company car. At one previous summer house painter exhibiting skills call collect Mr. Schwartz. 1-800-COLEGE
EARN $5,000-$10,000 Now hiring-managers and
limited opportunity. Part-time now.
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Call: 800-400-LCELEM. Mr. Gannon.
International Company seeks career minded individuals to train in the fashion and glamour industry. For interview, 1,232-6829
Help!! I need guitar lessons now. 841-8397, ask for Lazy
Lake of the Orkies Summer Employment. The Barge Finding Restaurant is accepting applications from hoteliers, excellent salary and tips. Great work environment. Job location is still available. Contact Frank
Job应 sister妈亲 for two school age children.
Job begin in August. Single girl is most professional.
Wage salary negotiate. Referrences required. Call 84572269 prince de.
Looking for adventure? Be a nanny! Go to interesting places. Earn good money for a year. Templeton Nanny Agency 842-4443
Need responsible non-smoking girl for babysitting Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday mornings 8:30 i:11:30 Call 843-2599
Part time evening shifts for food service wanted
Apply at front desk, 180 Naismith Drive.
Travel from Texas to Montana working on a wheat harvesting crew. Guaranteed monthly wage and bonus with room and board. Family orientation, 40 years. Experience not required. 931-569-4647
225 Professional Services
HYPNOTHERAPY CENTER
842-7504
Test Anxiety.
Memory Improvement
Guaranteed.
Government photos, passports, immigration,
visas, senior portraits, models & arts part-
titions/O&W, color Call Tom Swells 794 1601
Need an Attorney?
CALL RICHARD A. FRYDMAN
843-4023 / free initial consultation
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 401-6828
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841.5716
TRAFFIC · DUIS
Dresses & Dissertations
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping.
Lawrence Printing Service. 312 E 9th Street
820-750-9600
16 East 13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
1.der woman Word Processing .Former editor
2.letter formatting .text documents or letters and punctuated, gramatically correct pages of letter-quality type; typeset on paper or in papers.
3. 144-747 1:30 10:30 pm wkly, anytime
4. 144-747 1:30 10:30 pm wkly, anytime
A better price for Word Processing. Fast service
$10.00 double-space paper. Call Heatherb. 841-0776.
Absolute cheapest打印 in Lawrenc-
double-spaced paper. Hitch印书 no problem.
79-468.
Accurate typing. Resumes, Theses, Letters, Call Melia, 1: 083-1745 or 4754-683-181
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary
$1.25 double-spaced page. Call Mrs. Mattila
10am 4pm, 841 1219
Call K.-I. S. * typing Services 814-592 - Termina*
Doua's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term paper books, dissertations, letters,
reports, and spelling corrections. 220 G.W. St.
Cook and 230 W. G.W. St.
I will correct grammar, punctuation or spelling errors, edit and type your words of wisdom and, in general, help you produce the best possible papers. Phil. 842 6235
His professional word processing. Accurate and
touchful. Call after 1:00 pm. 841-6345.
anatomy Care II, 194-214
Professional resumes-C consultations, formating,
typeeting, and more. Graphic Ideas Inc, 927#
Mass. 101-471
WordPerfect word processing, Ink Jet printer
Near Orchards Corners. Phone 843-8568
Word Processing/Typing: Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing, composition. Have M.
S. Degree. 841-6254
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
1983 Honda V45 Interceptor 750 and accessories
12,000 miles, mint condition, $2100, Larry
841-4365
2 Plain tickets to Chicago over Easter weekend-$60 a piece or best offer. Call 832-4704. First ticket for sale. Call 841-1588.
For sale: DENMOS PAM704 int. amp $39, TU 400
Tuner 1000 TU 800 CD player $29, DRM680
Cassette deck $390, Cerwin Vega D-7 speakers
$29-all in excellent condition. Will sell separate
For sale: Honda Spree and Smith Corona Word
Processor. Phone 865-0679.
Futon, queen size, perfect condition, without frame, cost $155.00, sell for $85.00, 885-0690 anytime.
For sale: Miyata Eighty-SE ten speed bicycle, royal blue, in very excellent condition. Call 842-7936 ask for K5
GOVT SURPLUS! Sleeping bags, backpacks,
tent, camouflage clothing wet weather gear,
winter clothes, ski jackets.
CARHARTT WORKEAR. Mon-Sat 14-07 27:34 St. Mary's Surplus Sales. St. Mary's, MS. Saturday. Small quantities at discount prices. Small quantities. Walk-in welcome Call 843-8111. Ask for sale/service.
Ruger P85 9mm-12mm 2 grips, 2 mags, Biancio
Leather holster $300.00 obo. Call 749-596, ask for KE
EXPERT JEWELRY REPAIR AND DESIGN
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Resources that keep old of jewelry and keep the new are important. Jewelry repair staff can repair your rings, repair chains, watches in any other price point of jewelry expert repair staff can repair your rings expert care by master repairs. Jewelry expert care by master repairs.
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817 Mass./843-4266
For sale: movie theater components. Screen, projector, sound system. $2000.00. 816-531-8769
- Free estimates
- Free jewelry cleaning and examination anytime — no appointment necessary.
340 Auto Sales
BUY, SELL, LOAN CASH
For sale: 1982 Nissan Stanza, 100K miles, good condition $100包邮 Call 864-6532
Seniors and grad students! Ford's college grad program can help you buy a new car or truck. For details, call Bill E. 843-3500.
360 Miscellaneous
1971 VW campervan, rebuilt engine with
good mileage. condition; $1000 Call 842-3423 MWFs
1980 Red Hood Civeh hatchet AC, interior, 2K
carbon fiber roof. MoVGA video gas mileage MO evening drives 749-2575
On TV, TVs, KVCR, jewelry, stereo, musical instruments, cameras and more. We honor Visa/MCAMEX Disc Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry, 1804 W. 6th 749-1591
370 Want to Buy
We will provide private airplane transportation for two people to the Final Four games in exchange for two tickets to the game. We will pay for the two tickets. Ron Allen, T2K 722/77 KC
400s Real Estate
2-8 bedroom houses and duplexes. Available June
1. Sorry, no pets. Dick at 942-8971/843-1601.
1-2-3 bedroom apartments near campus.
Available June 1. Sorry, no pets. Dick
842-897/813-1601
405 For Rent
1. Serry, no pets. Dk at 842-897/843-1601.
2. Ac Studio Apps avi. June 1 for next year. Also
ibdm apt for summer sublet only; 95 mo
2049/016 eyes.
2 Bedroom apt available for summer sublease.
$360/month negociable. 85-416-616
2 bdm triplex available mid May. D/W, disposal,
W/D hookups, very nice inside and out.
$440/month. 842-5323
2 BH in agep in summer. Available in fall or summer, on 12月 leave DW, low in utilities, off street parking, close to campus. No pets. Deposit Call 842.8788. Akt for Tracy or have message.
2 Large Bags in Meadowbrook Apts. Available mid May through August. Water and cable paid. Close to campus. Great for 1,2,3, or 4 people; share $40 per room .81-6979
APARTMENTS: Small, small. Walk to KU Medical Center. Newly decorated, furnished or uninformed. Quiet, secure building, many extras 816-361-3928
Available March 1-1: bd unfurn ant in new building at West Hill 1034. Hewlett Kd Energy of Boulder, CO. Free parking for fans, min blinds. Great location near campus. Short lease allowance $50 per month. No pets
Available Await 107 Tennessee. 749-603-561
base apartment $235 monthly utilities, 1 year
installation. 8-hour room rental. washer/dryer/1 hour airtie; $300/month utility
unities; 1 month security, off street
building.
Basement app for quit graduate student. No pets live alone, good morals, non-smoker, take care of ap. Off-street parking. Individual rate $200 plus utilities. Utilizes insured impounds on
HG 1 bedroom for sublease. Available June 1 rith option to renew in fail. Pool, balcony, close to amphit. Rent negotiable. 842-8356
Bradford Square Apartments
2 & 3 B-RAvailable in May or August.
May be used for kitchen, microwaves, patio or deck. laundry facility. Onsite Management. KU bus路. off-street parking. Gain to reserve your apartment for summer vacations.
Check out Berkeley Flats. Studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Close to campus and downtown.
810-4151/mie. Call 845-2116.
Excellent Location 1, block to campas, 2 bedroom
in 4 pices, dishwasher, WDW hookup, CA,
no pets, available June 1. $60 At 1341 Ohio Call
842-4242
Extremely nice, spacious, 3 bdrm townhouse /w
garage. 2 female non-smoking roommates need,
year lease beginning August and/or summer
lease. $120 x 5%; utilities. Kerr 845-6062
Great 1 bdmr apt for rent, 1 block from Union Must see to appreciate. Call Kristen at 855-0410 Leave message.
*Great location for KU and downtown.* Studio ap-
lied with gas and water paid. $300./mo. Call 842-2116.
*Hey! KU Med. students.* Move in June 1 and
*hey! receive$ of off your rent for two months.* *Studi,
1 and 2 bedrooms* *Heat and water paid* *Across the
Red Center.* Rainbow Tower APR. 931-893-1631.
LEASE NOW FOE FALL BOY. Borney or 3+3 plam
duplas on bus line. Basement, B garage CA W/D
hookup. No. Lease. No.レス reef. res $440 mo and
mo. Nuggetable. N8734/736 after 5.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL. Extra nice 2 BR duples
up, in good location. Extra large MRJ; garage;
laundry/storage; nice yard. No pets. Lease &
refs. couple = small family $36/mo.
$15/mo.
Lorimer Townhomes, 3001 Clinton Parkway,
Quality, spacious, with all the amenities. Brand
available. Now new; 2 & 3 bedrooms. Lease thru
May. Jul or for 12 months. 841-765-8433.
MAKE IT EASY ON YOURSELF! Summer sublease farm 2 BR ap. May pd. Cable pd.option for Fall. Very close to库存. 834-472
Mackenzie Place Apt 5: 30 brm lazy apt, new leaving for August. 1yrs. 1½ month, washer/dryer, microwave, wall fan, 2 decks, 1 year lease, no cover. Wednesdays: 6737 eaves days, weekends, 8423 dulltime day.
2-1 BR, 4-3 BR. Washers/dryer in each unit, firearms, microwaves, firepoles, 2 full baths or a BR, on bus route, off street parking. Only 1 yr old. Call today! 749-1568.
15
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 28, 1991
会
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, status, education or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all ads advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Nice 1 bedroom apt close to the Union. No pets. Deposit and references required. Off street parking. 749-2919.
Now leasing. Extra nice, spacious two bedroom apartments with all kitchen appliances, including refrigerator and dishwasher, and blinds. Low utilities, pool and bus route. quiet comp $180.00 SPANISH CHEFT APEART COMP $249.00
Now leasing for fall semester, 1 and 2 bedrooms
apes. Apt West Aspen $305 for beds; $753
bedroom. Celling fans, water paid. Walk to
campus. Call 841-1260 or 843-1839
New leasing and 1 and 2 bedroom apts at Southbridge Plaza Apts. 1 bedroom; $275. 2 beds starts at $355. 10 month lease. Water and cable paired remodeled kitchen, new carpet. Call 842-1168
OPEN HOUSE: Saturday, March 20th 9:30 12:30 no longer for Mayau. 8 bdrm luxury brimly acre 19 years old, weather dryer, microwave, ceiling fan, stove, oven. 6 paces. Marken Place Aps. 113 Kentucky.
Spiacius 3 bedroom, $475. Sublease for summer or sooner. 1806 W 27, 842-4630 or 841-5797.
Spiacius one bedroom apt for summer sublease
Spoil yourself in a nice 2 bedroom apt.
WD/DW microwave/disposal Sublease $395.00
Call 865-3837
SUMMER SUBLET: 1 bed apt., 2nd floor. Walk to KU and downtown '82/mo, gas & water paid. 844.591 after 430.
SUMMER SUBLEASE June 1 4 bedroom townhouse Sunrise Village. $185 each negotiable. 794-2493
Sublease large one bedroom apt. Close to campus on bus route, microwave, dishwasher, jacuzzi and pool. Call 841-9114.
Sublease. 2 BDR apt, close to campus. From May
15-July 31. No deposit. May rent is $44/mo.
Call 842-7900.Mgr 842-9496.
Sublease 2 bedroom apt in Colony Woods, May
20-Aug 10 w/ 3 weeks free. $215/month plus
utilities 865-329-328
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24TH & EDDINGHAM
(Next to Benchwarmers)
Offering Luxury 2 BR.
apartments at an
Affordable Price!!
Office Hours:
12-6 pm Mon., Fri.
10-6 pm Tue. - Thur.
9-3 pm Sat.
No Appt. Necessary
841-5444
Professionally managed
24TH & EDDINGHAM (Next to Benchwarmers)
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Now leasing for summer & fall
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
Apple Lane Apartments
spacious & comfortable
*studios
*1 & 2 BR apartments
*2 & 3 BR townhouses
each apartment feature
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
- Large bedrooms
- Mini blinds
- On KU bus route
- Carports available
- 1 bedroom $355, $350
- 2 bedroom $440, $460
- 3 bedroom $560
611 Michigan Street
(across from Hardee's)
HOURS:
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
9:00-12:00 Tue
843-1971
Please call Kristy for anup
-3 Pools
-Tennis courts
-on KU bus route
gas heat & water paid
(on apartments)
(Call for appointment)
TRAILRIDGE
...
Now accepting reservations for fall leases!
Free cable
Pool
Water paid
Close to KU bus route
2500 W.6th
苹果
843-7333
Summer Sublease-1 Br apt, near Union. Hard-
wood floors, high ceilings. Must see! 841-1748,
afternoons
Summer subscale 4 bedroom furnished apt. Pool at complex, Sundance Call 865-4392
Summer subscale 2 bedroom with washer (dryer and microwave). Months and rent negotiate
Summer sublease 1 bdmr, furnished apt. June-
Aug. Call entries 843-8194 for more info.
Quail Creek Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
Accepting reservations for fall leases!
on KU bus route studios townhomes 2,3 Bedrooms Free cable Water paid Back
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall Special Graystone Athletic Club
SWAN
Swan Management
- Graystone
- 1-2-3 bedroom apts.
Open House M-F 1-5 p.m.
2512 W 6th St
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Two bedroom, very, very close to campus. Call 789-8041
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1288
Georgetown Apartments
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Call about our Summer Special
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
Tanning Deck & Barbeque
630 Michigan 749-7279
Office Hours: M-F 1-5:00 WKNDS - BY APPT.
- Low Security Deposit
West Hill APARTMENTS
- No pets
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now leasing for June or August
1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
-2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft
$280 to $335 per month
(water paid!)
$365 to $415 per month
OPEN HOUSE
Great location Near campus
Near campus
Great location
Mon. Wed. Thurs
does not include Phase II
1:00 -4:00 p.m. (no appt needed)
This ad for original buildings only-
842-4144
- Water & trash paid
- Large closets & living space
1 & 2 Bedrooms
Showing Units Daily 9 - 6
- Clean & well maintained
- 2 on-site bus stops
- 2 on-site bus stops
- Laundry room- 50¢
W&D
- W&D
- Unfurnished with
Summer sublease. Studio apt in Trailridge. Call 865-3519.
524 Frontier
- Walk to grocery
appliances
South Pointe APARTMENTS
for Summer & Fall
- plush carpets
- water & trash paid
- large rooms & closets
- mini-blinds
- central air & gas heat
- refreshing pool
843-6446
2166 W 264
Sat. 12p.m.-5p.m.
Mon-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sat. 12 n.m-5 n.m
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has rooms available for summer and fall. Call 749-0871 or drop by 166 Tennessee
Summer sublease. Unfurnished 2 bedroom apt. 2 blocks from campus on Ohio. 865-9807.
Two bedroom sublease May 15-Aug 15, no deposit.
842-3940 or 749-2681. Ask for Jennifer
OPEN DAILY
1-5 P.M.
Offering:
-Custom furnishings
-Designed for privacy
-Private Parking
-Adult supervision & KU
-Many great locations
-Equal opportunity housing
Subleases Available Immediately
Reserve Your Home Now!
We offer
Commercial Fee
1. 2*3.4 Bedroom Apartments Designed with you in mind!
Kentucky Place - 749-0445
1310 Kentucky
Summer sublease at Sundance. Studio, completely furnished. Available May 21, 1991 thru August 10, 1991. Call evenings. 841-576-3962
Furnished Studios
500 sq. feet
435 sq. feet
Barn to Townhouse
Spacious, I 410 square feet
1/2 bath downstairs, Large full bath with
dresser area unstairs
Hanover Place - 841-1212 14th & Mass
Go to...
2 Bdmr townhouse.
Roomy 1,290 square feet
1 1/2 baths, available May 1st
Sundance - 841-5255
Tanglewood - 749-2415
10th & Ackworth
Newly remodeled apartments
Campus Place - 841-1429
1145 Louisiana
Some Summer Subleases too!
- Furnished studio apartments
- One bedroom apartments
Enlarged to Show Texture
3 Bdrm Townhouse.
Spacious 1 410 squar feet.
MASTERCRAFT
- Two bedroom apartments
- two with fireplaces
10th & Arkansas
15th & Crestline Dr
Hours: Mon-Fri 8:5-30
Sat 8:5
Sun 1:4
Orchard Corners - 749-4226
842-4200
842-4455
meadowbrook
--gone down at Naismith!
- NEW LOWER COSTS
Sunrise Apts.
1. 2, 3 & 4 Bedroom
- Garages (Vill.)
- Tennis Court, Pools
- Free Cable T.V. (Pl. & Terr.)
- Luxurious Town Home
- & Apartment Living
- On Bus Route
- BRAND NEW 2 Bdrm. at Vill.
- Close to Campus
& Apartment Living On Bus Route
Sunrise Flac 9th & Michigan
Sunrise Terrace 10th & Arkansas Sunrise Village
Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Summer and Fall leasing. Furnished 1 and 3 bedroom apts. 1.1k from KU with of street parking, no pets. 841-5500.
Open House Daily
841-1287 or 841-8400
Mon.- Fri. 10-5
Set Sun 1.4
--gone down at Naismith!
- NEW LOWER COSTS
Sat. - Sun. 1-4
RUSSIA
NAISMITH HALL.
Living anywhere else doesn't make cents
The cost of living has
Summer and Fall fall, Furnished rooms with shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilities paid 1 bib from KU with of street parking. No pets. 841-5000
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
- NEW LOWER COSTS!
- Volleyball Court
- Free utilities
- Basketball Court
- Convenient location
- "Dine Anytime"
- Convenient location
Great social events
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
JUST WE'D BE OUT OF PINE TOWERS COLD WHEN MAN A WOOD ON THE HOUSE
MAN, I HATE THIS STINKIN' JOB!
More fun for
国家税务总局监制
- Exercise Room
MARY JANE BARRISON
NAISMITH HALL
- Great social events
- 3 Hot Tubs
less funds!
STANLEY KUBRICK
1800 Nishni Drive Lawrence, KS 60443 (913) 843-8559
- On Bus Route
SUN
$ 355 - $425
by Brian Gunning
Models Open Daily
Mon.- Fri 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 10-4 p.m. Sun 12-4 p.m.
842-5111 1301 W.24th
VILLAGE SQUARE
Apartment(s)
A Quiet, Relaxed
Atmosphere
close to campus spacious 2 bedroom laundry fac. & pool waterbed allowed
9th & Avalon
842-3040
430 Roommate Wanted
Roommate now. Very nice, very large W/D. Pets OK. See to believe! Only $125. 841-2746.
A male roommate needed on bus route, through July 820, a $50 million plus utilities. Nate a. b43-749. Call now for summer subcases. Female roommate Orchard Corners Call anytime at 842-3626
Female roommate wanted for 1991, must be non-mom.
female, quiet, oriented to studies. Call 844-6854.
Female roommate wanted for summer sublease
FEMALE $100 / mo.; utilities. Please call Michelle.
campus. Female preferably 749-2153
Roommate needed immediately. Close to campus $190 plus utilities 841-4535
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Roommate wanted to share three bedroom duplex with basement. Half rent and utilities. Close to campus. Female preferably 749-2153. Roommate needed immediately. Close to cam
Roommate needs for 3 bedroom baths $240
a month, $240 deposit plus 1½ utilities. Includes
spacious rooms, pat, on bus, fireplace, 1½,
baths. Call Steve. 843-6456
- Policy
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 Words
Words set in Cursive count as 2 Words
Summer Sublease: Female wanted to share 4 bedroom townhouse. Option for fall $180/mo. $14 deposit. Call Gina. 749-1500.
Three Bedroom for summer sublease. Please call 749-3477; economical
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
Words set in All CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Centered text count as 2 words.
Blank lines count as 7 words.
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OW KANSAN POLICE
make checks payable to
Kansasan
119 Saffron-Limil Fountain
Lawrence K 60045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
B-1
COMICS
DEATHHUNTS
DINES BURied
BLUNDIE AND DEADHOOD
RICKY THE ROADKILLED SQUARE
MARTINEED
THE OTHER LOVE
MAJMADEAD
FOR DEADER OR EVEN WORSE
FAMILY DEATHER
THE DEADHORNS
Ghost newspapers
16
Thursday, March 28, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Classifieds - find everything you need and more!
THE YACHT CLUB
530 Wisconsin Bar & Grill 842-9445
"FINAL FOUR" Party Headquarters
Watch the game on our BIG SCREEN TV or one of our 6 21" TVs
THU Lunch: Admiral Salad $3.50
Dinner: K.C. Strip & Steak Fries $6.95
Drink: Well drinks $1.75 75e Draws
**ERI** Nacho Supreme $4.95
Buckets of BUSCH/BUSCH LT. $6.00
SAT Lunch: Turkey Club $3.75
Dinner: Ch. Fajitas $6.50
Drink: $1.00 K券
THE YACHT CLUB
Lancashire Rd
Drink: $1.00 Kamikaze, Watermelon, Sex on the Beach
SUN Cheeseburger, Fries & Dairy O'Bee or Cash $2.50 (50g refills)
*•••Try our NEW Grilled Bratwurst served on a Kaiser Bun with melted Swiss* •••
BULLWINKLE'S
1344 Tennessee 843-9726
Monday...Pitchers $3.25 Tuesday...Schooners $1.50 Wednesday...Schooners $1.50 Thursday...75¢ Draws Friday...Cans $1.25
The Challenge is back!
Win a FREE MACINTOSH CLASSIC COMPUTER!
Apple Computer, the KU Bookstores and Kansas Volleyball challenge you to compete in the...
Mac Challenge Grass Volleyball Tournament on the east side of Allen Field House on Sunday, April 21, 1991.
The three divisions will be University Men's Living groups, University Women's Living groups and one co-ed group including registered student organizations and University departments. The first place team in each division will receive a ...
FREE MACINTOSH CLASSIC COMPUTER! Second place teams will receive FREE APPLE SWEATSHIRTS.
Tournament rules and entry forms available in the KU Bookstores Computer store, level 2 Burge Union. If you have any questions call the Kansas Volleyball Office, 864-3921. ($65 entry fee per team)
Apple
Macintosh The Power to Be Your Best at KU.
North Dakota Senate endorses abortion bill
The Associated Press
BISMARCK, N.D. — The North Dakota Senate yesterday approved what could become the nation's most restrictive state abortion law and sent it to Gov. George Sinner, who has hinted that he will yet it.
Senators voted 32-21 to endure the bill, which bans abortions except in cases of rape, incest and endangerment of a woman's life.
The proposal already had passed the House.
"All life, unborn and born, is sacred"
"State State, Donna Nalewa"
"unborn and born"
Opponents castigated the measure "By voting yes, we are showing a complete lack of respect and confidence in the women of this state," said State Sen. William Heigard, the Senate's Democratic majority leader.
Sinner has three days to sign the bill, veto it or let it become law without his signature. He has said he thought the bill went too far by declaring that life began at conception.
Two-thirds of the members of each
person would have to agree to
pay for it.
The bill could become the strictest state abortion law in the nation, according to the National Abortion Rights Action League in Washington, D.C., and the Chicago-based Americans United for Life.
Until now, Utah has had the toughest state abortion law. The bill, first passed in January, will not take effect until April 28.
The North Dakota bill is similar but stricter in that the Utah law permits abortions if the fetus has been implanted immediately physical or mental defects.
The Utah law also permits abortions in cases in which a woman's health is threatened, while the North Dakota law states that a woman's life must be in danger.
Under the North Dakota bill, a rape would have to be reported to police within 21 days of the crime or within 15 days after the woman became capable of making a report for an abortion to be legal.
The state's constitution bars the governor from specifically threatening to veto legislation. The governor, a former Roman Catholic seminary student, has said he objected to the idea that those who believed there was a human being present at the event could impose that belief on others.
Simner said yesterday that he planned to review the bill carefully to make sure he understood the language and implications before he made a decision.
Senators also voted 35.18 to endorse a separate measure requiring abortion centers to discuss the abortion procedure.
Abortion laws toughen in Utah; unchanged in Louisiana, Idaho
UTAH
LOUISIANA
Gov. Norm Bangerter has suspended enforcement of the act pending resolution of promised court challenges against it.
Utah's law, which will take effect April 28, has been considered the nation's toughest. It bans abortions except in cases of rape or incest, provided the operation is performed no later than 20 weeks into the pregnancy; in cases of grave danger to the mother's physical health or if the fetus suffers grave defects.
Gov. Buddy Roemer vetowed two bills in 1990. One would have banned all abortions except those in which the woman's life is at stake; the other added exceptions for aggravated rape and incest legislation lacked the votes to override Roemer's veto.
IDAHO
Gov. Cecil Andrus vetoled legislation that would have made abortion illegal except in cases of non-statutory rape reported within seven days, incest if the victim is younger than 18, severe fetal deformity or a threat to the mother's life or physical health.
From The Associated Press
it's your PARTY
Helping our customers celebrate is only one of our many pleasures!
1601 W. 23RD SOUTHERN HILLS MALL
749-3455
Congratulations Jayhawks!
We support you!
Let us make your party one to remember!
*PAPER/PLASTIC TABLEWARE * TISSUE BELLS/GARLANDS*
*DAY NAPKIN IMPRINTING * CENTER RENTALS
749-3455
WANDS.
NS.
LS.
STREETSIDE RECORDS
Catch Pauly Shore filming around campus today!
Be sure to pick up your Money Card at any Streetside Records or Pennylane Records for your chance to win $5000!
PAULY SHORE
THE FUTURE OF AMERICA
including:
LISA, LISA (The One I Adore)
DUDE AIRWAYS/HOLLYWOOD/BANK
Only $11.99 CD
$6.99 Cassette
VISIT STREETSIDE RECORDS'
NEWEST STORE AT 9200
METCALF IN OVERLAND
PARK IS NOW OPEN!
Don't miss Pauly Shore in concert tonight at Hoch Auditorium!
Prices good thru 4/3/91
STREETSIDE RECORDS PENNYLANE RECORDS
Independence 478-3748 Overland Park 381-2676 Bannister 763-8411 Lawrence 913-842-7173 Watts Mill Center 941-3970 Overland Park (913) 381-0292 Lawrence Westport (913) 749-4211 561-1580
PENNYLANE
1
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY TOPEKA, KS 66612
VOL. 101, No. 120
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING:864-4358
FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1991
(USPS 650-640)
NEWS: 864-4810
Early morning pipe bomb explodes behind JRP Hall
KU police remove bomb from under security jeep before explosion; two suspects put in FBI custody
Kansan staff writer
Bv Mike I. Vargas
A pipe bomb exploded minutes after a KU police officer removed it from underneath a KU security jeep parked in a service drive behind Joseph R. Pearson Hall early yesterday morning.
Joseph Ceresko, Derby freshman,
and John Ditkier, Lawrence resident,
have been arrested and charged for
breaking into a police station and Jeff
Lanza FBI special agent
The two suspects were held last night at the Jackson County Jail in
Holton, 30 miles north of Topeka,
a continuation of a detention hearing
that is scheduled for i p.m. today at a
magistrate court in Topeka.
Lena, 84a.
A detention hearing determines if
bail would be imposed without bail
initial trial or if bond will be
expired.
KU police Lt. John Mullens said the suspect apparently wanted to see what the bomb would do. The FBI, in conjunction with KU police, is investigating the explosive materials used in the bomb.
Mullens said a KU police officer
was approaching a person who was doing something to the jeep at 2.25 a.m. when the person began to run east toward Memorial Stadium.
The officer radioed for assistance and began to chase the person on foot, Mullens said. The person escaped.
Another officer responded and inspected the jeep for damage when he found an 8-inch-long by 3-inch-meter pipe bomb underneath the jeep.
and placed it on the hill between the service drive and the parking lot behind JRP, about 10 feet away from the jeep. Mullens said. The pipe bomb detonated at 3:31 a.m. and left a 2-foot-diameter by 6-inch-deep crater.
Shrapnel from the bomb broke through a JRP jobty window and struck the ceiling, destroying three cars. Shrapnel also broke a nearby car's windshield
Ceresko was stopped while attempting to drive out of the parking lot just before the bomb exploded. Mullens said. He was arrested shortly after the explosion Ditker was arrested outside his residence at 6 a.m. yesterday
Mullens said the jeep could have blown up if the bomb had detonated and ruptured the gas tank
"It could have resulted in damage to the building and injuries to the occupants," he said.
Lanza said the two men were in FBI custody. The prosecution has been deferred to the federal government because the use of explosives damaged property that receives federal financial assistance.
For the use of explosives, a felony, the two men can receive the maximum penalty of 10 years each in a federal prison, he said.
Amy Betlette, JRP desk assistant said the explosion sounded and tell like a sonic boom because the whole
"I was startled, but I wasn't scared because the building was still standing." Balette said.
Stacy Dunkin, southside first-floor resident at JRP, said the blast woke him up.
"I went to my window and saw a policeman laying on the ground." Dunkin said "I thought he was shot."
Sean Stange, southside first-floor resident at JRP, said many car alarms in the parking lot were activated by the shock vibrations caused by the blast
U
Coach Roy Williams tosses T-shirts to a crowd of well-wishers in front of Allen Field House before departing for the Final Four tournament. The Jayhawks headed to Indianapolis yesterday.
Longshot Jayhawks seeking glass slipper at Final Four dance
By S. J. Bailey
Kansan sportswriter
The waiting is almost over.
In just a little more than 24 hours, all the hype will be meaningless and Kansas fans will be overwhelmed with excitement when their Jayhawks take on North Carolina for the finals of the NCAA tournament.
March 30-April 1, 1961
Indianapolis, Indiana
FINAL
FOUR
During the past week, every story has been told.
There's the one about how Kansas coach Roy Williams will face his friend and mentor, Dean Smith of North Carolina.
Then there's the one about junior guard Doug Elstun, who transferred to Kansas after playing at North Carolina his freshman season.
But now the stories are finished.
And the only story left to be told will unfold tomorrow at 4:39 p.m. at the Hoosier Dome in Indianapolis.
Williams said he knew the Tar Heels' strengths and weaknesses, but North Carolina probably would be familiar with those of the Jayhawks.
"Both teams are very similar, to say the least," Williams said. "They have a little more size and depth than we have played this season, so teams we have played this season."
Williams said that although he liked his team's chances, he realized that his Jayhawks would be thought of as the underdog.
"I do believe we're the longshot, but that doesn't mean we don't have a chance to win it," he said. "I told you that we need to go ahead and spoil the party."
"It at this point in the season, it's not
"as much who you play as it is how well
your own team is playing," he
said. "If we played well we had the last few games."
Senior forward Mark Randall said the Jahayhs would be confident against the Tar Heels, despite their Cinderella label.
But so have the Tar Heels, who breezed through their first three tournament opponents, Northeastern, Villanova and Eastern Michigan, before taking a nailbiter from Temple 75-72 for their passage into the Final Four.
North Carolina starters Rick Fox and Hubert Davis were named to the East Region's all-tournament team. Davis had a two-game total of 37 points and Fox scored 19 points in the title game against Temple
The abilities of the Carolina players come as no surprise to Williams. He coached many of them while an assistant at North Carolina.
"I helped recruit the three seniors: Pete Chilcutt, Rick Fox and King Rice," Williams said. "I coached Pete for two years, since he was a King and King and Rick for one. also recruited Hilbert Davis my last year there."
But the Jayhawks have a back-up scouting report if they need it. Junior guard Doul Eslun played with Chilcott, Davis, Fox and Rice as a member of the Tar Heels his freshman year.
"I haven't given Coach any reports yet, but I've got them when he's ready," he said with a smile. "Actually, the kids have be some of their tendencies that I remember from practice and pickup games. They're all great players."
Jayhawks head to Indy, hoping for victory
The Kansas-North Carolina game will be televised tomorrow at 4:39 p.m. on CBS. The winner will play against the winner of the UNLV-Duke game at 8:10 p.m. Monday for the national championship.
Crowd of true-blue fans wishes the players luck: Finney joins in the fun, predicts Kansas to win
By Eric Nelson
"Anywhere Warm."
But if the message the team sent to 200 Jayhawk fans at a rally on the east lawn of Allen Field House is any indication, the Jayhawks expect to be hot when they meet North Carolina tomorrow in the national semifinal game.
That was the destination displayed on the kansas basketball team's chartered bus (kansas-basketball.com).
Whether the weather in Indianapolis, the destination for the Final Four Hawks, will be a rain
Mark Randall, senior forward, assured the crowd of men, women and children, mostly children.
was heading to Indianapolis with the intention to win.
Mike Maddox, senior forward, said, "We be the best fans in the country, in the world."
Kirk Wagner, senior forward, was a little nervous speaking. But that partially can be accounted to Richard Scott, freshman forwards, who lightly stalluring Wagner when he as spoke.
"I a little nervous up here." Wagner said. "But I'll be all right."
Alluding to the team's 1988 championship celebration, Maddox said he hoped he would continue his journey.
Wagner also thanked the fans but said the Jayhawks' work was not complete until they won.
The crowd followed the team to the bus and jumped on opportunities for photographs and
The rally lasted 10 minutes, enough time for Coach Roy Williams to loss a few shirts to the crowd and for Adonis Jordan, sophomore point guard, to videotape the event.
He said that although he did not have the money to travel to Indianapolis, he would prefer to be in Lawrence during the Final Four.
Mike Runny, Atchison senior, rode his bike to the rally.
C. W. Riee, a 1938 KU graduate, said he was there to bring them good luck. He brought a knife and a sword to the fight.
"I'd rather be here for the after-game celebration." he said.
If there is an after-game celebration, it will begin at Forbes. About 450 chanting KU fans were waiting for them yesterday when the team arrived to catch its flight.
with you all the way! Win or lose!"
“This is the same sign that I used in 1988 when they went to the Final Four,” he said. “I was feeling a bit nervous since we’re returning to the Final Four, I just said ‘What the heck’ and here I am.”
Even Gov. Joan Finney showed up to wish the 'Hawks well.
"I'm going to tell Coach Williams that I know what postcards can and how wrong they can be," she said. "I will also tell him what predictions that they will win on Saturday."
As Williams passed by Finney, she shook his hand and told him about her prediction.
Kansan reporter Joe Gose contributed information to this story.
FINAL FOUR
PREVIEW
SECTION B
KANSAS
3
More Final Four coverage Pages 3, 7
Alumni to welcome fans to Indy
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Kansan staff writer
KU alumni are rolling out the crimson and blue to welcome KU fans to Indianapolis this weekend.
KU graduates Travis Edenfield, Sean Williams and David Cleveland joined Jayhawk forces to plan a celebration cookout from 1 to 4 p.m. Sunday at the iDanaarania Zoo, which is adjacent to the Hossier Dome.
Edenfield, 1969 graduate and Indianapolis Zoo marketing director, said all KU fans would receive a special Jayhawk discount at the zoo gate and were welcome at the cookout.
Edenfield and Cleveland planned the celebration from the 1901 Final Four city, and Williams helped them.
"I'm opening up my 64 acres at the zoo to all Jayhawks," he said. "I may have lived in Indianapolis for five years, but I'm still a Jayhawk. I'm die-hard for KU."
Cleveland, a 1956 graduate and Indiana native, is the president of the KU alumni chapter in Indianapolis.
"We're kind of sports nuts here in Indy," he said. "But I'm loyal to KU."
Cleveland said he was happy to help plan a KU cookout at the zoo.
"I try to help the University in any way I can," he said.
"You leave a little bit of your heart in Lawrence when you go."
"I had called some professionals in Indianapolis who said it could not be done, and then I called some Jayhawks and we did it," he said. "It just goes to show that we've come through, just like our basketball team will."
Williams, 1978 graduate and Lawrence resident, said business school with the strength of the KU Alumni Association network.
"The cookout will be a pep rally for Monday's game if we win. It will be a season celebration if we lose. We should celebrate KU's phenomenal success for making it all the way to the Final Four."
The KU Alumni Association is planning a pep rally before the semifinal game against North Carolina, from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday, at the KU Final Four headquarters, Holiday Inn North in Indianapolis. For more information about the pep rally, call the Alumni Association at 864-4760.
Yeltsin supporters rally for reform
The Associated Press
The march was organized to support Yeltsin, the reformist president of the Russian public. But after Gorbachev banned the rally, it became a demonstration in support of democracy.
MOSCOW — Tens of thousands of Boris Yeltsin supporters marched in defiance of Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev yesterday but backed away from any major clash with Kremlin forces sent to block their path. Several beatings by authorities were reported.
Earlier in the day, Yeltsin's supporters in the Russian parliament gained the upper hand over hard-line Communists seeking his ouster. The reformists won a vote condemning Gorbachev's order to
Yeltsin has been pressing Gorbachev for more reforms, including a faster move to a free-market system that many Soviets think would ease their economic woes. The two also have clashed over Yeltsin's insistence that Soviet republics engage with economies and natural resources.
ban protests in the capital.
Troops prevented the protesters from marching to Manezh Square next to the Kremlin, their intended destination. Demonstrators settled for a huge rally on Tverskaya Street in the west of the heart of Soviet power.
"You should not try to hurt us. We have no weapons," an elderly woman said to a helmeted line of riot police.
The 50,000 police and soldiers deployed in the Soviet capital to enforce Gorbachev's ban on rallies rivaled the number of protesters, but there were no widescale clashes. Security forces were armed with water cannons, tear gas and truncheons.
Authorities said there were no arrests, but witnesses gave conflicting accounts.
U. S. Sen. David Boren said he saw at least a dozen instances of plainclothes Soviet authorities beating anti-government demonstrators outside his downtown hotel
The protest came at the end of a tense day in Moscow, with last-minute appeals to Gorbachev to call off the troops.
10
2
Friday, March 29, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
SUN
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59/40
83/70
Kansas Forecast | 3-day Forecast
Partly cloudy and dry. Winds will be from the north 10-20 mph.
High 47/ Low 28.
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KC
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50/29
Saturday - Clearing. High 54/
Low 31.
Sunday - Sunny. High 61/
Low 35.
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
Monday- Sunny. High 70/
Low 42.
forecast by Brand Maxwell
Temperatures are today is high and tonight's low.
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Yearbook may produce Final Four supplement
Kansan staff report
"If they win the next game, we are 75 percent sure we will make a supplement," said Jeanneine Kreker, a doctor at the University of the first or second week of May.
The Jayhawker Yearbook may produce a supplement if the Jayhawks advance in the Final Four.
The yearbook will send two photographers to the Final Four, but they do not have press credentials. The NCAA gives press credentials to only one photographer from each school, she said.
available to students who did not want to buy the yearbook.
The supplement would be necessary because the yearbook was sent to be printed before spring break, Kreker said. The supplement would cost about $3 and also would be
The yearbook will be available April 15, she said. Students still can purchase yearbooks for $25 from the yearbook office at the Kansas Union.
On campus
Kreker said she and her staff put in a lot of work on the book before sending it to be printed. The work included checking the name of each book and putting the picture went into the book against a list of seniors at the University.
Last year a student had her picture taken several times, each time using an alias. Many of those pictures appeared in the yearbook.
"We just sat down and looked at every name and checked the ones that sounded funny," Kreker said.
Today is the last day KIOSK Literary and Art Magazine will accept fiction, poetry, photography and submissions at Room
University Placement Center will conduct a "Resume Review" workshop at 3:30 p.m. at 149 Burge Union.
400 in the Kansas Union
Police report
A KU student was struck in the face at 1: 15 p.m. Tuesday in the 2000 block of Oudahl Road, Lawrence police reported.
Massachusetts Street, Lawrence police reported.
A mountain bicycle valued at $650 was taken between 10:45 and 11:11 p.m. Tuesday in the 1800 block of
A bomb threat was made by an unknown male caller to the Spencer Museum of Art at 9:24 a.m. Wednesday, KU police reported.
Correction
Because of a reporter's error, information in yesterday's Kansan concerning the NCAA swimming championships was incorrect. Senior
Jeff Stout is in Austin, Texas, competing for Kansas in the NCAA championships.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 29, 1991
3
Antivirus programs treat infected disks
By Patricia Rojas
Kansan staff writer
Computer disks infected with viruses now can receive treatment at the Computer Center.
Herb Harris, assistant director of user services, said the center had purchased 500 copies of F-PROT, a package of antivirus programs. Students and faculty members have free access to the program.
The Novell server at the center was infected last week with the "Yankee Doodle" and the "Stone" viruses. The server was then compromised, and the system was hacked.
The Novell server is the network that supplies software to and connects the Zenith computers in the center.
Harris said many people had reported infected floppy disks this week.
"The telephone has been ringing and ringing off the hook," he said. "Most of the people who have called got into trouble."
Mickey Waxman, programmer of academic computer services, said people who detected a virus in their floppy disks were infected.
"The best thing to do is to turn off the computer and
The virus is removed from working memory when the computer is turned off. A virus in working memory has been detected.
restart the computer with a virus-free floppy disk," Waxman said.
the ability to meet any program, even when
A virus is not a complete program but a set of instructions that copies itself to a program, Waxman said.
The F-PROT package has about 21 different antivirus programs. Waxman said he would recommend the two basic ones to students who needed to get rid of the Stoned or the Yankee Doodle viruses.
He said one of these programs looked for viruses and interfered with the computer's operating system if it found one. This antivirus program stops an infected program. Another antivirus program inspects the programs in *P*.
/ Another antivirus program inspects the programs in the floppy disk, looks for viruses and destroys them.
Waxman said that a virus usually could be destroyed without damaging the other programs in the floppy disk. However, sometimes a virus can be destroyed only by wiping out an entire disk.
Senate approves allocations for 35 student organizations
ASK receives $32,906; four other groups denied financing
By Michael Christie
Kansan staff writer
Student Senate voted last night to approve the student organizations' budget for next year, with $71,059 allocated to 35 groups.
Associated Students of Kansas received $32,906 to cover the campus chapter's dues in the larger Board of Regents institutions' organization.
The other 34 organizations received a total of $83,153
each. There were only 1,000 each. Only three were allocated more than $4,000.
The Organization of Adult Knowledge Seekers is allocated $4,632. The organization's purpose is to address the special problems and needs of nontraditional students who have children who have children to those who commute to school.
KIOSK, a literary magazine that publishes student-submitted art, poetry and prose, was allocated $5,325. Disorientation, an alternative news publication, was allocated $4,200.
Based on the finance committee's recommendations, Senate voted to deny financing to four organizations: Voice, Helping Hands Childcare Cooperative,
Commuters Club and Consumer Affairs.
voice, a campus peace organization, was denied financing because it is a politically-based group, said Troy Radakovich, finance committee co-chairperson.
Senate does not normally finance those organizations, he said.
The other three groups were determined to be members of existing student organizations, Rada-kovich school.
Helping Hands has had a rather difficult time obtaining financing from Senate. Through a series of miscommunications, admitted by both Senate members and Helping Hands supporters, the organization has been unsuccessful in securing Senate allocations for next year.
Members of the group and supporters were present at last night's meeting.
Pam Jefferson, senator, said the issue of child care would not disappear.
Voters to decide if county should pay to widen 6th Street
"I would really hope that the issue of child care at KU is not dead in Senate," she said.
Bv Vanessa Fuhrmans
Kansan staff writer
The long road of debate over a Sixth Street construction project will come to an end April 2 when Douglas and Kirk bond a vote the red or green light.
A last-minute referendum on the ballot will ask voters to decide whether the county should release $493,750 in bonds to help pay for the widening of Sixth Street between Monterey viver and Wakarua Drive.
The bonds would match a state grant of $1,837,500 and the city's share of $494,750 to finance the construction. If the bonds are approved, the seven-month project would begin in October, 2016. McKenzie, county administrator.
The bond issue, however, originally was not intended to be decided in a referendum. Douglas County commissioners approved the bonds on August 26, then last month decided to put the bonds, instead, to a public vote.
'I have a problem when the government uses its authority and its public funds to try to influence the vote.
Shortly after the commission approved the bonds, John Swift, Lawrence graduate student, filed a petition demanding a public vote with more than the 754 required signatures.
"Although the petition was invalid, the commissioners thought it represented a desire that county residents
- Tim Miller associate professor of religious studies
wanted to put this to a vote," McKenzie said.
Meanwhile, a brochure issued this week by the county explaining the bond issue has drawn criticism. Opponents of the bond issue charge that the county's $5,000 to produce and send to Douglas County voters, is biased.
"The ironic thing is that the vote was designed to give taxpayers a choice. Swift said, "Every bit of information we need to convince people to vote 'yes.'"
Tim Miller, associate professor of religious studies, said he questioned the use of public funds to produce the brochure.
"I have a problem when the government uses its authority and its public funds to try to influence the vote," he said.
McKenzie said that if the bonds were not approved, the city and county could lose the state grant, delaying the project.
ICKEY&
The race is on
Brett Campbell, 8; Brandi Heim, 7; and Dyan Schehrer, 8; all of Eudora, search out candy and prize eggs during Eudora's Easter egg hunt. The hunt took place Saturday and was sponsored by the Eudora Recreation Commission. This Sunday, the Lawrence
Parks and Recreation Commission, in conjunction with radio station KLWN 1320, will provide an Easter egg hunt for children ages 3 to 8. The hunt will begin at 2 p.m. at South Park, 12th and Massachusetts streets.
Mascot heads to Indy to cheer for Jayhawks
Kansan staff writer
By Sarah Davis
Tomorrow, the Jawhays will have a 6-foot-6 man on the court who will never score a point, never get a win and never hit a three-pointer.
But he still will help to bring the crowd to its feet.
The Jawhayk, KU's mascot, will be on hand during the Final Four to cheer for the Hawks in their game against the North Carolina Tar Heels.
Mark Montgomery, Wichita senior, left at 5 a.m. today to help represent the Captain as the captain of the mascot
squad, he said it was his privilege to be the only KU mascot to go to Indianapolis.
"It'll be a great time and easily one of my best memories," said Montgomery, who has been a mascot for three years. "I got to go to (the Final Four) in 1988 as a fan, and now I get to go as a mascot. To be a mascot takes a lot of work, but 90 percent is pure fun."
Kathy MacNaughton, Overland
Kathy junior is one of four Baby Jay
students in the program.
And part of being a Jayhawk mascot is encouraging the crowd to have fun
years. She said she liked seeing the enthusiasm she created in people.
"You put in a lot of hard work, but so much of the time people make up for it in the way they respond to the Jayhawk," she said. "We call being a mascot a 'license to be crazy' because no one can see who you are. I feel like I put a lot of me into Baby Jay."
Bill Early. St. Louis senior, is one of the four Jawahr macs. He was with the basketball team in Charlottesville, C., when the team beat Arkansas.
"I like being a mascot because I'm a person who doesn't like to just sit
and watch the game," he said.
He said he definitely had that sensation when everyone rushed on the court after the Jahawks' victory against Arkansas.
"It was just great because I almost felt like a player," Early said. "I was giving them high fives."
But being a KU mascot is more than just getting a close seat at a basketball game. The students have to balance their schedules with those of sports teams. They are required to play on every sport at least once a year. They also visit hospitals and attend parades and alumni events.
And they have to get used to sweating.
The 6-foot-6 Jayhawk costume weighs 20 pounds and on a typical day, the temperature inside can reach more than 100 degrees.
"It's kind of like doing aerobics
with a pack on your back." Early
said.
Even with two sets each, the costumes must be replaced almost every year because of damage caused by children and enthusiastic fans. The Jayhawk costume costs $2,000 and Baby Jay's costume $1,000.
Because seeing through the slit in the costume's beak sometimes is
difficult, the mascots get used to feeling their way around.
Montgomery said he remembered a dizzying experience of his own last year. He was at a Kansas State basketball game playing with Willie the Wildcat when a K-State fan came across the court and tackled him.
"I figured I was going to get doggled, so I just curled up," he said. But he said being a mascot was well worth it.
"The mascot has the freedom to do just about anything at the games," he said. "It's pretty much like recess is for little kids."
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Friday, March 29, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Final Four Rock Chalk Jayhawk! GO KU!
KU
Discrimination
Administration's refusal to act on ROTC policy threatens anti-discrimination policy's credibility
Forty U.S. Representatives sent President Bush a letter last week that called for him to eliminate a military policy that bans gays and lesbians from enlisting in the services.
Not surprisingly, military policy remains as archaic as before. But the letter, initiated by Rep. Gerry Studds, D—Mass., is the latest of several episodes in which public officials have taken steps to force a change in the policy.
Earlier this month, University administration and student government representatives went to Washington to pressure Congressmen to force the military to allow gay and lesbian ROTC cadets to become commissioned officers.
Gay and lesbian activists began last semester to push for a reconciliation between the University policy that outlaws discrimination and the military policy that permits it.
The University would prefer to wait several years for other schools and the military to introduce equality into the armed services than to act now on this campus. Administrators fear losing the ROTC programs, the dollars they bring to the University and a few of its students.
The ROTC programs threaten the credibility of the University and its unenforced antidiscrimination policy.
So gay and lesbian activists on campus are as right as the administration is safe. But judging from the responses of Kansas' delegates to Washington, the administration's solution is more likely to happen.
Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., hasn't responded to letters from GLSOK lobbyists, said Chris Craig, GLSOK adviser.
Nen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., has said little more.
Rep. Jim Slattery, D-Topeka, has been the most supportive toward the lobbyists. Yet he didn't sign Studds' letter. An aide said yesterday that Slattery never was given a copy to sign and hadn't known about it.
All three have been more receptive to the goals of the administration. They or their aides met the University's representatives in Washington.
Enforcement of the University anti-discrimination policy seems likely to come only after the Congress, White House and military are comfortable with the idea.
Rich Cornell for the editorial board
L.A. victim grateful to Gates Rodney King able to start new life thanks to hefty settlement
The police chief of Los Angeles is being widely condemned because of the now-famous videostand flogging of a traffic offender
But Chief Daryl Galey, while refusing to resign, suggests that the brutal beating might have been an upbiting result for the victim. It would indicate results for the beating victim.
As the police chief put it at a news conference March 18:
I hadn't thought of it that way, but there could be something in what Chef Gates says.
"We regret what took place. I hope he (the beating victim) gets his life straightened out. Perhaps this will be the vehicle to move him down the road to a good life instead of the life he's been involved in for such a long time."
There's no doubt that Rodney King, 25, had not been an exemplary citizen, although he's no John Dillinger. When the police stopped him for speeding, he was on parole for using a tire iron to threaten and rob a job
But as Chief Gates says, the experience of being beaten, kicked and shot with an electric gun gun might be worse. He move him down the road to a good life.
Who knows — in a few years, when all of this is forgotten, a reporter might drive out to a nice house in California suburb and find a peaceful Rodney King pushing a mower across his lawn.
The reporter might ask, “Mr. kevin you moved you down the road to a taffel life.”
"That's a good question," Mr. King might reply, "and I'll be glad to explain it to you. You'll have to excuse me if I wobble and drola a bit; my face has nerve damage, and my coordination hasn't been the same
BENNETH D. KING
Mike Royko Syndicated columnist
since they damaged my brain." "Of course."
"But to get back to your question. I think it was after LA.'s finest hit me about 50 or 55 times with their clubs. As you recall, some of the fillings flew out of my teeth and one of my eye socket's exploded."
"Must have been a tad uncomfortable."
"Yes. And at that point, I'm pretty sure that those nine skull fractures and internal injuries had already occurred, my cheekbone was fractured, one of my legs was broken, and I had this burning sensation from beingrapped with that electric stun gun. I was feeling kind of low."
"Yes. I thought: 'Well, one of my legs isn't broken; one of my eye sockets isn't fractured; one of my cheekbones isn't broken. And although my skull is fractured, my head remains attached to my body; and while hairs have popped out of my teeth, I still have the teeth.' And I said to myself: 'Half a body is better than none.'"
"Right. But as $\bar{1}$ was lying there, and they were getting in a few final kicks and some sort of hog-tying my hands to my legs and dragging me inside the ground, I said to myself 'Why n't you try to look at the bright side?'
"That's to be expected.
"Thank you. And I had a chance to think about why the police were
"And vou did?"
"Very inspiring."
treating me that way. It was their way of telling me that speeding is an act of anti-social behavior and I had been very bad, bad, bad."
"You have unusual insight," "I try. And I thought that if only I had the life of a model citizen, this could have happened to me. Let's face it. We have never fracture the skull of the president of the Chamber of Commerce, the chief antler in the Loyal Order of Moose or the head of the PTA. No, it was my past history of anti-social behavior that brought it on."
"But they had no way of knowing you were on parole."
"Yes, but I'm sure they could guess just by the look of me. Be honest, I don't look at all like the head of the PTA, do I?"
"True."
"Then, later, when Police Chief Gates said that the beating, although regretful, could be the vehicle that would get me on the road to the good life, everything became clear. I realized that the beating would turn my life around and be a one-way ticket to the good life."
the chief's words inspired you?" "Not exactly. to be honest. Chief Gates' words convinced me that he had to be asd an SOB as ever to open his mouth at a press conference."
"The chief's words inspired you?"
"But you said he helped you to a good life."
"When I took his police department to court, that jury awarded me a couple of million in damages, and then leading the good life ever since."
"That's right, he did."
"How?"
Mike Royko is a syndicated columnist with the Chicago Tribune.
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KU parking officials can be students' worst nightmares
Do you ever get the feeling you're being followed? Well, for the last week I've had that sneaking suspicion. Except I'm not being followed by your typical psychotic lunatic who is between prison stays and does things like write on himself with an X-acto knife and spell his favorite speed-metal band on his arm with the blood that scabs up. No, the people who follow me are far more deranged.
The people I speak of are the fine, upstanding members of KU's parking services, people whom I hold in the same regard as I do pond sludge. These people are my worst nightmares. Some people are chased by slimy lizards or obscenely harrying cats, and some I love. For me, the image of a white pickup will wake me up screaming faster than you can say red permit.
It's my belief that the evil beings who drive those white trucks are equipped with a radar, which tracks my car at all times. That way, even if I leave my car in an illegal location for just a split second, they can be on the scene instantaneously to issue me a ticket.
101234567890
These folks will stop at nothing to give someone a ticket. I read recently that several KU parking officials had been spotted selling their first-born children just for the opportunity to give someone a ticket.
Rich Bennett
Staff columnist
Seriously though — OK, probably not — in the last week I have received three tickets, or violation notices as the parking department ephemistically calls them. I estimate that since I started attending KU I've received more than a dozen tickets, and that's a lot of tickets; there's a violation out there to be committed, trust me, I've been "notified" about it.
Even if I park several time zones away from campus, as mandated by parking department regulations, I still manage to commit a violation of some sort. Failure to park between the lines, failure to signal before pulling into a space, failure to whatever, don't worry, I'll fail to do so. Most of the time, it's my failure to read the posted signs that causes my ticket woes. Of course, the fact that the restrictions on the signs are rarely much bigger than the type you see here doesn't help
Although, to be entirely unbiased and fair, I must point out that I just made this up.
parking department, as outlined in their 1990-91 handbook, is to use the available parking space in the best interests of the total university. Unfortunately for students, in the parking department's 1990-91 handbook of synonyms, it says that total university is simply another word for faculty. This leaves us students out in the cold, usually the cold of Iceland, where we then park our cars and trek to class.
Even though I am a qualified expert in the specialized field of receiving violation notices, I'm not sure of a solution to the problem of limited parking space. The only thing I'm sure of is that carving, "You're slime," onto a few parked officials with an X-actor knife might make me feel a whole lot better. However, I m told by rational human beings, who keep in mind, haven't received three tickets in the last week, such actions are probably a bad idea. So I guess I'll come up with something else.
Maybe I'll switch my major to education and become a professor so I can get the good spaces. Or, maybe if the parking services changed the name of their building to the Rich Building, I wouldn't would case my pain a little. After all, my paid tickets are largely responsible for that building's existence.
One of the stated goals of the
Rich Bennett is an Overland Park junior majoring in journalism.
Other Voices
German reunification
Euphoria has a price. When Chancellor Helmut Kohl promised that no one in the eastern wing would be left worse off from German unification, he effectively legitimized the euphoria gripping Germans as they moved toward becoming a single country . . .
When Germany as a whole gets its act together, it will be a dominant economic and political force in Europe and a formidable one globally. . . Bonn's ability to guide the transition in the east will be tested sorely in the process. As euphoria quickly gives way to realism, the need is to try and achieve a balance between economic imperatives and social justice. . . A balance is especially necessary if anti-democratic forces are not to take advantage of the fluidity of the situation.
Consider a U.N. army
While the United Nations is still basking in international goodwill, consideration should be given to ways in which the military burden of international law enforcement could be shared more equitably. The legal framework already exists in articles 43 and 49 of the U.N. Charter. These
provide not only for the contribution of military contingents by member states to international enforcement operations, but a joint command structure in the form of a military staff committee, composed of the chiefs of staff of the permanent members of the Security Council.
It is probably unrealistic to think in terms of a sizeable standing U.N. army. But what can be envisaged is the formation of a rapid international deployment force, which could be sent, on the instructions of the Security Council, to trouble spots to prevent hostilities.
There are other aspects of the organization's structure and practices which need to be reviewed. It is an anomaly that two of the world's biggest economic powers, Germany and Japan, do not have a permanent seat on the Security Council. Whatever the complications of upsetting the balance of the council's permanent membership . . . this is a nettle which must surely be grazed soon.
From The Financial Times, London.
Enact the Brady Bill
Congress should enact, and President Bush should sign, the so-called Brady Bill, which would require a weeklong waiting period before dealers could deliver handguns to buyers. During this delay, police could check records to see if the purchaser had a criminal record. And some people would be stopped from acting on violent, momentary impulses.
More than 20,000 Americans are killed by handguns every year. Common sense tells us that some of those lives could have been saved if legislation similar to the Brady Bill had been on the books. Most American gun owners have shown that 90 percent of the people support this measure.
Unhappily, that relentless and well-heeled lobbyist, the National Rifle Association, along with two of its most prominent members, President Bush and House Speaker Thomas Foley, oppose the bill. The NRA cites the Second Amendment, which either permits everybody to possess a gun or authorizes armed militias. The Supreme Court can decide whether the Brady Bill; in the meantime, however, let us hope Congress and the President recognize that a brief waiting period infringes on no responsible gun owner's rights, and may actually save some lives in the future.
KANSAN STAFF
CHRIS SIRON
Editor
From the Providence (R.I.) Sunday Journal.
CHRIS SIRON
Editor
RICH CORNELL
Managing editor
TOM EBLEN
General manager, news adviser
AUDRA LANGFORD Business manager
by Tom Michaud
Editors Business staff
News... Melanie Matthes Campus sales mgr. Sophie Wehbe
Editorial Tiffany Harness Regional sales mgr. Carmen Dresch
Planning Holly M Neuman National sales mgr. Jennifer Claxton
Campus Jennifer Reynolds Co-op sales mgr. Christine Musser
Pam Sollier Production mgrs. Rich Hargarbauer.
Sports. Ann Sommermath Kate Stader
Photography. Keith Thorpe Marketing director. Gall Einbinder
Graphics. Melissa Unterberg Creative director. Christy Hits
Features. Jill Harrington Classified manager. Kim Crowder
MINDI LUND
Business manager
MINDI LUND
Retail sales manager
JEANNE HINES
Sales and marketing advises
Letters should be double, 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 should include their phone numbers.
indicate that this is the case.
The columns should be typed, double spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be obsequious.
The Kauai reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest column and cartons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kauai newroom, 111 Stairfrant Flint Hall.
Loco Locals
WHAT!?
HOW!?
WHY?
SORRY, RUBIN. BUT.
WE'RE NOT GOING TO
MAKE IT TO THE
FINAL FOUR...
WHAT!?
HOW!?
WHY?
MY TOYOTA WAS THE
RECIPIENT OF SOME
HAIL DAMAGE FROM
WEDNESDAY'S STORM.
AND YOU
TELL ME
NOW WAIT
HOW BAD
COULD IT BE?
WELL, I WAS
CRYING
WESTERDAY.
MOHAUD © 1979/5/29
SNiff.. LOOKS
LIKE WE'll
WATCH THE
GAMES HERE.
UH, SOURE...
LIKE HECK
I GOTTA
FIND A
RIDE.
EXCUSE
ME, TANNER.
MY TOYOTA WAS THE RECIPIENT OF SOME HAIL DAMAGE FROM WEDNESDAY'S STORM.
AND YOU TELL ME NOW- WAIT HOW BAD COULD IT BE?
WELL, I WAS CRYING WESTERDAY.
WELL, I WAS
CRYING
NESTERDAY
MOHAWK 197/8/29
SNIFF. LOOKS LIKE WE'LL WATCH THE GAMES HERE.
OH, SURE...
LIKE HECK I GOTTA FIND A RIDE.
EXCUSE ME, TANNER.
Nation/World
5
Nation/World briefs Washington
University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 29, 1991
Unemployment level stays high
The number of new claims for unemployment benefits remained above the half-million mark for a second consecutive week in March, some 32,000 more than five years, the Labor Department said yesterday.
The department said that 510,000 people filed initial claims for state unemployment insurance in the week ending March 16, after 519,000 claims were filed the previous week.
While the number of new claims can be erratic from week to week, analysts said the high levels suggested that the recession was continuing in March despite other, more favorable reports showing a big jump in consumer confidence and signs of life in the housing industry.
"There is a recovery out there in the not-too-distant future, but it is not in the immediate future," said Bruce Steinberg, an economist with Merrill Lynch in New York. "We still have a few more months of lousy economic numbers to go through."
Washington
U.S. prison population grows
The U.S. prison population has risen dramatically even as the crime rate has dropped to its lowest point in 18 years, a Justice Department statistician said yesterday.
Patrick Langan, author of a study appearing today in the journal Science, said there was a possibility that the size of the prison population — about 610,000 inmates — was the reason a door-to-door survey showed that the U.S. crime rate was dropping.
Since 1973 the U.S. prison population has grown so fast that the nation needs a new, 1,000-bed prison each week just to keep up, Langan said. He also notes that justice system's tougher approach to criminals.
Johannesburg, S. Africa Mandela co-defendant dismissed
A court yesterday dismissed charges against a co-defendant in Winnie Mandela's kidnapping and assault trial, but left charges against another co-defendant intact.
Justice M.S. Stegmann ruled that there was insufficient evidence that Nompumelole Falatt, 18, had participated in any crime. Falatt, who has served in the court and embraced Mandela after the verdict.
But the court left standing a charge against co-defendant John Morgan.
Mandela, wife of African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela, spoke animatedly with her lawyers and friends after the decision. But she hid her face and moved away when reporters tried to question her. Prosecutors also declined to comment.
From The Associated Press
Saddam claims Kirkuk recaptured after attack
City crucial to rebels
The Associated Press
DOHUK, Iraq — Saddam Hussein's forces yesterday launched a massive air, rocket and artillery attack on rebel helib Kirkuk, U.S. and rebel troops. The enemy was claimed to have recaptured the northern oil center.
Rebel fighters in Dohuk, a city of 230,000 in the heart of Iraqi Kurdistan, said fighting was fierce around several Kurdish cities. Dohuk still was firmly in Kurdish hands, despite Iraqi claims to have recaptured the city.
Kirkuk, a city of 200,000 residents, was captured about a week ago by rebel fighters. The city is 150 miles north of Baghdad and is the most important city of Kurdish rebels fighting to topple Saddam.
In Washington, State Department deputy representative Richard Boucher said the Iraqi government had begun a major assault against facilities already had suffered significant damage.
"The Iraqi army ... has started a massive air attack on Kirkuk," said Latif Rashid, a representative in London for the Iraqi Kurdistan Front. He told reporters of casualties, but had no details on the numbers.
Later, the official Iraqi news agency said Kirku had been cleared of rebel forces and pictures of the city were shown on Iraq TV. It said Izaz Ibrahim, a Revolutionary Command Council, toured Kirku.
Kuwait ruling family suspected in killings
The Associated Press
KUWAT CITY — Some members of Kuwait's ruling family were involved in the killings of Palestinians and other people suspected of espionage or occupation, a Western diplomat said Wednesday.
The high-ranking diplomat said he was told by Kuwaitii officials that Crown Prince Saad al-Abdallah al-Sabah 10 days ago threatened to hang six members of the ruling family and their "goon squads" unless random killings and beatings stopped.
The diplomat spoke on condition of anonymity.
The report cast doubt on government denials Wednesday that Palestinians and other groups were being mistreated in Kuwait. But Kuwaiti reporting of the crown princess's warning indicting her for responding to pressure by the U.S. and British ambassies to improve its human rights position.
The diplomat said he was told by several Kuwaiti officials that the crown prince, who also is a member of Al-Sabah's former members of the 1,500-strong Al-Sabah family and told them to stop killing Palestinians.
Gun control may toughen
Administration may trade Brady Bill for crime package
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The White House softened its opposition to tighter gun control yesterday, suggesting President Bush might look more favorably on a bill mandating a waiting period for handgun purchases if Congress approved his own anticrime proposals.
White House representative Roman Popaduk said Attorney Gen. Dick Thornburgh would be talking to lawmakers in an effort to work out problems Bush had with the Brady Bill, which bears the name of former President Reagan's administration wounded in the assassination attempt on Reagan.
Reagan endorsed the bill yesterday during a visit to Washington marking the 10th anniversary of the attack. He also met with Bush at the White House on Friday, where he heard the former president's views on the subject.
When asked later whether he had persuaded his former vice president on the issue, Reagan joined the campaign.
However, the administration clearly wasn't ready to embrace the federal legislation, which requires it to be mandated by law.
any handgun purchase.
"We don't support the bill in its current form, but a lot may depend on what Congress does with the proposed law."
He would not directly comment on whether the administration was prepared to trade away its opposition to the Brady Bill in exchange for congressional concessions on Bush's crime package.
However, administration sources said Bush's intent was to open the door to flexibility on the
The administration contends the Brady bill would fall short of its goals, failing to catch the majority of criminals who obtain guns illegally rather than through gunshop purchases.
Instead, Bush is pushing legislation to deter criminals with the prospect of tougher mandated sentences.
"We support action on the bill for the president's crime package," Popaduk said. "We have concerns with specific pieces of the Brady Bill that we will work out with Capitol Hill and the attorney general will work with members on the Hill concerning the issues."
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The University of Kansas Theatre and the Department of Music and Dance Present Gilbert and Sullivan's Comic Opera
The PIRATES OF PENZANCE
or (The Slave of Duty) Directed by
8:00 p.m.
April 3-4 & 6-7, 1991
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale in
the Murphy Hall Box Office;
student tickets available at
the SUA Office, Kansas Union;
all seats reserved; to charge by
phone, call (913) 864-3982.
Partially funded by the
KU Student Senate
Activity Fee.
This production is an
associate entry in the
1992 American College
Theatre Festival XXIV.
BUFFALO BOB'S 1977
SMOKEHOUSE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
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Ask for it at the front desk.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES OF THE MONTH!
Senior, Advertising major from Tonganoxie, KS
After graduation, wants to go into newspaper sales.
Junior, Advertising major from Arkansas City, KS
After graduation, wants to work as a copywriter or creative director in an ad agency.
LISA KEELER
Retail Account Executive
LEANNE BRYANT
Campus Account Executive
Junior, Advertising major from Boulder, Colorado
After graduation, would like to work in sales.
JAY STEINER
Retail Account Executive
CONGRATULATIONS!
Keep up the good work!
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES OF THE MONTH!
FINAL
FOOT
Senior,
Advertising major
from Tonganoxie, KS
After graduation,
wants to go into
newspaper sales.
Junior,
Advertising major
from Arkansas City, KS
After graduation, wants
to work as a copywriter
or creative director in
an ad agency.
Senior,
Advertising major
from Tonganoxie, KS
After graduation,
wants to go into
newspaper sales.
Junior,
Advertising major
from Arkansas City, KS
After graduation, wants
to work as a copywriter
or creative director in
an ad agency.
LISA KEELER
Retail Account Executive
LEANNE BRYANT
Campus Account Executive
Junior,
Advertising major
from Boulder,
Colorado
After graduation,
would like to
work in siles.
JAY STEINER
Retail Account Executive
CONGRATULATIONS!
Keep up the good
work!
A. K.
[Name]
Junior,
Advertising major
from Boulder,
Colorado
After graduation,
would like to
work in sales.
Junior,
Advertising major
from Arkansas City, KS
After graduation, wants
to work as a copywriter
or creative director in
an ad agency.
LEANNE BRYANT
Campus Account Executive
CONGRATULATIONS!
Keep up the good
work!
6
Friday, March 29, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Arts and Entertainment
KU goes 'Totally Pauly' as comedian tapes show
By Nedra Beth Randolph
Kansan staff writer
Pauly Shore was destined for comedy.
"I talk about what people relate to in my comedy act," he said. "Me."
At the age of 20, the stand-up comedian already hosts his own daily show on his website at oatmeal.com and he used his first comic album, "The Future of America," March 19.
Shore, a Hollywood, Calif., native, was in Lawrence yesterday to tape a week's worth of shows for "Totaly Pauly" from various locations such as Wesco Beach and Downtown. He also did his stand-up routine during the Battle of the Bands in Hoch Auditorium last night.
KU was the first stop on a 32-city campus tour that will last until mid-March.
"Man, I like Kansas; I like middle-America. I want to marry a girl from middle-America," he said. Shore said he did not have any particular girl in mind as of yet.
Shore, wearing torn jeans, a neon green shirt and a black leather jacket, said he was excited to be back in Kansas. He performed at the Miss U.S.A. pageant in Wichita last month.
"The only difference between here and Hollywood is that down the street from me is a heavy metal club and down from you is a farm," he said.
Shore said it was cool to be in Lawrence when KU was in the NCAA Basketball Final Four championship.
"It seems to be a happening thing around here," he said. "Everyone's
'Other comedians have an attitude, but people like a different style. I'm the same off-stage as I am on. I'm a nice guy.'
- Pauly Shore comedian
into it. It's pretty cool. Good luck on the Final Four thing."
Shore said his comedy act differed from other popular comedic acts.
"Other comedians have an attitude, but people like a different style," he said. "I'm the same offstage as I am on. I'm a nice guy."
Shore said talent is just part of what it takes to be a funny comedian. A good comic is a clean comic to Shore.
"You don't have to be lewd to be funny." he said.
He also is adamant about saying no to drugs.
Shore's long, dark, curly hair was wind-blown as he walked into Hoch Auditorium yesterday to tape segments for his show.
Everywhere he went on campus with his swaying saunter, he had a following of at least 20 loyal fans. Some asked for his autograph on Final T-shirts, and others just wanted to touch him.
Bob Akin, Prairie Village sophomore, said he was missing his African Literature class to see Shore.
"I got to talk to my man, the Weasel," he said with excitement. "I got all shakty when I met him. I told him that I kicked my class just to meet you."
Akin said he planned to follow Shore around town all day.
The only thing Shore said he did not like about being famous was that he no longer had time alone. At 3 a.m. Wednesday, Shore was awakened by several zealous female fans pounding at the door of his hotel room.
"I told them, 'Look, you have to leave' and they got mad at me," he said. "They stood at the end of my bed arguing with me.
Shore, who has been doing stand-up comedy for almost six years, said comedy had been around him his entire life.
His parents own Comedy Stores in San Diego, Las Vegas, and Hollywood. His father, comedian Sammy Wagner, was the company's opening act in the 1960s and 1970s.
"I grew up at the comedy store," he said.
Shore said his parents were not particularly supportive when he decided to go into comedy. He advises KU students to follow what they think is right, not what their parents tell them to do.
"If you want to do something in life that will make you happy, man, joy."
POLYMERIC MUSIC TEAM
"The Totally Pauly" shows that we will watch Saturday, yesterday will sit on MTV August 12.
Shore left after Battle of the Bands he will perform at the Arcadia Theater.
MTV comedian Pauly Shore takes a break from taping segments for his show, "Totally Pauly."
Julie Jacobson/KANSAN
CALENDAR
Friday
*Inge Theatre* “Pot-Pourri Productions” “The Colored Museum” 8 p.m. Inge Theatre, Murphy Hall, tickets at Murphy Hall Box Office
■ "The Business of Murder," 18 p.m.
Lawrence Community Theatre, 1501 New Hampshire St., call 843-7469 for ticket reservations.
Billy Goat and The Urge, 9:30 p.m.
The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.
$4.
Soul Masters, 9:30 p.m. The Jazz-
house, 926% Massachusetts St, $1
Ricky Dean Sinatra, 9:30 p.m., The Mad Hatter, 704 New Hampshire St., $2 before 10 p.m.
"The Business of Murder," 2:30 and 8 p.m., Lawrence Community Theatre, 1501 New Hampshire St., call 643-7469 for ticket information.
Saturday
■ Love Squad and Poetic Justice, 9:30 p.m. The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. $4.
Soul Masters, 9:30 p.m. The Jazz
Masters, 9:26% Massachusetts St. $3.
Jazz Masters, 9:26% Massachusetts St. $3.
Monday
**Salty Iguanas, 9:30 p.m., The Mad Hatter, 704 New Hampshire St., $2 before 10 p.m.**
Student Art Exhibit. works of eight KU students, through April 13, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. SUA Gilen. SUA
Open Mike, 9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck 737 New Hampshire St. free
Tuesday
"Taxi Driver"; SUA Movie, 7 p.m.
Woolfitt Audition; Kansas Union, $2
Monterey Jack, 9:30 p.m. The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampstead St., $13
'Pirates of Penzance' coming to Murphy Hall
Wednesday
Thursday
By Joe Gose Kansan staff writer
"Taxi Driver," SUA Movie, 7 p.m.
Woodstock Auditorium, Kansas Union, 2
Opera "The Pirates of Penzance" 8
Phoenix High School, Phoenix Hall,
Hall students at USA Office.
Kansan staff writer
The KU production of "Pirates of Penance," which will open Wednesday in Murphy Hall's Crafton-Preyer Theatre, is no ordinary pirate tale.
The operetta, by W.S. Gilbert and Sir Arthur Sullivan, centers on Fredric, an 8-year-old boy who is given the role of a pirate and his ensuing adventures.
"Taxi Driver," SUA Movie, 7 p.m.
Wooldraft Auctiontion, Kansas Union, $2
"Opera" The Pirates of Penzance, 8
p.m. Wooldcraft Auctiontion, Urbana
Hall, student tickets at SUA University.
When he is 21, Frederic finally is introduced to women and falls in love with one. But tragedy befalls him when he finds out he was born in a
Biohazard and Joe Worker, 9:30 p.m. The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. $4.
"The pirates with whom I am apprenticed are not exactly bright," said Fredric Scheff, North Kingstown, R.I., graduate student who plays Fredric. "They're very kind people as far as pirates go.
leap year and is actually only 5 years old.
"They never attack weak people. They never molest orphans. They leave the underprivileged alone."
Scheff said the secret of the operet-
ta has humor relied on the serious way
the operator works.
makes it even funnier is how sincerely the people in the scene believe what they are doing," he said. "The more sincere you are, the funnier it makes."
Poul Hough, director of the operetta, said that he wanted the KU production to be as hilarious as the musical, which premiered in New York.
"The show was designed as popular entertainment. It was kind of like 'Monty Python' or the "Saturday Night Live" of its time."
actors playing roles. The theatricality of the piece is what makes it so much fun.
Show times for the operetta are 8 p.m., April 3, 4, 6 and 7. Tickets are available at the Murphy Hall Box Office, and student tickets also can be purchased at the SUA in the Kansas Union. The cost is $10 for the public and $5 for KU students. All seats are reserved.
The situation is funny, and what
"This is a highly improvisational and very theatrical production with a lot of funny stuff," said Hough, a 1967 UK graduate. "We never forget we are on a stage with
'New Jack City' shows morose view of drug scene
By Kristine Curley
Special to the Kansan
Drug hotels where you pay your money and receive your drugs through a slot in the wall?
This is the drug scene that first-time major motion picture director Mario Van Pebels has created in the anti-drug movie, "New Jack City."
It is evident from the start that the movie's main message is that drugs kill. Rapper Ice-T plays Scotty, a young drug-addicted man, and help put an end to the flow of
MOVIES
drugs. His equally thrill-seeking partner, Peretti, is stochastic played by Judd Nelson. The two join forces and go on an epic adventure as the empire built by mob ruler Nino Brown.
bother to check out.
Brown, played by Wesley Snipes,
creates a pseudo-drug community
complete with identification cards
and computers. His new form of
crack house is now more of a crack
hotel whose patrons often do not
Many people think movies such as these only lead to a glorification of the crack problem, not a condensation of it. Van Peebles, however, paints a pretty morse picture of the crack problem by modeling reality of crack-cocaine users.
Van Peebles is careful to steer clear of much of the racial stereotypes that often leads to an unfocused and misdirected story. Although the dialogue is sometimes trite, when Peretti tells Scotty, "It's not a Black
thing, it's not a white thing. It's a death thing, Van Peebles crosses a universal threshold with his creation and the technical society of greed and addiction.
A riveting soundtrack with artists Ice-T, Keith Sweat, Color Me Bad and 2 Live Crow is piped throughout the movie in careful arrangement. Coupled with the unique casting of Kevin Bacon as a drug lord, led by Snipes, "New Jack City" proves effective, even with its tidally delivered ending.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 29. 1991
7
Kansas slides past Wyoming
Wyoming
Wyoming
Wyoming
31
Javhawk Gerrv Camara ducks when a pitch from Wvoming's Mike Shultis glances off his helmet.
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas baseball team salvaged the last game of a three-game series against the Wyoming Cowboys at Holliday Stadium on April 10, 2014, noon at Holland-Munton Stadium
Wyoming had defeated the Jayhawks twice during the week by 7-6 score.
"We really needed to get back on the winning track," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "I didn't think we played hard in the first two games of the series. Overall today, we played harder."
The Jayhawks jumped on Wyoming starter Rigo Bledran for four runs in the first inning.
Kansas was leading 1-0 after one inning when Kansas catcher Garry Schmidt drilled a bases-empty home run fourth round-tripper of the season.
Kansas' third and fourth runs of the game were game pushed across the plate by center field Darryl Monroe's two-run shot over the left field
Kansas scored one more run in the bottom of the fifth off an RBI-single by Schmidt, and the Jayhawks' two-run lead was erased in the next inning with two swings of the Cowboys' bats.
Two Cowbys scored on the play and the Jayhawks led 43.
Kansas left hander David Meyer had not given up a hit until the fourth inning when Wyoming center fieldier Michael Rupp empty home run to deep center field.
Wyoming's Eicher and third base
man David Lacroix blasted back-to-
back bases-empty home runs to tie
the score at five.
In the bottom of the inning, the Jayhawks loaded the bases with two outs, and Monroe slapped an RBI-single to left field.
After shutting out Kansas in the first half of the sixth, the Cowboys' Warner gave Wyoming a 6-5 lead in the seventh—empathy home run in the seventh.
Kansas right-hander Jim Walker relieved Meyer with one out in the eighth and shut out the Cowboys the rest of the way to pick up the victory.
Kansas first baseman Jeff Nie meer scored the game-winning run from second base when Wyoming catcher Jim Robinson was charged with a passed ball and a subsequent errant throw.
Monroe, who was 2-for-2 with 3 RBIs in yesterday's game, said the Jayhawks tried to keep their intensity level high the entire game.
"I was confident we'd come back," Monroe said. "The last couple of
days we've come to the park with a bad attitude, but today we came out to the park.
Bingham said he was not worried about the Jayhawks' play yesterday affecting them against Big Eight Conference rival Nebraska tonight.
"We have never come out flat in a Big Eight series since we've been here, even years back when I first got here and we were awful." he said.
first of a four-game Big Eight weekend series at 7 tonight at Hogland-Maupin Stadium.
Kansas and Nebraska will play the
Javhawk Note:
- Yesterday, Bingham confirmed reports that Kansas catcher/designated hitter Mark Moore had left the team recently because of personal problems, Moore, a junior, was batting 333 and had start 12 games for the Jayhawks.
Golf team plays poorly in bad weather
By Rick C. Honisl
Kansan sportswriter
By Rick C. Honish Kansan sportswriter
"Waiting for the Sun" could have been Kansas men's golf team this week.
"Bad weather seems to follow us around sometimes," sophomore Jim Young said.
While Lawrence residents suffered through an onslaught of golf-ball-sized hail, the team suffered through a non-stop non-rapid rain in Santa Cruz, Calif.
Could it be worse?
But this was not normal bad weather.
Sleet, snow, falling trees and road closing mudslides added to the disaster that was to be the Western Intercollegiate golf tournament.
"There was an earthquake one night," Kansas coach Ross Randall said.
The team was in a restaurant at the time of the quake and did not feel the shake. Randall said it registered about 4.8 on the Richter scale and the epicenter was about 20 miles from the restaurant.
The tournament was to be played at the Pasatiempo Golf Club, but rain forced it.
"We walked around the course the day of our practice round. Young said it was a bit like a rock climbing lesson."
Young said the team as a whole did not shoot well. Sophomore Brad Bruno had the low score for the team with a 77.
We just teed up and played.
Yay! We have!
a chance to look at the course.
The tournament was moved to a public course in Monterey for the first time.
"We played on a public course in Carmel," Young said. "It was about an hour drive, and it rained on the road." He continued. The temperature never got above 50.
The Monterey course was not available for the second round.
Young said the team played better in the second round, but not well
by sophomore Matt Gogel, who had a round of 75.
Senior Len Johnsen had the low score for the team with 74, followed
Gogel and Bruno finished the tournament tied at 155, two strokes shy of the third round cut. The team missed qualifying for the third round by one stroke. They finished the tournament in 21st place out of 28 teams.
Young said the team hoped to rebound next week for the Augusta/ Forest Hills tournament in Augusta, Ga.
As far as this week's tournament goes, "It was the worst trip I’ve ever been on," Young said.
Taman agreed. "It was the most bizarre tournament I have ever seen," he said.
All KU coaches rooting for team
By Mark Spencer
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams thrust two fists in the air as the clock counted down on the Arkansas Razorbacks.
But he wasn't the only Kansas coach feeling the glory of reaching the Final Four.
"I want you to know that all of us in the football office are extremely proud of the accomplishment of our basketball team," Kansas football coach Glen Mason said at his spring football media session earlier this week.
"There's going to be no one rooting those guys on harder to beat North Carolina and take on a championship game," he said.
Kansas men's tennis coach
Scott Perlman said that he was
pleased with the basketball
from more than a fan's standpoint.
"The thing I notice the most is our recruiting and the signing date on April 10," he said. "For kids 17 and 18 years old, it's very easy for them to tell their peers they're attending KU when they see us playing for a national championship on TV."
Kansas women's tennis coach Michael Center said that his program also received recruiting from KU's success on the hardwood.
Indianapolis, Indiana
March 30-April 1, 1969
FINAL
FOUR
"It makes everyone excited about our school and Kansas in general," he said. "I don't know how much it will help women's tennis, but it gives us more national appeal."
The Kansas baseball team is also showing its appreciation for the basketball team.
After Monday's game against Wyoming, Kansas baseball coach Dave Dingham had he understood the game for KU's crowd's game for the KU community.
The Jayhawks were originally scheduled to play Big Eight Conference rival Nebraska in a p.m. doubleheader tomorrow.
After being told the basketball team would tip off against North Carolina at 4:39, Bingham said, "I might split those games up. I think that would be better for everyone concerned."
As a result, die-hard Kansas sports fans will be able to see all three games.
Frisbees to invade city this weekend
32 teams will compete in tournament
By Rick C. Honish
Kansan sportswriter
Flying sancers will fill the air this weekend over the fields off Wakarus Drive between 15th and 23rd streets.
Teams attending the 10th annual Fool's Fest Ultimate Frisbee tournament will be the source of the airborne discs. Thirty-two teams from around the United States will be in Lawrence to compete in the tournament, held every year during the weekend closest to April Fool's Day.
College teams from as far away as Winona, Mim., and Santa Fe, N.M. will participate in the tournament. Play will begin at 10 a.m. Saturday. The semi-finals and finals will begin at 10 a.m. Sunday.
KU Frisbee club president Holly Larrison said that Kansas would field four teams, including two reunion teams.
"About 50 old KU players from Washington, D.C., New York, Seattle and other places are coming in," she said.
The reunion teams are made up of KU graduates who played while in school. Larrison said most of the players still were involved in the
sport through clubs and leagues in their towns.
The KU women's team, known as "Betty," is coming off a fourth place finish at a spring break tournament at Stanford.
"California is the strongest region for 'Ultimate'," Larrison said. "That tournament exposed us to the caliber of play that we will see at nations."
She said the team named itself Betty after numerous name changes.
"It is singular, like beer or fish," she said. "There are a lot of famous people named Betty, and it’s sort of a name. Anyone can be a Betty."
"We have some good experience," she said.
The team also has many new members. One is Giselle Hernandez, a Costa Rica graduate student, who joined the team this semester.
She said this tournament would be her first.
"I am very excited about playing," she said. "I am playing well, and it is so fun."
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8
Friday, March 29, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
CAMPUS OUTLET
WISHES THE KU BASKETBALL TEAM GOOD LUCK IN THE FINAL FOUR!
•Tank Tops
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•Shorts
•T-Shirts
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Admission: $2.00 for adults, $1.00 children under 18, students free with KUID
New law may affect student bus drivers
A federal law that goes into effect in April of next year may decrease the number of part-time student bus work for the Lawrence Bus Company.
By Katie Chipman
Kansan staff writer
Because of the law, KU bus drivers will have to get commercial driver's licenses.
Chris Ogle, general manager of Lawrence Bus Company, said, "This may hurt our student part-time driver's skills. And they wonder if it's really worth it."
Bus drivers, including KU on Wheels drivers, currently are required to have chauffeur's licenses. To get a commercial driver license you have to take a training course to prepare for a more complex written test.
"It's almost going to be impractical for KU students to get a commercial driver's license on their own," he said. "We will have to give them the training."
He said the company usually employed 12 to 15 students.
"The problem with hiring students is the high turnover, but that's their nature," he said. "They don't stay in the same place for long."
Ogle said the law was mainly
targeted at over-the-road truck drivers who had multiple licenses from different states. Requiring the truck drivers to get a commercial driver's license will make tracking their driving records easier.
He said that the new tests the bus drivers would have to take would be significantly harder than the old tests.
"The written test shouldn't be easily dismissed," he said. "The drivers will be required to know about mechanical systems of buses."
Ogle said that he was a little wary of the law but that it was good because it would force every bus driver to learn the basics of mechan-
Stephen Tucker, Derby junior, is a student bus driver. He said the only drawback to the law was the cost of the license to the individual driver. The cost of the new license will be about $30.
"The training isn't that much," he said. "Most of the drivers already have a good knowledge of mechanics, and they will just be fine-tuning it."
Tucker said that although the test would be difficult, the information was worth knowing because it could be put to use if necessary.
Proposed abortion bill draws sharp criticism
By Joe Gose
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — A bill that would require physicians to notify parents within 24 hours of performing an abortion or minor injury was sharply criticized yesterday.
"The wealthy have always been able to have an abortion on demand," she said. "But with this law there will be some young women who will live in the city and those that time has forgotten; the coat hanger, the hat, bin, the ooop bottle."
Opponents of the bill testified before the Senate State and Federal Affairs Committee and claimed that the bill would ultimately endanger the health of pregnant teenage women by forcing them to seek an abortion illegally.
"I was a teen-ager back in the 1930s," said Violet Dodge, an Olsburg resident. "Abortions were illegal and so was liquor. In those days abortion took on the bigger, no one talked about it, but every knew where you could get it.
"The laws could not be enforced." Dodge said the bill would also force young women from poorer backgrounds into desperate measures.
sams for Life, said that his organization opposes abortion unless the mother is terminated.
He also said results of parental notification laws in other states were found to be unsatisfactory.
"In Missouri and other states where we have done studies, we have seen a reduction in the number of reported abortions and an increase in their numbers." "So that would suggest that there are less teen-age abortions on."
However, Alice Lieberman, KU assistant professor of social welfare, said that legislation enacted in Missouri did not decrease teenage abortions.
"After the law went into effect, the proportion of those who went out of state increased rapidly from 23.5 percent to 31.1 percent," she said. Thus, in 1989, the last year for which she was available, almost one third of Missouri teachers obituary abortions traveled to another state for this procedure."
Dodge added that the main issue was one of control.
"There is no law that you can pass that can tell a woman what she can do with her body," she said. "That is a personal decision."
WELLINGTON, New Zealand — A South Island town plagued by tens of thousands of rabbits is planning a scheme to plentiful pests — on Easter weekend.
The town of Alexandra, which calls itself the rabbit capital of the world, will offer cash prizes to teams of rabbits to compete in the most rabbits in a 28-hour period.
with the winning team receiving $320
(U.S.) and a trophy.
The booty will be counted Saturday night at the town's Easter Festival,
In the Alexandra region, the rabbit population has taken over acres of farmland, destroying crops and stripping pastures bare. The problem is so severe that politicians are considering introducing a flea-borne virus called mysomotis to kill off large numbers of rabbits.
Town plans mass bunny shoot
The Associated Press
Rabbits were introduced to New Zealand and Australia by European settlers and have no natural predator in either country.
Find anything and everything you ever wanted in the Kansan classifieds.
200's
Classified Directory
Entr
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business
Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
100's
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
110 Bus. Personal
Merchandise
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate
Wanted
Dwg. TC, Scott. Joe. You guys may be able to skim damp but can you WATER on WATER like ANDRE KOLE will when he comes to KU? Hey Myers. You are Silking it!
ACE EXAMS! Improve memory and recall, enhance concentration, education and study skills, maintain confidence using hi-tech audiovisual brain training, improve mental stress Management and Stress Management Center.
S. Chiff. "It's time to celebrate!" we know that Saturday is the twenty-third and nine month anniversary of the infirmary show collision Yonga and the plasmainne, rudulerte. W M copy 9/12.
300's
400's
Notice: Any information from individuals who witnessed incidents and or confrontations between citizens and police or between citizens and security personnel during James Addison conviction (21 at Memorial Hall in KC, are urgently solicited if requested to contact J. Reece 820-596-8048/766
100s Announcements
We will provide private airplane transportation for two people to the Final Four games in exchange for two tickets to the game. We will pay for the two tickets. Ron Allen, M31-789-227/KC
120 Announcements
S W M. E, age 42. *91* lbs, brown eyes and hair sees female for dating,likes country life and animals, foreign or handicapped user. Write Box 442115, Lawrence, Kansas. 66044.
Lemondrap. Will you grace me with your presence at Andre Kole next Saturday at 8:00 PM in Hoch? Jef-KU
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Temporary Tattoos
The Etc. Shop
732 Mass. 843-0611
WEIGHT PROBLEM? Whether you want to lose weight or gain muscle, Pathway guarantees a more attractive you for summer. Call 1-800-879-9723.
Cinderella--Been in the woods for 4 months now and love it. Love & xxxx. Ah.
*New Analysis of Western Civilization makes*
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ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT-Fisheries
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105 Personal
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Recycling got you out of sorts? We can help! Simple Goods General Store, 735 Mass.
B. C. AUTOMOTIVE is your full service auto repair shop. Classic to computerized. Body shop available. Automotive motorcycle repair and accustomer service. Mastercard & Discover cards accepted.
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*College Money, Private Scholarships. You receive minimum of 8 sources, or your money refunded. A SCHOOLMARK! Fines! Since 1861 COLLEGE SCHOOLHARDLOR MORTORS. Box B11.
Call Douglas County Rape Victim's Support Service for confidential and care assistance. If you need help, call 844-356 or 841-2345
DO YOU FEEL SECURE?
ARE YOU SAFE?
CAS FOR COLLEGE. Over $100 million in scholarships and grants unclaimed each year. For information on how you may apply, visit www.cas.college.edu/scholarships. 814 awards St. Martinius, Va 24128
The Etc. Shop Rental and Sales. 732 Mass.
AMPUS SECURE CONCEPTS
128 WINNING WAY
BATTLE CREEK, MI 49017
Quitting business sale continues at the Book End in Quarantil Fles Market, 811 New Hampshire; weekends 10-5
SEND $2.00 ALONG WITH
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BAR & GRILL
HOT SHOTS
Sunday
All You Can Eat Tacos
$3.00
...
EARTH SPIRITS Living Myth Through Ritual Workshops. Tuesdays April 9, May 26. Free introductory lecture April 2. 7:30 pm, Lamphiser workshop, 10 E Ninth, 10 E Ninth
For anonymous info and support for AIDS concerns, call 841-2345. Headquarters
Gay &淋een Poor Counsel A friendly
understanding voice. Free, confidential referrals
calls returned by counselors) Headquarters
841-245 or KU信息 841-306 Sponsored by
We may end up paying for the state's budget crisis. We encourage you to join the Kansas Association of Public Employees. KAPE员工辩论者 argue that the school district should union membership, and sponsor a free hot line for problems in the work place. But we need you Dates are 68 & 71 month depending on your gross income. You will be given a better future. Write me # a up card. Education 1414, H.W 19th. St. # a B. Lawrence 555.
Rainbows and DeMollays welcome any members
Call Vickie at 841-4115
Johnny's
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Cheeseburger,
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or Soda 1-8 pm
SPRING into HEALTH with MASSAGE. Recover from stress and injury so you can really enjoy the season. Call Bruce at Lawrence Massage Therapy at 841-662-1602 go fly a Kite
Suffering from abortion? Write Hearts Restored.
Box 94, Grinnell, KS 67738. Confidential response/material will follow
TIME TO LOCK THE WINTER PUDGES! "Good tasting, natural, nutritionally balanced Pathway means more energy, no hunger, money-back if you. Call for information, 848-973-0522 or 848-973-0521
Suicide Intervention. If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is call 841 2345 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center
THE WAR AFFECTS US-For a caring listener or info on support services, call Headquarters Counseling Center 841-2345.
130 Entertainment
Lawrence Info Center, content orientated BBS,
941-9769 8011
Johnny's UP & UNDER
is available for Engagement Parties,
Birthday Parties,
Pinning Parties and any
other party possible.
842-0377
140 Lost-Found
FOUND: KEYS-4th floor Wescow. 864-1171 to claim. Leave message.
Found: Pair of eyeglasses with case, before Spring Break in West Chester. Call 745-8280 to identify eyeglasses needed for leaving to return of black mountain bike hike from Cornwallia Restaurant Tuesday evening at Merrimack Valley Hospital.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Alvamar Country Club is now accepting applications for Spring and Summer wait staff. Prior experience a plus, great attitude on a mast a mast. Apply in person 1-9 or 2-5 at 1093 Crosgate.
Seeking students and grades to fill many positions Airline will train. Excellent salary and travel benefits. 303-441-2455
ATTN: Psychology, Education, Biology and
Reticulation related pages. Summer program for
special needs youth (learning disabled/emotional
behavioral difficulties) has position for
Located on take near MJ. MN and Boundary
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Available online. Contact Ed 488-807-901 or Tou马
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123456789. 311 W. Broadway, Minneapolis, MN
CILDREAM WORKER: Residential facility for adolescent boys Full-time and summer positions Dual orientation of education and data transposition Training experience in P.O. Box 223, Lindenville, MN, 56049 to PO Box 223, Lindenville, MN, 56049.
Convenient Store Offer $4/25* Weekend shift cash register experience preferred. Apply in person at Philips 686 Denovo Stortop. 1-883-3033 Christasid, 20 hr per week, nights experience. Removal $4/25*利率 with 2 work hours. retrie
EARN 15,000-16,000. Now hiring-managers and painters, limited opportunity. Part-time now. Full time this summer. STUDENT PAINTERS In, Call 800-COLEGE. M. Gannon.
Earn while you learn. Manpower is looking for students in interest earning great pay plus commission. We offer flexible hours, valuable training, and a competitive personal computer if You are a full-time student, sophomore or above, with at least A b average, and are computer familiar. Manpower needs you to help manage the personal computer IBM Personal System 2 on campus. For experience that pays, call Lori at 749 2800.
International Company seeks career minded individuals to train in the fashion and glamour industry. For interview, 1-232-6829
Help!!! I need guitar lessons now. 841 8397, ask for Lazy
Great job in Philadelphia suburbs. Have fun with kids for 30 minutes weekly. Earn great salary, room, board and 2 weeks paid vacation. Starts August 4, 2014. Calistat at Elizabeth (42) 443-3614
STUDENT NEEDED: Career position for age 24 or older business/businessman management. Benefits include starting salary, company car at least one year before graduation, presence in a master call集. Mr. Schwartz, an alumni of Call集,
Looking for adventure? Be a nanny! Go to interesting places. Earn good money for a year. Templeton Nanny Agency RB 4443
Looking for am/pm daiswasher. 1-3 days will work with school or business clients in the Alcalera Center. Ask for chef Need money! last? Make up to 0.50 a day trim. Need kitchen? No experience necessary 100-627790 100-627790
Part-time evening shifts for load service wanted Apply at front desk. 1800 Naimmith Drive
RACING ENTERS LASTS! We need outing inspiration in working for Friday, Saturday, Sunday project. Topics: Foodies include ticket takers, ticket holder interested in food. Interested apply at Man-ster. Interested please if interested apply at Man-ster.
STUDENT CLERICAL ASSISTANT 1. Distancee
4.91/9.19 salary 14.15 per hour Duties include typing, filing, and performing all assigned clerical duties within Office Services; performs receives, fills out forms, and transcribes photosoftype from Computer Center Staff takes phone messages; sets up meetings; etc. To apply, complete an application available at the Office Restoration Desk EOAEA EMPLOYER
Summer, ATT. MALE ATHLETES
Basketball in Massachusetts, WSL,
The Math department is accepting applications for the position of math tutor for Mat 101 and Mat 102 For Fall 1011 semester. Duties include tutoring students with wide range of abilities in a variety of math topics. To apply, applicants must have completed a minimum of five hours of calculus, have strong command of algebra, trigonometry, and numerical music training. If you are interested in applying contact Marcia Carlsen in 611 Snow.
Travel From Texas to Montana working on a wheat harvesting cow. Guaranteed monthly farm operation for 40 years. Farm operation dainting business for over 40 years. Expire not required. 913-673-4648
Government, photos, passports, immigration,
visas, senior portrait, modeling & arts portfolios
/B&W, color. Call Tom Swells 794-1611
225 Professional Services
PRIVATE OFFICE
0b Gyn and Abortion Services
overland Park
(913) 491-6878
Driver Education offered mid Maven Driving
Driver, serving KU students for 20 years,
driver's license obtainable. transptection provided.
841.77
Prompt contraception and abortion services in lawrence. BLA5768
TRAEEIC · DUI'S
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Fake ID S & alcohol offences
other criminal/civil matters
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Need an Attorney?
CALL RICHARD A. FRYDMAN
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LAW OFFICES
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1101 Mass. Lawrence 749-0123
Copying, hardbinding and gold stamping Lawrence Printing Service 512 E 9th Street 845-460.
1 der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scrittoiles into accurately spelled and punctated, gramatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 84-363, days or evenings.
235 Typing Services
1+ Typing/WP Letters, resumes, term papers,
etc. B2-4734, 3:54-16:30 pm wkdys, anytime
wends
A better price for Word Processing. Fast service $1.00 double space账单 Call, Theresa B. 847-9767 Absolute cheapest印字 in Lawrence $2.50 double spaced账单. Ralph Jobs no problem 749-468
Accurate typing. Hesuras. Theses, Letters. Call Mol 3181. 1-913-8345 or 864-3818.
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary.
$1.25/double spaced page. Call Mrs. Mattila
10am-6pm. #41129
*Typing Services 841-5948*
Term paper, legal letters, resumes.
Dennis's Quality of Writing and Word Process
Dennis's Quality of Writing and Word Process,
applications missing, laser prints,
retries, applications missing, laser prints
and spelling错了. 2020 GW St. Mar-
sfield.
I will correct grammar, punctuation or spelling errors, edit, and type your words of wisdom and, in general, help you produce your best possible papers. PHL 82-8258.
K professional word processing. Accurate and
affordable. Call after 1:00 pm 841-6345.
Professional resume-Consultations, formatting,
typing, and more Graphic Ideas Inc. 227%
Mass. 841-1011
WordPerfect word processing. InkJet printer
Near Orthodox Corners. Phone 843-8568.
Word Processing *Typing*; Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing, composition. Have M.
S. Degree. 814254
University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 29, 1991
9
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
196 Trek 700 Mountain 'lake', Aluminum '21'
196 Excellent condition $69.00 new. $65.00 - 85.00
minimum of ball and Final Four trees. 14
trees minimum of ball and Final Four: 7 and 5?
Size max 17x-Alwesome?
841-5549.
Final 4 ticket for sale. Call 841-1583.
BIANCHI road bicycle: 23" men's with many
touring accessories. Over $450 invested. $225 obo.
841-549
s- sale: PBMeron DPM740 int lrmp 269 TuU TU 400 TumU $100 CD8 CD10 player DZM_650 CamsterT deck $300 Vega Vega D-1 speakers DXN_650 CamsterT will sell separately.
s- sale: 864- 822
For sale: Honda Spree and Smith Corona Word Processor Phone 865-0679.
For sale: movie theater components. Screen, pro
Futon, queen size, perfect condition, without frame, cost $165.00, sell for $85.00 865-000 anytime.
For sale: Miyata Eighty-SE ten speed bicycle, royal blue, in very excellent condition. Call 840-7236, ask for John
GOVT SURPLUS! Sleeping bags, backpacks,
clothing袋,cover clothing,weather gear,
compat kit,and Speedite Boots. Also
47-1774 21. St. Mary's Surplus Sales. St. Mary's,
MS. Moving.贮藏和 trash boxes. Large quantities at discount prices. Small quantities. Walks welcome Call 834 8111. Ask for sales/service department.
Ruger P85 9mm-99% 2 grips, 2 mags, Bianchi
Leather holster $300.00 obo. Call 749-5926, ask for Peter
Specialized Mountain Bike-One year old-
Kryptonite lock, $300. Call 865-2845. Leave
message.
340 Auto Sales
1971 WV camperboard, rebuilt engine with 8001良好 condition, good load. $1240. Call 882-3423 MWFS 1985 Red Honda Cvide hatchback. AC, sterer, ZK2, one owner, factory warranty, clean gasoline.
For sale 1882 Nissan Stanza, 100K miles, good
condition $100.00 Call 964-6532
Seniors and grad students! Ford's college grad program can help you buy a new car or truck. For details, call Bill Lee, 843-3500
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
On TV's, VCKs' jewelry stereo, musical instruments, cameras and more. We honor VisiNCAME LLC Disc Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry, 100 W. 8th 759-1919.
Wanted-Used mountain bike. Men's large frame 842-7900
We will provide private airline transportation for two people to the Final Four games in exchange for two tickets to the game. We will pay for the two tickets. Ron Allen, 839-722-2720 KC
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
=
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, or disability, and any intention, to make such preference, limitation or discrimination.'
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all advertisements in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
SouthPointe Apartments
or 2 Bedrooms available Please Call 843-6446
1-2-3 bedroom apartments near campus.
Available June 1. Sorry, no pets. Dick
482 8971 834 1601
8 bedroom homes and houses duplex. Available June 1. Sorry, pet. Dicks at 842 097-8430/8460-160.
*AF Studio Apts* update June 1 for new year. Also适用于 summer suite #1, 943 mas 494-096 eve.
2 Bedroom apt available for summer sublease.
$360/month negotiable. 854-166.
28 hp in aptur. Available in fall or summer on 12 month lease. DL, low in offices, off street parking, close to campus. No pets. Deposit Call 482-8548. Ask for Tracy to leave message.
2 Large Bay in Meadowhill Apts. Available mid-May through August. Water and cable paid. Pool close to campus. Great for 1,2,3 or 4 people to share. $460 per mo. 811-0997.
ARPARTMENTS Small, large. Walk to KU Medical Center. Newly decorated, furnished or unfurnished Quiet, secure building, many extras 016-398-3988
Available March 1 - 1百 bd unit arr. in new apartment at West Hill 1004 Emery Hill. Energy eficiency of up to 85%. Mini fans, mini blinds. Great location near campus. Short lease available $850 per month. No perk.
Available Aug. 1 at 105 Tennessee, 749-606-1 1 BR basement apartment; 235/plus month rental fee; 1 BR master bedroom; 1 BR wafer/driver; 1 BR attic apartment; 380/month plus insurance; 1 year lease; 1 month security, off street parking.
Bassement apt for quien graduate student. No pets, live alone, good nonsmoker, non-smoker, take care of apt. Off-street parking. Individual rate. $300 plus deposit ². utilities. Insurance only insures ³.
401-352 evenings, weekends
BIG 1 bedroom for sublease. Available June 1
with option to renew in fall. Pool, balcony, close to
2 & 3 BR-Available in, may or August,
discounters, numbers for free/limited
free pickup, desk, deck, office,
site management, KI bus route, off-street park,
conceive to montage your apartment for summer
Bradford Square Apartments
Apple Lane Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
--spacious & comfortable
Now accepting reservations for fall leases!
Free cable
Pool
Water paid
4
Close to KU bus route
Now leasing for summer & fall 1991
1991
studios
*1 & 2 BR apartments
*2 & 3 BR townhomes
-3 Pools
-Tennis courts
-gas heat & water paid (on apartments)
TRAILRIDGE
OPEN DAILY 1-5 P.M.
Reserve Your Home Now! We offer
Completely Furnished
1·2·3·4 Bedroom Apartments
Designed with you in mind!
- Custom furnishings
•Designed for privacy
•Private Parking
•Close to shopping & KU
•Many great locations
•Equal opportunity housing
Go to...
Hanover Place - 841-1212
Kentucky Place - 749-0445
1310 Kentu
Sundance - 841-5255
Tanglewood - 749-2415
Campus Place - 841-1429
Orchard Corners - 749-4226 15th & Kesold
Hey! KU Med. students. Move in June 1 and
key to receive it on your rent for 2 months. *Studio 1,
2 and 18 apart. *Heat and water pay. *Access
Rainbow Center, Rainbow Tower Apt.
813-981-8631
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
West Hills APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now leasing for
June or August
Large studio apartment at Trailridge for sublease. Ready on June 1st. Rent $280.00
841-9113. Leave message.
1:00-4:00 p.m. (no apt needed)
This ad for original buildings only does not include Phase II
(water paid!)
2 bedroom room 950 sq. ft.
OPEN HOUSE Mon. Wed. Thurs
-1 bedroom apts. 735 sq ft
$280 to $335 per month
Extremely nice, spacious. 3 berm townhouse w/ garage. 2 female non-smoking rooms needed. Free laundry and cleaning. $20 to utilities. Kerr 841-6264. $50 to storage. Kerr 841-6264. 4 BRA apartment in May. Mail 841-8315.
Great location for KU and downtown. Studio apt with gas and water paid $300/mo. Call 843-2116.
Great location Near campus
-2 bedroom apts. 950 sq ft
$365 to $415 per month
LEASE NEW FOR FALL Boony o + 3 or plus 3D
dispb on bus line. Basement, Garage, CA/W
dockup. No. Pets. Leave & refs. req. *440* mo and
up. Negotiable. 847-736 after 5.
MAKE IT EASY ON YOURSELF! Summer sublease form 2 BR apt. May pd. Cable pd. Option for fall. Very close up. 834-472.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL. Extra large 2 BR duplex
in good location. Extra large MRG, garage;
hardware/store. nice yard. No pet Lease &
Beehive. Welcome! BEEHIVE $950-mo.
measurable. 843-7763 after 5.
Lorinar Townhouses, 3811 Clinton Parkway,
Quality, spacey, with all the amenities. Brand
new available. Now 2-4 3 bedrooms. Lease thru
May, July or for 12 months. 841/7849, 841/833
1 BR, 43 BR. Washers/dryers in each unit, cell fans, microwave, fireplaces, 2 full baths in 3 BR, on bus route, off street parking. Only 1 yr old.
Cell today: 786-1566
**Zeneca Place Inc:** 3rd birmingham ap, now leasing for August 15; ages w/ washer, dryer, microwave, fan, 2 hearts, 2 checks, 1 year lease, no occupancy fee. **Zeneca Place Inc:** 6273 events, and weekdays, 8:41-9:21 davenport
Check out Berkeley Flats. Studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Close to campus and downtown.
$299.411/mm Call 844-3216.
New Apartments
CAMENTATION 1. block to a campus, 2 bedroom
in 4 plies, dishwasher, WDU hookup, CA,
no pets, available 1. $360 At 1341 Ohio Call
842-4242
- Volleyball Court
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
- Basketball Court
- Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Exercise Room
- On Bus Route
- 3 Hot Tubs
842-5111
1301 W. 24th
$ 355 - $425
Models Open Daily
Mon, - Fri 10-6 p.m.
at. 10-4 p.m. Sun 12-4 p.m.
Georgetown
- KU Bus Route-Holidome
Apartments
- On Site MGT./Reliable 24 hour Maintenance
- Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout
- Microwaves & Dishwashers
- Fenced pool area with
- 24 hour Maintenance
- Low Security Deposit
- Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available
Tanning Deck & Barbeque
* 10 or 18 Month Lease
New leasing. Extra space, spacious two bedroom apartments with all kitchen appliances, including dishwashers and refrigerators and blinds. Low utilities, pool and spa quiet. Quest complete $150.00 SPANISH CHAIR APARTMENT $250.00
Now leasing for fall semester, 1 and 2 bedroom
Appeal Apt. West Apartment $850 for bedroom, 873$ 2
bedroom. Celing fans, water paid. Walk to campa
Call 842-1608 or 842-1839
- No pets
Nice 1 bedroom apt close to the Union. No pets Deposit and references required. Off street park ing. 749-2919.
Call about our Summer Special
New leasing 1 and 2 bedroom apts at Southbridge Plaza Apt. 533, Bristol. 872, 273 rooms start at $35. 10 month lease. Water and cable paid for. New kitchen now carpentry (Call 841-2812).
COASTAL WATERFRONT
Office Hours M: F-1 5:00
WKNDS BY APT 3
630 Michigan BY 749-7279
SUMMER SUBLET: 1 bed apt., 2nd floor. Walk to Kuiwon and Kuiwon downstairs. $250/mo. gas & water paid. 841-6968 after 4:30
OPEN HOUSE: Saturday, March 30th 9:30-12:30 for last week. For August 31st, luxury laptops a+, weather衣, microwave, ceiling cake area, washer/dryer, mackenzie's 1-year place, Aria 1133 Kentucky
Sacpious 3 bedroom. 4475. Subsuite for summer or sooner. 1806 W 27, 942-4603 or 414-5797.
Sacpious one bedroom apt for summer subsuite
Spool yourself in a nice 2 bedroom apt
WD/DW/microwave/disposal. Sublease $355.00.
Cell 865-3837
Enlarged for Texture
--ach apartment feature
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
- Large bedrooms
- Mini blinds
- On KU bus route
- Carports available
- 1 bedroom $350, $350
- 2 bedroom $440, $460
- 3 bedroom $560
offers
611 Michigan Street
(across from Hardie's)
HOURS:
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
9:00-12:00 Weds
R43-171
Sunrise Apts
1. 2.3 & 4 Bedroom
- Garages (VIII.)
- Tennis Court. Pools
Studios
1. 2. 3 & 4 Bedroom
Luxurious Town Hall
Apartment Living
BRAND NEW 2 BURNS. all VIII.
Sunnice Place
- Free Cable T.V. (Pl. & Terr.)
- On Bus Route Close to Campus
Sunrise Place
9th & Michigan
Sunrise Terrace
10th & Arkansas
Sunrise Village
- Close to Campus
- Tennis Court, Pools
6th & Gateway
Open House Daily
841-1287 or 841-8400
441-1287 or 841-8400
Mon. - Fri. 10-5
--ach apartment feature
- Washer and dryer
- Microwave
- Gas heat, central air
- Large bedrooms
- Mini blinds
- On KU bus route
- Carports available
- 1 bedroom $350, $350
- 2 bedroom $440, $460
- 3 bedroom $560
offers
611 Michigan Street
(across from Hardie's)
HOURS:
4:00-6:00 Tues - Fri
9:00-12:00 Weds
R43-171
Sat. - Sun. 1-4
apartments
Boardwalk
Showing Units Daily 9 - 6
- Clean & well maintained
- Water & trash paid
- 2 on-site bus stops
- Laundry room- 50¢
- Unfurnished with
- Walk to grocery
524 Frontier
Subleases Available Immediately
Furnished Studios
500 sq. feet
435 sq. feet
1/2 bath downstairs, Large full bath with dressing area unstairs
2 Bldm townhouse.
Room 1,290 square feet
1 1/2 baths, available May 1st
Some Summer Subleases too!
Newly remodeled apartments
- Furnished studio apartments
- One bedroom apartments
- Two bedroom apartments
- two with fireplaces
15th & Crestline Dr.
Hours: Mon-周五 8:5-30
Sat 8-5
Sun 1-4
842-4200
meadowbrook
24TH & EDDINGHAM (Next to Benchwarmers)
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an
(Next to Benchwarmers)
No Appt. Necessar
841-5444
SUMMER SUBLEASE June 1 4 bedroom townhouse Sunrise Village. $185 each negotiable 740-289
Sublease large one bedroom apt. Close to campus, on bus line, microwave, dishwasher, jacuzzi and pool. Call 841-9114.
Sublease. 2 BDR apt, close to campus. From May
15; No job res. /May rent is paid $345/mo
Call Calvin, #422-8000. Mgr. 842-3400.
SUMMER SUBLEASE Two bedrooms, very close to campus. Call 749-804.
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt., Inc.
Subliese 2 bedroom apt in Colony Woods, May 20-Aug w/ 3 wk. free. $215/month plus utilities. 865-3328
I LOVE SUNSETS! ARE YOU GOING TO TALK THROUGH THIS CARTOON?
THANK YOU FOR NOT TALKING DURING OUR FEATURE PRESENTATION.
Summer and Fall leasing Furnished 1 and 2 bedrooms a. lblk from KU with off-street parking, no pets. 841-506
Summer and Fall leasing, Furnished rooms with shared kitchen and bath facilities. Most utilities paid. 1 bib from KU with of street parking. No kits. 841-5000.
Summer Sublease-1 Br apt, near Union. Hardwood floors, high ceilings. Must see! 841-1748, afternoons
Summer sublease 4 bedroom furnished apt. Pool
* complex, Sundance, Cal Ange, 863-4929
Summer sub-lease 1 bdmr, furnished apt. June-
Aug. Call nights 843-8194 for more info
By Brian Gunning
Summer sublease at Sundance, Studio, completely furnished. Available May 21, 1991 thru Aug 10, 1991. Call evenings, 841-5786.
Summer sublease. Unfinished 2 bedroom apt. 2
block from office on campus.
Summer sublease with option for fall. Very nice apartment next to campus. Has everything. Call 865 293.
Large studio for summer sublease. Available mid May. May rent paid $275/mi. 841-6784 after 4pm
WOODWAY APARTMENTS
EVERYTHING IS AVAILABLE ONLINE.
Please call Kristy for appt.
LEARN THE
Affordable Living
Naismith now has lower than ever prices.
We have our own
computer center. Dining
Better quality living
anytime, and great social events
Convenient location
Naismith is close to campus, and on the bus route. Naismith spells out a wise living move.
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Nalsmith Drive
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 843-8559
Sunflower House Student Cooperative has rooms available for summer and fall. Call 749-0871 or drop by 146 Tennessee
THE FAR SIDE
Two bedroom sublease May 15 Aug 15 no deposit
842-3040 or 749-2851. Ask for Jennifer.
VILLAGE SQUARE
Apartments
A Quiet, Relaxed
Atmosphere
close to campus spacious 2 bedroom laundry fac. & pool watered allowed
9th & Avalon
842-3040
Quail Creek Apartments 2111 Kasold 843-4300
on KU bus route studios townhomes 2,3 Bedrooms Free cable Water paid Pool
Accepting reservations for fall leases!
Now Leasing For Summer and Fall Special
- Graystone
Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants!
Open House M-F 1-5 p.m.
S
Swan Management
- 1.2-3 bedroom apts.
Open House M-F 1.5 p.m.
2512 W. 6th St.
749-1288
430 Roommate Wanted
A male roommate needed, on bus route, through July. $20 a month plus utilities. npt. a47 838-471 Call now for summer sublease. Female roommate Orchard Corners. Call anytime at 842-3626
Female roommate wants for summer sublease
Furnished at campus Place-a Great location
$181 mo./¹⁴ utilities. Please call Michelle.
855 669 699
Roommate now Very nice, very large W/D, Pets OK. See to believe! $125.847-2746
Roommate needed for 3 bedroom townhouse $240 a month, $240 deposit plus 1. utilities: Include spacious rooms, pat, on bus, fireplace, 1. baths. Call Steve, 834 6456.
Roommate wanted to share three bedroom duplex with basement. Half rent and utilities. Close to campus: Female preferably. 749-2153.
Roommate needed immediately. Close to campus $140/mo plus utilities 841-4535
Roommate(s), spacious 4 bedroom, 2 bath house.
Two rooms for 1-2 people. Reasonable rent/utilities. Alison, 855-2578.
Summer Sublease. Female wanted to share 4 bedroom townhome. Option for fall. $180/mo. $10 deposit. Call Gina, 749-1590.
Three Bedroom for summer sublease. Please call 749-3477; economical.
Bv GARY LARSON
5. 29 Tomm
BNNN
"Oh, the whole flower bed is still in shock! He was such a quiet butterfly — kept to himself mostly."
Friday, March 29, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
10
CD
EASY
DISCREET
RENTING
Must be 21. I.D. Required
XXX VIDEO - 1420 W. 23rd
CORNUCOPIA
A RESTAURANT & BAR
-Now Offering -
*Authentic Southwestern Cusine
*Fresh Seafood Everyday
*Daily Drink Specials
*Breakfast Anytime
1801 MARSHAUSETTS 842 9607
1801 MASSACHUSETTS 842-9637
Hours: Sun. & Mon. 11-9, Tues. - Sat. 11-10
EATS
JILL MANN
LAWRENCE A RANSON
TANTY TOMMY TRAIKING, TIMOTYN
TIN PAN ALLEY
Rings Fixed Fast!
Kizer
Cummings
JEWELERS
833 Mass*Lawrence, KS
We've Moved!
Shawnee Mission
Ford
Up to an additional
$1,000 cash for:
• college grads
• first time buyers
Contact Brad Shull
(913) 631-0000
RAINBOW TOWER
APARTMENTS
- Studio. One & Two Bedrooms
- Heat and Water Paid
- Heated Indoor/Outdoor Pool
- Jacucci & Sauna
- Exercise Spa & Laundry
- Restricted Entry System
- Underground Parking
- Furnished & Unfurnished Apts.
- Across from KU Med Center
- Excellent I-35 Access
BEFORE 6 PM-ADULTS $3.00
(LIMITED TO SEATING)
SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00
Crown Cinema
Now Pre-Leasing for Fall 831-9363 39th and Rainbow Kansas City, Kansas 66103
SLEEPING WITH
SAINTS (P. 10.3)
SAILING WITH
THE HARD WAY (P. 10.4)
GUILTY BY
SUPRIZON (PG. 1.3)
WOLLINS WITH
WOLLINS (P. 10.5)
SILENCE OF
MISSION (P. 10.6)
CINEMA TWIN
VARSITY
1015 MASSACHUSETTS 841-5191
HILLCREST
925 IOWA
TEENAGE MUTANT
HILT (TIGERS) (P/G)
SAT 9:14 AM 11:30 AM
3:15 AM
EVERY 5:15 AM 7:15 AM
REVERSAL OF FORTEON (R)
EVERY 7:30 AM 9:30 AM
NEW JACK CITY (R)
5:10 7:25 9:45
Dickinson
23rd & IOWA 841-8600
$300 PRIME TIMER SHOW!+
SEN CITIZENS ANYTIME
THE FIVE HEARTBEATS (R)
5.00 7.15 9.35
THE DOORS (R)
SAT, SUN 2:15
EVE 4:45, 7:15, 9:45
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES (P-13)
4.45, 7.10, 9.20
IF LOOKS COULD KILL (P-13)
4:40 7:05 9:30
CLASS ACTION (R)
4:35 7:20 9:40
Headmasters
You'll Love Our Style
809 Vermont 843-8808
HOME ALONE (PG)
4:50, 7:00, 9:25
Fun Flowers
To Go!
6 ROSES
$6 50
Mixed Bouquet
$4 50
Cash & Carry
The
Flower
Shoppe
1101 Massachusetts
841-0800 8:30 5:30 Mon. Sat.
I
Julie Denesha/Special to the KANSAN
Ultimate practice
KU Frisbee Club president Holly Larrison practices in preparation for tomorrow's round of the Ultimate Frisbee tournament. Larrison said 32 teams from around the country would compete in the two-day tournament at 15th and Wakarusa streets. See story Page 7.
Women take arms against toe licker
The Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO Some female students at San Francisco State University have armed themselves with nukes, might prowler dubbed the toe lice.
The young assailant on two consecutive weekends in September entered
However some residents of the only dormitory, affected said they were ready with baseball bats, bat ties and other weapons.
dormitory rooms, lifted the covers from women's beds and licked their toes He reappeared in tour rooms Sunday but the attacks were thwarted when the women chased the man from the building.
one is panicking, and relieved that the incidents have not been violent, representative Sheila McClear said Wednesday.
University officials are extremely concerned, but are pleased that no
U.S. may send military, money to wage drug war The Associated Press
The U.S. government said it was pleased with the anti-drug efforts and Paz Zamora's decision to fire high-level officials accused of corruption and announced it was expanding economic aid to Bolivia.
LA PAZ, Bolivia — President Jaime Paz Zamora asked Bolivia's Congress yesterday to authorize using the army to combat drugs and to allow 112 U.S. military advisers to troops in anti-narcotic operations
Paz Zamora convened a special session of Congress to discuss the drug war. By law, the army cannot take part in such operations, which are in the hands of a special police force.
The U.S. military will train two infantry battalions of about 1,000 soldiers over a 10-week period, said Gustavo Fernandez, Paz Zamora's chief of staff. The advisers will leave training has been completed, he said.
The Congress is controlled by Paz Zamora's ruling coalition and passage of his program is almost certain.
"The Bolivian government has come to the realization that they need more manpower because of the increased trafficking activities in certain parts of the country." U.S. Ambassador Robert Geldard said.
He said the United States would increase economic aid from $130 million for the 1991 fiscal year to an estimated $190 million for 1992.
Great judge of character.
With Priority Call from Southwestern Bell Telephone, your phone gives you an indication of who's calling before you pick it up—so you can decide whether or not to answer it. Priority Call enables your phone to alert you to three
Priority Call enables your phone to alert you to three callers you really want to hear from. Or three you really want to avoid. It does this with a special ring.
* 61
Priority Call*
Then sit back a
* 61
Just hit *61 on your touchpad and program in the three numbers you'd like identified as either "preferred" or "unwanted." and let your phone do the screening.
Subscribe to Priority Call for only $3.50 a month. Or only $1 a month if you also subscribe to one of our other convenient calling options—Call Cue, Call Return and Call Blocker. Contact your Southwestern Bell Telephone business office for details.
Priority Call. When your phone's equipped with it,it'll make all the right judgment calls.
Southwestern Bell Telephone
The one to call on."
Installation free for a limited time. Not available in all areas or to party line customers. Some telephones may not be compatible with some calling options.
NCAA TOURNEY
March 30-April 1, 1961
Indianapolis, Indiana
FINAL
FOUR
INSIDE
A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
Roy Williams arrived at Kansas just in time to serve someone else's jail term. He had to rebuild a wound in Kansas program
The results of his efforts come to fruition this weekend as Williams guides the Jayhawks into the Final Four for the first time since Kansas won the national title in 1988.
Williams Page 2B
PETER MCGRAW
Growing up in Clyde. New York, Terry Brown could be found playing on a basketball goal in the high school parking lot.
"In the summer he used to play kids three on one for soda money," Brown's high school coach said.
"If the kids guarded him too close, he would charge the goal, and if they laid off him, he would hit the jumper."
▶ Brown Page 12B
MICHAEL BLANKER
The number of Mark Randa'l's awards and accomplishments is nearly equal to the number blazed across his insignia. This
week, he is on the cover of Sports Illustrated.
How does he respond to all of this praise and attention?
"I really don't have time to think about it right now."
PETER J. KING
When Kirk Wagner was recruited by Kansas in 1988, he was well aware of the success incess in year's. NCAA
tournament. But that wasn't the only attraction.
"I just liked the campus and the environment and the people." Warger said.
Wagner page 11B
MICHAEL B. MURRAY
Basketball and family.
the two w in d through Mike Maddox's life together
M a d d o x
turned down
offers from top
schools too tar away from us
Midwestern relatives and accepted a scholarship offer from Larry Brown of Kansas.
▶ Maddox Page 11B
BASKETBALL
WILDCAT
JERSEY
BASKETBALL
WILDCAT
JERSEY
Bon Klein/KANSAN
The 1988 NCAA basketball championship trophy is displayed in Allen Field House.
KANSAS
24
Final Four fight for opportunity to capture title
Philp Mering/KANSAN
By S. J. Bailey
Korean author
Kansas forward Alonzo Jamison looks for a passing opportunity.
And then there were four
College basketball fever will consume the nation this weekend as all eyes shift their focus to Indianapolis for the 1991 Final Four.
Sixty-four teams began the tournament three weeks ago. Most of them have been sent home dreaming of what could have been.
But tomorrow, Kansas, North Carolina, Duke and the University of Nevada-Las Vegas will have the opportunity to fight for the national championship.
The match-ups have been well publicized.
Kansas, led by third-year coach Roy Williams, will face North Carolina, where Williams honed his coaching skills for 10 years under the tutelage of "the dean" of college coaches. Dean Smith.
In the other bracket, it will be a duel between the participants of last year's NCAA championship game. The Duke Blue Devils may be hearing the theme from Jaws swimming through their heads as they prepare to face the Runnin' Rebels from UNLV, who trounced Duke last year 103-73 in the most lopsided title game in NCAA history.
For each of the four teams, the road to Indianapolis has been a difficult one.
The Runnin' Rebels buildozo through the regular season, ending the year at No. 1 with a perfect 30-0 record and the top seed in the West region.
But the tournament has not been all roses for the Rebels, who have struggled in each of their games against 16th-seeded Montana, eighth-seeded Georgetown, fourth-seeded Utah and third-seeded Seton Hall.
The Duke Blue Devils, on the other hand, have powered through the tournament after a 26-7 regular season record left them the Midwest region's second seed. The Blue Devils are no strangers to the Final Four. This will be their fourth consecutive trip and fifth in the past six years.
Tournament victories against 15th-seeded Northeast Louisiana, seventh-seeded Iowa. 11th-seeded Connecticut
and fourth-seeded St. John's have put the Blue Devils in position to avenge last year's embarrassing loss to the Rebels.
The Kansas Jayhawks, 27-7 during the regular season, would have to be considered this year's Cinderella team as they entered the Southeast region as the third seed behind the Razorbacks of Arkansas and the Hoosiers of Indiana.
But after struggling against 14h-seeded New Orleans and sixth-seeded Pittsburgh in the opening rounds of the tournament, the Jayhawks manhandled the second-seeded Hoosiers and the first-seeded Razorbacks, possibly making the Jayhawks the hottest team in the field of four.
This will be Kansas' third trip to the Final Four in the past six years, and the first since they claimed the NCAA title in 1988
But the Jayhawks will have to face another perennial tournament participant: the Tar Heels of North Carolina. Under the leadership of Dean Smith, the Tar Heels have reached the NCAA tournament 17 consecutive years and have advanced to the Final Four eight times in four decades. Smith is the only coach in NCAA history that can make that claim.
North Carolina entered the tournament as the East region's No. 1 seed after posting a 25-5 regular season record. Victories against 16th-seeded Northeastern, ninth-seeded Villanova, 12th-seeded Eastern Michigan and 10th-seeded Temple put the Tar Heels in position to go after their second NCAA championship under Smith.
Oddly enough, North Carolina also won a national title in 1957 by defeating the Javahaws in triple overtime.
The Kansas-North Carolina game will be televised tomorrow on CBS at 4:40 p.m. The UNLV-Duke contest will begin about 30 minutes after the conclusion of the first game. The title game will be played Monday evening at 8:10 p.m.
As they say in the other sport that made Indianapolis famous:" Gentlemen, start your engines."
I N D I A N A P O L I S . I N D I A N A
Final Four 1991 NCAA Men's Basketball Championships Saturday: Kansas vs. North Carolina 4:39 p.m.
Monday: Championship game 8:10 p.m.
A S KU
KA SAS KU
KU
Coach: Roy Williams
Starters: PPG RPG
F Alonzo Jamison 10.7 6.4
F Mike Maddox 7.4 2.9
C Mark Randall 14.9 5.9
G Terry Brown 6.4 3.4
G Adonis Jordan 12.3 3.1
notes: Kansas (26-7) will make its third trip to the Final Four in six years. Williams, in his third year at Kansas, has compiled a 75-24 record. The Hawks finished 12th nationally this season.
North Carolina
Coach: Dean Smith
Starters: PPG RPG
F George Lynch 12.4 7.4
F Rick Fox 17.0 6.6
C Pete Chilcutt 12.2 6.5
G King Rice 8.3 1.8
G Hubert Davis 13.0 2.4
notes: North Carolina (29-5) will make its seventh trip to the Final Four under the legendary Smith. In 30 years with the Tar Heels, Smith has compiled an overall record of 717-208.
JNLV
NO L
Coach: Jerry Tarkanian
Starters: PPG RPG
F Larry Johnson 23.0 10.8
F Stacey Augmon 16.9 7.3
C George Ackles 8.3 5.8
G Anderson Hunt 16.9 1.5
G Greg Anthony 11.4 2.5
notes: UNLV (34-0) will try to defend the national title. Tarkanian is in his 18th year at UNL title. Tarkanian is in his 826; he is 811-145 (848) overall in his 30th year of coaching.
D
Coach: Mike Krzyzewski
Starters: PPG RPG
F Greg Koubek 6.1 2.9
F Grant Hill 11.2 5.0
C Christian Laettner 19.6 8.7
G Bobby Hurley 11.3 2.4
G Thomas Hill 11.9 3.7
notes: Duke (30-7) makes its fourth straight trip to the Final Four. Krzyzewski has a 261-108 record after 11 seasons at Duke and a 25-7 NCAA tournament record.
---
2B
Friday, March 29, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
The Coach: Roy Williams
Players come first for Roy
Williams credits 'the kids' with team accomplishments in tourney
FRED DUKE
Coach Rov Williams and assistant coach Jerry Green re-enact a foul.
By Eric Nelson Kansan staff writer
In Fall 1988, the mood on the KU campus was a little more somber than it was this past week.
The Jayhawks were told by the NCAA that not only would they have no opportunity to defend their 1988 national title, but they were also slammed with recruiting restrictions.
Roy Williams arrived at Kansas just in time to serve somebody else "jail term." He had to rebuild a wounded Kansas program.
Williams' difficult beginnings at Kansas make it hard to believe that the Jayhawks, a Vitalte perennial in the 1901 Final Four in Indianapolis,
Williams admits that even he is surprised.
"The two years I was greatly concerned about were this year and next year because of the recruiting restrictions we had been under," he
But 26 wins later and with a date in the national semifinal game against his alma mater and coaching mentor, a season meant for rebuilding has become memorable and enjoyable.
Williams called it "the happiest I've ever been to postpone my golf game for another week."
Success is not new to Williams. His tournament successes include the 1982 national championship at North Carolina.
Winning Williams
At Kansas, he last year's team to the Dodge NIT presseason championship. That team was ranked either first or third for the nation for 13 consecutive weeks.
Williams currently holds the best winning percentage by a coach in Kansas history. 75.8 percent.
But Williams coaches for the players and not personal recognition.
"I've said many times before, the greatest thrill I get out of coaching is seeing the look on our gue's faces immediately after they have accomplished something," he said. "After the Arkansas game I tried to step back and just watch our kids for a few moments because that was
really something.
"Some of you guys and a few others keep sticking cameras in my face and I didn't get a chance to sit back and watch. That's what I would have done. I have done, but still, that's the best feeling you can have as a coach."
Roy's Boys
When questioned about the success of the Kansas program, Williams gave much of the credit to “the kids” who wrote the word Kansas across their arms.
The hard work of the team and assistant coaches, which he referred to as the best in the country, has built a success story.
But Williams is not one to stand in the spotlight of the team's successes.
Richard Scott, freshman forward,
said that if the team executed and
concentrated as they were told to,
thems gave them much of the
credit.
"If we do all that, he'll just put the credit on the team; he wouldn't really take the credit for himself."
Williams becomes disgusted when not enough credit is given to the
"Sometimes I've felt like people were saying 'It's the Carolina system' so much that they weren't giving credit to my kid, but I gave it to like everybody else, but my kids are a heck of a lot more important."
Mike Maddox, senior forward, said much of the success of Kansas State.
"He deserves a lot of the credit," he said. "He's not one to get up in front and take a lot of the credit. He tries to give a lot of the credit to us and sometimes too much so. I know all the players respect him for that."
Mark Randall, senior forward, said Williams' hard work was evident both on the court and on the recruiting trail.
"I think that carries over to the team," he said. "Everybody wants to work hard and they want to be good. You have to do the best they can all the time."
Sibling rivalry
Now Williams is heading into a
game against a program that raised him and a person he considers a brother, Dean Smith.
"He's done more for college basketball than anybody else will probably ever do." Williams said. "Even more importantly, he's done more for people without them ever knowing about it."
Like a big brother, Williams said that Smith had given him a lot.
"But if I had a big brother, and I was playing him, I would still try to beat his butt," he said.
Not feeling intimidated by being the long shot of the tournament, Williams has set his sights on winning the tournament.
"I do believe it is going to be an exciting time," he said. "But at the same time, it's something I am not afraid of." Well, we made the Final Four."
Williams said that he considered
With North Carolina State in 1983, Villanova in 1985 and Kansas in 1988, the long shot came in to spoil the party.
“That’s what is great about the NCAA tournament,” Williams said. “It’s not necessarily the best team who wins the tournament. In in the record book it says they’re champions and that’s what counts.”
Now with the possibility of facing the team they stunned in Madison Square Garden UNLV — the underdog role again.
Williams and the Jayhawks have some practice at being spoilers. At last year's NIT they suprisingly won it all.
Coaches' N.C. tie adds twist to game
"Since we're here, let's go ahead and spoil the party," Williams said.
By S. J. Bailey
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams spent 10 years learning the game of basketball and sharpening his coaching skills as an assistant under Dean Smith at North Carolina.
Tomorrow,
the nation will
see whether
the student
can give the
teacher a lesson
of his own.
PETER WILLIAMS
When the Jayhawks take on the Tar Heels
Dean Smith
tomorrow afternoon for a shot at the 1991 national championship, it will be a reunion of sorts for the team's captain, friend and mentor, Dean Smith.
Williams graduated from North Carolina in 1972 after playing on the 1968-69 Tar Heel freshman team. After a four-year coaching stint at Swannanoa Owen High School in North Carolina, he rejoined the Tar Heels as an assistant coach, where he stayed until he took the job at Kansas in 1988.
Smith, oddly enough, has strong ties to the Jayhawks as well. Smith graduated from Kansas in 1953 after playing on Phog Allen's 1952 national championship team and the 1953 Jayhawk team, which finished second in the NCAA tournament to Indiana.
Williams, who claims to have learned 90 percent of what he knows from Smith, said watching his mentor prowl the opposing sidelines would be difficult for him.
"It will be hard for me because at the end of the game, one of us is going to lose," Williams said. "But on the other side of it, one of us will be in the finals, and I like that part of it."
Williams said he could not have asked for a better professor of the game than Smith.
"Coach Smith's influence has been amazing," he said. "He truly is in a league by himself. He's done more for college basketball
than anyone will probably ever do."
Williams also said Smith was one of the primary reasons behind his success.
Smith has high accolades for Williams as well.
"If it weren't for Coach Smith, I wouldn't be where I am today," he said. "He's very, very special to me. He's like a big brother who's given me everything I have, and a lot more than I deserve."
"I am very excited for Roy." Smith said. "He is a talented coach who has done an excellent job with that program. In fact, people tell me that Kansas runs our stuff better than we do."
Smith is not stretching the truth much. Williams has taken the principles he learned at North Carolina to the players he has at Kansas.
"It's going to come down to who can execute best." Williams said. "Our plays are extremely similar, right down to the names and signals we use for them. Basically, whoever can execute their third options the best is probably going to win the game."
But Williams has another advantage as well. As an assistant at North Carolina, Williams helped recruit many of the players on the Tar Heel squad that won the championship noon, including Rick Fox, King Rice, Pete Chichet, Hubert Davis and George Lynch.
"Certainly, both teams will be well seated," Smith said. "We talk a lot with Roy during the season and exchange tapes. But I have to say they probably know a lot more about our players than we know about hers."
Although Williams said he and Smith were like brothers, he added that he would have no problem getting prepared for the game.
"Once the game begins, I probably won't even remember who's coaching the other team," Williams said with a sheepsish grin. "Even if I had a big brother and I was playing him, I'd still try to beat his butt."
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 29, 1991
3B
VALOVER 35 KANSAS 20 NSAS 1 MORAIDO 5
Philip Meiring/KANSAN
KANSAS 24
A deep bench played a key role in the late-season success of the Kansas basketball team, Three-, four-, and five-man substitutions became a trademark of Coach Roy Williams' woodberry stretches toward a loose ball in a game against Colorado. RIGHT: (From top) Rex Walters (ineligible this year after transferring from Northwestern), Adonis Jorteran, Kirk Wagner and Alonzo Jamison wait for the next player rotation during a recent practice. CENTER: Freshman forward Richard Scott rises above three Nebraska players to shoot. BOTTOM LEFT: Sean Tunstall changes directions in a Big Eight Conference tournament game against Colorado.
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4B
Friday, March 29, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
Carolina's style familiar in Kansas
The Associated Press
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — There are 30 years of tradition behind Dean Smith's career at North Carolina, but a piece of his heart is with Kansas, the team his Tar Heels will have to beat at the Final Four.
NC
"I like the place," Smith said Tuesday at a news conference. "He isn't, it's not like The Wizard of Oz."
When North Carolina and Kansas meet in the national semifinals in Indianapolis on Saturday, the Jayhawks and the Tar Heels might be engaged in a little onepmanship Temple coach John Chaney has said that Kansas runs better than the Tar Heels do.
Given that the offenses and defenses are basically the same,
there's the notion of stealing signals. There's more to it, Smith says, than the tred signal indicated by one of his players holding up a fist.
"In our league, they should know if we're going to scrumble out of our man-to-man defense. One time, I remember Wake Forest's Skip Brown turned around to try to read the signal and they threw the ball in to him." Smith says. "It bounced off his lee and went out of bounds."
So, with North Carolina knowing the Kansas scheme and Smith knowing what Williams might do, are we or a boring, low-scoring semifinal*
"I hope not," Smith says. "We try to make the other team look bad. This late in the season, we know how to win. Both teams know how to execute."
"We might not be getting our simple back-door layups against one another. I know if somebody gets
one, watch the other coach laugh because we're the only ones who know the keys."
Only UCLA has made more trips to the championship round.
North Carolina has built its reputation under Smith, wrapping up his 30th year in Chapel Hill with his 10th appearance in the Final Four.
The Tar Heels are also in their 21st NCAA tournament in making their 17th successive trip.
Smith said the school's image was not the product of a grand scheme, but of the suggestions of the people who helped build the success.
"It wasn't named," said Smith, who has developed rituals and traditions that have been copied. "The reason we started our huddles is because we didn't want the second team to know which defense we were in. There are huddles all over basketball now."
Duke guard nets fourth Final Four
The Associated Press
DURHAM, N.C. — Even if Duke doesn't get past UNLV for the second straight year in the NCAA Final game in and Greg Koeblek will have no regrets.
"To me, I feel very fortunate,very
"To me, I feel lucky to have played on four great teams," said Koubek, who has accompanied Due to the Final Four for four sons
consecutive sea-
Last year's tournament carried mixed emotions, he said. The Blue Devils knocked off Arkansas to reach the championship game, in which UNLV ran away to a 103-73 victory. Yet the prospect of playing the Runnin' Rebels again doesn't bother Koubek.
"We're stronger and we can compete at a higher level than we did last year," he says. "I know it going to be better than a 30-point game."
Koubek was overwhelmed as a
freshman on Duke's 1988 Final Four team.
"The atmosphere in Kansas City will be one thing I'll never forget, going there for a shoot-around and being booed," Koubek said of the session before the Blue Devils met Kansas in a national semifinal. "It was packed all the way, the price was packed for a shoot-around. It was filled up, and we got boomed. Being a freshman, I was definitely intimidated."
Experience has calmed Koubek's nerves. He and teammate Clay Buckley are the only players to make trips to the Final Four during their entire college careers. They had the advantage of freshman eligibility, and Duke would seek its first national title after eight games to round the national championship round.
But simply having a chance to win it all has been great to Koubek.
"One of the reasons you go to school is that you want to compete for the national championship." Koubek says, "This is unbelievable. I still
don't think it's really sunk in. I'm not really excited about the four-for-four. I'm excited at competing for the national championship."
There have been the ups and the downs of going for the national championship. Koubek remembers a few and blushes.
"There are a lot of funny moments after we lost, but I don't want to talk
Then there was Koubek's sophmore year when Duke went to Seattle to try again for the national title. Duke faced Seton Hall in the semifinals and run up a big lead in the first half before disaster struck.
"That was really a bad situation. We thought we could beat Seton Hall before Robert Brickey went down," he said.
Brickey crushed to the floor while going to the basket on a fast break, suffering a leg injury that not only took him out of the game, but also destroyed the Duke substitution rotation. The reserves didn't produce, and Seton Hall won 95-78.
NCAA Tournament Winning Percentage Since 64 Team Bracket was Institutionalized in 1985
| % | Record | Years | Final Fours | Titles |
| 1. Kansas | .818 | 18-4 | 6 | 3 | 1 |
| 2. UNLV | .808 | 21-5 | 7 | 3 | 1 |
| 3. Duke | .806 | 25-6 | 7 | 5 | 0 |
| 4. Louisville | .786 | 11-3 | 4 | 1 | 1 |
| 5. North Carolina | .760 | 19-6 | 7 | 1 | 0 |
| 6. Seton Hall | .750 | 9-3 | 3 | 1 | 0 |
| 7. Villanova | .733 | 11-4 | 5 | 1 | 1 |
| 8. Michigan | .706 | 12-5 | 6 | 1 | 1 |
| 9. Oklahoma | .700 | 14-6 | 6 | 1 | 0 |
| 10. Georgetown | .682 | 15-7 | 7 | 1 | 0 |
| 11. Indiana | .667 | 10-5 | 6 | 1 | 1 |
| 12. Syracuse | .650 | 13-7 | 7 | 1 | 0 |
| 13. Arkansas | .643 | 9-5 | 5 | 1 | 0 |
| 14. St. John's | .625 | 10-6 | 6 | 1 | 0 |
| 15. Temple | .600 | 9-6 | 7 | 1 | 1 |
Compiled by Blake Spurney, Belleville junior majoring in journalism
Doubt nibbles at Tarkanian's toes
The Associated Press
LAS VEGAS — 'The only one questioning UNLV's capability is Runnin' Rebels coach Jerry Tarkanian.
"What if Larry (Johnson) gets three fouls in the first five minutes?" Tarkanian asked. "Then we're in big trouble and anything could happen."
Tuesday, Tarkanian kept bringing up what-ifs as if to convince people that the
TROPHY
defending national champions are not invincible.
UNLV practiced Wednesday before leaving on a charter flight scheduled to arrive in Indianapolis that evening. The national semifinal matchup with Duke takes place tomorrow.
"The ball's got to go through a hole this big," he said. "What if we keep hitting the ball?" We ask, we have a fine club, but anybody who thinks it's going to be easy is crazy."
Tarkanian had a final luncheon with boosters Tuesday, which was highlighted by a ceremony in which the team received its award. The Award as college player of the year.
Still, he cautioned that the Rebels were no cich to become the first team since Indiana in 1976 to finish a season undefeated, and the first since UCLA in 1973 to win consecutive national championships.
"Duke is a good team, a well-coached team." Tarkamian said. "They're going to have a chance to be at the top, and that's going to be any easy games. There
aren't any cinches in a one-loss tournament."
UNLV, unbeaten in 34 games this year and winner of 45 straight during two seasons, meets Duke in a rematch of last year's national championship, which UNLV won in a 103-73 blowout. That game weighs heavily on the mind of Tarkanian, who fears Duke will be more than primed for a second chance at the Rebels.
"When they got humiliated in that game last year, they had to live with that for a year." he said. "They're really good at this game as they possibly could be."
Tarkanian said last year's title game had shaped up as a competitive matchup of two teams that played out with little interest in the game that promised to be a close one.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 29, 1991
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 29, 1991
9B
Jordan glad he stayed with Kansas
He joined 'Hawks despite NCAA probation
The Associated Press
Just as his grandparents know where they were and what they were doing the moment they heard about Pearl Harbor, Adonis Jordan will never forget the instant he heard what the NCAA had done to Kroger.
Relaxing at a friend's house, he thought his world had been turned upside down.
"They came on with the news and said, 'NCAA hands Kansas a three-year probation,' and that's all they said. I didn't know what to think." Jordan said. "I didn't know what it meant."
A highly sought point guard in Reseda, Calif., Jordan just a few weeks earlier had committed to Kansas and its energetic rookie head coach, Roy Williams. But now came of a three-year NCAB probation.
To a high school kid, it sounded as if his college career were being devoured before it could even begin. Was he headed for a place that would not be on television or in the NCAA tournament until he was a senior? Would NCAA guards patrol the hallway?
"I was one phone call away from changing my mind," he said.
The next day, Williams was California-bound.
"Coach Williams flew out and we had a meeting," Jordan said. "He explained the whole thing to me and my mom."
Williams' message was this: It is not as bad as it sounds. He assured the family that the three-year probation included only a one-year tournament ban and that Adonis' career would not necessarily be affected at
A great many other schools had been clamoring for Jordan. He had narrowed his list to Kansas and Seton Hall.
Josephine Jordan let her son make up his own mind.
"She told me to do whatever I thought would make me happy," he said. "I wasn't sure what I should do, but I put my faith in Coach Williams."
It was a decision that turned out to have direct bearing on Kansas' making an unexpected trip to the Final Four this week. Jordan blossomed as
Adonis Jordan Kansas guard
'If I had gone to Seton Hall, I'd be sitting at home watching the Final Four on television. But my mom will be in Indianapolis to watch us play.'
a sophomore and was probably one of the most underrated players in the Big Eight this year. Averaging more than 12 points a game, he led the Jayhawks with 126 assists and 38 steals. Quick enough to penetrate the defense and three point shooter who makes it tough for a defense to get settled.
Showing consistent improvement, he is one of the few players in Kansas history to have more than 100 assists their freshman and sophomore years.
The NCAA's three-year probation came as a shock to everybody at Kansas, coaches, administrators and recruits alike. One reason for the changes was that theNCAA football program had been penalized less than five years earlier.
The toughest aspect of the penalties was probably the recruiting restrictions placed on the program, not the one-year tournament ban.
Jordan turned out to be the only prospect from the early signing period in the fall of 1988 who stuck with the Jayhawks.
"The others thought there was going to be a cloud hanging over them and the school, I guess," Jordan said. "They didn't want to take the chance. I just put my faith in her. He told me he would help me develop a good basketball player and a good person. So far, it's paying off."
Josephine Jordan is happy she let Adonis have the final word.
“Oh, yes, she’s thrilled about the way things have turned out,” he said with a smile. “If I had gone to Seton Hall, I'd be sitting at home watching Four on television. But my mom will be in Indianapolis to watch us play.”
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Leading the Kansas offense, Jordan brings the ball up the court.
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10B
Friday, March 29, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
The Seniors: Mark Randall
Randall epitomizes KU basketball
THIS WEEK
Randall raises his arms in celebration as he is welcomed home by fans at Allen Field House. The Jayhawks made it to the NCAA Final Four by beating Arkansas 93-81 March 23.
KANS
42
IOWA STATE
35
Senior has been Hawks leader for three years
Randall slam-dunks as Iowa State forward Phil Kunz attempts to block the ball.
Richard Quinn/Special to the KANSAN
By S. J. Bailey
Kansan sportswriter
It is as familiar to Kansas basket ball fans as the Rock Chalk Chant.
"At away ... from Englewood,
Colorado. No. 42. Mark Randall.
booms the voice over the speaker during pre-game introductions.
For the past three seasons, Kansas fans have heard Randal's name called before the start of every basketball game — that is, if it can be heard. It was rumored roar of the grounds of Jayahawk faithful who pack Allen Field House.
42
To many, Mark Randall does not just play Kansas basketball; he epitomizes Kansas basketball
He has a list of awards and accomplishments nearly equal to the 42 bodily emblazoned across his jersey. This week, he graces the cover of *The Guardian* as Jayhawks march into the Final Four for the third time in six years.
How does he respond to all the praise and attention?
"I didn't even know about it," he says, almost embarrassed that the subject was mentioned in the first place. "I really don't have time to think about it right now. The only thing there is to talk about is basket-
Sounds pretty modest coming from a man who has been the pillar around which the dayhawks have built their team for the past three seasons.
Highly heralded freshman
And although he may not admit it now, Randall has been one of the most consistent players ever to do a Jawhawk uniform.
For when the final buzzer wails at the end of Randall's final game as a Jayhawk, an exciting chapter in the series has basketball will come to a close.
Former Kansas coach Larry Brown remembered being impressed by the skills of his former teammate.
"No doubt he was one of the best players in the country," Brown said. "We were thrilled when he chose over Duke, Arizona and Colorado."
"I was pretty tough on him in the beginning," Brown said. "I pushed him and gave him a hard time to get over the potential to be a great player."
As a freshman, Randall played in 31 games, averaged 4.5 points a game on 52.9 percent shooting from the field and 2.7 rebounds. But friction soon developed between the highly heralded freshman and his coach.
Randall said that the criticism was tough but that it only inspired him to work harder.
"Any coach is going to get on you and tell you when you're doing something wrong," he said. "If the coach is getting on you, it means he wants you to do it. You've looked at it. I've grown a lot since then, and I've got Coach Brown as
well as Coach Williams to thank for that."
The growth would continue his sophomore season, but in a completely different setting - on the practice floor and on the bench.
Randall was forced to redshift his sophomore year because of surgery to correct breathing and jaw-alignment problems. His sinus cavities were drained and his jaw aligned in a process in which his upper jaw was broken in four places and plates were inserted to correct an underbite.
"I had been been in orthodontics for about 10 years because of the problems with my mouth," he said. "I could bite down, and I'd be sticking my tongue out at you at the same time. There was such a gap there that I was only touching on my four back teeth."
After the surgery, which took place Jan. 4, 1988, Randall's jaw was wired shut for eight weeks. But he said the pain was nothing compared to that of watching his teammates win the national championship without him.
"It was a very empty feeling," he said. "I did not get to practice with them and I reared all the benefits of what they had done, but because I couldn't be out on that court with them, I didn't really feel like I was a part of that team. And I was determined to go out and do whatever I could for that team when I could play the next season."
averaged 16 points and 6.7 rebounds a game and ranked 13th nationally with a field-goal percentage of 61.7 percent
Team leader
He has started every game in that three-year stretch, racking up points and awards as quickly as the scoreboard on a pinnail machine.
Since that redshirt year, Randall has become the leader of each of the past three Javhawk squads.
He also was selected second-team All-Big Eight conference and played for the gold-medal-winning U.S. team in the World University Games in West Germany during the summer.
Last season, Randall scored 13.3 points a game and snagged 2.6 rebounds while leading the Jayhawks to a 30-5 record, which garnered him a spot on the AP and UPI second-team All-Big Eight squads.
In his sophomore season, Randall
Randall said he thought Coach Roy Williams' system and the team concept that Kansas basketball revolved in a great deal of his success.
"Coach Williams' system is almost perfect," he said. "I don't feel I have to take on any more of the load than any other player. That's what makes this a team. We have so many guys that can come forward on any given night, and that's what makes our team so special. Everybody is unselfish and contributes every night, and that's Kansas basketball."
Dream season
1991 has been a dream season for Randall and every other member of the Kansas Jayhawks. For Randall, this is a moment of great personal accomplishment.
He averaged 14.8 points and pulled down 5.2 rebounds a game this season while breaking the Big Eight Conference record for field-goal percentage in a season at 64.6 percent. He also was selected to the first team and the eight squad as well as being named an honorable mention All-American.
Besides the Sports Illustrated cover, Randall's play this season has brought him accolades from many other sources as well.
"Mark Randall is a great player." Arkansas coach Nolan Richardson said. "Some people are simply able to mark Randall is a basketball player."
North Carolina coach Dean Smith also has praised Randall lately.
"I'm extremely impressed with him." Smith said. "He's a great passer, runs the floor well and is very smart."
of Mark Randall than his own coach. Roy Williams.
"He has meant everything to this team," Williams said. "He's been an unbelievable player, a leader both on and off the court, and the kind of young man that a father would want his son to grow up to be like.
"He's made me a better coach as well as a better person. He has been a coach's dream. If I can always have players like Mark Randall, Roy Williams is always going to be a better coach."
But there is no one who thinks more
Last chance for title
As the Jayhawks march into Indianapolis this weekend, Randall said he knew he was fortunate to get a shot at it. He thought that I'd feel he was a part of in 1988.
Randall said he thought Kansas
“This means everything to me because I know this is my last shot at the ultimate goal,” he said. “I don’t have any more chances so I am going to go out there and lay everything I could put in there.” But to all my teammates because every one of them has played a big part in all of this.”
had as much of a shot at this year's
title as any other team, even though
many people considered it to be the
playing in the big leagues
So what lies down the road for a man who is one of only five Jayhawks to score 1,300 points and grab 600 rebounds during his career at Kan
"I've always wanted to play in the NBA," he said. "It's always been a goal of mine and something I've dreamed about."
Coach Brown, now coach of the San Antonio Spurs, said he thought Randall would have that opportunity come summertime.
"He'll be up here in our league next year," Brown said, "but right now he's got other things to think about."
Randall couldn't have said it better himself.
"My favorite team that I follow is the Los Angeles Lakers, but when it comes down to that, I really don't care — I just want to play," he said. "But I can't start thinking about that until I'm done playing for Kansas. We still have a couple more games to go."
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The Seniors: Maddox and Wagner
University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 29, 1991
11B
KANSAS
32
KANSAS
32
EISER
Julie Jacobson/KANSAN
Family support assists Maddox
Bv Mark Spencer
Nearly 100 awards fill Kansas senior forward Mike Maddox's bedroom at his parents'
His parents, Jim and Jan Maddox, know everything about each one. They were there when he won them.
Kansan sportswriter
"He got that one for being a Converse All-American," Jan Maddox says, pointing to a yellow-crimson covered pine board. How about that one?
"That's the Jim Thorpe All-State award they give in Oklahoma," she says.
And that one? There, on the top row?
Maddox fights for a rebound against Big Eight rival Nebraska.
Basketball, Mike Maddox and his parents have all had influences on each other.
"We're very close," Mike Maddox said in his apartment across town. "I talk to my parents every day, whether it's on the phone or not. It's nice to spend some time with them."
Basketball and family. The two wind through Mike's life together.
When he went to college, his parents moved to be where he played. Mike turned down offers from top schools too far away from his Midwestern relatives.
Not a day goes by that he doesn't talk with his mother or father.
Jim Maddox remembers coaching Mike as he grew up.
They've always been close.
Getting started
32
"When I look back on it, it was a little bit of everything," he said. "Mike liked to play all sports. All the way through the ninth grade, he went to summer and then football and basketball."
Jim Maddox said the time he spent with
Impact as a leader required a significant
impact in his photography.
While his father coached Mike's teams, his mother traveled with them.
"We got to spend a lot of time together," he said. "It was really enjoyable."
"He's always had a lot of family support," Jan Maddox said. "It's meant a lot to him. I13
Before 10th grade, the Maddoxes moved from Grand Junction, Colo., to Oklahoma City where Mike enrolled in Putnam City School and dedicated himself to basketball.
During the summer, Mike attended several basketball camps where college coaches
"The University of Utah was the first school to send him literature in the ninth grade." Jan Maddox said. "We knew he would be going somewhere."
His parents knew they would be going somewhere, too.
"I was in the construction business with my brother in Oklahoma City," Jim Maddox said. "I told him up front we might be leaving there, but I didn't go to Oklahoma or Oklahoma State."
"We made the decision when he was a sophomore in high school in Oklahoma City that we were going to follow him." he said. "We just went on and enough to enjoy watching him play basketball."
After the move to Lawrence, Jim Maddox became the executive director of the Brandon Woods Retirement Community Jan Secretary for the Retirement Management Co.
Mike Maddox averaged a state high school record 23 points a game for three seasons as a Putnam City North Panther while his parents never missed a game.
From then to now
"They really wanted Mike to do well," said Bill Robertson. Mike's high school coach. "They were very positive people and as team-oriented as he was."
Maddox caught the eye of then-Kansas coach Larry Brown, now with the BBA's San Diego.
"I saw him at the Nike camp, and he really impressed me. What a terrific player he was," Brown said in a telephone interview. He knew the height could have a terrific career, at Kansas."
Brown and the Jayhawks received mutual admiration from Maddox.
"He'd been with the NBA, UCLA and all over." Maddox said.
Mike and his father visited several colleges during his senior year and narrowed the list to 12.
He shunned the offers of far-away schools like Duke and Arizona, and during the early signing period, accepted Brown's offer to become a Javahawk.
"I wanted them to see me play." Maddox said of his parents and also his grandparents in Wichita and End, Akila. "It was really sick. They are all very close."
Testing the dream
Two widely publicized degenerative discs in the midfoot lower back have slowed him down.
Maddox has never needed the support or family and friends more than he has this past summer.
The throbbing pain and stiffness the morning after games was so intense that Maddox considered quitting.
"It was December or January, and I was really having problems," Maddox said. "I was going to the Med Center, having cortisol injections, and questioning whether it was all worth it."
Maddox said the support of his parents, sater Jennifer, who is a KU freshman, fans and friends.
"I made the commitment to myself and my teammates to keep playing," he said. "All the fans and everybody else around me were great and very supportive."
His back problems won't end with the season, however.
"I'm sure when I get older it's going to bother me," Maddox said. "I may have to have some surgery done, but I don't think it will be anything major."
Jim Maddox said it was hard to watch in the injury keep him from playing to his benefit.
"I was wanting him to have a super strong year," he said. "You never know if professional opportunities are down the road. But, if he ever did have a possibility, this dampered it."
Maddox's season-long valor has brought a smile back to his father's face as well as the team.
"He's struggled all year with his back, but I think Mike Maddox has really shown a lot of competitiveness," Williams said. "He may have grown up more than anybody around because of the problems he'd had to withstand."
His No. 1 fan
Maddox and Anderson met in November 1988 through mutual friends.
1988 through internal friends. But it wasn't love at first sight. Anderson recalls not hitting it off with Maddox the first time they met.
Maddox's family support will increase by one officially on Aug. 24, the day he and Bonnie Anderson, Randolph, N.J., senior, will be married.
"A week later, I saw him again, but we didn't talk because we still didn't like each other," she said. "But by the end of the night, we were doing fine."
Maddox proposed in September 1990.
"The good thing about it is when I first met her, she didn't know anything about basketball," he said. "After a practice or whatever, somebody and not have to go to basketball somebody and not have to go to basketball."
Anderson said basketball was usually the last thing they talked about.
"If there's something going on and he wants to talk about it, then we talk about it," she said. "Usually, when he talks to me about basketball, he gets frustrated because I don't
Maddox said Anderson's lack of basketball knowledge showed him she liked him for who he was.
"Marriage wasn't something that was on my mind when I decided to come to Kansas, but I've been lucky," he said. "I've found someone that makes me happy."
Reflections
"I want to understand what I've accomplished," Maddox said, "but it's hard until I can look back on it.
"Winning the national championship has got to be the best thing," he said. "But we won an NIT Championship, and I am very proud of that."
"Last year's team was ranked No. 1 for long, and we had the second-best record in KU history." Maddox continued. "Heck, this year's been great, and we're still going.
Maddox's academic career will continue after he completes his degree this summer and enters the KU School of Law next fall.
"I've also had an opportunity to make a lot of friends outside of basketball, and that's why we play."
His basketball career, however, will end sometime this weekend in Indianapolis.
Maddox will learn to cope with basketball, but a certain career highlight will be his next goal.
"My parents," he said. "It's been really special for them to see me play. I know they enjoyed it. It will probably be harder on them than on me when I stop playing."
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Childhood dream takes Wagner to brink of championship
Bv Sarah Davis
Kirk Wagner battles through the defense of Colorado forward Asad All and center Shaun Vandiver for a shot during the first round of the Big Eight Tournament at Kemper Arena.
Kansan staff writer
When young Kirk Ail Wagner played basketball in his Aladena, Calif., driveway with his older brother and cousin, he was gaining more than basic basketball knowledge as he was developing his competitive edge.
31
To George Terzian, that was evident from the start
"His hallmark is just how hard he worked and his leadership on the court," said Terzian, Wagner's coach for two years at Pasadena City. "He knows how you win. It isn't just the physical talent, it's all other things."
Those other things were Wagner's determination to improve his game and his burning desire to play Division I basketball.
"I told him that you have to put in time and effort because competition is higher," he said, laughing. "But Kirk would always say 'Coach, that's no problem. I want to play at the highest level possible.'"
Terzian said his prized player always had dreamed of being recruited by a major college.
The path to Kansas
Wagner set out to achieve his goal. He practiced extra hard during two-hour practices at Pasadena. He continued, long after the others had finished their skills. And during the off-season, he would work out in the weight room.
concerned. He just kept getting bet ter and better."
As a sophomore, "Cool Kirk," as he was referred to because of his calm nature, averaged 19 points and seven rebounds. He shot 62.8 percent from the field and 76.4 percent from the free-throw line. During his two years at Pasadena City, he was an All-Conference Coast conference selection twice.
"He was absolutely outstanding." Terzian said. "He had the type of attitude that sops up everything he threw at him as far as basketball was
Wagner's team role
Wagner's mother, Carol Wagner, said her son's competitiveness began when he was an 8-year-old playing baseball with his older brother.
"He tries to motivate us," said junior forward Maclom Nash, referring to when Wagner would come into practice and tell his teammates to pep up their step or to start stretching. "As a player, his actions speak for himself. Sometimes he might be the most outgoing player off the court. He's showing a great deal of leadership."
Sophomore guard Adonis Jordan, who was Wagner's roommate last semester, agreed.
And the team seems to benefit from his hard work and dedication.
"He gets us up every game," he said. "And off the court he's just a good person to be around."
Wagner said, "I try to work hard every day to help to try the team."
"He's always been really competitive," she said. "Hated to lose. He's always wanted to be a winner."
Nash said that Wagner was extremely kind-hearted.
"He's one of those guys, that as a person, you like to be around," he said. "He has a sensitive attitude."
Final Four as part of the National Basketball Coaches Association Convention. He said he looked forward to seeing Warner play again.
Terzian will attend this weekend's
"He's a kind of guy who is a team man, whether he plays 5 minutes or
30 minutes," he said. "When he does come in, he seems to help them. He adds a lot to the team."
Senior guard Terry Brown, Wagner's roommate this year, agreed.
"I've learned some things from
him," Brown said. "He's a role player. When he does get in, he sparks the team."
But Wagner doesn't think he is doing anything differently.
"You've got to just keep working hard and doing the things that got us to this point," he said.
When Wagner was recruited by Kansas in 1988, he was well aware of the Jayhawks' success in that year's NCAA tournament. He chose to come to Kansas instead of New Mexico, Baylor and Washington State.
He said he felt fortunate to be part of Kansas' Final Four team.
"I just liked the campus and the environment and the people," Wagner said. "I also liked Couch Wilson. He's nice, genuine guy. He really hopes it."
"He's the one who really stressed the importance of getting a good education," she said.
Wagner's mother said that he fell in love with the Kansas campus.
She said Wagner's father, Eugene Wagner, a probation officer for Pasadena, was the one who emphasized school and learning.
"He knew right away that that was the place for him," she said.
Wagner's former coach agreed.
But love and support were abundant in the Wagner family.
"If you trace any kid back, you find a mother or father who has been supportive and encouraging all the years she gets a lot of credit for who he is."
"Kirk is a family-oriented person," his mother said. "The family is there for him. We all kind of stick up for her." (Penguin) Womens former coach agreed.
Injury strikes
All the support Wagner received during his junior year at Kansas paid off. He played in 21 games and shot
59. 6 percent from the field for the season.
Mack. So it iself" he said wipper
for Kentucky.
Kansas, said that Wagner had a knee
and an ankle sprain but that the
injuries never discouraged him.
"He would look at me and say
"Where do we go from here? I want to
get back to playing." Cairns said.
That's just the type of person Kirk is.
"He is a quiet person," Cairns said. "When he puts his mind to something, he goes after it. And you'd better not stand in his way or he'll mow you over. I expect nothing but good things from Kirk Wagner."
Although this is Wagner's last year to play basketball, he is planning to stay at Kansas to finish a degree in communications. He plans to go either into the broadcasting or entertainment field.
His mother said he would do quite well in the latter.
"He likes to sing - rap," she said. She remembers her son as a toddler, waking up singing in the morning.
"that kind of softens the blow, but it's going to be different not to play. I've played all my life, junior high and high school."
Wagner said that he would miss playing basketball next year but that his extra year at Kansas would help the transition.
His high school basketball days could be relieved if the Jayhawks ever meet up with the University of Nevada Las Vegas Runnin' Rebels in the tournament. Wagner, fondly nicknamed "Captain Kirk" at John Muir High School in Pasadena, was a teammate and close friend of Steama Augem in 1968 when their team won the city championship.
His mother said that ever since Wagner was involved in basketball, he had looked forward to the challenge of going as far as he could.
"He's always had a dream to go to the Final Four." she said.
Tomorrow his dream will come true.
12B
Fridav. March 29, 1991 / University Daily Kansan
The Seniors: Terry Brown
Brown follows championship dream
By Jonathan Plummer
Kansan staff writer
Like many young people in the town of Clyde, N.Y., population 2,491, a junior high-school kid named Terry Brown practiced shooting baskets against the goal in the Clyde-Savannah High School parking lot.
tony Pantanzo, Brown's high school coach, said Brown worked hard to meet his goal.
And there he made a decision to follow his dream to play for an NCAA Division I team and help it win a championship.
"As a youngster he made the decision that he really wanted to play basketball." Pantano said. "He was constantly practicing, seven days a week. 365 days a year."
"He was a great football player, and after a two-and-a-half-hour basketball practice, he would put on a weight jacket and get a basketball and run two or three miles, dribbling the ball."
It was a coincidence that Brown made the varsity basketball team as a freshman, Pantanza said. From about 500 students in the school, he had been able only to field a varsity team of seven.
“At the first scrimgam, I needed another man to balance the teams, so I went to the J-V coach and I asked the player to come to the practice,” he said.
"Terry came, and I saw him play and I said, 'Well, I've found my fifth man.'
Pantanza said Brown did not slow down during the summer and often could be found playing on the goal in the parking lot.
"In the summer he used to play kids three-on-one for soda money." Pantano said.
"If the kids guarded him too close, he would charge the goal, and if they laid off him, he would hit the jumper. He would have to be careful." He was always looking for a game.
In high school, Brown would go on to be an All-American in basketball, an All state selection in football, in which he played wide-receiver and linebacker, and a letterman in track, in which he participated in the high-long and triple-jump.
Keeping priorities straight
As more and more colleges took notice of Brown's skills and achievements, Pantano said he told Brown to keep his priorities in order.
Many schools, including Pittsburgh, Arkansas and Georgetown, showed an interest in Brown.
"I always told him: number one, take care of school and work hard on your skills, and everything will be fine."
Brown ended up at Northwestern Oklahoma A&M in Miami, Okla., where he continued to gain recognition for his outstanding championship game of the 1988-89
3
season, Brown scored 26 points and was named most valuable player.
But Larry Gipson, Northeastern Oklahoma coach, talks of Brown not only as a player but as a member of the team.
"His goals were centered on the team," Gipson said. "The rest of the players had a lot of respect for him and I felt he was a leader in the team and carry it offensively."
Gipson said he saw Brown continue to work at his personal goal of making a Division I team.
"He was extremely hard-working," Gipson said. "He was one of the best competitors I've ever seen.
'Terry Brown Day'
Tuesday, Terry Brown stood in Allen Field House as reporters took turns asking him about how he played golf. He was in the first game of the Find Four.
Brown said that it was difficult to keep focused on winning the game with the extra attention that was being put on him.
"I try not to think of that and block that out of my mind," he said. "I just try to keep my mind on what we do the best."
"It was part of my dream to play on TV. It was part of my dream to get to the Final Four. Part of my dream came true. Hopefully, we can win it."
Brown is not the only one hoping his dream comes true.
In Miami, Okla., Coach Gipson said he and those Brown played with were rooting for him.
"He was such a team player," said Ginson.
And in Clyde, Barbara Marchitelli, the village clerk, said Mayor Richard DeVito was talking to Coach PanTantoo about naming a "Terry Brown"
Marchitell said she, along with the rest of the town, was looking forward to watching Brown on television tomorrow.
But that won't happen until tomorrow. Marchelli said that Tuesday — near the sign in front of the high school that reads "Go'Jayhawks" — kids, as always, were shooting baskets in the parking lot.
And one of them, she said, could be dreaming of reaching his goal: to be just like Terry Brown.
GUEST
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Brown attempts a three-point shot over a Wichita State defender.
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"Stressed" for Success?
Being a student can stress you out, whether in the classroom or on the basketball court. You can't get rid of stress, but you can turn it into something positive. Stress comes in two ways:
- "Eustress" is good. It's when you're hyped up before playing in the game, giving a speech, or doing a job interview. It helps you gear up and function at your peak.
- "Distress" is bad. You're revved up and can't relax before finals or graduation. You don't feel good, can't sleep, you're irritable, you overindulge.
How do you deal with stress? Recognize it. Balance work with play.
Plan a well balanced diet. Exercise. Most of all ... relax. For info on stress management call the Mental Health Clinic at 864-9580.
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